The Montrose Democrat. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1876, August 07, 1866, Image 1

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A. 3 ! - GERRITSON;'I ) 4I:th
.01:11 tt.
" !:
Gov. Geary and His !,-Eli.aoe.":i
Pram Our Special cottespettaent. •.• ,;, Cal°
LA.wansoßvlK:l l 4, 0ct. , 13 1 ,i lase. ,
For some tithe baek , the friendskareirert.
emieaof Free Kenna iti_,the States , haVe
been tickled- hy•the- tune, :"Gow:Geary
has restored peace to 'the Teititory, and
all the difficulty is over." This.. delm3ive
fallacy-is an insult and another u roiig to
the unhappy Fide-Sate • people. Peace
has:been• restored as it was in Hungary in
'49, eras (Jul. Sumner restored it lastsum
mer, by disarming the Free-State people,
smd4eaving them at the-mercruf-theiren
emien- ; Helen; : .profuse in
protests - dens _and. promises to tlae Free.'
State Men, but his atte;-whenitriped
this mocking tiniel„ - prove" th:atihels`una
hie, as unwilling, to protect' F.ree-Stite
Settlers ;•thache ;4s deteEtnified' to tntlk z e
them bend to thelingus bitirpatinris; that
he is hostile 'to all - Free;State detnonsera
tious; (which aloe; indeed, laWletts tind6r
bogus authority) ; 'that' he offers . do 610-
sit on to arrests being Made . byliogns Of
ficers under the . most frivolous pretenses,
or to the unhappy lictims beinfg'• freited
in the mist ignominious manner ;•that be
has allowed wi"d, murdering tiatift, of
Missouri in vadetii to " go; aftet 4 lthivcbm•
mission of violence and crimes,-unpunish
ed, while he arrested •by the Aragoons.n.
large party--tipward of one - hundredi Free
State men—who had, marched from Lastr
reuce and vicinity simile, few Weeks ago, To
repel one of these invading: pOrtieS; ..and
that, furthermore, beiturned tbese,unfor
tunates over to the tender •rnercies of the
Border Ruffians. Titus and his...Anyrcni
dons, as..euroacici miluilarlaveleen:guard
tug these prisoners itt Lecompton, -.The
Pro Slavery Courts and bonus officials
hare been fabricating indictments against'
them last week, and this week mangy* of
them will he on trial for their lives, and
the remainder for trumped-up felonies.=
God have mercy on them! I see no pow
er here that can and will. • i n
Nor is this all. Gov. Geary keops,o ,
most watchful eye on emiaration from Ilk
Free States. As the Border It uffianl4 have
practically closed the navigation-,of the
Missouri River, overlaud emigration by
`tiebral..ka has been: the only alternative.
All such overland emigration partakes of
the caravan, or aggregated party of emi
grants, and the danger of being intercept
ed by bands of Missourians on the frontier
renders this precaution• doubly necessary. I
Spurred on by the. Border Ruffians, who
groan over the advent of every Free : State
emigrant to the Territory, the Governor
has kept the greater part. of his forCe,
dragoons scouring the country in that-di
reetion. One or two of tl , e,,etnigrant
trains have passed the dragoons i . sokeiye-,
fa, the appearance oeihe tea ' ` ' t-
tents and occupants that the' dragoons
never suspected that such could betbe
Northern "armed emigrants."
,It is, in
deed, not difficult to get in in this way,
although . the dragoons are being used:to
the best advantage to keep , thput, il ollt-
The North is thus "iiffiiaaf-Y'l , 6cr ed and
hedged out of Kansas by the Border Rid- '
flans on the 2lissouri River, • and Geary
and his dragoons on the Thal
the Governor's sensitiveness about" arm
ed immigratidun is not equally aeute'at'all
points,, L will tuention•tto:tt fk-catirkany ,
from . 51.isissippi; Zit — Bathe twen ty-two
•
young tueti, armed .. .toaher-leethv.ihrolfe'd
a.military company, 'iota if?naan „with.
them, apd; fventige ' pfttibibte or
industrious intentions, ac,riv_eid at Lecomp
ton a week . - ago. They ii'resene6d tlferri
selves in" - Ohl - edge; -iiiii:-;x4ery august
vice-regal place of abode : ; and-every inL.Y.trt
last %week their arms *et'eltacite4 .41:ft int
of ',heir bivouac, while their sentry' kept
hi- --rtial t:,:ati under his omniscient. Ex,-
great nose. This .
Caine in a guise in which: io'-kr - ee-State
party ever 6ntered the Territory, and ey
ery evening last, -week any persote-about
Lecompton Wlto was not deaf, cold& hay.Se
heard them swearing about what 'they
were going Lo do. to the 3. tO.AboGiionisls."
Such is the state of agair) at irecornt,
while courier after &miter nod: &neon
after dragoon hi dispatehed:to aboy,Fth
era frontier to stop" the , -Free.State
'armed immigration," no ineouptarabie
portion of which is traveling eamitiev -- Be
sides all this, Gov. Goirsr"
ted a' snake-like and insidiousinroad : of
nearly three thousand Missourians -to in
vade the ballot -boxes and eleet a L0,0 8 .4'
Lure. •
Gov. Geary is not a Gen-Jae - lion.
is notion the :other . band; a respectable
tyraut,,nor Yet aninabecile. nrinerely
a pow,wiap„ ,and be, taiseraWo
, c tippl..-er a
miserable faction
.whir4l3 ,-,e,lsloyigts ..4010
tyrannies under--the cloak of Democracy.
Ile gawp herp Are; co" - Anake,,pgaftekbut / lo
malcii.it4tiitcalWarAere saf 'not
to put an end to inAint,y, but toe eoY up
in iquiq, fr.nxikiitt hi e , RO T stair the,
smoke - 6M bliriutg nnikt. a npe ascendto
Heaven as awevidenCe against=the PeVe
trators of aJka• nee villaimesqk #tor. PotY
bokfted tb;_et 4 be iura,
"P resideutiallsaudjAate cars on shoulders."' IhideribajitipTestion,
bap had-an dye thie•pte2ll4l3, -
den. Proud of this,,anticipto ATP6TP.I!
weizlit, the " acoveinp..4 , 4, , e(?ti.lickr 'AP 10- ' 1
stain allowed hie
,R,zoilflitt,:tter'iii to be
unsteadied by, ihe,gipais:Of en' enslaved
Young, erafnrp., blpf4b 3 g,:ruiP, of
Amereaa bbertiiibas bees sbafeeriCat
his feet, and . not: "one =nip npabliaaa
fitig wiftiev ,helr and
tliligtib, 6'o°4'o bFesKan4i. - : Ali his
Yro rtkth‘P 4 .beOP;tt 4 P l i t !!!o 4 4Ps9"
e , lhe , rO:SlaVeryiary; , ,helfct t o
his•rnaSter4 , 741,114 - at
the daihe'tiine h Is . load
.protesta
timi',4 and' Weclaeationa of itziparilality, jus-
Gre; v; Geary is either a very, ilig
tlitirtr, flidn ° oi very pomp:ohs'
one.—per
li'alig'al4le'Of'hoth. is :profthiud
ekori:4;'ithd iklits about what;he is and in
tend to by, a `somewhat_ 'ostentathiiis,
manner. "Gov_:Geary is :a determibed
idan, With:Oat the 'capacity 'to deterniiiie
course; has'an iron
to u without
afiilr i' es p a llur id ose PreSidential can;'hiS i?nly aim being
136 ' 044E 1' r and " that is
uhder instructiOns: Tie has inivie elate
thousand dollars
of 'ice•O:riit'seHicie money.' *lle' also stated
tea "'company of Free-State i gentlenfert
that "them were' not two hien startling
bui lie knew where:fliey
were "'You have not a' secret
:niseeting," be " but r too w What
- takes place; I ilmOt. It 'now your though ts. l4
If this be ,ift true, the conduct. of his om
niseiebt Eicellency'is still more culpable.
.i2Vett7 York Tribune Nov. Ist 1858.
' • •
4
The absurd. hlunder ) which , recently ap
.
p r ear4itt.`.print,n.by whitsh speaking :ofa
decea , ed.c,ongressman, eulogist owas
inade,,to say .thitt
was wafted ititotlie,presenee of his Mak
er,".-7-,whqreas it ;was..written the - 4 ,! gentle,
Au4oly•spirit," 4,ce.,--7-rkialls a similar tuis
take.,cqually ludicrous,-whereby the put.-
1 jag h ,4:9lpma, in the ; wrong, place entirely
reversed the intended meaning. - A lady,
.ioaseaport town, wishing :to -have pray
ers husband, who had gone
un a. v9.yacre,43nt up to the minister, on a
'slip of 'paper, the following: "A man
}Paving gong to-sea,
.hia de.,,ires the
-PraYeT B .9f :44e cengregation. for his, safe
return." Instead, ..ho:wevce, ..of placing
. 11 . 1 ,,e , PTE 1 111i1;.4,fietthe«.word . kt Sea: ' , she io
aaveSWDLLYI piaqe4 it alter , `* wife,", there
.hy.attordipg much paw went era to the con
gregaiion aq t min ister .reattir- 7 ,f , A map
paving gone. to reu • his wife, -deir,o't the
prayers pf t4econgregation.,fat bie, safe
return." A story •is also told of an, g.,ng
lish gentleman, who,Jkaying,,proettrod fcir,
a friend a situation in, the.Ersist Intlia;enna-,
piny, was put to po littleieapensu bY
Oading a letterfrout latter, in which
.the ; wsiter endeavored. to .express his grat
itude, „" said.rtbe.,:ab§PntePt
" heentliusadace4 in a pot : where am
sure of t regular, salary, and, having it in
PoyerilwWgl enjoy health, to lay. .pp
something, every . ,YOr fur-the, future, Lam
not neraiudfalinf my. heuefactoroxid mean ,
to, l seed you an eqatPlaenOT: .Baol3 a shock
ing hand, however, diththis grateful Indi
,4ltt rme, ithat the :gentdeniatt „thought he
meant at)IJO i q i end bitp,„anelep4Ant. AG
serdingly erected t , =at_ considerable-ex
pense a:large eut-liouse for the unwieldy
pet, Cut never, received ,anything to put
into , it, eavo-a ;itklil pot of India sweet
mea.ts and an-additional buudienf ;
Nagy, r entember the story of
aa,npietear of queer apimals, who sent
.out to. Africa an•order for Iwo naorkeys.
.The;Niciird_tivo,,Ns he ~wrqte ;it', bore such
.aresemblarieeAq.tbe figoresAP9, ,that his
faitgul„agen‘ was some.what,perpl4eflin
,efgent s ipg.4,-„conimission, that ~couipelled
him to wage war upon the whole nation.
He persevered, iinwtisver,
,to the great. sur
prise ofibe,naturalist,, ,w ; lio in due time
received ? a,ktter, informing him, in mer
cantile' phraiwOlogy, that ; eight .monkeys
hi'4,b,'een shipped, - as per .copy of the bill
at/ ~: lalvd, and, that he,
,bsiped to be,able to
,ea . fy.lllA the rest of the. order in time fur
Lae pe.xt. . -
. „,13ut there Js no need of ping to foreign
jands :for r eici.truplee -of mistakes ,arising
04,n;bitti or careless handwriting., Those
9, , ,bn 01. ti*iar l iwio „the old chronicles
and Fecordssof pnr.,earty colopial , history
will rem - 104 ; eonsternatiqn ~into which
;General.qpurt. of Massachusetts and
41 1 e;':.4 8 °4ate4. sAtlemetits wfire•AtkrOWn,
when t eir, ale,* read , tq . Churn a:letter from
-Pii? l(o34 i V i f• l ` t r.t4Y. 4 4 Oaelieve it was
„Cutt'bp ; Sratber,saying thaklie,addressed
.IhGq ;4% ,magistrate 4 as set of
; Jeadiuri cfevt/s/ Fancy the astonishment
of the 4steners at suet! treat inept from the
,gooff and. ; gentle Mather.: The horror
_t!!„risiteti elerk—,ns- well be- might—paused
iii ins reading, aghast. Cenld it be possi
tile! PerlapA.l4 eyes deeeived , ire
looked at thefettpi gain read the words
tratliward - and foi:War4l; 4 afrid' finally, oiler
thOriitigti l eiitiiiiiitioVexelitimed, 'Yea!
,Wig Itiihati'defillo" . -- 4 'Wink rig itidigni
'4ioti;,toit-'l6ll(raWY deek. followed. this,
il l o l dratiiiii: r qft,h6rbatibeen eulledr.Hap-.
"or “.
~vttiei' } if stilentlietetics;
166ked;
Ithtr - I.ShirdreW, of AMeikelinti;° 118'111*V-de
liternif,lated tTjeiiip Vast too Mitch, I ').A nor,
1- tesp'on o eildeimiliediateFy'rolleiWed; Which I
to theleffVet
4nrstalte • hi , =their fvtitio6 .l 6f
1 7 reidihgllie,'epiiitliv-Liti6nibetl WA.;
- ter li j ad'intende4 ''Plaire
Vidiffdttate
'phis; Wiley eathvgnvegetubleisixdge4 ips
-firlxicolegreetriwithiverdigivis
MONTROSE;'
TrESDA. 4, AU 1.8160•
ITVOLUME XXI .
11,- NUMBER 32.
• .
The Welt Airmty',Lam.,
itiVicirleCt.:o4y of tb"o
Bounty WI as itpassed hothjleutteivapd
-Nees 'approved-by the President.:
• Sxotatr" 1, Be it- ena cted,' Ac.; that .tp
each and every soldier who • enlisted into
the army of the r 144 ,States - after the
19th day, of april, kt 38, 11 for' a period of
tot less than .three years, and having eery
.ed-his jerm of enlistment, has 'been bop
, .orably diacharged;- and who bas received,
..or is entitled to reekth , e, from The United
" States, under existing laws, a bounty of
;one hundred' dollars and. no more; and
any such soldier enlisted for not less than
three years,..wlio has• been honorably dis
charged on account of wounds received in
the line of duty, and-.the widow, minor
'children; or parents, in . the order,named,
-of any such soldier , who died in the-serv
ice of the United' States, or of diseaSi3.:Or
wounds contracted while in the service
and in the line of duty,' shall be paid the
:additional bounty of one hundred dollars
hereby authorized.
. Sac. 2. That to each and every soldier
who enlisted into the army of the United
States after the 19th of April 1861, during
the rebellion, for a-period of not less than
two years, and who is not included in the
foregoing section and has been honorably
discharged therefrom after serving two
years, and ;who hasreceived or is entitled
to receive from the United States, under
existing laws; a bounty of fifty dollars and ,
no more, and any soldier enlisted for less
-than two :lears, whip - bwi been honorably
discharged' on account ofw'oniids received
in'the iltlif Of duty, and' the widotV, minor
Children or pat-ill:.1 ' in die order'` mimed,
• tdany Audi soldier died in ;he service
of the thined 'Siates, or of diseases or ;
viounak - contracted while in the service of
the United States, and in the line of duty, j
shall be paid tbeadditional bounty of dry
dollars hereby authorized: Provided, l'hat
any soldier who law' bartered; :sold, us-
I signed, transferred, loaned, exchanged, or
; given away its dual discharger papers, or
any interest in the botany provided. by
this or any-other Cougrtsi, shall
tot be eutitled .to-receive,-,any addidotial
,bounty whatever., tied when appdeatiou is
made ally:I-Water ;tor, said tioutity 4 .he
:bball be required, under the pales, and.
penalties of perjury, to make oath or, of,
tirroat4onivf tot.,loefoihy, and;that he/has,
: rintsO,.bartered, sold, assigned., transfer
red, exehanged, loaned, or given ;Away,
,either his discharge papers or any interest
in Any bounty as aloresaid, and no-claim
for such bounty shall .be entertained by
;the Payinaster-Geeerah.or other account
ing or disbursing otileci, except upon re
ceipt of the claimant's discharge papers,
_accompanied by the statement under oath, ;
as by this section provided. •
Sat-. 3. And be et farther enacted, That
in the-payment of the additional. bounty
herein provided .for,,it Shall be the duty of I.
the Paymaster-General, under ;snob rules ;,
and regulations. as may be prescribed by
the Secretavy„of War, to cause to be ex-1
itnined the ac Cants. of each and every!
soldier who makes application ther . elor,
and if found ;entitled thereto, pay /add
bounties. , , •
Sic„ Anciiip it further enacted, That
Au the reception, examination,. settlement,
aud.payment of alsitusfor said , additional
bounty, due. the widows -cr heirs of diseas
ed soldiers, : the accounting officers of the
Treasury shall bo governed by restrictions
: prescribed for the Paymaster-General by
the Secretary of. War, and the payment
shall be made in like manner under.• the
direction of the Secretary of the Treasury.
MISCEGENATION IN row # .—McGregor
'boasts among her citizens, black, white
and mired, a certain "loyal" man who
has' always professed a holy horror of
""dopperheatis." tee has manifested that
sort of insane devotion to his dear,cmiutry
'that he Las stood ready at any tine to
,pocket as much as possible ;, and in pro
portion as his "loyally'' has beett,proOta
,ble, so Las his hatred of Democrats in
areas d. Besidur all of this, he is ,a,piwis
- sent, and belongs.to the most sanctinauni
ons`Ofthe inits . curar
.i christions, so c'alled.
tile/ entry a black.and-tan specimen of ihei;.l
tribe African, tst' letuak, with btaf-stek
I other cliarrOs to mat,cli, so enTap-
I . tured ibis model . Abot.itionist. that . , tbe
husband of the utioVe r,nentioned:.negre.s
one fine morning ftilind his said" wife an,d
thi s o loyal" man in the same ecoeeti r.- . to
kOther. The : resift was a pistol aimed
with deadly intent it the white culprit,
Who, probably eor the first time in.his iife,
I - fell upon 'his knees and uttered genuine
F' 'I •
'prayers for tnere,y. tun I aLe
, ,
settled; Tsil,
for thai'is the ii4hiuuf the tnjured darkl,
consid! , rs'hi , i'llonplrestorkA, and the
olitionistlias"ifeparted a wiser, and vtii to
y'hoped, cur.e7l7itragetgOgliop,,, ,
''"
' • :Qbrig his •>Q
'ttinibTefis,
the Diplomatic Appi,4iatton bill, retuned,
1.449,PaY TA% Wl'AtiOstis to
. pyp.pga4 i,evrisnqueuve of:a letter: ; ef 14s
innnnining i l rYsk4unt 41insoo.
l
swag,. Ineai cPuteloP'.l4o4oAnsl
- .c9pgress., „ 4pe rf Au
spite work; 'yet, it. illustraces i Oy3i?0,1411":11
01;0e ni) . ncl that, rn,444 J.ktift '
We 'do pi;t, '6(CrriniiSserate' liaryfey—nay
''FrOSlesS; 1 7 kiit
lifige - Li4ilO*AoFOr4Slniffliiiitfr reo.
iigti toitirdg prpl/21.0.iftkw
tni:;?`e bapi,l,Alider!loti s troin the'Cbarleston
POr4; 40 at the gatee'iliniS fitting,* a
- fleet ,to'ieinforee Met "thifi'''634l . llidiAt
"einivayed'' "h'e "iiele, '.itit'OethOgit ' • io
:Phiiileiton lifeli"ffe hoi!hie:a thOrdi• - ''
'''li'Vis'ioii liiiivH'aiVifi44t•thi,l3s,rifO i r4Y.
i
*iOn ethleptithiiislyc'n'tid - hOte'ir ebtitrary
to' the wiiihes of the Liileoln 'AAniinii.tit
tion i yet he idlii'ttetekriii:as rewarded by
the appObitmOnt;of liihiteter' to Portugal.
Xté " turned - tap" to 'the' best ititeresta
'of his eblin try ip Servo the `iadicals at l the
be` innirig of the" war; his mission.
He now'" turns tad" 'l.O the radioaliand
they reftiie to pay Min i ."' Verily the Wale
'df the Wicked OWU'll'Of 'trouble. ' What
Wfil be th . e' 6te of Ue.irY;" ihe Tife-ton i g
'deinocrat, who liaii' - '`iiitiliik.cl' negric slit
fiage to biA party f,,',i. The'o;ttee'of 'Govern
or ? Should /ti be eldt , lted iind'"tui=n `tail"
to his fiit?:iidilyill they' feftuie to liaitin't?"
The Prussian Needle Gun."' ' '
This gap, wbich(mi sq much to win, the
recent victories ttl ,Aohetnia and SaAnay,
is nothing more. nor, - Ist3 ; t han
Igaaing rifle.
.Xt first came into use in LIM
revolutionary troubles of 1848, V but, there
was . ppportunity at Oak, time
. to don
oustrate the superiority that is now claim
ed fur it, .as a weapon„ surpassing all otti
ers now iu use, for its destructiveness and
reliability, in ,the business, of, hpuaan
slaUgyter. At th battle: of Podolia, the
tiro pf Ote Prussian, ini;tairy'was six times
fib ttfective' as that ()idle Austrian. .The
inventor of the "Needle clun" is a Mr.
Drey r e, iniupithctureT ofprips at Sltnercl4.
earlyas be Auegbi to attain am
advantage or ease and :faCifity of leading
by clesing the tirgech with two, screw
behind each other, having a space between
:then). • In "t his . 'spa e there was as irul
which
middles
a needle, working
through the tuiddle.i, the inner screw.—
AWniple . pirce of rii p ehanism enabled this
spring to be
,drawn • Lick; and, when let
I,ese, the penetration *of - the peedle into
;•the fulminate eaysed t . he... ignition of the
charge. - . rife cartridges with ;spherical
b.iffs used . Witli.this arm were at tlTt
Serted at. the.muFzle, 'and had a pruning
1:01* ruhni n i 4
atethe bottom ,
gtieotly Vx . lilcac Cpl - etnatuyel tr.beri,r4in
-1 med tod lird,' - or when the, needle project
"ed beyond Inner. screw. The whia
.
) l a. . - 13 C 4 1W
sufriejeOrth"rit'sp . LllQ, sides of the. burp.
Tiiese'objections the projectorto.
insert the cartpkdge at, the
,breech, as. was
done at Neri4iay, and hence prose the new
"Piiisisian Needle Gina.", The cartridge
is inserted at the rear; and :ignition is pro
duced `by the ihtriision of a. needle into the.
fulminate attacheft„to the cartridge,
and
the closing of the open 'barrel is effected
by the fitili . of the trout'
ea end of the (Awn
ber to the - rear dram:barrel: The chem
,icaf companion of,the priming whih, in
opudeetion with theair cluitulier, e.atises
dstu..l.4 Coniplete combustion of all the
"Pdtyde'r employed than is obtaitieirliy any
other gun, is.the setiret which is supposed
to be known only , to the Prussian govern- ,
went. The effeiit of igniting the p9wde,r ,
in this air c4iiiie,r is, that the gun con]
bides the explOsive power of gun powder
'with the expansi've power of the inteusly
'heated ,air; Wile
,in .'the ordinary rifle
the explOslve:lnn4 'of: i the
,powder ends
With the Cxoo6lon, in this the explosion
is . prolonged, and.intensified by the air, so
that, the pressure 'Ori" the increasetiliy
an eer 'emulatingeslikision, until it reach
es-the, muxxle of, the on. . said .that
'the' rptize of this' w'On - derful . needle g,nn is
seven Ones as great, as that of any othAr
rifle, and thit 'aim is infinitely mere
perfect._ Like eyOr l y other worli
of man,
however, if 'lily its intileffecti'cus,- 77 anil
'not the leaStiseriiins 'oo,,bc'se is, that 110
"recoil", or ; thC gru, great as to that,,
a
serious Objection to its use, and that r tlie
storage, of the cartridge is made nn safe by
the fact tlit3E tig ;printing iS between - th,e
powder and btill_;;_and .iguit.es by pencils
pion: rlot aware to,what, if any,
- eitent, tiis?Yeinargo , le piece of 11-aretße .
nit;etne) is "hiiSJ.?een
,iiitroA9c?4 i n to.our
(own can lit'?A4 . 4eubt,: the
terrible iffectiVo3; ,es With , which 'it' has
'been_handl e d, :in the
~1 -4i‘eat campaign ip
mot*, prominently
berord the Vepitrtnient, not' bf this
Crtiverornentaione, but,or ail others, that
are atilcietts'l,q keep paoe with the' discov- ,
ery, and appliances of modern sciences.
Entitled - to Inerease.cif Pension
"The Kiluiwing Class of personS are en
titied 'to
,aninerease of their peusiontun
der the aineniTedpensiim law :
Ist: Those'Who have lost the sight of
both eyes; the:.use • - of • both , hands, -or' : tire
' otherwise total,l„s:-:.‘iiii;ibleitaiiii,incaliiioitti
t-
t:l;42ll:).p.ciiraitipg,rultuttal 4
wiaows , ,sibildrtth under
si*terlp, h ;yeari - '6,l:pgfjOitg,:;t.atitied. t 0.12.00
per men; h addigonai for eueh.chill • .
or :soldiers , are 'entitled =to '• the
itihS mothei Why lIV.IAg
, • , , , j
T - T .Thoi m4lO „ htiiprois:s • 0 1 3 P0 13 .9 1 1i
jtadiral , Oigrpos titla ben to wreventoa
, restorat.iiiii' of the
I':Af pitpolini,ptiAeq6.ilr t!Ftqa - ,,ti itte t ed
[itqf o 4l l ±ithAtiio;,l4,o4 'o9...rMei4ents
Nvisaato4llr4aly - And;:pieau4euti.apd:tay,en
aitcaultikeki.;;:iiiatilkr.4.4ll4ofeeititkttYn
1:01,1 1 11}V, TA tt IMP I P.P . ;;Wt r 49rI°,!PTRSt
dtiewavaartikummik ili4 , fr . 414 4-44. 2,4 2 t:4, 7,•1
fT9 , 4" .. 1..0 0.74 407 W 41
• .12, isette.r.s.
nil • .3 L -
!it 410 .- .44C.A9.4P, 6 igh,t 96 11 9
main Hague in the .preeetADEßlAg4•Eits-uge.
gle..„,yie, that Of 'veer° suffrage. the
radiCal, pnrtyl tolarry what
they very mil ly ... ttrin " tnanhood suf.
,frage l ''„ into , jnst., ae soon
tfieY.Citn - Let' thetn,:eerry the' "glee. '
ti 8t h far d- ey then 60 sid
theinselies titrOnit'encinkh to do
and you will Bee 'them throw oBff ail re
-serve:" •
~ Their plan As to give. the ballot to. all
.gs .. roeß' l of .th r e order that
they'may control that end of . tEettnion.'
The freAttneittii- bureau i r e' 'Only an itistilu-
An'ent in) thelr'handa to be used' for politi-
zalirrposes,Ati soon as the time coinesfo/
.
In. 116p .i tlikeradicals in 'this State, shisli
'edithe- negrio suXiagelaitite. They demed
- thatlhey ' were"iti' favor` •of 'giving
black man-the,ballot,- and the people-were :
simple-minded enough to believe thetn..
They cannat.play.this gamea second time.,
,They b ere agoarely „committed on the re
cord. Wm. D. Kelley, member of Con
gress 'frotn Philadelphia, says that he is
in fa:roe - Of 'Striking. the' word "white"
- from our State Constitution.
Jakki W,,,Fprpey sap that our Coned
tutiou cannot : 40 amended again until
1870, and iliat whin .that comes the radi
-eals Dili lint fear;feilike'groiind in favor
of it: • • ~i r .
Every-Republican member•in 'Congress
•VOLO tor. la forcing - negratuffitge
up?u,thepeople of ;he Ilistr,iet Colum
bia, and every Replibfieati member of - our
&nit, %nate voted . foi:a Pint `resofutlon
-thanking their meth hers of Congress' Ter
voting for negro suffrage.
The proposed amendment to the Con
stitutiop of the United States provides
that the number of Members of Congress
thim the South shall . be reduced nearly
one-half, unless the negroes are allowed
to vote. ,n•: ;:
We ean_fill column_after column with
.the very best te§timenyin_layor.ofthq af
firl"iv9 of 11*'3°Pation.- the peo
ple tie' on their - gtipid . and prepared to
-flieet'the -issue: kis new fairli'liefOre
them?: :Unless the-white race vislrlovee
~thilligreat,cOuntry.pasirioto We hands of
themeßy anstkkplii3s,-,th.ey gaust,deleat
radicals at the , halp. r , h e x... 3 ,09,9pr
"Votigressnten ? 9 egro
judges, negro Jurors - negrbjustiees-?;
Let them answer - arthe polls.
_ v.!
•
Mei Otindititin ottlie t
The ~uly report:of4e Commissioner of
Agricitilture announces Lb;
,gratifyiug fact
that the yield of theepiesent . year will be
ati aver.44d•one inuillrespectsL The wheat
jp anitin. the country
east of the' Misliss f irpi,,,kaa been. t3QlllO'
Qt
what injured by Ilts.gverity of the' win-
ter, but §taies west ,of_tlt4t p rixer• promise
au ti
unsifilfilibitiniant — crep or superior
.qoality. Thee fine weather of the liter
spring- andedrly summer his wonderfully
developed-the rediaining 'grain of the in
jured districts. •
• Therethas been. an aminel exemption
front ravages of indect , tribes ; neither rust
nor storms have done. it 'material injury ;
and, if •it ?escapes sprouting from wet
-weather, the promise id of. a crop nearly,
as large :as :last year, • and' far- better in
quality.- ~The present indications point to
an Average of: about eight'-and One half- .
-tenths in quantityirand4of •tv-quality that
Iwillcmake itiequalatt..valaw to last year's
crop.-. Thei testiitionyfrom all quarters
:renders it , certain that , the quality will-be
excellent. • The orops•havelretti gathered
in: a good conditionvand that will add to.
the per cent: of the-yield. •
Theminter barley crop' is in very near
ly the same condition as the wheat. Ta
ken together,.- the average of the fall sown
reach; nearly..-nine-tenths, and the
spring sown exceeds- sn • average by near
ly.a.tenth., .The.crop.of Ottlff.has been un
usually,,good,. sthitost - beond.., precedent.
,The condition offiastities is;gnod: With
;the exception-of Maine.and--Itlbwllamp
shire,eirery State reports u , gtenter breadth
of enra - .thifir usual :: Ohio <. luaisua,'lni.
nois,. Minnesota, Kansas, :end West Vit
ginivtiave I each increased their average
abet:it-ten per-cent. :In every State there i
;were more potatoes -planted Alum usual.
In Ohio„.filleen • per-cent:l:more ; in Ken
tucky, twenty per cent. ; in Missouri
twenty-five per-cent:.;-in -Kansas, thirty
per:cent. .
In: condition ; no States except Illinois
and Minnesota are.reported •at less than
ten , tenths: °The' •••fruit. crop promises to
be quite small,. audit is 'believed that. the
:peach crop :will thi Eastern
Stately though the reportelfromthi.West
are . tooreencouragingiff.r.... ,
. A velt.ltntfiiirr - tfatbor of Buffalo ,
tWadjzi ii `'` bletfiat; ` iifiiop do : to X 557, and
liAnctimi It ifi iieth46ffiefitti - finternitt RO
.oatie• tit the . fdotiuk,
'Ada Veyliod: 44 No fix* iii . oomea below
s o ff i wo .
ttotiOne . , 'S.
Ettayulink putiently,^ihd clerk niquited %-.
:441Vitttliigibe-thythingt"r ,
11163i P'11 -.•'
, f AtEtkr_iiivmtv sea 11,) ; •
• 13 1 - 111 O r njoinlrittiodine Aims
iota icrffulAirstoo)l sfinxinorteris *wad
iiii i ii;iig uj ow n iat) I.') eel br .1 '
tt—nri 0n..4 - 3"*. ti a .•••
. ' ` Bounty Bill Passa
Congress, ii ter great delay and much
giggling' and hhggling over the matter;
Bas arlitat passed-a 'bounty , bill'-by a' ma.
jority ;of one , vote,.which does partial jai.
49e: 1 P the soldiers of 180 1 and .63. Con.
gress deserves no credit for passing the
bill for it was done as ungraciously as
possible and only at the last moment.—
' EverAody else was served first, and it
only got, through the radical Senate by
having coupled with it an act to raise the
pay of mein hers of Congress from three to
lye thousand dollars a year. In this body ;
when it came up on its own merits, a five
days-before; it was - defeated, Only receiV
'lieg /4 votes in a Senate that can pass
Freedmen's Bureau bills over the head of
the President by a majority of two-thirds.
In 'the House', when the ficial'vote was tak
en; it , was defeated by teal majority; but
some -members, who were afraid to go
home and meet their constituents on the
question, changed their votes before. the
result; was announced, and it thus passed
by one - majority, only. The vote stood 51
for, to. 50 'against it. The Democrats
voted in its favor and thus saved it from
defeat.. This in a House that can give 120
votes In favor of a radical measure does
net look like a strong' disporiition to do
justice to the soldier.
The bill.was passed because Congress
was afraid to do otherwise.. The lath of
June a bill giving bounty to the negro.'
was passed without opposition on the part
of the radicals; and a few days before the
adjoarnment a bill also passed giving -ex
tra'pay to officers which met with no op.
posttion. It was left. for the measure that
was'intended to do justice to the private
soldier, and he a white man, to meet op
position at the hands of his pretended
friends. '
Jr4P - A curious case of domestic civil
war has arisen in Aiamakee county, lowa.
The two towns of Lansing and Waukon
each claim the right to be considered the
seat of justice' of the county. The lawis
of that State allow the people to deter
mine the place of their seat every three
years, provided the properly signed peti
tion to that effect be presented to Board
ot t Super v isors.' In accordance with this
cyst in,' tile 'voters have declared for
Waukon once and 'for Lansing thrice at
.a.c many .elections. Each town has a
.poprt ; house. In 1864, Lansing received
majorlev of the votes, but Waukon
blaiined 100 more votes more than were
allotited her. After sundry leg,alproceed
ings pro and con, a forcible raid was made,
a, few days ago, by forty armed men from
Waukon determined to seize the county
reedids. By timing their arrival in the
night, they succeeded in their purpose,
and left the town before Lansing knew
what they were doing. Swift pursuit
a:as, however, organized, and, after a spir
ited skirmish, Waukon was vanquished,
'and the spoils, of war 'recaptured, and
brought back to Lansing in triumph. -L
Waukon declares that the end ie not yet,
The Chicago Times says the last cen
sus (1860) contains some films not very
'complimentary to the righteous Puritans.
Massachusetts, with a population but lit
tle less , tban•illinois, has about six tiOICIA
as matty paupers, and more than ten times
as many criminals. Georgia with a pop
ulation about the .sanie as lliassachusetts,
has about one-fifteenth as many paupers
and, one-twentieth as many criminals.—
,Taken-together, the avrage pauperism and
crime in New-r England are about eight
times greater than in any other portion of
the population of the country. What the
Puritans lack in these respects they make
up in pretension. With right times more
paupers and criminals proportionally 'than
the rest of the country, they pretend to
'more than eight times more virtue than
the remainder of the human race.
Geary and Negro Suffrage,
the.candidate of the dim:
ion radical party for Governor of Pettnql
vania, Is' in favor of negro suffrage. Ile
.is daily charged with this, but neithca. be
: nor his friends dare come, out and deny it..
He knovis very. well that he cannot do it,
He is folly committed to it, and as an ad
vocate and supporter of this pet measure
ofthe Abolitionists he goes before the
people into the campaign. If be - be elect—
ed, all the influence of his administration
will
,be Oven, to the support of this obnox
ious measure. How .necessary ,then to
man in The gubernatorial ohair
who is>xipposed to this revolutionary; rad
ical measure. , . :
. .
If the people of Permaylvania,tiant the
negroes to vote, tfiey enn, be,gratified by
electing Johu W. 'Geitry . Governbi t but
if they are opposed `Co negro iniffrage and
want a genuine' white man for Governor,
lliaatstrAllymer is the man to elect.-
neeriiin
, ,
127" A man living at a village near Me.
bile;'nfferitlited to frighten shine 'girls by
7 440414 a white cloth around: hni body
andlnrsonnting a ghost. All ran bat one,
who po)l.ed out.a revolver.,and, fired:.stx
.bailelnto , the, head and body ! ACtbeAret
' , shot : the ghostfoll, but sba . nontlnued.,fik•
fpg. §he,then went blithe
thp o#spnistana, ..1194tutrtie retipungy•
the spot, teue,d...b:re l entitt4 e*thuitOwo
,balls having : PelietTated the tereheakes
fike,, 0 4.049F, 4 .4 e rgi°!):.4.tbel`hPF.l%,..
= =1
r . r. , ety,
—.l