Gettysburg compiler. (Gettysburg, Pa.) 1866-1961, March 20, 1868, Image 2

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-1-
Another step in the Impeeehment ease
Wa&taken last Friday. The Senate hav
ing reenived Itself Into a "High Court of
I m peach men t," Chief Justice Chase
presiding. the counsel for the President,
Messrs. faapherx, Curtis, Black, Nel
son and Evart., preiented the President's
response, aSking forty (lays for the pre
paration of hie "nnswer. A discussion
arose .between Mors. Stanlery and
Curtis op the one nide, and )lesire. Bing
ham: and Wilson on the other—the for
tar! contending for the allowance of (he
tithe suggested, and the latter Insisting
on the trial proceeding lutinetilately.—
The h'ertate then retinal for tie purpose
of consultation. At 4 o'clock the Sena
tors returned, and the Chief Justice an
nouraued that the President would be al
lowed ton da)s to rile his answer. Ding
ham askod en order that the trial com
mence hninedintely after such filing, but
this um overruled, by a vote of gZi to 2a,
The Pre4ident's answer will therefore
be put In on Atenday next, but it In ilOt
likely that the friar will begin for some
days after—not until Wednesday or
Thursday. .‘tirLiono :VS the ilmlieals are
to We.. tide i II raIIIMIA proceeding through
:it railroad speed, knowing ones predict
that several montlet will be required to
bring t to a elo , e. The jury of the peo
ple will watch it elosoly, and in the end
triumphantly elear the President—let the
Senate dleehk I L+ it may,
EIENDIVAATIC HAIR INF NEW JIABIE
NAHUM
Wu are at lust able to lay before our
readers the result of the late electan in
_New Hampshire. In spite bf the Radi
cal despatches claiming the election of
Hardman by an increased majority, toe
Ihnnotrate have made a handsome gain.
New Hampshire, since 185.5, has never
bee.' carried by the Democrats. In ltrt6
the Republican majority was 8,5,56; In
1660, 9,118 ; f u 1864, 3,420; in 1967, 8,146;
but now, in 1868, it Is only 2,430. The
Democratic gain over last year is there
lure NIX iiDNDAiIiD AND SLITICEN I—a very
fact, and all the mom so when
the tunnel's() Radical advantages are
considered. The Lower, House of the
Legislature etood, iu 1567, 203 Radicals
to 128 Democrats; Radical majority,
Thi4 year the House stands 190 Itediesim,
to 141 Democrats; Radical majority, 49
a Democratic gain of TWENTY-81X!
The Dentoermie vote exceeds 37,000,
no doubt a majority of the legal votes of
the State. A glance at the map shears
that New Hampshire is surrounded by
the intensely Radical Stales of Vermont,
.)taine and Ittnuttriclitisetts. 'lids feet In
dicates whence the increased Radical
Note was derived. The entire vote of the
State haro hitherto never exceeded
71,000.
An examination of the vote by towns
shows the gamnlng fact that the Radi
f (tts burr gnined,only in those towns bor.
&Ting on Vermont, Maine c oi f Mama
ehusettiv; while in the interior the Dem
ocrats have gained largely. Colonization
(with money) enabled the Radicals to
hold the State this time, but that cannot
he done at the Presidential election. -'`
This gain in New Hampshire is made
on the vote of 1887, a year in which the
Democrats carried nearly everything.—
The tide Is therefore still with us, and it
wlll continue until corrupt anti despotic
Itadlcallsm is swept from pla - and
poWer In the nation,
NNTION A L DILTIOCUATI4' CAIII% ENTIION
A %riter frran New York speaks tun
I . ollowb ui the /proud lh•wucrutie Cow•
ventiOn to ;wool& there 00 the 4th of
The Nntiiutal Demoeratie,Con yen thin
to be held In NOW York 00 the 4th of
.luly will he the largest ntiil grandest ever
Mild in /be 'United BMWs. Tammany
Lh will be hurried. forward to comple
tion for the receptimi of delegates. 'l'he
exterldr Is Itow almost thitslied, but all
thitintarkir work les attil to ho done, end
there hi au muub of it that it.vailinit be
completed ntwit beton: July. New York
means to Wye the th.lejtittes such n romp
theta asesiti lie' worthy of the city and
the great itiwitinia the l'onveNtlon will
line* tm towel. the tieutheru titutes
%Oil lie tully represented, cud the gather
ing will be the lii4st or the kind ever
ogmelutted ltr 'Nlsw York - . The outside
tinittitode , will he ontertal nett In one of
tits , tiarke"-ornUaLly Tutupkina &pure
— UAW all will Mid that New York is us
liosidtable as she is powerful and con•
eervuttelt.
RVIVOLITION 4ND JtErNDIAPION.,
The tole* 'Volt tbfroneroial, 11Y tinily
conducted 'Republican journal, continues
to ekpreserittueh'unettsluess at / the retro.
lutionary Eoinplexion of thingtial Wash
ington. T b e ftnincial
, situation, too,
troubles
"Ws see drifting into repudiation!—
We illst , fipstrelling, t ioot beeause . our debt
is Lou cu.e,rous, or WAIL our people ore (lir
holie6t, brit' because ettugreaa Is either
tutterialbleto the danger or indifferent to
its monsesmoncoit. .1f Mr. Morrill, of
Maisie, - Winks that a spreati-eagle speech
about, faith , honor mid integrity will
Idiatte overibe danger, be is fatally mis
taken. '4'wo things, at least, must be
time. Jelapesises must bottisniniabed and
thu.,fooo, I,if44erest. !twat be roduzed,-
lioth are yraeticable. Congress can ef
fect both,ltud tt wilt be held responsible
for its refusal or neglect to save us from
a great daagar mid a greater shame."
ettiaiwan.md.flter short years ago the
whale powar wf asetrowtru mon t was rut--
readoredats tliewstagtiese latiaqh4..l , ooB"
grim adosatieCand, thw -mold* itclui
eeeed /tit Itli!h,stipt'etnit character of the
Presitleat,dtwettdieseat. from. thie eiww
was not 1014, kha. zaittue • argument.—
Bow ohaused ia•swerythiag ,now. The
, ittesident is Meshed: warsa.than • soul
lAtta, ;TM moment he attempts to ex
-shrine bismienatikuttenal,funottowly, he
is , threatened with diagram.: The . Aa
cottins of Ilwegress-arerehrong enough,
ft theli haw" thst ooneage, to unseat him,
+.lta4' ibtavig , phitarate the dignity and
wahltrorthis-Preaktendal chair. To this,
atif ttiey de & to the 9otherottreme, they
&visit tight: .
4. 1 c.elumWee-
, flitlionatentiiMirraa'a Punaworteer—Tha
Previtionablionsitellrery properly:speaks
of Itisineludlifie of Stabs ILegisistarwan
dengue thelispeseimessM et tins Presi
dent as a l'iboughtless‘and unbecoming
proeeedlnrrlr may - " Blame a very
naselibnicees7,prisseedler *NW ThelZew
lorlc Tirileeetrifl says Uutt it le not elm
ply that the action how wft the relied on
technically as a precedent but Its success
nt ha% '.thWriftbet orfiisl log int‘li be
" a'pCrttddly VoiPer
Amige In' tile
•treshientlal <Mee
tarin'er - ilQr-
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that theyommerimgmes, end few to
knepvi.:2l-9. .• j.
THAD. RTETENR ORGANIZER A REIGN
OF TERROR.
The New York Zareriltd, an inslepensl•
eat journal. hut ulltls the It:elle:de all
tbiough the wie`rniti for &Ate time after,
now scob thatteifi windy will drive tile
country to. ?ell+ ICt fiessultstlY
deals heavy blows at the IsenSis a the
!testis-al leaders, which cannot but have
weight with the mass of the people.—
The picture it draws of The4,,Stevens In
the following article M strong because
truthful: The reader - of French history
cannot but at once acknowledge its 'en
tire faithfulness. We trust that not a
few Republicans will peruse it—nod they
of all others should give Its points calm
and dispaisiermte consideration. Their
Judgments would "be all the better for
IL" The ijerald says :
The proceedings of Congre.s in thetas. I
perschment business, and particularly the
language and bearing of the Radicel
leaders, bring vividly to mind the Jaco
bin reign of terror during the French
Revolution. When Thad Stevens, on
presenting the articles of Impeachment
against the President, drew up Isis feeble
frame in the attitude of a dictator and
shook his finger above ids head in a
threatening manner towards the Senate,
while fiercely exclaiming, "Let me ace
the recreant who dare' to tread bark up
on his steps and vote on the other rider
the history of Jacobin terrorism iu the
French Convention was faithfully re
peated. After analyzing the vote of the
Senate as a strict party one, and exulting
in the prospect of there beiug no chance
for Andrew Johnson, the "unfortunate
man, the unhappy man," escaping his
doom, he exclaimed, "Point me out one
rof the Senatoras who dares to do it,"
who dares to vote against m proprannue
for deposing "the man at t he other end
of the avenue." \\lien (behold Radical
chief uttered tide threatening language
he evidently had in his mind tile Giron
dists or the Keisete—the Shernians, the
Fe , a. mien! , the Porneroys tuid others- in
who's] he lead not mutts confidence, and
whom Itefelt ft necessary to whip In by
the ihreatof party vengeance.
Well may it be said thatbietory repeat',
itself. It is mpeeially so in revolution
ary times. The denuneintions of An
drew Johnson as a ferniit and a violater
of the laws on the flimsiest widest by
'l'llad. Steroid and others whoa allow
themselves to be the most violent ty
rants, and who scout the Constit Mien as
an obsolete, worn-out i nstriiment, carries
us back to the reign of the Jacobin
Alimutain in France. Thad. Stevens'
exclamation's, referring.to the Presideut,
"Unfortunate mad, thus surrounded,
hampered. tangled In the meshes of his
own wickedness! unfortunate, unhappy
man, behold your doom I" re's:sleds us
forcibly of the language of Robespierre,
Denton, Camille Desmonlinn and Marat
with regard to Louis the Sixteenth and
Marie Antoinette. Unfortunate, unhap
py Louis Capet, surrounded, hampered,
tangled in the meshes of the bloody Ja
cobin- revolutionists! Unhappy Autol-
nette, unfortunate Austrian, "what.
Aimee %Nue there, what loophole" for
your esteem'? So alike are these revolu
tionary scenes, so similar the language,
that we can hardly realize the fact that
we ate nut reading the history of the
Preach Revolutiou or that such things
are occurring in our own beloved coun
try. Yes, history repeats Itself; for we
are yessaing through n similar revolution
to that of the French, to that of the liu
glish when Charles the First was be
headed, and to those of other is:shims
when all the old landmarks were de
stroyed and conntitntione were laughed
at. Thad. Stevens is a tit leader in or
ganizing a reign of terror here. He has
the boldness of Denton, the bitterness
and hatred of Murat, and the unscrupu
lousness of Robespierre. Ben. Wade is
a suitable ally of Stevens In the revolu
tionary work, though &subordinate ac
tor. lie has the coarse and vindictive
character of Marat, too, with all the ag•
titian and levelling theories of the most
sitivanoed revolutionist. Sumner, anthill
er fit ally, is a visionary and sentimental
theorist, conceited as Robespierre, -us
weak as Camille Desmoullns and as Im
placable as Murat. The lesser lights of
the Jacobin revolutionary party—the
Chandlers, Wilson, lloutwells, Butlers,
and others—while equally as
vindictive and destructive, are but the
followers of the lenders. They are all of
the dame stamp, however, and are all
bent on uspuration of power and the de
struction of the old government handed
'down to us by the fathers.
Ah, hut some inerreftrinoe and over
hopeful people inay say, ell will come
right; Andrew Johnson le not going to
bb hanged ; the bloody scenes of the
Trench Revolution will not he repeated ;
wastrel:l come back to law and order by
aDd by, rind so forth. Let us nut deceive
ourselves. History shows us that those'
generally who inaugurate revolutions do
not nutleipate the ulti ;nate eonsequelleett.
When they start they calculate upon
stoppleist.short on attaining certain oh.
jecte.; but ruvolutiuus do not stop; they
grow with party necessities and as parts
-awn feeling becomes intensified. ..Sueli
thine as many would shudder at In the
beglnninirof a revolution areaecomplish
ed with the greatest complacency after
wards. The very apathy and over-hop e fulinems of the people encourage revolts
tionlets to more outrageous measures.—
Do the American people realize the revo-
Massa they are mewing through? la it
small Oleg to impeach the President
of the Visited States and to depose him
on such thmey and ridiculous charges as
the Radicals isave trumpeel• up agaluet
Mr. Johnson? ills worst enemies do
not assail his honesty or integrity, De
has endeavored to perform his dirty ac
cording to hie understanding of it and
the Constitution which he has sworn to
preserve. Ills sole offence lit that he has
not goue with the dominant party in
Congress' In their efforts to African's*
themtrantry and to revolutionise the gov
eminent. Ls it u small thing to remove
a President for party purposes alone?—
Such a thing was never dreamed of be
fore in the Visited States. It Is au im
portant and very long stride in the way
of revolution. Aud who a short tone
ago would have thought that a large
section of the country, ten States of the
Union, would be kept for years under
military despotism in time of peace?—
}'ho would have thought that these
istatee and the white people of our own
flesh and blood would be put under the
government of barbarous negroes ? Who
would have isnagined that Congress
would have ventured to abolish the Ex
ecutive and usurp all the powers of gov
ernment in its ow u hands? Who would
have believed that a powerful faction
would dare to set aside the constitution
and declare it deod ? Yet all this has been
done, and llibelrerare,'Wlthin the brief
period of two •or three! rein!. Is not, this
revolution? It would behard to find in Ilk
tory a greater and more rapid revolution
within as short a time. No, the revolu
tion *mild not stop with the deposition
of the President. That event would
only accelerate it. Ills removnt would
not be peace, as certain Radical organs
pretend -to say. Tile necessities of the
Jacobin party would impel it ou to other
revolutionary measures, and probably
to serious conflicts among the people.
The people would become .familiarised
with these high-handed and despotic
.Foroceiitliois, and either, apathy, winch
Is destructive to liberty or counter revo
lutions would follow, What under other
Chef stance, and in former times would
have startled them might no longer
create/in/Prise. and a reigu of despotism
or anarchy would ensue. A faction de•
fermium) to rule will atop at nothing
when it ti ns the power, and especially
when there is fear that this power is slip
ping omit of its hands. The military des
over the South may be extended
1 .. = North. Some disturbance may
be Ibmented as a plea for suspending the
`writ or hobear corpus end governing the
North as well as the South by thestreug
arts of military power. his quite, evi
dent that the Hiidleal oligarchy now
established At Washington Would not
stick at tithe or anything elme to perpetu
ate its power. As tire revelation pro
toots we similes:sem Said that we securi
ties will run down abroad. and they will
be sent back In vast numbers; old thht
both the' government and ebuttery frill
be- lunged late great deanaial troubles
60,41,,ai i ireuptuy And whetwillbeemne
°Utile debt and tondholdens? Is It like.
ig that the. peoplr" will' see theniselves
mined'," a revolutibiary slid
thettarouseut:to !bear the itaideer id
id an
wrpowookg. LS tkovE*4 4 .4o 4armd
be eoutrety A 9 41e;
'thee vgyere. the
people haven't - ad I'-nzr.
This Is th - e e of thine to
gelid Mod
nethiewithraCh m ee ittabli wt, atiudiddit
lhappile ye like ir
tutis VP 01 4 159 ,
c -a 1 '
IMPEACHMENT AN VIEWED BY GEN
JACKNON.
DOrinithe ,Presi t illency of ttep. leek.
v•°";PaYfil the gtens.kneeugred
has ast iiilportlint 'pearl* upi the n -
teA nowt: penttil betswen the Radical
party arid AAtre Solinsoiq Upnty he
reitiovalt;? tliegovertnent money front
the Bank of the tnited States, by order
of Presblent Jackson, the to nape ',sowed
a ,Jettolution declaring "the President,
in the late Executive proceedings in es
tenon to the public-revenue, hen mourn .
upon nitwit pittliority" and,. power not
conferred by the Constitution and laws,
and in derogation of both" This was
during the session of 11434, and oh the
day preceding the adjournment of the
Senate, Mt. Benton offered-his mem
orable retention deelaring the eondem
notary resolution of the Senate-Imputed
nr.peocitable matter to She Senate, and
might net to have been passed uptin , by
the• Senate, except In thewagniar hums
of constitutional itopmehment, and that
such resolution ought to he expunged
from the Journal of the -Senate. But
General Jacks= ithie protested ;whist
the action of theßenate, and from that
bold, .aNe , . and stirring paper; which
roused the country hire the West of a
war trumpet,-we copy the following pas
sago:
If the Rouse of Representatives shall
be of the opltjion tiotthere is just ground
fur the censure pronounced upon the
President, then will It be the solemn
duty of the HOIINo to prefbr the proper
accusations Mid. to •eause Aim to be
brought to trial by the caustitutlonal
tribunal. ri,it,lu what condition would
he find that tribunal? A mainrtfy
of Its members have already considered
the ease; and have nut only formed-nut
expressed a deliberate judgment upon
its merits. It Is the pulley ofour benign
system of Jurisprudence to seenre, to nil
nritninal proceedings, and even in the
most trivial lingations, a fair. unpreju
diced and impartial trial ; mu! surety If
cannot he less 1,j,, that such is trial
should hr •rriwrel to (he highr‘f opirer of
the government.
The Constitution makes the House of
Representatives the exclusive judges, in
the first instance, of the question, wheth
er tile Pri•sident has ennimitted on un
pardonable offence. A majorit_v of the
:.lenate, el hose interference with this
preliminary Auestion, has, rot the best
oral! reasons, been Studien-1e excluded,
anticipate the action of the !louse of Re
present/di ves,.assume not only the func
tion which belongs eseinsivuly to that
body, hut come themselves into accusers,
wilmsses, counan and . tudges : and pre
judte the whole case—thus presenting
the appaliing spectacle in a free State,
of judges going through a labored pre
paration for an impartial hearing and de
cision by a previous ex parie Investiga
tion and sentence against the supposed
offender.
If, in 1534, General Jacksen objected
to being judged by the Senate because
"a majority of its members have already
considered tire case, and have not only
formed but expressed a deliberate judg
ment upon Its merits," has not the pres
ent Chief Magistrate good grounds to
stand upon the same platform? Assur
edly he has. The Radical Senators have
converted themselves into accusers,
wit
nesse+, counsel, judges and jurors, and
have now. summoned Andrew Johnson
to appear, in order that lie may have a
fair, Impartial and just trial. Will not
every man in the nation, not blinded by
passion, admit that this impeachment
movement is a disgrace to the intelligence
of the age in' which we live, and fraught
with untold mischief to the progress of
free principles, Aot only in this laud, but
in all parts of the world? But the peo
le sustained Andrew Jackson and re
buked the Senate, and they will, in the
end, pass a like judgment upon all who
are engaged in the present Impeachment
conspiracy.
um*: tCHWENT or CONGHESX
Senator Doolittle addressed a veet as
semblage at Hartford, Conn., on Wednes
day week. Afterspeaking I.Wo hours, he
closed ‘N ith an Impeachment of the Rad--
cal policy Ili Congress as follows:
In conclusion, fellow citizens, while
the impeachment of President Johnson
clo.es my mouth upon the subject of his
impeachment, while delicacy and duty
forbid me to speak upon that, my moo
is not closed, and no Considerations of
duty or delicacy will prevent me from
speaking of another impeachment, and
before a tribunal more august than the
Semite. In the name of constitutional
liberty, in the name of our great ances
tom who laid the foundations of this
GovernMent to secure liberty for them
selves and for us, in the natuticif all who
love that liberty, who are ready to strug
gle and if need be to die, rather than al•
low it to he overthrown; In the name
of the coming generations, and of that
race to which we belong and which has
given to the world all its civilizations,
I do arraign and impeach the Radical
policy of the present Congress of high
crimes and misdemeanors. At the liar
of the Amerfean people, in the presence
of High Heaven and before the civilized
world, I impeach it, first, as a crime
against the laws ofnattire xhiCh God the
Almightystamped
upon the races of
mankind, because t:Attempts to foree a
political and social and unnatural equali
ty between the African and the CALIC33.
tau, between an alien inferior and exotic
race from the tropics, with the highest
type of the human smell' the home of
the latter in the temperate zone. Second,
I impeach it as a crime against civiliza
tion, because it would by force wrench
the Government out of the hands of the
civilized white race in ten States of this
Union, to place it in the hands et the
half-civilised African. Third, I impeach
it as a crime against the constitutiou, be
cause it tramples down the rights of the
States to tlx fur themselves the quell licit.
lions of their own voters—a right with
out which a State ceases to be republican
at all. Fourth, I impeach it as a crime
against the Constitution and against nit ,
[tonal faith, because It annuls the par
dons constitution:iffy granted to hun
dreds of thousands of the mostintelligent
while nten of the South, and in open,
palpable violation of the Constitution
disfranchlsea them. Fifth, I impeach it
RS a crime against the existence of ten
Shack of the Union and the liberties of
eight millions of people, because In ex
bre's terms it annuls all civil government
y which alone those liberties may be
secure:, and places them under as abso
lute -military despotism. Sixth, I Im
peach it as a crime against humanity,
tending to produce a war of races to the
utter destruction of one or both, a result
which cannot be prevented except by a
large standing army, which neither our
resources will hear -nor our liabilities
long survive. Seventh, I impeach it as
an utter abandonment of the purpose for
which we fought and mastered a rebel
lion. It tends to make false all the
promises and pledges made by the friends
of the tiovernment lii. its fearful struggle
to put down the rebellion, and it tends
to make true all the prophecies and fore
bodings of its enemies.
True ellarge . ,_eyerz one_of them, say
the jury composed of THE PEOPLE!
A. PATRIOTIC
~RSPIIRLICAN.--4140r
James B. Colt, of connecticut, hitherto
ailepolilican, awl a soldier of the tiLliiati,
has written a scorehing 2#o,es to the
Norwich Grant Club, declining twetriber..
ship and Melee: -Ile-scorns association
with a club "called by, and afileased by,
and for the most part addressed by those
who sympathise with the It-idlest party
in Ka *Aron the Exeoutive, the Supreme
Court, the people of the North and the
treasury ofthe - nattrin,* and assigns the
follewing Season* AW itle.efotitee : •
Thegionoit"Aarralri, tapir , stiffing
Widd ths peopicserthe %rile :Sow before
thew. Vyriariopaim ta hOdieseLNdlisil
*le*l4 tiY l 4 4o !x'uflitiMul t rxmt
con Rion o dr oosstd e
their leStsTiMirlittipon i at
livers ard•sinssiloiiiiriiirlibirressiN of
lq.itt Rol* Poshr)sato
DAD BLOOD AMONG THE RADS.
The Radical Stato , CoOeittlun IQ Phil
adelphia, week kodoOlust, Slid•heything
but harmuttiouk: Oa the vaelion" la-
Ktrucling the delegates to the Chi•, •
Convention tOo rafts* unit Soc.CTI
for Vice Prsiddent, *ere you). a Reidy.
(line The ivadi-cauil t oron men opposed
it bitterly. Mann, of Potter, said :
There are- 100,000 Republicans in
Pettaay;lvaaiu„ar good, to say Uee least,-
us•aLy 406,000--T2opublionie hi the
ted States, who prefer Ben. Wade for
'reail - Cit. That fact is to be ME&
known stAellioagneand it.ori/l be by the
selection of delegates of their choice, or
iu some other way. Now, there is no
use in attempting to choke us in this
Convention nor iu the :State, for it can
not be done. There are a large number
of Itepublioans in Pennsylvania, who
do not desire the nomination of U. S.
Grant, simply betatuse they do not be
lieve him to be a Republic -tin, but a Con
servatire. We have acquiesced in that
nomination, but !rpm insist on putting
another Conservative on the track, you
will rides the votes of many people at
the poll* next October, w tileli you need.
Mr. Errett, of Allegheny, continuing
the NN'ade-(;timeron side of the debate,
said that for the Committee on Resole
thins to attempt to Instruct rite delegates
elected by the people of the districts it
as preposterous as it is revolutionery.
Tile business of this Convention is to
nominate a ticket, the electors et large,
and delegates at !rime. The balance of '
the wi.rk is to be left to the people—and
any attempt. on the part of Use majority
here to say that the ininority shall not
be repiesented at Chicago, will be met
with resiatanee on the part of the
people. 'The power to 50 instinct dele
gates is not committed to this Con
coition, and any attempt to exercise it
will Le resisted to the last.
Mr. Bayne, of Pittsburg, denounced
the resolution us a usurpation of power
and authority to attempt to instruct del•
egates elected to Chicago. If he were a
delegate there he would not obey a
word of Lim Convention. We have dele
gates running In Western Pennsylvania,
said he, who will pay no regard whatever
to ally instructions emanating from this
Convention or any other body.
'nos protest and indignation, howev
er, did no good, and the Curtin rLsolu
tiou Alai passed by a vote of ye:as to
40 nays.
Er.:323=1
Now is the time for the people to read
and understand the issues that are to
come before thegnAhln full for decision.—
It was never so important for the sal va
tion-of' the Union that the people art on
derstao dingly. One false step now may
prove fatal to the government beyond
the hope of rieovery. Never was the
national existence, as a free ceustitution
al government, in as great pectins to-day.
The Congressional conspirators and trai
tors have their hands at the throat of the
nation, and the body is almost ',nineteen.
We tell the people that the struggle to
day is not one of party, but for the ex
istence or destruction 01 free government.
If the Radiettls triumph, free constitu
tional government is at an end, and only
taxation and oppression are in reserve
fur the people.
—The foregoing, taken front that ster
ling Democratic journal, the Dettult Free
Pura, contains a great deal of tru lb in a
few words filly spoken. Truly, now is
the tints to read. The country is pass
ing through it severe trial, in which ev
ery interest is Involved. Events of
greatest moment are transpiring every
day. The people, in order to act wisely
and understandingly in this crisis, must
READ TILE TRUTH. This they can DOW
only find in the Democratic and Censer
votive journals. The COILPILEII. will
keep Its readers well posted In relation to
all important matters. Subscribe atone°.
Send in your names, with $i in each
case, anti we are sure you will get the
worth of your money.
I=l
Igo thief, no turglar, no highway rob
ber was ever so shy as the Radicals are
of the courts of Justice. Not a word had
they •to -say against - General Lorenzo
Thomas, the great co-conspirator with
Andrew`Johuson, when he challenged
his aceueors rn^a court at law. Again
last week, a small amendment was se
cretly smuggled through Congress, tak
ing awayi.in oases of habeas corpus, the
right olappeal to the Supreme Court.—
This was to get the McCardie case from
before, pat court, w here It s is now actual
ly on trial. Lct it be remembered that
it is from judges appointed by their own
party that the Radicals now slink away.
Any place whore law is administered is
too hot a phew for them. Surely, remarks
the Age, this is equivalent to a confession
of guilt. It la because they are criminate
that they are so much afraid of the courts.
No tittotere kit the halter draw,
With Ap.*t opinion of the Low.
Tlft siirciiten Anew Alt
On the third instant, the Senate of the
Veiled States passed a bill exempting
property Leal and used for negro schools
in the District of Columbia from local
taxation. Similar property used for
white soheois taxed by the eity author
ities, and Ita measure bas yet been Intro.
dueed nu anther„ branch of the Rump to
exempt it. from taxation. .It is pot
enough that the aegroshoukl enjoy all
the privileges enjoyed by white men:
Ile must enjoy more. His black /Minis
so beautiful, his thick Hp* are so eapti
voting,' hls long heels ars so bewitching
and his wooly head so etatraneing to the
Radicals in Congiess, that they must, in
the profuLullty of their admiration, ex
empt him from horde°. which labile
people have to bear. But what do the
white people think of Oils? Will they
not indulge—la samesoskius thoughts
about it ft,- Wirer
Radical papers'herald the result
in New Rampshire as an evidence of
the ,popularity of Genera) Grant. flow
so? Rarrlinan last year, without Grant,
received over three thousand majority ;
this year, with Grant, his majority, on a
largely increased vote, Is reduced to
about twenty-five hundred. Left-hand•
ed poptilatity this for General Grant.
ALTHOUGH' the Democracy in Cam
den, 'New Jersey, were beaten at the
late contest, still they made most signifi
cant gains upon the vote of 'March, DIV.
Three members' have "been added to the
Democratic roll in City Councils, and in
the south Ward the candidate of that
party was defeated by one majority. On
the . yogulir vote ib ere lit also a Dernocrit
le gain, and yet the Radicals claim •
victory, If such Viotorlea as these (lo
not herald,a defeat, then "history will
,
not repeat The Democrats of
Cart4Du are a fighting race, and they
will push the Radicals to the river and
into it before the contest chsnat.—Age.
OUR ' CANDII*TES.—TtIe bflaJlineBlll
with which the Denmorstic journals of
Pennsil_yania • greet the nominations
:mile by, the state Convention inspires
conlidencelt: the result of the election.
The partrin all sections of the Ste are
sat:stied With' our noniineis, aad
will, go, litto the fight tor them with an
issilesweli,thitt will be the Inof, , guarau-
Iff,
T" Bgvto - " ye;' ww#ipillaed
t.# 4"-7111 1 411 14
a mp tto 11
1 173§ 1 : LlOO.
Ytigt
• ' , • - • il4-1...4 9:1
GENERA Torkhaiii aomptsted _the man:
MY* dffillirlSigiinkilbiledrinensolt; of
"V* stteit•etitty.n •• •
==!
II ARRISBUItO, Marelal6,lBl,lB.
Etiitor Compikr:—Not nitilikilwoutLe::,
islainis, I have not been quite.is*te
titre to duty of late as I onght,to
~. Jlikui I think I couladriveo be.
ter 'Millions for my negligifonee,tha 'th
Legielaturc: for ita wonderful waste o
time. But there may be some palliation
after all, as a certain member said on
Tioday, wimetitbe question was up for
adjourning over a week, from Tuesday to
ortely, "That - the - Igtster - and peopte
would be An lloinr giro orpuld adjourn
forever."
There! le . Stall prlatiniet ?Of lktiti,
the weather is getting more Mild and
pleasant, that the Legislature may break
op somewhat earlier thati was ,apposed
some thaw ago r siotthat theyare getting
more honest and more Industrious, or
that, the , busluesit for which they were
sent here to traneeetls in a more advane
ed state, but merely . beeause they would
like td get lionie lb Make eiettegetuents
for the coming summer. lem sure eve
ry tax-payer In the State is, or ought to
be, glad of the near approach of the ad
journment. if they could take a peep
into the secrets Of' this body, every tax
payer would say, depart from hence as
soon as ynu can.
Much was said of the corruption of the
Legislature last year. but corrupt and in
famous as it was, the presmit one is fur
ahead in that Tine. Everybody here
would agree with one if the question
were put to him. The geneial appropri
ation bill is quite a huge affair. 20r1)4) of
the items having been raised from last
year, besides new ones, adopted. The
Senate has topot on It - yel.
Th
t .
contestlKl election case In the Sen
ate, tween the sitting member, Mr.
Shugn t, and the contestant, Mr. Robin
son, Is 'tiol, yet decided. It will oast the
State bVtween- three and four thousand
dollars, it Is supposed. It is a case like
that of your Senator and Mr. Duncan
three years ago, and w ill likely be so de
cided. In' connection with this, permit
me to relate au lucident that occurred
the other day. I will relate it as It was
told me. A certain Senator was ask,
ed by a Republican friend to aid
Mr. Robinson in this matter. He re
plied—"No, sir—l perjured myself three
years ago for that 4-41 cockle eyed ape,
and I shall not do It again." The Sena
tor in question and his "ape" are not on
good terms now:
You are aware there is a Dail/ Legisla
tive Record printed by order of the Leg
'stature. Mr. Bergner, a rank Radical
and the publisher of the Telegraph here,
is the publisher. He gets fifteen dollars
for every page, whilst responsible par
ties have ottbred to publish it for twelve
dollars per page. and I have it from prac
tical printers that it could be printed for
ten dollars, and yet be remunerative.—
Thus about eight thousand dollars are
squandered, which could be saved to the
tax-payers in this single item.
The 'hellcats, at least the majority of
them, refused to sustain the Hickman
resolution, giving the negroes votes In
this State. The question with them wag
only as to time. 'They contended, in
their remarks, that the people were not
yet ready for it—that they needed a little
more instruction on the tender point of
making the negro an equal with them.
The vote on this resolution was a mere
cheat., It is to gull the party into the be
lief that they are opposed to negro suf
frage._ This is self-evident from the way
their readers actin the South and In Con
gress. It Is also shown here on other
bills. For Instance, a bill was passed the
other day permitting the negroes to vote
in the city of Lancaster for officers in
the city. Lancaster city is Democratic,
hence tha.negro element there must be
brought into requiel:lon, A eh:ldler bill
is now up fur our city, Harrisburg. You
know our city le also Democratic. The
secitko gittog the negro the right to vete
here and in Lancaster, reads thus:
"That the freemen of the city of Harris
burg, citizens of this State or of the Uni
ted &alai, who shall have resided," de.
Here theOlvil Bights bill le to come in
aid. Everybody here sees the drift, and
the people are vette Indignant at the at
tempt to make libestegro here a voter.—
We have a vast dumber of uegroee here,
and should this bill become a law, and
the wards of the city changed as cottem
plated, the Radicals may succeed to a
great extent la the city election. The
bill changer the wards from six to eight.
.A bill was presented the other day in
the Legialature to make' a turnpike from
Hanover, in York county, to Mount
Hock, in Adams county. Also one to au
thorize and empower the three railroads
running to and from Hanover to build a
Union Passenger or Union Passenger and
Freight Depot, at a point where the Lit-
tleetown Railroad crosses the Carlisle
turnpike in the borough of Hanover.
The "Border Damage 13111" has been
made the order of the day for to-morrow
night.. I have made diligent inquiries as
to Its probable fate. I think its passage
In the House this year is very doubtful,
having been so determined on by a
clique. Last year it was permitted to
pass the House, but was ordered to be de
feated in the Senate; on the plea of want
of time. That there is a sham effort
made here by some to effect its passage,
when, at the same time, they have no
manner of desire to pass it, I have ample
proof. Among these is your Senator, and
last year Mr. Stumbaugh, from Chem
bersburg. I have discovered that you
had several gentlemen over early in the
session last winter, to aid in pressing the
bill through. The bill was drawn up by
a lawyer in your place, and handed to
Mr. Stumbaugh, of Franklin county, to
be presented at as early a day as practi
cable. The Republicans having a large
majority, It was thought best by your
men to give the bill to a Republican, and
the memorials to your member, a Demo
crat. Thus the matter was arranged, to
the satisfaction of all concerned, as they
thought, Well,, instead of Mr. Brum
baughbringing the bill before the
House, day after day was left go by, till
towards the'Cloee of the session, eo as to
enable your Senator to plead want of
time. There is no mistake in th i ls. If
necessary, I think it could be proven.—
TM, tQ l difeatet (1) , , the
Souse, to avoid action in the Senate.—
Whether they can accomplish the de
sign, time will tail. But this much Ido
know, that they Lae, a better opportu
nity to do so than last year, on account
of the many new members. It Lan in
famous game, and you ought to expose
the trick. A. L.
IrHs frantic ecetaelee of the Republican
pram throughout the country, over the
fact that they were just not beaten fn
New Hie . irrpshire this year, signifies whet
a fearful looking for of judgment there is
in ail their hearts.
THE Inventor of the latent t flying-row.
chine, a St. Louie man e is.to Met his ap
paratus by jun3pfni from ti billoon two
.tneruswnd }lret Iran t6elattl.: f l l4 Llnts
,;.. ,
.
41.4" fie
.30telkakitillii44144110101 1 40 3
Al
arnai•Nsoity alba diaroymiessida
eaabkr OW poverty.
!and thepartmtuf
TOWN,iO4Y COIiNTIIS.
The *2) • iieer occur )o-day.- 4
Dotriochts vat x ETV
Deplorable Occurrence.—Dr. D. S. Pef
fer, long a prominent and highly success
ful physician, residing at Abbottatown,
this county, some weeks ago became dis
turbed in mind. Evidences of growing
tnaantty act multiplied that a constant
watch over tits action. became neces
sary. A. patent right dealer, named
Cole, from the State of New York, we be
lieve, then temporarily in .Ihbottatown,
consented or offered to stay with him,
and did so for some days. During Tues
day night last, whilst Cole, it is supposed,
was lying down to get some rest and
was fs,st asleep, the Doctor struck Kim
violently upon the head witk a heavy
wash bowl, fracturing his skull in a
horrible wanner. Cole was unconscious
when discovered, and continued so until
Wednesday night, when death ensued.
Dr. -Patter was brought to this piece
on Wednesday and lodged In one of the
rens of the county prison, for safe keep
ing.
This Is one of the saddest instances of
insanity It has ever beellibur duty to re
cord, and the lutelligenoe of It will come
upon many of our readers with shocking
force. The sympathies of the entire
community cannot fall to be touched
by It.
Sudden Death. —On Friday evening
last, about 14 o'clock, MN. Frances 11.,
wife of James E. Flaliarly, residing in
East York street, this place, while attend
ing to ordinary domestic duties, com
plained of dizziness In the head and pro
posed to retire. Whilst disrobing her
self, she fell to the floor speechless. Dr.
O'Neal was at once called In, but after
lingering until 4 o'clock next morning,
she died. She was 44 year*. of age, and
was in her usual health the evening be
fore, having partaken of a hearty sup
per.
Anotker.—On blonday Mat, Mr. Daniel
Beitier, of Butler township, but formerly
of this place, died very. suddenly, of
apoplexy. He had left the house for the
purpose -of attending to his farm
stock, and not returning as soon as was
expected, a member of the family went
but to look after him, and, sad to state,
found him lying in the yard, quite dead.
A physician called in gave Batt his opin
ion that death was instant. Mr. Beitier's
age was 8.5 years 7 months and 1 day.
He was widely known and universally
respected.
Fall of a Bridge.—As a drover, Thomas
Graham, was passing over the bridge
across the Bermudian at the York Sul
phur Springs, in this county, on Friday
last, with ten head of horses, the struc
ture gave way, precipitating Mr. Graham
and a young man with him, together
with the horses, into the stream beneath,
which, at the time, was high and tilled
With 'floating lee. The young man was
badly hurt. Indeed we are told that one
of his legs was broken. Several of the
horses also received injuries—one of them
breaking a leg. It seems that the bridge
was In a dangerous condition, the middle
pier having been swept away by the ice,
thus leaving the span of 64 feet unsup
ported; but Mr. Graham, being a stran
ger, rode upon it without thought of dan
ger. It is said that the managers of the
turnpike had been notified of the dan
gerous condition of the bridge.
East Baltimore Conference, of the
Methodist Episcopal Church, in session
at Baltimore, adjourned sine die on Tues
day last. We notice the following among
the appointments announced by the
bishop :
Carlisle District—James Curna, P. E.—
Carlisle—William R. Mills; 0. D. Che
noweth, supernumerary. Mount Holly—
John Donahue* Chambersburg—Sain
uel Barnes. Shlppensburg—William A.
Houck. Rh ippensho rg Circuit—John A.
MeXindless. Newville and Rehoboth—
Willhim H. Keith. Mechanicsburg—
Thomas Daugherty ; Oliver Ege, super
numerary. Carlisle Circuit—Jos. A. Ross,
John W. Feight;• D. C John, supernm
menarv. Duncannon —Andrew W. Gib
son. Stew Bloomfield—Geo. W. House,
Geo. W. laser.* Newport—Alexander R.
Miller, W. H. Hougbtelin. • East Salem
—To he suplied. Mifflin—Alexander
M. Barnltz. Tuscarora—Cambridge Gra
ham. Concord—Andrew E. Taylor, Wm.
Schriber.• Gettysburg—John B. Van
meter, Joseph B. Shaver.* York Springs
—James M. Clark, Jesse B. Young *
Hanover and New Oxford—Franklin
Gerhart. Shrewsbury—J. Clarke Hagey,
Frederick E. Crever. York, first charge
—N. S. .Ituckingliain. York, second
charge—J. H. S. Clarke. Wrightsville—
J. Mar. Lantz. a. L. Bowman, Profes
sor at Dickinson College, H. C. Clieston,*
Principal Preparatory Department, mem
bers of the Carlisle Quarterly Conference.
John B. Mann, agent of the Memorial
Church at Gettysburg, member , of the
Gettysburg Quarterly Conlerenee. T
Ege,* President of Irving Female Col
lege and member of the Mechanicsburg
Quarterly Conference. Those marked *
are deacons.
John H. C. Doeh, P. E. of Frederick
District. Em m ittsburg—J. Duey Moore,
Wm. A. Koontz.* Hagerstown—O. W.
Ferguson. Waynesboro'—Daniel Shef
fer. Mont Alto—Corwin W. Wilson."
Frostburg—G. W. Cooper.* Allegany
—A• J. Bender, James W Howard.*
William Ouynu goes to Williamsburg,
George Warren to Birmingham, Henry
G. Dill to Catawisaa, Martin L. Drum to
Renovo, and Leonard M. Gardner to
Strawbridge charge, Baltimore.
Revs. Henry Slicer, Thompson Mit
chell, Joseph France, B. H Creever, John
H. C. Dosh, W. L. Bpotswell, and T.
Barnhart, were elected delegates to the
General Conference which assembles In
Chicago In May next.
The Conferenee will meet at Danville
next year.
Jlen►orta! Ghtirch. —We notice the fol
lowing In the proceedings of the Metho
dist Conference at Baltimore on Monday :
The committee on the matter of the
Memorial Church at Gettysburg repor
ted resolution* recommending it to the
liberality of the Church, and proposing
the appointment of the Rev. J. B.
Mruin, of the • Baltimore Conference, as
an agent' for the collection of subscrip
tions, with a salary of $1,500, the Salary
to be raised by assessments on the seve
ral districts. Quite a lively discussion
arose on the resolutions, particularly in
regard to that•part for the employment
of the agent and the mode of obtaining
the funds for his salary. Patriotism and
the sacrifices of the war were brought
into the dlicussion. All seemed to con
cede that a church was wanted at Get
tysburg, coating from $100,051 down to
$33,000. Rev. H. Slicer suggested that
the matter should be commended to the
prpsidiug elden4 who Should present the
subject' to their preaches's . tend- to the
churches at large. The resolutions were
adopted. ;
-Ifppointmente.—Atireerr the appoint
ments, by the linitimore Conference
&Ptp ie nataita Um& Of Uev.,Ellea
# l , l a_ mpirmi , R . B. M. L.
Cen
wr, of the Baltimore Conference North,
" to
F.4airart42741,_,.,
ILav
) . 6x d& L Mr z z oriFigo.,.
rUNDOMILIk. posy
ITO . ne
"Aformanism."—Our readers should
bear in mind that Co!. McClure will I ft' •
AYe blire lin'Agrictatural Mil on Monday
"Mormanism."—
The 'Dictum will certainly be interesting.
Ti 4 reinalnlig loetureig of the course
will deliver hpyrof; Kidd, of Cln-
ItHs4l4 l -114reit.-41, ^ Rev. Dr. Tall
mage, April G.
Political.—John Stewart, of Chant
bersburg, le the Radice' - Elector for this
district. John 'Cessna, iat Bedford, and
Dr. R. 17 - . Fahnosteselr, - of thlergetc - are
the Delesl4. to the pktleago(bfivention e
with Wm. Adams, of Franklin, and Dr.
Duffield, of Fulton, as alternates.
Shad.—As the fresh shad season is near
at hand, and in order that our lady rea
ders may be enabled to do ample Justice
to that excellent fish, we publish the
following method of boiling their tinny
victims: Clean the shad, wash and wipe
it, flour it well, wrap it In a cloth and
Place it in a large vessel of boiling water
with a great deal of salt. It will require
about twepty minutes to cook IL Serve
it up with egg antice or rich drawn butter.
Phis most excellent fish is said to be very
palatable when dressed In the manner
stated.
To House-Kccpers.—Young folks and
others, who are preparing to go to
house-keeping this-spring, will do well
to make a call at Col. C. li. M1E111.11103
Ware-rooms, near the Depot, Gettys
burg, Pa., where, In addition to a large
variety of the mast approved t'oogixo
SrovEs, Sitting Room and Chamber
Stoves, can be found a very large &start
went of every kind of TIN-Wank, Hol
low-Ware, Japan Ware, Toilet and
Chamber Sets, Bread and Spiee Boxes,
Teaand ColTes Canisters, R shore, Coffee
Mille, Water Coolers, Spittoons, Pud
ding Mouldii, Flour Sieves, Candle
Sticks, Smoothing Irons, Egg Boaters,
Fruit Cans. Jelly Alotildtt, old A thou
sand other articles hr the house-keeping
line—all of which will be sold ut lowest
cash prices. Call and examine. if
Illanka.--Carninaa, Executors' and
Administratons' Deeds, Mortgages, Com
mon anti Judgment Bonds, Amicable
Actions, Promissory, Judgment and
Waiver Notes, Summonses, Supolas,
School Orders and Statements, and all
other litattics—printed on the best of
paper, and with clear type—can always
be had at the COMPILER office.
Coca Apprpsia Cure will Immediately
relieve and permanently cure the most
aggravated case of Dyspepsia, Flatulen
cy, Sour Stomach, Constipation, and all
dbleases of the Stomach and Bowels.
Physicians, elergysnen and all who use
it, Join in unbounded praise of its great
virtues. Sold by Druggists everywhere.
Price 41.00.
De Soto when he visited the shore. of
America, sought long and arduously for
the "Spang of perpetual youth," that
those who bathed therein might never
grow old in appearance. People of out
day have in part discovered a substitute
for this unfound spring in fling's Vege
table Ambrosia, a few applications of
which gives to white or gray hair that
dark, strong and glossy appearance pe
culiar to youthful beauty. If any of our
readers doubt this, let them try a bottle
and be couvinceed of the truth of our OA -
sertion.
March 13. Inn
Incomparable. Orare's Celebrate'
Salve is conceded' by all to be the best
preparation for the cure of cuts, burns,
wounds, scalds, sprains, and cutaneous
diseases and eruptions generally. In
places distant ,from medical aid it will
be found invaluable, and in the nursery
it should always be at band.,
A WAsnixorox correspondent of the
Aye, under date of Tuesday, silys: Ac
cording to current report, the 'valiant
Stanton and bird equally valiant followers
hereabouts, are still apprehensive that
they may be auddenly forced to leave
their comfortable quarters and "carried
away captive" by a, band of Virginians,
headed by Colonel Moeby. The long
bridge has brew strongly guarded at each
end for some time, and the War Depart
ment stili bristles with bayonets, al
though no armed foe has been seen with
in cannon's siwit of the Federal capital
since Early's raid lu 1864. The truth is
that Stanton ts 'aliatural coward, besides
a very artful politician, and lie ituagiiies
that by creating an Impression Ori the
public mind that the city le about to be
Invaded by ex-rebels, as they are called,
he can hide some of his, own rascality and
expedite the removal of President John
son. That's about what he is after.
TnE Two REBELLIONS.—When the
Tribune was working to elect Mr. John
son, It made its boast for him that "if
the Rebels were to recover Tennessee
and capture hint, they would hang him
before noon of the neat day, bet-lime
they had no more original, consistent,
implacable foe„ and not many more ef
fective." Now that4he Rebels' of 18n4
are defeated, the Tribune is working
with the Rebels of 1t368 to hang Mr.
Johnson for precisely the same reason,
because these later Rebels, with their
theory of the Republican party, have
had "us' more original, consistent, im
placable foe, and not many more effec
tive."
IT is a wonderful and instructive fact
that for three years the Radical leaden,
have refused to bring to trial and fam
ishment JOE Davis, the man who
labored to destroy the Union, but that,
instead, they are now engaged in trying
President Johnson, the man who, for
three years, has been endeavoring to re
store the Union. This fact is sufficient
to stamp treason upon the brow of every
Radical leader in the Rump Congress.
GIL% Tamunbas not "informed Grant
that the rebels In Tennessee are effeeting
a strung organization Intended to assume
control of the filtate government," hul
says that petsous (Radical scampl4, of
course) have so Informed him.
WAne's defenders, who vote for mak
lug him a judge in a case where he 11118
a supreme interest. ali say for Ohio,
"Each State is entitled to two Senators
dikdeithe qtiontitotion."
Where 'then, pertinently asks the
World, are tholweuty Senators from the
ten Southern Stites?
'SENATOR WADE, lu his reeent speech,
declared Oit the gates of bell could not
prevail against the Radical party. Pro
bably not. Whentver these 'pritit+ples
butt against those gates the gates will
give way and Into hell Will go both prin
ciples and party.—DtcAurige.
Ak'dppreadeil li•Aleoripayer stated
hta cape thirsty:
For him we watch—for him we
,pray,
For him we work both 'night and day,
For him wevlgb,B6 , Ittaxas pay,
This colored cum froni.Afrioa.,
TWA New iotirSilferard at that, tilt
rwmackatile.Jaerewie 1.( the Dent
oeratie vote - Wherever elecitdona have
been held ati a criterion, that State will
glee Itlii,fielVhfOrriii-ph4kiiiiA Radicalism
11 1/ 1 4. f an. l• '
titiosts "nniiti e _
reitae aid struT4l4oA4 l .)o4le ,
Great L.11,19017S;:
Agiug ll lit 019 sutaNer,l9 , o494 pAor
enu "e and m" . 1 1*., : i .!. '
LATLST FROM WAIIIIINCITON
WAstryscrrwl, March 117—The public
are daily misled - by paragraph s trout
Wash Ing ton ,purporting to g yowl the iitic
statements of the President's defence In
the impeachtueut tiial, his purposes, &c.
It should be kIION a/ that these state
ments are founded upset merest specula
tion and eurhston e gossip. None of them,
there Is the nest. authority fur guying,
have been derived from qtr. Johnson
himself, or [row his cona.el or Cabinet,
who alone have the president's eutitl•
deuce, or are advised of the plan or
points of defence.
There Is also authority for un undoubt
ed denial of the trutitfuluuss ul the New
York Sun's assertion 4,4 sat Judge Kick
hut stated to Mr. Johnson that Le has on
hopes of an sequlttal. Of the KIIIIII. kid
ney Is the allegation that the Prethlent
has considered the proposf(ion to riden,
or that he ever Intimated to wirraile such
a pUrpo2.e.
ttrant has tmt reeelved any farther
aecnnnts of disturbance in Tennessee, and
it is presunted that the authoritles of that
Slate are prepared to quell the law tem
ness Raid to be prevailing Pri cara
ud
%dees from Tennessee reeelve4l here Imp
elite that the alleged trouble has been
greatly exaggerated, and that the opera
tions of the Kukuluk Klatt merely excite
merriment and laughter, and that no
outrage tins been committed by any of
the Klan.
SPECIAL NOTICES
itoirs vezptabislilelllssi !lair itimewer
RENEWS THE HAIR TO ITS oiticuzim
COI GIC WREN GRAY
tho'nutritive mutter which awriethei
12151
REA' Ell'C ails GROWTH' OP Tla lIAIR
WHEN j 1,11,2.1
Ileneu s Itrnmh, ss Iri hair to oilltensoft,it.
HAIR
One home shows its elreetx.
K. P. likt.r.* (1)., Noslion, N. 11., Proprietors.
For so ie b 3 oil druggists. j Max. G, lei. lin
Roux at trot.. •
I ant Inlghty ht the 40.14 . 1,
lonely wleldwl by tho breve;
Glorious In the stalwart Mee tner,
Laughing at I he storm and was e.
Beauteous In the palace linters,
Saving In the pointed rod.
Aa 1.1 brings the dt•Odlyllk,ltttling
quelled and hernthato to the nod.
But there le a glorious essence,
Whore I take toy grandest poser,
Olvlng to the nava my surest, _ _
Sweetest old, In doluter's loam
See Wh,• me fly . female, !
see the !la rkeat h> 111.110 U
Flee the ram of health and beauty
Take the palest cheek and brow.
Fly, a,),4peivilat fly aotatuaptloit !
I ea, MI Ills are entaltea at Lew th !
For I Os e what human nature
only es er nee.le,l—masslTll!
• Shall I tell In what iVeSlIUtel . O
I rnu Ilium your nplrlls cheer Spy
Pallid, L entbll nu..l . ly • lu . g.b/ullrto,
the la Lord - 1 4 /curlolis NYltli r."
The ' , E.:mm*l.v%; SYltll I" Li a wol...ted .01.1-
titm t the ilolocialk, 1r,,0. a awit. litionvr
ie.ll , ln. 1.)1111, istrtlies pl the nag Ot 411+,....:
lipl.l 1, the bl.xxi WWI /1, ///oidoosc/p.'‘ //. /. •
The germlne has .. Ph n 1 $1122 - 1 , 1,1,151, in
file gilts% Pamphlets free.
I' PIX.NII.It 6 . Prarl. mr, 311 SI r, el.
NeN, 1 00 1.. snl , i 11
me 1(•1%;St vElyint vrEn sm.v
tutu Ntr.J,trirest ((It. Aun.shto ,
"I Was titilleteit With n hove, felon on one of
toe flatten., mid tried ttuuly remedial ulthot/i
rehet. 11v trieuthr Intlhoed et. , to aptly funs
Solve. lit Lwo day.; tt extraelett intlaunkta•
lion 110111 tot linger NO Oslo unable Ole la
Inv %V hrty that the Salve work -
111 Ills marno, for It etreetett aeon: witletrut hom -
li,; avar. I tialaiwit•ttlcoffy inouotiove (how,
r,terr .in eng ellent rernetly, iltid lint Lititilit II
111 tkinweelated lairmsubuut 411,•11.1,1,
•
°NIA' sS I'ENT,I A I.IOX.
, 11TI1 W. PN}WLE et .UN,*ton, I . roprietur.i.
I.v Ay 11 h,. arl.os and Uuxvr+g,a,rnrlll.
.NI.LI, u,
Try a llnntle and br Convineed
It n ill only cunt you) uur time In Indult it, II It
ilto•)ou ltootl.
=:!
As an FA fermi! Item, dy In rases or Citronle
liltraruallein: (Unwise! Hanel, illuadaild
Puts, Mtllttess of the Joints and Ilontraetton of
the >f navies, Headache, Itnilse", ralits lu tiro
Limbs. Doak anrl Hoses, ToOtiowlie, ening%
Of 11144 . 001 110 Kprtllll4, Iln wonderful enrolls e
ritoreix ore
'rake!, Internal!) in awe. of Hick Ileadiwlie,
Colic, Bowel flotuyialuls, (iadera, nysentery,
Vomiting awl I)yspepsia, Its %bottling mil pen. -
tnititra towlines are fell tw aoon as token.
felt the render or Ids friends ha% e any
roni
phtiut named In this advertisement, try the Ve
netian Liniment. It...member, If you do not and
relief you can have your money mfundrd.
Ask nu Dr. Tobias' Venetian Liniment, and
take no other. It Is pleasant to take and clean Io
use, and eradleatea the disease from the system
so that It dm,* not return, as Is the ease after
u,ing the many Liniments, Pain Killen, and
011 a, now flooding. the country, that only stow
the pan while the article Is beluit used, und then
return.
Price 5.11 crab; per bottle. Kohl by an the Drug
'gist.. Depot, MI cpUrtliallat Atreet, N. Y.
I=llelirn
doldes Dry
hum (Lorne,' for an who domino to miaow in age
one of the moat glorloun KIM+ of youth—the lona
nificent black or brown tinge which renders the
hair an Irroatatible element of pommel attrue
thou.
INFITANTANEOUS BEAUTY
'timings Mom the appltention of but one Warily.,
lu the world. That elonnlcul elizlr coutalinethe
vital principle and coloring matter with which
nature non/ahem the moat beautiful of the 'Aiken
tobrita wherewith •he 114.11.1. the
13=
Need ft be said that this M under of clelllzattots Ix
11AI/1 DYE,
the moat genial, harmless, x holesome, and eer.
Lulupr, p.cratluu urns kind In the whet, notvers,•.
Manufactured Ity J. ottNNADulto, w ,Nlalden
Lane, Near York. Hokl by. all Drugickts. Al.
plied by all /Lair Dressers.
Mar.0,1% 4 . Im
=!
DEL DITPuSLA.Pri ,
PILLS FOE FIIMALEs. Intelllble orreet
.ing irregularities. ileautieind tne4ru , nee. of the
Montlay Turns. then 1/11.4VINT LkiEl4p, UM] .tl
- as • Preventive.
/66516 CW over thirty yeani slaw the abovonel , -
brated Pills Were first dimwoverril by Dr. DUPON
CU, of Par* daring which time they have been
extensively and sauementily need in Inunl of ft •
public inatitiitiullo, an well se In private prta tie..
of both hemispheres. with unparalleled euceema,
in every ease, and It is only ott the - urgent re
quent" of the thowniude of tulles who hate us. I
them, that he is Induced to make the Pills fwoi e
fur the alleviation of tiff , tte nil fierir.g from nay I r
regtainrif les whatever,tts well. to prt•yeill
an ul
crease tit family Where 11.0 th will nut permit It.
InNI. Pil.f Is A Dumf.:.
remAies ptt alt trly el touted. or thosetluppoilltig
thetas. lees so, are cautioned against tlying tilLyu
PUN while in flint emid ithat h-st they - Int it,
inlieforrlakte," alter whieltadmonition, L. Pre
p. tenor namrmo t rerponelettitynitiii tight tin
Wilt pi or. ent any mischief to
otherwise the Tills urn re, flea \ i•
INVALUABLE REMEDY for MI thane
coutplaitits so perullor to the sex.
°NE lIOX SUYFJC/ENT.
111,000 Ilexes have been sold within Two Ye Ir..
Ten TheriuAnd Box. sent by Mall, both by my
sell oral Agents, to all berth of the world, Ub wu It I.
&mower. have been returned, I u which la .1,4 anti,
nothing like the above Pills have been known
since the Relenee of Medicine dawned upon the
world, In Removing Obutructluns and Itestorlii4
Nature to Its Proper Channel, Quieting the Nerves
and bringing bark the .itosy color oh Health . ' to
the cheek or the must delicate.
Price $1 per lien. SIX Bost n
Sold by itttt rykoluy, Druggist, Mule
Agent for Getty•blint, Pa, -
Ladle., by egiultng jam $1 through the 'rout Of
fice, can have the Pills sent, (conildrinially,)l,? .
Mail, to ally port alive noun try, "tree of isotdge.
bent ably by J. Spangler, Chambers/a:mg 11. W.
Ned; York, Colenttut dt Mogen, and Brown /troth.
ere, Wholeenle Agente, liultlo ere, end S.
Howe, Proprietor, New York.
March 4, 1861. ly
l*rtors oi Vann th
A gentleman who coffered for yearn fnmn
Vous betellffy, Premature Denny, and ell the
elects of youthful Indlicretlon, will, for the nuke
oisutrorluglMM , WiLr, send free to nil who need
11, the recipe and directions for untioug the slin.
ple reined)* by which he was cured. Sufferers
wishlgg ty profit by the advertiser's experience,
nab doso by addressing, In perfect confidence,
SOHN B. °UDEN,
12 Cedar St., New York.
May 77,188.4. 19
1=2:2
I.pwroeriort guaranteed to produce Klux urbtot
growth of hub - opens bald heed or beardless bur r ,
also a re ale., for t.tur nemeNal of Pimples, Blotches,
tes, on the skln, leaving the same
son, e
oft u , P cloa ° r, seed bearituut, qpil be obtained with
out charge by addrababg
11108. P. CHAPMAN, Chemist,
liroadway, Nag York,
l
&mt. 28, 'sc. gm
Few Marriage Cleride.
AN F>l9lY FOB YOUR KEN, on Physiolo
gical Errora,„'Allapa and es, incident to
Youth auct Early Manhoowi, which canto izo
pwdinienta to MARRIAA with sum menu' of
robe. tient to seilltd_, 1 envelop m fred of
charge. Addreala N. J. SIC LLIN HOUGHTON,
, Honraad Annameladan, Philadelphia, Pa,
Dia Ilk 1181. tr
irli nillowas Ott , ff.
The Rey. Edward A. Wilaes Witt Nerd Wed of
charge) he all who dealre It the persertpiton with
WA; rgarr
i t i tte mdze
Otwistlptlga l .
outrat•eet Isecabeemilitthe ataletaditial 'whelped
avegpermillthasplempenptiena,as tt.Wllll
etet
m d.ztapt }owe aamieribmi.
RM . IiIIYWAZTA AAVI=
eltell,o o4 stekikutimi,virtrk