Zluvritan Welnotnr. CARLISLE, PA.,. TUnradny Iloriilmr. tUl> ’ * ANNOUNCEMENT ! Our subscribers will find the date to which their subscriptions 1 arc paid given on the address of their papers, immedi ately after their names. All those in ar rears for the current year, whoso su >- scriptlons date from the Ist of December or thereabouts, who settle their accounts during the month of February, will be. charged at the rate of #2 00 per annum After March Ist no variation will be made 'from our published terms in any instance. All will have fair notice and wc intend to treat all alike. Subscribers in arrears wiim therefore save fifty cents by FAYING FOB TIIEIIt PAPERS BEFORE THE Ist ok March. This is not intended as a dun, but merely as a notice for the be nefit of subscribers who are m arrears.— The heavy expense of the Volunteer establishment requires a prompt collee lion of all accounts; and it is nothing more than fair that the enterprise mani fested in this journal should meet with a corresponding promptness and liberality on the part of its patrons. __ free school* for yocno apri- lu the House, at Washington, n few days ago, Thad Stevens introduced a bill to establish a system of common schools for the benefit of young Afri cans in the District of Columbia. Tho bill provides for the establishment, with in one year, of a sufficient number of 'common schools in the DistricKpf- Col umbia for the education of every colored child, without distinction of any kind, between the ages of six and sixteen, resident therein. That no father or guardian shall bo permitted to vote at any election for any public officer in the District who shall not have caused his children or ward, being of proper age, to attend the common schools, or some other school, at least part of the preced ing year, and that one-third of the ex pense of the system shall be paid by the United States, and two-thirds by the District of Columbia. During the last five years, negroes from all sections of the South have been Hocking to Washington by myriads.™ Some forty thousand, it is estimated, have been added to the resident black population of the District, Of these, about one*fifth (eight thousand) are cliil dren'under sixteen years of age, and, according to the provisions of Stevens’ bill, must be sent to school, one-third of the expense of their schooling to bopaid by “we, tire people of the United States,” and the other two-thirds by the white citizens of the District of Columbia! Iladieal niggerism, like every other ugly epidemic—measels, small-pox, itch, —must run Us course; and we sup pose we will have to submit to addition al taxation to raise an immense school fund for the education of little velvet heads. Until now, no one supposed that the money of tiie United States Trea sury could be used for any such purpose. Certainly poor white children never were and we presume never will he schooled at Government expense. But the negro is tiro “ coming man,” in the opinion of tire fanatical fools who rule tiie rump Congress, and the people will be compelled to submit to additional taxation to carry out this opinion. Es tahliwhi»£r in »fCW umbia, one-third the expenses attending the same to lie paid out of the public treasury, is but the beginning of what is to he introduced in all towns and com munities. Negro suffrage is to be first enforced in the District of Columbia, it is an experiment, a feeler, and so it is with this negro-education scheme. Be fore long tiro Massachusetts school inarm will be seen in all the States and territo ries, gathering up the little “pet lambs,” (as Mr. Lincoln once called the young negroes,) and negro school houses will dot tiie land, and the people will lie re quired to pay two-thirds and the Gov ernment one-third tiie expenses for mai ntai ning the snn ie! W hat a glorious idea is this ? But if this bill, by its provisions, is calculated to work a great wrong to the people at large, it is more than a wrong to the white inhabitants of the District of Columbia. To them it isau infliction equal to that forced upon tiie Israelites when Pharaoh’s task-masters required them to.mnke brick without furnishing them the necessary straw. On them it is an outrage that none hut one posses sing the heart of a demon would dare propose! For some reason or other Stevens and the radical majority of the two houses of the rump, appear to entertain a pecu liar hatred for the people of the District of Columbia. 'Whether this arises from the refusal of the house-keepers of Wash ington to permit their black kitchen girls to become too intimatfl with Ste vens and his fanatical colleagues, or whether it is the natural aversion that low, degraded men feel for decent well bred people, we know not. But the hatred, it is evident, is intense. Accor ding to Stevens’ hill, the people of the District of Columbia will be required to pay for the schooling of over five thou sand young negroes, nil of whom have settled in Washington as black-birds settle on a corn-field, within the last few years. More than this, the black popu lation is increasing daily, and as the ne gro is now avoter in the District, it will not he long before he will rule it and lord it over the white citizens who.mnde it what it is. indeed, some are of opin ion that the blacks arc even now equal to the whites in numerical strength, and that with the aid of the Yankee .squat ters who arc loafing there,‘they will he able to elect their city officers for Wash ington and Georgetown at the first trial. Tims tiro people of the District will be hound hand and foot, and no matter how industrious or how prosperous they may he,all their earnings are to “he swal lowed up in theschoolingand maintain ing of young negroes, nil of whom are strangers todhem, and belong to other States. Could the prince of darkness himself have invented a bettor plan for the humiliation and ruin of a people? The property-holders of Washington ami Georgetown might as well sprinkle brimstone on their houses and burn them up, for the passage of the Stevens bill will make a Sodom and Gomorrah of those two cities. JSTE\v Uemock atic Paper The Chi cago Journal states that a new Democra tic paper is about to be started in Chicago The funds have been subscribed, and the Times will soon have a formidable competitor. SCJIENCIII Everybody has heard of •“General” Scuenck. During the war he earned a reputation almost equal to that earned by Millroy and Ben Butler. Ho put in most of his time in and about Baltimore, regulating city and township elections, and attending to many other little mat ters of a political nature. Like all small men, lie was a potty tyrant, and it de lighted his little soul when he could find an excuse to harrass men, women and children who failed to square their ac- tions in accordance- with his ideas of “loyalty.” Bunning off negroes to Washington, to be supported at the ex pense of the government, occupied a considerable portion of Schenck’s time and attention. As to fighting the ene- my, Sehenck had no heart for that, and if a live rebel were scon within ten miles of the head-quarters of our hero, a re treat was at once ordered, the “General” always being two or three miles in ad vance of his command. By some means or other, (known only to the then “loy al,”) Schcnck became rich, and from a very ugly, poor little Abolition politi cian, lie assumed the airs and appear ance of a man of importance. The war being ended, the “ Government,” (Mr. Lincoln,) had no more work for political Generals, and Sohenek was accordingly “ mustered out.” He is, we believe, a .Massachusetts man by birth, and of .course has an eye to No. 1, always. Ho posted home to Ohio, where he has lived for some years, squatted down in a Be publicau strong-hold, and had himself nominated for Congress. He was elect ed, of course, for the people of the Buck eye State appear to like such men as Sehenck. Last fall he was re-elected. “ Well, what about him ?” asks some body. Not much. We only want our readers to knowSchenck, and to inform them that lie made a speech in the House on Thursday last. The subject under discussion was “ how can we pun ish tiie President?” Mr. Sohenck spoke ns follows. Wo publish his speech in full, a favor we don’t often grant to Bad icat orators: ■ “ Mr. Sciiknck. Mr. Speaker, perhaps It would not be a bad plan to slop tbo President’s pay in some way, or to take from him the competency to receipt for U.” After this burst of eloquence the mili tary orator subsided, took .his seat, and looked as wise as an owl. The sugges tion lie made was considered somewhat ambiguous, and some of the Democratic members asked him to explain, but this he refused to do. In what way does Schenek propose to “stop the Presi dent’s pay?” What does he mean by the suggestion that tho rumpers take (from the President “ the competency to receipt for it?” (his pay). DicMie in tend to hint at assassination, or iLnot that, what did he mean ? This doubt fulness of language will not do, “ Gen eral” Schenck. The people have a right to know what this miserable siang whanger and jack-pudding means when he suggests that the President of the UnitodStntesshnll be made incompetent to sign a receipt. Wo hope, then, that the Democratic members of Congress when they hear these dark hints thrown out—these threats at violence —will con- tinue to insist on explanations. More than once lias the President’s life been threatened by members of tho Bump Congress, in their public speeches. It is time a stop was put to this mode of attack. The member who indulges in it should not only he deprived of his seat, huf a good strong negro should lie employed to kick him from the District of Columbia. ANOTHER “I.OVAf.” PREACHER C AO El>. The Rev. Joel Lindlsey, the unnatural brute who whipped his boy babv, three years old, to death, last June, because it could not repeat the j-ord’s prayer, was tried at Albion, in the Court of Oyer and Terminer, a few-days ago, and found guilty of manslaughter. He was sen tenced to hard labor in the Penitentiary for ton years. During the rebellion, tills Reverend Lindlsey was one of the “loyal” preach ers, and for a time was Chaplain to a regiment. Like all preachers who dab bled in politics, he soon fell from grace, became brutish, and finally murdered his infant child. He is but one of hun dreds of ministers who have gone down in the political whirlpool. When min isters attended to their duties—when they preached Christ and him crucified, instead of attempting to uphold and de fend the attroeitiesof an administration noted for its infidelity and wickedness —it was seldom if ever that we heard of unlawful offences being committed by one of their profession. Not so for the last five years or more. Scores of men wearing the livery of heaven to serve the devil in, have, we regret to say, been dragged to the bar of justice, and con victed of crimes of the blackest type.— But could anything else have been ex pected ? Wa have heard from the pulpit of this town recommendations and sug gestions thrown out that caused the blood to chill and the lip to quiver. Murder, and arson and brutality were applauded and recommended from the sacred desk, and, as a consequence, men were seen leaving the church door with clenched fists and flashing eyes. Men who had, for many years, feasted to gether at the same communion table, became alienated, and hatred and re venge took the place of love and charity. The serpent of sin had found its way into the church and coiled itself about the altars of the living God! Oh, the political preacher lias a fearful account to settle. Those of them who indulged in party slang, preached up hatred and called it “loyalty,” could sustain them selves so long as the minds of men were crazed with passion, but now that “ the sober second thought of the people” has returned, those same preachers And few to commend them for their former con duct, but scores who condemn them and refuse to be influenced by them. How true is the adage, “whom the gods wish to destroy they first make mad.” BSrCameron’s organ says that .the re fusal of the Southern-States to ratify the Rump amendment “will speedily result in the overthrow of President Johnson’s so-called State Governments,” by the Rump Congress, with what itcalls “the Territorial scheme.” To which the Pat riot A- Union replies: “Ah, grubs, Pres ident Johnson and the Conservative majority of the Union have a scheme worth two of that. It is a scheme em bracing the Army and Navy, and the “sinews of war”—the Treasury. It is a scheme founded upon the Constitution, and vitalized by the spirit of civil lib erty. Over it floats the flag of Thirty six Stars and Thirteen Stripes, which Is upborne by two million patriot hands. Touch It If you dare 1” ' ' " v * ; PETIIIONS FOR IMPEACHMENT. One of the dodges resorted to by the Jacobin-disunlonista to cast odium up on tlio President and to bring tho gov ernment into disrepute, is the presenta tion of petitions by members of Con gress, “praying for tho impeachment of" the President.” Prom the proceedings of tho House of Tuesday of last week, wo clip the following: “ Mr. Colliding, (N. Y.) pfoKuiiU’U u petition of citizens of Alcltm, Eric comity. Now York, pray lug tho Impeachment of the President. Referred to tho Judiciary CommUtce.” . These so-called'petitions are printed at Washington, and then sent out under frank, to Badical-disuniou wire-pullers nil-over tho country. A few scurvy pol iticians, negroes and scavengers, sign hem, and then return them to Wash- ington, to be presented to tho House by Mr. Conkling/'or some other conspira tor. The Badicai-disunionists appear de termined to do ail they can to engender hatred and ill-will. Evey device that man or devil can invent is resorted to for the purpose of heaping indignity up on President Johnson. The country’s honor ns well as its interests are suffer ing from these disgraceful proceedings, and thousands of our prominent busi ness men are beginning to see and feel that this state of affairs, if continued, will bankrupt the nation,and eventual ly destroy it. That, the designs of the radical inajority in the rump Congress are revolutionary,-is an admitted fact. Hon. Henry J. Raymond, Eepublicaii member of Congress New York, ind editor of the New York Times, in a late letter to his paper, says-: .... - "Tho purpose of tho majority of the present Imperfect Congress, us wo all see, Is to remove tho president, and not only tho President but tho Supremo Court out of Us way. Wo see this, and wo look on in apathy, uml go about money ma king, stupidly trusting that no harm will come of it, and yet what Is doing is that constitutional government is destroyed before our eyes. A bill was brought in on Monday by Mr. Williams, ol Pennsylvania, which, absolutely, is entitled a bill to •* delluo the powers of the Supremo Court” —of the Wppremo Court! whose powers are de llned by tho Constitution, and tho chief object oj whose creation was to define uxc powers of Vonyress. — A more barefaced attempt at usurpation was never seen; a more latul blow to constitutional government was never dealt. Vet what may wo not expect when Mr. Wilson reports a bill which declares valid and conclusive certain proclama- tions and conseciuent acts which tho Supreme Court can oiily declare valid? and when Air, Boutwell does not hesitate to declare, • with strong emphasis,’ that tho Supremo Court exists but by the breath of Congress—the Supremo Court, cre ated by the creator of Congress, to intercept its laws and bo a check upon its action! Congress has no more right to deline I lie powers of the Su premo Court tuuu to dollne its own powers or those of tho President.” Enymond, reckless politician as ho is, sees breakers ahead, and warns the people accordingly. liven Stanton —tho “loyal” Badical Stanton—is alarmed, and expresses him self freely. A letter from Washington eays: “ I hear that Secretary Stanton, in conversa tion‘With a Irlcnd, gave it us his opinion that the country Is in more danger to-day than at any time during tho rebellion. Ho thinks the pro posed Impcachmeutof the President will, If pros ecuted much farther, lend to a war, tho result ol which It Is dllllcult to foretell.- The Secretary is represented as being very apprehensive lest Con gress should take some fatal stop in that direc tion. This sounds slrange fromStauton,” In Europe the distracted state of af fairs in this country is attracting atten tion. Europe holds about one-fifth of our debt in Government bonds, and she has it in her power to force a financial crisis here any day she pleases. A late letter from Washington, to the New York Times, (Bepublican paper,) says: “ The Government Is in receipt of advices from Europe, to tiie elfcet that large amounts of securi ties will soon ho forwarded to this country for sale, owing to tho luck of conlldenee occasioned by the announcement that Congress would prob ably impeach tho President. European capital ists are disposed to convert our national securi ties. Nothing is more natural than a result like this. The truth is, Congress, by its wild, passion ate, and unwise system of legislation, Is doing its best to rum the country at homo and abroad.” Some of tho Badical members of Con gress, too, it seems, are beginning to get their eyes open to tiie consequences that will follow If they continue to yield to the xreasouunio oeiuauus" or nuniner, Stevens & Co. -Hon. Wm. E. Dodge, of New' York city, is one of the wealthiest and ablest business men in this country. He is also a Badical of the straightest it w'ill be remembered that he sue- sect. cessfully contested the scat of Hon, Jns. Brooks, in tire present Congress. On tiie 21st ult., he made a speech, in his place, in the House, from which W'oclip the following extract. We call attention to it as showing what a change has come over the spirit of the dream of even the most ultra Badical Jacobin destruc tives : "He rose to give his reason why he could not vote cither lor the bill or the amendment. Ho hoped he would not, lor hIK course on the bill, be denounced oh a renegade Republican. He cljll ered entirely from tue general sentiment on the republican Hide of the House—that the States re cently in rebellion were not States in the Union. Congress had already commuted itself ogaiust that view. The constitutional amendment abol ishing slavery had been submitted to them by the general government, and had beeu rulillcd by them m IcstiiJ when West Virginia was organ ized. Mr. Speaker Colfax hud made a speech In winch lie declared that Governor Pierpont and the Wheeling Legislature were the nghful gov ernment and Legislature of the State oi Virginia, competent constitutionally to give assent to the partition of the tstuto; and the last constitution al amendment has been sent to the rebel .States for ruUhcation, and ho was coulideut Congress hud intended that it should bp so sent. Ue hud read carefully the bill of Mr. Slovens and the substitute of Mr. Ashley, and he had failed to tind in either the first thing that promised peace, conciliation and harmony. Ho looked anxiously for peace and permanent conciliation, therefore Congress should be careful not to pass laws that could only Irritate the'peoplo of the South and perpetuate the hostility between the sections.— Ho wafc not deficient in sympathy for the colored men, but he knew that under the circumstances such a state of things was in a measure to bo ex pected. Something to bring about a better feel ing between the North and the South was what was wanted, and at the sumo time a bettor feel ing between the Southern men and the frccd men. He could not see in either the bill or the amendment anything of the kind. The result of the passage of the blit would be to disfranchise a large proportion of the white n)cu of the-South, while it would enfranchise the colored man.— Would the passage of such a law be Calculated to create better feeling between the North and the South? Xftho Republican party in the fcJtato of New York had laid down such u programme at the late election, ho hud no doubt it would liaye been defeated.” A WORD TO THE RADICALS. The Radical death-dunce over the grave of the Union moves on apace. The Rump leaders appear to be striving to emulate the Red Republicanism of the European continent. Theprocecdingsof the French Directory,-in the days of terrorism, and Jacobin sway, almost pale before the un blushing tyranny and tho“brazen assump tions’' that characterize the deliberations of the American disunionista. The popu lar calm must not be mistaken by tho would-be rulers of our nation’s destinies. Silence does not always indicate indiffer ence or imply assent. Reason is always serene. God neither made nor does He govern the world in a passion. There is a poetic justice as well as a legitimate re tribution that waits on those who mistake his plans, and work to thwart his designs. God will not let the heavens full that larks may be caught. If tho people of these United States suffer an unscrupulous fac tion of partisans to realize their crazy schemesof miscegenation, and their wick ed efforts to establish despotism, at the ex pense of the overthrow and destruction of ‘‘the beatgovernraentthe world oversaw,” they are false to their God and to them selves. This we are not ready to believe. It is rather to bo thought that the poison ed chalice that Ashley and Stevens, and their colleagues and followers, are prepar ing for their countrymen, will be com-' mantled to their own lips. The people are begining to be tired of continued agi tation, and constant war upon thp Union. It keeps everything unsettled, and de stroys all harmony and union of thought and action, for the promotion of the gen eral welfare. If we do not mistake the temper of the honest masses, throughout our broad land, it is averse to keeping open tho gashes of our civil strife. It craves -that peace; which is so needful to the highest interests of society, and which is the only lawfulobjecttff/vvar..,. We warn tile Rump leadera that theideacent: Into AVernuB,dB easier than to obtain egress,— York Democratic Press, ’ . 1 XIIE NEW TAIUFF 1111,1. ' Passed the Senate on Thursday Inst— yeas 27, nays 10, absent or not vitlng, 15. The Bill goes back to the Hoiisej and will no doubt be passed by . that body also'. It ls a bill of abomination!, n grand swindle, by which the rich itje to be made richer, and the poor pool'd'. It may bo called a prohibitory tariff, under the operation of which the cottoi/- spiuners, iron-masters, paper-makeis, wool-growers, and dealers in coffees, sp gara, teas, and other articles in geucnil use, can charge almost what they please. Nearly all the Now England members of Congress are directly interested in the various interests protected by the bill just passed by the Senate/ Senator Sprague, of Bhodo Island, is the cotton lord of America. His profitsfor the Inst five or six years have been enormous, amounting, wo see it stated, to about a million of dollars a year. Ho wants more “protection,” so that he may bo enabled to raise his prices ‘dill higher. Other Senators are engaged in wool growing and its manufacture. They are now making a profit of about sixty per cent. They want more ''protection,” and larger profits. Thee wo have our iron-lord, our paper-mamfaeturer, and dealer in the necessaries Of life, all occu pying seats in Congress. For many years their charges for theif articles have .been infamously exorbitant, amounting to an impo-itlon almost beyond endur ance. They have all made independent fortunes off a tax-ridden people, but they want more “protection” and addi tional profits. ' - .How Inn# will thn poopln put up with, the doings of the rump Congress? .Have they not suffered long enough from high prices? Are they willing to continue to pay out all their earnings to purchase the necessaries of life, merely that a few nabobs in a portion of the Northern States may become millionaires in a few mouths? No wonder these cormorant members of Congress are anxious to keep out of Congress the representatives of ten sovereign States. They could not, with impunity, puss their infamous measures if all the States were ' repre sented. Depriving ten States of repre sentation is induced by ayarico as well as treason. It is a Yankee trick that deserves the censure of the world. But, enough for the present. In conclusion, wo call attention to the following arti cle which we take from the New York Evening Post, a Bepublican paper of great power and respectability, and of which Mr. Lincoln’s old friend, William Cullen Bryant, is editor. Bead.what the Post says: THE HILL TO INCREASE THE PRICE OF THE NECESSARIES ,OP UPJJ We must again .warn Congressmen against the atrocious Tariff bill, now be fore Congress. No man who expects tocon timie in public life can afford to vote for that bill, which discriminates heavily against the mechanics.anckfarmers of the country, in favor of the wealthy. It does this in an ingenious .way, which makes the thrift a muddle to any but ex perts ; but we repeat what wo wrote a few days ago; If the bill becomes a law, its oppression will be quickly enough felt, and-the people will resent it, and punish its authors. It is a fact that in this Tar iff bill the cheaper qualities of cloth arc to have a much higher proportion of du ly laid upon them than the high priced cloths. Thus woollen coatings, tho gold cost of which is $lOB per yard, are to be raised twenty-four per cent, higher; but the lino and costly qualities, tho gold price of which is $2 40, are raised only eleven per cent.; and still finer qualities, of the gold cost of $2 CO are raised only ten per cent. The coarser coatings are to pay from eighty to one hundred and twen ty per cent, in duties, but the finer and more costly are only burdened with from sixty-five to seventy per cent,... TITI ~ r r]m duty on the high-priced carpets is not raised at all; that on low-priced carpets is raised ten cents per square yard, about five per cent. In the same manner, there is no increase on silk dress goods, which are bought by the wealthy; but on small ar ticles of .silk, such as ribbons, which arc used by the poor as well, there is an in crease of ten percent. lin ens are even put under a diminished du ty —they are to pay five per cent, less than now. The commonest kinds of cutlery are to pay from one hundred to two hundred per cent, duty ; that ia to say-, farmers and mechanics, and working people general ly, are to be made to pay by this atrocious tariff twice or three times as much as the articles can be imported for; for, of course, the home manufacturer will at once put up his prices to the highest limit at which be can just undersell the importer wh« has these duties to pay. This atrocious swindle upon the farm ers, mechanics and workingmen of the United States ought to bo called “a bill to still further increase the prevailing high prices, and to grind the faces of American workingmen.” That will bo its effect, if it becomes a law ; it will still further raise prices, add greatly to the cost of home production, thereby entirely disable us from trading with the' rest of the world, and make the country poorer and poorer all the time. The people are learning a costly lesson —they are begin ning to And out that this continued tam pering with the industry of the country produces evil and only evil to them, how ever it may enrich a few favored manu facturers. They begin to see that a law to divert intelligent Americans from the industries they find most profitable, to others which can only be pursued at a loss or with the help of what is called “ protection” from the government, is in fact a measure to inflict a great loss upon the country; they begin to see that it is better to leave such matters to settle them selves; Americans are not stupid as to need an act of Congress to tell them what to work at. But if “ protection” is demanded, why is it not better that each State should fos ter such industries ns it chooses, by a di rect bounty ? In that way many, millions would be saved to the people every year, over the present system. Wo do not see that the protectionists favor this plan, but if they were sure of their ground, if their arguments were sound, they would agree to it very quickly, because it would relieve them of many .difficulties. fISF’We cut the following from the Washington letter in Forqey’s Press of the 25th ult: ■ Tub Condition of Mauydand.— Great solici tude Is felt for tho Union men of Maryland. Tho Legislature at Annapolis, under .tho direction of Hwann, is carrying things with so high a hand that Congress may be compelled, outer sheer hu manity, to interpose. Tho whole power of the State Is tinder the control of those who would have carried her out of- tho Union, If they could, and tho proscribed classes are tho men who saved Maryland from secession. Thus Forney sounds the key note to the caufi d’etat that Congress is expected to make shortly against Maryland. The right of Congress “ to interfere” In the internal affairs of a sovereign State, is no longera question, but simply one of con venience, and when necessary to help carry out the revolutionary .plan of Con gress. . We predict that In six months Maryland will bo without a State Gov ernment. Tho Rump will have absorbed everything that it don’t already possess. MabY-Land.— Both branches of the Maryland Eegislatqrerecently passed a bill directing a new cleetjoii' to be held in Baltimore, February 6, with the in tention of Superseding, the present-qiity government,' which; was elected; for a term of two years. ■ ' ' 7 JSQP-Tho signs of the times stronglylii dicate the ignominious collapse of the Radical Republican party. WEBSTER'S PROPHESY. This is a very-appropriate time to re produce. Daniel Webster’s famous pro phesy. Speaking of tlio dangers to be apprehended from the revolutionary party now in power, which was laying its foundations when he died; he said: ‘ “If these inforrml fanatics and Abolitionists over trot the power In tholr Immla, they will over ride the Constitution : set tho Supremo Court nt dclluncc; change and make laws to suit them selves; lay violent hands on those who differ with them In opinion and daro question tholr Infalli bility, and Anally bankrupt tho country and del uge it In blood.” • Has not every word uttered by Web ster proved true so far as the fanatics have gone ? And, unless the people are aroused to a sense of their danger, is there not every Indication,that tho finale of bankruptcy and blood is at hand? Mooting of tlio Democratic Central Com* mitt cc. HAimxsivunci, Jan. 29 1887. The Committee met nt Bolton’s Hotel. Present.—Mr. Wallace, Chairman; Hon. Bobert Given, Westmorland ; H. F. Shull?;, Lancaster; Col. Jacob Zeigler, Butler; E. Davis, Berks ; Thomas Chnl fant, Montour ; H. W. Petrikcn, Lycom ing; M. Park Davis, Crawford; Mr. Smith Lancaster; D. E. Nice, Shuylklll; Mr. Caldwell, Huntingdon; Mr. Boush, Snyder; A. B. Schofield, Fourth District, Philadelphia; B. L. Foster, Dauphin. On motion of Mr. Davis, of Crawford, B. L. Foster was re-elected Secretary. On raotiioi of Mr. Caldwell, the second Tuesday of June next was fixed for the meeting of the State Convention, to nom inate a candidate for Judge of tho Su preme Court. ’ ; On motion of Mr. Nice, licsolvcd, That it is recommended to dhc'Dcmooraoy of Pennsylvania to forth with elect two delegates of recognized po sition and infiuojioe with the party, from each Representative and Senatorial Dis trict, who shall meet in Mass Convention, at Harrisburg, on a day to bo fixed by the Chairman of tho State Central Com mittee. On motion of Mr. Zeiglcr, Resolved, That the Democracy of Penn sylvania be requested to use their best ef forts to sustain and extend the circula tion of the Patriot and Union , as tho or gan of tho party, published at the State capital. On motion of Mr. Smith, a resolution of thanks to Hon. William A. Wallace, Chairman, and other officers of the State Central Committee, was unanimously adopted. On motion, the Convention adjourned whir die. [For the American Volunteer JliiioralH for Paris Exposition. The time appointed for the opening of the Paris Exposition is not far distant. In many, departments much has been done to give the United States her true char acter in such a display. The arts', manu factures, and sciences as Well, will sever ally show their achievements. Personal interest and a just national pride have moved our more thoughtful and whole souled citizens to work zealously; in many instances, oven to devote a portion of their money.. .There may ,be £ large class of those extremely practical men who cannot feel at liberty to gratify their pride, and, still further, who cannot take much time to think whether they enter tain a genuine interest; jn ; the cause or, hot; but, it is to be hoped that there is not one citizen of influence who.,will fail to note the sure bearing ofsqopeniautl gen eral ft comparison upon our relative wealth and strength. /Estimates madeat. that Exposition will be hard to undo by yerbal arguments, or, we may say, they will simply stand until another opportu nity comes for slde-by-aide measurement. It may bo well to consider too, that, if our arms are found just a little hit short or weak, neither England no?, France will make much ceremony about telling us of it. But, if tho good citizens of Cumberland and adjoining counties will permit, I will be. more to the point. There is one de partment of wealth, which.is not as.yet quite fully represented, and that is, our resources in Minerals. Ten or twelve of tho States have already sent In full contri butions, but Pennsylvania, whioh.should be high upon, if notat the top of the scale, ttwrrmtrynflgl; lO UUUmOnC 1 the lowest, or scarcely represented at all. Coal formations of Pennsylvania are. unequalled in the world; the iron ore de posits are hardly surpassed; it is especial iy important that these interests be well set forth. Having been appointed, soirie days since, to make a collection, as full as pos sible, of tho species of minerals found in this section of the State West of the Sus quehanna and. East of the Mountains,of Johnstown, I am obliged by Jack of time to take this method, in part, of collecting specimens. All will understand mo to ask for specimens of any simple mineral whatever. To represent amore (of any sort) one (1) larger specimen, not over a cubic foot, and forty (40) small ones of the size of an egg, are required. Where two parties extract ores from the same deposit, or ores that are in all res pects similar, they will confer with each other, and forward but one set of speci mens. A hydraulic cement should be furnished lib such, quantity, us ores. Qf a ipofipffr islfite.from iten.(lo)' to'fifteen (16) qf'the* prepared slabs should be sent. A fire-dlay must not go beyond twenty (20) pounds. As regards the more rare minerals—of which there is a large number—it need only be said that wo would like to have them as fully represented as possible.— Compliance with thedirectionsbelow will insure safe delivery : Pack in strong boxps—in case of slates pack carefully, thou place the following address on a stiff* card, well tacked to lid: McL. W. Thomson, Harrisburg, Pa. —and send by express. lam obliged to request that parties forward to Harrisburg at their own expense. Parties, having placed their initials or their mark on the box, will be kind enough to give that mark by letter to the same address, together with a description which shall cmbracq the following ; Any che mical analysis that may have been made of the mineral sent, the locality from which it was taken, anil, if possible, the geological formation which yielded it. The descriptions cannot be too full. All specimens, ns well as letters, must reach Harrisburg by February 12th, 18G7. McL. W. T. N. Y.. School of Minerals. Will other papers please copy? State A&R&XJUEVUAJb . annual meeting of the Peri State Agricultural Society was held riot Harris burg, on the 17th'illt: :: A-BdydHamilton, of Dauphin, was re-electod President; A. B. Longaker, of Montgomery, Record ing Secretary; James Young, of Dauphin, Corresponding Secretary; 8. 8. Halde man, ofLnncaster, Chemistand Geologist; and Henry Gilbert, of Dauphin, Llbarian. The total receipts of the Society last year were $13,061, and the expenses about the same; showing a loss compared with previous year, caused by the unusual storm at Easton during the Fair there last September. Tho 24th,2oth,iJ(jth ai|d 27til of Septem ber wore appointed ns the days forbidding tlie next Annual Exhibition, and tho Pre sident and Secretary were Instructed to invito proposals from cities and towns de sirous of having the Exhibition held near them. • Joseph Mii.leji, Esq., of Bloomfield, Perry county a highly respected citizen, died in that borough,- loStHvei3k,’' l, Bro' bad tilled .the office? of JPqst ■MastbrandDoputy Sheri IF, iuall of wjrlcb positions ho was considered a-very falth full officer, His ago was 57 years. ,‘v PUNispiNd Buelis^s.—rTllUU bitrg tlidt feeyeralmon / who ■havo'reo'ehtly been Mississippi, have been indicted'by the grand-jury of the county and, bound laiatoianßwetfor.iWeir oftmoel' _.•‘.> , < . ' OUB WASHINGTON LETTER. tonnwlonnl ll.nrpnllom.rTfci Indolence of tuS JflniorltT*>llotr It Deserve* Co be Mot-- AndthflrV«o-*A Kf w.Tftrlff Ibr the Benvllt or Kcw En»l*nd~A r Wmtonal Democratic ConVontlonT-TU; IjnnS&KST"* U —TJbo Nymph* of the fiftUorj’. Cbrreipondtnca American Volunteer. . '; Washington, - February i, 1807. Congress la rapidly centering in Itself all tho political power of tbo country. Tho ruling of the speaker, tho other day, that “ tho House of Rep resentatives has tho right to examine Into any thing' that It may deem proper,” shows the ex tent to which that body is determined to go. In all the history of our Government, when was it ever known before that Congress claimed tho right to examine Into a State election? Never until now, and tho Thirty-ninth Congress is tho first to exercise this tyrannical power. Tho late State election of Maryland Is to bo examined In to by a Committee of tho Houso In order that there may bo an excuse to sot Itnsldo, which has already been determined Upon. If Congress can examine Into and set aside an election in Mary land, why may It not do tho same thing In Penn sylvania and New York 7 If It can sot aside one election for one cause to-day, why not another election for another cause to-morrow? And 11 It has power to sot aside a State election, why can it not prohibit State elections altogether 7 It can, ami it will, when this comes to bo necessary to secure tho present dominant party In power. Not content with vilifying and abusing tho President of the United States, on nil occasions, tho Radical members of tho House are In tbo habit of applying nil manner of offensive re ,marks to those who are politically opposed to them. They seem to be perfectly at homo In bll ingsgato and flsh-markot slang. Ashley, of Ohio, one of tho most foul-mouthed of tho Radical blackguards, in the course of his speech, one day last weak, took occasion to charge that tho Dclu oorats, both In and out of Congress, wore In league with rebels during tho war, giving them aid and comfort. Mr. Winfield, of Now Ytork* pronounced tho charge untrue, and a vile slan der upon himself and his party friends, and Mr. Hunter, of tho Brooklyn district, said that so far os ho was concerned It %vas a bate lie t whereupon ho was called to order, and a scone of excitement and confusion ensued. His remarks were taken down, and the, speaker ruled them out of order. Mr. Randall, of Pennsylvania, said they were true, nevcrlhclc.fi. For this ho was called to order by tho vahane Kelly. After tho reporters had writ ten out tho remarks of Ashley to which Mr. Hun ter took exception, they were read from tho Clerk's desk, and tho resolution offered by Mr. 31111, of Indiana, directing tbospeakor to censure' Mr. Hunter was adopted by a vote of 81 to 81, on ly one Republican member (Mr. Baker, of Illi nois) voting against It. .As unparliamentary as tho remark of Mr. Hunter may have been, It was nevertheless Justifiable under tho circumstances,' It is the duty of the speaker to protect tho mi nority as well os tlio majority,'and when hdslts in his chair and heats a member make a dollber- 1 ato charge of treason against somdiforty odd Rop- 1 resen tatlvcs du tho floor of tho House, lie Is bound' under the rules’of the body to puta'stop to lt; and If ho doCs not do so promptly, it Is the right and oven tho duty,pf any member thus assallodr to ropcl-the nccusatlbn in tho strongest possible language,-whether it bo strictly parliamentary or not. ■ ■ • - . ■ Tho President's veto of tho Colorado bill, Bent to tho Sonnto on Monday, Is a complete overthrow of tho Radical position.. It exposes the inconsist encies, tho incongruities, tho unconstitutional!- ty, and oven impossibility of execution of some of Its provisions. It shows that the population of tho territory docs not reach oven thirty thousand souls; that tho people are opposed to supporting a State Government; that tho territorial House has protested against it; 'and that; the bill is vio lative of all rules and precedents, governing tho admission of now States. 'lt shows that tho Rump undertakes to j&ako the Institutions 1 of a State—. or In other words, .to rfiake staie. fthd force it as such into' the Union* under such con ditions as tho Ihvdlcal loaders have proscribed. Tho Senate has passed anew tariff bill, more infamous, if possible, than the House bill of last session. It discriminates^ exclusively in favor of Now England and against the industrial Inter ests of Pennsylvania and tho great 'West.. > And yet tho poor dupes otßadlcal bumbuggery. will applaud it to tho skies, simply because It has been made a party question.- ’They can bo made to believe that it Is to their interests to have the. few dozen cotton mills of Now England protect ed by a high tariff, and have not sense enough to > see that it is they, and not the' foreign producer, who pay tho tariff. Massachusetts has always lived on tho tariff bounty of tho Government, and is only willing to support those measures which exclusively benefit her. Her. Senators, contended to have the duty on coal reduced, be cause her manufacturers import their coal' from Nova Scotia. She desires a idwAarlff,*orno tariff at all on such foreign products as she wants for her own consumption—though those foreign pto r ducls come into direct competition with those of Pennsylvania and her sister Slates of the South and woot; while shodemaudsahlghtariffou-oU suen fabrics as she produces. and whfoh sha wish es, by excluding ■foreign goods, of like kind, to force tho people of tho rest of the Uuion to con sume at her own How long will it tako tho people of tho Mfddlo and Western States to learn that while these Yankees are ready enough to use them to accomplish thqi c .projects, and schemes, they are never dlsposod to .rooipiocate the service when tho interests of Pennsylvania and tho West are Involved. ‘ The sentiment In favor of holding a National Democratic Convention early in the spring, seems to bo gaining ground. Thoro is no doubt that the lending men of the Democratic As sociation of this city favor the Idea, and their ac-. tion. has assumed such definite shape that on last Thursday evening it commanded the attention of a Congressional caucus, bold at the Judiciary rooms of the Capitol. In that caucus the propri ety of holding such a Convention was fully dis cussed, and the weight of opinion was decidedly favorable to the plan. However, thdro was ty of argument against It, and without coming to any definite conclusion as to a recommendation, the caucus adjourned to meet again next Mon day night, when the subject will come up for fi nal action so far as the Democratic members of CJongrcss are'concerned. No one should bo de ceived in regard to tills Important business. So for ns I am'informed,'H Is hot designed for tho purpose of making Presidential nominations, but for the purpose of effecting tho reorganization’of the Democratic party, North and South, upon a basis, that will be harmonious, : and agreeing uPr on a course of action best calculated, lu tho Judg‘d ment of the delegates, to Insure success.- Inltla-. tory action in the matter of Issuing a call will bo. proceeded with Slowly—every inch of ground will bo felt, and no step will bo taken backwards.' Tho bold and decisive attitude of the Demo cratic press, in regard to tho impeachment of the President, has occasioned much disquietude in the Radical ranks. They rood In tho unmistaka ble language used outhU subject their death warrant, as a party, If thoy.procood-with it. Tho more determined among them, however, do not slack in their work. Their. Very dreams are tor tured Into realities, and they are no doubt imbued with the idea that their false and unwarrantable conceptions are tho oflfcpring of truth. Such is, 'and always has been, thosplrit of fanaticism and self-serving expediency.- What, in after years, may be tolerated by the country, wo oauqot toll; but now these Jacobins are too fast if they think tho American people are ripe fdrVrCrlGwaTqf tho drama of the Fj»uchxeyoiuttoni ‘vi'f Female ** borers” are bocomlng > -the-nnisdnCe : 6f the Capitol. These'* 1 nymphs oLthe gftlleryJldm ly assemble,in the anterooms at the south end of tho Capitol, 16 ' f )Sbre’ / for soldo male lobby sche mer, who thinks a petticoat and ft- palrbf rteat ankles can do more than pantaloons with certain Senators andmembep** .They havesuch a win ning way about them : and as they tho halls wlth theirM tllters” at tlon, they doiabltah if they wore bqat idii-busi ness. StartU'ne/as It may seem? niapy Con gressman- of‘irreproachable at home sellsi hts'voto for tho friendship of ono of those scheming females., The notori ous and disgraceful, and Will sotm call for a rigid and searching investigation. MISCELLANEOUS. y ■. ■ —A negross In Ausiin, Texas,'has,sued, a white man for breach of JHrorfilsbr ' - • f —The front hair qf the ladies In-Paris.lu getting elevated to at} farmingextent,j —An aj-tempt Uasheeu made : to.asaasiiii\atQ, the Presideut of Peruir’T.h^.^^ln r ' —A wag suggests that a ,got J ria : of tho national debt would bo .io,:iet it. • **}!•*. ■ —lt Ih csUmntedtimtalace thecloaQ (Ho negro population of Virginia has bpenToduo ed 100 m * --■ • —An Italian engineer, M. Qeralgo, of Trent, has Invented a needle-gun, which tires 15 shots per minute. —A youth of 20 married a damsel of 01 In Wheel ing recently. Cnpldlty, not Cnpld, inspired the match. —Qno of the regulations of a late raoe at Baton llougo, La., was f*.no bp brought on tho ground, outside pftbQP9i99h£arryjUig,lt." —lt took'6o6'{flborer4 to ’clear the track ortho Western N, ‘Y. of snow drifts often this late storm. , ’ . —One thousand mon'liavo been employed, at a cost of $50,000, In., clearing the'snow of Che late pf-pQStfln. ( ’ vi ; ( Hing thereiwlnterils merely a —A number of,our largest banks are preparing to go in to liquidations, and some of them will booh breakup. Wo rtyor to snow banks. of the know drifts at Charleston. Muss., being too largo /of removal, havp boon tunnelled to afford a passage for travel. u ,’ —A Western artist had $l,OOO worth of tickets in the, Crosby Opprd House lottery. Ho drew $l5 worth of pictures. —The south has boon anything but “sunny" this winter. The weather there Is.beyond the experi ence of the " oldest Inhabitant." —The Alabama House of Representatives has passed a bill establishing a system of common school education for both whites and blacks. _Ou the oth ult.,' Godfrey Parbaiigh,'of Koll daysburg.wasßtruok by alooomotlvo while stand ing on the railroad and so severely injured that he died next day. O —Punch’s latest and mbst'atibclous banting is this:—" If yous’ft# the Klinn of Tartary laughing lit to kill himself, why might.you bo sure ho wasn’t a Tartar? BeoAuso ho would evidently bo A Merry Khan. —An Insane man got otfa train at Hornollsvlllo, N. Y., a few days slnco, burned one hundred dol lars in greenbacks In the station, and then went out and sat In a snow bank until his logs got froz- —London In IStWhadau estimated population of 3,037,UD1, as compared with 2,003,013 lu 1805. In 1800 there wore In London 107,053 births, anil 30,120 deaths. —At Vicksburg, Miss., last Saturday, a negro throw an old bombshell Into the Are to see If tho powder was good. The experiment'cost him an arm and ono side of his face. —On Tuesday night the 17th lust., MnJ. William A. Stokes tripped on the carpet In his own house* causing him to fall, breaking both boncsof one of his legs. .. —An Irish spirit merchant announces that ho has still for sale a small quantity of the whisky drunk by thd Prince of Wales, when H. R. H. was at Klllaruoy. ' ‘ ‘ —A worthy man, when.'told that he-was about to die, sold ho was “ glad of it; ho. was was tired of putting hlsahoosandatooklngsouanofr." And this Is about what life gets reduced to at seventy; —Vivo members of Beecher’s church, In Brook lyn, have been arrested and held to ball for dis tilling whiskey without paying tho Government tax of two .dollars per gallon. • —A lady of Preston Ct., lately gave birth to two infants so diminutive that ono of them weighed less than ono pound and a half, while tho other was but little over two-and-a-half pounds. So say’s a Boston paper.. ’ —No less than 47,-103 children wore registered la England In 18(34 as born out of wedlock. Even this number docs not represent, the actual state, Q f things, ns registration Is not compulsory. —Thirty or forty skaters were recently droned by the giving way of the ice upon a lake In Ilc ■ gent's Park London. About ndulta ! and children wont down with the Ice. ; —There is a colored woman living on Fulton street In Vorboketown.who Is nearly one hundred ' years of ftfeo. Hoi* namo ’is Grace Murray, and she . has lived In that place for half a century.'' Sho'ld probably th 6 oldqst person-living-In Harrisburg. —We ore InforraedJlthat on Monday the ■Htb, as Mr. Levi Venus, of Hopewell township,york co„. was returning from York with several horses and a wagon, he sorUehow.. fell,,one of the wheels 1 go ing over him, Injuring him internally, from tho effects of which ho died. —A newly married couple, from Boston, went to Troy to spend tho honeymoon, recently, and enjoyed themselves so muoh that their first night was passed in a police station, Instead of at tho hot<?U They had also to hand over $lO to a magis trate next morning. —Wo And tho following in a Christmas letter from' Vienna“ Wo came across a statute of tho Emperor Francis, whoso stone nose was ombel- Halted by a long 101010, which gavo. tho amiable monarch tho appearance of b.elng aflllcted.withn desperate cold In the head.” ~J* . ‘V j —A communication from tho bureau of ©mlgnf ilon states that In three fourth's of the, past year" -23(3,400 persons arrived In tho United States from foreign countries. The destination of 200,000 of these was Now York. . i —J. J. Byrant, a faro hanker of Now Orleans, was shot dead at'tho St.-Charles Hotel, In that city, on Wednesday night, by Judge Tate, a Texas lawyer. Tho difficulty arose from a forged checlc passed on Byrant by a thlrd‘party. , -~ • * 1 —Two, member* of the Virginia Legislature— Ward and Smith—had a knock down tho other day, after- leaving tho House, about' tho usual: question of veracity. It-Is not surprising to b© jtold they wore both members of tho committee on Lunatic AsyluiUs.' ' 1 - -••-A H t; \ —The unlucky chaps who didn't draw tho .Chi cago opera house ore now sorely abusing Crosby because ho made some $050,000, whilst they mado nothing. They unite In saying that the whole thing was abase swindle—a foot they couldn’t see uo/oio because tho hoilso was lu their eye. ' ; —lt Is stated that at the sinking of the steamer Platte Valley, on tho Mississippi near. Vicksburg, on tho night of January 17th, a woman, by her own unaided liyqs.qf her live jchlldred. and ■ drunken husband. She. waded • through tho water on tliohurricnapdeckliftor lho steamer careened over, and carried them one alter another', to the wheel-house, where she-placed them in a position of safety. —A French work recently published, maintains that every ton thousand years tho waters of Uio sea pass from'one polo to tho other, submerging and overwhelming In thoir passage the earth and all Its, inhabitants) The. author states that tho last deluge occurred 4000 years,ago, and he.has. sufficient regard for the comfort of tho present generation to postpone thbnoxfcdolugo tda'pqhqd; ,6000 years hence. •” '• •'* , —A North Carolina paper wants General Grant ■for next President. i, i —lt Is reported that Senator Dela ware. willresign,,uuc-. Mir n. .. •»? ; • , .XL, S; the Kentucky Legislature, lost week. .of .the IptUaha jLeglslature/It' 1? said, are farming' out iholr’ clencshlps 19V three hundred dollars each. '—There are about forty candidates forthfFno mlnatlon for Governor of Virginia, including ‘‘Extraßllly Smith,” ' —The Now York Tribune laments that person alities should be more common in Congress now than In tho days of tho chivalry. —The Boston Commonivealih says that such men ns Phillips and Stovcris are tho cream of tho coun try. If they are, tho sooner the.country is skim med tho bettor for It.— prentice. —There lu considerable talk among tho Republi cans as to who Is tho author of Geary’s twaddle on Inauguration day. , SomosayDungllsou,andoth ors say Brewster. None pretend to say tlmtGeary wrote the message. —Tho removals from office since July last are stated at4ls, out of 2464 appointments. Tho nomi nations sent to tho Senate wore 217, only live of Which havo been acted on., 0/107 removals in the Post-office Department) 120 wore for political rea sons. —A resolution halTbCCh introduced Into our Legislature to build a State Arsenal. We don’t) See any necessity of this slncoCangress Isgoingtoi organize tho mllita and put them under tho con-_ trol of Butler. Why not let Congress bulk! tho arse-! nalslikewise T ' v * : - —A oat the name of George Landon, of Bradford '(JQunty, as a : candidate for United Statsßenatoi; to saccood Mr. Buckolew, Col. M’Cluro ns hi if anybody has be* quoailJodUandbaTfalf a million dollars lately,— Did Cameron's election cost him that sum ? —The Now York TV/bunesaysof the Radical par" ty that u lt has been mlssled Into putting thelvos and swindlers into power, and these-have robbed the nation to its sore discredit, and injury.'! Just so; but is it *' mlssled" when It makes every ex ertion to keep them there, under the plea of cur tallnlg Executive power? —The Rump House passed a bill on the 28th au thorizing the appointment of an Investigation committee of three persons, whose duty it shall be to nose about the Treasury and other Depart ments, and make an ppnaal report of what they see. * * ; Caucasian. —The Chicago Tribune (Radical) says the organi zation known as tho.Qrand Array of the Republic has been perverted lnts a political organization for the purpose-of ali the public offices, and predicts 'lts downfall Inconsequence. : —The Federal Constitution, says Congress may (ddrtitt now States fnto the Union, but in the Colo* ratio )>ll[.;tUo namp\htis, attempted to the Institutions of that Territory, and to forde'lt. into tbe Union against tho*wlil of the pooplo, What oan’tn Rnmpap? - ?v .. /1V ;... , | s < people aroedndiiig a school UoußQto tho the progress of that community in “ grand moral ideas.” As an accompaniment to it they ought to end one of the auction blocks annually.used by the various towns ip soiling their paupers' to; the highest bidder/' J ‘ * ‘ , ! —GovpfndrjQearjr has made ; tbe following ap- S olntmongi^:^ ] ~ I : ■; - « ;>tf •. t v;-:". -i •- ov a.i Hrt-n 1 BOLItIOU. I' JJU jpbbsonal, ■Hou. H. -8.-Wrlglft, otWllUbbarro, „ seriously —Hunta Anna, we unaoraluml, Is mm i„ v York, or Elizabeth, N, J. . ‘ Nu «- —JuUgo Ezoklol P. Chambers, of Kent com,, Mil., died on ■ AntbOMr,,orJll).odftlsland, Is coea,, , to his rooms by Illness. _ • . o,l ihu>,i —Hon. Henry S.-Magmw, formerly state x rf>n , crot of Pennsylvania,.died last week la w^t ton, of apoplexy. a8l " n 8 —Hon. Philip Johnson, representing the n»> -Pennsylvania district In Congress, died Rqdik.n I at Washington on Thursday night. J —Miss Neill© Dean,of Chicago, figures on apm* burg Bleating pond as a professional perform* and gets two hundred dollars a week and her ponses. ■ ex ‘ Col. Robert W. M*Alien, late Lieutenant Col tho 107th Penpa. died'at.hls,residence, in Fn°i nottsburg, Fmiikiin counly r 'on tho 23d Inst. "*' —James S. Ulaluo, of Mo., Is said to bo thohaM somest man in the U.S. House of Representative,' Ho sits between Thaddbua.feteyohs Wm n Kelley. - ' ' V ’ ' —Ex-PrcsUlcnt Pierce has boon confined to],!,' house by an Illness of several weeks, but oa j£oq. day was thought to bo much better. , —Mrs. Major Williams (formerly Mrs. Stephoii A. Douglas) has celebrated'the first anniversary of her marriage by presenting her husband with twins.- —L. Q,. O. Lamar has boon elected to tho Chair of Political Science and Law in tiro AllßaisJilppißtnto University, and S. 0. Garland to the Chair of Ex perimental Philosophy.'.' —Rev. Col. Hogglnson has been lecturing o nhU comrades In tho war. Ho divides them Into two classes, which ho styles theholy rollers’’ andlho “ holy jumpers." - ■ ■ '.‘ -.."..V ‘ • * —James piston, b firemau of Philadelphia, liv ing in humble circumstances,,.with, a wife’ana five children, has^rocelved.'information that th rough-thb dbath'dPa’f'cfiatlve ln Mississippi ho has fallen heir, todvpperty BlOO,OOO and $5O - * .biU Jx.r i —Dr. Camming, tUo.mlllonipl nulsaucejhfts, Just Issued a bow leqae for ton years, and fixes tho date of the grand winding up afr some time'this yeta. Yes. and-ho tooled lease of the ground on which his chapel stands for nlnoty-nlno years In the spring of IR>l. - * Business' Notices. ! \VM.‘ BLAIIJ & SDN, ( IMPORTERS Or ' • ' CHINA ANB-QUEBNSWAKIi:, AND WHOLESALE AND. BET AIL GUOCKItS, CARLISLE, PA. Do you wish to buy-ware of any kludge -to tho Store of Wm. Blair & Son, whp hayo' the largest stock outside of Philadelphia.-,, : ' Tho “Unlversdrcog-Whecl Wringer” and po* tv’s “Clothes Washer” can bo boughudniy of Wm. Blair & Sorrj who have tho exclusive agon es' in Carlisle. ’ ' ‘ - - [Jan. 10, ’ff?. eclat 'Notices. CtJRAULK BY Dll. BCUENK’bMed iciNES.-To euro consumption, tho system must bo prepared so that the lungs wiJI heal.. To ac complish this; tho liver arid stomach must first ( bo cleansed and an- ti|st>oXltc created for good _ • wholesome food, which, by these medicines will jbo digested properly, and good'healthy blood mado; thus building up tho constitution.— ischbuck’s Mandrake Pills cleanse the stomach of !nll bilious or mucous accumulations; and, by using the Boa Weed Tonic In connection, Jbo ap petite is restored., - r ... ; Schonck’sPulnionlb BynipJs nutritious ns welli ;as medical, and,‘by using the three remedies, all |mpurltlos aro % expelled from tho-systcm.-and 'good wholesome blood made,which;will repelal disease. If patients..will .take..-these medicines: according to - directions,-ognsumptldn very fre quently in' Ibr IfiSt stftßts'yleWw'Tendlly to tholr action. Take tho pills frequently, id oidanse tho 'liver, and stomach. -'lt,doea.not.follo\v that bo* cause tbo-howols arenot costive they are not re quired, forsome times, iu dlarrhtoa they are noc* o^so^.^Thb i Btbm(ic , h mdst hd'kcptr healthy, and an-appetite created to allow the Pulmonic Byrup to not on the respiratory organsproporly and al* ay any Irritation. ‘ Then all thntlsrequlrcd to perform a permanent cure ls r tp 'prevent taking j cold. ■’Exercise abouttho rooms as'much as pos* sible, cat ail tho richest food—mt and in fact,-anything the appetite craves ( but be par-. 'tlc.ular andmoatlcato well* V; Oct. 25,180(3—2nd wca ino i yr; : Bemediae Institute pokJ. Special I Cases, No, 14, Bond Street, Kew York,\ OSr Full Information, with tho highest testimonials; also, a Book on Special pUcasce, in a scaled envelope, ) Bcnt/rce,"6Sa Bo euro and send for, them, ami you will not regrot it; as advertising physicians ; are, gCilcroll^' J iihV6Mors; 'without’ inferences 110 i stranger should be trusted) "Enclo'se ft,stamp for postage, nnd'diroct to Dr. LAWTIkNCE, No. H , Bond street, Now York, • ‘ Nov.ls,’"r:; .. , .? , To CoNaujiTPiYES.rr.Tlio having ! been restored to health Inaiew weeks by a very simple 'rbiiiedy,‘after’ liiivhlg suffered fbr several years with a s'overo lung affection, and that dread disease, Consumption—is anxious'tofnako known to his fellow-suflerord the moans of euro. ‘ To all who desire it) he will send a copy of the prescription of charge,) wlth the direc tions for-preparing and using thesdme, which hey will find a sure bare for. Consumption, Ast hma, Bronchita. Cough's; Colds, and all Throat and Lung Affections. .Tho oniy object of the ad vertiser in sending the Proscription is to benefit tho aflllctediia^d.spread jwhich ho conceives to bo invaluable, and ho hopes every sufferer will it will cost them nothing, and may provow blessing.- - * Parties wishing the proscription, free by return mail,-will ploaso address-A L h j ■ ' 1 ' ilTty. EDAVABt) A. WILSON, K; vSilfitmSsbnfg/ kings Co., N. Y. .. Peb.lCl, IBM.—IX; v • , A Caud to. Invalids,—A Clergyman while residing In South America as amlsslonory discovered a sale and simple remedy for the Cure of Nervous Weakness, Early Decay,' Diseases of tho Urinary and Seminal Organs, and tho-wholo train of disorders brought on by baneful and vi cious habits. Great numbers havo.been alroody cured by this noble remedy. Prompted by a de ’alro' to benefit tho afflicted -and unfortunate, I 111 send the recolpo for preparing and using this jnediplne, in a. sealed any one who needs It, .Free 0/ CAarpc. Please Inclose'a' post-paid envelope, addressed to yourself. ••-i-V . . - .. • * Address, JOSEPH T. INMAN, Station D, Bible House, New York City April 19,1600—1y* Wondeufu-l, "but^'TiiukT—Scxdastb Keminqton, tlie world-renowned Astrologisl and Sonambulistlo Clairvoyant, while in a clairvoy ant slate, delineates the very features of the P cr ” sou you are to marry, aud by the aid of nu Instru ment of intense power, known os the Prychomo trope, guarantees to produce a perfect and life like picture oftheluturo husband or wife of the applicant, ? wilUi date of marringd, "occupation, leading traits of-charaoter, &o. • This-is nodmpo sltlop, as testimonials without number can as sort. ( By slating place of ,birth, age, disposition, color of eyes /and half, and enclosing*flfty cents arid Stairipedfauvelope addressed tb yourself, you ' will receive thp picture by return malb.together Whit ,desired information/ - - • 1 ; I'' / Address, iucqnffdenco, | Ington, K N, X* - * ! ! : -Nov: 16; BJflMnff y f ,z ‘ ,: 'v ■ x ' u " r *' ~ oi;ViuTfl.—Aj Geattdinari^hftauife^ 6^ for years from Nervous Debility,-Premature Po cay, and all the affects of youthful indiscretion, will for the sake of Buffering humanity, send free toaUwhoneod it, the.rcoipe and directions for making ttib simple" remedy by which he was cured. Sufferers wishing to profit by the adver -1 User’s experience; can'do so by addressing * •.“r;/! John B^pOPEN, it. m: 'is ') jn.-'-vir' Nb.l? Chambers St., N. V. Feb. ; 32, Ud^iy .; V.V fcLSniAitdEV'BuT young lady - aad gentleman in tho United States can hear.Bop lo ' thing very much to their advantage' 'by 'return mail-(free of .charge,) by addressing, tho undor tlgned. Those having fears of.being- humbugged obUgeby nptlplng ( ■^A i Pf?? rs will pleliaV address-tUftl&obejwpt.apEyosU h .i t>M ** ’ .JT. .* ; .THOS;P;CHAPMAN,; r ‘; ‘ ; ifi J j u ;f fsSt Scratch 1 Wjioaton’a Ointment. wiR curdpne Jt oll In :48j houra;' •Als6^\sW*fc ! Sdlt “Rheum, Ulcors, . Ch'llhiaihP,' and' till Eruptions of the Skin; ? rl0 ° 60 cents. For sale by all druggjatffi ,;By-8pnal»8 'by mail, ffce'6f pontage, to any part of th fl .VP‘ v * w . i • i..jjux»aw?<!*riy.:. :v/ ■' u’j.UH w<„ ...
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers