II The :Democratic Watchman, AT P. OKAY MEEK Terms, $2 per Annum, In Advance BE M IgFONTE ? PA: Friday Marelag, February 19, 1869. Jacobin Tootles thereihtis been no Presidential cam• paign wince the organization of the lie publican party, iu which its party press has ntrt within a few weeks ImA:we an election or the commission of some grievous legislative wrong, raised false mimes, and made false charges against the people of the South and the 'Demo oratic party. We appriSe our readers 'ow that they shall read in the Jaco bin papers, from this time forward !m -oil the full measure of Shin Radical scheme is complete, all smantter of '•rimes, of murders, arsons, robberies, rapes, and the whole catalogue, which will be ascribed to the unruly and tur bulent disposition-of the white people of the South, and this for he express purpose of engendering, 'keeping alive, sind promulgating a feeliing of hate and bitterness, not only besseeen the people of the sections, but between the lie. groes and their Former maiderii. This kind of tactics antiazgument are the shield and buckler of the Republican party.-- Without principles, they fail to reach the reason Owl judgment; without re gard for law and order, they seek to em gender contention, strife, hate, and hit tertires, aiming by an appeal to the ba rer passions to dethrone reason, over• whelm the judgment, and retain their party power, the mintarch of demtroo lion and deeolation. This course is pursued upon sin a* samption of the - ignorance and want. of It now ledge on the part of the people of the North, who have heretofore Leers taught by the name pernicious teseli• ere, to•regoin4 ;tire Teople - 110 - Priatitli us the very eneanntitvif all that is hell ish in human nature. But if noother lesson has been teurii• sti by likritivern inert and soldiers in the war, th e wit hoot twou be forgotten, that they met, litive, generous, lion °ruble, high - niia4ted foe, and (me whom to iiiibfAVW -111,11,411 t, to to love and iespeet_ It 'ram ilisetaint lying, fake•, /tanler not, higotrd, vroorriptive 'Tint of the , Northers 'trees, supported by Northern lanntiem sisla fools, which grnuled On the people of rite 'Si:nail to thi. tirq. o,ert net,' of rewolattlen fhe preasase then was the wisei. ness ottlse institution of slaver!.. It is now the vosoniption of the right to sit of judreneat anti ileal nut punishment Jr the Ems sof the past. This parq.of trawl, 111411111SUjUll 111111 orniption %rave for its history and re, .ord sines the war : A violation of the terms of seri ender ot the Confederate armies. A thommanti iclations of fitths plight .1 a tlionplanud times rovert aroneti menult 'Aron thr tti liame imairtrationot of the c.noktoo- C,onnl polgovw :if the Ex,-..iitivk An at I (mar: 11,0 ficogro) elo. Fla pi e MEM A .lestruetierr of nil the right.. of ton millions of iiihae peo,pre. The erentiaek of a strong, rentrah7ed g.verntnent,eArstrolled by Congres , 4 ex Itimivel), at tics. expcir4e . anil do : orio lion of the rigiaei of (lw awl a lz.ttNerttntettt by (lbw people. A lying, deco-cou‘c prtitniae ct place Ind lOW to a 416 . 1.lAribil and degraded -ate for partiman plurposee. A inortgage of thouttouttl. cat ddllaro , e‘cry titan, 60/11Al. uml , 1111.1 111 Coillitry' t II the altitpo of ;\ au uwl stem od revianim tur .1&ori briber• for crium._ Klbe(1111(kel111Illfoft.01 - 01.116 1110111 W. attempt to oeire State plettotire and Pc trite_ ith !, g 1,4,.. or suit,. in but a titiritotailitat. i 4 the a the IGudic•al part) 1%10/111 I{o' •hurl, anti it io I.llt natural thus th.• "lay itrxitileiit cif it,4 member... i.r) of your II r ourltt. --A itedival j,aper of South Caro., tina su that the present Position of that State it , . one of "enterprise, prow perily and lutppinemn." When one rea4s of the sufferings of the poor peo-. pie there, and tke. outrages committed upon Pe defenceless whitos in air Itari.e4by the United States eolored troops, the heart lass mockery of the iumerlion in apparent —Nagai' jot drunk oa ilia way to üburn, and faired to appear on limn. 1,111 a miserable thing to be trotted It the eouutry as a I•,•ctitrer for Y. 'briatian AaVeit"j',"o, The "West"---Whet "West?" Our correspondent, Mr. JOHN P. Mtvcitr.m., writing from Minier, noie, taken exceptiong to an article Which appeared norreethilne since in the Wsrcuu.tiv, entitled, "l you can Earn a Living at Home, Staf there." jTe seems to think that bur advice to young men about the delusions of the tar Went, refer to Illinois. Will our friend be surprised, if we say to him that we do not regard Illinois an any part of the "West" in the sense in which we use that point of compass. We looked upon Illinois as one of the Middle States now. Ifhe will refer to the map of hie country he will find that (ouneil Bluffs, five hundred miles west of him, in only about the centre of it; and if he will refer to the article to which he taken exceptions, lie will find that, we gave the names of the States and" Territories of the a Wtst" to which we 'referred. They were Min nesota, Nebraska, Kansas, C,olorado, Wyoming avid "Rich." A poor man, one without'aome means, had better stay away from there, is still . our opin ion. Our remarks to young men of the South and East in that article ap ply as well to Illinois, an to Pennsyl vania, or elsewhere. Does Mr. MITCHELL see the point? If he does riot, let him go "West."—nay 1,(1(X) or 1,500 miles 'further toward the netting sun,—and he will see that we speak from knowledge gained by observe tion—from "the book." Universal Eqaulity Congreipi has finally gamic,' an amendment to the Constitution in the following words : ARTICLE 15. Nodiscrimination shall be made in the United States among the citizens ofthe United State+ in the exercise of the eleelive loge or in the right to hold oilier in and State On account of race, color, nativity, proper ty, education or creed. Which, when ratified by the Legie Intums of two thirds of the Suites, he comes a portion of the fundamental At last lat last! Notwithstanding the prevaric,ation of the men who sought office from the people on the Republican plat form of Chicago, which left the question of satrap: to the States, where it belongs, we hate now the fruit- of a wide spread conspiracy. it a apparent that alien Republican candidate. Pdil the people that they were opposed to mongrelizing the country, they lied, and that they were pledged to that I nratny Ity P‘110111111144 the anionlinilit r lose ly it it 11l Le rsed til be e.t.a more sweeping. 0111.114 a n d I nfenml than any thing e‘rr .) et seriously dreamed of It gives the ballot and qiir. t. i.ery human heitig save WOlllllll, that hmwe to make the United States lon abiding place. Nigger, Indian, Alas' ken, 1% lIIVNe- Atheist, Infidel, hLt hotnedr Pagan, are to be made the equal of you, proud but fuller Mid degraded American citizens! Without a rising of the people 011. 1110l111(711111, (41 the Sea—w ithout a 1 Th an ,p ea k,., t h e l ea d ing R lti h ea l universal protest—without immediate piurnal of tiloo "Are we a nation of and spirited action by the whole people swindlers?" Well may the Uazelle -hy all who hoe their country, and acknowledge that "there are a great who would present. to the guidanc e of many screwa i dome at Washington."the only race wllo has achieved any It might have said thnt there were a thing for mankind, its 1111.titiltiOn." a nd great rawly thin ea loose there a1m0..! - destiny- -there is gretit danger that t h is ••l iii' thno,es, who lime grown rich infamy will lie large:led upon them. plunder, who have robbed, and are Now is the hour to work ! Shower Hull robbing the people It might itigut the Legit4latarei everywhere • Matt. and that these men who are rob protests mountain high—let thl•m lung the people tali Itepubbeart repre know that you arc not sleepless----that Heritative., who are authorized In act you will' riot lie degraded • nor p. emit and speak for the Itepubliruu part, %Mir ' Nen until to degrade Ili, eau and that a hether or 114,t, we ore there• eamian Mood. tore "It nation it swindlers, • ' that that _ pariy n.ot party of swindler.. Mid i-ii The sublimity if Africaiiizatiiiii thee ar us liortrayed in glowing colors in the worth. fidLiiwing It i. froth ua I{A& COI i'lltreloffidelit, who describe. Sena for A %IP I.r le, late reception in oThe floral dceoraiions in profuni tttt frotii Doing, arches and walls. and ; lase to the roonim a look of fair) land-- while the ladic,‘ poured along i n toilettem that dell' The aweete-t inuidc vibrated the per nulled air, 14 filly reconi.tructeil irrupted in white find made intligesltion attainable." In other Icor& : white niantini et Africanus, bruthertan, eatutn, niggcriun wenclitun still Kim): ri moan whititudi, bitguni, itannotAi Eonnor v.—The Radu•al State 474 • r 4:o urtn ittee panned a re polutkon the ether day declaring in lit ror of igoroum economy," There i need of it. Since November, 1467, the National debt ham inereaded ON cr sixty - live millions. If rigorous economy in not speedily practiced repudiation a ill be inevitable. --The liarrisburg Patriot nayB there is a gigantic scheme on foot to deepen .the.sdiatokel of the :•,insoknehahlts. river, mei 01118 reader - it navtgahie for steamboats. I t im proposed to petition Congress for.an appropriation of $lO,- 000,000, which is the estimated coot or the improvements necessary. Inauguratleti B.H. It is settled at last and finally that 'the great inattgiaratien ball is to come off, nigger or he nigger. The tickets were at dint put at 120, with the hope of keeping the nigger out; but it was fouled that Democrats had resolved to furnish certain derides with tickets in order to give them a chance of vindi cating their "rights" in the eyes and under the nostrils of their "brethren" of the pale skin, and there being no hope of keeping them out, the price wig reduced to $lO.. It je now be lieved that there will be quite as many negro wenches present as "loll"- ladies —as many buck niggers as buck whites —and that musk and African scents, rose water and Dahc:rney sweat, "balm of a thousand flowers" and "balm of a thousand niggers,"—will commingle and perfume the air and fill all space with the glorious aroma of Black Re- The Proposed•Ohenge—The Press vs The Centre' Clique 1--- The liollidaysburg News, whose editor attended the late Editorial Con ve4tion at Harrisburg, and favored the movement to have the laws each war published in two newspapers in each county, instead as now, in book and pamphlet form, gives the following irenaihle r truthful and concise view of the proposition in answer to goitre tool of the Harrisburg monopoly. We copy and commend the facts contained below i—"Wbat are the facts? The cost of the public printing for 1868, amounts to the sum of $134,968, in cluding $32,745 for printing the Legis lative IterFd. Add to this sum the amount of $37,000 for 'asters and fold ers, and $3:2,000 fur postage, arid we have an aggregate of '1 4 203,065. This expense could he dispensed null, and if distributed equally it ) two papers in each county in the State, would give $W)00 per annum, to each. Now, we believe the expense would not amount to over half this sum which would leave a clear gain to the State of $lOO,OOO over the present plan. We have for many years rewired this pro position, have no good reason now to change our opinion, notwithstanding the strictures of irresponsitac and nameless scribblers." ARE WIL A NATION Or SWINDUMPI? but we certainly base a great ninny swindlers in Ole nation. `F lad tern have now got hold of some old land patents which acre issued to the soldiers of the war of but which are worthless, and are deluding the heirs of those soldiers into the belief that they are valuable. To begin on. they yawt feast varying from forty to one hundred dollars. Au eminent lawyer, who sends us the coninaunka than on this subject, printed in a:mother place, closes n private letter with this suggestion : "It seerus LO me them: is It screw loose at Washington, or this could not be done." 'There are a great many loose screws at Washington. and General (i rant should at once provide himself with a longer screw driser fur use after the 4th of March --rinrin. nafl Gazdtr. Flll,ll Tllr M 15 , 4.1 xi 51,01.1 learn inns a private letter from a friend at Coilmai Mulls, that real tivtate is looking up and doubling up. This was ItiNit)n our opinion an to the future of that place. We were sure that there was more money in real etarrte ut Council Nu& than in any other inventmult that eduhl be made, alai we nay 110 W 10 an Midi as may lime money to invest profitably tkat, at dip present prices of lots antilads at that great railroad centre, tirtun dred per cent. per annum in to be looked for, Mr the next three or four year, rouneil BMWs is the point where height breaks bulk east and . 1--- 7 The Augusta (Ga.,) Daily Preas enitiihtit Mr. Tessiessim, a member of the Georgia- Legislature, has intro duced a bill prohibiting marriageable women from flirting, and providing a - penalty for those guilty. He should change his name to Turnip lops, for he is certainly as green as the latter if he supposes he can prevent the ladies from flirting. We •advina/im, if the Legislature ever should ltdjOuira, secrete a wig among his baggage when he returns to his county if his lady constituents serve him right s they will "mash him bald" immediately on his arrival! The Beautiful Modems. We gite \ below a description of a 'beautiful, but murderous sea-flower, which is known ,to be one of those strange but rare nuker existing between! animate and inagimato,tiature, that oc caitionally stuns the senses with its wondrous novelty. The reader:cannot, fail in its peitual, to se i t also the ap plication, plication, which the ount• permits, of the story of this intfrdercitut sea- - flower to the beautiful eyren who is wooing ihto her deadly toils the un wary soul : One of the exquisite wonders of the sea le called the opelet, which is about as large as the German aster, looking, indeed, very much like one. Imagine a very large, double aster, with ever so many long petals, of the most delicate shades of light-green, glossy as satin, and each one tipped with mac-cola., These lovely petals do not lie quietly ' in their places, like those of the aster in your ganlei,, but wave about in the water, while the opelet hitpself genet.. ally clings to a rock, How innocent and lovely itlooks on its rocky bed I Who would snapeCt that it could eat anything groositr than dew or sunlight! But tfu twautiful waving arms—as you unsay call them—have another use beside looking, pretty. They have to pmviat 'food for a large open mold, which ie hidden deep down amongst them--so well hidden that one can scarcely find it. Well .10 they per Ibrm their duty, for the instant a tool iah little tiehlet touches one of their rosy tips he is struck with }suisou, 'lts fatal to him as lightning. Ile intuit. diately becomes numb, and in a rno• ntent lie stops struggling, and then the other beatwfutarms Wrap • themselves around him, and he is as quietly drawn into the huge, greedy mouth, and is seen no more. Then the lovely arms unclose and wave again in the water, looking as innocent and harmless as thgligh they had never touched a vic tim. Manners The f•dlowing good alt ice t..) reing people oil the bent mode co,' acquiring self-possession and easy, graceful man ners and address, is eidleil iiry um 'Trom the Cincinnati / '0InT11(1114.,f It is brief and to die point. Young folks should , be mannerly,. But how to be so is the que•dion. Many agood boy and girl feel that they can not behave to tent themselves in the presence of company They feel timid, bashful and sell-distrustful the moment they are addressed by a strang er, or appear in company. ,There is but on, WHY to 'get • over this feeling! Mild acquire graceful and easy 1111n1 tiers, that is to do the best they can MX die time at . home, an well as abroad. I ;ooil manners are not learned from arbitrary teachings so much as acquired frqin habit. They grow upon us by use. We must be courteous, agreeable, civil, kind, gentlemanly and womanly nt home, and then it will soon become kind of nes;vud nature to be no every where. A coarse, rough 1111111ner at home, begets a habit of roughness, w loch we eau not lay ofd if we t , y, when w e go among strangers. The most agreeable people we have e%er known in company, are those that are perfectly agreeable at home. I ionic is the school for all the best things, especially , fur good manners. MR& Si }MATT ' S REM UN./ ---The re 11111111 M of MN. tiI'HRATT %ere, last N eek, deliered to ANNUL Suns ITT and her brother IM),Ac, by order of the Press dent.—with the understanding that there should be no public demonstra tam, and that whate‘er funeral ser• VIVCA might be had iniva be pmately conducted. The body was buried dl reedy after the execution, in the statfl• Iller of 1865, in the same enclosure with the bodies of Paine. A tlerott, and Ilarolti, near the place of the In terment of Booth's remains. -- --We are told that they have im ported it new kind of "nipper" at the bar-rooms in Bellefonte. It is called the "Iteame.4 I'nrk'ey,•.'• It is made something, like the, ordinary cocktail, but differs in this : you stir it midi a spoon. minim ur eti While litrfi sltp the spoon in your pocket We understand it it a site eessful "eye-opener," and renders it iieve.o.itry that liar tenders should tie cry attentive and sleeplen. ESE --The Williamsport Daily ~ . !and ard, of litia week, announced the ar. rk al at that city, of the Hon. Jona C. llititextivainoc and wife. Mr. lIRFA•K -INICIIXIK passed MI .to Baltimore. He is probably ere this at Ilia old home at Lexington, Ky. We are rejoiced dial the evil days are painting away, and that no American) need longer roam in foreign elimaa a refugee from him native land. —We are in receipt of the cinern nati "Enquirer Manual and Political Register for 1869"—a very concise and valuable almanac. for Ohio and the Union. It is oust, and in some aspects, superior to some others of the same character lately issued. —The everlasting nigger is "mighty and will prevail." What was latery intended ,as the white man's "Inattgu. ration-ball," might now more truthful ly be rendered an ti!; Rep_ublican "In. 'niggetation bull." 311 way dal.; white chile I fa•hloaa' fir Mardi Madame Detnorest says there is very little difference between fashions in March and fashions in February. • March,. however .boisterous it may be, seldom passes without a promise of fairer days to cone, and, believing in that promise, we , pieparc with the con fidence' or entire faith for sunshine, while encountering 'storm, and devise garments in which we shall greet the ,ipnpringing grans and flowers, while our eyes see nothing but the chill drearinedn of barren 'winter. Suits, with the addition of shawl or cloak for occenionti of extreme severity; have held their place for winter walk. rig wear during the entire season, and. will, we Hii.eerely hope, for many sea• sons to come. This siMple, vet stylish and appro priate out-door description of costume, has reorganized dress for women, and made it so much more free, independent and econiimicat, as to deserve long continuance, if not perpetuity. Formerly three or four street dres6cri of different kinds and styles were need ed in a NC/MOD; now one suit iv suffi cient, with the aid of a secondary one, or a long water-proof cloak to protect it in case of rain. the useful length and remtrieted the Hutt preventm it froth wear ing otirtihW,Tirlitleriniirtg thabhy, and if it t 4 originally of good material, will itrpmerve it alinomt aN frenli for the nee onJ titi the firm_ Co really well adapted arc there snits to their purpoue ; that they look better than mixed dresses of a much more costly kind, and have quite driven the latter out of the field! Vel)ct cloaks and fur capes, those admired goals of .) ninny wotnen's ntribitioa, are no where worn over colored dresses; they utter by comparison aith el'en a very plain suit, Nt r •hicli is neat and uniform in style, arid leak only a general im pression of being old and out of date. The coming spring snits will, we think, be greatly admired; they will he marked by an elegant simplicity, ,whieh will render them universally accepta ble and beeonithp., harriers will he superscsleid altogether by a graceful style of loops at thillt sides. l'pper dresses will tie worn with two or three (apes, with talmns open Upon the hack, or with where-eat tabs on hack" and front Knitter 01 ale naan• material, or of a dillerent material and the name color, will be um fashionable. even more faigh ionable than over Spring poplins and all-wool 4 lrinnie+air extremely pretty milk rattles of the $ll.llll color, or aid: ruffles of the •urns, 601111,1 with silk of a 001 l 04)1or I,origtdresses will he re served entirely lor-lemie wear nod cur I=l A new 4tyle nfeApe w pnrtlt rut up null (11e hark, tl/ nitord Aimee for the 111.1*C 01 all I ' f - it\ rnrnw 1 . 111111 , 11 IMIN .111r/111/1InIlII:Z till •Ikort broad tql,lm of the pia.h. Theme elab:•rate boats are m high siezue, and wlll tiontiiiite, I r the iir,ent errtairil), 14n form n pruniiiient 'Catlin! .11 the dremm. Boots Cro the street ttre more and more an object or the find attention and consideration. They are not now trimmed to any extent, (al%nye had mate,) but the material, the lit, the rot, the are of the greatest im portance, Fourteen dollars per pair is the price demanded for new mt)le (d ladies' walking-hoots. Spring waier-proof violin are in het. ter qualitien find much liner %antsy , /1 colors than formerly ; thrr are u,elid ly made, nut only into clunk „ , but into loupe tqfitn, which ellll be vi"rn "%er others In elt/411. antorfo, or for protuc tion in tru%eling. A witter l proof cloud( or nifit in indispensable. - —The following deserved sarcasm 11, from the Baltimore Stategnum : It Is said that a bill is in course of prep anttion which proposes the consolida tion of several bureaus, now under the control of the Department of the In terior, into a separate Department. thus creating another Cabinet oilier. The bureaus selected are the Indian, the Educaticinal and the laird Oilier -- three different administrai e subjects, not tery germane, and sertainlj not 'Eery closely rAtted. A Wbinet Min• ii4,er who comprehends all the details of Indian difficulties and complica Lions, may possibly obtain, indirectly, some ihmilikrty with land reservations, hunting grounds, and buffalo ranges ; but we do not perceive how his knowledge of educational philosophy will be particularly enlarged by con tact with the Comaehes, Cheyetinel and Arapahoes. friends of the Warcumhaa can do much towara.extending its cir culation over the country, by renutll• ing their copies of it, after remlingoto acquaintances, and by dropping a line to thetn, toolitiee clube- for it. I,y -ahouldn't Petinsyvania bate one jour: nal with aiuttional circulation? Meta News —Mr. Halal, a printer Of Williarnport, .di e d there tut Week. • —Soma bummers in Tyrone have been gis. turbing a religiose meeting. —A man by the name of Wars eommitted 1:111 bide atMountarille the (Altai day. —lion. Ass Packer and party have returned from thoiNvii) to tat South—io 'aye the koston News. ° —The vokfolpedo fever Is spilled tng as.faieit noeno of "'those who "straddle tile darned thing." —The Hollidaysburg Standard says that otos lino of business Is brisk there—the dunnin, huninoss —Tito Mauch Chunk Goseas proposes Gen Wm. billy of Carbon, is the next. Republics", vaudidatu for Governor. —Thorn was a destructive liFe at Altoona, ob last Friday, which destroyed the Vsedicator of• 'firs, and much other property. —fit. Valentine's day was generally observed, and murh spite Instilled into the hearts of soul old maidlig and rusty old bachelors. , —Another editor In luck. The chap who rune the Radical has fallen heir to 12,17 by the death of a grandfather In Copenhegen. —The "Crawford county system" of [tontine. thriTasti Mates Is growing in popularity. This does away with County ConVentions. —The Harrisburg Guard thinks the prows are damaging the great Republican party, by as. 'sailing the Legislature for its extravagance —A 'poi IrooMcer, on last Tuesday morning et Heventh and Washington streets, PhilmhiPli* pleked up a human finger having on It a plain gold ring —The Illethechat church In Hyde Park, Lu sr rum county, together wllit two dwelling hous ca t , were ,oueumod by fire OP ISM. Hondo) In truing, —A huge 'lumber of counties taro "Matra, u•J" for Gen. Cisme, for Governor. A number of other gown:Lien ars also spolienef In the same connection. —A elsrgyinan at Pittsburg by mistake dropped his surinen Into the post Wilco letter hoz and Plfirttld to read a private letter to Lv oonitregation on Sunday —Mr. Neiman, editor of the Easton Swaim. vexed aday Or two ago A •ery beautiful vane was presented to him by his friends Or r tasionalty quill-drives are remembered the. ho *Clearfield itapubitean antio . unceii the .•lopetnaut of the liar J J. tlhurthdl, of Poi. with 61 stater of hl■ Hook, deverthie lila wife H listal preached to that Huck ton yearn --Yesterday there Wlus in have been a meottnr, or -border "stitterers' of Franklin emotty, at rhambernburg, to devise tomtits to get pay for property destroyed by the Union and Goofed , r ate armies —A young man Named Anson IL Fuller, n ruir penter, while engaged in removing the old U,wer from the Diamond mine near Vier:intim. on the ISth Instant, fell from the wire tore and sine instantly killed—leaving a wife. and three children eolore.l woman, In IluntlnFnlon no the 15th 'natant, held It. r child, Lout one yea: w old, over a hot stove until It an no well roe. led that little hopes are entertained of q eovery. She jail—so says 11 eurrewor, dent of the Hollidariburg //Tiger, —Proponak for holding t h e flllllllll ..01111,1 of the Pennmylvanla Kati, in-September neat will be r ivied lit A I. Ilurrinburg, until I WI, Into gintranteu for the imerfornianee nt the proposition ti ndered w 111 be required Executive i ntnnntlre well t o t t th. 17th of Mon 1.1, and derido itlon CONN t...Tlus, It, ASMEM lII.E The following etitlVelle in llMrn - burg luring the next tew weeks, at thin pine., unit dub, affix. it Suite l'eniprunee 'onliention- Tue.- , February 11l a r , w this Court House. Stub. ru I Co n% Put ion - 11 an li 1 State Colincti Junior (lyd.•r A no rn•an !doehunic.--Frols) April 'rah, 11311 of llous. It,•pnr.•ntnti~,•. (;rmol Flo olopoo lit it tln• 1 tolopono - Urd. r I hid F. I low •-- boll tho Mal., Itopr.,tditoti NV., Nifty 17th and loth Ih•diratton of Ih,• 111 P% tom llono. rn.•nt--\1 2t; -The ,tabject ul State rig litt. o, be ginning 10 conintatar the attention of . State I,olitiviamm, Ha VtV ul the tel strotot ntridt, Federal contrnliration in Ina lj ing. - Why is it, eui.l Ofle of our ,chool noirno. to IL yvting selipvgritei• who hail causo.l ; 11,r much trouble by lii, bud conduct, why 1.1 It you IN hit%.4l when you first 1 . 111110 11.•PY ti school , and urn Po thS4 , bellit Ilt Boynton, ' , Kul tho young lu ,p,fu , looking up into the tem( her r fore, I V. min% much Rl quainted then. I 5() TEACH MIS WA NT ED.- biker ( / sl'.o - I' ER MONTI' , for 11111 yarti,olni s Toldrens "I lie People* Jouin 41," Philadripliot, Pa • rl4llB-4t WANTED—SIat Millen to Ira% el fuel soli by patnple a now !input goods - Situations permanent. and good wagon. Ad drona with stamp, II II 1611 14 Alt 118 it CO., 41.1 l'heatnut St . Phila., Pa. vl4na-41 pn I NTS FOR FA 101 E IN. - 1 . 1.111 t 40 4 posedior any purpoae or a bbl of 300 I,bn. Stitid for circular Ilse MIMI'S AL PAINT CO . 'eel Pearl Street, Is Y. 1411a-41 e 10, I'(7 $5240 per month salary paid IV.. 4 good Agentm to moll out Patent Non wrrosit'e WW11... Wire Clothes Imes Slats age and paia rayupation, and address 1.1 y• Annuleati Wm Ciampany 'l6 William St., :N. Yr or 111 Deftrfa,rn HI., el'ileugo, 111. vl4llB-.0 _ _ (LENTS WA NTED,—For the on Is steel engraving of Gen. Grant and hum ir published with their approval. Engra. nod by Sartain. Hiae 15 by 19, "2.00. 100 p.l rent. to agents Addreaa GOODSPEED k O4l • Chicago, or No. 37 Park Row, N. Y. 914,01-31 • A (JEN,TS WANTED FOR. TJIE SIGHTS A ND SECRETS OF THE NA Il Al. CAPITSL, • work descriptive of Washington City; Inside and Outside Un masked and The spiciest, most thrilling, roost ning, instructive, and taltlin b o o k of • ArrEand for Circe. 'ars, w ith terms, Sr. Addreu UNITED STATES PuBLIHNINU Co., 411 BrIXIMO St. New York Ultr vlene-41.