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A...., . :., • ,4 . 1 r•P -1' . •; 11. 'I i I• '.. 'I , ..11 ' -':Y! ,-•••• ', . ' I ... - 10 ,' ...:' 5.1103! 71:.. : 01 .! . ttill'.l ‘,l: •••: t. ~f 1 1- r E 1 -• r. - - ~.- ~ - -,, CT ... , 1- .1.1 .. 4 4 .I. ~.4. •., 4. A. 4. • 1 , .-; - • : - . ~,, 4,, „. -1,, , ; . (1. , ....."4i , :, ''•,, ri•`:, ' r ; e „. ,„,,,,, , J....?, -, ` - • , " '-'! -. • ;:,...' . ,:_--4. 0 ', ~,- • `.? it - , ‘l - 0 , ,-1''...: . . A. J. GEtRITSON, Pt_bASllog4 Clymer and Cleary---The Contra.g. There are two candidates before the people for the office of ; Governor of Pennsylvania.. One is the nominee otthe Democrat* party—the other is the choice of the Radical disunion organization. The character of each is so marked and dis tinctive, and the position of each is so clearly defined, that no possible mistake ran by made,by the voters of Pennsylva nia in casting, their ballots in October next, .Llitt us glance at each in turn— liiesier Clinker, and John W. Geary—and see which of the two deserves most the suppok of the intelligent and patriotic freemen of this Commonwealth. Hiester Clymer, the Democrat, is a gentleman of the highest and most un blemished character. No stain rests up on his private lifeioone clouds his public or official career. His personal standing and political integrity are such as to si lence even the faintest croakings of parti san malice. His ability as a statesman, his eloquence as an orator, and his devo.. tion to the true interests of the masses, have "won for him golden opinions from all sorts of people." Thoroughly educa ted, gifted with talents of the highest or der, Having a mind stored with infor mation upon all questions of importance to the State, he is just the man to be placed at this time at the head of the Old Keystone, to carefully guard the true and solid interests of her Wheat and tax rid den people. Ever since he entered polit ical life, he has been distinguished for his nuf.iliering Democracy and his unswer ving del , ~ . 1% to principle. No jobber, I uo ttie,,,fti, no political.sharper, he stands belle c hie people of his native State to day a perfect type of• a true Pthatisylva: nia Democrat, and the bold, honest and fearless advocate of Union, Restoration, and Constitutional Liberty. John W. Geary, the radical disunion is equally well known in Pennsylva nia. Fur many years past he has been be fore the public eye, and, in - many instan ces, in no very enviable . position. He is the candidate of John W. Forney, and the fielitical fortunes - of the two have been linked together—the former aspiring to the and ei:eat - print chair, and the latter to a seat.in the Senate of the United States., Geary was in the Mexican war, but won' nolanrets - in that 'Contest: On the return of the Pennsylvania soldiers frotu that, dis tant battlefield, his own companions in arms unhesitatingly denounced him, and gave him an ugly record. Drifting into California as an aimless 'adventurer, he rotarned after a season to Pennsylvania, a 1 , 1 remained comparatively quiet until I , le breaking out of the late civil war. ills conduct in that straggle is not at all ..alculated to bring him enduring fame, his principal.aohievements being-won and recorded by newspaper correspondents and busy camp followers, who sent home to the journals they represented glowing accounts of the great man's prowess that existed only in tile graphic imagination of the writers. Perhaps the most signal exploit hes performed during the entire war was the gallant capture, from the reb el hordes, of an unresisting cannon at ILirper's Ferry, which he intended to pre sent to the City of Philadelphia with due and appropriate honors: Unfortunately, however, the ceremony'did not come off, as it was discovered that, having been bu ried.% that Aside soil for over forty yeaLs,.c9nld . pot, be removed, except through the agency of Butler's Powder Boat, or the . employment of as large a force as that used on the Dutch Gap Ca nal. Of his present political opinions he makes tio concealment—when he knows exactly. the company he is in. On no point is ho more fixed and determined (when he is with the Radicals) than in his eternal and nndying-bostility. to 4 my pol icy" of the President; and in the presence of Stivens,.Helley, and the gentle Anna Dickinson, he is equally frank and une quivocal in his advocacy of negro suffrage and negro equality in all its varied forms rand phases; short time before his nom ination by the 'Oadical disunion Conven tion he addressed tm'affectionite letter to his old friend Major Samuel -Maguire ' of this eity,.in which he einpbaticallY said he was a ". lifelong Deemerati" and seem ed to iesent, with glowing scorn the dis graceful imputation that he was or ever could be anything else., ~T he Democratic Convention, however, for 'Some reason or other, passed over his wondrous claims in silence, and - then the Ramps promptly took him ,as their " constable of 'the watcht;!q/e,being considered the most "fit and desartless'!_person for that exalted Paaitlon, tuidonhtuottiacconnt of the - unto long Democtie, - ..tbat;" bristled all over him and .was written' op every,lineament of his claSsio' and h eroieeonn tenance. His great and overshadowing ability, h.owev er, is shoWii in - his e pis tOlary., performati - fed rfIP,P PAT;',.IiK - 044W44- 4 CTId write such letters. They have t,fie 43110 ,„1- ordinary,inelit of 'What:o443 not say, and not flaying - iying.3l,lo% this intrhgtte„bianeb of "iterating, the subject, of our present' compliteentayynO' Lice seems to haie closely- studied the charmer' orAwothittilia bfairgoatie;that fellow who said-" words •- were - inventO to done* idees,” . And the 'editor , New.Toric isimposeible` to tell frOM his essio al speeches which way the latter- , gentletnati 'intends to votempon any bill before the august body of which he is a , membei, so Is it morally and physically impossible, and beyond all htfrnan poster, skill, and fore sight, to tell anything about the private or, public opinions of John W. Geary upon, any subject upon which . he,andertakes to illuminate therhlio with his mighty pen. Such, in brief, is the disunion ,candidate for Governor, and if, in preeenting his portrait to the public, we havo rammed to give any prominent feature, let us know it, and we will do the great hero , ample Justice. We shall nothing extenu ate, nor "set down aught to °lance- • Freemen of TennsylVania I the two men are now before ortlik for your support and confidence.: ,Hieeter Clymer is the embodiment, of the tree.Uniop sentiment Of the nation Which looks, at a speedy and general restoration of all the„people of all the States to all theirrights and privile ges under the Constitution. John W. (Geary is the repi . esentative ,of ,a narrow and heartless sectionalism, ,that seeks to keep in perpetual bendage and exclude from the blessings of a free goverament, millions of white men, iu order that. the Radicals may have negro eug . 'rage, negro equality, and negro support at the ballot box. Mester Clymer bears kdoft,the old flag of the'44),,Uhlle with the name. ofev cry-- State, ilfg . c,ribed'upon it, and with 'not a single star dimmed nor a solitary stripe erased. John W. Geary carries the black banner of sectienalism, civil strife, and perpetual disunion, with a po4ion of its, stars obliterated „awl a number of its stripes turned pale by the destructive arts, Of reckless fanatics and scheming dema gogues. Union men. I which will you follow ?—.4ge. - The Pentane. The Irish in America have been the special objects of Radical denunciatihn, because of their.firm.adherence to Demo cratic 14gtwithatlinding the alacrity with which they .rnshed to the 'field at the call cf the overnmentof their. adopted. country , and the ding .bra• very with which they fonght:and fell un der the flag of the Union, they have, as a class, been stigmatized ae " sympathizers with treason" by the Radical party. But a change has come =over the .spirit of the Radicals. The action. Of our. *overnment., in the. matter of the Fenian invasion of Canada'hii, afforded them ,an opportuni ty, afithey suppose, to entrap the Irish ; into their support. "President" Roberts who kept out of hares way„while he sent brave and honest men into Canada to be• killed or captured, posted off tn-Wash ington after the Canadian failure, (aft of wrath against the Government, to strike a bargain with Sumner and Stevens. That the bargain , was made is evident from the altered tone of such hypocritical and unprincipled sheets as the Philadel 'Tads Press. " Blarney" bas taken the place of abuseof the Irish, and the Demo cratic party, who fought their battle and that of all our foreig n born citizen's in 1854, are held up to theni 'as their ene mies. James Stephens, who *stands "at the head of the Irish organization, under stands ": President" "Roberts and his newly acquired Radical friends, and speaks his mind very freely about them. He addressed a Yeniiin mass meeting numbering ten , thousand persons at 'New York on the 24th, and the-following is'an extract from the very .sensible speeelrhe . Were the menengaged in this Canadi an aff,air , ,really in earnest?. [ Cries.ef no." 1 It certainly' was difficult. to be lieve it when th€, , so called President Rob-. erts fulminated ' his 'proclamation dated Canada, when written in New York; Diughterl, when even. fighting Tom §wee ney was taking his ease at his hotel,. and the poor misguided men rushin g in to the snare Made ready' for theta. 1110- raYe O'Neill might fight ' to the and . Spear 'might do battle to the right s . hx!t the in termediate ground en -,44 aide otithebot der was the pleased t reslhgpface afthose whe presumed to„gtude and be at t / he bean of all. his .dutiy, aid the brave fellows with - him 'did theii, ty; as ' they 'saw it to: be' their',duty [vitcif• emus chebringlbut IheY,„Weftil entrapped hiyotid the to eas,u re, of a doubt.,,, But they Must never be _eritrappe& y again by the inadbiiiatkrit"44eighl,g politicians. To 'the sbatrie of Treland t it. ,kl must be, ,eenf ess . ea, aid the linipediate,leaders must have kno46that the dovit' ( r l imEnt, „ixtud inter 'reie,aed Ow 0 , *4ii.04y,a44 with out ; that' 45,, ' )144081.09Plo•sy that these' in4ii,Aa,cr ,pkohatse ; whatever from toyernnicikt'Atiat t ,..*7, 7 7Aßld even this Muckless *peaty encourage Dc: ' ion I t hietOet the DD Ante:ileati pteee wipe. Just,pow, ? that , :tf!U ~g1;1?at n atioti cao be.draggld . into 'a yarby , any party.„,of Inshmeni agamst,her 141494 irlitiaaP be.: he 1.v.497 bP,AllaTs IA MB' "intl}. citilittrc,Abl§,AkAo -policy of his bretlitetiiiiirerabd, - atid false tt,QQ ,his oath of alrogilitilie' tb Psadopted linolivaniiiikairiiiquiriy l net :F ; 10 - Arricisitioni*hiift schitiveig ta , fberlejtidtelallt* I2W 4 ea and iieVpile4: . Tbefe *Sy it may not be far distanr.bitheliviihib N0NT.R05F,;',"p4,',..,7.0 . g.DiYi,, , Jtl,;i-,117;d1,,8d6; America may choose .10 , not 'differently, when she may Sod , it even convenienvto . go t,o war with England, but of tbisobe will'doubtless •give , you wattling. You are: ready for her atany time, are you'notf [Cries or " Yes,-yes," throwing up of bats, and general hallelujahs.] If these men.would come forward-now, I after their Canadian failure, then it would be well.. To those of the rank and file I' offer not my hand,but both:my hands and my, heart with:them. With the so called President .I have nothing in common, nor ,with his General nor with his Senate. They have tried , to make of this organiza tion a more political machine for the com ing election. ,I say now, you have been the victims of these men who but scorn you.. „,They,aspire' to place; and• power, and make-you t'ie , tools to do work their way ,for them to ,their unrighteous end. p Give it to them, give' it to them."] You must 110 longer be the tools of those designing men. If you are to be a power on this continent as it is said you are, let it be a power for good or not at all.' If you are to save Ireland, it Cannot be done otherwise than by respecting the laws of your adopted, country to whom you owe an allegiance scarcely less holy. And it is only by the ,observance of the laws of these free States and by the dignity of your conduct, and of your demand for the, freedom of your native ;Ireland, that you can merit and receive the support of the American people or Government. You will be told-at the coming election doubt less that you aro great power and ef forts will be made to use you, but your eyes are open, I trust, and yon , will not in the broad light walk into the traps pre pared for you. • • COtton Frauds. Great efforts have been made by the Radical interest to hush up the allega tions against Government agents who have been employed in the South since the war, and even during"it, wherever the United States military power prevailed. These agents, civil and military, have plundered the' Government, and robbed the planters of tintold millions. The facts have been reported ,in, and yet Congress has been careful to overlook - Or to sniiin'ess them. Where is ihdignation against such wretches and 'robbers? They keep, all their yea geance' for the 'N ational Union men who resist their mid policy. When will they bring to justice these their own partisans, some of whoni have obtained, by pecula tion diteet, 'fratid; hundreds of thous ands of dollars?' Is this money to, be re covered for the Wilted States Treasury, orsi it t o be employed in the coming glee,- titin to perpetuate the Radical power ? We copythe following from theSpriog field Republican : WEIOLESALE ROBBERY OF THE Gov .l7....m.iftrr,—Several attempts have been made in Congress to secure a fall investi gatiort,cf .the immense frauds upon the Government, committed by its agents in the South, during and since the war ; but for some reason Congress is not disposed to overhaul this matter, although the Gov ernment has , lost, bythese gigantic frauds and stealing% from five hundred to a thousand million dollars. "But they ,cannot be wholly covered' up. In Alabama, Jodge Busteed has suc ceeded in getting together a grand jury difiposed to'•rnake , a searching .investiga tion of the .robbery ia that section ; and, indeed, the. people generally will 'be in dined, to aid in the,enforcementofjustice, as they have been robbed, in the aggre gate, to a largenasseut than the Govern ment. "". "The grand jury for the United States District Court of Southern Alabama made a presentment on 'the subject a few weeks since that 'should attract general atten tion.' - They state that there were, 150, 000 bales of cotton belonging , to the Con federate Government f ie Alabaine at the cloki of the war, which the treasury agents Of the Velted States were Ordered to 'collect for the benefit of the Govern. Merit ; that these aggits at.,Mobile, C. A. Dextet•ind James ACTomeny, did col lect, and ship a large part of this Cotton, bat senitety 25,000 sales of it 'were con. 'signed to the Government, and. th ese - chatged ixith snob extortionate expe nses the Treasury realized very little from rftlie snide' ;Valance a 144- Wig frateittlently - Teleased to . pretended . own ers; upon afildaiita' knoWe to be.false, the treaSury agents shin Ter2;cli: in jtie - Oradea. another`. part was l sald ,directly by' the agenta,who - poei . ceto: the entire preeeed,e. Tn" audition steaArig time Gotietinmetit; theiSzente seized great 'deal' of cotton was private property,s'and .. iihen:):t Fie so :pr9yed, thq-Ationtd not 'relitor'e it unleeei the ere would sell it to S. C. Ogden db. Cii.fbi I less than ha lf p .77 Aifati•lstitt* tkzii :ili `wilful abgenee ii'ddr's6ocOrikolif," (if," 7itnikep Preilea*a; gilF i eb# l oioo 7tit ese ligation vtielrptigl r ri# l ,; gift - Pat tlior twe Of thp iltoe; d' 11dit J ey`ary -'elgrt bti .ibVeitigiitiou'or ;fotids i roliken lio lY is tio-tiedevliditqW4 for trier; fp 11 4 ti • tivety that the Treasury ageniglieltirldii:' ted are sustained,bY o llleir Peperiora &be , Treasury, Department; thati44,fuet,, the Centre of this magnificent -operation is ; in tbe Treasury department ,Washington; that, in fact, the Co.' in the firm of' 8: d. Ogden & cons4ta mainly of si lent partners. in Co., ' die executive department of the government. It These are startling, statements. It is .not likely they would be made if there was nn foundation for , them. The agents I of the iswiudiere at Washington-who have operated in the South may possibly get their deserts there throngh,the, United States courts, unless they escape., with' their ill-gotten booty. ~ But if the princi pals are housed in theTreasery Depart ment at Washington they may hold their plunder with impunity, lidless Congress does its duty in the. case. It inrist not fail, to doit. .T 4. facts are certain to come out, and the people will pass judge ment upon them. Those win) permit or connive at these crimes cannot escape the responsibility. "These gigantic robberies l and frauds by agents of the Government ip.theSoutb —and 'they are but specimens of many of the same sort—show us what we may ex pect if the South is kept under territorial or military rule. , . "The government will be robbed • the people will be robbed and oppressed; in &miry wilt be discouraged,; there will be no inducements , to loyalty, and things will continually Wax worse and , worse.—. The thieves who are so , lucky as to get employment under the General Govern ment at the South, and to make their pile, wilt of course go , for perpetual disunion ; and this class has, had no little ,influ ence in pr'omoting the ill feeling, at. the South, and the misconce . ption at the North, by whiclCrestoration is delayed. We must not offer a, premium on dishon esty ; we must iial c ave things prn erag : ently in such condition that .the indeee ments to knavery, ie -publinaffsits are ire resiatable to men of but average integrity. A 8014.13.0bu5i. One of the boldest sehemes yet invent ed by robbers was successfully praotitied upon a•_man. named Bristol, residing at Loraine, Obio,,a few-days ago. Tbe Pitta burg Dispatch gives the , following gar ticolars of the robbery C • • Mr. Bristol, had bagged it,,large quanti tY. of gold diiritig tbe-,war,, apd,-bad re cently invested largely,42,,,Vutted State& bonds, baVing Some. twenty thousand dol lsrs in gold and bonds in his house.. A few days ago ° a party olAnen„pretending to be officers ip search of stolen bonds, visited his house, demanded ,possessiqu of the bonds until such time as, the numbers Could be examined, s tud coolly informed him that it would be necessary to take him into ctistody. Mrs. Bristel and three hired men having popla in, they,,.too, were informed that'the course of Justice. I required their arrest until tlieix,connee tion with the property could beexplained. Handcuffs were produced, and Mr,„and Mrs: Bristol, with the three ; hired men , were manacled and Ordered to,sit. The " officers" then secured the stolen" bonds, 'and also"ebitiscated the' gold as part of the'prdeeeds of:other bonds PrOb ably sold, 'and witlidreii for Consultation, strictly charging the manacled . ' party to remain perfectly quiet' in: their seats., It is • scarcely necessity Ito state" the "officers" did -not come' blink. The hand- Cuffed vietimsTemaitied until-late at night, And then hearing no stiMitionSibliropeed to jail, the conviction datvisedppno•their minds that they bad been" sold''at V ery costly. price: The alarm ' web and the services of a blacksmith secured to unriiret' the chains, but in 'iltiiineatitime the -robbers had lied leavini not a single trace behind. 1.• . . The .Weet, Plate , Revived. gi ' i. _, I A letter from If.aly tO,ab'Enps . h Etper says that breast plates ' .. te ) bein . g re,viv.Rd, as in the glorious times OtthelCnigh3s of the Round Table and tti.s-rlankageoets. M. Muratoti, the ' direCior,,Ot the":Gsneo PenitentiarSr, Inie ineceeitixl inr4:ltlsi9g a breast-plate, 4 fot :solditits, ',4,ri,l43,l4epr i eelY weighs.three grigliidl,ish e tinds., Affes re. peated:e i tpgripientsc Eirtfa4c#4l:43n: r f itivith heavy 'ca piiicils` to„`, 4 ,tyß i pp.ess, j and lances, bayon et If and 1%79.0,5 IN hp -peen discovered* to lie niter!): ifntienetraa oth to bullets' an thrtnits; 1 1 1)9 rn e (fei l stp :ing 1 peculiarity o fthis briiiit : Pl4e,,lvl4ltei in no is 4 ay,impede' . .th'e poite,iftent l s pf a soldier,_ k Is that ' bot'thet ifigStoo l .,atoo of . . , •-, , - metallkOiatter eatihithato lilt - c'Oni . Rosi tion; 1 .' • '' ,' `• 1 •', • ". • I epx , e r ip T e h or i r e f _ ln ? . tt oeo i i ti n to 7 f e , I:46r t li ' e,e f r ixi ii it )1 7 / ti ii A t ti l % kit r ti . ) : ; 1 7; its p r actical aaffalais ' af t r :)3 l: l .! 44 7 lth . . i ;! ~ 9rl • 0 .A . 0 , ; ,',) • ()Brit thi#cip I tel ligenier My* ' A T ; 11 el ICP orrelativoiotilo , ite to demon:oo - e On 111 4i or . , It 6WLaipenile' that g'Wk,t wba dlAdlevernrl34o l lases tie old riitin4:" . gt:to ; :I.o4Nivn.; ingv feetdeiii"otldnbli gfatogn, , County, New -Vorkrievatiffidive, end mad to bet Art0*14 1 7.74 0 4% - forl MlNT wards of` 100 years of age." " d ' iTOLUBIE XXIII, NtrlitßEß 29. =MEI Zjl , . ' Batunitiyy Dinning. HOW. wipz., kiss has . been,given—bow Many a curse 7 Thow inpy . a caress--how many a look - Of 'hate—boa , 'many a kind vord - .2-thow' =MO promise has been bro ken—how many a heart has been wreck e4l--bow maoya,sonl, lost r --.bow many a loved one lowered to the , narrow .cham lier—bOw rainy., a babe . has gon,e forth , &Om earth - to Beaven—how Many a little crib or cradle stands empty now, which last Saturday,night held the rarest of the treasures of the heart I zA week is a •history. A week makes events of sorrow or of gladness, which people never heed. Go home, you bean erring wanderer. GS home, to the cheer that awaits yoni wronged waifs on earth's hillow4. Go home to yottr family, man of business.. Go home to those .you love, man of toil, and give one evening to the joys and comforts fast flying by. Leave your books With' complex figures—leave your dirtrshop=your busy store. Rest with those you - love ; for God alone knows; what next Saturday night may bring them. Forget the world of care and the battles withivhich life furrowed the week. Draw" dose around the fnini ly hearth. Saturday night.has- awaited_yourcom ingt with sadness,. hiltears•rintailetice. Go home to those you love, and as you bask in the,loved presence,_aud meet to return the embrace of your heart's pets, strive to lie a better man, and to bletili God , for giving Ilia weary children so dear a t step 7 pifig.stone in the river io the Eternal, as Saturday The Past and the Present The radicals throeghoiit the country are busily engaged in defaming the Presi dent. Not many months ago the same men who are now employed in this dis reputable busines4 ,distinctly announced :that the President Was the government, and that any•abuse,of the former was tin, •deniable treason to the latter. Any person who wrote or spoke of the Executives efcept /. in a complimentary manner, was deemed by these worthies as fit only for iinprisonment cr exile. In niany cases where •the offending parties 'were-not reached by ths central . despo tismut Washingti.6; brutal mobs were turned loose upon theiii, and every spe cies of insult that inalicelcould invent was :heaped upon thege 'who' "knew their • rigbts,and knowing dared maintain them." - Bat all this 'changed! The' radicals I .now cluini the sight they Once ceetempt .nously'denied to others. They now elan 1-der the President in'the' very name of' "loyalty."' Their miserable spies and informers are as busy as ever, but their despicable efforts are at • present directed toward bringing into contempt " the gov ernment," they once professed to revere, and are tamed against the office of Chief Magistrate, , heretofore invested by them with the same dignity which doth hedge -.string. They have " Completely changed- their base,"and histoiy presents no meatier spectacle than the party that once im prisoned inert and'exiled women; and throttled - children, now exercising a li cense 'of pen intl . speech ,yebich, in others, they denounced astreasonabfe and diabol ical.. r - • .A. Bear in a Bed-room. On Thursday night a tame hear whieh is kept by the proprietor Of. the Cambria House, got loosefrom-bis kennel and start e4-.PP Artffl/rPloringtetpedßieti. through the premises., ',..flind . ing a dpor open . , Bruin entered, and' iiidde 'hiti way through" the . house. In pastlfit ilirofigh the hall, he came in con taet with one',of the servant dish suppihing' that ,the bear was bent on misol*f,,,fted l , screaming . , into a 'bedrioafu *se at hand, Bruin seeming io ap,preciate a joke, pursued her closely, 'anot'tooW his 'statrd,ip the door. The girl seeihObtrelit ciept under the, bgd to biae',fi:iim 'the; iiiVastar"., 'The inmate of •ihec,otkoh,•dlady, being awakened by, the 'Screamsthe girl,. and, seeing Bruin ; ma. king Mil WaY' toward the, bed f startednp in a burry, coniplating , her ,toilet in a 'mate expeditious maupgr,,i venture to 'say,"tllin she' had' gyar done in her life be -,sgr,saras to those of 4,he " The .bear commenced ' charge:upsin ihelifr'SneSl eviaentfriti:a . spOrtiye *lobe de s )tter,ons,flailkMovement be co rn ered them' both .;.,and.; raising UM- Seinpodi# hipd 4 ,loo;:h4l;64'edinti4tily their Yacell;" if to goi; dp : . Bj this ' npailY'We liouse arodspd x ilia' rai.cine of lidsiaged. ptnin, was ",,dgiztprlof softie of the masculinelandeiand tiskeii to his kelretatkiic l!har•lghteeed,WPreee were A4o' care, off ATAelre,P4e.ll9;4o4:of the MNYII-.9190941•14.-,PaPog rb9oo Qfleo aPPaPIa ; and. flftfrwardy :44 4 4 i_kt2 14e.,groptd4.81Rells of Om I tirgiaL-Mitteatitie Wen4ific/. I ,-,.ti R. ;.) F:iirr;•.l-77 sq.J ' 5:41E% lc filatAvi- A Jugge• angrily, to PINCIt.4 I 4er, frOPV , llPfßotOiriirt , 498W,gr y CM!) .bB,9l3TaltratAP [4 ol:nrw Trlkqt • y. nik@fir .YerifY. X Pith OP QPiker atifgure4l. o 4_46 Afor t -find t t Ge taVP49opf - 4 11 , 04 4VI4ititArnfirt.th.cia• sand a year. Instating tho-liish, The men who hounded on mobs.years ago to burn Catholic churches; who ad vocated depriving Irishmen of their , votes 'until' they sliould have resided the cOuntry twenty-one years ; who jollied the dark lantern know-nothings in 1854 and 1855 ; who have since tried again to deprive Irishmen, of their votes, while they are doing all in their power to give votes to negro* men whose thief ex ploit in life has been the advocacy of measures for the degradation of white men of foreign birth, and the elevation in social and political life of the African ; these men are to-day willing to return to all the votnit they have spewed forth for a quarter of a century against the Irish, and to eat. it, just because Johnson, a President of their own election, thought proper to issue a proclamation against the Fenian movements, under the hope that Irishmen are such simpletons as to be blandished into the support of the aboli tion ticket 'on that account. All the insults and denunciations that judge advocates and town counselors have showered upon the heads of Irish men are as nothing to be compared to the insult of putting forth a mere first idea that any'trite Irishinan could by any pos sibility think of voting a republican abo lition. ticket. Anything but that. That cap would be too bitter. They can stand abuse, outrage, insult, denunciation, any thing, but blandishments from abolition know'nothings to get their votes is a lit- Ale tougher than anything else. Mlitary History. The Disunion press seem 'very' indig nant that Democratic journals should re fer to exploits of Gen. Geary during the war. They strive desperately to bolster him up, and resort to all kinds of false hood and garbled accounts to make it ap pear that he was a soldier of renown: His prowess in capturing the spittoon" at Harper's Ferry is not- disputed, and that achievement was perhaps the most brill iant in his military career ! Hue . the gal lant General's - friends need not foanr at " copperheads for- throwing out such" in sinuations," as they call them, in rogard to-thev.onduct as a soldier,ef Forney's candidate. Geary'a record as a military tick; will soon be published. It is in 'course of •PrePartition by soldiers who yerved-during the war, who know Getity, and who-will present/ facts do regard , to him in such authentic, form that the Dis unionists ,will haye to acknowledge -them. An officer in Geary's regimens told us a few days ago that he could' not vote for him, arid that we would not credit him were he to tell, as the number of those who have l,een under his command who would do likewise. None are better able to ap preciate Geary than his own men, and when they furnish the public with his rec ord it will be a bitter pill for his friends to swalliiw. We have not found Oppor tunity, to refer to the history of the war and follow the General through its pages, but we accidentally stumbled over one in stance of his gallantry, a few days since. In glancing over Swinton's " Army' of the Potomac," we noticed the name of Geary, and intentlypernsed a page or so, think ing to fiad,some refutation of the "insinu ation" of his masterly capacity on a re treat. Swinton, page 353, says : " A new line .was then formed by Doubleday's and Robinson's divisions of the First corps, and by troops of the twelfth Corps brought up by General And in a foot note, adds ; "It had been intended that Geary's di vision (with the exception of Green's bri gade) illiquid also reinforce the left ; but his - aiviston missed its way." According to this authority none of the .glyiryof Gettyiburg belongs to the hero of the "spittoon," but had it eventuated Adversely to our arms, he. would have been master o the situation on a retreat. Cetarv: G tiros HcicutEs.—The vener able'Pbetial and 'polities! editor of the 'Post,'"WhO, - since the fights over the pro tective Vain' of 1828, has stack to the faith np_on free , trade as expounded by Calhoun, ie shocked at the tariff bill now before' congress. He hopes that, if the bilri.aisee, it will be vetoed, and he can trot serhow it can get the approval +Of President Johnson. The veto oldie civ il Rights bill, in-the estimation _of the , POBt,Lwitti nviful blunder ; _bat "eironm :stinfoes (alter oases." -'The venerable 114- - a the rest of them,' does noVhesi tate tti call upon Hercules' when his go oart gee& atock in the Innd:-.(-: —A !aft' ti a tijittia Ofilia came upon "thinaliie of liecateoyetOring ;in a line dike ttilti: -.! „. Shall 14igti s th(aleentil of , ) ' the. deepeit Hell, -gin -.,,.36 , 0.1! '''',The 14;4 thieking that he hid alien* - area , nti iircigt:Ans. 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