The Montrose Democrat. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1876, April 14, 1864, Image 2

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    ii o.(tmt*Witt*t._
A. J OBRlTBoW,::.7fiiter._
(01-4,47, ap4//4" , f, /6164.
wine warms sipialife* wit
oig.psper will Goma the alandardioit
thatennalo maim it Port Rotat'l74i
toot pleasure in daingaosomo_weeketeo;
mete a. predict. of correctitig all in
oorrectt news or statements which may
appear to ent oohnnee.: _
Among the tiloit itateitaitt wblo oar
"staigbtor''*amattitv 10611414 ate.
*fly or otherwise; are allegationa stno
1114,Xleilan held ft print, or treasonable
interview ;with Lee, the night after battle
of Antiotrun th* Stit. D. W. Voorhees,
and Ot!ierDeseporate bad consulted Gov.
Seymour with referenp to getting up a
Northern rebellion; ..that we and our party,
are opposed to - soldiers voting, and that
oar party is opposed to an increase of the
soldiers' pay; also that our ,rendera 041
soldiers "puppies."' Will the Republican
make the! (Inendelonarablvby correcting
these basely coined or `copied slander*?
Perhaps; but it aroubi beau:sage if it does,
as thefalaehoods Were, Willful, and chronic
w ith that sheet.
—"A Phrenological Reminiscence of
'Little Mae;' "—an exploded and mean
libel, is re - pr oduced in that sheet this week.
ga'After Lincoln's administration bas
deliberately disgraced and humiliated the
Republic by its abandonment of the Mon
roe doctrine, and, through Seward's des
patches has tacitly connived at the subju
gation of the Mexican Republic and the
erection upon the ruins thereof of a French
Monarchy, the House of Representatives,
nlarmed at the bold encroachments of a
foreign power'npon our borders, has put
its most emphatic brand of condemnation
upon the sibameful conduct of the admin.
istrationby the unanimous (yeas 109, nays
none) passage of the following :
Resolved, That the Congress of the Uni
ted States are unwilling; by silence to leave
the nations of the world under the impres
sion that they are indifferent spectators
of the deplorable, events now transpiring
in the republic of Mexico; therefore they
'think it•fit to declare that it does not ac
cord with the people of the United States
to acknowledge a monarchical government
erected on the ruins of any republican
government in America, ander thikauspi
ces deny European power.
Whether this sudden change of front
shall, if adhered to by Lincoln &Seward,
cost us only mortification, or a war with
France, time will determine.
/a - Scarcely any orator is so popular
with the favorites of thit Administration
Aia Wendell Phillips, and none receives as
marked attention from the President, Vice
President, and leading Republican Sena
tors and Representives; yet Phillips not
only boasts that he has labored for years
to disiolve the Union, but he says:
"I have no hope for the future, as this
country has no past, and Europe has no
past, but in that sublime mingling of the
(white and black) races, which is God's
Own method of civilizing and elevating
the world."
Tilton, editor - of the Independent says :
"The history of the world's civilization
is written in one word--bat many are
afraid to speak—which many are afraid to
bear—and that is AMALGAMATION.
In the far future, the negro will wash his
face into paleness with the blood of_ the
white man's veins`."
—And Abraham Lincoln selects the
Independent in preference to every other
newspaper in the State of New York, to
bestow upon it an enormous and special
patronage 1
The Chaplain of the U. S. Senate, like
other abolition humbugs, having made a
practice of notifying'the Lord of what - he
wants done, in his " prayers," Senator
Saulsbury has offered the following:
Rewired, That the Chaplain of the Sen
ate bexespectfully requested hereafter to
pray and supplicate Almighty God in our
behalf and not to lecture .Him, informing
Him; finder the pretense of prayer, his
(the said Chaplain's) %opinion in reference
.to His duty nstrie , Aloggiaty; :1414 that
the iiaid Chaplain be further requested as
aforesaid, not under the form of prayer to
%. lecture the Senate in relation to-Abe ques
tions before the body."
garTbe present admirers of John W.
Forney are invited, to read wbat, he said
of them some yearn ago. See 4th page.
General attention is °kelt:ailed to what
- Giveley said dating the lfeirietiii ivar,'on
the .
war theory. He eclipses . foitltig
.ever, charged to virulent "copperheads."
arPfopositions are before the State
Legislature to buy en elegant mansion for
`the Governor ; and to transfer the seat of
Government
_to 'Philadelphia: The shell.
ties Majority in the House refused.to mu
shier eneoletionriveto SsOadjeure.
merit, but ibe*isae rimes the,2Bol.
aaasstvuttaapadtp."
we trate akeitieleeifirea page today
th i s thiat" s ItiPlaPan palieri=
afthe Fran - tont stripe, irbich = ought to , be
reed attentively by every Freeman. It
reliearses-truths in-a plain Vold style, for
uttering which huw re&ls= of honest and
nu 3 .141141 21 0: 61 0 -110 Prid*Yali 6 ,-
into Ulla* and hee‘ils anisrsp
*re be* seppressid or the ,ofilees dos.
trOjed*Lineoln's approval, for printing
-less- datnigieg articles. : BuV the Nell.
Nation is not-stiPpresisal, '4ololbecause
-dare ot ley tie Nita von va s
newiwit fa boawa natoiter how
siva* 000.13..1#1.49.1de1•
.
ArThe MCMtroia*intinbtration echo,
not liking,to &ea r ditoide . d opproval or
amidemnatkm of 'be nasty dootrbte now
so earnestly advocated by many of its
Party leaden, resorts tkit!le fame apology
that somnof the ponthent folks used to
do sel Does it .necessarily follow that as
the abolitionists ezlictot to :get airtbldar
kies away froth the South that they_ must
all dive into the miscegenation bitsi'ness,
booause somebody says that smite Of the
more debased-Rebels • have practiced it.?
Do the abolitioniets hOPO to galvanize so
degradingon idea ititb respectability, by a
pletithat :they lean) it. from Rebels,. and
will improveh by making voters of - their
-" colored brethren," and wives of their
sooty "sisters?"
The special Lincoln organ in New
York,- 7 -Beether's "Independent"—edited
by Theodore Tilton the miscegenationist
advocate, in spdculating . upon the Presi
dency in 1868, elays; _
"The next National nominating con
vention will be held in Richmond. Blacks
and Whites will perhaps mingle equally in
its debates and decision, and it would be
an act of justice if one of these long op
pressed and despised friends of God shoM
be selected to represent arenewed nation,
the master and model of the world."
• Weil, it Lincoln can ,bold power until
18138, and his party's miscegenation theory
prevails, perhaps the country would then
be ready
. for his proposed black successor.
erne abolition organs have general
ly labored to induce the people to believe
that the Democrats in our southern bor
der comities gave Leo encouragement do
ing his invasion. The Chambersbmg Re.
pository, edited by Col. A. B. McClure,an
ex-senator, and prominent Republican
politician, exposes the malignant slander.
Ina recent editorial he says:
"With, very few exceptions, the people
of the border, of -every political faith,
stood as ane man during the invasion,
and united their mere* to confound the
common foe ; and in ho . single instance has
the evidence been at all conclusive that
an of our citizens gave them aid, comfort
or information, unless, under duress or by
accident,. Every effort has been made to
fix guilt on all sturpected parties, and it
has uniformly failed.,- The charge, there-
fore, that our people m any way aided or
guided the enemy, is, unfounded in fact,
and th e impression that seems to prevail
with some members of the legislature on
this point is in no degree merited."
HARPER'S MAGAZINE for April opens
with an illustrated paper condensed from
Captain Speke's "journal of the discoi
ery of the source of the Nile," which the
Harpers are about publishing in a large
octavo volume. Mr. Lossing'a "Scenes m
the War of 181 q," are continued, the pres
ent portion being an account of the War
with the Creek Indians. The opening
chapter of" Dennis Duval," Thackeray's
flew Novel, which has been left unfinished
by his death, are also given, with several
novelettes that will please many readers.
" A New Jersey Cavalryman's escape
from Richmond," and the attempted "Es
cape of six rebels from Fort Warren," are
very interesting incidents of the 'ar.—
The Monthly. Record of Current Events,
Editor's Easy Chair, and Fashion Plates
and descriptions, complete an unusually
good number of the moat widely circula
ted Magazine in the world.
A Clerical Beauty.
We understand'that a certain preacher
whose :name we shall withhold for the
present, who resides in Jackson township,
makes himself specially„ busy on every fit
ting occasion to excite the prejudices of
soldiers against tmoffendingatizens whom
he chooses, to callcopperheads. The last
Story he
,p ouredi nto their ea was that
Democrats,were banded toget er, armed
for the purpose of assisting in the
next raid he was preparing to make into
Pennsylvania—that be knew the names of
a number who had thus banded--dud
when told that ifhe possessed such infor-
Madan; he was in duty bound to disclose
the plot, hn.seplioatthatif he did so they
would fire_ his building& • Now, fora man
who will 'thus circulate what baknows to
Am a malicious felsel tct undertake to
preach the Gospel , is camong hyp?erisy
to a point- we had suppo s ed no man suLn-
Senn, conoit,y bad yet resebed. ; Alit such
inflations hypocrites wholookeuitbashing
laf thaabolition lulu litni,retallit illaint
1 the eatiotry, that are nosponsiblefoimUch
of the eut4Fry:of the tilues.• Vhfithatvii
*Mord, lleCOUllt to Sett4klllld wi l l yat
learn that jUstice, though soonsogislovir,
will baiurs to evirtika 111 em. : We may
11100 44 gli:!***ls . 11 3 0 1 40 enisig*. Vii=
~.~.~+ n
Ttie anti of the Potomac" , atat : hat" sa
In'deep mud, though its advance may. be
AntiMpatelin a short time. Nearly ev
erytiking seems , to be , readineo for the
movement, General Burusidls ~`pertion,
of tire .expeditiou,,, however',„l not 14
repared to move.- Thfi first p thns,of
-.-slittfotteement!,,'t 'l4 l
amount , 41 to petimpa teejhousand
mee l vissed tbrough.ntsbergyqaultabt
U ie
bunt "Annapolis , wheiebut bxpek
tion rendeavousing. willbe. ewe •
dairs...beforelie .will be ready
this Wilrvery fikety dataitr i thi t edenniiii
tTie Rapillan. Culpepper is to be made a
pernument depot of supply, and is to be
surrounded by fortifications. It iialtnost
certain' that Grant will divide-hid *traria
the attack against Rich song-pact going
by the,James river, part by dulpepper. 7
General Porest is still , doing
. as he
pleases *want' Trentticky. Re holds
Hickman, ola the Ohio river. The Feder
`al cavalry who, were beaten near Somer
vile in Teatteitsee, were the, only troops
'available 'to interrupt him. • He_ now has
everithing his own way.
The number of confederate :Prisoners
captured in the'renent bittle in Arkansas
was throe huadred And seventy. ; .All the
federal officers at Little Rock upder, Gen.
Steele-have =v.6080116 toward Shrev
eport, to aid the Red - RiVer expedition.
A stiecessfal expedition :haa item made
up the Red river, at-Natchitoches, twen
r ty miletaboveAletrandria, La., which re
sulted in the capture of about two hund
red of the rebel cavalry. The water in
the river is rising, which will greatly fa
cilitate the operation of gunboats above
that point. A column of General Banks'
corps has passed through Opelousas, La.
Free Fight for Fremol.
• The German Republicanshavegoneinto
the Fremont movement with a will. They
have become so thoroughly in earnest that
it is plain nothing can ever induce them
to vote for Lincoln. Indeed, their whole
movement is more of a protest against
him than an advocacy of any other candi-
date. The spirit of the Western Germans
can be judged by the folldwing extract of
a speech made by Casper ButtiviTjAdt "-
cal Meeting in Chicago:
"He said he did not think there Was a
single Mall present who would stand up
and say that Abraham Lincoln should be
reelected President of the United States.
He (Lincoln) had told the people - of this
country that the best, policy for the coun
try was no policy at all. (Laughter.) So
far as the speaker was personally txmcerned
be did not, want any such man fOr Presid
'eat. [Cheers) He thought Abralnim Lin
coln was the WEAKEST and WORST
man that ever filled the Presidential 'chair.
(Great cheering) He bad no merits that
were worthy of emulation, and be had no
more sense than a child. (Loud laughter
and applause.) He considered Lincoln a
perfect IMBECILE. (Renewed applause.
Lincoln had come from the little town of
Springfield, and had acted as if !filled ne
ver seen my other place. He — haa _tried
to direct the generals in the Sell!, but in
this he had signally failed. The generals
who were far distant from Washington
always won their battles, while tholes ha
were near the capital always lost them.
If a general once came under the blighting
influence of Lincoln, he wits sure toNlose
everything. He was decidedly opposed
to the nomination of Lincoln at the Balti
more convention, and in the event of Mr.
Lincoln being reelected, he would dread
the consequences. Cameron would be
sure to be taken back into the cabinet,and
this country would become the reproach
of every country in the world. He wished
to see Fremont nominated and elected,
and he declared himself in fever of voting
for ANY ONE EXCEPT LINCOLN
or VALLANDIGHAM.(Loud cheers.)"
Reading this speech will not make Old
Abe good-natured, bet there ie .. a great
deal of the same kind of talk going,on in
native,Republican circles. • •,
Republicans False Prophet&
Of all prophets, truly remarks the
Brooklyn Eagle, surely the leaders of the
Republican party are least entitled to be
lief. After labonng to show that the Un
ion of -these Staten was not worth a dol
t '
lar they predicted that the South could
not be kicked out of it. When a Section
al party triumphed at the North, it was
predicted that the South, insteactof en
deavoring to get out of the Union,iwould
content herself by forming new combine-
tions within it. When the thoigbtful
men of the country were alarme4Ay the
gravity of the times immediately %Flow
ing the election ofMr. Lincoln, that' func
tionary himselfassured us that there was
nobody hurt, and that there wouldllot be.
When war actually broke • ont,:we., - were
assured that the Southern tieoplewite en
deavoring to deceive thetnselves but that
t ey could not deceive so astute's politi
cian as the man who made the statement,
Mr. Seward. Then came the " sixty days'' ,
prophecy, and fmallythe intelligent con
traband, too, took his place among the
),
prophets, and the. south was to be okra
ed out. Give us, says Mr. Greeley,"an
emancipation policy, and 900,000 men
will take,the field. Free theelavesomd
the reads,of - New. England will swarm
with volniteemmysGovAndretv. Pre.
claim the extinction of negro *very and'
the newt will be einfed - lhetigiatatl o n
to plantation, says - - the Tribumveed the
rebels will. have as much as they can at;
tend to-in .pntting down serviler•sneurrec
tion; gvery prediction of . thaw !tea- has
been falsified ; yet aualusho," they non
hod to . prophesy, ut the, .orediOf'of,
oar dppes Is not yet exhausted. - - : ~•
woi #
, -.7., p.... ' : .4t tits binetit ie d, - -
. 01111 V . reolIdifOgexiigtan t '
. mghtythive 'pi* -,,.. .
The ibolition . preas are endeavoring to
tbrOwAhe whole responsibility of the 'hie
riot:in - Charleston,llliriOis ' upon the Chi-
Zeno, bat the inve'stigationhad case
shows, :thatit: was brotight on , by some
drunken soldiers making an attack on Mr:
Wells ,` a citizeii, - who was standing near
the COurt.house.' ' Wag pointed
411 i to4heis ass copperhead,. when same
fifteen or twenty of them made a rash for
itittit „Several tit: there gazed him. Pistols
`Were:Arms both , sideti.
was, iiijokaeatl by one of the soldiers. Ma.
Ay of'Mr. Wells friends went to the rei.
Pee, and the fight that ensued seven
were killed t and twelve or fifteen persons,
'Polkaing citizens and soldiers,were woun
ded. Aporiloi of the soldiers, instiga
ted by some bad men, had perpetrated
many e otiti - agcs dining several days prece
-ding ilie'fatal affray at Charleston. One
Citizen was badly beaten that morning by
soldier, without any provocation, and had
bcen rewarded "by a present of a
pair of boots from one , of the active fo- -
- mentors of strife. On Saturday previous
to the;affray, two' citizens froni the coun
try were attacked by soldiers in Charles
-ton, and with great difficulty made their
escape from a murderous assault. A few
evenings before an old gentleman, a la
borer, after having retired to bed, was as-
saultE:d by a couple of these soldiers, with
•pietols, and compelled to go with them,
under the pretext that he was required to
take some sort of oath. On the way they
assaulted him- and beat him very severely.
Many persons were forced by them to
take some sort of oath. The conduct of
a few of these soldiers, under the influ
ence of liquor, and urged on by a few ab
olitionists, had produced a perfect reign
Of terror in Charleston and vicinity. Mon
day, the day of the affray, being the first
day of the Circuit Court, brought a great
many people to town. When attacked,
they fought. It would be proper to add
that a majority of the soldiers were sober,
and conducted themselves with propriety,
and that most of the citizens of all parties
disapproved of the outrages referred to.
lai'The Tribune contains the following
telegram from Washington :
" The impolicy °title government turn
ing engraver and bank -note printers is
unhappily illustrated in the garret and in
the cellar of the Treasury. Twenty-two
hydrostatic presses are piled np, smash
ed. Northern machinists, who supposed
they were selling to Uncle Sam instead of
an irresponsible and speculative go-bet
ween, are " out" about sixty-five thous
and dollars, am] savage in their grief.—
The government, is " out" in experiments
and failures about one hundred and thirty
five thousand doltdrB; and the magnificent,
Treasury building has received a per
manent injury from the settling of time
iron floor of a part of the upper story,
from excessive weight." •
If this were all the mischief that is to
come of Mr. Chase's paper / Mon ey schemes
the country could stand it ; but before we
are through with him we shall. find that
in addition to the premes, he will have
mined and destroyed the wealth and
trade Of the nation, and that, not the
treasury building alone, but the whole
fabric of society will sink under the weight
of his financial follies.
WHAT IS " LOYALTY," Now ?—A few
months ago, the radical prints and poli
ticians were.all preaching up " loyalty,"
as they understood it to be—obsequious
bending before the figure of the illustrious
railsplitter of Illinois. Lincoln was the
government; and to say anything against
Lirfeoln WAS to assail the government,and
to be guilty of " disloyalty." Now, these
very same radical prints and persons, sup
porting the pretensions of Fremont for
the Presidency, are denouncing Lincoln
in more violent language and hitter tone
than his political opponents ever employed.
"Loyalty"—what is it now, according to
your radical dictionary ?
Spirit of the German Press.
The leading German radical paper of
Michigan—theJournd, published at De
troit—has put up the Fremont flag. So
have two. German papers, 'the
Peoria Deutsche and the Alton Bebbachter.
The Wisconsin Denzokrat, while giving
its _preference to Fremont, declares it
will not support Lincoln under any cir
cumstances. "
''The Westlido Post says that a division
exists in the Republican party, which it
is useless to deny.; and that the division
or annihilation of that party,'which has so
shamefully prostituted itself to the dic
tates of one man, is a far less evil than
the continuance of the present administra
tion system.
The Kansas Zeitung says, that the Ger
mans of the West, ury for Fremont, and
that hai&daily gaining strength among
both Americana and Germans in Kansas,
while Lincoln is constantly losing ground.
The Memphis Rem Zeit :has also hoist
ed Gen. Fremont's name.-
THE Puff= Sounsn.—lf there is A
being in the world who is deserving of
private affection and; public gratitude, it
is the soldier who leelrehelt .as A private in
the Taal of ae arm& to figbt for his
nolntry, and otters bia blood and life lig a
sacrifice for the:maintenance of the Union
and the Constitution. -And yet seldom it
is ihat.they, get . honor Rd reward
their sennrs entitle them to. It is the
Pt/Mewho. cianie,a .the gaol . it-is ,the
roiveta irbo m archesi on foot thrflugh mnq,
RoSt • and snow x' is - the inivate,yho
ere4ti bridges, Odor siiit ;titan*. and
rears theloftWortification`;'tlns it: is . the
titivate Wlinoivith'The bayonet setocharss
hn and against the
— iiclutulatoolentite of the enemy ;—and yet
how:aebiont bit that be ;wolves thebon
of his noble cant. diet. %`-
=Mr
tB~ B F llioClBti WOIIWbo
the Chicago Tunes, looked -upon as the
py2Wpar organ 'Ct. the
.. 15oryhwestern
liocriioy, 849
" We are sametiines asked:what would
be the *iiiitivc.policy:,if restored to pow
er. Their negalivepoliales, opposition to
the Abolitionism, imbecility •and corrup
tion of the administration, are sufficiently
elear t buttliere, are• some who profess
ignoratiee - - of it the - Democracy then.
selves propose to do.
"First, they would restore the >sup
remacy of our violated Constitution and
and 'with•thiti" intim andlabiohite,
liberty of iPiiiieli;tif - thet - pless :and of the
ballot, and the sacred privilege of the
lutoras corpus. - _ -
" They will free the loyal States fioin
the presence of milita7 encampments and
of all officers and-soldiers physically Able
to take the field;.thus reinforcing our
armies at least onetthird.
, They will abolish the.system ofarbitr
ary arrests fur opinion's salce-4 they will
abolish provost marshals and the entire
system of military government in the
loyal Stets.
" They will offer the rebels fair and
honofable terms of peace, provided they
will ground the weapons of their rebell
ions and come back to the Union ; o ff er.
ing them the Constitution of the nited
States in the one hand, and a " vigorous
prosecution of the war" with the other.—
The wars of 1812 and 1847 sufficiently
exemplify what Democrats mean by a
" vigorous prosecution of the war". They
do not fight with proclamations."
The Soldiers Vote.
The Harrisburg , correspondent of the
Sunday Mercury in alluding to the bill,
which lately passed the senate, providing
for the manner in which the soldiers are
to vote and hold elections while in actual
service, says:
" The bill providing for the manner in
which the soldiers are to vote and bold
elections while in actual military service,
passed the Senate yesterday. The Demo.
crate endeavored to engraft some safe
guards upon it to preserve the purity of
the ballot-box but the Abolitionists voted
them down. For instance, the Demo
erits wanted an amendment so that Dem
ocrats could not be put upon detached
duty to prevent their voting. They also
wanted any officer. punished who used
coercion or threats to induce a soldier to
vote any particular ticket. They wanted
a section to punish frauds, corruption or
perjury committed in such election co be
on the return of such men as were found
guilty • but all of these propositions were
rejected by the Abolitions. I have already
heard it intimated by a prominent Repub
lican, that the " Copperheads" in the ar
my, whether volunteers or drafted men,
would not be permitted to vote.
The Terrible Result.
How is the war progressing ? This is
the, question that interests every body.—
The North American, an intensely loyal
sheet, that a few days ago indicated a
disposition to embrace miscegenation
publishes the following.
It is made np to Sect. 1, 1863, and in
cludes the battle of Chickamauga:
CONFEDERATES.
Killed. Wounded. Prisoners. Total.
IE4II 1,250 3.055 2,772 7,937
1868 14,550 47.304 15.876 77,646
1663 12,821 4t 1 ,800 71,511 131,839
Total ..... —28,147 99,469 89,636 217,463
Confederates died of disease and sickness fromeom
mencement of war M. present time 130,000.
PEDERA LS
Killed. Wounded. Priponers.
.. 4,721 9 . 791 9.144 M. 799
20,819 68,973 46.534 135.366
15.363 53.981 33,281 102,623
Total 41)(V1 1=215 89.009 m.2,.m0
Fedemis died of di cue and eic2tners during same
time, 290,000.
RECAPITULATION
Federal losses in battles, ,ic
by sickness, &c
Federal.• total loss in three years._ 652,12E1
Confederate losses in battles, it° 217,465
•• by sickness, &c I'M 000
Confederate total lose In three 5earn.......&11,405-31,7;165
Rzeess of Federal loss
CONFISCATIOI•I UNCONSTITIITIORAL —The
Kentneky Court of Appeals in the case of
Norris vs. Dempleton, in appeal from
Madison county, have decided the follow
ing points, in reference to the act of Con
gress to confiscate the property of cer
tain classes of rebels—Judge Bailin de
livered the opinion of the court
2. The right, given by the Constitution
to make mar upon rebeht, give a the power
to perform acts of War, and no other pow
er whatever.
8. The seizure and confiscation of
enemy'✓; property on land are not acts
of war.—(Brown vs.' United States, 8
Crunch.)
2. The act under consideration is un
constitutional, because. it attempts
,to
authorize the confiscation of the property
of citizens, as a punishment': for treason
and. tither crimes, without due process of
le* by proceedings in.rent in any district
in winch the property may be ; without
presentment or indictment by g grand
jury ; without arrest or summons of the
owner, and Upon such evidence of his
guilt as would be sufficient proof of any
fact in admiralty or revenue eases. ': (Con
stitntion; article 8, Section 21, sub. sect. 3,
and section 3, sub. sect. I,; and articles
3tb and eth of Amendouints.)
• ' State of * Maine is no placie for
'- The RepOblican Legislature of
that ,state by a. *Cent law have signified
their dunce of Irish militants in_ a very
Marked ,meanie. An adt-wat puked, in-
Camouflaged , tg kmigranteAid Society,' 4
to which was given a bonnty front the
state tr,eiiiiiiry - of twenty liVe dollarit: for,
every!' emigrant betwecn•fifteeii and flay,
who should be brought into the suits. As
originally vomposed, the law included alb
emigrants; but it was subsequeotlymneod
ed 611401111441i4 014) -
Whatit pretty labyrinth our.Repabli.
can friends are getting into ? One year
ago Old Abe, was . " the Goviirnment."—
Now the..most radical °lbis' party are
laboring night and day to defeat " the
Government
We learn, upon good authority, that
Fort Lapayetpis. over-run with rata of
gigantioinze and intense fierceness As
the unfortunate prisoners lie in their un.
comfortable cribs at night they are liter.
ally covered with the disgusting vermin,
:The Republican ~majonty, in Con.
neiiticut, which started off at ten thous. -
and, hqa been ciphered down 'to 'some..
ting 'over five thousand, and is getting
small by.degrees and beautifully less. It
was not so much of a shower, atter all.
—R. 8. Brown, radical Republican,
publishes nearly four columns iu the Ml
waukießews, directed against Dir. Lin
coln.
--Pat Bunts, an industrious citizen of
our goodly town, residing on Pine.4reet,
is seoentyttyht years old, and the tither of
thirty children, the youngest being thirty.
six hours old, and weighs bizieen pounds.
Mr. Burns is living with his second wife.—
Binghamton Lady Times.
--Captain Mosier, of the ship Norway,
reports that, while at sea, a negro made a
desperate rssault on a sailor, and then
endeavored to blow up the ship by firing
the magazine, but was shot dead while
endeavoring to accomplish the act. The
body was thrown overboard, and the
wounded sailor taken to the city hospit
al
—Whether Richmond is to be taken or
not,'is uncertain, but there is no doubt,
says the N. Y. Express, that Connecticut
is, if Mr. Lincoln can take it, inasmuch as
thefArrny, instead of being enroute Soul h
ward, is in part, at least, on its way East
ward.
Well it took Connecticut by 5000, and
Rhode Island by a small majority.
—Another attempt was made on the
4th, in Congress, to call upon the Secreta
ry of ,War to state how much commutation
had been taken of conscripts, and how it
had been used. The Republicans refused
to permit the inqniry—strong evedenee
that some of the money has been used fur
improper purposes.
—ln the LPgislatnre, last week, a reso
lution condemning a Maitsachusetts officer
who directed a mob to destroy property
in Philadelphia, and carried unoffending
citizens ont of our State, in irons, was vo
ted down by the Republicans.
—The partisans of General Fremont are
offering the Lincoln men two bets even :
I. That Lincoln will not be elected ; and
2. That Fremont will be the next Pres
ident—the two to be taken together.
They noted with more safety make a
joint het th-tis:
1. That Abe won't 'be nominated; and
2. If nominated they'll help defeat him.
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tions, hysterics. fatigue, pain in the back tilid limbs,
Sc„ disturbed sleep, which arise from interruption of
nature.
DR. CHEBSMAWS PILLS
was the commencement of a new era in the treatment of
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forward wish IMMEDIATE and PERSISTENT SVC
cEsS,_7(=k2a.Pit bo Tleocazoktracl.-
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have been a standard Remedy for over thirty years, and
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mitil certainty, periodical regularity. They
arotnown to thou ' B ands, who have need them at different
periods, throughout the country, having the sanction of
somOjof the moat eminent Physicians in America.
Explicit direct ions,stating tell . en they should not be vad ,
with each Pox—the price $1 per box or G boxes for f 5,
containing from 50 to 60 pills. Allis sent by mail prompt
ly, secure from observation, by/remitting to the Propri
etors. Sold by Druggists generally.
miTeLIiNGS a BILLYKR, Proprietors.
mh9l 6m!' • 81 Cedar street. New-York.
ilirtiold in Montrose by Abel Terrell ; in Tunkban
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.....202,255
1217 — Swallow two or three Hogshead: of " Bnehn."
" Tonic Bitters," " Sarsapari ll a," • Nervous Antidotes,
,ke., and afteryou are satisfied with the recall,
then try one box of old Dr. Buchan's English Spetide
Pills—and be restored to health and vigor in less than
thirty days. They aro purely vegetable, pleasant to take,
prompt and salutary in their effects on the broken down
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United States only by
JAS. S. BUTLER; General Agent, •
'Station D. Bible Douse, New York.
P. B.—A box sent to any address on receipt of price—
Which is One Dollar—post free. March 21.—fim
THE CONFESSIONS' AND EXPERIENCE OF AN
INVALlD.—Published for the benefit. and as a warning
and a caution to younginen who suffer from nervous De
bility, premature decay of Manhood; etc., , supplying at
the sametime. the means of eelfure. By one who'has
cured himself after being put to great injury end ex.
pea se through medical hurting and - quackery.
By enclosing a postimid addressed envelope, single
copies may be had of the author.
NATHANIEL MAYFAIR. Fag,
Bedford. Kings Connty.N. Y.
may26-Iyle
0-'" Me no other f—lttiehar Specific Pills are the
only Reliable Remedy for all diseases of the Seminal.
Urinary and Nervous Systeme. Try one box, and be
cured. One Dollar a box. ()no box Will perfect a cure,
or money reftnided. Sent by Mail on receipt of prte,!-
JAMES 8. BUTLER; General Agent,:
littatlon Ailble Ipn t eg t ZiewTork.
St. -403.
EgrEla you 'WA toga Cuud Baehan's Engileh
IlcutglePille cure. ID less. MO al day., the worst cafes
Nervoustme. Itapoteaey, Premature Decay. Seminal
Weatheas..lasaalty, and, all Urinary, &anal and Ner
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wiesi ens Dan pet hex:- Bctit.Poll4.lo mu%
reeelplataa order.' Address " - •
4A74.118 lleaetal Agezt.
• • - Station D, Bible Haase, Nov 'fork.
• ~Marcti 24-111 a •
DR. TOBIM' IniN/TIAN Sina
- Titab'Mr Otorre.—Whets peaty and Intemeting oblld
'I saw last week! :But now. else t It is uo,rnprot I Such
wan_ tko , oonvertation of two gaditreed
town Patlut cars Died of epsePA lOW., 6trangei when
tr.loblas*-Veuitian I.lolment Is a certain cure Utah=
tline. Now. Mother:a, we appeal to ylm. ;It Is not
r the paltry pin and pro& we realm, bet for the like
of the infant child test cow Ileaplaying a t your feet.—
Crou Liniment gerotm disease: tun use Dr. Tobias' Ven
etian In time. andlt le-robbed ol tor terrors.
Always keep It in thirhoese_A. 'eulogy not want it tcr
Ated:or tomorrow . nit telling when—but armed with
Able Malmo:yin us prowit i d, let Item° when It
will. Pries MONt* a W Olnes eartlaudt
I '
Otreeir New ell* Will WWI* - •
APnbrilik.