rhe Beaver Argus. J. witYAND. Eynon oto Pitorairroa D eav er. Pa...Mllireb 23s IM7O, Tun President on Friday morning Joint reiolutien last, vigned the ap propriating one.;year'a salary fof an Associate • Justice, of the Supreme Court for the benc4it of the widow and children of the late E. At! Stan ton. • litiTonatATtON• Is rec e ived bit Vitt . cent Colyer from (len. (lriersoti, corn mantling the Department for Indian Territory, that the larger part of the ,nainl",•of the * Teseriratlon had remit'. ed their annuity. The quantity of goods Issueti, though not large. 1,4 9f enperior quality, and the Indians exprn theinselvet well satisfied. The IndhuiS depot commit as many depredation's as formerly. Tits CorninhiSioner of Internal Be. (..tvenue was informed on Friday . that lien. Bennett, a furn►er'supervisor of North and South Carolina, and one Loring. an aecompliee,Vere arrested at Atlantic City, lowa, on the 14th instant, ny Ben. Cliirke, U. B. Mar shal fur lowa, and taken to Raleigh for trial for alleged conspiracy to de •frtiud under the' United States reve• nue laws' , Tun Board of managers of the Na tional AsyMtn for disabled volunteer soldiers finiShed their labors In Wash ingtnn city, on Friday tem]. They provides] for several important im pmyements looking to the better goVernment of asylums and greater comfort and happiness 'of disabled' soldiers. A re olution was adopted that all applicants for admrssion shall be allowed the privilege of selecting the home they j)refer, and be admit- tesi accordingly. The Board will hold their !text meeting in July. nt Aug uSta, Maine.. ' i. TWELVE :cvlored members of the Georgia Legishiture'visited Vice Pre- Lsident Colfax at the Capitol on last Friday morning. ' They were Intro tlusr.ed by Senator Wilson. One of the Georgians made a short speech, wetting forth the views of the (Mega tinn. and expreing the hope that Congress would not give the colored citizens of their State into the power of rebels. In reply the Vice Presi dent frankly stated he did not believe the existits Legislature of Georgia cenld perpetuate itself. and said his sympathies were with the freedmen, and he hoped to sec them secured in their righ44. I= Win im the Georgia bill was before the Senate en last IVednesday, Sena tor RtiVOIS (colored) of Mississippi, took the floor and occupied the :Mon t ion o f Senates about an hour. A. gnat many. portals in and aboutthe capi tal antieipMed this speech of the col orett:•3enahjr, and the result was a full Senate and crowded gallerieit. The speech itself was listentml to with marked attention, and when the spea ker finished' Mid sat down he was heartily congratulated by a number of,llis Senatorial colleagues. As this Is the first speech ever delivered in the Gongress of the United States by erepresentative of the colored rats., .we publish it in this week's Ai.iut;s tas reported - in the Pittsburgh Mo s/creed. Read it. OH:. (1 IRON, formerly.prlvaleSeere tary to (hw. Geary, proposes to ..4111). 11411 a new daily paper at flarrishurg within a short time. It will of course he arrayed against the treasury eor morots, who meet there semi-well sionally to adjust the balaneesand di vide the spoils. A hold, live, honest 'Republican paper is much needed at I larrlshurg, and it Dr. (I ihon's proves to he such an one, the lads and the State will be greatly beticilted by its establishment. —On last Friday we received the in i itiai number of the new daily. It is called the "Tapir'," and presents a very neat and "newsy" appearance. Its eclitcirials have the - right ring, and nitgtalie our guess if it does not maktrits mark soon in the polities of this Stltte.. We wish It sweets. Tem annual meeting of thnliittt ;burgh Conference of the 31. Is. Church "is to aswinble to day (Wfsitu-sday morning March 23d)in Johnstown, sixty miles east of Pittsburgh on the PciinsylValliil railroad. Bishop Janes will preside. Over two hundred ministers are expected to be present. Extensive preparations have been bunk by the hospitable citizens of that fitly for the entertaintnent of the clergy, and the sewsion protases to be one of the most interesting find pleas• .• apt in the history of the Conference. It is pfohable the business will be finished up by Monday, when a grand excursion over the mountains as far 10 Altoona and return, will be taken, the railroad company liming' gener• ousl y made arningementS for the trip. (kat, having run its po litical co u rse,see tus to be etinttintpoiv with making '"dri ves' ° 'at some, and in attacking the private personal character of others of these who have cro+stsl its Witor's Dap, and aided in brioging lel t schemings to grief. Vide 116 revolt displays of ivory toward deist of the Lantaster Re p:as. tie% K. Anderson, Lowry, 13111itagfeit. - Irwin and our humble self. • People who experience great delight in exhuming private person al matters in which the people have no interest, and laying them before the public, generally get their own gourds cracked, with weapons akin, before the game is over. For fear that Mr. quay may not be appreiteM sive of results of this kind we re sPectfullY gawk to hint the propri ety of loOking carefully around and reflecting for a moment what might lie said through the papers . to Injure and mortify him in case a vigorous attempt was ma'le.to do so.' People who in houses of glass should not throw stones. If the editor of the Radical Concludes that he is not in a building of that character let him go on with his ilitig;ing. • . GEN. WALKER, Superintendent of the Census, is drib Mg the preparato ry work with dispatch, Now plates for ell blanks are being eieutrotYPed- Amendments to the old bill will he propu-wd, repmling the clause mak ing It !mammary to Ole a third copy of all returims ht inch county at . the . county seat, thus saving outs-third the expense of printing, and at the same time securing greater privacy for the uffairs of all Individuals. • A ciicelar Will be Imued hi a few days itivlinrincb Information as will ena ble the people to avoid befog imposed upon by persons who may attempt to act without authority, and • make unauthorized questions. Under the old bill additional compensation was allowed in California and other west ern sections. The Rinse authority i 4 now wanted for mast of the States and territories west of Missouri, ex cept Kansas, Nebraska, and: Califor nia. • . Alr. Shorhock introduced& bill Incorporating dap Rontbilde Railway corepa ny. The corporator& are J. H. Marred. H. 1. imbrie, Rh McKinney, Jr., 111. li. (loan Thomas A. Scott end J. V. Cameron. The. mud le to run num litiebargh by the left batik of the Ohio. to Swot. Mr. Adalro objected to the consideration. and Yr. litunphrala a wn. ed the bill. Laid over. We clip the above from the lees lailsa pi-Om:Id/rigs of last Thursday, as we find them reported In the Pitt sburgh 11 . 11111Cti. As these papers cir culate extensively In this county; we have , been frequently asked, since then, what this bill meant. At this particular tine we are in the dark ourselves, and can therefore only state what the people hereabouts my on the sulkiect lt is generally under stood here that Mr. Quay is at the head Ot z the ineveMcnt; and It is al leged by some that., during' the past week, a terrible mid was made by the 4egislatu i re on the bonds in the Sinking Fund In the State Treasury, and to save these, Mr. Quay—who was in Harrisburg at the time—got up the abovelbill as a sort of counter irritant, with uo intention of having it passed. .As Mr. Qttay has not been a special champion of the people's in terests for seine time past, and, mor :- over; as the pegsage of the bill was not retarded by its friends but by its enemim; this theory falls to satisfy nil except that gentleman's particular followers. Otheriassert that,as the Baltimore,' Pittsburgh and Chicago Railroad Co. had decided on constructing their through road'from Pittsburgh taChl cago "by the left bank of the Ohio to Beaver," Mr, Quay concluded on go ing into the preempting business, and take possession of that part of the line before the B. ,P. C. Company came on to the ground. In that event Quay & Co. could my to the Balti more, Pittsburgh Chitigo compa ny : " Ceme, now; down with your, dust and yott can get our right of way. If yon'refuse to shell out you may hunt another mate for your road to Chicago." As we have. remarked before, we have no definite knowledge yet of the purpose of this bill. We only report what others Fay of it here. By next week we shall know more about it. Thomas A. licott's name is used as one of the or without his knowledge consent. We presume he will order it .to be dropped. If this bill is a " pincher," which we suspect it Is—:a movement td foire the Baltimore, Pittsburgh & Chicago Co. to pay a heaVy sum of money for that which they should get for nothing, in view of the, gnat advantage their road would be to Beaver county—we haVe only' to say that air. Quay, and , those acting with him in the matter, are deserving of, and should receive, the emphatic condemnation of every citizen whose intertAsare affected by Their conduct. SENATOR!Coulding's report on the credentials ~f General Ames as Sena tor elect from Mississippi calls atten tion to the constitutional require- MOMS that a person to be ,eligible a 9 Senator of the United States must be an inhabitant of the State for which he Is chosen and . must be an !ninth,- tant when elected. The election, this instance occurred on the 18th of January, WO, at which time Gener al Ames wri's a military officer sta tioned in 'Mississippi by order of the supreme military authority, and was acting as Provisional Governor by aPPointriamit front General Mellow-• ell. In the opinion of the Judiciary Committee bis presence In thew two characters did not constitute the' re quisite legal 'residence, notwfilisland , ing his declaration, when consenting to b'ecoine Senator, that he r intended to leave the army and mide in Mis mimippl, and notwithstanOng his sub sequent resigriment front the army, which will accepted by the President before signing the bill to admit the State. A DrxistON of great importune° to ninny of thoex-soldlers of the' Union rmy, was ',rendered by the United States Supreme Court last week in, Washington . — Heretofore it has been held that soldiers who enlisted for three years or during the war, in 1861, and were diseharmd on surgeons' eer titicates of disability before two years of their:senile° had expired, were not ' entitled to their one hundred dffilars 'bunty. The one hundred dollars bounty was supposed to be due those only who were discharged for wounds or the heitB of .thuse who fell in bat tle, within the time named. The de- Osten referred to upsets that theory and givfes the bounty to all, and seems to be a final disposition of the whole question. The awe to which allusion is made anise on an appeal from the Illinois Court ot Claims. A Judgment wasgiven by that court (Or [la:claim ant fur $lO6 bounty ((Jr enlistment ender the President'Scall for volun teers in 1861, he haviOg been dischar ged Mr disability upon a surgeon's certificate. The question was wheth er, under tlieact of Congress ratifying thence, of the Executive the claimant could recover, the net providing that , two years' service should have been rendered to entitle the soldier to the bounty,nnlessdischarged for wounds: Mr. Justice Swayne delivered the opinion of theeourt, holding sub stan tially thati the proclamation of the President and the general orders of ' the With Department stipulating-to pay $lOO fur each volunteer, followcfil by the enlistrt of the claimant, co 'nstituted a v contract between the Uovernment and the claimant, upon which he was entitled tolthe bounty, affirming the judgmfait of the court below. • We trait the widest pnbileityl will be given to this deehdon through the Union papers, pasts of the (trawl Ar my, and by all friends of the soldier. There arc in Pennsylvania large num ber of invalid discharged soldiers who will come in under OILS decision,:and their elai ma have been so long defer red flint probably the greater part of them have long ago given up all hope or expedation of getting anything. • A statiotis affray °mitred at a land ing on the Monongahela river, three miles above Monongahela City, Sat urday evening, during which Pat• rick liensir, a coal miner, was shot and seriously if not fatally Injured. The steamer "Elisha Bennett"- her down trip stopped at the landing referred to; to take on more freight, and a crowd of drunken miners matte an attack upon the colored deck Effn Nods," One of whetn was seriously beaten. His companions managed toget hiM away from, hts:.nstatUants on board of the boat, hen thedrutt ken men threw stoma at thu boat, compelling her to kale her st" planks at the landing. As the boat baled into the channel a shut was , tired from her at the crowd who were still throwing stones, which struck , - Hensler. • IT is now next to certain that the Ithigham amendment will he atrlek en out of the Georgia ; blll and in•this the House wilt Undoubtedly concur. For this result the Georgia rebels have no one to thank but themselves. In their ebulition of joy they forgot decency, and began again; their old game of threats of personal' violence and attacks on private character. The quickerend .14 'put , to t.pin the better for Georgia and. the country. ..Tau new law 'for the punishment of gamblers provkles that all gam blers shall be fined not more than el,- 000 and lrepriSeued not over fiveyears and ullkeepers of gaining houeses the same. Lottery dealers punishable in the same way, but purchasers of.tick ets are exempted. Constables are charged with the du tir et watching for such gumes,and punished for neglect; and keepers of hotela, inns and res taurants are forbidden; under severe penalties, from allowing garnei in their houses. The relatives of these, who lose are enabled to sue and re cover in any court of record. The net La quite.full and Very stringent. A mar occurred near Pavonia Fer ry, Jersey City, on Saturday, origina ting in a eharge made by a man na med Kinney, foreman of a gang' of men employed in loading freight for the Erie Railroad, that be had been robbed in Taylor's Hotel, and that the proprietor kept a lot of thleveS about him.- Ho was expelled, 'and procuring the assistance.of about 30 men, soon atter returned and made a, violent attack upon Taylor and 'em-. ployeet - . Taylor was btlaten insensi bleand a man name Kinney severe ly injured. ..11uring theineleeseveral pistol shots were fired and Kinnelly was slightly wounded. He and Ma ny other rioters were arrested. I A iirstwrcir dated St. Louis, Mar. 19th, says: The deed body found near the fair grounds has been hien ! titled as that of Wm. Stretger. The evidence before the coroner's Jury this morning showed that he nod Herman Tubbesing, who was killed last night, belonged to the same lodge of I lain :awl; and that Tubbesing was mainly instrumental In haVing Stretger ex iwlled therefrom. One of the pistols found near Stretger WAY a French weapon, carrying a peculiar shaped hull, end that the ball found In Tub - - besing's • body, 'corresponded exactly with those in Stretger's body. It is therefore believed Stretger was the murderer. of Tubbesing, and that he committed Suicide, OVER forty railroad projects are ul retuly before Congress askiug for subsidies, while the - river and harbor int provements sought for will amount in the aggregate, to over eleven Mill ions seven hundred thousand dollars. The Chicago Tr/butte gives a notable instance of Cho end towards the means In the ease, of the little town ecCennetint, Ohba, which is situated Emewhere between Ashtabula and rie tor midway between Cleveland. and Buffalo, which already had near ly $2.1,(X)0 of the Government money, and is hard after more. and, which during the year ending June 10,.1868 yielded in tluti collected, the mag niticent sum of eighteen dollars This. superfluous harbor it is said will re quire' annual dredging, at Govern ment expense to keep it in navigable repair. E schooner James 11. Hoyt went ashore on Wed/R.-slay, at Loag Branch, during a gale, and is a total loss. After the wreck,' the Captain and four men clung to the rigging, and whilst the storm lasted were plainly seen by people on shore. As sistance was procured, and a large number of men assembled, but the surf ran too high for boats to Jive in it. A line was shotacross the wreck but the men were too much enfeebled to pay any attention to it. Then,one after-another, in full sight from the crowds on the beach, they fell out of the rigging and were drowned. One caught by his feet as befell, and hung some minutes head downwaid. The bodies were washed ashore by the waves and taken charge of by the peo ple. - disturbance of the municipal ity of Richmond, Cu., between the partizans-of Mayor Ellison and his eontestant Mayor Cab/en still contin ued at last advices. A dispatch da ted Richmond March 20th midnight, mil: the dense crowd of blacks stan ding all day around Cahoon's head quarters at the third station house so blocked up the streets that to-night Mayor Ellison determituxl to clear them away. At ,eleven o'clock he sent p force of men there who pro- ceeded to clear-Jefferson street. They were fired upon by the negroes, and: Richard Bush, a member of the ape.' clad force, instantly killed, and Capt. WilliaM Knox wounded. The Elli son force then fired on the crowd, who. after resisting the attack, were driven off. The negroes carried their ' dead and wounded, if there were any with them. The police succeeded in clearing the street, and at this time all is quiet. Bush's body artstaken to the City Hall. THERE WaS a good deal of joking at Washington on Friday last, at the expense of Senator Sumner and Gen. Butter, over the bearing of the follow ing clause in the Texas bill, introdu ced by the latter: "Proridedfurther, That this act shall not affect In any manner t he conditions and guarantees upon which the State of Texas was annexed and admitted as a State." On that day this came up in the Sen ate, and Mr. Sumner was so anxious to have the bill passed that he sug gested action without formal refer ence to committee. The following is an extract from the Joint resolution for annexing Texas, approved-3fareh Ist, 1815: "And such State; as may be formed out of that portion of said territory lying eolith of thirty 7 six .le grms thirty minutes, north latitude, commonly known as the Missouri compromise line, shall be admitted into the Union with or without sla very, as the people of each State ask ing adnaimion may desire." --W. W.. Cornell, the well known iron nakrehant, died •at New York on Thursday last. MMEM This Harrhiburgh correspondentoT of the Philadelphia Bulletin, writing of the passage of the omnibus railroad bill, stays: Some severe comments have been made by parties, hot* in and order the Legislature,with-refer ence hi the hasty manner In which this measure has been rushed through. the Legislature, i.Trita ILL that hill luta been introduced •and . pas:ted inside of seventy-two' hours, but a residence here during. the. moat seesionitasaervmt toomvince many that thb engineers of Lida Scheele did perfectly rlghtin acting as they have. Had, it, been allowed, have gone through the ordinary channels,-there wouldj have been corrupting intium ewes at work that would not have been og benefit to the mends of the State. I Why, even in the remarkably short period that this bill was in the Legislative halls, there • was enough witmsised to'have disgusted any true citizen, of Pennsylvania: '' "Hardly had it inadi3 . ' appear-, ante when a caucus of the' Booster Ring,' which.is reported" as being a well organized institution, and into membership of which, it 1,8 Alleged, .but twenty-five have been admitted, was held, and it was unanimously. re solved to send a manta Fisk, Jr., in New York City, and see whether the bill suited him. Of course the ob ject of the visit can be understood. It was calculated that, as thls new road was Intended to run away with' the grain trade from New.Yort City, and, consequently, reduceby a very large figures the freightage Over New.York' and Erie, Fisk, Jr., would do the handsome in the 'shape of a contribution for tinedefeat of the bill. Hciwever, the. courier either didn't seelbe owner of railroads and opera houses; or was informed that there was no legislation before the Penn sylvania Legislature which he desired passed or defeated]-for he returned, and since then there has been no per ceptible commotion among the Ring. Had,hbt mtyion been .successfill, thins would have been made' In teresting on the Hill, and the State would have been disgraced by a bocly which had been elected' lbr its high moral tone and for reformatory_ pur- • SENATOR REELS' imams' SPEECIL Dr'tiered tri Illenateoh Thursday. llllurch ltith 11170. At one o'clock the Georgia bill way a uo,the galleries being.thronged in anticipation .of a speech.. by. Mr. Revels. Mr. 3loteros' who was entitled to the floor,-yielded It In favor of the Senator from. Mississippi.. . Mr. REVELS then commenced his remarks, which during their. entire delivery were listened. to with the closest attention, He said: President,,l rise at this putt cularjuncturein the discussion of the Georgia bill with feelings which per haps, never before entered into the experience of any member 'of this alto. I rise, too, with misgivings the propriety of lifting my voice at this early period after my admbo- ' ion In the Senate. Perhaps it • were wiser for me, so inexperienced in,the details of Senatorial duty, to,temain a passive listener in the progress .of this debate; but when I remember that any term Is shorty- aral that- the issues with which this bill-is fraught are momentous in' their present and future influence upon the wellbeing of my rake, twould sutra . indifferent to the importance ofthehour,,and re cremit "to the high trust imposed upon me; if I neglixtetl to. lend 'my voice on behalf of the loyal people of, the South I therefore waive ad thoughts as to the propriety of entering Into this discussiyn, breaking through the generally understood etiquette of this body.. When quelyons arise which . bear upon the isafisty wad I , t e.i ttcotion' of the'lgyalwfilie and ,eolo people of those Slides ih /le 'llicktt. I cannot allow any thought us to mere propriety to enter into my con sideration of duty. • The responsibilities of being the 'exponent of such a constituency as' I have the honor to represent are fully appreciated by tne. I have, about 'tie the keemet sense of thiS weight, and that feeling prompts me now to lift and, voice for the first time in the council chambers of the nation; and Sir I stand to day on this flour to up ! Irani for protection from the strong aria of-the Government fer.ber loyal children, irrespective of color or nice who are citizens of the Southern States, and particularly of the groat State of Georgia. 1 ant well aware sir, that the Islet is abroad that an antagonism exists between the whites and blacks; that race whieh the na tion raised front the degradation of slavery uud endowed With the full and unqualified rights and privilegni of citizenship, are intent upon power at whatever price it can he gained. It has been the well considered per 'pose and aim of a Class, not confined to the South% to sorted this charge over, the laud, and their efforts are us vigorous to day to educate the people of this nation into that belief, as they were at the close of the war. It was not uticaunnou to find thissame class even during the rebellion, prognusti eating a servile war. It may have been that the wish was father to the thought, and, sir, as the recag,nized representative of my down trodden people, I deny.the charge, and hurl' It back litto the teeth of those who snake it, and who, I believe, have not a true and,couscicntiuus choke to further the interests of the whole South Certainly any one possessing a knowledge of the colored population of my own or any other Surto need not be reminded of the noble 'con duct of that people under the most trying circumstances in the history, of the late war, when they were bey ond the protection of the Federal for ces. While the Confederate army prtssed hem its ranks every white male capable of bearing arms [ the mothers, wives, daughters andsisters of the Southern soldiers were left de fenseless and in the power of the blacks, upon whom the chains of sla very were still rivetted, and to bind those chains closer was the real issue for which so much life and property was sacrificxxl. And now, sir, ask, how did that race act Didl they, in those days of Confederate weakness and impotenco, evince the malignity of which we hoar so mach ? Grant ing for the sake of argument that they were ignorant and besotted,. which I do not believe, yet with all their supposed ignorance and credu lity they in their way understood as fully as you or I the awful import of ' the contest. They knew, if gallant corps of Nationalsoldiers were batten buck end their flag trailed in the dust that It was the prtsageofstillheaVier bondage. They longed, too, as their fathers before there, for the advent of that epoch over which was shed the hallowed light of inspiration itself: they desired, too, with their fathers, to welcome the feet of strangers shod with peaceful preparation of good news. Weary years of bondage had told their tale of sorrow to the Court' of heaven. In the councils of the Great Father of :all they knew the adjudication of their (Ouse, albeit de layed fur .years, In. which patient suffering had nearly would in the end bring 'there. the boon for which they. signet), God's most bleSsed gift to his creatures' the inestimable boon oflitierty:.,, They waited, and they' waited :patietitlYt /n the taxmen= of their - musters they protected the virtue and Chastity, of defenseless Wonien. Think, sir,, fur a'anoninnt, what the condition or this land wouldbe today if the slaw population' had 'risen in servile lusurectionapainstthose who month by'month, were lighting to perpetuate that institution which brought them all the evils of which they coluplalned. Where: would have been security for property,' ft. , nude chastity end chilithood's lame* mem? The bloody 'counterpart of Such aliiitery of cruelty and wrongs would have been paralleled only . in those chapters of Jewish history as nee -- OW that ' reign the atiroci by tks of se that or terror, Which sent the unfortunate Lout .XVI. antis Marie Antoinette to the seaffold. No.; the deeds' in that druma of cold blooded'" butchery WoultUffrive oute-Iferoded the • diabolical acts of Tiered himself. . Mr. President, I maintain that the east recent ofmy?palle tientridix of ti iefaillege which diraislmate them. They lecir toward their for -new toasters no revengdbi - th. no. hatred, ~ no, animus tie, 'they aim not to elevate- themselves by sacrificing uneelegie leUkrestqf their white fellow citizens. They ask but •rights which are theirs by Oars eat vereal law, and which are the nate-, rut outgroth and logical sapience of the condition in which the legisla tivo of this: nation have placed.. them. They appeal you and to mein see that they receive that pioteetion which'alone will ena ble them to pursue ther daily aye: cations with success, and enjoy their liberties of citizenship on the same footieg. with their white neighbors and friends. Ido nett:keit° simply to defend my own race from imjustend unmerited charges; but I also • desire to placeupon theiVecord an 'express shin of my foil and entire confidence In the integrity- of • ; with which I believe_ the ' dent, Con mess and the Republican party will meet these lune:lona :so prolific of wealor wee, not only to my own people betto thewhoieSouth. - They have been; so en; as. eau,. read the history of Modules, Influeced by no spirit of petty tyranuy. A' poet has welinald "0, it is excellent to have a glant's strength, but ft is tyrannous to use it like a Blunt." And how have they used that power ledged in them by the'People? Inacts of cruelty and oppremion toward thew who sought to rend ei twain this goodly fabric of our fathom the priceless heritage of so much Wrdship and endurance in revolutiouary times? Let the recon= 'erection enactments answer this in terrogation. No poor words of mine are needed to defend the wise and beneficentitOsiation which.has been extended alike to white and colored citizens. The Republican ..party .not In flamed, as some WoUld fain have the country believe, atalAst the whide population of thetiouth. Its - borders are wideenougli kir. all truly, loyal men to find waidtai them peace and repose from the dim and discord of angry faction, and be that loyal man white or black, that great ,party .of our Republic will, if cousistent,with the record it has Odrtedy made . fur prasterlty, throw around him the same impartial security in his pur suit of liberty and, happiness. If certain ,class of theliouth had accept ed in good faith the benevolentover tures which wertk l offertsl to them with no niggard band, to day would not find our land still harnisse,l with feuds and eontentimi. remarkol, fir. l'reSideut,.that 1 rose to plead fur a defenteless.race, who now send their delegation to the seat of Government to sue for that which this Conger. alone can secure for them. And here.let me say fur ther, that thepeoitle of the North owe to the coioral rate a deep obligation which it is no easy matter to fulfil. When the Federal armies were thrott- ened by death tutddiswititr, and som bre clouds ultieglisusg..the length and breadth of the Reflublic, and the very air was pregnantavith rumors of for eign interference; in those dark days of defeat, whoselnemories even yet haunt uses an uglydrioni, from what source did our nation in its seeming death thro(*gairtadditional and new found power? n jt was the sable :inns. of,the South the.kvaliantly rushed to the rescue, end but for their Intrepid ity and ardent dering,many a North ern fireside would miss to day pater- nal counsel otlakrothet's love. • Sir,- I repeat the (^ that the colored raw saved .to the Qftle women .4( New England mullet, Middle States the 1 men on whom they lean to-day for Security and safety. Many of my race, .reprf:entativett air these men oil the tieldof WALL al in the wuntless graves of . If those quiet resting' plades of our honored dead could speak to-day, what a mighty voice, like lo the rushing of a mighty , wind, would etitne upfront those sep ulchral hotnes.• Could we moist the eloquent pleadings of their appeal? Alt,..sir, 1 third r this question of Me mediate and attiple protection fur tile loyal people of thangia would lose its le;ral teehnielditles, and we would • cease to hesitate in our provisions for their instant relief. Again, I regret this delay on other grounds. The taunt is frequently flung at us that a Nemesis more ter rible than thelireek personation of the anger of God awaits her hour of direful retribution. We are told that at no distant day a great uprising of the Amerlauti,people will demand that these riadiistructlon acts of Con gross be undone and blotted forever from the annals of legislative enact ment. 1 inquire, sir, if this delay in affording protection to thcloyalistsof the State of Geories does not lead an uneoinfortahlevalguillomee to- this beastieg sneeewith which were often meet? Delakis perilous at best, for it is as trueltkiegislatlon as in physic, that the longer we procrastinate to apply the remedies, the more critical beallCN'tila malady that we seek to heal. The land wants such as dare with vigor:execute the laws. Her festered meinhens must bellowed and tended. lie is'a bad surgeon that fur pity spares the part corrupted until gangrene apreails and all the body perishes. He that is merciful unto bad is cruel to good. Mr. Revels then reviewed the his tory of affairs in Georgia, stating that at the election in November 1867. for members to tho State vent ion 811,- 001) white- and .so,ooo colored Votes , were polled, and a 'lumberer colored ' delegates elected. A constitution teas framed and ratified, and a legislature elected under it was convened after all this. Supposing they had prised beyond Congratilonal centred, the re bel element in the Legislature assert ed itself;and Many of those whose disaabilittes lauliven removed by the StateConveatiop,which co:upriser/1i number of 'coloted members, joined in the declaration made by that Leg islaturethat a num having more than an eighth of African blixxl in his veins was ineligible to office. These very men, to whom the Republican party extended all therights and priviles, cs of citizenship of, which they bad de prived themselves, denied piffled equality to a lafge majority of their fellow citizens., Twenty-eight mem bers were expelled, On the-22d of December, DRA an act of Congress was passed, requiring the reassembling of persons declared elected by the military commander, the restoration of the expelled menu bens, and the rejection of othenewho weredlisqualified. Alleonditinns had now been complied with. and having nalfied the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments, GeorgiapriNented her- Self for recognition. The Bingham amendment proposed to legalize the organization of DO, and would legal. he the. set of the Legislature in ap pointing it Judge who decided in lie eer-nr ci_as distinction in the. State. As. a moms of future protection for loyal Georgians,. he desired that these termStibouldcouituentwifrom the date of the prweet legislation. - Heasked , this in the name of 100,000 white and coloredGeargiarts, and reminded the Senate thaVhe *lto permitted oppo sition'slifileetVie . . —Thc As . vellirig• house of Jahn T. Stouffet,l4 UR Pleasant, Westinore land county, wittimost °fits contents, was destroyed by lire on the Oth inst Lost between five and six thousand dollars: son of Mr. Stouffer, who attimes is ittans, is supposed to have set the house on Are. Ile has been removed to Dixtnont Hospital. • liiebriated man in Lawrence, . 11 1 0 k i sts, wits found clinging too fence, Itiokinglietplessly at a neighboring row 'of ahlaie treee• "Haifa/3w said A Merl al.'_!whatre matter; Jack?" "DarnlV'e n3 dee. Jacob,"' "that pnxxodefiN3 never goin' to git past." 1t . lI(MAW IDAIPTIVEL .-t 1 ' ‘ , /te . &Aire of Me rftgrtafriat Girls ' in nxaa bit laa)ixt .liisa,;,;l3arlio -Wan V,* Moiler • Theiirarents -4)17Goall gp : 14itit, jam. • -- MwrAbtateTexas, 11/-1870 In -this distant Tart of the country, when. the malls are not very trtist worth.Y, tgiSt aft surnntslng that only resientlyirsaavit)letter from Wash ington giving an account of the re lease of two Ifttlegirts - who'had -been 'caPtured Wiatilawand their arri- Nat at the national capital under the awe of Vol. Leavenwortbi.tot whom they were Indebted for their release , . As from the disposition proposed to t . :uiadnofithe children ,it would appear that they are without relatives t de elm to narrate ' the elreta te nitales at tending (their capture, so that -their surviving - friends ma y be enabled to take them home , ff•destrousof so do- In. . ~,, ~, • . T h eipareta of the girls,'Whoie air rect,tiames are Alideand Susan_ i were named Thomas Jefferson and Martha Fitzpatrick. -, • They' lived on- Clear Creek, some eighteen miles southeast of this place, and .were .persons , in niodenite eircumithinccs.'. On the 6th of Jan.;•lB6B, ii neighbor of theirs, A. H. Parkhill, arrived at their • farm With the Intelligence that a' band of Kiewa •Indiaws were on a raid near toy,igling, and scalping all who , tell into their power, and burnintlioases. Mr; . Fitzpatrick, with his wife the two girls and an Infant boy of two years of age, accompanied -by Mr. Parkll, immediately started for the hom(of the latter, about halt a'inile distant, closely pursued by the In dians. - They had not gone far when the savages cane up with the fee; Svcs an attacked , . them. The two axle fought with the greatest tiesper, anion, but were finally overpowered killed "and scalped and their bodies horribly mutilated. Mrs. Fitzpatrick was scalped alive and stabbed twice in the back, the Indians leaving her 1. 4.1 'for dead. 01. their departure oho wrapped her lead - in a part o 1 her (lava and end tvored to reach Mr. Parkhill's house. She walked n short distance aud.fell. \Vhen found she was dead. The .• tragedy (averred about five o'clock in the evening, but the bodies of the three Victims were not discovered and brought In until the nexCinorning. . , . The babe was carried by the Indians aboitt half:lll3li% when the wretches daShed out its brains and flung the corptite 013 the. road. The girls, how ever,were borne off uninjured , , consigned-to the care of a squaw. As soda as information'reached the citi zens of the pr ta of Indiana, they organized a band and started in pur suit; but the night being very cold and thesleet falling heavily their trail was reptotedly' lost, anti they suc ceeded In making good their escape. The dead bodies were buried in one grave, beside a number of others who had lost t heir.liv4A at the hands of the same band of savages. Mr. Fitzpatrick was; I think, a na tive of Indiana. He had been twitx , married, and by his tlrst wife had two daughters, who resided at last amount in Tennessee. His father was re3i ding here at the time of his murder, but returned to Indiana soon after,and Is.doubtless there now. It is not un likely that lie Is ignorant of the fate otitis gminichildren t and it would be ,well.,for the:authorities to ascertain his whereabouts and restore them to Ids keeping, as the/eget and mosrap propriate guardian for the orphans. ItieIIMOND. The Municipal Imbroglio (balinues— • Partial Interference by the Military —Action by City Cbuncil—Graft E.milenient,One: :Iran Killed and. Two, liOunded. IB,—Tho C(1)11; tiltion of affairs here is not flinch changed.' Both Ninyons had inter• views with Gen. Canby this Calloon's party, with- the exceptiim of three or four who were starved out this morning, still hold. the lower station !loose. .They have been:with out food since Wednesday . night. Daniel Ilendorson,,colored, was idiot and killed this morning by a special I pollcoman for resisting when they ' Were chlwitig lite streeb3 of a crowd around • the . ioWer station house. Mayhr Ellison's police still have po i se-sion of the city buildings, with the Wm e: lif the station !musts. i er liis afternoon Cameral Canby in terfered in the municipal troubles by sending a guard of soldiers and rids ; dug the siege at the lower station ' house and giving free egress and in gress to all having business there. This action, he says, hail no reference to the questions of the Mayondity a but taken purely as a precauthin i against any ass of dishonor or vio -1 lenee. The movement is applauded by the friends of Calnion and is, pro tested against by Ellison as no war- I rantable interference with the civil law oft he State. When the military Mot: posscosion or the station house, Mayor Ellison's police left, and being I stoned by a crowd of colored men,t he ; police charged upon them. About-j fifty shohi were died and two or three colored men wounded. Affairs have i since quieted. To morrow both Mayors will have! Mpolice force on the street and hold courts. I independent Trouble is ap prehended. The city council to night hits an ordinance abolishing the sta tion braises now in the hands of Ca !moil's police, authorizing Mayor Ellison.to call out the tire brigade as police, pledging the city to pay all special police sworn in by :Nlayor Ellison, authorizing the city court to be held in City Hall, and pledging Mayor Ellison the earnest support of the city, council in his efforts to main- tain the peace of the city against the lawless men conspiring against it. The city is quiet this evening. The casualties of to day were one man killed and three wounded. Cahoon has his headquarters at the lower station. house, where. OW ..military I inlidd LS, and Ellison' siteartquarters are at the City ilaLl. Ellison 's police i patrol the city to night. • AT the meeting of the house Com- Mince on Indian affairs a bill provi ding for the future treatment of In dians was considered at length.. The bill jvill Provide for the( division of Indians into three classes, the first to he' known as civilized, and to receive no annuities or ot her benefits or goods from the United States, and the two other classy to be composed of the half civilized and barbarous tribes, who will receiveaid until sufficiently far advanced io be ranked with the first class. It is also provided that the country inhabited by the Indians shall be divided into four districts, each to have , a. superintendent, and also that as many agencies shal I be es tablished throughout the districts as may, be,ncressary to tarry out the provisiona of ifieuct. The bill dots not etintthimplmite Or proVide foi treat • ies of any character, the committee being . pretty well satisfied that treaty makingis one of the worst plans that can be pursued, both for the Govern ment and the Indians. Gov, Bur bank, of Dakota, writes to time Com mimAoner of Indian Affairs that there is a fimir prospect that Red Cloud, chief of a warlike band of Sioux, wilt want' to negotiate, with the Govern meat, and go on a reservatian this spring. This will make an important change in the current of Indian affairs in the Northwest, as he is the most formidable chief of the Sioux, and has 2,500 Indians. under his command !amides influenetViaver nelny others. :---431n Tuesday morning, a young man named' Win. Driner, about twenty-four years of age, employed at the bone mill of Miller & Smith in the city of 'Wading, met with a 4iferrible death byli4ing ground up in the phosphate mixing tub. He was cleaning the tub, when the belt Was slipped off the loose: pully upon the siutfting, starting the machinery and crushing his body In u frightful manner.... • I —The fruit in Ohio Is reported en jured by the menteold weather. The 6ras4.Arszir Nearly everybody knows:Of the. existence inlhitt, State of the loyal order of the Grand Army of, the- Re public-sfewdierhaps, have nn nem: ate and thorough conception of what 1 It Is and what lt, Intends-to- do.. We propoeo to briefly sketch.theoutlines of the work which the members of ' the Department of Pennsylvania I have mimed out for themselves. It is well known that during the latter Vart'of hest year ft thorough-' reorgenimation of the ceder was effix , ' ted. - The dry hrtmehm were lopped off—nominal membership and the membership of nominal soldiers was dime away with, . and the . organiza tion, although perhaps showing • less on paper than t his, time.hist year, is in far more efficient miiditlen and really on a fur stronger : busk It is flow in working order. "• At the annual encampment held in PittsburgJanuary . 26, Major A. It. Calhoun, of Philadelphia, was chosen as the Department Commander for' the coming year. Ills inaugural order,rmently issued, develops the Tian oraCtion which the organiza tion intends to pursue this year, and from it we are enabled to point out the leading features of the work. In the State of Pennsylvania,•over four hundred thousand men sprang to arms during the late •war, at the' call of our imperilled country. Nearly fifty thousand fell on South-' ern battle-W(ls or died in Southern prisons, and as large a number re turned broken In health, or maimed' for Ilfeby the bullets of our late foes. Dmffilte the unparalleled generosity of the Government in caring for its defenders, there Ise fearful amount of misery entailed on the Widow and the orphan and the maimed, which the nation's charithes cannot reach or remedy. This suffering will contin ue till the soldiers' widow have passed away, till the soldiers' orphans have grown to maturity, and till the last maimed veteran crosses the dark river and joins the ranks of his com rades gone before. To care for the distressed, Air these who have borne the heavy burthen of the war, to enforce the pledges made in the, ex- trona hour of war to the soldiers and I to his children after him, is the first great duty of-the-order. As such it is a beneficial order, and its platform is broad enough to cover every age 1 and sex - and color and party, asking but one question, "Was the affliction brought on by fidelity to our country in the days of rebellion ?" But there is another object—to per , petuate the friendship (.6i/west by.! four y(mrsn of war. Comrades who marched and fought and starved and bled together are joined by ties too I I strong to be severed by the disband ing of thecrushes. It is only natural, then, that our soldiers should follow' the example of the soldiers of our previous want and organize from the', purest motives to perpetuate that noblest of feelings. a soldier's friend-. In addition to the object already named, however, by the action of the remit Department Encampment new work is to be undertaken. . A committee of comrades has been ap pointed to look iytu the uninagemeut oethe schools for soldiers' orphans, established and maintained by the noble generosity of this Common wealth, and to satisfy the order from personal inspect ion. This great work alonewould justify the existence of the organization. We know of not h ing which would so thoroughly satiny every good citizen as to the , etActency and purity of the *soldiers' inpfuns' sCluieds as t h e verdict of a committee of tne Grand Army. allili."41214""Or ellnrflet with this mho s 7rfu 0411 4.0te.0s almndyappoin Ithid (viten we'say that It is headed by AWor General John F. Hamann we need not i*l that tt. will be well - Another objective point of the ex ertions of the Grand Army is the es labibbld'etil of, e State home for the Omitted ( sldier!: In this elibri every good citizen will feel prompted to assust._ .(.amts monumeuts to the patriot dead ore another mptvific object attic labors at the order, and we are pleas ed to hear the State Commandant announce that monument, organiza tion have been established already in 'nt. , arly . every county In the Common wealth. 'The preservation of the ‘var—re , 4- imental history—hwitlents—personal adventures-48111:4o part of the Sys tetuatie tabor of the (irand Army. At the locoing,: of the poets all his torical menhir:lw :out contribution , are read mut Li for the u-c or the future historian. The miler, as ,is (ellen alleged, is not partisan. Democrats and Re : publican work silo by side in its ranks as they did in the war dals. Au hinatrable and present good eharnoter are the wily e 111174- fluent papers IlittAiXl to admit any inarine of the Union. Narely the very recital of the ob jects or this vharitable, friendly, and loyal organization ought to silence forever all defannitiou and aspersion; and its ix worthy of notke,, we may 'pint out in closing, that only those opposed the Onnul Army now who opposed and villitied the army, in the field during the rehellion.—Phila. Pre.u. —About live years ago a young man employed as teller in a New York bank discovered upon settling amounts one evening that he wa 800 short. Not being able to replace the amount himself he was discharg ed and his sureties were forced; to make good the missing amount. Since then he has rested under con tinuous suspicion. A few days ago some workmen in removing, the desk at which the teller had formerly bet•ti emptoyed, found a gold check, signed by United States Treasurer Spinner, of the date and amount kreckoning the premium then obtain ed) of the alleged defalcation ---A feud between two families in Summeru county, Tenntwee, of long standing. culminated on Wednesday in a,fight at Gallatin. Jamot ll:wri t:lM, on one side, was killed, and Messrs. Exont and Preston, on the other side, I,7,bundvd. A negro by stander was also wounded James Branham received several shots through Ilk clothes. The par ties were arrested and hound over for trial. gentlenion was scolding his son for staying out late at night,.aud said: "Why, when I was of your age nay father would not allow the to go out of the house after dark." "Then you haul n deuce of a father, you had," sneerial the younginlitligate. The father votifenned, "1. had a confoun ded sight better one than you, you young rascal.' -=—A meeting of anthracite coal operators, representing over four millions of tons, held at Pottsville on Tuesday, agreed on the following insis for the wages of workmen : With coal at $2 50 pee ton at Port Carbon ' outside wages, $9; inside wages, $10; miners' :Wageff. $l2 per week; contract work reduced thirty per cent.: all advputcrilwenty per cent., as heretofore..:•; . . „.. —At a temperance ntectlng. in PottstoWn, it wusiesolvedteappoint a committee( to act withothetaotlike character and purpose) "to ascertain the names of such persons who lend, their influence to perpetuate drunken ness by signing certificates to obtain licenses for the coming year, in this borough; and report the same as early as possible.' —Tito Pliiindelphia Volunteer Fire Department is composed of 87 com panies,: The active membership numbers Oiti ; honorary, 6,171 con tributing, 10,994. In the department thenotre 47 engines,ll3 hose carriages 10 trucks, 1,467 feet of ladder, 81,130 feet of how, 1,1 i) feet of suction, 7 hand engines, and 68 hooks. 'There are connected with the department 17 engineers, 46 drivers, 92 horses, and 4 ambulance', , NEWS SUMMARY. —The Urestmoreland county jell contains no priiioners. --The, wages of the workmen n the Lehigh fhhte t'ompany have lx ..et -Tetlutvd tosl -10 per tiny. --An Indiana fanner laid a grave yard gliost Hut other night by fin9at: ing:llls,old white huits.. ; • • A•Georgia"newspaPer, speaking mindixak,Z.rount. says tbut Ids "is in full robustltude." , ---The Jolt-hint:vat 'San „ roman%) are on half rations anti Want to change their boarding place. —I ask plit.%ter mistime ,u.-ell bby WasitingtOn dart:lea to asnlreeats dut.urtheir best .roottm.., suys he dims' out after hisAlirushirat— Lethal-.thought ho had closed his toouth fur good. Nevada newspaner,tays borne, of the streams of that State have "brook trout over four feet long. —Delimiters don't alWays got rich, but by the time detectives look for them they are generally: Wolf off. —Sam Lynch, the ring leader of the st6ituer Dubuque rioters, has been captured In Arkansas. —The safe of J. B. White, grocer, at Fort Wayne Indiana, was robbed of $2OOO on Wednesday night. —The Prince Imperial didn't have the small-pox after all. Ile is not to be pitted so nutch as if he had. —They have lately disinterred an "eight foot Indian chieftain and four of his subjects," near Louisville, Ky. —At Bennington , Vt., the Mt. Anthony Observatory was blown down ilurlnr, the storm 011 Wednes day. —St. Patrick's day was duly et..le brated by Irish citizens of St. Louis, Chk.tgo, Cincinnati, New York and other cities. —The laborers on the government canal at Keokuk have quit work, and demand amadvance of twelve per cent, in their wages. —A Mksouiian. who last his .wife by a railroad accident, leaks *dO,OOU damages.. The e3mpany offers him $2,OOiL —Swine,hunting is carried on io the streets of Louisville. The swine do the hunting and small children are the grime. —Representative Steel, of Arm strong county, is laying seriously ill at his home in nrrville, in that coun ty. —The woman's party appropriate ly wants to make Elizabeth the capi tal of New Jersey. Ann-elation will come next. —The new princes; of Naple; wa born on 'ktlipolitan so —seyentl sacks of it, imported by water and spread en the floor. - —A young lady . in lowa, Ivanting to commtt suicide in 114 1111:11.41111t way as possible, made a nice take to put her poison in: —A San Franci , eo Othello Put out his 3./e=deniona's light and his own, the other day, with a revolter, in stead of a pillow and sword. —The New York Tribune :says Cap tain crime "is worse than dis. gmeeful to his nation and rata.—it a calamity to his veeitN." etite6rtriQin , P fenntle traveler, in Indiana, weurcd a whole railway atr to herself by carrying a j:tr of sour k rout. LA party well supplied with whis j key and other needful artichs, has Lille, killed a huge California lion in I Mixinuri. New Orleans pickpockets send npa ho-t of India ruhlber hailoons,and while the crowd gazes heavenward, go through their pockets. —A Jack Bunshy told a Conneeti ent caucus the other day that "if we do our duty and elect our wan I have no doubt of the result." —The Idwa Senate - applauded the other day, when the Pre,ident : Jiiss Clerk.'! She is a young, pret• ty, and engriKsing clerk. lias beaten a Philadelphian out Of $i.. ) 10,000; $1.09,000 of which he had at once. Ile now fell thankful for the shelter of the hour house. Minne,ota paper announce": that four young ladles were recently baptized in num river, in that State, with the mercury In degree:4 above zero. —Some of the Philadelphia papers are making a great ado just heeallSe two policemen clubbed a drunken woman to death in the Street a night or two since. —Mrs. Esther. Morri4, Justice of the Peace, in Wyoming, on her tirst court day, wore a calico gown, worst ed breakfast shawl, green hair ribb ons and green necktie. —Olive Logan sivs there are two kinds of fashionable "girls" One has no thought beyond her mere personal apperanee, and the other is fashionableand yet has brains. —Maron Palmer, an employe, fell 'upon a heading saw in . stave man ulaetory at Fort Wayne, Indiana, on IVediwsday, and had his right hip horribly mangled. ; —Students in the Baptist Theolog ical Seminary, at Chicago, are said to be living on less than a dollar a day, ! and are suffering great privations for lack of means. —At Nashville on Thursday last, j the Irish population were out in large numbers celebrating St. Patrick's day, whilst the Hebrews wereenually zealous in celebrating the Festival of I Purim. —The lion. G. A. tirow hits recent ly become connected with a large manufacturing establishment in ; Philadelphia, and removed to that city. —Josiah Spencer, of Warren, was killed in that town on Saturday by filling from the top the railroad bridge to the ground. Ile was engag ed in making repairs.. —The new Opera I louse of Messrs. Parshall and:Oould, at Titusville, it is expected, will be ready fir "public dcdioition" in September. The "R -ings will amfonmpalate fifteen hun dred _pers. ins. —A few eve!' I rigs lig.) a iwet ing was held in WaylleAllrg, Chester county, to take mea-ures fur the fi [nation of a new euunly out of parts of, Chester, Lancaster and Iterks, with Waynesburg as the county alt. —Mr..Michael Kenth .diea at the Blair County Alms House, on tile 111th inst., at the advants.sl age•of one hundred and four years. Ile was an • ate of the Alm" Ilinise for the past ten years, during which time he was totally blind, but he enjoyed good health until the last ten days, when he had a paralytic. stroke. —At the Philadelphia Methodist Episcopal Conference the returns on the question of lay delegation were ollictally reported. The vote stood in this Conference—for, 6,4011 ; against., Ltilti; majority in favor, .IAIO. —Some of the lager beer dealers in ,M Bison, Wj4., reftNol to supply liver to inembeiN of the Legi-lature who voted in fa - Vor of removing the State capital to Milwaukee. seine legislators got very thirsty. —The Senate premises the country some action on the bill abolishing. the franking privilege next week, when pa*iibly the Georgia bill will he out of the way. By general cou,ent it was made thespeciat order for next Tuesday. • , H 1 • TO TE NtSlit are Moron , pared to furst.ll all cla-we't w Ith colorant risploty issue at home. the whole of Ito- Owe or ler the spare. moment, liusines. new. Relit andprolltas hlo i'llfl,ollo or either •,•X molly Corti Ctil. pr, itropottlottal OM by de %silt:lt:lSOß whore limo to the buelness. Rays and girls rare nearly es much as men.. That ail who we MI. stay os stl thelrythirept• sad attest the hus• Ines*. we make this unpatalteled otter: To ouch as are not well satietled. tee will send }I dollar to pay for the trouble of litrttlng. Full portico Lars. a valuable sample, which will do to commence work on, and a copy of ma Illerary (imp. panini. —one of the lamest and beat [amity lattwa• papers published—all sent free by mall. • Wad e s, you wait permanent. profitable wort. adders. E.C. ALLEYS Co., Auipseta, .We. octil7:Sact. Medlclnal. Ayer's Hair 'Vigor, For restoring Gray Hair ( t its natural Vitality and Color. A dreF,in g is at once agreeabl e healthy, and effected for ..preserviag tLr hair. Faded or , M hair is soon t r atord to its ori9inal C. 16 with the gloss freshness of youtl 4 Thin hair is ;ened, falling hair checked, and LaLb lais , n often, though not always, easy inv its use. Nothing can restore d, flair where the follicles are destroyed. r the glands atrophied and decayed But such, as remain can be rived fo r usvfoluesi by this application. a baud si fouling the hair with a pas ty unto, it will keep it clean and vi,,ffotoce Its occasional use will' prevent the hair from turning gray, or falling off, 5 2 .1 consequently prevent baldness. Foe from those deleterious substances ,make some preparations dangerous a3d it,:atriOtts to the hair, the Vigor can only benefit but not harm it. If wanted weedy for a HAIR DRESSING, nothir, else can be found o tleArable. Containing neither oil nor dye, it doe. jot ,oil white cambric, pud yet-lam long uu the hair, giving it a rich glossy lustre nud n grateful perfume. Prepared by Dr. L C. Ayer & Co., I'ms.cricAL AND ANALYTICAL ellE31111; LOW} LL, MASS. PRICE $l.OO. Ayer's Cathartic Pills, Por all tho purposes of • Lawn, Medicine. Perhapr no oar met, eine is so universal:- r: quireil ter e* er) 6.: . . • cathartic, nor u s. 0.! 4 i.,. ___.; , ,ii: ny ::...,, , ,, u , r,. :::,. , v7 , ,:, ,,, ::, :• :, _.." • . .._ ,_._ . IS adopted tut.. to- a e zligio brit cal • -o pig -,;.., fill. The 01•r1.1,,i n, son is , that it is a ni to f o .-..-- - lerble and fir t.:. es cf,. , _ • tual rentetly e ...10 1, other. Thos e sno h.• :ded it. knsisr that it cured theta; flood s (es mgt sot, know that it curer their neighbors r•.l its,.:, 111 , i nil know that what it dues owe it .I.i.- ale a • -that it never faits through my fault or 4,44. 14 I I, conipo.itn•n. two hare thousands 1., it 1:. .. t • tints Or certin,:lt:e3 of their rentarta tile ....No . : • i t.llowtic; complainti, lint such cures are 15...... . . t 1 .017: Ilfnelloorhooli, and we need not liiii.looi*. .. ‘dalile 4 l to all ages end conditions ii a ll .I oataming neither calomel or any delete:lo 1.... . ry may be taken with safety by any issli 4r. • fogar coatine preserres them ever fresh.,. , Italie, :hem pleaAant to take, while being purs4 ica{-,:ti to harm can arise from their use in aay enact.: They operate by their powerful influence si I..ai Menial viscera to purify the bloat and yhentht I litO healthy action —remove the sib ',try. tools ..I' es ttomach, bowels, liver, and other or,ran. of ..... IN ty, metering their irroputar action to t ..aith.. I correcting. wherever they etlit...ll .leran, tient. as are the first origin of ilieesse. Minute directions are given in the neat.l l er . 1 Le hoz, for the following complaint., stn• hit. -.. l'ills rapidly cure: For Dyspepsia or Sodirearion. Listless. nests. Languor and Laos of Al ppetire. a •,- dumb! be tae" Moderately to sunialtie the , e.i. telt and restore its healthy tone rind :wrwe For Liver Complaint awl it, 13r:oti ; ~ •• ,- ,n:11., Miaow. Itrodutbr. kick Ile.olacto. toolice yor OrS,ll 111C.111 PIM alines Colic awl 121 Moor j ir•loo-ly taken fhr each cane, to corn.vt 1,11011 I,r re.IIOVC tho ob4trurti,ini 1,11.411 gnu For Ihypratery or Dlarrher.t• i•" 4. i• Cenerally requirol. For Ithruniatioso. Gout. Gr.arrl. MOO. halloo of [hr Pain an CI • %Mr. nark anti Lotus, they a.‘ mtirr,l, to r:Inozo th, 1- :he •r•tl.111. used o.Ang , fl•• r , q . D romby nut Ilirowticat 40. t &no. 11.11.11 w 1 iken in Tarp. aii.l it.. ~ . •',•-••• ittve tht.rtrim-1 }'or Soplorr.sion I 13112422322111ZWM=1 A. A D' I:0, mit. or III" ilice•tion ml 4 relieve 1!u• 021=212=1111 Mil===llo=l 4111.1 *y.tent. 11,1 ,, n•• • rallt=l4lll4 where no MTi01141ar.111,.1 . 11• 4 , Vlh, R" , 14 talernblr well. often dupl. rt ifl .e PH/. make_a tam feel lalh l Meir rlran•in and renovating erect on iw Ju t allltara[tla• _ OD. ✓. c. .irE rt & co,, Pra.41.4.1 LOoRL.E. 51.455.. S. .1. marl 7: I, , ... , , . ...- --'...! ...5." , •., .• - • • 1 • .. : , • .-.- ••'--:-.:(t9.-;43:• 1 .. .: -.- ''' -: .7 ? . f 1; .'%!•:; . qa - 1., ' I 4'.,- .: , . 4 '., ‘ ( ' . t , 4 -• .; '.. I ... ! d, ta 4 1 '. ~ •• '1.,,) C' , ','. 4 i 1 `—,) 'l.,Ce. , tr.l 1 ,1 ~.,-,. \ ........; ~.,,..,.........4 • v• v i: .,.,,,1. i ,..... 4 .k,--ii-- . fit t J ; 4 . 1 ,1 ' i 's - ~...1 . - r • . J ',: . . • .. _._ floi9tl flair to it, k! rvopvcs Datidru:7, i f (tIN • it: DI•LISES' r THE S(II.P. .• P. .•makes Inc ..ir. Glos., tut! Luzon:.:. =I P. .1 I.r SF:WA.II.I), 10-:x r: .1 (311 . s p ml .1; ugziat, -• ; I'l litk Nator for paile at Ih•• ftderpioled, .rf•olo , SELLING OFF AT COST. L the room 1/04 . 0CA . 14.1..1 lo --' Orr S Cooper—on the dud of April. to reduce hiepluel 11+011 TUE ri Ex - r TIIIIITI 111" lll.stotk consfl.lf. In pirl .0/7/ Goods, anti And all article* usually found In a og,, Come and see fur yourrel‘;, ?.Ir, elae.chere Tuom.‘ , + LIP." mart:Sol Itra:ro AIL , I.' Iri s X EetT()ICS NlYnt:r. I.4.tter, te•ti. 4harine h`ttti enured M th , .olrc.rttx , the ...tn... of J. Vary Ittotl.lo9. 01 borough, an to.r.otts luttrAted to .441 hereby aoparrt Gowan tchrovellate t;htlarut all {Karon' bat to clahiloraistest data rt . pre,eot theta .Inly azithruticateol fire JOIIN St. YOVNtL MI)WARD DOCK IN(;. . - Brighton Paper 'Mills! BEAVER FALLS, .PENN'A. PRINTING. NANNILL.I. ROOFING, BAILING, 16,11. 1 1. 1i.A.(4 AND ('A 1:1)1•IT PAPER' 31.A.Nuiv,vc;-1-1- EI) AND SOLDAT Wholesale 47 Retail b) Frazier, Metzger & Co., 82 Third Avenue. PITTSBURGH arliags Laken In aschnnze. IMIE
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