JUmicnu ColHwlm. CARLISLE, PA., XbnrNdny Morning-, July 2. ISOS. IUIMOCIIATIC STATE XO.niXAIIOXS, t FOR AUDITOR GENERAL : EON. CHARLES E. BOYLE, OP FAYETTE COUNTY, FOR SURVEYOR GENERAL: GEN. WELLINGTON 1L ENT ; OF COLUMBIA COUNTY Election, Tncmlny, October l.Hh, ISOS. COUNTY CONVEX I’lO.V The Democratic Standing Committee of Cum berland County, mol according I" adjoin nmoiit, on the i;tth lust. After various amendments the following resolutions were adopted: # Resolved, That the Democratic Nominating Con vention beheld at the Court House, in Carlisle on Monday, .Inly 27, ISOS, at eleven o'clock, A. M And that the election of delegates he held at the usual place ol holding said elect ions In the sevei ■ al boroughs wards mid townships, on satin dav July 25, INIS, hi the llornngh ol Cm lisle hciw.-ci: the hours ol Hand S o'clock V: M.; in the Itoroiigl of MechanlOHlmrg between the horns <d omul o’clock E. M.; in West Peiuishnro'b.-lween IJn hours ol 4 and 7 o'clock K In ilicoinci in*? onghs, wards and townships Ix-twrcn the liom* of lands o'clock P. M. At which time the De mocratic voters of each hoi < nigh ward mid town ship shall elect two delegates l<» repn •m-hi men In said convention. Resolved, That the proceed 1 ngs ol tin- Commit tee he signed hy the odiccr-. and published In the Democratic papers ot tin- county Committee adjourned. FI IA N K UILLELKN. Chairman Ron’T M’Cacuuan, Sur'/I. ('ATX FOR THE NATIONAL I>F.MOI’UAT IC* eONVKNiIO.V Washington, 1-Vhniarv IStt- Tho National Democratic Commh tee by vinuc of the anlhorlty conferred upon them by the last. National Demoeiatie Convention,Vd a meet ing held this tiny, at Washington, D. C., voted te hold the next Convention lor the purpose ol ominating candidates for President, and Vice- President of the United States, on the 11 h da> ol July, I.sOS, at 1? o'clock, m., m the CHy of New York. The basis of representation, as llxed by the in: National Democratic Convention, Is double ll: number of Senators ami Representatives in Cm gross of each Mate under the last apportion men Radi Mata is Invited to semi delegates accord. Ingly. S. R. Lyman, (leorge IT. Raul. .Install Mmot, I*. O. Fim-h, 11. H. Smith, I.siim* F. Eaton, William M. Onnvarse. Thomas Haym-s, Gldonn Hrmlt'oid, William McMillan, r W. G. Steal, William Aikm. W. A. Galhnxlth. Absalom II (.’happi-11, John A. Nicholson, Gmrne A. Houston, Oden Umrle, Joseph A. Ro/lcr, .lames Guthrie,, A. R. Gna-mrooiJ, L. S. Trimble. John W. Left wick, Rufus P. Kannev, Tlmmas sweeiiv, W. F. Xibhu-lc, John Palrick, Wilber F. Storey, Jos \V. Met'orkle, W, L. Bancroft, W. L. Sh.itUey, Lewis V. Bouy, John HancocU. John Jl. McKirun, Al'Gl'ST BELMONT. ('/mirmmi. FUUD O. I'utNCK, Xcr.n tarn. THE 1868. CAUCASmJS !! \ DeuioeraUe Campaign i > aiu , r, 11i:\ UTF.I> TO The Interests of White Lahoi and the PresceeaMon of file White Plan's Gov ern ment. V ( ► Tv I ' AT !• The ('APCASf ,\ v will Im* I week! y fmm 11 if \ ULI’ NTI-XU otll'-t', t< »r I lie- I '.i Ii 11 ill I" is. ( 'umiiii'nrini/ Jul'/ 10, WW. and i-on tinning until I lie ivl unis ;>| t he Prcsulviittal i-li-vl am an- i <•<•1*1 v i-<l. Til K Cal'c - \M.vn wilt cull lain .Sui 1 'ii Mi/imimiif racy, 01 iginal ami sc I cut ci I I’uliiical Ilc.nl ni". ami NVi 11 lie Iho 1 'hciijH.sl Mini It-*l rani(i:iign I’apei' in Uie Slato. The (lissmiiliiaimu nf trnlli ainmig the luassus lb vitally c.sm-iii nil In Dcmncrallc suc cess in the Cuming cumimli'u; ami we call upon our friends everywhere to assist mir cdurts in giving the CalT.vsian a wide cm-ulaUon. We have put Hie pi lee down to the lowest pnssil.].- liguie. In order to enable every one to take the paper, and wu Inist mir Democratic friends will manliest a similar liberality. KWb number«ill be embellished ullli poi traltH 4»r«iis(inmii*lieii iiutiiiilimN, mid ho. niormiH cuts I liusi cal i t e of the puli I teal bit., lory ol the Ilmen. This novel leuture rentier* eil the CniiciiHiiiii tleebleill.t popular in IMUi. TIIK I'AtVAisIAN Will vigorously oppose the la natical madness ni the Disvuiionisis m ami out of Congress, umlVill advoeate the speedy restora tion of the C n ion and the cause ol Const it ut 1011a 1 Liberty. To this end it will devote all Us enei gles to secure- the election ol Mu' IVipm-ratie Stale and .National Tickets, ami the trttimpli of Democracy eveiytrljer**. TfißMS—Cas/i in Adrcmac, HUu/fe f'rjiirx, lU thpic* !n oiti- .-Uliln-u, ao *• .6iJ-AU Clubs must be sent to one addre -*fsr*Club» should he sent in hy the middle of June or Ih Ist of July, at funliest. Address, HUATToN A KENNEDY Cue/ntf. J\;ui\i. TIIK TYKAXT AT Ills tVOltli, Military dictatin' Urant i-till contin uen the iirosocutiiMi of liin cari-lully laid m;hcmo to the people of the South into his absolute; control, as thefolluw ing despatch will show. KliW OULI.ANS. Jllim Csin-ral hllrhanan yesterday recvlved an mder horn (it-m-ial (Jiant direct lug the removal nt Uowrnor 1 taker and LteulenunMiovermir V.wriict-s.an.l Micaprmihl incnt of W urimuuh and Dunn in tliHr ol ic s the app<»lnliiu in. to take pi,me on Momlav’ when the Legislations vein-,, In ohedieu.-.- t.> this order, (jeueial Ihadmnun last IV„,. an order making the icpuivd .-hue'.-, -m ... same order uuthon/.es all purisU amt’munim-i ’ pal onicurs, declared clecle.l by his piev ,otis or ders. to lake their oilli es upon takiii • the oath prescribed by the new Constitution, cm Moi.d tv Louisiana will have a perieet hlaek m -io m, Lieutenant-Governor. 13 Tliis mull who makes ami unmakes governors to suit his limey, who turns a white man out of cilice ami jmls a coal black negro in-liks place, is the liailieal candidate fur the Presidency. Will he receive the votes of the white freemen of the .North? Will we place it in the power of this man Grant to elect i,ini self by negro votes, ami then [dace the necks of his own race under the heels ol the ignorant blacks? Can it be that this traitor to his own blood and race shall receive the electoral vote of a sin gle northern State? JOSS'- Subscribers for the Caucasian are coming in rapidly. Our first issue will consist of several thousand copies, and all those who intend subscribing for the cheapest and best campaign pa per in the Stale should do so at once, so that we can complete our mailing lists, and at the same time save oursolves a great deal of unnecessary trouble. The Norristown Radicals have sent a petition to Hon. John Al. Brnoniallf of the House, asking Congress to-'F®* call the currency having faces of 8. R. Chase and ,W. kS|j«esseii den.” Tiie Philadelphia Atff^'x plains this by saying that the Rudsaro ashamed I to look an honest man in the face. The Age is ahead. ‘ now.M voi r.s aurto nc lAOIlIltEl). It poems that the Frectlmon’s Ruitsui —the new Radical patent for the 'manu facture of negro votes—has been exten ded for another year. It will be re inembered that even General Howard advised its discontinuance, but the Mas sachusetts carpet-baggers, who enjoy the largest share of the picking.-* ami stealings of the establishment, raised a terrible hubbub about the ears of Con gress in behalf of the “school nuivins” and Radical drill-masters about to be thrown out of employment, mid the bu reau was consequently continued. It is to be hoped that the Northern people witl be aroused to the enormity of the outrage which is’now attempted, before’the election comes olf. Those negroes are declared to be competent to govern ten states in the Union, to make Constitutions, to pass laws for ten mill ions of people, to regulate the rights ol person and property, and to take their place among the enlightened communi ties of the Union. Congress atlirms that the half-civilized negro, fresh from the cotton and rice holds, is superior to the educated white man, and they clothe him with all the privileges ol political power. They make this de cimation in one breath, ami .in the very next they demand that these same ne groes, who have just boon charged with the very highest responsibilities of civ ilized society, shall be taken in charge of an organized bureau, because they are still unfit to lake care of thcni > selves, and shall remain a burthen upon ’ the national treasury, because they are , too lazy lo work. The real design of llio Radical revo lutionists is to niuintuin (lie iVocduien’s Imreau ns a political organization throughout tin' South, with a view of controlling the negro vote in the Presi dential election. For this purpose the .people of the United Slates, already weighed down with taxation, are re quired to contribute to the maintenance of negroes who elaim to govern, hut will nol labor. Under the “Omnibus” reconstruction hill, passed last week over the Pie.-idenl's veto, the negro statu governments thereby organized ‘ are authorized to establish any system of registration they may see proper; and in all those stales in which there would he a probability of a conservative tri umph the registration will he curtailed by striking oil' a requisite number of whites, and the electoral vo'es of the Stati* will he curried fur the Radicals through the inlluence of the Freedmen’s Ihireau. 1868 In ilu* whole history of this country no fraud so moiwtrons has ever before been attempted. While industry is op pressed with taxation, ami the honest, toiling masses find (heir labor indifier ently'compensated, a Radical Congress puts its hand into the public purse, and filches lens of millions, extorted from worthy white taxpayers, to pamper In vice and vagabondism the degraded in struments of their venal despotism These Jacobins give the halanceof pow er to ignorant and debauched negroes, who, without properly or intelligence, are to legislate for the* great interests o! the white race of native and adopted citizens ; and Insecure their power they take the taxes of these white citizens to bribe their black followers.- Oppressed and outraged taxpayers, this is a speci men of Radical’ legislation. Js it sur prising that the public debt should I>< what is, when plunder has absorbed at least half of its aggregate, and that the war was continued two ye.irs lor Hie profit of shoddy contractors and a cor rupt ibngrc-sV That debt i-increa-ing daily, and must continue to swell while untold millions are added to it to keep up electioneering bureaus and manufac tories of negro votes. G UA NT GOING TO THE ROCKY Mul'N r.u.vs.—-It is given mil Unit Speaker .’olfax, after the adjournment of lies ong scs.Mon of I ongrc.ss, say in August, A*i 11 make a I rip to Colorado to see what •r-speel there is from themines around 'ike’s Peak lo pay olf the national umdlmlders in gold. General Grant in he meantime, it appears, will make a dmrl lour of military inspection West, perhaps to the Rocky Mountains, osten -il*l yto look after llio Indians, hut re dly, we suspect, to escape the pestering uni impertinent politicians. When General Scott was a Presiden tial candidate In* set out for Kentucky in search of a site at Blue Lick or there about fora military asylum ; but on his way he was entrapped into speech ma king, whereby he not only laid himself out Hal and cold hut made his campaign the funeral of tlieold Whig: party. Let General (.srant, in departing* on this pro jected excursion, beware of the Rocky Mountain copperheads, or they may Hank him, and sea Ip him, and serve him up like.Gcneval tfeolt, or “a hasty plate of soup.” Something foe the Tax Payees. —Since the Radical party obtained poss ession of the Government, in 1801, it lias expended about SKVKN THOU SAND MILLIONS OP DOLLARS being an average of one thousand mill- Urns of dollars for every yeurl This is a monstrous increase in contrast with what the Chicago Republican platform of LSfjO denounced us the corrupt and extravagant administration of Piesi dent Buchanan, which cost the country only about seventy millions per annum. And all this immense expenditure has been extracted from the pockets ol the* white people of the North, so that the ignorant and debased negro of the South may be-placed on a political equality with them, and also that the hordes of hungry and ravenous carpet baggers of the Republican party may ho enriched at the expense of the coun try. ‘ it will be fur the people of the United Stales to say, by theiraclion in October ami November next, whether this enor mous depiction of the Treasury is lo gc on, or whetherjho expenses of the Gov eminent are to ho brought hack to wlfal they were in the better days of the Re public. .Thousands of honest Radicals he lieye with Judge Chase that, to quote hisowlt language, “(he time has come for'riif who love their country to bnnrl lo- the Jacobins." When suelf as the Chief J ustice of tire Supreme Court deserts the Republican party, the masses will begin to inquire if (hey are right in adhering to it, and there will be such a defection as will lead lo tho overwhelming defeat of the Radical candidates. GOVERKOU SETfIIOUKI’N NI»EEC»I. The salient poin£ of Governor-Sey mour’s spefth in New York, on the 25th instant, is the totally unnecessary ex travagance of the present administra tion of the government. With the skill of a perfect muster of the 'subject, lie points to its evils; with the skill of a statesman, he points to the remedy.— . The fact, no: always discerned, is staled* clearly, that the interest on the public debt demands but one-third of the na tional revenue; the other two thirds supply the wasteful expenditure of the government. The appreciation of the paper money and the fceeurßics of the government by a perfectly feasible re (renelnnent, would, in Mr. Seymour’s opinion, obviate all question as to the modes of payment of the public debt. Mr. Seymour says: Our ailment Is debt. aggravated by devpotls-m. I», another wav the Republicans do a constant wrong to the bondholders. -In answer lo com mill nls of lion w taxation. they say It, can not be helped with our heavv duht, ami thus throw the whole mlhim on the d<*9f. Why ho they not toll die truth and say one-tliUd of our taxation K imulc livmu debt? Then they will lie ashen, what makes the two-thirds? Thlsqnesllon they lo not want (o have asked, ami they do not wan' lo answer. When thev do answer the; eyes of nil. elasses will he opened. They-will he forced to -jiv that In the last year they spent, by reports of* the Committeeot Ways and -Means, 83.1i.p5,- .HKl.h.l, ami this In the third year of peace. Well, our well-meaning Republican triends, we -.impose the Interest oI the debt took most of it. Oh, no, that look si lMlfvNt.s7. notajuitea- much as was spent hv the War and Navy Dopat t incuts width was Slid,and besides this, we spent I. lor other Ihlngs. Why, that is S-M doo.imii more than the Democrats spent for ■ nnv and muv and all expenses of fno govern ment put together! But why do you spend SiiV i'iKl tiTlt.'ill on the navv when it formerly cost Sl'J.- MHi.ummnnnally ? Mas Amerleanshlpplng grown -o mneh Unit we have to keep up vast navies to niotei-l It? Oil, no. our land's have swept away Mneriean ships from the ocean; we have lost the carrying Irade; the British have not that.— I‘herv why don't you irlvc the builders of mer chant ships iho money spent on the navy. h> way of drawback on duties? Would that starl work at our shlpvards? Oh, yes, hull Ihc cost would do it. Then why is it not done? We did not think of It, really, we ha\e been so lies’.- with the Impeachment and negro ((Ucstlons, ihaiwi loigol our sailors ami mechanics. But we sei that the War Degaritneni Ibis year spent sliV v-i, K,ti. when the ear belol ell spent only a bon I The longer a e have peace tin* mmv (he army costs. Ilow Is this? Well, n costs a gieatdeiil to keep soldiers and Krecdmen's Bit i can iiu l ills, aml to feed and clothe Ihe negroes in Uie South. But win do you do it? Let the negroes support themselves, as we do. V>t make the laborers of lln-Nm t b uork to teed ami c-lcthe these idle Africans, line, but by so do big we get their votes, and thev will send mi travellng.ageuts id Congr<s- : w e shall get i wen • ly Senators In this wav, while a majority of tin people of the United Mates living in nine stales have only eighteen. The people may vole a i hey please, init I in-v ea 11 not gel the Semee, noi ■ epea 1 any <>t the laws we got lluongh lor on advantage; Ue have managed it so that one ipnirleroi the people have more power in tin Senate than the three ipmib-rs. False Phoimikts.— The last Sunday Mrrcu rtf con tained the following commu nication, which had been sent to For-' ney’s /Viw, iinil refused Insertion. We have hut little sympathy for Mr. Fberly. or any other man who, al this late day, I'fvmiWt XI v. Forney to CuvuisVi him brains: Mr. John IF. Fonuy: For years past I have worked, given my money, and long lit at the polls for your Republican pally. I have earned S4,(KID by earl di iving and cellar digging. I have had my money in United .Stales bonds—the o-iOsof KS(>7. before the attack on Presi dent Johnson. 1 read, almost daily in the /»m« ( short articles like this: “ JJoud holders will lake notice., that if ihaf great ri i/iiinal Andrew Johnson is aecjitillcd. Cl of rn ux id bonds will he worthless / The hard-working niui—fhe men wholmllt our ri(i< s— wilt he ruiiad /” Now I read the J‘ress every day. and I read nothing el-e. I believed that the Sunday Mercury, and all Democratic pa * er.-, weie—lor you told me so—“disloyal -heels.” and I’daied not bring one ol them into my house. Well. Johnson was acquitted ami lima fnf/htrurd, ami sold my bonds, which wore then 10s;, and bought a row of old cnurl houses lit A h'er si root. But wbai followed the acquittal of that grcai “ criminal?" Why, bonds rose in two weeks to ll:Vj! I find that 1 have lost nearly a year’s interest by taking your advice; the “loyal" men who sold to mi- tlio bolide.-’ cheated mu; and my cop perhead neighbors called mu a look I am .fl.imo oni ot pocket. Will not W. B. Maun pay my losses? John Knniu.v, No i;;i I Aider street. W v 11 1: CiiANoi-.D His Politics.— The (7 inion till.) County Independent. formerly a Republican paper, is new pub lished in the interest ot the Demociacy. Its editor, Mr. George Sellers, who hit been a Republican ever since the orgtu - izaiinij ol that party, says ho could slam, it no longer. We quote the last issue : “Nearly all Ihe deceit t men who ever belonged to Che Republiean or Radical party have left, and many more will leave it as soon as they leant the truth.— (’liief Ju&tice ( Senators Trumbull', Grimes, Roj.s, Pessenden, Cowan, Doo little, Dixon, and even the President ol United Stales have left the party since it tell Into the hands ol Bueh dirty thieves as I'.easi Butler, Dirty Work Logan, and other original lunatics and abolitionists like Stevens and Sumner.” One of the sharpest political carica tures is the ” dying impeachment glad iator.” Ben Butler lies prostrate -in the arena, with his broken sword and must demoralized countenance —whilst President Johnson is seen retiring with a heavy spoon over his shoulder, with which he has brained .the hero of Big Bethel. At a late dinner in North Carolina, there sat down to table three ex-Gov ernors, an ox-Justico of the Supreme Court, two ex-members of Cong, o-s,and. some other men of honorable distinction in their State, mid the only person in the room who could vote or hold office was the negro who waited on the table Such is reconstruction. “Let us listen to the people,” say.* Greely. Well, lisle., as attentively a? you please, but you w.ill be sure to real ize the truth of the old saying, “ Listen ers hear no good of themselves.” [Pren tice. The men who take the greatest inter est iu the bonds are the bondholders— they take all the interest, but it is the farmer, the mechanic and tho laborer who pay it. President Johnson will issue a pro olaiiialion of general amnesty on tin Fourth of July. It is a noble state pa per, and one that ho has given much at tention to. The New York Tribune believes that if Ben Butler wore appointed Commiss ioner of the Revenue, and woujd ac cept tho office, ho would collect the tax es. No doubt of it—and keep them too. The Chicago Platform in brief—the ballot for the negro, and gold for the b uidhohler. How do you like it, white Wo iking men ? A N. YV paper charges that Greely is out of his.head. His brains seem to he sometimes. Riientice wants some one to inven an “extractor” that will take tin “ stump” out of Congressional speeches. The Caucasian will he issued on the 10th inst. All orders for clubs should be sent in at once. The Caucasian will be issued on July 10. llndlcnrr.vldcncc. There is a class of people following the load of Radical politicians, who sel dom read for themselves, and who de nounce every charge of djshonesty, plunder or treason against the Radical party as the invention'of the .copper heads. AVe wish to give our readers a little Radical evidence, from that in tensely loyal sheet’, the Stair Guard: The Keystone State wap disgraced td humiliated in that Convention-hy men who, neither at home or abroad, re spect the wishes and the will of the mass ex of the Republican party of Pennsylva nia., 'These men made their money from hr. advantage they took of the patronage >f ourpdrtypuui to-day every embarrass nent we sudor in the advocacy of our principles springs from the charges of cor niption opponents arc able to fling to our teeth , BY REASON OF THE DISHONESTY OF run 31 UN win) defied the will and misrep resented the wishes ot thepeopleofPenn sylvania at Chicago. These demagogues are rich, and therefore claim they cm do as they*nlease. They are the authors nf our disgrace, and therelore act with desperate unconcern whenever the reputation of the Republican parly Is at stake. But the old wheel horse must •aVugglo on in heavy harness, ami wmr.E DE.MAUOGUES BIOT IN THE WEALTH THEY HAVE ALIICADV FILCHED FROM. Him COUNTRY'S NECESSITIES, Oil PLAN NEW SCHE3I sof PLUNDER, the Republi can masses of the Keystone State are ex pected to be true to principles, are looked to win victories out of which these clique leaders may secure the means to odd new acres to (heir already gigantic land pos session, dan more dollars to their own swollen hank accounts. The Republicans of Pennsylvania will not always submit to .such .wrongs and dishonor. Oyu I.OAl) OK DISCI HACK IS JIOUK THAN «’K can in:AH, anil when reaction does come, won mo to thk PLUNDERERS who nownssumu the tyrannical management of ,ur jin I i lit—it oigiinizatiou. In the mean time, yo tony trltu'A horse and do your du- 'll ■ Tilt! Guard isriglit. The Republicans if Pennsylvania will not always sub nit to such wrongs anti dishonor, and :he nomination of (irant, who is the lumb tool of such men as Butler the .hiof and Binglnun (lie murderer, is the ■np-sheaf of your dishonor, and will Iraw o\%ry lamest man from your al ready depleted ranks. lie Soiilliom to bo Armed nl tlio Public K.v|h>»mc. A bill lias been introduced into Con •csH “ to authorize the Secretary of War i deliver certain ordnance to the Stales ' Arkansas, Louisiana. Soul’ll Carolinia. ooreia. Alabama and Florida, for the <e of the (Negro) militia on the discou nuance of military governments lerein.” Tliis is ashow towards arming ic negroes of those States at the expense ' the General Government. The whites f the South have been disarmed, ami when Maryland applied for the use of a few held pieces for her while militia, the application was not only promptly refused by Congress, but the loudest out lay was made by the Radical .press throughout the country. Yet here is a proposition to give artillery to i lie negroes even before they have asked Lor it.’— Will the people of the North sanction tins arming of the negroes at the expense of tlie General Government in order that le while race of the South may com- pletely subjugated to the domination of >f the black? Thus to puturms Into the lands of the negroes of the South would >e to encourage them to begin a war ■gainst the unarmed whites which would ■xceed in horrors the terrible scenes on icted in the West India Islands. The reposition thus deliberately made in ongress cannot fail to excite Intense in iirnation in the mind of every decent bite man in the North, and ought of itself to he aulUcient-to damn the party which favors it to eternal Infamy.—JjCin canter JutcUiycnccr. Extraordinary Democratic Reac tion in isoU’JTi Carolina.— The tele graph informed us yesterday that the Democrats had gained a majority of the districts in South Carolina at the recent local elections, having secured sixteen out of the thirty-one districts. There are about live white districts in the State Sparfenburg, Oconee, Greenville, Ander son, and Chesterticld. Rut this only give- a faint idea of the extraordinary re act ion in the popular vole in the Slate as compared with the vote on tho new con "liiution. We find that in Union coun ty the Democratic gain has been nearly two thousand, in Kershaw over seven teen hundred, In Laurens over thirteen hundred, in Chester over one thousand, and so on throughout the State. The-e local elections show the strength of con servatives in South Carolina,and are indi cative of what they are capable of doing when they bring out their entire fotce Resides the practical benefit locally ol me conservatives in tho South polling a full vote, the moral atleet in the North and West is highly important; and we sug gest that hereafter, at every election,- there be a united elfort In all the South ern Stales to bring out every conserva tive vole that can be relied upon. We have always believed that the white con servatives, with such sensible colored voters as are not under the thumb screws of the Radical carpet-baggers and submis sive to arbitrary military direction, are capable of controlling every State in the South. It would be a.curious but to us a not unexpected event to had the South ern Stales instrumental in electing a Democrat as the next President of the United Slates. They can do it if'they try. — if, I”. Herald, It seems tbnt the nomination of-Gen. Hiram Ulyase* Grant don’t carry the soldier boys by storm. A few days before the municipal election in Washington, the Radicals fearing that the .soldiers would vote against thorn, requested Oen. Hiram Ulysses Grant to issue an order 'orbkiding them to leave, their barracks on the day of election. And at a Radi cal ratification meeting at Montgomery, Alabama, the oilier day, the soldiers present groaned when Grant was men tioned ami cheered for McClellan. The Commandant of the District, fearing that such conduct will become contagious, lias i-Mied an order cluiracleming it a breach of discipline, and tending towards insub onllmulon to revile their Cmnnmnder-in- Chief. It wasn’t a breach of'.discipline, however, in the same gents who woie shoulder straps, to revile not,only their superior, but 11. U. Grant's superior ofll cer—the President of the United Stales, iml Coninmnder-iu-Chief of the armies and navies! McClellan and Hancock. —Gen. McClellan has written a letter from Fu-. mpe to General Hancock, stating that he will arrive in this country in August next, and (hat ho will not let his name ne used in eonneetiou wilh the Presiden cy. He cordially endorses General U., •>r any other good man who may be se lected at it e J oly convention , in opposi tion to tiie Radical nominations, and will taue tiie slump iu their behalf.*— H r u#/(. Exjjvcss. The San Francisco Examiner says that the throe Pacific States, California, Oregon and Nevada, may lie set down as sure for the Democratic nominees iu the next Presidential election. Califpr nia, itsnys, will roll up 20,000 Demo cratic-majority. fiS5“ Grant has something of a match in Desborough, the butcher-general of Cromwell’s lime, who “knew the four hoofs of a clean going nag better than all the books of Moses.’’ Similarly, Grant loves a trotter and hates the Jews. Matched ? World. jßrjr The Washington correspondent of the Boston /’oaf says that Mr. Pendle ton has written a letter to u friend say ing that the moipentuny other candidate gels a single vole more than himself In he nominating convention his name must be withdrawn. SunscnißE for the Caucasian, for it will be the cheapest and bestcamaign paper in the State. * SIISCIiI.I.AIVKOUS. —The now tax bill makes the tux on whisky sixty cents. - Burlingame’s Chinese take kindly to strawberries and cream. —A Goldsboro’ negro brained another with a hoe and spoiled a good vote. —Othello in Hayti la played by negro who stains his face white. —The battle of Ranker Hill was fought ,ety-three years ago, on June 17th Brick *Pomeroy lias an office which cost $lOO,OOO. It pays to ho a “ brick.” —One Lamb is nominated by tbo In diana Radicals for Congress. Ho is a black sheep, Brigham Young has the contract to grade tlie Union Pacific Railroad from tlie head of Echo Canon to Salt Lake, and lias begun work. ■ —A barrel of whiskey exploded in Cin cinnati the oilier day. It hadn t paid the lax. , —The ninn who is writing a “History of the Devil”.has gone to Chicago to col* loot materials"'for- his work. Tennessee eoniplainsbf the seventeen year locusts, lint they are nothing com pared with tile low-cnsa Brownlow. —Encouraging for travelers—The con ductor recently scalped in Nebraska mis recovered, with a bald spot eight inches by lour. —Rhode Inland must bon nice little Stale, with few axes to grind. The leg islature sat only two days. I he old and new school branches of the Presbyterian Church, al their Conven tions in Albany and Harrisburg, each adopted a series ol doctrine articles n« a basis of Union by a iarire majority. This action us yet to he endorsed by the I res bytrios of the two schools to make it h- ■ —On Monday afternoon the powder mill belonglng to Milton Johnson, one mile and a half south.of New York, ex ploded, demolishing the building ami seriously injuring a man named John Adams. —The daughter of a prominent Radi cal in Washington county, Va., eloped a tew days ago with a big buck nigger. Rad for her, but served the old man rigid. Only a few more practical illustrations of Radical doctrine are needed to set the old folks thinking.” —Hon. Reverdy Johnson, of Maryland, has been appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate, Minister to England, in place of Mr. Adams, resign ed. Ho has accepted; and will leave for his hew post of duty in a few days. —Pennsylvania makes two-thirds of all the glass manufactured in the United States. In Pittsburg there are sixty .eight glass works, devoted in aboutequa) proportion to bottle, window glass and line glass work. Their annual products comprise 70,000,000 bottles, GUI),000 boxes of window glass and 11,8000 ions of glass ware—worth on an average nearly S7,UUU,OOO. . —A few' days since, a little girl about eight years ot age. a daughter of George Lalferty, in East Earl township, Lancas ter county, accidentally fell in a well fif ty feet deep and containing twenty feet oY water. She was rescued ami drawn up and when she hud almost reached the top she again fell to tho bottom ot the well, ami was the second time drawn to the lop in safety. The little girl did not appear to be the least injured by her narrow escape from a dreadful death and was able to walk to her home, a distance of tw'o hundred yards from the scene ot the accident, without assistance. ■ POLITICAL. —Mississippi has gone Democratic by a very large majority. —A “Lincoln Democratic club” has been organized at Springfield, Illinois. —The Omaha Herald says that Grimes will stump against Grant. —lt is rumored that should Mr. Pen dleton fail to receive the Presidential nomination, his influence will be thrown in favor of General Hancock. —The Democrats of Butler county have nominated Lewis Z. Mitchell tor ( 'ongress, and Abraham Moyer of Assem bly. —The Democratic return judges ol Favette county have nominated the fol lowing ticket: Congress, Henry D. Pos ter: Assembly, W. H. Pluyford. —The Democracy of Cumbria county iave nominated Lieut. John Porter for he Assembly. —The .Bradford Argus places at its mast bead the name of Hon. Asa Pack er, lor the Presidency, and advocates bis nomination in an able article. The South Carolina Senate consist? of twelve niggers who want to be whites, and twenty whites who want to be nig gers. —Hon. Isaac Hugus, of Somerset, is an nounced-us a candidate for Additional Law Judge in the 10th Judicial District, subject to the dlcision of the Democratic conference. »pho Democracy of Westmoreland county, by the Crawford county system, have putin nomination the following ex cellent ticket; Congress, Henry D. Foster; , Assem bly, H. B. Piper, J. M. Kennedy. —Tho Democrats of Venango county have put in nomination for Congress, S. C, T. Dodd ; for Assembly, A. W. Junks. —The Democrats of Bedford, on Mon day last, put in nomination the following ticket: For Congress—B. F. Meyers; For Additional Law Judge—J. McD. Sharpe of Franklin county ; For Assembly—Capt. T. H. Lyons. —The Republicans of Butler county have nominated Ebcnczer M’JunUin foi Congress, James Kerr for Senator, Alex ander Leslie and William 0. Adams for Assembly.. —ln the Democratic convention of Washington county, Colonel Wm, Hop kins was declared by acclamation the choice of that county for Congress ; and Dr. Alfred Crelgh and Robert McKinley wore nominated for the Assembly. STATU ITEMS. The street railway, in Harrisburg doo : not pay expenses. The next meeting of the State Medi cal Society will be hold in the City ol Erie. —The Pennsylvania State Fair is to be hold at Harrisborg, on the last two days of Septemberand the first day of October. —Shad are now being caught in great abundance at various points along the Juniata river. —The new bridge over the Susquehan na at Columbia, is 5,5-19 feet long and 20 feet wide, with a railroad track iu the centre. —The Radical legislature of this State, at its lust session, appropriated $2,500 to a school in Chester county, called the “Xfincoln University,” where negroes are educated for teachers. —The Old School Lutheran Synod, re cently In session at Philadelphia, nomi nated Rev. Reuben Hill to the Franklin Professorship in Pennsylvania College, made vacant by the resiguution'of Prof. Muhlenberg. —The residence of Dr. Kauffman, on the Harrisburg pike, about six miles west of Lancaster, was entered on Monday night last and robbed of sl,loo—partly In specie; —Mrs. Ream, wife of Mr. Frederick Ream, residing iu Reading, was last week stung in the back of the neck by a locust; 1 The wound immcdiatly com menced swelling, and fears were enter tained for her life. The following reme dy was applied, and she la now outof dan ger: A young chicken was killed and guttpd, and the flesh applied to the wound. Iu about one hour the poison was absorbed by the flesh pt tljo chicken, which presented a greenish* appearance. Single copies of the Caucasian can he had at 50 cents for the campaign. PERSONAX. •—Charles O’Conor’s professional in come was $50,000 last year. —New York entertains 20,000 strangers per day. —Mr. Evarts has been tendered the position of Attorney General. —Colfax was first elected to Congress by the Know-Nothings. —Yates says he has a rod in soak for Trumbull. The trouble with Yates is that he is too much of a soaker. —Lucy Stone was in Troy on Wednes day, ami the local paper flippantly says that sho had a carpet bag and n husband with her. —Gen. John*Prase**, President of the Pennsylvania Agricultural College in Centre county, bus severed his connec tion with that institution. Senator Fessenden has declined a public dinner, tendered him by citizens of Ronton who endorsed his course on the impeachment,. —Signor Illitz/ds about to retire to pri vate life after fifty years professionalex perienee as a ventriloquist, magician, and trainer of birds. —Franklin Pierce is the only surviv ing ex-Presldentof the United Slates who was elected to that office by the people. Hon. Michael C. Kerr, Democrat, bps been nominated for to Congress in the Second Indiana district. —President Johnson has bought a beau tiful larm of live hundred acres at Hend erson’s Depot, iu Tennessee, two -fine flouring mills on it. —ft is understood that the President has written a letter to Hon. W. S. Groes* heck of Ohio, tendering him the ollico of Secretary of the Treasury. —Commodore Vanderbilt, though well known an a -f«Ht man, went over the Hudson Iliver .Central Railroad, the other day, at a spied that was decidcly lust even for him. He, and some of the principal directors of the road, in the di rector’s car, made sixty miles in seventy minutes on the Hudson River road. : —Hon. John R. Henderson, United S'ates Senator from Missouri, was mar i led last week in Washington, to MLs Mary Poole, daughter of Judge-Poole, ol New York, and niece of tho late Hon. Solomon Foote, formerly U. S, Senator from -Vermont. 3L oc a l Sterns Commencement Week at Dickinson College.— The Junior I’rize Contest, re ported last week—resulted in the gold Medal being awarded to Hobart JL Smith, and the silver Medal to 0. W, Linn. s On Tuesday evening a poem on “ Unre corded Biography 17 was read before the Literary Societies by Levi M. Haver stick, Esq., of tho Rock Island (Ills.) Union, and an address on “ Education in Politics” was delivered by Hon. Henry Stockbridge, of Maryland. Both tho po em and address manifested more than or dinary ability, and were well received by a largo and brilliant audience. A. H. Slape. Esq., of Salem, N. J. has been chosen poet, for next year, and J. .Wick lilfe Jackson, of Wilmfngton, Delaware, was elected orator.- The address before tho Alumni was de- livered on Wednesday evening by Col. James Wallace, of Maryland. It was marked by little ability, and wasentirely unsuited to the occasion. What the learned gentleman was trying to come at we were totally unable to discover. He rejoiced that the war had established the principle of “ liberty, equality, fraterni ty” among all races in this country, and then complained that eight millions oi our own lineage were placed under the heel of the barbarous negroes of the South. Ho commended the clemency with which tho north hud treated a fal len foe, and then denounced In scathing terms tho military despotisms erected by n Radical Congress in the* Southern States. Ho spoke in glowing terms of this grand ago of political development, and then complained thuteverytliing was goipg wrong, Congress overrides the Constitution, Judges are purchased on the Bench, Jurors are tampered with, legislators are bribed. Taking it all in all, it was a very expei t piece of tight rope ballanoing; and if the orator en deavored to make a political speech, without saying anything which ho did not subsequently qualify and contradict, be succeeded admirably. The exercises of the graduating class were held on Thursday morning, and em braced tHe following addresses : Salutatory Address, Jessie B. Young. Berwick, Pa. Oration—lnconsistency and Error, Wm. P. Davis, Milford Del. Oration—Shall we have a National Re ligion?—H.-L. Bowman, Carlisle, Pa. Oration —The Future Ago—A. C. Chen- Carlisle, X'u. Oration—Parlor Matches—l. C. Wesl Frankford, Del, Philosophical Oration—Thought grayi tution—J. Frank Goucher, Alliatice, O. Oration—The Necessity of Philosophy —G. D. Chenoweth, Carlisle, Pa. Oration—Sovereignty of Principle—J. E. J. Buckey, Cumberland, Md. Oration—The man of the times—H. J. Beatty, Harrisburg, Pa. Master Oration—James M. Williams, Milford, Del. Oration —A glance within with Vale dictory Address —A. D. B. Bmead, Car lisle, Pa. Theaddreesds were fully upto the stand ard of College performances, and the young gentlemen acquitted themselves with graceand dignity upon the stage. The latin Salutatory was spoken of as faultless by the best judges. The address Of oui young friend Harry L. Bowman, posses- sed considerable originality, was sounc in principle and wed I delivered. Wo de- sire to make special mention of the vale dictory of A. D. B. Sinead. It was one of the very best valedictories we have ever listened to. Its chief charm consist- ed in the fact that it was outside the or dinary formula of such addresses, rtnd was withal witty, pathetic and elo- queut. Although just verging ou-man hood, Mr; Sinead thinks with all the vigor of a full grown man, and has a hap py way of “ putting things” which will al ways make him a pleasing and popular orator'. The board of Trustees met on Wednesday at two o’clock p. m. The ejec tion of a President to take the place o( the late Dr. Johnson, was postponed un til next September. They however elec ted Rev. Wni, R, JkJwurds to the Chair of English Literature, and Rev. Lippin cott to be the Principal of the Grammar School. Wo learn that the financial con dition of tho College is very much better than ever before, and wish it abuudaut success. Piano Tuning.— Major W. A. Tarbut tou, of Harrisburg, visited this place, by special request, on Friday last, to tune and repair several pianos. He comes recoin* mended iu the strongest terms by Mr. ituocbe, piano-dealer in Harrisburg, and we learn that his work gives entire satis faction ; as there is frequently great diffi culty iu getting efficient and reliable piano tuners, we take, pleasure in stat ing that Major Tarbuttou will visit Car lisle whenever he receives orders for tuning three or more pianoes. We will cheerfully forward any orders that may bo left at this office. Closed. —Our business and job office will be closed on Saturday, July 4tb. AMONG THU INDIANS.—As will be seen from tlio following, clipped Irom the Onnlm Herald, our young friend Joseph Busier is oiit in Ids old tramping grnim.ls, among the Indians of the Upper Misson- We are often placed Wilder •ihhgat ions to our excellent friend Joe Tipsier L S ip for favors; and we wish to thanU him for Ids frequent ItindnesS to the ITeiald. It "only a short time since that we noticed his arrival on the “ War F.ngle,” hound for Ft. Berlhold with Imlian supplies.— He dropped in on us yesterday, having made the trip, witli safely mid success, the good boat living under the command of tho veteran John Be Barge, whom we knew so well In earlier times, aided by that accomplished clerk Chns. I'l. 1 horn dike, and making die shortest trip ever made She left Omaha for Berlhold May 27th, reached that post .1 one 12th;and ar rived at our landing yesterday noon. Mr. Busier has favored us with notes of the journey, from which wo glean iiiler estilig news from the Upper Missouri. One thousand Brule Sioux were found above Fort Sully, who were daily expect: ing the Beaco Commissioners. Major .Hanson, the commandant, issued rations of Hour and meat, which appeared to put them in good humor. There were O.tlllH Sioux at Fort Rice, camped on cither side of tho river. They, too, were anxiously iookiilg for their ollieial fathers. Major Galpln and Father Du Smut had hoi n gone'about three weeks to the camps ol the hostile Indians. and fears were enter tained that they would not succeed in in ducing them to treat. Gen Terry was at Fort Kiee in wailing for General Harney ami Sanborn. At Ft. Stephenson great dilllcullv lias been met in transporting the mails between I hat place and Devil a Lake, on the St. Paul and Ft. Totten unite. Tho last two mails were entirely burned. Tho first time, two soldiers were killed and scalped. The last time, it being In tho hands of half breeds, they were turned loose on the praries, min us homes, clothing, etc.. Dr. Trobiand, the genial and accom plished ollieur who commands at the Post, is making every effort to avoid a re occurrence of these affairs. He has. one of the best disciplined and conducted posts on the river, and is regarded as both a gentleman and soldier of high charac ter. Found the Indians at lierlh old in a starving condition the Man da ns. (iroseo.-es and Arickarees, numbering about 1,001). Unfortunately heavy rams had nearly destroyed the corn planted.— They lind’tpiHna brush with the.Unc-pa pas a lew days before the “ War Lagle' arrived. The fight took pltft'e within-a mile of tlie Fort, resulting in two Une ■•■.-pa's killed alii) several wounded—tho Mandans had none killed, several feol m- llie pressure of an arrow. Met the Indian Peace Commissioners on the *'Deer Xjodgo, M fifteen miles above I'or Fully, on the ISIII inst.. on their way t< Fori llico. Gen. Stanley was pre|miin« to leave for Fort Rice also, to be pre»en during the pow-wow. Tiih Mahy Institute.—We had the pleasure of attending the annual “ Soiree Musieale” of the Mary Institute, at Marion Hall, on Tuesday evening of last week.. The programme embraced many of the most dillienlt vocal and instrumen tal pieces, ail of wliidh were rendered in the highest style of the. art. The hall was crowded to snflocation, and the bril liant and appreciative audience seemed loath to depart when the order of exer cises was concluded. We trust that next year, if possible, a larger hall will be se cured for the soiree. It is one of the most delightful entertainments of our annual season of'literary and musical festivity, and it is a matter of deep regret that many invited guests were unable to gain admission on Tuesday evening. The regular commencement exercises of the Institute were held in St. John’s Churcli, on Wednesday evening, where an address was delivered by llev. Dr. Keeling, of Harrisburg, and diplomas were awarded to the graduating class which consisted of Laura Ehy, Annie Shealler, Nannjc Zeigler, Kate Dale, “ Julia Huinrickhouse, Wooster, Ohio. Domestic Trourles.— Somo months ago a man named George Brockman left his homo and family in Illinois, in com pany with a woman named Carrie Colo, who, wo beliove, formerly resided in this county, and took with him about $7,000, in cash. Hia wife, a lady of intelligence and refinement, started in pursuit of the guilty pair, and after a search of several months—traversing sis or eight States— came upon them residing in this town, on Saturday lust. Brockman and his para mour arc now in jail, he to await a hear ing before Justice DehufF, on the charge of adultery—and she to await the requisi tion of the Governor of Missouri, where ahe stands indicted for larceny. Requisites for Keeping Butteu. — Butter made in May, June and July, of quality, -host!.. Whmi pat. away for the fall trade three-quarters of hgo to grease. The trouble is in keepr mg it. Butter containing whey or lime, or milk, will not keep. It should he made dry, should become hard, of line color, solid and properly cured. AH our people salt too high. It should be salted 10-the palate, and that is enough to keep it. Better have no salt at all than too much. The stable and cow house should ,bo ala distance from the milk. Itshould be borne in mind that cleanliness and an entire exemption from disagreeable odors is essential to good butter. SunscßihE for the best campaign pa per in Jhe State— The.Caucasian. Protect the Birds.— Birds are the farmer’s best friends and should bq pro tected accordingly. By an act of the Pennsylvania Legislature, it is unlawful' to kill or destroy any insectivorous bird in any season of the year under a penalty, of two dollars for each and every 'offense. Insectivorous birds are all those which destroy insects, and they embrace most ( of the bird family—including the robin, flicker, lark,dove, cat-bird, blue-bird, jay, oriole,* wood-pecker, sapsucker, thrush, and many others. Mail Difficulty.— Wc learn that the Postmaster General lias notified the Cum berland Valley 11. R. that alter June 30th they will make icreduction of twenty.-five per cent, from their funner, contract for carrying the mail from Harrisburg to Hageastown. The pompany have replied that they will not carry the malls for less than the old contract, and unless the dif ficulty is settled before- Wednesday, we will prolpubly have no mails for a few days. Protection Against Moths.—Here is an Item for the consideration of house- wives “ A small piece of paper or linen,moist ened with spirits of turpentine, and put Into a bureau or wardrobe for a single day or two, two or three times a year, is a good protection against moths.” A Strange Bird.— Our neighbor, Fred. Buhner; has on exhibition at his sa)oon, in the rear of the Market House, aijpne specimen of asea turtle. The lov ers of'good* turtle soup will now have a flue chance to enjoy it. Fred, knows how to make it. Stoilds Closed.— By agreement, all the dry goods stores In town will be closed on the Fourth of July, . High Honour; aiinunl exhibition of the Male mid male High Schools of Carlisle wg, h In Rheom’s Hail, on Tuesday oveninc The Hall was crowded to its utmost c paeity. Wo have only.room to notice tht order of exorcises, which embraces the following essays, speeches au j r ~ tions, interspersed with some dellcbtrl'i music by tho school: *> lHul Sqtutaloiy, Annlo M. M'Cartncv n , ■ lie Schools? with, the Salutatory, imiLn Thompson, Lchoes of the Jhi.il \r U ' W. Bingwalt ; Dead ontha Field of jW or, Geoi go D. Keller ; SnUncus and J/lrlh M. Jennie Htinirt ; Daniel Webster n*' Orator, David Rnlstnii ; The Flint! ™. Time. M. Lizzie Wolf; love of & Robert T. Lamherton ; The llcnl M. M’Caieh ; il/emo,-.,/ Mary. L leu ; Character of Washinylon, Jacul, r Corheit; Affectation, Emma M; C'(mn„'„r Only Wadi,,;/, Florence U. B, ad-• S 1 years and fire Fran, .Samuel Aril,, - Woman’/* Hlghtu,iiue.li Rliey; Smt ,1 the Situation, .Tames W, Dale; In Helm?/ of F.dneri/inn, ,1, Marshall Hannon * .1,7,,, ici/h the Valedictory,Bella Widnor ' Jtccliluda, with the Valedictory, Joseph s Fn.srainggr. ’ 1 F. U.-B.— True Friend Lodr/c, No. .-,g, ICuir/hts of Pythias, Carlisle, Pcan'a. “ The silver cord is loosed and thecold, on howl is broken at the fountain " fa In tho.glory mid strength of manhood our brave brother knight Win. U.th-ovu lias been summoned from our eanhlv lodge, to Unit Supreme lodge “ not made \smui Imtuls, eternal iu tlio heavens.” Prom the din and tumult and heat of the battle of life, lie lias gone over tho river ami rests under the shade of tho trees. 0 And from Ills vacant place and empty armour conies a siluut aud Impnwaivo warning, that wo Ko llvA t hiit, wluMi om- HummonK mines in loin I'lio Innumerable vnmviui timt moves y 1 To the pale real run ofshade.wlu re each shall t u- Mis ciuunbur in tho sllontlmll.s of death." “ Wo no, like those who wrap tho dmnerv nr thoir couch * • > 1 About them and lie down to pleasant dreams ■> Wo cannot break the* barriers round the dark domain of death or bring our brother thence, but we can strive to euiu* late his virtues and cherish the sublime principles of the fraternity he loved. And as a memorial of our sorrow he \[ Jiwofvi'd, That In our bereavement we hrnvln unlble submission to " the will of Him llmni,, th all Hungs well,” ami while we deeply imnu,i he irreparable loss of u true ami lind‘l»n»ili(i i’o are consoled In tho Immortal hope Hut |,J uis gone from the brief mid uuce>(ain 1 rioini. hip of earth lo “ that friend who sUcJceili bun u brol ner,” In Heaven. Jfc.sulvnl, Tlml Iho Jam'ly and relalivcs i.( p,. Icceasod have dill' since sympathy nftii <mh- Inlencela Mils mournful dispensation m Pi., u , lonee, which has shrouded thoirhe.U'iMmdli'uiii n uloom. Ji'c.soivfd, Tlmtdur hall, be (Import ami tlu-ini-in mrs of this lodge wear Iho usual Imdguot unmm- UK for thirty days,and that those proceedings k ninsmlttcd to Iho lam ly of our departed hn.iii. ' and published in the county papers, Kuamc 10. Hki;j'ziioovi;u, | " t‘. 10. Maolauoiu.in, | .1. 11. Khi km, J. rv,i.| Adam Kkli.'ul W. M. Ooii.hy. AH :t: 11. U. Williams, It. s. Uaii.road Accident.—On W.ednr.- day Jast. the engine of tlio.secondfrcigiit train on the Cumberland Valley Kail Unite), ran oil - the trade, by reason of a switch being turned in the wrong dim lion at Cornelias & Bosh’s warehoiM l , and drew several freight cars after it. Fortunately the train was not going al a rapid speed, and no serious injury \v:s done, though all the trains were delay ed for several hours until the locomo tive was replaced upon the track. Itnuciious.—Her. Dr. E. Forricr, of Pennsylvania College, Gettysburg, will preach in theSocondPrcsbylerian Church, on next .Sabbath, morning and evening. Itvimrt of A. ¥s. Spoimlor, Trcamircp of flic SolUioi'** Monument Assoflaiiun of C'uiubcrlamt t’omily, To amounts collected on .subscription l>ao1;s: Hook of A. L. Sponslor, Treas., Carlisle, :>l "i “ “ Thus D. Million, *’ , “ “ John Fuller, “ J""' . “ “ Jj. Todd, Ksq., • “ I l * l -* 1 “ “ James J. Uulo, “ J*w “ John Campbell, “ fi *’ J “ “ Joseph Stuart S. Middleton, lew “ Chas. 11. Million, M “ “W. F. Hwijier, " •) |JJ “ •• Alj’m Witmor, Middlesex, I'Jl *' “A. Lainberlon, Esq., “ ul i" Proceeds of lairs and festivals; Fourth of July celebration, lbt!7, F 1 a Carlisle L'mklruu a liur, o' Mic'dlusex fuallval, Hi"*' Christinas lair, lid UiuiUiijiiilon of “National Uillos” ol SViib ) Uigton, D. C,, per E. X. Mathews, w 1 ‘ iJy J, H. Graham, Secretary, *• Jus. Loudon blank books, Ac.. “ Samuel EllioU, printing, “ Ouu. Uoucher, posting bills, “ J. U, Graham, - “ Account lair, oil painting, &c., “ James Louden, books. &0., “ Draiton A Kennedy, printing, “ Geo. Taylor, janitor, “ A. K. Uhoem, printing, “ balance, The foregoing statement w.is preaenn-* >• " meeting of the Council hold Jam* irprovii and ordered to be published. /' muabei otm lillcato books are still In the liands oi ei»i> |, f | ‘" • and tiio amount thus out-sladlng is tiol ktm*' bulwill bo given in luturo ropoi ts. “n< ■ il paint ing valued at SIUU remaids unsold Mrs. Partington Insulted. T ho While Mup mains of Now Humpshireme evidently a great institution—very high, heavy frosts, beautiful view, four foliar dinners. But the practical eye of a cer tain renowned Brake saw these smooth faced rocks, and thereupon adorned ami variegated Jhe bridle path to the Tip-top House with his familiar S. T.—lBo(l—X. Plantation Bitters. This raised Hie ire of the Mrs. Partlngtons composing the Legislature of the Granite State, who got their wise heads together, outlawed Dr. Drake, and made it a penal. offense to ply the artistic brush on their beloved hills. Verily, the tine arts are at a dis count in New.Hampshire* Uuery.—hid Drake pay them for this splendid adver tisement? Magnolia Water. —A delightful toi let article —superior to Cologne; and at half the price. [July 2, 18CS.— 2t] #ss“* We would call the attention of our readers to an article of merit, which is advertised in our columns as being used extensively and with the best results, for restoring gray hair to its original color, and in case of baldness renewing the growth, called Hall’s yegetable Sicilian Hair Renewer. It Is a medicinal prepa ration ; its- action -is ladicui, and by its use the glands which support the hair are nourished and strengthened. Heat, irritation and excessive perspiration of the scalp, which produce baldness, are soon cured by a few applications of tins scientitic compound, and it imparts to the hair a rich and glossy appearance. We have tried H; and speak from actual use, Pennsylvania Qreaißend. The great amount of time consum ed by the ladies in dressing , and arrang ing their Imir must make any article which-would lessen their labor particu larly desirable. Ring’s Vegetable Am brosia leaves the hair in such conditkm as to render the dressing and.-arruiigi a very easy matter. It imparts to it tl>a splendid'glossy appearance rq rriucli m* mired, cleans, the scalp from damlrull and all humors, aud prevents baldness; promotes Us growth, and restores gray, hair to its original color. June 11,-U To thu Weak, the Woks, and the Weahy.— Tho Editor of the Boston Be oordcr says, “ Wo can" moat unhesitating ly recommend the Peruvian Syrup, a pro tected solution of tho protoxide of Iron, to all tho weak, the worn, aud the weary, ■having richly experienced Us benefits. It possesses all the qualities claimed 01 st by its proprietor.” Sußfaonißß for The Caucasian. :: A L. SEONSI.EK Trra.iurcr
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers