E 3 al'ate 11,111111.411 . ::: iporpsignll IMPEACHLIIESTO. . f , there are pumas who deem it la' disputuble sr aeon desirable that in a written frame of government fora tree people sto important matter Mould be Ufa to be deteratined by latereace, anal- Vey or precedent, but that all powers, prohibitions ..or, Ilsultatloin should be clearly sad earantakablyy, set forth, the Osaultution Of the United . Slap dims ii‘ot cams ap.to their Mgt:must. fa Many partkitlers that laitruatiat Tape sad ladelaite. Whether . this pa inharlty results. tree faomitaittous), from lack of thorough eculdanalos, born a dMPOiltlos COMM** t• all how. = yen to leave much to be replan by • recognized principles of Interpretation, er from a settled purpose to put the or ganization in such form that It could be easily adjusted, in many of its parts, to the growth of ptipohalon, the divereiti salon of interests, and the. general der velopment et !dem, sack one must (th ine according to his conception of the saes who were potential In giving shape to the lestrramnt. Tho provisions of the Ceastitutron In respect to impeack sone tarnish illustrations of the peal'. arldes e l which we refer.' I. some puts ly exact On ethers they are =vain 11 , ambiguities, which can only, be settled Oty interpretation, 1 Article cn,seetion two, elaun ay% I stipulates than the gone of Represents-. &nes "shall Lave the sae power -of im petiehmeat." This would seem to vest the satire authority touching this matter In the Manse, to the total &dation of the Senate: ' But Article sae, section three, clause als; deolans that "the . Senate shalt hare 11010 power to try'all Impeachments." Thin essentially mod- . ides the grata of , power conferred upon the Holum, limiting it to preferring efruges upon which trials in the form of intreachmeat may be conducted. It .wan certainly easy to have made this distinction in plain tents, and no good reason can be thought of why the men who wrote the Constitution dad not • Stake it. The Constitution does not define what classes of people shall be amenable ti impeachment, nor for what grades of obsess. It simply specifies in ' Article two, section four, clause one, that "the President, Vice 'President, and all civil officers of the - United States, shall be re moved from office on impeachment for, and conviction of, treason, bribery, or other high Crimes and misdemeanors." ‘This much is imperative; if impesch aunt and conviction are concluded for Igo reasons thus set forth, deposition must Certainly fellow. ,It is not said or intimated, however, that "treason; bri bery, or other high crimes, and *lda ssesnors" are the only offence for which an officeholder may. be impeach ed, convicted sad removed, or that "dull officers" of the United Stun are .• the only persona who may be proceeded - against in this form. err. Marmon stonily maintained that the President not °Witt:eight, but (right , to be, impeached for removtig pawns from office, and filling the vacated places, far no substantial . cause but the promo tion of pray or personal ends Itched that this was Is corrupt use of the appoint ing power, _..tinder the first two Press dentsno doubt was expreased, if enter-' , tainsd, as to the soundness of this con . elusion. There wile universal agree .. Brant that say misuse of power on the pert of a pen= in of leiril position Orrb jotted him to impeachment, and no doubt existed but the House of Repro. sentativu is the preliminary proem& lags, and the Senate in the adjudiostion, were exelelivelt . empowered to decide Ise what a misuse ol power consisted. That this is the true intent and meaning If the thatititntion cannot well be de la lashed, from whence the found ers of air government derived many if not mon of their primary, or rather per baps, traditional , idiom, any chin= was and is liable to impeachment for any 'form of theiviam. Parliament, which holds the impeaching power, Is =chi . duly empowered to decide Whet actions or what emissions to act conktitute er bloke such a demist of ineiviset as to Justify runt to initeselcoma. The in. delilteneM of the Constitution on this • keel, oe4duly leaves it "lobe inferred that the bapeirehliti power of Congress - less to the same extent, which le au ex eesswhack should have been scrupulous ly gnardoragenst. Stopple/ short of this, lad restricting Lability to. hapeachment to individuals holding civil offices under the Govern-' matt, it is worth while toconeider under • what eircesisianars "it-- la jelucious or proper fur Congress to exercise the au thority which it unquestionably pos sums. In every Government, whether ita onward' form is that of an absolute despotism!' i limited monarchy, or a republie, public opinioa is the actual Constitution.. , 'What the people rase meetly desire must and well be 'done. This is why „ NLIKILION 111 watches stet Intently the ' Shifting phases of Monett • and emotion among the masses of his subjects. When the people are fully - . resolved to have their 'mei LAY point, be knows Guaresistance on hispart is not only melees, but involves the certainty of the deepest peril to . himself , and his dynasty. The aristocracy which rule Great Britain recently exhibited by. Con - cessions in the matter of, pada:Psi sp . pT, representation what deferents they feel bound to pay to the matured judgment of the many. - In MAO 'United States the pee is no wise different. The peopleire absolutely sovereign, not only over the 'administration, bat one the organic Ibres& Their will is the supreme law, and though it may be !Sanded for i time, it matt oltlimately prevalL . , This. shows the necessity that is laid -'- 'on Congress not to move In the maths of impeachment •eicept Pli Oedience to the popular demand and en 'grounds: which will be approved by public sepia; . ion. Armed as it Is with the Mit -=- pie powers by. the Comtitution to ire. '. peach and depose the President for any reasons estishritiol.to Well, ill amain those powers Tor causes or under circum stances witch the macs of the pope's, lion would dhoPprova as not iontamt plated by the organic law, or as not demanded by the public exigency, or es calculated to produce greater miseliiefs • than those - it was intended to remedy, would be most unwise. The intentions of the peepli 'are often wiser than the Most eauticrue and labored deductions of Statesmen,. end those intuitions in a Government like this Cannot safely be , ' 'contemned. Ova IXAMON taught by. the late elect tlon in this county stiould be carefelly beeded--the folly of mating late zeal rations. Our legislative nominations were not made until the drat week in September; and, as - the t ticket was not complete ur then,. it wasimpossible to, begin thecampaign at any prior period. The left ass but four weeks for effeeilve work; and is the sluggish, apathetic state of the public read, fOur weeks 'Seated too little time to room it into activity. In compact titles like Phila delphia and New Tort late aorulastions may do, because the tonitcny to be worked ova is not extensive.; bat in a county so territorially large as this, it reuithva months of • steady work to or. Anise the 'party therusghly. The County Committee should take idle* in time to secure the nomination of a com plete ticket at an early season next year; so that, as wen as the Presidential nom ination is Made, we may beside to begin the leak of the campaign. Tax N4rti semi , PLAY of .rainaillo took the ChicigO rims into commulon lut fall; bat ifbu>Oksliddia aad iota. THEN AND NOW ' In 1889 the Democrats carried !few York by 10,752, and elected 17 members of Congress to 14 Repnblicana New Jersey by 14,597, and elected 4 members to 1 Republican. Pennsylvania by 3,524, and elected 13 members to 11 Republi cans. Ohio by 5,577, and elected 14 members to 5 Republicans. Indiana by 9,649, and elected 7 members to 4 Repub. limns. Illinois by 18,546, and elected member . to 5 Republicans. Mulligan by 6,014, end gained 1 member. Thin our armies were in the field, Emsuiclpa- Oen was In prospect, Ilepablicana had to breast all the recoil entrant of that pub. Rs eentiment turned aside by the annuli ,MX of Present's proclamation. T.Sey had defeats, diseaters, mistakes and be trayals to contend spinet Their /wider was more milled and ridiculed than sag. public man had ever been. Their cite sties were wild with enthusisien. rebels struck: with 'renewed vigor rind assurance of. :victoxY. Tbe London Mass assumed that nothing could bring pea= but a recognition of the Confeder ate Stites; Mr.:Oladstone said Jefferion Male had created a nation. The Dem ocrats held a jubilee In Philadelpiar at which our soldiers were said to be fight ing "Ii patient submission to the inex orable law which dragi them fromtheir homes," and that "the Democracy now present to the world an unbroken phalinx of kindred souls, that they can never be enslaved„ - - Ipd Ruth the, habeas corpus is the sheet-anchor of their hopes." Mr. Lincoln was pronounced"a tyrant" who had come into power with "heathen oaths," and was "a nightmare to his country." Mr. Ingersoll uroposed a National Convention "for the reintegra tion of our individual freedom and our State rights, indultam hope of restor ing the Union, of-which there was not the remoted . chance by any other means," XL Reed, more diplomatic, said the North was "weary of debt and taxation, of the tax collector and there-. crafting sergeant, weary of the ambu lance of the wounded and the hiarse of the dead, and would hall with testacy beyond control the hour when flags of truce should be displayed at Washing: ton and Richmond." Ha called upon the next Legislature to . "become 'the grand invent" for indicting all who had dared to take a prominent part ,in the war. But the nation was not lost The clouds which darkened-the hbrixon swiftly vanished, and bright victories followed in rapid succession on the field where thousands of brave' hearts ware battling, and at home, where the silent ballot gave evidence that them:Tie ware still arrayed on the side of Truth, Right and Justice. W to-day, ak in 1862, the cloud lowers, but it portends no dhow ter. The people see its dive; edges and hopefully await the brightglare of light which will stream th:ough to warm and gladden the heart of the nation at the forthcoming Presidential election. ON Nips Liam. XDITOILI Arxr{::—We are, to-day, where the army of the Republic , wan when . nlght closed in after the bat tle of the Wilderness. Let its leaden esti a council; and' on their decision de pends the question of its success or dis ruption. Should they . amain& to re cross the Rappahannock, they can get ready for private life. The muses:will wait until the Lord sends elude., and got. Richmond. Should they resolve to advance, the rank and fie are ready for motion; but should they attempt to entrench, and go into winter quarter", their forces will take the responsibility of being homeward hound; and the squatters may dwell, in solitary state, behind their etutltworke. There is nothing for ffiengress to do but flat it out on this inici The Amer ican people are . prone tolreckleuneas. They are young, vigorous, full of grow lag life.. Conserrstient compromises are born of age and decrepitude. The compromises of the Constitution never were observed by any party but the Puritans; of 2iew Ragland, who had been schooled Into conserlitiun by their veneration for the law of Mogen The caution and gravity of old, age was grafted upon the vigor of their growing youth, by their pecaliaz training to Self restraint, and veneration for the customs of two thousand years ago. 'They learned in great ateasure to conquer their preju dices, andobserved corepuit which was hateful to. them, when the Southern people burst the bands, as though they had been burnt tow, while the 'Northern sentiment surged and chafed tinder the restraint, and ear- great col. listen came from theattempt to recon-- clie the isreconcileble--to restrain, by the consecvatism of age, the growing youth of the nation. Should Congress disregard the lessons of the past, and set about patching up a policy of compro mises, its mission is tilde& its mem bers need hope for no farther lease of power should they spend a- winter in the important work of doing nothing. They - mast dismiss from office the man who has prostituted hispower to release and reward the assassins who struck M the life of the action, and murdered Mu prisoner's cewar. "The voim of thy brothers' blood cryeth from the ground," and the land cannot be cleansed from blood until their murderers have paid the forfeiture of their crime. Do honor able members forget that it was the peo , ple, tho glorious rank and die of oar ar mies, who starved and froze, and rotted and shrieked, in the plummy and mad. tipszak 01411114 i 011,11 A 011, Alll4/.2 root 011, 011. T.11P.10a., , Cubes 00, ticd, gbh* Lead. Twal,ll,ta VALLI I,lsels, r.mus PTO 0.10.4 Tailni9.P! ~a test varl ,, y, Tooth atubs.. *to, . - sou of dispair, at Andereonville and l - *I"! Belle Isle, and handreds of other prison houses? • Do . they forget that when the lives of two officers were threatened our Goveriment saved them by resorting to retaliation ' '' • ' It is the rink and Ale who do the vot ing as wall as the !telling; and they. Would be wanting in common prudence, If they tea no steps to secure them- Selves the treatment of dlvillzed war. fare, in any future war. If the past be allowed to gounpunished, what tool is there that, in the future, the American soldier, when a prisoner of war, will not be murdered to weaken tercet. A government is a.faros, which beano power, within itself, and Its defenders.; If Congress was prevented, by . the Pres. blue, from doing justice to our eoldkrs, It was their plain duty to remove MM. The people interpret the Crinititution by the rules of common sense, and if oon yinced that it grants equal rightir.to friends and enemies, or protects its ens- miss in murdering Its friends, they would toss it into the waste basket without 'a zsgretWe went. I government able and willing to protect itself, and make Itself res p ected bT- friends and foes. Those who do' not love should be taught to fear It. The people most grow and poseesathe land; and - they , will not be . cramped by the waddling dads which Its old nurses lilted to its infancy.. Let Congress learn the lesson and move on not only to make treason odious by im peaching the prince of traitoic, but, by wise SSICI prompt 'orlon Ace rains our people from the burdens tinder which 'they labor, Ifkinat. •• Taw Erpoaltion has taught Englaad that Fame Is likely to Cirri, pfliter u the factory of the 1. world. From tha lath of education amorgit her working classes is ,ioaking Itself felt In the decay of her manufactures. ProL Tyndale, of the British Pocial !Mum Congress, thus predicts unto come: "I hue i 0212 entertained the opinion that, in virtue of the better education prssidedby continental nartims, England must one day—end that no distant one —find herself outstripped by those es. Alois both in the a rt a ef peace and war. Aseure as knotelOge Ito power this must be the result." TAIL Washiagton correspondent of the Oltarlestorc.Cronrisr, lamenting OTU . ths prospects of _certain -impeachment, 1111111: • "It will be dlißcult - the President to resist the enforcement of the law, when applied to Mavens. inspenalOn End arrest ! But ha has certainly declared to sernral public men, wlthhz the last taw days, that he . ircooletresistit. . WHAT IS THE 6EAIIOIII Eorroas Gaverra:-1 have been read. lag several editorial leaden and ex tracts from leaders commenting upon the great falling off, in the Republican Tote in this and other States this fall. Some have it that it teaches this, and Miters that—some that we have been too radical, and others that we have not been sufficienUy so. In my opinion it teaches nothing of the kind, bat [lmply the fact that vast numbers of both parties, but chiefly Repiiblicans, Were so indifferent about the election that they did not take the trouble to go to it. I aball take for example the vote of this city for Governor in 1860, and that for Judge in 1667, and see what can be learned from them. -9ta11......4.1/1; Asyle .1 W—WL11110.3.150),8hanw0.d1,590 • Mal =I This shows that apathy ruled the hour and nothing else, and that there was about ai much of it In one party as in the other. The returns show a lUrelall in4 'off , everywhere. The Democratic 94311.1,18 they are called, are only rale tive,-enly smaller losses—leu falling oft That party is better trained than ours. The difference Is about the tame as that . between regular troops and VOltillteera, It Is only when the enthetstesui of the latter is aroused that they can be Rpm:. To hear or read what some earnest and zealous gentlemen say, we should be led to suppose that 'incur voterswere philosophers or statesmen, and knew how. to bind an abstract principle of national politics in a ballot for a State Judge. Many can do it, I admit, end those many did vote; but thousands, who see nothing Ltt • a ballot but the name printed upon It, did not feel anfil cleat interest la the man who bore that name to induce them to quit their. cro- ,rttUons and repair to the :polls- Theft was much apathy and little enthusisaut; and hence the vote was light and, our majority in the Butte was cat down to nothler. Very few Totem changedsides, and most of those few were governed by pique or prejudice rather than by more far-reaching principles. We have as many Republicans in Pennsylvania to-day Oa ever we had . ; and if the usual proportion of them had voted we should now be exulting over our Mr majority -in tinter - at; but r- olg nialority as ._ past; u some thotuunda of them did not think worth while to do so, we most be con tent with the result as It is, whoever may have succeeded to the Judgeship; for at this moment I do not know how that matter has gone. This reverse, like the first battle of Bull Run, will do us good, however unplea sant it Is for the moment. It will do us good, provided it renders as more care ful, as a general thing, in the formation of our tickets, especially for members of the Legislature and county °Blurs. We could not have Wand a better candidate' . than we had on our State ticket. Bat should timid counsels prevail, and any of the cardinal sad immutable principles upon which the Republican party was built up and crowned with a series of glorious triumphs be abandoned, then the result will be disastroaa Remem ber, the old Whig party, In 18.12, took a retrograde step and perished. - We have errors of practice in abundance, which wei will' do well to amend ; but we have no errors of principle to fonske. Our creed Is right, so let us stick to it. Let us not disgust and drive from us our geed men, as the Whig party did, in order to conciliate a few bad outs. The watchword of the Republican party from the very first has been " ON WARD I" and whether we encounter • host in arms, as we did in the war, or • perfidious President, or a lingering, chronic peejudice barn of slavery, still the only cry that will hold our people together is " °await') l" After a little, whop the smoke of this skirmish"' is blown by, we shall pot our standard into the bands of General Grant, and then the country will shake with the tread and the shout of freemen " march ing on." There is but little panic, and that little will pass away quickly, and the country will continue to be governed on Republican - principles, Prat as it nothing had happened. C. Chickens Hatchet freise Bicp one Then name Two Hundred Taira Old. • The Faris oorreapondent of the Nihon states that the guests of the 'Abbe Denis, curate of the Pariah of St. Elol, in the Fouburg St. Antonle, dined - a few days ago on fowls Whose immediate ancestors figured, be says, on the table of the great Frisukiali. King Dagobert. When the Abbe Dennis laid the fish stone of the church and presbytery he bad built by him own exertions, oath° site of the old chateau and gardens of Dagobert, a hen's nest Dill of ens was discovered beneath the ruins of the ancient building. These ens, mote than twelve hundred* sera old, were about to be thrown away 7 by. the laborers, when the Abbe, remember ing that :wheat bag been grown from grain found la Egypt, in pommies; da ting back from the time of the Pharaohs, bethought him: that possibly there might 'still be life In these eggs. A savant of the Institute, consulted at once . In reference to three precious rel ies of an age wh n there wee, as yet, : no France to detest "Perfidious Albion" or to be Jealous of Prussia and needle seine, advised their being forthwith confided to a hen of approved susses In the mater nal capacity. This advice having been acted up the good cure and bbe friends had the delight of witnessing twenty-one days afterward, the hatching of ' fins brood of cnickere„the direct-_proeny Of the denieens of King Dagobert's barn ye_ d. The fowls thus obtained have bee. carefully kept front .any megabl- Ince with their cogeners of less ancient blood; and the Abbe has DOW a yard so well replenished with "King Dagobert fowls' that he not only supplieshis own lardecrwith poultry of this illustrious breed, but is about to Organize at the gusweetton of numerous - Mends, a sale of "King Dagobert " for the benefit of the poor of hip pa ris h. JOSEPH rivaling, Druggist. Cones linnet strut and the Dinsesd. 141 los hand a vary lane sten of Tun , ArCedes, Trusses and tappenev of 41. kinds, and rants and Dye Staffs of all tieseslestens, at stry low oils.. ' • Very sop.lor se4 An, at redterd prlees /rub Blue Lick '..20 Cosign e W,f4y. m 11.11 a 8341ag0. aaE .I:gni'. P.O. IS gra.t v.rl•tl. oold tale.. Maori for mi3letno tourposes; that etuotbe for Ovltt. ...Obi as sou. Urn. Comm:Pon. llbtrrl sat ICU.. What, ex alts. Molva GO, uld tpattll.g Catawba • Wizes, oto. • ilivisißLE .ratecoaTe. , . the Medial. sad Ma Ilatese (antails Inalr nuts. with peassfal wstldetea agsdan ad aubtla ;also*, vita able% 1517 saaS 104e.tte7 1/Miasmal., gad whisk IU) famed might gad drib. employed against theasetvaa. - There insfebia ;miaow; &Mom as dash,. *Kahan width tea of es Mak of taldng Those Imes are fa Slui sir. Wbn Us state. seen 10 rezeharged with LIRE, se 11 ailmaintae. u~t this a W asoatdasale amen saran Fla. *O a m en Can s*, a b Yana a nest wasskable eta.a azimut of min , sass has Ltam hea been Gnomes, sad the esitalatleas as Sae sail Soya Oem sad mei dames and goat cm aMott bayonet • tassels, Time ukalallos • axerstas LatonlsloallalMaeo on tail oast pow bsad prealspoto lb tram JO attonta. oroak•oatmooM an oeMalltalaa of reatruat &May. halide and depression. Shea amps SM. an generally tors...aro of se indolent. UCMmb at W a o g e s - e t ar l - ia wM t o l ln lri N g w o the west effseties sathiche to andaris Ma the vefatata Ittallolll as ever fteMal. Zia Opt,. Malt tbmotol,-.o•If Oelatialva sad tglir1 11 131 . • ti r a4, ` 4 ° Z4nigli. rot? and noolalataig jaw. asd roattato of Sal item' I:WWI:al mob. It to Ismatatatay overt° • d•rewis ••••parattes. to any etas, teals, Mrs kat orialses al. as neel.“10011 la modostl,orito ttott *c.f. of IttlartlTlLlM 01711a5 Is. tidastaaly gametal. • parfeet anfingassd agalaai latenaltheas oad raaa.toat Mora . BLIND ElIV! lINSTOIXED. TM OM IC clash o..Huded 0000 cello M.o. of Clviatt.o& Valor, et Ratio county. Is not ontlro/7 °MIMIC the &pomace. of Moo 11.ber comdf, atm cad., called on DI. AZT. .111111 to pones. to Um* bla for 111. acalu sod eWla lanolin by SO WSW= AND rile IC= 01011 T. 1110. /Mbar Cod boas omit Wino for bur contta. • Ms woo so blind OW No could cot 41.1inguist may Moot no az to Oult& 000, abut It wo.. The no. I. rmastablo. hundratts of ti••• 11141 WM ors dolma to IWrils ondlog daftness, oo 11V.7 PtotOS l tsicr. Ir to can. sat &ottani au Pt dm. abe ores cod. DOCTOR .1015R0 . 8 triatmat for too loom., 000 Moro ob. oppllsd Es sirosob bow bmbor, also. P. 701ter: C.D.s wore entenalmeet a( bet new sotttot bar oldtt. .Il.r out le veil lizoira to Ob. obtrbbor bowl weer* Mb ...Ado; sod bus boos recorded Y ono at outrsordima '