. ii ~. Otanttlittr. OETTYSEURG, P.A. '• Waaday 1111Foripkte. Sas. SI, Mt. vow **ins. Aryotlvo Impc(rtan: Supreme Cburt De.; eigo#4,—Justiee ltfeld, oa Monday, deliv ered the hpinkm of the Supreme Court of the bruited States In the lawyers' arid teat oath Pares. Both these ninths aes deelsred übeoustitutional, and consequently void and of no etteet. This decildbia'onnoves another of the hindran- Vim phiced In the pnth of constitutional Melly by a usurping Congress, and yin dicatee the wisdom and patri4tlsna of the Pembendlc party. A Washington letter, under date of Monday; says: - At coMparativaly an early hour this morning the Supreme Court roornl was well tilled with distinguished lawyers, • _members of Congress and others, in anti oipatiott of a decision on the teat-oath mien before that tribunal. Promptly nt 31 o'clock the court was opened, and Mr. I Justice Field proceeded to deliver the de cision of thermajority of cite judges on the IfsestToisth law of that State In an elabo rate and learned opinion, the Court held the law to be unconstaultoncd, because was c.r postfaefo, and in the cloture of a bill of pains and penalties, which is con. teary to the constitution of the United States; anti in the case of Garland's ap plication for adinission to practice before the Supreme Court, it was held by the Court that the test-oath prescribed by act of Congress for practitioners at the bar, was illegal and therefore void,' and the rule of the Court requiring them to take it was, by:order, rescinded. These decisions have created great en thusiasm intiong all friends of the Consti ftlthmi b.4h in anti out of Congress, and it is hardly possible to over-esti Watt; their importance, especially at this particulet finte. They have struck terror to tho learts of the Radicals hereabouts, and t.helr denunciation of the Court is t4ll , measured and exceedingly bitter, . - ...rug TANGEXT PUBSEM Thaddeus Stevens wrote a letter to Ma 'or Harry White, on the sth inst., in re gard to the , United I.4tates SepatorshiP, which has attracted much attention. It ikterribli severe on "bribery and corrup tion" ati ' Harrisburg. bieConaughy's friends May Judge from it what old Thad. thinks of his vote for Catnerom. The temper of the following extract is the temper of the whole Letter_: "Corruption, bribery and (rand have been freely charged, and Ilear, too open proved to have oontrollerl their actions. .mattor how honest when chosen, the atmosphere of Haerhtbary aeons to have pierced many of them with a .demoraliz ing rifeet. A seat in the Legislature l,c raine an - ptir diem vontributi other largo r dates for and to pia the ballot, known tot, sad to J*. mernora4l. precious 11,l proverb(i 1 I 10 win. more dettel do not her' lia and it 6, game." SOLD OM, The Laneaster Intellipeneer, one of whose editors was present, draws the fol fowing.skehth of sights and souuds out• Ride the Radjical caucus which nominated ; old Moccasin Tracks; "Outsicito in the rotunda, there was gathered quite a crowd anxiously await ing the announcement of the result which had alieinl/ been settled beforehand. Among thee were a nutnber of promi nent Philadelphia politicians of the Rad ical persuasion, all Curtin men, Two of these were boisterously incitint, One of them, an ex-clerk of the muter Ses siooe, made quite a running speech, In it loud, clear voice, he began as follows; "Bring ine a bell l 1 say, somebody bring me a hell. There is an unction go ingon here, anti I intend to cry it. The 4 . Repnbil an party professes to be a party of grea Moral ideas, and boasts that it hast, )ted the sale of negroes, but here br a sale o -bite men going on in the Cap itol of the Keystone State. Sontelxxly bring meta bells Talk about Republican ism, and love for sold iers, and patriotism ! Why such a pirtV deserves to be datu ned. The men it sends to the Legislature are Only ; fit for - the basest uses. Yet they are the pick of three hundred thousand. Rah I The worst things the Copperheads j ever said are not half bat enough. These scoundrels profess to be voting for Cam- tron. It is a lie, I will show you the' ticket they are 1 oting. Here (pulling a l grvibli)aaci. out. of his pocket and holding it ,up,) here is the ticket they are all voting) —mid the candidate's name is written on ' it—Spinner—by GA. That's the fellow they are ell votingfor, and this (flourish ing the greenback,) is their ticket," Later in the night, after the caucus, a number of excited Philadelphians (not of 1 the Winnebago tribe) went into the Mar- 1 kilt House and auctioned off the Phila- I delphla Representatives who voted for ! Citnerun.- ! Decency forbids mention of the bids offered and the consideration for which they were knocked down. The indignation of the crowd was Intense, , and nothing was left undone to exhibit' the contempt for these who it was believ ed lied sold theruSelves to the successful Candidate, I=l "Cameron .Nominaled."—Under this beading Fbrney's Prey of the lith eon tains the following bitter reflection : r "Simon Cameron was last evening nom inated for United States Senator by a ma jorlty of the Union members of the Leg islature, nearly every one of whom vv. led for him knowing that his selection would be regarded as an insult by the Ile publicans ofFhts district, and accordingly by the great body of the Republicans of the State, There has never been so stud ied a violation of public sentiment and public decency as this nomination. Al though a large body of the trusted cham pions ofour party appeared on the ground ,protesting against the selection of Cain tren and warning the Union members of the dangers of such a step, their appeals and their admoultions were alike Were - 'glinted," Good 11'ews.—Forney declared In - the ?moot Thursday week, that the election of Simon Cameron "would lead to the certain destruction at the Republican Union patty in our State." As Came ron hat been elected, the "Union party" Is gone to smash. - • leirThe 'Great Commoneel hi' the Radical mucus for Senator, received but I Votes. This shows the combined - strength of Forney and Stevens, and is the ninth of a whole season's ejection „moue and labor. Hoy art the Mighty tanta.t "larThe Mewls of Senator Cowan ••wlll, Be glad to learn that he has been noml !wed as 31114Ister to Austria, In PSACIIMIENIr The fluandej editer Of the Plifladels Phia DriLly Nerasta-la iris article of Mon day, Makes Mae points which it would ; be well for men of all parties to consider. Starting out with the undeniable decla ration that the "proceedings of Congress, as reported from &ay to day, are anything but encouraging," he comes to the move ment of the Radical fanatics for the int-1 peach ment of the Presideut. "Whilet," he says, "ninny view It as, bat the ebulition of a violent party spirit , ' on the part of an Individual member, other* point to the large vote by which it was passed, and affect to believe that It Is not only seriously intended, but that the purpose of its mover will be aecom plished,and all who reflect calmly see in it an incendiary proposition which can de nothing else but injury to every inter- 1 est In the country. It Is no small thing. to attempt the impeachment of the Pres- ; ldent of the United Slatee, especially' when that facer is basked by the Con stitution and supported by the Supreme I Court. Mr. Johnson is no child, neither is he a coward, and we assure Mr. Ashley and his friends that he will ue found ' (Otte equal to any emergency in which he may be placed through their lawless' conduct. He will not yield the. govern ment over which he has been culled to preshle to a faction, and if revolution fol lows the effort to wrest from him his just powers, the men who make the eflbrt to do ap must bear the responsibility.— Whilst such a contest is in progress the business Interests of the country must hot only suffer, but be placed in great peril. I Credit, be it private or public, cannot ho inahit i ained when anarchy fills the air, and capital will take wings and fly away when threatened with spoliation by ren shn either of the distresses of the people or the foolhardiness of their rulers." Referring them to the late etregglo, in which the issue "was simple and well de fined"—rebellion on the one side and sup port of the Government on the other, in which nuillhere of men, weight of credit, ' and power of endurance, made the suo ems of the national cause only a matter of time—the writer takes the ground that "In arevolut ion the case would be altogeth er different," and proceeds as follows: Anarchy is a twin companion with rev olution, and, aocOrding to the rule which has governed the world for all time, des : petism follows it, The American reve -1 lution by which the celenies of Great Britain were separated from the mother country, Is an insolated case, and Its re sults cannot be quoted as precedents .for what would follow in the event of a rev ' elution which would necessarily attend ' upon the effort to depose a President who is guided by the great charter on which our institutions are based, and supported by the highest tribunal in the land. Such &revolution wouldbring in its train a . duplication.of the already enormous debt of the country, and in the end a practical isepudiation of the whole; credit would . vanish at once, and capital would imme diately seek its most secure hiding places, OW its owners might he safe from want and starvation after it should be dragged ' away from them. In such a condition of things as we are anticipating—and cer tainly not without reason—there would be no solid North acting as a unit en a • single proposition, and fur a single pur pose. Divided as the country now is, with a powerful party on the side of the conspirators, the President west needs • ht the batttlo of the government wher e r that party exists. and as we have re marked on previous occasions, when re • ferring to this subject, there would and could be no dividing line, as was the case with the rebellion. A great, strong, and powerful interest, which sustained the government before because it made mo ney out of it, would not exist in the new controversy, and this for the the reason that there would not, be the same incen tive. A United States government bond which was nearly as good as gold to a contractor duping the rebellion would be next to worthless to the man who would he asked to furnish supplies t 3 either side in the contest which Mr. Ashley and his friends propose to bring &built, and hence the probabilities are that either side would by force of might take what it could get without regard to the wishes , or position of the owner. I We marvel very_ much if members of , Congress ever consider this subject calm ly, and with a view to see what is before them. If they did so, exercising ordina ry intelligence, they would come to the same conclusions that we do. It is Idle !for them to talk about northern Geyer 'nors with northern troops sustaining them in their revolutionary conduct. No matter how parties are divided, and no matter how well one of them has succeed ed in poisoning the public nand against j the President, they cannot deny that ho is commander-in-chief of the army . of the Union; and every one who knows • `him is satisfied that be will use that 4r my to sustain, save and maintain theg,ov- ernment just as Mr. Lincoln did when Ihe was President. Nor is it worth while for congressmen to calculate on the de- I feetion they think they have caused in the army. In such an event as we are considering, the people will form the ar my of the government just as they did I under Lincoln, and if RadicaLe could be' Induced - to fight against it, conservative! men who love the old Union, and who ; revere the government under which our I , country has grown to be so great, would, + and will come from the hills and the val leys of the country, like so many spirits rushing from the mighty deep, to over whelm the poisonous crew, who under pretense of loyalty and love for an infe rior race, would seek to break up the grandest fabric that was ever reared by human bands, It is time to look this subject fairly and squarely in the face. The num who sees a conflagration ap pmehing his dwelling' and takes no means to secure his property from its ray ages. is simply a fool; and unless we look at this subject and adopt measures to pre- , vent what is so certaiubt approaching, we will deserve to be tblEr scorned people of the earth, LOAN. A Radical member of Congress from Mis souri, rejoicing - in the euphonious name of Loan, on Monday last, in the House of Representatives, deliberately charged Andrew Johnson with complicity In the assassination of President Lincoln.— When called upon for the proof of the assertion, he declined to answer, but coolly announced that "he would pursue this matter in his own way and in his own good time." Nat so good, Mr. Loan ! This will not do. A charge thus boldly made must be sustained, and that quick ly too, oroonsign the author tosomething worse than infamy. The Pre*dent of the United States has been arraigned for murder, !Phials no common slander, and it must be fairly and squarely met, now at the threshhold. The honor of the Republic demands this, imperatively, and when the base and cal um n ions charge has been properly ventilated, there is no divinity that doth hedge a Congressman which will save him from the conse quences of has rash and 111-judged COn duct.-4,ge. 111111" At Delhi , Ohlo, on brew Year's night, a man married his own aunt, he being the son or tier sister. etMIL. AriaLOME •% MIL mseN,alfieStue, liartered their vote /414th. rfaittet teLititellerfit." - I rialto( Republican vinery air a ndee, • must render their account, That . the greet built of the Republican Th. Harrisburg letter of "Humes," petty preferred 6or. Curtin for United published in the same Irene of the Re- States Senetor, is a fact beyond question. pository, concludes as follows Throughout the entire State this feeling , After traged,y there usually comes the manifested itself, and in the Southern farce, and the legislature does not depart tier of counties wasimineasitrably upper- from theatrical rules. On FridaV last most. Stevens had friends, earnest, but Senator MeConaughy manifested Lis in , tense anxiety for the reputation of the not numerous; whilst fJainerun seethe d iegi,hii,urev,e, h e iyux poilw borne and tq be almost destitute of supporters. wished a certiflesde for his constittients-- Actuated iry the prevailing feeling;' by asking in open Senate whether the Col. 3leCture, of the Chamberaburg Ire-, committee of investigation had discover pottery, threw all his energy and intlu- ed ques a t l iCin i . 11 i 1 1 5 0 twlCrisonSgenqi in t he r t w6ler nraetolrileal yi ence Into the contest, determined that, if —"nary found." He had not onlynot possible, so general an expression of pref- found anything, but be had not even found erence should have decisive weight when a presumption, not even an imprudence, Hot eve an e a r n ° indelicacy, a n o t %vr o e u much nu tt e s the day of choice came. No man ever the ia worked with more vigor in a cause than Senator from Adams was content. They did Col, McClure to secure the Senator.: forcibly illustrated the following dialogue ship for Cloy. Curtin. But all to no pur,' of the two complacent but unsuccessful : pose—no effect. Why, he himself tells, ; putch fishermen Huns—Anytiug bite you , Yakun in his last paper. As few eV-Nets - may Yukup—No, noting bite not be uninterdating to our readers, we l e //ans,Noting bite me too, give the following. • ----sew*— . In a letter from Harrisburg, under date ofJannary 11th, Col, 3feClnre says; All efforts to avert the blistering die. honor of the election of Simon Cameron to the first legislative tribunalof the na tion,-have proved utterly futile. The people believed that they had precluded the possibility of such a result, for in no single Senatorial or Representative dis trict in the State does a majority of the Republicans desire his election. On the eon trary,nineteen-twentieths of the faith ful men who have by noble, patriotic ef fort given victory to our cause, are earn ^estly, iniplseably opposed to him, and de ; inand the election of a tried and trusted statesman to the responsible position of 'Senator. Knowing as I did, before the late elec tion, that Cameron had debauched both our immediate Representative and our Senator, that he hiul wrung from our leg- Native candidate In Perry a written pledge to support him under the threat of defeat, nod that he had contracted for Senator and two RepresentatlVCS in the adjoining Bedford district in the nomi nating conference, I could not doubt that elsewhere as here, he had corrupted the delegated powers while the people rested in confident security, I still hoped, how ever, that a wrong so unexampled and exceptionless could not be consummated, and I committed the natural error of bow ing in silence, rather than peril harmony and success in a struggle involving the most important officers who were to be charged with the safety of our nation ality. When the members had got safely be yond the power of the people by their election, every appliance was made to hear upon them that ingenuity could de vise. There were offices for the ambi tious, plunder for the venal, and promises for fools. Many cattle here still strong in their integrity and mindful of the noble people who had confided in them, but I saw them wither and fall like the blight ed leaves of autumn; and fall like one of old, to rise no more. Thus did the har vest of corruption go on until the garners of the master were full. * * Why Simon Cameron was chosen, I need not repeat. The story is familiar to all, even in the humblest and remotest homes of the State. 1 f written in flaming characters on the dome of the, capitol, or branded ineffaceably upon the brows of the men who did it, no one would have to learn thereby how the richestjewel of loy al victory had beeu basely bartered for a price. From a leading editorial in the Repos itory, the following is taken In the midst of the appalling debauch ery that compassed the nomination of Mr. Cameron' for Senator, there are sever al monuments of perfidy which tower over and dwarf all others. That Mr. Stumbaugh should vote for Cameron was but natural, and none who knew him are disappointed, although he was pledged to at least three other candidates, and in structed by his own immediate Republi- Can constituents, for Gov. Curtin. Why he voted as he did is as well understood by every man, woman and child in the county, who can read or comprehend, us that water will descend until it finds its level. But of Senator IlleConaughy, who makes pretension to manhood and good repute, and Senator Worthington, who has reached the evening of a blameless life only to cloud it with dishonor that will endure with his memory; those who have, trusted them cannot but bow in shame under their deep humiliation.— The Republicans of Adams, in their last regular convention, passed a resolution to guide Mr. McConaughy. When it was presented, a motion was made to in sert the name of Mr. Stevens 171 the place of Gov. Curtin, but was lost by a vote of 37 to 8, and then the resolution was adopted unanimously as follows: "Resolved, That Hon. Andrew G. Cur tin is the choice of this Convention for U..S. Senator." Franklin, the only other county in his district, followed the example of Adams, and in a Convention regularly called and chosen expressly to give expression on the Senatorship, adopted the following resolution by the decisive yote of 73 to 3: "Resolved, That in obedience to the emphatic expression of the Republicans of Franklin county, our Senator and Rep resentatives are hereby instructed, in the name of the People they have been cho sen to represent, to give a zealous and faithful support to Andrew G. Curtin for U. S. Senator in the Republican Senato rial caucus." In the case of Senator Worthington the case was equally strong. * * In the face of the positive, even impera tive expressions of the Republican Peo ple of these districts, Senators McColl aughy and Worthington: went into the caucus on Thursday last, and east their votes for Simon Cameron on the first ballot. Deeply as their treachery has plunged their faithful supporters into sorrow, there is still a profounder, a more consuming sorrow, that will fall to them and those who must bear their name, as the legitimate legacy of this fatal step. If it were possible to explain it consist ly with integrity, they should have the benefit of the charitable judgment of generous but sorely aggrieved constit uents; but with the high tribunal of the People writing over this chapter of our political history, in letters of unmingled darkness, that shameless venally there fought its boldest battle and won its complctest triumph, the blistered laurels of the victor cannot but encircle the blotted brows of his lieutenants in this crime against the People. In an article on the "Senatorial Cau cus," after classifying the votes for the several candidates, the Repoattory re marks : In the list of votes for Cameron will be seen the votes of Senator McConaughy and Represcn tat' ves Stool bough and-Shu man, all of whom have thereby offered the keenest insult to their eonstituentN end with them are eighteen others, whose mimes are given in italiee, all of whom were either solemnly pledged to, or in structed, by their constituents lo vote for Gov, Curtin. These twenty-one votes added to the twenty-threk votes received by Gov. Curtin would have given him forty-four on tint ballot, two more than enough to have nominated him. In ad dition to that number, Se.nators.Bingham, Billingtelt, Browne (of Lawrence) and Fisher, and Representatives MoPherrin, Richards, Webb and Wilson—eight in all who voted for Stevens or Grow-. would have voted for Curtin as between ' Curtin and Cameron. If, therefore, those ' who were instructed or pledged for Gov. Curtin had not basely betrayed him sod their constituents, he would have com manded Anyitwo voter against Camerog in joint caucus. Why he did not receive that vote, is well known to the people, and ti 4 them the mercenary puppets who McCLEMJ ON GEJAIY, (From the Chambersbarg rtepott tory.] That Oen. Geary threw his whole per sonal and official power in favor of the election of Cameron, bartering his offices as Cameron directed, can no longer be concealed, and his administration starts with this stamped upon it. Gov. Geary may soon learn how easy it is to wreck an administration, but he will prove himself a wise man If he demonstrates how it can be rescued and restored to the confidence of the people who created it. On this subject Mr. Penuirnap, editor of the Pittsbeg Gazette, writing to his pa per frOm Harrisburg last week, says I "Gen. Geary has fully identified him self with Oimeron. So far, ell his ap pointments have been made with the view of detaching support from ('an't). and transferring it to Cameron. What ever appointments he has to make of pe cuniary, value, are all pledged to promote the same end. This course on the part of the Meowing Governor excites conflict ing comments, according to the Senatorial predilections of the individuals talking. There are loud threats of ,reprisal at the elections next autumn, and abundant predictions that Geary's administration will be in the minority in the next Legis lature. how far these dolorous prophe sies result from a definite forecasting of the future, and how far from the bitterness of present disappointment, it would be idle to speculate. "Gen. CameroWti friends are exultant over his anticipated' election. In their elation they more than intimate that a persistent effort will be made to secure the General the Presidential nomination in 1868. This will interfere with Gen. Geary's ambition. which aims at nothing less than the Vice Presidential notni,.a tion, and gives sign that it will seek the higher mark." CONGRESSIONAL. The Washington correspondent of the Age, in his letter of Wednesday, says : An interesting discussion took place in the House to-day, on Mr. Stevens' bill to reorganize the government of the State of North Carolina. Mr. Bingham (Republi can), of Ohio, characterized it as a bill of destruction and dismemberment, and re ferred to Ashley's measure for the same purpose, its a bill of anarchy. The con serative tone of a portion of Binghtun's speech was exceedingly distasteful to his Radical associates. Nevertheless, he had the stronger position, as between himself and Mr. Stevens. hater in the afternoon Mr. Dawson, of Pennsylvania, obtained the floor, and made by far the ablest speech yet delivered on the restoration question. He was listened to with deep attention. Both the bills of Messrs. Stev ens and Ashley are wholly Impracticable in their nature, and can never be carried into effect. It is thought that in thee fent of their adoption by the the Houso, they will be permitted to die in the Senate— at least no final action will be taken up on them this session. The bills for the aarniiston of Ne braska and Colorado, upon the prece dent condition of negro suffrage, passed the Senate to-day, as amended by the House. A veto in both cases is anticipa ted, and the Radicals are making p re paraticins accordingly. M=2==l SUE WAX AND XUE UMW!. Hahn, last year, went to Washington as a Senator from the StatZ of Louisiana; now he is there to prove that Louisiana is not a State; of course, then, he was an imposter .lit.a pretended Senator ; When Gen. Butler was in Louisiana, "it was intimated to him from Washington that it would be desirable to select two mem bers of Congress from New Orleans and the contiguous parishes;" to carry out this suggestion he sent Gen. Weitzel with an army through the Ltrfourche country, to clear the country of "rebels," and thus make it "loyal" enough to rote for a Republican Congressman. From all of which it appears that a State is a State only when Radieals want It to he a State.—Boston Post. • RADICAL TYRANNY. Democrats! remember that the Mon grel Radical Congress has forced unqual ified Negro Suffrage upon the people of the District of Columbia. in the face of the fact that nia-tenths of the people of the District expressed their opposition to it at the polls._ If there be such a thing as Tyranny, We have It in most mon strous shape in this act of Congress. Lot this matter be talked over among the people. Call your neighbor's attention to it. Above all, bring home the fact to your friends in the "Republican party." They must acknowledge now, what they _lately denied, that their party is in favor of Negro Suffrage, and they must either endorse that doctrine, or they can no longer consistently act with that party. rat it at them firirllen. nuttier has lately had another batch of suits entered against him in New York, by loyal Southerners, whom, it is alleged, he robbed or defrauded. It is altogether probable that Ben's idea Ii getting elected to Congress was to secure exemption, as a member, from arrest and punishment, yer.fiou. Roscoe Con kling was last week elected United. States Senator.from New York; Lymau Trumbull, Senator from Illinois, and Charles D. Drake, Senator from Missouri. ' • Or The story that one million dollars were paid last month to Southerners by the Government, for cotton stolen by "loyal" thieves, during the latter day's of the war, has been omelally contraditted. Itirlifr. E. IL Parker (044 , 10riii) Iff an nouneed as an independent candidate for Mayor of Allegheny City, Pa. So we go; - • VillantalikioN llAtO AlllOlO/110. [rams tho Itimiuter jateplgenMv ot Thursday.] Yesterday Ifaj or General John W. Gea ry, as his admirers call him, was dulyin augurated Governor of Pennsylvania. The day was an inauspicious one for a display of the kind contemplated, and this circumstance enabled the Harrisburg Telegraph to frame an exeuse for the very meagre crowd present. The proces sion was a very poor affair. On arriving at the Capitol, a prayer was offered up by Iles. Senator Brown, of Lawrence; the Clerk of the Senate then read the certifi cate of election, and L. W. Hall, Speaker of the Senate, swore the Major General into office. This was all there was of the show, except the speech of the Governor. We venture the assertion that a weak er address or one less suited to the occa sion was never delivered. Judgingfrom both the manner and matter we conclude that John W. Forney has quit writing J. speeches for John W. Geary. John W. did get up a piece which John W. G. la said to have spoken immediately after the election, which was decent English, and in which the ideas were expressed with some clearness. IfJohn W. F. had not been a candidate for Senator, and had not quarrelled with John W. G.'s. roaster, Simon Cameron, the inaugural address of our military governor might have been a respectable Radicle' docu ment. As it is we cannot think or lumb ering up our columns with it. A short synopsis of it is all our readers will care to see. fn the very first sentence we have an allusion to the Deity coupled with a re , minder to the crowd that the Speaker was a great military chieftain. Proceed ing in a train of thought which Is In Its vanity, he goes into6a discussion of the cause. of the rebellion, and an esti mate of what it ooit to subdue it, and is thus enabled frequently to call the atten tion of the crowd to himself. On the subject of slavery he expends about a column of empty words, ringing the old worm out changes upon the subject.— That part of his address, if we are not mistaken, he gleamed from an old tile of the Harrisburg Telegraph. He had to say something about the ne cessity of education, if for no other rea son than because he exhibited such 'a lack of it himself. His remarks on the subject remind us of the compositions of school boys. He concludes that portion of his .address in the following language! "Pennsylvania should be the vanguard of education. She should remember that, as she hasbeen the mother of States, she should also be the teacher of States." What States was Pennsylvania ever the mother of? Where are her political daughters? We never heard of them, nor any one else; until their existence was tuns announced by Major General Governor John W. Geary. ' The next subject to which the lumi nous genius of our Governor addresses itself is the military of the State. Here he is quite as much stilted and no more practical than in his talk about ueation. The subject was lugged in to enable him again to call attention to himself, as a military genius. Merely that and noth ing more. Much of a muddle as 111.5 talk on pre ceding-gublects Is, it Is not until he begins to debate the tariff that the stupidity of the speaker fully. exhibits itself. This part of his address is made up almost en tirely of qultations, but so bunglingly put together that we defy any man to make good sense out of the jumble. Of course 'he had to ventilate himself on the question of reconstruction. From what he said it is hard to tell what wing of the Radicals he belongs to. About the clearest sentence in the whole clause re lating to national affairs isthe following : "The abhorrent doctrine, that defeated treasonlshall not only be magnanimously pardoned, but introduced to yet stronger privileges, because of its guilty failure, seems to have been insisted upon, as if to strengthen the better and the contrasting doctrine, that a nation, having conquer ed its freedom, Wits best guardian, and that those who were defeated in honora ble battle should be constrained to sub mit to all the terms of the conqueror." That is about as clear and as states manlike as most df the Radical clatter upon the suhjeet. We hope the friends of the newly elect ed Governor will take him in hand.— Frank Jordan can get up a decent docu ment. We hope he will see to It that the annual messages of this gubernatorial prodigy are decent Esiv/i4h, even if they ureuothing more. " Il'ApnlsaTo.v, 'D. C., Jan. IS.—Thle morning at eight o'clock the conserva tory attached to the Executive Mansion took fire from the bursting of a fine on the southwest side. The main building, extending from east to west, and erected over an old brick structure, is two hun dred feet in length, with an addition of twenty feet from north to south. The flames swept through these buildings, destroying at least one-third of the valu able plants, many of them of the rarest character of foreign origin. Horticul turists and florists express the opinion that the collection could not be replaced for years, and not even then without a eo;4t of hundreds of thousands; of dollars. The buildings are damaged to the extent of probably twenty thousand dollars. Prize Fiyht.—Harrisburg, Jan. 15. This morning a prize fight came ofYabout fifteen miles from Harrisburg, at Golds borough, in York county, for the cham pionship of light weights, and a purse of MO. 'rho combatants were Samuel Col lyer,o f Baltimore, and John McQuade, of New York, Forty-seven rounds were fought, occupying 53 minutes, and the fight was witnessed by about 400 persons. from all'seutions. Coflyer was the victor. The Spy an Indicator of the Weather.— The color of the sky at particular times afibrds wonderful good guidance. Not only does a rosy sunset prestige good weather, and a ruddy sunrise had weath er, but there are other tints which speak with equal clearness end accuracy. A brightyellow sky in the evoring indicates wind; a pale yellow, wet; a neutral gray color constitutes a favorable sign in the evening, and an unfavorable one in the morning. The clouds are again full of meaning M themselves. If their forms arc soft, undefined, full and feathery, the weather will be fine; if their edges are hard, sharp and definit, it will be foul. Generally speaking, any deep, unusual hues betoken - wind and rain, while the more quiet and delicate tints bespeak fair weather. These are simple maxims, and yet not so simple but that the British Board of Trade has thought fit to publish them for the use of sea-faring men.— Scientific American. terrible riot was raging in Fair mount, Vermilion county, Illinois, on the 3d. At last accounts seven persons were killed and fifteen wounded. The riot 'grew out of a controversy on the question of a new county. ear An extraordinary elmement took place from the neigitborktoodbl Vs., a day or two since. A gay nod fes tive youth, of the tender age of sixty summers, me ilfr with a dulelnea of twenty. The num left behind h int a wife and a large number of children, D. K. Jackson, of Philadelphia, and Milton Of irtwriglit, of Erie, Pa., have purchased B,oooaeres of the richest Cotton /ands in South Carolina, and intend putting it at once under cultivation. -The price paid was $l2 per acre. iiir•A bin & girl at Shelbyville, Indi ana, has commenced a suit against a white man for breach of prom's() of mar riage. • This Is a case for the Civil Rights bill. MET Col. D. Iteerea, of Erie meaty, has been appointed A utialt. general of Pennsylvania. He w illnot assume his duties until spring. - 5,7* AND COON'W,AFFAIRS,• n A 11410 A IXELlicno maid ii'epori, `--The Spinal meeting of the Stock hold. s erj ammuo i 'court wifitortnnence ers of the Gettysburg Railroad ivas held day: i in this place on rifonday. The following cifloers were elected for the ensuing year ; President—W. G. Case. Managers David Wills Robert' Mc. Curdy, C. S. Maltby, I.'. W. Northrop, I Rowan/. S. Came, Robert. Crane, John Bachman, Win. McConkey, Henry Kant felt, Philip Small, Peter Diehl, Wrn, NUJ - gigot ( Statement, of It. McCurdy, Sequestrater of the Gettysburg Railroad Company, showing the Receipts and Expenditure s of the Company-for the year ending b e , comber 31st, MO: sisr Rev. Mr. Bouse, of the M. E. Church of this place, received a han , lsome gift from members of his Church ou Christ mas day. • Exitisrrtox.—The "Grapevine Litera ry Association" bare resolved to held their first .B:chibition at Geapistita School-House, in Butler township, on Friday evening, the 22d of February, to consist of Vaudevils, Dialogues, Speeches, Essays, fie. M Linn ASBORU. the annual election for Directors of the "Muni inasburg Mu tual Fire Protection Society," held on Monday last., the following persons were elected : E. W. Stehle, George Throne, John Mickley, Peter Shall, Tobias Boyer, Barnet Myers, Michael Dietrich, Sr., Ja cob H. Plank, henry J. Brinkerhoff Isaac Howe, George Thomas, and Dietrich, Jr. P9 l l9o,Piters. Freight. Tot., MS 4'7 $1,146 48 LI 775 5 84 1,04 14 1,400 xq Oin 1./19 115 cr Ll= 30 1,313 11 2,ne, i t 966 136 1,416 416 2,415 'l2 1,066 111 1,166 SI; 7,212 to '1.121 51 911 I.ltti 1.678 214 1,413 SS 3,911 ei 1 ,10 76 1,469 se - 2,8v 7 1,420 at - 10 , 2.524 4/ MN IS 1,5 q j 1 2.530 39 tai 36 Lon 1,1114. - .121191 93 1114,838 OS s.?7llrlig _ blifln the State Senate, on 711ursday, I Pr°,2n, i Pos,t•Olneo Department, tramper- Petitions were presented front citizens of F - rOn 3 ibii z Z l Elta l4 tes tbr 111111iss7 trans- Adams county, praying for relief for pro- Fro P M rtati ezira n. trains and talseenoneous 4 ' 5214 70 perty destroyed at the hattle of gettys.: P0c 9 11 , 1 9 . burg, . _1 -I , Fli.rln't . , ji r uiry. o t t i t t re g ri. Ektrooralpary l ' i re i rl .. .. 7 arsei — We learn that McConaughy has started tho following bills in the Senate: February, 1,211 78 cvi 2 ifii7 ,: .34nrell, 1,261 30 552 1,702 :15 "An Act to change the venue' n the ease April, - 1,370 1.1 1; 1 70 13 of the Commonwealth of Penylvatila ' May. 1,104 , I* 1;1114 25 11$ 95 2,137 20 1,7(31 50 3,151 45 vs. Henry Stevens and Jacob Artnan, Jun., 1,119 72 119 00 1503 74 from the Court of Gener4l Qtarter Sue- I AukLst, lAt4 4.1 . laud ee 2,779 51 Mons of Adams county to the Court of Septemlo43. Lam en sal a 1,632.7 General quarter Sclisious of 'Dauphin l, ) T'.' ' .'" i i• Ira 10 103 0.9 14 so 1,09 41 1,709 47 oounty." I i/ec ('‘ ein nl o;7 r , ' 1.1 40 91 773 21 1,954 53 "An Act to ollange the venue In the , ..--...„, — 'case of Jesse Clironister vs. Howard 1111- I ..._. O 1 4 / 3 . 13° 48 66,809 44 ' 22 2, 419 92 rlnt rf of Ar•nt Kt Orttysbu r zatatioll. 550 to lee, George Hollinger and Ottniel Hue- ssisiyufsequestrator,pere erofetairt, sou 00 bold, from the Court of OM 4011 Pleas of. Adams county to the Court If Common ... _ ~. Pleas of Dauphin county." Are judgoa and jurors in -Clams county no longer to be trusted with the trial of, the roost ordinary cases? )ally, the re peated insults offered to otr peopls by this bogus Senator are enouji to provoke universal contempt and indignation elirThe Standing Committees In the `"", --- House were announced on Friday week. I unt"liand. -17,ste 00 I have purchased and put on the road Mr, Heltzel is on the Coniraittees on 5,300 cross-ties during the year, 'ail of the Counties and Townships, end Accounts' bestquality of White oak aud-ehesnut oak , In the Senate, fir. McCosaughy is on The cost of the ties delivered at the road the Committees on Federal telations;Ju. was 45 cents each, making a cost of $2,385, diciary, and Estates and Escheats. I In addition to this, It cord about one-half atirWe are pained to belompelled to , more to deliver the ties ttiong the road, announce the death of It. GI Harper, Jr., take out the old, and put in the new ones. oldest eon of the editor of the Adams The spikes cost $250. I. had Corsowaeo Sentinel. He died on the it,' Bridge i rebuilt by-the erection of a tii se . Howard county, Md., when he fast , he had boon' c su a rri ss or t7 B9 T i r dl g r n P t a r dAt ri e rt s i t t 1 1 .0 - i engaged for several years ineehool teach- bor done by the bends working on r i e " - - ing. His remains were broight home on' pairs. I have also had Swift limn Bridge bought, en. Tuesday evening, and interred in Ever- f i ebal i t ti alifit Creek re green Cemetery on Wedneslay. He was I which u i have R ock in his 85th yw.tr. Peace tohis ashes. , end items of new construction , t i og e eti t: se v ; with several other smaller Items of per- Stef - From time Annual !teport of fue l manent repairs, make up thu above item StateSuperintendentorConmon Schools, I of $6,860 46 of Extraordinary Expendi-- just submitted to the Ibgislature, we ! tures during the year. The road is now In bat ef it e t e l e l 1 e t n o t be eo e u x d p i t t ;n l o ( ti o ( a t and will i:oll s t r t e n cl o t t li t r n e k espy, on our first page, tht Report of our County Superintendent, karou Sheely, I for some years. Esq. It contains many farts 4u4.1 sugges-1 The account of the net earnings of the tions of Interest, and will no doubt he Colepany up to Uec. 31, 1685, was tiled i during the year, showing a net balance generally read. of $5,571 97, which slim was 'distributed 4 by the Court to the Bondholders, as here tofore. An account Aiming , every , Rein of receipts and expenditures fur the past year, will be flied mu Court es soon as the outstanding bills are collected, and the net balance will then be distributed among the Bondholders. __ _ 'The weather was eseecalingly cold during Thursday and Friday last, ren dering out-door employment almost im possible. The thermometers did not run as low as in the latter part of Decem ber, we are told. but itispect that the instruments felt they could not "do justice to the subject," atid therefore did 'not try. tt • HaLuan. (o( Peter,) of this platte, recently slaughtered a pig 10 • months old, which weighed 284 pounds. That's certainly good fore pig. THE LAMT FASHunis.—Since the In vention and successful introduction of the Celebrated Duplex Elliptic , (or double) Spring Hoop Skirt, by J. W. Bradley, tit New York, the ladies throughout the country have given up the idea of dis carding the fashion of wearing hoop skirts on account of the peculiar and graceful manner In which the Duplex Skirts adapt themselves to every exigen cy and emergency. So generally accep table have these Skirts become ihst the ladles regard them as n speeial favorite, 10 view of the superior Flexibility, ' Lightness and Durability combined in their Manufacture. They also consider them a far mere Economical and Com fortable Hoop Skirt than ever has or can be made for all Crowded Assemblies, for the Promenade or House Dress. Any la dy after wearing one of thee Skirts will never afterwarda willingly dispense with of an agricultural paper just started at their use. Long experience in the man . uftwture of Hoop Skirts, has proven to Philadelphia by. S. S.Teatit—U. W. & S. the proprietors of this invention, that S. Foss editors. We have per usgl the Single Springs will always retain that first number with Much pleasurit Its stiff, unyielding and bungling style articles are of an interesting and useful which has ever characterised them, . whereas the Double Spring Hoop, or tim character, and its typography distinct Duplex Elliptic, will be found tree from and neat. Published every Saturday, at these objections. Notwithstanding the $2 per annum, strictly and always in ability of the manufacturers, Messrs. advance. Wests, Bradley ot Cary, to turn out over six thousand Skirts per day from their Dom. fcholas Codorl, butcher, in this place, slaughtered (Oleg, the other - day, which weighed 666 pounda—the heaviest of the season. Mr. C. purchased it at Littlestown a week or tiro ,ago. Stir3fr. Charles E. Armor him pur olutse.l the house of Janes A. Grimes, In En Middle street, for $7OO, cash. 16...5iz inches of snow fell last night Mar The Farm and Fireside Ie the title pe. ...ay fru... .... . Alii*B(4ll Houses of the State Legisla- large Manufactories in New fork, they tune met at 3 o'clovk cm Tuesday, and • d fe e e r l in o g bli h ed to request Ellipti all m c rechants or- the Duplex Skirts, to elected Simon Cameron as United States "tut their orders a few days before they Senator.. In the Renate, on the first are wanted. if possible, us they are most ballot, Cameron re eived 19 votes and, constantly oversold some days ahead. Edgar Cowan 10. In the liouee, Cam- eron had 62 votes and Cowan 37 EM:I Sarin the procenlings of Congress, on Tuesday last, the fallowing Is recorded: Mr. Koontz, of Pennsylvania, from the Committee for the , District of Columbia, .made an adverse rtport on the memorial of citizens of foreign birth, praying for the same rights a.inegroes. And yet the linilcals In ovary electron district In the cotntry try to secure the votes of "eitisens of foreign birth," and in some cases bonit that they succeed! t -The "Centtal Executive Commit tee of the Eepullcan party" of Louisi ana, (see Raclicalorgans,) was organized on the 10th inst., by the election of "Mr. Crane (white) PraidcLnt ; Judge Pluplan ter.(white), Viae Preaideut, and Messrs, Mantier, Mulfori and 'Dunn (oolored) Secretaries and Treasurer." There's "black and tan* for you• How do you like it, PeOusstvania "Republicans ?" YOU must make kb that at trust ifirWe learnftum the Pittsburg Peat that the workmen who erected the tri umplfatarch onti Pennsylvania avenue, epos the «leatfon of the Radii* "sot- Mere! and Sailors' -Convention," at Pitts burg, have commenced an action in the District Court against the-Radical Com mittee tor the recovery of their wages- Ur Gen- 0111 1 114, approves of the Presi dent's veto of he District 'White Man's Dwradation MU. So does every body of common seuse - sind patriotic principle. /WOW Alstplee Chase Is said to be oPlioto propoaed plan of getting n the P trent by Impesobtaent, 10!2A you% 'Win in Teviot, Franoe, has now be sleeping for about four 'weeks. Stir* gentleman in nizabetii, 3r. .14,, is the possester of the pistol with which Cot• 'Duyvil/NW Hamilton.-- ' I mar - sec s de !pe ils brothel*, and his bre er-in-law and a coutin, ail Vold LintBllllte.s offices, lel MARNINGFI, ' 1/kMI. Jauui4ry, Febnunry. btu/felt, Itlay, June, July, Augu.t, tleple Octobemr, ber, November, ember,DeC I= ME Medi, In null WARY Passenger rowel kW, N FrOglitwecellitx, 14,~15 alI Military trans., malls, &c., 5,512 el 03,241 4 11/5, 4:40 0 8 M 46 1,':1430 tat Ordinary rxpenses, 14traordivary eSpeitSrl. Salaries, Amount of not fuming", B Ih outat anti fug I ticluda.l Iu Use above hatunee, 1.719 MS Jan. 14, 1867 Latest Market Reports.- 6ICTTYI4I3URG FLOUR, • • WYE FLOUR, WflrrE W 11 E AT, BED WHEAT, - colt-N, BYF.,•- - OATS. - • 8114 K W HEAT, HAY. CLDV 9:HALED, FLAXSEED, FORK, • • VLOTM. • • - 21 OD • 11 50 WHEAT, • - 2sl ilO RYE, • - • 111 30 coRS, - - • 97 1 90 63 • GO hund . 0u4,6 9no BEEF CTTLk, * 16 00 40 00 16 00 010 .1f Y, • • 2/4 - WHISKEY, • • 3 25 • Y 30 Married, on the PO MK., at the house of the bride's mother, In Arcutitsvitls,l4 Itrvikt. Snyder, Mr. 4±...Moti LADY Su ] IIes LIZ,M, tivilwAitrz, both of this county. At thciresi.lenco of the bride's mother,mar To teniburg Jan. Oth, by Rev,. H. Dieter r. , ur LOACIIMUTI4Ij ,y. to MIAs IigIIECCA. A, NIILLiit, of Iluntin ,on township. Atlanta county. fly the }nine, Tao. Sill, et the residenee of the brtdc's father, Mr. EPHRAIM C. RICE to MIMI EIN fRA WALRA Y. both of fileoalien townahip. On the lith Milk. by Her. Ur, seer Mr. NOAII C. BROWN of Carroll Mft. to If ON A Wilt CAROLINE; daughter of Wm. Rotifer, of Adams county. Or. the Bth inst., by Rev. Mr. Tams. Mr. AU (JUSTUS 11.11.RER.of finals Middleton township, Cumberland county - , to Miss NATE, tiOFFILtio, of Adams county, • Died. On Ratanlny inorbijig,geifirlide tannish, 34 Fs. CATHARINE puticKLeY widow of 'Samuel Sleekley. in the &RA year o f ace. Pthd At oti Sabbath rning, I Jailgr,Voalir UMISIta, Jr.. aged 34 years 8 months a.pd 1 der. o n odivout tais.,BAri,Waig i gAitYdigant son ofJohn outs En= 4eth tsmanim„Aged Iginnntha. On the td Init.. am.; at co l um n . tion, Um. ANN MANIA. was sr Dayitt Hartielt. in the 58Ih yeas of be, age. - , On Monday, the 141,13 Inat.,ln BrnsbArn, Adm. county, cif eauting9Mon. Mr. EDW ARD ClUarti- MATOR, son of the late John (1 stator, cle. et:vied, aged 30 and 19 dam Open nreetanaL .. lballth that,. irk rover CO Z Mr, JA. tfrl, War 1 aged about, 911 • At Pew °Ward. Mow, MILEY. aged 107•11181 IMMO. 1111614/144411k XoteMpar weed. ea. ft lAMEE WILLIA infant aon OT Esategmtid Clarissa Kenthly, age N. d Imonth and M dar. , - _t ii se 50 EMI 1 1 X1,2 I I 07 szLeop tri $9,571 - 66 ii. McCuicur F.:quo tratoir • 12 50 SI 1200 • 600 • 2SS 42 275 - xSOw 2io 77 . rn • r sa 10 on j i 16 SO 760 • 2a 60