I =!ZNI - iiiiimii._.mirttiTO.er. a, CAB&ISI'E, PA., TtmrsdWy KOrnfee. , mwim committee meeting* A mooting of the" Democratic Standing Com mittee of Cumberland County, will bo hold at Iho Committee Booms, In the Court House, on Satur day, February 83d, at 11 o’clock, A. M. A full at tendance is desired AN'OTHER DpSB OP BASKET. StpMi (o BMei” ®!? ■° IBI ffwl * People! NeffteJam secmeti to culminate in our State Senate on the sth and 6th inat.— The BUI to punish by. fine any rail road company that excludes negroes from the cars, or that requires negroes to oc cupy any particular part of a car, was called up by Mr. Lowry (Eadical-dis union Senator, from Erie.) We copy the Mowing from the official proceed ings of the Senate of the sth and Gth of February:, ' . . / On motion, the act,to pimish by fine any rail rail refusing to ailowcolored people to occupy seats In common with whites in the cars, was considered. ■ , Mr. WALLACE, (Democrat,) moved to amend by changing the section so as to allow colored persons to occupy seats at tho end of the cars. Mr. WHITE. (Radical) favored the bill, but held that it was 'lllegal to indict a corporation-for a misdemeanor. ' Mr. WALLACE. (Democrat) held that tho dufiy of the corporation was done when It furnished com for table seats, and hold farther that tho col<> ’ ored persons had no-rlght to Intrude themselves upon the scats devoted to white persons. The amendment of Mr. Wallace was lost by 14 ayes tom nays. , , . • ' A running discussion took place os to the word iug of the section—whether tho language made tho corporation liable or merely its agents.—>; There appeared to be a technical difficulty In con-; vlctlng a corporate body of a misdemeanor. The - matter was anally adjusted by a proposition of Senator Cowles, (Radical,) to make the company which shall permit persons to be excluded liable' - to an'notion of debt to tho person-aggrieved in ' tho sum of $5OO. This proposition was agreed to by 17 ayes to 14 nays. Mr, SEARIGHT, (Democrat) offered an amend ' raent releasing tho penalty in case any company , shall set apart separate cars for colored persons, or separate scats at the cud of the car. Lost by a sporty voleoflß Radicals to 13 Democrats. Mr. WALLACE, (Democrat) offered the follow ing: Provided, That nothing herein contained . ahull bo construed to compel the admission of ne groes into berths In sleeping cars, or to punish any oho for the exclusion of persons of color from cars set apart for the use ot ladies. Lost by a par ty vote of 17 Radicals to 13 Democrats. • Mr. DONOVAN; (Democrat) moved to amend by making the penalty 8100,000 for excluding a negro, ana imprisoning tho party who offends Until Fred. Douglass Is elected President of tho . United States, and Thaddeas Stevens Vico Presi dent; ' [Laughter.] Ruled out of order. Mr. M'CONAUQHY, (Radical) moved to refer tho bill back to the committee, in order that it might be perfected. The subject was interrupted by the hoar of adjournment, and was holdover. Afternoon Setaion.— The discussion of the acl al lowing negroes to ride in the cars was resumed. The Dili was favored by the Radical members, but they did not agree as to the proper I ‘form in which to piace the enactment'. The Democratic Senators opposed tho bill as an Infraction of the laws regulating society, and as breaking down the barriers which separate tho classes. Mr. M’CANDLESS. (Democrat) suggested that it might bo well to allow thetieople to vote upon thosubject.- - >■ •••■ ' Finally the Senate refused, tp, recommit the Tho first section. Inflicting 8500 penalty for re fusing to carry colored persons, was agreed to— ayes 10, nays 13. ‘ ' Tho secondsection, punishing railroad officials who \yas agreed to—ayes IS, nays 11. • Xliabjli wad then laid over under tho rules un m to-morroW. ‘The Seriate adjoprned. February 6,—After the reading of the journal of the preceeding day : , the Bill flowing, negroes to Tide in all public ijonyexances, afldeejpythe same priv ileges as white people, was called up .oh. its final, passage.. The Bill was read by the deck, as follows! Sij.r/PWN; 1. JBe U exacted, Ji'c„ That on and after •he passage of this act, any railroad or railway corporation within this Commonwealth that *U*ul' occlude or allow to bo excluded bytbelr ugen,ts f conductors or employees from any of their passenger oars any person or personson oa emmt of color or race, or that shall refuse to car ry any of their cars thus set opart, any person or norsons on account of color or race, or' that shall for-sooU reasons compel or attempt to cbm- Ed any person or persons to occupy any partleu r part of ony of their cars sot apart for tho ac commodation of people as passengers, shall be 'deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and, upon con eviction thereof, shall bo liable, In an action of debt to the person aggrieved, in the sum of 8500, the same to berecovered as actions of debt arc now by law recoverable. Skc. 2. Thatany agent, conductor, or employee, of any railroad or railway corporation, within this Commonwealth, who shall exclude, or allow to'bo excluded, or assist In the exclusion, from any of their cars set apart for tho accommodation of passengers, any person or persons on account of color or race, or who shall refuse to carry such person or persons on account of color or race, dr who shall throw any car or cars from the track, thereby preventing persona from riding, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and, upon con viction: thereof, shall pay a flue exceeding five hundred, dollars ($500) n.or less than one hun dred toUars, (5100) or ha ipanrlaojfted for a term nqt'axceeqlng three months hap less than thirty qftys, Qr.'botb; at the discretion of theCourl. ■ On the passage of the BUI the yeas and nays werecalled, and the Bill passed ,hy the. following vote: Blghara, BlUlngfelt, Browne, Brows, Coleipau, Connell, Cowles, Graham,*Lan don,-Howry, McConaughy, Rldgway, Shoema ker, Stntzman, Taylor, Worthington and Hall -17, all Radicals. VKays—‘Messrs. Burnett, Davis, Donovan, Glatz, Haines. Jackson, James, M’Cnudless, Randall, Scholl, Bearight, 'Wallace and Walls—l 3, all Dem ocrats except Mr. Haines. . There! What think you, white folks? Do you see any negro-equality in this measure, and are you prepared to be jostled and crowded in the cars by swar thy, Ask your wives and daughters how they relish this: negro equality business, and if they are pre pared to see negroes occupy the same -seats in the cars with themselves? It will be seen that the amendment offered by M,r. Beafight, (Democratic Senator from Fayette,) to require railroad com panies to provide cars for negroes, or ?ep£ra,te aeata at the end of the car, was lost by :a party vote, It was not the ac commodation of the negroes, then, that theßadical Senators contended for; it was for equality with 'the whites. They are determined to mix the two races, and: 'to' compel the white man and woman to keep company with the ' blacks ! Of course the Bill will pass the House, and of course the burly Govern or; Geary, will sign it and make it a law. / . We ask the people of this county and State to reflect on what we told them last Summer and fall. We said then that the objects the Republicans had in view were negro-equality and negro suffrage. The opposition papers and stump-speakers denied these allegations, and assured the dupes whose votes they wanted that they entertained no such ideas. We knew they lied; we knew that negro-equality and disunion were the objects the Radicals had at heart, and that it they succeeded at the polls they would show their hands and avow these objects boldly and defiantly. They a^, IK)W P urB uingthe very course Demo cratssaid they wouldpursue, aridthose of their parly who refuse to toe the mark and come out flat-footed for negro-equal ity, soon And themselves outsiders, with out political standing or influence. Let the people, we repeat, look at these things, and reflect. IST At a Radical meeting in Boston, recently, to devise means for the “re lief and education of the Freeclmen,“ a - Biullcal member of Congress made a speech, in which he said: ( l' ‘S?™ “ re "“I' Preseut,) of dollars are not collected S^n^ 11 millions before the Um of Anrll wrfVn 5 a n d £ ow , n on or ' hereof Congress.) wSI ink* 6 tnl 1 ™ Itadlc i l 1 mem pubUo Treasury and apnronr n^?f noy frou > tlie , - bestforthe freedmen. V° , {leem * ' ‘ortdirmUßfbo protected Ml^2Sr pde < 8p . l8e(l8on8 'tUe-’Unltfld States °ven ‘f / ■ Uon/:i\Ve <the Bndiccils) ttouw nSf^7 er de ?l e ’ needed raised by Bl?utbeu tbe ‘ lf those who are KiW** 1 ? libe r* * -WeaifcfWardtefto give of their mfan B R? or we will take their money from the ,« n even wm> Bo! ' ii! Hunt ' ‘ Illness, on ■ r> " " v ‘' BEIECnOJIS BY THE KEMP SENATE. The Rump XT. 8; few weeks, has occupieda gaod’portldh’ of its time in roJooting.'Presidehtial noi' minations. Witboutdebato nefitly evev ry man appointed topfflbe by £*esldent : Johnson, has been rejected by that de lectable body. Many of the bravest heroes of the war, maimed and' poor, have failed to be confirmed, because for sooth they received their appointments from President Johnson 1 .Among other braves who have fallen under the Sena torial axe, is the intrepid Brigadier .General Curtis, the Kero of Fort Fishery who hod been appointed Collector _of Customs at Ogdensburg, N. Y.. Gen. Curtis entered the service Of Kis coun try nt the breaking out’ of the war and was one of the best Generals in the army. Ho volunteered; like General Slocum, In one of the first regiments raised in the State of New York. His services and abilities were soon recognized by his superiors and the War Department, and he was early honored with the rank of Brigadier General. At the storming of Fort Fisher he led the assault, march ing, with sword in hand, in advance of his men. , His heroism attracted the at tention of the enemy, and he fell with, five severe wounds find was. carried off the field in a dylng conditlon. 'The Be-; glslnture of,Now York passed resolu tions, reciting his. 'bjrayei',deeds, and thanking him for his conduct .In the, service. He- remained in the' service about a year after the close of the war, and was repeatedly offered a position In; the regular army. l Last summer Presi dent JohnsonappOlnfed this gallant sol-i dler Collector of Customs at Ogdensburg. His name was sent to the Senate for con-! Urination, and the result is his rejection 1; The thousands of brayemen who fought for four years with General Curtis, and who witnessed his suffering, and devo tion in defence, Xjhjoh,. will not! forget such treatment towards their old commander. WM. KENNEDY, Chair, Dan. Bland, Coin. But, we. need; not dwell particularly, on the rejection, of (Sen. Curtis, Nine! ■out of every ten. of the men appointed to office by President Johnson were sol diers, an/d aa fast as their ngjnes were sent into, tho Senate they were rejected without a why or wherefore. The like |of this, never took place In our country before. Heretofore the only questions asked when a man was nominated to the Senate were, “ ishe honest ? Is he cajiable ?” If an affirmative; reply was : given to these questions, his confirma tion was secured. Now, however, un der the party of “grand moral ideas,” the questions asked are, “do you con sider the Union restored, and are you a believer in the President’s policy ?” If the answer is yea, off goes his. head.— Neither character, capacity, or services to the country have th© weight of a fea ther in his-favor.' The petty tyrants who occupy the majority of the seats in the Bump Senate—nine out of ten of whom were contractors during thiewar, and all of whom have their relaitives from the first to the: last generation in office—are ns remorseless as, tigers and as avaricious as vultures.. There are, we notice, some sixty Pussfiodßns. in of fice, some forty .'Wilscasi and as 'many Sumners, Wades and Trnmbulls. Every Radical Senator has his relatives tug ging away at, the public teat. The action of the Senate in .rejecting maimed soldiers, is but another evidence of the hypocrisy of. the Radical-negro party. Forfnany yearsthespouters and editors for that pestiferous faction have professed great love lor the soldier.— They were the “ Soldiers they told us, and they bellowed like the bulls of Bastion, as they demanded a large portion of the pubUc patronage for “the boys in blue.” But, just as we expect ed! their professions were all lias. It now appears that the only soldier they care for is the negro soldier, and they only us© him as a convenience that will enable them the better to fob and plun der the public, treasury. They are a sor ry sot of political vampyres, these negro equality gentlemen, and the older they grow the worse they get. They obtain ed power by false professions; they pro longed the war for party purposes; they stole hundreda. oj millions of dollars ftom Uncle Sam; they preached about “ loyalty” and at the same time sold powder and lead' to the rebels; they grasp a negro in one hand as they run the other into the U. S. Treasury; they depleted the White House; and now they are out flat-footed in favor of a dis severed Union and amilitary despo tism! ' ' Freemen of Cumberland county—men of old, sober-sided Pennsylvania [--keep an eye on the desperate men of this des perate party. They are enemies to the country, and their, dark purposes are being gradually revealed. The Union has passed through one peril only to en counter another. We have escaped the Scylla - of secession—let us not wreck ourselves on the Charybdis of centrali zation. Watch the conspirators! Be ready, if the worst comes to the worst! “Rebel Venom.”—Under this cap tion the Carlisle Herald of Friday', cop ies the following artielefrOm i he Phila delphia Daily News; ,"■■■■ 44 If tbe men who lead in the lladlcal conspiracy were not; known to every one who can read to be . unmitigated knaves. It would not be so great an astonishment that a portion of the people are de* celvctl by them; hut when It Is'.nnaemable that they are the most selfish and venal wrethes who ever cursed a country, how gros*' mast ho the de* basement of the popular mind when an apparent majority can be found to follow their lead!" The iJerafd finds fault -with thesen timenta of the Hews, call's that paper a “copperhead journal,” and the article quoted above “ a foul lie.” Is it possi ble that the Herald don’t know thatthe News is an old, influential,Republican paper—a paper that was'regarded.an able organ of the liincpln ndministra-’ tion ? No paper in the State has assail ed the democracy with more bitterness than has this same News; and yet our neighbor, 1 for the purpose of deceiving his readers, speaks f of the ;News as’ a “copperhead journal.” ’There is' not much ingenuity in a falsehciodlike thls. If speaking In condemnation of the Rump Congress, makes a paper a “ cop-, perhead j ournal, ” ’ all we have to say is that a great many Republican papers may be thus stigmatized. It la a feet thatnearly every Republican editor who has not a collar on his neck, has spoken out freely against the infamous conspir ators and knaves who are in tbe major ity and rule the Rump. -Even Greeley, in Ids Tribune, a short time ago, spoke of the' Bumpers as ” negro minstrels,” and he advised them tocprktheir’faees and “ charge forjthelejphrfpri^ajj^,’’ The New.iYorki^af^another.vet^a^i^ Republican vtors.” journals?” inforrn your readers, Mr. Herald./ • on'/Friday) thoestabljahbpnt tj&e pyef| tpn^tat^iof..ftjiia T|idon,iMr. Mdssachusbttsv who Is a; very stiff cal, expressed his fears that Ida parly was going too far, and hof>ed some other plan would be introduced for the settle ment of the country’s difficulties.- Af this Stevens fired up, and, according to the official report of the proceedings, re-, plied to Mr. BankB “sneeringly.” fib cracked his whip oyer the heads ;of the Badicals, intimated that’many of thoni were “demoralised,” and. had been tampered with by the man “ at the other end of the avenue” (the President}.— “Great excitement among the mem bers,” the report says, followed Stevens’ remarks, Stevens is great od a “ sneer,” and he frequently exhibits his displeasure in this way; but with all his'impiidence and dogmatical disposition, we did hot suppose he would dare attempt to sneer down a man like Gov. Banks. - Pollttr cally speaking, we have as little confi dence In Banks as wo have in Stevfens during the war he waaone ofrMr. Bin-j coin’s political Generals, and like most of the Radical Generals, was a failure when,flghtiug the 'enemy ; ,was to. be done. But Banks- is a man of talent, and the superior, of Stevens intellectu ally and morally. to statesmanship, ; and ia a gentleman In demeanor, -qualities that Stevens is a stranger to., For Stevens to sneer qt lum, ; tberefore, was another, evidence' of the brutishhess' of his nature, and Of his overweening arrogance. ‘;■ , 11 .; How comes it, that ; this ; .bad! man) Thad: Stevens, is. so much, dreaded by Radical members .of Congress? “A majority of the Radical members of the House,”a letter-writer says, ‘.‘are evi dently frightened at this attempt' of Stevens to establish a military despo-; ■item in this country, but yet. most; of them, it is believed, will support the bill On'.the final yvte.”. , A fearful fed mission . A majority opposed to a mesh sure, but yet will vote for it! Rather than-incur the displeasure of Stevens they will support a bill which they know to be wrong, and which, if adop ted, will convulse this country from' centre to circumference. Such slavish servility deserves thetemtempt anid con demnation of every freeman. Mb.- Sxevens as a Wit.—Mr, Sell. Held of I’cnu sylvanlo, denounced Secretary Seward with great severity, la debate In tho House' the' other day;' for sending the constitutional amendment to tho rebel States for their approval.. ..Mr. Schofield 11, lustrated his Opinion lor Mr. Seward by.a story; ; An Englishman once, on exhibiting the quall ' ties of Ids kennel to an. American traveler, came upon onolddog whe was nearly uacd up;, l . , ..That,’ r . said the'nobleman. 'Ma the best dqgt In the pack; ho Is lame,-blind; deaf. and old. bqt still the most valuable animat I have." ;*• For what?”, said,tho traveler. “ Hlsoducattonwasgood.'andhlssense of smell Is still- perfect; and we take him out to put the’puppies on'the.traok and' then return mm.” " I renew, Mr. Speaker; that it Is .hardly dignified to compare tho Secretary, of State to. ■ that old pointer, and will tell you why I am not going to mnkethe comparison; Said. tho. noble man, ” I have owned that dog fifteen years,.nnd, hard as he looks he never bit the hand that fod : ’him; .or harked upon n false trail.” JLaughter and’applause.]- ’ The Speaker hammered away with his mallet to restore order. ’ ■ , ” Mr. Sohoaeld, mistaking thoobjoctof tho Speak er. inquired whether his time was.out. . - - ” X'\ suggested Mr. Stevens,,ln a low tone, ho Is only calling you to order for.dothg Injustice, to the dog.” The remark was'lahghed at by those' -near enough to catch It. The Carlisle JTerald of last week, pub lishes the above, and by doing.so soils its columns. Instead of giving it-the caption -of “ Mr. Stevens as a 'Wit,” it should have been headed “ Mr. Ste vens as a Blackguard,” for-, none .but: a. low, shameless blackguard would speak Of the second officer of. the Government ahd.intimhte that a,.dog had dis-! graced by being compared to Ihlnu Wo are no admirer of Mr. Seward, for he organized the God-defying Eadieal-Ee- : publiean-Dlsunioti party, and that was, a sin for which he can never make atonement; but yet he is, beyond ques tion, a statesman and scholar, and occu pies a high official position; and no man Who is not an infamous brute wonld .re fer to him in the language used by the two blackguards, Schofield and Stevens. They cannot disgrace themselves, but, being; members'of Congress, thfey dis grace their constituents and the coun try. “Laughter and applause” follow ed Schofield and Stevens’ vulgarity. I What a set of beauties the majority members of the House must he; what noble-minded fellows, to laugh when the second officer in the nation is com pared to a-dog! Ten years ago had a. member niade a remark like that in- , dutged.in by Schofield and Stevens, he would have, been hissed out of the House, audperliaps kicked but, Then Yankeeism and hegroism did hot rule the nation, nor did blackguards and jail-birds occupy seats in Conjgress. "Me. Ingersolu, (III.) asked leave to Introduce a resolution appropriating $ 25,000f0r distribution to the poor, of the District of Columbia' through Major General Howard of the Freedmen’s Bu reau.” . , .. The above we clip from the proceed ings of the House, at Washington, of a recent date; Of course the $25,000 goes to the negroes, every cent of It; “ Maj. Gen. Howard, of the Freedmen’s -Bu reau,” will see to that. He was made the agent for the distribution of the money with that express understanding. The people’s Treasury is jobbed al most daily by the negro-worshippers composing the majority of the Rump Congress. This re volutionary and trea sonable body, we see itstated, has, with in the last three years, voted; to the Freedinen’s Bureau. and', the' negroes* over forty millions of dollars inmoneyj and double that amount in schooling and rations 1 Heretofore no man evcr, .dreaihed"that the money o? the XT. S. Treasury—the people’s money —cbuldhe used for the benefit or relief of individual poverty. No white man or.white, child over tlioughtof applying to Congress for clothing; or-rations;- or schooling. And had they'thought of it and made ■ application 'to’fCdngress. for they would have been told that' the public 'toqhey could not be squan dered for any suchobjects. Tho party of “ great moral ideas,” however, disre . garding both law and' honesty, are ap propriating,bveryfewweeka,thouBanda and millions of. dollars for. the relief of negroes, and thus the Treasury is being depleted, and our hationalindebteduess, notwithstanding the severe manner id which the people .ate taxed, remains without diminution. Thus far the peo ple have said'amen to all this Infamy, buji we believe they are now getting qheir eyes open, and will,; at the first opportunity,-hurithelmen whotbussquanderthepubliemoney. ■ a®- We retunt our ttoekslto fion. C. L, Dawson, Mr, liong, for his (vtte»ttoJW.-.v., i; ;i £.; jy -.'.‘l, Bait’s pBOPHEsr pronounces iel Webster, ur. last, -a “stropqwms says that hte cos to his coun® (fitthtii at leasttdprotect his memofy fromsuoh base assaults.” But yet, notwithstand ing the Herald's denial, Mr.’Webster did use the .Very language -We quoted.—' convinced flftat the" 1 * mfdrndl faMtiiS the couhtiyiand; deluge lt lh blbodj” s !? .'not Rested; In.thelrjd^d posed to addrE&s'fhis felldwKjtizens. in Pnneud Hall, Boston/ The city author-, ities, who were ‘ ‘ infernal fanatics and Abolitionists,”. reiused the üBo of the Bali to the great statesman, slammed Its doors in his fhcq, and groaned and hissedhimwhenVherandehiahppear ance. > They had not mueh respeot for his ‘‘.life-longservlwsto hls eountry.” ,Mi\\yebBt»r,refusirigto'be-hißsed'dowa by the eohspirators; ifihd'e fils’ speech from the steps of a. hotel; and then it was that he .used thia language • .■; ,; '.-’’lf tUeso lufurnalfanatloH andAbolltlonlsts over get the power Into thler .hands, 1 they wIU override the CousUtntlon'.j set the Supreme Court atfaoUancet.ohangoand.make laws to suit them selves;, lay violent hands on those who differ with them id opinion and daroqucstlon their In "faUlblUty; and anally, bankrupt the country and dolugo.lt mblood.tt.'v/ ... The “iihferriatfanatite’lwere fierce in theird i 6nuneiaUbnspf' , nt that tlme, and ; Bpok6 of him in la nguago similar.; to that - employed by ; them against Andrew Johnson now. ‘They held meetings, adopted tei questing him to resign his .sciit in the Senate, and heaped upon his head their Ohoicest' l Ti"- offr, memory serves us,* tHfi'Leglsfature oLMnssaenu-. setts condemned hjim byresolutlon/and asked him to resign agd 11 go'horiieiyA What. ayqnfteMul respect the i‘infer ,nal fanatics’’had for his “ liforlong,ser vices.” ’■; • •• It will not avail the; Herald then to ■deny that Daniel Webster used the lan guage we quote above. He did lae it, and it is a part Of his history; and if Daniel Wehster’were living how, and in his seat, in the Senate, his stentorian voice would bo heard against the “ in fernal IhnaticS”. as ■of yore, arid : with a wave, of ■ his ;hand he yitoum send such pigmies as Sumner, Wilson, Wade,and Fessenden howling to thoir homes.■ .Oh , that Webster, Clay, Silas Wright, Devi Woodbury, ;;wfe.Alleri, Steven Douglass and their compeers,’could rise from their graves and resume tKo seals in the Senate they So'long adorned.— Would they’uotbe amazed andconfoun.- Sied.ot witnessing the efforts of the pres ent “inferpal fanatics” in that body to <r bankrupt.theco'untryanddelugeit in .blood ?” Wouid.thoy. not at onco buck le bn their armor, and, appealing to the patriotism of .the people,, demand that these meii—theSebastardSenators who occupy seats qncq occupied by great and good dMist from their ffcasonable efforts to destroy the .Union,. or If they did ■not, that they beregarded ; and dealt 'with p traitpra ? ' One shake of■'U®hry’.Olay’s, Tong’ forefinger would curdle the blood in the veins of the Sumners : and Wades; one look .-from Wobster or Wright, or Allen nr i)6ug lass, would cause these petty politicians and conspirators to hide their dimln ished heads in sharae. ' God knbws the people, :have suffered, long, enough ami too long because of the want ofpatrioD Isrti -ami 'honesty“ln' *tlfis" seKate 'and House of Representatives at Washing ton, and they yearn for a change for the I -better. - ■ ; W' I The Arrest of Snmt(«-4ncer' Fneto and • . Bnmon. • I Some Inquiry having been made about the amount of mohey to be paid' for the arrest of John H. Snrrott, it worth whHo to call attention to thefact that the order oiferlng a reward for his capture was re voked by the President some time late In the fall 0f,1865, two months at least after the Btate.-Department kn.ew he hadgone after instruc tions were abut to our.C'onsui at that point to do nothing toward effecting his arrest. " It may be'mentioned in this connection that the Consul general of Canodn wus at .Washington laatweektoconsuU.withthe Oovern men t about bringing evidence ifom there against Surratt,‘when his trial takes; place. “Perley,” telegraphsVthat .there are intimations that if Surratt .is. willing to become: a witness,on .thepart • of, the Government he can :s'a,bsitant»ate;w,hit is now circumstantial .evidence, hot only connecting Jeff.. Davis with-the. conspi racy .which culminated, in .the assassina tion of President Lincoln,-but implicating another: prominent individual once “a village alderman.”. We out tills from the. Boston Common wealth. “ Perley” has let the conspiracy cat out of the bag. It is no doubt part of the Badical programme to Induce Surratt to conect President' Johnson and Jeff. Davis with the assassination of Mr. Lin coln,.under promise that by doing so he will' be released:- It is -.Chstomary to ex amine a party to a odpspiracy osa witness , against others unless there Is a previous ; promise of pardon. If Surratt be.-guiity, ■ os he is generally Supposed to be, but little' faith can be placed.in the revelations, be. may make to save hia own neck. : ‘. The. conspiracy,against the President is os deadly as that against Lincoln—the "only difference’ is. that the ■conspirators have not yet found ,a man Who has pluck enough to Strike the fatal blow.—Jse.' - Mubdeii.— The,New York Tribune has ah article upon the subject of “ The Mys tery, of Murder,’-'ln the course,of which it furnishes some: very.startling facts. — Amongst others is‘the statement that In the clty.pf Now York .there were,' during the year 1861, ho, fewer,than soventyrone homicides and murders, 'without inelud ing numerous of death'by drown ing or other-fn'eanS; where dt 'was not quite blear; whether orriot therohadbeen foul play; ;Ohly ‘thlrfy-:thfee" persOhS were arrested for, these crimes; add' the records of,-the courts shoot: only 'fifteen con vfotions,'(Several of-whlohweroforof fenses committed-in a previous-. year.) with nineteen, prlsoneris-still to be tried. That Is to say; .of thenerpetrators of blear and unmistakable, homicides In. New York, more '•.than fifty .per cent, ore: not arrested, nud.hearly eighty, par rceht. ‘Ore hob punished. ;' . , r , Me. Geo. Peabody'and the .Book.— A correspondent Of ; the New York Times writes to that paper that fewpergonskriow the real amount of good Mr. George Pea body. Is how doing. - His benefactions, it is stated , have averaged, tor Several years past, one thousand dollars kday,hhdthls correspondent states that Mr. Peabody's whole,tlmojs now.ocQuplediddOvlalng the beatwayfor,the benevolehtto 11 dotpe most good to the largest; number of.per sons." It appears .that for several days.be has. beea vfsitihg. talklhg wlth, aha'ex horting several of the largestOopltaliats of New York, to,move in this great work'of reform. He says tho ambunt of suffering in large cities can be.partly ameliorated bysystematlobeheypienSe.ahdlJiattbofs auds.of Jives may bo savedaiiunoUy by a much smaller,sum of money than.'people generally suppose. , Mr. Peabody 's plan, however, hasnotyetbeenannpunced,,but, comiugfromam^ rnentaod!;|Uohvthpm^ obi - r thstjlt isbj moye' Yor? it • ceed I. The Unit Wall Btrfe«>Hlobliiiry--*lo0 > 000 , v; .... ip Honda Stolon,. Sndjiot the JeSst ’fluent wl theVeyentsi |whieh : etlr tfetnetdiwlai bfedof thebulls! afiilted whiqSarel 'oharaoterlzed]by more eaaeln thelt/exe-/ cutlon than skill in their conception.— Probably there is no sort of property more easy of appropriation than United States bonds. A roll of these valuable securi ties lies upon a desk in a crowded office, a Clerk turns hla head. and a smartly drCssed by-stander deftly-reaches forth ;his dexter hand;;graspsthe.treasure, hides. Itbeneathhlsovercoatrandiodllyw'alks off. In jurt such a mibß'er was Mr. Leonard Wv Jerome vJqtlmltSd yesterday to the tuue of $lOO,OoOl A Between twelve and one o’clock, the business partofthe day,'while a number of. persons wore In Mr. Jerome’s office, No. 48 Exoh'orige place, a roli of five-- twenty bonds which had Just'been re ceived from the office of Brown & Co., was taken from a deak whoro it had been placed by the clerk; The rob bery was discovered’within flve.minutes after Its ocourranca. but not id time to ar rest the thief; for whom diligent' search was at once instituted/ The only clue to the rogue is ’furnished , by a gentleman who was waiting to.speaklwlth’Mr. Jero me, who saw a man pass, from the stove; where he had apparently been, warming his hands, toward the desks,’ going be hind that upon .which the bonds lay and at once came back and saunter out of tbo office. ;■ ’ As soon as the theft was discovered, in formation Was conveyed to the Superin tendent of Police,who pht detectives on the case, and they have gone to Work up on the faint clue they possess as to the man's Identity.. The. number of all the stolen bonds will be published td-daV. Mr. Jerome offers a reward of $25,000 for the recovery of the securities - —Hew York Times, 6 th. ; OUR WASHINGTON LETTER. Uow People Zilve In Wnililnrton--A, New Pleee or Tyranny—Old Tltbd. XiOSlugr bis Power—lllsNew 11111—Xt Is Opposed by some Radicals—A. Tariff Tor Ben. Bntler—Slow Int penebment Is tobeßronstat About—Wbnt It will Amount to—How the -Barbies will Vote—Btow-ihe Badleals thov ttaelr Xiore for tbe Soldi era " ' '■ Correspondence American Volunteer* " ' ' Washington, February 11,1807. It Is a remarkable fact that very few persons seem to live in Washington; they only stay here. I have an 614 friend -who I know has been “ stay ing" here at least forty years; and the other day I took occasion to express my Surprise that with his largo family he should never have'taken a , house. “ Oh, you know, I have only been living hero temporarily,” Was his reply. Arid that Is the way with a vast minority of the people of the. District. They cbihe to Washington—are fortu nate enough to get anoffice—they go to boarding' —after a time they got.married, then they go to bqaTdlng,withrtholr:wlYCß;; Tho Paradise of cp homo; thoy'hbyer see—and they never feel os if they were doing more than mere ly staying, at .the CapUol, until‘some political change or some official freak’ehall lay the yellow .envelope upon their desks which tolls them their., services are no longor. required, by their : grateful country. Washington, is very .much, like the' “devil-fish", described by’Victor Hugo in his “ Toilers©!, the Sea.” ..Mon/oome hero, struggle for years In Us embraces, and If , they are lucky enough to got fl.woy.at’all, go’ owoy poorer than* inuy came, tt sucks your very life-blood with its myriad paralyzing mouths of lahdlords and gro cers, bakers arid butchers.. ‘ * The crack of old Thad’s lash Is again licard la , tho halls oflegislatlou, -but It has a weaker and more uncertain sound than heretofore,'' His' bill, which is now, before the Hqhse, for remanding the. Southern. States 'territorial condition, dividing ;them Into military sus pending th o: Hob ecu . corpus, is so mqnstrous;in Its provisions that even Homb of ttio Radicals; recoil from It. . Banks opposes .loan'd so does Raymond and Bingham. A blUwhloh attempts to say that eleven States of the .Union do. not exist; wfiloh declares that the President ijhaUnot. ‘‘be <som in’ander-in-Chlef of the [army and navy which suspends tho ftafircuicoTpualntlraeof peace,not withstanding the Constltutiondeclaresthat,* 1 the ■ privilege of the writ shall not bo suspended .unless whenin case* ofrepeUiOnand in varion the public' Safely; may require ItVr-dppfiars • to. bo too'ranch even for the rascally rump Radi cals. This measure lB lhtcnded to take the place of the Constitutional Amendment, which r- met such a sad, fate at the hands of 'the pfeople. It is entitled," an aottolproyido fortho more efficient government of"the Insarrecllbhary States,”, but had bettor be called an act to establish’ a despo tism in the United States. Hero it is: ' Whereas,. The pretended State governments of the late so-called Confederate States of Virgin ia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia. Mis sissippi, Alabama, Louisiana, Florida.-Texas and ,Alabama, wore set up without the authority oi-i ■Congress and without the sanction of the people, and Whereas,- The governments afford no adequate protection for life or property. , and countenance and encourage lawlessness and Crime. And Whereas, It is necessary tbatpeaoe hud good order should be enforced In the 80-cxUled Slates until loyal and republican State govern ments can be legally established. ’ < Therefore bb »rr enacted by tHk'Benate and House of Representatives op the United States in Congress, ASSEicßinuvThat the' so called States shall be divided into military dis tricts and made subject to the military authority. of the Unlted-.Btates as-hereinafter prescribed, and for that purpose Virginlashallconstitnte the FirsiDlstrlot; North Carolina and South Caroli na, the Second District; Georgia; Alabama, and Florida, 1 the Third District; Mississippi and Ar kansas. theFVmrthdistrict; and Louisiana and Texas, the Fifth DlsfrlCt. Sec. 2.'-And be it ENAafkbiwThat it shall be.the duty of the general of the. army to assign to tbe command of . each of such districts an officer of the regular army. not below the rank of brlgodler-general,’ to detail a sufflolent mlUta* ry. force .to enable jmett officer to perform bin da ties and-enforce his authorlty lh the district to .which he is assigned, , ' j \ 8X0:8. J ANI> BE rr rtJRTHER enacted, That it - shall be.the duty of each officer assigned os afore said to protect jail persona Intlie righto of person and, property, lb suppress' insurrection, disorder and violence, and to punish, or cause to be pun- 1 * B i ,l i»S ßrBi3 !s t^ ej>u “W o J9 eac ® ondcrlra- Inals, and to this end he may auow civil tribu nals to tahejurisdlctlon of and try offenders, or when. In. his Judgment it may be necessary for the trial of offenders ho shall have power to or ganise military cammlsslons or tribumasr. for that purpose; /Anything in the court and laws, of.the so-called States to tbe contrary notwith standing, and aluegislative and Judicial-proceed ings or processes to prevent or. control tho'pro oeedlngs of said military tribunals, and all inter ferqnce by said' pretended State governments with the exorcise of-military authority under this,act shall be void and of-no effect. :• , ; , Sec, a, And bb it Further -enacted, : ‘.That‘ courts and jadlolal officers of theUnltedklatea iShallvnot Issue write of hnbcaa:corpus in behalf of persons in military custody unless some com missioner or officer on duty in the district where in.too person is detained shall endorse upon said petition aBtatement;certlfyinffnp6h-,hbhorthat he hoa knowledge or informatjoh’as to the cause and circumstances^ofthe alleged detention: and tnat-he believed the same to' be wrongful;- and farthM.Ahafc he believes that r the Indorsed pctl tiJ.n preferred Ingoodfolth andln furtherance pfjastloe; and; not to hlnderor delaythe pun ishment of crime, aUpersons put udder military .arrestby virtue of this act, shall bo tried without - Sbo. 6. and be itfurther enacted; That no .sentence of any railitarycommlsslonerortrlbu-. nal hereby, authorized; affecting the ilfe’of liber- ’ ty of ony person; shall be eieoated'aatll'lt is ap- - S roved by the superior bfoto'r^dn'command-of le district rand the laws andregalatlohs for the government of .toe army shhlbnofc be affected by thls acL except iirsq- far:as they conflict wlthlto ; provisions; •„ ■> * lW •• . Banks made a telling speech- In opposlUon'Tb the bill, oh Saturday. i-Hp said he beHiyod the Stoles lately in rebelllan.syere still'States. ‘They hod been mado Stdtes by the potlplo, sad Con gross had recognised thorn os’ States during the /entire war, end no power of the Government eoiild deprive them of their Statehood.' He wan ted to be on the .side of Democracy end' not on the filde of arts toe racyhnd centmUratlon. Bantu WAS followed by . Haymorid, ’who, opposed the measure Iha slitillar strain.; Old Thdid. will try hardto force the measure through to-day, uiiaer the gag h|lt if‘£e succeeds In ; getting It through, there.-fo' pass it oyeftho yoto whlobrltls sure to receive. . ThohewTorlff Bill,'as amended *h the' Senate, amounts Waimos to virtual prohibition. It yrlil probably pass both Houses in',this shape/os tho New England mauufacUirers Beoilito’have It 01l to themselves. The -price of gbDdh' wtU ho greatly enhanced upon, the passage of - the bill bat what cares the Yankee forthhtTlle packets the money and the to poy It. 4t seems lhnfh.riih|ilng, which is mide I only at IxnvCll, by a factpry ln which Boh, Butler 'ls Interested, is to hoonornjoihly taxed.'The pser ,ent duty is flftjt.per cent.’atW'tfi'o sKjijr propfised, by tho bill how'nndor cbhWiaop»ftbiU'(i.s; which legislating With opeolajtWerOuOo/to'tho intertills' *S«aw“ InWiertcd upon reliablemitiiorLy] thiltJim. *0 ho» «eett ijibsoflbefl Hy V6rK« J 'biottonii Bgttlnat- liesldint- Jpimipn/- «h itm •SJ ® adoring ana reckl&ia jut of rcoutltlrojklu ■reh6ysan[ltlieyßeo iQfhdgebernlcrafiU niiclde thtfltmlniw TM&OU aitfendid op fp&rtußltyto fllltlidl* c^raTdytdiftliSitoa -1 grange, sb.-v tbo Radical policy, WUMlloovor before long that tboy r b»vo_ boon Ittyinfe'tKO'foundatlon of thoir 74wh;t6ia;£'\' s&>• •//TbC- "colored cHUons" of Washington oUd; ’lieorgotown, are beginning to toko an active part iht aaked who they intend) So vote fbr in the appraßohlng mnnlolpnl contest/ An yiSM'dey.Ahtt up." Thlsmokbalt:, rretfieralUmpoi^Mtol^intc>yfho‘ , dey M 1«. a The Kadlool Senator! are showing thoir love for the soldiers with a vengeance. They have, Within tho post week, rejected tho nominations of Qon. Pratt, collector of Internal revenue for Brooklyn—Gen. Eagan, oolleotor of tho North District of New York and Major-Qon, Conoh, ool lootor of the .Port of Boston, These gentlemen all soryed gatlantly dnrlng tho entire.war, and wore appointed to civile tiled, as a reward of mer it, without regard‘to; their political opinions.— Thoy have foiled to bow to .the Mofooh of fanati cism, and off go tllolr heads. Oh, consistency thou art ajowol. Caucasian. HUCEmhEOVS. —A colored ppot Is giving readings In Washing ton. ’ ■ —dno of the State Senators of Virginia owns 100,000 acres of land. —Mr. Gravlor, Freno.h.sovan, soya. tho greatest meteoric sbowor will come offnsxt'NOvembor. ’ —A young man'lnlowa, after his father’s death married his step-fnothor. ~A woman- has been brought Into court In Northampton/Penna., on the charge-of being a "common.scold;’’ c —Tho Society for the Prevention of Craolty to Animals recently prevented a dog'light In Lon don. ' '' ■ —Half of the nourishing .town of L:v Grange, Georgia, embracing all -Jho huslnoss hbnsos,was burned recently. —Now York city, Including Its, parks and other open spaces,-has.a population 61.82,000 to tho square mile.' —The Lafayette (lad.) Courier reports " a well dcflnod'caseofTnsqulty. resulting fromtho uso of halr-dyo.„ —Mbre than half the income tax oomos from tUreeuStataSrrMassaobusott*, Now York. and Pennsylvania.., , —a! woman In Chicago, on Visiting hor bus band’s office, discovering long hairs In his hair brash, has sued for divorced .* —A wag says he provohtod a; case bf hydrophoi* bla by " getting on a fourteen rail fence and stay ing until tho dog left. ... ; —Il ls estimated that slpce the closo of tho war tho colored population of Virginia has been re daoed one handred and ninetythousaud. —A bill levying a* spebiiic tax oh bid .bachelors, to support a bureau of emigration, has- been In* traduced.in.the,AVost Virginia Legislature. . -JohnM'DuflT. of Marietia.'eommUied suicide, Ifist Saturday, by taWng polsdn. . ‘Whisicy caused hlm tb comniH thorashaot,' ' V - . —Four ybung lads, under, twolve years of nge, were dlsobyored'ln a Bostoh churoh on, Sunday, ploying oaohrC lor tho “ beer for the brow'd;”* i—John Hancock’s;chair,.and the,table.upon whibb’tbe Declaration of Ihdepbndenbewas'slgh* ed are to, ho returned from ;Harrlaburg to Inde pendence HailPhilodelphlo. —Mr.-George Peabody has .given 2,000,000, to bo used for.tbeprbmotlpn ofthe moral and Infcollbot-. ’ udl educatlon ofdestltuto youth iu the Southern and SouthwesterixStateS ofthe Union. ' There’s luck In odd numbers;** said ’ Rory , o’More;” hut there ain’t* - Twenty odd and twen ty-four even onos.drew prizes In the Crosby lot tery. ■' ,■'* —At recent fashionable receptions in Hew'York ' several young rrien appeared in maroon velvet coats and; breeches, 'wlth'BUk.s toe kings—abort of courtcostnme, . , —lt is assorted.that a crinoline manafaotarer In 1 Saxony, ddrlng tho lost ton BC3,- 784,000 sprlngs—onough go around the world times, i ■: • ; —A number of boot-blocks arrested jn New York yosterday for ylolatlng the Exolso : |aw. They polished hoofs’, for ,twehty-five cents, and gave drinks of whiakey td fchelr customers from small bottles whioh they had about them. —Tho offlee bf the Hagerstown Mali, oho of the best ofoar.exbhanges,'was entirely, destroyed by flro on the 27th January, last.' The .proprietors, were osusoallnafewdays. —The ih'dtahs of tlf o'Florida Everglades have declared thelTdQterrrilnationtohold.lheirnegroes .asslaves. .They dcny thejarlfldlotlonofthelaws, and troublo.ls apprehOhdad, as .the negroes -aro arming, and have called upon the-military for assistance.',; ' v . ; *i —A cotempprary says that the religious world rostarted theglftor lottory.basiaeSs, of late years, and that if they would stop that sort of gambling the law-making powers would Ukelytak* meas ures to stop the rest of tho people who haven't the fear of the Evil One much on their minds. V —A, Lebanon county farmer,' io years ago, bought a team of mules which ho has worked uninterruptedly till the,present tlmeVand ho, can now sell them at double the. pride be paid for them. Like fiddles,. they appedr to improve .With ago. ..,r - .” O' . —Th6 Macbn (Go.) Journal notices an extensive movement of free blacks from Georgia to the Mississippi Valley, remarking that “we must accustom ourselves to regard this emigration a flxed,ahd irrepressible fact andforeoast of thaday when Georgia will boast an almost exclusively whtepopulatipn.” ’■ • : [ ;. y , —ln the Illinois Penitentiary, at Bprlngflold, on Saturday night-week, a convict paocarod 1 a fllle, cut tho Iron,bats of his cell,'seized Mid gag ged the gnard; and liberated" They then set" thetaißeives’lor work: cutting the bolt, of the .other, cell c««a;VbatJtho"oUtaldo guards were alarmed and saededded la capturing the party before any farther mischiefwhs done. - —A young man of good address has been recent ly carrying on an extenslveswindlo in New York. He would pbtajn tho names of persons havlng re datives In Sing-Sing, and.then go to them and say that such persons had recently been injured by. , on explosion in a quarry at Slng-Slng, andlf they,; wished to soe.thelr relatives alive, they must Im mediately goto that place. He would nsally ob tain from five to twenty-five dollars for his sup posed klhdndss; and hot until the persons thus misled had. reached Sing-|Sing. woald they learn ■thatthey hadbeen thedupea.ofi. spouhdrel. PERSON AL. James fttls, a Boston Journalist, died lost Fri day. ■" ‘ _ r- • —General McCloliaanls expectedhack from , Europe.earlydn the spring, Washington” has been arrested in NewOrleahs for robbing a hen roost. r- M Horace Greeley,”! who Mr. Rhett, at Charleston, S. 0., has been found guilty of mur derln the flxst.degree. —Hon. John Morrissey is said to have lost 8400,- 000 by the “ Cumberland corner” smash, la Wall street, last week. ' , - JohnaoW^m‘..ytol i ;Boafcoi i, on'the 34th of next June,- to osatofr at the dedication of the hew Masonic Temple (iie^e.‘ ; f , “"Artemaa Ward has had to, suspend his Mor-, mon Lecture In consequence of 1U health.' His friendsexpress anxletyconcernlnghim, —Miss Gustlna , Bartlett died at Bartlett’s Is land, Me., QA;ih.e 18th nit. 'She wos : but’ 15 years old and weighed 400,pounds.. —The Fenian ex : ohlof organiser,. Stephens, Is now.potttlvely said to bo living in Second-place. Brooklyn, • “Death Bed of Lincoln" repre sents Schuyler Colfax, who wasn’t there, as ohe of the chief mourners over the dpuoh of our mar tyr.PresldenW -v; O ' —u. H. Crosby has bought tlio Opera House of A ' H. Loo.thcluoky ticket holder In the.lato lot tery. for two hundred thousand dollars. , V —Hon.HonryLeß.for.'ivboinSouthOarollna oas t her electoral voti; for, Vibe,President .hlthe second election of General Jachaon.diedln Bos ton lastwook at theageof 85. —Hon. Kreklel. F. Chambers, of,Kent county’ Maryland, and a Judge on the'supreme Bench of that Btale, dlcd on>'Vodno«4»y. H[o was esteem- Jurists IntheQtateb, and. was a man of wlldly-admlttod excolleabc. , tli «.« of,ijeVentMiu)hli-! • dren of.Wm.ffllery, elgnei of the-Xlisoianition Of Indopendcnoo. dlod ot Newport hut Monday, He eebseaiiad boon Collector of the Port of Newport for forty years. 1 ;■ —Benjamin Prankim Hancock, the father of .Major-General HnnimskVandthoCoileotorpfln ternaf Neyenue ,for;the Sixth PcnnsylvanlaDls triot,, died In Nort’lstbwn i ' bgbd sixty- ’■ seven AThevGeiMrM 'arrived home on- Wednesday^; J , “ supposwon is bated btf the -& .. —A Western papotfsdabs Thad, Havens the • ft- not approve of the S>rojo Convention. — itfWpKiftte for Congress at *th© ln Connecticut. •*'" —tEd any the Im pcnchmont furore will amount, Ini tho end, to nothing. ' : : —No Impeachment can bo tried before a/rag? went of a United States Senate. Hadloaltflra mt ut understand this foot. ... y.,^ ■ -BarrettDavis, whs Jb]«[oWil titfltod Stow ]Ben .otorby tho Democrats and Oou bery'atlvos.byTb agalnsV il -fdr- a few scattering ,•<. ■ . —An U going on among tho ne groes in fho District of Qplumb[a,( preparatory to the election there. - ' ' V“V , —A bill has booh introduced in the Now York Senate, providing for a convention to amend the State Constitution/ aOaa tb sqclire (hbift;ahohlso to colored persons, . —Speaking of impeachment, Mr. Greeley say's ‘•'no patriot will wahtonly or lightly shake the twin fabrics of Publlh.Order and Public Credit.”. —The Hous6 have, agreed upon the abolition of the tax on in* comes under 81(X)6 r ’aruift flve por oenktaxonall Incomes oyer thai amouiit, • .yv/ v —The Itodioalshayonoabjeotloh.tottielrmem bers of Congress lying, , bat only to their being toldof £*>»<, • :• -Houae faaa refused, to join lu the action of the Bdnate lh amending the law so os to permit wlilt© porspna to Intermarry with tho ne gro,lndian, or mulatto, tfho' vote stood 45 yeas, 75 nays. '' " ' '/ :; —The Tennessee House yesterday concurred in the resolution, requestlhgySehator'Patterson to resign,,previously posscKl by the. Senate. .Both. Houses bfth© abillgiYlngsufl^^pto.thene^oes^,; - —The House ilUttary Committed have agreed to report favorably upohthoblUto transfer tho Indian Bureau for tbo lhte’rlor to the War De partment. There’ is a'reoognlzed necessity for this charge, and the bill will probably pass. '—Tho President la getting another.breathing spoil Just now; all tho energies that pnritaulsm possess being expended InvllllfyingthoSupremo, Court for declaring the Missouri tost oaths un constitutional. How thankful he’ll bo. ’■ brilliant In mrtsand arms. Being called on lately, at a public dinner in Erie,'to propose a sentiment, ho gave this:— “ The English like thoir beef, the lrlsh llko thelr potatoes. and the Germans iike thelr lager. This; ontlomon, is the sincere teniifMnii Register of Sales.— Sills for'the fol lowing sales have been printed at this office: ,'j.'V./:’;.-:"V/ Thursday, February 14tU—B.-W- Wood burn,in South Middleton .township—ex tensive sale of horses, cattle ahd farming implements. N. B. Moore, Auctioneer. See advertisement in another column. Thursday, Februnryl4th—MlssHettlo Quigley—salodf.ReatEatato:lh-Hogues town. W. C. Houser; Auctioneer. ■ Friday In' Dickinson townßhlp.on.the Qpttya— burg road,/our miles from Mt. Holly sale of real estate and personal property. N. B. Moore, Auctioneer. ,- , Saturday, February 16th—Samuel and Benjamin Goodyear, Executors of Jacob Goodyear, sr;, deo’d., in South Middleton township,, near, Boiling Springs—largo sale of personal property,;, .Saturday,February, Wtifewm-. A.'Mar-: tin—in’Sbuth Mlddleton townsUip—sale ofhorsea.hogs, Ae."-' -SatUrday_, February l6th%:Sam’l, Cook ley, jr., at,MlUtoWn,,lni Penn toWnsl/p—■ sale of horses, cattle and farming lmple meats. John Miller,'Auctioneer. - -' - Monday, February, 18th—-Daniel Eck els, Assignee of G. P. Myers, Cinfl'isle-r-sale of groceries. East Main street. - Monday, Februafy 18th —Jacob Eokerd, lu Silver Spring tWpiV half a mile North of Hogues town—horses.-threshlng ma chine, dec. Wm. Devehney, Auctioneer. Mbnjlay, February 18th—Noah Cook ley, in Penn 'township,‘ near' Milltbwn— sale of horses, battle, farmtnglmplemonta, Ao, John Miller, Auctioneer. ' '• ‘i iW.edneeday, Fbbrpary:2bth—John;Fof fer,lnDlpklDsbntownahlp,daroad'lead- ing from Jbhn PaUl’s to Stblle 'Tavern large saleiof horses, stock,.threshing ma chine, &o.' Nl B. Moore, Auctioneer. r Wednesday, February 20th—Adam S. ‘ Longadorf.on the road Icadlngfrom Me chauicsburg to Now Kingston—horses,-, mules, stock, A 6. Wiii. Devlhney, Auc tioneer. See advertisement-in another column. - ; ; Thursday, February 2ißt—Jonas New- Comer, InPenn township, on thoWainut Bottom road—largo sale of horsed, cattle, sheep, hogs andforminglmplementa. N.’ ,Bi Moore, Auctioneer. .. Friday. February 22d—Peter Albright, in Middlesex township, adjoining Poor House—horses, ‘ cattle, > farming, imple ments, Ac. John Eitch, Auctioneer, i - Saturday, February 23a—William Kel ler, in.. South. Middleton township, two miles east of Papertown—horses, mule’s, ■cattle,,hoy, potatoes, Ac. N. 8., Moore, Auctioneer.-'' ■••■ ■ Saturday jFebruary 28d--DanlClBhoe maker,nehrLeidlg’s.tavern—horaes,cat- tle, threshing machine, and household furnituro. : Wm;Devlhney/Auctioneer. " Monday, Pebruary:2sthr-J. Hi' Boaler, adjolnlng- Carlißle. on.the.' “ Stayman ' caffliigoi' ‘&o, N. B. .Moore, Auctioneer.';..";. Tuesday! February. 30—Samuel Hess, North Middleton townahljr—sale ,of hor ses, cows, yduhg cattle; hOgSiShcep, far ming implements, Ac. John Eitch, Auc tioneer. i „, Tuesday, February2Bth—JacobZeigler, In South Middleton township. bhe 'mile cast of Papertown—horses, thresh ing machine, Ac. N. B.Modro, Aubt'r. Tuesday, February 26 th—Dr. J. D. Bow man, in East Pennsboro’ township—hor ses, cattle, farming implements and'fur-. nltUre. Jub. Sheaffer, Auctioneer See advertisement in another column. Friday, March,lst—Geo. Zug, In South, Middleton township, near Papertown—a blooded stallion, cattle, reaper and mower, Ac. N. B. Mooro, Auctioneer. Saturday, March 2d—Daniel Eckels, Assignee of Q. P, My ers—sale of.two three story housed;' ih Carlisle,' 5 at the ‘ Court House, at 11 o’clock. Saturday, March 2d—John Shugars, in South Midaldtbn township, on the Para-. dlso Mill road—personal property. ' N. B. Moore, Auctioneer. • Monday, Moroh 4th—Joseph Eutz, In - NorthMfddleton twp., on the Crain’s Gap road, five m(lea from Carlisle—horses, cat tle, andfarming implements. Jno. Eitofa, Auctioneer., Thursday, March 7th—John Hem-., mlnger, Jr., in Newton twp., six miles ' Eustpf Shlppenab’g,near Stoughatown— horses, cattle, Reaper, wagons, Ad; John „M“*er, Aubtlonoer; • ;i *«».• Friday;'-MarchSth—JonasYorlett,- in North Middleton tle, Ac. V-; ■ Monday. March llth-rMaftiew Wyn coop, In NorthrMlddleton -townshtp, on the Waggoner's Gap road—horses, cattle and farmihg implements. John Thomas, ■ Tuesday, March 12th~BonJam)n Hand shety, in. North Middleton township,' nenrCarllaleSprlnga—mare,cow,Bheop, household furniture, &o. Jolinf Eltohl; Auctioneer. _Wednesday, March 13th—James S:; Houston,’ In Bale of leather, harness, horse blankets, bufiaTo robes and furniture. W. 0. Houser,’Auc tioneer. ’ f Monday, MarohXSth—W. P. EokelaL In Silver spring;, to wnshlp-r horses threshing machine,‘&o. \Vhi; Dovlnnoy, Auotioneer. . .Vv-.'.'-'-v '~t V . Thursday, February 28th—Joaiah Web- Middlesex threahlng ma * V». l ~ - •• v, •»■-.' - i'l ■ 1 ■■•''. l “ v -." X; -i)' a - ./ ■ dtft, Jj^j ernor BtfWolt * tbSi Hokjohnß. Alley’; '<s&>»-“- ps,llrf*--''• ii railroad from Hagerstown is projected; and will soon bo iadl. bui * 14 * 9 '*? be aq ; extehaop of tho Valley road, running n<lw from w* “ l " 1 bui% r .|t : .wlU^)n route,from Martinsburir to pi,»„ . r rccl ' pot the vait B v!> but prill bbiaesldfea cutoff for i i? 8 more OhlC wilrbad. The , anil (ho rn!? entirely practicable!” ' Wute Tinware.—lii one of our "tram orouna town,,wo.rdoenUy dropped Into th.i * Stove and.Tlnwdreestabllshmont of M c .,„ 7*" kor.A Cloudy,* John D. Qoteu **' wore gratified .to seefso many th rlfly and prosperous! business. In edditi ” * a great variety, of usofal and ornamental nS .wo noticed somosplcndld Brlttanli p?' with Iron bottoms; wfitoh.aro snld to h. » useful Invention, - , : b, " raM > '-Fob. M, 1867.- : , . Ware! Ware I! WareHMVo dm now prepared to Bell Ware of every kind t»hni sale and retall. on.botter terms than aroV™ Inoroutofthdoltled.WelmporiourownOucm? woro and bhy onr own Glassware front ihoiZ' ufhotarers. Tho expense of conducting onr hM ness Is ns ono to ten comparcdiwlth city whole! sale dealers, and our. word lor It, wowni ji those who buy from as a large share of the iurL‘ onoo. - Wooso call npd examine ourveiy| m 7 >to6k. ; WM. BLAIR & eoN . ; ‘ Booth End, Carlisle ifnv ■ Them, Tmm Buv Taßt-uotys Olotha Washer and the Universal Cog-Wheel Wringer can bo bought only In Carlisle; from WM. BLAIR <fe SON, who arc the exclusive agents, and who give thorn otit bh trial, to bo returned If not am. Isfaotory.' • , . Fob. 14,1807. S?peci&l Kotier ». Notice. — The Indian Doctor will pay another, professional ylslt to Carlisle, on Satin, nny, Sftnaoy and Monday, February 23d, 21th and 25th. Ho will be found at his robots, at the Min. slpn House, and will bo prepared to wait on nil thoso who leoy deslrahis services. Tho follow Inn are testimonials from Shlpponsburg: The wife of Goo. Athorton, Dyspepsia and Pnl. pitntlon of the Uonrt tor 20 yenrt slnndlnß, vn cured. ■ urDanlol Crosslor, of Nonraigla lor many, yeans was cured.;' , ;■ . 1 • The wife of John Milter 1 , Consumption for let, years and Homorrahago of tho lungs occasional. ly, was cured. , Fob. 11, ISBI. Haul’s Vegetable Sicilian‘ Hair Renewed, Renews tho Hair \ Restores Gray Hair to lt falling off I 'Mala Vie Hhir fy)iooifi\ a/id Glossy! It does not slain the Skinl. It:hQß ; pi:oV,od itself-the best preparation over presented'to the-public! Give ltd trial,- Price‘sLOO; B.P, .tIALL-A CO., Nashua,Jl.~ For sale’by all druggists.- 1 Fob. U, 18<Jr-lt*r • ~ pR. SOHENOK’6 MA.NDRAKK PILLS of varlouß tho powor lb relax the secretions of tho Uver’as prompt lyand e/Toctual ly as blue pill or meroury,and wllhoutprodaoing any ofthosd disagreeable or dangerous effects whlChbftOn.follo’HrthdiiSDdf tho latter, , 1 In aUbllllous dlsordorsthesbPlUs may homed with "confidence, aathey promote the dlschargo •of. vitiated |>iio t and reniovp thoso obatructlons from tho biliary abets, which are the cause of general. Sohonok’s MandraXe r pillg cure Sick Headache and nil disorders bfthe lilvdr,.indicated by.&al* low akin, coated venesa, drowsiness, and a geaeral fe’elltJg bf weariness and lassitude, allowing thatlhe llVdrlS in a‘torpid of obstruct* • cdobnd^||dbni ii ,; • , ,' v-> • v -':. ■ > ."lttshbri/thesbPlfls friay be'uaed wlth ndvan* tage la aU cbses .iwlien a purgative .or alterative raedlclnela required.; \A, . V, Please ask for “Dr.Schenk'a 'Mandrake PIUV’ . odd obserwe that'tho two’ likenesses of tho hois* tof areohthe government stamp—one whenla the lost stage bt Consumption, and the other la hlaprosent health.' Sold by all Drugglsta and dealers. Price 25 ds. per box. Principal Office, No. 16 North 6th Street Philadelphia, Pa, { . Nov. 818Gd-—ith & 6th r w oa mo ly ' Remedial Institute fob Special Bond Street, New York. «-W information, wUhthelilgheat testimonials • also, a B6ok on gpve&i ZHjcojcj, intv sealed envelope, sehCA*ee.' a ti%' Bo sure and send fort hem, and you will not regret it; for, as advertising physician* are generally Imposters, without references no stranger; shoald.be trusted. Enclose a stamp to postage,'ami -idlroot tfl'br; LAWRKNCE,'Ifo,« Bond Btreet,New York. Mov.tf, 18«f-ly, - . TO; I The .advertiser, having been reatored to health ln a few weeks by a very simple 1 remedyi . hayihg suffered for several years witluaßQvere'ltmg affection, and tbaldrend dlseMe, : known 'to fhUow*Bh9‘crai&th& of bare. ■ To wtib/deslre It. he wiil sehd n copy of flu tions, for. preparing and using: the same, whidi hey will had a’sui-ecur# for Consumption, i*t* hma,Bronchits; ; (^ughi t 'doldß r andallYiueat andlmug'AfTfcdtJphs,' ;The bhly-object of vertlsorln sendlngthe Prescription is to ban# the aflUctcd,.and spread information which he conceives to be invaluable, and he hopes every sufferer wlUtTyhis; It will cost them nothing, Ondmny prove ablesalng,; Parties the prescription, free by return, mall, will please address ; v. \i ‘ t; ' Rkv;edward a; wilson, . F e b. a2 l im-^ lmtt T“ ars, - ianßB Co - N - Y - A To INVALips.—A Clerg^nrao; while residing In South America as o*ai«lanw7 dtscoveredia safe ami simple remedy foryui Core of Nervous Weakness, Early Decay, Diseases ol the Urinary and Seminal Organs, and tbs' util ok disorders brought on by banobU and tb clQUs.hablts, tireat numbers have been already -cured by this noble remedy*’ - Prompted by d do* slro-tb benefit the afflicted and unfortunate, I Hi se.nd the; -reoelpe for preparing and usiof this medicine, ina sealed envelope, to any one Who needs It, -Free ofChdrae. Pleasolnoloaea post-paid envelope, addressed toyourself. -, - ", , 1,., ..Address, ’ . , . . j : ’ ' ' ' ’’ ’ JOSEPH T. INMAN, - 1 . Station D, Bible House, . Now York city. ’■'■AprillOiiflCgrUiy. 1 1 WONPBBPUX,, BUT TriUE I MADAME Ukkikotoh, the world-tonowued Aatrologtat and Sonambnlistiq Clairvoyant, while In a olalrvoy* ant attttOj dpllneatea IUo very features of the P er " son yqu injury, and by the aid of an Instru ment of known ostho a'perfeet and Ufa like picture of the future idßb'ahd'or wife 0/ lb® applicant, wllli date of marriage, occupation, v ßitlonw. without number can as* .flerL .disposition dfty;penU 'andht^pfeic^^ ijxoil, together . ; wjto;destt£d,^ tngtonjP.,OjilWW^M^|wy,^ : T. , '‘-' ■ v ;•*■;■ EaiWß^oyiXoim*.—A. Qentlgmap who suffered De * ybuthftil Indiscretion, will ? to directions, tot ‘ by which ho was by the »**»■ addretslog B. OGDEN, ■■ ladyand • gdnUe&onln thb toaittdlljktea «ul hi«t w®o - I;- , -> ~ ?' Boi^tdbri'Whqaton's Ointment wlUcuro tha It® , 1%. mmaaakeamis. ; ■ -vriv-;.,'^'Ci- fiA'*-*'* MNME
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers