Clearfield Republican. (Clearfield, Pa.) 1851-1937, June 18, 1868, Image 1

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    tutu of ,MfrH
IIW TYrif. nl !..
I'ron the It .ehp t, r I'tltoo
! !, 1'iir ft h -w da jmi horn
; i'.ilthful inquiry into the qnos-
in liniirliiiiiti-il mill enforced
! r .f K': iii It'J.T:it MiMicr,
i l v the enemy, to starve nnd
t ! i il prison t-n, nnj havo at
(k 11 i 11 evidence llmt n
: remove nil doubt. Thistv
, no are hid tos:iy, is of of a
:! and enntcs from a source
I once earns conviction uud
-p its of any liability t stispi
!' unfairness thai mitiht olher-
entertained by our Kopiibli-
mmIs. We tii d il in tho docu
ry record of that immaculate
nr. tho"Conimitto on l ho Om
!' tho War" in a report mudo
. .1 body iiy the chief of lliu 1m
Anient Managers, Muj. lien. It.
1
I.
t .
'"
i'lcr. Tho position occupied by
1 i-u . iiiMler at this time, in tlio eyes
of tl," Itmlicnl nrty of tho country
vsj'tn ; ,'iy, nd Is groat weight to din
tt?; i ' iiy (Hid nerves to givo addi
tion, t; importanrc and interest to the
en! J a t uiiilcr consideration.
In hi report (ion. Duller recites
the 1 ids concerning tho disagree;
men! about tho cxctiungo of prisoner
ciiniii!.' when ho was entrusted with
tho ri.ities of Commissioner by the
Si 1 1 :nvy of War.in December, lSiil.
J( Meeoled during tho following
t! i'. t' Months, after much trouble, in
iiri:iii; ing the basis of an exchange,
man lor man and officer for oflicer,
wiili tlio rebel Commissioner, .Mr
OulJ, with whom he held conference
at lOrtreos Monroe. Ho then sava:
" .M r Ould letl on the 31st of March,
with tho understanding that 1 would
get authority and inlonuatioii from
my government, by which nil dispu
ted point jiossible could bo adjusted,
ami v-iilj then confer with him fur
lhor,cuhcr meeting him at City I'oint
or elsewhere for that nurpo. o. Jn the
incaniime the exchanges of sick and
wounded and special exchange should
go on.
"Lieut, (ion. Grant visited Fortress
Mom -ph.! on the 1st of April, being the
Li'kl time 1 had ever met Inm.
"To him the slate of the ncgntin
tiauor.s ns to exchange was verbally
tjomtniiiiieated, and must emphatic rer-
M directions were received frail the
Lieutenant (ieneral not to take any step
if r Inch another aide hod iedmnn should
I exchanged until further orJert from
km."
Ou Uie 14th of April, (ieneral l!uf
kr rrved a telegram from (ieneral
Grant, nl Washington, stating that
ike :u!e subject of exchange of pris
ner hud been referred to inm as
Julio : -
WanOTs, II p. pji., April It, 1M.
y Mi. i r.a. lit ti kr : oar ri-purt reajtr -lina; lie
petia-tM-Tp. Mjtli (Vcnmii. inner OulJ fur tbr ei-a-hitmif
-t prwoarc itt war, lac aora rertfed 10
mt tW a- tender.
I I'll t'EiwaiiicJ bjr n, d ny ordrrt thrrrB
am prrn- bj dfUmnll ftirtkrr Jtmfftm-
ti-. U. limi, Lieut. Urn.
(Syn later, aflor tieneral (irant
liO'l "rrawineil," he sent a lot.g tele
p jeueral liutler, slating that
h hzl 'cm empowered to "give with
ict'nitidns ns 1 may clocm proper,"
lie cave instructions of which
llienTi! Hntler says :
'lor these instructions.in the
l!- state of negotiations, rendered
utij- iv.ri Uer exchange impossible, and
K.lilli:i(:o useless."
'nor( It ii i lor says he then made
rtl r to have the sick and wound
ed -r-fcd, so that they might be
xch.s;,e(l, and he received, the' fl
J ir. tlogrsm in reply:
W ltTp, 9.30 p. April SO, ISM.
M 41. lr. H. F. Rrri.cs : Knjre nil the ilrk
ml wupp lJ ihr Cuufri!i-rtt aullwritiiw will
iwod v frill mr tit trrhmfot.
V, S. sht, Lif-iiU li.
p Upon this extraordinary "instruc
tion" Geueral Jlutlor ro. narks i iol
low :
"To obtain delivery of even sick
nrnl wounded prisoners without anv
return would bo a somewhat dillicult
operation, Rave that tho enemy, tty
giving us our wounded and sick in
their luind, won'Uining a'l tlio rebel
sick sil l wounded in oars, burdened
us wuli tho care and coM, of fM the
sick mi I winiiided of both sidtw an
op rntion of which it w it1iciilt to
see tho Btrasctic value, and only to
bo delendcd beeauso of its hniuai'ity
in resitting our wounded from the
destitution of sufferings permitted to
them by tho Confederates."
In August tho question of exchang
ing prts-iners was again up, the rebel
I'me li .sinners having renewed the
oiii'r (.1 give tn s ii for man ami oftlccr
ff o'ii. i'. Hut tien.ttrant interposed,
and in ii telegram to (Jen. Hutler, da
ted City point, August IN, 1MU, said:
On lb" o'.jwl fif rxclmnr. T iliffrr with lirn.
Il:-tir !, ; 11 liitril ou out tnrn hfl in Nmrhrrn
fnw:p. y, ,i tv ci-lljtifp thrwi. hut IS huniwtpttv
tt lip i' in tlir rankB Up Tiff hi tur hatll. Hi
nt in pit r n-i'oj Ktn pArnle or utlirtwiM hfromc
n ft- : pp.-lilirr L'inlt ii Ml unfe cither ilirrct
lv p'l ii- ' - f ltr. if wr ciiinmi'ii' o ttrtn of cx-th'Hpi't-
p.p-b lils-ralrH all prMonr.rp taken, at
will Itupr, t' frrliton until the whpilr Soutii in rl
M'Hiii!'' 1. If w h'l1 Ihime men raiight. thr
am.p,ttl t-p no ntorr than ilial mm. At Ihit rr
if.iinr tiiPMp. to rnlraur all robd pritdnor .N.trth
wniiipt ii.'-pppq Sherman ilrfrat, anil wuuld ron
promtiif i,ppir nafrty hrra,
I'. S. 1 1 HUT, I, tent. firn.
I'l in we haven full and free avow
ftltii.it l'i leaving of tens of thou
sands i f oor Federal soldiers, w hose
intt i'i(.. :u and bravery carried them
to t'ie iVmit of buttle, to starve, and
rot, mill im in rebel prison pens was
A mutter of stndied jMiIiey u part of
lio ti "Im-j by which Genearl (irant.
init'.Iti
iriipou tlio robeliion. And
p; will remember that while
.';tn policy was being meru
it Hed out the- were told by
rnnicnt and by the organs of
lustration that the whole
i hont the exchange was on
tho rebels that on r gor-
ns w illing and noxious to
:''! fellows out of tho juws
I V
h .. ' i
les-i'v 1 (
tho i:-"--p-la
rfi.lSlp-I.'! V
tho p..: 1
eminent
get I t! r j
of the. I
them i 1
U. 'I 1
. iiii ; : ,.
" t; ).. .:
tlll-SP'
'1 1.,,
ftCCOlllit
urihlo death that awaited
loo rebel prisons, but coulti
duplicity- was in keeeping
,l orse than barbarity,
.t'er concludes his report in
'p'll it mj duty to (tiro an
'.li thii purticular careful
. participation in tho busi
ness ol 1 xp iintiijo ot prisoners! tho or
ders 11 f 1 -.I -1 l' which I acted, nnd tho no
go'.iiii nuis attempted, which conipn
sen a !.,".! !pi narration of nil that w.is
(J')iic. - i :.:it all may Lei 0100 a Putt
ier 01 ' i. ,- ,.iy.
"T:.- it importanto of the que
tiiKis; l ie tearful responsibility for
lire mar
thousands of lives which, .
CLEARFIELD 'teREPUBLlCAN.
GEO. B. O00DLANDER, Proprietor, PRINCIPLES-NOT MEN. TEBMS-$2 per arninra, in Advinoe.
VOL ll-WIIOLE NO. 2075. CLEARFIELD, PA, THURSDAY, JUNE 18. 1868. NEW SERIES-VOL. 8, NO. 17.
by tho ro fu an I to exchange, were sac
rificed by tho most cruel form of
death, from cold, t-tarvatiuii and pos
tilence, of the prison-tons of l(loigh
and Andersonville, being moro than
till tho llrilihh soldiers killed in the
war of Napoleon j the anxiety of
father, brothers, sislers, mothers,
wivcK, to know tho exigency which
caused this terriblo and perhaps, as it
may have seemed to thoin useless and
unnecessary destruction ol those dear
tolhom,fcy horiblo deaths. each and nil
have compelled mo 'o thiy exposition
so that il may bo seen that thetr tecs
irrr rient as a yart of the system of
attack upon the rebellion, devised by
the wisdom of the (ienrral-in chief of
the. armies to destroy it by depletion,
depending upon our superior numbers
to win tho victory at last."
The loyal mourners will doubtless de
rive solace, from this fact, and appreci
ate all the more hiijhly the genius which
conceived the plan and the success won
at so great'a east. '
It is Oeii. llullcr, chief 31 imager of
Impeachment and leader of tho Kadi
cul party now supporting (Jen. Grant
for tfie Presidency, who states theso
facts and makes this criticism upon
tho originator and executor of the
policy of sacrificing, uselessly and tin
necessarily, more lives than tho lirit
isli lost in nil their wars with Napo
leon. We haro tiolbiui; to add.
Oenrral Otoi fe Sloneman.
General George, Stoneman, the new
ly appointed Commander of Military
District No. 1, was born in Chautau
qua county, New York, August Sth
Is;!;!, mid is, therefore, in the 4tit b
year ol his ago. ' i
Graduating at .Vest Point, in 1S4(1,
he entered service as brevet second
Lieutenant in tho Second Dragoons,
and served in that rank throughout
tho Mexican wur. From the close of
the war to the commencement ol bos
tilitics in Jxiil, ho was on dutv in
Texas. New Mexico, and on tho Pa
cific coast, during which time he rose j
to the grailo ot t tiptain ot Cavalry, porters oi tmr. r.ngnsn, oi v onnecu
In tho Into war, General Stoneman will oc found at this hotel princi
was a disLint'uished bnd cllicient offi. pally. '- At tho Southern and Now
cer in tho Federal Army, lie was
chiefly engaged in tho army of Vir
ginia, conducting numerous raids,
some of which wrought serious inju
ry to tho Confederate ruuso. In
lxiit, ho commanded an expedition
undertaken with a view to the release
of tho AnuVrsoiivillo, prisoners, in
whieh attempt he- wtts captured in
Middle Georgia, and kept a prisoner
for several months.
Since the surrender, ho has been in
command, fiint of the Department of
Tennessee and Cumberland, and,
since December ISoVi, has had charge
of the District of lK-tcr.sburir. In
this position, bo has won tho esteem
of tho people over whom ho was call
ed to rule, by his moderato and gen
tlemanly ' conduct. Whatever his
course in Virginia may bo, wo feci
satisfied that our citizens will bo free
I in in tho infliction of llioso outrages
which a Sheridan, a Sickles, or a
Meade have poipctrated upon our un
fortunate Southern sisters. Ho en
ters upon his duties with tho feelings
of our pcoplo enlisted in his favor.
e trust he may do nolhini; to shake
their confidence.
It is a singular coincidence that
General Stoneman is a native of the
the same State and county ns his im
medinti predecessor,' (ieneral Scho
fiold. Lynchburg Republican.
KsrAPF from tiif. Gravi. The
Cleveland 1'laindcalcr tells the follow
ing remarkable story of a case which
it says happened in that city: "Some
six weeks ago a young lady residing
on Lorain street. Miss Klleu It. White,
was taken ill by what was regarded
by her phj-siciaria as typhoid fever.
For four weeks her condition alterna
ted from belter to worse, wkon about
two weeks since r-ho had a sevcio re-
lapse, sinking irraduailv until it was
thought sho had died, and sho wits 1 older to havo time to perfect thoir
pronounced (lend by her physicians, I manipulations of the country delega
her mother nlonc retusing to" believe ! tions. The admirers of Charles Fran
her dead. Preparations were msde , cis Adams, from Massachusetts, New
lir her funeral, the mother nil the j Hampshire nnd Vermont, w ill repose
time insistiiit; that her dntiirhter was ; their nchinc limbs at the I'larentlen
alive. Sho was to have boon hurried
on Sunday lust, and her narrow es
cape from tho grave is thus related
On Saturday, while one of the neigh-
bors and mother were standing bi
lbo sido of tho supposed corpse, tho
door, which had been lelt open, blew
shut with a loud noise, which hud the
effort of so acting noon the girl ns to
brinir her to. und set her life-blood in '
motion. Sho sprang up and throw- "fill by neclamalioii nnd with tho
ing her nrms around hor mother's j "'in'o unanimity by the Whig Con
neck wept teiirs ot joy over her t s- j reiition in I -S44, w hile the Democratic
cape from tho horrid death of being. Convention of tho same year camo
buried alive The young lady doacrib-1 together with ns much doubt as to a
ed her feelings during her trance, I candidate as may mark tho opening
from w hich it appear she fully real-1 proceedings of tho Convention this
ir.ed all that was going on, but her J"''". Yet when Polk was nominated
will was powerless. Her xittiHtion j J'arty wasj tlioioulily nnd otitliu
appean to havo been ono of perfect , siastirally In nceord, and the randi
happincs, except w hen tho thought . l"l was triiimphsiitly elected. For
of being buried alive possessed her." ll,f instance, it was hardly possible
Tho St. Augustine (Fla-) correspon
dent uf the lloston Post, in a lute loiter,
makes mc'Mion of General Waddy
TonipsiM), as follows: Among the local
celebrities in fact about thoonly one
the city can boast is General Waddy
Thompson, oneo Minister to Mexico,
and one of the wealthiest cilixens of
South Carolina The old gentlemen
had very littlo to do with the late war,
but thotiovcrnmontscized all his prop
erty in South Carolina, and he is now
neurit- ss poor a man a can be found
in the South. He ii but little moro
than a wreck of what ha oneo was,
and his nppouranoe symbolir.es the
ruin. 1 .
(ireelev is intellectnull V exhausted.
.. - . . - 1
iio save he "has no new thonnlit 1
to give tho Seuatu."
The DrmorrnMt .Vatlonnl VKj
rrnHon.
(Jrciit preparations are now being I
matlo tn tins city tor the purpose ot
uccoiuiuoujting uie itumrroiis oeiesa. tlio perusal ol nil wliom it nny con
t inns who aro to bo prxo n t in Now tern : . ... . , .
York during tho first week in July, 1 hope to live to seo tho lime when
from all parts of tho Union, to take it w ill bo considered a ditgraer to io
part in tho deliberations which trail' j sick ; when people with flat tdicsts
result in tho nomination of the npx,ai,j stooping, shoulders will creep
I'rosident and Vice Presidcut of tho S round tho back way, like other vioU
Uniled State on a Democratic n-! tors of know:i laws. . Those w hoii
tionul platform. Tammany Hull will hrrit sickly constilitutioiis,. have my
nccomtnodalo an immense assemblugo
within its capacious walls but ns it is
cumulated that each deleguto will bo
I accompanied on an averugo by ten
friends or backers, it will be neccssa -
' ry to find (juartcrs in other places for
this immense ooilcourso w hen the la-1 conMaiitly Jwtwoen tho confectioner
bors of each day's session aro conclti- ishop and tho dentist's office) who hoi
ded. Irving Hull has boon ongaged : ball ropes and jowala in ilonty, but
by tho Suto Central Committee vfj who owns neither an umbrella nor a
Pennsylvania lor tho convenience of , water proof cloak, nor a pair of thick
the delegation from tho Keystone ; boots : who lies in lied till noon, never
Suto, and .MuMinio Hull will furnish
sleeping quarters for tho entire Pen
dleton escort, which is to number over
Cvo hundred men. The walls ot tho
Academy of Music will oneo again
resound to tho eloquence of Democrat-,
ie orators, and it is also belioved that
the Circus building will bo engaged ; steak, nnti a nice, walk not ride af
for tho necoiiimodalion of outside ter it f Why don't tdio stop muncli
Southern delegations. Tho Kvorett i ing sweet stuff between meals f Why
House will furnish board and lodging! don't fho go to bed at a decent time,
to two hundred and fifty delegates I and lead a clean, healthy I fcf The
and their friends from Maryland nnd j doctors and confectioners liavo riden
other liordcr States. Tho Hancock Jin their carriages-Mong-enough, let
men will congregalo at tho Aslor tho butchers und shoemakers take a
Houso in large numbers, and ncgotia-1 turn at it. A man or a woman who
lions are now going on with the pro- j "can't tat," is never sound on any
prielors of this hotiso and delegations question. It is wasting btvalli to con
front Illinois and Connecticut. The
Connecticut men have a desiro to so-
euro tho Indies ordinary for a caucus
room to meet in Five hundred delo-1
gates and their frionds nre expected
...v-i ,. ht i,,.i.n v.'.,-,,,
at tho Astor House. Acx-ominodations
have been made at tho St. Nicholas
Hotel fof twelvo hundred persons theories, because their internal works
who arc expected to be present ot the aro In a stato of physical disoruiinir.a
t n. i -i - . .. .i .! . ... . .
Convention. Tho Chaso men and sup
York hotels preparations oi a grand
scale aro being perfected for delegates
from tho border and Southern Slates,
and the denizens of these hostclriej
will once moro behold tho familiar fa
ces of staunch Sou'-hern democrats.
Tho Kverett Houso is negotiating
with the Vermont delegation, and it
is probable that tho Green Mountain
boys will bo found hero in large num
bers. Tho Pendleton men will aggro.
Cato themselves at the Filth Avenue
Hatch The irrepressible, indefatiga
ble, nover-to-bo-bcuten Col. Wooley,
of Cincinnati, who had tho honor of
kicking Butler some few weeks since
in Washington, and who now is endu
ring imprisonment for his country's
soke, has secured rooms for tho West
Virginia delegation at tho Fifth Ave
nue Hotel. The Now York Suto
delegation, ntinihcring sixty-five per-
nuns, iiinronnieil oj -n r. .nmiiui rf. i u
den, w ill stop at the iflh Avenue 1
Hotel, as will also twenty-six delegates i
from Indiana, headed by their chair-1
man, J.afayclto Devlin. Tho Illinois
delegation of thirty persons, under
the chari'o of Mr. Slorer, of the Chi-
cago Tunes, and the Ohio delegation
of forty-two persons, w ith their gal
lant chairman,- General G. W. Mc
Cooke, will also occupy quarter at
the Fifth Avenue Hotel. Committee j
and caucus rooms have been engaged
at the holds named from theurst day
of July until tho close of Congress,
which will begin its session on the -llh
of July. It will cost each delegate
about seven dollars a d.iy to live in
this city during tho convention, in
cluding tho necessary trifling expens
es of tho barber's and boot black fees,
nnd ear faro. Many leading statcb
mrn and politicians hvo engaged
rooms at the different hotels from the
twentieth and twenty fifih of June
until tho close of the convention, in
Hotel. Tummany Hall will bo fully
ready by tho 2,'ilh of June, and the
inauirurul, or dedicatory ceremonies
w ill be, tho most imposing description
I KaI...I,I in V,.u. V,.h1. ..I'
mliti-
cul nature. X J'. IForW.
Tho apparent unanimity of the nom
nation of (encral drant is of no po
"tmal signihcaneo. t lay was nnnu
ror any convention io Bssemoic wun
more "must" candidates before it than
the Pcmocralio Convonlion of IHb'Z.
Hut when Pierco wis nominated
against Scott, the conrjucrorof Mexico,
there was "unanimity" onotigh to
enablo him to carry evory Slate in
tho Union, excepting four
A man named Mose Johnson was
murdered on Thursday or Friday last, j
in his own houso in Brook field, Madi-1 Tint Cakpidati. Gonoral McClel
son county, Now York, and his body ;lan advises tho I lomooraoy to nomi
east into a well. Ha wa first robbed i natosome first-close man, a rocognltod
and thon hatchnrod with an ax. I and accoplablo statesman. Every
m tm m . I .rood Democrat will atcroe with "I jitLlo
Twenty-three, young men were or.
dainnd priests In tbti Catholirt Chnrch
V iiithon UcFMrlwid. nt Trov. On
ISnndsv. and nearlv ono hundred olh. I
J t s
ers were odmilted to denronshirt and
.minor oraers. .
t'athloiuible inmlidtum, ;
Fanny Kern almost always writes
prnctieatly and to tho point.. .The
following from her pen is well worthy
sincerest pityi 1 uy reqsoot one
lavor oi them, thai they ceaso perput
! uatinr thoiusclves till thrv aro tihvsi-
cully on a sound basis. But a woman
j i,at laces so tiiHit that sho irHtba
, only by a raroaecident j whovibrates
exorcises, and complains of "total
wnnt of appetite," save for pastry and
pickles) she is simply n diogusting i
nuiiMtnco. Sentiment is all very nice,
but, wore 1 a man, I would bewuro of
woman taut "eouliln t eat. V by
don't sho take a nico littlo bit of boot-
verso with them. They tako hold of
everything by tho wrong handle. Of
course it makes them very mad to
whisper pityingly, "dyspepsia." when
they advance somo distorted opinion;
un-j- uui iiiiuu nuinu
but I always do It.
jng in muddlo my
1 hey are not go-
mr brain with their
lion. J.cv mem iro into a mnaiie asv-
lum and bo properly treated till
they can learn hovr they aro put to
gether, and know how to manago
themselves sensibly.
How I rejoice in a man or woman
with a chest ; who can look the sun in
the eye, anil step off as if they had
not wooden legs. It is a rare "sight.
If a woman now has an errand round
tho corner sho must have a carriage
to go there; nnd tho men, more dead
than alive, so lethargic are they with
constant smoking, creep into cars
nnd omnibuses,', and curl up in a cor
ner, dreading nolhini; so much as a
littlo wholesome exertion. The moro
"tired" they arc, the more diligently
they smoke; liko tlio Women. who
drink perpetual tea "to keep them up."
Keep them up! Heavens! 1 am fifty-five,
and I feel half tho titno as if
I were just made. To bo soro I was
born in Maine, whero the timber and
the human race, last ; hot on'f cat
pastry, nor candy,'. nor ice cream. I
don't drink tea hah! I walk, not rido.
1 own stout boots, and pretty ones
too ! I have a water proof cloak, nnd
no diamonds. I liko , a nico bit or
beefsteak, anybody else who wants it
may eat pap. I "gu'lo bed at ten,
and pet ui at six. I dash out in the
rain, because it feels good on my face.
I don't caro for my clothes, but I wilt
bo well; and after I am buried, I warn
you, don t let any fresh air or surt-
light down on my coffin, if you don't
want mo to get up.
Mrs Wastih. The groat want of
this ai;e is men Men w ho aro not
for sale. Men who' sro honest sound
from centro to circumference, true to
tho heart's core. Men who will con
demn wrong in a friend or foe, in
themselves us well as in other. Men
whoso consciences aro as rtcady
as tho needle to the pole. Men who
will stand for tho right-if tho heav
ens totter ami tho' earth rccsl. Men
who can tell tho truth and look
tho world nnd tho devil right in the
eye, .Men that neither brag nor run.
Men that neither flag nor flinch. Men
who can havo couiago without w hist
ling for it, and joy. without shouting
to bring it. Men in whom the cur
rent of everlasting Lifo runs still and
deep and stroic', Men to Isrgo for
se.clsriun limits: nnd too stronir for
sectarian bunds. Men w ho do not
strive, nor cry, nor cause their vet - s
to ho liennl in the meets, but w ho
will not fail nor bo discouraged until
judgement be set in the earth. Men
wIhi know their message and tell it.
Men who know their place nnd fill it.
Men who mind their own business.
Men who will not lie. Men w ho aro
not too lazy to work, nor too proud
to bo poor. Men who arc willing to
eat what they havo earned, and wear
what they have paid for. Investiga
tor. At tho Dry Tortngas the heads of
the prisoners aro shaved and they la
bor under a torrid sun on a sand-bank
in the midst of tho ocean, with halls
and chains about their limbs. The
officers who command at thai fortifi
cation are amonahlo to the laws of
noilhor God nor man. Colonel Gron
sel was lied up by his thumbs and treat
ct with every species of cruelty and
barbarity. No one interfered. Tho
laws were silent. The man that en
ter there leaven liberty, justice, and
; hope behind.
Mao" on thr point. - Wewantnocir-
ens ridors; neither ia the Democratic
nrtT dAnirouiwnriilnf&linrrtii tlm pMaa .1
Unnev man !. '
1 J .,t,r. f'iiit
lanrl hrainao,iA,.K e,l1t-. h. tu.t.
of his own" -1
j I ngraltfut nor.
i The mourning crowd which follow-
cd Kx President Jiuchnnitn n !m rti-
, ral grave wus eompoded of varied ma
teriuls. Democrats and I!cpubliens,
Radicals and Conservatives were
there. , Neighbors and friends, and
those who wero neither pemniul nor
political friends were thero. , Old men
who wero cotuiuporuries willi Mr.
Buchanan, and young men ai.d boys
who on ! thought of him as of the
venerable man whoso presence, with
his imposing figuro and his gray hairs,
was so fauiilliur in the streets of Lan
caster. There was many a homely
tear shed as tho crowd of neighbors
passed through tho hall and by his
co din at Wheatland. .But one man
was -aof- Uioro, and ho ono of whom
tho dead man in life had been the
persistent benefactor. That man is
John W. Forney.. There is a picture
of Landsecrs- litmilisr to us all in en
graving of "the shepherd's only
Mouraor;1' a noblo hound stretched
in aorrow on his muster's oollin.
Fow can look
of the heart.
at it without a spasm I concealed ft om our view. Abolition
Forney himself, who ists themselves Tvmild shrink hack in
is profuse, in sentimental tears, lias
I no doubt wetit at it without a
thought of the tei'l ihlo illustration il
ifivcsofhis ingratitude. Weru there
in tho elements of "Forney" any of
tho noblo instincts of the animal race,
with which ho seems to be associated,
ho would havo flung himself on Mr.
litu liniiiin's eofiin and wept bitter
tears of self reproach. Within its
narrow limits lay tho patrou of his
childhood, his youth u'nj early man
hood, his unpaid creditor for mony
generously loaned to aid his cirly en
tcriirises, tho U'usteo of his wil'j and
children. For thirty years of his rest
less lifo Mr. Iiuchaiiaii wus bin friend,
and il was only when the horac-lecch ,
claimed too muoli that ho was shaken
off. ' Ny, moro, such was the infatu
ation of tho Kx-Prvsidcnt for this
Lancaster boy and man, for such For
ncy is, that ho at times alienated Let
ter and truer friends by his persistent
favor, llcoflcred him oflico farahove
his tlescrl, ana would, we believe,
havo dono more for hi in had
1101 liis
Southern friends, in lsoU, rcmoiistra
tod against contact between them
selves and him. Tho Jamison letter
was writtcti nnd divulged in New Or
leans. From that moment ho turned
venomously both on tho President
and tho South, and h persisted ever
since; and while his bouefactor lay
calmly in fresh deuth in tho houso
in which Forney wus once a welcome
guest, tho latter was addressing a
brutal negro mob in Washington, uud
stimulating thorn to outrage on his
own race. Hut perhaps it is well that
Forney did not venture to Lancatlor.
There wero worm hearts beating in
the dead man' boighborhood and
uono knew better than Forney that
his presence would have been unwel
come, and might have been perilous.
The. ancient sacrificed cocks to a
I healing deity. Tho inodurns might
have taken it into their heads to offer
up another creature to tho lkMnotl of
ingratitude. .V. Y. World.
The Pantai oo. We always had
an idea that in on went on their mus
cle, but tho tights disclose the fart
that "there's nothing in them," and
that our young men, especially tho
f...l.ir,tmr,lo isnninniJ-tKotn ata-ni.
i.i. ,i,n...n.o,l . Ti.i.t. .i,,....i.ka.kH'rW mcPtioiis the. suppressed re
. r . -
"false calves," or something of that
kind. Such diminutive, minute, In
significant, littlo spindle-shanks as
they sport np and down oar streets,
is truly alarming, and if tho fashion
should increase, the High Constable
will hsve his timo fully oct npicd in
arresting them for having no visible
mentis of support. How they get
tho tnrnnl things on is a wonder to
ns. They can't pull them over their
heads as tho ladiesputon their hoops,
that's certain, and how they got such
pedals through such narrow pipestom
icsl msccaronies, is surprising. Wo
often hnd owasion to speak of Indies'
fashions, bnt we esnnot mil to mind
any that aro as ridiculous ss these
abominable tights, n til ess it bo that
ol tight luring. Whoever started thi
absurd fishion should bo made wear
them all his lite.
Tho nprrs"rleirus"lhnl or 7,000
white men in Memphis, 4,0lK) are d!s-
A . 1 1 .. 1 ; . - a
ranciiisru. ,My ,m0 w.t.to ,nHn in
t.renty is allowed to vote. "Allowed h
tnvote!" What a sentrnco is that !
How long onght the infamous sr-otin.
drels bo ' allowed" to live who attempt
to deprive white men of toting, and
plv, that privilege only to negroes
Congress has no more right to say
who shall or who shall nol vote in
Tennessee, than it has to do the
same in New York, br any' other
State,
When Southern bullies in Congress
insulted each other, in t'mes'past.they
went quietly outside nnd squared ae
counts to iho annoyance of nobody.
Now, however, when tho follows of
"grand moral "ideas' have a falling
out, they slund nnd blackp-liard each
other for hours; fill the ttliolo country
:. 1. .1 1 1. r .!.:. .
n 1 1 pi 1110 nil-lit 11 01 mi ll iiuAuiun r.-
halations, ami when exhausted of filth,
eonfe; publicly that they aro both
blackguard and liurs.
There isa men In Bridgeport, Conn.',
over seventy years nf aire, "who h,!
spont but sic and a quarter cents for
liiinor during his lifetime, and that i
amount was assessod npon liim ataj
millitary parade to pay for wetting
down the officer's commission. :
Brimstone Hrownlrwr Is recoverinir.
f1nd tn bear il. A Wis AhrtiiTi! lits f.ir :
iwtt Koinm f, 1,n TLi.il QlAr.rta rit
ti i.,.i.?..r. 'r... . t....i.j .'.
in-p iiiuii-i UPiin I'Pi a ii'inun-ii ii-iiis
ii,.ni,.n..i.t ... 1,.. 1
will eofHemri an1 drar.?. tlietn.
Henry f 'ny'a Prophecy. .
Henry Clay,in hisielnbrsled speech
before tho Senate, delivered February
7, 13'.), uttered the following predic
tion. It is no lesn prophetic thun was
j the' prediction of Daniel Webster in
regard to tho results ot abolitionism.
M c commend 11 to the atlcnlion of
the negro-lovers of to ilay : lt
"The .Aliolilionisfs, let me suppose,
snecoed in their present alms of uni
ting tho inhabitants of tho tree States
as one man against the inhabitant of
tho slave Stales. . A virtual
dissolution of tho Union will havo al
ready taken place, while the form of
its existence remains. The most val
unbleelomentsof union mutual kind
ness, the feelings of sympathy, tlio
tValerutel bonds which now happily
unite us, will hsve lieen extinguished
torever. One section will stand hi
menacing and hostile 'array against
tho other. "The collision of opinion
will be quickly followed by tho WnsA
of arms. 1 will not nlteiniit to tie-
scribo sconce which now lie happily
dismay anil horror at the contempla
tion ot desolated fields, conflagrated
cities, murdered inhabitants, anil ihu
overthrow of the fairest fubrieuf.hu
man government that ever rose to an
imate civilir.ed man. lam,
Mr. President, no friend of 6luvery,
- but 1 prcler tho liberty of
my own country to that of any other
" , . J
people, nrnl llie liberty ol my own
nice to that of any other race. The
liberty of the descendants of Africa
in tho United States, " - if il
wtrd possible, could only bo estab
lished by violating tho incontestable
owers af tho Slate, and subverting
tho Union.' And beneath tho ruins
of tho Union would be bnricd, sooner
or later, tho liberty of both races."
Simmabv WoliK Two profession
al htrse thieves Mole a valuable ani
mal of Ktiah Hays, of Cogan Station,
on Monday night, nrnking their ap
pearance in this city at an early hour
on Tuesdav moromg. As soon as pos-
niblo they mitdo sale of llioirropcrt',
recctvinir 11011 at too bandi ot Joseph
Ilaer, who keep, s Jivery sublo in
the rear of the old t piled Status ho-
tel.' Pocketing the money, the thieves'
nui 1 in vnniAiin v iiiv v u j nuiii, I
starteil off cn tbe car, one going to
Lock Iluvcn, tho other in the direc
tion of Harrisburg. When it was as-,
ccrliiincd that the horso was stolen,,
parties at onto made efforts to over
take the guilty actor. Telegraph
dispatches passed np and down tho
wiitta, ono ot "7liifh was instrumental
in causing, through tho efficient ex
ertion of Const ablo Wtstbrook, of
Lock Haven, tho arrest of ono of
them. Messrs. Van Busktrk'and Bacr
loft on t'10 H rst train for that point,
and will no doubt securo the party.
As tho other is known at sight, wo
would pot give much for his chance
if found within a hundred miles of
tho 'Hverlasting State." HWiVims
port Gatrttc.'
Jlr.MoviNU Seals rnM Piin.ic He
corps. Tho vacating of the War De
partment by Stanton removes the seal
irom several important official docu
ments which have been withheld from
the people and even from Congress.
Prominent among these records, tho
M rOlllllielll ttlllongl
ItHfa'ailpflainLa aiwinil A aits at inn -tt .
hfi VI ' 1 is a nil ifiiva uir-n'uv'u.i v v-
ton rxpotlition up Hod river, which
hue never yet been permitted to sco
daylight, and tho report of General
W. F. Smith, Senator Hcverdy John
son, and James T. Brady on the evil
administration of affairs under Butler
and Banks, in tho State of Iiouisiana.
Tho presant mania in Congroaa or
sending fur persons and papers would
bo cured by tho production and pub
lication, n speedily as possible, or
these nnd somo other records which
Stanton has o long suppressed
Buffalo Courier. ; ,
DlSTUr.SSlNU Ol'I'l'RRI nck. On lost
Tnesdsy nleht about 12 o'clock the
hnnsc of W illiam Gorton, in Hook
wheat Yalley, ulioul two miles from
Kieli tit'Ul, in Junialti county, was dis
covered to be on fire. Two children,
a girl aged IS and a boy aged C years,
were sleeping in a room by themselves
anil the fire had made such headway,
that all- efforts to rescue them wero
d , lhg n(l,.rib,v
, , "'t, ' . ,
perished. Both Mr. nnd Mrs. Gorton
were badly burnsd in their efforts to
reach and save tl.s children. Il is not
known bow the fire originated. The
hotiso was entirely consumed. This
is tme of lhmosi heart-rendering ac
cidents w have ever chronicled, and it
ha cast a deep gloom upon that com
munity. Miflntown Kcj'uMican.
Stanton ami Dajton. Tho i!oh
tnstiii con.ity tIIl.) Cons-ffufibn sys :
Danlon was one of the bloody tyrants
of the French revolution. Stanton is
Secretary of War ! A person in a
vision saw both of tbcsf worthies in
hell, and thufidesrrihes the interview:
".luilt-d Klant-in to Paiilun,
o, boa do ypn Ho
b'rttwurrl 0 an I oli la Sintitoit. . . ;
'Uko Ilia Pavilair yuaf' :
Kasnrd Statilipn to Pnnlan, .
' II. don't yon know who r
BnissTd Dantoa to ittanton,
,. , I II I d iif 1 di!'"
It seems strange that Danlon
rowod any knowloilo of Stanton;
but thin is aoconnted for Kiaiiso uf ;
tho hunpn of ..Mis. Surratt. j
--
1 he returns front the county ohi-
tions in South Carolina bold lust week,1
show tho ltudieal havo aaiu carried !
most of the Counties, but by reduced
mnjorities. Many counties in tho in
tenor u-bu-h iraetw luJit-pil
tn 4 iwt I ltntti ttAttAil lliA llAai.Atai
:'CATlHfARES. nrOOlM.RI.EIOIIi la.
,..... .':..t i , i m .1..
ippiiim ttiitn.- in huiiiimii uirp mr
.;.i'uli .t.u 1.. . -
-lioii'ies. Thin. at tnAtna .- ...
' Jhr ftrnrnrtd Vfjrubllfiiii.
i . i.
f ' 1t t f wl- riftt. f -,
If rt f Iti r-ef V itrra t,.itil , tf
11 pid allt'i tlin-e mpd l-.-f..f i frp.Ml.i J
Il i-iiil afnt Itc t jij'ifpii"S f.f .It moiith...,. I SO
Half, of A4wrtllnc,
Tranlt nl tdtrt I "rst al pr ettaet f 11 )ipe tr
kM, II ItHir ma..... S
or eat b 9n9l inteiirit..
Aitminiiirniwa' n4 Ks-it'r' initla 1 s
Aailiiart' Hfttw t M
I'aati-pMa ana traf I
ii-.luli,p aeMrva. J ''
l.nol .!!,-, ., low U
OMluaf7 "is k, star lr lion, Y tma...... S
i'roiciiiunal I'ar4a, I v-rar OS
THSM ismtrmrtiKSTft.
t t'tirr.. t mi i is.lumn S
J Kiirrr IS Sli I wlnHt 4 OS
1 llPiim 'i I I n.ua4n Ji
, , ', Wir. i
oi i.
Siuglt aairr. ?2 .''0 M ti'iirri, jrfl,trff I 73
3 .uirr, periiirc, 'J 01 Ottr S, firr nira.. 1 1
- . MaiaiM- ,
i tW, li ar I'M,, I il) I i .hot. T or Irw.ii il
aal, 3i lit Ism, I t I abprtt, U t Irta, I 10
Orrr 2i ol each si lmrt tt art nlr rata.
KO. n. OOlll.AMiKIt,
.Ml . UJIIar mt l'mprktor.
Van jn3 3its.
mvim ajd' siiok suiir.
TEDWARD MA"drC
Oa Market ureal, nppiuita tbe hrpul,li-n"
' - - Oflisa. -...., i
T
UK proprittor baa antarcd Into the BOOTti
la laurailna4 aat tn ba oufbiaa titkar la qual.
it? or rie fur die aork. Sraial aitation
III aa pat la aaaaafaraanac aaaa work. . i
kaa haaS larra lut of ICraacb Kip -salt
Calf Bkina, of the ?ary ken quality. The eiil
rane of CltwrtaU ai aiaiaHr are raapeetfulljr
iBTitad lo ira kiai uial. Ma e barge Ut rillt.
or.' if
- PEACE lWUIMEI). .
THE WAR OVEK II CLEARFIELD.'
KNOX TOWNSHIP QUIET. ' -.
yearly all the Contrabands going haeti
to thrir "Id maulers; but 'nary ons
going to old Mntaehusctts, wher$
' they were loved so long and sit well.
. .1
IS fpequfio of the akoTr fasti. F. SHORT,,
of the t-14 "Short Sb Shop," aoold an-
tiaatiar la ! ejaiMnsn pau'int, sad the aopl
f:L,'' , , 7 , J " .ft . ""fil
firat rata lot of aiHid uatrrinl. jn-t rr red frnnt
tba l eal, ana ie priMied ama-ft aotiaa la nuska
and mrnd Hote and Shoe, at bij sew abptp ia
tlrahana'a row. He fa ntieflod that ba caa pleaaa
all.(onlrr It might breome intaaaal loaal 1U7
at bona patrinta. ) lleia prrpareii loaellloafor
Ca.b or Country T"n"tiiee. Pont fbrirat lha
Shin ant aaor Inhaam a Urahaa'a Kara,
on Market atrt, Cararlald, I'a, ud kepi a
fellow eoiataoaij called
)yV7-f . t T "SHOITT. t
DAMF.L CONNELLY, ' ' ;
Bool and Shoe .Manufacturer'
HAS ja.t rcreirad a n lot of rrearb CAlf,
K1VH, and la lw prrparad tn aannfac.'
are are'rlhpoc la ku liaa at tba lowetl Saras.'
Ha will warrant bia aork to be a. rrprrtantta.
Ha raapactfullj aolirita a rail, at kit ehop tea
Market atreat. aeaoad U'f aiaalaf Iba paotufiea,
akera ba will da all in hit power to render aatia-faction-
Bona Boa (laitrr or on Sand.
-aijS.'Sr.y - PAKHL CtrXMiLLTiit
JEW BOOT KM) SHOE SHOP,'
, ., ,.....,.. .
... . ,"
Mun'i-:xiiVii.LR.
atrlf etartrd a aaer
boat and Kbo ab in fnrwrae.ille. aa
Main etreet, fr-t,otta jubet.h H. train'a Drua
flora, rfpittfolly annnanrea to Iba pafcn that
ba la prvfparad to aiaea aruraall etylrinif Boats
and sbora. and rrrrprihin; in bia ln.s, oa aborb
notira. lie alao krena en band a goad aaaott.
aient of raadj-autda work, akira ka will aell
ekaap for caab ar eoaatrw pra-iirar. -ts-tl7-tf
!:l.-t) LKWIS ?. R0S!:
Jietrls.
CLEARFIELD HOUSE,
- . (Furwerly k-pt by Ja. II. Ualrr.)
, Front Mtrret. rhlllp.barr;. Prim 'a.
"ill luifiaarh any ona arbn aaye wa fail
IT In Kr direst and petrosal nitration tit
all anataaaara. ar tail ba mil tkrai to rejaiaa
oer a well furairhed laMa, with rlean rooaa
and new r-rda, wbara all nay frel nt bnmi and
tba weary b nt rt;- Vrw etah'trr attached.
1 JOHN MM,AliuULlJi it CO., "
Tbilipbarg, June II, IsM. Proprietor.
i. W. ' WALLACE . . THOU, u. snAW
AMERICAN HOUSE,. ,
,. LathrraburK, ( Irarfirld Cw. Pa.
rIBIfj well known and I-rtf snabli.hrd Hotel,
i formerly kept l.y R. W. Moor, and lartetlf
by W at. fcrbweai, arn baa be so Isawd fnr a taraa
ol yeare by lb andrilrnr I, to which lha attrn
tton at lb trarellnr puhllo ia aaw tailed, and at
liberal aliar of public ptrona; ia aaliriusl. ,
aprlS. SS-ly.pd SHAW A WALLACE. "'
JONESES-HOTEL.
.'f' (roaacnLT arosa't,) 1 -". s f
rornar af Paalb and Canal 8trcpts, (at Ka h-ad,f
M ARRI8BURU, P.
taar!-3ia:pd j J. II. JONE, Prop s. J
TH E WESTERN HOTEL "
I , CLFAttriKI. P, FA.
fpilK aabarribfr hafts; braaad far a term af
L yeera thi well known Hotel, (kept 1'pt ataay
jear by Mr. Lanlsh.) and ra-nltsj ami refars
ished It tbrna(bani, ia prepared tn rater
tain traveler and lb publio ranrrallr apoa
trruia ll la hoped lik afirsahla 1 both patraat
ad 1 roprl.tor. - HI TABLH and BAH will
b upi lied with tba bait lha n aiket affortlaj
nd a paint will be ipared oa hli part to add la
ka eosTcalatiea and tear,,rl af hit fwawta.
l li rry suable ia aire attarhrd t lb aa.
tatiltphmeiit. lloma, BDrrlrt. t., furrilihrd
aw rkart tit ar ptrataie rakea any aval
deeirrd, JAMKS A. RTI.VU,
'" Propilatar. 1
SUSQUEHANNA" HOUSE?
t'urwriiMllle, t Uai field rounty, r. ,
rpiHSoUan.l well atkliabd llstal, WeantU
1 lully aitaaied na th bank af the Sasqne.
hanna. ia lha biiroirh r Cnrwoa M lie. ba
lrad fi.r urn of yrara by lha andrtaijaed
It baa been entirely reSlled, and ia now open ta
Iba paMIr federally aad tho tratallinf caaa
ttty in pariiculat. No pain will bo prd ta
render t ustit eonfotiahl while tarrying at this
bnoaa. Ainpl VUblina; roo.n far tba ftoaamnta
datina of toaaia. Ckargea modrala,
a.iTli tf ' WM. M. JKKFRIKS. -
RAILROAD HOUSE. ,
Maim STBitr, ruiLtrsil'Rn, tk. ;
TTI1C ndrrlaed kaep annaMatly aa had
th aaetaf l.ianra Hi tnhla ia alwayl
eupplird with the b. l ib taaikrt atf.irj. Tha
trarlinK public will do well to le biai-a aall,
ao?l,'. ROHhKT LLOYll.
SUSQUEHANNA HOUSE
COXKSTOWX, ItAl'I'HIK Co., TA. ,
rpilE nTi Irriira.d akr iMa foethol of In-.
I JL fnrajin tba l atmnra af ClrarfceU ewanty,
! tbatba haa rrltted atd fa-opened tba botal fur
; faeriy krpl ky B. Skfeinrr, at Ciuteatowa, wkara
. . ha will taka apaeial pain W reader aatiafaoliaa
lltia- I to all a hit faror kirn wiik thrir natronata. Ha
' Hnw H A mcka out f is tlar 4
8 "Tr'be7 1 ""IokValk
f ' . . '
PiVPTinP AVT1 CTrTPTT CTTDP
wahxiiauxi Ainu otiXilun oSXJ.
, IN ChRA lFI KM), Ta.
(Tmmediatriy la rau of Mchio 6hp,) .
r!S bribf would pfall Infurailha
citiiena i f Clearfuld. and lb ruhlnj ia aaa.
aral.that balapreprrad I daallkiadtaf warkaa
... . w
- p. p-t'-n n"-i--w at,,, ra- raaaonaoKt 14ml, aa
la warkaisniika manner.
trr ..' J'T'1' " T.:?..-T