4ettoinr, FRIDAY AITUNOON, DEC. 13, 1887 lIIIPIIIACKIIILWT EdLEMIL The Infam"us Radical scheme to get rid of Prosldoot Johnson by impeach - ment,"wiis killed, beyon.o all hope of res urrection, in the House, on Saturday hist. • . Mr. Boutwell, one of the majority of the committee, made a lengthy speech in favor of impeachment, on Thursday and Friday. At its conclusion, Judge Wil lem, the chairman of the committee, who reported one of the minority reports, fol lowed In • speech of an hour, and then moved that the majority report be laid upon the table, calling the previous guesUon. This led the impeacheis to "filibustering," which continued until the adjournment. On Saturday morning, Mr. Wilson's motion again came up. Mr. Logan en, deavored to stave off • vote by various dodges, but all failed. Ile then offered that if Mr. Wilson would withdraw his Mallon to lay .on 'the table, and allow the vote to be taken squarely on the im pbachmerft resolution, the - minority would withdraw all opposition. This was assented to by Mr. Wilson, and he at once Moved the previous question. Having been . seconded, and the main question ordered, the House preiceeded to vote byleas and nays on the majori ty resolution, as follows: Rooked, That Andrew Johnson, President of the United States, be im peached for high crimes and misde meanors. The vole resulted, 157 yeas to 101 nays —the former all Radicals, and the latter 40 Democrats and 88 Radicals. Yeas—Messrs. Anderson, Arnell, Ash ley, of Ohio, Boutwell, Brootuwell, Broomall of Pennsylvania, Butler, Churchill, Clarke of Ohio, Clarke of Kansas, Cobb, Coburn , Covode of Penn sylvania, Cullum, Donnelly, Eckley, Elk, Farnsworth, Gravely, Harding,' Hol,kins, Hunter, Judd, Jordan, Kelley or Pennsylvania, Kelsey, Law rence of Ohio, Loan, Logan, Loughridge, Lynch, Maynard, McClurg, Mereur of Pennsylvania, Mullens,. Myers of Penn sylvania; Newcomb, Nunn, O'Neill of Pennsylvania, Orth, Paine, Pile, Price, Schenck. Shanks, Stevens of New Hampshire, Stevens of 'Pennsylvania, Stokes, Thomas, Trumbull, Trowbridge, Van Horn of Missouri, Ward, Williams of Pennsylvaiiia, Williams of Indiana, Wilsop of Pennsylvania. Total, b 7. ° Nays—Messrs. Adams, Allison, Ames, Archer Ashley of Nevada, dwell, ley, Biker, Baldwin, Banks, Barnum, - Beaman, .Beek, Benjamin, Benton, Bingham, Blaine. Boyer of Pennsylva ram, Brooks, Buckland, Burr, Corp, Chan dler, Cook, Golladay, Dawes Dixon, Dodge, Driggs, Eggleston, Eldridge, El iot, Ferris, Ferry, Fields, Garfield, Getz of Pennsylvania, tWoisbrenner of Penn sylvania, Griswold, - Grover, Hu' ht of New Jersey, Halsey of New Jersey, Hamilton, Hawkins, Hill of New Jersey, Holman, Hooper, flotehkies, Hubbard of •lows, Hubbard of West Virginia, pub bard of Connecticut, Huriburt, Humph reys, Ingersoll, Johnson, Jonee, Kerr, Ketcham, Knott, 'Knouts of Pennsylva nia, Dalin, Lawrence of Pennsylvania, Lincoln, Marshall, Marvin, McCarthy, McCtalo4f4, Miller of Pennsylvania, Moorhead of Pennsylvania, Morgan, Mungen, Niteksek, .Nseholsore, Perhani, Peters, Phelps, Pike, Plants, Pollard, Polsey, Prisyn, Randall of Pennsylvania, Robertson,' Boatman, Row, Sawyer, Sllgraves, Smith, Spalding, Starkweath er, Steuiart, Slone, Taber, Taylor of Pennsylvania, Upson, Van Aernam, Van Aiken of Pennsylvania, Van Trump, Van Wick, Washburne of Illi nois. Washburn of Indiana, Welker, Wilson of lowa, Wilson of Ohio, Wood bridge and. Woodward of Pennsylvania. Tot 4 • [Reputdlians in roman, and Demo crats in italics.) After the vote was announced, a mo tion to reconsider, and another to lay it on the table, prevailed, thus preventing a resumption of the subject. The Above vote shows that a whole some fear has mire over many of the Radical leaders. Had the same report been made one year ago by the majority of the•Judlclary Committee, there is no doubt the impeachment of the President would have been attempted. The result of the recent elections will account for the change. The people have spoken, and the political bigots and desperadOee, who feared nothing else, do not dare to brave the popular will. They.know that it would not be safe to follow up their mad designs, and so a majority of them were found ready to retreat when it came to the test. It is true that among the sixty-eight ,Republicans voting against Impeachment there are some few com 'panitively conscientious men, but when we temember hOW they were driven to cast various infamous voter by the lash of Thad. Stevens and other leaders in the House, we Cannot give them credit for meth of honesty or independence. We are fully convinced that nothing but is wholesome fear of the people pre vented a further attempt to break down the last barrier that stood in the way of the proposed usurpation by a fragmenta ry Congress of all the prerogatives which beleng, under the Constitution, to the Executive branch of the Gager.) Gov ernment. The people have thus speedi ly reaped substantial fruit from their al most universal repudiation of destruc tive and revolutionary radicalism. The prompt anddecided defeat of Impeach ment•is the direct and legitimate result of the recent Democratic victories. An analysis of the vote on impeach ment shows one significant fact. The Republican votes against it came main ly from the mandlacturing and com mercial districts. The great depression in business has had its effect, and the vote is a confession by the Radicals themselves that their policy is calcula ted to do great damage to the material Interests of the nation. The President has emerged from this contest, thoroughly vindicated - la his personal and political course, and hie - enemies have voluntarily retired from the geld In shame and oonfuslon. Let us hope that they will Ilan wisdom from defeat, sod that daring the brief term of rule Still allotted to them, they will en deavor to repair by wise legislation the mini and great Injuries they have done the country. Fun DOUOLA L FOR POSSIDENT.— The New York Chwrch Unioyt °omen out strongly in favor of Fred. Douglass as the Republican candidate for President. It gives HS reasons for urging his nomi nation, end thinks he can be more easi ly nand time any man wbo fine been named by the party. It nye "the white loan cannot be trusted in this emergen ny,." It thinks Douglass would Dot only be awe to receive the entire negro vote of the lieMbern States, but the whole of the' NMI Zogisad States, except Con an/4M, sad a sallaient number of the esteems Nenheriatere Otatee to lasere hie *netlike. As thellediems believe ht the "mesh. ty et the retee,' , they timid set beet tats to hale Fred. bemire he 1. Meek. If it le tilibt tome the awe to get Wks Medi ftwitool; It is Nett to nee the Baikal to PI dies ter the sets Ilia all la the mete beet—piseed there Ma`oo4e pint tleirem-ead meet awe' afisiefirmates ad the par bp. ThiStilp=memmeraLKDOvt. If or of CokOloto boo boon Ts wood to Dorm. IN • TIGHT PLACE, The Radical papers have been unspar ing in their abuse of President Johnson. because be failed to "make treason odi ous"—because be did not try and hang- Lee, Johnson, Longstreet, and the thou sand others who were prominent on the Southern side during the recent war. And whilst engaged In this tirade of de nunciation, they have extolled Gen. Grant without measure, and many of them gone so far as to raise his name to their mast-heads for the Presidency. It may be that the October elections had something to do with the latter Step— but no matter what the motive, the fact is patent as we have stated IL But late developments place these Johnson-denouncers and Grant-putters In • "tight tlx." The publication `of Grant's testimony has come upon them like a bursting bomb-shell, demonstra ting as It does that Grant has all the time shielded "bloody rebels" from the punishment which the Radicals insisted the President should mete out to them. The Bedford Gazette has an article. on the subject, which Is so racy and point ed that we cannot think of withholding It from the readers- of the COMPILER. Here It Se: - Ha! Ha! Ha! Such a Nominee ! And now - we must jog the memory of our neighbors of the Franklin porito ry. Do you remember, gentlemen, how vigorously you scolded Mr. Johnson for -falling ter "punish traitors and to make treason odious?" Do you remem ber how you raged and stormed because he adopted a certain policy with regard to the seceded States? You cannot have forgotten. Nay, even now you rant and bluster about "my policy" and "John eon's treachery." Well, how in it with you now, when your candidate for pres ident In 1868, smears before the .fudie-ia ry Committee of eongress, that Johnson wanted to "punish traitors," etc., but that he (Grant) prevented him from so doing ? Huw is it with you, now, when this game Grant swears that he recom mended the pardon of Lee and Joe John son and other leading "traitors?" Nay, how is it with you, when this pet candi date of yours, this Grant, swears -that Johnson is endeavoring to "carry through" the identical plan adopted by the late lamented ' , Government' Abra ham Lincoln? Come, now, gentlemen of the Repository. do tell us how you "feet" on these questions? Your friends would like to know how you reconcile your opposition to Johnson with your support of Grant, the father of Johnson's policy; how you can damn the Presi• dent with your Radical anathemas, for pardoning rebels, and support Grant for recommending the same rebels for par don ; how you can hunt down- and per secute-Johnson for carrying out a policy which Grant teetiflei, under oath, is the same that was adopted by your own Lin coin. We would like toe see the logical prestigiation by which such featsare ac complished. Presto! change! Now you see it, and now you don't see it! In this column the Repository consigns Johnson; to everlasting infamy, in that , It lauds Grant, the preceptor of Johnson, ' to the seventh heaven ! Signor Blitz, ' Prof. seer Anderson, and all the rest of the conjuring brotherhood, look to your laurels. The great prestigtator and pro fessor of Radical legerdemain, who pre aides over the columns of the Franklin Re ' pository, "Is comi ng:" =1 The New York Independent, among the ablest of the Radical impels in the country, In down on the timeteervers of its party in the following strain : "If the Republican party in not to stand for the negro's rights, then it has no bet ter mission than the Democratic. Every national qtrestion, save the question of the negro, might be just as safely trusted to the Democratic party - Ss to the Repub lican. If, therefore, the Republican par ty throw overboard the negro, we shall straightway move to throw overboard the Republican party. We observe, with mingled pain and indignation, that many conservative Republican journals, in va rious Northern States, are putting - forth tentative articles with a view to the framing of a l'resldential issue in which the negro shall have no place. But the glory of the Republican party will end in shame, if such, counsels be allowed." The independent is right. The whole stock in trade of th i g so-called Republican party is the negro, and whenever that party drops Sambo it has nothing left, to go upon. The , starektrented African la its only Lope of sal vatkut, and whenever it ceases to take him to its warm embrace, It droops and dies and - detscencis to an untimely and ignominious grave. Like the fabled shirt of Nessus, the negro will stick to the Republican party closer' and closer, and any attempt to looserthis hold or detach him from ita bask, will inevi tably end in the destruction of both. ryi 4,1:4 At the inaugunstion of our government the people were foolish enough to sup pose that men of brains were necessary to frame constitutions and enact laws. That idea is dissipated, and "Cuff," "Samba," and "Pompey," fresh from the cotton fields, are now thought fully qualified to remodel governments and establish political systems. For instance, says the. Ape, the Alabama Constitutional Convention Is composed of the following material: Negro barbers, IS; coach driv ers (white and black), 18; valets (halt and half), 11; ex•plantation hands, 8; Yankee pediers, 14; Freedmen's Bureau men, 7; Massachusetts colporteurs, 5; Tribune correspondent, 1; negro preach ers, 3; escaped convicts, 2; loyal leaguers, 2. Total, 87. Of the white total but nineteen are natives of the South; the balance are squatters from New England. One or those classified as escaped convicts has.his ears cropped; the other is brand ed as a deserter from the Federal army. One of the negro preachers is the same scamp who befooled the "unconditional ly loyal" in this partof the country three years ago by representing that be was Mr. Jefferson Davie' runaway coachman, when the fact is, be was a graduate of a low negro boarding house in West Broadway, and was never out of New York City in his life. The name condi tion of affairs exists in Louisiana. In the convention of that State seventy eight members are present, of whom for ty-font are negroes. Crane, a white delegate, called the COn vention to order and nominated Gardner, • negro, for temporary President, who, on taking the chair, said he was "on'ed by de ,election of de Convention." Vig ere, a light-colored African, was then Be leceid as Secretary, and the business commenced. These are the men called upon to lead la political matters in the Southern States. It is an insult to the white men of the nation, and will be so considered when reason takes the place of passion. OWL HANCOCK, the new Commande of the Fifth Military District, Is giving satiafseUon to Conservative men every where by bls administration of affairs. A gentleman, soldier and patriot, he gov ems with a merciful hand, and the peo ple of Louisiana abd Texas will hail him am their deliverer from the tyranny and thraldom et nob petty despots as Bberi dan and Mower. Tux Detroit /Wily Maks paper Bore• Wore pohnotbod Is tats sototeot of lbe workiali own. kw Wool tit Domoorstle Ism iiosioliag tla looms to bottattor somort tit petootiaut of tit Domoorstio Put/. Tee Derylestrone Deneeeret has bellied the woe et Nes. Jed rather. et Sew Utley. se fibs Dueeende amid/dale ler President END OP THE 131LPEACIINENT PIAOCO If the Republican party had only made asetithe jest and scorn of ttiankind,tbet Is an evil which could be oheerhilly borne. But unfortunately that petty is In posses sion of the government, and the reputa tion of the country suffers by its absurd and degrading antics. What will foreign nations think of the dignity of a govern ment which has been managed for the last eleven months on the hypothesis that its Chief Executive was an cinema dem ned, merely because he Wag an u n tried criminal, and hi at last driven to confess that there Is no evidence 'to warrant such treatment? The abandonment of this preposterous proceeding is extorted from Republican fears. Adverse elections have frightened the party from a course it was bent on pursuing. While the elections were pending, the impeachment tocsin was vigorously sounded by their most noted stump-orators. Speaker Colfax, whose official position should have taught him decency, courted popularity In the West by menaces that the heels of the Presi dent should dangle in the air. Senator Conkling, who presided over the Repub lican nominating, convention in this State, spread bimself, in his opening speech, on the same subject, but with more logic and decorum. We select these two for particular mention, because they are ardent popularity hunters, and it is the instinct of popularity hunters to study the humors of the multitude and say what the multitude will applaud. Their utterances prove that before the Republican party was so beaten In the elections, and when it had no apprehen sion of its doom, impeachment was one of their favorite measures. "Row art thou fallen from Heaven, 0 Lucifer, son of the morning!" The breath of the peo ple has passed over the Republican par ty, andlitis project lies stiff and cold as Sennacherib's army. To the disgrace of meditated injustice the party has added that of cowardice. "'Curses, like chickens, come home to roost." The Republican party In falling to impeach the President, has impeached Itself. All its proceedings for the last eleven months have gone os the assump tion that the President was guilty; and his triumphant acquittal convicts Con gress of wanton violations of his rights. Wily was the Tenure-of Office bill pass ed ? Because Congress pretended to con sider the President unfit to be trusted with the power exercised by all his pre decessors, and which constitutionally belong to his office. Why was the bill passed subjecting officers of the Army to heavy penalties if they obeyed any order which did not come through Gen eral Grant? Because it was pretended that the President was unfit to be Com mander-in-Chief of the Army as the Constitution makes him. Why were the commanders of the five military districts directed by statute not to obey civil au thority? For the same reason. Why was the act passed for assembling the Fortieth Congress at the very hour the Thirty-ninth expired" and why has it been kept in a sort of quasi session up to the moment fixed by the Constitution for the regular session to begin ? The avowed object was to keep a strict sur veillance over the President, who was proclaimed unfit to be trusted. There is left to him little beyond the empty name of his office; heis insultiogly stripped of nearly all its powers The only pretend ed justification of putting these manacles on the President's hands, and fetters on his feet, and sentinels to stand guard over his conduct, was, that he bad forfeit ed his office de jurc, and these restraints were requisite for the public safety until the forms could be gone through with for deposing him Sic facto, They all went upon the assumption that lie eteserr ed impeachment, but had not got his de serts By these boll acts, Congress virtually passed sentence on the President in ad vance of formal charges, and without evidence. It thus inflicted the greater part of the punishment due To high crimes and misdemeanors; for_the very utmost penalty attending a conviction ou impeachment is loss of office, and when a President is divested of his pow ers, the hollow shell of aqthority is of little account. It is very much as If the European Conference should deride that the Pope might retain his temporal au thority, but might appoint or remove no officer without the consent of the Italian Parliament, and Issue no command to his army except through Victor Emmanuel. They might as well require him to be. lieve the Scriptures in the sense put upon them. by the Chief Mufti. The one would be a circuitous and insulting method of making him a Mahometau, and the other of degrading him into a subject of the Italian King. It is much after this manner that President John son has been treated by Congress They have taken from him the command of the Army, the appointment and removal even of his Cabinet, and they demand that he shall understand the Constitu tion in the sense they choose to put upon it; which is about as reasonable as it would be to ask the Pope to accept the Bible according to the intrepretations of a Mussulman doctor. The Republican party having acquitted the President by a public confession that there are no grounds of impeachment, they are bound in equity and logic to restore to him his full authority. The disabilities put upon him have been im posed for precisely the same reasons (and , no others) which have been urged in support of impeichment. As they are found to be false and insufficient for the one purpose, they are equally insuffi cient for the equivalent purpose. If they do not suffice for deposing the Pres ident from his office, neither do they for stripping him of his powers. For in what does the office consist but in that assemblage of powers of which the great er part has been taken from him? Sen• ator Conkling contended, in his Utica speech, that if the President is bad enough to have these disabilities and M r ' dignities put upon hint, he is too b to remain nominally in office, and ougt, to be impeached and deposed. The method mutilates the government by an nihilating the Executive Department; the other merely removes the man and leaves to the country the advantages of the office in other hands. We wish SenstorConkling would recall to his recollection the forcible and 'lien reasoned passage to which we refer, and acting in the spirit of it, would introduce . bills for repealing all the obnoxious laws hampering the President, which rest on the same grounds as impeachment, and inflict nearly the same punishment with out the Justice of a trial. To acknowledge the injury without taking any steps to repair it is not consistent with magnani mity, with sincerity, nor with decency. —N. Y. World GENERAL HANCOCK has revoked the order secluding non-registered Ohmse hens juries in Loadsbuth That M rigid, and wdl be enrolled of by every right thinking man in the North. Iris said the Mande of Maj. Oen. 0. 0. Howard will present hie name to the Repobbean National Coneettion as a candidate for Proddent. " IIiCO3IIIIUCCTION " .1* 11t1 Wherever in the South the Degrees have been left to themselves they have "run down." On - Edisto and other blends of South-Carolina—the richest long staple spots or the cotton region— where the darktes were pmvided with free lands and agricultural implements, under Bherman's war order, they have failed to either make money or produce enough for their own sustenance, and are leaving the islands and crossing over to the main land, to work, beg or steal, L inclination may prompt. "Recon struction" so performed, therefore, as to give large bodies of land to the negroes, and to make them the controllers of leg islation and the civil government, will necessarily reduce those States to a pitia ble condition, industrially and financial ly. Instead of being able to support themselves and leave a large surplus of cotton, tobacco, sugar, &e., for export and to be taxed for the support of the Government and payment .of interest upon the public debt, they will probably not be even self-sustaining or productive enough to pay the ordinary local taxa tion. Preliminary "reconstruction," under the Radical plan, has already forewarn• ed the country of this by the general dis trust, apathy and stagnation prevailing all over the Southern region, but the worst is ;yet to come. And come it will and must, when the whites, now out lawed civilly and politically, shall be robbed and impoterished by confisea don and negro legislation, and crushed and trampled upon by the arrogant and ignorant negro demagogues and despera does who are to be set up as rulers in the legislatures, in the State offices, in the courts, in the jury box and even in mu nicipal afrairs, the police government and the State militia. All the "brains" —the Intelligence, the enterprise, the genius, the "pluck"—thus submerged beneath a Mall avalanche of ignorance, stupidity, superstition, arrogance and indolence, those States must go down— down to financial and industrial ruin as deep as the humiliation and degradation to which the - white race has been doom ed. This must be the inevitable conse quence or" Radical "reconstruction." Patriot & Union. THE WOOER TOO HEAVY A LOAD POE 1., The New York Herald has been the most persistent advocate of the nomina tion of General Grant for Pro Went, and It still advocates his claims. But it is forced to admit that he can never be elected on a radical platform. It says: There is something so repulsive to the American mind, so antagonistic to the genius, the spirit and the manifest desti ny of our political anti social system, in this thing of a Southern negro balance of power, especially as it is established on white disfranchisements, that it can not last It Is a compound of Asiatic despotism and African barbarism so monstrous that its first submission to the general verdict of the the country will result in a Judgment decreeing the au thority and the instruments (or Its over throw. Put it to the test, and the major ity of fifty thousand against negro suf frage in Ohio, for example, will be main tained against this experiment of a South ern balance of power in Congress and our Presidential elections, resting upon uni versal negro suffrage and white disfran chisement-4- And so it will be in Sew York and throughout ,he North, excep ting, perhaps, only Vermont and Mas sachusetts. It was supposed at the time that the suspension of Stanton and the removal of Sheridan anti Sickles—three of the leading figures of the war—would oper ate to strengthen and solidify the Reptile Bean party in our then impending fall eleetions. But the results have shown that the eyes of the people have been drawn for the time being from our heroes and the achievements of the war to the unauthorized and unexpected reconst rue- Lion schemes of a Radical Congreis and their dangerous tendencies. In view of these facts, and of the election of 1852, when Gen. Scott was overwhelmingly defeated by an obscure New Hampshire politician, on the bare suspicion that the leading men of the Whig party were not safe on the great Compromise measures of 1450, it may well he doubted whether General Grant himself can be elected if placed nn this obnoxious platform of Southern negro •ttpretnacv, maintained by a coercive military dispotiam. We anticipate, then, from the present ma ple:ion and shaping of things, a peditioai revolution in ibt3B against this substitu ted negro oligarchy of the boom quite as remarkable and effective as that of 1881, which decreed the extinction of the old negro slaveholding white oligarchy. THE New Raven, Connecticut, ter says: "More men are out of employ ment in this city, at present, than at any previous time in the last ten years. The leading manufacturers are reducing or have reduced their forces, and it la a dif ficult matter for a mechanic or working man to obtain employment of any kind. In this city, not less than one thousand five hundred laboring men are unemploy ed, many of whom depend upon their Wages to support their families. Recent ly, one-half of the operatives employed in the car factory of George T. Newhall were discharged ou account of the dull times" In the face of these facts, the Radical party Insist upon their "restore. tIon" scheme, by which ten States are destroyed, the markets of the South dosed against Northern products, and the general business of the nation over thrown by the imposition of unheard of taxes. It is time that business men should look at the evidences of Radical misrule by which they are surrounded, and may be overwhelmed. In this city, as well as New Haved, thousands of per sons are out of work who would have constant employment If all the States were represented in Congress by white men, and the party which prevents this consummation should be driven from power by the laboring men of the North. —Philo. Age. ONE of the local black and tanaisays that "Republican members of Congress are earnest in their efforts to organize the South so as to save it from the pol luting control of the old political influ ences which prevailed there during and before the slaveholders' rebellion." This is the sum total of all the "earnest ef forts" of .the miacalled Republican members for two years peat. Almost every act of legislation during that time has been designed to secure political power for the Radical party and spoils for its leaders. The "earnest etlbrts" of the Radical leaders have resulted in the adding of hundreds of mlllione of dol lars a year to the expenses of govern ment; increased largely the tax bur dens; prostrated agriculture, trade and manufactures; and brought the whole country to the verge 'of financial ruin and a war of races• It is high time for the negrophohists to stop their "earnest efforts." A LEAniwn negro elected to the Con stitutional Convention of Virginia, can neither read nor write, and he has been Ave times imprisoned for stealing. Re ie a good ?member of the "God and moral ity party." Thatdarkey would shine in Congress like a patent leather boot. New aurnmran le marine! The Desseersts carried Portsmouth by 60 ma jority anit•caose within 10 of carrying Dover, at the late town @teething. Last Year the %rum save nearly 200, and the tter over 410, Radios] msiorf TUX CITIES ISPUILICINOt BOsTON, Dec. 9.—Dr. N. Shurtieff Democrat, was chosen mayor of Boston to day, receiving 8,8113 votes, against 7,875 for Otis Norcross, the present Be pnbilaan incumbent. Ntwnrwrrowr, MA:v; , Deo 9.—1 4 7 a. thaniel Pierce, Dem., was elected mayor to-day. / Cosconn, N. 11., Dec. 10.—James /A. Weston, Democrat, was today elea mayor of Manchester by a majorit • . three hundred and two over C ,- the present Republican incumbent. The Republican majority last year was five hundred and forty-three. Pirrstwuci, Pa, Dec 10.—Unusual in terest was manifested In the city elec tion to-day. The Democratic candi dates for ma, or and treasurer were elec ted- by nearly three thousand majority— a Democratic gain of about six thousand! The result In Pittsburg is even more ex traordinary than that in Boston. The Radical papers are astounded. The Post, Dem , says: A few year* ago this city gave Mr. Lincoln in the neighborhood of three thousand majority. tihe now repudiates the Rattles, destructives by a majority In the neighborhood of twenty-eight hundred. It is not our desire to inquire Into the causes which have led to this disaster to the Radical forces; suffice it to say that many Republicans voted against the nominees of that party, being totally disgusted with their leaders, who have kept the country In constant tur moil by legislating for negro supremacy. Thus is Radicalism slaking, even in its old strongholds. The people, at fast seeing the ruin resulting from its eon trol of the government, repudiate and spit upon the unclean thing. The bold, bad men who have for six years lorded it over the nation, regardless of the people's rights or Interests, wilt soon be driven from the political stage, never to re-ap pear upon it. So mote it be THE election of a Democratic Mayor in the City of Boston will be hailed with delight throughout the country, as ad ditional evidence of the increasing strength and power of the Conservative element. It hien unmistakable indication that the corrupt organization called Rad icalism is feat pasting away and that the places which now know it will soon know it no more forever It is juistly meeting its merited condemnation by the intelligent voters of the nation. The four great centres of trade and commerce —New York, - Philadelphia, Boston, and Baltimore—have during the present year, ranged themselves on the side of the Democracy. ' The last one to speak was Boston; and it was, perhaps, the severest rebuke any public man ever received that on the same day Mr. Sumner was pressing hie negro-suffrage doctrines upon the people of the District of Colum bia, the metropolis of his own State de clared in favor of a Democratic Mayor. Verily, revolutions do not go backwards I —49 v. LAWLIIIIIIIIIIM TIME EL%CU I= MONTGOMERY, ALA., Dec. 4.—Alarm fog excesses have recently been com.nit ted by the blacks in Bullock county; In the neighborhood of Perote. The color ed loyal leagues organized and resisted processes by civil authorities. Under In structions from colored emissaries they framed a code of laws to govern the ne gro population, opened a court, officered and organized, arresting by night all blacks who opposed their unlawful pro ceedings, and carried punishment so far that their victims applied to the civil authorities for protection. The black sheriff' and his deputy were finally ar rested, but oilier insurrectionary leaders organized the negroes and made resis tance. Aid from other leagues was summoned, and the blacks flocked to Union Springs, threatening a general rising and exter mination of the whites and taking pos session of the country. Black leaders went to plantations and forced laborers to join them for vengeance, showing pre tended orders from lien. Swayne that they had a right to kill all resisting their authority. During the excitement a ne gro church at Perote was burned by un known parties—it is alleged by black leaguers to inflame the negrom . The white citizens universally regret it. The white citizens organized for protection. Gen. Swayne was Appealed to and sent a detachment of troops promptly to the scene of trouble to restore order, and fif teen black insurrectionists have been ar rested.and lodged in Jail to be tried by civil authority. At last, accounts order was restored. What a terrible state of affairs Radical negro teaching is producing in the South I Can white men in the North longer adhere to a party whose princi ples tend to, and whose leaders encour age, lawlessness and outrage in ten States of the Union? How THEY VoTED.—The following le the vote of the Pennsylvania Congres• Mortal delegation on the Impeachment reeolotkine Yale.—Thaddeus Stevens, Thomas Stephen F. Wilson, John M. Broomall, John Covode, William D. Kelley, Leonard Myers, Charles O'Neill, Ulysses Mercur-9—all Radicals. NAYS.—George V. Lawrence. William H. Koontz., George F. Miller, James K. Moorhead, J. Lawrence Getz, Adana J. Giosebresner, Samuel J. Ecoustall, Ben jamin M. Boyer, Caleb N. Taylor, Daniel AL Van „Auks*, George Ir. Woodward 11—Democrats 6 ; Rade 5. Henry L. Cake, Rad., paired off with Mr. Cornell, of New York; Daniel J. Morrell, Rad. and G. W. Schofield, Rad., were absent—all for impeachment. Tier. Republican National Executive Committee met at Washington on Wed nesday, and tired on the ..sDth of May, at Chicago, as the time and place for the meeting of their National Convention, to nominate candidates for President and Vice President. The chairman, Gov. Ward, proposed to change the name from National Republican to National Union Convention. This was opposed by Hor ace Greeley, who said that a change of name . would operate disastrously to the party. The proposition was not agreed to. Look out for a storm in the Radical party. THE Radical Senate and Home have passed a bill to strike the word "white" from the charter of Washington City, and from all other legal documents which contain it. The Rada are deter mined to force a negro mayor and other municipal negro officials upon the peo ple of the Federal Capita/. MR. Romer& the member of Oongreee from this distriet, voted against im peachment. What have the bowlers against Jobes= in Adame to say to that? A oostaisvorriszwr of a Savatmah pa per says that owns of the ..akt families" of Beantert, 8. C., have returned to that town, and are in a deeUtute and starving eandiess. Two Billy girls In Maquoketa have declared their readiness to walk from that place to Chicago, in Ave days, for 000 each. AT a recent wedding in Valparaiso, Ind., the groom was V 6 and the bride 72 years of age. They looked blushing and happy. WILD pigeons by the wagon load are brought into LittJe Rook the sale. They being My cents a dozen, The Gondar says "two gentlemen reeding below the city, killed twelve hundred pigeons with their *bulgur one morning lately, en the Ktottn Aar, twetre rrtflf+ below town." local Otpartireirt. TOWN, coon SMOSUISOUNINNS COUNTIES. Sem.—The raspy gingle of slab beUs Is again bead incur streets, a now of considerable depth having fallin yes terday . Preaching.—The Rev. Mr. Gladstone will preach in the United Presbyterian hurch, in this place, on Sabbath next, (the 18th.) Coil Acrepted.—Rev. Mr. Magree, of Baltimore, has accepted the call to be come the pastor of the First Lutheran Church of Clunntorsburg. Approaching.—The Christmas and New Year holidays are rapidly approach ing, and will bring with them many pleasures, especially to those who have an abundance of this world's geode. We trust the poor will be remembered. Another Mad Cow.—We are Informed that another cow belonging to Charles Diehl, in New Oxford, went mad a few days ago, being the third cosethat has gone mad in that place during the past month. I'.ew Loeomoffie.—The ffanover A. Railroad Company ham contracted for a new coal-burning locomotive, "Reit auee,f' to he finished during the prevent month. It le to owl 512,000, and will be powerful ne well as hat. Sudden • Death.—We learn from the Waynesboro' Record that Mrs. Walker, wife of Dr. Thomas Walker, dee'd, died very suddenly hi that place on Wedfies day afternoon last. Mrs. W. had been a helpless invalid for a number of years from the effect 4 of inflammatory rheuma tism. Dead Letters.—We see It stated In an exchange that the Postmaster General has instructed Postmasters to treat all letters dropped • into the office, directed with a lead pencil, the same as dead let ters. The public will do well to make a a note of this. Robbery.—On the night of the let in stant, the premises of Mr. Daniel Ben der, in East Berlin, were robbed by some scoundrel of about twenty dollars' worth of clothing, which had been lett hanging out on a line. On the night following, a quantity of clothing was stolen from the premises of Mrs. Overholtzer, in the same place. Purehases.—Col. P. B. }lnking has purchased a two-story brief house, with lot, in East Berlin, from Hon. T. Ste vens. John Riesecker has purchased a house and lot in Fairfield. from J. V. Danner, at $1,600. Barnard Reilly has purchased the house and lot, In the came place, of John Johns, at $l, ..300. The price paid by the Misses Keever for the property of Jeme E. Spahr, in Arendtaville, wee 12.056—n0t $41,260, as published. Wild OW Shot.—One night, some weeks ago, whilst John W. King, of Fairfield, this county, was out hunting, his dogs treed something which he sup posed to ‘ be a 'coon. lie climbed 'the tree, and, with a single-barreled pistol, shot the animal , wounding but not kill ing it. Crippled as It was, it made at him, when rapidly re-loading the pistol, is breech-loader,) be fired again, killing it instantly. Instead of a 'coon, it prov ed to be a wild cat, of very large size, and a very ugly looking customer to deul with. Disastrous Fire.—We learn from the York Gazette, that on Tuesday night week, between the hours of 11 and 12 o'clock, a destructive fire ocOurred in the township of Windsor, in that, county, to tally destroying the store and dwelling of Henry S. Overmiller. Ills not known how the fire originated, but the first in timation the occupants had of the build ing being on fire, was by a little son of Mr. Overmiller, who awoke his parents with a scream, being almost suffocated from the smoke In his room, when the building was found to be in dames. The family barely escaped with their Jives, not having saved sufficient clothing to protect them from the inclement weath er. The building, with its entire con- Wits, consisting of store goods, furniture and wearing apparel, wee destroyed be fore any assistance could be rendered. Partially insured. Vie Holidays.—The approach of the Holidays is unmistakably indicated by the large stocks of new goods to be seen at the several Conteotkmexy and Variety Stores in our place.. Prominent among these is the lately enlarged establish ment of J. M. Warner, in Baltimore street, nearly opposite Fahneetocks' Store. ?toted for good taste and enter prise In his business, he has this time really outdone himself—having laid in, when in the cities, such a stock as is rarely seen in a country town, and not often found in any single establishment in the cities. His Confectionary articles embrace everything, from the cheapest home manufacture to the finest French ; of Toys, his variety is almost endless, embracing many novelties; whilst of Mantle and other Parlor Ornaments, he has an assortment of which he is special ly proud, and which he feels Must be ap preciated by an intelligent community. Whilst his articles are fine, they are cheap—quite as cheap as they can be had its the cities, He invites everybody— male and female—old and young—from town and country—to call and examine his immense and attractive stock, and then satisfy their Holiday wants. Eve ry, taste can be gratified and every pock et suited. It Stoves I —Moves 1---at 8.0 Cook's, York et„ Gettysburg. Particular attention la called to Small & Elmyser's Pennsylvania Cook, No. & The fire place of this stove takes in a piece of wood two feet long, which makes it the rhea — pest stove in the market; its baking and heisting qualities have been thoroughly tested, and never failed to give satisfaction. He has the exclusive sale is Gettysburg of Life stove, and also of the Empire and Oriental self. feeding Base Burseni4t ie re of the best stoves ever invented. y can be sees in operation at the Keystone House and Globe Inn. * tt Grand Ledge_rif Manne.—At the nine ler quarterly sestdon of the Grand Lodge ask. Y. M.,• Mallet the MAINIOIO RAU, Chestnut street, Thlladelphia, on Wednesday, December 4th, the follow ing were elected Whom of that body:— Richard Yank, R. W. Grand Master: R. A. Lumberton, R. W. Deputy Grand Master; 9antuel C. Perkins, R. W. S. G. Warden; Alfred R. Potter, R. W. J. G. Warden. These dicers will be, Installed on St. John's Du, .Decem ber Web, at the Annual Communication, to be held on that day. IBstreatiog Ctoupd causes the friends of the teetlitter almost as mae.b pain se the suffbrer himself, and should receive immediate attention. Dr. Wistsr's Bal sam et Wild Chang speedily curse eougba, colds, inflames, sore throat, ie. It will Messrs name consaseptions, sod la maiky Vida attested cases it has AlM tvd a perfect cure. Adjourned (Mort —The Special Court, oommeneed on Monday morning—Presi dent Judge Flakier and Associate Judges Wierman and RobLneon on the Bench. Common Pleas cases only were tried—as follows : Catharine GorioN, now — Livotone, Admini , tratrix with the will annexed of Henry Gordon, deoeased, vs. A. D. Gor don, Administrator of William Eyler, deceased.—Debt on promissory , note, un dersea], not exceeding $826. Verdict for the defendant. Caledonia Cold Spring; Company vs. Cumberland Valley Mutual Protection Company.—Debt on a policy of insu rance on property destroyed by lire at Caledonia Springs, several yeam ago. Verdict for plaintiff for $0,413 33. John Gabble and Gibson Smith, Ad ministrators of Hannah Bowers, deceas ed, WI. Jacob Stitsel.—Dent en bond of $l,OOO, dated Ist of April, 1804—also for money received by defendant for the use of Hannah Bowers In her life time, amounting to $450. On trial as we write —Thuniday. Chris Kringle having established his headquarters at E. H. Miunlgh's, in Chsmbersburg street, next door to the Keystone House, that is the place to find anything and everything suitable for Christmas presents. Mr. Munich has an unusually large assortment of Holi day goods, which cannot fall to please every taste, and win golden opinions from his numerous customers All he asks is that the public shall give him a pall and examine the thousands of nov eliei he exhibits, and the buying part will be sure to follow. finch beautiful goods at such moderate prices, must in duce any number of sales. In Confec tionary and other sweet things be can't be beat—neither in Toys, Parlor Games, Holiday Books, lc., ike., &a., which he could string out to the length of half a dozen newspaper columns. But as this cann ot be done, he must content himself With asking everybody to come. and see for themselves, assured that the satisfaction to be derived from an exam ination of his varied assortment will re pay the trouble of a visit. It Ballou's Magazine, for January, Is on our table. This is a very interesting monthly, with varied contents, from the best pens, and illustrations, numerous and apt. Among the contributors are Miss Camilla Willian, Amethyst Wayne, M. T. Caldor and Mies Amends M. Hall. It has a young people's de partment, well and appropriately filled. The Magazine has been enlarged to one hundred pages. Terms $1.50 per year. Address, Elliott, Thomes & Talbot, , 3:1 Congress street, Boston. .Uintal.—We are in receipt of the De cember number of the "United States }logical Review," published by J. L. Peters, WO Broadway, New York, at per annum. The Review Is i complete musical magazine, and will keep Its Teed ens fully posted iu all matters pertain ing to this beautiful branch of culture. Ocr musical friends cannot do letter than subscribe for it. American Farmer, Ballimore.—The December number contains articles on the—Agricultural Policy of the South —Orthodox Manuring—Clover as Ma nure—Lime—Rotation of Crop Systems —Fall Ploughing—Colorado Potato Bug —Grape Growing—Sheep—Mutton and Wool—Destruction of Insects—Harvest of 1887—Besides Farm, and Garden Work, Veterinary Department, and a variety of other interesting matter. Published by WORTHINGTON tt LEWIS, Baltimore. S. a year, in advance. Commendatory.—We cannot speak in too high terms of Coe's Dyspepsia Cure. It is a well-tried Remedy and invaria bly cures. Why will you suffer from Dyspepsia, Indigestion, and disorders of the Stomach and Bowels, when so good Li remedy can be obtained so easily? 4= Is it for short memory, or want of memory altogether, that no nevspaper has reminded Weston that there was a Norwegian not more than about thirty years ago, who did ' parallel" him and was more than a"precedent" for him? In Mennen Ernst. a Norwegian by birth, marched on foot from Paris to Moscow In less than fourteen days. In consequence of a wager of one hundred thousands francs, of which, in case he should win, he was to receive but four thousand francs, Meneen Ernst started from the oolumu of Verdome, In Paris, at noon, on the 11th of Jane, 1822, and early in the morning of the I.Zth of the same mouth he stood before the Krem lin In Moscow. lie had walked six teen hundred English miles in a little less than fourteen days, or one hun dred and seventeen English miles, on an average, a day. In 1833 he made a tour on foot which was still more astonishing. -He took let ters from the Queen of Bavaria, in Munich, to her son, the King of Greece. He started from Munich on the 6th of June and arrived at Nauplia on the Ist of July. And rather than have his trainers and followers along in carriages with food and whisky and whatever might give him comfort, as Weston had, Ernst tramped alone through morass and wilderness, arid nobody took care of him but himself. On the road from Smolensk to Borodino he had even to protect the food he carried from this wolves that persecuted him. But the greatest of all his pedestrian feats he executed in 1836. • On the 18th of July he started from the Atmeidan,' In Constantinople, with letters for the h raker (Apeman, of Calcutta, and han ded them to the party addressed on the 27th of August. After three days rest at Calcutta he returned to Constantinople, and reached there on the 3d of October. Jn sixty three days he had made live thousand one hundred and seventy miles through the Wild mountains of Asia Minor, through the Syrian Desert, and through the wild forests and rough passes of Afghanistan-; under difficul ties tampered to which Westo&s tramp was mere play. Meneen Ernst averaged eighty-two English miles a day for sixty-three days. We think that at least Ooniewiporone wow history ebonite be examined before spe.akisigef say 'timprecedgeted and on- Pan 41611 d" feat 'The fiat le that the AssOoos people feel annoyed it they are Without ear niutitaler exploit on hand to excite thug. Weston was a re lief in the dearth of exciting news. The beet that the people eouki do for him was. to hail him With the epithets of "unprecedented" -- and "Unparalleled." Only a little isms the people did for Gen eral Sheridan, aid yet there were Na poleons and Miebers before him.-31. Louis liepublioan. THE New York Journal of Ccratmerce says it has been noticed that poultry this swam will notialten, and the sug gestion has been made that the fact is indicative of a mild winter, the birds not requiring the amount of carbon need ful in severrwinters. AT Montreal, on Monday, the ther. Wiewieter marked 15 to :A degree* below 9.0.1.0. SPECIAL NOTICES liew• Marrlaffe 4Nride AN OW Ali FOR Int MI MEN, on 'I h 1 Alitaies and Dissiusea, hie!,lent to Youth sou Early Manhotaal, Whirl, emelt' itn pedlusenta to bf Altftt 11SE, a nil mire weans of relief. tient in lesleel leiter envelopea ire* of chortle. Acim... lir, A, sit:ll.l.lN HtiI'GHTON, Howard Asaorlatiou Philadelphia, In. Dee, 11, 1017, -- Dr. Writer•. Sabina of Wild Cherry. In the whole Minor) of medical Imo% rrien 2tti JIZMILIA her.. performed so many or met remark able cures of the numerous affections of the TIIROAT, 1.1:1•04 and CREST, as this laug-ttlad and Justly celebrated Balsam. No 'laterally se knombidged te the superior, inseellettoe of this rented; that DM few of the was* who hovels/ t. ed its r !Hum by experience fell to keep it ut hand en x stre.ly end (WWI/ Mire for imilriert lit tera. of leer)—fully believing that ice tvmrxllnl powers arc comprehelleire enough to embrace every form of dines., team the slightest euld to the most dtmitorotts symptom of imimounry complaint t qt ti.IuITED TESTI 1,1()147 From itLV. FK.utu U.l In/Munn., !furor (At NIP,P, (bnortort'unitt/ Church, Hrttfgepoof, rt,tit "I cm:udder It a duty ultleh 1 tot e to 411torl ttg human lty CO beat WMIIIIOIII to the s Witarlea liaNalu of V. /1,1 cherry, I lint, to.t . tl It whot I has t. had , u.tcar.lon ft.t.r ny rt int .4 For 1'151• +, Or Mor , ThrOnt rn.tto ‘lll , l never 1.1 11 , 1110‘ , 111ettis11113 hi. It 11111* 'I t•• In• t• lulu tilt,. lite. I hate trequentb It.tt.tt home ott Isit.l looked forward to Its.t delivery of two 'ter/noun Ott atilt tual MINOS Itlll - 4, 11111 11 a Itlutral lli••ni 111, , 14 11.111 / 1 1 Itont , teattu , has Invariably lien re -01,11 Itt“ iw,arltn.l without ififtlenll). I ' , it/flirt/1F It to me tt,...(t.r0, In tryomttit.try. 1111*1 1 • 1,1,1 t• -1.”.11.1 lit•rillt , nn is t•erttillj rein* •1 , Fur Ils• los ~ 1 11 1 rout,' .tt to uljil.l) as as , 1 1 .4 . 011.,1N e 175101111 port,) 111 Nt rit NV. WIN', IC Tre mont Huton, stint tar *gilt , 11% . Ilrugglotu gou.•ralts, For nit ILr !'rtn , an rot 1!( , 014, 011,010Ung ,110 th. le I , lit ii 11 In 7 Wall 01 11111 i tile pnrifyine etinelt Of loil.ne whelk ndlutnl.tontl Jh a NI, Mt. 11 .VNIIER , lODINE WATER It ti pure ~,lution of h..ntr 11 14%01,14i 11l %liter, a;flf..at nullolit. nut In Immti rent4.lv fir Serum and ktuttr,l tlistumm d .. tk.coN, Cirollaklx 4. J. P. PINSMtrItI , :01 11.1 , to et NoNs sold ftruggtnt. getaTully. Del% 6, 1n67. ini To Owstfoo of 110.111.1 and Cottle.. Tobias' lO.oln condition Pest dens ore arrant ed stip. rlor to ally (ahem, Or 00 pay, for the rune of Distemper, Worms, Rota, Coughs, Ilide-bound, Cold, &c., In Holuee; and Colds, Coughs., .1.0. s of Milk, Black Tongue, 'torn Distemper, hi., In Cattle. They are prrfectly side and Innocent; no need of stopping the pork log of your uni. mak The 3 Inerritoo tippottle. Wtw a nor root, cleans. lip.. mlOlllO4 /I and al Maki 10101111: also Menses , the milk of roue. Try Own.. and !, no *lll tenor to. witlieut thOnt. ruff, liar celebrated tralsier uI troll/fig layrws, ha.* used them fur ears, atia rPeOriiniPlitla 110.111 lu hi. ( 01. PllllO. TOW, of Itf r r tremor Race 1 °Oro,. Fnralluite. N. 1 not:in 110: /OW them until he won told 01 a hat Ilse ro‘ppir por.e.l, nonce a /Ile], lip to 100 en V cI 1,001. Motu. Ito Was over 111013 running horse, In hi.. he, ref, and for the last tine., earn la, used it,, °qu•r medicine for thine. /folio% kindly ports t.. 1 leo tO refer Htq 011,- to him, n/1 r /,900 of he a I, PT sweet tun In MO nal the depot. Pklltl Its 1111011,011. find Se.l.ller, pr.,. 2; rrnto per bPS. r. , ;.41 l'oarda/011.tror1, .Pll . 00 lbe Topanota Wave of popularity. luau .1/ 041•11t , ,r.1.11,4 , ,04 comp, VA Ju, Minna to 14.% At Till:1,41 1 4 , 1 , 1+1111 . 110 ru vpr.,llllllll, wlin. of WWI, prodncex Il.r t,ut. pit Itulron . Time %hit., I= u oplnloun from :%.11 mrt• nf peopin,' and rnn m ~ .r "4. , by lam tward" wbtlu It la Imbt dr...trot& In 111011 or woman WLW VOII1 , 1). 400. Ultielltr , 11 J I itisr.u)otto, , 0 - 1 ori.. snth by '.ll Inumft4b, Appll..l bt all Hi.ll I r, 1 0 . C. 1111 llrwfuettt, Mindnena And CAlarth. Tn•nb+l with the atm.( n1.10e...., by la. .1. Oeullat to td I.l.rlht, flormrrly 01 f t - den, Ilona tald No. 405 .\n•h atreet, Philadelphia. Te.tltnouiala from the 100 at rellubl.• soure..s In 04,4 If y and Country, tam Ix• ...at at Inaonh,— Tuo fut•ltrul illellit) nut . lu I led 10 1..1111,4411y their hit h.• ham no scor.•t. In hi• fun!, t 1.0”. ffelal ryrn inn, rted mithuut rill: NO charge noatefor eXataluat hub, No.. II !NZ'. ly A Card le the Ln41114.5. DR. DDPONCIP4 PFR InDll' PILLS I'}. 1A ,orri I t lhg Irtrgul.trltlr., Ken/cuing Utudrut•lloos Of I Io• Muutlll.• 1.4., !rum u , Wl4 AI - W 11314 mite..... 140 IL D. now 0a er thlrte,o enrol 'One,. the above. ele. 111%1/.1 tills a ere hod ;limo. a red by lie, Di_ - co, dorm.; o,II.•I, Elmo no, b. • o .Levi 5ue...00111) Used liinond 01 t e paidir Oodittitions, as well out in private pr.o to e, of until herol,pheres, wlth otaptrollyled KU, es+, I. every ease, and it Is only at the •nlrgetlL roe quint • • ot till• thin.. lads of ladlen who halve Intel at, !hal lie 1. , lailui ed to tstoke the tills plil,llo for tn.. inn 01 tlicae autterlt.g from 11.11) /r regularltbs wli.dever,aa Wlll us to prey. rat 411 crews., of f•Imlly when• Inot`th will not permit it. ONE DONE, Fern•iles peetlllarly thoneecharahting tbernael 640, rl. 4 6116610116 . 4 agaluml. taslng fates. wlrle In 111th tx)utlltlon lest the) Bo Misearrhog.•." ntt. r which wirnonitlon, the Pro prietor u.. oaten nil responmilllllty,nlUv Ugh Llgelt Inlldne,s will _prevent nn) rnimehlet to health otherwise the Pill. ere reC011:11110.0410ti am 6 MONT IN V.-11. r L it BM EBY tor all thaw larlieting ,61111111641164 en Twill:l4lr 10 110,666, ONE BOX 1.1.1 HUFF ICIENT. Iwo Ho%ex have been hold within Two Yo,lni. Ten nouphind Bogen 'rent tn Moll, both by m5 _ self and Agent, to nil partriOf the word, to which liniment hove non retornen,lU which is ten nay. nothing like the ahoy° PI/14 have tarn lirnerti nth, the , teienee of 31,11,ine 11•Inined opon world, in iteintiving obetruettonm and Itepitoring N-Itlll , toltsProp.,4llunuti,tokeungtheNtr,,,, and bringing back thy "Racy color of the cheek of the most oteMoilba. Pelee St per Box. 'hll Bonet Sold by JOHN S. YOBS Ell', Drugglit, sole Agent for Gottyaburg, Ladles, by .calhag turn Si through the Poet CH- M., sin have tbo Pills +en: l..antittentlolly,, b :Hell, to any part of the .yalut:ry,..free of postage ' Sold al., J, Spain kw, Cruixol...r4l.sury; ;U. W. Neff, York; ik lingo/natal Jim.) Br otla en., Wholesale Agent*, Baltitnore, and M. 0. Howe. Proprlelor, Now York. March 4, LEI lY F=l A gentleman who auth red for year' from Ner- Coo. DehilltY, Premature Decay, and all the el . feet.l PI youthful Ind aeration. wilt / for the atke of suffering humanity, it ad free to .1: t, he need It, the rtriy.• and dire, Ilattol for mak 'Oa the aim pin remedy bv which he was cured. ...utterer. wleb Ina to profit by the advertiser a expel-ler,. can do so by addressing, In perfert confldere e, JOHN it. iki6EN. - 42 Cedar at., Neu York. May 27,144. ly To ILUmmansplivee She Rev. Edward A. Wlinon a 111 owed (tree of charge) to al/ aMo den/ re It the pormeription MI/ the direction, for making and using the nifutan remedy by which he wan eared Otik lung an,- tton and that dread dlaeaoe ronnumption. only object to to benefit the a/Dieted and he hcjo every Buffeter will try this p,reneripi ten, an it a 11l cost them nothing, and inm pro, e n himning. Pleame addrem _ . . Rev. EDWARD A. WII.NON, No. 16.5 South s,rouct St Ept. tO, PC. Am Willluniothorsch. Neo Yorl I Infant - tattoo ettoranteo4 oratlavo o gnaw! h of hitlr upon n I , GO head or louirdloon face, taloa a recipe tar the. remosr I at l'lnlpleo, Ith 0,e100,, Erupt loam, eto,, on the rkln, tIo• ~ eft, clear, and is avour, talc lot obtained a It h aul charge 1/y witir. .41 ng 1111.t.r. t,}I..I.I'.VIAN,AIPookt Broadway, Nem.. Ynrk. Sept. 21, IRS% tom Jury List—January Court I= Gilt() ehu re-Robert McCunly,(Forezusu,) Hen • Culp, Wm. Royer. Highlund-Cennte W. Scott etunnerind-Ww. Row, Henry 1.. }Hearn. liarailton-Jacob Heaver. Tyrone-John Cowan, Yarn M. Myer,. Menallen--sxmuel Mesita • Mountpievamt-John N. Tierney. Ist.ratanl-Jeremlah Miniver, PMlip Donal:me, onn N. Boyer, Latinturr-Jahn Martin. Mounaoy-leilae M. Horner. Oxford-Henry Wiest. Unikattaton - Deoras A. Peferi, Jalapa A. lertnek. - Butler--(toorge B. Hewitt. Franklin-Daniel K. Warder, John Colo. Union-Edward lionerS. COnowago-Nunuel kiellitarta. • Gettyebu,ne—husob Riley. Jacob 13r1nleetbon. Scraban—Henry A. Pinning, John P. FeMj. Franklin—Albert Vandyke, DantallWlLler, Dap,. in Kuhn. Stones lieJthoopearee, !noon P. Lower, Jeiemlah Bunsecker. Berwlek nerr.--Jg, WOW, P*** ymne—llSenry oeeph !spangle Wo ', erwlek tp Kepner, Left KeptlPT. Iteatllrig—lattob H. 'Tnniblabaugb, Abraham Bushey. Cu mberiarta—Jame• Thoneint„Vons. Careenn, P. D Ran key,t7harles IS. Oxford—Henry 0114,JOIstes. Liberty—John Maineirean. Freedom—David Rhodes, Sr. Dlountjo;,, —James mpskilnsf, Isaac. N. Parbtsraw. Littb , stown—Phtllp Homier, h - phralm Myer,. John F Sherry. Beth r—J e., ohn Gmlnter, Heal" ilartnal- Ntontplettaant—elainuel !Short% John Reed, Franete Ruddy, J. A. C. Rlndlnub, Joseph Kuhn. l•nlortfnoch Lefever. Nam! nry Lawrence, Henry• Wolf. Kenai len —lien, Eppe D lman, John urkin:44"r. latiniore—Ltan , lt tVoriev. Ellut I u. l nn--Thorn. Jacob Zntz. Highlatel—Dodd Stewart. conow.hto—Peter Nevlorerr, Henry Gut Oho, Dec. Isqr. 10 J♦ my abeence, there will &Maya has thorough ly competent operator In charge of the Excel oe Gallery, and work of all kinds and wider all elroomsbutom must give satisfaction before It ten leave our rooms. C.. 1. TYSON. Vlfitt'a of the Battle Mold, Meg or ID Pete . very' low. Also. 13Talt , FAMOOPtIr EWA of the Battle field at the Eseehtfor hwy. Don't fall to see them. C. T. TYSON. TMHZ nub la ftw the Rmosiskor &Wary. All are whited ow in rotation maul with Aloft:it