11411MCIPINMEA1711. - LaW/C...... ^. -1. 141111117 .Z.M." , .. , ".. The Democratic Wat c hman rsELLIToNITt.;, PENN'A P. GRAY MEEK, Editor FRIDAY MORNING, NOV. 20, 1868 TERMS. per year when 1.111 111 n 1 canoe, 2,5 C when not pail in folvan -n, and c 3,00 when ni,t paid liefuro tha of the yenr ,A Scheme Against the Reserved Pow- ers of the-States: One or the measures which the Rump Radicals intend to carry out this winter is the passage of a bill tbr an air line i:ailroad. from Washington city to New York and New England; to be built and controlled by the red cral Goverement,—i, r. the Rump. There is a three-fold object in this long-contemplated project of the Radical leaders ; first, to open ave nues by which a lot more of their friends and relations nip- plunder the Government in contracts and hold sinecures of profit; eecond,-to pun ish the city of Baltimore and the State of Maryland for being Demos cratic, and third, in open the way for theeonsolidation of all State prermz ative.i and powers within the Federal Government under the csintrol of the Rump Congress. The project con templates a line of railway to connect with SIMON CANkitotirs Northern Central, outside of Baltimore and to be built with Go‘crnment fund-, un der tlw direction of offieittlg lie dx , ignated ly.the rump. The State of Mani:oil Is to have nothing to -ay in Ow minter. llor tern; i to he inva l d and sivert awa, i aI, ofhattie, in-t n- tleott.th r,— were or lie • ed . - t N, tv I . '3.11 Tip itd4r, !let -, lent lent at - 1 1'1 II til , •-•• :I'l'}.• t it) 111 0.1 , 1:11 It-171 1111 I I ." I. I 1:i ILO 1; 111 !1.,: r• , I 1:10.; IL Y. i.l L_ (.r 64.!4 , 4441. • 1,.z. 1..1!! A.:. :I IZII3I Iltr.k11•21. BEE ! I a I I I '1 I I I 'pi, ME ~,. ~, , 11111 M I . It .1' n'n i t L •127:, I, r:„ rri,:.• tr it" 'll Mil 11,. t • t plait t , , • 1,411 I.:1 \ and Ch.: Eu•-•,J 1-1 . 11; , 11.1 :111'1 I: w•;! +lli.pll . ': 1 , , 11,1,0 1111 imr.'t. ft, t 11.1 - the Tilt lit thrtt'lttl:t tt 211 Int an , ; w.cr ihc Alllel Wan pi(); I '1,,i. , r 111111! 11.1t,,tr, hi• 1,1•417 , 1,7 ft ti, tt, the•e and le .114• tuna ra 114 w ight t. 11 we '.tier. It i• w.:th Gen tilt\ \ t t, t K^..l tt tat(' tieni, but thee , le•:t ele,t.t,f a vita:ire that lath:- Ile lir, been -educed Lc :,-,tilottyrt into ler•eirtirkg the Ile eler,:A.tl ainibbaer, ettpl the :ante I an. riti .I:lluenve Inqy ne.l lutn tie. the; re,,olt, ~c4 :1 ,1, wt . the tilted •••,tite• find. t imbue% but thetn•el‘e , for 'II ;:tti v i l liy ruching .heir eouotry irt . ,4 the jattH of it tcran :cal awl a cured cle.pothirt. ice,, . 7 t iM sullicent fir to gay is re iza-fl to this railv-hy and telegraph ,cat Hue, :Pi well as (it' the project to nii,re negro , tifrritge in all the , tarten, enactment that neitbor Cou grey, imr the Federal tiovrritimat -e, any legi•lat.eve or executive po sot., not delegated by the Strident to the 'Federal (lon,titsition, ared no. where ut that instrument is power zranted, e ithenexpressed or implied, legiile.t3 upon or carry out malt ebetrids. The posher to do these things dor Stato/4 reserved to themselves— eacii separately—and any attempt oe the part of the Rump or the Execu tive to usurp such authority will be a Ingla ,erium and should be met with all thefurce cfpopular vengeance and in thc swiftest and most condign man ner. For our Ilan we freely and em phatically declare that every individ ual Who thus undertakes to repudiate his obligations to dais state deserves to be hung as high as UASIAN, and to leave his name inscribed on the roll of infamy as a wretch who ought nev er to have been born. -- : —Goid goes up ;IA the negro party, and the bondholders have their wishes GRANT-Cd. . !== "Good Times." Prior to the election one could scarcely %peal:to a supporter of the Radical ticket, but he would point to the %peculators of the country and cry "Good times," and ''elect Gluon' and times 'will be better still." With slietiff sale bills sticking to every post in the country, with ragged back, empty bellied children, at every street corner, with tax-gathers following them as persistently as a New Eng land radical follows a negro'lwench. and with every srospeet of a continu. ation ofhigh prices and higher taxes, hundreds of thopsands of laboring men closed their: eyes to the real con ditien of the country, and went it blind, for the.e "good times" radi calism was pointing to, and the "bet ter times" that was to come as a re sult of GRANT'S election. Three weeks have not yet gone by since GnAtcr's election, and what do we see as the result—manufactories stopping,--contractors discharging their hands—sheriffs closing up iron works,—the products of the (*Arm her creasing in value- the price of labor cut down almost one thira—bank re fusing or fearing to decount—build ers stopping work on unfinished houses, unable to proceed, and cvery' prolwet of a general financial panic if riot a fearful business ervh. ...Ls yet. _the _pourer of' 'petal& who handle but a few hundred dol lars per year may not feel the effect. of the radical triumph on the .;rd inst., but mereliant,t and men of buy - ines% do. Here in our (two town. hundred., if mile. , I ront the gi;.at vont nwrcial point: , of the country, the tir,t -.honk (4f the general c , -t-lt ril ready been (*Lit 1)u• to • th • p.i t wet w tlo , e,•urrty I.ii. 1 , •t' 1 1 4,1. from the v . ault , of our Jul.- v.i It the ••x•eption (4'll' llevtio6d-,1„ Co - at any prt ,, .11.:,; 1 1 . 1. , crows! I , ldy, tie ar. , not a, t I /A t the v.-c vichsto tat.oet nt-t , •!,1`1: :Ct I the suet bailie. !Lox not lii mot:, y to •lii)l•••ntit :7.11 pat. r. how :••,• mnnlxfartrrrir , to be kcpt. im pro; f , m-nt4 to h• mad , t•.r, to int.:•l akol I •1 - rt.• r, to 111. q, y WI th : • (h. fin. ,11 . r l.ur , thr , t• alrt rn•lteal victory that wa - t 1. i •_: I. r N.. NI ,Nl.l E 0. 11:1(4.1% , :;Ca %pc , - ..+1 l'l , 1 I. i ; Li;) Io ). , or lo •v. • 1..• nit I. 8 , 1.- (Lc) t th "rit. y xi b i1e.14 . 1)in4 In twrpi =I '111"y -.t. 1 that to ailopl, the I bono `• - al; ~r prititin?, etiou:ti of Gncnluol. to hi, tio‘erninent bond• now due would he Jetonliat ut 1111/(1 am it would flood the cum' tt,-) %%lib chi, radical eurrene), :and ili.- p . reelate that alrcad) to circulation, to Ittieli an cttent that it would be north coaling. We would like to know Tier/ 'bilk arc fo jtel ouT TLTtcrrliii hn nal trouble, without admitting the Pernoeravy were right, and adopting tin: policy a advneated, in the late CUL4IIIIII/gll. And tnile,s they do a d o pt that p o i I and we get more money - tho-e who est, had better "set there hili•es rn order - and be prepared ter the worst The cry is Low "no money - When there i, no :tionev there can be no work, and when there is no work, helv the families of the toiling mill wfas. Whether money io plenty or *Arco the wealthy esti always get 'Jung -they ti'ay ., when times are hard he unable to hpeeulate but they can I live --the poor run not, it is the labor ing sten whu L el hard tituos, and it iv upon them that the crash which is now threazonin,g, will tell iso terribly. Awl yet who is to blame far it but themselves. Thousands of them vo ted for it wilfully and Nillitly and if they are nade to feel it to an Went. nevet ihefote felt, they certalaiy can ahk no sympathy from democrats. La 1864 General McClellan car ried only three ,States, for the ?resi dency Marylsnd. Rentucky and Delaware, and ieeeiveil bu't'-'f electo ral vete& In 1868 Mr. Seymour re ceives 84 elcet3ral votes—a gain of ei:drawee, and were it net fur the le l ►mows negroism and registration acts, would Lave carried Missouri, Tennes see and "West Virginia"—making a total of 110 voteaaad again of eighty: nine: With thew facts before him the man who says the 'Democratic party is dead or likely to die,sii "a liar and the truth is not in him." —Radical capitalists and maciu facturers havg taken advantige of their Encomiast the polls, by reducing the wages of labor and advancing the prima of merchandise and the neces wins of life. - Negro Suffrage Coming Itctl..re the election, when D'emo trek made the assertion that' the leaders of the radical party were in fn ot. of-vegm suffrage it was pro nounced untrue , and whCII they charged' upon that party the deter mination of Ihreing upon the• people this odious doctrine, the howlers fur G RANT pointed to their platform that assserted, that the question of suf frage was a question that the several states alone had - the right to dater mine, and reiterated their intention of standing by their platform and leaving this question entirely with the states. There is no man of sense, truth, or honesty who will deny that this was the position of the radical party less than three weeks ago. Their platform, their sweeties, pamphlets and pikers all show it, and yet to-day—even before the vote is announced officially, and but fif teen days since they swore that negro suffrage must be leftio a vote of the people of the states—their leading or gans and speakers are urging the ne cessity of forcing it upon the country by acts of Congress and State Legis latures. They know that to leave thin ques tion to be decided by the masses, that negro suffrage would he repudiated by nine-tenths of the people of Penn sylvania. They knOw. that *it is Kneed upon them illegally t it never can be accomplished, and that unle-s, the do i stumeed WI getting the suptiurt of the boil() cuffec-, now reAdents of this state, that they • can not continue filling it offices with idi debnuehrus and - putlin r-. ft i, to , ecure the election of 4 I;t`tt et nor ne , :t that they are tom lliv' r eticenient nw , l ilitAurm , and deLrralim , moa l ure up on in Tiny earned the State by flan , l at thl hoc eleetton•. Itontlit,thit r, v , i II nut be oply intere-,tetl in the oket t on p. ‘st can anti VI/11-1. , 1 11 ntly zefu-te to g,itte thettit money to itro . it in the -ante mannor :mid it tau."( go Itt: t he Detnoct.wy 1111 Lhey 12.11/1,,14“ /t 1 giVing tll-44 bullet 11/ the 'logo(' Tht, rti our yca -tot v.h, LIR ) . urge Itz. adoption ,:t i• .lltt Tim: it mill_ he adopted Ju-t ni the "'"• manner that the-': leading rroiteal,l" ( '"'" S""'L''r propo-e we have but little their httlo • MI 1 . 111 , -! were warned ayaut-t it , i,rotnptl declined to ar,• , ..pt 'd arpl but they (10-ed their eye , to the lent, c‘oienveornatrioti-on. (') teldunr then' and rtied"enppet head" and ";et u , that, Owy had a wind to, (II 'y ba‘e peace, 'and the 10, , aer tie y " 11'11 ' 41/ " I "' n inn ' 31 get will 1., w,llLwri to the 1. , )!!, non " Ill " 'Pt' 1N r la! thy• dwzdyddr r Id d r- the bdindlholdh I, u❑ (lII' .1.: thuy will like tt , Our Late Congreeeio•.al Election Now., that the politic:ll campaigns, fur this 3cai, have. cudtd, and that the smoke Las vanished Irian Cite a nous fichls of contest, there are many things to he seen that attract tnore than ordinary attention, and are worthy of a passing nottee. Here is one of then] An exaininaliort dr the return~ ,how that MACK :Y, 14 l'ungre,, ::4PI inure rule., in the cli,triet, than Buyt.F. fur Auditor General. while .11INP•Tinei(1, fur Congress, ha, .:14 lehs than IlmcritANyr llAlrllLtNfl',lnaJority in t6l 1 - invt, 1 , 21;:)1, while AnNt-eritioni'B 1-4 unit or er_!': If..pf than the ma jority fur the Republfeliff State tick et A itm-TittiNti runs behind the Ite iitibliean ticket in every county, as follow., viz , In Centre, Clinton, 421, Lyeoining, 15, Putter, 6, and Tinga, to—Total 31 , 1 On the other hand, MAck Ey rink ahead, of the Detnoeratie ticket in three eoutct iea or the dktriet, La follows, viz . In Centre 4.), (Tinton 127, and. Tioga :17, Totar3t49 In Lyeoniing and Potter, the "vote for MArKEY and 130PLE is the tattle. In Clinton. Act: ET %runs 227 votes ahead of his ticket. In by corning, 2LitusTawiti run 15 votes be, hind—very conclusive evidence, we think, thai Mr. MACK ET teas, while Mr. AititivneoNo was ,i(l4, popular where, best known. Our radical friends and the particular favorites of !flux AumwraoNa may be able to extract comfort frpm these figures, but it will be queer comfort to boast Of. —Poor NELLIE WADE iS to be pitied in heaving "greatness" thrust qtpon her, in the shape of that puff, ball Scumni, COLFAX. His mate ho uld have been one of. the Fable female "wards of the nation "—Miss C. G. Nation. -The Democratic gain in 'Con gresi3mon this fall is sixty-five, enough to prevent the destructionists •from having a two-third majority in the Rump House. This is a substantial gain. A Crumb of Cgmfort , The election of Mr. SEYMOUR Rronld .cot have been a positive but only a negative advantage 'tq the country. With the Rump Congress opposed to him, lie could not have originated or carried out any policy or measures of the Democratic sort, and hence the only good work which he could have performed, would have consisted in retarding or obstructing the infamous and devastating mea• sures of the disunion party leaders.—, This, it is true, would have been something, but still not what is need ed by the country. rho first and principal object to be accompliiked by the Demccracy is a reorganiz Lion of Congress, and a giant stride wqs made toward that result at' the late election—as much, in fact, as could be made at a single election. Sixty five members of Congress were gained by the Democracy, out of the one third of the whole membership bal loted for. Had the election been for a full Congress the Democracy would have undoubtedly done better ,still.— The defeat of Ma. SEYMOUR may perhaps do much to make theknext Congress Democratic. The Rads. will now have full swing to tarry' out their wicked policy, and we feel as• sured that in carrying it out, during the next four years, they will so ut terly disgust_ the Utokic arld the country as to enable the Dem. ocracy to make important gains of 'ongressmen at the succeeding elec tions, and thus, in 1872, to take com plete ,control of the (;6vernment with a Pre , ident and a Congress opposed in R a dical negroism, Looking at the Imatter in this light, we ought t 0 be paticnt and hopeful. relying alway , . up4n the in..tness of 11:111 ple•rrVltllz an 31)1(1111t faith in the 111 (M1:1(1. (1'1111111)11 of th , . r gn• rt priori ph-, which uphuilt the country to great no—, and wh a:oni• cot.im t the elements or aq safet. and twrpe• —A l o t or 111,. W:1,1,111,4t.4 It city 1,00, tato•ttlt‘ ifllli l 1111r,1, ti I'Y G RANI, a prupo-etl tlitlowli their sprrk , .•matt Itlte ," .1: I t vi•t. up :1 uMII , I ,•nhoi , 'r (pm of • ov,r clevt 11. rillr in a quiet arol re-iiieetah; • Thuii .411111, ~ucctottµ•nt ltot lu lunl avi aha 6el and nnu h titttyr tri •idi the and' the and 11/11LIIIL)11, liartit•aury %%litchi clic-, tel him Ilre-idenc. Ito illicit hull. I but ileiThie the tutmirahle ereuture whir, 14 thiigi 4,1' their ua n • vile hint effluitry RA the chivi iih al - init.. We shouiCii t many id' the — "rite Barnacle;" Radiealimin erninent, craft afoir thii fourth iih March ---TI at "nn prefix or affix - Dein ocrat onN W. I; EAtti--has remind cd (he public that he wants to I governor for another terni. Ile got imbe of hi 4 friends to write him a puff', u 4 a candidate for I lriited ;••ztalc Seri ator, (oh, ;loly !) t‘ii that he could decline that and announce a candidate for le election--all iii good time. It was a nieo little tiick, hut so vely tral c ILIA Huall as to excite only mirth and ridicule among his party friends. ,Inits's pro , pects arc not so .good as they were, and the probabilities are quite Ftrong that he will have to give IT living in the styli.; of but the four tecutli, in a palace gotten up a la Pouipadour. Good bye, JOHN, in pronlieeliVe. —Lady STANTON Nays that in 1W the Pennsylvania Itads overbid the Ohio Rads and hired the lovely and loyal ANNA DICK! Ni ON to stump the mining regions, when their he speakerl were afraid to go, and that after she had exhausted herself of talk and been pelted with rotten eggs, they retnsed, and to this day refuse to pay her for her labors and her trials.— They said it took all the Lehguo funds to pay the other fellows. What a shame I and yet what, better could be expected of persons who cheat each other at every convenient opportuni ty. Louisia t na, at the late elec tion, the great macs of negroettvoted against GRANT and COLFAX. They have got it into their heads that the Radical party is made up of BEN. BUTLERS, and BEN, they say, would steal their last Johnny cake. They are not fur wrong. —Yrhe AT. Y. Sun's Washington correspondent, says that GnmiT is in llarwtvel "egress pasaiitig an amend ment to the Federal Constitution, 'un der which the negroes all the States may vote, and that lie hopes Congress will pass such an amend ment early in the session, so that it may be raftifieir during the sittings of the present Radical lcgislatutes and enable the darkies to vote next fall in every State. If this be true then GRANT is no better than a contempti ble demagogue and scallawag'. lie certainly ought to know that the power to regulate or enact a measure of this kind—a measure of no ordii.a ry moment, but ono which constitutes the foundation stone of government— resides with the people of each sov ereign State, and not with the Feder al anernment----with each State sep erately, and not with the States cal leetively. It is not for the New Eng land States. or the Western States to say how we of Pennsylvania shall elect our State, county and municipal officers —whether we shall do it with white ballots or black ones, or a dirty mixture of b?th. For the same mass on it is none of our business if Mas sachusetts, with about. fourteen hun dred darki'es, ehoosessto elect two ne groes to their legisla ire. We hardly think, however, that Grant has so exprelsed himself, not because he is acapabla (Yr so linfati - ht•ii - oraneci and injustice to the people of the States, but because we believe he is hardly capable of originating an idea—even a despicable one like the one in ques tion- - --It is charged that - the Pacific Itailroad'is being pushed rapidly for ;yard in the most flimsy and tempura ry manner, merely to enable the cuul , pally to -ecure the tioverninent to.kb otly, tt ltivlt eote,i,t-inf every alternate !:on i f !anti for fifty nitle , otalat , th • tale, tlf the road --amounting to soon' tot li, thou-and :tyres fu I.ll'l'y of tra, k It 1, evident that the %%hole , eheine I,,as founded in a tuto.tittneent I lot ertitnent, swindle on Cie part of th , member , or the . Ilu.ap ,•, null :1101 flit tot , Tilt, llt Itad;eal trintriph 'non vtt'l ~, 1 o. 111 , a1 -1, 'l , l ti Illtk) till , 3111 111.1 t•, 4.01111 `.11:11 •Vhllll. • -'I 111,;,:kt 11111111 r , glvt 1110.4 beatttly str.llo yea!, hewer. (%.***".., • - “I t io. Q :•:, 11 , Gat I 1,1 at f, lat. , '!'ht 111 , 11 , .'1i%%'!1 tl AV. I V a .11:i rt .11 I 110 . 1.i1l 1, a:1,1 ~! i! ,allatta4 to fvt, w, t.• hough,t affil Ii 1, l to vJte 1,,r..1.41t IVIto I t Imo and r% 3 1, tote aril act oil tlin.l,‘"iten, awl 111, , of totes ro,t I, , pro , crit the indi,l and 1n,r1,• , t of iuiuu 101 the Into eleetton (11,2 I,,,ifttlar will that; any of It , llrr,lrrcP.nr and only , 1)ow4 what !Hay L arcuwl,it hed by the u•-c of looney. -Many or the flit(heal organs ate voliem'ently dcmam ing that 'ongiys shall pass a negro suffrage bill i,)l all the Tittles. They say this the true lesson of the election, althoull th e y denied the issue a w weeks ago. It is a great pity that the mongrels can not get enough of their volorod affin ities withyut committing ad, that outrage the sentiments ()I' white pee pie and are in violation of the true doctrine Of Stale right., — Congreiss:' had better make a little Africa fur those scallawags, and Kock it well with nigger wenches. —About one year hence the eight thousand ll)einoerats who voted fur I:RANT will tie reeling their empty pates to see if a crop of wool has been grown thereon. If they don't find it, it will not be because they don't de- serve to. .I_ , re.hope.their brats will not be born with long ears like their daddies. , —Our cotenioraries_ who arc charging our defeat upon Attous2 BELMONT, might with propriety look nearer home for sonic of the delin quencies. We know that New York did better for Pennsylvania, than Pennsylvania did for herself. Some people, however, can't Rep, things un der their noses, because tt pays better to•fnd tt nape goat away off. —lt is said that G ItANT'fi confi dential clerk spends three hours daily in destroying radical applications for office. His orders are never to let ono of them meet the great smokers eyes. In consequence there is an immense sight of "wcapins",and"wailin",atid "gnash in" of teeth'in "]oil" —Bondholder's own more white slavos now, than Southerners did black ones ten years since. Magazines and Papers MIMI 011,1 , 1 'S LADY ]Soo K.—Thin favorite among the ladies for December, hnv levy upon our bible for 90111 C tints TO ,ay That k is equal to any of the post moo. horn would scarcely be doing it joqice, tittil to soy that it extells them,wooldoio fear,be stretching /ho troth h little for Gmlll'i Lady Itoo/c hoe,, for years post been as near perfection in the way of dl agazines 118 it is possihle to get. If it even keeps up to its already high stand: ard, which we know it will, its patrons 'nil: receive many times the value of their tittbscription. It Is but $3,00 per year Address, L. A. Cody, Mao, --Messrs. Pett,ingill, Bates k Co, of New York, will issue on or before Janu ary next, the first number or a Rural and Family Papitf—to be publisheit thereafter ueelkly, and to lie devoted to all that pertains to Country - Life in its broadest sense. It will not lie ,partisan or sectarian. It will be called Hearth and Home, and will be tinder the general Editorial chitrgo of Mr. Donald G. Mitchell ; while its Homo amt Fireside Departments will be subject to the super vision of Mrs • Ilarriet Beecher Htotve, who wilt also contrtbule regularly to wry number .1 large corps of 114 406100 1: , 11- ( (IN, of high reputation in their special departments, hay been enlisted in tap_ port of h ht.+ triter•pri.re; and - no labor - or exieti-e will he spar) hi make the pa •I1 'l .- --111 •ottp.ct nialfer to hell ai tllus Isuliva—...mut-tl4-y rwrp hoilwvitold in the land 11%1 IMl ' i MtiNTIILY \I kmt.—The December number of tlii4 t rine 1•4 received. We find it thin( elifiremig voriety of 111 , 1-tro,,ii I to keep it ni the Ili I I 9f flo• • lIIP 1•011111.. r, in 1 u , f I 1111,1 1111,11 . 11 11:1.f I 001 1),,t I: I -0. tag, , i•t111, \ V. ”, '..71 N , C,11: I .11!ig • ,r), Pt uil im I lA.. r•olririne I nu ' r 1i II NI 1 , P I)trliw: :n.l I 1 11 1. .1 4 1 I 1 11 11 9 01011- ' _ I 1•NI i , "' , L :II •• I.i 111..4 iiil,ll , ! \l,-• %% I 'l7l ,t I ,y Iloilo 1'••01, 11. 3 (CM 1111 . / I I 't I 1 ,•,' • 1 I ri 8.0 .11.1.11 I 11 1i r, • , •11. 0,1 11111"' y 1,14 11,. 1"..1"" t illy 11 0.111 hi' 11111 , II Ifirio.,”.l o‘o i lIM i• LI Ix II n I "..) pet p.m, or pi rin4 r 1:111,tt, Tho.it•l 1 t',l, !,,),;. Alt“ ‘.. viii -1,, •,,to bee, 1.. I.]lile It Idrminl nurni er o iih two t.teel vograv in,,,.., a matowoolli 1a.1,;0n plate, it 00 ',DT- I.] HIM I'l in Ilrrlur t%lllk, and nearly filly se cut The principal .tell en gra% ' I or t'itemtna , ill ti.te 11 y 11e 110 rent wen- If•r .1, t., • Li.t, ten, 1:1t .111,11‘,11 UI l'e 101 !,, t 11.• large4t m 010 =MI acrid --rip it really gives more for the looney than any whet Eve!) body Btight to siiio•rilie for It Its stories are the te,t published ilb)ulicie In 1 89, In addition to it 14'11111 yuauuiy lol short atones, Four Original Coppight !Novel- I cis %VIII be given, vl7 • '\ l llle \ 1111011 - eileM Talisman," by Mrs. Ann S Ste phens , "The Alystely of ilrangii," lay the author of -851 \ oers Ii ar , Winter in ‘Vaslongtuo," by Frank Lee Benedict; and "The Story of Maggie, by the author of ••Sit , y Diary .1"f he, mammoth colored fashions to this Magazine, are always the latest and pro iest,the principal editor having lately gone to Paris to senora patterns in advance. About a thousand pages of reading matter 'Will be given in. 1869, when !Me Magazine will he greatly im proved The terms will however remain Two Dollars a year to single subscribers, To clubs it is cheaper still, viz four copies for $6,00, with a large engraving, (21 inc' es by 16.) "The Star of Bethle hem," as a premium to the person get ting up a club ; or eight copies for $l2 00, with both an extra copy of the Magazine andrg "Star of Bethlehem," as primuins. Now is the time to get up clubs for 1869 Specimens of the Maga zine sent gratis. Address Chas. J. Pc tureen, 306 Chestnut street, Philadel phia, Pa —The Philadelphia Rads are al ready at work maturing a plan to se-, cure tho ptissage of a metropolitan police bill, so as to tako, out of Mayor Fox's hand the power to appoint police.nen, Small business—but St just suits chat family of politicians. •—The Democratic party never dies. It has more real vitality in this hour of its defeatottan the Radical party has in the Lour of its victory. m,....,, • ' „ I=
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