- i''''SiOt-t. L --.t-- - Iralday 4 July 24, 1868 Advertisers and others Interested trill bear In naln k lhat the rOgnlar emelt ht ion or the , "STAB AND !SENTINEL. is nineh lamer than that..of misty other paper pnbllsked in the C4Dsitty4 being read weekly by ,not less than 11.000 persons. • - - aor Ad • ertem en .to teenre immediate attention must be band ed In on or before Thursday morning. QUIt CANDIDATES. FOR PRE.§IDgNT: GEN. ULYSSES S, GRANT FOR VICE-PRESIDENT : lION. SCHUYLER COLFAX OF INDIANA STATE TICKET. FOR AUDITOR GENERA'. OEN. JOHN F. HARTRANFT FOR SURVEYOR GENERAL GEN. JACOB M. CAMPBELL GRANT & VICTORY! THE STAR AND SENTINEL.-TEENS $2.00 PER ANNUM, IN-ADVANCE VI-Any of mix present subscribers will receive credit of 60 cents on their accounts for each new name they may send in with the amount of subscription (12.00) in advance—in other words, a- PRIXIVit of 50 cents for each new subscriber thus sent to us. FOR CAMPAIGN UNTIL NOVEMBER 15 SINGLe Cory, FIVE COPIES,. Cerbe campaign hams will not more than pay the cost of paper awl ink ; but we desire to put the paper within the reach of every person desiring it during the present important campaign. MEETING OF COUNTY' COMMITTEE. The Republican County Committee will meet at the Eagle Hotel, in Gettys burg, on Saturday the 25th of July, at 1 o'clock, P. M. A full attendance is reiluested. EDWARD IicP.FIERSON, Chairman The following persons constitute the Committee: Gettysburg—Edward MrPherson, D. McConaughy, Dr. E. G. Faitnestock, F. B. Picking, Dr. Charles Horner, A. J. Cover, D. A. Buehler. Illerwtck Dorongh—Henry Kohler, Edward Stahl. Berwick Tp.--Joisepb Kepner, Isaac Wolf, Sr. Butler—lsrael Shank, Wm. 11. Dontrick. Conowago—John Waltman, Adam Diller. Cumberland—P.l).W. Kauko'', Joseph Walker. Franklin—Capt. James Mickley, Capt. W. 11. Adams. Freedom—Samuel Moritz, James afghan. Germany—Daniel IT. Rudolph, Jacob Feely. Hamilton—E. 5 ..Afelsenhelamp,, George W. Spangler. Huntington—Henry C. Peters, Gen. W. W. Stewart. II ighlaud—J..3. Kerr, Washington Lott. liaintltanban--Capt. E. McGinley, E. W. fferbaugh. Liherty—Peter &reedy, W. C. Foabrooks. Lit tlestown—Erthralm Myers, Dr. B. S. Stilts. Latimoro--Isaar D. Worley, Charles W. 0 reset. Menttilon—Samuel Meals, Wm. S. Cart. Muntkly—Nesston Darboraw, Newton Horner. klonntpleasant--Capt. C. G. Miller, J. A. C. Rindisub. Oxford—Alex. S. Glutei, Jeremiah Diehl. itredloz—lolt Brunel, Samuel Overholtzer. It cabala—M.4. ilabt.. Bell, Wm. WiWo. Ty roue—J. F. lleuck, Chutes Yeatts. • Union—John H. Feity, Jacob Baseboar. TO SUIRSCRIBERS IN . ARREARS We have, on the whole, a clever prompt paying list of subscribers,"who make it a point to gladden the Printer by punctual advance payments of their subscriptions. On examining our list, however, we find quite a number, who are in arrears. Our terms are $2 cASH IN ADVANCE. The last few years have einieted an entire revolution in the newspaper publishing business-the cred itsystem being abolished by paper, type and ink manufacturers. Publishers be ing required tray cash for everything, eau no longer afford to.carry on their ists ny bid prompt paying subscribers —least of all dead-heads. We desire to Dave a clear, clean list of proMpt paying . patigus, and to this end it is our pur pose shortly to revise our list, dropping ull who do not manifest a purpose to pay up. Ve have a few on our list who were indtt‘kked to the former Proprietors. We I).Ave now furnished the "'STAR & SErvritzEt." for more than a year, and hereby give notice to all of this class, who do Jitit remit to the present pro prietors tha,amount of subscription for the past year, by the Ist of September next, that their names will be dropped without further.:totiee. PAX VP The enlargement of our paper and the purchase of a new Press, Type, 40., has cost us over $l,OOO. We have be shies several heavy paper bills now due, and we are compelled to calt, upon our friends to furnish us with thc means wherewith to meet them. We '-have large amount due us for subscription, Job - wOrk, Advertising, &a., whichwe would like to realize at once, without the necessity of making out bills. The vash system, has become a necessity in the newspaper - business. We have to pay cash for everything copnected with the ofilec--Paper, Type, Ink, Labor, &c., and that we may de so promptly, without involving the office, isAtbso lutely neetwntry that our patrons pay us with equal proiiiptuess. dis. like to dun tan our present waits de• initial it. Will those iudehtwLvto uS ••• please take the hint? ON Monday President Joingsmkt sent batch of important nominations to the Senate—among them, HenrY,M. IValts, of Philadelphia, atuMinister.. to Austria, in place of Collector- Sanytiee re jeottal ; Hon. 410 L. Dawson, of Pennsylvania, bliatister to Russia; ;eneml flosecrans to Spain; General :.Nlcelernand to Mexico; Edmund Coop yr, of Tennessee, Commissioner Of. In ternal Revenue; and ex-Lieutenant (;overtior C. C. Cox, of Maryland, to he Commissioner of Pensions. fiome of tlise ncmtinatlons will not reeeite the approval of are Senate. 'r it: action of tile New York conven t ion mhows that the o-ezil Icd I)enioeracy fire t ia they a 1 tys have been, iindeir the ikoninion Of the Southern loaders anti - Southern influence. Not /rile word. linve they in their platform favor the Union inen of the South, 4vi>ne - wiis4cif ixensure denouncing the wiskid lotgrcitibe rebellion. 11 ".4 1 ' . - "Ek 9 Lin - In FebruM7 of 1867, a. bill paised Congress, wlAich required thiSee t retary of War to refund the $3OO comipUta tion which has been paid by =mit- ! ed person who at the time of the draft ' was entitled to discharge frOm Wit ligation to remier personal service der that draft; but the operation* the law was limited to those elaims. .ivilieh had been filed prior to tbellamage that act. This proviso the Hbuse - has voted to Tepeal, and haS limited the thine of presentation'to two years from . the date of _ tbe Anilasage_of tide act : Gen. 4.Ooirrzi Who. was active in; se curing t,helorigitusieulotonent, is esa tied to; the credit of this additionSl legislation which will open the Way for the settlement of Some just clahns held by deserving citizens against the Gov ernment. Gen. K. was indelatigable 'in his efihrts, and deserves lignorable mention for it. Tim "Democrats" are coquetting - for the colored vote in the South, have got a part of it, and will get more. At the . Democratic ratification meeting. In New Orleans, on the 18th inst., their resolutions asserted the kindneas , of their feelings towards the colored pop ulation, and cited the late eleMon-in Mississippi as proof of what can be done in this direction by the Demaera • cy. Gen. J. B. Freeman of Mississip: pi, in a speech before the Metropolitan Democratic Club of New York, ou the nightof the 17th inst., disclosed the means used to carry Mississippi. and stated that "Notwithstanding the ef forts of the Itepuldi!aus the negroes of the South would in future vote with the Dinnocratic Party, as being that of their einployco ,who fed and paid them." This discloses the whole programine. The negroes are to be converted to De mocracy by a system of terrorism and starvation ! This effort is not a surprise to sagac ious men. On the other hand, it was forseen from the beginning, by some.— THADDEUS STEVENS sought to guard against it by requiring, in reconstruct ing, that a certain portion of the land of rich Rebel landholders should be confiscated and divided among loyal negroes, in small tracts, as homesteads for families. The country was not pre pared for this, and it failed ; and the consequence is the blacks, who labor, are largely in the power of the rich lauded proprietors who employ labor. How promptly the latter will tighten the viee till the blood oozes from the finger-ends of the helpless, no one who knows the South need be told. Nevertheless, this system will not be completely successful. It will accom plish some results. Republican Recon struction has completely destroyed the former unity of the South, and will ul timately overthrow their ancient favor ite ideas and polities, But the over throw would have been ramie surer and would be nearer, if Mr, STEVENS' ad vice had been - taken. q 0.50 . 2.00 ASSASSINATION prevails l over the South. Last week, Capt. Benjamin H. Orr of Harrison county, Mississippi, was assassinated for his political opin ions. He was a Republican member of thihrecen t State Convention to from e a Constitution. A flood of light was thrown upon the condition of the _Southern heart, the other day in the examination of a Mrs. Moore, a witness for the defence in the trial of the assassin& of Ash burn of Georgia. We extract the par agraph from a late Georgia paper : By Goy. Brown.—Do the female mem bers of your family desire the death of all the radicals? Ans.—lye do. [This ques tion was objected to by Mayor Mosses, but the witness preferred to answer it) This answer uncovers a very hell of" wickedness, and warns the people that the duty of murdeiqiiii Republicans pdssesses the heart of Rebel women, iy instilled by them into children, and is impressed upon the men. No govern ment of such people, in ignorance of this horriblerevelstion, can be at all adequate to the suppression of crime. ROBERT T003113S of Georgia, was re cently pardoned by ANDREW JOHN SON ; and at once he entered Into poll, tics—making a speech at Atlanta, the the new Capital of that State. His speech is a compound of Treason and Democracy, but was adapted to influ ence his audience, every one of whom had knotrn what it was, Within Eight years, to Le a Traitor and a Democrat. He also wantspeaec, but it's BLAnt's kind of peace—peace at the end of a new revolution. He gives this reason for electing the Democratic candidates: will tell you another fact, which is enough for this time—that as the late war was produced by the defeated democratic party of 1860, we shall never have peace till it is restored in I ii6S," We don't see the logic of this reason ing, but we confess the truth of the fact that the "late war was produced by the defeated democratic party of 1560." The people are not yet ready to trust that party to deal with the coun try's enemies. MARTIN F. CONWAY, formerly M. C. from Kansas, lately a JOHNSON man, has came out for GRANT, and in a recent letter makes this capital point: "In the recent Convention at New York .the conservative element seems to have been entirely submerged in a whirlpool of Democratic radicalism. On the other hand the Convention of the Republican Party at Chicago was controlled by the conservative element of that party, and Gen. GE.tsv was nominated because of his conservative prin ciples and character. Gen. GRANT is, there fore, the representative of the conservative element of the Republican Party, while Mr. SEYMOVE is that of the radical element of the Democratic." This thought will control a multi tude of votes. The Country wants quiet, that it may recuperate. The DemOcmtic programme is one of revo lotion and usurpation, as foreshadowed by, 131 Jan who was nominates] because of Nis atrocious and dangerous views. GRANT'S election will give the Nation peace. WE are glad to notice that the Dis strict Attorn.77 difficulty in Philadel phia, over %%With the Copperheads gloated, has beZra adjusted - by the with drawal of both ths' Republican candi dates—Messrs. MA and 11AzEL HURST. The Repul>lican Convention will be called togethesto make a new . noMination. The Repablieans of Phil adelphia will now go intOthe -campaign thoroughly united arid help to roll up 20,000 majority in the State f. , )r. GRANT and CoLFAX. _ MAJOR R. H. G. Lass, of Liteti burg, Va., "Conservative" candidate for Congress, has declined to ran, laid in declining expresses the opinion that, the white people of his district oiught to try to elect a negro. TherConserv atives" and negroes are "getting very thick" in certain parts of the South. HON. THADDEUS STEVENS &VS that tlie Vow York Convention bad the pow& to distract and disorganise the Republican partly bo by its nomina tions has consolidated It and increamd its numerical stsatiStitt tone bent- MEM We have rept.atedly alluded to FRANI.: 41 BLATIeS revolutionary leto which so much commended ,lidm lit \ ti the iiebel element in the C0n'4e41*11,,.. at they forced 1 105 , rtgfaino*.llo: . ,.,V), y rreiidetiey: :fthe. , built. .2" 4the lAirlini:beuvaraticr , per ilii N\ ' ra.. Pennsyf vstrkio o liorpitie, ci iTez OW War, 4 tad Itisiblete;tts - lh, fit revoltitionnry action in ease of Deno crane ascendency. JouNsos stands ready to help in the work of blood and outrage. The people may as well un-' derstand now the danger which threat ens, so that. they may prepare. to twat if. The language of the Post is em- - phatie, as follows : "General document on this sub ject is the doctrine the Democratic par ty. He has expre it forcibly ; but oth ers have advoeated the same thing, and it . is in accordance with true wisdom and sound policy." THE work 'pi Reconstruction is go ing on . glorinuSly. Florida, North and South Carolina, , Alabaina, -Louisiana and Arkansas,. havhig ratified the amendment to the Constitution, known as the 14th article, and elected Setators and Representatives to Congress, have now resumed their places in tbe Union with Republican administra tions, and military rule in all these States has been discontinued. Georgia having considerable rebel element in its newly elected Legislature, hesitates as to the line of duty. Mississippi, the hoMe of Jeff. Davis, has voted not to re-construct as yet, while Virginia and Texas are yet to hold elections. Still better, Secretary SEwaito, on Monday, issued a proclatnation announcing that the Ant:. , ndninnt to the Constitution (Article 14) has beep ratified by the re quisite three•fourths of all the States, and "so become valid to all intents atul purposes as a part of the Constitutioh of the United States." For this important "-Amendment, which largely secures the fruits of the war for the Union, the country is In debted exclusively to the Republican party—the Democracy having bitterly contested its adoption at every step.— As many of our readers have doubtless forgotten the full import of this new Article, we give the text in full : Section 1. All persons born or naturaliz ed in the United States and subject to the laws thereof are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or im munities of citizens of the United States ; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty or property without due process of law, nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. Section 2. Representatives shall be ap portioned among the several States accord ing the respective number of persons in each State, excluding Indians not taxed ; but when the right to Tote at any election for the choice of electors for President and Vice President of the United States, Rep resentatives in Congress, the executive and judicial officers of a State, or the members I of the Legislature thereof, is denied to any of the wale inhabitants of such State, be ing twenty-one years of age and citizens of the United States, or iu any way abridged, except for participation in rebellion or oth er crime, the basis of representation therein' shall be reduced in the proportion which the number of such male citizens shall bear to the whole number of male citizens twen ty-one yearsiof age in zuelt State. Section 3. No person,shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States or under any State, having previous ly taken an oath as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any State Legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any State, to support the Constitution of the United States, who shall have engaged in insurrec tion or rebellion against the Caine, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof But Congress may, by a. vote of two-thittls of , each house, remove such disability, Section 1.! The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law, including debts incurred for the payment of born:River rs, - 4 tz.• ....op pressing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be questioned ; bet neither the United States nor any State shall assume cr pay s any debt or obligation incurred in aid of insurrection or rebellion against the United States, or any claim for the loss or emanci pation of any slave, but all such debts, ob ligations and claims shall be held illegal and void. Section 5. Congress shall have power to enforce by appropriate legislation the pro visions of this article. "VETERAN OBSERVER," of the N. Y. Timcs, predicts : "Seven of the Southern States have been re-admitted, and five of these seven will vote for GRANT, if at all. Connecticut and California, which the Democrats boasted of, will go for GRANT. From the Delaware River to the Pacific Ocean there is no State likely to vote for SEA:moult except Kentuc ky. 131. sin has no popularity in Missouri. Ile has tried his best against the Radicals there, and signally failed. WI% a Western candidate and a good platform Indiana might be deemed doubtful ; hut, as It Is, In diana will give a larger majority for GRANT and COLFAX than it did for GOV. Mont Ox. Ohio will poll her old-fashioned Republi can majority, and the residue of the West ern States will be swept for GRANT with a tornado. As the probabilities now stand, GRANT will carry twenty-seven States, Say stoun seven, arm three will not vote." —the three last referred to being the three unreconstructed Southern States. As to the Congressional election, he thinks fTrum Pennsylvania to Colorado there are nine States, electing scventy-four mem bers, of which the Democrats are not likely to elect more than thirteen, but may pos sibly elect eighteen. In Indiana it is not probable they will elect more than one, but there are two other districts in which there is a possibility of electing Democrats. In Ohio the Republicans may lose two dis tricts, but probably not. In New York the Republicans cannot lose, for they were reduced to their minimum before." "Veteran Observer" is an acute polit ical observer, and his predictions will be fulfilled, if the Republicans make proper exertions. THE N. Y., Times calls attenti on to the fact that, since the nominat ion of BEYSEOUR and BLAIR, the old-time Se cessionists are corning forth not only to resume their former places as leaders of affairs, but we see them coming for ward to glorify the rebel cause, to vin dicate its claims, to reassert its preten sions, to advocate its success and to proclaim their hopes of its triumph. The Rebel cause is the "Democratic" cause. The Rebel ticket is the ticket of the "Democratic" Party. The elec tion will determine whether the ma jority of the people are determined to keep the government In their own hands, or to hand it over, practically, to the enemy. Ex-Gov. WISE of Virginia, at a Democratic meeting in Richmond, Va.; on the 11th inst., said lie cared nothing for the Democratic platform, and dis sented .from its first plank. Slavery was dead, but secession was not dead. He would not admit that he had not the right to secede from any tyranv.— He accepte'd the ticket because FRAN cm P. Elam, who had said what he did about setting up military over civil authority, had been put on it. I WALLACE, in his A:rlcireas to the DeMocratic voters of Pennsylvania highly eulogizes Szrz[opu, but ignores tlitexiatence of Blair and his tfealion ablp lettr. 'This indicates the Demo =tic Programme. rattle North, the campaign into be made cin. SEYMOUR and his War , l.ectird• in,the Smithi it Alio be made ciR BLAin =and his tree: iota]) le 444 rofvutiosiary 'to ConiTegs — ('' • ' !eft 'P t leant t:' ly passed, exeludi the electoral I college the vein Aately in re- I hellion wit iikk isfilitit uoklitofe been reor ganized. The', o. ''..:jarene of the 4sLoapiellant r'' .4. • . "°- as written p'entire:cktngriOdisikat-work of re .constrnirtion belng, : pronouuced uncon ; itittait*Ag.--qtad ot no validity., Con -1 grentinlide short work of4it, Afte r Its reading In both 'Houses the bill was again passed by the requisite two-thirds vote, and is now a law. The vote in the Senate on passing the bill over 4he `,veto,, stood—yeas 48, nays 8; in the if oUtie,secta /34, /wit 31 ~ \president JOHNSON', in this last veto, talkes up the revolutionary programme of R,LAIR and the New York Conven tion,\ nd gives us distinctly to under standhat he will not regard the, ,re cently organized governments in the Rebel States, and invites the Rebel leaders td \ ignore them' and arrange to , hold eleetT for President and Vice- Presidentutul'er the old regimen ,where by every red\handed Rebel and Trai tors may vote, and every loyal Unionist, white and black, be die franchised. How'else are we to under stand this paragraph: "The States whose inhabitants were re cently in rebellion being legally and con stitutionally organized and restored to their rights prior to March 4', 1667, as I am satis fied they were, the onlidegitimate authori ty -under the election for President and Vice- President held therein, tlat4t lie derived front the governments instituted hefore that peri od, and it clearly follows that all State gov ernments organized in those \ States under acts of Congress for that purpose, and under military control, ARE ILLEGITIVCIE AND OF NO VALIDITY WHATEVER i and la that view the votes cast in those States for President and Vice President, iu pursuance of acts passed since March 4, 1867, and ita obe dience to the so culled Reconstruction acts of Congress, CANNOT BE LEGALLY RECEIVED AND COUNTED, while the only I.IOICB in these States that can be legally east , n d counted, will be those cast in pursuctnce of the laws in force in the several States prior to the legislation by Congress up on the subject of reconstruction." Is not this a direct invitation by the\ President to the Rebels of the South, to inaugurate a new Rebellion and Civil War? FRANK BLAIR is determined not to be misunderstood. In formally accept ing the nomination of the New. York Convention he writes a long letter de liberately re-affirming the revolution ary sentiments of the Brodhead letter which scoured his nomination. He calls the Senate and House of Bepre sentatives "the fragment of a Con ! gress," "the usurping Congress," "the vindictive Congress, l l and charges upon it all sorts of violations of law, and particularly denounces the Reconstruc tion acts. Grant he styles the "mill ; tary leader," iyho has announced his willingness to shield "the usurping Congress" from the result of their wickedness, and who In accepting the Republican nomination Is to maintain their "usurpations" over the white people of the South. Alluding to the I expression of "Let us have peace" In I Grant's latter of acceptance, lie says that "the peace to which 4e invites the country is the peace of despotism." In case of the success of the Democratic party In the election of Seymour and himself, the work of Reconstruction will be wiped out by the strong arm of power, even to the eittent of dispersing, if needs be, a despotic and factious Congress; Bram Is determined that lie shall be understood us meaning just what he says—REVOLUTION AND WAlt ! WADE 11A4nro4 made a speech at ;.. , . Baltimore 'on Thqrsday night of last week, in which he glorified White's (guerillas) who were Marylanders who left their State to fight against its picture of radical tyranny in the South and said : mlty bps matter of surprise that men who fought as men miter fought before should so quietly submit to such great wrongs. They have submitted because they believe to create trouble or raise riot would injure the Demo cratic Party. [Applause.]" So that the peace which exists in the South—a mockery as it is—is not, at this moment, bloody riot and open war to overturn existing Governments, only because to do so at present would hurt the Democracy. After the elec tion, we are notified the ball is to open. THE fire-eater WfsE proclaims pub licly that secession is not dead, but is waiting for the opportunity of its re assertion through the revolutionary party which has just taken t4e field.— The fire-eater Thomus proclaims the doctrine of nullification in the old fash ion, uttering the same denunciations as of old with all the former bitterness, pouring his maledictions on the brave men who have saved the Union, and threatening to "resist to the death" the laws which establish political equality and freedomi of suffrage throughout the South. And the Implacable Secession ist VANCE proclaims that "what the Confederacy fought for would be won through the election of SEvgoun." WA LLACE gravely informs the coun try That the "National credit is below par." Its securities bring a premium varying from eight to ten per cent. He whines over the debt. It was created, to put down a rehelliqn of the cleftatca Democratic party in 1860. lie is opposed to military rule. His party is organized on the basis of rev olution. The men who didn't fight when they had a chance, are now fierce for bloody• work, if the elections go against them. Let the people consider. If they want peace and quiet, elect Grant. If disorder and excitement, elect Seymour and Blair. "United States District Attorney Henry S. Fitch(formerly a Chicago lawyer), of Georgia, Pemocratic delegate to New York, is the otmaidate of his party for United States Senator. It is said that $2!,000 has been raised in New York to enable him to secure his election." Fitch Is thus a "carpet-begget!," but being a "Democratic carpet-tiagger," is thought fit to be a U. S. Senator. A native Southerner, if a Republican, is called by the Democrats a "sealawog," and is considered un fit to hold any of fice, or in the opinion of Rebel women unfit to live. But a Southern Rebel like Toomhs, is the "pink of perfec tion !" This "Democratic" party sees with crooked eyes, as well as speaks with forketi tongue, CONGBEISS expected 'to adjourn this week—to-day or to-morrow. But the recent Revolutionary policy ao daringly avowed by FRANK BLerß and his Rebel backers, and the dettnnt tone of Johnson in hi s last veto, has alarmed the Republicans, and there IS now a possibility of a recess instead of ad journment. . Tim Columbus (Ga.) Sun says boldly : "That Gen. Frank Blair should have keeit so quick_lT and eiordial)y bidorsed rogol* ly oar bu bold and manly letter, /RUIN forth his views of the situation, may De Jul con sidered the most concluslye and evidence that the National Democrat megui work seriatim work." AU who-WAntWOrp know tkorood, ; - -ilincen , BriarLiantrissuiresittni kg*.atentiii ihdaate Major ()entail William Preston cif Tat third party'nintatteat twins to have fizzled out. Kentucky, who less than two years ago ' claimed the offices of that State for Corkin& . A.yontottairr county proposes to give Grant erate soldiers, because it was.they who had an444faa - 10,000 majority. "revived the es-animate Democracy," and t he 4 . 408E14 the , swotted by Wade Frampton , who was one 4 Ai a aiof 1868 of last Confederategenerals surrendering 1/ 1 10011,1 11 , 0 4!*to Sets moi to the authority of the Union, and by .the Dtittittitnid Say- bloody' butcher and outlaw, Forrest, of. mtt«Gritirs Waif band _ d o I Tennant*. It was a fitting support to give a recreant Union soldier, who had empha sized his apostacy by proposing a second war. The lying pretence that his nomina tion was magnanimously conceded by the Southern delegates, in deference to the rights of Federal soldiers as victors, will deceive nobody. He was nominated by Kentucky and supported - by the South, be cause he had s'lown that notwithstanding all his pretended love of the Union, he stilt nursed his native born hatred to it, and that his Southern birth and .education had at last borne appropriate fruit. Down, we say to the Union men of the nation, with the ticket that bears upon it the name of this most dastardly and contemptible trai tor in the whole country. The Democratic Convention has insulted the nation grossly and outrageously. Let its work be tramp led indignantly in the dust.—Cleicago Post. QM Wu. Cockrill, a leading Democrat of Madison County, Tenn:, has come out for O r a/I r l6l-C RKW. Snanum, nt a meeting held in St. ,ours detiati4 . . Eleyniour and In favor of .Gen. Grant. A. J. compaints the New York nomina tions to the small-pox—liable to kill, hard to cure and harder to endure. Au. of Sswe.azo's intitfinte friends have come out for GBAYS. They have no idea of being on the login; side. Tait Tipton Times, the most influential Democratic paper in the. VIIIth Indiana District, throws overisOird Seymour and Blair. Tres DemocracYeverywhere are on the anxious seat. They find that Seymour's Copperheadism is bad enough, but BLAIR'S Jacobin and revolutionary violence threat- THE Democracy of Louisville, Ky., rati ens them with absolute ruin. • , tied Seymour and Mai/. on Tuesday eve- A New Yong. paper says that Blair takes Ehlig a torch-light procession and whisky for medicinal purposes. The Hart- speeches. The principal speakers were ford Post says: "We are inclined to think rebel General Humphrey Marshal and Ex it was "thr medicinal purposes"—to was his first spirit since the downfall of for corns. He was dreediblly corned all the time he was here." j the confederacy. As he looked through the crowd he saw those who had hunted him As exchange says: "Gen. Grant and the through briers and brake, "But here I .am, bust near together within the past few years. Democracy have done a great deal of bust in the old Democratic party, and so help me God may I never be anywhere else." A Gen. Grant has dune the tanning, and the lava: number of transparencies were carried Democrats have furnished the hides! They handed in two more last week—those of in the procession. Of course in such a pro oratio Seymour and Frank P. done early.lia November. Blair.— I cession, proteins of Jefferson Davis, R. E. They will H • Lee and Stonewul Jackson, figure I eon c - be uously, m says the Centeict, but it makes Tim platform of the Democratic party no mention of the Stars and Stripes, from was drawn up by a platform committee which we infer that our national banner comprising, among others, the rebel gener- had no place in the procession. als Wade Hampton, and Preston, and the rebel legislators Bocock and Landon, and • Lecc4LN . 6 OPINION OF JUDGE ctiss E ,—A writer in the Boston Transcript says that Barksdale, a rebel editor. These are the Gov. Andrew, a few decks before his Man who fix the principles cf the party which asks Union soldiers for their votes.— death, related hint the following "I was Dclaivare Post, in Washington just before Mr. Chase was nominated as Chief Justice, and at Mr. Lin- LeTit be borne in;mind that it was Val:- coin's request, called at the White House landighein,Jhe chief- of the Northern see"' 'Here I am,' said Mr. Lincoln, - 'surrounded sionista, who turned.the tide in the Demo- by documents relating to the vacancy on the cratic Convention for Seymour for Presi- Supreme Bench, and requests to appoint dent ; and that Wade Hampton, the most Mr. Chase. Mr. Chase is a man of ability ; violent of South Carolina traitors, dictated as a public officer, of mark, , d ed e nty ; a s a the nomination of Blair for Vice President. politician, ambitions ; en tlic subject rf —Cincinnati Chronicle. thcPresirlcacy a //ilk inauae. He has RELTDATION,: 'Revolution, Ruin. These said things of me which have sent discord are the deliberaterinposes of the Democratic where there should be harmony ; but a man party. The platfoitta is full of repudation, in my position should not harbor resent- Blair is an avowed revolutionist, Seymour's ment, and I shall appoint him.' " reactionism can end in nothing but rtltn. TILE t!ielma (Ala). Times .; gcr A party which enters\ npon the canvass fiercely denounces "the bond-holders' con with such deliberate and\ avowed purposes - spiracy" to accept negro suffrage as a fixed will be buried so deep that It can never be tact. It claims that the white Govern- - resurrected. merits in the Southern States ale not de , THE Joneaborough -(Tenri). Flag says funct, and says that, should a Democratic that Mr. Ezra Mather, Mr. Isaac. N. Babb, Administration be secured this Fall, the and Mr. John S. Mather, and 'many other officers of those Governments will, as soon as it is organised, demand the assistance of citizens of that place, who Iffive hereto fore been eethig with tt i e conlignittive, (so the federal Government in restoring them called) from honest and conscientieus rno- to power, and a Democratic President and ' fives, have come out bolds , and emphatical- a Democratic Congress will be compelled ly for Gen. Grant. So It is all over the to decide between the contesting Govern - country. The Forrest ticket is a pill , that meats—Governments ordained and estaln can never be swallowed by men who love lished by white men according to the laws, thetc Country as tIleY should love it, . and negroized Governments ordained and , established by Congress in violation of the Trre Democratic platform pledges the- party to overthrow reconstruction, place \ Federal Constitution. the rebels In power at the South, and de- IT would be satisfactory to .know just liver over the white and black Unionists to;how many members of the New York con their tender mercies. If this is done the veetion served in the rebel army. A New "cause" that was "lost" in the field will i York paper rayo they represeut every grade have been gained at the polls. These men of the retie d service, from the drum-major and theirprinciples haye green repeatedly to the fall general. In fact, the South was condemned and repudiated by the Anieri- principally represented by the men who, in can people. They ~44, ha again crushed one capitkcity or another, were the most in November rtexestsitiftedlot of national prominea rebels during the war. And Tux opposition press frequently assert that Grant was unsparing of the lives of his men, and assail him as sebtitcber who recklessly sacrificed his troops. Now, the facts of history effectually put this slander down. Before Grant took command, the Army of the Potomac lost, in killed, wound ed and missing, 145,118 men. The subse quent losses were 100,561. Gen. Grant's operations embrace the great fighting which caused the Rebellion to succumb. For his losses he had something to show, which cannot he said of the other commanders_ I WE do not fear half so much from Sey-' mour's hereditary tendency to insantity, although his father blew his own brains out in a paroxysm of madness, as from his 1 innate love of evil. In the event of his election, Seymour crazy would be less dan gerous than Seymour sane ; he might possi bly in his frenzy take a fancy to be honest. Bat what shall we say of the prospect of filling the place of a mad President with such a man as rash, impetuous, violent, liquor-crazed Frank Blair P What a ticket! —Chicago Post. IT would be as great a personal misfor tune to Horatio Seymour to be elected Pre sident, as it would be to the country. He would be either forced to carry out the re volutionary programme laid down by the reckless desperado associated with him on the ticket, or his life would pot be worth a moment's insurance' Methods have been heretofore found to remove an obnoxious President, and It Seymour should occupy that position, he would be got out of the way. The nomination of Blair is an earn est movement on the part of the anarchists who control the Democratic party. AT that very hour when this man Sey mour was decrying his country, encourag ing rebel sympathizers, and filling the minds of his followers with the passion ofmaligni ty if not treason, that found expression a few days subsequently in fearful and bloody riots—at that very time the hero Grant wag receiving the capitulation of the rebel Pem berton at Vicksbprg, and the "boys in blue" under Gen. Mead were driving the army of Gen. Lee before our triumphant banners at Gettysburg Oh, men of loyal spirit and love of the Union, can you for get those times act regent that tried men's souls? Cap you, under partisan passion, now accept Seymour in full °Yielir of lus attitude then, and reject (}rant, IV h.P heroi cally defended your cause and saved" the I Union? No, you cannot; you will not 1. Troy Times. SOMMER ComPsx - staid in 1864: I will lay down three facts here, the truths of I which no man, be he Democratic editor or orator, will dare to challenge "Every man who is a leader in the rebel lion in the South, such is President, Vice President, members of the Cabinet, Speaker of the House of Reprecentatives, the lead ers of their armies, everione of them is a Dena:wet of the olden time. SecOn4 BVery man they relied upon in the NOrtil, When they drew the word of treason against the country and raised their banner red with blood, is a Dinocratic leader t o•day. Third. The Administration which was in power when' the rebellion broke out, which could by prompt and vigorous measures have crushed It out in Its infancy, as Jackson crushed out nullification and treason in South Carolina thirty years ago ; that Administration which looked on 'with closed eyes and ears,-allowing the rebellion to So on, awl deingnot , one thing to save the Union front *salmi*); was in all parts Democratic told taloa% Every man who stood up In Vo bri , that dark winter, win* State alter `Optic Avoi ietedthg, and said! IRTO euerelmtill':iFfott amnoPiPertio sareeelp Eitate"--firof cut was a Demo- they were slkootiug or starving our ruion soldiers. Azielegant party this to ask the support of ion rpm, either North or South.— liAtIA(Oltio) CENARAL NEWS Mns. General IroOker died at Waterloo, New York., on Wellirsday of last week. EM. NUEL LErTZE, th \ C celebrated artist, died at Washington on :".•Niturday evening. JAMk:3 Stephens, the F4hin leader, is re ported to be in New York. \ THE potato tly, a new lest, is doing much damage in Vermont, \ CONGRE6S will not du anything with the Tariff bill this :session. Anot - T ninety thousand mowers' kal rea pers are annually made in the tinitett States for this and fortAgti markets. NEW counterfeit fifty cent curreneY \ has made its appearence-7-said to be well exe't:ut, ed. Hos, W. M. EVarts has entered upon ante duties as Attorney General of the United • States. TILE Eight-hour law is now in force in all the departments and workshops of the Government. VICE-PRESIDENT Colfax and family will leave Chicago, August 3rd, on their pro posal Rocky Mountain Excursion. GENERAL eillcan reports that the new Constitution in Mississippi has been defeated by 7629 votes. TRAINS are now running over seven hundred miles of track on the Union Paci fic railroad, west of Omaha. • A MAN in Brooklyn, N. Y., committed suicide on account of the discomfort he suffered from the hot weather. AT the annual sale of Kentucky horses at Woodburn, fifty-four head of yearlings brought $21,912, au average of more than $405 each. Ix Tennessee, the colored people arc flocking to Nashville to invoke the protec tion of the Governor of the State against the Ku Klux. IT is said that salivation will cure hydro phobia, laud a cabbage leaf in the crown of the hat will prevent sun-stroke. Holy la dies will wear the cabbage leaf we are not told. A FATAL distemper, or dry murrain, is prevailing among the cattle throughout Georgia. Quite a number of fine mulch cows in that State have died Of it within the last week of two. The disease is on the inCreuse, and In almost every instance proves fatal. Soma American ladies at Copenhagen, who recently called on the Queen of Den mark, were not a little astonished to see that she wore a cheap dress, and that, on rising to receive them, she laid on her work ing table a cotton stocking, on wbickshe had been knitting. TaxonAna from a number of knalitiaaili the States of Illinois, "Wiscotuthr, lowa Mut Minnesota, with two or three exceptions, annottime the crops of small gains unpre cedented, both in quality and quantity, anti the corn never looked bettor. 'Unless some blight should come, both the small grain crpp and the corn will be the _largest ever gathered in the North-west. ONIONS AND EPIDZIIIICS.--A correspint dont of the Scientific American commends onions as a specific against epidemics—not 'as an esculent, but sliced and kept in a sick room, where they will absorb any:atmos pheric poison. They should be replaced by frtsh ones every hour, is noticed that IN WO room of a small pox patient they NI blister and decompose with great rapi dity, but will present the spread of the dis t Their application has also proved Ut. One of PAO bIWc ! - IMA 113 Y Gifu II =11 ".111 , 4tht Adventure* with a Nigger Delegate • froin•Tennelisee. Nsw Toac(at a c leap Ito arding-hoosell J my 4,1888: Et I hed kuowd just wet I bed to: go through with, I never rood hey tWeredfor the posishen I now okkepy. fled I knowd the troubles wich was to beset mo, the tor tes mite hey gone onrepft,entid, and the . Democricy mite hey nominatid a candidate without my help. lamat a cheep board. in-house, with is salubrusly sitooatid on an alley, the landlady bein one uv the anshent Kings of Ireland, wich her name is O'Shaugh nessy. I coodent get rooms at the Aster, nor the St. Nicholas, cz I coodent git a clerk to look at me for an hour, and when I did succeed in rivitin the attenshun uv one, he flew into a pasheu and ordered me to move on, with the onfeelin remark that he lied no room for sich ! And that insult mite be addei to injoory, the onfeelin woman who presides over the nianshen I inhabit, per emptoorily refoosed to reseeve me ontil I pade advance. I tried several places, but ez I hadn't baggage, the preyailin opnyun seemed to be that advance payment wood be better, and I wuz forst to return to her. My adveuchers on the route were noonter oils, if not pleasant. At some pint In Ingiany, where we changed cars, I found the trane we lied to take full uv delegates. In lookin around for a sect I diskivered but one that hadn't two in it, and that one bed in it a disgustn nig ger who lied the impootience to be well drest, and lied a carpet-sack beside Lim. My Demokratic blood riz to wunst. Seein that in a car filled with Demokratic dele gates, anything I shood do to a nigger wood be safe, I stawkt proudly up to him holdin my nose. "Good Lord !" sea I, "wat a smell !" "Good Lord :" ekoed the delegates wich got on at that stashen, "wat a terrible smell." "My gentle Afrikin frend," sed I seezin him by the collar, "I regret the necessity uv sayin disagreeable things, and still more uv doin em, but the fact is yoor impudence in gettin into a car of white gentlemen with the disgustiu odor inseparable from and part uv the Afrikin race, is rather too much. And more especially do I wonder at yoor keepin your sect, while I and these other white gen tlemen are standin." "Out with the nigger!" yelled the lately arrived delegates, "hustle the stinkin cuss." "Merciful hevens, wat a smell!" sung out others uv cm,. "list him !" "hist him!" Seein myself thus backed, and feelin a lit tle zeal wood be safe, ez niggers can't vote, I knockt his hat out uv the winder, and fol lured up that demonstration with a serious attempt at liflen him out uv the seat. I wood hey succeeded, but the nigger resist ed, and resisted vigorously, to wit knockt three uv my front teeth down my throte, pulled out wat little there waz left ur the hare that hangs in scanty festoons about my venerable temples, and blackt both my, eyes. I wuz lyin on my back in the passage, somewhat astonisht, the nig ger standin over me, with his boot heel raised over my face, when some gentlemen Caine in from another car and restrained him. "Mr. Willialus, Fed tha, "let him up.— Ile's pore while trash, antinot wurth west in yo'r indizuastien onto. Let him up, Mr. Williams, let Lim up." • sed I, rMn to lay feet, tremulous with rage, "is this the treetment I am to ex pect awl the way to Noo York? Ana I to be pounded to a jelly by a nigger—a nigger, sirs, whose oder evin now makes the car ontenable to gentlemen uv refined sensi bilities—and to beer the nigger . addrest a 9 `Mister,* after that instid uv being tore to pieces by the !nfuryatcd spectators! 0, shame, where iz thy blush !" "Yoo mizrable cuss," sed wun uv these gentlemen, "appologize to wunst to this gentleman fur yoor Instiltin roodness, or well chuck yoo out nv the cars. Apologize, sir, to Mr. Josef Williams, delegate at large for the Stait tiv Tennessee." r amidst ittaLLCU. /ma tugger, WWI, win a delegate wuz a regular delegate, armed and equipped with regular creden shels to the Demokratic Nashinel Conven tion, and I lied been guilty In my zeel uv assaultin uv him! Gladly I apologized, and further, I humbly begged permission to sit beside him, with he accorded with a graciousnis I never saw ekalled. It wuz astonishln the change that crept over the Injeany delegates. They crowded around us and shook him by the hand—they dnid't smell any odor at all any more ; on the contrary, they seemed to like him. They addrest him ez "Mister," and several nv em in introdoocin him to their friends who got on at various stashens, yoesed the prefix "Honorable." It's wonderful wat a differ ence it makes wtth a nigger to hey a vote, and also how he votes. fled that Williams his infected with Ablishinism,. I make no doubt that the stench with I reely fancied I smelt when I rust undertook to subjoogate him, wood hey continyood to the end nv the trip. In olden titne it wuz observed that slave niggers didn't smell—it was only the free ones. It is a settled fact now that Di mekratic niggers are inotlorous ! I mite hey known, however, that the nigger wuz a free nigger, by the way he pitched into me. No nigger 111 a state uv servitood wood ever hey did sigh a thing. That much they owe to the war, anyhow. _ _ My Mincipal objick in goin to Noo YOrk Wll2 to de what I cood toward secooring the nomination uv Jethro L. Kipping. I found the delegates badly torn up. The offers made for votes wnz so redikeulously low that there wua much disgust manifested.— Tile trouble NVII7 that the markit wuz over stockt. Ilad the convenshion been pretty ekally divided, and the balance of power held by a few clAt mouthed souls, they could bey made a good thiug uv It. But where a whole coUvettahen is in the markit and all their inflooenshel friends, no candi date kin afford to buy. I withdrew Mr. Kippins towunst. Ez he, hez but a small farm and that nacutgaged to a grosery keep er, the delegates I approicht kit me to skorn. I wuz on the Committee on itesolooshens, or rather wuz in the room ez a 'sort uv advi- sory committee while the resolooshens was being drafted. General Forrest uv Tennes see wuz pirtiklerly anxshus that a ',xesoloo shen shood be adoptid dencuncin the Ra dicals, who wuz, with unholy hands, a strivin to destroy the best government, the sun ever shone upon, and one the destile don uv with wood be a calamity wick un born millions wood shed teers over. Ile desired a resolooshun pledgin the Dimoorisy to Stan by the old Stars and Stripes, wich flag had braved a thonaand breezes, and wuz synomomous, et, aettry. Mr. Woolley, Mr. Cobb (Mrs. Cobb's husband), and per Fuller pertikelety, desired a resokkashen detusadin the turnin out uv aftis uv corrupt men, that the government might ha ad ministerdd with anthill like the purity with distinguished it .doorin the administration uv the late lamentld Bookannon, at the menshun uv whose name every delegate pre sent held a lutndkercher to his eyes for five oonseoutive minits, ez tho a grate greet' bed fallen onto him. Wandygum insisted that a plank be in sert** wide recognized nigger suffrage, but thnt Mis Withheld oath it cood be definite . IY altgellaiund whether Mississippi wuz reely carried by nigger votes or not. FS& major ity uv the niggers did reely vote the Demo kratic tinket o it wuz decided that they shood be recognbsed ex our ekala—ef not, we'd see em (I—d lust CheefJustioe Chase won esposhelly anxyns fora resolooshnn denounain in the severest terms thom• onprinclpled, fanatical Radi- kits, who for years hed been laboring to subvert the government, by Interferin With the persons and property nv citizens, and Woo pWei Ow Govt *w to this who eoneereetlesn witbout wlch thee coed be no gait atalvertionvets.- pernartence in our goreenment. I dropt into the &Were and Sailers' Con- fsi !OS DYSPEPSIA CURE. Yenshen, but I didn't stay long. Them ‘_j whose noses wuza't red all wanted to be ' COE'S DYSPEPSIA CURE. either President or cabinet orflsers ; and ny - A CURE. the balance uv em, the leastest sed the bet- t COE'S DYSPEPS IA ter. My sole indignated ez I saw seated among em the Very sutler who refoosed me credit when I wuz serYin ez a drafted man in 1862 ; and also aclaim agent who got 4110 uv me on the prom's rtv gettin my bounty, which when ho got it he absorbed in rem costa and commiasions. There wuz ny coarse some troo men. There wuz sojers ther which resigned early in the war on ak kount uv its beln a d—d Ablishin war, and otheri who left becoz Linkin wuzunt rapid enuff in makin nv em Major Generals.— There wuz no limit to ther speekin. Every wun hed the speech which he delivered at the Cleveland Convenshen in 18C6 carefully preserved, and they all insisted on deliverin em, wich ez I left they were doln, all to themselves. Ef they kin stan it.l am will in. We are goin to hey a Soljers Conven shen in Richmond to ratify the nomina shens, wich will amount to suthun. We shall have Forrest there, and Boregard and Breekinridge, and ther speeches will count. We will hey the flag uv the two govern ments entwined, and we will hey the moosic uv both sections played. Sieli a Convenshen will amount to suthin. Wat the platform will be, or who the can didates will be, the Lord only knows. I um prepared for any thin, and so are all the delegates. Ef Its Pendleton, on a repoodia shen platform, well and good—ef its Sey mour, on a Nashnel Bank platform, jest ez gootl. I shood be happy to see Breckin riddc the choic uv the party, and delighted of Hancock shoed be chosen. I kin hur rah for Chase, and with ekal vigger kin awing my hat for Vallandygum and I find all the delegates similerly affected. The Post Offs is the lean kine with mailers up all the others. We arc willing to sink ev erything in Post Ofßs. That my sincerity may not be doubted, let it be remembered that I hey rid with a nigger, from Ingeany to Noo York ; hey been whaled by one and hey felt good over it, hey bin hurrah in for au old line Abolishnist, and swcarin the while I liked it. Ef any other evidence uv flexibility is needed, I feel ekal to the task. Politically I am ekal to all emergencies. PETBOLECN V. NASBY, P. M. (Wich is Postmaster) APPETITE FOP, Pits.—The Portland Ad vertiser says : "A young lady in Cumber land county, Maine, healthy, and possess ing apparently a very robust constitution, indulged iu the foolish habit of keeping pins in her mouth in the night, and even practiced eating with them in her mouth.— As a consequence for the last five or six yeah she has suffered extremely with gas tric irritation, nausea and vomiting, being able to retain but a very little food in her stomach, living for weeks together on a lit tle sweetened water. She is now emaciat ed, nervous and failing in strength. The points of some of the pins she has felt at times pricking through the skin opposite her stomach, but not sufficiently distinct to have them removed. Her sufferings, and probable doom, so far as the recovery from disease is concerned, should be a Warntng to all not to indulge in the dangerous prac tice of holding pins in the mouth, as this is only one of the many instances of disease, and probably death, which have resulted from such a habit." Six° a song of Seymour, And Blair full of rye ; Every Tammany TrUcin's Finger's In the pie- When the pie is opened Little birds willings 3 'Seymour, Seymour wants to be, But never will be king." Blair in the wigwam, Feeling very frisky, Full of high ambition (Synonym for whisky) Seymour out doors towing off bin ala 'Long comes Ulysses Grant And nips off his noes. Wass the news of the nommation of Sey mour and Blair reached Wooster, Ohio, the unterrified thereabout fired a salute In honor of the event, and painted the cannon toward the North, whereat a Grant man standing near quietly observed that they were "firing the same way they did during the war." Br his fall from a stajrwv In Montreal, the other day, Jeffers= Davis was much in jured, three OW rib's being broken. He was cloing well, however, at last aceoun to Paoluxturr Democrats in St, Louis threa en to bolt the ticket as they can't stand Blair. Where the Blairs are best known they ere least liked. c ptri4l 4oticts. SPEER'S STANDARD WINE BITTERS is highly recommended by phylicisna for Dyspeptics, on no ' count of its tonic properties, its purity, and its delici. one flavor. See advertisement in another column. Sep4.4.—ly TO THE DIES.-FOR ONLY NOE DOLLAR, We are selling Silks, Shaseir, Dry and FUney Coals of every description, also, Silver Ware, Furniture, etlo. Pa/stable Presents, from $3 to 8500, sent free of shave to agents sending clubs of ten and upwards. Circulars sent free to any address. WYETEI k CO., o & Cce P. 0., Box, 2931, Sll 4 C 2esaors Hanove to r at3isssi Boston Mae.. Feb.s.-641 DEAVNIIBB, BLANDNESS AND CATARRH, treat ed with the utmost success, by Dr. J. ISAAC'S Ocea list and Aurlst, (formerly of Leyden, Holland.) No. 805 Arch it., Philadelphia, Ps.. Testimonials from the most reliable aources in the City and Country can be seen at his otlice. The medical faculty are invited to accompany thnir patients, as ho has no secrets in hut practice. Artificial. g,yee Lawrie,' without pain. No charge made 53r ezaudnittou, Nov. 20,1867:1 y HALL'S VEGETABLE SICILUN HAIR RENEWER. Is lb o only infallible Hair Preparat to% RESTORING GRAY HAIR TO ITS ORIGIKAE COLOR AND PROMOTING ITS GROWILL It is the cheapest preparatic-n ever offered to the public, asone bottisukiii last longer and accomplish more than three bottles of any other preparation.. Oar Renewer Sc out a ➢se ; it will not stain the skin as others. re WILY 4 . 4.4 WIZ /LIFE /EOM FALLINO ckows tJ Seatp, arid malu the hair SOFT, LUSTROUS, AND SILK/VV. Our Treatise on Flair sent free bY malL R. I'. BALL A CO., ?Isamu, N. 11 4 Proprietors Fro Bale by all Droggiets. [Jaly • Zintnart, &c. TIN-WARE AND STOVES THE LARGEST ASSORTMENT OF TIN-WARE IN THE COUNTY, COOK'S, (Formerly Andrew Polley's); slaoseme of THE BEST COOKING-STOVES IN THE MARKET, among whirl; are the OLD DOMINION, VOMPIOIIIIIIE, PENNSYLVANIA, NOBLE COOK, BARLEY RIMY, ECONOACLIT, Al many oilier any for Kitchen use, which will be d ogio es low do at any other puce a in the amity. April 12,180 EL, B. G. COOK. \ !WM NEW 'BAKERY. NEWPOR <lc ZIEGLER. Meehanteal Bakery,. Corner Washington and East Middle street; Gattisburg, \Pa . CoitstAatly on band tbe beet of BREAD, • CBACKIEBB, CA: -Patine :ate lined morning, by lon their vat tb• Raney. iv malt GIVE 176 laNlif COE'S DYSPEPSIA CURE. COE'S DYSPEPSIA CURE. COE'S DYSPEPSIA CURE. COE'S DYSPEPSIA CURE COE'S DYSPEPSIA CURE COE'S DYSPEPSIA CURE COE'S DYSPEPSIA CURE COE'S DYSPEPSIA CURE COE'S DYSPEPSIA CURE wt,rl,l renown 04/ relMll,4 for the unfailing cairn of DYSPEPSIA, Indigestion, Xicl. Headache, Sourness od Acidity of Stomach, Rising of Food, Flatulency, Lassitude, Weariness, Biliou.sne,tr, Liver aiiPlaixl, finally terntbutting in Deuth Is urged upon the attention and trial of sufferers from this most horrible of all diseases. Dyspepsia shows Its ravages In a thousand different forms, i• fact, all disorder, of the Stomach and Bowels, with all their complaints, such as Sick liemlachio, Rarthurn, Dopresslon, general sense of 11111 31411160111 and hailing that you are not well. Food distresses you, rise. and - sours on your stomach; breath is bad, skin at times flashed and hot ; don't feel as it yotf could move or stir abort, sad worst of all. Indigestion or Coustipa• thin, are nothing more nor Isms than Daypepola.— Thousands upon thousands suffer and die Una way and neither themselves or physicians know what ifs them except that they Sr. surely dying. Reader we repeat it, this is all Dyspepsia. If yaw would have proof of our statement, if you would save yourselves and children from an early grave, It you would have health end energy and strength, again we bog you to try olio bottle of Coe's Dyspepsia Cure. You will see how soon It will dispel soar bed feel ings nod gloomy forebodings. Ilow loon it will chase. away any apseies of Dyspepsia. low soon it will give you new life and vigor, and how soon It will make a well mah or Women of you. For your own 'mks, for the sake of everybody angering, we hog, we er treat you to try it. , FOR LIVEI2 COMPLAINT AND BILIOUS DERANGEMENTS, It Is a Sovereign Remedy, walla for Fever sod Ague, and all those diseases which are generated iu a mitts role climate, it is a certain preventive mud cure. That its wonderful medicinal virtues may nut stand alone upon our statement, we appends few nusolkited testimonial' from those whose position in society sad reputation as citizens will place their evidence beyond all imitation, and carry with them strength and con viction to the snout incredulous. Ma. Luna ilizmort, a whoteeale merchant of 30 years, in Milwaukee, one of the most reliable and emeriti men in the State, says, under date Mawnrxxs, Wm, Jan. 24,1866. Munn. C. G. Cl AES k Co., New Harm, awe. Both myself and wife have osed Coe's Dyspepsia Cure, and It has proved PERFECTLY satisfactory es a Rem edy. I have NO hesitation in saying that we have re eleved GREAT BENEFIT from Its use. - reryitespeosfully, (Signed) LESTER SEXTON. r Front Rm. L. P. Ward, Avon, Lorain Cb., Musses. Snoso k Atuurnuoso, Gentlemen —lt give/ me greet pleasure to state tkak my wife has ' derived great benefit from the nu of Coes Dyspepsia Core. She has keen for • number of years greatly troubled with Pyspepeia, aecompskied by violent paroxysms of constipation which no pros. traced her that she was all the while, for months, un able to do anything. She took, at your instance, Coe'a Dyspepsia Cure, and has derived GREAT HENEPIT FROM 'IT, and is now comparatively well. IThe re gards this medicine as a great blessing. Trnly yours, Jan. 13, 1565, [Front Rer..l,§A.AC AIKEN; Allegheny, lie.] Joeggu BUMMING, Druggist. No. 81 Market Street. Pittebargh 8r1:—I take great pleasure in stating that, after having suffered from dyspepsia for about fifteen year', at some periods much more than others, 1 have been entirely cored by the nee of Coe's Dyspepsia Curs.— My friends know that of late year' my case has been an extreme one. I had great suffering from eating any kind of food, and on au avenge would vomit about one-third army meals, in a sour Indigestible am. When the severe atta cks would come, I ',mild lose all strength mad become utterly hotplate. Some of the attacks would be so severe that for days together I would not retain any thing on my stomach, save a lit tle dry Mast and tea. lot years I knew not what It was to pass Eve consecutive hours without Intense pain. Prom the time I took the first dose of this medicine I ceased vomiting, gradually all 1101110•111 pared away, and flesh and strength returned, and ever since I have been able to eat any kind of bad set upon the table. Six months have now passed withent any symptoms of the return of the disease. My we wee eonetdored by all, even physicians, so marvelous, that for a time It was feared it might be fictitious; but I am now so well convinced, that I have not been merely relieved, but permanently cured, that I can conscientiously recommend Cu,'. Dyspepsia Core Mall victims of the Dyspepeits. ISAAC AIKEN, Late Pastor of the Deaver St. M. E.Church, Allegheny. CONCLUSIVE EVIDENCE Nzir norm, Cr.; Juno 1,1887 Nunn. C. G. Cuaz Co. Gliarts:—Belng anxious, from the great benefit de rived, to midst in spreading the fame of Coe's Dram. eta Cure, I would state my era. Something over • year ago, I had • violent attack of Diarrhea, which tasted eight weakt, Merin which time I employed three _physhtiaati, Ent tritium relief, mail I tried spitlak iar Cotes By Am._ This trot dale helped me ; I took it Mill SSW/ kit • weak and wee entirely carts: "SI *lay that It saved my liter. Be toil__,4Blo4l IA way this season, r took Ono gem WillA i r e ttpur in_ right. I would advise every It so liazii rawly tot immediate use, ir Sean M/ or Bowel Ceseplainta. C. DUSII. ... , _PM abets IL!. Donn is in our employ. am we euk • zwAgalbribe above statement being true. IL ARNOLD A Co. Coe's Dyspepsia Cuie Will be found Invaluable to all cases of Diaribs.. Dysostary, Colic, Bummer Oomplitats, Griping sad low every disordered condition Oche s Womb. it by Droner's In city or roundly ovirywborlfall per Bottle, or by and/lotion to • C. O. MARK di CO irq INlA4twaw ' liseeffn=ll4 L. F. WARD. All stav Gettriburr. SPAIifiLER' of ship, died very sudden! week from Apoplexy. PROPERTY SALES. haaaold 1113 farm to Meats and DUNCAN, fOr #7,000 MesNrs. 1 attNEirroaca: sold one of their b htre,t, to Wm.ll.Gati LLOON ASCENS JOHN A. LiOwr, the reit. .Evonant, will Make an this place some time Hoe, not beemtletluitely fixed ti tlee will be given. CUT.—Whilet Mr, ti.x . gaged In reolring Senft:s township;•:one (ley laid thumb nearly off with 4 be the hand, the skin at each Mt ing the thumb, CoNVENTIONB. County Cfniventloh has meet 0.1 the Nlondar p August 10. The Republ mines tneete to-morrowl time for holding the Rept! pit - Yesterday morning made her appearance on th in a state of intoxication., abuse some of our citizens,. treated her' to a good drubb MAIL her up to enjoy the 1 Sheriff HANN. ADVERTIsING.—"Ths , more for his rent than for does not know his husinesii im ()ran experienced and s chant is incontrovertible. to have a line gtore than t should know where it hi at RUBBERY. -00 the Warehouse of Itiona robbed of a barrel of dour, and a large iron safe broken money taken, the amount' -The thief gained an entry I , ,illtlUW On the si`o. , lltl q. , ry NVELDoN has been arrosted and 1“ , 14,,(1 in jail. • •I.CCIDENT.—We learn t day, the Itith inst., a soft of of Tyrone township, hail broken, midway between knee. It seems while the fa oral of the family wore enga. int; a load of grain, the I el ant boys wore amusing themsel bummersets from one of the the mow, when the acei,len Dr. MAnsnEN was inimenla ho set the broken limb. PENNSYLVANIA .COI understand that arrangetne , made with the Peunsvlvanh Northern Central, the Ilan and the Gettysburg Rail Ron by which visitors to the C exercises of Pennaylvania ilavo paid full fare over the secure free return tickets. ing Rail Road and Its earn: sion tickets to Harrisburg ca f,r the occasion at any point DrATIL—Our obituary records the death of Jolly H. known colored man of thin took place on Sunday last.. the Janitor of Puntalyvani: about thirty yearn, serving larger part of Dr. KRAUTU'S and the entire Presidency of Ltt. 'rho name of "Jack U familiar one with the /Auden area of the Institution druri period, Ida integrity and mending general couthlince. ty and Studer.ta, in a body. funeral on Monday evening, being conducted by Dr. President of the College, am FRIARTRII anti Cowmen. rAt the Annual Elec Monday, the 20thinst., Gov: was elected President, and t gentlemen Directors of the Battle-field Memorial Aso mund A. Sonder, Henry C. liam M. Hersh, David A. S Heister, H. N. McAllister, J D. McConaughy, R. G. McC Arnold, A. D. Buehler, and M. L. Stoover. ' The Board .rgazazod by .411 B. G. McCreary, Viee-Prenid Cunaughy, Secretary ; Geo Treasurer. • LIGIITNING STItoK will tho present Set Von be a one by reason of the intense morons sun-strokes, but also of the large number of fatal charges. Our exchanges roc. nal number of deaths fro men, horses and cattle bet. the open field. A person st by lightning can seldom be when the injury is the resu sion from a stroke of lig4tui ary remedies promptly spill'. relief in most of insfanem I ommendod, in such ea'es, Water rapidly over the le a friction by active rubbing, enco of mind, and the promp , of simple remedies of this k physician can be called in, w' life. MURDEROUS ATTACK., from a recent number of county (Missouri) im,iirer, tha ceding Tuesday a murder° Mr • VINCENT BIERBOWER, the made by a notorious Rebel,. It.INT, armed with a borvie-k • Dig serious, if not fittal , -w. BIERBOWER i 8 a brother of W IfiEnnowalt, Tobacconist or He graduated at DickineoU iu 1868, and went to U charge of the Marshall Co • an earnest out-spoken Repu nal. Ills fearless deounciati Rebel Democracy attracted of the Ku-Klux, ,who Posted peculiar coffin and cross-bon - office a few nights preceding which is attributed by his fr murderous organization. By torious returned Rebel, w ,do the work, who way=laid a BLEB,DOWER on the street, the unarmed• Nevertheless ho - wrenching tho knife from turned upon him and wot have despatched him bat to ference of other Rebel friends As It was, the latter waa bedl The Republicans of the N. ,conception of the outrages to men are subject in the Rebel States, where the true aplri ."Democracy" miwitesta I , insults, persecution and rim THE PLACE TO BUY:: Housekeepers and others wan good Cooking Stoves, the best ket, warranted to bake and gi lion, or any thing in the line o Japan Ware, Hollow Ware, C Bread and Spice Boxes, Ice zers, Water... Coolers, Coffee Cages, Fruit Jars and Cans, Sze., will find just what they Ware-room of Cul. C. if. Bu or of Railroad and Carlisle Or. the Passenger Depot, and at defy competition. CARDS.—With our 119 W 00 . and full assortment of Farley we are prepared to furnish, notice, all kinds of Vial Ling Cards, WoddingCardayßall i , Lecture Tickets, In PL4X ot, ors, equal to the beet Cl*: new tiorden works' •,, be sea operatte let IN
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers