1, .1;,:1••;eli*. - :...:V c k!Ilnii.git Gazette. :4118. AFSOCIiTION • • 45.1115173 T 23. , 2865 MON STATE TICKET. POR ArDim GENT.nex, • • •• • • • • -••-•• . , -.--: CEN. JOUN - P.JUARTRANFT ...: • ".' Of Stontgo Icy count , ron Aunv , n Onurstat. .., ..1 COL. JACOB CAMPBELL t •- • Of CAMbrlik COnntY - ITEION COUNTY TICKET , .ervanarre: ootisTY CVErraCtl.l.2ll: LA.MBEET, Pltt.Tiraltililp; :' , • lion THILUIVIIIIB.: f„inklrin A4.E11, - IR, or Liberty To7nalltp." 7011 RENATE! :4,...6 1 Ww ^ 5 L. OTIAIIAZI, All nc~ny. iroit Aeariamit : ' Y. MeICEE, North Fayette Township. IiANS B. klEltlislN, McCandless Township ::.ALFRED SLACK, at Allegheny. DAVID - S.IIAFER,Uppr.r S. P.: ci/ass, musburgo. 'it.loll.ll A. DANKS.KW%•Tpwobei,. /012 CiiIIINTV CONXIBBI,6I3= 'I JCRASIIAN 4ELLT.4fLovier Sc.cnair , ) I,o * . Oorstronuovirroar U. L. McOrtaXr. o Btrmlagham roa oimtcrOx or room r r iitOSES • 013 . -ESS • of Chaktirra Tomah!,. INDICTfiIIpFT OP BARBAIOthiI . . . . - • - , The-cilminaf records -of nations show ..'- their civilization and Morality with a closer - , ~ :conformity to truth, than do enutuorstlons Of their achlevirnents in ' at§ and scion . C e N and of IbSIS rides for the inertia'. i.. l l, 1 : , of relif sand intelligence. The first ' is - att-expieision.of the real passion and hu• mity do peeple, and of their regard for i tlle Maniervation ofjnatice tad the protoc f. - thin o 'the'citizen in the pursuit of his right (' fa} ling. ' telligli degrees of advance- I:. pe, t - in comprehensive branches of -i . ivledge .is 'Often found among 1: .- liste ' , iieoplb deficient -in the .. moral " l AliStinction -of : right and wrong. This -'...,.. Is exceptional, it is true, but it illustrates .•••. out' asset don 'Mit the criminal records de !: terisaineyaote c'osely the character of the .; ... eiv.ilizatiOu Ora pi ople, than what may be re ; pitied as the mere ineldenrs of a parti-o- l•" - lar e" "tiofsociety.C 1 .• i - ; 013L1 on r In_ i c 0.,. i' 41116 .to ;all clfteres, while the inlitt ;' thCes gro!.ying out of moral causes and po collar poetesses of education, are exceptional ' ".:-..- and pertain only to particular , nations or 1..- races. ilence, if we would learn the real 4 . feeling and sentiment that exists in clasies "or l communities, we 'must, go into the 1 • • colitis of justice. : It is there, that we will - if %fin& -portrayed in all of its vividness, the . utmost desires, passions, purposes and as ,'. piretions of mankind, from which we can . -. I discover and distinguish the hitmane and '.. • . l s `-tnlightend from the cruel aria heathenish. Where shall we find a fuller revelation rif -the fearful barbarism of the South than in i• - the :diselosuresiof the crimes committed .. . . i there a^ainst humanity. It is in this light , i that'We reglad the presentment of W'irz the i leeper of the Ainiersonville Prison, given 'Th.otir paper of yesterday. - It is in this that ;'we`see the culmination of the atrocious dog. `, znas fought to he . made the corner stone of 1 a gr s tat Empire . These dogmas , asheathen- - i.sh Mad evil as they were, found, and still find ! adherents in a political organization, from i. - whieb, while it draws its inspiration from ....',' f- the Senn; exists in all parts of the country, :•." .... .L. and ospires to gite direction to our govern linen tel a friths. There is no better characteri• -filza,tl6.nof the policy of the Confedende States andrtheir sympathisers here, than le fotuad in 1, the :indictment against the Andersonville The principal criminal is not the , poos creature against whom the Indictment .1* is preferred. !leis but the feable accessory tdeisliy ,and moralfy gully without doubt, i oil tie eaircc charged against him. The i real felon who has so tong roamed at large dt.fd.log law end order , is the pernicious tem offarbarism,which has been recognized , and festered In the South as an institution tote propagated and spread over the land. Anlqustitution" in the past preserved and strOnithined political Falty aiming to • cciitivl"tbe Poliey;of our nation. Unforta , trtite7i the law cannot reach this felon In his col' 'Mit a nin s titution. r Mlle CS as Th e • L , Onlvronicly.is to punish the in:strumeuts _ . . carrying out 1116 behests cf ,the system. TLC great betty of sympathizers who have ,•::'," ...., etood.:_ Ly and still stand by this. retie „ latinalunininy ;not be brought into die petir_ts of Jusilte. They however cannot escarAt tilal at the bar of:pane opinion, and tittererdit once pronotioced wilt not be re f,,,! • *,verEcd. ; . • Tii E_EPISCOPA L 81. PS . . . Blsbop' 110PRIN.4, of Vermont, whose • .13011 on Slavery, in which be end?arored .justify that• 0 institution by arguments • drawn from the Bible, is well remembered, 1, Is now the senior and presiding bishop of elturch tbe. United States. He re- ii,:-cently . drafted a Valenta! letter addressed Yto tbfhislipli of the late rebel Statas ia vitingthern to return to the bosom of the national chtirch without any conditions or ,ICaliCeEt3lollB whatever , either , moral or . _L ,i , -polittcaL By sole blunder of the telegraph of the presi, eXtraOlAillflry s l . * document was attributed to Bishop POTTEP., Of Z t :reW York, brother Of the late Bishop -I'Orrixt of Pennsylvania. As coming fr . om imdt pscited . sorn9 surprise; but when its .I)sternty is traced home to Bishop Hor _-;I: EINS all Eurprise ceases, because It is per fectly hz character ; with the man. Of coarse he canhave no quarrel with men who at. tempted to overthrow the government, and shed the: blood of their • conntrynaen - la defense.,of a divinely appointed institution. ;We learnthat at least six bishops of loyal 1 - 13tates have refused to put their names to to the letter, not being willing to justify -1 treason. -So the matter stands at present. We know not how the southern Erdscopa ', liana feel about the matter; but if they are t._aituated by the same. spirit that actuates ! the Me , thoillstt - ,EPlecOPsi Church South, they Will decline the invitation, especially as it ie not sonde unanimously. But if 1 those_gintlemen should return - and take _ their fornier places in tho Biwa of Bishotis, gust es lieY:are, It 'will be very likely to viake.a . among' the :loyal members of that ceinuitiolon,. and lead to some very de cided uttoisitees UllOithErsubideta of free _ dm:a emdloyalty i WI well as their opposites, • : slaveryjdul ,Tnh Bvrrttas s ra. Dzuscavoir—Re have itlrCady !had la our - 431VitChe5-.-an alhision to another frond at Kea; York; :Which had boon lashed utr by *teal of the delinquent. "The emir omwed.ln a anardnent Well street Nut; . , and the detaltero Bayles Tellts„depottoo ;.` doily and saystSliPuqTith - oso, 4 3oobamoig to the .iniititistten. - .; l oiititql: of the enibander had celled upon the &utter* the peak and pinged idin they - would make. up ,-the deficit If the miller was quieted,toWidelt the odic& sprat: 9 4 4orissiugagy 4100114 thettier will bollard:ls an tnibabillty of ihe fortunatoratar..T , The ittillir!l C Telki# -ma - to boa zoldstleA•tikid testr:lit thruilt. opeetttar ?rat, b i tedia-Ouicti.'wligitaiidav urdalsaSal ~- eatleat-repfitrtttgn let ntetpeeeendetintaicirclrs; ` Xa awe* from what 'Siam learn, io hoe beat :i2t e tlteivictiro.to goe4c. lamas& Mn. AgOttOrtii .14 kitc!rfAtilte.Waais (Ohlo)en_k26*. lifter .brief tikk A VI t) incon. A Jinn number of the most prominent Union nifen of Bostoihave addressed a let- I ter to the - Maiden upon the subject of re construction, urging particularly the neces sity of delaying the final settlement of the queationspentling between the lately sece ded Slates and the General Government. It is a well drawn and forcible paper, but its length precludes our publishing it in full. The position is first taken that peace, howeVerdekirable "will be only an illusion and a mischief, and not that peace over which we may all rejoice, if it be precipi tated to the neglect cf those terms and con ditions which the safety and security of the country demand." The first of the con ditions mentioned is that the white pripula • Con of the South shall not be allowed the election of the representatives of the blacks, as would be the case if the former relation of the States to tfie central government were restored. Either the whites alone should be represented in Corferess, or the titbit of suffrage should be made universal. Other wise the voters of some of these States would have a power In the general govern ment double that enjoyed by an equal num ber in the North. Of the alternatives men tioned, that of giving the negroes a right to -vote Is - advocated, as being due to their well proven loyalty, as being theirs by nat ural right, and as a meaiure . of expediency, in order to control the manifest disloyalty of the white population. The asstribtin that the negro vote w 'rod be east only in accordance with the wishes of their old masters is seat dis cussed, and shcwn to be utterly improbable. On the contrary, the repu.panee of their masters to their former slaves has crea•e.l.l conflict, in wielch the ballot will be use , l by the latter as a means of defence. R'it'e .et it they are powerless and liable to be crtshed down to a worse con,:illon than slavery. The neces i'y of social reform, of recur Mg the freedom of speech, which lot a tine was wholly lost, and of free intercourse between the two scclions of our country, is forcilAy rm. "Into the abyss between North and South, crnugh of twasure and bleed has been cast to Coco it, and this country has but to ray, let it he closed, and it wiil be closed." Such are the quemions. which should be settled before the present Bt4iNA is disturbed. "To decide upon these iwmediately" . it is said, "is rendered difficult and hazardous by reasons of the unpreparedness of the population of the rebel states, either to re sume their old rights, or to exercise new rights safely for themselpes or for the Country, at pre,cnt, and certainly not with— oat patient and cautious considerations as to what restrictions or litnitationa upon those rights are requisite and proper. The other reason is the unpreparedness of the free states to decide at once, and finally, this great question which has sprung upon us by the sudlen collapse of the rebellion. Public opinion is rapidly ripening. It is beginning to see that the true ques tion is, whether, in such a non-...ay as this, political rights should be dependent upon race or color. Men are ranging themselves on one side or other of this question. We think, however, that the people cannot now be ready, not mere ly to decide this general question, but to see clearly the details and consequences which belong to any determination of IL The inference we drawls the certain and absolute necessity of delay, before the corm - .try comes to any such practical conclus ions as will take from the whole country all Forcer to retrace its steps or amend its er rors; for when those States are rehabilita ted in all their constitutional rights, there canle no further interference with their internal concerns-" The possible evils lesulting from delay are 0021 tdered and compared with the ex pected benefit, by which they are entirely outweighed. The President is urged there fore to hold tho question of reconstruction in abeyance, until tithe shall determine what policy is to be pursued. Stub, in brief, tire the views expres . ied in this dem:cent. In regard to the policy of delay we believe they agree with those of the President. His recent acts tend to sho w that the States which have seceded shall not be re&inritted until they prove by their conduct tl.r.t they are prepared to discharge arieht their duty to all classes of their own eople and to the nation of wh eh they are a part; and the authoritative statements to this effect, made by Gen. SCHENCK an °them ate evidence of great weight. The fears cf others regarding his coarse arise from their mistaking a merely pmbationary for a final policy in rogard to the South. Let not the raider become uncomfortably per turbed, It is the same "crisis" through which we have been passing since our history as a na tion began, and which is still "Impending." We may sever lot itt for an epoch without its crisis. It will not grow oat the same conditions always. But as It Is the turning point of events, when will It lie that an "Impending crisis" will not be at hand? A special. and we suppose we may call it a subordinate "impending erts6" Is fixed upon to come elf on or about the first day of 'January next. The Associated press dispatches has given to the world a letter of a private ritizcn cf Cemdeu, South Carolina, showina us that at least ono party Is mating suitable prep. aratione to precipitate the crisis at the earliest day possible. According to this private citizen, "the negroes, poor creatures, arc to be turned loose on thefirst day of next January." From thiewe,infer they am yet somehow held in bends In that State. The same authority in forms us that "Their doom Is sealed; they or the white race, most perish." This, if true, is st&tlieg. The, destruction of an entire =VI is an awful ealarani. The threatened ca lamity is all the more terrible, because both races (we can't tell which le the doomed Ste) are Frith, old "settlers" In this habitable globe. They have been going on now for , i, ee« o r the wtl putc.,l3.r. ef 1,1 oiorel .1 a' Et" ar, Chief Coated.- sary S , Jalsa nee, area ale noled the a-0 It'Re •il. wee MptlM.-, the late, t . . 1.30 it Shoe', heLI at Si,':, P'1.1": a a fear week, liner, !ho be,t aesolux a:leonine for ell ordinary i• arpeae3 Joui,eol, June W. TEE WHEELER. & WILSON '; Lodi Stitch Sewin4 Machines j •theelved • he h,:PC, :the great . fithera... ,11.t1 h.al,,ons at. . PA I< !S, France lid.. LONDON Enel ,n 2. ..iB - 3.1 ..' RUIONSFI , ' WI, P:atials3i3. I'Where all the Senrine linchlnes nf En- i rope and Amortca trete la coml.:lt:um No. 27 Fifth NC, Pittsburgh , . I 1 . 01; F ,- 2,I'TE , 4IIEn. Harpers' Mag.:due, Godefs Lady's. Book, Peterson's Magazine, Eallou's Monthly, Leslie's New Monthly, Arthur's Magazine, All the Comic Monthlies, And Other Magazines, Late Papers, AT 0 'UP riL 2:1 8 3:7 AT HUNT'S, N. , .55111.TH sraLEz .9 F IFTS ST., MASONIC HALL SUCCESSFUL TREATMENT Chronic Diseases, Consumption, Scrof ula, syphilis. Seminal Debility, and all Female Complaints, D DRS. AMOS & JOHNSON, 14.2 I.4ciouorth El tireot, PITTSIBURGIT, PA. Teetimoniall3 from the Medical Proles- G=l Arr. Esti/or: It Is with plesauso I Make known .the following Mote to the puhito, believing my ter timcuy may be of germ., to some mvelie ,rho has hitr.eito failed to obtnan relict At all events Ism Coin no more than 'memo to two medical gentle men of l our city, in coufessimg tbat I here sun. sea: 1111 y treated severs/ very bait eases of seminal weakness and female compialtas, by adopting the mode of treatment now proscribed by Drs. Amine h 3oluho • . • • • . . Fen :ernaloweaknes• 1 in not know of anythlng that nsis equal tiureMO, 'EIS I have preneritind them 'or nrwst many ladies who have been iron. Wee for) ears with weakness, and to every on perect curt has been elllanteili some very bad cone. have ;it'd. , to this McKie of treatment 11 the short spew of two eek, • otas, respect fully, W. F. DERWIN, N. D. (71evelato, Chin, 1 .umber 23, ISS3. 'CEDTIFIC.I TE Fli OM THE RED. DR. 11.4.111LT0N FRL.. AC H. OF ..GONTRE.II. 1 certify ibex Drs. Ames a. Johnson'. medicine. have turgid ap , ite, who was subject I, debility auy years. Tbr a...fiches were net only H. U. FILE:HUH., 1.). 1). Important to Ladies. Our I'ENIODICAL LOIOPti bring nn the morally lekaesa :is cases of obstruction from any Lanie. Prins 11. N. 13.—Ladies who are ping ]. at should ant use thorn. 'IUD.' 1o: 1. to, ale W ealertees, n cert•ln cure, 5,4 lejectlon lOr the White• or LeucorrnLe., DISEASES CT THE BLOOD, &c. Dys./venrrn—Drer Firs :nun ageLn etute that your react:lea fir ecrorule end blood at.ense. eke reehy excellent. For acrufuln, eypal• It. or :nwurltlee ot tic blood, I thud they never tall to onto been need AM dlreeted. I hare eat ee