'ions S'. BfIiTTON, Bflltor & Fro^rlttor. CARLISLE, PA., MARCirXG, 1865, DcnKWMths Ticket. ’ To-morrow (Friday) isThe day of our Bor-, ough election, andTbia'tobe hoped Jhaf eve-, ry Demoorat in the two Wards will bo vip and 1 doing.. The following ticket was ngteed-up-| con- at the Democratic Ward mooting*: , JBorohoh Oracm tChief Burgess —John Campbell. - Assistant j ßurgess —AViA. J. Cameron.' ■Assessor —William Noaker. Auditor —A. -K. Sheaffer. East Ward. Town Council —C, 0. Hoffor, George Wet zel, J. w: D. Gillelon, A. B. Zeigler, G. B. iHoffman. •School Directors —E. Cerumen,(long term) H. IJfewsham (short term). Judge—A. Kerr. Inspector —John Boherto. Justice of the Peace—A. 'Dehuff. Tax Collector— Jacob JConstabU—A. Martin. WasTWAItD. %fhn Council —George B. Bsetem, John S’. JRhoads, Jacob Thudinm, Dr. J. J. Zitzer. . j«3yc—T>ariiel;.Bj, Croft. Inspector —William. McMillsn, Tax Collector— Joseph Boutz. Constable —Charles L. Doans, .School Director— B. C. Woodward. /First or Annin Chances. —Those of our Hown snbsorihers who intend changing their -residences on the coming first of April will please .inform us of ths fact, so that our car rier may .know where to dcUvdr their papers. -changing their rpost-offioos will -please notify us, giving ~tb« namo of ths old as well as the new post-oifics. Spring. —March marksd mildly its advent, -and the joy inooming of another season whose days "will soon be fostoonod with sun ny -smiles-and fragrant flowers—when ripple and .rill, field and foreet will wear its gala jgorriiture. We were adieu to tho chilling ■past and welcome in the present with its promise. Ai we write, there ie a contest be tween wailing winds and gentle zephyrs for -•the supremacy ; or as Oct avia has beautfully -worded its-commingling— ■“ Br«!*r Trill tor nullon stands to-day apart, A'sprlng-Uk* sanahtno-bathos tbo moaddir slop*!” The warm weather and tha henry rains ■which fall at the olos# df tha week bars dis pelled tha snow and ios; and ns we write the ■bursting of tha like buds are tokens truo of ■coming baa and bird, and bud and blossom. The blue birds—Spring’s harbingers—were about yesterday. . TVs Draft. —No draft has yet been mads 5n 10ns-county, although we understand the' Provost Marshals officers V hnrve received! or-, •to be in readiness for it.. The districts -have ■been hard at work filling their quotas, and ■some of them have enough already in to es cape tha ■draft. AVe have not been furnished ‘ with the names of those thus fortunate, but; this borough is one, W« do not ase bow the county is to escape fho draft entirely, ae we learn that some districts have put in but few ; if any, substitutes. AVe urge our citizens to burry up the business, as the draft will be upon them; when it will neither be so easy ■or convenient to find substitutes after one is drafted far the service. 1 A- Hoitestias tor Sals.— The' desirable homestead, containing 38 acres of land, about a mile west of Carlisle, advertised in another Column, hy Wu. J. Smiarkr, will he sold at 'pnhUo sole, at the court bouse, in this place, ■on Saturday next, at 10 o’clock, A. M. This is a yery snug little Amiable for ItfttOk or other farming, and worthy the at tention of those having green-hacks to in rest "ißisovim Praotici. —The many friends ef A. B. Sharpe, Esq., will be pleased to learn that he has resumed the practice of law, in the room heretofore occupied by the Post Of fice, two doors north of our office. Captain Sharps served faithfully for some three Jears in the army , and only resigned because of physical disability. , PAnt Trbeb. —Spring isaipoti u«, : and our advice to. all is, plant tress. Every person, whether living-in town or country, and hav ing the nnoocapied space, should at onoo im prove it by planting trees, cithsr fruit, shade': or ornamental. We feel assured, that we cannot improve the same space in.onreol-1 .limns to more advantage, than by advising, our friends, everywhere, to plant trees. 86T We are requested by the. immortal 11 J. N. w J(who writes us from Washington, 1 to state that he will be in Carlisle on Satur-' day evening, the 18th inst., at which time he will once more “ lift the veil and take the pressure oh himself.” The many friends of the distinguished philosopher, oratoyand sa tirist, will salute Mm with shouts of joy. O’The Democratic State Central Com mittee mot at Harrisburg on Wednesday last, and by resolution appointed Wednesday, June 21st, for bolding the,next State Con vention at Harrisburg. i Dsad.— George Darsie, formerly .Canal Commissioner. —Bedford 'Gazette. . A mistake. Mr. Darsie never was a Ca nal Commissioner. Ho was for many years a State Senator, and afterwards represented hie District in Congress. He was tHiWhig candidate for Canal Commissiherin 1854, but eras defeated by the secret influences of Knyw-Nothingism. *•► The Democratic Stale Convautian Of . 'Connaoticutbae nominated the; Hon. Origen f S. Seymour aa a (iandjidata for tSaTarnof, and thiplatfcrrividoptad by the-parly iii 1(563/ With an addiftonai resolution de nouncing the mode in which the coaatilu ' 'tianal 'aman dmant aboliiting flljftary baa bean forced upon th* country. . TIIB INAUOCKiI IMRESS, our last wopubljshed the Inaugural ad dress delivered by President Lincoln on the 4th. of March—the day ho entered upon the duties of his office Tor a second term. Like;' all papers of the same paternity, it is weak, nonsensical and boorish, There is scarcely a sentence, from first to last, that indicates a{ noble or patriotic impulse. Notwithstanding the many grave and momentous questions that now agitate the public mind, the Presi-. dent makes no allusion to them whatever. In one sentence -ho hints at dissatisfaction* with the Almighty, because He has notaa-, swored thwprayors of the peoploof the North fully 1 the whole speech, short and, disjointed as it is, has'reference to tho only subject'his little mind can contem^lnto-— the 'subject of slavery, lie thinks it strange that the .'Southern people “ should dare to ask a' just God’s assistanoe'in wringingthoir bread' from the sweat of other men’s faces.” To say nothing of the insult thus offered to W ash inoton, Jifmbbsn, Madhon, Monbob, and Jackson, (all of whom owned slaves,) it was a hard slap at his collsagut, Andt Johnson, most of whoso worldly possessions have been acquired by slave labor. 'His whole speech’ is twattling gossip an’d'bitlderdash, If a lad at ono of our. primary-schools dared to blub ber out such a piece <Sf composition, ho would receive-a spanking from his taaelier, and do graded to adowor class. IVe will not dwell, on His peculiar notions about tno rights of his dear friends, the negroes; hut there is: one sentence in the Inaugural which-amounte to an assertion,’and this ehall-pliiim out- at tention in these remarks. In speaking pf the war, the President-saysi i “ With high hope‘for the futnre.no pre-. diction in regard to it is ventured. : 0n the occasion corresponding to this fouryears-ago, all thoughts were anxiously directed to an im pending civil war. All dreaflcd-lt. All sought (b/avorthit;’’-' “All .sought t’P'Avort it,” indeed. 'EVsry, man common sense knows that'this is not true. ’When EJp. Xincocn arrived in Wash ington, wearing a Scotch oap, a little over four years ago, Iflie 'Peace-Congress was in Session, and Ex-President John T-rniit was its Chair man. Many of -the most eminent Southern men in that assemblage -were anxious and willing to compromise all difficultioe on the basis of the proposition offered by the -ven erable John S’. Chittenden, of Ky. That proposed compromise was fair, just, and-hon orable; .and had tho President and his party of fanatics desired to avert tho calamity that then threatened, they would .hare agreed to the proposition submitted, and saved the country. -But they, one'and all,..resisted it— nay., they resiotod everything looking-to peace f and compromise, and obstinately refused to ; propose any mode rff settlement themselves. The delegatee to the Peace'Congress had been eeleetedby the Govenore of the various States, and not by the people, as they should have been. Most of the Goyernors of the Northern States were Abolitionists, who desired war. Ihe 'delegates deputed were men after their own hearts, who would do. nothing except Tote “ no” to erery peace .jDpdposition. AY ho did Curtin of this Stale send to that so-call ed Peace' Congress T Fire of the most rabid,! implacable Abolition disunionists he could find. The notorious Date AVilhot headed the delegation, and they, with one accord, de clared for war and opposed peace on any terme. And these wore the men who spokefor our good old Commonwealth in that Peace Con gress, and by their persistent stubbornness assisted -to hasten the then ampending tem pest, end which soon after culminated >in war and wreck, fury and blood. These 'five mom who misrepresented the sentiments of our people, have been paid for their baseness and their treason. Wilmot is a 11. S. Judge, and his four, noripeers in crime and treason, are 1 either office-holders or compactors under the Government. They have become rich from 'fthe war—-.rich on the blood and tears of a too lenient people. But "Wilmot andbis four companions were not alone in receiving favors from the Govr eminent. Almost to a man those who were members of iho Peace Congress, and who vo ted “ no” to ovary suggestion looking to a settlement of the difficulty then threatening sis, have been provided for by old Ana — they have all received the wagee-they tvero prom ised. A few days ago a certain Jams Har lan, of lowa, was appointed Sesretary of the Interior, vice Mr. Usher, resigned, in speak ofKs appointment, the Philadelphia Inquirer, ■ an organ of the’' administration and an apoi- i bgist for all its iniquities, says—“On the as- ( ( sombling of the famous Peace Congress of 1881, of which Ex-President T-tlir was Chair man, Mr. Harlan was appointed a delegate from lowa, and actively opposed the adoption ojtjlie various suggested compromises,” Har-, LAN' has received his. rpwerd, therefore, for.; nssistingHo,,^ifun|^ : d'uT then happy Country into war. : Indeed, the members «£ that Peace Convention, who “ natively, opposed the va -1 rious suggested compromises," are the par ticular favorites of the Administration, and l favors innumerable have been lavished upon' them. They ana almost as much cared for and petted as are the relatives of the. man who fired Ji he first gun in this war—the thief and murderer, John Brown. is it net then a most outrageous perversion of troth for Mr. Lincoln to daro to say (in speaking of the war,) that “all sought to avert it I” Wbsay emphatically, the decla ration is not true'.' They all, from Lincoln down' to the meanest thieving shoddy con tractor, played for war and worked for it—, not to fight in it, hut that they might be en enablod to steal from the people’s treasury, and cover up their villainies by professing a '• zeal in behalf of “ loyalty.”. Not loyalty to the country—not loyalty to tbs principles of our forefathers, but.loyalty to Abraham Lincoln aqd liis “pet lambs," the swarthy descendants of Ham. ~ It will not do for Mr. Lincoln, than, to assert that “ all sought to avert the war.”— Sehntor Chandler spoke for Lincoln and his party, when he said, two months before Sumtor was fired on, “ wo (the Aboli- want a little, blood-lstting." .And Bsn IioiLSR, and Stanton, and Dix had a ;dark, devilish, .treasonable .design formed’ and wall matured, when they clapped South-’ *m'numbers of "Con grass on their banks and •aid to them,.(just before thsy loft.Waihing ton for'their Southern homes,) “you ars right, stisk to jt, and gsa-hsad." . Tb* rsbsl lien was a wioksd oompiraoy t but Northern Abolitionists'he weU.’as; Southern Jlro-eaters were its leading spirits. • Had a.'fsw of them been hanged,, ws would , bare, had no robsl-i lion* and Hr. Lincoln would nob at this late j day, consider it nebessary to falsify Jiislory. < t I In'liia speech on inauguration day, Andy Johnson-, the Vico President, 'repeated three times that ho woe “ a plebeian.” “I am a plebeian, and thank God fbrit,” ho said over and over -again. It was not .for this low, vulgar man to remind the people of a fact that Was patent to all. Sure enough, he is a plebeian, as his conduct for many years proves. Walker gives us tho defini tion of the word plebeian thus —“ Plebeian, one of tho lower people ; moan persons, be longing to tho lower rank, vulgar, low, com mon.” Certainly the Vice President is one of this class, for no one will dispute the ’fact' that he is o vulgar, low, common man. ' And; this pldboian occupies the second highest of-, ficiiflipopitiondn tho Government 1 What a. disgrace to , our once proud nation. Lincoln holds tho first, and Johnson tho second office in tho gift of'the people !—the one noted for j his imbecility and false professinns, the other, for his brutish-depravity. Truly, they are a pair of plebeians. /In consequence of Johnson's conduct on tho 4th of March, the twq or threat Abolition papers that have had tho courage to condemn , insist that it ; ie -Andy’s plaffirdoty to apologize or resign,”, Tho Now York World, in referring to this fact, says; We have very little expectation that Mr. Johnson’s party will force him loan apology ora resignation. The Vice-President is os incapable- of appreciating tho reparation which he owes to the country as he hat' shown himself to bo inoapbio of appreciating his own insult tothe-country. lie is report ed-in the Washington telegrams to be indul ging in BtilbcnOtbor debauch. Nothing bet tsr is to be expected of him. Those are'the habits of his life-time. They were known to! the politicians who nominated him; they were proclaimed in the face of tho party which elected him. Nevertheless he was' elected—byfiaud. It ia-idle.ito askthostream to rise higher than its'fountain. And, in our. judgment,-it is a much more rnelanoholy cir cumstance that Mr. Johnson’s party last No-! Tombst-invitod these insults to'the country ,| and now in March wilt neither -expose _nor- punish them, than Ahat the Insults are given' 'US. ’ . ■ ■lf Andrew Johnson had not boon drunk en , inauguration day, the epeech which'ho would' have made would have been less incoherent, but in all other respsots it would have been the same. The shallow demagoguery, the -affected “ plebeian” pride, the real self-oon-' tempt, and secret envy of -more fortunate men, these have been betrayed, these have been tbo-storffc and fltapfle df'evory speech of Andrew Johnson for yenrs. AVe say nothing of his political'tergiversation. It is ridicu lous to ■suppose that he over had any politi cal principles. He was nominated because he had none—but could bellow his bastard “loyalty” loudly. AVe refer now te that which was most degrading in 'hie vinous speech—its betrayal af his inmost -charac ter. It is necessary 'to affirm either'that ho 'ha* been drunk every time bo has made a speech since Mr. Einooln- rewarded his po-" IHical dishonesty by making him military governor of Tennessee, or else that he'is— drunk or sober, boy, man, tailor, senator,' governor, or Vice-President —'the lew 'boor which, with infinite pain, : in the last presi dential contest wo felt it our duty to declare him to be. His speeches are nil alike. Thie last one in the Sonato chamber was no ex ception, save in its incoherence. Head _ his speech oh hearing nows of his own uominaj tion at Baltimore. Let'our readers look to their files. It was published at the time.: — 1 It reeks with the very'same, vulgarity, the ‘sama;demagoguory, the samo low-lived man ners and- 'morals. Hoad his spseob after hearing news of bis‘election. It is another, yet the same ns that of'Saturday—-vulgar, low-bred, boorish. There, too,' ho proclaims’ hie humble birth with “ plebeian” pride be-' traying secret'envy. ‘ As if ho were the first man in this Domoorafic republic who had ever risen from narrow circumstances to the high places cf the land 1 As if Juokson and AVebster and scores of others had not com ' passed as groat advancement as ho, who nov- [ 1 er spoke themselves, nor permitted others to ( speak -of them, except in language becoming 1 to their real greatness—who never set theit own praise to devouring their own deeds! 1 It is this which As melancholy in the pras i ent situation of the vice presidency, ana for this no apology or resignation is either possi ble or probable, for it is the victorious Ra * publican party which .would need to apolo ; giie to the country or resign. "1 4M L PIE BEKS'.” The Merhv Dance Goes On.— 'While tlie armies of the Union are bravely struggling 1 against a .desperate enemy and suffering the rigors of the wintry elements ; while the rattle of musketry and- the roar of cannon awheard almost at the doors of the lede'ral Capitol,, mingled with the groans and shrieks, of the victims of ’terrible war, we read of thoj luxurious ’entertainments that ate of almost, nightly occurrence at Washington among the' Abolition mognates of the land. From 1 among others we select the following descrip tion, taken from tlie Washington papers, of the matinee of Mrs. Senator Sprague. After reading it let the soldiers and people consid er whether the maintonanoeof such royal os tentation and expense is in keeping with re publican simplicity or.the dark aspect of the ; times. Lot them also consider whose ■saorl ' Sees, whose toil, and whose means goto teep up Buoh unseemly' carnivals. Is it not the, people’s mpney, wrung from th,em in taxes, and squandered on speculator and favorites, ■ that is thus lavishly poured opt at the shrine ' of fooliph and unblushing pleasure.? But, read: ' < “ Tiro' elegant mansion of the Senator was' decorated as became his great. wealth,and as became the accomplishments and graces of bis beautiful wife.. The air throughout the different apartments of the edifice was redo lent with the perfumes of athousand flowers, and music (out its enchantment to the whole,l causing the hours to pass but too quickly bv.: A,dancing hall, expressly erected, was fitted up in the grounds adjoining the house, which resembled. more the abode of fairies, as we are. told of them, than a place foiT'eommon mortals to dance. For the inner man, each and every delicacy that could tempt the taste was profusely, offered. The residence off the. Senator, spacious as it is, was not top e.xten-, ded in its proportions on the occasion men-, tinned, to be filled with the good,.ths distin guished, the accomplished, and the beauty and fashion of the -metropolis, and of very many of the Statssof this Union. The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States—father of Mrs. Sprague—Members of both Houses , of. Congress, Ex- Governors, | Cabinet Ministers, Foreign Min isters, and other dignitaries,and,their privss and .daughters, vter.a among , the .delighted ,throng. V, >;■* :■ JC7* ThsNaw York ZVmespnblishes a list of favored gentleman who hava“ permits” from the Government to bay cotton in the rebel State* I '. A commit!** of Cohgfaaa i* I*ok|ng-up tka mattsr, and it i*.already as certained that large sums ,of monay have baan paid for tha privilege, in' this " aga of purity”—-whan “ honest' msn.hatepdma to claim thoir own." :vl-^ ,$/■ ;/;/■* -;a stalk lie. v ,. Th«V&epdb , .ioa& »bwH»prt< Vl|l Ulo.'Uo . maliciously,'Wilfully and poralstemly, alltoe World knows. seam* hard for them to tell the truth, almost impossible for fchtm to abflU .ionaHo whidh'they nave ones staßtod.. . They, seem to bonerfßOtly enamorodpf fajaehoods, and to some, vthioh they Jiavi inyanted thay cling with a tenacity and a fopuness that u wonderful. ! It is useless to array facts before them. If you demonstrate the falsity of their -assertions ns clcnrly as'yon could, that one and two milko three, and not four, they will •still cling-to'lhsdie, arid repeat it with U bra- I zen.-effrqdtery that is astounding for its un surpassed impudence; To no one lie nave they more persistently and tenaciously clung 1 than - to the oft-repodted nssortion that Mr. Buchanan allowed his Soerotary of War to 1 rob tho Arsenals of the North to I into tho'har.de of Southern traitors. Only I yesterday we saw this stale falsehood offen- I sively repeated in the Harrisburg TiUgraph. Now it is not possible that tho oditoV of that I shadt canbe ignorat of tho, fact, that a Com mittee of Republicans, appointed-hy n Repub lican'Congress'toinvostlgats that very Charge, 1 were 1 compelled to report, not only that there was no truth in lit, hut that during Hr. Bu ] cliamuds entire-term of office the Northern 1 States bad received pioro than their shave of I arms—’decidedly a larger numbsr than they wulil’d have been entiled to had art onuablo I distribution of them been made." Tho South ern States instead of receiving more arras '] than 1 they wore entitled to had received fewer. That is tho report made by a Committee which wodld have been glad of tho opportunity to re port -otherwise. But, does any oho suppose ■ ths Harrisburg Telegraph will retract tin ■falsehood it utters when it is even thus char ily proven to bo such ? Not it, indeed. That is something not done by journals of its class. ; They have neither honor,'principle,'nor ds denoy. They. He wilfully and persistently for ' a set purpose; and, having onoo uttered A ' lie, they. wiU swear to itstruthfulnessa thou -1 sand tima* over if need be. /Exposuredoes ‘ not incommode them in the least. They. are ; l-as destitute df shame as they are of ptinoi-, ; I pi*.' Such ‘journalism is o disgrace to any. 1 ags and any country; and it would ho a die- I grass to any‘party, eicspt ths one in whose j bsh'alf it is continually -employed. It can ’ j scarcely he more completely disgraced than i it da-already. —Lancaster ‘lntelligencer. . Bt*BKon or ANDBS\V-J(J*fNSOJf. During all this time Androwilohnson —for such ho simply was tlion, notfhaving taken tho oath of office (would to heaven that it could bo said in behalf of tho country that he is still only Andrew Johnson) —continued his speech. Such a speech. It was dis graceful in the extreme. 110 had apt pro ceeded far when Senators 1 On the republican side began to hang their heads, sink down in their seats, look at each other, with signifi cance,-and say, V Is Jia or what is the matter?” They exhibited m overy' foature groat uneasiness.- There was no mistaking the iaot that the Senators Were mortified in the extreme. The .democratic Senators leaned forward and ; .oppeared to he ohnok ling with each other over'the figure made by the republican i party-through their ■Vice- President* elect. Theforeign minister* showed-unmistakable signs of amazement a* the 'incoherent sentences came from Mr, •Johnson’s -lips, die publican Senators moved around in their seats, unable still un der the exhibition before them, of the Senators sat sidewise, others turned their r- hacks, as if anxious to bide themselves. Mb Charles Somn*&, to our great Luckily for the members of the House of hours'6f the lato session of'Congress, to at wero uot subjected to but a-small por-| least one Sentiment in which there is. noth-, tidn .of'this scene. .1 ing of puritan prejadioe or malignity. When. The-speech was disconnected; tho senten ce resolution to contract with Powell, the; oes so incoherent that it is impossible to giva; . ICBUIUWU . an -accurate -report of hw -speech, \A9 hie American artist, for a:Naval Picture to cost Bentat.co« oanio'up in the reporters* gallery, ■s2sjooo, was before the Senate, Mr. Sumner, tht statements that- “your President is a offered a proviso, declaring " that in the No* pleboian—l am a plebeian, glory in it—Ten .. , * .. 1 iiya. "NTnfinnni neaseo (hio) has never gone out of the-Union tional l Capitol, dedicated to the National I ftra v fco talk t £ o minutoß and a ha if t Union, there shall bo be no picture reptesen- on that point—rl.Tvnnfc you '.(-hie) to hear me. ting any victory in battlb with our fellow-cit-] Tennessee always was loyal—wo -nil‘derive Eona if 'feeling tljat prompted this our power from the (hie) Jus proviso was something more than a mere ties (hie).Chase is but a ergature df'the peo “ . t „ . a . .. pie—l want yon (hie.) to hear .flie -two-mm sentiment--if Mr. .Sumner and his party utoa on that point—yon, Mr. .(bib) Stanton,' would but make it a principle of dotion, the; Secretary of War, derive your authority and chief obstacle in the way of peace and re- power-from the people. i(“ Who is Seoreta union would be removed. Let the men now by of the (hie) Navy?”—was then hoard, in . , ... _ _• a yoioe of less volume. - Some one responded m power so iarconquer their, sectional pre- , Mr> WoHm a, y OUi M r . W.ellos, (hie) Score jndioee-as.'to regard the Southern people, in j ttr y 0 f tho-Navy, get, your power -from the lithe spirit df Mr. Sumner’s sentiment, na fel-i people (hio.i) This was the strain and tone, low citizens to be conciliated by a. tolerant of the whole speech. _ ■ ■ 1 "TV” - "r.l” b -, teziSSXS&. subjugated by relenileaa war, and tho day in the rear, declaring, 14 What aj Peace will not bo far distant. This previse shams;” “Has he no friends?” “is there eon templates'a future' in whish'ths people, no person who will have mercy upon himt”J now arrayed against each other as foeman, ■ :^* 1 ] i hsm tO . *‘9P and save .the oduntry fur-,j ... . .... a . - theT disgrace, .were so numerous, that it en willagam join hands in fraternal Union.— tirely prevented* Tull reportbeiug made— When that time jihall come—when tho rep- Tho only full report was that of tho official resentatives of that people, from North and, ropbrtere o'f the plohe. The Senators how- South, shall again assemble on a common wot, were so at the, speech, that; , .. . .. , T .. , . ..J they notified the Olebe reporter to suppress, feeding m the National'Capitol, no picture and wait until Mr. Johnson could, or other emblem'Should be found there to* write out a speech, that thii -affair/mighb pot, wound -the sensibilities or mortify the jiist go before tho world in that form. It is obar-' pride of either. The idea is worthy .of a Uahle to s a y thdt his obndidition was such r , , .■ . . , .. . . that‘he was unfit to . mako n speech. -He ev- Btatohman, a patryd and a Christian. Act j d entiy. did not shun Bourbon county, Ken upon it now,-and prevent, the^multiplicationlUoky, bp-hi* way -here. ’ - , •of nnwpttby tfnlfjeots for a piotiirbtdtftaiiorn' Mr.' Johnson finally oonoluded his speseh, the «£pitol of a nation of" follow oi tiA»<i whereupon Vice President Hamlin adminis v 'SJered to him the oath of office; Mr. Ham- Aaread tho oath by sentences,' and Mr. John-; sonsrepeated it after him. The effort of the Vice'President elect to go through With the formbi repeating' the ’sontenoee as read by Mr. Hamlin, was painful in the extreme.— x He stumbled, stammered, repeated portions, of it.several times over. The moment that hO'Canoluded; this task Mr. Johnson turned to the audience and oommenoed -another speech, giving to those assembled his idea of the oath which .he had just taken, He bad: ■uttered bnt two or three sentenoeswben some \ of the officials standing near him had the good sense tostop him, he having already, 00-J copied some nineteen minutes in his former i speech, and delayed the proceedings beyond, all' usages. They were unwiUitrgWbat they should be-any longer dalayed by tho vnoohe r rent remarks of this new official.. It blis heretofore been the oustom to close all speech., ■cs-the moment that the. judges of Ehe.Sn premo ’Gourt .'and diplomatic corps reach the, fianato Chamher. : But Mr.-Johnsbn did not -appear to -understand the’.usage on such ob .oaaioqs, or else was not inclined to ■; follow them, for -tho diplomaticgentlemen,,beard tho bulk of his speech, and,unfortunately, the worst part of it. ;The moment .that The new Vice President had heon-sileUeed, , Mr. Hamlin declared; the old Senate adjourned. Thus: expired the Senate of the- Thirty-eighth Congress, .at-fifteen- minutes past -twelve -o* clock. 1 , :u r: ,h : i:i. ; . jle calm rga sENi^B’tro bttßEk. 111 -; . Mr. Johnson immediately called the new Senate to orden .uThe. clerk of.the Senate,, John W. Forney, then read the proclamation of the President convening the Senate in- ex traordinary session. The newly elected Son -atora were ordered to approach the Clerk’s desk and take the oath of office as their names were announced. .The following gentlemen ll to this call stepped forward : Messrs. An thony, Fessenden, CraejupTlbward, Nate?, Norton,--Outline arni •Lane, and took the oatlllere Vico President Johnson made tyrfilher . r Prssidetjt or the Govern- , ,-SfiNT. —Forney some months ago offered a' 1 reward for a new name to the United States, and the New York Tribune has repeatedly had something to say on the subject. Now, why not adopt the caption at the head of this article, It is patent that New England Puritans govern the-remains of the once United States. They wore the originators oT the war for the dissolution of the old Union ; they were the first to denounce the Constitu tion framed by such men as Washington, Jefferson and Madison, as a compact with hell and a league with the devil;. they were the first to-attempt, to secede, and unite with Canada; -and the -only 'people that burnt Blue Lights to notify the British when and', j how to strike during the war of 1812; they were the" first to petition Congress fdr a die? I solution; the first to send Sharp’s rifles to the harder States; the first to canonize John -.Brown, the Ksfasas horse thief; the first to innooalate the, Christian-churches, of: the North with -infidelity and -hypocrisy. In fact they have been'the firstln every move ment yet devised to disgrace and disrupt the, Washington government; and, in this .war they have been the first to pteal, rob and plunder ; the first to commit arson, rape, and murder;' the first in every deviltry end de-. baiioh; the first' to hug and lust after the sweet soentedniggef ; and the impartial his torian will write it in his hook, that in ail the sanguinary battles they wer a the first to rim, but : ihe‘last to gee into any danger,—• Then why not give them precedence for their, enterprise, 'and acknowledge the fact, by an nouncing that on‘the 4th inst. Abe 'Lincoln was duly inaugurated the first President of the Now ■ England government? Forney Will please'hand us over the “ premium." ; A SID SPECTACLE. ./The Philadelphia Ledger, a dignified ad ministration paper, thus speaks of the scene ip the Senate Ciiomhpr on the day of tiro in auguration;' The saddest spectacle -attending tiro inau guration at Washington,, on Saturday, was the Vice-President of the country standing before an assembled multitude of his fellow citizens endeavoring to articulate a' maudlin .speech, but unable- to,-do so intelligibly.— 'There have been- shameful exhibitions in' public b.oforo by ihon occupying,positions and places of honor, but on no period of our political history can there bo found one which sb. degraded; the: high offioo the people bad assembled to honor. The Senate, blushing for . the pcene, immediatoly ordered the bar for the sale',of liquors to bo' removed,; but this,does,not remove !the public disgrace of tjie spectacle. It is, painful to baVe to reflect In terms of consure upon persqns oxhallod to tba highest favors pf tiro Republio; but the pnly yray to ,correct a bad example in suoh positions, is for the people to , condemn the open improprietias cl their public servants and hold -th'dm to a just acoountahilitv for their publio conduct. To slur over such in ■tdnoas is,to have more feeling for the. indi vidual than respect for the positiOh he ooeu pics; MORALS OF'OUR REPUBLICAN PARTY. iphe Kind of Jtulera They Have Wiven Vs— . ,J 1 Melt Disgraceful Scene—The Vise 'President in a State of ißeasily Dfunkedhess at the Inautfura- s Hon —He Makes d Charac teristic Speech. . Uho correspondent of tho New s® ork Tier aid, a personage sufficiently mendacious to prniso Mr. Lincoln profusely, and rondy to go so for ns to floH" his innugimil nddrasS "el oquent, nhd all that, gives kho followihgac ■count of-tho sayings and doings of tho Vice- President at tho inauguration: - < “While tho Diplomatio'Corps were taking their seats incite Senate Chamber,.Mr. Ham lin concluded his Speech, w’l on the Vico Prssi ; dent eioot, Mr. ffohnann, commonced his ad dress, before Jio Imd-taken'tho oath of office. Ho had boon talking about llyo minutes when the President entered tho door from the Sen ate lobby, at the right of the. Olorkts desk, escorted by Sonntors'Hendrfasks and Poster, Mr. Lincoln taking his seat ot tho ond of the Clerk’s desk, near the members of his. Cabinet. , ■ / ■ FAUX PAS. He stopped forward with the Bible, hold s it out, and motioned to the new Senators to - touch the -Bible, bow their beads in assent, • and thon motioned them away without repeat ing the oath in -any form. Most of the Sen ators left tho stand when the muddle 'was discovered., The Senators, were recalled, and Mr. Fbrnoy administered to them tho oath of office. By this time it became apparent that some one besides Mr. Johnsn would have to conduct the business of tho senate. Without giveng:an opportunity for any fur ther disgraceful scenes, Mr. Forney announ-. oed that tiro procession would thon bo form ed to conduct the President elect to tha . plat form at tho east entrance' of the building; Where iho oath of office would bo adminis tered. As he announced the order in which they prould form, tho distinguished’ 1 guests foil into lino. In a moment more tiro pro-, ccqsion had disappeared, from tho Senate Obdmbar. ! , I .CALLS FOR ANDV‘JOHNSON—NOT.inLE TO COU* ! toxin*. - ' After Mr.’’ Lincoln had finished, the ddlir-, ary of his inaugural, criss'for Andy John-' Son next eneusd. TKore was d momentary delay, and then the Vibe President present ed himself and waved both hands. There wart o&lla of ‘‘ speech," " speech;” and some •pplause when Andy appeared.' t Ha rabbsd' bis rod face with' his hands, as if to clear up his ideas, blit did nob Succeed, and said noth'-: ine. A lane -was then opened through, the' crow# on the .pfatform, and tho.Prosidentiai party retired into the’CoWtol, qihid the thun ders ofthe artillery in "Chpitol Square and the mßsio of The firing of the saluto began the moment itho Pfesidqnt bad taken the oaib, and’bdforo the salute was over the nssomblago began.to disperse;' TUB EVNATE (WAITS I.ONO FOR 'ANDY, BUT HE eOUES NOT, Upon entering tho.Oapitolthe Senators re-, turbed to the Chimber, strnggling’in'by ones' end twos. The doors and windows’df the, Capitol building were thrown open, and -the' crowd inside rushed out svith os much diSST-, dor ns that which characterized the rush from tho galleries as the procession loft the Senate 1 for tho.phvtform. The Senators gathered in squads in different portions of the..hall, ear nodtly ’talking over tho scenes which had transpimd'th'CVo before they loft for the plat form. 'They wore evidently-in no pleasant frame pf mind. They remained thqyo for some time for the ’return of tho ViooPresi dentj-who, according to usage, would bo re quired to adjourn tho body. They waited in suspense 'for-nearly, nn hour, but Mr. Johnson did not make bis appearance. Fi nally the Senators slipped out 0110 by ope and disappeared without bbing-adjoutned.--- It is, therefore,-supposed that the Scnnti I3J still in session, although not one of tho Sen ators is in his seat. . IV ABIIINQTON, M'Allfcn 7, The ■’Senate. nssiembled (it 11 d’olook, bul ■tho etejdProsidenV was notpresontto call tho body to order. Tho Sonata. being-left with out n presiding oflioor, on motion, Senator Foster, of Conn. was appointed President pro tem. ■ Mr. . Wilson ■.(•Republican,) immediately rose and said, after the disgraceful seen* in that body on Saturday, he Jolt it a duty to make it‘motion. : On his'motloirtherefore the Senate adopted a lesblution which'prohibits in-Mute the sale of intoxicating liquors in the Senate wing of tho Capitol. This Vna a hard hit at the vioo President, Andy John son. The fear is that it will ndfproyo to be more effusions thian tho Maine liqaorlaw.— Andy Johnson wiH have his whiskey if he has to carry dt'to the 'Senate chamber in a pint llask, in the tail of his coat. A Washington letter-writer eaye—Vice-Pres ident Johnson is too 'Unwell to pttend table duties in tho Senate, and will, probably, not Tosume hitj seat this session, it being deemed necessary by his friends and physician, that 'he should have quiet and rest. 1 lie is in a deplorabloTSOndition. ■Tribute of Reject. 'OaUJ’ Batitbev “ D.’l 2nd P. "V. < Artillery, Bermuda Front, Va. > JVinroh 6, 1865. _ Mb. Editor : — lt becomes our moldnofioly duty tn-announoe to you, n's well as his maOy frlOdtls.ttho sudden death of our late associ ate and comrade in arms, Prbdsriok Eaiibr, who departed this Ufa at the Hospital, at Point of Books, Va., Tob.. 24th, of acute Di arrhoea, coptraotsd in the semes while bot 'tlibg for tho rights of his adopted country. , At a meeting df the undersigned members of Battery “ID,” 2nd Artillery, March, 3d, 1805, tho following resolutions of condolence were ' ■\Viibrkas, It has pleased'Almighty Qod in His Providence, to remove by death our Companion in arms, -Frederick -FabOi?. Therefore, , Jiisolved, That wo. deeply deplore hrs loss and sincerely sympathize with his bereaved 1 and'afflicted parontiafhd relatives, in tbs loss; of their son and brother. liesolbed , That svor raafly to respond to duty’s Call, Toarl.es in tho .hoar of danger, kind arid modest in hie department, lie won, the respect and eateem of his companions in arms, and his memory.shall ever be cherished ns only the true ana' brave can be, in the •hearts of his comrades. . Resolved, That a copy of this# resolutions. bo sfent 'to the family of our deooSoed oom-! rude, and fheta roeolatione bo published in the phptVs of Carlisle."' . . . ' Charles D. Hull, Prank Cart, James G. ■Weaver, John D. Lynch; Courtney H. Early, Frederick Iludy.Bsnj. Bear, Gecrgb G. Wert, Leonard Hoffman, Henry' Swoyeland, Wm, Meehan, John M. Kramer, Committee. I Gun. Grant’s’Ofi-iniok. —A. private letter of Gen, Grant, published in the Quincy Her-' aid, eays: ", ' ; ’ “Everything looks to mo very faroTn'blei for N a speedy termination of the war. The. people of tho South are ready for it, if they oan,got clear of their leaders. It is hard to predict What yv.ill become Of them—thy lead ers ; whether they will flee the country, or whether the people will’foroibly depose them and . taka the matter in. their own hands.— • •One or the other will likely occur .if our spring campaign is as successful as I have everyJiflpo it Will bo.’’ * There is-every reason to believe lhat if the' . leaders could be driven oat, the people of the rebel States Would not hesitate a day in com ing back into the." Union. The continual ef forts of the Organs of rebellion'tokeep down the dissatisfaction of tbs people with tho reb el Government,prove how extensive the feel-; ing against it must be. Though the journals try, to. put a good face on the present situation of affairs it is but of little uso. the people' will not'believe bat that tho Confederacy is on ite last logs.;, Grant and Sherman ate try ing to take the underpinning, from it;"whin: , 'the whole structure Will topple dodfel, leaving noting injuries ;o» a memento Of its wiokednesel r L- OIITIICAROLItfA Bailie Near 'Kinston — The Federate Defeated . With a Loss of Three Guns and Fif ■ teen Hundred Prisoners—Official llcpOrt of General Bee. ■ 1 AVamunotoj), MAncn l2.—The Riofthiond Dispatch'd Friday, March lOtli/contains the following despatch from General Loo, giving (lie-particulars of a battle near Kinston, N. .0., belweed General Bragg of tho'Oonfeder ate army! and the United States forces-wbich. movediVora Newborn to meet Sherman, in the direction of Goldsboro’: Headquarters, Eto. March 0, 1805. Ron. J. 0. Breckinridge, 'Secretary of War ; ■General Tlragg reports that .ho attacked the enemy yesterday, four miles in front of Kin«- toh, and drove him'from his position. 'He groand obstihateij and took up, a ne’w line, three miles from bis tlrsV Wo captured three piooesof artillery and 1,500 prisoners. The number of the enemy’s dead at\d wounded loft on the field Is large ; ours is comparatively small. The troops behaved most handsoihely, and Major Generals-Hill arid Iloke exhibited their usual Zeal and on-, ergy. ■ • ■ , i '(Sigaed) ■aj/-- : It. ' ' Kihston, near \yhereTho light occurred, is situated oh the weot route from Goldsboro'' to Newberh,-’and:is aboutitwenty-milpc'east of Goldsboro,’ and thirty west'of -Newberm. It is sopposed that this force of the enemy vyas advancing from Nerybew againStGolda ■boro’ for the purpose -of cutting, the railroad at that,point. . Fight Bktwbbk a Whitb anbßoack Opt obid ItioiuiNT. — Mxurms, Maroh 9, via March, 11.—A.fighf occurrod at Fort Pickoring night before last.‘between the 3d United Stoteh colored' artillery and. a "white regiment, resulting in the death of several ■negroes -and one white soldier.' The .fight grew out of a disagreement about raVooi. : .John P. Hade ‘fen. John P. Ilalo. ef New H a «° b boon appointed artf BcnGrnred a a Jl '-°’ Seain.; This nomination has Uk prise some of the partidtildripersccni /■ BUt ' of ; Mr. Dinooln, who havehebnSysidl n 0 persecuted by Mr. Hale for two' v Ca,,J They fiiiy the’ surest way to the #®*A destructive firs occurred n ‘ n-i A near Pittsburg, on the 8d in*i -n°'' Cll j •New York Hotel, just fmiHl'wiii 1 10 ,llr R dwellings wore destroyed ’ "*■ 3Sarrl*&. In this place, at tho Reformed on the 28th lilt., by thq-Rov. Snmuol Pn- m Mr. John C. IlEnEi,, to -Mian llan^ i" T' inoer, both .of Perry co. NA " Htj- M Typhoid fov«,%H d Rr of > ■HER, aged -7 years -and 10 monife daughter ofPiout. IV. A. and S J B pV rt and®grand daughter of’ John Pefe!/" Dickinson toiVuslnp. ,Br ’’° In this borough, nn the 23th tilt,,.n r w „ * B ° d 20 3 °' m ' 7 ""““h u 5 ISa'tkfk CARLISLE MABKHIi-SttShlSuß Floor, Suplirfin#, pir bbi., 1 do., Extra, do., Byo, ; do,, Whitb W«RAr,'por‘birthel. R»d Wb.at, : So’ Rtm, Corn, Oats, Sprinp Barley, Fall do., Clotrrbirr, TiMOTHTBRID do., do., tioi, 'do:, do., IiICEWSES. . NOTICE is herabygiven that tin follnwln named persons have filed applications in ih office of tho Clerk of tho Court of Qanrttr StninJ of Cumberland county, for license under the pro visions of the Act of Assembly, npprovtd list March, 1168, and tho auppiomonts thereto uhl t applications will be presented to the Slid QontU Monday, tho 10th day of April, 18»5, vh; 'TAVERNS, Carlisle—East Slntlln, John I Heisor, T- B. Weakloy, Oscar Shields. Carlisle —Best. Ward—il. L, Burkholder, Into ■TiiudiumV David 11. Sill, iPhilip Aughlnbnr; •John Hannon. .T.'Cufvdfc. , Enet Penneberough - Benjamin Chy, Ja« Sholl, Jfloob Switzer, John Soiror.John A. Sail Hampden —Qeorgo K. Buoy, D v Hurao, Lower Allen —Jacob Kline, J, S. Ilitcahuo, Jcl O', Heels., , JfttW^arr—Eliza Bollingdi*, N.'lV. Woods. Jtfonroe—George 'O.'Donnol, W. IrVino, loiter IVssthefi Goorgo L. Sponaler. Newvitle —Daniel S. Dunlap, John JI. Woodbur Newton —Christopher Mcllinger. • North 'Middleton —tT. 0. Beecher. New Onmierlaud —Samuel W. Drcoburn. Newhnrg— -Isaac A.'Quigley. B. Bystor. Shippcnthu'rg —John Wyncoop, Mary A. Mulct Wm. M. Angbinbaiigh, Samuel Baughman, Ji Junkln. - SoU<htitnptoH~yfilVwta Clark; Samuol floch. South -Middlcltin V/'BlWm S. Mullen, BU Rtfpley, johfc TtiokoTf. Silver Spring —J, 'We 'Loitlig, Goorgo Dney, v cob Otstott, A. Klink, John b, Black. Upper Allen —William L. Cooklin, Jereml Hannon. , . Weft 'Cbianoll, Wiu zd*, IynobESAL'E Mb KKtXii. deambb, Carlisle—'East li r rtrti —Thomas J.'Kirr, Char F. Boltols, John Kalior. i Shippsnslurji —B. K. Keller. . ■ ' ‘ E. COMMAS, Cirri •March 16,1816-St Notice* , TV OTIC® is Kersby given that I TnUnJ A. l apply .to the next Court <f Qaartor cohi Of Cumberland county, to bo bold on the lON Ap&l } 1865> for license to koop a Boor Houm ' Restaurant in the Eastward of the Borongi •Carlisle. Maroh lfi, f 6s—2t* H*tice. ' Xl hereby given that I intend t 0 *PPtyJ?, next Coart of Quarter Soasiona of OnmM 'County, to bo hold on tho 10th day of April, 1 araST: received from tbe f ro “ l v Auction Sales-‘ ‘ ' . 3000 Yards CALICOES, 1 2500 " WHITE MC? AxJj BS, • 600 “ SPRING •8000 - “ BROWN MOok s 800 GINGIIAMS. 5000. “ •■OABPBIS, (i OlUClotiil, looking Glo*»ss, ®“jjidW Bargains inHoop. Skirts, K n . 0 , Inf 1 Spring Moulton, Dross Goods, # loa ||< ■abovo'goods and many s lll , ~ pleat® M oft toil. I until tho Ist of A P ■ B ireot- t ■door bolow Martini llot, gA^ ' March 0, 1865.' • V .Pr»tl«oiiota , 'y’ g TVTOTICE is.horeby given " fl[oJ il -.trust : t8 tuvo - prßßonJ ( tfcojdotary'a office# oum bcrlflA Cfonrt of Common ?1«m “ the «» for confirmation on Wofn.Booj-, April, A. D. MiS.l'rt* i; ; KoJ t, Co®® 1, Tht »ooou«t qf W>°“ . Nifloy Brow'nawoll, a. ll ! n “i 1 Oooho» 1,er V “ Tfio aooouotofM.olm d OO JoflUjamln Brtlth.> !»»•“ . amptott townßhip, iIM i- ,g. March 9, ?«—Bt BDSAN GILMOEI
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers