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BusiNy.ss - T.A.w .. z: PE'rE4'IIAY, ' Xaloo33l.6locl436 . liloCrtiCrXioCert Auburn Four Coyne" Pa. .. ~ . . . . . . . TTOLMEY AT LAW. Bounty, Back ray, RenSIOD, LIL and Exemption Claims attended to. ;0 , 1 -1119 - o Aloe Ant door below Boyd's 9toreliontreac,l%. M. C. SUTTON, .-r _waists Aucnorriturt, Friendsville, JA Penn% t an. '64. _ ____DQCT. E.L. _IIANDRICX, IpRTSICIAR RIIRCIRON, retAectfully tenders Utis villaPirleZZE'erviettaldrs thceiggiclosolgitt. Bode& at & Raeford's. Poll SO, 28.61 zAixatttfriicr;Veeti, and Meal, Ratreit Ond Dairy D Salt; Timottky-and • Clover Seed Groceries, Provis ions, Fruit, Toirdleara; oll . Wooden and Stone Nara, Yankee .101 - Opposite Railroad Repot. Now .MII rd, Pa. . bids A. pain:WWl * B.n 0. 'it1.1.37 4 P. W. army: `LATHROP TYLER RILEY, . DINHALERS in Dry,Goods, Groceries, hardware, Relay Arado Clothing, Boots & Shoes, Hats & Caps, Wood & Warn, Iron, Nails, Sole & Upper Leath er, F4sh. Flour and Salt, all of which they offer at the yen , • MT Macrvirosit Firicstess.ari Latirrops Brick Building, Montrose, Pa. April 6, 1863. y. IF R. 11C3IPTURO COOPER WM. R COOPER & CO., IDWlliitaS,-31out.rose, Pa. Succeseorsto Post. Cooper JU) & Co. Nice, Latbrops'new building, Turnpike-st. 1. B. Iep;ILIDX. D. W. IBSATII.Z. VCCOTALIThI SEARLE, TTDRIs7kB and Counaellorp at Law—'.Montrose, Pa. Office in Latiutqrs' new butißing, over the Bank. • DR. WII. SMITH, . LIM - MEOW DENTlST,—Montrose, Pa. r...i.- -- - OCraire in Latiliops' new building. over . .0 ••=0 - .--0. t h e Bank . A ll Dental arvratOnis will beAllire m aii perierraettin toad style and warm:Lied.— • . • 4, Fn.-IVES*. • Iti • Fin.Ph nix A*lo ABLE TAILOR—Mont roirm Pa4Shop •-1 Block, over storisOrlicadf Witrolls• ds roster. AU work - warranted, its to tit and finash.)l7 Cutting done on short notice, in bestretyla. Jan ' 6O '1 .1611. N GROVES, TAlWl„—Montrose, Pa. Shop / I near the 133ptist Meeting House, on Turnpike trdht. 4 PIII orders filled promptly, in first-rate style. Cutting dona.on short notice, and warranted to fit. L. B. ISBELL, 1) EMIRS 'Coda, Watches, and Jewelry at the . I.IIL shortest notice, andon reasonable terms. All work warranted. .Shop in Chandler and Jessup's 6 .110 ; 'tore, Movrnoss, Pa. o t WM.. W. SMITH, AND MUIR MANGTACTUREBEL—Foot of 3XoIn street, Montrose, Pa. nog tf C. 0. FORDIIAM, iiI.kNUFACTLIMI: of BOOTS di &WOES, 'Montrose, in. Pa. Shop over Dewitt's store. All kinds of work made to order, and repairing done neatly. jes ABEL TURRELL, "TIVALER in Drags, Medicines, Chemicals, Dye .L Staffs, Glass Were, Paints, Oils, Varatsb„Win doir Glass, Oroccrles, Fancy Goods, le:teelry Porta nerv, tee.—A,gent - for all the pion popular PATENT fIitICINES,-119ntrose, Pa. ang tf MEDICAL CARD. DA. E. PATRICK , DR. E. L; GARDNER I ATE GRADUATE of the 3IEDICAL DEPARTMENT .3J 'JP YALE COLLEUE, have formed a copartnership r .r tile practice Of Medicine and Surgery,and are propared all business faithfully and ptmcinally,that Intrusted to their care; on terms commensurate , a-tih the ttrael, ibseases and deformithie of the EYE, surgical opera. ::014, and all surgical discasetertiertlarly attended to. t-Y - alee over tiTelib's Store. \„011:1ce hours from 8 a. n. to 9p. m All sorts of countryproduce taken in pay molt, at the highest value, and CJESN NOT 'CETI:WED. Montrose, Pa., lay ith, 18.1.4.—tpf FIRE INSURANCE. THE INSURANCE CO. OF NORTH AMERICA, AT PHILADELPEIA, PA., gas Established an Agency inidontrooe. The Oldest Insurance Co. in the Oruion. CASH CAPITAL PAID pre: ASSETS its rates are aslow u those of any goodeompany in T Newyork, or eleewbere„anditaDirectoreare among the Arse for honor and Integrity._ G. COMB, l'res. CHARLES PLarr, Seey. MITIIIIII Iloatrose, Julyls, '62. BILLINGS STROUD, Ag't. ME Co TtaiE M INSURANCE COMPANT, Of Ne•iww2"cos-71s. CASH CAPITAL, TWO MILLION DOLLARS. ASSETLS tat /au. 1864, 83,288,270.27. - LIABILMEB, " " 75,803.82. J Milton Smith, Seel , . Chao. J. Martin, President loSa 3icGee, lus't " A. F. Wilmartb, Vies " Policies isented and renewed, by the undersigned at its oflice, in Use Brick Block, Dlontrose, Pa. nov29 y BILLINGS ST/10VA, Aged. S. a Pettangin tz Co., No. RI PARK ROW, New York. and 0 State Streit, t4oiSe citl4: o re a rteir f i o r r el b •t!oi l ike enten i tt tad subscriptions for wet our lowest rates. J. BATAZLETON, Awheictips• and Photographic ~Montrose, Pa. ilrPietures teinin*ltM lands of weather, %the has Itrk of the Art. - oaf° _ R. B. & G E 0:: P... LI TTL E Attorneys and Counsellors at Law s unamaissummorrin, apnea on Main Street. 'ParticuStratteutfon given V to Conveyancing. deelo Wyatt& ISTCAID - ICIIIIII . TIM subscriber iterebY resPectranigivai nott*tbst: he has taken License to auctioneer In thaVoinatr of Su squebanna.Aind an. his eersteesto Tar CWees reasonable; and all calla wllLbeeronspb /7 Mansell to. Obi:tem:l, ]/arch lebt. tf . . ~ . . .?'..•-,;:r...Z...'7•-1;,..7.4'.,-,r•PrW".,-.K,71:;.7.0k4,-Alf ......Trp.:-.2 . ,.. ,. ._ , 1tv.zi1. i , .... , . i.ff..,44-at'...7l),;..r:exf-.-n...,..,,,p214te1.71.,0e5,....,):0..rs ~.F.,4t,,54.3,4,1,4..,...0.4_, ---........... EME nr mstiutomlsErtai Carpenter, 'in his standard-history o 'Massachusetts, a work iia,rl4l4:partialt4 . 41 In July, lagiiieveralQuakeraiiiriited in ilasiachusetts from Barbadoes, two or whom- were wonien7 aware of the contemptueolidisregard for existhigOr dinaticesindniged in byktlie mere zealot's , of the sect itangland, the magistrates in Boston brought thelair against heretics -to bear against the intruders, and ordered their immediate--arrest. After. theirper sena had been e:xiimined for those' marks whielv were auppoied et that - day .te indi 'cote, such as dealt.in witeheraft,:no thus being discovered, - )1 'their- trunks were rifled, "and the bi•okii .foUnd therein Okiered to he burned.. A -brief imprison-, • rci;Ut Was' imposed' upon but they were finally reletated and hanishedthecol ony. Peveral others: Who - arrived anima queutly Were sent back to England by the same vessellin which they 'came. About theesame ' time a law was passed to pre vept their introduction into the colony, and impelling the penalty of Stripes and coercive labor upon all Quakers that should infringe it. * * Some of the women were whipped, and several men condemued to lo§e an ear. * * When seized they offered no resistance. Sen tenced to be flogged, they" yielded' with entire satisfaction their backs to the exe cutioner." Finding that these atrocious measures were not sufficient to crush ,out, the liber ty ofthought, a law was passed, says the same historian, in 1658, banishing the Quakers from, the Unitefl , Colonies of New England, and forbidding their re turn under pain of death : ' 4 This sanguinary and unkstifiable en actment was Earned by ono vote only.— Many staunch friends of the government strongly protested against it, not only as cruel, but as liable to invite- the-persecu tion it sought to avoid. The result soon proved how well grounded was •the fear. Marmaduke Stevenson, Wm. Robinson and Mary Dyer, courted the danger to which they were exposed and quietly awaited the operation of the• law. In September, 1658, they were seized, and after trial, condemned to be banged. The sentence was carried; into effect upon Rob inson and Stevenson, but Mary Dyer was reprieved upon the Scaffold, and again thrust from the colony. Resolute in seek ing a martyr's death, she returned soon after and was publicly executed on Bos ton Common." "Ohl the rarity Of Christian charity." Will not some New England clergy man of modern orthodoxy . she& at last one tear over the scarlet sins of 'his own ancestors who assisted in the murder of this poor woman on Boston Common, while ho is Weeping as if his head was a fountain of waters over the landing of a Dutch ship with slaves at Jamestown ? But again, says the same friendly histo rian : "It was at the beghming of this year that manypersous of piety and good un derstanding were again led to believe in the prevalence of witchcraft in the pro vince. Prominent - among the most cred ulous of these was Cotton Mather, son to the Rev. Increase Mather, for some time past the agent 'iof Massachusetts bang land, and himself a clergyman. *- * The alarm of witchcraft was again sound • ed. The ministers fasted and prayed with the distressed' father., The, villagers of Salem -also fasted and praied l ; end the fear of demoniacal influences became gen eral, a day of fastite , and prayer was ape , cially set apart to be observed by the whole colony. The belief in witchcraft ; being ihnei solemnly recognized and fos - Itered, it was not long before the delusion spread across the whole breadth alba ; province. The number ,or victims so ra pidlyincreased that nituiy Of the Colonists, perfectly panic-stricken, became the accu sers of others, lest they should be brought under suspicion thanselves. The execu tion at Salem village of air. Burroughs, a minister of blameless, life, was a terrible instance of et, power - which the delusion exercised over the etrongest . ininds in the comMunity. For fifteen ponths this strange belief held full possession of the popular faitb. Oaring this period, out of twenty-eight persons capitally convicted of witchcraft, nineteen had been hanged, and onci'pressed to death." NERDY DILINSEFI .4 503 , 00 E 442014000 F A rrilExpraincin.—A;:female teacher of a scheol that"stood. on 1 thel:tinhs 9 f a, quiet stipath, once wished to communicate to her papila' an`idea of faith. While she was tryin g tb explain the . meimiughfthe word, , a small boat glided:iti. sigh!, along the stream. Seizing.upon" this maident for an illustration 4 'she'exoluimed: igf it were to tell you that there' Was' n. leg of mutton in that boat; - you'"would believe me, would 3ron not, even` : -without geeing= it yourselveiP" f‘Yes tra'arai' replied the sabolara; 44 Well, that is faith,v said the sehoolaistress. The-next-day..or der to test their reCollection of :the lessou, she inqufredWhatlaOtithr 'f les of mutton in. 2140" 59811, answer shouted all farts of tho subookoosit hen ay; as ear* attleSi %. igiCti nano before *a Ounatry'lB ' put : down` the 11Inioty or' shall the Union piit ilowt abolition." . --•••• f d i • Can a Civilian be tria,dl*Oimitgitrtidl? li'Aitizeit of Ohio,no way- connected. with:the military or ;level service ef the country,, was arrested, at his , own liotise by e squad of, soldiers, taken beyond the<limits- of ,bis State, tried,jind convicted by . ; .a court,Martial on charges Ather wordik:for express- - ing *bat, were iiiideabtedly his honest convictions, however , erroneous may' they. have been, resper-tiogilari . coln'S 'admims iratiOn :the war—and on the finding o ,said Court-Martial was banished from his country by the despotic order of a ty ranuicat executive, acting in , the double Catuicity. of" reSidept. and ,commandeN in- Chief IteeentlY—only few weeks ago—a res. Went of _Werrenten,iVirginia, , was, tried I ty in r , Generai744,39a0 2 13 de trartnient,.aitd sentincied to , be marched through the town to the tune, of the "Regbe'i March," - for selling apirituons. liquor to soldiers, in violation of an army order; but - the commanding general dis approved of the sentence on. the pound tha t "being a civilian, a court-martial had no right to try him I" Whether the com manding general in, this case was General Meade or General .Grant is not stated ; but it is quite, certain that it was neither General Burnside nor his tyrannical Antea ter, A. Lincolth But, however this may be, if a court-martial has. no right to try a civilian for an offence committed in the disloyal State of Virginia, how can the right be maintained in respect to a civil inn`charged with an offence alleged to 'have been committed in the loyal State of Ohio ? I National ppicruptcy. The N,eiv. York Tribune, one of the most intensely -loyal abolition sheets in the country, says : ." The natan is drifting 'ate actily tbdiard bankruptcy. We are now ,in the grandest crisis of our =national history ; and we choose dwarfs to do the work which might well employ angels. Some thing must be now done to stop the tert= deney to ruin, or the country is lost be yond redemption." This is strong language to come from a party organ. Bat who is to blame for allowing "the nation to', drift into bankruptcy ?" The adminisiiittien have bad things all their own . w:ay ;"not an ob stacle' has been interposed' by the people of the North. After conducting, the war for three years under such circumstances, the Tribune now adMits that there is dan ger that " the' countiy will be lost beyond redemption !" The time for.a change is cotrilnp• and Ow ctla can, th , ;T will, place men at the bead of the Government and in Congress who aro not dwarfs— men who understand the principlei'npon which the Government was founded; and who will endeavtr to restore the Union. Charitable and Consistent. We observed with pleasure, in the Leg islative reports published yesterday morn ' ing that even the small sum of two thous and dollars to each .oitinty had been ap propriated by a vote of the Senate, for the support and education of the orphans of soldiers. who bad died.in the service. • We are informed that in the- afternoon session, this orphans' mite was sought to be .Withdrawn. The black republicans did I not like the state of the record ; there., was too large a majority of Democratic votes in favor of this (truly sanitary) pro visien, , The soldiers, after all, might thus discover they had more ,Democratic friends in the Legislature than Was con , sistent with the teachings of the negro party leaders, So .I±dr. WCandless (Rep.) moved a recOnsideration—when every black republican in the Senate but twe vo ted to reconsider, and then against the measure! Now for a commentary: In In the same appropriation bill there is' a provision—put there, of 'course, by a party vote—giving a very considerable sum for a poor-house for negro children in Philadelphia. A new thing, but very con slitently presented.. Starve the white or phans of the soldiers,hut clothe the ne gro babies in purple Mid fine linen.—Pal riot & Union, 29th, tat.; 'Ninety-Nino Votes Lost. Extract of% toldter's tett r, &tied, Nrwinms, N. C., Atiril 11,1868: I =Anew tell yen boiv our reyul3licans started to gitoi benne to vote. They left here a ireektgo Thliraday Tbe order'came, little after we got te:` bed, for certain ones to pack their koaisielis and fully, eitniii, , " j ust as soon as. God would lei them. ' This Owed a goad deal of excitement , in imp Some thought *ere goiig r on, a raid, and Way were ; taken : sick at epee' , an Y? could, :not `go,' and bid bi*elflo, - a‘ bay-, mow,anklie•was left bibind; But alI at once some, one said,they Wargigoing 'home, hen' the'elek reo Ol Well *ill. lien learned that:none liut,.Reinibli- Were ,g,e44 wehile*_,iliey,wetie ordered orde on - tssoirite: '24ZinetYniiie fro in (sir: regimens started. They - got mil, „ ;: ,to nti Hatte,:iition a titifinia.`roun anal eaiaie biieliteakreiVbbni: tee g o anyfurth er: *ere gOne sisi - traAalftb4 0ir.06 , w a ter . ,x, e ,rie: m odot bad* prOtti lfilst of the iioldiete, had been bomb before: .0.001g*10..14* •We Sid in- oneofthe .11'641pyie:pip ere the following ,Teneedeteof a 'nian kriew too innetil. r • - Daring the aantinistration' r OPre' eident Jackson, ihero tuffs a iiingulOtjoung gen. timely etnfildied in the rblic Post Oflico at Wnshington; lntrnit 'llOl5llB from Tennessee; the' iicinof i n wia= ow; neighbor - a tbe President",;'pti which account, the old hero hell 'a 4 1 " feeling for him,'; and niWiys „got' hhri, out of his didlculties With idtoo Of. ' .ficials, to whom'his eingehti hiter,ferenee I was d* • tef was 1 ' Among other, things, it is — stud Of -hint that while employed in the General Post Oflice, on one occasion he bad to " copy 'a letter for 'Major H., a high °lola, in an- Inver to , an 'Application made by .an old gentletnan in 'Virginia or Peansylvanin theestablialmient of a new pest office.;-:-. The writer '.of the - letter said the applica tion could snot be granted, inconsequence of the applicant's f 6 Proximity" to another offux.. When 'the letter came into G's hand to copy, being a great stickler for plainness, he altered prciximity" to "nearness to ; " Major H. observed it,and asked G. why be changed his letter. " Why," replied. G:; because I don't think the nian would know wh4 you meant by proximity. . , " said Itivorli.;:" tri lain; pqt in that 'proximity' again.' In a few days a letter was received from the applicant, in - which havery indignant ly said: "That his father had' fought 'for liberty in the'second war - Of indepen dence, and be shotild like to ' have the name of the scoundrel who brought the charge of . proximity or anything else wrong aga inst "There," said. G., "did not I say se?" carried his iMprovements so fa.r.that Mr. Berry,. the • Postinaster General,' said to him; 1 I do not want you' here any longer, you know too much. Poor G. went ,ont, but his friend, the General, got; him 'another place This time G's ideas underwent echange., 4e was one day very busy writing, when a stranger called in and asked him where the Patent Office was? "I don't:knovv," said G. ' "Can you tell me where the Treasuiy Department is?" said the stranger. • "No," said G. "Nor the President's House ?" r. 44 N o. o The stranger finally asked if he /sneW where the Capitol was. "No," replied G. "Do Yon live in Washington, sir ?" asked thestrartzere .----" Yes, sir," said G. '"Good Lord ! and don't krio'w where the Patent Office,Treasury, President's House and Capito are ?" ' °' Stranger," said G., "I was turned out of the Post Office for knowing too much. I don't mean to offend in that way again. lam paid for keeping this book. I be lieve Ido. knew that much; but if you find me knowing anything more you may take my bat." " Good morning," tiaidthe stranger. The way to do it. In Warren ceunty, Illinois, there is a village called "Young America," that is all black, and has been the scene of many , outrages upon Democrats, by soldiers in stigated by abolition residents. We learn' frout last week's Peoria ;ilea, that these abuseS have been put an end to. .An arm- ed cavalcade, one fine morning, rode.into• the village—the rioters fled at their ap-. proacli. The cavalcade, composed of law abiding bitizeus, announced that their sole objedt - was toObserve the peace and keep the laws, and that they meant to. do it.— They demanded and received the pledges of some fifty of the leading abolitionists it and arenntithevillage,that no more out nigeir should tieperpetrated on-Demo eras. Peace and - law thus reestablished they paid tbefr hotel bille,"atid, in:silence and perfect' ordir, roole Cut 'Untie i viPage a 5 they bad entered, it. It , appears ;that some things can be done an well n s oth ers, and A great deal hotter, too Not Fit for' a Triiitei. _„ . , I SoMe . moatbe since the members of the; church tu,L— r -.were, called together to elect a:member of the board of tro races.— A gentle, ,in business as a wholesale, grocer Was pained an. a : very suitable, Man. for the place ;bat his inommatiort was ve• bemently, 'opposed' by . another,r who e :was very =talus in the temperance cause;-, on diagram:A that in the: way of his business he Old liquor:.; . And appealini to brother tAdStns, one 466 oldest members'pre.:' sect, whOfrom his i solidPod. clerhudlook,` 1143 -cued." he said ; . what do' yep Say, brOther Adams ~ , . , ,; it Ai l !" said brother Adatiss,, clocking verrgruYel.. 4l TAY,4% 01 3 , 1 4 8 r,cean6 Witha view thenfilbilßiS i q and.oio lit6h3t.iiivihat e hadto'say; " that is,notllie worst #4 it 1 ,1 1(:6lemil shake' ' 41 , 414, .e.#0); 'tkuo.4ippt 449. , bist' of it V' ';. : ~- ',,(. ,' :, ' 'if 1 " ' Why* 'br 6 ..th'er, **a am4l'f4g! , 4 the ; othios,:ctowdhfg#o#4l;irid'Aoking ' , ffir, {some other deplopthe4 f . f a *littt;Asti, as : - "Vbst'elsiv?" _aft : bifitver; - *ails, : IniitiOltOliwiht.s`cane . W . i , thii:rat&i!!' ll6 d6p rvep il. - goOft attlele. rye_ 0,4 1i1 , P,! r i'l l hellitithet iisii'ain, elected. , - - •4- ratve.t.'s," . REF'IOIO, XX/ 7: 12, Atiotlitir Trinmph "ot of Xeltieekie , o_OP 2 . o ,rkt An I,4*.iip, backed by thfi;f4yoPeto Ptiena..P l 4 o .ted- 11 T*.P4oe4 , InfoFe Tc.'oll4r/PS"? and •I'inTßlV.f l 3 l ` IkTaxigiilu , a •legitimat.ph.dessendant,ol Ittuielib of litipsburg, : ranitt:old ,Of. haa,beerveroiing OF. ..0 14 .• -Meer*: *Ca:44 4 . 011, 4=9f our own hemisp here - • • • , opE-guileleis belief, come:to regard the .141PrOe3 1 99t.fine as, a , settleo, public, law op., tbia 'es...nth:loll4oo:4a lid -r-iPtYeil, the ` §solemn_ , ot the _lStaten,within bersqtra,, When :first declared; it met-wltbi the hearty.,iissent of all parties : fairly interested; ,and by • none • more. Willy tban _ the, people jrnifed States of all Andes ofpolitical ; opinion.-, To forbid the: eetiqueett.9r. eetorusintiOn: of ,any Part-of Central America byuny ofthe.monarchical,powers of tu xctßel was so,PhOnlY, a.,....P00fi11re of safety and. self.defenceythnt f no , S,tatesmen" from tbatAay down to the present, has ventured to disclaim the doetyine,or dis regard the duty. it imposed oatile. rulers of Per RePtihne• . r., Tlaced,as Mexico, midway ,between :two of the,largest.,:oceana Of ; the =; world; and 'covering. all the ,-space intermediate between our oWn;,Atlaritic and ; Pacific possessions ; besides, all this,,,b4ding,-,ooe or-more of the great transit ways• likely to infuence,a cbange,in the course, of_Arnerl can and Auropean eommerce,witli ; Phina and the countries washed „by. the , South ern seas, we were bound to see to it t that no Europeanmenarch fastened hies jealous bands upon our equal chances of competi tioniin ttla. regard. Ae well Inight claiin to intervene, so as to place ; the cornaerie of other nations 444,ttr!t•uerey, , by assuming Control of the` British ;Channel; the Strait of Gibraltar,..er the Tithmus of Suez. All .the ". nyrnerous,,long, .nateral and artificial ways of.eommerce in our. West ern.and §outhern .States, have thdr ae bone,her ,upoh the. Gulf of Mexico, t?., which, the .I.,Sland . of Cuba, so .long ‘held . by Spain, is . tho.key,; now France, trie.sworn ally of the Spaniard, seizes upon and ap propriates all the conntry of Mexico itself, while our imbecile President., and the cnr rapt coterie, called his Cabinet, are either engaged in 611ing.their pockets from the Treasury, or,in venal and petty schemes to unhorse old Sinbad, in order to mount int9llBpiece. ; • , - Give.us.back Monroe or Jackson, Clay or Webster, Calhoun Or even the sterling "little Giant", of more modern times, and huii,sternly ,and promptly would they_ liarorFilsted at the . • - eannonrs — ifferuthithu3 conquest of a coter minous republic, as an act of declared hostility to otirselves.— Well may the London Timeg ,;t44., its kind red apologists., of turopean : tyranny and usareation, sneer at•this disgraceful ex hilaition of weakness as a nation, and our total - disregard of former, declarations of puhlie policy and principle. Stands forth ye Neck ktieptiblican drivellers, anfl.meet the sneers and reproches you have bronghti upon the American name and nation ; and say,.why . ,,the " Monroe doctrine" and . a proper, national defence, has been lost sight of in your efforts get into, EQUALITY N/.,GROES SOLDIERS' VOTES: :The Tribune thinks it a sufficient reply to the eiposures of the crime of the_ad ministration in tampering - with the free dom of elections by sendng home from the - .seat of war 6n1,7 ..11,epubliea.a• seldiers to"i•ote, and denying furloughs to:Demo cratic soldiers % to Cite the:jteptiblican maj9ritieS...of ihOge.states, Whiott;:allow their -soidrei 4 fote bitheßeld:. As, if it would be a g694.:reOgn for deUyirigDe,M viitii,,ai,ag,,gitotiri ba r , !lima thidatepublieuns; Outnumber them. IThat is - ezaetlit, the revolutionary, legtu.habitu al with . the Tribuii. But the, letter,stioWoy, whit 'Cheatin ;and Lep,. Tell - Bel the tßeJer.Po9 3l se efitallase 4rgtl7J went gaga Epee:one. existenee: PIILTADEUtit4 April 26. To EDITOR OF TIIE • Sta: Under the eapttod' of ; "',W: caolain ?"t_oidarti Tributie,s4si"TVere waS"he " sending honie of =l7 11,elipl41- caw soldiers" to, vote in Obio'labt falye' o; Perhaps not ; at that tithq , l'"w;:as",an officer in the United States sery ean'testi4t that,hitbi. Pct§tat,.'44lol4lw4a on diity'When theOhi - o - Ohio' , ; were called ni)pn to vote Tor governor, the, only ballots presented' gitildVihe the 'IMMO :, j of Sohn BrOngli; resaigned the packag e .myself, and asked," What ifs man wants to r vote th? tieliet":—.a4 Was go down here; orteetnething t 9; that effect. :'441),:r bad :, for ; seine time possess. youpita -06phosf.:`4 b 9 l 4 ani a ,:14 -;f a i d Xe4oF, 4 t state agent, fiPpa Dnhiwarq. tflt:j was stdPl - an "C0.,""1c r tp,4he Sit column was" Not 'aao he tioti"—, -This agent was going 09 0 t !9 , tko takiimthi, ) 444l,orlAp DelitiA* o - 8 414.10*:f9r4 1 4149Pt0 1.0 g 4 t Anaii l. 4l"iiFor-tobloS , iP9olrY , intimate ' nfio : voted ”.lll3lPn *4 14 0. V001a.ber 1 :4444 . 0.gP• vooaoc , 4l444ort. , *fig It , an aggregate of 82,275 linion - ",yoteally4 fall to 7,112 Democratic ?" Nykuratt ~, ' -, " - amore - stTiettlltin". ilijitit?'' . • - iiithe'Senateof the United Stoles` Mr- - Henderson efllissouri, on theltli daY of .pril, madea speech - hi favOr of the pro llostd"iiiiianatrient 'to the Constitution to abolish elAiiiiry. '•-• Re is tidaeoted parasite :of the administration; yet he used words ,which - ,emboikysetitimetits., so-;similar_ to ,those of Mi. I..mig, that it would puzzle a Pfigadelphii i lawyer to tell the differeace. M lititiderktio 'said: - '. " - ' . . . If it become evidentithat theriitiels ate strong enough to.resist_all reasonable ef forts to subdue them, I shall act upon it. I amfrintiprepared to ruin the' country in a viihreffortfto -dawhat carinot.he done. Shall this war _go on -temper? Is this . Common cry . of "the last nian'andthe last 'dialar,” poetry, Patriotiaia, Or ,braggado cis? - Should the war go on untilthepub lie debt equals , the:enure wealth ' of-the country?., -Should ;the whsle capital of the people be forced. into Federal r securi ties, and - these securities ,bd madeth e' ba sis of an irredeemable paper circulation ? Should it . go on'thitilnlisery brOoda over the.whole-lmid;.untilthe civil authorities Shall ; -become impotent,- and all rightii of persou and property.staed at the mercy of military power, ? Should it go on until the , inernberilififite'Senatentid 110eilp of Rep resentativtaithall otie their plaaeshere to the I baycmetinitetul of to the ballot box ; ; until they beceme ,as contemptible as the IRump.Parliament that solongenactedthe bidding'of military usurpation to the ov -1 erthroW of the English Constitution . , to befinally expelkd *emplace by the pow er,they had so 'basely Served ? Should it gct ort until siorrnption and fraud, the nee esiary concomitants of civil war shallbave crept into high places. and put on the garb of patriotism ; until officers becomeso nu inerouti that-official patronage May quar ter one-half of the people upon the other half mid give them the 'means di:Perpetu ating their own powerV Sliduld it con tineenntil, exhausted,; 00 nation -, would weldoMe the. coming of a 'Cromwell or a Bonaparte; - until proviAt marshals with military police shall be stationed in every village:in .the Northern States, displacing the,eavil authority, isseing orders for gov erning: people heretofore supposed to be able to govern themselve s teaching how God shall be worshipped, resc ri bing new and strange offences, and. unishing them by courts-martial ? Should it continuo nntil financial ruin brings misery,and mis ery rushes into anarchy, when do hope but despotism is left? Mr. President, a feet years more of civil war, and the outlines of' this picture will be seen__ It—flumet _he _ethr_rwißp . It is the necessary result of a long civil strife. Peace parties will Spring up; and the war party will denounce them as traitors ; the publication of newspapers will be sup pressed; and freedom of speech be, denied; mobs will retaliate againstmobs; the blen ders as wellas the corruptions of the war party Will tend to. strengthen the convie./ tions of the peace party ; the period be ing one of violence, each party appeals to violence, the one to hold the other to ob tain power; the ballot-box becomes a mockery, a cheat; instead of proclaiming the voice of a free people it speaks the subdued language ~:of base subserviency or the bold tones of military despotism ~ SOLDIERS' Thou nIENDS.—Hon. - 13.-F.. Meyers, of the Pennsylvania Legislature,' in a recent speech before the House made the, following, pertinent remarks: . It seems to be the cue of the gentle men on the other , side of this House to. plead for,mobs and mob law. They say that the soldiers. have bad great ..provecs.- tion,tolirb printing , offices. Why, gir t the Democratic press is the, best and tra, eit,friend.of the soldier. When contriw tors defraudbite the Democratic papers ekpoSe them., „When . faithless ,offteiala clothe,liii4i,slioddy, Democratic paper . e "compel them-to give him comfortable anr. fOrms..`Shen the white 'soldier is decried and the'negro is praised ashis superior ia valor, Democratic newspapers come to the rescue of the heroes of the Peninsula, Antietanl,Shiloh, and Gettysburg. Oxr.;:lDEß..—President Lincoln's; ad.dreas t deltrered at the Baltimore Sant,. tory F air; is entirely devoted to allusions.... to, negro litiernand negro soldiers: There. is not a word concerning the courage and fortitude of white troops;; not . .a word In reference, to the prospects of our military success; not a wool locompliinent to the. • sanitary tiOveme,uta which have awakened thowbole land , in behalf of Alm .soldierg, • whOare suilbang by the war.. It is num. iptiTitieat,elip-trap effusion,_ contrived , to make capital by promisiag re.tribution tor , the Fort Pillow massacre. No man but a very cheap politician 'could hive made suclroipeeish on such an oecasioO. hisptatensothat heiwonld re sliatefifeln to eliciwlhat•he don't know , what ., tri do. and he will finally- baCk out of rand neter l. pinforM his - Affln the days of ,Jaekson we did not. - Believe that Congresseonld create United , Ottitps Barilta hythotisands, give them the, • Sri' ht ix.redeeniable onrrenny t eh ituira:Wiiii taxation and glialbea,l - and innuendo' by, :priihingront4tate Bankt. That dilOitte:.. 'Yaeksoti t ':getised, and the TisOpil.T` buried to be dug tip bY•Liriock l and his higher law adherents.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers