alueritan CARLISLE, PA.; Tbaraday Vonilnfi April S 5, 1907. Buicii. oroanm. It is amusing: to'read the comments of the leading: negrp-equollty papers on the recent defeats of their rotten party. They nearly all agree that their bad luck is tiwlng to the “ insane policy pursued by Sumner, Stevens and. other leaders of the Republican’party.” To'use the language of a Radical pap er before us i «These men (tho lenders) *lmvo gone too fav; they consumed the whola 'session or tho thlrty nlntli Congress In talking About impending tho ’President, when It was Veil known by the whole country that they never Intended to nut their threats Into execution; Refusingdho Southern etntes representation In Congress, was another Impolitic step; was a denial that the Union had been restored, and gave the Democrats an opportunity to brand us as dlsnnlontsis. AVe hone to ace no more of this reckless policy. If out Republican friends In. Congress are wise, they ■will retrace their steps, pay mnreii tUmilon to tho wants of tho country, adlnit the Southern repre sentatives, and stop their everlasting talk about the "coming man’’ the negro. Tho popple,aro ilek-nnd disgusted with the domngoguelsm and dishonesty that characterized the lost Congress. ASoctlug distinguished officers of our late army, rnorely because of their politics, and feeding tens of thousands of Africans at the public expenso will not bo put up with by a Just people. Let tho Connecticut election and tho result of the hun dreds of municipal elections all over tho country serve as a warning to tho extreme men In Con gress If thesd warnings aro not heeded, the . Republican party has gained Its lost triumph. The above is as sensible as true. The people are “ disgusted with the dema •gogueism and dishonesty .of the last Congress," and they will make their in dignation felt ns often as opportunity offers. The Radical editor, whose lan guage we quote above, speaks like a prophet when he declares that “ the Re publican party has gained its last tri umph.” Most heartily do the yeoman ry of the country respond “ amen” to this. They have placed their feet on the neck of the hydra-headed monster which has been feeding on their substance for the last six years, and they are de termined to crush it to death. Is it not strange, however, and al most unaccountable, to see Republican editors upbraiding their party leaders now, after all their fanaticism, deviltry, treason and negro-equality notions have been foisted upon the people ? One-half the Republican editors of the country can now see that the people will not tol erate the insane and treasonable acts of the 39th Congress, arid they upbraid •Sumner, Stevens and other demagogues, and hold them responsible for'having offended the people and destroyed the Republican party. Why did not these editors thunder out their condemnations before, when these “reckless Radical measures,” as they call them, were pen ding and under discussion? They can now find fault-and kick apd cuff their leaders, but had the people endorsed Congress these same editors, we opine, would have been found eulogizing the very men and measures they now con demn. They like the radicalism of their leaders, so long as radicalisrri wins, but they like their party better, and are willing to find fault with the extremists, if by so doing they can save their infa mous organization from going to pieces. The people understand these gentlemen perfectly, and have as little confidence in the Republican editors who.now con demn the treason of Congress as they have for the men who stood foremost in behalf of the measures complained of. For some years many honest men have been blind to the aims and objects of the Radical-negro-equklity Jacobins, but now that they have got their eyes open, it will give .them great pleasure to throt tle the rascals who have deceived and betrayed them. Mark it! New Assessor.— ln the confirmation of Revenue Assessor for this (the loth) District, there has been much difficulty and delay, owing to the obstinacy of the Rump Senate. First, Col. A. J. Fulton, was rejected, then M? S. Eichelberger, Esq., then Col. Levi Maish,andlast Hen ry Latimer, all of York county. All are good and reliable men, and no reason but political malice against President John son and the Democratic party, can be given for the course of the Rump Senate. On Friday last, the name of Hon. A. H. Glatz, at present State Senator from this District, was sent to the Senate for this position, and he was confirmed.— He is a firm Democrat and will make a good officer. The Connecticut Election,— The official canvass of the vote at the recent Connecticut election has been made and Ihe result has just been announced. Jas. E. English, the Democratic candidate for Governor, received 47,570 votes, and Joseph H. Hawley, the negro-equality candidate, 46,583; English being elect ed by a majority of 987: The Total vote cast was 94,153, which is 3000 larger than that cast at any previous election. The Democraticmajority on the Congressio nal ticket is 1394. Governor English is to be inaugurated at Hartford early in May, with appropriate ceremonies. The Eads have it that upon the ad journment of the Rump Senate there was much harmony and cordiality ex isting between tlie President and “the traitors at the other end of the line,” and it is therefore intimated that there will not be a quorum of Eumpers to as semble at Washington in July. At the late municipal election the Democracy of Chicago reduced the Radical majority 1,691 on the vote of 1866, and 1,929 on the vote of 1865. Besides this they gained fouraldermen. The total poll of votes was 19,880. In ' 1865 the total poll was 16,537. Wilson is down South threatening that if the people do not accept the military despotism bill confiscation will follow. He tells the people that negro suffrage will be established in the Northern States in a year. The women of Wisconsin are not to vote until another Legislature has also passed the amendment and it has been submitted to and been ratified by the people—contingencies not likely to oc cur. SST Ex-Governor Gilmore, of New Hampshire, died at Concord, on Wed nesday of last, week, after a lingering and painful illness, in the 56th year of. his age. *■ 6t. Anthony, Minnesota, goes De mocratic with again; so does Red Wing city, with a gain of 2IX ; so does Chat field hpd Mankato, also with gains.— TheNorthwestis getting outofthedark ness of the Radical wilderness. Ashley, .the Impeacher, succeeded In having three Soldiers rejected for the Toledo Post Office. Refills proud of his achievements id that line. CORRUPTION IN THE NEW TORK I.EO -ISI.ATUKE. According to tlio tenorofobnrge‘4 made In tho newspapers of New York, the Legislature Of that State has been, for several years-past, composed of very dishonest Individuals. A Writer upon this subject states boldly that since 1868 one of tho railroad companies of that State has paid half a million of dollars to Insure the stockhold ers against Injurious and aggressive legislation, and to protect Its stockholders. In one case spe ckled, the members of a certain committee re ceived twenty thousand dollars each for making a particular report, and woro promised each live thousand dollars moro when tho bill became a law. One Senator demanded twenty-live thou sand dollars lor his vote ond got it. This start ling statement is received amTcommented upon without any seeming doubt of its truth, and tho company which thus yielded to thfc supposed ne cessity Is said to be Justified In its action, upon the argument that not being able to get Justice for the sake of Justice, it was forced to buy It. In one year it Is stated that 8100,000 was paid by this single company to members of tho Legislature. Of nineteen votes finally recorded for a certain bill in tho Now, York Senate, it is said that only six were given upon principle, and without any pecuniary consideration.. Tho constancy and boldness with which those charges are made against the'Legislature of Now York, ought to cause a general excitement in that State. But It does not. It seems to bo received by tho people ns an actual verity, while tho members assailed sit quietly under it, asamailer of no consequence. Tho evils which thus exist must continue to do so as long os tho people are careless. They, can control the actions of the political! parties, and obtain tho nomination of honest men, or If not, they can vole against dishonest Nominees. But they do neither. Hence, Instead of this mon strous evil-and wickedness decreasing, It seems likely to Increase.— Phila, Inquirer. Tho above article appeared in the Radical, negro-equality Philadelphia Inquirer a few days since. To see a pa per of that party complain about corrup tion's something new and quite re freshing. The Inquirer might have sta ted, in its comments, that the Radicals are in the majority in both houses of the New York Legislature, and that wher ever this is the case corruption, bar gain and sale, and bribery are sure to be found. Bad as is the New York Legislature, it :s-not a whit worse than the Legislature of Pennsylvania. It is notorious that of late years corruption and bribery have procured nearly all the legislation for this State. Let a measure be ever so necessary and meri torious, no action can be had on it until the cash is paid down to members for their support; and no matter how infa mous another measure may be or how injurious to the people and the State, it will be made a law provided those in terested agree to pay a good pile of bri bery money. • This is notorious. From the very year the Republican party obtained power, bribery, corrup tion, fraud and perjury commenced, not only in all departments of the National Government, but in all the State Gov ernments. Until this treasonable and pestiferous faction gained a majority in our State Legislature, no such thing as bribing members was thought of.— Formerly, before this negro-equality disumon party obtained control of af fairs, a member of the Legislature was respected by everybody, and by every body regarded an honest man, for none but honest men could then receive the votes of tile people for this responsible and then honorable position. Not so now. The greater the rascal, the more is ho worshiped by the leaders of the Republican party. The whole country is alive with corrupt and mercenary men. TheLincolnadministration,back ed up as it was by dishonest Governors and by “ Loyal Leagues,” corrupted the people from one end of our land to the »ther, and no public man of the Re publican party is considered “ smart” if he does not make his “ pile” inside of a year or two. Corruption rules the land, and thus far the people have sus tained it because party tactics required them to do so. We agree with th a Inquirer —this state of affairs “ ought to cause a general ex citement.” May we hope that such will be the case ? Many of the Republican journals of this State, we notice, are speaking out boldly against corruption, and several of them have even gone so far as to express the wish that the Demo crats may carry the next Legislature of Pennsylvania. These are good omens. And now that the people have been con vinced that they have been sustaining a set of rascals, let them be zealous in assisting to remedy the evil as far as they can. STIUWS. It is an old saying that “ straws show which way. the wind blows,” and the following letters, received during the present week —and which indeed are but a sample of a dozen others we have on hand—show very conclusively that there is a change taking place in the public sentiment of this county, in ref erence to the political issues of the times, such as has never been witnessed before. Oakville, Cumb. Co., Pa. i April 22d, 1867. / Missus. Bkatton & Kennedy— Dear Sira: I take pleasure in sending you two duliars widen wus given me by one of my Republican friends wishing you to send him the “ Volunteer" in re turn. He has been reared under the In fluence of such papers ns the New York Tribune , Carlisle Herald nud American and Shippensburg News, and lam happy to state he has “ fallen from grace” to the doctrines preached by those papers, or in other words has got enough of negro equality; Prom henceforth he intends coming out boldly for the great principles set forth by the Democratic party. Please send the “ Democratic Almanac’’ to each address. Yours, respectfully, Newville, April 22J, 1867. . Messrs. Bratton & Kennedy: You brag so much about your Newville list, may be you would not mind to add a few more names to it. I send you eight dol lars, to send your paper, the Volunteer, to the following persona: ****** * * », * * .*,, * Their P. O. is New ville, and one of them used to be a red hot Republican, but the negro business fixed him and be swears he will vote the Democratic ticket. What he says he'll do. And be is not the only one who has been on the fence. I know of three oth er changes. They are men you can trust. I think one or two will take the “ Volun teer.” Don’t fotget the Almanac. Your obedient servant, How many more of our friends in Cumberland county can send us the name of a converted Republics#!? Four such in every township will increase our county majority two hundred in the next election. Senator Morton, of Indiana, in his address to the negroes in Washington, said: “ The great example of Congress in making universal suffrage the rule in all the Southern States must now be followed in all States.” Senator Sumner announced the same doctrine before the Connecticut election. How do the Radicals like the response? The portraits of Thomas H. Seymour and Isaac Toucey have been returned to their former place in the Senate Chamber at Hartford. Cause, the recent election in Connecticut. t@“ With' about six or eight excep tion, the. Radical papers of .this State speak of the late Legislature as the most corrupt body that ever had existence. An exchange says the wprst “cut” the Rads have received lately. Is the Connectl-cut. CHE I.ATE RAIHCAI. I.EOISEATIJRE OF THIS STATE. The Harrisburg correspondent of the Franklin Repository, a leading Radical organ of this Slate, under date of April 15, thus speaks of the late Legislature of Pennsylvania: All hall, Pennsylvania! Day has ln on tho starless midnight that has encircled our ven erable Commonwealth. The people can breathe again. The Legislature of 1887 is no more. It Ims fought its last light—lt has won Its last stake—it has brought gladness to over three million hearts by Us adjournment. The gallant roosters have closed their legislative miction, and gone homo with heavy hearts to settle their accounts with tho people who in an evil hour entrusted them with brief authority. They have passed sixteen hundred laws, "pinched” others by tho score, and finally, after'over three months ol legisla tive noting, rotating, pinching, plundering and pocketing, their time has come, and they go out, as a rale, to return no move forever. Public bills wore not considered. A few, perhaps a dozen in all, unimportant in their character, were passed, but sixteen hundred private bills have been ad *led to our statutes, and tho hugest of volumes Will ho added to-our pamphlet laws. Just’whnt has passed nobody kuows, and none pretend to know. Governor Gcury has had hundreds of bills to dispose of during tho lost hours ol tho session, ana how many of them had snug little serpents, hissing vipers, or regular anacondas, colled up in theme ho will leuru only when their fangs sink In to some luckless victim and ho prays for relief. Tho Senate has gradually degenera ted until it rises but little above tho House In fiolnloi tho dignity of legislation. On .Tuesday a argo calender of private bills was to bo disposed of, and tho first legislative tribunal of tho State sat for hours passing bills by their titles, no one knowing what the body of tho blits contained.— True, they had passed committees, but who know what hud dcoii interpolated by a stray word or line? or who knew what hidden serpents wriggled In them under tho color of fairness?*- There sat Blgham and Rldgway, In front of tho Clerk to hear tho titles rend,•and qb fast as pro nounced by tho lUferk they were declared passed. Occasionally some obstreperous Senator would interpose an objection, but ho would bo bawled down by a score of voices, saying—" let it go—lt's all right—don’t stop the machine 1” and, lest his little ulll mightfall a victim to the retribution of some defeated associates, ho would quiet down and the farce would go on. - Thus were hundreds of bills passed in. the Pennsylvania Senate, and they now stand upon our records nssolemnly en acted laws. In the House It was tho sumo, only ailttlo more so, Instead df reading bills by their title, they read and passed many of them- mere ly by their; numbers, Neither title or body of the bills woro read. Colonel Quay at one time Joculqrly suggested that they Ifad better pass the calender of oills by the page, but it was deeomd necessary to read the numbers, and thus they were rushed through. Ofcoursi in such a whirl wind of legislation the roosters had a good time, but often it would be discovered that there had not been a fair understanding or a fair divide: that some rooster sharper than his follows, had snaked a "gopd thing” through without giving the rest a show. Immediately upon the discov ery of such u mistake, amotion would bo made to reconsider, and as such - a motion was always a notice to all the roosters that there was some thing wrong,-it always carried. A hasty consul tation would fallow—a little knot of first-class dealers would bob their heads together In a cor ner, tho objectionable bill would appear dll right, and go kiting through again. Thus rushed leg islation for days, ami especially the last few days of tho session, until the enormous number ol sixteen hundred bills were passed, and nearly all of them have been approved. This, says the Philadelphia Age, is a humiliating picture of the Legislature of a State like Pennsylvania, but it is a faithful one in all respects. The Radi cal party has introduced corruption into al 1 branches of the public service. During the war the cry of “ loyalty” was quite sufficient to lift into power a man desti tute alike of honesty and intelligence, while the opposite allegation, unsup ported by a particle of proof, woulu de feat the most upright and well-informed citizen in the Commonwealth. The trading material in the country took" advantage of this tide, and were floated into legislative bodies and other posi tions of honor, profit andresponsibility. Once there “ rings” were formed. The ins and outs joined hands. One party drove the game into the pen ; the other slaughtered it. When nominations were to be made the same influences were at work. Bad men returned old officers who had “ done the right thing” while in place, or new ones who had been measured and found willing to do the bidding of the managers of the Radical party. Under such a system it is no marvel that the Legislature should take a lower place, year by year, in the esti mation of honest, men, until Radical writers are compelled to present such a pen and ink portrait of it as that given from the -Repository. The increase of taxes, the multiplica tion of offices, and the general stagna tion of business-, will compel the people, at no remote period to effect a reform in this matter. Better men will be de manded to fill all places in the gift of the public. The Democratic party must be prepared to answer that just demand. The officers belong to the country, not to individuals. It is not the policy of the Democratic party or the country to make office-holding a trade or occupa tion in this land. The man who has no regular calling, or is too idle and worthless to make a living in any legi timate way, is not fit to go to the Legis lature. These facts must form the basis of action on the part of the Democrats of this State, if they wish to rescue it from the grasp of the reckless men who are now in power. , If we put in nomi nation the best men of the State this fall for the offices' to be filled, a change can be effected. The Working Classes.— ln New York the “ Eight-hour bill,” has passed the Legislature, and now only needs the Governor’s signature to become a, law. An eight-hour'bil I has been in troduced into the lower House of ihe Massachusetts Legislature. The strike of the Iron-workers at Pittsburg has ended, the men going to work at the old prices, thus yielding to the employ ers. This strike began in January last, and at one timo7ooo operatives wore en gaged in it. The strike among the iron workers at Dover N. J., is also at an end, the men abandoning their demands and going to work at the old prices. In New York some of the carpenters now on strike have started a co-operative carpenter shop, and will work hereafter on their own account. At the colored meeting in Richmond, on Monday of last week, to commemor ate the death of Mr. Lincoln, one of the whites made a Radical speech, caution ing the negroes to, beware of the politi cal designs of the whites, and insist on equality before the law and in the schools. One of the colored speakers made a Conservative speech. He said he was reared at the South, these were his people, and he wanted to be at peace with them. A Radical meeting was held at the theatre in the evening, and a large crowd of negroes stood outside dissuading others from going inside. During the speeches, when the ques tion, of peace between the whites and blacks was named, there, were loud cries for peace. Alexandria, Virginia, is now in the midst of the fish harvest. The salt-, ers there can cure ten million fish every three days. On the 15th, 275,000 herr ing and 23,900 shad were cured in four hours after their arrival. , The follow ing are present quotations of prices: prime salted shad, in white-oak barrels, 15@16; No. 1 herring $8 60; family roe $11; pickled shad roe, in six-gallon kegs $2 50. Sumner’s “ Progress.”—Negrochil dren are now being indiscriminately in termingled wiih white children in the public schools of Philadelphia, This is the “ progress,” about \yhich we have heard so much from Radical - dema gogues. The Lancaster city' municipal elec tion will occur on the 8d of May, A-BARICAE OPINION. The Johdstown Tribune (Radical) has the following to say about tho late Cam eron Legislature: “Tho fyiputylican press of tho State, with few exceptions, is outspoken In Us condemnation of tho course of the Legislature which has Just ad journed. There seems to be no ground for doubt that unblushing corruption—the buying and soi ling of votes—cnumcierized much of the impor tant legislation of the session. Of course, mem bers oi both parties tool: the bribes. If bribes they were, but tho llepubllcnu party Is shamed tho must by tho conduct of Its representatives, for wo have heretofore been somewhat loud in tho utterance of tho boost that wo were holler than our opponents. Wo have no advice to oiler, but a blind man can boo. that if the Republicans of this Stale deslro to retain power they must purge their party of tho contamination winch comes of dishonest leadership." Wo agree with the Talriot & Union, when it says that this denunciation of corruption at this time, amounts to lit tic. It is tho cringing courtiers’ excla mation—“ the King is dead—long live tho King I” A dead legislature cannot reward or punish—a new one can do both. It is the custom of the Radical press to denounce their corrupt officials, congresses and legislators, after power has departed from them, but never be fore.' Each new officer, and every suc cessive legislature is to he an improve ment on its ignoble predecessor, but the promise is never fulfilled. All turn out to be of the same corrupt class, and are, in turn, virtuously, denounced when forced to abdicate. The people have had enough of such practices, and no longer put faith in Radical promises of amendment. The only way to bring about a thorough re form Is for tho voters of Pennsylvania to select their public officers from that party which for years has been in mi nority . They can rest assured that men who stay by a minority party for as long a time as the Democracy have been out of power cannot certainly be actuated by corrupt or selfish motives—more es pecially when the fact is taken into con-' Bideration that the Radical party lias always been ready to reward Democrat ic renegades, and does reward them be yond their deserts and over the heads of the original Radical leaders. The people can safely confide" the destinies of the State and country-to the keeping of present leaders of Democracy, who have so steadily resisted Radical blandishments and the temptation to sit down to “ buzzards’ feasts” with those who have fattened on the necessi ties of the country. Let them elect a Democratic majority to the next Legis lature, and corruption will cease. Radical Pkosoeiption in Connec ticut.—Since the Radical defeatin Con necticut the workingmen who support ed the Democratic ticket have been most shamefully proscribed by Radical capit alists and employers. At Portland, it is said, one thousand men are now out of employment. The quarry owners notified the Democratic workmen that their services would not be required for a year, whereupon the Republican wor kingmen, disgusted with such infamous proscription, struck and declared they would work no longer if their fellow workmen were to be proscribed for their political opinions. In Rockville the Radical managers have discharged fifty workmen for voting the Democratic tfeket, and in other places the hunt for and discharge of Democrats is rapidly proceeding. In addition to these facts, the Radical factory owners, as if out of revenge upon the whole working class es—at whose door, mainly, the defeat is laid—have added an hour to the day’s labor, making it twelve hours, and cut down the wages ten per cent. These tacts show tnnt tiie HaUlcai politicians love the workingmen only so long ns the latter make themselves the tools of their employers. The workman must be the thrall—the slave—of his Radical employer, or be denied the right to earn bread for himself and family. This is true of the leaders of that party in eve ry State. The tariff lias been changed eleven times In the last live years.-~.Er. And every change has been to benefit the rich and oppress the poor—to make* millioniaresofmanufaoturersand pover ty ridden paupers of farmers, mechan ics and day laborers. Eleven changes in the tariff! eleven advances in the price of goods 1 eleven dollars into the pockets of rich men—eleven dollars out of the earnings- of poor men; rich men’s wealth increased eleven times—poor men sunk eleven times deeper into pov erty and want. Such is the result of the eleven changes. Will our people over come to a sense of justice? Will they learn before it is too late, that tariffs are but the tributes of the poor paid in to the coffers of the rich ? Radical Senator Perry declared in a speech, the other day, that the Connec ticut victory was owing to the fact that all “the. ignorance and superstition of the Oid World arepbured into the Dem ocratic party.” And how are the Rad icals trying to carry the elections in the Southern States and some of the North ern? Why, by pouring into the Radi cal party the ignorance and superstition of the negro race—ignorance and super stition beside which Old World ignor ance and superstition would seem to be the brightest intelligence; The President on Saturday nomina ted and the Senate confirmed the follow ing gentlemen to the United States offi ces in Philadelphia :—William Harbe son, Surveyor; General D. W. C. Bax ter, Naval Officer; Alexander Cum mings (at present Governor of Colorado), Collector of Internal' Revenue in the Fourth District; Charles Abel, Collector of the First District; Thomas H. For sythe, Assessor of Internal Revenue in the Fourth District. A Radical newspaper, bragging about the colored wealthy, people of Philadelphia, makes out that the weal thiest one is a lumber merchant—worth several hundred thousand dollars,, and that the second in wealth acquricd near ly an equal sum In the bounty broking business—selling darkies Into the army, of course. The United States Senate adjourned on Saturday. Messrs. Sumner, Hender son and Johnson offered resolutious pro posing active mediation on the part of our government In the affair of Mexico. Senator Cole proposed a friendly inter ference on our part between Prance arid Prussia In the Luxembourg difficulty.— All these Intervention resolutions were tabled. Disunion State Convention.— The Pennsylvania negro-equality Commit tee lias Axed on the ; 2Sth of June as the time, and Williamsport as the place of meeting of the ■Republican State Con vention, THERE IS NO SUCH VVOIfR AS “ FAIR.’: There is a maxim in tho code of rules which Dr. Franklin prescribed for the regulation of ins own conduct, which the Democratic party ought to store up in their hearts and try to understand.— ‘‘Do what you resolve to do.” The practical benefit that would arise from an unshaken adherence to this principle is certain and important. Within the range of possibility, ail tilings can he effected by the exercise of time, faith and energy, in defiance of whatever difficulties may besot them. Tho De mocracy of this country are emphatical ly tho bone and sinew, numbering in its ranks the young, enthusiastic and generous, while among the veterans live tho wonted fires of by-gone days. “ In the lexicon of youth, there should b*e no such word as “ fail,’ ” because the mental and physical capabilities of the sanguine and persevering admit of no limit. If a man entertain even a faint idea of defeat he had better at the very outset, retire from a contest, which will ' inevitably result ingloriously. What a dragging anchor would bo to a vessel in a race, is this retarding doubtfulness of success in any undertaking. Never for an instant, did a dark doubt dim the bright prospect of a Now World, which Columbus saw, with the truthful fore sight of genius, beyond the trackless blue expanse. In his bosom all was buoyant hope, while discontent and de spair rose in mutiny against him. But CoLmbus, firm in his resolve, and rest ing his life upon his faith in the little pointer of the ocean, aforded another in duction to establish the proposition, that success will finally reward the res olute and brave. Not until with a fat alist’s perception, “ the conqueror of an hundred battles” saw the star which, he supposed, controlled his destiny, dimin ish in lustre, did the possibility of defeat enter ins mind, and herald the downfall of— “Tho Arbiter of others' fate A suppliant for his own." A firm determination on the part of tbe Democratic party to regain po wor, will secure success and tho propagation of those principles of freedom which are based upon the natural rights of man kind, even, though there may bo “a divinity that shapes our ends, rough how them how we will.” v It is said that Satrap Sheridan intends to try the rioters of July, 186 G. Ho had better try to keep to the business for which he was appointed. SIX YEARS MISRULE. No civilized country has ever been cursed witli such a set of corrupt and reckless rulers, as has this Republic since the advent of Radicalism in 1881. It re ally seems as if the American people were given over by Providence to work out t heir own destruction, or else they would not have been led, thus long, to endorse and continue in power the men who are controlling the destinies of the country. What the patriotic and sagacious states men of other days built up, the men now entrusted with legislative power are pul ling down. They havelaid rutblesshunds upon the great structure erected by Wash ington and ids illustrous compeers, and have bound the people hand and foot in a more galling despotism than ever was at tempted by the King of England upon tbe American colonies. Tho Federal Constitution is no longer regarded as having any binding efficacy in conducting the government. The Radical leaders have torn that sacred in strument into tatters, and its mutilated appearance is all that is left of what was once the organic law of the nation. If it were possible for the statesmen of 1787 to rise from their graves and revisit the hoHo ofOongrcou and our State .Leglsia cures, they would no longer recognize the work of their own hands, but turn away in disgust from tbe destructive doings of their sadly degenerated successors. And all this has been the work of the last six eventful years. Can it be that this state of things is to continue much longer? Shall thbso en trusted with power be permitted to go on in their mad career until the last vestige of liberty is wrested from us? Is there no redemption from the thraldom which is sought to be impojed upon us? Have we so far degenerated from the splrltand Catrlotlsm of other days, as to meekly ow our necks to the yoke of despotism which is being fastened upon, ua? Wo believe not. We think the time has ar rived when' the people are beginning 'to look at the existing state of things in its true light, and we feel strengthened in the belief, judging from the recent elec tions in Connecticut and elsewhere that a healthy reaction in popular sentiment lias set in, and that the six years of Radi cal misrule will soon come to an end May heaven speed the day when we shall again be a united and bappy nation and enjoy the blessings of a Constitutional government administered by Democratic statesmen.— Reading Gazctt. “Tlio State la U'lilto.” The above motto is significantly put forth in capitals in the Hartford Times, m referring to the lateeleetions. and these four simple words contain a platform of principle within themselves, “ The State ie White!" If we could divest the whole question now before the country of all extraneous matter and just getthis sim ple platform before the people, we might hope for deliverance. For six yearn a' party has been working with all the pow er they could command, to blacken, to mongrolize the country. The people most directly affected, resisted but unfor tunately in resisting set up the issue of disunion. Thousands who would, not have fought to niggerize the country, felt compelledtoresistthateffort. Thatphase of the question is now past, but still this party is just as fierce toearryoutitsamai gamatiou ideas as over, indeed fiercer for they now assume that because large mases of the northern peoplesupported them in the war, to prevent disunion, they are equally as - earnest in a desire to niggerize the country. This we doubt, and, indeed we feel sure if the real question could be put before the people, “Do you desire this lo be a white or a mongrel country ?” the result would bo an overwhelming verdict for a while country. Can we not get the issue sim plified to this. Let ua lift the Democrat ic party out of its old.ruts, as seems to have been the case .in Connecticut, and combine all who want a White country, on one side, and all who want a Mongrel country like Mexico on the others The white party would sweep into power like a whirlwind.— Day Seek. , HSy If our friends will use preparations for restoring gray hair they should use the bestin the market. Ourattentionhas lately been called to an article which has an extensive sale and a very high reputa tion, known as Ring’s Vegetable Ambro sia, and we are inclined to think that it posesses more desirbleand lees objectiona ble qualities than any other in the mar ket. It restores gray or faded hair to its original color in a most remarkable man ner, and by its invigorating and soothing properties removes all dandruff and hu mors from the scalp. Give it a fair trial and you cannot fall to like It, Rt. Rev; John Timon, Catholic Bishop of Buffalo, N. Y., died of erysipelas on Tuesday. He was a man of great ability, and was universally loved and respected in his Diooese. : ISyThe Qoverhorof South Carolina es-' timates that one hundred thousand peo ple in that State MhYe npt tested meat for thirty days. Several oases of starvation have been reported, TUB NEW JURY I.AW. Tho following isacopjlof tho now Jury Law, passed by both Houses of tho Legis lature.: Seo. 1. Be it enacted, &c., That on the gGDorftl elect&D to bo bold on tUo second Tuesday of October, Anno Domini one thousand eight hundred and sixty seven, and trl-ennlally thereafter, at such elec tion, tile qualified electors of tile several cou a ties of th is Com inon wealth shall elect, in the manner now' provided by law for the election of other county officers, two sober, intelligent and judicious persous to servo as jury commissioners. In each of said comities, for.theperlodof threeyears, ensuing their election ; but tbesarne per son or persons shall not be eligible for re election more than once in any period of six years; Provided, That .each of said qualified electors shall vote for one .pep son only as jury commissioner, and the two persons having the greatest number of votes fdrjur.v oommissionersliall bo duly elected jury commissioners for siiphcoun ty. - Seo. 2. It shall bo the duty of said jury commissioners to. meet at the seatlr jus tice of the respective counties, at least thirty days before the first term of the court of common pleas, in every year, and thereupon proceed, witli due diligence, to select from the whole male taxable citi zens of the respective county at large, a number, such as a term of the court of pleas next proceeding shall, by tho court, be designated,of sober, intilligent andju dioious persons, to servo as jurors in the several courts of such county, during the year; and if tho said commissioners can notagreeupon tbenamesof tbepersons to be selected by them as jurors they shall' proceed as follows: Bach of tile commis sioners shall make a list containing tho names of one-half of tbe requisite number of persons) and.ten per centum in addi tion thereto, and the proper number shall lie obtained by each of said commissioners striking from the list furnisbsd by the other, a number equal to tbe said addi tion ; and the names not strickeii out shall bo tile selection of names of Jurors, and the said jury commissioners shall, in the mode and manner now directed by law, place the names of persons so selec ted, in the proper Jury wheel, and the said jury wheel locked, as now required by law, shall remain in the custody of the said jury commissioners and tbe keys thereof in the custody of said county. Sec. 3. The said j ury com mlssiouers and tlie sheriff of the respective county, or any two of them, shall draw from the ju ry wheel panels of jurors, and grand ju rors, of the proper county, and as petit and traverse jurors, for the trial of issue in fact which may be taken in any action in any of the courts, civil and criminal, in tire several counties aforsaid, in the manner now practised and allowed; b’ut before the said jury commissioners and sheriff shall proceed to select or draw ju rors In the manner aforesaid, they shall severally take the oath or affirmation now prescribed by law to be taken by the sher iff' and county commissioners before seleo- 1 ting and drawing jurors. Sec. 4. That so much of any act or acts of Assembly of this Commonwealth, as makes it the duty of the sheriff and coun ty commissioners of any of said counties to select aud draw'jurors shall bo repealed and all acts, and part of acts of Assembly, now in force, imposing any penalty or punishment on the sheriff' aud county commissioners, or either of them for any. thing done or omitted by them in rela tion to the keeping, locking, opening, sealing, or breaking the seal of any. Bec. 6. It shall bo the duty of each of said jury commissioners, to take upon 'himself arid discharge the duties of bis office under a penalty of one hundred dollars for each and every neglect or re fusal to attend the same, to be used for and recovered before any justice of the peace of the proper county, as debts of like amount are now by law recoverable, ten dollars of which shall go to the per sons suing and the residue to be paid by the said justice to the. treasurer of the re spective county for the use of the same. Seo. 7. In cake of the inability of ei ther or both of said jury commissioners by sickness or death, or other unavoida ble causes, to discharge the duties of said office, or in cose of neglect or refusal to serve thereon, it shall oe the duty of the president judge in such county, wherein such vacancy may have occurred, to ap point a suitable person or persons, os the case 1 may be, possessing the qualification aforesaid, to perform thedutlesof said of fice during such vacancy, and such per son or persons, after haviiigcomplied with the requirements of the third section of tills act; shall proceed to the dutiesof said office the same as if elected by the people, until the next general election, when the people shall elect a commissioner in lieu therof. What they Grow Over! Our mongrel exchanges, are trying very hard to suck consolation out of the fact, that Rhode Island, a little State, not much -larger than a good sized, potato patch, and - one that has not elected a Democratic Governor, from the “ time that the memory of man runneth not to the contrary,” did, a few weeks, since, succeed in re-electing Blundering Burn side, thenbolltlou candidate. These jour nals, are very careful not to givtf the par ticulars of that election. They don’t tell that Burnside’s majority was 1,200 less than when he was first elected! they dod’t tell that the Democracy could have carried the State, or have reduced his ma jority at least 1,000 more they made proper efforts to do so; they don’t tell that they lost six representatives, neither do they state that a fair, square fight in “little Rhody,” would have given that little pinched up corner of creation to the Democracy. And yet, such are the facts. A loss of 1,200 votes, and six representa tives, to a party, in a state that polls but 11,013 votes, is-certainly a big thlng.for that party to come over I Ain’t it? Abo litionism crows because it didn’t loose it altogether! It feels like the, man crippled for life—thankful that its no worse. But why donlt . these papers tell us of, the other elections, that nave lately taken place? Columbus, Milwaukee, Detroit, and the hundreds pf other towns and cities throughout the west whore the De mocracy have swept everything before them, electing their Mayor and council men, in places where they have never had an officer, and Increasing their ma jorities by hundreds, where they have been successful before. These facts would notperhrps be as palatable to some of their readers. Tbey-show that the "so ber second thought" of the people is re turning. That is breaking in upon the benighted portions of this country, and that the white.man U bound to be triumph ant at last —that constitutional liberty will yet ,be victorious, and that press mobera, bastile-keepers, wonoh-huggers, public-robbers,., -Union-destroyers, ana the whole black brood that Puritanism has hatched and sent fourth' to curse the country, will be burled beneath the scorn and contempt of an Outraged people, so deep that their whiskey-soaked-carcasses, will not even scent the air.— Bellefotne Watchman, ■ One op the Satraps.— A Now Orleans correspondent of the Cincinnati Enguirer gives the following account .of Satrap She ridan and his doings; “ My worst fears Of Sheridan hove been realized. He has thrown himself com pletely into the arms of the very worst class of the medicantßadicai demagogues, who are seeking to monopolize the offices and government of the State. In his se lection of Registers of Electors, he has picked out some of the most contemptible creatures in this community, persons of no character or responsibility, and sever al of them entire strangers to our people. .The only two who are known are an old ‘reprobate who has a negro family; apd is a practical mlsoegenatlonlsti who lives in the suburbs of the city, and a quack doc tor who, under a 1 fictitious name, adver tises to cure' secret diseases without ask ing any questions. The others are hang ers-on of the Federal army. And these are'the men who are to sit in judgment on the rights of twenty thousand voters, and who are, in, the very order creating them directed to exclude from the regis try all voters In regard to whom there is the slightest doubt of their qualifications. Sheridan has not disappointed me, if he hasothers. His free and easy mode Of life led the fast men of the city to imagine that he was a jplly good fellow., and that be would act on the square with the peo ple. J .never thought so, and-now my Judgment is sustained by'the sad /.reality of his thorough and entire surrender to the very worst oloss of Radicals who have him now, body and soul,", r:; ■; lADERTY AND T W E DAG DROEOT. ENOUDI Tlie Southern negroes seem to bo apt scholars In tlip Radical school of aggres sion and plunder. A year or two ago they were thankful for the boon of liberty. A little later,for the privilege of civil rights. Later still, for political rights. But now. grown great In arrogance, they demand Tree gifts of the lands owned by their late masters. Whattbelrnextdemand would be, if granted their desire in this, It Is Im possible to say, but possibly nothing short of the exclusive control of both State and federal Governments as the superior raooi The following extractjffofn/thp' report of a Radical negro meeting hold in Rlohr ■nond, Virginia, on ■ the 18th* not ; only bears out the foregoing statement, but It furnishes an instructive warning to the country: “Toe convention reassembled at.lon A‘. H. to- Uny. The prevailing feeling shown In the speech es of thocolorodraemborswoaconfiscation.’ One or two who opposed It wore saluted by cries of ‘ copperhead,’,. The announcement bv one Frerf land.of Petersburg, that If .Congress did hot give the negroes land, they Would no Utlre'ii by vio lence, was received with much applause.’* Here we hove the opening of a question that will eventually lead to disastrous re sults. The insane, dishonest alldrevoiu tionary utterances of Radical demagogues have been eagerly caught up by the ne groes, and, sooner or ,later, must bear hor rible fruits. Will not the country hold the Radical leaders responsible for wbqt is,to come, .whilst crushing with military power the barbarous black savages who may undertake to overthrow the laws in brejer to satisfy their lust for plunder?T- Mbst certainly it will. When it becomes necessary to crush out with the bayonet tbo nigger freebooters who nolv threaten— 'Under' the Very pose of the satraps—to commence a plundering war, the white Radical instigators will also be brought to, judgment. —Patriot and ,Unioh. v The People’s Policy. —There are jour nals who nre consfantly telliug- us of the’ peopie’smolloy In contradiction to thai of the Eresldent. The people's poliCy,;for sooth! Thepolitlcal tricksters who made their appeal to the people last fall, offered but one proposition’—the adoption of the constitutional amendment, when did the people give their assent to the overthrow ofthe Constitution? Whendid they agree that martial law should be’ forced upon their countrymen, after they hild estab lished governments.republican lit form and lu entire unison with the Federal au thority? When did they assent to the overthrow of the jury trial and the sus pension ofthe writ of habeas corpus f When did they ask Congress to Impose negro suffrage upon their fellow.couutry men ? When did they give up tbq right to model at will their own constitutions to a dictatorial Congress? When these gamblers with the Consti tution and the fortunes of the .Republic assembled in Congress,'they hud no poli cy. They wrangled week after week amongst themselves. They could agree upon no theory. They could harmonize upon no plan. Scheme proposed only to be dropped or formally rejected. And itwasonly in theexpirlng hours of the session, when the necessity became manifest of doing something that looked like reconstruction and that should calm (lie growing dissatisfaction, of the people, that the military bill was propos ed and adopted. But it was never asked for by the people, and, judging by the im dicatiofts of public opinion, it wl|l not be endorsed by them, —national Intelligen cer. ■ HSy A writer for the New York Times who has lived for the past four years on tlio South Carolina Sea Islands, among the negroes, says that the latter are fast relapsing Into their native barbarism. Immortality and. licentiousness prevail to a fearful degree, and they are rapidly getting independent and defiant in their way of thinking. The Valley-Sentinel, published at. Shippensburg, this county, comes to us in an enlarged and Improved form, and ■ presents a neat and attractive appearance. The Sentinel ia ably conducted, soundly Democratic, and is in every way worthy thcentbuslasticsupportof the Democracy of our county. , '• » , jBQT’The State constable of Massachu setts recently emptied sixteen hundred gallons of'liquor.into the Boston gutters. MISCELLANEOUS. —lcebergs are drifting alongtho coast of Maine. —Mr. Howard Is said to be negotiating another extensive purchase of territory. . —Hanging In Montanais styled “ climbing" the pine limb,’! and-In Nevada “ early rising.” -Mother goods have declined, but the rise in hoop skirts on the street is at times quite start ling. •" -- •- r —-The Great Eastern tore up fifteen submarine telegraph cables in coming up Now, York harbor the other day. . , ■ .. . —A new paper; In the colored interest. Is to bo started in, Washington. It will bo styled “The Enfranchised Citizen.” ■ —An Ohio editor, who has been ‘presented with a new shirt collar, says, ho is now waiting for' some one to give him a shirt. . •' '\.J\ . “ 1 -i-Hlxteen'hundred gallons Of at SoOOO, wore spjlled into the gutter at• Bostoh by the State constables a few days since; 1 ' '!! —Last Friday morning the post-offleo at Pa., was entered by burglars,, aad tho safe' was robbed of $l5O in money and 81000 worth of pos tage stamps. —An Irish paper announces thnta Mr. Kenney, returning to town, foil down and broke his hook, but happily received no other damages! —According to the report of the Agricultural Department, the United States supports about 6,000.000 dogs of overy degree, nt an unusual ex pense of 850,000,000. —A market .wagon was run into by.a traln at a crossing on the Lebanon Valley Railroad,. yes terday. A Mr. Qulgst, who was In the wogon was killed, and his son was injured.. ‘ —Benjamin Hogan, charged with shooting sev eral men in the Pennsylvania oil region, lost summer,, was arrested on Friday,‘ at Saratoga, New York. The Supreme Court has issued subpmnas, re turnable in December, against Blanton and Gen erals Grant and Pope, under the Georgia bill. —The Charaborsburg Repository assorts that a man.ln Fulton county, in this State, recently sold his wife and children to a peddler for 817, giving a bill of sale. - - • / » r‘ i. O’} . clergymen been indicted for libel at the present term of the Hunterdon Court, New Jersey. Politics Is said to be’at the bottom of the affair. , • - , '•' ' —The'telegrph stated, a few days since, that "a, grocer in Augusta,Mo...was-filled for.selling a glass ,of older.!!. .The grocer, it how appears, Waa ; Deacon J6hh Plummer, a tempdrahee lender. 1 of thatlowiiV' «'< .'r■; ■- | —The Savannah Republican says that tho fro- '• quency df murders and other atrocities by the, negroes “seems to have reproduced i.hd wildest days of StVDomlngo'lu Southern Georgia.”-" ! —A number of negroes haye registers In the Southern States by the military satraps. Of course, therefore, the registration' of voters will bo eminently fair to charcoal. ! t A n Officer of. the Freed men’s Bureau in L\in fcfabnrg county, ‘Virginia, lately county : under martial law .because of a disagreement 1 which he had with tho civil authorities. And yet some people foolishly call this a republic I ' ■- —The Mississippi Valley cost 816,000,OOOtrtwo abd onp-hftlf cents,per acre; Florida cost 88, eight cents per acre; California; Ndw Mexico and 1 Utah cost BXs,ooo,ooo—twenty-live cents per acre; Arizona bost'Blo,6ck),ooo—fifty cehts per acre; and Russian America cost 87,200,000—about two cents poraoite. ■ - :v - 1 / , x .. 'JPEBSONAJ^ -John G. Saxo Is going abroad, and will bo a contributor to Punch. j —Granville John Penn, grandson tif William Penn, tiled in London on the 20th ultimo—a bach elor. ... i —Gov. Geary has appointed Richard Perry to bo Inspectors Flour lorWestern Pennsylva nia, ‘ - ‘ ■ ‘ r • ' ’ —The.apprQaohlng coronation ol the Emperor. Francis Joseph as king of Hungary will be cele brated with brilliant fetes. , k —A Cincinnati paper, speaking of Miss Anna.' Dickinson, tells us that sbehas “susceptibility of appreciation of - —Since the destruction of four thousand beg- » glng letters by Mr. QeorgOPeabody.hd has Re ceived about one thousand more* " CimHeaU.,youngest sohof Doiig-" (hß,has been appointed a clerk kureavi, '' r ' ‘ 1 ■ .. v rouwut 57 ,-A Convention of the colored tv.™, bama Is to meet In Mobile on Ihoflmt Al *' -At a recent election for Mayor Inn Ala. tho negro vole helped to deles? Uvll1 '. men’s Bureau agent, whSwaa a SSSSta, -Tho Cleveland Herald suggest. - „ pajld.Todd, asßepubllcan noralncoLn, Vl ' r »'’' ~ ThO Bos^ n Pbtl-'diacovers that the o ' newspapers have not written obltnaril Democratic party for eoverol weeks. Upon “x ’ i^Offlolal'returns of the.Oonnoctlmi *h«w an,aggregate DetaooraUo’galn 7,7 Mll »n gresslbaal Districts of 12,017 since ism, th ° Co “- —Throeministersla HOrtfordiConn - . on 8171,709, ns follows: -Rev. Dr. Goeron * •»» '197,'9751R«V. Drirjonalhnn Brace, -L,? Clwk ’ Dr. Horace Bushneli, $27,859. . ’ Rev, .—The Conservative Union Oonvemin nessoe mot;at NoshvlUe yesterday «? of Tc n . colored delegates being present,'anj I ; llmbGr or Emerson Etheridge for Governor, “ onii *iated —John gets credit jfor bei n „ best bohayed members of the Eumnr ! as well as ono of tho moatattehtlve dm sensible, - . .. . • , ,Fnwil calim ( i ! - During.hla speech in Petersburg M r said to the negro mooting, “I amono\ ( f n but,whether he meant that ho was ano * yot, « > * white man, or both is loft to conjoctupft 8 * 0 orft ■ Post. • i •• ure -'Rw(on ,—Gou. Rossoau has received his commit Brigadier Gonoralin the regular ratny n* ** prbbaply bo given command In Texas.* • ° —The Bdrgner-Oamoron organ is aboutth* ly organ In the State that attempts to the. last Legislature. A clear annual profit from ten to fifteen thousand'dollars w . will purchase much 11 nio. ' ~ ever ' . —The Senate .of Saturday confirmed tho n natloniof Coli D. W. 0. Baxter as naval qZ and William Harbeson as .Surveyor of emt at Philadelphia. Alexander Summing* W aa cm 1 firmed as Internal ' Revenue Collector f ur fourth Pennsylvania District. e . ’ There is a general Impression in Washington itbat’there, wiU.be no quorum of either Housp .when Congress meets In July. The feeling he. tween tho Senators and the President fa roar ' sqnlod os more. cordial,, and the ugvjb ol the «!* ceptauco of tho Reconstruction Act throughout the South tends further towards harmony. —A gentleman,ln Worcester, Moos,, wonJSM on the election In Couneotlciunmlou Tucsdny , allowing ga»e the workmen In his employ-son, four hundred lu'humber—a holiday, paying then, fnU price for their time, besides firing hsalute ol one .hundred guiis. This Is the right kipj M gratitude, mid evidently was appreciated byu. workmen. Uusinses Notices. Q,UEEN S W A R E AND wholesale GUOOEIIM, Hoorn End, Oaiilisle, Pa. We oiler to the public a largo assortment ~l Glassware at nearly 51) per cent, reduction on lormor prices. Coal Oil Lumps, Chandeliers, Hall, Braoketan.l Stand Lumps, Looking Glasses, Table Furniture Ac., Ac,, at greatly reduced prices. P. S.-110 patient, ladles; your very dear hus bands, will buy you a Doty’s Clothes Washer aval Wringer, as soon ns It is entirely convenient. * „ WM. BLAIR* SON, nr \ oc' ,c,w • Sole Agents for Carlisle. March 28,18U7. Write Wash Lime.—OUr friend, Mr. Jocob .Brctz, boa on hand at his Lime Kiln,ln West North street, an article of Urno for Wlilte Washing •which far,exceeds anything of the kind over manufactured In Carlisle, Its whiteness cannot bo disputed. Try iu April 25,1807—1 t Special "Notices. A Family. Remedy.— “ Cue's Cough Balsam. 0 These have become" words with very many families, and the mefraptthe article Justly entitle it to our couiidouco aad pat ronage. : The originator does not claim to bat physician, but has evidently hit upon a prescrip tion that meets.the wants of a largo class of suf ferers. , Some are' testifying that it has actually cured them of consumption, Iti.is uodoubtiht consumptive's best friend, while for coughs, hoarseness, and kindred! troubles, we think it has no equal. We predict for It a world-wldorep "atatiqn and extensive dale; ■ • April 25,■i8Q7—U' f Notice.— The Indirih Doctor wlUpay another professional visitto Carlisle, room at its Mansion House, Monday and Tuesday, April 29ih and 80th, whore he will examine and prescribe to ail such as avIU give him a call. He will treat all Chronic diseases. To bis success and skill, till former patients can testify. Wo use such balms as have no strife, With nature or the laws of life; With blood our hands we never stain, , Nor poison men tq ease their pain; But our father, whom all.gopdness nils. Provides the means to cure ail ills; ..The simple horbbehettth’our feqtv, Well used removes our pains complete. Wealth without . Labob.—Hlddtn Secrets of Love, Mystic Art,.Ventriloquism,4c.- 500 New Wonders 1 Free for 5 cents. Address! - B. W. HILTON* Wlillamsburgh, L. I. April 11, . Remedial Institute for Special 'CASES, .fVb.'JI,. Bond /Street, .JVcw York. jWFbH information, with the highest testimonials; also, a Book op, Special Diseases, In a sealed envelope, sont/ree/ffifir Bo sure and sendfor them, and you wlll not regret if; for,' as advertising physician* are genoraUy,' hnpostenvwithout references no stranger should bo trusted, ‘ Enclose a stamp fa postage, and dlreoi to. Dr. LAWRENCE. W. h Bond Street, New York. , . N 0v.15, 1800—ly Wonderful,, but .True !~Madame Remington, the wo tidi-renowned Astfologhtand Sonarabulistic Clairvoyant, .while 1 Dura clalmy ant state, delineates the : very features of lie per son you are to iqarry, add by tjid aid of an Instru ment of intense power, known-as the Prychcrac* trope, to produce ' a 'perfect and life like picture of the future husband or wlfb of the applicant, with ; date of marriage, occupation leading -traits of character, K. Sohenok’s - ; Mandrake A SubslUute/or Chtohicf.—These Pills are composed of various roots, having the power to relax the secretions 6f the liver as prodipi ly and effectual ly as blue pill or mercury, and without producing any.ol those disagreeable or dangerous effect* which often follow the use of the latter. - in ali'bUUoaS'diidrClerd xhesePills may be used With ; ’prdmote the discharge of vitiated - bile; atid remove those obstructions from the liver and.blilary ducts, wltfch are tba caußepf bUious jiffectioiiq in gonqsal',. ; , - Bchcnck’B Mandrake Pllla curoßlfihHeailap'.he 'and nil disorders of the by sal* lowskm, ooated and a general feeling’o£ weariness and lassitude, shoeing that the liver la in. ft torpid or obstruct ed * - In short, tb,eae Fills' may bo used advsu* tage In all .cases a ! purgative 1 ior Alterative medicine is required. ■ Please ,oskfor W&andfalcePiil*.'' .ftftd twd Jikenossosof the Doc dor are on the. Government sWap—one when k. the Iwjb of Qonßnrnptirin, and'.tbq other in f :hU ; 'preBpp^baUh. ( , . *. Bold by all Druggists and dealers. Price 25 cU. per hojo ; Principal Office, No. ISNorth 6th'#ireet Philadelphia, Po. : i _ .; ' ; General" Wholesale' Agents:-Demos Baines* . Co., NV Y.; S» S» HiihceVßaltliriore, Md.g j otm D* Parks, Cincinnati, Ohio; Walker A Taylor, Cb>* cago, IU; i Collins Bros,, St Louis,‘Mo. . , N dv. ff 18G0-4th «fc Bih wea 'mp ly I Xtohl. Itch 1 Itch 1 Sc'irktoW. Sowtel 11 Scotch ) Wheaton's ointnieatWm • ir WM. BLAIR & SON," IMPOUTKH3 OF