. I/ a 40/1114±5PAY ,, 1; Como Mt bimm it i ttrd4ll ma tt WllltoTt.oraWoleito tit Cie moontlin 11441 foonchtni thallium with boo light Yuu cams back with chaste glowing crimson, And eyelash** glitterlag And aemile which, half sad, half triumphant, Still ovor Jour awati mood, Did be talk of tte beauty of sowinhirl Or pram the wild roopaperDune, Or speak °roar arbor. ao nude, Where woodbine andiessamtne bloom ? He told you a "story!" Ohl did be? Well, Katy, deer, tell it to roe ? You've "alloreat forgot it?" Already ! How very touch clattered he'd be. You ea} that you "thlak I ro►y gueu ft !" Ye., Katy, the .tary I know ; 'Tie an old tale, yet alelayl t moot one— I'm certain that you found It 80. It 'was new In the Ant dais of Attain, When wandering through Eden's fair bowers, Nre's little ear it was whispered, While she, bluoltiog, played with tho Bowe o, You're blushing, too; whet is the matter Why what aro you crying about? • Your grandfather told your grandmother Thor very woe story, no doubt. Jodi littlo words tell thin story— hatitonsands °limed. they have thrilled ! Ilmsr many with Juj tboy bare gladdoned ! - - How Many with sorrow Imre tUled I Thew three little words': "I lora you I" You smiths the very came tale That you heard there //Weight by the woodbino Beneath the moon's elliery veil. Don't say that I know' nothing shunt It— You know very well it Is true; But Katy, my dear, did you tell him The muse story that he told y 05,1 • --.l:+charige GEARY AND HIS BIOGRAPHERS The Abolition State Central Committee,have brought forth a labored effort on tho civil and military history of their candidate Jno. W. Geary They ire freely circulating a pamphlet among the people, as a gull trap to ceichyotes, hoping to take advantage of theme tunes when military ezoitemout runs high They would force upon the people of Pennsylvania, a man who is not lit for the position of Governor, and who if elected, would o'nly be a mere 'neckline in the bands of designing Abolitionists whose drily motto is to "rule or ruin " But. unfortunately for the credit of Geary, them are too many living witne.cs on the the stage of action ilis Biographers are true to tbeir natural propensity to deceive, and have rublished unscrupulouely a whole tissue ofsbsurdity and falsehood. the hope of retaining power. A short review of the two pamphlets in circulation, will be all that is neccsentry to *auto the whole—and show that he is a wan of straw, unworthy of our confidence or sup port. In the irould-be (lovernor Geary, there is neither merit nor capacity. As to his ancestry nothing need be said. All men are born somewhere,and If that place shoutl„ happen to be a pig stye, It does not follow as a ;consequence, that oil men are hogs. True Merit alone is essential to true•tgrat nese. It mntters but little whether he was born in Westmoreland county, or elsewhere there is no disguising that he is like the po tato the beet parts adder the ground. lii.,qspacity for Governor has been test ed on several occasions. As Territorial Governor of Kansas, his governing powers well, of the limited order,lincapable to gov ern even ton thousand frontier settler.. What then must be his qualifications, for discharging the weighty responsibilities of the great Keystone State of this Federal Union. Meow' historian tells us that his adminstration terminated in "six months." Brief a. it was, there was ample time to bring out the man, In that brief period,- hi. week vaeilating character could no lon ger be tolerated. Murder, arson, rapine,— In short the very demon of Wife; ruin, riot between the contending parties, and yet he was "all things to all men." Ile left. the Territorial Government in chaos,—fife and property without the protection of Civil The foot that he was sent to the l'aoifio coast, as a post master with plenary powers, is scarcely worthy of notice, although it is heralded aloud as though it were an impor tant qualification for the Gubernatorial chair of Penoeylvaula. Almost every cross road in the State at that time, Gould have furnished an assistant rest Mester with mental calibre sufficient to have performed this duly--/t is claimed for him as an Import; that he discharged the dodos of distributing the mail, and hired men and mules to pack the matter' into the mining districts. Cer taiuly thin important service to the Govern ment should not be entirely overlooked. But ho ws..elected first Aland& of the city of Ban Francine°, a judge of Bret in- Mance. If this can be tortured Into making a groat men of him,lhen a Mexican greaser who had filled the office before him with as much honor and ability, 'should have been entitled to as much respect. In that posi tion he certainly gave greater ends faction, why should not our Abolition friends send for him?. lii. oomplexioa might possibly giro a truer representative of their princi ples. They would only have to draw a little upon the imagination for wool, and Peunsylvania would have quite as good a flovernor as by electing John W Geary. But the tenure of hi■ office there, as well as in Kansas was short. Ills great talents were not recognised by the inhabitants of the Pacific Coast. Throe yeap were the fail measure of his exploits in that quarter of the globe, during whioli time it is claimed forisim List hm nervioes secured the adop tion of a free &ate Constilutioa for Califor nia. Hat the most important services that die -Cmgeteited Ms fitiblie esresr on the least remain* I. he studied. Here it is reported by his frienda: • ”On the let of i1ept.,2846,a aostreatiou of Delegates asaemilded to' 'form a Biala Con stitution at Monterey. This body included the best talent, and the ^rlpeit experience, in the Territory. Col. than ,'queer as it may maim; was net ainomberr of this Con vention, but from some unaccountable cir cumstance had such outrolling influence upon this body, as to have inserted a free elate Manse in the newly framed constitu tion." Could anything be more absurd How in the name of common Donee did he acesunplialt this great fete, when he conce ited le. 141 opponents the eloution of two United Staten Senators to represent the now stab in Congresa But he loves offices, If he is not compe tent to discharge their duties. Governor Geary•anay be flattered by thin impeertant pamphlet which we More been .esinally re •iewing,but hie raptly ham no limit. Stick • feather in‘his nap and he will strut him self to death. • There Is still inOther Kim in the lutiount Jbt this wonderful mania his California ex ploits, and it is probably, the most thrill as welt as most desperate act of his life. It *termed In this ptuhphist a perilous ad venture on the Isthmus of Panama, or his journey to' the ?italic. The courage o(.Don •Quixote Is nowhere in comparison to this. 814 ‘9 1 ,9f natives mots his,hodun.ge 'b*LititssaMhinvery and promisee-of MEW • Whichnenerlf illtints him tit the hour 4 aleei 1 04 bfahltttoah oeuratie .in the ditch at the battle of Cisepellopen) moms to hia nibt. Hs lashed out (mutt- ~ . . ~.. :(Jalite Protactrati(-,--iejlatt.liiiiiiii,-/ =1 von. xi-. sally—found a native in his blonket— knookidlim down—look "thi Sim out of some empty ennekete—scoured his baggage again and felt good over his uletory.. But he by a military reputation, which 'WM political friends have Thn Beetling broad emit over the State. A more con glomerated mats of incougrutiont never have been made public. The Georgia Campaign alone is sufficient to prove this For our present pastime, we shalt make some ex tracts from is work entitled "Sherman and his Campaign's page 187 " "On the 27th of October, a Pontoon bridge was thrown morose the Tennessee river. On the following morning before the enemy could-recover from his surprise. [looker with his corps, had erased, seised the heights rising from Lookout valley, anti took up position. That night the ?Bth the, battle of Wouhatchie woe fought. The re sult of this battle is claimed for Cenry by bin biographical committee who aro ever engaged in in perverting tho record. The history of it is this Hooker devis ed the plan for the altact, leaving General Geary with his divsion in front of the ene mies entrenched camp, whilsche with the balance of his command diverged to the left, with.exgreas orders to Geazymut to make too strong a demonstration, until be was fully apprised that Hooker was in possition to attact in flank. •Either from vaulting am bition, or from not comprehending his or ders, the later of which is most probable, be brought on en action before Hookers position bad been perfected. This irults eretion (met the life of mania brave soldier, iris men fought bravely, but , to them be longs the honor of holding the position for the :time being, until Gen. Hooker arrived and prevented them from being cut to peicee. (lad the Federal army not tri umphed, a court martial would have given • very different coloring, to that given by those plamphiet history makere, who at tempt to give him alone the honor of this affair. The history of the engagement, does not show that his name is entitled to any hon or for the part ho look in if. In _army parlance tt was known as "Hookers night fight" of the Watiliatoltie. Here is a sam ple of the absurdities of this pamphlet, which says, "as to the loss of the enemy in this engagement it cannot fall short of fif teen hundred." The fasts are, there were 167 killed, and 180 taken prisoners:mak ing the total loss of the enemy 287. This the, reader will see leaves a discrepenoy of 1213 to be accounted for in some other way than the truth, by the history makers of Gen Geary political campaign military ex ploits. Not a word is said about tho lose of the Federal army. It is 9 notorinus fact, hundreds were slain of his division by pre maturely bringing on the engatemilint in disobedience of order. - Raving now disposed of Wauhatchie, we proceed to "Look Out Mountain," for an other of his great exploits. "The enemy were driven by a succession of terrible as soultairom their reboubts redline and rifle pits" we are also told. This battle is alone ascribed to Geary, but on page 188 of the history of the campaign, the credit is given to Oen. !looker, to whom the glory belongs. The most ridiculous part, is that Look OM Mountain never was fortified to any extent. It was used as Rename indicates, as a place or tower of observation by theenemy. There were however some trifling forttheatdons made after the battle of Chiekomagna, when ltoeencrans had to fall book ot) Chattanooga, but these fortifications were no part of the facts with which flee: Geary had to do. Any one who •Islte the summit of Look Out Mountain, look In rain Tor the redoubts and redone, so formidably 'described in this abolition document ThisnoLtilain was not token by sameseive nesabls, but by flank ing the enemy, and gaiding the summit I miles from where they were posted Oen. Grant, having twice °reeled the army of Tennessee over the river, and had it in position beyond Chattanooga ready to attract the enenLy on Mission ridge, thts "look out" nurfounded on three sides, leaving but one open to the '"relis" from which they made the best possible time, "skedadling" to Join their main forces on Mission ridge, Nothing but a feint was made against the position of the enemy, while the rear flank gained the summit, Thus the desperate fighting &emitted to.the taking of the moun tain, don't tumear in the history a. given Mt by abolition Central Committee. The large number of prisoners taken without the re cording of any slain, goes far to prove the surprise and the real character of the fight . Gen. Glearys name, is not in any way con nected with either the battles of Wouhatolde Lookout mountains, Minion Ridge, '''or Itiagold, by any historian of those cam paigns Surely it must have hare been base in gratitued to have over looked so prominent a character, it be had rendered his country the important cervices claimed for him, now by these working polnicans of the abolition party, who have put parthilar': stress upon these points, kit that be "fought alone," second that be was, "select ed specially for the ardeous work" of to klifirtillrlifablialbrlAiiiihal. be ktipt the enemy froiti l .itieleirtg a stand en Mission flidgt. Quarts, hew haw ihs bloody and hard fought battle of the next day made if Geary prevented the "robs" from making a eland on Mission ridge? Truly this committee is inoonsisteat in history and it is inconsistent with truth. At the bottle of Mission ridge, the prin: oiplo fighting of the day was on the rebels right. They were opposed by the army of Tennessee, under fiberman'e immediate command. On the eztrarne Union left, is where Gen. Thomas peirced the rebel cen tre, and Sherman doubled up their right.— The command which Geary bad in charge is the one which should haret"watched, the gap," but instead of this the "robs" Were allowed to stampede. This Central Com mittee makes it out that Gen. Geary bravely pursued the enemy atter he bad let them eaoapa At liingo!d lie was held at bay, until ChM Sherman had to again get him out of tbouble. Thus we bale an exhibi tion. of the valorous deeds, no eloquently commented upon *the abolition central committee. This grings us down to the olosing soots of thst yosr, tbst of tirlsiog ),he Confeder: itsmt out of Tossososs. Tho eossstosti9o of this Is yob largo sarollood. to Gaul ago aright bare bosh expittiot bf rito.loooallt*. TimOmer alt oo4y eseri. Mao .rooloo-of Gary OH not .ailtoor In the history of that eirtiPllgn as given faithfully by Cols Bowman and Irwin. On the 7th of May, 1964, Gen. Sherman, commenced the first of the series 'of his grand campaign. Ott,tho Ath two days af ter, we And Gen. Oearys name mentioned in connection with his division. After this time during the one himdred days of fiyAting, to the fall of Atlanta, his name does not oc cur. 'fad he performed anything worthy of note, his egotism would have in some way then given him the notorielk Ilia name appeers again in the organization for the march eastward, simply an commander of a Dl•lsion Front that'llupt LIMA Slier man arrived at Stivannah it occurs but three time, and then only SS to the politton of his division Ile if not represented as having taken any part in the many sit Irma rhos with the enemy But we iron ap proach the climax of their alisurditiesl— Geary led, in the advance on Sal/mi l:tali and received the buirender of On City." In all seriousness, what is there in all this to his credit. The city hail alicaily Veen surrendered to Ucn Sherman by the civil authorities The confederate force having fled the night previous Although Oen. Geary's division was next to Savan nah river, over which the• enemy had to cross, and the same day their retreat was heard on his front, be kept shady and for some reason perhaps, seemed to he incapa• the of comprehending it. ha to (len (Scary governing the, city, in a manner stailfactory, after its occupancy by the Union troops, is a matter.that might he of the circumstantial order. If destroying all the (rodeo fences around (tie public parks and cemetery's, the-destruction of shade and ornament trees along the thor ough fares, together with the total destruc tion by fire of more than one fourth of the beet part of the city through neglect, can be called good administrative capabilities, then he is entitled it. It is 'nimbi that we follow the forging's of Gen. Geary through the C monoas to find at toast something on which to build n milt• tory reputation. iVe have followed him down until the surrender of Gen.•Johneton and his whole orktjt to the victorious Shannon, without finding northing in Thu shape of those meritorious actions claimed for hint, by these would bo patriots of thin abolition State Control Committee. Are the people of Penneylvania, 'prepared to elevate to the Gubernatorial chair, one who has had so ninny opportunities to have made 'filmset(' Immortal in the history of his pountry, ;without accomplishing it There Is too much sober thinking among the peo.. ple to be cheated by thw "soundillk brass and tinkling cimbles" of paper titres. The effort of his militafrlklitory makers, has been-s 'abase/lime indeed It has proven as fruitless as redicillotts."The radicals will never congratulate themselves on any such "moonshine" electing h:m. Such a triumph woyd be sircumscribing the rights of the people, and placing in power a man who can be tpow`dffNuto any purpose at the bidding of his masters. Voters it is your duty to turn put and thwart the purposes of snob man by electing Heisler Clymer Goa. ernor of Pennsylvania. GREAT Dasomtidzsysts.--The opposition party is just now undergoing a 'feriae of afflictions by disaffection and rebellion with in its Men ranks, that must shortly wind up the loyal concern, which has done hum nese for five years past in the name of Lin ooln, Stevens, Stunner & Co., rind held to gether by 'rapine, murder, arson and gener al plunder,. A Lira of, political cholera is swooping ever the country. Not only has the "Oornmeet" deserted the Disunion allies, bu tone after another of their great men are falling around them The deser tion of the Chairman of their National Com mune, Mr. Raymond, is an affliction they can illy beer; while Mr. Turner, the Chair man of their State Committee in also turned against his party and is bat tling for the "Goveinnient;" and even In Maryland, where neither liberty nor De mocracy has had an abiding place for the past five year., the Chairman and a majori ty of their Slate Committee, the Governor, and the whole machinery of the State Gov ernment, are all doing heroic. sergice in t'lt name of liberty and law. The .•bread stud butter brigade," as the "dead duck" de nominates those who are opposed to Dis union and war, is becoming a formidable party, and will surely ads sister a death blow to Radicallarn.—Cleerfirld Nrpublican Tu■ RADICAL CIVIL [WAITS BILL.—Tbo Civil Rights Bill makes the negro am equal of the white man before the law No State ono ever make a dietinetion between them 11 destroys State laws, and fines a judg who deolaes according thereto. Ifs negro murders a white man or rav ishes a. white woman, he cannot now be tried before a Slate Court, without bin con sent; ho is only liable before the United States Courts. _ The negro is made a citizen _whether be In fit. or unfit; the intelligent foreigner must wait fire years. Perfect equality between the races m cre ated by it The negro may marry the white woman, No State clan prevent It. They can force themselves by it into our company In the hotels, kith° care, in the lecture room, and in the public astemblica. The power exercised in 1t can allow the negro to vote, to sit ae jurors, and to hold Mike contrary to the will of the people of the State. Congress has already gi' II them the eight to vole in all the territories. It creates a swarm of officers to eat out our eututneee The white man mnn pays them to tike oaro of the negro. It of Mal a publio proaeout or,whoie paid by theranTeimment an a epj upon the whlte man fbr th benefit Of the negro.—Ex. USIRCI TRIII BATTLI-ILAGI POR. CLAPTRAP. —IL woe understood by the soldiers and the people that the regimental battle•tlags of the Pennsylvania regiments, were to be re turned to the Adtutoni. General of the State and "carefully preserved." So says the law upon the subject. It appears, however that the Geary campaign' . managers are dragging some of them over the country to make claptrap ; to create "stirring inci dents" at Geary meeting", and to relieve the "Snieksrsvllle bete" when he gets 'Molt in big Mill vet, speowbot: d.t _Reading, two of thaw nags wore thivat upon the plitferm was "blowint offA-An • Oboes flags So be dragged about' the country by the politicians? Whitt say the soldiers f= Petrtot end Union. "STATE RIC/ZITS AND rIIIIIIRA.I. lINXON." BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1866 LUXURY AND EXTRAVAGANCE--WHO PAYS THE FIDDLER? lon years ego there resided at (taint Pleasant, in Ibis State, a young elerg)nein of the Home of linear], who Fontein!, en preached, but whose chief Moiness wax teaching school in the Mount Ple 1,1.01 lege, nt n salary of probably $5llll of ¶lBlO it year. lie dressed plainly, and,lsia font ly lined economically inn plum clie.ip turn cottage. In the winter of this cler gyman V.P• sleeted by a Puritan la:gedatore Senator in the Anierfcan Coastes,,aiol soon . this (denier unpretending elergyin in n,uni ed huge propel thins in dress.equipage,style and fashion and matte of life Ile Lain a palatial residence in Mount Pleasant nt cost of $ll,OOll, and furnished it at a coat of $7,000 more ; and the tenth hf the preacher liceamb the lea ter of the gnyoris tocratio arwrfalthionahle world about Aloert t l Pleasant, but the proaclibr had increased in proportion ab much that he must need'- hare a residence on the Capitoline Hill m iNash ingtou,and he purchased a grand residence there at it cost of $30,0110 mote So gi sod ly was this residence famished that in the summer of 'that sonic but glare,having o ken then Ira) tato the house, found at ments of gold and sttr , or lying !scattered about, to the value of $3,01,0, and u“,,To -010.'01141) 1 , 1,1 ILCIVI •11010 nod canted them off Report 01130, too, that dining the opera senoon the pi caihei's loudly Ii rod two boxes at the thentm,at the coat of $lOO a week or the] cahoot: that lie holds his weekly leNees for the gay and festiNe of that city of wealth pool luxury ; and be tween the obeisance tied ilnytifing of liver ied servants, and other extravagances, the house of the former humble minister of the gospel more resembles a palace of monarchy than the residence of an Amerman gentle man. list where does all the money conic from, and who pays for the ,—Kro kuk, ( felon,) Consfaulton THE ISSUE BRIEFLY STATED The Democrats pleall for tho Constitution without the addition of the laq proposed Amendment Tne distinionists contend for this Amend meat because iu tin partial 'operation it will favor them and the nogroes The Dewe y/Os plead for the Union with thedtighte dignity and equality of the States niiimpar ed. The disunionists say, the States lately in rebellion can not-he represented lift they adopted the proposed apendmentrand thus degraded their people down to t i he level of th . negro The Democrats plead for the Supremacy of the White Itnee, according to the law of Clod; and ale opposed to the ne gro suffrage. The disinfioniuts plead for the equality of the t tees before the law,and therefore negro soft - raga in the Territories and all the States, and the D. C The De:not:cmtm ple.k.l for Gold nod nitoer as the only Const,tullonal "legal lender The ilisunionists have flooded the COllll try with paper trash called money, and say the laboring classes "nnit.t. be satisfied with promises to pay.'' 'file Democrats plead for just and equ tl Taxes on bonds and every other kind of properly„ The de:Hinton:us say, the rich eon put their money into bonds not t tied owl thus escape all taxes of every kind Suppose all our citizens were to do this, win, would pay taxes to support the Oovernment Can you tell Mr Abolition bond bolder? The Democrats plead Ihal IllX3tloll without I cp resenintlon is tyranny. The disunionisis admit this In be ttirrect when applied to the people and Stales . of the North, but say, it "oftu.t dm row , when. applied to the people and' blades of the South under R 1.110141 Tyranny lint we don t taco the point, only that then alien partizan ''Ox is gored." N EXTINCT liner —Otto or the most re- Ilhirkable I..ces that ever inhabited the milt is now extinct In the sixteenth Cen tury, pestilence, slavery, and the cruelty of the Spanmrds, succeeded inn totally colon - minating lineal. They are desertlfed ns baring I.IVOII gigantic' inn stature, but or a e tngu burly null and gentile nature The, food Collmißted,of barley., wheal, and goat's 11111 k, and their agriculture was of the toil vet kind They had in religion which taught them of a future state of rewards and pun ishments after death, annul of good and evil spirits Theyllegarded the volcan• of Ten entre.us a place of punishment for the bad, The bodies of their dead were carefully embaltned,• and deposited in catacombs, which continue to be an object of Curiosity to those who visit the islands Their mar riage rites were very solemn; and, before engaging in them, the brides were fattened on milk. At Um present day4bese strange people are totally extinet.—Ex IRActcAr. PIITTIMIIIIP —We fitrd of n radical who wanted to employ that loyek black and kin wife The following courdr nation took place: Radical—l want to hire you and your wife—will build a brigkhoge for you ' Colored—What do you went with oat 16,4 want you to -work in the barn, chop wood, &o , and your wife to work for my wife and daughters, and' wait en. tloni, C—My wife is not very strong.wowhpou keep me an case she should die t wltho . ut a wife is ton much trouble--you Hare to run after him en much. C—l would marry your daughter. 11-oh, but my daughter is white. C—l don't care a d—n 1 I would . marry her and your wife, rather than put:ycu to any trouble The radical didn't want colored man, and colored man had no faith in radioal.—Er How CIIANOZU !--Filteen,nionths ago,the Diannionists of the Stevens-Forney cl•es, through ¶ho public press, declared that An drew Johnson was put in the Presidential chair by Providence; and them blood hounds went so far) that they tuurdered,ini• prisoned add fined a number Of men for dissenting from this opinion. Now Forney & Co denominate the President as 'the man made President by J. Wilkes Booth.'‘• What Democrat's life would bare been safe, or whit!, newspaper establishment would have 'soaped an Abolition mob, bad either uttered a senUmout like thie. The boasted ttloyalty" of the present day, as in the days of the American &evolution, 'shut • garb ' , worn by thieves, traitors, spits and cow boys, things an devoid of 'patriotism as. tiM Eaton is of Christigratty.—..Clearfield RtYNLIf tan. ' . Mil THE GREAT SLANDER One of the characteristics of n brave sol dier iv sougnaiiimity It but raioly that animations is allied to courage. The history of warfare (dourly . shows that the true hero.is 11,14 ' M neeund 10 oth ers the qualities he clams Ir iiossess too, self. Not err, however, with —lielierals' J. W G cosy, the disurnota 101111 taco for Giver nor. Ile even], 10 have reversed the rule and liras denied to Ins COlOll3ll 10111 11t 01 1110 the Col°lllolle , o virtues of the prnfoileit to e hick they , lielonged Among the gallant 111(01 freer wire ronort on de fense of the Republic were thousands who new repudiate the Radical platform" and cintlidate In order to pen peeper ex pression to their sentiments, they recently assembled us convent,ion ryl Ilarridiorg Some of the hest and tensest soldiers of the ''w;ir part seipnled in that move merit We tievpl not enumerate then, Yet ell these without exception, have been slandered m tire vilest manner- by Geary Ala disunion meeting held iu Baumgard ner's woods, near York, he ifeiouticed them all to "shysters, cowards, skid Ates, and !we irdo( or ,n nod lidded to the grey elan der the 11,1gloolis statement (lint , •lie keno it, coronet hr hdditcieni t'a ea porn unr army tuns, If " Thu; uncalled for and brutal as sault upon the brave men who Intl lied the, lives for the Union, has justly excited the most , lIICTISe indignation, not only among the voldiers and sailors slandered, but everywhere throughout the counts y Hun deed' of Republicans who intended to Nuts for i trot ' now wuobnte i heir deter run ditto to oppose him... Universal diagnst (Alone.' the publication of his Infamous speech, and Ire iv now reaping lbe ha7est that Is al way 9 gathered by those, whi, through ven om or stupidity ; depart from the Owl), which inpoliites OM in everything else, to 'rho best palicy."—Oronvhitrf Repuldwan. Tar: hint OditAl Polley.—Front Ole time of the defeat or dio- Federal party maim. Hamilton, by the Democracy., 1 by Jolter ,on, until now, the Democratic party has been the defender of the Coll,lllution and the Union Against alien and sedition Yaws, Know-Notkingisni,Now Eng land treason, Abolition and Ilthellion, the United States Itank u power and its corrup tions, the Deinocrticy haVe battled wit hunt fear or faltering, That party tins, I{lolll ALliese trials, kept its faith, toothl the good fight, and w ill yet leap the risk reward of its rategrilv Defeated, its death and hu rifel hive Ito often been proolanned hy. those sanguine place•1111111C,S. mks loVllove phut der to be synonomous with patriotism It "still lives" le rejoice in its mime and the pi ineiples that aline denotes, Wilting now, in this great crisis, to unite with 111 good men m order to save the Constitution and the Union, by a joint effort for so glo• Lams an r objecl.., yet., its history And its auhlevomenLs, its trials and its alea.tr noss to the (rile principles of our (tavern meat the rights and liberties of the people and the States—forbid that it should subor• amide ito inganizatiou or intermit to 1101110 •1t hen tillicinal restoration in all assured political fact, the Democratic party will en noble that epoch and just ify the ceremonies of iejoieing by the float and enduring pi in eiples inscribed ire its hamlets —Az TIIR lit 5100 11. 01. 9 r ,NTON.-1 . 110 news triunes from Vinshington that Edwin NI Blanton, the vilest of mankind, will now certainly leave the Cabinet. IV° have hoard this rumor no often. that we bcgrn to thy ru4t it cot. ely, and shall watt for 114 roc. lixation helium we give II our COllllllO.llCe ❑I VOlllled.loll 111111 this report collies anoth er minor which we exceedingly regret to hear It is said that Pll'Bl,lolll, JOIIII.II In tends to brook the fall of Stanton by giving hum the mission to Nladrld, in other words, to let him escape from the county unwhipt of justice If Stanton should have the good lack to get away from the, slimes, it is not at .01 likely that he will crer relit; ts. lle will hole Iris cowardly 0110119', tit sours ob scure European-town' whet e he roll !lye la (inlet on the plimiler a he has bogged, mill where the avenging hand of jriljz cannot reach 131 ill tie beg President Johnson,'fiowever, tint to befriend the criminal, but turn him loose on the moiety lie has outraged l'he Amer 'can people do not intrid ever to forgive Stanton, Seward or Joo mslt. linthne why these wretches roust be brought to justice in this life, unless in the meantime death steps in and summons them to a higher than earthly tribunal —Johnstown Detnocrrtt. Toy Roslyn'. 01 LEI . IIOBI -It is stated in some of the foreign journals that this tot rible it sonic of the scriptural era, and which was epilleinieihroughotit Europe from the tenth to the sixten'h century, is now developing itself :in 'various parts of the world with all Us/ancient repulsive charac teristics. 41 prevails CI tensiycly in two , e, dely sundered countries, the Vest Indies antliNorwity. In the latter, according to statistics recently published, 'diem aro no less than two thousand lepers The tub ercular form of the disorder, which is much more oommr, and unfortunately much more horrible than th.fl which effects the • ts, is pronounced by the physicians In -enr le. itleanwhile,• it,....i0r entisfactory to know [hot it is not eontagions Nut tides of lepers perished `miserably in the 1117 early ages, atingded to their fate in uonee quence of the universal belief that whoso ever touched them Inuit neoessaaily share in their colamity. The malady is very rare ill this coun:ry, and it is hoped that it will be a long time before we arc alhamed with this scourge —Ex —Larry Cassidy, of Wllntore, tell a good story of the Oenry family at the time of the Mexican war We ,will toll it In his own words, and Icit‘c the render to form nn opinion Shortly after the storming of Chaptiliepey n package arrived for Mrs. Cleary,who then resided nt the foot of Plane No 2, A P. It It It contained a eingnifi tient shawl valued at $1,600, which the general had abducted from some fair Meal can's dressing room Mrs. Geary Immedi ately sallied forth in lice "new robe" when she was thus accosted by a (timid: “Why, lawit-a-day. Mrs. Geary, where did yon `gee Inset n magnificent flinwl ?” •altawl," repeated Mrs. Geary, in et-l' dent contempt; ^eall triti'n - shawl, do you! Why, this is a Mexican tag which my hus band eaptured Alike risk of his life while storming the heights of Obapultepeo."— Comment is unnecessary.—EGensinur Scutt nal. THE CITY AUTHORITIES Th e disgraceful conduct of the municipal authortties of Philadelphia, so refusing to extend the !ha, hospitalities of this metropc -lis to the l'tn silent of the Ironed Stat...., bar covered dnui with orerhistung shame 311 , 1 contempt Under the Inch of party prejnolnee : 11l cute poor, ww . ki caiEinis meanly skulked away, ant] had not the mainlines. to (Meet Mel confront public -Henn tomtit upon the subject Tine Mayor with characteris tic etneardicii, tleti-from the etty,-in order to, wooed the importunities of those, who though they differed wino Andrew Johnson iti policy, desired to avert, if possible, the impending dungrace Which the course of the anthornies threatened to firing upon their homes and ftresules Honest impartial, un inrejnnlneed Olen felt that a great wrong was being peritetilted by those who wore be traying the tirtyt reposed in them by the people, They Cannily bought to pungent the consuminalmni of 'tins crowning infamy of Radicalism But their tutted were power less. The Mayor sank down into the low est depths of disgrace The city commits wa I lowed even deeper no the nitre . thintigh giant, and Earrognit, and Meanie, Mere to hi; erect eed. suds by sole with Oar l'ne'dilt nit of the 'United SWUM, these con [mondani° pan limns crolsly and pointedly insulted the Chief 'Magnin rate of the Itepub lie and it, heron. defender'', mot by their 1110110,4 Made tlielli 4 elS es the laughing stork of the entire city Never was such a rebuke administered to faithless Iliadic servants', as that which the Mayor and cdy Councils received from the people of Plinlailelphia yesterday Without their countenance and presence, the demonstra tion nits grand and magnificent, annul the only thing that could have possibly detract ed from the ovation would hove been tine sudden appearance m Ito 1111ahl of these skulking officials, who sine now justly regar ded wnth scorn MIMI eollielept by all whin take an honest pride in the good mime and fain fame of our city —.dye. . SOLDIERS FRIENDS Forney bawls loudly fur the nomination of soldiers by the Republican party, but he has not yet brought forward a soldier for the United Stales Senate Ile..."oposes to take that position himself lle thinks sol diers good enough to fill the eiluaty' officeit but in all this great Common Yoh, which sent front two to three hundred thousand Yvon to the field, he has not yet found ,one soldier as wsll fitted for and as well entitled ton seat in . the Senate, as himself! Modest man! Great friend of soldiers Curtin is alllicted,in the same way. Ills friedehip for the soldiers is unbounded There is nothing he wouldmot give them, except whayie wattle himsClf. lle would give them the right to vole alongside of a negro , to sit in the jurA-box with "Ameri can oitisens y African decent," or to send their ahildren to school with piccaninnies lie would even allow them .to be elected to the Legislature, if they would pledge them selves in advance to vote for him for the Senate. But out the thousands of officers to whom he issued commissions during the war, MA out of the hundreds Of thousands of privates whose names are enrolled in the Adjutant General's office at liar shurg, Curtail 611.1 not been able to find a 'ogle Mee chum he prefers to himself furl un ion Dminterented soul! With all his bad liAltti, he iv willing to :eke upon himself the labor of representing Petinsylvnii . bo in the United States Senate, rather than see the position imposed 11110 e enure poor mil ileir ! If three Republican leaders were Mincer,' In their profeemiona, would they not prop°se come moldier of ilintinetion for the Senate, nuatend of nh oggling to secure them /Inn eleetton ' Wraan 11 ww, it Hive 801.011S1118 —The pay department announces ds read moss to pay the buttntses to negro soldiers, granted by the IZuntp Congress in June last, This will dram the treasury so low that the whue soldiers will 13,0 to wart many months yet for their hu tams. 'Congress provided ,a u nty for the bite soldiers out of "any Money la the usury not other wise appropriated ," but us the negro bill nine passed first, lire Juicy soldiers' claims must all be paid before the while soldiers eon reach a dollar. Nom, of the Government officers are re sponsible for this; they most obey the laws no passed by the Rump Congress The blame is entirely •with the Disunion majeri ty, who considered ft their first duly to reward their 'colored brethern" because In the war they '•bore off the palm "(!) Let it be receolleated, too, that the sum of' $3OO each, was appropriated for the negroes, al thoughnome of them served three•yeers, and that only the sum of $lOO was set aside for the white soldiers of 1861 and 1862 for three years' service. Can the soldiers of Pennsylvania vote for Stevens, Lawrence, Wilson, and others of 66e Disunion Con gressnien who have beenbenontinated, after such shabby treatment! Can they vote for their candidate—Geary—who approves the whole course of the Rump, and agrees with Thud. Stoversl in everything ?—l'almoi and Croon A PI:EASING INClDENT.—Yerterday, a poor one-legged Confederate soldier, still clothed with the remnants of his worn gray jaeltiet, sank dew* exhausted on the steps of, the Story building! at the corner of Camp nod Gravier streets. A Federal ser geant Passing on some distance, in order nopo attract attention, quietly returned and slipped a contribution into his hand. Debeately and unostentatiously as this was done,. handsome pair of eyes wars watchfbg and wit:rased the little tribute of charity and kindness All honor to our brave mol dier! Such as he eon never be otEenemies and such eels, by challenging our admire tine and our sympathies, do more to restore and consolidate the olden "Union," than all the ft ectiman's bureaus, re,onstruction committee., nail Radical legislation 'that could be crowded into a century,,, When will 'our "'New England political debtors learn: that kindness is after all, the touch stone of tiU Soutbern_eharacter, and that no 'tying !People more thoionghly emmempli the 411 and beautiful maxim that ./lYper.t.omeh or kitulno. maker the world stkle. ° —N. 0, Titrler.. —Geo. .ILIVby Sod% iota declined the Presidene: be Ilreinia and.iieuteolur Railroad to with% be wee letedielcoted. NO. 35. AT THE LAST, The stream to calmest wheat it nears the tide And dowers the sweetest at. the OTTlgidll, All4l btrth eno.t mursral at close And saints dirtnesf when they pass away Morntelv for ely: Lot a holier tarn folrletl robe of holm : And Weary man uaaa ever love her bent., For normal; e kilt to toil, but 1:10:1„to rest She coulee from Heaven, And on her wings dnth bear A holy fro gronee,J,ke the I,renth of propel. ; Fooletepe of otßgele fallow or her trace, --T. glut-the Isoary a)auf Ley in pll.O. All things aro hushod beta., her as she throws OW earth nod .ky her mantle of repose, There 19 a calm, a beauty, and a power, That Morning knows nut, in tho kro'ning hoar "Until tho ening" wo mt.t imp and toil, Plough life'.l stern furrow, dig the weedy tool, Treed with , sad feet our rough and thorny, way, And bear the limit end burden of the day. Oh' when iiur Petting, my we glide, • Like Stnniiier ening down the golden tide; And leave behind u•, an the Fenn away, Swea, blarry twilight round one +leering clay. - TA:I - HAT AND THE OTHER. 9,11 y ceded Veno tie ensiteklyr —The Ilun2nrinn Cofl4 ttktion of ISIO to to • Lo reatoril. --Mr. , . Jeff, roon Dar Is ha+ rotrirtool to For Il==!! —llan. Das al tl Barnett hal bran chalen V. S. Senator !roan Texas --The eorn crop in Virginia hint been seri ourly 111)1trol by the draught —Marry mg a woman far her beauty is like outing a bird for its singing. ----A treaty of peace ha been signed by Ann (rub Pr...in, Italy and Bavaria. —fin rder has ',gen le.nnl abellehing the Pre, est. Marsha' General's bureau. --In CiriciiitAr during the first lon days of August, 999 persons died of cholera. —Congress is going to pay itself • I, ghor solory for keeping the Union dissoli ed. —Tho rats hare euddlinly dropped Ueueral ()rant us o candidnte for the Presidency, —Paper turn up in small inch bits makes a good bed as a subetttute fur hair or feathers. —The hop crop of Otsego county N. Y., is ("Woofed of 3,000,000 pounds wurths96o,ooo. --A spools) session of the Legislature of gnat)) Carolina will be ionvened on the 4th of September. —A revolutionary neither, awned Frederick Craider, IL lately dial near Meadville, Mide,tt ho ago of 108. —Mart;ctl, Mr. John Strang° to Miss Mary Strange, Strange, maul "nu next thing tuny be a at, anger. —"lIow is coal this morning?" said a man in a coal-yard to an Irishman, "Black as iror, ho labors," said Pat. --"W eke up hero and pay your tedgings," rani the deacon, as he nudged a sicedy stranger with the contribution bun. —lion. A. M. Clapp, Abolition postmas ter of Buffalo, N. Y., ban been superseded by Joseph Candor!, adonnlstration. —A man maketh a very wry face over a gill of vinegar, kut he takettk down a quart of whis key without o twist of to neut. —Geary and Curtin enyir—"Bring on your /rout—Otero is no pomade objection to it!" re tho people ready tor the question —A North Carolina farmer hai ehipp North (his ooze. over 600 'barrels of dri blackberries and 2000 bushels of dried apple. —On the 20th the Disunionlets hoW a "mass inoehing" at Lebanon. There wore I.l4r iy-ets persons present—Geary himself making thu 38th. —(/rapo-growor I ungworth was introduced tho other day, to poet Longfellow. Of the like ness M . thou limes, the poet maid: "Worth makes tho man, tho want of it tho fellow." —The ,S'n facility Unarm is guilty of gross adultation of Parson nrownlow when it calls him "a fanatical buffoon," "a phenomenon of Indeconcy ," and "a loud mouthed ruffian." —A fashionable but ignorant young lady, desirous of purchasing a watch was shown a Tory, beautiful one, too shop keeper remarking that it went thirty-six hours. "What, in ono day?' --Congress meanly cuts off the salary of Minister Homy, bovine° ho wrote a private letter in defence of the President, but Increases Its own salary, earned only by abusing the Pm. html. —Congress votes to Increase Its pay for pro tecting British commerce Ny Preventing our yes sole sold during the rebellion from coming book under our Bag. 8. H. Wilson wined for that measure. —The commissioner of agriculture reports that, notwithstanding they unfavorable weather during a part of the season, the crop tn the North, Northwest and portions of the South will be unusually large. —The Mobile Advertiser nye the body of • federal soldier has Leon dug up near there com pletely petrified. There are minty bold federal soldiers living, but this one Is a boulder. He was &hero of Limestone Ridge. —At Memphis, on Saturday, U. S. Tax Cullpotor Wood attempted to kill Col. Galloway of the Avalanche Newspaper. Wood would have been lynched but for the Interference of Gen. Forrest. Its Is under arrest. —That was • provident and affectionate father who seou'redW:,ll9o policies In an acciden tal insurance company upon the Hewer his Riv en small children, andhent the darlings for • holiday excursion on • New Jersey tailwind; —A Sly Job.—Congress prop.** to fund lho national debt sod sell sorphu gold, allow ing • percentage for the huskies. of °insiders, and raises the pay of members to Ave thousand dollars. 8. F. Wilson unotioned that piece of Rascality. —A young Vermonter was assented, for d2unkenness, In Chicago, a few • few days since. On his person wore found 29 photographs of young ladies. while his clothes were staged Nil of love letters which he had received in answer to matrimonial advertisements. —The Lebanon Adawsiser says Gait "Ono. Geary pot a Board over a spring to keep the wa ter nice for himself and GA and seade4he pri vates get their water nod drink from a dirty strata." and addo that ..be 110./T treated • psi. vats with even ordinary nowt" —Our friend B. P. Myers, of the Bedford, gazette, who was bitaly nominated as theDemo cratie candidata for the Blabs Sonata In the Be& ford and Somerset district, will be trioniphandl elected,. he deserves to be. Tio IF be no. stroke against That . Stevens and d kez not, --Prewident Johnson hat Wiped a panda _illation abolishing inertial law to Team, ,ilia, last State in which It iota. and piGli= that -'inerunreetion is it guieid, Chit order, and trasqullliy and' btvti nithefity itier exist, in and thronshoot the whole ett t he Stater." THE KENTUCKY INNCIENTION. • No event can be more gratifying lb a we Itrinecrat, or indeed, more encouraging, than the result of the recent election in Kentucky. Always intensely hating the abolitionists at Intuit, but sadly sod Ireful. ly represented by an metier and enarropii one gang of petition adventurers, the he reditary lomat Llemocretsyetliis has finally secured that freedom of voting which it lout when Lisools, by the aid of his hire ling troops, crushed it out. Never wie a tamer or more despotic sot committed than Burnside the despotic loot of the John Brown party, enacted when he put the State under martial law is August 18 68 • only three day" lisfere the election for Bow oraor,, This atrocious amt was openly ap proved of by the New York Tribune end the entire John Brown press. By means of tins military edict Bramlette was elected tlevernZir, and bolds MI other until next fall, when the now diseuthrtilled Democracy of that State will mike short work of their eat, idge box Executive. Four years seem a long time to endure snob an outrageous itult, not to speak of the innumerable wrongs whioh be has been the weans of -bringing uptea iieetycicy! But it is often *mei- to submit to temporal l y eitils than to fly to there we know not of. ••The mill. of the gods grind slowly, but they grind ex ceedingly fine " Such follows as Bramlette Bfirbridge, Palmer, etc., have mink, and are already sinking unto that hated obscu rity "where the passion of the war found deem They strutted their brief brier on . the singe of public affairs only to fir their names in the pillory of Infamy. The world would have remained unconscious that such malevolent • aml petty tyrants as Palmer emu Ifurbride ever lived, bed it not been (or the John Brown party and their siivage war upon American civilisation. "Their memory may serve to point a morel and giro a tole," otberwtee their names might have been - left In that almmrity from which they emerged and into which they have agam disappeaied. In another respect this election is worthy of note. Not only have the upstart tyrants received a blow from which they will never recover, but a persecuted man, Judge Du has been voted for and elected to office by the very people who have been so inso lently told two years ago that they should not be allow to dojo. Thee, has time made all things even. His majority will be at least forty thousand, and this has been oh taAted in spite of severe opposition, when all the elements of dieaffection joined to 4e, feat him. The campaign consisted mint; in denouncing Duvall as "The rebel candi date," and his supporters es "the traitor party," but despite the malignity of Pren tice and the perfidy of others, the result is a glorious victory It is but justice to say, that not a little of this suttees. Is owing to the able earliest labors of the Lou isville Courier, which has parried the blows and confounded the sohpistries of the oppe. anion party in a westerly manner. This victory in Kentucky ought to 'owl en couragement everywhere, and teach us to labor patienly ind wait for the harveat.—t The despotic 'aloud has been lifted from that Slate, and the southern State* have only to bide their lime for the deliverance whioh, we trust, thawed' near.—K. Y. Lay- hook. THEIM BOOM IS SEALED. Their is evidently great trepidation in the Itaditial ranks all over the country. c r They begin to see lb.k hand-writing on the wall—hence the nsanir`apiicals of their press, not only h e In Pennsylvania, but throughout the entt e North. The Nation al Union Convention is a greet @entree of trouble, oipl'they are resorting to all possi ble, means to counteract the hattpy effect it has already bad on the public, mind. And,as if to verify the truth of the old adage that "misfortunes never comes single," they are now perplexed beyond measures at the call made bye large number of the army ellitiers —the fighting Generals of the war—for a Soldiers' Convention to tle held at Cleveland on the 17th of September, to mmtain Presi dent Johnson in his patriotic efforts for a aterationof the Union. They also see that the great Democratic party of the country was never more firmly united, sad that thousands midterm of thousands of con servative • Republicans are joining heart add hand with them to crush out of exis tenee the Radical faction which has driven the Notion to the very verge okbanitrueto7, anarchy and destruction. • A ll this is so apparent that Greeley mouFirliver the gloomy prospect for his party. Forney like a betainite, and is ready to call upori the mountains to fall upon and bide him fromige)?rstgazo of an insulted and betrayed ople. The Beast Butler froths and foams at the thought of the fearfial retribution which awaits him, and Stevens, in his wrath and malignity, vents hisepleen on the foreign Population who cannot be induced to swal low the negro.' In the MOW time, the con servative element of the country is hourly gaining strength and effielenoy, and by the time the election arrives, Raton° and mo mentum will be irresistible, and the halls of Congtess will be purged 'of the traitors and disunioniste who have for to long a time been permitted to lord and tyrannise over this goodly hardier of our Whirs. Their doom is sealed. Beishasur-like, the leaders of the redlialqarty are trunk.- Hag with fear. Their cohorts are boosna ing more and mare demoralised. •The light of truth Is breaking la .pod do eolintry, and dispelling the dark cloak °furor and impart ition. The people ails aroused to • sense of their danger, tad they are deter. mined that .the Uaion and the Constitution shall be preseried, and that thainesales of both shall be put down. It la the co& mammas of all this that has shriek terror hero the Radical munp, and °eased the trep idation and'ale4i "Which le appsreat in all the writings sod apetgbes of disosion Isad ore. Courage, Democrats, we here the vantage ground; the day is our own. The country will be redeemed, regenerated and dime• thralled from the foul Manny whit& bum paralysed its energies and Imaged its sob- Mama for the last lee or sLayears.-,Lem• mar /Mailipedbr. , thltlTlOX.—Jusi sbontAbis doe the sew oniony will be doodled with inewediaa sp. peals to the'peasions and prokedlene a Ike people. They will be fans} in the loakiel papers of Wks day and their anstionsering petal:dilate. It *es., oontneted attaini of grata cruelly to the "Ger nitro" plyl ear nieo,perparetsd ky the riciPlii-KV will be set teeth in glided selfortS, Lli tile kaaginatloom of the dlispetaliFin t , severely tosted - to "firshiltito , .00 OAR; re s 7 for Om riod: Ire 114;1114, ' 4 1 111 1,' , ♦ wore ofantoss files eta wilitigi - ' IP? Well digested plea a 4 , , of Congress. , to diikitOio iii 4 a it i4 4 public' from that own tiadia .1 ' know that tboit Want ' toilkiii)4thil: . oak with the rem* a th•trimos vaiug ' timibeeht.: la' "the R4•l ,— ‘6 l .dt s; "pods' wietro'aid think suivirttlidta " to.—Jeasubson Disso.ire.