Eancaster 3jntelligencer. WEDNESDAY, JUNE! 8, 1870 The Coming Congressional Elections. The people of the United States will have an opportunity to right many of the wrongs they have endured by the election of abler, wiser and more honest, men to represent them in the Lower House of the next Congress. The Rad icals have had a majority of more than two to one for some years past, and have managed to preserve that disproportion ate preponderance by gerrymandering States so as to prevent a proper repre sentation of the people, and by summa rily turning out numbers of Democrats who were legally elected. With such a majority the Republican party cannot complain if it is held to be entirely re sponsible for what has been done, as well as for what has been left undone. Tried by that test how do the mem bers of the present Congress stand before the people? What have they done to benefit the masses? They tell us the national debt has been reduced. Grant It; and what credit can be claimed therefor? With taxation kept at the ex orbitant standard reached during the war ; with burthens of the most oppres sive kind laid on every branch of indus try; with stumps on every thing to which those once odious appendages can be attached, from the title deed of the millionaire to the box of matches from which the hod carrier lights his pipe; with a tariff' that with unseen fingers i tisidiously steals a considerable per cent age of every dollar that conies Into the laboring man's hands ; with un inquisitorial tax on all incomes, which the rogue evades while the honest num pays more than he ought; with taxes in an infinitude of shapes—taxes on all that we cut, drink and wear, taxes on necessities a 1 luxuries, taxes on our daily wants and on all our pleas ures, the government manage, after rascally officials have stolen a very gen erous Isar Tentage, to extract front a bur thened and not over prosperous commu nity the enormous sum of over four hundred million dollars a year, And liecause they do not spend the whole of that vast stn, because a fraction is saved and :Tidied to the payment of driblets of the national debt, the people will be asked to throw up their haLo and re-elect the Radical members of thu present Congress. We fancy that intelligent white voters will want better reasons for their votes— for the negroes we can not answer. White 'ten, those of them who read aunt Iltiul:, Will examine the record of the present Radical Congress; and we imagine that very few who are gifted with sufficient intelligence to under stand a plain matter will lie satisfied tvith what, has been done. Revonstruc t ion lies been tinkered :it, and ficorgia has been admitted to the Palau only to be turned i oil again ; a bill full of pains and penalties has been passed for the ostensible purpose of enliireing the Fif teenth Amendment Itw h ich no one had attempted to violate) but designed in reality to transfer thi.e4lntrid of elections to Congress; that gigantic swindle, the Northern Pavilic Railroad bill has beeu Through, and a multitude of similar jabs Inane 111,11 perreeh'll. That is about all of importance Unit the present Congress has dune. Months were spent in driveling debates over a remodification of the tarill; a display was Wade Of the greed of Yankee mo nopolists am' of (twit' power, alld then the whole sal'ie , t was ' l, 'l'l' ol . A funding bill was prepared and passed ty the Senate which was heralded as the greatest financial invention of the age, but the National Ranks had it transfer red pt a committee in the Lower House, and there it still sleeps with very little show of Iwing ailed upon. The debates iin the lin:owes of the country, the great question in which all elte,es are alike deeply interested, have show n n lament= able w:utl.'ml eat ctrl ty among, the mem bers of Ihr present Ciingre ,, . The vast Railieal majority has exhibited an utter want id'tthilily to l grapple with the liv, isues to the day, mid they must be tht ust out, told wiser men put in, if flit people wwibl have relief. we can only hint at a few of the rea -iins silty the people should feel ini pe111•11 to make a complete change in the eh:trailer of the next Congress. l'he iairrmition which confessedly exists at Washington ought to be sufficient to in sue the defeat of a majority of those who :I.l'l. -wekiilq re-election. Rings as corrupt and mercenary as those which are known In have existed in the Penn sylvania Legislature have been formed among the Radical members of the present Cimgri-s. Many or them are known It deal no longer with lobby agents, lint directly with prineipals who have jobs to put through. Members of oifituliue,, take charge of improper bills, Seen re a favorable report and engi neer the passage of paying legislation.— Radical Senators live in princely style al Washington on salaries which would wit pity for thee4tertainnients they give, and members of the Lowerd louse amass Miami,. hi a term or two. The people do awlCeti In be toll hint t here i s rtu i k 1.1 lest) . at t h e laittom of all this. It is so evident that it .ean not be denied. That many Radicals NViii la unseated at the ,itithing NV, ilaVl` 110 111.11iit. The 111,111' illlll,i iluu . spapers admit that such trill he the ease. Large Ikanovratii. gains in New lurk an' coneeded, and them are a mother tit' districts in this State ‘vltich tan be revidutitinized. \ Vt. shall take oceasiun shortly ti, speak id them in detail. A Bridge at MT:ill's Ferry Tile 11.x)1)1 10 c•:tlls attention to an Act of .Assembly, passed by the last Legis lature, incorporating a company for the erection of a bridge over the Susque hanna:it Ferry. The corpora tors are Samuel I nitigherty, James ltoyd, John Odin, Robert Smith, Itimalioe, 1,. \V. Findlay, licarge 1. Steinman, David \V ilson and ii. \V. Books for subscriptions have been uponc~l al the store ul• (leorgc Slciunuui & Co., this city; at the tavern of :Michael Donahoe, NII 'all's Ferry, and at one or lev places in York coun ty. It is to lie hoped that the bridge will I,e speedily built. The filet that a former Fridge 10:1s swept mvity, ought not to deter from the proposed iniprove nient, as modern engineering can easily overcome Ihi• causes Nvhieli led to iLs ilestruetiom Directions In Regard to the Census We publi,ll elsewhere full details or the question,: 11l will be asked by the falters; of the censtis,l with explicit ili rectiiffis as to the answers whicil 5115111,1 be giv e n. 'l'lijs is iniporlalll Matter, anti persons who post themselves thoroughly will save considerable trouble, both to themselves foal the oflielals. 'rho iliquisitiv, fellows will be eallinft 11121 . 01'V l..eg, and we advise (111 reaf furs 1.0 loi•prupared to meet, thew. such preparation the suuam:u • y whirl 55t , publish elsewhere will be rollllll to 111.15,,,, value. •'i'iao edi tor a a weekly newspaper in this date saw lit some time ago to de clare himself favorable to the nomina tion ofJohn W. Forney as the succes sor of John \V. Geary ; whereupon For ney, after vainly waiting for an endorse ment of the suggestion by other weekly or daily newspapers, writes a letter that he has no aspirations for the gubernatorial chair, and that he does not want ally ollice. In view of the fact that Forney has been one of the most indefatigable place-hunters in the country his wordy abnegation sounds strangely. lint, as his letter is largely made up of an exhortation to editors to speak kindly of each other, we forbear further emninent upon this singular production. He declines to be a candi date for Governor two years in advance of the nomination. That is being wise in time. Subservient Journalism By his vote on the Northern Pacific Railroad Bill, Mr. Dickey laid himself open to the animadversions of an inde pendent press. It is a swindle of the most gigantic character, and those who watched the course of the measure in Congress, did not hesitate to charge boldly that it was bought through. Be fore this infamous job, the attempt to transfer some Nine Millions of Dollars worth of Railroad Bonds from the Trea sury of this State sinks into utter insig nificance. Yet we find that virtuous journal, the Express, excusing the ac tion of our Congressman. That is a line of policy which is perfectly incompre hensible to us. For thelife due we can not understand how a delinquent public servant can be eulogized, and his ac tions condemned in the same newspaper paragraph. The editor who does that sort of thing, lays himself open to the gravest suspicions. In its attempt to insinuate that we are influenced by a preference for Professor Wickersham, who intends to contest the Congressional nomination with Col. Dickey, the Express only shows how uneasily it rests in its present very awk ward position. It confesses that it is committed to 341 r. Dickey, and admits that it dare not honestly criticize his actions. It does this, not openly and boldly, not manfully and in a straight forward manner, but in that peculiar cringing way which distinguishes it. As between the two men who are con tending for the Radical nomination, we have expressed no preference. We have criticized Mr. Dickey freely because we regard his vote on the Northern Pacific Railroad bill as radically wrong.— We condemn him for it, just as we have condemned every one of the ten recreant Democrats, who united with tell times that many Radicals, in the pitssage of an act which gives to Jay Cooke and his fellow corporators a ter ritory nearly twice as large us the whole State of Pennsylvania; and that with out exacting a single restriction, or providing for any of the rights of actual settlers. So infamous a measure calls for the severest condemnation from an independent press, and none hut subser vient. journals will remain silent or ex cuse the outrage. The Lupin,. is 00 the fence. It seems to have no opinion upon Congressional railroad jobs, and does not know wheth er it will support Dickey or Wicker sham. It leaves that to be determined Icy future events. It would not be harsh to infer from such language that it is ready to he bought and waiting to see who will make the best bid. The I NTELLinENcEit is the only in dependent newspaper published in the English language in Lancaster city.— The others are all the organs of sonic petty taction. The subserviency and corruption of the rest can be judged by what they say of each other.— If we are to, believe the loyal fel lows .who control them they are "a pretty pack of thieves together." Our circulation is extending among the more intelligent and honest Republicans of the county, and our paper is read by them because they know that it can be relied upon to give a truthful account of public :drafts. We 010 not aspire to make it an organ of any Whig or fraction of the Radical party, but are content to lie recognized by the best men of the party as the only really honest and reliable medium of public information published in this city. The Census Takers Marshal Gregory has not been able to select Deputy Registers for Lancaster County yeL. The applicants for these petty positions are almost innumerable :11111 the tiVah'y between them intense and hitter. Inasmuch as Geary rose to the Governorship, from the position of census-taker under James Buchanan, there are some men in this county who looklu lltheollieuoCtownshipcuuuu•r -alor as tlie:stepping stone to future polit ical exaltation. Embryo Assemblymen find would-be State Senators are eagerly striving to , secure the opportunity of being thus brought into notice, and en abled to extend their acquaintatiee with the voters in all capacity. It is ru mored that. Gregory's chief of stall'in this district, an ex-Congressman who gave t'Videllte of intense loyalty by lodging the negro orator, Fred. Douglass, in the best bed in his house, is hostile to our present representative ill Congress, and ready to use all his influence to prevent Ids renomination. How this may be we know nut; but should the Deputy. Marshal send out his small army of enu merators, every one :u•nted with a record of Dickey's vote on the Northern Pacitie Railroad swindle :LIM other of his of ficial acts, we imagine he ought give the gallant Colonel of the "Bloody Tenth" no little trouble. \Ve hope whatever• quarrels exists may be speedily compos ed, and the taking of the (111505 per mitted tO begin in Laneaster County. The Self-t'ondemeed Senator Alorrill, of Vermont, has pu on record a very high compliment to (len. F. I'. Blair, jr., the late Democrat. is candidate for Vice President, which seems to he now unearthed for the firs( time. In a speech in the Senate, he as serted (hat hut for the unswervingvalor, patriotism and gallant conduct of that gentleman, Missouri, in the early period of the rebellion, would have been ar rayed with the Southern Confederacy in the attempt to dismember the Union. NVllat a 'severe rebuke from high Re publican authority to the revolutionists of Missouri, who deny to this most gal lant officer the army the elective franchise upon a frivolous technicality, whilst conferring it by wholesale upon illiterate negroes. THE labor or six long n u mths•which have been devoted by the House Special Committee to the preparation of tt bill for reviving American ship building has ended in naught. 'Pie Pennsylvania members united to break down the Heavy duty on copper, but stunk up for a high protective Million the iron used in building vessels. The Western mem bers opposed it, 011111,01,111 t 01 its draw bail: features, which they denounced as the worst kind of protection. So amid a mntest of (dashing interests the bill was killed very dead indeed. Wit EN ( ran I was inaugurated lie an nounced that he would have no policy of his own, and lie Mu+ so far kept his word in all except the San Domingo job. That promises to pay a party of specula tors with whom he has formed a co strt nersh ip, and our money-loving President is hound to put the thing through. lie has just sent a message to the Senate in regard to the matter, in which he very strongly urges the ratification of the treaty. It is to be Loped the Senate will snubb him. Tiff: Washington correspondent of the New York 1 Icrald says it is likely that a resolutMti expressing sympathy. with the Culaut insurgents will pass the I louse only to be summarily defeated in the Senate, which body Is said to be in harmony with Secretary Fish, and to approve of his foreign policy. Sumner will bitterly appose any hill looking to the acquisition of Cuba, and a Major ity will follow his lead. IS to be believed in Washington that the passage of the proposed Inter nal Tax bill would iusure the reduction of the force of local officers fully one third. It would accomplish this by al lowing collection districts to be consoli dated. If any such effect would be pro duced the bill ought to be passed without delay. We are of the opinion, however, that sonic excuse would still be made for keeping in all the swarm of officials who are eating out the existence of the peo- OICE of the beet things the New York Sun has said lately is this: "The beat thing that can now be said of Gen. Grant is whatwas once said of another illustrious failure, namely: that he has a brilliant future behind him." THE LANCASTER WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1870. The Income Tax The tax on incomes has been very bitterly denounced by almost every newspaper published in the East. It has been persistently decried as inquisitor ial, unequal in its exactions, and'ealcu lated to encourage rogues in evasions of the requirements of the act. The effect has been seen in the House. Members of Congress have been told that they could not go before the people with a prospect:of re-election if they failed to do away with this obnoxious law. The West does not seem to look at the matter in the same light as the East. Not a few Western members were strongly in favor of continuing the tax without abatement or alteration. When the question came to be settled by a vote a compromise was effected. On motion of Mr. Cox, of New York, the rate of taxation was reduced to three per cent., and on motion of Mr. Hale the amount of income exempt from taxation was in creased from $lOOO to s:.noo. Should the Senate concur in the action of the House those upon whom the income tax has heretofore pressed most heavily will be relieved. From statistics before us, we infer that these changes will operate about as fol lows : the increase of the exemption to $2OOO will relieve about one hundred and fifty-nine thousand salaried men, and other people of limited means, from the payment of the tax, who now pay between nine and tell millions; the re duction of the rate to three per cent. will take uhf about $0,400,000 more front the remaining hundred and sixteen thou sand taxpayers who will still remain subject to the tax. As the law now stands, the income tax of last year was levied upon two hundred and seventy five thousand persons, who paid $2.5,- 02,3,008. If the foregoing amendments Shall be finally adopted by the House and the Senate, they will reduce the amount raised from this source about $10,000,000, and leave about $9,1100,01H) to be collected. The Fight for the Mayoralty or Washing- The cry which the Radicals raise about election frauds is only designed to cover up their rascalities. In Washing ton City the straight-out, Ilegrtl laCtloll of the Republican party are getting ready to re-elect Bowen I\ layor of the city. The Registers are very busy, and wagon loads of Maryland and Virginia negroes are constantly arriving from the surrounding rural districts. As soon as they cuter the city they are taken in hand by the active managers of the party, posted as to what answers they shall make to the questions asked, aud speedily trans formed into citizens of Washington city, for the time being. They are paid so much a day for the time thusspent, and are fed and lodged at the public expense. It is said that Bowen has imported enough of these rural negroes to render his re-election certain. The Democrats have no candidate in the field, and the contest being bUtWel . ll two Radicals only renders it more desperate. The entire police force of the city is engaged in electioneering 'and thousands of idle ne groes lounge about the grog shops and other places of low resort all day long. They arc engaged in playing the part of American citizens, and can not con descend to work. The Debasement of Southern Polities. With the re-election of 'Whittemore, the disgraced army chaplain and cadet ship trader staring hint in the face, tt correspondent of the N. Y. Tribune, himself a Northern Radical, and there fore unquestionably good authority, writing front Charleston, gives the fol lowing in relation to the ruling power in South Carolina politics: "There is an unpleasantly large class of politicians who live only by politics, who know 11,, other profession, and who look upon the legitimate and the illegitimate emoluments ~1 the trade with equally fa rnrablo eyes, When to these we add an infusion in the Legislature of as the test eligible iu acommunity .114,1,1 hand:, who never saw a school house and never owned a five thdlar bill, it iv easily to be Seell that dangers bt•sct the publi,• af fairs of South Carolina.- That is the condition to which a Rad ical Congress desires to reduce the en tire South. For the accomplishment of such results the Union 11:1,4 been kept divided, and the infamous hill for the enforcement of the Fifteenth Amend ment passed. We would despair of the republic, but for the fact that we believe many men who have heretofore acted with the Republican party in the iNorth are beginning to see the evils which the corrupt leaders of that organization have brought upon the country. That there will be many and very decided changes at the coming t•ongressionat Elections is the opinion of t h ose who are best informed, and with the destruction of the overwhelming power ut the Radi cals in the National Legislature we may expect a change of policy. RANT iv to leave the cares and troubles of the Presidential (Mice on NVednesday for it week's trout fishing with Simon Cameron. That he will have a jolly season we have no doubt. Simon can afford " to stand treat" in consideration or the appoint neat of his son-in-law to a first-class European 111 Grant's trout fishing always costs his friends someilhing,. The last time he tried the gentle spurt was one Sun day in August. Suuu• true sportsman made information against his Excel lency tin' violating the game laws or the State, and Col. Kane paid a line of live dollars Mr each fish caught. 'phis time ( ;rant comes in season and it is he hoped he won't fish on Sunday. It is setting a very bad example to the rising gener ation. IF Congress duos not adjourn soon there will be no public lands kit fur the people to settle upon. It will all have been given away to Railroad Corpora tions, and put into the hands of monop olists who will grind the faces of emi grants and compel the hardy pioneer to pay exorbitant prices fur a home. Thus will the opening up of the great \Vest be delayed, :Old the i n terest of the , Nation injuriously atli-oted. low long will hon est Republicans continue to countenance Congressional corruption? A CANVASS lies been made of the Sen ate since (It'ant sent in his silly message in favor of the San Domingo Job, and it has been ascertained that but a single vote has been changed by it. Senator Iloward is announced as ready to vote for the proposed swindle. It is thought other arguments more weighty than those contained in the President's mes sage have been brought to bear upon him. The whole transaction is sur rounded by all atmosphere of corrup tion. REyNot.ps, the Radical State Auditor of Alabama, wrongfully collected a large emu of money from an Express Com puny and refusing to refund the same, was committed to prison by Judge Busteed, of the United States District Court. Reynolds wants to be Governor of the State, and this appropriating game, it is said, will improve his chances for a nomination by the Radicals. SIMON CAMERON has not been cod dling Grant for nothing. His son-in law, Wayne McVeigh, Esq., has just been nominated as Minister to Turkey. Grant will no doubt feel as much at home in the mansion of Lochiel, which he is soon to visit, as he would at the hotel of that name. He has paid his scot in advance. A DESPATCH from Washington says The Senate Pacific Railroad Committee has determined to make hereafter some in quiries as to the antecedents, character and financial standing of applicants for railroad charters and land grants First come firmt served has heretofore been the rule, and parties desiring franchises to sell or use as a basis for bond operations have been serv ed as readily as capitalists asking charters in good faith for the purpose of building the roads. That is locking the stable door after he horse has been stolen. NORWICH, Connecticut, has elected a Democratic Mayor by :NS majority. The Official Vote of New York The official vote at the late election in New York has just been published, and It foots up a Democratic majority of 84t -206. The Democratic majority :in the city, is 59,965, and in . .the Country tracts 27,241. These figures completely do away with the silly stories about the election having been carried by frauds practiced in New York city. The Rad icals made a very poor show in the rural districts, and in some of the most relia ble Republican counties a complete rev olution was eflbcted. The Tribune sticks to its exploded falsehoods about repeat ers, &c., but other Republican news papers can not see it in that light. The Times says : The fact Is we must go behind all thesug gestions of the Tribune to find the real ex planation of the result of Tuesdays elec tion, as well as to discover the means of preventing a repetition of the disaster in November. The truth is rapidly growing apparent that the Republican party lacks harmony of thought, as well as efficient leadership. A great party, like a great army, must have both a cause and leaders in order to achieve success. The policy of the past, by which we have hitherto won victories, has been meas urably merged in accomplishment, and out of that accomplishment has sprung a variety of now issues, which no one has yet attempted to deal IA ith in a statesmanlike spirit.. The Republican leaders in Con gress, whose legitimate work it was to con duct. the party, have utterly failed. Instead of rallying round the Administration, and co-operating with and strengthening it, they have been indifferent or hostile, while at the same time they have neglected the pub lic service, and developed nothing but a con flict of policy, and a diversity of action, the first fruits of which were harvested in this State and Connecticut. An honest confession is said to bo good for the soul, and we have no doubt the editor of the Times felt better after telling the truth about the election. The facts stated are recognized by sensible Republicans everywhere throughout the country, and their force will be felt, not in New York alone, but in every North ern State at the elections next fall. New York only leads in the great political General Hancock On the arrival of General Jianeock at Sioux City he was waited upon by the editor of the Sioux City Times, and his attention was called to the Associate Press despatches from Washington of May 22d, charging hint with having shown discourtesy to the President on different occasions while the latter was General of the army ; the said despatches also stating these allegations as a reason why the President refused to assign General Hancock to a command com mensurate with his rank, and at the same time giving to a junior a command of a higher grade over General Ilan cock. The General asserts these alle gations to be in the main false, anti says that he intends to take an early occasion after having seen what has been published in reference to this subject, while absent on the upper Mis souri, to formally reply to the allega tions, as charged, in detail, they seem ing to bear the impress of the sanction of authority, and this occasion being the first opportunity presented that war ranted a formal reply to such allegations. General Hancock was not aware of the publication of despatches, or any part of them, correct or incorrect, as published, nor the origin or cause of their publi cation, until he received the newspapers containing them two days since at Fort Randall, and therefore is not conversant with all that lots gained credence (luring his absence. Letting Light in on the San Domingo The Washington correspondent of the New York Sun lets some rays of light in on the San Domingo Job which Grant is so diligently laboring to put through. He says: The limitation of a million anti a half of dollars for the purchase money is only a trick to deceive the public. That is but a drop in the ocean of projected expenditure. The scheme is to get the island at any price, and, having got it, to build up a naval sta tion of magnitude without regard to ex-. pense. For this purpose the lobby have . secured the best sites on the island for quays, docks, and the like, with the lauda ble Idea of making Congress pay roundly for every inch of the speculation. Twenty millions would not foot the bills for St. Domingo, ifonee acquired. It is the largest job, after the railroad spoilations, which has been put up, and the ramifications in it extent! from the White House to all the sources of real or supposed influence. What a spectacle is here presented to the country and to the world ! Let the people look at this man Grant in his true character. Let them remember how lie has systematically made sale of offices, how he tilled his cabinet with mediocre men who had given hint gifts, how he has parcelled out places among a greedy gang of impecunious relatives, and how he has grown wealthy by the acceptance of presents from men who look to be paid by favors; and then let them behold him boldly and impudent ly taking his stand ill the ante-rooms of the Senate Chamber, where he button holes Senators and begs them to vote for his San Domingo Job, which he and his friends have set up in such a shape that they will make immense fortunes if it is put through. Even the gold speculations in which Grant and his brother-in-law Corbin were engaged looks almost respectable beside this last and most impudent attempt to swindle the tax-payers of the nation. Tito School Fund of Tennessee was stolen during the reign of Brownlow and his saints, and a Committee of the Legislature of that State is now engaged in tracing the missing property. It ap- Iwars by the evidence of Mr. Itutter,the President of the bank in which the fund was deposited, that it was arranged be fore his bank was made the financial agent of the State, that it should fUrnish a certain amount of money to the Radi cal leaders as a party corruption fund. It did advance that party twenty thou sand dollars at one time, to aid its leaders in maintaining power in Memphis through the the Metropolitan police. It advanced money also to bribe membeN of the Legislature and to sup port Radical newspapers. In this way the whole three hundred thous:nut dol -1 Lrs of the school fund were used up.— liaton,the RadicalSehool Commissioner, owned and edited the Nashville Post, and thousands of dollars of the school fund went to aid in propping up and keeping that rotten organ in existence. These are the facts brought to light by the Committee of the Legislature, and they show how utterly and shamelessly corrupt are the leaders of the Radical party in Tennessee. Effects of the Rains on the Wheat The continuous rains and uninter rupted cloudy weather of the last week have prostrated a great deal of the wheat, much of it being very badly down. As the grain is just blossoming it is feared that no little damage will be done We notice by our Maryland exchanges that the saute thing has happened in parts of that state. Elsewhere there is no com plaint that we have heard of. IN order to show his complete subser viency to Radicalism, the ex-rebel Cres well appointed a Negro Postmaster in one of the countes of Maryland, where the negro population is most dense. The darkey could not give bond, and so he was compelled to abandon the office.— The Postmaster General is reputed to have been much chagrined at the mis carriage of his scheme for destroying all distinction of races in his native State. emloos, who has been figuring for some time in connection with the May oralty of Richmond, Virginia, has, at last, tumid his level. He has been in dicted for forgery, by which the State was defrauded out of seven thousand dollars. What a precious set of scamps, scalawags and plunderers now rule and lead the Radical party North and South. RETURNS from Whittemore's district indicate that he has been re-elected to Congress by a majority of 8,000. He was supported exclusively by negroes. What will the Radical Congress do with this member of the party. If they turn this thief out they will offend the ne groes, if they let him in they will dis grace themselves. Whittemore Re-elected The expelled carpet-bagger Whitte more has been re-elected to Congress.— He had no Democratic opponent. A negro took the field, but it is believed he was bought Another carpet bagger of more reputable character run the race out, but Whittemore beat him badly. A correspondent of the New York Tribune, writing from the district of Whittemore gives the following ac count of him : If the gossip which this gentleman's own neighbors retail about him be true, it seems strange that even the most infatuated of his black constituents should not pprue soon to know the man. I have Listened to nothing from the lips of Rebels or Democrats, and get my estimate only from true, earnest Republicans who have had to work beside the man in one capacity and another, in legislation and in electioneering, and have come to know him by degrees. These all give him the praise of being a tireless, con stant laborer, ever ready 'to answer any call, able to speak in sten torian tones by the hour and by the day, equally capable on the stump and in the pulpit, and an adopt in all the social expedients known to the local politician.— But they all attribute to him a readiness to replenish hie pockets by any method, a willingness to confiscate small perquisites as well as large ones, and inability to distinguish between his personal treasury and that of the party which cannot but bring any politician event ually to grief "Why, Sir," said one gentleman to me, "when two lady school teachers came to Darlington, and the hotel refused to take them in, this man took them down to the house of one of the best citizens, and got him to keep them over night, a man with the real Southern notion of hospitality; and then the Representative in Congress collected 75 cents apiece from them fur their lodging, and put It in his own pocket. They went to the same house for shelter again a few weeks after, and of fered their host in the morning the same sum they had paid before: and he resent ed it as an insult; and so the whole contemptible swindle came out." " Yes, and that was hardly smaller than collecting dimes and quarters from all the negroes in Isis district for a national stag, and then getting the money for the same stag from people in the North on the plea of the peverty of his people." We found his accounts in a sad state in our Republi can State Committee ; and when we in quired into some of the deficiencies, hosaid he had spent a certain hundred dollars for printing ballots for such and such a village; but the leading negro front there contra dicted bins on the spot, and said on the contrary hu hail sent down and demanded collection of money to inky for the tickets, which had been duly made and entrusted to him. So wo were unable to certify to his correctness, but made a report speaking of his great ardor and indefiaigable work in the campaign, and regretting his vitro lessness in keeping his accounts." Of worse I, MI a brief sojourn in South Caro lina, cannot testify to the correctness of these stories; I merely give them as speci mens of multitudes of allegations freely made upon his political friends, so far as I know uncontradicted, and going to show how natural and consistent with his entire career was the lapse which occasioned his departure from Congress. What a commentary that is upon negro voting! How completely it ex plodes all the theories of the Republican leaders! What a farce such an election is, what a mockery of Republican insti tutions ! It remains to be seen what the Radicals will do with Whittemore. He comes back to defy them. Will they turn him out again ? We shall see. He is scarcely meaner 111:111 some others of Isis class. Massacre of the Jews Iu Mournella The story of the Massacre of the Jews in notnnelia, which we publish else where, is one of the most horrible reci tals which has shocked the public in modern times. If the telegraphic re ports be correct the "native christians" of the Turkish Empire have proved themselves to be more barbarous than heathen. How, after having been per secuted by the Mahommedans for cen turies, they could turn upon the Jews and butcher them in cold blood passes our comprehension. Can it be possible that this was done in the name of Chris tianity ? Itoumelia,Room-elee,Rumili, or Rou mania—ltoman land—is the name for merly applied by the Turks to the largest of their European provinces, comprising their most important possessions in Greece and north of it as far as the north ern ridges of the 'Balkh', and is now ap plied by them to the territory comprising part of Macedonia arid some adjoining districts to the northwest. The name is generally used, however, to designate the provinces known to the ancients as Macedonia and Thrace alone. The whole number of Jews in European Turkey, in 1660, was estimated by Dr. Kolb to be 70,11(1(1. What proportion of these re side in the. province of lionmelin, we cannot say. The number of Greeks and Armenians, who are called Christians, in Eurolicall Turkey, is set down by the same authority at 10,1si0,oilo, and of Ito, man Catholics at (*Ono. From these figures, it would appear that the Jews are not sufficiently numerous to defend themselves against an attack by the " Christians." We hope that future accounts will, at least, lessen the extent of the inhuman butchery as reported ; but that a wick ed and cowardly work has been done, of sufficient magnitude to sicken the civil ized world, appears far too probable. The Truth About Congress We publish elsewhere a letuling edi torial from the New York Herald which tells the truth about the present Con gress. The article is all the more signifi cant when it is remeniliered that the Hrrald is the most sycophantic flatterer of Grant to be found among the news papers of the country. The opinion that the present Congress is in fanniusly cor rupt is so general that even independent Republican newspapers arc compelled to speak out in terms of open and undis guised denunciation. The Washing ton correspondent of the N. Y. San says: It is not to be disguised that the breaking up of the Republican volumn is roost seri ously threatened. Superadded to the rea sons already given, the class legislation here, the enormous land grants, the vast spoliations on the Treasury, the partisan violence which sets aside all justice, and wide-spread corruption, have tended to alienate and even to disgust moderate and upright men, who in not think it a part of their political inissionkit countenance frauds and to cover up plunder Mr the benefit of Republicans in Congress. All that is needed to insure the defeat of the Radical candidates for Congress in several of the close districts of this state is a proper presentation of the is sues to the people. Thousands of honest Republicans are alarmed at the corrup tion which exists at AVashington, and they can be induced to vote for Demo crats of ability and unquestionable in tegrity. Let our best and purest be nom inated throughout the State. THE Radicals in Congress put their opposition to universal amnesty upon the plea that rebels would be sent to represent the South. IL is even feared that John C. Breckenridge might Inc returned as Senator from Kentucky. We admit that such a thing would be likely to prove extremely disagreeable to the Radicals. Such rebels would not only tower far above most of the Radical Senators in intellect, but they would expose the rascality and corruption which prevails in Congress. It is no wonder Radical Congressmen dread the reappearance among them of such men as used to represent the South. Death of Jonah D. Homer, Esq Jonah D. Hoover, Esq., prominently known throughout the country as a leading Democratic politician, died at Washington, on Saturday last. Mr Hoover was United States Marshal fur the District of Columbia during the ad ministration of Franklin Pierce, be tween whom and himself a very warm personal friendship existed. Mr. Hoover was a gentleman of high character, and enjoyed the confidence and esteem of men of all parties. He was for some time engaged in the newspaper business as publisher of the Washington Eaprcss. He frequently visited Lancaster, and was well known to many of our more prominent citizens. Grant "ficated on a Monument Smiling at Grief." The New York Sun, loyal Radical, thus notices General Grant contempla ting his Waterloo defeat in New York : The Republican party in New York is !tt disintegrated ruin, and General Grant, seated on a cigar box, contemplates this ruin, and in undisturbed placidity blows smoke through his nose. The New Minister to Turkey The nomination of Wayne McVeagh as Minister to Turkey is not regarded as any great compliment to Pennsylvania, or as a thing which is likely to aid the Republican party in this State. A very large portion of the party are disgusted at the influence which Simon Cameron has somehow managed to establish over the President. The Philadelphia Eve ning Telegraph speaks of the new Turkish minister as follows : President Grant yesterday nominated Wayne McVeigh, Esq., of Chester, to the Senate for the mission to Constantinople, to take the place of Hon. E. Joy Morris, of this city. We think that there is eminent propriety in the appointment of Mr. Mc- Veagh. He is the son-in-law of Senator Cameron, and cannot get office from the people of his county, district, or State. His last effort was less than two years ago, when, with all the appliances Cameron could command to aid him, he was beaten only five to one in the Convention. Being a son-in-law of Cameron, he must of course have office ; and as he can't get it from the people, he must get it from Grant. At first the Cabinet was selected, and it was an nounced by Cameron that McVeigh would soon succeed Attorney-General Hoar, but rather than miss, a second-class mission is now accepted. The appointment will cost the Republican party of Chester county a reduction in its majority of five hundred or so, and many thousands in the State; but no matter, Cameron and his family must be provided for. The Color Question In the Theatre Washington city being immediately under the supervision of a Radical Con gress, the great doctrine of the party is being rapidly worked out to perfection there. Negroes have been admitted to the public schools and are received at the entertainments given by public dig nitaries. The Washington correspond ent of the New York herald, records the following instance of the pushing impudence of the blacks : " The equality of color is making rapid progress in this town. Last night two ne groes, dark as the ace of spadts. occupied conspicuous seats in the orchestra at the National Theatre, enjoying the English opera. The night preceding, an otticer of the House of Representatives created an iIIIIIIOIISO sensation, by appearing at the SUMO theatre with two dashing and ele gantly dressed colored ladies. lie bore his honors manfully and meekly, paying no attention whatever to the curious looks di rected towards him by his white brethren. Route very excited white folks went to the manager of the theatre to protest against the "outrage," as they called it, and to suggest the propriety of putting the colored gals and their white escort out of the thea tre. The manager declared he couldn't do it short of a tine of live hundred dollars, which he did not propose to incur this sea s et." The House t Georgia) Reconstruction Bill, ready to be reported at the first op portunity, goes even far ahead of the Gingham amendment. It is specially provided therein that a new election in the State shall be held the coining fall, as is provided in Ilse State Cons( i [Whin. The bill differs in all its essential fea tures from the Senate bill, which was some time since passed by that body in such an incongruous shape after a very protracted debate. It is gravely appre hended that the present status of the question, and the seeming incompati bility of views in Congress, will, after all, put oil an adjustment of Georgia, till the next session. We are not sure that this is to be regretted. The present condition of Georgia is bad enough, and any additional Radical legislation can only have the effect hi aggravate her sufferings. CERTAIN overzealous and hide-bound Radical newspapers—such as the Lan caster Express, for instance—have denied that the New York Sun is entitled to be called allepublican newspaper. It does not support all the bad measures of the administration, and occasionally tells some very ugly truths. The following is one of its latest and hardest hits: If Gen. Leo were President of the Uni ted States just now instead of Gen. Grant, with Jeff. Davis for Secretary of State, in stead of Hamilton Fish, the policy of the Government could not be more averse than it now is to the cause of human freedom.— We doubt whether both England and Spain would not prefer the present Admin jstration." That kind of talk is enough to rile the whole tribe of syeophantic Radical edi tors whom Horace Greeley once aptly characterized as "the insignificant in sects whom Providence, fur some mys terious purpose permits to edit Republi can country newspapers." WHEN the Effpre.so is worsted in legit imate newspaper controversy it resorts to blackguard ism and abuse. Its last issue is On instance in point. It goes off into a flurry of loyalty and lashes it self into an agony as desperate as that of a dying whale. It prates about copper heads and apostrophizes Jett". Davis. That is its method of carrying on an ar gument. It is a very poor one, to be sure, puerile and ridiculous, but it seems to be all that it is capable of. We do not suppose it will ever discover that epi thets are not arguments. Tito Pittsburgh Comm, rciid thus ilk poses of the proposition to make John W. Forney the next Itailical nominee for Governor of Pennsylvania:— " A Harrisburg totter writer to the Ileav or Rodic‘d expressos th,‘ conviction that the name Of John \V. Forney will be urged fer Governor before the next Republican convention of the State. Ile ontiLs to add that it will be urged in vain. 'the writer proceeds to give a history of Forney's po litical career, just as if the people of the State are not fluniliar and disgusted with it. Attempts like this to bolster up pMitical leeks only lead decent people to Lou if the time will never come when the Republican leaders will cease to insult the masses in this way. Cameron Mr oiled States Son :gor, Forney for Goveritor ! Who is the next patriot on the list ? A SPECIAL do p atch to Forney's li' so shows how deeply he is ehagrinegl over the result of the Municipal election in \Vashingtim City. He says: The defeat is attributable solely to the course of the disalfeete,l Republicans, who, almost :thogether on account of personal 41ilrereitees, united with the Democrats against the regular Republican nominees. 'l'he case is the same as in Virginia and in Tennessee, where itepliblh•ans deserted their party standard. And in Washington, It.s in those States, such liopliblicalls will 4inichly learn the error of their ways. 1=! Eight thow-nnil imum, arc 14,t. ,ale in Ecars pr4,w ling ttl.ut iu Blair county. A NVOIMiII • near ; -, l•ranton ha , given birth to triplets—two boy's and a girl. All are doing well. The term of Hon. James Thompson, Judge of the : 4 uprenie Court, will expire next year. The Presbyterial' Synod Harris burg will meet at Bellefonteiin the Listli inst. A little boy playing, in the Heading market ran a meat-hook in hie wrist. It could only be removed with ditlieul- Nathan Hellings has erected immense building, costing over s:2o,uno, near the Delaware river, two miles above Bristol for the preservation of all kinds of fruit. A child 13 months old, of Mr. E. M. Reynolds, of \Vilkesbarre, picked up a bottle of corrosive sublimate with which its mother was cleaning bedsteads, and drank it. It died in a short time. The locust trees through the State are unusually full of blossoms at present, tilling the air with their fragrance. This is said to be a sure sign of a large and bountiful corn crop. The Governor has appointed and the State Department commissioned the fol lowing notaries public for the term of three years each Charles G. Milnor and C. H. T. Collis, Philadelphia. At Thomasville, York county, George B. Thomas is appointed Postmaster, vice Emanuel Spangler, resigned. A new office is to be established at Mount loyal, York county; Michael B. Leas, postmaster; en route York to Dellisburg. The Montrose Democrat says Joseph Shupp, while hunting on Saturday last found and caught a rattlesnake on the fourth rail of an old fence, winch measured live feet three inches in length, and was proportionally large in thick ness. The citizens of Bethlehem, recently had an adroit swindleramong them. He opened an office as agent for a Boston Life Insurance Company. One party invested $163, but afterwards had some doubt of the agent's integrity, and he wrote to the principal office for proof. The swindler was arrested and put in jail. Some of his friends disgorged the $163. News and Other Items. One hundred females are now study ing law in this country. The King of Prussia has among his pets fifty white mice. Michigan complains of invasion by a legion of potato bugs. The rains have caused heavy freshets in the Southern States. lowa city has got pure water by boring 400 feet. A Chicago joke is to grease the keys of concert pianos. The number of cattle owned in Eu rope is 95,700,000. During a thunder storm at Chicago', yesterday, three men were killed by lightning on North avenue. Cowley county, Kansas, which had not a white family two years ago, has now a population of 2,000. It is said that the new detachment of Canadian Zouaves for the Papal army will leave Canada late in June. At Portland, Maine, on Saturday, Mrs. Hutchings,a deaf old lady, was run over and killed by a locomotive. Despatches from India, mention an alarming outbreak of cholera in Bewail, in the Bengal Presidency. The fruit and grain crops in Central Illinois are reported to be nearly a month ahead of last year, and to promise splen didly. An extensive fire is raging in the woods of the Metapedia district of New Brunswick, and miles of telegraph poles have been burned. On Saturday, Hon. Wm. H. Tweed, of New York, paid a bill of $.5750 for the transportation home of Fenians from Vermont. There were 271 deaths in Philadelphia last week, a decrease of 33 from the re turn of the previous week. There were 30 deaths from scarlet fever. The Union Pacific Railroad company is employing Chinese laborers for the section west of Cheyenne, and the dis placed laborers are making threats. At Central City, Colerado, on Friday, Leopold Klein was killed by an idiot named Tuttle, whom he was driving out of his garden. Tuttle is in jail. The Fulton Re publioun, Fulton coun ty, Ims again changed hands. Mr. It. E. Shalkr having re-purchased the office from Mr. H. B. Jeffries. James N. Miller, 11:1,1sold the Wayne:: burg., Green county, Rei.wit,,ry to Mr \V. (I. W. Day, of that place Who Will it the future run it. Ropresentatis•e Voorhees made a po litical speech at Terre Ilante on Satur day evening in the course of which lie said he intifinled "t 1) make lint one more race for Congress. At Deerfield, sew Hampshire, on Sunday, a boy, named Little, aged ten years, shot another, mimed Bean, aged live, while playing with an old musket, and killed him instantly. The smallpox is raging among the Crow Indians, 111111 there is 'very little hope of checking it, as, owing to some superstitious idea, they refuse to be vac cinated. Scott county, Illinois, was visited by a destructive tornado, on Saturday. For a space of four or five miles in length, by one in width, all the trees, crops, fences and vegetables were destroyed. No lives were lost. There is a place on the top of Laurel Hill, in Fayette county, known as the Philadelphia rocks, where snow can be seen now three feet deep and icicles as thick as a common saw-log. Mrs. Owen Franks committed suicide by shooting herself through the heart, at Pekin, Illinois, last Tuesday. Do mestic unhappiness is assigned as the cause. A eat owned by H. M. Collin, of Ro chester, N. 11., lately caught a large perch which ventured too near the edge of the river, brought it into the house, uninangled and still alive, and laid it at the feet of her mistress. A vigorous old lady of Westport, De eatur county, Indiana, by the name o Wheedon, walked to Greensburg a few days ago, paid her taxes, and on return ed to within 21 miles of Westport, mak ing 30 miles in one day. Her age is 7• years. Colonel Morrow, commanding at Fort Buford, Dakota, reports that the Indians in that vicinity have declared war against the whites, and are preparing to attack the fort. Morrow had fifty men to defend the post, while from three to five hundred Sioux warriors were in the neighborhood. In Kansas, thirty-five Indians have attacked Col. Nelson's mail station be tween Camp Supply and Hays City, killing two privates and wounding Ser geant Murray. The Indians have also killed a Mexican servant at Camp Sup ply, and carried of 50 mules from the vicinity. At Chicago, complaint has been made to the Health authorities of a sickening odor in the vicinity of Washington and Wells streets. The nuisance was abated esterday by a visit of the Health offi cers to a Medical College, under the roof of which was discovered a vast collec tion of dissected human remains in var ious stages of decomposition. In Chicago, the erection of a new ho tel, to be commenced on July Ist, is an nounced. It is to have a frontage on state street of El feet, and on Monroe street of 2,52 feet, to be eight stories high to contain 7riU rooms, and to be in the style of the Louvre at Paris. The cost, including the ground, is estimated at z 42,500,14111. The Erie war has been renewed.— Commodore Vanderbilt yesterday noti fied Jay (;ould that all arrangements between the New York Central and Eric Railroads are void, and that Erie tickets between New York and Buffalo :tad Niagara Falls will not be received on the Central. The Pennsylvania Railroad has received the same communication, :LIM negotiations arc said to have been opened between that road and the Erie for an alliance offensive and defensive. The International Typographical I'M ion began its 15th annual meeting, at Cincinnati, yesterday, one hundred del egates from the United States and Brit ish provinces being present. Among the delegates are two women from New York The following officers were elect ed for the ensuing year :—President, .T. Hammond, of New Orleans; Vice-President, Thomas Willard, of Albany, and John H. O'Donnell, of Roston; Secretary and Treasurer, John Collins, of Cincinnati; Corresponding Secretary, Miss Augusta Lewis, of New York. The session will last until Fri day. At the Third ward polls at Washing ton city, on Monday, during a difficulty bet Ween the whites and blacks, one of the latter was shot in the wrist. A riot occurred in the Seventh ward, which became so serious that the officers were obliged to resort to force. A colored 11121.11 was shot by one of them,the hall entering the left side. ity riding into the vast crowd and briskly using their batons, the mounted police succeeded in dis persing the rioters, some of whom were arrested. With these exceptions there was general gem!, order through out the city. Never before has there been so much interest exhibited in the municipal election in this city. 'The main coutest was between Bowen, the present Mayor of Washington, and Emery, also Republican, who was for the greater part supported by those out side of that organization. The Terrible Story Confirmed! PA ills , J one it—\l id night.—The in (omit tion respecting the massacre of the Jerrii ill itolllllelia, as telegraphed to the American Press Ataticiation, emanated train the Cen t ral Committee of the Alliance Israelite llniverselle of Paris, who published a tele gram from Constantinople, announcing, that on Sunday the LtUch of May, the Chris tian populace of Botuschang, in the pro vinee of Roumelia, attacked the Jews by a preconcerted signal, committing a terrible massacre. M en, women and children were slaughtered, and the scene is described as terrible beyond expression. on the following day the attack was con tinued. All the Jews had lied from the neighborhood. The Jewish telegram re ferred to described the fury of the populace as horrible in the extreme, and implored that succor should be immediately sent them as they were houseless wanderers. No contradiction to these accounts has been received. The Indian Vleltore WASILINGTON, June G.—Red Cloud, Spot ted Tail and the other Indian Chiefs, were received by the President this evening, and the entertainment is reported to have been in every respect as elegant as that given to Prince Arthur." There were present, besides the President and Mrs. Grant, the Cabinet Officers and British and Russian Ministers and families, Eon. Felix It. Bru not, Vincent Colyer, Commissioner Parker and members of the Indian Committees of Congress. The chiefs and squaws were in full Indian costume. The President pre sented each of the Indian ladies with a bouquet, while Mrs. Grant and her daugh ter made similar presentations to the chiefs. The Indians were much pleased with their reception. Ei=iiVEMEEMI wwentrarroN, June ti.—The charter elec tion to-day passed off, contrary to the gen eral expectation, very quietly, only ten riots occurring, and they wore not serious, and were soon put to an end by the police. The reform Republicans have swept the city clean and elected a mayor, and have a majority of aldermen and city councilmen. It is generally conceded that Emery, the reform candidate, is elected by three thou sand majority. SKETCHES OF TRAVEL NORTHWARD - --.-- No. Vlll.—Sharon Sprtors. Sharon Springs are situated in Scholarie county, New York, at a distance of about sixty-live miles from Albany, from which they may be reached In three or four hours by either the New York Central or the Albany and Susquehanna Railroad. By the former road tho tourist will proceed to Palatine Bridge, and then take the stage for the Springs, some ten miles distant, while by the latter he will have a stage ride of about the same distance from Cobble skill Station. Tho country is very hilly, and either ride will be found rather tire some. The principal hotels at Sharon are the Pavilion, the Eldridge, Congress Hall, the United States and the Union, all of which (except the Pavilion, which is the most fashionable) are near the Springs. There are also several smaller hotels and a num ber of cottages. The Spriugs-4ourin number—aro at the base of a lofty mountain. The waters flow for a quarter of a mile and are clear and pure, closely resembling the White Sul phur of Virginia. The tourist who visits Sharon in search of health will rise early in the morning and drink two or three glasses of magnesia water before breakfast, taking care that the first glass contains several toaspoonsfull of salt. This water is remarkably clear and cold, and is not at all unpalatable. Daring the day persons usually drink front eight to ten or twelve glasses of sulphur water, which is rather dark in color and exceed ingly unpleasant to the taste. Eleven o'clock is the hour for bathing. Tho sulphur water is heated by steatußand supplied in numerous small private bath rooms, an attendant being present to regu late the temperature to suit the invalid. These baths are very beneficial, especially to persons suffering from rheumatism. We know of several runes where they have effected NViniiintlin en roe. Persons fre quently visit Sharon early in the season unable to bathe, and leave late in August thoroughly cured. A ft, a bath you feel very weak, and it in advisable to take a sleep, especially if you have had the water very warm. The afternoon may bo pleasantly spent in rambling, among the mountains or in riding. Tine "drives" about Sharon are not very numerous, the country being rather too hilly. TM, most popular and perhaps the pleasantest "drive" is to Prospeet I lilt, a few miles from the Springs, or to ('horn• Valley, still farther away. From the former the visitor will ohlain a splendid view of the country fur miles and miles away..- Near Sharon is Cooperstown, the Inane of J. Fenimore Cooper, to whose writings wo have frequently referred in former articles. In the evening hops aro given at the prin cipal hotels, and are generally well at teinhsl. The season at Sharon eonunencea about the first of .1 ay and usually terminates late iti August, but if the weather is not too cold many persons remain as late as the first of October. Tho etimato is pleasant. During the day it is sometimes warm, bnt there is generally a line air, and the morn ings and evenings aro cool. Occasionally it becomes SO cold that tires and overcoats are not uncomfortable. Fruit of all kinds is rather late, strawberries being quite plenty in the middle of August. Sharon is now visited by persons from all parts of the country, and is destined at no distant day to become One of the most popular of our summer resorts. During the past year efforts have hems !made to ex tend the railroad to the Springs, and when this is accomplished Sharon will rapidly grow in public favor. We have been compelled to wake Wig article unusually brief and, we fear, unin teresting. In our next we shall speak of Niagara Falls. C. A. L. OUR BUNDLE OF NOTHINGS Paying the Printer. "I do kuppose, all knowledge flows Right from the Printing Press; So here I goon, In these old clothes, And settles op I guess," No one, not immediately connected, in some manlier, with the " Printing Press" of the country, can form any correct idea of the tardiness and general reluctance, there is manifested on the part of subscri bers, in "paying the printer"—and especi ally in what is called the Country Picas. Now, we have not the most remote idea of making an . invidions comparison between city and country subscribers, or between those, rather, who support country, and those who support city publications, whether newspapers or magazines; never theless, eve think it is demonstrable that there are people, in some communities, who "strain at a gnat and swallow a cainel " that is, who pay a fire dollar city subscrip tion with curnmendable composure, but who " wine° awfully" ill paying a onc dnikn• country subscription. But we do mean those persons per se who theoretically acknowledge that all knowledge flows from the printing press, whilst at the same time they place the paying of the subscrip tions to their newspapers and magazines on the very lowest line in their catalogues of pecuniary obligations, if indeed they do not place it on an "air line" below the lowest. Most unquestionably they all intend to pay, and this intention would not at all be objectionable, so far as it goes, if it were not that many who so intend, seem to think—like Mr. Skimpole -that smell intention is just the same as if they had paid. Some shockingly bigoted old religious en thusiast has roost inconsiderately blunder ed out that "The way to hell fr pared with good intentions," lint surely nobody be lieves him in these enlightened days, and why should they? when all of Mr. Sk Un pole's philosophy on pecuniary obligations runs in a "diametrirally oppoisito direc tion—when good intentions may efface any obligations, pecuniary or otherwise. The little "couplets," however, which constitute the head of this insignificant "stick" in "our bundle of nothings," breathe all encouraging and refreshing I spirit—something more than a mere inten tion—something more tangible than an ob solete skimpoleism. They indicate such an honorable itch - nowledgment, honest in tention, and s uc h a practical net, as ought, to stimulate all those who aro under pecu niary obligations to the printer and pub lisher of any journal, whether In town or country. When an individual truly be lieves that the printing press is ono of the most prolific sources of knowledge that ever has been vouchsafed to the world—or rather perhaps wo should say, the most ef fective mcd/uni knowledge—for all knowledge has its source, primarily, in lied, immediately in man, and mediate ly in the workmanship of il3llllS— if then this were fleknowledged, there would not lie so much reluctance ill according to it that pecuniary recompense which it so richly deserves. Ilia there are absolutely people, in this closing third quarter of the nineteenth century,who hare no faith in the printing press as a medium of knowledge. Here is a !UM 11011 S response from such a person. " Donil sent me yor poper no longer fur i dond reel et, i ony shaf woos in a weeg, an i hef to mood' shafen paper" If such a communiection can yield any balm to the weary head and heart of an Editor, it will lie nothing for him to re pose tranquilly upon a " bag of augers," and digest "gravel 11.11." But that is ab solutely nothing, in regard to the volume it speaks, concerning tl.e intellectual status of him, who does not read his paper. Such a man has not oven good intentions. lie belongs to no school of philesopy,:and prob ably has no /foil hut gold, or "green backs." Ile does not intend to "pay the printer"—he does not make any " guess work" alsmt it, for his fixed purpose isnot to incur such a pecuniary obligation. There fore, this stick of ours, has no power to "stir up" him, but must be applied to those, who having voluntarily assumed such an obligation, vet delay, and hesitate, and equivocate, in a prompt and honorable dis charge of it. BELLE-V 1 Jaw, MIME= A Filibutstering Expedition Broken tip. 11...v.LNA, June s.—Do Bodas telegraphs that the filibustering expedition which sailed from New York on the steamer Goo. B. Upton, disembarked at Punta Brava, a few miles east of Nuckvitas. They were at tacked by a Spanish force, 100 strong, as sisted by two gunboats, and dispersed, los ing 10 killed, including Capt. Harrison ; 2 were drowned and 3 captured. The steam launch, rubber rafts, and the entire cargo of arms, ammunition and medicines which had been landed, were captured with some correspondence. The Spanish naval commander telegraphs that the munitions captured consist of two tons of powder, over 100,000 cartridges, and 1,700 rifles. CLsnepoa, who commanded the expedition, had sailed on the Upton, with the balance of her cargo, for Columbia, for the purpose of bringing back an expedition of 200 Columbiana. The editor of the "Voz do Cuba" reports that six tons of gunpowder,ooo rifles and the entire material of the Upton fell into the hands of the troops, and several pris oners taken wore immediately shot. None of the despatches state when the lauding was effected. [For tho Intolllsoneer.l CAPE ISLAND. CAPE MAY CITY, Juno 2, IS " A life on the ocean wave, A home on the rolling deep, Where the scattered waters rave, And the winds their revels keep." Had the gentleman who wrote this lad been hero for three days last week would have been thoroughly convin that the scattered waves and wild wi wore keeping their revels in downri earnest. The sea run mountains high, wind blow a perfect hurricane, and the poured down in torrents. The sight grand beyond description. But the sl has passed, and the bright sun is a shedding its genial rays over us. Ou Saturday an excursion train e: down with six hundred Presb2, - to ministers on board. They arri in the midst of a heavy rain ale which marred their pleasures, m to their regret. However, they trived to enjoy themselves, and all w smiling faces as they gazed upon the br ocean from the stops of the Stockton. S. ventured out on the beach, and gath clam and couque shells to take limn mementoes of their trip. A sump luou. past was served up by the Railroad e piny, and they all ate heartily. astonishing what appetites these 'ireful have, but probably they were only spar ed up by the effects of the salt air. 'r were supplied with six hundred gullet milk, but no gin. I think that this wa oversight on the part of the company, verily believe that a few converts ei have been made to the gin and milk trines of the 11ev. Mr, Smyth. The re having been finished, the prayer said the hymns sang, they were carried ot carriages to the depot, all seemingly lighted with their trip to the sea sliere. The hotels aro making extensive pre ations for the 91/111,111•11i1111, 501144011. The mantic, the Centro, tho WashiLviol several others of the smaller 1U11...... already open, but the guests are, very few at the present time, being in, composed of persons who hays ruulo 010 look alter their cottages. The Columbia House will again td leading position this season. Me. Itultuu, the proprietor, who has made self so popular, both her, allii burg, WILS down lhr 00101' to work to fully ;wept, himself tor opening day, which will take place on Ind old one. The improvements made the l iiimobia sin, last season show s liberal spirits of the proprietor. Ile It hesitates at expense where the tu n a furl hie patrons are iS earl it . a Very gl`lllll4llllll, uu,l is serving W . llllll'll praise for the Manner ill which Ile ens 111,1141 his 'ilt Thorn Is nothing in the l'hiladelphi, New York markets too good filr lii. ;ilk For lint) oysters and lisp there 1,11 lie better than those, at Cape May. 'They taken out of the I ieeatt fresh every [nor expressly for this house. Tito best c. are employed, and the admirable kit. arrangements cannot be surpa,scd. Bolton has arrayed around hint nrr clerks who understand their business know how to be courteous and anon Aznong them I notice NI r. John Polo Harrisburg, an estimable young ge man, who is now hero superintendhe refitting of the house. :NI r. Bolton pi ices to excel himself this season, Ile is scantly, I mu told, receiving applieati by letter, for choice rOOlll,l, which sh very clearly that then, will soon be c rush here of beauty and fashion. (4,1 feature of tire coteelhin Iluu so, an important one, is that its patr. , ll:l. from the most wealthy and relined raiii of Philadelphia, and the entire intern Pennsylvania. 11'ith no great aim at play, you bind the essentials of u retired genteel summer home, and the appo atoms of the house throughout are stir swim especially adapted and applied In desires of its guests. Thine, Official Deapatch from General Han elm:Aim, Juno 3.--Tho following patch was received ut the Military II quarters, Elated Sioux City, .1111111 2. I have just, returned to this point. I s to the Cheyenne agency, above Fort N and had conversations with the ludi Troops have been placed at old T. Whetstone Creek, Cheyenne and I; River agencies. I have visited all cept the latter. General Stanley Was it lbw days since. Everything wits I have ordered two eempanics to Lower Brute agency, eighteen miles la Crow Creek agency, on the application agent, who informed me that he could continuo his business operations Lin troops were placed there. Evcryil seems twiet, Lit the intern is iainsidi uncertain along the river :tt. 1 . 114 , .: el Major Randall's agency, tie, only p where I talked with the Indians, I olisia that they made premises for the Fitt and sonic of thoni there, :vi points, complained of troops being pl. on -their reservations. They unili•rst however, why iL 1”lie, and seem t, nit the i justice or it. My impression is wo I have no trouble with thei the government continues the feeding therm Otherwise 1 have doubt there will be serious trouble. were more likely to make tree Llu r where, however, as they ran only trail. the Missouri. The policy of sending representative men of the refract. dry dians clearly would have a good eltert, would generally break down their ie 01110 With the 1111H/init. I request thorny to advertise a reward of t?.. - 0,1 $l,OOO, say in horses, for the murder, the family on the Nebraska river. I hove we may thus capture iheni, least produce the effect of Mitering all from like Crimes, for fear of being :trre through the same rewards. I leave lei first train for St. Pants. W. S. ILAN. Major-(;eneral, uitml Statv, t The monthly public debt sbnement issued, shows it reduction luring month or Slay of $14,:101,962; anionn coin in the Treasury, $106,759,731; 0111•1• cy, $14,243, 016. The following la till . capitulation statement of the debt bear interest: Five per cent. bonds, $2.21,:".. 300.00; per tint bonds Ixsr,, $3..:3, 1 d00 $2,107,943,2011.00. Interest, $1.:,11 451.14. Debt bearing currency inmres three per rent. certificates, $15,510,000. navy pension fund at three pereent.4ll,l 000.1/0. 'Vote], $59,510,0110 Imi. Inter $462,103,71. Debt on which the interest ceased since maturity,53,721,317.3::; inter $401,030.64; debt bearing no interest, and legal tender notes, 1,ta:, , ,,,107,221. fractional currency, ; titivates of gold deposited, tt:ta,:te, - ,mo TllOO, $.131,011,070.311, 'l'lloal 1,1111,11111 , standing, $2,602,215,595.74 ; interest, 900,675.53; total of debt, principal :11111 terest to date, Including interest due I paid, $2,645,124,271.27 ; amount in 141,mi coin, $1013,769,731.6::: currency, $14,::43, ; sinking fund United States coin int est bonds and accrued interest there , $35,463,228.51; other United States eoin terest bonds purchased and ileecu Oil lilt eat thereon, $42,0115,122.27; total 11111111111 L treasury, $236,561,809.49; debt less anim in treasury, $2,4(16,562,:{71.76; debt I amount In treasury of Ist ult., $2,4211.10 334.35 ; decrease of debt during past neon $14,301,962.57; decrease of debt HIM, Ist, ;31,76(1,105.39. Negroes 1 n the Public SCI/001/d The State of Louisiana has a Constitut that VMS made by negroes and carpet-I, gore, and, as a matter of (nurse, it .11 'anent prohibiting distinctions ins acco of color or race in all places of a pill character. One of Ms articles provides "all children in the State shall be admit to the schools or other institutions iif lea ing, sustained or established by the St• in common, without distinction of r color, or previous condition. There sl be no separate schools or institutions learning established exclusively for race by the State of Louisiana." The nc and carpetbaggers' Legislatures enactc u school law to carry out the Said `41:114.11 a cle of the Constitution, and the State Sul intendent of Schools—one Rev. Outwit is enforcing that law by putting nc children in the common schools with whites. .4 great commotion among w parents and their children is the con uuence. Several public meetings In been held by the whites, and iirrangeme made to establish private schools Mr wl children alone, leaving the common public schools to the negroes. The German citizens of New Orleans progressing in a very businesslike w Their plan is to establish "one prim school in each of the six districts of the ci and ono intermediate school in the hi and Second districts, the establishing 0 high school depending on the reportsof Committees on Finances and Teacher The enrolling of pupils has already moucod, and subscriptions are being Ire made. Tho future of the public school system assuming ominous appearaiwo. 'roe rat OfieN will not send their children to I public schools on account of religious cur plus. White Protestants will not scud th t children to the public schools that Lulu black children equally with white. 'II result will be that the public schools NS' be left altogether to the negroes. Who parents, who are too pair to Send tht children to the private schools, rather tin let their children go without education w send them to the Catholic free schools. that way the Catholic free schools will seen as pupils pretty much all the poor whi children. Poor people will prefer the children to be educated as Catholics, rah, than educated as social albinos. kith that, or Protestant whites will have to t as the Catholics; tax themselves to Lista bli. free schools for poor white children, and taxed at the same time to keep up the pu lio schools used altogether by black colored children. Such, it appears to will bathe result of the general enfurcente of the Louisiana school code, Which Ls e bodied in Mr. Sunnier's bill.