CARLISLE, PA., Thursday Morning, November 10, 18GS. THE NEXT CONGRESS. It is now. certain that the Radical Ja cobins will not he able to muster a two thirds vote in the House of Represen tatives after the meeting of the forty first Congress. The next House will, we think, ho composed of 144 Radicals and 85 Democrats—a gain to the Democrats of 48 members. The brains of the House too, are on the Democratic side, a number of the ablest Democratic statesmen in the Union having been elected members. Among them wo may mention Woodward, Foster and Getz of Pennsylvania, Cox and Brooks of New York, Voorhees, Holman and Kerr of Indiana, Marshall of Illinois, Eldridge of Wisconsin, Beck of Kentucky, Swann of Maryland, and many others whose names we cannot now recall. It is well for the Democrats, then, well for the country, that the two-thirds Radical majority in the House has been wiped out. But for their two-thirds majority, the Radicals would have been comparatively powerless during the last two sessions of Congress. The Presi dent, in obedience to his oath of office and his duty to the country, returned, with his objections, to Congress, every unconstitutional measure passed by that treasonable body. But the President’s objections were hooted at, and the men who boasted that they cared nothing for the passed the objec tionable measures in defiance of the President’s will. The two-thirds ma jority was sufficient for all purposes of outrage and wrong, it was a power at once irresisfable and defying, and never did despots use a power with more re lentless fury. But this two-thirds vote, as we have said, has been swept away, and should Gen. Grant see fit to hold Congress to constitutional legislation, his vetoes cannot be overridden, as were those of Andrew Johnson. We hope he may prove to be a wise and moderate ruler. If he should decide so to act, he will be compelled to rely upon the Democratic minority, for we do not believe the Radicals will voluntarily pause in their mad career. The country will look to Gen. Grant for an example of moder ation and true statesmanship. If he exercises it, the people will give him full credit, and no portion of the popu lace will more cordially approve his acts than the masses of the great Demo cratic party. A NEGBO CANDIDATE FOB COSGBEB9. A letter dated Tallahasse, Florida. Nov. 15, and published In the Philadel phia Inquirer, says: “ Saunders, the Independent colored candi date for Congress, in quite a lengthy circular to the voters of the State of Florida, denounces the nomination of Hamilton by the Republicans, os a fraud npon the colored voters, and says Hamil ton’s supporters boasted of having cheated the colored Republicans of their choice. Saunders, In an article dated Headquarters Union League of Florida, and addressed to the members of the League, says the Republican Nominating Con vention have put up i» man whose name alone Insures defeat, and calls on the colored Republi cans to send a live black man to the next Con gress. Saunders signed himself ‘ Grand Presi dent of the Union League of Florida.' ’’ Saunders, we see it stated, is a large, muscular negro, of pure blood—black ns a crow. He was formerly a slave, and a cotton picker by profession. He can neither read nor write, but is nev ertheless about as intelligent as tiie oth er “earnest Republicans” who infest the State of Florida. He should be sent to Congress, by ail means, for we have no doubt he is a better man than some others who will occupy seats in that once dignified body. Being a negro, and very ignorant, should secure his election over Hamilton, the white car pet-bag candidate. Ignorance and a black skin are passports to greatness these times. “ Equality of the races must now be insisted on,” says Forney of the .Press. So he it then. Gen. Grant is indebted to the negroes for his elec tion'; without their votes he would have been defeated. The negroes, therefore, must share the spoils; they must be sent to Congress to make laws for white people to live under. “Up with the nigger; down with white men,” should be the motto of every Union League in the land. We repeat, then, that Saunders, the black, should be elected to Congress in preference to Hamilton, the white carpetrbagger. We are op posed to carpet-baggers, whether we find them North or South. THE FLORIDA OCTKAOE. Fearful that they would be beaten in Florida, even over the bayonet and over the negro vote, the Radical mana gers at Washington caused the negro and carpet-bag Legislature to pass an act vesting in themselves the choice of Presidential Electors, and taking it away from the people altogether! One of the electors is a negro. There is no language in which such an act of ras cality can be sufficiently condemned.— Only the most scandalous party would entertain such an idea for a moment. It is robbery of the people of their high est and dearest right. What would have been thought if the present Dem ocratic Legislature of Ohio had refused to allow her people to vote for Presi dent, and, like that in Florida, had chosen the Electors themselves ? Such an act would have led to forcible revo lution among her population. But this disfranchisement of Florida by a coup d’etat upon the part of the so-called Legislature is worthy of the party which totally disfranchised Vir ginia, Mississippi and Texas by a pre tended act of Congress; and which in Tennesse, Missouri and all the old slave States, rules by the power of the bayon et and other acts of revolutionary vio lence. There is nothing that this party will not dp to retain its ill-gotten and usurped power. It has the desperation of the old French Jacobin organization, without its honesty or manliness. The population of Pennsylvania has recently been estimated by a compari son of the election returns of 18G0 and 1868. In 1860, the vote polled for Elec tors for president, was 476,442 to a popu lation of 2,906,115, as obtained from the census returns. In 1868 the vote for Auditor General reached 653,155, which would give a present population of 3,083,997 souls. Applying the same ratio to Philadelphia, it appears that in 1860 there were 76,707 votes polled to a population of 568,034, and that in 1808 the 121,458 votes cast would indicate a population of 809.426. In 1860, the por centage of voters to the population was 16.4 in the State, and only 13.5 in Phila phia. “NOW FOB NEGRO SUFFRAGE.” Already the Radical wing of the Re publican party is at work planning the accomplishment of its favorite design, the enfranchisement of the negro in all the States. Sumner, Phillips and But ler, are each sounding the beauties of “universal brotherhood,” or “univer sal negro suffrage,” the necessity of the people being “educated up” to this point, or rather forced up to it, by the. enactment of a general law or the amendment of the Constitution in such, a manner as to secure this result. Tiie dangers attending such scheme do not for a moment deter these s elf opinionated gentlemen. Trollope some time since well expressed these dangers when he warned the English bond holders to beware of repudiation shoul d the blacks get the balance of power In this country. All know the lack of Commercial honor in the negroes.— Should the question of repudiatic >n over be sprung, the most effective fiel id for the demagogues would be amoi ig the blacks. The better class, of tl le white population will hardly vote for repudiation ; yet none can deny that finances resting on a basis of '.100,00.0 debased negro votes, these semi-’oarba r ous.beings having the power to amen d, annu), or even annihilate any law re lating to said finance, is far Morn se cure or altogether reliable. This country to-day is in an un&et- tied and inflamabie condition. Is; it wise or safe then to place the balai ice of power in the national and State gov ernments in the hands of Congo negi -cos, so ignorant; that, uniikeany other people on the known earth, there is a special department of government aliotto d to keep them, like froward children, from tumbling into the fire, and thus in vito the condition of affairs so much dreaded? Onational safety'certainly does not require the votes of these bar barians. Our national security will be at least endangered by sui.Vlenly giving them control of affairs. The general principle of government, “ tho greatest good to the greatest number,” and self preservation as a nation, alike protest against the doctrines of the Radical ex tremists. Well wrought theories ap pear well enough in print, and may find their place during the millcnium. But it is with the practical we have in this age to deal, though we may be liv ing, as Whittier would say, in. a grand and awful time. It is far easier to adapt a government to the people, than force a people to adapt themselves to a government. When the negroes cease to be a burden upon the national tre.os nry, it will be time enough to cry cut “ universal suffrage” for them. 'When they exhibit sufficient financial ability to support themselves, it wjll be tin ie enough to ask that they may be tdlowetl to legislate in behalf of the financial interests of the nation. When they ex -1 hibit an appreciation of- law, it will be time enough to make 0 f them Judges, Legislators, Governors and Presidents. Just now, however, the good of tiie country, financially, morally, govern mentally, a r ~d in fact in all respects, demands that tho negro should not have tire franchise. The white men of this country should assuage tiie present difficulty or present perturbed state, by white ballots alone. To drag in bar barian hordes at such a time is a humili ation and disgrace to American civili zation. TIIE NEGRO XO HAVE A VOTE. When Democrats have charged that it was the purpose of the Radicals, so soon as they obtained another lease of power, to establish universal negro suf frage throughout the United States, it was denounced as a ““Copperhead lie.” Let us see what the Radicals now say about It themselves. Since the election the N. Y. Tribune has contained the fol lowing announcement’: ’ “Uneof the first measures that will be Intro duce! into Congress ou its assembling In Decem ber, will be a constitutional amendment provid ing for the regulation of Suffrage tbroughouttbe UulieitStates. A bill will go through without a doubt, and the Legislatures of two-thirds of tho Stales being Republican, the amendment will be rutliled, unci the question of suffrage settled for ever. A piomlnenl member of. Congress has al ready prepared such an amendment in the shape of a bill, which he will introduce on the tlrst day of the session." Forney, in his JPrets, sounds the bugle call as follows: "The colored man holds the bond and pledge of this country. Under the furnace-blast of war we promised him freedom. We owe not the hol low promise, lo be kept to the car and broken to the hope; but the substantial thing—good meas ure, full, pressed down, and running out. Let um give it uow, and lot the Fortieth Ongresssnalch the honor. Common Justi.-e, common humani ty, aim common gratitude call on us now to en franchise with the ballot the colored man in every State. It can be done salely and success fully. We have no Presidential election to im peril now. We are on the wave of success. Let us use It to flout the ship of state into quiet wa ters—quiet because they are the great deep of jus tice and of right. Let the Fortieth Congress, in December, ns their first and main work, propose an amendment lo the Constitution conferring the power lo vote for national purposes and ofllcers on colored men, under equal conditions with while men, and sub mit it to the people, under the fifth article. Three fourths of the States would rush l<> ratify it, and another l»urel, ever green and glorious, would be added to the enduring honors of our great .party.” When it is remembered that this very party announced in their platform that in the North the question of suffrage be longed of right to the Stales exclusively , it will bo seen how honestly their pro fession compares with their practice.— Well, we did our duty. We warned the people not to be deceived by the specious declarations of the Chicago plat form, and if they can stand negro suf frage we guess we can. “ The Surratt case Is ended, he having escaped by the icclmlcnUtles of the law. We suppose Jeff Davis, the greatest criminal of the age, will manage to escape in the same manner. No oth er government in the world would permit such lenity to criminals; and yev the late rebels com plain that they are harshly treated.”— Radical paper. The reason why Jefferson Davis has never been tried is well known. It was the fear that certain evidence might come out implicating a number of prom inent Radicals in the disunion move ment. It is a part of history that Brute Stanton and Beast Butler w-ero among the first secessionists in this country.— They occupied more of Jeff Davis’ time in talking over the matter and propo sing plans for a dissolution of the Union than any other two men. Had Davis been tried, as he should have been, there would have been an unearthing of secrets that would have astounded the world. No, Davis will never he tried so long as Stanton and Butler live, and the Radicals hold power. As for Surratt, his “case is ended,” * sure enough. There was not one single particle of evidence against him, and therefore he could not ho convicted by a court of Justice. Had he been tried by a military court—a court selected by Stanton, and composed of his tools—of course he would have been convicted and hanged, just as his innocent moth er was. “When Mrs. Surratt was hang ed a murder was committed,” said But -lor--to-Bingham,-and-this_wus-trne.;-aniL should the conspirators who murdered her escape punishment in this-world, they will not escape in the next. GOV. OEART AND TOE U. It. SENATE, The Jiric^ llepublicon of a recent date having urged the use of Gov. Geary’s name as a candidate for the United States Senate, that gentleman replies in a letter as follows: PTNNSYHVANIA JhXKCI'TIVK t’HAMIIEU, > Hahhisbuuo, Pa, Not. H, ISGS. ; Jb- the Editor o/Ute Erie lirpuhlican : T)kau Siu:—ln >mir i-upur of Frblay, October YMli lit 1 lie Icailcr, innlcr the nipilon of ‘•'Who is to in* senator •*" I ohservu ’mi have brought 10r w.0.1. ;r. eom.iftioii iviiu the name of several honorable «eut k'liiun. my name as candidate for Iho position of United WtiUe-s Senator. I bi*g leave to return my sincere thank* for the ardent, and, I may say. Haltering manner In which you have referred to me. But in the spirit of frank ness L desire to say, that, having already given my friends permission to use me as a candidate for re-election to the ortlce of Governor, J cannot permit the farther use of my name ns a candi date for an ollicb for which X have not been, am not now, ami will not be an aspirant. Yours very truly. John \V. Geaky. General Governor Geary has gracious ly permitted his friends not to use his jiame, but to use (mo) himself, not as a candidate for re-nomination but re-elec tion for the office he now holds. This gracious oondocension will he gratefully remembered, especially by the candi dates for United States Senator. They will now draw a long breath—and ex perience a sense of relief, beautiful to behold. Men of Pennsylvania, do not despair, Geary will not desert you as long as there is a dollar in the Treasury! jSy A negro Convention was held at Harrisburg a few days since, for the pur pose of considering political questions, and particularly the question jof equali ty with the whites. The negroes, in their first resolution, say that the Declaration of Independence declares “ that all men are created free and equal.” The Dec laration of Independence, declares no such thing, and we venture to say that the ignorant white man who wrote the resolutions for the negro Convention never road the Declaration of Indepen dence in'his life. The negroes hud bet ter go to work, instead o( loafing aliout towns holding Conventions, ihe Rad icals have been dee-aving them witii promises of “ equality,” but the people of Pennsylvania, like the people of Ohio, will say “ no,”, to their demands. Our wives and daughters cannot vote, an” Mr. Nigger shall not. Forney made a speecli on the night of the late election, in which he asked his hearers to “ watch” the steady de cline of gold from that hour up to the inauguration of President Grant. Gold was then selling at 1.152. It is now quo ted at 1.303. We are “ watching.” Earthquake in New Jersey.—At Elizabethtown, N. J., on the night of the 15th inst., four-distinct shocks of earthquake were felt. Tiie shocks con tinued some twenty seconds, and chairs, tables, beds and other articles of furni ture swayed too and fro. A number of tire leading Radical journals are advocating an increase of the President’s salary. After the 4th of March, (the day Gen.. Grant’s term commences,) they think the President’s salary should be 5100,000 per annum, inste ad of $25,000, as at present. Give Us tiie f. atlntics of Disfranchise' incut. lu t.lie States of Virginia, North Caro lina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alaba ma, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, Arkai isas, Missouri, West Virginia, ami Tenmisso there are restrictions upon nili/ei iship into the particulars whereof it is h oped the several Democratic State Coum litte.-s will at once inquire. inipor lance ol a precise exhibit of the mami' ir in which, under the sounding lilies of Kqual Klglits, Universal Sul- Iruge, and so on, the .franchises of the citizen are invaded, and of the extent to which such invasion is carried, can hard ly be lou earnestly impressed on tho-e who, by local knowledge, are best fitted to furnish such intoruiatioii. In the immediate future those great questions of right have been so cunning ly blinked by the party nominating Gen eral Grant are destined to reassert their claims to the best attention ol the Ameri can people. In itself this election has settled nothing beyond the mere prefer ment of General Grant to the Presiden cy ; and as the destinies of this country ar® not as yet, thank God, in the hollow of anyone man's hand, it must bo at onee evident that issues temporarily slur red over must be settled upon their mer its, and not lo the good will and pleasure of a single personage. To prepare an ac curate statement, therefore, of all such legislation, whether by Congress or the putative rttute governments, as debars the citizen from citizenship in whole or jun t,andto supply such statement with tabular exhibits ot the number bei eft by this or that edict of this or that birth right, is the lirst duty of the committee above named, or of any private persons iu the thirteen abused States who may have it iu their power so to do. In the ef fort, it is almost a work of supeiogatiou to say that the exactest cure Is desirable so that the scrutiny these exhibits will en counter may be successfully met. Noth ing extenuate, nor sot down aught in malice. — World. PERSONAL. —Tad Lincoln goes to school at Wies baden. —Jefferson is playing Rip Van Winkle at Detroit. —Dan Rice backs time against Weston for $20,000. —General .McClelan has been chosen President of the University of California. —General Sherman will lake the place of General Grant as General-in-Chief. —Ex-Governor David Tod of Ohio, died very suddenly last week. —A volume of Artemu.s Ward’s un published jokes is being prepared for the press. —lt la stated that the widow of the late President Jamea K. Polk is in straighten ed circumstances. —The.safety of Dr. Livingston is now placed beyond doubt. —lt is denied that General Lee is to have a place in General Grant's cabinet. —Brigham Young is said to be the third largest depositor in the Bank of .England. —Governor Orr, of South Carolina, has given up his project of going to Missouri to live. —Pope Pius IX, is suffering from the gout; Isabella 11, from the go-out. - The story comes from Paris that Louis Napoleon has a son in New York. —Dr. Livingston, it is said, may ar rive. in England before tho new year. —General Itobert E* Leo has been of- fered the Southern supervisorship of agencies of the Knickerbocker Life In surance Company, with salary of $lO,OOO. —Mrs. Partington (P. B. Shillaber) was a Democratic candidate for the Massa chusetts Legislature, and was defeated. —The President has appointed Arthur D* Markley Collector Sixth District, Pennsylvania, vice. A. B. Longaker, re signed. —Weston is reported to begetting ready to walk GOOD miles In one hundred days, from Maine to Minnesota. . —Senator Pomeroy walked through the streets of Leavenworth, Kansas, recently, bareheaded, he having vowed to do so if Leavenworth county should give a Re publican majority* —^Tlro~Eirgllslr~papers~say*that~Glad : atone is now equal to tho average Ameri can Congressman. He can make a five column speech every day.' -Gen. James Shields, the hero ami patriot has been elected to C .ingress from one of the Missouri districts, by a majori ty of SSB—a Democratic gain. —Anson Burlingame's Chinese name is Pocau-Chen— Chin-ehi-choong-jen tach en, the pronunciation' of which an En glish paper sneeringly compared to a long sneeze. —The second trial of George W. Cole for lie- murder ot ].. Ji acock, commenc ed last wee:;, at Albany. M-. McPherson lias settled up like es tate of Thaddetta Stevens, and finds that about one-hundred thousand dollars will remain after the payment of the debts. —lt Is said that General Grant will not resign his military office until just previ ous to Ilia inauguration, and that he will strongly urge the appointment of Gen eral Sherman to be his successor. —Louisa Mulbnch Is poor. She says she would like to have money enough to buy a small house and garden, which she might leave to her two daughters, it seems as though some prosperous book publisher might give her a house and garden. —Poor old Santa Anna has come to final grief. His plots against the Juarez government having been discovered, he is ordered to leave Havana within thirty days, under sentence of perpetual ban ishment. He is now so poor that he is unable to pay his passage to this country. • —Two weeks ago Mr. Edwin Forrest paid, through Jay Cooke, at Philadel phia, $05,000, the amount in full of the accumulated alimony due to his late wife under the decision in the divorce decree, which has at last been made final. Mr. Forrest has expended, it is estimated, upwards of $300,000 in this painful di vorce suit. —The young man Bower, who put atroyid belladonna into a prescription, in Philadelphia, instead of assafcctida, whereby Mrs. Hecht came to her death, has become insane and left that city. It is believed that lie will commit suicide. The allair still excites general attention among the physicians and apothecaries of Philadelphia. —The executors of the late Ex-Prcsi dont Buchanan have contracted with one nt i .* prominent marble workers in pii ... .eii-iua lor the erection of a monu ment over his grave. It will be a solid l,|oek of Italian marble, live feet high, seven feet one inch long, and throe feet seven inches will.. The top ami bottom wi i 11,1 v*• iit W .\ mouldings, and the >tnne will be enriched with a wreath of o-ik lea>.- and acorns around the entire Mii'iiee. The monument will be plain, rich ami durable. —General George B. McClellan is one of the engineers engaged in constructing the bridge across the Hudson at the Highlands. The Newark Courier says that the executors of Edwid A. Stevens’ estate have employed him, at an annual salary of $lO,OOO a year, to superintend the completion of the famous Stevens battery at Hoboken, which when afloat, is to bo tendered as a free gift to the State of New Jersey. —A very intimate personal friend of Mr. Seward says that he is making ar rangements to retire trom public life at an early day, and that but for the still unadjusted Alabama claims, his resigna tion would take effect on the Ist 06 Jan uary next. According to the same au thority the venerable statesman intends to quit Auburn, and spend the remain der of his days in New York city. He has the purchase of an elegant mansion in Madison avenue in contemplation. MISCELLANEOUS. —Swine eat negro babies in Savannah. —A Portland firm has made 24,000 planchettes. —The Pacific locomotives run into buf faloes occasionally. —Fifty-five business houses in Chicago have just failed. —Shooting buffaloes from car windows is a favorite sport on the Union Pacific. —Six miles a day is the rate of truck laying on the Pacific Railroad. —California has jiulded $00,000,000 in gold and silver in leu years. Another English clergyman’b (laugh ter ha« marrieil her father’s coachman.— She brings him $250,000. Michigan ha« a man of IDU, and Og denshurg, New York, one 10L», now liv- Fish were hoiled in the ocean off Chili in the earthquake of August last. —lt is said that the most appropriate dance for a tin wedding is, the —can-can. - There will be a total eclipse of the sun next year, visible in many parts of the United States. —A telegraph cable has been laid across East river, between New York and Brooklyn. - The* great plains of the West are al most covered with buffaloes, on their way southward lor the winter. —Gold is found in twenty-five coun ties in North Carolina, and the annual yield is estimated at 8500,000. —A “ Honeymoon Car" is to be placed on the Pacific railway, when completed, for the benefit of bridal parties, -The ninehundredth milepost on the don Pacific Railroad, west of Omaha, } been.passed. —A German philosopher predicts that Europe and .America will be submerged in 500,000,000 years, and no one dares con tradict him. —The Paci fte railroad is employing an army of fence builders; fences being neccessary to keep the animals off the tracks. —The Boston Journal says: “ There is a gentleman at the South End who bears so strong a resemblance to Gen. Grant that office seekers look atbim longingly." —A Mississippi lady recently shot ami killed a truly loyal negro who attempted an outrage upon her. —The London streets, placed in a sin gle straight line would reach from Liver- pool to Now York. It takes MU,OOO street illuminate Loudon. of the newspaper discuss ion concerning the adulteraatlon of milk, Punch gives his opinion that the best ar ticle on milk is—cream. —Only 400 souls out of 40,000 survived the earthquake nt Equador. A whole dis trict was swallowed up in an instant and Is now covered by a lake. —A letter from Spain- says that the portrait of Washington has been placed in front of the town hall of Barcelona, in place of the picture of Isabella, torn down. —Moses Smith, a colored man, died at Washington, D. C., last week, at the ex treme age of 120 years. Deceased was formerly a slave, His wife is still living, who is nearly as old as her late husband and their youngest born is now 00 years of age. —ln Boxbnry, Massachusetts a cradle and a coffin factory ace located side. by side. The name of the town may per haps account for this coincidence, Box standing for the cradles, and bury for the coffin. —A man jumped from the roof of a hotel in Baltimore, and a woman In Cambria, Pennsylvania, hung herself with a bed-cord. Life had too many troubles for them. state in:.iis. —Altoona is to have a skating rink, —Lancaster is to have a ditto, —Perry M. Hunter, an extensive woolen manufacturer nt Norristown, committed suicide last Thursday morn ing by shooting himself. —There is a man in South-western Pennsylvania who has walked ninety years on a crutch. ——Colonel—Drake who-suuk-tho“first oil well on Oil Creek, and gave the world the benefit of his discovery, is at Titus ville living in extreme destitution.; PBNJISTI.VANU-eoHPI.ETE EL ECTION RETURNS, ISOS. Wo give below the full official vote of every county in the State. In Phil adelphia, the Radical board of canvas sers threw out several thousand, votes cast for Seymour AUD. Gun. 1 I’JUISIDKNT COUNTIES. Adams Allegheny.. Armstrong. Heaver.... Bedford.. Berks Blair.. Bradford, Bucks ■Cumbria Cameron. Carbon.... Contn Chester... Clarion..., Clearfield Clinton Columbia..... Crawford Cumberland. Dauphin Delaware E1k..., Erie.. Fayette.... Franklin. Fulton Forest Greene Huntingdon. Indiana Jefferson Juniata Lancaster Lawrence..... Lebanon Lehigh Luzerne Lrcoming.... M’Kean Mercer .Mlfllln Monroe Montgomery Montour Northampton Northumbe land. Terry. Philadelphia Tike... Potter Schuylkill Snyder somerset Sullivan Susquehanna. Tioga. Venango Warren - Washington Wavnc Westmoreland Wyoirting York Totals. 321739 Majorities. POLITICAL. Mr. Seward voted for Geueral Grant, —Seymour’s minority in the State ol Delaware Is 3,234. —Forney writes columns to show that he, and he alone, has claims upon the gratitude of Grant. —Tennessee elects two Democratic Congressmen, Sheatle and Leftwich. —The Philadelphia Bulletin has nomi nated Grant for President in 1872. —Gen. Grant has ordered ids Secreta ry to make “ cigar lighters" out of all ap plications for office. is not yet ascertained which oueoi the,Washburnes will go into the Cabi net. —lt is said that Colfax will ask for the appointment of Ben Wade for Secretary of the Interior. —Johnson, Democrat, iselected to Con gress from the Northern California Dis trict by a small majority. Blaine, of Maine, hopes to he the next Speaker of the House of Representatives. —Spoony Butler is to be the mongrel leader in Congress. A lit choice. He is a true type of tile thieving crew. —Tlie New York Times is out in favor of increasing the salary of President Grant, from 623,000 per annum to 6100,- 000. Is this to be the commencement of the economy promised ? —lt is predicted that President John nn will receive the Democratic nomina ion for Governor of Tennessee. —For the Senalorship from New York, besides Edwin D. Moigan, the pre sent Senator, it is announced that John A. Griswold, Horace Greeley and Win, M. Everts are candidates. —John Morrissey has more than eleven thousand majority in the Fifth New Vork District. George Francis Train re ceived twenty-five hundred and fifty votes. H o c a l Items Death of George W- Sheaffer. — By reference to our obituary column it will be seen that our respected townsman, Mr. George W. Sheaffer, died at his resi dence, on Thursday of last week. As a citizen and neighbor, Mr. S. was genial, kind and liberal. To the poor especially, he was a benefactor, tpul to the commu nity at large a man of enterprise, whose views were always respected. Previous to his decline in health, he was the soul of the Cumberland County Agricultural Society, of which he was tho Treasurer ; and to his untiring efforts the Society was indebted for its prosperity ami stability. All in all, Mr. Sheaffer was a most wor thy and hospitable cit.zcn, whose death will be lamented by all who had the pleasure of an intimate acquaintance with him. Peace to his ashes. DiAtii of Judge Line. —Hpn. Win. Line, who was an Associate Judge for this county many years ago, (appointed to that position, we believe, by Governor Ritner,) died at his residence, in this borough, on Saturday last. For many years previous to his last illness, he de voted his entire attention to the nursery, botany and floral business, in which he took great delight. He was a gentleman of strong mind and will, a fond neighbor and true friend, who had the respect and confidence of the many hundreds .who transacted business with him. Pcquies catinpacc. A Trip to Holly.— ln a Saturday afternoon’s jaunt, last week, we paid a flying visit toMt. Holly,said “ how are you?” to mine host Mullin, at the Springs, took a look at the machinery in the magnificent new mill of the Mt. Holly Paper Company, and were pleas ed to notice a largo force of laborers at work oh the rail-road. About the time the mills are closing and the street is filled with men and women going to their homes, Holly looks likl> a very energetic little place. Its thrift and en terprise almost make Carlisle folks blush for the sluggisnness of their com munity. “ All’s Well That Ends Well.” —On Sabbath evening, Bth inst., a cow belonging to George Cameron, of this place, fell through the floor of a well on the farm of Leonard Gutshall, in North Middleton township. The well was some twenty or thirty feet deep, and the water in it eight or nine feet deep. Strange to say, after her [first plunge, the cow came to the surface of the wa ter, when some one went down and held her head up whilst ropes were fastened around her body, and she was lifted to terrcfjirma perfectly safe and sound. Jjgy The editors of the Herald think the miscegenations part of Anna Dick inson’s book remarkably fine reading.— Well—every one to his taste. The Newspaper in the Family.— It is not every one who appreciates ns it I should be tho value of a family newspa per. Its visitations into the home cir cle are at all times interesting and agree able. It is a friend and companion that is not easily dispensed with. To the seeker after knowledge it is ever wel come. Tlio father, mother and child all like to hear and read the news of tho week. Their paper is looked upon as an invaluable educator in the family— It will instruct how to read, how to think and how to uso and value facts. — It is often a sure guide in business. It generally contains information of a practical character upon almost every topic. The-farmer gets information from its columns, in reference tn the markets and his business, worth ten times its actual cost. The. housewife ■receives hints in reference to household affairs. The' interests of tho communi ty are always sustained by a live, pro gressive newspaper. The laboring man Is benefitted by its teachings and the man of ivealth and property is cared for in its instructions. , The newspaper is also a pleasant literary companion.— While you read over its well filled pa ges, it seems like holding con verse wills a familiar and intelligent friend. It enlightens tire mind and understand ing. It improves the heart, fft ele vates the soul and enlarges tho affec tions. No one should be without a well conducted, carefully edited newspaper. It is the companion of our solitude, tho consoler of our spirits, a true and valued friend, whose presence has a refining in- ■ 2917 2-jl'7 ■WB2 .lots 2fiS7 7917 flucnce and whoso instructions and words are invaluable and immortal. 7702 •1210 2110 53173 1313 ’ 6113 9123 13IS 1778 The Opening op Business.—Now is the time to advertise. Now that the Presidential election is over, people will be ready to settle down to practical business. Housekeeper* will be pro viding for family wants, and merchants laying in stocks of fresh goods to meet the demands whiah are sure to be made upon them. Those who have merchan dize to dispose of should take advan tage of this favorable state of affairs, and do as the politicians have been do ing-keep themselves before the people. 312210 313382 313382 331410 321733 28R98 The columns of the Volunteer are open to all such! We cordially invite business men and business women of all kinds to avail themselves of the golden opportunity promptly, and to as great an extent as their purses will allow or their business will justify.— No money is so well invested as that expended in judicious advertising. A Rolling Mill.— We hear it whis pered that a company of capitalists, from Beading we believe, are looking into the feasibility of establishing ex tensive iron works at this place. We hope the rumor may not prove to bo all smoko, or rather, we hope that some smoke may come of it. The time was when the people of Carlisle seemed to be afraid of the dust and dirt of manufac tories, and opposed to the noise and bustle of business communities. Not only did our capitalists decline doing anything to develop our resources, but cold water was thrown upon all enter prises proposed by foreign capitalists.— Thank fortune this spirit lias died out. Young progress has killed old fogyism. There is an activity and enterprise no ticeable in this community now, such as has never been known before. A New Literary Paper.—Wo un derstand that Messrs. S. M. Pettengill & Co., tho well-known New York ad vertising agents, intend issuing a new Literary Weekly Newspaper, about the first of January next, to be called the “ Hearth and Home." It will be under tho editorial control of Donald G. Mitchell (“ Iko Marvel,”) and will have, as contributors, some of the best literary talent of this country. If they display as much energy and tact in their newspaper as they do in adver tising business, it will not be long'be fore it will take rank, both in merit and circulation, with the most popular literary publications in the country.— We wish them success in their new en terprise. A Fine Picture.—We are indebted to Lerue Lemer, of Harrisburg, for a fine photograhpic representation of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church.which mol.at Harrisburg.in May last, containing portraits of the minis ters and elders in attendance. So far as we are able to judge, the likenesses are accurate and life-like, and tho entire picture, containing several hundred fa ces, is gotten up in tho highest style of the photographic art, and is of such con venient sine and comesatsuch moderate rates as to ho within tho reach of all who wish to preserve the portraits of the loading clergymen of this branch of the church. How to Get Bion in Fifty Years. —The poorest laboring man that can save 13} cents per day, put at compound interest will save in one year $5O, in ten years SGSO, in twenty years $l,BOO, in thirty years $3,950, in forty years $7,700, in fifty years, $14,600. Who could not do better than this if he would try?— Constant labor would enable every la boring man or mechanic to make a for tune by saving but a fraction of his dai ly earnings. Improvements at the College.— Extensive improvements are being made at Dickinson College. Gas and water have been introduced into por tions of it, anew fence bas been built around the North and West sides of the campus, a new pavement is being laid, and there seems to be a general “ brush ing up.” We trust the outside of the College buildings will be treated to a coat of paint, before the good work cea ses. They look venerable, but decided ly rusty. The Lecture Season.— Why is it that arrangements are not made to get a course of Lectures for the Winter sea son. The Young Men’s Christian Asso ciation, or the Good Templars migM make arrangements for a series of lec tures by prominent lecturers, and make a handsome profit for themselves out of it. Surely in a community which lays such high claims to intellectual culture, a course of lectures ought to be richly remunerative. I. O. G. T.—The semi-annual session of the Cumberland Valley Good Tem plars’ Convention will be held at Waynesboro,’ Eranklin county, com mencing Wednesday, the 28th inst.— Delegates from-tho several Lodges in Cumberland, Franklin and Pulton counties will be in attendance. Bunn' MK.vnoN.-Tho Empire Hook and Ladder House la under roof, and will he ready for the Truck The Good-Wlll-ore arehavingnblastod rooky time of it in excavating the cel lar for the hall of their new building. Professor Himes will lecture In Ilheeni’B Hall, on Friday evening, on the 11 Properties of the Atmosphere. An interesting lecture on “ Peasant Life in no'hmcl,” was delivered in the „urnn church, Juat Tuesday night. Grunt will ho troubled with a‘dozen or more applications for the Post Office In this place, on the part of a number of patriotic gentlemen, who are anxious to serve their country for a small considers- Tt e town council and the janitor of the Ourl House have come to terms, and the dials of the town clock are again llluml- ic friends of George L. Gouoher, Esq, “ the champion bill poster," will be gratified to learn' that he has returned from bis recent visit to Philadelphia, in vigorated and refreshed. The year 18119 will be honored with an eclipse of lb* 3 sun, which will occur, on the afternoon of August 7th, and will be total, nit a line drawn from Alaska to South Carolina, and partial in other parts of the country. A simple epitaph in St. Pancras Churchyard is touchingly commemora tive of the gluttony of a husband and the grief of his widow : Elisa sorrowing, rears this marble slab To her do ir Joan, who died of eating crab.” At a recent Teachers’ Convention held in Boston, a well-known oculist called attention to tile fact that near-sightedness in children is much more common than has generally been supposed.. He points out that teachers and parents frequently punish children for carelessness and idle ness, while the apparent faults are real- ly (lie effect of defective vision. The iceiuiei staled that many persons born wiili a •digbl tendency to " myopia" ae imil ly became short-sighted by injudi cious and constant study. A man was found lying in an uptown guitar (Im other day, and on being rous ed to consciousness ami asked to explain how lie came there, gm oil the following by way of explanation : • Loaves have Uielr Him) to fall, Ami so llkowme do 1; Thu reason, ton's tin- .same. It comes ol dry ! tlun-u's this dllleroncu, iwlxt Icmivo-j and mo falls move harder and more irmiucntly Mr. Charles H. Wvhh, >aw I lie Grecian head at Saratoga, and i!m< eele bralcs It In immortal verse ; When lovely woman stoops to frolic,. Anti rues tho ruse, alas! 100 late, What halm shall heal her melancholic? Whai art Khali set her back up straight? Tho onlv thing for her disaster— The only way her woe to end Is to apply a mustard plaster; If she won’t do it, lot her bond. This Fading of The harvest is past the summer Is ended." To the Inver of nature there is a melnn ohnly pleasure hi wandering forth into the fields and woods, “ when the leaves whirl rnnnd with the wind,'and strew the graves of the dead,” to note the vari ed and brilliant tints of the foliage, (which are only seen to perfection in the Northern (Stales, and to listen to the songs of the few remaining birds, and “The music of the autumnal winds v , , Among the faded woods.” / Tbc indolent inhabitant of the with perpetual summer, knows naught of the pleasure derived by tho observer of nature in the North, from her various changes of climate and foliage through out the year. There is something un speakably sad in tho decline and fall of tlie leaf during the “ season of mists and mellow fruitfulness,” suggesting as it does, thoughts of the death of flowers and fragrant herbs, of the absence for many, many months of the feathered tribes, thoughts of the end of the season, of the year of “tho last sad hour,” th 0 fading away of life, the cold ,and narrow house appointed lor ail the living. Thus the pleasures of youth fade away as the (lowers am) the verdure of the for est drapery, and in the advancing years, as with the mature foliage, we fall into the “ the sere, the yellow leaf.” Thanks be to God for the woods, at ail times beautiful? In winter, when the lofty trunks and the delicate tracery of their brandies are visible ; In spring when first they blossom and put forth their young leaves; in , midsummeii when they are shadowy and aromatic; but most beautiful and gorgeous in au- Uunn, when every t-pecies of tree devel ops Us own hue of bmwn, orange, red, or yellow, combining wiih the unchanging pine and other evergreens, to present a picture of surpassing bounty: " But soo the many-colon« woods, . Shade deep’nlng over shade, the country round. In brown; crowded umbrage, dark and dun, , OI every hue, from wan declining green To sooty dark.” Could Thompson, who pUiuted the Seasons, have walked among our bound legs forests during the month of October, or sailed upon the Hudson or the Upper' Mississippi, he would have drawn a warmer picture. Bryant regrets in the following exquisite lines, the brief career of the tinted leaves : “ Ob, Autumn! why so soon . , Denari the hues that make thy forest glad ; The gentle wind and thy fair sunny noon; And leave them wild and sad ? Ah I’tworo a lot too blest, Kar in thy colored shades to stray, Amid the kisses of the son southwest To warm and dream for aye.” The Meteoric Shower.— I The predic tions of the Astronomers in regard to a meteoric shower have been realized af j last. There was a brilliant and beau+j. ful display, lasting from eleven o’o) ock on Friday night until almost light Saturday morning. Some of the r fle teora wore of extraordinary brillla» icy am j splendor, flashing oyer a large arc 0 f the heavens, and leaving a brilliant train which was visible foraevo\. a i seconds.— One seemed to burst in OMd-heavenj and described afigureSor a\ e tterS. Another lightetfrup the earth liVe a flash 0 f light ning. Observers at tjie Washington ob servatory state that one time they fell at the rate of 2,500 pr_. P flour. The display seems to have bee n general and was wit nessed atpromir.ent points from Boston to New OrleauF,, though it was neither so brilliant or 'extensive as that of 1833, when 11 is estimated that 240,000 fell in the space o y f nine hours, some of which were apparently equal in size to the moon. Unfortunately “ the .“bower” had not been duly advertised, and many persons failed to see it entirely, numbers of whom, in expectation that the performance would bo repeated, remained upon Sat urday night, but wore doomed to disap pointed. B6s°* Business cards, bill heads, enve lope tips, and all other Job printing, promptly executed at the Volunteer office, at city prices. H©“lt has been well said that “ the best way to keep the sheriff from ad vertising and selling your goods, is to advertise and sell them yourself.” Gypsies.— A small party of strolling gypsies-passed through-town ou-Mouday-,- proposing to grind scissors, or tell for tunes, to gather up>few pennies. York County Items.-Tlto bridge over the Susquehanna, between Coluni- Ilia and Wrightsville, will bo entirely completed next month, when the clll zcna of York will have a daily train to ami from Philadelphia. Thu brick stable of Jacob Smith, Esc of York, was destroyed by lire on'limi'.’ day afternoon of last week, and the fr ;uue stable of Air. Prey, was also burned on Friday night lust. The former was sup. posed to be accidently set on fire; the lag ter was the work of on. luceudiaty— There were several other attempts at araou during the week. , The Susquehanna river is said to t B quite high, overflowing the banks at some places. ’ A company of capitalists, consisting of F. W. Hughes, of Pottsville, Jacob Jame son, of Philadelphia, and Dr. 0. M. Nea and Henry Kraber of York, are erecting a large furnace at the latter place, to en gage in the manufacture of Iron by anew process, which has been discovered by one of the firm. l Duties of School Directors— From the lust number of the Pennsyl vania School Journal we clip the follow ing sensible advice on the importance of directors visiting the schools: “ The duty of visiting the schools is considered one of the most important duties that directors have to discharge in the administration of the system— The law makes the duty imperative and no person should accept office of school' director unless he is willing to perform it. When well done, its effect is always; to make the schools more efficient. It stimulates the pupils iu their studies,— It enables directors to ascertain the ex act condition of the schools, schoolhou ses and school grounds. On the whole, so high a value does the Department set upon the local supervision of the school that it always expects to find the schools of districts which are regularly and sys tematically visited by hoards of direc tors, according to the provisions of tho law, other things equal, fifty per cent, bettor than those of districts in .which tho schools are entirely neglected in this respect, and this estimate is made hum personal observation made in hundreds of districts.” Court Proceedings— The following cases were tried, after we had gone tn press last week ; Com. v.t. Wm. Barber. Dlaturbiiu: a Sihlmth school. Verdict guilty. Sun leuoi'd to pay a Hue of SlO and costs in prnsoon Dion. Com. vs. Eli Good. Selling liquor without license, Defendant pleads guil ty ami is sentenced (o pay a tine of sfil ami costs of prosecution. Com. vs. Ira Day and ot'v> j re,. Nuisance. By consent this case ; Un costs to abide the resnU'tf a civil action of quarc clausum frcyiC. In the civil sail of Borough of Mcctmnicsburg vs. Rev. T., Dougherty, Dr. P. H. Long, D. H.. Swiler, John W. Burshmun, Tva George Webbert, William Slegary, J, Emminger, George Shroeder. Saudi Ru pert, Thornton Rupert. Cornelius Smy serand i-I. B. Myers, a verdict was ren dered of one dollar damages for the plain* till. This was an action to recover diuu agea for the extension '>f the Methmllat church iu Mechanicaburg, upon wlml 'was as ;a part, of the Public \Hquare. Com. vs Jacob W. Coble-False pre- tiib Lkak.— sence. Verdict not guilty ami prosecutor Yetman Eves to pay the costa of prose cution, and def't to pay his own wiuiess- Cora, vs Win. Milton Still-Fornication and Bastardy. Verdict not guilty ami prosecutrix Elizabeth Murphy to pay costs of prosecution. Second week—common plkas. Court commenced on Monday. Presi dent Judge Graham, and Associ ate Judges Stuart and Blair on the bench The following case was the only one tried up to the time of going to press : John Smobl vs Goldsmith & Bro. A .feigned issue to determine the title to certain personal property’ levied upon bv the sheriff. Verdict for the defend ant. "Tins Glory op the SBASON.—There* seems to be n glory in everything ai*’U-ndi us at this season of the year Forest and* mountain scenery never looks so* beauti ful as now when nature seems to exhaust all her resources in lavishing the- richest’ and rarest profusion of colors in> myriadl forms of fantastic brilliancy and- beauty on eyery hill and* in every valley, field, and forest. Many writers moralize upon these scenes. Chateaubriand says of the season, that “ the leaves, falling like our years ; the flowers, fading like our hoatf,« the clouds, fleeting like our illusion the light, diminishing like our intelli gence; the sun, growing colder our affections; the rivers, becoming frozen like our lives—all bear secret ,i a tior\s to our destinies.” There Is a glory in our gor g e ouB No vember sunsets—with t T ue j r wealth of golden magnificence, wt I j o | l n 0 artist can imitate. There is ft ?’lory hi our.clear, cold,, moonlight high' There is an ad ditional briUU’acy i n the twinkling of the stars, 'as they travel through their nightly watches, and “ one'star exceed ed another star in glory.” There ia a glory of the a by, the earth and 'the seas. Hr jMK Cheerfulness.— Many a chli d goes astray, not because there is a w an t of prayer and virtue at home, hut simply because home lacks sunshine.— A child needs smiles as much as flow ers need sunbeams,. Children look lit tle beyond the present moment. If a thing displeases them they are prone to avoid it. If home, is the place where faces and words’are-harsh, and fault finding is over in the ascendant, they will spend as many hours as possible elsewhere. Let every father and mother try to be happy. Let them look happy. Let them talk to their children, especially the little ones, in such a way as to make them happy* B6T It is strange to see with what caro lessness some invalids - attend to the r health; They willprocnre abox of Ph> n " tation Bitters, which ought to be used up in a month or six weeks, and upon in* quiry it is fo*md that they have used on ly two or three bottles* Some days they have used it according to the dlrectionSr and others have not touched It. T* l ® whole trial has been irregular, aud of course a less favorable result has come from their use. If it be true.that “ is worth doing at all is worth doing welli how emphatically is it true In matters r 6 ‘ latiug to the health. A few bottles o Plantation Bitters'-have often wrough . wonders, while in other instances dis ease has only been subdued after weeks. Magnolia Water— Superior to the best imported German Cologne, and sol at half the price. Appointment of Notary —Governor Geary has appoint 6 -Geo.-J.-Kunkle,--I^q.,-.of-Harrisburg l son of Sami. Kuukle Esq., of Shipped burg, Notary Public.