NEW STAR-SPANOLENSANNER-TO SUIT TN& TIMES. tirniTTNl ANDMNPIC AIN) . TO tit '''NN* NA TIoN," IIY U. It. (4111011 . , ORAVTOK, ILL. "All.hdil the . 1 la n t big tie."—[Ar:Y. Tribune 0, flay ann you see since the war's , deadly blight, Via Ono honored flag, without sadly re gretting The foto of o' people who Pohl their birth- A n d Tin, behold now the sun of their liberty lettinir And the e f ax w' now pay (near two million pr day ), 0 i ve 3 'Hoof that fanatics and tyrants bear avrtty— While the Star Spangled Banner in mock my WaVOR, ow b o nd holding , tyrants and taz•rldden The bravo aoldiers who relight amid trials So Sore As they thltight—lbr tire old'Oonatitiatien and Union; Ani hoped they would see when their porile were o'er, The States all united In frilmdly comma niun. But now they behold from our Union of old, Many iitetee stricken out and by "nigger'" controlled, While the Siar.Bpangisd Banner deridingly WMVOO, O'er a country destroyed by fanatics and MEM 0, what would our tires, who for liberty bled, Think t., nee their homes sunk In suoh vile degra teflon t- The South ruled with bilyonets, powder and -teal, And the North under bodcls of most gal. ling taxation/ Could they rialliitheir greet FLlle their °baleen are slaves, To these shoulder-strapped tyre/via and bond-holding knaves? While the star Opengled Banner (loth taun tingly wave, O'er thew war blighted realms of liberty's grave. The black Mongrels icy they will force the Staten si!l To accept "manhood suffrage" and !'mis• cegenation For without it they know that their party must fall, And down go all hopes of our Mong tQl "New Nation ," And they know if they can't get old Useless 8 Want To be their Dictator, their schemes must avaun t And the Star fipangled Banner in truth s may yet wave, O'er the land of thar free and the home of the brave. The Materiel Papers The Springfield Register has adopted the plan of illustrating political issues with suitable engravings. in the last ig,oo or that piper it gives ito rtadera a "picture' representing a tax collectors ofot•; with a bondholder and a poor blacksmith who lost one leg in the war, standing at the counter paying their taxes The following oGOmersation nat urally takes place between the tax col leotor, the boadholder and the black smith : Too Collietor —"Now Mr Jaycook we are ready for you, sir Your moneys tad credit above $120,000, your house fureitureo officio fixtures, horse and buggy, and some other little things foot up $3,575 more. Total, $123,576. Da duct $120,000 held in 6.20 government bonds, which are not taxable, and the bul,tuce is $3.675 Your State and county tax on this last amount is $71,00. Cheok ! All right sir." “Now Mr Bellows, 1 have your receipt ready. Your 'money's and oredita show $B5O, shop fixtures and tools. $1. 875 , household furniture $869, horse and wagon $275 Total taxable for State and county purposes, $3,850. Tax $78." Bellows. —.flow la thio t ' Jaycook's personal property amount. to $12 0 , 575 , and he pays only $71,00, State and county tax, while I with less than four thousand dollase._all told, am leaked to pay $6,00 more than he?" Jupoook.—"Ab, my good friend, you see my $1,20,000 in bonds are not taxa ble. In the countries extremity, with other truly loyal men, 1 came to the rescue with my greenbacks. 1 loaned my bleeding country, threatened with destruction $y rebel! and copperhead., my money, and with that gratitude which becomes a grateful people, 'en gaged in the interest of God and human ity,' 1 am-exempt. Thus " tt should be with a magnanimous and christian peo ple." Bellows—" An d 1, , in the country's real extremity,, bad no greenbacks to loan, but I shouldered • • musket and gave my body to the cause, a legs of which 1101.134 the geld at Shiltuth as you see , but a 'grateful people engaged in the internal of God and humanity,' 'hare no taz exemption for 'Me.. This may be all sight but Jowl oes IL" itliook,—..But you see Mr. Bellows, ciliae was a voluntary act. I could not haTllkOluk compelled to furnish the mon ey. You volunteered, it G trul, but you could have been oompelled to go." Vettelee.— , "Yad, ; air, - I did volunteer when lay services were nodal, Ilia Your voluntary sot-wabedrea*--addle Cie rebel hon alas Malta dawn—titan you felt Cure diner:We; investmedt wits wife..-- The PollOy Which exempts your linu 2 drdia eititpfaePtialroot (option, and at the lagnW tinte'lexes 'my -low .hundreds, is ?tided Id villainy, air, You footed 6ret44iiitii m • worth pow ,truct , 7 dente on kite dc4r. *To now dol-, lark r 40,11•31.1,fh gold, hi- mutest. •1 . rtehel*'lllfel i nd give , s Hob to the ea ‘ ido' holds mY and went to work. hi their 'licit pert, lam nude to pay full nattoolllJ Slate and County taxes on all my little , I _ onrit t re y . _ 11 1 Itr i e f rltt cr =IS MI U VOL. 13 RELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY AUGUST -7, 1868. NO. 31 posseesions, while your bonds, pur alleged with depreciated greenbaols are exempt. This nice little game of 'Got and humanity,', superfine loyalty and patriotic disinterestedness, is downright robbery, air, and they who uphold it are no better than the thieves, sir, and we °fee laboring millions intend to blook it, sir, with our ballots next November. We will sink any man or any get of men, who stand up (or it, so deep that the eouod of Gabriel's trump will never, reach him. Do you mind that Mr. Jay cook." Exit dieptitants. 'The Collector, solus.--"It strikes thin individual, very forcibly, that it ain't all wind that blows tipt of that bellows." Steven. a Sensationsltst The vagaries of Thad Stevens are won derful and nest finding out. • Yet he dif fer: widely from the mass of Radical leaders who are too stupid to eomprs• bend the financial situation of the coun try. These leaguers imagine 'that the taxpayers and producers will allow their pockets to be picked in a legal way for the benefit of the bondholders, be cause they have born almost everything else rd the way of outrage upon popular rights by the party now in powey. Their theories of freedom, whilst tramp ling tJ►q,CoUstitutfon and the laws under th‘eir feet, have been patiently Aistened to by a tax-ridden people. But when the issue is egarely made by the Demo cratic party upon the matter of reducing the public debt by paying the bi . iindif, which are not speoifically made payable in coin, in toe lawful money of the country. Mr Steven. sees the eteengie of our position at once and falls in. lie knows that the. people—the working men of all spo.rtiem—whilst equable of receiving unmoved largo quantities of Congressional blatherskite and .fine the cries, are fully awake to the situation when it ie proposed to make them slaves for life to the bondholder, Without be tog more honest than the men who ma nipulate Grant the bondholder's candi date, Mr. Stevens is simply less stupid than they In hie place in the lleure, Mr. Ste rens eatd : "If be knew thirliliy party in the country would go for paying in cola that which was psyablo in motley, thus en banning the debt ono-belf , tf be knew that there was suoh s platform and such a determination on the part of any of bis own party, he would go with Frank Blair, and vote for toe other party. lie would vote for no such speculation in favor of large bondholders and mil lionares lie repeated, though it was hard to say, that if Frank Blair stood on the platform of paying secording to the contract, and that the Republican can didate stood on the platform of paying bloated speculator. twice the amount agreed to be paid to them, and of taxing his oonstituente to do so, be would vote for Blair, even if a wors t .) WWII than Sey mour headed the ticket." [Muoh ex citement and senstatlin ] Mr. Ross—The Democratic doors are still open, the gentleman man be taken in. [Laughter] Cons roe CONSUMPTION.—Est ail that the mind requires of the most nourish-, ing food, soak as fresh beef, lamb, oys ters, raw eggs, fruit, vegetable., and three tiores I . day take a glees of egg nog, made as rich as the patient can bear. Avoid all alcoholic drinks. Bathe twice a week In water egreeablyikwarm, and in a warm room. After bathing rub the body and limbs with sweet oil.' Ex ercise daily in the open air; walking is the beet. Stand 'erect, efercise the arms and lungs freely ; keep the midd cheer ful; take freely trf the beet cough medl eine, and consumption will be* stranger to your household. _ For making the beet cough syrup, Lake one ounce of thorough wort, one ounce of flaxseed; simmer together in due quart of water until the strength to entirely extracted. Strain carefully ; add one pint of best molasses sod half a pound of loaf Sugar; simmer them together, and, when cold, bottle tight. It. is the okespeot, best, the safest =Maine for coughs now 'ever used.— A few doses of one tablespoonful qt a tittle will alleviate the most distressing sough of the lungs, soothes and allays Irritation, and if continued subdues all ';endepqy to oonsumpUon; itratilte up entirely the whooping sough, and no better remedrean be foiled for , oroep, asthma, bronchitis, and, all affecttloas,ot 'the lungs anti throat. Thousands:tit Preston' hese may be saved every, year by this cheap and simple remedy, as Well Is lhousailds of dollsre which would otherwise be spent In the par. ,phase of sostrusna, which are both use less and dangerous, - C] • • "lITI.A.TE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION." What has been Done with the Money ? The Easton (Penn.) Aryua treks the following pertinent questions, Tax payers, laborers and business men will make a note of them °vet. Num hundred millions of dollatv have been oolleoted by the United States Government, in the shape of taxes; sine. the close of the war! Just think of it! One half of the National debt! Where has the •ntogey gone? Is the Jebt any lees Igo! !Cu more than it was three years ego While Oongress has been making the negro the white manlreaq - ail, amt teem eiruating and impose-bin*, fifteen hundre" millions have been token from Me pockets of the farmers, and mechanics and the labor ers of the North! The people were told by the Radical patriots, and thieves, and bummers, that the close of the war would see a restored Union, with peace and prOsperlty and happiwees. Well, the war ended three yearet ago, the South laid down its arms and surrendered, but Radical hostilities have not dense& The tight still goes on against eight millions of white men, women and children, and it costs the country just Five Hundred Millions a eyear:--that's the price. What has become of these fifteen hundred millions 7 Where have I,liey gone to Have they gone to pay the pubite debt? NO. Not a bit of it How a it tbat to spite of all OW tax 1111013—notwillbtaading ono half of the *hole Nations: debt hes beenraisea friar, the sweat soil toil •of the people—.the bunion ia se _heavy, as oppressive; as crushing now as ever Fellow-catizens, these are questions for , you to answer Don't allow your self' to ho hoodwinked. Don't let dust be thrown in kour eyes by conspirators who are stealing your rights and your mousy at the same time. When you aro asked next November for your vote in favor of Oraqt, who is the tool of a crazy Congress, demand to kno . w what has become of the fifteen hun dred millions of dollars taken out of your pockets during the past three years. Ask them the reason why the South, now that the negroes are free, produces only one-half what lt formerly raised Aak them if the Fifteen ❑uudred Mil lions have not goon to support a grew es gro boarding house In the south 1 And to support a standing army over the South, in orde'r that we may Lase— Negro J41149f1! Negro Governors Negro Legtaaeures Negro Glovernrnents ' Instead of appropriating t►eee fifteen hundred millions of dollars to the pay ment of the public debt, they have been upended for the maintenauoti of a grand system of pauperism, black pauperism, tied Congress bag just voted to °outdone the stu A reisdows robbery soother year What is the remedy • You have it in your owu bands. Vote for men for every office, from President down, who are opposed to thee° outrageous swindles. Vote for a President and Congress who will agree to— aboisith the iVegro Bureau and let She negro alti ft fn. th em sel yes. Aipluvls the expensive standang army in the South r` But Grant won't do this. Fleur. be Ifise no opinions of his owu, and will do just as Congress directs. Insanity In the Seymour Family The Radical prove, remarks the Cis ohlnott Enquirer for want 9f eomethies to militate aga,latit so pure I patriot and gifted statesmen• Horatio Seymour, have mot attest t ealarvv . that the family bate • peed spoeiteon to theafrity. This slander has already been exploded. But It le true the Seymour , /Atom st Itiod of insanity which, to the Itadioalisind, is of a peoulier ohmmeter. It manifests itself ins devotion to law, order, pod goveramestiadr pure Democrat io faith. While liorat4 Seymour was ,Govenaor of Now York, during the rebolliou. l e ill fOrated the "lots lamasted" that New YOrk, •as • State, had spree , sight* whiff' , the Federal Goveressont wee bound to ',spook, Odell deeillrettsis a clear proof to the ,CeustitotLoh-htopk ors that the 6svertior• was 146 mm—for, acieoFding to their own login, ( it ime grime to tolerate the ides that • a sov ereign State posseeted say rights„, what ever. Governor Seymour was more the, a inoliiiklit/A-the. Waaltiogton, despotism, add ► the Amps em Sow ble capture E - tetly hilad.,►eaes theithatred of gao l) Seymour.—Council Bluif(lowa) Dever °oat. Slanders Upon Seymour If the Rauioal journals can wage t o stronger fight agitil'isi 'Governor Seymour than is manifest in the twiddle Olen( ht. "sympathy with IleOPSIliOD" and his 'lel lowahip with the rioters" in thie city, their you weapons will show how weak their sauce really is. When a paper like 4be Albany Evening Journal . leads off in attache like thesi, the ogee oan be dis pelled of at epee h g exhibiting the dose and antidoje in parallel cabmen Fur ;nstanee ; what the Evirting Journal now charges against Governor Seytnoures diu tinctly denied four years ago, when the events were fresh in the 4fftlolto mind, and When Ilfe - Jotsfacir Ma no Abject - or interest but to tell the truth. :zee what the Journal says new, anti what it seal then: I. , Vons the Albany Evening iminta stair 18; 'DM "rh o mime the ri MIL Seymour wen, down there. Flail I. been Andrew Jerk son, -.lnstead, then would have been ni palaver with Iht bloody criminal,. ile would betedio ponied them by s u m. other method, th , ,it by promising al they asked. * * Look at the scene Rebel armies mus tering ; rebel con scripts hastening to the field ; rebel en ergies , gathering On the other Kand— la bleeding Union, a palsied army, brave and daring, but re ducted, A nation calls for help, It decrees assistance A yelping crew. filled with-I-be spirit of rebellion, thirsty for blood, fired w Alt rage, -resist theit country's pleas and demands, and assail be °Rimini of the nation and the Moo cent poor of theta city What doer Horatio Seymour do! Does be point them to the oblige. dons of the e iti retie the dangers of 'be nation, snit the im periled brethren tot, the army f Net ao all It would seem so' [Prom the Albany &ening Journal in Juiy, I NMI ] Oo•ernor e y oin a o PROMPTLY "DE- I'LA It I NO THE PI- M' IN A STATE OF I N SU R It ECTION," tlol2lllibUleti largely I to the auppreaututs if OM mob It gore mineetale legal ef ficiency to the mill try arm, and emt nleJ the civil au horit ire to Utll3 that power with terrible diem IT SHOWED ' ALSO. T II A I' I T !WAS lIOVEhNOIt iIEYNIOUR S PUR POSE TO 0 [YE NO (IU A R T I: h" TO VH k RUFFIANS who raised upon the roccattints of a pupil tar esoltmeut to rob and murder The exeret-o of the pow er Thum called Into net-vice was ACCI The • • insurreci inu" hail been quelle . /. \l Olt II It WI BEEN OV E R POW EKED Law and ..r.ler hove T Rl - EP. and the RIOTOUSLY DIS POSED evey where hare RECEIVE!, A LES'ON , A II ICH "'HEY WILL NOT ,SOON FORGET. cient simply to slit the .Imrnar acrd similar s'teets to fill their own words, if they did not display tbt digestive powers Liir ostriches, and , actually thriVe on this tied of diet. It they de not remember their own words of commendation, obey would do well to recall the fact that Lineoln and Stanton publicly testified to Ottrernnr Seymour's prompt and valuable aid in seeding troops to the defence of the milieus' capital; that 'filtepublican Legislature, by se almost unanimous vote, thanked blot ; that • Republican Mayor, Opdyke, se theltisioriso of oDentoorstey in the Gai ted Suites" has written, °publicly re °ruled the accusations that had been falwly made against Governor Soy , °moor, and !kid s warm tribute both to "his motives and notions, showing them "to be of the highest and most worthy "character." 11.1.esesraliderous sheets will not receive Lb. testimony of promi nent men in their own Tarty, they will at least accept the Irrefutable fame of history. It is • fact that Governor Sey• mour was in advance .of any ltadioal Governor In the North in abodinglroops to Washington. It is shot that he com plied more promptly in every requisition for me. than any Radical Governor In. any State. It is a hot, as the Albany Jounial toenail', that his pirompt action in thrs . oity during the draft Mote "eon trlbuttad largely to the aupyreseim of the mob." if stale slanders and long ago-refuted ealumnise are the only wee pone upon which Redioattivut relies to win this fight, sad they as Its osely weapons, the Artery for Seymour sad the Deasserstlopitty is assured es-day. —N. Y. ~Warld. iterroitri Qussrions. 7 -To ask st seer shoat if lib lise ever tilsealod ► esstotoer. Ti elk a dosser bow may inflow be lute billed. ' ,„ ts:sisk a 'servr it,,lao $'K 'told a lie. TI ask a subssillo“ if be bas paid the printer. T6' let Willa Ilts is of boy of Isis oort,espoodeists. Ti ask a young Jody whether she wooed like a, blab. •,' , • , - To asks saga 'to 1 16110 74 bis kpbekei bask. • CIE THE NEW SENNACHERIB The freedmen came boastfollyllown to the poll. And hid pockets were filled with the things he had stole, And the whitee of hid eyes shown with ter ' rible glee. And.th• seems of hie presence were awful, yule see. Like the leavings of wardrobes, et earliest day, - Ills cohorts appeared in a shabby array; Like the leavings of dinner thrown out on the ground, Said cohorts at nightfall could nowtrein 'be 'found For the rildlions of red give themselves to the blast, And the freedmen grew frightened and pale as the passed ; %ear thelr sedst4visi eyeshot hil-41•arairs was killed, Mid the rage of the club-room was suddenly stilled. Oh' courage that faints at the chance o at frey Oh ! daring that dwindles ardwithert away; Oh !oarpat bags fambllsed, and miming ler aro 11— Oh ! passionate R il g rimea—the thoroughly "loll." —Kew Orleans Paper THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER —Arariee Ma its keeper, to' Burialt those who wish dead. —A french paper advertising ftly . a j p ed itor, promisee double pay while in pri-on. —The moat thoioeigh elevjetor in a fashionable hotel he the clerk who makes out the bells. -- —How doe!. Seymour stand? asks the Duda° Expi,ss, and the World replies without staggering I --Orthodoxy, said the late wise and witty Aichhahop of puhlia Orthodoxy ,in my dozy. ilaterodely is another man's dozy. —lleffaloes are roaming the karma prairies in herds of thousands, and are com• Mg eery near to the settled portions of the --111 m. Bullet's ernes eyes enable him to read the Chicago platform two ways— for and against negro suffrage, and fur and againsltho payment or the mations! hinds In gold. •• , The tiouth Canines Loginlature has 10 white and 12 negro Senatori and 44 white and RO negro 'Representatives. Nearly all the Lla.oke me unable to rtaid or write. —:Misr Oria►ne has a Seymour Legion. Everybody almost belongs to it and ham the utmost sonttoenee that he le doing some thmg to elect a Vesident. which, no doubt, us the fact. An it is ail right to try. boy Moto years old having been told thut a reptile is an animal that oreep• and being asked to name uno, replied, Aunt Martha • baby. —A kumband complaina madly at th price of (Licks. 11 Is w der recently bough* three fr.* $216, ♦is ;—A duck of a dress, • duck of n bonnet, and duck of a parasol. —Cattle Illanding lo cold, muddy yards,. exposed to the weather ,000aume shout twist as much& s those In sheltered stable', kept Llean Sad littered, and free • rum the aoeuma. tattoo el manure.—American Fortner. ---The smoking of • lamp. Soak \ tha wick in 'strong vinegar, a ad dry it well/b.- lore you me it ; It will therm barn both swee t and pleasant, and give imeacb satisfaction for the tri fling trouble-In preparing it. rTk Ch imago Jowyrre/ dimmesrs fiat the harp on which certain Democratic ',di— m are play lAg , A la a very small Jew. hasp— Pvt. 'Tribune Dot if that harp dotal play a Nbevy,Chuse for Mole and Monirey,thrant it..will be be cause hia infamous order agaluit the Jowl is net fully understood -The N. Y. pog .111,;Ok g lam the/Long reits to understand that the next pwasident shall, be elected by white Totes - exclusively. II lays, It is well' for the bummer party to understand now, that no presidentind can. Mates sleeted by a majority suataimed eoldl by nigger votes,wlU be held as conatitutdoeal. The democracy mean that the republic shell continue to be "a white man'. govonitnent." At. Yu Doecooratio ratilkation moot ing in Loalaville, there were three portraits limos in the promotion, and eon wore ttoo , portraits of &ownll Jackiog, Oen. Robed Lee ami Dads.—Tr tie. • AnA bad Aix nit a riglot—oloom the A.M. ,no Moro no equals too ,nti thilkPortaing m Hilary Fad know, and the WO. sl gentleman and otatomani f--qmolitioatkat bet few moogrelo can boot of—Poorfeo jaikooomis. Serelina wetwspeenly ett whiebeelested Preeideatied 141 loos the legislature. She pi 00. 1 smiled tordooriteit ehs impulair, IN SO 114 the "kilt': mese& Ikea .i 4 iito-oes pee- posed that is Set Soulkee‘Bilkkee 11444 oarpekbag legislatarse c adie, ezomplei gloethr °smite. be felkowed, sad appose. President:kid Rieetaii, rather the' Ow& ■ vote of:the potpie.. : d 14betilf,' IVA 248 poundo. "' " Correct/ —Tiardly anything ii more contemptible than the conceit whisk rents merely upon rocket ponition—thi. conceit of those who imagine teat' thus They ore divorced from the, clay of corn thou men, of 111080 who shrink with hor ror trona the idea of work, as something whioh degiaden by its Tory contact, anti yet who, very likely, owe 'their present pc - tallow to some not Tentitel ancestor, who recognising his call to work, lived more honestly in the world than ttley do sod was not ashamed of soiled thumbs, it in one of the meaneit things for . peo. Fla to be ashamed of the work from which they draw . their 'income, and, which glorified their ancestors more with their soiled aproatiaid bleak gowns, Hiss themselves with their fuse ribbons and lash jewelry. It might be a fine thing to be like the tulles, More ;loll ' ously clothed than Solomon, aid doing nothing, if we were oily lillies. Ad iantageette position is oily a mere em phatic call to work ; and while those who hold the advantage may aol be compelled to manual. drudgery, they should recognise the hot that manual drudgery luny be performed in the same spirit se the which obaracteriess Choir own work, wad tberehre that it le equally' honorable.—Rev. Dr. Chapin. El Is if. Rion r—fitany a sigh is heaved, many a heart is broken, many a life is rendered miserable, the levrible in fatuation - whlsth winner - eftenrmairilemt in chooving -life-oompanion for their daughter,. How in it possible for hap piness to result from the union of two principles so diametrionlly opposed to each other In every pOint. as virtue is to vice! And yet„bow often le wealth considered a better recommendation. for young men than virtue. How often is the first which is asked. rospectinthe suitor of a daughter, this: "rr he rich ?" Yes, he abounds in weallits;.but does that affords my evidence that be will make a kind and affectionate huts. band? "Is he rioh ?" Yee, his cloth ing is purple and fine linens and he fame sumptuously every day, bet can you in fer from this that be is virtuous ? "Is he rich?" . - Yes, hellos thousands float log on every ocean; but de not ricks* eometimes "tate to themselves wings and fly sway?" And will you consent that your daughter shall marry a mat who has nothing to reocomsaend him but Isis wealth ? 'Ai, benare Fb& gilded' bait sometimes stovers a bearded book. Ask not, then, "fete rich ?" but "is he virtuous Ask not if he has wealth. but has be honor? and do not socrificie your daughters pgaoe for money. QUITE A DIFYIIIINCIS.-A "Laboring Mau" in the Bangor DemoeraL figure. out the difference between the year l 869: and the present tense ee follows: For four days' work in 1859, I could buy • barrel of excellent dour. For ea equallygood baterel now, 1 here to work astilit days. For one day', work In 1859, I ttould boy five popde of tea For the same itty'a work, it can now buy but too pounds. For one dare work then I could buy thirty pounds of sugar• For a day'swork now 1 eau get but fifteen pounds. For a day's work in 13.59 i I °Cold buy styli pounds of tobacco. For a day's work now, I ean buy but three pounds. For a day's work in IWO, I °mild:buy fourteen pounds of oodee. For n day's work now, lonia buy Mafia,. pounds. fn 1F59, for one month's work. I could clothe myseLf and family for one year.— To do the same now, I am obliged. is work full Iwo months and a half. I might thus go through the whole list of articles that ji leboriag man sad his family actinium The fast is, we ore permitted to enjoy but one-half of the fruits of ear labor ; the other pair goes ao the porernmeut 9d plunderers of tics pubis leeasury. Is it aot time for me cad my fellow laborers to look around us, abeertald the sauce adds robbery of labor, sad ap ply the remedy 011AMIT AT fin. Jon—ifs is Gitoitens sr.—We learn from tt illeatlentes who re turned. yesteeest frets S. Joe, that on the arrival of Grant, s demonstration who attempted by a few liiatia there ; hue were greased dome, and the General hurried out of town The people Wouldn't' lee bias speak his piece, shout ing vociferously for Seymour and Blair, lien, Oberman was Indigsast, and while We regret the chsrecter of the reeeptiot whieh the people of Si. Joe. hare seen It to touter Ow .1 1 ,411M* triblOtetio 1911, haling borne an illananW of weep for years, they ere eltonealile' tee it:bikinis* their Moltke for the head canter of hr cabin' elevittry. , —Colutei Blois ( low) besmear I , --- 7 ,Thoopdltor of the Relifiovs TOP friph.objeeli to plaiting try tiko olcoin oforoloo wbl takitig cap • oollooclocs." toosotlocoo icoocp rit,tletipo a!m'oirk:iocl iq , tbe slojeng 4to oloa,tho colloo4oo, 441, , coicb slcoir, oloofitoyov, cheylooccicketot seoobe'bas. yi It*skate • 't 1 l'A,l O 7 - ' i i • 1 Ti - , 0:04 1 7 l e tt , W 4 10 4 a t l f th !Pe t ki I ~ 4. 4•1•110101114 66" 14.,. , 4b0 11 4 , i eisawits ettlottottli in ?Wager tse the 1 .'` ' ' '''' ''l
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers