niii: 'cmitimo nmnLicAr ' BlTA HI Ittlll) in lilt, Tbi largest circulation of any New, piper in North Central i Pennsylvania. ; Terms of Subscription. 1 paid la I'I'um, or within 1 aunlhi .., (M) U paid after and before Booth! ft All U paid after the expiration of .mill... 3 00 ! Bates of Advertising. Imliieet adeertltetnenu, per iquarsof 10 linn or I.M, t timet or lew m f v For each lutisoquent lueertlon.. 6(1 itloainlltratori' end Eieeutnra' notice. (o Auditor!' aollwi 1 jo i Ceatloni mil E.traye 1 it piMolutlon notloel. 00 '"' rfealiunal Oardl, 1 year I 00 Leal a.tleei, per lino 14 I TEARLY ADVERTISEMENTS. 1 14 sere. M 00 i eolumo..., I oolutun..,. I eolutaa..,. ...1 3 00 ... 46 00 ... 10 00 I ifioru.... ..I J 00 ,.30 00 lour... I Job Work. I BLANKS. Iiaf'e oiiro.. 2 iO I t q uirea, pr. qulre,$l 71 ; I aire., pr, quire, 1 00 Oeer 0, por quire, 1 SO I HANDBILLS. ; t iaeet,IS or lau.tl 00 I i ohoot, I or Uoi.ti 00 ) 1 ibeet, Mar leal, a 00 I I .heet.15 or le.r.,10 00 I Beer li of OMh of abora at proportionate rate.. I OEQ. B. GOODLANDEK, Editor and Proprietor, t . .. (Cards. faun t. uici. nun rtr.if.ro. WALLACE &, FIELDING, ATTORN KY8- AT - LAW, ClearBeld. P. dr-Lafnl bu.ineffl of all kind, attended to I wltk promptneri and fidelity. Offitre in rreid-nea I ef Williaiu A. Wallaoe. jaol2:70 A. W. WALTERS, ATTOtt.NEV AT I. AW, Clearfield. Pa. lOfflea Id tbe Court llouaa. der3-l y H. W. SMITH. ATTORNEY -AT-LAW, J. SI Cleat field. Pa. ly WILLUU A. WiLl.iri. t. (LAIC Wll.Tin.. WALLACE &, WALTERS, Kaal Es!t AftnU and Conveyancers, Cleirfleld, Pfiin'a. tVftral Estate bought and snlil, titles exam iaad, euDreyaticri pre jiartd, tales j.niij, and itinu raaoss taken. O.Loa in our building, nearly opposite Court House. janl.TO ISRAEL TEST. ATTtlKN K Y AT LAW, Clearfield, Pa. Office la the Curt lluuae. tJyll.'fT JOHN H. FULFORD. ATTORNEY AT LAW, Clearfield, Pa. Olee aa Market it . o' er Hartawick A Irwln'e Drug ritora. - Prompt attention fieen to the .eeurinr af Buanty, Claim., Ae., and to all legal buiineae. Mereh !., l7 It ROBERT WALLACE, attoiix ey - a r - la w, waiLceton. ciearfieM County. Penn-a. t. All legal bufineM promptly attended to. WALTER BARRETT, ATTtlKNEY AT I.AW. 43ea aa Beeond St., Clearlield, Pa. tiiJl," I JOHN L. CUTTLE, ATTORNEY AT LAW ; And Real ltale Affent. Clearfield. Pa. Offi,e "n Tbrti t'reet. it Oherrt A 'alpi. fltr-Keepertfiilly ffrr lit a eervtree In eelltni j and huytnt; lni in ClaarHnld and adjttnin "title; and with aa etpertnea nfaivr twentf ? Taara aa a anrvayor, fleiitart faitntfelf tat Hp pan rio'tar tatlafaettnn. febt.'S if WM. M. McCULLOUGH, ! ATTl'ItXtY l LAW, Clearfield. Pa. ' alea aa Uarket etreot one dnr eaet of the Clear- eld County Hank. ioay,'0( John R. Orria. C. T. Alexander, ORVIS & ALEXANDER, ATTnl NKY A r LA w. '. riillefonte. Pa. eepll.'DS-y DR. AI THORN, PHYSICIAN k SURGEON, II AVISO located at Kylertown, Clearfield eo Pa., offer hia pmleaamnal atTviera tu tbe ipla of the furrou riding ovuntry. Hept, JV, 6-y DR. J. F. WOODS, F II Y 8 1 0 I A N A MlKntllN. HarinK renored to Ananill-, Pa..rpra hia profeaaiwnal acrnoea to the people of that place and i be aurrountng eountry. Ail ealla pnmiptly au tend ad to. Ue. 3 (ttu . J. H. KLINE, M. D.s PHYSICIAN & SU!.GEON nAVINU toratrd at Pnnfield. Pa.. otTrra hit proteMinnal aerrieoa to the eti 1e of ttmT iv'v ati'l aurrouudiiig country. All call pfntpity attended tn. et. I A ll. JEFFERSON LITZ, rntsici as i surg kos. HAVINO loratrd at O.renla. Pa . ..flrr. hi. profeeelonal -eriiee. to the pet.pte of that lave and earroundlnff nuntrT. aM.AH ealle pr-imptly attended to. Offee and reeienea aa Cornn at., formerly neoupitd by Dr. k Hoe. eally DR. J. P. BURCHFIELD. J.;ta Surgeoa of the KJ,t Keg; ta ni, Penneyleanta VoluDieen, aeint rowm-d fr,.ai tbe Army, M. orofeaalunel aervira. I. eitieu f ClearHeld a un'y. -Profalnl ealle promptly atten led to IB- oa Seeoad .treel. Or. Wood.. formorlr oeont-leo ny f.ri,'SSU DR. T. JEFFERSON BOYER, rnvsiriAN AMI ntl.rON. Rerond Street. Clearfield. Pa. r,TIaving permanently loealed, he now trTert f professional jerrif to the eitisenaof CtearfM-rl tad viHnity, and the public generally. AH rails promptly attended to. oetlY 7 F. B. READ, M. D., TIIYSICIAN AND KCRtiEuN, Kvleiiown, Ta. Tlaepaetfully nlfere hie eereieee to tho eillrene of tbe aoeroaadins aono.ee. a,r s Am pd REUBEN HACKMAN, House and Sign Paintor and Paper Hanger, ( Irarfield, Trnn'a. .WH1 eieeute joht ia hie line promptly and la a workmanlike manner. a r4,67 TENTAL FABJNE SHIP. Dr. A. M. HILLS, neelre. t Infurra hie patron., and the nablto goner lly.l at be bsea.eocLled with alio ia tba praetlee of trntletry, S. P. shaw, r. P- s.. Wh I. a tr.1a.te f tho PtUdrl.hta PeMal Collet;., ar.d therefore ha. the hijlieet atteita M of peof-losal ekill. All work d .ne ia tba eflee I will hold taeaoif ti-wnelly roenoaei bi. for balsa done tn toe woei eMfaeir, asaa aar and his.e.t order of iSe nroleetia. Aa aeaabl.ahed praetlee uf w.euy tw . yane. ia thia plana enaaloe ma to apeak to aiy patient. w)k oaoSdaaoa. Vnfefefnente frost a dUtneea ehoald be etade by tetur a lev dai bef.ra ti patient d-eigoe .iiaeany. ' la. a, lT y. II E A GEO. B. Q00DLANDER, Proprietor. VOL.43WIIOLENO.2181. Cards. MRS. S. S. LIDDELL'S MARBLE & STONE YARD, CLEARFIELD, PA. "Fhop on Reed Street, Beer Prnneylranie Hailroad depot. maj lt,'7U:tf. G. H. HALL, PRACTICAL PUMP MAKER, KfiAR CLEARFIELD, PENN'A. "Pumpt ilwayi on band and nitwit to order on bwrt notieo. Pi pel bored on reaionabte terna All work warranted to render aatilarlinn, and delivered if daiired. niT2A:lTpd GEORGE C. KIRK, Juitlet of tko Peace, Surrey or and Cunrejaneer, l utherkhurg, Pa. All (taaineaa Intruited to bim will be pramiiiW a'tanrird to. feraona wiihtrtf to employ a rar vevor will do well to sire biui a call, at he flattere hitnaelf that he onn reader aalitfartioo. Ieedior oonrevanoe, arildea ol apmmpnt. and all leral papera, promptly and neatly executed, marttoyp DANIEL M. DOHERTY. BABBIE & HAIB DRESSER, BKCOMD BTKKKT, jj23 CLLAIII'IUI.D, PA. If CHARLES SCHAFER, LAGER DEER RKEWER, Clearfield, Pa. HAVING rented Mr. Entree' Brewery he hope, by .triet attention to bnnneeo and titv uiatiufaoture of a auporior arliole uf ItEEK to reoetvo the patronage of all tba old and meoy new eu.tomcri. Aus. Zj, tf. SURVEYOR. DKXID ntAMS, Lurl.eraburg. Clearfield Co., Pa., oflera hia aenfi- ai Sureyr In the at end of tbeeounty. All calls will Unattended to promptly, and the chargea moderate. 1;1V;70 SURVEYOR. THE nndereigned offera hie enrvieei ae a Por vryor, and may be fuutid at hie reeidence, in LMwrenee ttiwnrbip. Letter! will reach him di rected to Clearlield, Pa. marT-tr. JAMES MITCllELL. J. K. BOTTORF'S PUOTOURAPII GALLERY. Merket Street. Clnrfleld, Pa. T-CR0MOS MADE A BPECIALTV.- EtlATlVKS made in cl.iu.lv. ai well ae in elear weather. C'lnetentl. on hand a rokI rtinent FRAMES. JtTEIlEOSt'OI'ES and STEREOSCOPIC VIEWS. Frauiea, from at.y etyle ol osouldinf , made to order. apr2-tf THOMAS H. FORCEE, DwULaH IX GENERAL MMUIIANPISE, C.RAIIMT1, Pa. AIm. eitenirt manufacturer and dealer In Pqaare 1 im her and hawed ieutobcrot all kind. VOrdra aolieited and .11 Ml la promptly (.tied. ro. ALaKHT nritar a likiit,. w. ai.bkrt W. ALBERT Sl BROS., Ulnnnfarturera A eitenlre 1eatertin Sawod Lumber, Square Timber, Lo.t WOODLAND, PENN A. sar-0rdn enliet. Ttttl. atl.4 n and reaeunable terme. Addretl Woodland P. O., Clrartleld Co.. Pa. j,J.i.y W ALIlKHT A I!ltl9. FRANCIS COUTRIET, M KUCHA ST. Prenehrllle, i Irarfield Coaiity, Pa epe conetantle on hand a full aaortment of Dry tloode. Hardware, tlroeeriea, and ervthin aeiially kept in a retail autre, whirh will be .old, for eaih. e rbeap ae eteewbere in tbe county. Fmichville, June i", I si.7 I j. C. KRATZER &.SONS, U E I! C 3 A N T 8 , nBALIR. II Dry Goods, Clotlung, Hardware, Cutlery, Queemwara. lirftreriee, Provleieaa and Shingle., Clearlield, Petin'a. rwAt their new .tore mom, an Rerond ftreet, near II. t. Hiflar A lo'e Uerdware .tore M0SHANN0N LAND Si LUMBER CO., OSCEOLA ETEAM XI ILLS, aArrAm-REe LUMBER, LATH, AND PICKETS II. II. SIIILLINGFORD, President, Oo Foeeet PI.. So. 12.'. S. dth .. Phifa. JOHN I.AH.-HK. Sonerintendent le'fi71 Oaeilo Mill", Clearlield eoontT. Pa. SAMUEL I. SNYDER, Practical Watch Maker, Oppneita tbe Court Ilonae, PrcOND 8TBEET, CLEAHFIKLD, TA. r-ff-A! kinda of Watrhra. Cloeka and Jpwelrr promptly repaired, and work warranted tn a;ire ftHtia.artin. amrJ 70 JAMES C. BARRETT, Juatice of th Pvaee and Ltewnacd Conveyancer, l olhrrburix. Clcarflt Id C o., Pa. jt-ftC'illefltiona A rpuiiitanoca nrnmptlr anade, U'l 11 kiiitta of inairuuteuli iaiilHl on nhirt outioe. may 4.7 ut( CON HAD MEYER, In vera tor A Manufacturer of Ih Celebrated Iron Frame Pianos, Ware run tna. No. 711 Arch St., Philadelphia. Ilee rrerirrd the Priie Medal of the Wrld a Great Fihilniiiiii, London, En-. Tbe liielieat 1'niea -wardld when and lure or elbiblUd. E.uMi.heo I" 1 jeli Sm i. aoLioaai aa a. nam canny. HOLLOWBUSH & CAREY, UOOKSELLEIiS, Blank Hook Manufacturers, A N D STATION ERR, SIS Market SI., Philadelphia. n,Per.er Fl"r Fa-k. and Rafe. Fool.n. Letter, Nolo, Wram.iog. Cortatn and a all par.".. fel,5.7ll trr.d NEW 7IAI.111YK lYORHN, CLEARFIELD, TENVA. CALL and one the arw JIAIlIll.F. WORKS, oa Market alroet, oppe.ite tbe Jail. HON I VENTS, GRECIAN TOMIIS, French corenrs, TABLE TOP, MANTLES, OARPEN STATUARY, TERRA CfTTA WARE, HEAD A KmT F-TO.NUS, ' rf rw and beantlfut detifna. All of wbiab will be tuld al rity priewe, ar J.i T"r oent- leaa then any other eeiaMlahment la fhii eonnty. S.ti.fartiim ynaratiteed la all eaeee. Orderf tl.ankfullj neeieed and promptly Slled ia tha beet workanat. -like'maMor. - A. A. GIBSON. Jtate a. Waoaaiu, Afe.! yU '7 R jir iiTii n 1 , u AGRICULTURAL FAIR eighth ANNUAL EXHIBITION or tui CLEARFIELD COUNTY AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY Will bo bald on the FAIR GROUNDS, CLEARFIELD, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, 12th, ISlhnnd 14th OCTOBER, 1870. THE PREUIl'M LIST la pablianed In para phlet form, and can be bad by application to tbe Secretary of the Society, ait her peraonally or by letter. Family Ticket a, during Fair 93.00 Hngle Ticket a, during Fair T5 Wnple AdmUalon Tlrkrfa 8ft TIIL KSltA V rurw of l(KI to ha trotted fur. FRIDAY Para of .' to be trotted for. For condition, entries, Ae, arc pamphlet. It ia to be hoped that Faruiera will take an in- tereet tn thia Exhibition. Ko paioa will be epared hy the oQieert of tbe Hoeiety to make It a credit able on. Judjrea will be announced from the a Laud on Wednesday . jMPrewiume for Flock and Cereal Oraina bar been largely ineraaeed. It. W-.PHFTT, Preaident. A. WRIGHT (.RAIIAM, Beeret,ry. aolO .T.W llOI'ril'.l NEW i;(.HU!! NEW TKICES!!! HARTS0CK & GOODWIN, CURWESSVILLE, PA., Are now raeeirlnf, dlreet from Daltlaaora, Kaw York, Boitoa, Philadelphia and Pltt.borjh, aa Itnnenee atoek of DRY GOODS, CLOTIHN'O, OEXT'S Fri'.NISHIKO 00ODS, IlAtS A CAP.', BOOTS t SHOES. CHINA, GLASS k Ql'EENSWAItB, DAI'.DW ARD, GROCERIES, Ae., Bought at lower prieei tbaa bare beaa aiada ta aoy hooe. In town ilnea the good old day. be fore tha lata ottpleaaantoeaa" all ta be dil triboted to thoa. who vlelt Carwen.rilla for anppllea, in aeeordenee with tbe ,raat eaerlf.ee at which they were boufht Tba Ladlee are partleolarly Inrited ta eall at Hartaork V Cioortwln". Cheap Xtore lo ei amino tha aplendid atoek of DRESS GOODS, TRIM MINGS, SHAWLS, FANCY GOODS, Ae, new oa oihlbllloa. Tlirj Defy Cempellllnn 1 Partial eanaot do tbeaieelvoa Jaetiea la buy. In, tba aeeeeeariae of life without ealltng en HARTSOCK L GOODWIN, CurwensTilla, Pen a 'a. my4.Su. ST0E AMI EAUTIIE.VARE OF EVERT DESCRIPTION! CROCKS! TOTS! CROCKS! I'laher'a Patent Airtight Keif - Healing Fruit (anal IH'TTER CROCKS, with tide, CREAM CHOCKS, MILK (ROCK? APPLE -EfTTER CROCKS-, TICKLE CROCKS, FLOWER PnT3, PIE DISI1E5, STEW TOTS, And a great many other thiney too numerout to mentioo, to be had at FRED'K. LEITZINGER'S STONE - WAKE POTTERY, Cortm ol Chf..y nd Third Ftnti, n.EAKFIKLD. PA. Now Cnleliict ! fOSHANNOS LAND AND LI Uflr.lt com rOSHANNOS I.AM AND LI MBER COM . , rsrl nni r for uwb o- w. ommii of Oaeeola. t learliet,! enooiv. l-a., ano ni-o lore to eait parehaarn wateide tbe lioo.e of .aid horouxh. oareoia i. euuaieo on .no w, o...... Creek, in the neheal portion t the eonnly o( .-i i , .... I . I . i i - A PIMPI.I Railrfoul. where the Mo.hannon and Hearerton I Lranrh rondo intoraeeu It te also ta the heart ol tba Mo.hannon eoal -baeln. and laifro boilioa ol white pine, hetnlnek, ook, and other limber rur eoond it. One of the lariret lofnler aiannfaetur infl .Btahli.hmeot. in tbe Stale o loealed IS tha towa, while there are many oilier lumber and elusrle nulla around it- Tin town ta but ae en yeart old. and enntenie a p ipulatioa of one thoa- aanit lahaiittaeta. Jrdr-Kot further 1: formation apply at tha affioe of Uie abo.ofaipaiiy. J0II" LAWFI1K. aprld anavrieeoadaat. PRINCIPLES; CLEARFIELD, PA., 'WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, TIIK REPUBLICAN. CLEARFIELD, PA. WEDNESDAY MORXISt), SEPT. H, 1870. Til E PAItTINfi HOI K. Thre'a aomMhirp; in the "parting hour" Will ehill the wartneat hrarl Yet kindred, ontnradea, lovers, friend, Are fated all to part Rut thia I've seen and many a pang Ha preeaed it to wy mind The one who goee la happier Than tboae be leave behind. Xo matt or what the journey b. Advtmluroui, (Janfrruuf , far, To the wtld ataMp or block froaiiw, '4 To aoiitude or war Rt Sit aiimetliinr rbefra the heart that afaraa, In all of human kind, And they who g are happier Than those tbry leave behind. The bride to the bridegroom's home, With duitingi and with tears, Rut does not Hope h-r rainbows spread Aernaa her eloudy fear t Aln ! the tttolhrr who rem 4 ids, What eomfurt can she tind, But this the gone ia happier Than one she leaves behind 1 Hare too a friend a cfimrade dear t An old and valued friend f Re aura your tf-rm of aweet eonoourae At length will bare an end ! And when you part as part yon will . O, take it not unkind, If he who gikea ia ha'ipier Than uu be leaves behind. God willa it eo and eo it is: 1 be pilgrims on their wny, Though wek and worn, more cheerful are Than all the rest who atay. And when, at last, poor man, subdued, Line down to lienth, resigned. Mnv be not atitl be bappier far Tnan thoae ha leaves behind t Mr. Seward's "Little Bell." The ftilliiwitirr KHtt'imuna will ahow tlie ninnnor in wliii-h cit isfiis were uiiiniarily corthigtiPil to dunpoima utility me war. I Here liua bren fiiitliint! like tliotn, hpcii aince the ditya wlifti Uttres ile mrh rt ere ttufticietit to conaijrn iwy cilim-u of 1'rutitv lo tl.e BaHtile : Df eanrareT or Sttf, Wanhinrton, Cept. II, I m 1 . J .Maji.r Oen. N. P. Ilanke Uroerol, If you oan arreat Dr. Charlei Majiil. of llaKeriliiwu, Mary land, or eanar him to be arrreted and eetit tu fort Mi-llrnry, to be tbenoe eoneeT.d to F'trt Lafavette, let II be dune. V a. II. fcr a .'. tseen tary ol State. Dr.. Miiill ia rtnw rctnitlftit of Rit lininiid, V., whitlirr lie wont )u. ring the war, to cstttiie the aournl of the "litllc b.11." DrrattTWRTer or Statr, Waeliinetrio. i. lsf.l I Marah.l V ilw.rd-Kend Wm. . Wmdor toi0"1"1"" tort lAUyotta. u II. Kewann. heoretary of Htata. DacaaTMnirr or Htatu. 1 UMahington, (let. 11, 1I. To Edward J. Chaae. t'nltrd Statee fiffi'Jl "j?!r,K-&fli'ir,'fl7ltVlrT Attornee for the North Dietriet of New York, and arreel Fran eii D. Flandera and Jorrpb K. Flandere, and oon fpy them to Fort l.afayetta. Very truly yuure, Wa. II. Srwnn, Seoretary of Htate. DttranTitrvT or Hrara. 1 V aibine-ton, Not. ,0, laC.l. To the Rt. A. I.. Iliteellierrer, Bo.ti.n: Pir Thia Droartment, haviuc a.l.iiite,! a rule whirh prerlu'tee all Tlrite to political priennere even from Minietere of the tlu.pel of any drnominallon haa hitherto etrirtty oiireed iL It. howerer. neaa or an ether reaMiai.e eauae. renuira the eereieee of their epiritoal advi.ere, the rule would I he relaxed in fa. or of any one of undoubted loy alty. I aw, air, your obedient aerraot, W. II. Hrwann. Heerelary ol Slate. ItrrasTwatror Ftatr. I Waiiuington, Ilee. IV. Isr.l. To Delretlre Foley, New York Cily : Mir ..n. (le-nrR W. dune., late Henatnr in Ciner-reo fr-oai town, and hue I'nited Statee M miner in liu-pita. learoe her Ibi afternoon for New York. Arreel biui and rend hiw to Fort Lafayette. Hi. II. Kewano. heeretary ol State. II Land for tho Landless." That was one ol the promises of tho Judical parly when it first got con trol of Congress in lMliO. To a certain extent it has made good that protniso It has given "land tn the landless," but not tho "landless" it pretended to favor the honest, toiling, jioor men of the country. Tho "landless" it provided with lutuls was tho thieving contractor of "Now England" the carpet bag scalawags of the South and the Ibidictil rascals who loaf round the lobbies ol Congress, getting lit) railroad companies, anil a-king the gocern ment to build tho roads, and allow them to havo tho profits. Here is the amount of land they I nave given to itiese "lanniess notiniis the n limber of broad acres they have taken from the penjilr tho working, tax cursed masses, -and .given to thiev ing corporal ions. To railroad com panies it has given as follows : I'liioo PaoHflf Norfhrt) I'aH-ifir n-ro ntt i' rlhwa-sirrt. M Tide NfNiu anrl Mwrqiirllr Hi. Paul n I Curifii Ilrmnfh H(. I'mil and lritir Minnesota (n.rrl H Wmflw and ft. Tftrr Mfmphtf and Little Hock Cairo and Kaltim ...tile Itnrk and Y'nrt hmilh Imn Mminiain liailmad ('atru and I niton lnrn M..taio Jaksn. MagmW.... Flint and rprmrqitM.-" I.nk Huffrmr and Mifftsfippi...,, MinntMita Hmittifrn Hatin)r and lH-rwitah St. Jmm .h and lmr City , Kna anl Nrnhn VaUrr Sitiillicm Itranrh I'ntna Pawihr..., IMa4wi-ilf and Sarranirntn t'aliffirnia and Orrjfun Atlanttr and l'citin Ktiirkinjttrtn and lupriis Total . l.1"."' , 42 noi. nnii . a.'ii.nm, 1Tl.rvT.7ds That' the amount of lands the Had ical party has taken from yon, hilor ing men of the country, ami given to "landless" thieves to monied spent lulors, and niiimmoih monoiics It has taken one liunlm! ami srrenty one miliums, tiro huniimi ami ro;'i'v term f ,,.,,,,, ayrrn hundred anil forty eight .r.i ..I l, ,,1 .1,,.. lu, I, I I., -,.,, - ailll JOItr children, and given thcln awnv. I - - - Under tho teaching of such men a Senator llrownlow, tho negroes of Tennessee aro becoming unruly anJ threa'.ening riots, misrule anil murder. What else could bo expected from Ihe seed planted by euch a liadicul hus bandman? ' In many country districts they bio a horn betore dinner. In Ibis lown, many take one REP NOT MEN. THE IMPERIAL PEIS0NEE. On Iho 15th of July tho French Corps Legislutif declared waragnints trttsHia. Un the lilt li Ifismnrck an nounced the declaration in the Trus- sisn Parliament amid the cheer of Ilia members. On tho '.'I'd the Em peror was received in the Corps Leg islitlif. To tho speech of M. Schnej. der, in which lie said, "behind vou.bo hind our army is tho nation," the Em peror made reply : "I experience great satisfaction, on the eve ol my dejiarture for tho army, in being able to tnanK you lor mo patriotic co-one ration you have given my Govern ment. War is legitimate when it is made with the assent of tho country (ad the approbation of its representa tives, ton are right in recalling the words of Montusquie'j. The true au thor of the war is not ho who declares, bill he who renders it necessary. We have done all that depended on" us to avoid it, and I may say that tho en tiro nation, in its irrcsistable force. lias dictated our resolutions," He confi ded to them the Empress and said he took Ins son with bun who would leurn in the midst of l ho army how to serve his country. The mxt day the l'.mperor issued Ins proclamation to the people of Franco. Ho said a de cisive hour hud arrived (r France. Prussia had scorned her and had aroused distrust in all quarters. Sho had mado Europe a rump where reign disquiet and fear, lie addod : 'Wc pledge ourselves that the people composing the great Germanic nation ality shall dispose freely of their des times. As for us we demand the es tablishment of a state of things guar anteeing our security and assuring the future. We wish to conquer a durable peace, based on tho true in terests of the people, and to assist in abolishing tho precarious condition of tliitii! when all nations aro forced to employ their resources in arming against each other. The glorious flag of France, which we once more un furl in the face of challenger, is the same which has borne over Europe tho civilir.ing ideas of our great revo lution." lie concluded by referrinir to his son, who "knows the duty bis name imposes." Almost the next wo hoar of tho Emperor is bis foolish (lis putch on tho iid of August, about Lou ts, at whoso tranquility at ftaarhruck "the soldiers wept " Then we have the Metz proclumulion of li e loth, thut seemed a premonition of the ruin he was bringing on himself and his Another hull month bus gone, and tho Emperor bunted and hurried through all the French camps. now reported insane, now dead, now a fux''ive, but always sick and Iroub day, in a dispatch to the Empress, "All goes wonderfully. Our plans all succeed," and on Friday surrender lo King William, less titan two months from tho first muller of. discontent at tho choice of a llohenxollern for Spain. From July 5 to September 2, ore included the sixty days during which Louis Napoleon dictated a crown for Spain and losl his own. Has ever the arrogance of man had a more aintllll rt'lltlko ? Was it within I lie flllipa, of human BHHCtity to pre diet the ruin ol a grout nutttin in eo short a time ? One litilo month niyo AupiKt.2 ttii the affair of Sunt brack, the vir tunl npi'ning of the rnmpuij't), a Krenrh viftory, ufier wliit-b we peo uluii'd wlictluT the French would make for the t'oblrtitr. or Mnyenoo. A lew dttya Inter rume Wt'irinunliur.nnd aim e tiicn, four wetktt of "8trtot;y," full of promise and hurren of rpmiltn, mil l now on the of 2d SopUimhor the Napoleon dyniisty of a aooond lime criinihlen away, amid the thunder of hatilu whose Rullen roar inihi ultiio-l wake lite (lend that rtl on the ni'iir tiy plain of Waterloo. That little an i;le of Europe liaa been the theairo of the mit;hlieei event, and liinlory han taken new coloring Inim tho IranNiie tiotta on that litniled nren. The Emperor btirrfiitlers to a more nintianimntm nulion, we trust, than hia Imperial prediice-or did. lie aur ret'dera lo a Kini; who will be even ! more clemenl than the population of rans. Jietter lor litiuis .apoieon to ho a captive, subject to the appoint-1 meal ol his residence by the King of, Prtissin, than to meet the angry cry I nt in enraged rubble ol too cuptioi, modified, hitmilialed and ready to inuke a victim of the eattso of dishon or ilnil has come on the French Aug. They remember his proclamation. "I go to plnco myself nt the bead of that 35 son. onn 1 gallant army, which is animnteu nv Sr foil lion , ,(, Nr.ua.i. .n J dov.li.rt to iPoti'i ' ll,,l.V- That army know its worth. si", i,oii 1 for il has seen victory follow its foot jmi.iios atops in the foiirrjtiurtcr of the glotie." 1;'I2 Alas! how has tho lustre of these aXMo eagles been dimmed by the blunders vi .n of an Emiernr, tho incapacity ofGon ss onn f-"'", Iho weakness of a comiiiissariut, liv;n and that sclf-suflii ient pritle which . 1.4OH 0O0 contentedly overlooked the real pow- ' J Jj cr of an enemy. X. Y. Commercial. h. a ono a) aw ae ;.. "en Till Schools. A dispatch from mi.(h Wasio.'ton, asva that the white j',"""!!!!' schools of that city, were thrown hack L?i'2t i ward last year, in ennsequencu of dif- 'no imn ficullies growing out of the attempt m oiliifMiu w-lnln uml colol'PlI t- lllllrell i " -w '., , , . tng.sUier. 1 his year, the schools will ne Kept sepatate, encn one onvitig a iiiiiu ol its tiwn euiitcieo iia us sut sirt. This is a confession ol tho bud effect flowing from mixed schools, and yet if the lliidiculs curry the Leg islature nf Ibis Slate they will pass a law forcing an admixture of race in the school of this State. Such a ,. . for their lirtce IS asKOO t lllO OCi;rot-n nil inru voles. voles, and the "Ifinif" is willing . f... r...uM ...... i - - lent' i Ilotl .l) J. MotTcll announces his intention to appoint a board of gentle - men lo examine applicant for the military nnd naval cadetsUipa in hi- diet net I.r. 1 1 is for the purpose of ascertaining their pecuniary ntialilicatioiis. ... Alwsya do a the aim doe at the bright side of everything lor, while it is just as cheap, il e time si (prod for dijfestioci. JDJj 1870. NEW How France haa boen Swindled. It ia related of the Cnr Nieholna that, shortly alter the Crimean war broko out. ho wni strolling, through (he ordinance, yarda at Sebuntopol, aurvejing with prido the pyramids of cannon hall, piled up 1 hero, when ho idly chanced to strike ono of them with his walking stick. It pave hack a strange, dull sound. An ex amination revealed that it was made of wood, and the snmo exaggerated wooden nutmefr imposture had been practiced l;v the contractor in supply ing all the build thero stored away. Following nn this clue tho ('naraHcer- tnined that jobbing and fraud pervad ed all departments of the army service, and thai except on paper, bit empire was in no condition to contend with the allied powers. Napoleon's army and military equipments and Jirovis ions arc nl as duliciont and delusive as those of Nicholas ; but they fell lar short of whul ho and the world ex pected thorn to bo. Wo question, in the first place, whother the active army was anything like 4U0,IIU0 strong Wo have never boen able to figure up more than 25l),0UU or 1277,000 regular French troops in the advance on Prussia; and we believe that loo ac tual enumeration of the men at hie command was the principal reason thut induced Napoleon to stand on the defensive instead of attempting an in vasion of Prussia. Somebody or some military ring has been deceiving the hmperor and getiing rich out of the rations and supplies of the army. Then, too, tho reserve of 400 ,0HO men, which were supposed to be capable of taking the field at short notice. Why havo they not boen available to rein force the regular army more prompt ly : Mecalise, we venture to av. the War Department was unablo to furn ish them with rifles or muskets of any description, to say nothing of C'hasse pots, equipments, and uniforms. More than a year ago wo read the statement that France had over a million Chasnepots in her arsenals; and the Govenrmont fuctorioa were said to be still turning them out. Hut, immediately after .Mnc Million's defeat, complaints begun to be rile that France Was short, noi only of Chiisse pots, but of arms of every" kind. The Freneh'commissurial is worse, if possi bio, thun any other branch of the ser vice, if we may believe a litilo of the statements made by correspondents, Mu Million's army was represented lo be almost starving for some days, and that, loo, in a region in easy commu nication with lliu capital. All these I deficiencies and weaknesses in the French army, disclosed by the light of events, astonish those who believe making uiireniiliiiig efforts for a war with Prussia. Either she hadnoseri oils intent of fighting Prussia in nil that time, or the Emperor has been has been grossly duped by his favor ites, who have deluded bun into the belief that France was prepared "to confront every eventuality" (lo quote from his speech lo the bodies of stale. January IS, 1r!M, and have profiled by his credulity to amass lortunes. X. Y. Journal of Commerce. Errors of tba Press. A slight mislako frequently chung es tho whole effect of an article, or mny utterly ruin a writer. Alluding todm pus of the pros, Pycrofl re lates a conversation whiub ho held wilh a printer. '"lieallr," said tho printer, "gentle men should not place euch confidence in tho eyesight ol our hard worked and ball blinded reader of proofs, for I am ashutned to say that I've utterly ruined one poet through ludicrous misprint. "Indeed ! and what was the unhappy lino 7" "Why, sir. the poet intended, to say, 'See tho pule martyr in a sheet of tiro;' instead of which wo made bim sny, 'Sec the pule mar tyr wiih his shirt oa fire'" Of course the reviewers made the most of a blun der so cnterluinitig to their renders, and the unfortunate author was never heard of more in the field of literature. Another versifier was extinguished in tho following manner: A lad in a printing olliee came upon the name of llecatn, necurring in a lino like this: "Shall reign the Iliwale of the deepest bell." Tho boy, thinking he had discovered an error, run lo the foreman of the olliee and inquired if there was an e in cat. 'Why no you blockhead," was the reply. Away went the juvenile typo setter t tlie i i,.,o, tanai it'll Hill superfluous letter. But fancy the hor ror of the poet and publisher, when the poem appeared with the line, Slie.ll reign the Ho cat of the deepest hell" Another instance, showing the im- portance of a single letter, ht that of, nn Nclrprtmcmpnt in a cw rk p nor, in Mhv, iMili). liciuii'J "Jt.ftrnttl rpmony. ' It wmh rery p-wihlo quite true, but ofcotirso the compounder of tho qnuck mixture meant to nave sum "Internal remedy." Can't see it When an iron mnnu- j foctiirer rote in Conrress lo increase line price oi an utucm ne.,.,g it I . :...u.,n,l I'.. -I ...... wnicn no to inicr.-i.- c . . n. (1( ,b0 same time refuses tn pay rmcn ono cent cr week ad vanco lor llieir la nor, tne i.auicat papers cull him a friend of American laborers. Wonder if the luborcrs can see it in that light. - ., .i t, i- Seen ih Waii Among Ihe inci- i dents related of the present war in i .. . .1...11 .i I ... , to!,' ,' . If, I'lirf Ilia. e. nn,-, i i,,',f. fi 'ntosiuns into the besciged I - city of Strusburg burst thiongh the w-alls of a convent nnd exploded in 'he school room tilled ilh children. ' -tilling and wounding a lurge number oi mom. who contested Bcnard, the negro the seat of liuiley from the Second ia I I ' . . . . i. .. i.oui-iaoa . oiign-ssinni utsiricn has1 heon arrested for an infamous assault -lnnklttpnn a girl. Wbittemore. Hntler. 1 Menard thus, one by one the gotl three, the Jiadical 'thrown party are being over J Vi 1.1 1 TERMS $2 por annum, in Advance. SERIES-V0L.il, NO. 9. The Most Wonderful Military Cam paign of Modern Times. Since the inrention of gunpowder thero hits been no war between any two or more nations which will com naro with this just closed between France and Germany, whether we consider the strength and equipments of the armies on boih sides, the bloody buttles .ought, and within the brief limits of a singe month, or the obstacles overcome and (he results nchietcd hy tho armies of the successful belligerent, Tho wnr was declared by France July 15, and hostilities were com-mopr-ed by France, "Louis and I," til too liltlo frontier German town of Saarbruck, where tho Prince 1 mperittl received hi "bttplinin of fire, ' on the 2d day of August, and on the 2d day of September the war is ended in I he capitulation of the army of .MucMuhon and the surrender of Napoleon to King William. Within the week from the opening of tho hull in the dramatic little uff'air of Saarhuck the strong positions of tho ndvauco right wing ol the French army under Muc.Mahon. from tho Saar to the Itliinu, and thence up to Strusburg. in a series of fierce and bloody battles were carried, the whole French line wus doubled up and pushed liuckwurd over tho Vtrsges Mountains to the line of the -Moselle and its protecting fortresses, lu these operations the losses lo the French involved the reduction of the splendid army column of fifty thousand men, with which Mac Malum marched out of Strusburg, August 4lh. lo less than fifteen thousand in his halt lo repair damages at Chalons, ten days later. Where Napoleon rode buck with the Prince Imperial to his hea Iquar tor at Molx, the French army extend ing ia segment of a circle from thai point around to Slrasbtirg, numbered, perhaps, not less than two hundred and fifty thousand men. The Ger man armies confronting them, rough ly computed since at liulf a million, did not probably exceed in all three hundred and fifty thousand men. Hut the weight of it was thrown w iih crushing force upon MucMuhon, and in bis demolition nt Woeiih the whole campuign wus virtually decided The next chapter in the sanguinary drama was in the succession ol de-pcrate but. tie with the original left und center of the French army on Ha line of the Moselle, nndur Har.aino, culminating in the terrific struggle of Iho 1st h at Gravelotto, which resulted in shutting up liaziune within the wulls of Mela, to the extent of from eighty lo a hun dred thousand men, in churgo of liie Prussian General Steinmetx j Thus by the 1Mb of August the! oritriiuil, Freucb.,MtJin.c-s(,'J?bitr-ment beleaguered in Slrasbtirg, and excluding the cscapingreintiaiil ol Jlc Million's eorH noil the detachment escaping from -Mrli and uniting with MucMuhon in tho north To this point the French losoes in killed, wounded and prisoners, and in their forces held in several fori resses, as under lock and key, were equal to two hundred thousand men. The cupitu lulion of the new army of MucMuhon , nili,r Cnhnrul Wi, lit, Ion at I I.m fit,.. ie.r,nirt .H.iii.r.. ,,1 i. n. I. ! of one hundred 'nnd fifty thousand j 11,6 Abolitionists, whom the peo men, more or lesa. We have no , pl were instinctively pntmpled. tbir- means of estimating the aggregate; lossos in killed and wounded on cither side, hut from the reports made we up- j prebend that, while the French losses of tho war will not exceed one hun , died thousand men, thcGerman losses, j from the exposures on thut side as the at I ticking party, have hardly been less j than one hundred and fifty thousand men. All this has been done in the brief space of a month, from the 2d day of oui:uni lu loo u un, i,. m-iivi,,i,iii , nd the grand result' arc tho surren der of Napoleon and tho suhjugalion . en .. . j ... .. , ... , l ,,i .i r t....i...-i.... . ol r ranee, and at a point tu the con test when the French people were on-1 ly beginning to prepare for the expul sion of the enemy. X. Y. JJeralU. j The roistiNKt) ToNot a. It is the custom in Africa for hunters, when they have killed a poisonous snake, j lo cut off its bead and carefully bury it deep in the ground. A naked foot stepping on one of these tinhuried I fangs would be fatally wounded The poison would spread in a very short space all through the system. This venom lasts a long lime, and is as deadly after the snake is dead as il was before. Our cruel Indians used to dip the points of their arrowr. in this ItOton.. Oo If ih-y -'t lv toa", wound, ihoir victim would bo sure to die. The snake's poison is in his tee'.h ; but there is something quite as dun gerous, and much more common in communities, which has its poison in its tongue. Indeed, vour chances for escape from a serpent ure much great. er. i no worst sniiKes glule awav in fnar at the approach of man, unless disturbed or a'.lacked loit this crva ture, whose poison lurks in his tongue., attacks without provocation, and lo! lows tip its victim with untiring per severance. 1 will tell yon hi name so vou will alwavs be able to shun lion, oe invitoeu a rM.isiti rrr. lie; l.: II -...li.. J - fi . n . poisons worse thun a serpent, Olt en iiis venom airikes to the life of a whole family or neighborhood, do troying all js aco and contiduueo. Congreoaman Under, of Tennessee, has some hard charges to answer: first, forgery, by which he tibsnrbed other people pension ; aecond, rob bing tbe mails, by which the pension ers received no sal i-fst lion from the department a lo why their penion were not paid ; and third., perjnry in taking tho ironclad oath to practice before the Court ol Claim., when at a subsequent date an act removing tlis abilities w found neeeewary tu bt map or on, nv n'i'i oo.v i Mr. Under is one of the most reliable Heptihlit ans in the House. j Colonel Bonaparte (son of Jerome ftonaimrte, of Hultimorc). has been ' put in command of the Tuilleries. the of. home ol the Imperial family frob- - i atiiy tne r.mpemr has moro latin in ' ttitti tnnn tn pot ni nt Olnsr atnair"ei aa aMmeajeia n iwii.a swain Mli flue tklan Lfrnatlcs hni FppIs Which are Mod If 1hncxt frrncralion mnat ellla this matter, and decide hit h are moat responsible for the ruin o our Memo ctsiic sstcmlhe abolition of luna. lies, who are striving in "aholiah 'the natural supremacy of the white mart Slid inohgiclir.e tho government, or the fools, m. utterly ignorant of the matter, blindly asvcnt to iheir act-urn' e.l lunacies, ai d thus aid them in their mstl nml revoliiiig devilment. The Abolition lunatic really helierca that negroes should bo "free," that iht should ho forced into a tommon citi zenship with the white man, attrt.giv en the same chances, education, etc, iho "prejudice id' color" will disappear uflcr a while, unit ull harmonize and amalgamate together, just as with the I f inli and licriniius, or other vurioliv of our race that come lo us from the Old World. He thinks the men who founded our instiiulions faially at fault, that instead of setting up a While Kepuhlic, ihey should have abolished Wliito Supremacy, and set up a mongrel concern at the aturt. anil he believes that, having correct ed their errors and made u "I'ni.in it ought to be," that t'O V, Willi this nigger clement included the prngree ami prosperity of tho country will re ally siirpttsi anything ever dreamed of by the men of J77tJ I He tacitly admits thut ull his "reforms" have leen fraudulently worked out thus" fur, that all the forms of our political ystein, lite right of Slates and even personul liberty, huve been groesly vi olated thut the mighty national debt is a grcul evil, tho destruction of com merce and the enormous luxation aro utifortuiiato, but lliu end, ho thinks, just dies tho means; the "elevation." u he MipHes, ol our millions od groeswid be euch a transcendent good to tho country, thai he mny well tsiiisent lo ull the evils necessary lo its accomplishment. Such is the Abolitionist, such hit belief, bis acts, and such his hopes Thirty yeurs ago, hen be first ap peared in our midst, the people lynch ed him. and if permitted, would have silenced him, either shut him op as a lunatic, dangerous to society, or as a social leper, that had no right to ex ist, they would have murdered him. Why whs tliiaf Simply because ft wus right il was an in-titict of sell preservation an Abolitionist is moral monster thut bus no more right to be at largo than has the wretch that is guilty of im-e-t. Indeed, he ia viler, more at ar with nature and the safely ol society, than tha revol ting beast thut cohabits with bis sta ler. Tho ncuro is a widely neps rated from tho white man as the crow from tbe eagle or the ass from the horse, and theme degrnded and sinful wretch e, aa we see sometimes in individual cuses, who "rise above the prejudice of color." and mate with negroes, rot oul an peri nli I nun the earth polluted by their sins as utterly in three or four tfcncrulioiis a the mule or other atiimul hybrids no in a ingla reitera tion. W hat is true of the individual is of course true of the aggregate thus if su-h a moin-trous sin against God and crime against society a a Mongrel citizenship were pir-e-ihre in this country, il would needs bo sim ply a mutter of time when the four millions of negroes, and of course aa equal number of white people, would lieexlinet ltnt,.niwl.emt..rt.lW let only exist as now by armed snpport, anJ when the Northern people rut no longer stand lliu taxation that they huro for five veins paid to in Im port a degraded and vagabond sol diery in lb South, and ol course the -higher law" of niiiaro will manifest itself, and the natural supremacy of the white people over the negro will ho restored us "il wus," and as it ia ordered by Omnipotence. How, then, in the n una of all the Belxohubs of the infernal regions ia h. IV years ago, lo exterminate Irotn the face of the earth, tiow rule the coun try, and, wilh a landing army in the South, degrade the masses, not into a submission lo emperors or kings, but into a Mongrel citizenship with ne groes Why .simply bcciiu-e a mighty horde of theive and trnitnm to their kind, for the sake of plunder, aid them in the hideous devilment, and a still mightier hurtle of loots, utterly and stupidly ignorant of tbe unfathomable i Horrors wniiiH.-u uii in horrors wraped up in "impartial . , .; ,, . lrd..m,- will not. or at all evc.,l..d(, I n"1- "n 10 .;''" themselves or i to ptsihiIo w ilh tlie u nstH-alsahta crimes of the AlMililioieita. In their dense and criminal ignorance, they think il make little or no difference whether negroeare "slaves" or "tree" that is, whether tbe natural ditrsi' linti of rprete onheined by the Al mighty Creator shall be honored by mortals, or a bet her Ihey shall destroy themselves in a sinful and beast l et rempt lo ignore it. und to amalgamate with negroes! What unshakable and iinfulhomuble fools, to bo sure, who, in their iguomnce, and blind ness, do not even know rr dream of the boundless horror wrapped up ill that which they are to setit to ! Tha Abolitionist beleives that be can "r (.iimimo ViIiv iia.r,, aurK or itie Eter nal, and elevate the negro 10 a lewel wiih the white man ; but the fool thinks it makes no difference whether mortals renecl or desecrate the work of God! There is, therefore, no dope or possibility of overthrowing the lu nitttcs nntil the fools are enlightened or forced, by tho pressnre ol Ietiio crutic senttinetil to confnitit the for mer. And this i the work before tbe honest and earnest Iemocracy. They must cnligoten or they mawt drive lbs fool square up tn the issoa tbe bite Republic of Washington, or amalgamation with negroes tha I'nion as it was, or the Mongrel ra tion aa it is White Suprrmm-v. as or- , , ... . i i "t. I uuinru .', oiroi eenn. nil, ,.. . ;i T-ipiuoiJI w .... ini;i'm .ii.tc , .,,,- il arc force And if llns can l" don in time b.r 1PT2. all will be well the great abolition lunacy with traitora nnd theive who uphold i., will be swept away forever, and a few yeart hence men will wonder, not that euch a sinful and hciistiul liit aiy ever ex isted, but that in ull America there could be found a single f.ml so utterly stupid as to fenr il and propa)e to as sent toil. .A'. V. 7iy linnk. The newly enfranchised citiiiren of llarrisburg object lo having the word "colored ' placed alter their name on the registry list, fitv Corgre did not pan an act to pon -h the auda cious register, for even in'imating that the newly cnlrutichised a-r "niggora." A young ladv examining her claa at Sahlmlh seh'sil, asked: "What w the pomp and vanity of this world V A little girl, looking p in her face, very innocently rejitieu : ihe sowar oa reur f-"e.