'the Vittobtrigt4iiittit. WEDNESDAY 'AVRIL 25,.1866. MAJ:CEN..JOHN W.:CEARY, OP Cl3lOB RLA D. MINT Y NOTICE TO.ADVEIIITISERA Hanka to km4ol elven that homelier all Tttan- S admrilsemeat•sleoleitt at Ms °thee must Da paid our when handed L tia imb3M)i to the we of 'emir wiremisers. whom DIM mill be ren4ere4 quarterly. Mr usuel. advertisers sail Meant make e Oct.. of Wm, ILI the rule of roe t futrinenrip for firl• rart.tocznante of the character !stated, trillbe lndea- IDIv enforced. The price of our paper li • TEOLIMOZNTB si the toaster or from newsboys. Served by carrion at CEFITS Per (reek. MR. CLYMER'S INCIIVISM Mr. CLYMER filled a seat in theSeante of this Commonwealth throughout the whole period, of the rebellion.. He .Was - chief of the Democratic leaders in 'that hody. lie had advantages, personal and acquired, which gave him special Ipfittenca over, such of his . colleagues as belonged to his party. He was-both their mentor and champion. We do no injustice to Mr. CLYMER in as serting that from the beginning of the war to the end of it his sympathies were strong ly enlisted on the side ofythe rebels. Had he been under the' immediate direction of Mr. Jzir te DAVIS — tutO he would have put sued substantially the course he marked oat for himself. Whatever obstacles he could put in the way of rendering-efficient aid to the national authorities in the prose cution of the war he was sure to bring for ward. Not an important measure was proposed for arming the State, for putting volunteers into the Held, and for repelling actual invasion, that he did not oppose. In some instances, to be sure, he did not re sort to a hold and defiant - method Ile was fruitful of specious amendments, Intended to emasculate vigorous measures, to retard action, and frustrate desirable results. When he had fought a bill in this way, with parliamentary ambuscades and strata gems, and was likely to fail, be Would of ten assign the rejection of his modifications as the reason for voting in the negative on the final passage. But, in these cases, ev erybody saw and felt—everybody now sees and feels when reading the official record —that at bottom he was just ns much against the national cause as the rebels themselves , and that, in the sphere in which his lot was cast, be was laboring as earnestly as they were to destroy the gov ernment. Scarcely Vir.tasolonsm him self has a worse record. Ought such a man to be elected Governor of Pennsylvania. Is he a tit successor to GovernorCunrul, whose hands he sought to tie, whose plans le endeavored to thwart, all through those eventful years? It seems to us that the bones of PennsYl vania's dead patriots, fallen in the great contest, would shake in their 'maitre,' graves, at such a'disgram. This is not a question of ordinary diver sities of polities' opinion: It is vain to speak of the excellence_ of Mr. Cbrsueet's personal deportment; of the amenity of his manners; of the compass of his intelli gence; of the breadth of his understanding. All these considerations weigh lighter than air against his undeniable incivism. Who doubts but many of the rebel leaders pos• sensed all the social virtues and graces in as high a degree as he does? Who doubts that some of thew surpassed , him in intel lectual culture, in force of reason, and in the charm of oratory? It matters not what accomplishments a man may show, if he has pursued such a course as to justly rank him with the enemies of the country. Ica mauls not thoroughly loyal—if in the time of trial he has been found wanting— pre-eminent natural gifts and acquirements only make his conduct the more offensive. If Pennsylvania had followed lir. CLI ME-les lead; if she had adopted the line of policy he mapped out and pertinaciously recommended; not only wo d her terri tory been overrun, her fields laid waste, her towns given to the flames, and her rail. roads torn up, but the government would have been so paralyzed that the tnion would have been lost. It is absolutely monstrous to talk of electing such a man to the Chief Magistracy of the State. There ought to be such a sentiment among - the masses of tliNmeople as would make his &spirituous hopeless, as would consign him to private walks forthe remainder of his titiya.. That there is such a sentiment among Republicans we feel and know. The DentocMis talk of serious divisions and - 'R wholesale epostacies among as. lot a half dbzen grains of fact can be sifted out of whole loads of this chaff. A few -men, inspired either by greed or un rest, may lie willing to rdpudiate or adopt any principle, if by so doing they can ob tain the .hozors and emoluments of office; but the influence of these men begits and.. ends uith themselves. It is a conscious ness of this that leads to suggestions - of -a third candidate to help Mr.- CLiaura' .chances. All such erpedients are power less. The people havahS choose between a gallant soldier, who freely periled every thing for -the cause, and a politician - who did .all he could to serve the rebel leaders. On that issue the stragglers from the . R epublican rinks will be too insignificant - hi numbers to afford a count. ' tRT. JOHNSON ORGAN Of Yesterday 'att. notmeed that Col.. Seatuut.McKgrxar has been appointed U. S. Marshal for the West ern District of Pa. Tliis is the Col.'s re ward for presiding at the tiny Johnson meeting that was - held iti the mud on liar ket Street a few weeks since. - The present Marshal, Mr. lionnocn, h . cs been a faitlifttl, obliging, courtemis and la every way excellent officer ; and v, closely has.he confined himself to the duties of Lis office without meddirug in - polities that w e do not know how or where ho blinds on the issue between the President cad Con gress. Thel removal-.of sucliiiician is not only an act of the grossest injustice butime, of supreme folly, on the, part of the Presi dent. Mr. kirrisailr-is fl Mall Of wide in-, fluence. Ile•has %t , lilt hick the. political power of'the county in he-lives, „to say nothing-of what he has outside s !JIMA Mr.MeXcLvx has not enough to the ward in which he votes., Toexehange the one for the other; therefore; inubt prove "e( losing game to . the Presidmw.. . 4 , The same thing may be: mid of. all the other removal.s mpdf? . -orlllTtyt.4 be made in due State in every casei, taking. the cur rent reportsrpf ,the the probable a ppolutgen..tne