TERMS OF THE GLOBE Per annum In advance months three months TERMS OF ADVERTISING - • - - 1 insertion. 2 do, 3 do. One square, (101ines,)or less.s 75 81 25 $1 50 Two squares 1 50 200 • 300 Three squares 2 25 3 00 4 50 3 months. 6 months. 12 months. !no square, or less $4 00 $6 00 $lO OD Iwo squares 0 00 9 00 15 00 Phree squares 8 00 12 00 0 0 OD Four squares, 10 00 15 00 25 00 Half a column, • 15 00 ' , O 00 30 00 Duo column, - 0 0 00 35 00.... 60 00 Professional and Badness Cards not exceeding six lines, One year, .s 5 06 Administrators' and. Asecutors' Notices, $2 50 Auditors' Notices Xstray, or other short Netter! - 160 ,6k - ,0 - -Ten lines of nonpareil make a square. About eight words constitute a line, so that any person can ea sily calculate implore in manuscript. Advertisements not marked with the number of inser tions desired, will be continued till forbid and charged ac cording to these terms. Our priers for the prtatlng of Blanks, liondbille, etc. are also increased. PROFESSIONAL & ROSINESS CARDS LAW PARTNERSHIP. 7. N. 'Slattern an Wm. A. Sipe have associated themselves in the litacticeei the law, 'under the comma MATURE I: SIPE. Alt business entrusted to their care will receive prompt attention. ANP•Special care will be given to the collection of Pen• done; Bounty, Back Pay nod all Claims against Ztato of United States. Office nearly opposite the Court House, Hill street, Ilun tingdon. Pa. J. \V. MATTERN, feb2l—ly WM. A. SIPE. ACENCY, FOR COLLECTING SOLDIERS CLAIMS, BOUNTY, SACS PAY AND PENSIONS. LL who may have any claims a gainst the Government I,:or Bounty, Bark Pay and enaions ' can hare their claims promptly collected by ap plying either in pereea or by letter to W. II: WOODS, • Attornoy at Law, Huntingdon, Pa. August 12, 18G3 /011.1 SCOTT, SAMUEL T. DROWN, The name of this firm has been chang ed from SCOTT & BROWN, to SCOTT, BROWN & BAILEY, under which name they will hereafter conduct their practice as ATTORNEYS AT LA W lIUNTIXGDON, PA. PENSIONS, and all claims of soldiers and soldiers' licks against lb. Government, will bo promptly prosecuted. May 17, 1805-tf. I:IM=3Mil THE firm of Benedict & Stewart has J been thanged to BENEDICT, STEWART & LYTLE, notler which name they will hereafter practice as ATTORNEYS AT LAW, HUNTINGDON, PA They Will also giro ,careful attention to the collection of military and other Claims against the State or Our ortnuent. Office formerly occupied by J. Sewell Stewart, najoln ing the Court House. - fcb6,lSC6 K. A. LOVELL, ATTORNEY AT LAW; HUNTINGDON, PA. sirg.Prompt and careful attention will be given to the collection of all elaimw against the Government for Back Pay, Bounty, Pensions, Se. OFFICE—In the brick row, nearly opposite the Court not-tint X-Itcxte HUNTINGDON, PA. WM. C. MCNULTY, PROPRIETOR, Formerly of Ole Frauldln hotel, Chambersburg. TERMS LIBERAL. mey3, 1665-Iy. ALEXANDRIA BREWERY, E. 0. & G. W. COLDER. HAYING entered into copartnership in tho Alexandria ilreuery, the public are informed that they will its prepared at all 1111103 to fill orders on the shortest notice. • Alexandria, Jan.13.18654f. ' 7 0 ALLISON Arlf - JLE.R ; DEVTIST, Has removed to the Brick Row opposite the Court Rouse April Vd,k559. T E. GREENE, el • DENTIST. Office removed to opposite the storo of D. P. Orin, in the square, Lill street, Huntingdon, Pa. April 13,1561. -DR. 1). P. MILLER, • Office opposite JacUsno House, offers his service to citizens of llontingdon and vicinity. nel-Gms DR. JOHN MeCULLOCH, offers his professional services to the citisens of Hantirgiton and vicinity. Office on Itill.strect, one dearest of Revd's Drug Store. Aug. 2e, '55. TIR. E. C. PRUYN, Medical Electri j.jclan, Jackson House, Huntingdon. WM. LONG, Dealer in Candies, note, Family Groc:rics, Se., Lluutiugdori, Pa. riUNNEN - GITAIL CARIION, MereMulti+, Iluntiagdon, Pa. WIIA RTON MAG DIRE, Whole ante and retail dealers in foreign and domestic Hardware, Cutlery, de., Railroad street, Huntingdon, CHAS. 11. ANDERSON, Dealer in MI kinds of Lumber, Bc., Huntingdon, Pa. TAMES - A. BROWN, to Dealer in Hardware, Cutlery, Palate, Ulla, te., Mut Sugdau, Pa. ROMAN, and Sheen, Dealer Ready Made Clothing, Hats and Cap,, LLL is a T) P. GIVIN, • . Dealer in Dry G oadit, Oratories, Hardware, Queens ware, flats and Capa, Routs and Filers, Se. E. HENRY & CO., Wholesale and S.'Retail Dealers in Dry Goods, Groceries, Hardware, Queenswaro, and Provinions of all kinds, Huntingdon. IJENIt STROUSE & CO., Markles burg, Pa., Dealers in Dry Goods, Groceries, etc. Wll.l. AFRICA, Dealer in Boots and Shoes,in the Diamond, Huntingdon, Pa. T EOPOLD BLOOM, Huntimr,don, Pa, A . 1 Dealer in Ready Made Clothing, liat% Caps, JOAN H. WESTBROOK, Dealer in Boots, mess, hosiery, Confectionery, Huntingdon. ZYENTEII, Dealer in Groceries and ~Prot- i aions of all kind,, Huntingdon, Pa. QDION CORN, Coffee Run, Dealer in Dress Good=_, Groceries, Wood and Will ow Wak• T B. SIIONTZ & BRO., Marklesbum, tp *Dealers in Ready Made Clothiug, Jewelry, &c. QINP3ON, ARMITAGE c CO., 30 Dealers in 12A.K.ks and Stationery, Iluutin„Von, Pa DONNELL & KLINE, PHOTOGRAPHERS, Huntingdon, Pit rill:1011AS G. STIt.IGH.LER & SON, 11 Manuilicturers of Brougher's patent Broom Head or \t rapper, Huntingdon. T M. GREENE & P. 0. BEAVER, Plain and Ornamental Marble Manufacturers. .G , E . T2 o l ti A ,ln iN g i t a C ti. O glo p i Dealers in Ready 11:11 M. GREENE, Dealer in illusie,niu j j.dom Instruments, Sewing Machines, Iluntingdon. L SHOEMAKER, Agent for the Ma star Liniment, Huntingdon, Pa. A P BRUMBAUGII, Agent for the ,r3L. Victor Carle Mill, &e., Jurnes Creek, Hunt. co, Pa NiTSM.. WILLIAMS, Plain and Ornamental Marble Manufacturer. WM. LEWIS, Dealer in Bootie, Stationery and Musical Instrri nients, Huntingdon, Pa. BILL POSTER The undersigned offers his services to busint men and others desiring circulars distributed or hnridtiitle posted. ite can be seen at the (hour office. Huntingdon, Aug. 16, 1665. JOHN KOPLIN. 11, ARCH Id N T DEED PAPER -- ruled, for rale at LEWIS' BOOK STORE. —Breeding cages for canary birds just aeecired and for sale at Lewis's. $2 CO . 1 00 C~ ~),~ WILLIAM LEWIS, Editor and Proprietor. VOL XXI. i{e 61obt, HUNTINGDON, PA. [For the Globe.[ Letter from India BY S. D. BROWN Since the date of my last letter I have been what we call itinerating, i. e., traveling with my tent and preach. ing among the towns and villages.— On ono of these tours I attended what is called "The Neemkar Maki." At Neemkar there is a celebrated Hindoo shrine or place of pilgrimage. Hie- duos come by the thousand, even from very great distances, to make offerings and to bathe in the sacred pool, which is surrounded by temples filled with idols. Missionaries frequently attend these malas in order to preach to the crowds who are always to be found there on such occasions. Ncemkar is about 25 miles from Seetapore—my home—so I sent my tent out the day before, and on Friday afternoon I. mounted my horse and rode out and found my tent up and my dinner—or as you would say, supper—ready. In India we do not have dinner in the middle of the day. During much of the year the heat is so great that it would be very uneomfortable work eating at noon: 8o we rise early in the morning, take a cup of tea, and attend to our out door work before breakfast, which meal generally comes on the table between oand 10 o'clock. Then wo have dinner between 4 and 5 o'clock in the evening, after which we can go out and preach again, or attend to any out door work which may be on our hands. I=l The next day the people came crow ding in from all sides, preceded, as is their custom, by bands of men and wo• men, singing and playing on very pri mitive and, to my ear, unmusical in struments. The principal points which seemed to be aimed at were noise and discord. Taking a stroll amen.. ' the temples I noticed a lot of lazy well fed Brahmins sitting on the stops of one, playing cards, ich, by the way, is a very common amusement among all classes of natives in India; and, like their dishonest paternity in more en lightened countries, they gamble for money or almost anything else. These Brahmins are the pest and curse of In• dia. They extort money from the people by all manner of deception, One of them, a man of considerable intelligence, who has just joined our church on probation, told me the fol, lowing trick by which they collect un told sums of money front their super, stitious countrymen : These religious mendicants daub their fitcos with ash es—put on a peculiar style of clothing, consisting chiefly of a long strip of coarse muslin dyed yellow; string a great lot of sacred beads around their necks, and with a large dried gourd suspended like a shot pouch from the shoulder, and one of the very crooked est bamboos they can find for a cane, they tvander here and there and very where through the whole country.— Stopping a fbw days in one village and then going on to another. The poor ignorant villagers think them very ho ly, and feed them wherever they go. Of course in this way they find out a great deal about the past and present history of the fitmilies in (lie villages they visit. Now let us see to what good, advantage they turn the kuowl, edge thus secured. After a long tour of this kind they come back to their homes at some one of the shrines of a certain deity. By and bye, many of these same villagers will come to a Malt at the shrine where rho ruendis cant lives. There have been so many mendicants in their villages that they do not recognize any of them. So one "Faqir," for that is what they aro call ed, goes -up to a villager and says:— "Your name is Rani Deen. Your fa ther Buldar of Ituttunpore died five years ago last March. He had prom ised to pay Viand here the sum will be' large or small according to the ability of the villager) ten rupees at this shiine but he die d' without doing so and is kept standing at the door of heaven and cannot get in until the money is paid. Now, surely, you aro not going to let your poor father stand there year after year when you can gain ad mittance for.him by paying so small a sum." The poor villager is thunder struck, and says to himself "it must be true, for Ram Deen is my name and my father Buldar did die just where and when this good man says." Of course he asks the Faquir how he came to know all this, but he is ready with the following reply: "An angel who pitied your father came and told me in order that I might inform you."— Ram Deen pays over the ten rupees and goes on his way rejoicing to know that ho has been able to seeureso hap. py a lot for his father. Faquir pockets the money and congratulates himself that ho has enough to keep him com fortably a month. It may be asked why the Brahmins possess so much influence over the people in India. My readers must re member that of the various "castes" amonr , b the Hindoos the Brabinins stand highest. All the minor divisions of caste proceed from main branches. According to Mann, the Brahmins, Ksbatniyas, Yarsyas, and Sudras, sprang respectively from the mouth, the arm, the thigh and the foot of Brahma. Hence the; Brahmin claim to be superior to all others. They say the Sudras were created simply to servo the Brahmins, 3&e. It is easy to see that the whole system is the in vention of the Brahmins. But to return to the Mala. 'Endo° merchants, like some Ten of their call ing in other countries, generally map ago to make religion "pay." A few NE \` \~l-1` HUNTINGDON, PA „ WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11, 1866, days previous to a P.lala they gather in from all quarters and are ready to sup ply the crowds with almost anything they would be likely to demand. A piece of ground is set apart for their special accommodation, and each tilts der stretches a few yards of coarse muslin over a couple of bamboos— "opens out"—and half an hour after his arrival on the ground, is doing a brisk business. Here ho remains dur ing the continuance of the Mala, usu, ally from five to ten days,—finds time some morning to bathe in the sacred water, and at the close of the perform ance returns to his town or village, quite well satisfied with the result of his journey, for he has not only wash ed away his sins (so he thinks) but has made a handsome profit on his goods. It would be impossible to describe the scene I witnessed on Sabbath mor ning, that, as it happened, being the day specially set apart for bathing and presenting offerings to the idols, or ra ther to the Brahmins who get their living in this way. I left my tont early in the morning and made my way through the dense crowd to the steps of the tank or pond in which the poor devotees were bathing. Such a sight ! Little children supported by their parents, and decropid old men and women held up by their relatives, were plunging into the water, dipping their heads under three times, then scrabbling up the steps and pushing their way through the crowds to the groves, where they bad left a few dry clothes in the carp of' some neighbor. The air was quite cold and I saw old women shaking as with ague as they tottered' along in their wet clothes.— The tank is not over one hundred feet square, and I have no doubt that not less than five thousand persons dipped themselves in its filthy waters during that Sabbath morning! Several times during the day I tried to preach to hundreds who were as sembled in the vicinity of the tank.— Of the idols and the offerings made to them I may write in another letter.— After spending several days preaching and selling and distributing religions books, .I returned to a place called Nis rik, which is also visited by the pil grims who go to Nemliar. Here I tbund my wife and children who had come out in a "doby," a kind of palan quin carried on the shoulders of four men. Having our tent put up there 'wo preached to the multitudes two or three days. In Misrik !found a great pile of broken images, which the peo ple said had been lying. there ever since the days of Alimgir, a Moham medan king who had caused all ima ges to be destroyed throughout this part of India, with the hope that the llindoos would give up idolatry, but they have gotten up the plums of their maltreated deities, and worship them to this day. The Government has established a school in the place; but I found but few boys in attendance. The people say, "We get our living from the pi! , grins who come hero, and our chil dren will do the same; so where is the use in their learning to read ?" I ex amined the classes in Urdoo and fin dee, and gave each boy a book. Hay ing work demanding my presence in my station wo returned home. Will not the readers of the Globe give freely of their money to help en lighten these poor ignorant and be nighted people? And especially would I urge the children of Iluntinglon co., many of whom I have addressed in their Sunday Schools, to pray ffir the salvation of the poor boys and girls of India. How I wish the little readers of the Globe could go with me seine morning to my school and see nearly ono hundred boys—many of them with bright eyes and intelligent countenanN cos—reading their daily lesson in the Testament! lam sure they would be ?leased and would be- happy to know that ono who used to talk with them in their Sunday Schools, now spends many hours in teaching those poor heathen boys the word of God. Now, I have written a long letter, but it is seldom I find time to devote an hour to what is to mo a pleasant task; and as it costs very considerable to send a letter from this far country, I hope you will not think my present letter too long to be interesting. SEETAPORE, OUDII, India, January 25, 1866. [Per the Globe. I Letter from the West WESTFORD, Wis., March 27, 1860 MESSRS. EDITORS :—ln my last I gave you a brief description of our town ; allow me .to say in addition there is more business done hero in one week than in Huntingdon in two.— These little western towns all assume a business like appearance; at least, all I have seen. People all appear to be employed, each man driving ahead his own affairs. You don't see loafing around tho corners and blackguards strolling the streets at night. All is right, everything is safe. The mer chant closes his establishment for the day, leaving the windows exposed to burglars, and seeks rest perfectly easy. Such crimes as blackguarding, burgla ry, petty thieving, etcetera, appear to be unknown. The people delight in their exhibition of wit and sharp deal ing. Allow me to say the generality are as witty as the wittiest and as sharp as the sharpest. They aro prin. cipally from New York, Vermont and Mains; very few Pennsylvanians. My old friend Dr. Me— of Spruce Creek, remarked to mo a few days before I loft Huntingdon that I would be tired of Wisconsin before I would be in it long; that nobody lived in Columbia county but Irishmen. In reply I can say it is just the contrary. I have seen but ono of those sturdy sons since my arrival. Two or three settlements -PERSEVERE.- east of us aro German, ono west is Welsh, and further west, Gorman and Norwegian. Irdians can be seen at almost any tine passing on the cars. Thus you perceivo the variety is great, notwitlstanding the scarcity of Ireland's sons. The country is beautiful; very•levek not rough and rugged as many would readily imagine; not hilly and well timbered as many presume. Timber is scarce: Wood sells readily at 84,50 and 85,00 per cord; boards, common, $lB per one thousand feet; shingles, from $3 to $lO per thousand. Prices eerrespond.nearly with those of home. Wheat, 81,10; flour, $7; oats, 20; corn, 40; butter, 2.3; beans, .31 per bushel; dressed hogs, $lO per cwt,; eggs, 15; apples, $ 2 ; and potatoes, 25 cents. A prime mileh cow will readily bring 810, while a good horse—well, nothing to boast of—will sell for $250. The other day I saw a span of mules, cons sidercd medium size in Pennsylvania, and very poor at that,_bring the nice little sum of $6OO. Money is plenty here; all that is necessary is some place to invest it. Boarding is reasonable and of very good quality. Talk about your first class hotels and first class boarding in Huntingdon and the Wis consinites will laugh at you. There is one thing I acknowledge is not very palatable, and that is bread. The western ladies can not compete with eastern ladies in baking; yet the fault is not the ladies, 'Lis the wheat of which the flour is made; it being prin cipally spring wheat. During the last week I traversed over the prairie both east and west, enjoying the scenery of the country and sport of a buggy ride. (Westford has two livery stables, therefore there is no trouble getting a "rig.") The towns through which we passed were Pox Lake and Cambria. The former is a place of about 2000 inhabitants; quite a business little town and about five miles east of this. Cambria is a Welsh settlement of 2000 or 3000 in• habitants and a great business place. You may judge when I inform you there are sixteen or eighteen stores in it. Cambria is five miles west of this place In our travels we frequently passed what wo supposed to be small hop yards. Great attention is paid to the cultivation of ,the.lop in this State— more perhaps in the western part than here. For ten dollars you can got suf ficient roots, or, rather, cuttings of roots ,toet out one acre. These roots are Alai .s about S feet apart each way. The first year, as the hops don't am ount to anything, a crop of corn is raised between the hills, allowing the vines to run on the ground. Before winter sets in they are covered with straw, or a substitute, to shelter from frost. The second year a pole is placed to each bill allowing four or five vines to entwine around it while the balance are covered up with dirt and prepared for future planting. When Pall ap• proaches, the picking begins. Tables are arranged in the hop yard and box es placed on each side. One box holds seven bushels. One person attends to gathering in the vines and keeping a supply on the table for the pickers, who consist of males and fema!e.4. The wages last fall was .45 cents for seven bushels, or one box. Two boxes is considered a good day's work, but some females pick two boxes and a half. From the boxes they are taken to the kiln Tor drying. The kiln cons sists of two stories, two rooms above and two below; rooms common sized. The first room below contains two large stoves and stove pipe in quantity to encircle the room; above this, or ra ther the floor of the room above, con— sists of slats covered with heavy can vass. Upon this the green hops are placed. Tightness of canvass is re quired to save all the finer portion of hops. After becoming dry, from this room they arc shoveled to the adjoin ing room—floored in the same manner —for cooling, which requires from fbur days to a week. From this room they arc shoveled into a hopper and con voyed into a box, in room No 4, for pressing, on the bottom of which is placed a piece of sacking. The press is put on, which packs about one hun• dred and fifty lbs. in a bulk. Then the press is removed, the box taken apart, sacking sewed up and the hops arc ready for market. Many hop rai• sers, last fall, realized $lOOO per ton, clearing $5OO per acre. One ton to the acre is the general produce, so I am informed. One more idea and I am done.— Would it not be advisable for the far mers on the poor Ridges surrounding Huntingdon, to turn their attention to hop raising, instead of' grain Lick Ridgers, try the experiment, and if it don't pay I will agree to say nothing more on the subject. Thine truly. War. H. A.ENNER. The Views of Mr, Lincoln on the Scheme of the. Disunionists, The following important letter on the views of Mr. Lincoln on the Radi cals, and the question of restoration, has been addressed to President John son by ex-United States Marshal Lahr on, Mr. Lincoln's intimate - friend and former law partner : Mr. President :—Among the numer ous allegations made against you by the ultra abolitionists, I hear none re peated so often as this---,that you have deserted the principles upon which you worn elected, and turned aside from the path in which your lamented predecessor would have walked if he had lived. It seems to he believed by some that Mr. Lincoln could have been used by the radicals for all their pur poses, including the destruction of the Government, the overthrow of the Constitution, and the indefinite post pobement of Union and harmony among the States. • T need not say to you or to any 4.•";:', -.• - 4..- ~ r.. •;', •?-' "N. , . 1 ~ . , , %.., ~....).. t _. , \'' q I - ~,vii., • ~_ N..., • well-informed man that the masses of that powerful party which supported Mr. Lincoln and you in the canvass of 1864 were sincerely attached to .the Union and devoted believers in the Constitution. They everywhere as serted, that the object of the war was to re-establish the Union with the least possible delay, and one of the resolutions of the Baltimore Conven• don pledged you both to restore the paramount authority of the Constitu• tion" in all the States. It is true that the party included some roalignants who'hated the Union and tried to destroy it before the war began, and their pretended love of the Union during the war was more than suspected to bo insincere and hypo criticul ; but they kept prudently' si. lent. Mr. Thaddeus Stevens was, to best the of my knowledge, the only leading man in the party shameless and impudent enough to avow his hos tility to the Union. He was not the exponent of our views, and he repre% sented not even a tractional part of the honest millions who cast their votes, spent their money, and shed their Mood to bring-back the Govern ment of their fathers. All this you know. I write now to tell you what I know concerning the personal senti ments of Mr. Lincoln himself, and I claim now to be the same kind of a Republican that I was when I voted for him at his first and second election. I was his partner in the practice of law for a number of years. I came here with him as his special friond,and was Jlarshal of this district during the whole of his administration. Down to the day of his death I was in the most confidential and intimate relations with him. I knew him as well as one man can bo known to another. I had many and free conversations with him on this very subject of reconstruction: I was made entirely certain by his own repeated declarations to me that ho would exert all his authority, pow er, and influence to bring about an immediate reconciliation between the two sections of the country. As far as depended upon him, he would have had the Southern States represented in both Houses of Congress within the shortest possible time. All the ener gies of his nature were given to a vig orous prosecution of the war while the Rebellion lasted, but ho was equally determined upon a vigorous prosccus tion of peace, as soon as armed hostili ty should be ended. He knew the base designs of the radicals to keep up the strife for -their own advantage,and ho was determined to thwart them. As he himself told me very often, if any corroboration of this statement is needed, it may be found in the fact that the.ultra abolitionists had actual ly begun the outcry against him before his death, and the moderato men everywhere, North and South, sincere ly mourned his fall as a calamity which deprived them of their best friend. If that inscrutable Providence, whose ways are past finding out, had per mitted his life to continue until this time, there can be no doubt that the Northern disunionists would now be as loud in their denunciation of his policy as they are of yours. Mr. Ste vens' demand for the head of "that man at the other end of the avenue" would have not been ono whit less foreocious. Of course he could not and did not anticipate tho precise shapd of the measures which the radicals might adopt to prevent reconstruction. The Freedmen's Bureau bill, which recent cently met its death at your- hands, was not born in his lifetime; but I pronounce it a foul slander upon his memory to assert that ho would have signed a bill so palpably in conflict with the ConAitution and so plainly intended to promote the one bad pur pose of perpetual disunion. 1 did love Mr. Lincoln with a sin cere and faithful affection, and my re• verence for his memory is intensified by the horrible circumstances under which his high career was closed. Now that death has disarmed him of the power to defend hiMself, his true friends should stand forth to vindicate his good name. If there be any insult upon his reputation which they should resent more indignantly than another, it is the assertion that ho would have been the tool and instrument in the hands of such men as those who now lead the heartless and unprincipled . contest against you. I have time honor to be your obeli out servant, WARD H. LAMON GRAFTING. Fwory farmer should learn to do his own grafting. It is a very easy opc ration when once undestood. A sharp penknife and a good fine saw aro indis pensable. Splitting the stock so that the bark shall not bo bruised—and shaping the scion wedge fashion both ways, preserving also the uninjured— and placing the rim of the wood of both stock and scion exactly together, so that the sap can intermingle—there is no danger of failure, if properly wax ed. We make a shoulder to the graft and think it adds to the certainty of success, though probably weankens it. We prefer also two eyes•or buds to a graft, and would rather have only one than more than two. One year's wood should always be used when it can be obtained, as it is more certain to take and grown more vigorously. Wo wish to remind those about pre- parino b grafting wax, that we have found five, parts of rosin, one part of beeswax, and one part of tallow, to be the best proportions. Melt them in a. skillet, (which is the best,) or a tincup, and mix wt3ll. ft should remain in the vessel and used as needed. Twen ty or thirty scions can be waxed with one beating up. When much grafting is to bo done, a fire for heating the wax should be made on the Spot, be tween two bricks or stornes.--(lerntha• 'town Telegraph, TERMS, $2,00 a year in advance. i : "Ma.„ 4 :o3Moi Important Proclamation from Presi dent Johnson, President of the United States, Insurrection Declared to be at an End, and the Supremacy of the National Government Fully Established. WASHINGTON, April 2, 1800. By the President of the Mated States of America! A PROCLAMATION, WußttEAs, By proclamation of the 15th and 19th of April, 1801, the Pres ident of the United States, in virtue of the power vested iri him by the Con— stitution and the laws, declared that the laws of the United States were op posed and the execution thereof ob— structed in the States of South Caroli— na, Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Missis sippi, Louisiana and Texas, by combi nations too powerful to be suppressed by the ordinary course of judicial pros ceedings; and Whereas, By another prodlaniation made on 16th day of August, in the same year, in pursuance of au act of Congress, approved July 13th, 1861, the inhabitants of the States of Geor gia, South Carolina, Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, Louis iana, Texas, Arkansas, Mississippi and Florida, except the inhabitants of that part of the State of Virginia lying*:est of the Alleghany Mountains, and 840 other parts of that State and the other States before named as might maintain li a loyal adhesion to the Union and the Constitution, or might be from time to time occupied and controlled by forces of the United States engaged in the dispersion of insurgents, were declared to be in a state of insurrection against the United States; and Whereas, By another proclamation of the first day of July, 1802, issued in pursuance of an act of Congress ap- proved June 7th, in the same year,the insurrection was declared to he still existing in the States aforesaid, With the exception of certain specified coun ties in the State of Virginia; and Whereas, By another proclamation made on the second day of April, 1863, in pursuance of the act of Congress of July 13th, 1861, the exceptions named in the proclamation of August 16,1861, were revoked, and the inhabitants of the States of Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas, Mississip pi, Florida and Virginia, except the forty-eight counties of Virginia desig nated as West Virginia, and the ports of New Orleans, Key West, Port Roy al and Beaufort, in South Carolina, were declared to be still in a state of, ! insurrection against the United States; and Whereas, The House of Representa tives, on the 22d day of July. 1861, adopted a resolution in the words fol lowing, namely : Resolved, by the Rouse of Representa tives of the Congress of the United States, That the present deplorable civil war has been forced upon the country by the disunionists of the Southern States, now in revolt against the constitution al government and in armsa - round the capital, that in this national emergen cy Congress, banishing all feelings of more passion or resentment, will recol loot only its duty to the whole coun— try, that this war is'not waged on our part in any spirit of oppression, nor fur any purpose of conquest or subjus gation, no purpose of overthrowing or interfering with the rights or estab lished institutions of these States, but to maintain and defend the supreMacy of the Constitution, and to preserve the Union with all. its dignity, equality and rights of the several States unim paired, and that as soon as these ohs jeets are accomplished the war ought to cease; and Whereas, the Senate of tho United States, on the 25th day of July, 1861, adopted a resolution in the words, to wit : Resolved, That the present deplora ble civil war has been forced upon the country by the disuuionists of the Southern States now in revolt against the constitutional Government and in arms around the Capitol; that in this national emergency Congress, banish.- ing all feelings of more passion or re sentment, will recollect only its duty to the whole country, that this war is net prosecuted on our part in any spir it of oppression, nor for any purpose of conquest or subjugation, nor pur— pose of overthrowing or interfering with the rights or established institu• tions of those States; but to defend and maintain the supremacy of the Constitution and laws made in pursu ance thereof, and to preserve the Union with all the dignity, equality and rights of the several States unimpair ed. As soon as these objects are ac complished the war ought to ceas3. Whereas, These resolutions, though not joint or concurrent in form, Are substantially identical, and as such may be regarded as having expressed the sense of Congress upon the subject to which they relate; and Whereas, By my proclamation of the 13th day of Tune last, the insurrec tion in the State of Tennessee was de. Oared to have been suppressed, the authority of the United States therein to be: undisputed, and such United States officers as had been duly com missioned to be in the undisputed ex orcise albeir ofWal functions; and •Whereas, There . ;now exists no or ganized armed resistance of misguided citizens or others to the authority of the United States in the States of Georgia, South Carolina, Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, Louisiana, Arkansas, gissiseippi::and Florida, and the laws can be sustained and enforced therein by the proper civil authority, State or - Federal ; and the people of the said States are well and loyally disposed • and have confer., med,or will conform in their legislation, to the condition of affairs growing oat of the amendment to the Constitution of the United States prohibiting sla very within the limits and jurisdiction of the United States; and,. Whereas, In view of the before reci ted premises, it is the manifest deter, mination of the American people that no State, of its own will, has the right or the power to go out of Or separate itself from, or be - separated from the. Americdn Union, and that, therefore,, each State ought to remain and cum, stitute an integral part of the United States; and Whereas, The people of the several before mentioned States have, in tbe. manner aforesaid, given satisfactory. evidence that they acquiesce in this, sovereign and important revolution of national unity; and Whereas, It is believed to be a fun, damental principle of government that people who have revolted, and who have been overcome and stWedo must either be dealt with so tteoin duce them voluntarily to • become friends, or else they mutt be held by absolute military power, or devastated so as to prevent them from ever again doing berm as enemies, which last named policy is abhorrent to humanity and freedom; and , Whereas The Constitution of 'the. United States provides for .cOnstitti-, tional communities only as States and not as territories, dependencies, For,. inces or protectorates; and, • Whereas, Such constituent States must necessarily be, and by the Oen. stitution and laws of the United States, a-re made equals and placed upon like footing as to political rights, int" munities ' dignity and power with which they are united; and, • Whereas, The oliservance of politi.„ cal equality as a principle of right and justice is well calculated to encourage the people of the aforesaid States' tot be and become more and more, eon. stant and \ persevering in their renew, ed allegiance; and , Whereas, Standing armies, military occupation, military law, military W., bunals and the suspension of the priv. liege of the writ of habeas corpus aro, in time of peace, dangerous to public, liberty, incompatible with the indlyid, ual rights of the citizen, contrary to the genius and spirit of our free insti. stitutions, and exhaustive of the nate, ral resources, and ought not therefore to be sanctioned or allowed, except in cases of actual necessity, for repelling invasion or suppressing insurrection or rebellion; And Whereas,- The policy of the Government of the United States from the beginning-of the insurrection has been in conformity with the print. pies herein set forth and enunciated; Now, therefore, I, ANDREW SOIINSON, President of the United States, do here by proclaim and declare that the ink surrection which heretofore existed in the States of Georgia, South Carolina, Virginia, North Carolina, Teenessee, Alabama, Louisiana, Arkansas, Missis sippi and Florida, is at an end, and is henceforth to be so regarded, lb testimony - whereof I haVe here unto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed. NO, 41, Done at the city of Washingtoo, thg second day of April, in the year of oult Lord ono thousand eight .hundred and sixty-six, and of the independence of the United States of America the ninetieth. ANDREW JO/INBON, By the President 'MuirAm If. SEWAitEI, Seerethry of State, It is among the reports from Wash ington that Senator Sumner is prepar ing to arraign the President for his veto, on the ground of faithlegsness to the principles of the Republicatiparty, Considering how recently Mr. Sumner, in the Senate, separated himself 'from, his friends on a measure to which the Republican party was quite as dies tinctly committed as it was to the Civil Rights Bill, such a proceeding to say the least, would be not a little au dacious. It is conceded that the Rep, resentation and Suffrage amendment would have passed but for Mr. Sumner'e opposition, Tho violent and. Moor lug character of that opposition is. without a parallel. No ono questions his right to separate_ himself from his political friends ;.all will concede that if he really felt the measure wail an unwise or dangerous one it was his duty to oppose it. But he should be willing to concede the seine right to the President in regard' to another measure. He may criticise and con. dcmn the grounds of the veto, but he cannot with consistency assail the President for separating himself from his•pulitical friends, for the President has done no more than the Senator him. self did on n no less important measure, And in regard to the Civil Rights Bill, we find Mr. Bingham, one of the most astute Republican members of the House, opposing it as unconstitutional, unwise and dangerous. We believe na one has assailed him for apostasy; That ho was not successful in his op position does not alter his position—be would have defeated the bill if be could, As Waring on the question of, party fealty, we may instance the course of Senator Trumbull, on the resolution to unseat Senator Stockton. .Although it had been agreed upon, and was as much a party measure as anything could be, and although it was baeked by peculiar• reasons, and if carried would tend to secure the Civil Rights Bill (of which he was the author) irt spite of the veto, Senator Trumbull steadily refused to go with his politl , cal friends,and by snob refusal, op ths first trial defeated the resolution, No one' that we have hoard of has de, nouneed him, or proposed to glass hint with the Copperheads, for no ono sup. poses he•is lees a Republican now than he was before be separated birnsolf from his political friends on this moue ure,—and the same may be said °lgoe, Sumner. What they might become; into what attitude they alight be dri• von, should the "dogs of war" be let loose upon them, no one eau be eertain We make reference to these eased for the instruction they afford acid as a part of the current history of the day, Pittsburgh Commercial. ita,Do not live in hope. with your arms . foldee. Fortune siniles on those who roll up their eleetres and put theif ebotilders to the wheel; Party Fealty,