iftp hrg ' out itir. aviaosir. Apra a. IMO& DEMCRILATIC 'STATE TICKET. - Itttotrog altrnit lT„ Ho». MI 81.410 sori,E,..r tremarw •CRPRTOR GIVIItItArft Wsr.l../AGIIWN of Cotand , eit IMPEACHMENT ins Treat oveneasseva The trial of the Presittent, at the in .,staur.o:Al the Radicals-of the House, was 1 \ • commenced in the SollatO ou Monday. The case was opened on the part of the House managers by Mr. li. F. Butler, who read a pretty address, which occu _pled three hours In its deli% erk . , - itivierv7 ing the etinalltutional provisiona which are alleged to male It the ditty of the ~House to impkeit and the Senate to try a President charged with high' criaima and miteletneeuors, reciting English and American precedents in cases of Im penchmeut, and considering the matters of fact and law which would be (level. aped in supporting the statements of each of the impeachment articles. A very wide range of inquiry will be open ed, beta as to the filets and the law of the ease, if the points raised by Mr. But ler'in his opening speech are to be fully and fairly considered and discussed. Mr. Wilson, of the Impeachment mana gers, commenced the introduction of documentary evidence—the President's ofticial oath—the nomination of Stan ton as Secretary of War by Mr., Lincoln - —the confirmation by the Set at:—with a copy of the Presideut's message to the Senate, Dee. 14, lbffi, giving his reasons for sunpeutliog Stanton. Thom docu _ meats are familiar to the pubic, but Mr. Stanbery desired to have them read, which was accordingly done. Thus the t forms at least are complied with, and un less the President is to be deprived of the common privileges of defence accor ded to the hunffilest criminal, it is diffi cult to see how there can be that, swift solution which Is demanded by the more bot-headed partisans of impeachment. ' On Tuesday, the proceedings COM rnonced by the Impeachers calling wit ,. nemeses. ' • Mr. Burt Van ilori, -- titem_her of Con , grass falai New York, was-put on the stead to- detail the loddente of the interview between Oen. Thomas and Mr. 'Stanton, when the former deman ded possession of she War Office. Mr. Van-Horn was subjected to a marchlug ' arms examination by Mr. Stanbery, which caused him to stammer and heal tattv.before answering. During Ole ex amination it came out that Mr. Van - Binh and other Radical menthe:it of Congress were at the Wur Office for the express purpose of spying on Den. Timm:let Mr. Burliegh, a delegate in „ the House from Dakotah Territory, was next called, and was proceeding to elate a conversation which occurred between him and Gen. Thomas on Friday night, Feb. 21, 18118, relative to the latter's ten tioa to take poem-salon - of the War Office the next morning, worn Mr. Stanbery objected to the reetption of the teidhuouy on the ground that it was irrelevant. The Chief Justice decided that the ob jection was not well:Laken and the eel • dente was admissible. Mr. Atka Immediately rose in the mop' excited. manner and insultingly shouted out tbat the Chief Justice had no right to make any decision whatever on any question. So violent. did he be come that he was called to order by ooh _ er Senators and rapped to order by the Chief Justice several times before he ' would take his seat. , Aftersis argument from Messrs. ham, Butler and Boutwell againet the 'Tight of the Chief Justice to role on any question, thh 13enste, on motion-of Mr. Wilson, retired for consultation, the mu- Man being carried by the meting vote of • the Chief Justice. It was three o'clock ,-- when the Sedate retired. After being out about three hours, and returning, • the result of the consultation was .an nounoed In Thu shape of a modification of the seventh rule, which-Substantially sustained the decision of the Chief Jus , tier. Drake and .hls partiittlar 'friends were very wrathy about 14' ad did ant simple to give audible vent to their die satisfaction. It is understood that the debate which took place was very stormy. The decision is taken as a bad sign by the more savage of the 'Radicals. The proceedings on Wednesday ex hibited no special point of interest, ex cept an abortive attempt of Mr. Sumner to reeover from the discomfiture which the Imi - woollen had suffered In the vote of the court In secret session, sustaining by a vote of thirty to nineteen the ruling of the Chief Justlee that he had a right to decade, In the first instance, questions aulaw cad evidence. With this view Sumner submitted act order that In giving theeasting vote an Monday upon the motion to go Into secret consnitatiou open the appeal taken by Mr. Drake against the ruling above-mentioned the Chief Justice had done that for which there was no consUtutional warrant.— The order was rejected by a vote of yeas 21, nays 27. This is the second failure of those extremists whose programme is to make the Chief Justiciiii mere ornamen tal. figure in the court of impeachment. The case Of the hopeaehers is growing Weaker as the trial progresses. NARY SPIISCH.—We picked up the Oettyiburg Compiler yesterday to glance over Its ever well-tilted columns and bright pages A paragraph stated that on the oubilde would be found the speech of ling, A. J. tivisellUanNakt. Turning to that,part of the paper nary a speech nor anythaig elae' of a readable nature IL could we dud. It was ank as the day the sheet taunt oat the Paper lUI. (Joust, litrattLEl. '' of your shatuutigen" ou us I—Reading Grvetfs. Couldn't help it, Sanderson. Popular ity of the COXPThEII—'2/11 poi at of fact," new subscribers I May the spicy and good looking Gazelle often be "afflicted" ,ist the same way. psitomtatic %%crony is MECHANIC:M. aux - 41,—Laat fail the Republican maiori ay litAuchaniesburg. Cumberland coon ity,tracilli. Ott Friday week the Demo crats ,gasied the town, electing their BMWs by sortm,ls majority. Mr. Levi Katialeaut, o of the editors of the Har risburg Stiolocarearci i was the Radical candidate for,Rprgess. It seems the peo- Plo'-of Mathatalcaterg are not numb in ' love"MtU gegrodaquality doetri nee preiteitert ep by ltattftrnsa In the Slate Ouard. 1 Wri•sorr, one of the impeachment man rieetired on Monday week that "Counsel should not be alloWed time to educate thetr - wives in the cage." to. :other *onto, the President moat be rueL dd before hti i3onusel can arrange I"tiiihnee. %Lett cotninet to . destitidly. IO shows en! _igiutbrr bow empty ex' the larva broughtlnyille conspirators. • 4 .ffilaitilibiestmesh visa thete.ides a** tillibiket repo • vets i mosse,' 40/104implete6 the feteihret,vAbet e l p oothay hoe, It only mesas WI theft whin too many "side Issues" Involved. GEM EEL WELLINGTON H. ENT We tlnd In that able.papp., the Co/- um/don, the yloning interitating per sonal sketch ortlentind Ent, -the Demo cratic candidate. Tor Surviyor Geherni. It will he rend Avltit interest, and not eben Isis opponenta can-fail to gee that he la a man worthy to be honored and rewarded. The Columbian saya: iCleneral ... Ent is well known to all our readers, acrd -has art mrsulifed reputation both mos krildierlind as a man. lie was balm AL Light ietreet, In this rowdy. Au gust 1633, and consequently Is ,31 years eve. lie graduated at the Law Univeridty In Albany, N. Y., ;pill was soon after admitted to the pruetiee of law in this and adjoining coun ties, which prolession he followed until the outbreak m of the war. Gen Ent was - the first to ove In this eounty in the matter of raising troops, and on the tirstcall of the President tendered his services, and wax unanituously elected to the IX/Yak/II of First Lieutenant of the "Iron Guards , " a company raisea for three months, ard which afterwards changed ita term of service to three years. This company was accepted by the Governor April rah, 1861 On the ^Jith of May following, he was elected Captain of his company, then known as "A" of the oth Reeerves, Cap tain Ricketts, its former commander, having been chosen Colonel of the Regi ment. September 21st, 1862, he was com missioned as Major of the Regiment; November 26th, 1862, Lieutenant Col onel; May 2.3 d, 1863, Golotiel, and subse• quently was brevetted Brigadier General for gallant conduct in the field. On- the 11th of June, 1864, he was mustered out with the Pennsylvania Reserve Corps, having served two mouths or. tr his time. Bur,tig this period the General partici pated with his Regiment in the principal battles fought by the Army of the Poto mae from Lrainesville to Cold Harbor, I which lust engagement he received Is bullet through his hand, which has lamed him for life, During Lee's first invasion of Maryland he was borne on recruiting Bernice, but at the risk of a Court Martial and without waiting to be relieved, went at once to the trout, and joined his Regiment in time to partici pate in the battle of Antietam. He and his Regiment were particulary distin guished at the subsequent battle of Fred ericksburg, being a part of the only charging column that sueceeoed lu breaking through the enemy's lino; had the movement been properly supported, vicory instead of defeat would Lava crowned otir banners. At the battle of Gettysburg the General specially distin guirdied himself, his command operating nn the left in the vicinity of Round Top. During Grant's campaign to the time of his muster out, his career way -11 brilliant one, and we doubt not the people will re ward his services in a triumphant elec tion- Blues the war the General has been principally engaged in the iron business, which interest he has deeply at heart. He is a fluent, forcible speaker, and ere the campaign close* will give his oppo nents a lair test of his intellectual abili ties. At the time of his nomination, and since, he has been in New Jersey on busi ness, and no man was more surprised than himself at the compliment. such are our candidates, and we go into the canvass with the , consciousness of having good men on the ticket, pledged to constitutional principles, and we doubt not; the peoplo, by their trium phant election, will show that reason has resumed Ler throne, and that the reign of passion has ceased. And now, friends, go to work. Tut: New York Herald draws a etrik log parallel between the language and bearing of the Radical leaders of the "Rump" and -}he Jaoob!n reiga of t,error during the French Revolution, and in stances Ihe threatening "language of Thad. Stevens towards thle Senate, the denunciation of Andrew Johnson as a - tyrant and violator of the laws on the flimsiest pretext by those who show themselves to be the most violent tyrants, and who scout the Couetituttpn as an obsolete, worn-out instrument. So alike are these revolutionary scenes, so anti lar the language," eaysthe Heroic', "that we can hardly realize the fact that we are not reading the history of the French Revolution, or that such things are oc curring In our own 'beloved country." Equally forcible and striking Is the fol lowing picture, which we copy from the same Journal The Girondists of the French Revolu tion, of whom we may mention Verg nlaud, Genaonne, Gantlet, Brimiot, la niard Lanjulneis, Condi:proof., were the best, the bravest, the most eloquent and the moot virtuous men the revolution produced. Their conduct- and their fate were pregnant with !peons to all future generations. Their manly instincts re belled against the King, - But the revo tlonary current was too strong to be re sisted with safety. Fearful for themselves, they yielded to the popular torrent and voted for the death of the unhappy mon arch. This vote at once ruined their influezice and sealed their fate. Twen ty-two of them soon after perished on the scaffold; nor was the vengeance of their enemies satisfied until Isiadaree Ro land shared their fate. Their names had been greater if they had perished ear lier. We, too, have out throndists. Anthony, Feasenden, Howe, Norton, Roes, Sherman, Sprague, Trumbull,Vau Winkle, Willey, Williams, Morgan— these are the men who are now attempt ing to moderate the strife. They have played the part of the Oirondista so far. It remains to be seen low they will play it out. Will 'they learn from the pest and remain true to their nobler instincts, or will they yield and !WI like their great predecessors? THE impeachment of the President be ing a thing wholly new in our history, it is not surprising thatpome people mis apprehend what has been done. The House has Impeached the President; but this Is of no force in itself. The im peaoliment must be tried by the Senate, the Chli.f Justice presiding, And If two thirds of the Senate shall find the prim- dent guilty as charged, he will be 're moved from office. NOT a single eitizen of the country has ever beeti injured in person or property by act of presideut Johnson, nor has there been lost to the Treasury a elnee dollar of the public memey. _On the oth er hand, thousands of people, North - end fluuth, have beau brought to the verge of starvathro, and hundreds of millions of dollars have been kept out of the pub lic treasury by the unconstitional legisla tion of the Rump eorigrese.--Patriot & Union. DULLY FOR litcxmarri—John Hick laq. a Member of the Lep,telature from Cheater county, in hie apeeoh delivered a short time age, in the LIMP*, 1p fever of striking the word whiteout of the Con stltutlog,readd : "Imay porriply see the day that may walk side by side with a colored women. 7 have teen a great many colored women that .4twaffht rather wall; w4th than aortal manyle IILS wen, k n o w apreat many wives w /Ain* are beh'er satitted to vote this moment than a great many while men mho do vote, and hale tong weercis' thstranchise." on.rriartait Wfiteofretu Rome 00110 that Ira freedman tolls the B4Rall tbst a fanner owes him a sum of Money, and We farmer protests that be beeen't owe him a dollar aad asks for a trial, no trial Is granted, but a military judginerki la eunuriarily rendered against bins for probably more than he is worth, ilia prop erty siezed, hie person putt-ouder guard, sad his family terrified, and all for noth ing—no writ, mo t charges, no nowt, no jury, no esamisalhou, tie itainlry, n9tlr log but the black vagabout l yeap Ea)." Aipr consanl3Mtls abash's Judir ChM", Abe moinnahmtgesi tamp 9Petif4JtkOr *dr wait* vim SheaN4v!adiM4ter 4000" tor filiousio• la.pat a ammo* Palklic**lo4llr utilise. with Met' liligiggowdlw Ogre. Littools, LEITER FROM lIARILIXDUIte HARRISHURU, March 30, INS Editor compiter:—ln uay Idler week- hiefure lash, all error of sortie comma/none occurred In relatlol6 to the cipenses of the contested election case in the Senate, between Itotilnion and Shugart. I do not kuow whether lc lies at tuy door or belongs to the "printer." No matter of that, I will correct It now. Instlad of three or four thousand dollars, read from iliteen to twenty 'thou.,and. I have it filial goal authority, one of the commit tee, that the expense will-be something like that, If anything rather more than lees. The committee watt drawn on the 9th of January, and closed the eVidence on Wednesday last. 'Sea; four hundred witnesses were exautined. These wit nesses were nearly all examined here, from Centre, Mifflin and other counties, a distance of over one hundred and fifty miles. The argument will open in the Senate Chamber on Monday next. It la a ease precisely like that of your "ape," three years ago. You know he had no earthly right to the seat, yet, to procure a majority in the Senate, the committee decided that lie was entitled to the seat. So it will be in the present case, although the contestant, Mr. Robinson, is no more entitled to a seat there than you or I.— The same reasons exist now as then. Out of the 11 retiring Senators, 9 are Re publicans, and 2 Democrats; therefore, Shugart must be put out and Robinson put in. You are aware the Republicans have only "five of a majority In the Sen ate, and they ere sure of loslng two next fall, MeConaughy and Shoemaker. To give you a glimpse of the extrava gance and corruption of the - present and preceding Legislatures, I will state a single case aaaaample. Ily looking over the Auditor tienerai's report ot last year, you will find that the pastern and folders coat the State twenty thousand dollars. bill was up in the House on Thursday last, fixing the number and pay of the ofncern of the Senate and House of Rep resentatives. During the debate on this bill, it wee stated that there were respon sible parties ready to do this job--pasting and folding—by contract, for three thou saud dollars. Now, the 'Republicans knew that the job could be done for three thousand dollars, yet paid twenty thou sand. Here are something like seven teen thousand dollars given to favorites for no service rendered, in this single item, in one year. No time has yet been definitely fixed for the adjournment of the Legislature, hut it Is generally conceded that It will not take place before the 9th of April, if then. The General Appropriation bill passed the House sortie time ago, and has been under consideration in the Semite for the last week. So many amendments and additional appropriations were added that the whole bill was voted down yes terday. I presume it will he reconsider ed on Tuesday, as• it is not likely the members would adjourn and go home without their thousand doh am apiece.— But some say they don't care—that they have already drawn nearly all. Legislation is going on yet at a great rate. Private bills come in about as fast as ever, and they are rushed through with locomotive speed and receive but little attention, and many pass which should be defeated. Your Senator woke up the other day and had quite a number passed in the Senate, besides a parcel in troduced. The following were passed yesterday and sent over to the House: An act granting a pension to Charlotte McMaster, widow of it soldier of the War of 1812, front Adams county. Also pen sions, dm., to Jacob Comfort, John L. Burns, Joseph Harman, John Baltzly, Henry Brickert and Jacob Brown, all soldiers of the war of 1812, from Adams county. Also an act to incorporate the Mount Rock and Hanover Turnpike Road Company.' Also two House bills, one of which is an act to authorize the Gettysburg, the Littletdown, and the Hanover Railroad Companies to estab lish a Union Passenger Depot, 'and to change portions of their roads, to con nect therewith ; and the other an act to incorporate the Gettysburg and Chain hamburg Railroad Company, and author izing said road to make connections and increasing the number of commissioners. Also an act to extend the time for the payment of the enrollment tax on an act to incorporate the Battle House and Min eral Springs Watering-place Company. Alsu dq act to extend the time for the payment of She eiggllment ta; ou the Adams County Railroad Company. Also an act to authorize ,the School Directors of Butler township, In Adams county, to pay the committee appointed to procure volunteers tollt the quota and to levy and collect a talc for that pur ls:wt. Also an Rot In 'elation to pleading and judgment, and additional return days for writs In the Courts of Common Pleas of the Nineteenth Judicial District. Yon will see tram the foregoing list that your Senator woke up all at once.— These bills ought to hies beisn brought up long ago, to ensure theta passage this session. It Is almost Impossible for them to go through the House before the day of adjournment, should the Legislature adjourn on the day mentioned above. I have It from reliable authority that be could hove presented them a month ago had he attended to his duty. Should they be detested for tho want of time, •our citizens know who to blame. This is abouhthe most trifling and cor rupt Legislature that has eofivened here these many days. I will again relate a single one of many squally bad cases. On Friday, the Nth of 'March, en set was passed in the Bone of ftepresenta , tives, entitled as follows :—"An act incor porating the Domestic Resource Com pany." This bill, althotigh trifling as its title would indteate, proved *to be a huge affair, probably equal to your Benet or's Lottery bill last year. AN seemed right, however, till Tuesday morning follow ing, when a member jumped up in Me seat, with all the dignity and gravity imaginable, and held up a newspaper to ward the Speaker p and anocungetj—"Mr. Speaker, I hold'ln my hand a newspaper, the Philadelphia Ledger of yesterday, in whlch is an editorial article to which I would draw the attention of the House. I move it be read." Of course leave was granted and the paper handed to the Clerk and read. The /earned and sedate lawmakers were ail on tip toe t o hear what this was. ?he Clerk read the era.- Cie, as follows : Soandedoes-Aentik . apocka Legirga ,,,44l444irda,y's report of the Legisla tive proeeediniT ht the lime of Repre sentatives at 1117114 rd on ttio do r bee fore contained he Gzhowing grief pure. graph :, "An act incorporating the Do mestic Regain* Company passed final ! 11 This Thle is so modest and innocent a Itie sentence that very few people would be likely to Pay altdutiOn to li, Yid the bill referred to II whet liarrlsborg operators' would cell "a Lag tiring." We ! have ri copy of It before us. It inoorpor- I a t" . 0 , company of the,,trioat extraardi nary pharar;ivith power Collegial ;to,- tdddowdY itoed, amid botitrw sabott intone llail:elpnet: :0 W - pfixoCIPIPY,- wi t t ee 4 a rattand a tryll Vath ' add hold wi 'est 4071 - Istaltotthiet 1 wera ' Meteor Wawa essesdlimal4lMlßlll moos. Bath an unbridled grant to a ept. potation to hold teal estate, we feel aida in saying, has never been heard of except In the Legislature of Permaylvintia, since the statutes of mortmain. Itds further empowered to purchase and tell bonds and securities, to make adrarsees of sto ney to raileky and other companies, and to contractors and manufacturers; to re ceive and hold orudepoidt personal estate. Including notes, hands, obligations and accounts of individuals, companies and States; to collect, adjust and settle ac counts of individuals, companies and titatea ; to receive and hold real estate as well as personal estate, In trust, and to sell or dispose of it in the United States or elsewhere, without poi:calms" in law or In equity, on such terms as the company chooses; to deal in exchange, toreign and domestic; to endorse and guarantee railroad bonds, and to establish branches and agencies anywhere In the United :States,. Europa or dd.-where. - It beats anything yet attempted in the Pennsylvania Legislature since the old days of "log rolling," under the United States Bank and we lay the foregoing dissection of the new "monster" before the public, that they may take a thorough look at it; and we trust It may also meet the prompt inspection of the Senate, the Attorney (ieueral and the tiovernor. After the reading was over the mem bens looked amazed and quite grave. No one wanted to father the child—it looked too monstrous—it was then recoutiidered and voted down, not ono to do reverence LO it. Now, what do you think of the wis dom, patriotism and efficiency of one hundred Legislators, to leave such a bill be snaked through, without looking into its provisions, and by far the larger por tion of whom are lawyers at that. And moreover, an editor of a newspaper, ono hundred miles off, had-to draw their at tention to it and expose the enormity of the swindle. I think this sample will suffice you and your readers, as well as every honest man in the State. Your "liofder Damage Bill," as it passed the House, is now before the Sen ate. It, has been reported by Use cow mittee as committed. So I was Informed. I hoard it rumored that the Senate In tends to add additional restlictions to it by way of "loyalty" to abolitionism be fore they Intend to pass it. I cannot tell whether it is true or not, hut I think it will make but little difference what they will do with it, as it is merely intended to blindfold the sufferers. Even this much would never have passed had it not been on account of losing votes in these counties next fall. On the first bill, only three Republicans voted for it, and these were personally interested in It. Bin Armstrong, from Lancaster, a hard ne gro man, made a speech for the bill last year; this year he spoke against it. In. stead of giving your sufferers bread they give them a stone. would further add that the editor of the Ledger forwarded a copy of his paper containing the exposition, to every member of the House, on Tuesday morn ing. A, L. PHOTOCIRAPIIED The telegraph has announced to the world, as a matter of general Interest, that the managers of the Impeachment bevelled their photographs_taken "in imperial style." Thad. Stevens and Ben. Butler are most prominent in the groupe, and the others are arranged so as to make the beet show possible. There will be another photograph taken of these follows some day. Impartial his tory will be the artist Then they will be ezhlblted in their true characters, and all who look upon them will turn away with loathing and contempt. This his toric picture will be held up as a warn ing to all free people, and the names of Stevens, Butler and their associates in crime, will be remembered as are the names of those who have 'lived to curse the earth.—Lancaster farelligenoer. STARViaI TO Ds:Am.—We cut the fol lowing from an exchange: A respectable, industrious woman, the mother of nine children, died of starva tion, last week, in Philadelphia. Her husband, who worked in a foundry, had been outot work for someweeks and the poor woman, too proud to ask assist ance, had denied herself that her little ones might have food, until nature could endure no more, and she perished. This is the way it goes, says the Doyles town Democrat. A white woman starves to death In Philadelphia for %Tanta food, while the government keeps up a bureau, which costs the tax-pajers several mil lions a year, to feed, clothe, and educate negroes. This thing goes on year after year and the people quietly submit to it. Congress devotes a large share of its time to the negro, and all manner of ways are devised to make him more comfortable and give him new power, notwithstand ing women are permitted to starve in Philadelphia, under the nose of the Union League. It:mei:is that justice has taken its flight from this World. Foil-Nap Press says that before Mr. Curtis "had proceeded many minutes" In the reading of the President's reply to the inipeaqhmeat ttrtioles on Monday, "one-half of the members had left the Senate and ming Senators had given ap listening and were dioerting tiwinselves in various ways." In the face of this dis graceful confession the country is expect ed to look upon soak persons as constitu ting a "high court of Impeachment." A "high old court" it IL—Patriot & THE appointment, or Gen. Hancock to the command of the Department of the Atlantic, gives great satisfaction in coon niarVetiVe quartets. We brilliant states tuanship while In the oquimaud of the Fifth District, is a sure augury of ejudi chats exercise of authority in arty emer gency that may arise. TUE New Hampshire Statesman (Rauh ual) figured up the vote of that iitatiaa follows Ilarrimat; 38 t 1i8 j Sinclair 31,- 0--nark,jority ,488. Thin is a gain in votes on the vote of 1887, for the Rads 3,900 ; fur the Perricatrats, 4,441, - end a Radical toes ou zuskiority of 54. The Democrats gain DI members of the House of Representatives. W. W. lloinmr, the Radical negro oand biota for Governor of North Carol'• na, wanted Lincoln asbusinated in 1863. He swallows the black dose now, howev er, and that covers a multitude of sins, John Wilkes Ilooth if pqw alive and a ooavert to Radical negroism, would oer tairdy be made a Radleal candidate for something—probably one of klen. Wade'a Cabinet Tgli /Wisela in Qin:wean refused to allow q Minister from cair Government to be sent tp the Papal States, but voted with alacrity to send one to the worth less, revolution-curved "Republic" of Hayti. The first act was tb'insult the Pathelice — the other to compliment the Digger*. - . • ,—. NAllitvmus, 20.—bpdtdcm, convict, recently Abided alit of the &ate Prison, to it leis tightitheen SOU. (413 Ced bkibe Cingit Cauttcot•Fratiklin r tankage on his Infithar-in laT, Is ra a PadilminE ja* o talli th) having been °onus en as cap twin by the Slate alithoritiew There's Radicalism for you—Brown law Radicallintr; •La *MY imesoar *SU Veit 'SOO et PO Ineeeneedesetor Mantnthoes diedkemeon raerwande, nada mMenewillaes7- SSSL Thontadleethme punewe d adt of from twenty to thirty thousand. PUBLIC rLraskJL riLal Illatiourry M•11.12* is ilia Radical !WM: " =L a * Tril l' TT!: Expealle: !Ind Board BUIS Vier ' a. basalostary. [COrre•poudi nee of the S. Y. Works.] WASH I NOTON, Mush i. Mr. Edward McPherson, Clerk of die House,appeare as the author of all octavo volume of •Lt.ll pages, which would be faultless in style if it were not so highly figurative. It is a statement of the con tingent expenses of the House of Repre sentatives, which Mr. Mortereotr com municates in obedience, to a resolution of the House of Representatives passed on the 4th day of March, 18{2, which re quires "that the Clerk deliver to the postmaster of the House seek kind and quantities of alalioners as front time to time may be neeessary for the see of the House, keeping an accurate account of the same, and also of the quantity and value of that used In the Clerk's office; and that, hereafter, in the annual report now required by law to be made by the Clerk, showing the amount of expendi ture from the contingent fund of the House, he be required to state accurate ly and distinctly the quantities and cost of the stationery used by the House and the Clerk's office separately." All this is stated In a very brief communication on the first page of Mr. McPherson's novel, and the remaining 230 pages are 'filled with figures which will convey to the tax-payers of the country a startling view of what Radicalism considers "Sta tionery." It would take a good account ant a week to add up this bill, and whether it amounts to millions, or only, hundreds of thousands of dollars, the items show that full one-half, and proba bly two-thirds, of these charges are down right swindles upon the Treasury and the pockets of the people. - Radicalism and robbery are synonymous terms. The present bill of the House for the mere item of "stationery" is only for a single year. It does not include any of the large legitimate expenses of the House—the pay of members, printing of public documents and so on. But the mere cartage of documents, mostly Radi cal electioneering pamphlets printed at the expense,of the people, amounts to $5,562.50 a year, this cartage covering 11,151 loads of trash, the bulk of which goes to wrap bundles in grocers' shops and to baser uses. Thomas H. Beaten and J. B. Clark, "trooly loll" of course, have the carting of these "loads." If the articles of what may properly be called stationery are really furnished to the members of the House, it is probable that nearly every member intends to set up a stationery shop at the close of his term as a Representative. In a single session 4,741,963 envelopes, eating $2,- 478.73, were furnished. This envelope business includes fancy note-paper and envelopes to match, visiting cards, mono griiihs, and paper collars and °tare, not only for the members, but for their fami lies for present use and fur several years to come. It should be remembered that every member is presumed to purchase all the stationery he needs with money which he draws for the express purpose. There are now 194 members and dele gates from Territories in the House. In a single year, according to McPherson's romance, these members used 726 gold pens, costing $2,637.84; 1,039 Inkstands; 2,71 penknives, ceding $5,520; and 527 porte-monnales,costiugsl,o44.3o. Among other Items of stationery are hair brushes, nail-brushes, toilet soap, Marti nique snuff by the dozen bottles, cork screws and kid gloves. The kid-glove business is one of the sublimest of all the swindles. For instance, "on account o f the death and burial" of a Representa tive, there are charged twenty-five and one-half dozen kid gloves, costing $762, or about roar pair to each member to wear to a single funeral. Other "station ery" appears in round charges for coffee urns, sauce-pans, broilers, flour-sifters, and fish-kettles. It may be remarked here that N. G. Ordway, Sergeant-at- Arms of the House, has a very nice thing of it. There is scarcely a week when his hill for two or three thousand dollars doe not appear, and his "travelling ex- Swink's" alone would cover the entire cost of the British Abyssinian expedi tion. Columns could be filled from this one document to show the barefaced swindling manifest in this list of the contingent expenses of the House.— Prominent among these swindles is the outrageous one of summoning witnesses before some committee or other from N. Orleans or Alaska, and paying them for their testimony at the rate of $3OO or $3OO each; under pretence that traveling ex penses cover the bill. Every "loll" loaf er in the South who went to Washing ton last year to beg for an oftlee, or to lie about his neighbors, or as a Radical dirty-work agent, was summoned as a witness stint was roundly paid out of the people's money. Remember, too, that this gigantic Swindle is one of the least of those constantly perpetrated by the par ty in power. To support the Govern ment, the old rant cry of Radicalism, means being supported by the country, at the expense of the people, and the right to draw $l,OOO from the Treasury is free ly translated Into the privilege of stealing $5,000. If there were no other reason for ridding the country of the now dominant party motives of economy alone should prompt and compel it. The entire reve nues of the country are not sufficient to pay the expenses of the Government and at the same time to till the pockets of the thieves who are plundering the pub lie Treasury. AT last accounts, says the Quincy Herald, the nigger was ahead—at least, in the opinion of Senator Wilson, of Afassachusette, who said, the other day, that "the negroes now in the ()onset'. dons of the southern states are better fitted to make constitutions than were John Marshall and James Madison." The nextwe shall hear from these Radi cals will moat likely be that George Washington was born of•negro parents, and that Thomas Jefferson was born in Africa. If there Is anything foolish and ridiculous that has not yet been said by these Radical leaders, it is only be cause they hasn't been able to think of it or find time to say it. A CIIANOE rr LIFE,—The ups and downs In this life are aptly Illustrated In the person of Hiram 8. alias Ulysses 8. Grant, late shoe and leather defiler at Galena, Illinois, who new rccelvea 00,- 000 a year salary. - Oneetterfr head clerks recentlyasked the General to recommend hie salary to be lame/wed to $1,400. Grant refused Grant's little boy, ten yew old, /idea to solteol every morning ou a pony, with an orderly on honstimOit about a rod behind him. This la te ' l6, for a matt 'who has a usi/llon superiors-1u every gift and acquirement, who have to support their-families-on a thousand dollars a rear, sod spare opt of teat • part of the to* to pay (4raßt his $.10,04 —Beading lassos. Tics megrim of 'Madinat, Os. Wins to is tale !mod and ociaiee .... roolliwid, fs a ftodl *al *rent out of tetra tbtrottiordaiy:, -• brie satikthat JaThreen Data la no longer undir.llll4l to stand Ida !acid t epartatent TOWN, COUNTY AND SURROUNOING COUNTIES, Thank/.—Oar thanks are 'WOAD Hon. A. .1. Glettabsennet and Hon. Fernando Wood-tor Congressional I.loen meets; and to Hon. N. Hellas' for Legislative favors. Cattle Plague.—On our fourth page will be found a very Interesting communica tion on Pleura-Pneumonia—to be follow ed by inOther nett week. ' " - Properly Sold.—David L. Topper has sold his property, in Highland township, to Mis. Louisa Wieder-8f acres, with improvements, at $l3OO. Ornitica.—ln the list of Township Offi cers published last week, we accidentally omitted the names of Ms Inspectors elec ted in Mountjoy., viz: U. M. Appier and Wm. Young. .19rror.—The stable, , with horses, &lc , built In this place on Monday night week, belonged to the firm of Danner dc Ziegler, and not Judge Ziegler alone, as erroneously stated in our last. .Nor mat School. —Superintendent ghee Iy's Normal School opened on Monday with a large attendance. This useful in stitution cannot but meet with the high est success. Nationai G 4 ins the House at Harrisburg, on Tuesday, the Speaker presented joint resolutions from the Leg islature of the State of Minnesota, favor ing the transfer of the Gettysburg Na tional Cemetery to the general govern ment. Adiniffed.-011 Wednesday last, John M. Young was, on motion of D. Wills, Esq., admitted to the Bar, after a credi table, examination in open. Court. Mr. Young expects to, put out his shingle somewhere in the west, probably Kansas. He has our best wishes (pr his success. Improvements.—Mr. David Dinabaugit is about erecting a handsome residence on West High street. IStr, E. H. Minuigh, on Chambersburg street, Is putting third story on his residence, and remodelling the front. It will Leone of the most decided improve ments of the season. Neu , Church.—We understand that the German Reformed Congregation of Lit tiestoWn have determined upon the erec tion of a handsomechurch edifice during the coming summer. Sufficient funds have beep subscribed to warrant the un dertaking. The building will be riS by 55 feet, with basement and steeple. It will no doubt prove an ornament to the town and a credit to the congregation. Pod Route.—A new poet route has been established between York Springs and Wenk's, in Menalieu township, ria Idaville. The establishment of a post office at Wenk's would accommodate - a large number of persons who now have defective mall facilities, and we hope it will be done. Lectures.—Prof. Kldd's elocutionary entertainment, in Agricultural Hall, on Tuesday evening, was one of the treats of the course. A master of the art of speak ing, he gave us almost every conceiva ble style—and all with a naturahtess that took the house by storm. ... Rev. Dr. Talmage will deliver the last iecture on Tuesday evening next. correction.—John Stuart, Jr.. Segues trator of the Carlisle and Hanover turn pike, through the Carlisle Herald, states that the bride over the Sermudian creek, where Mr. Graham recently met with an accident, was a new one and in good condition; that the ice had lodged against the piers only the night before the accident occurred, and that he had been notified of the fact the day subse quent to the accident. Bemused to the State Asylum.—Tbe Judges of the Court of Quarter Sessions, yesterday week, took up the one. of Dr. D. S. Peter, for the killing of Mr. Cole, and after taking sufficient testimony to establish the Dr's. undoubted insanity, directed him to be trunsferred to the State Insane Asylum, ut Harrisburg— and be wan accordingly removed, by Sheriff Hann, on Saturday. The change was not only a matter of necessity, but demanded by every consideration of mercy. The Fty, st—Wednesday, the Ist of April, was a..busy day here. A huge proportion of our population changed quarters—whilst many thousands in "greenbacks'' changed pockets.— Though houses Were scarce, we believe everybody was accommodated; and though there was some complaint of the scarcity of money, settlements were ef fected with the usual promptitude. A loosening in the money market will, we hope, follow. The Next Inea( Crop.—Emm present indications, the next wheat crop will he a good one iu this county. Farmers in different sections agree in stating that It stood the whiter very well; that the large amount of snow which fell and re mained for a long time on the ground protected the young plants, and preven ted theni from freezing out. The wheat crop in Adams county has become a big thing, and its promising appearance now will be accepted as real good news by the community generally. Seventeen Year &Imola—The Centre. ville (Md ) Observer says that this Is the year for the re•appearanee of the seven teen yeas locusts. These insects made their drat chronicled appearance here In Maryland In 17419, awl returned every seventeen year.' after that time. They lad appeared In 1841, of which many of our readers doubtless have a distant re. collection. "Straw Catch.rtg."—The comparing of the Democratic majorities in the large country dtetri,ts of this county, on the very light vote of Friday week, with those had on the heavy vote of last fall, may be taken as a fair sample of, the way in which Radical editors feel com pelled to console their readers in the downward path of their party. Removed.—Mr. Bierbower has remov ed his Seger Store to the Die otond, one of the best locations in the town. By thus cossetting the convenience of the tobacco , using public, he has no doubt greatly bettered his business prospects, good as they have been: He ofihn3 large and choice variety of goods In his line, and is certain to give every one the worth of his gooney. • It Yielded at kaa —fly letter received front-theproprtators of Coe's Cough Bal sam, we are informed that they have at last yielded to the presaing . demand, and in addition to ordinary else now ElO long in the market, have consented to furnish their popular remedy (Coe's Cough Hal slint)4n tneringiidit 41rgNy bottles, which JOU Ixt the largest bottles of raediellie ever laid in this iumntry or El—and which in unegialled as a sure and speedy remedy for Coughs, Colds, Croup, Whooping Cough, and all throat and lung entnplatibi. Both shies can now be (modal aii drug storm Ruskin' lazaltis)tas Opp Radical, as sweal—seeetTytady expected. Execution of Donovan tie York.—Wm. Donovan, convicted of the murder of the Figulblthfatutly, spa executed at York on TuiadNr Wt. The scaffold, procured from e Sherif!' of Lancaster county, 'was erected In the rear part of the Jail yard, several feet lower than the wall. At precisely half-past eleven o'clock, the prisoner, accompanied by Sheriff Engles, Sherlff Hoffman of Dauphin county, and Revs. Murray and Mahar, ascended the scaffold. Prayers were uttered for the %Lula We unfortunate man, after witlah• the clergy bid him farewell. Sheriff En glee then asked Donovan If he had any thing to say, when Ile turned to the au dience and declared his innocence—that ho was in bed w hen the murder Wai emu witted, and knew nothing ebbed it. The Sheriff then adjusted the rope and stepped from the platform, and as he wralked down the stairs pulled a small rope—the trap fell, and with the words, "the Lord have mercy," the soul of Donuvuu was ushered into eternity. His neck was broken by the fall—which was about three fret. The body remain ed motionless, with the exception of a few twitches of the Angers. Motions of the heart could be telt for about fifteen minutes, when the physicians pronounc ed him dead: At twelve the body was lowered and placed in a coffin—and next day interred In the burying ground in South Boaver street.' • lk Soto when he visited the shores of America, tonight lung and arduously for the "Spring of perpetual youth," that those who bathed' therein might never grow old in appearami s People of our day have in part discovered a substitute for this unfound spring in 11111 Ar's Vege table Ambrosia, a few applications of which Overt to white or gray hair that (hub:, strong and glossy appearance pe collar to youthful beauty. If any of our readers doubt this, let them try a bottle and be conviuceed of the truth of our !As sertion. March 13. lm The Great American Bair Priparctlion, valued at home and abroad, a real Hair Restorer or Dressing, (in one Wile.) A great triumph of science. Mies. S. A. ALLEN'S IMPROVED, (new style.) Every Druggist sells it. Price One Dollar. March 2.5. lm - No Wonder so many worthless medi cites are advertised for the cure of vari ous diseases, and when tried, "fumed wanting," that the invalid loses all faith in specifies: We have yet to learn, however, of the Bret failure of Woorir's B«biam of Wild thrrr,y, to cure coughs, colds, and pulmonary disease. =9 Mr. Bonner, of the New York Ledger, is certainly excusable for turning an honest peony by setting Mr. (.rant, the father of the ticueral of that name, at work, to putt' into eminence his son. But Bonner has touch to answer for, in beguiling from a respectable obscurity an innocent old gentleman, and indu clog hint to display his egotism and gar• rulity in the futile attempt to make a great man out of a very ordinary boy. If the hither had sufficient power of dis cernment to see In his sou Ulysses the germs of greatness, why did he not give him a bettersituation than that of a porter In his leather store in Galena, at a salary of forty dollars a month—. small pittance for a man with a family? The elder (Boot boasts of having been able to give each of his children $2i,000, after retain ing enough to support himself and family in at least comfortable circumstances. Why, then. did he not, out of that abun dance, give to the great and brilliant Ulysses the small sum of three hundred dollars, to enable him to purchase all outfit, when he was offered the commis sion of a lieutenant-colonel? Why was it that it was left ton former partner of the elder Grant, D. kreollins, Isy. , to furnish the means for procuring that outfit, after the positive refusal of the father and brother to advance him a dol lar for that purpose? We would re spectfully suggest that the least sild on a subject like this by the relatives of General Grant, with u view to improve Ida chancea fur the Presidency, will be the most easily mewled. A judicious "reticence" is a very good thing in its PfaindertlF% DISTREEISING AOLIMENT—ELSV EN MEN K mamt.—Scran ton , March :11 . —lly the breaking of a chain connected with the hoisting machinery at the Diamond coal mines in this city, this morning, a platform containing seventeen men was precipitated to the bottom of the shaft, 185 feet. Eleven men were Instantly killed, one has since died, and two more, it is thought., cannot live. They leave eleven w blew s and twenty-eight orphans. This is the most disastrous accident that has occurred in the Lackawana Valley coal tickle for many years. DARING RORIIERY OF A RUOnE fa LAND RANK.—The following le one of the moat daring roliberiee we have ever heard or read of: PROVIDIMCN, March 2ii, 1868 Last night four men hired a carriage In this city, drove to North Scituate, it'll miles distant, went to the home of Al bert Hubbard, cashier of the Scituate National Bank, entered the bed chamber, and after binding and g,ngging the eagh ler and his wife took the keys of the bank and went away. It appears, how ever, that they were unable to open the bank vault, so they returned to the house and carried on' the cashier with them buck to the bank and compelled him to open the vault, which they robbed of about MAO in bills and bonds, besides valuable papers desposited with the bank. The robbers then returned to Providence and soon disappeared, taking the train for Boston about half-past four o'clock A. M. NEVI TEXAR, ' Allegheny county, be oamu Democratic, Lima week, for the that time, by majorities. ranging from terr to fifty. LATROBg, Westmoreland (sway, went. Democratic on the =oth ult., for the firatains in-many years. GLORIOUS.—The Democratic VietoriOs n different parts of Pennsylvania. The qmpeaelsers" are being impeschel by he people. THE Harrisburg Pa trot (sod Union sop'', good old JaeobZlegier, now In his ninety seventh year, walked, to •the b'ecuull ward polls, en Friday' and T.0(44 the • straight Democratic tiolot Notwith standitt the inelemeney of the weather, 3Sr. Ziegler refused a carriage, but pre ferred walking and appeared remarkably active for a man of his year•. STANTON holds MS commission Jak Sec retary of War from Me, Lineal'', hence, according to the tenure of cake ant, he was liable to removal - any time after one mouth from the accession of Mr. John son to the Presidency. FOB 00Olft pot tUe convirators at Washington have been in great treiu dation on aceotinti• tie lag4e influx of stranger!. It tatrtitt out that they are 0 1 14 the adVithee gyud of hungry aline tteetera after'etfßee under Ben Wade. Ir to said that A. T. Stewart haa dropped Grant gut a candidate for the PresiderioY, became he has not the re= unions integrity or the geutiefeelkiy bearing neoenaary la a President. einy, a prominent and influen tial Ohio Radical, has leg, the conspira tors and joined tiae'llemoesseir. ' iPieiAC NOTICES TLS• Urea% Prise! ti. it i /MIMI IT b il, xn..varaa.e, r,b, nut, Liolt. TUR /iOWRSEwz 4/4 31Aciti sr:Cour...ow Eta tm llosru, J it A.. a; Jed ovcr CompWitbre, TTIII HIGHEST PRS:MIMI The Only Crn of 'ho Lesion of /Lome IMMiI G .11* DAt.l4 ills ea to SNWINLI XrAeumutt, per Imperial Deere% publl.heti lit the "Nliu3itetit Unlverzn 3 l." zrzttletBl Journal of the French Ezn rej Tne.lng, Juty—lstri, Iti thrse wont!, Fabrinutte de Nfuebineli a tviudro exponutt ELI.Vi ILOWE,JIL 1 Manuthetnror of gelling hin,hl."-Extabltor. Till* double first booor In sooner picot of Ow great Kupi.rfority ot the t[ow fitr•NifUr Mu dlint. OW, Mt 01 h.ra MIULNY d 141430 Pg, No. TA south Elstith ri~ILADELPNIA, PA., %gent. for Penn.) tvnliln, New Irmo, Dela- Nlitr. 4,184 k :trit ova are It u,I West Virginia (.1 ,, 1041,1JAC01,1.4 111tO., tiellysbOrg, Agt•nts fin lawn.. ~..)/0). Perron% Who arc Grey OM hill• their flair teslon.,l to 16, !mint,' I tor, and if It Inks fallen nut, male n new rrovit,lL by using HALL'S VEGETAIILIf, SICILIAN lIA IR ii .NEW it it rive act hair tin...sing in the world, rank. hot ['filen+, braqhy hair, healthy, colt, Mitt &may. Price •l.pt. For mile by all drugglata. it. P. llALLhutt, N. it., Pn.prieturs. Apra :1. ing Among the litany re.toruttvca ultl, It nal Inv ha , stutl 11. d In n hovoille utlllellons of 1111111Nlii, thew Is no more fa\ orlte one fora vertuln clam of 111.11.,11 than the "tot.all Intl gain" of the Wild CI. try Tree; l of however t ,Inal.le It IN, 114 rto heat, to to to z ,e tool to cure, is en11an,42.4 len toll hp nai. nt hlc :11,1 Ji. It clout eutubitint lon a lilt other ludtedt. lilt, lit uu•mPciv.•. lit enunl harry hag ratty It t, ut.o kid& dLglvt , la Ur. Wi•lrteis !Miriam of 1111111 C4err3. 5.,10, In cluing cougint, I'ol,k, In on. hills NN ..41t, 5 nmp, .1•1[1111 I, 1 . 1111001. ,r 3 Allot 110tt,1111.1 !Wirt at eitII , IIIIIIIIICIII t. lat ill Tl: , ll\t \ Mit 11/ \J MIN Wili I:1.1.1c, 1,1, 41,,,t, 11= " in the n 1.1104 111 lros 1 rt a , . 1111/,I •t, rrelx Int in Ith a hard, I try etillgll, 1t. , 1111A11.11 11a1- 1)111111111 1 111t. 1111,111 xtreatir, eetoplet, pi.L.tilit ing in% 111,10111 N apitl l lll, and pradlal lug wtll - dohilltaled Mint' Ilettltit that, after to ; 1111 diva! 0111 to no porpme, I hurl gut en up aft 111/111,11 1 e 1 1.1 1 . 01 ul 'ring, m 111.11 1111.1" 111) . 11 It Oth.. kt Mtn,. 111 111.11IVra I Win Prerallell 1111101 (111.111a1( loq Matt e of a avighbo. to In 1. tar •1 11111,4111 Oi 11 till 1 %VI r), 11-111 i. 111.1Ort• 1111118 tll or b”lte, the entel 11111 aLigt/ ,a. its uonigli en! irn./) hilt. Die, ll...night NWt,Lts t. % 1(11311 onAi Harm toy Itt rat ...wit ettal auto 1.1011 11.1,1 all/1111143 111) UOlllea 1110114111.11 d iltUr. Thus hall lII\ Waal. 1ta.11..114.11 WY II rLalarkokt 1/) 11. 1,011, t oil, ...11l With the abuse facts, 11l ,rally utatthed tall trout LIM t uts 1110 g grate. You are at ifhvrty 1. ulr thin lan the Lear nt of Ulu afflicted." Prt.por../l by blil II W. mull LE.. ei(iN, le Tut mont wt., 1104T4,11, and for rctle by Dettliglo/4 grn erally. it,e 11..4 known Nuway or NCItOFULA In all Its m forum, Including Ulerre,O.ot eort, 13pptllu, Solt Rheum, ate, Ste.. 4 lett. AN- L/Kith' fillffliE WATER, n pure solution of Ire Wale Without a reheat, fllef.vver.l Lifter wetly years of sal,•utllle redo:welt anti experiment. For entrileating humor"; from the patron It has no equal. r:lrrulnn% t Kohl by Ilrugglete generally April 3, Lin J. P. DI Sti1101t1:, Jti Loy .t„ N. 1 Warrauted llseaptit mad Beta! To Fnruh•rx, ExprewiConipunlex, Sloge Proorh tom, Livery EntabllxholentA, and nil who use Ilorheq. nit TOIJILVI . V-ENITOLN IN PINT UOTTLEA, AT ((N4 ZAMA Alt, for the cur• of Lamenem, Seratelivs, Wind sprains, Britiso,, splints, (sails, tuts, (:Wb•, tit ttl 4., 0% erh. at l ng, Sore T ro.,t, N,Ol In the Foot, Se, All who own Or ell, trio atinur,l EMIL thin Liniment will do all nod more than Iti m ated In curing the nboce•nwloed nomplallitl• Duthie, twenty yearn It has never luil,Yl 111 olle itottaftw. thin Inn single laintnnee. t.. 01,1 it, the I teoggi t ,t, Depot, :InCortlnnit et reel, New 'VOL April :S. 1111 Ntop the Itonleefrt Lo you ink what robber? t44y *lather Vat... of room., who In nfeallog the even from millions of heml, of hate. 'AI.! E=ll What dm.? ale raVagre emu IN LP Is 'THAN TFIN M lNtrFk4, It le omen done, No imulde ; no danger of I njnr lug Li:le/Ulna, Not ato tahl. CilltlSTADOlttrrt HAM DYE ...tern n Plivrib Mark or any Movie of brox with all but tuirueUtous rApitilty. .111.11ufueturett by J.CRISTAIJORO, &I Malden Lane, tit w York_ sold by all Drumgl.44U. Applhxl by all Ifni). Drelocrs. April:l. l.a ' • A CArdt to the Lndlas. DuroNcoli CiOLDEN pEnzorli.tr, PILI-S I , KNACKS. laidßMW hu uxrett ing Irregular' ltels, MOWN/ Um Olollnletiont of tllO Monthly Turas, Iraq% whatever Caws.% alai al way ei tiltootultil us u Pmventive. it ta now over thirty years since the ahoy retie. braced folly oerentvt Mat:m.4.ml by Dr. DU MIN CO, of Paris, doll.; which time Dug 4atu 1,00 eX,tOM/411,1y .nil rite. cabs:lllly 1.1w.1 111 W.I. 01 tic. pulalic /I.llEllll°li., s, n M el-I as I pHs ate l a,ir , ul botli in et Cry ue“.7, aid IL is only at the - urgent 1..- quelsr 01 the thoonancla ul 14.11.11 ?MO have o I them, that he In Ithlut.,,l to tnAlte the PIM pobl,e (or the aliot bt lillll 01 LIM (ruin a.) he egtilariti, , r. 119 well.lS to prey. tit :In in ervatio of 1.01)11v w hate }M.4 . 111 till ».01. pernut 11 U:. r. PILL h LANE. .. • . I.'entales la eullarly 1•11.11.11t.11.1// 1.11.0811p11.11114, • theIIMAV,.. M.. ale e11U1.1011a.,1 UItMIMI using these Pals while in that .v11.11E10:1 lest they "Intrin Itilsean lag"," 'I munition, th, It,. . nth tor imalf:ll..s nut. Tiwn.lolll{S altin ugh Oh+ - mildness will 1... Nt hi uoy ni.f t o 0111, role. th , ate n, tun nt, nt lid a,n Ml).: INVA I GUILE REM I IIY for all tho‘o alfllt tits complaints so Death, to the %ex. USE. Mil{ 10,000 posts has.: been SOH wlthin TIVO Year,. Ton Thnintand Box., Neat Ly M 01, both by thy sell ,sll Of the word, La IV answer% have been rrtnrnetl,ln tlhlth la.law'4.ly nothing like the above Palls have been known, xlnee tile Selenee Ito.11elw• dawn,' upon 111, world, In ltenaculng fit,trootlong awl Itestornae. Nature to Its 11 oper Limn a4l, qui et it t in:Nerve. and bringln , .. bad: the ”Itusy color of 11..a11.L It. the cheek uttlau moat delltull.. . Prlce St per Doi. Six Ilaxev 15. Sold by JOIIN S. VOILNEY, 11344g15t, Agent for Gettysburg, Ladles, by mend lu g hi at $1 through tho Pout Or flee, ran have the FIRS B , IM, L J ". tu .thy port of the ooaut ry, 'lrene( posti u g e .•. Sold also by J. Sllongler,Chatullerghorg; 0. W. teit York; Coketuau dr. Itognra and Brown Broth , Whojectle Agvuth, italtlwore, and S. D., Howe, Peeprietor, Now York. Atarett 1, 11417. ly E=! A gentleman who suffered friV.Vw.l4 from Ne - Vona llehlltly, Premature lk-eny, and all Lb., ellfet GI of youthful led simitthu, will. for the of suffering humanity, send free to all iv hu nee,t It, the recipe and direetlems for melons the Mtn ple rvine.ty Iv rkkn Le w.. ur.l. wtshlug In !wont by the ad. el thwr's •Aperte4ce, Coo clO4O by addreseilug, In in rlbct <3l4lb:elle°. JOLLY 1./10, May 27, INg. ly , 4; ewer st., Nes. York. I==2 Information guiminWeit to prOdw a Invariant • • wth of hale upou a baillibigi or , artlletsi Owe, Amon recipe fur We remoy Of Pimples, itlotches, Eruptions, etc, on the n, leaving the same soft, clear, and beautiful, can be obtained N Ith out charge by addremlug THOS. I ^ , EII.A.PMAN, Chemist, _ _ _ Broadiraydirew fort, &lg. W. M. &ea New Iffaritwee Guide AN F:l9 tr . FOR YOUNG MEN on rhyaNto. Veal Errors, Abuses and IllhaAt i locleent to Tooth dna Eddy Manhood& I create tat , padttnente to taIARRIWIth sato means of reUcf. Bent to scaled envelppew trey et charge: - Andros, Pr, .1, 1 /JR rfouwitim, Ylowant Assaciattan. Mtn elpnta. P l 4. Der. IS, WM. 14. to cowilwifttve/. The hey. Edward_ A. Wilson WIII send (free of charge) to ell who desire It the worries with the diseetloos for 'asking and using simple =ti t SatterW a s id a= °sly oedeot Is to ben ed:Abe afflicted and hetors: everyfisnist se will ley WM preseriptios, su4iegl toot Mem DOWN& and AMY, prom, a 1..• NW* eliakeeS • WY. ZIMA.IKA A. IrrLIV . .. 115 South Second heft.iser., Bm o. wuusm•burth, triiriFfork,