CURRENT NEWS. A Radical eye opener—Kentucky. The cattle pest, like the hopes of the Radi cals, is fast subsiding. Extra Billy Smith is on the stnmp in Vir ginia against Radical reconstruction. ( hieargo slakes its thirst at one thousand three hundred and fiftyfive saloons. A few days ago a Grant meeting was held in the Filth Ward, New York. The speakers numbered six, the audience four. The meet ing adjourned. A girl in Chicago died recently from swal lowing the point of a needle, which broke off while she was picking her teeth. The Chicago POST recently considered, "Can a Democrat be saved ?" and answered, ''Hardly." We beg to inquire then, ''lf the Democrats can scarcely be saved, how shall the Radicals appear 1" A crippled soldier has been at the Collec tor's office in Buffalo, selling both flags and badges, offering the boatmen their choice anxious to sell all that he c> uld. lie sold Flags—Seymour and Blair, 2q5 Grant and Colfax. 4 Badges— Seymour, 580 " Grant, 22 And, "let us have peace." The Jackson Glarian says that there will be 50,000 majority for Seymour in Missis sippi. Colfax says he is not a Know-nothing.— After November he will be no more. IFram Grant embodies the principles of his party—all smoke. If the Radicals want peace, what are they arraing the negroes for ? A jealous negro in St. Louis stabbed an other negro dead. The job occupied only a few minutes. 'Let us have peace." Mr. William A. Crafts has written a Life of Ulysses S. Grant. There is more Craft than truth iu it, we suspect. Col'ax. a little over a year ago, said that "Grant had proved a failure in every capaci ty outside the military." Now Grant ho'd give his opinion of Colfax. A man in Ohio got tired while black ber rying, slept up on a railway, and his friends had to do the rest of his "burying" for him- The Chicago POST inquires : "In contra distinction to the Democracy, what is it that our Republican leaders tn Congress go for ?" Why, they go for all the money they can lay their hands on. The reason that Butler favors the green back system is because he is afraid that hi* spoons will be melted and run into coin. Disas'er—The Kentucky and Montana elections, to the Radical party. The E'raira (N. Y.) Gazette has been quoted a- having gone over to the Radicals. The Gazette man says the fellow that start ed (he story is "a branded liar and villain." . We suppose it started where the other's do. in the N. Y. TRIBUNE. Queen Victoria, it is said, believes in spir its. So does Giant. Flcmington, lowa, had a democratic pro cession three miles long. Five hundred ladies on horseback partici- j pated in a Democratic procession in Illinois ' the There was an acre of Demo crats ia'attendance. A "manhood" down in Louisiana whipped his boy to death for running away—a fact which the Radicals have overlooked as an argument against the election of Seymour.— Tbey should not thus neglect their strong points. Wanted—Radical vagabond*, idlers, and loafers to go down South to preach "loyalty' and "mules" to the niggers. In return they' will be sent to Congress—salary five thous and dollars a'year and stealings. The only outfit necessary will be a carpet bag, a paper collar and a fine tooth coinb. The enthusiasm for Seymour and Blair throughout the West is so great that the at tendance at meetirgs is estimated by the acre—"acres of live Democrats." Grant had the pleasure of witnessing one in St. Louis and doubtless thought it an "acher." GRANT'S EOI.ILOOIR. Quoth Gen'ral Giant, "It's blamed unlucky. First Oiegon—and then Kentucky ! Such conduct don't show any sense— And hits me in my reticence ! It's not that they have got the State— But that they -gain' afsuch a rate ! And what is most uncommon rough, Our pirty's vote is 'falling off!' We'll have things fixed a little straighter In States that vote by Legislatur' ! But here's a pint that's rather tough How are we sure there'll be 'enough ?*' A h-ird conundrum ; and I think I'll go and take another drink !" Mr. Pendleton addressed a crowd of thirty thousand people, in Maine, one day last week. It is said that Gen. Grant intends to see the Niagara Falls this summer—let him wait until November before he goes and he can witness two falls, Niagara, and the fall of the Black Republican party. There was a grand enthusiastic Gran' club meeting held in Port Jervis, one day last week—only EIGHT persons present.— Not much enthuse there. A severe case of sun-stroke—Grant 'telling , bis father to "stop them letters." The Democrats carried every county in Kentucky except one. Gen. Blair has been making more of his . very effective speeches. CLlfax is afraid to say anything, Fred. Douglas refuses to take the stump for Grant and Colfax. Fred, has the old pre- j juqicc of hi race against poor white trash. ; ffly democrat HARVEY MCKI.ER, Editor. TUNKHANNOCK, PA. i Wt'dne-tlay. Aug. 26, 1 868. -FOR PRESIDENT, •I HON. HORATIO SEYMOUR, ' OF NEW YORK. FOIL VICE PRESIDENT, ' GEN. FRANCIS P. BLAIR, OF MISSOURI. DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET. Auditor General, i CHARLES E. BOYLE, of Fayette. Surveyor General, Gen. WELLINGTON ENT, of Columbia f Delegate Election. The Democrats of the several election districts in this County will meet on Sat urday next (the 29th inst.) to chose Dele gates to the Democratic County Convcn -1 tion to be beld on the following Monday. 1 Three persons for Vigilance Committee I for each distiict are also to be selected. Our friends in making these selections should do so, with especial regard to the best interest and success of the party. No minor personal considerations should be allowed to stand in the way. Let the j contest, if any there shall be, between the friends of rival candidates, be decided in a fair and friendly manner. Let all agree to abide by the result, whatever it may be, and cheerfully vote and woik for the whole ticket which shall be put in nomination. Those who threaten to bolt a ticket regularly pl aced in nomination ! because their particular wishes or interests | have not been gratified are not the men for these times. We want no bolting Dem I oerats, no secret enemies in our ranks. The issues to be decided at this time are ! too imp irtant —too momentous to allow persona! preferances or p tty bickerings to interfere with the genera! welfare. We do not believe that Democrats will allow this to be so. We throw out these reflections, in advance, that they may not be thought to apply to any p lank. 1 wp. GEO. OSTEEHOCT, J R JOHN W. CRAWFORD / *TT T • . 4 T i. J- Washington 5V JACOB DECKER, J ° ROSWELL GAREY, Windham, On motion the meeting then adjourn ed 11. R. LITTLE, Chairman, O. L. PARRISH, Sec'y Wendell Phillips on Grant as a Drunk ard. AN INVESTIGATION DEMANDED. In order to show that it is not Demo crats alone that believe that Grant takes j too liberally of "tear-punch," we repub | lish what Wendell Philips said upon this subject in February last. He demanded an investigation. Has this been made ? If so, when, where, and by whom ? Mr. Philips' information from "different anil trustworthy (black Republican) sour ces," on fhis subject are not to be treated wiib silence nor contempt. Democrats ! and decent Republicans, don't want a "con ; fessedly invetorite drunkard"' for Presi | dent, whatever Mr. Philips and the radi I cals may think of his fitness, on the score : of "fidelity to the nigger." ' [From tiro Anti-slavery SlancLird for the Week Ending February 1, 1869 ] This is an anti-slavery journal. Look ing out ou politics, as the mgro looks on them, it deals with public men and m. as I ures only as they are tree or false to him. But has abundantly proved even before the 1 existence of the present administration, j that only temperance i* the substratum of ! all other reforms How sad the result when power is given to men who are wont "to put aa enemy into their mouths | to steal awav their brains,' this war has i almost impressively shown us. Sow ru -1 mors re c'hut General Grant has been, remarkably j drunk in the strei Is of that city within a Jew ' weeks. We know nothing ourselves of the truth of th-se tumors. We make no . charge against General Grant in this re -1 spect But even the possibility of the truth of these reports is of tco momentous importance to be lightly dealt with. The nation is bound to inquire as to the habits ;of candidates for high office. After the experience of the last three years it has no ; right to run the slightest, risk in this re i-peet. No public man, whose friends are asking for him high offiee. ought to com plain of the strictest scrutiny by the pub lic, as to bis habits in this particular.— We call, therefore on the national and State temperance societies to investigate these reports. They have this subject in their special charge. They are bound to give us the facts, and save us from even the possibility of such another infliction as the nation now sutlers. Especia ly we i call on the Hon. Henry Wilson, a pledged teetotaller, to see that the whole truth in this matter is given to the country, lie has devoted himself to the advocacy of i Grant's claim. As a temperance man, ho is bound to see that we run no risks of this kind. Living in Washington, he must know, or have ample means of knowing, the truth as to this matter. If we are un necessarily anxious, let him relieve us by , trustworthy assurances that Grant is now a temperance man, fully able, on all occasions to withstand this temptation. It the fact is not so, let him explain to his temper ance associates how he dares to ak their votes for General Grant. It is perilous enough to give the Presidency to a man who was confessedly an inveterate drunkard , two or three years ago. lut it will be the gravest crime to give it to him if that vice still holds him in its grasp. Of course fi i delity to the negro must be our first and decisive test of any man's fitness for Presi dency. But this test of temperance is also < vital, WENDELL PHILLIPS. Radicals will have it that South ern Democrats are anxious for battle at arm*; hut the Democrats d-clare it is onlv a contest t the ballot box they contem plate or desire. The Richmond Examiner says; "Our notion is that the people of the United States this Fall are going to use the peaceful remedy of the ballot box to put down the mad revolutionists of Radicalism, l'hev are going to outvote them. It is pes sible that the Ra licals may arm and resist the verdict of the ballot box. hut if they take the sword thev will perish by the sword." ; negroes in Washington are arm dby Radicals. They march thronch the stieps with gun* loaded with ball car- , tridges, and at the slightest provocation file ! a platoon of innketry into the nuoffending wayfarers on the side walk. j "Let us have peaoe." Is ItP Is the fact that GRANT rode a mule in a circus when a bov, a sufficient reason why you should vote for him ? Is the fact that he was a drunken worth less vagabond at West Point and gradua ted at the foot of his class, any reason why you should vote for him ? Is the tact that he resigned his position j in the regular army, to save expulsion and disgrace on account of drunkenness—"con ! duct unbecoming a gentleman and officer," any reason why you should vote for him ? Is the fact that this drunkeu imbecility during the war murdered more men than his advasary had command of, any reason why you should vote for him ? Is the fact that he issued an order ex pelling from the lines of the army, the "Jews as a class" because they would not pay his father double priee tor the cotton he stole, any reason why you should vote fur him ? Is the fact that he draws twenty two thousand dollar of a salary per year, upon which he pays not one cent of taxes, any reason why you should vote for him ? Is the fact he is seen almost daily when in Washington, beastly drunk or carousing about some house of prostitution, any rea son why you should vote for him ? Is the fact that he is the candidate of gold-grabbers, treasury plunderers, New England knaves, southern negroes, bond holders, national banks, tax-collectors, con stitution defiers, thieves, liars, hypocrites, prostitutes deser/ters &c., any reason why you should vote for hitn ? Is the fact that he is the candidate of the party that oppresses the poor for the benefit of the rich, that gives to the la boring man greenbacks and to the nabob gold—that makes the working men pay the taxes of the bloated bond holder—that takes the bread out of the mouths of white | children to feed overgrown niggers who aro to lazy to earn a living for thems lve, any reason why we should vote for him ? Is the fact, t'>at he is the candidate of I those who have run this country in debt so | deep that figures can't represent the i amount, and who are daily squandering : millions of dollars of the peoples money, ' upon negro bureaus, large armies, theiving ! officials, v.llianous politicians and houses !of prostitution about the capitol of the ; country any reason why you should vote i for liirn ? Is the fact that he represents all that is corrupt in politicshy, pocritical in religion, debased in morals, and revolting in society, any reason why we should vote for Lim ! If for none of these reasons, why do you j vote for him ? Ilis friends deny none these facts, and they present no other inducement for your support. Think welt before you cast your ballot. — Beliefante Watchman. Large Increase of the National Debt in July. The official statement of the public debt has just been published. It show an increase, during the month of July, of thirteen millions, two hundred and filly eiykt thousand, fire hurt/red and ninty three dollars, and mat'/ three cents. What has become of all the money raised by taxation. How has it been squandered ? To what purpose lias it been applied ; The debt Las constantly increased for months. Is that to continue ? Are the people to be taxed as they now are for all time to Come; and never to see the debt reduced or paid off ? When will we see economy practiced by the Government? When will some wise and financial sys tem be adopted ? How long are we to endure the rule of the set of thrives and public plunderers, who are spending all the money wrung from the toil and sweat of the masses, con stantly increasing the debt ? The people aro asking themselves these questions ? There can be but one answer to them Not until the Rad caisare turned out of power will there ever be a change. Let the tax-ridden ma>ses remember that when they go to vote. BANKRUPT LAW —I.; the Bankrupt Law of March 2d, 1867, it provided by the 2d cla .se of the 331 section, that "In ad pro ceedings in Bankruptcy commenced after one year from the time this act shall go in to operation, no discharge shall be grant ed to a debtor whose as e ts do not pay titty per centum of the claims aga-nst Ins es tate, unless the assent in writing of a ma jority in number and in value of his credi tor who have proved their claims is filed iti the case at or before the time of applica tion for discbarge." The act went into operation on the Ist of June, 1867, and therefore, any .debtor wh e estate would not pay fiftv per cent of his indebtedness, lias been debarred since the Ist of June last, of an application with the prospect of a discharge. The Senate, however, on the 22d ultimo, passed finally an amendment to the act, which amendment had previously been passed in the House of Representa tives, which extends the time for an ef fective application by those who cannot pay fiftv per cent on their indebtedness, to the first of January, 1869. THINK OF IT. —Farmer, mechanic, worfc ingman—and especially you who have act ed with the Republican party—you have now till November to think of a matter that concerns von and your children. W ili yon vote the Ra icai ticket and pay the bondholder's taxes, or will you vote the Democratic ticket and make the bondhol der pay his own taxes ? Every dollar ad— ded to tax duplicate relieves you. 1 lie Democratic platform demands that bonds sha I be taxed the same a* other property —the same as your dwelling house. Ihe Republican Platform favors the exemption of the landholder, sa>s, in etf.ct, that he ts a privileged character, and shall not be taxed on his bonds. hicli is right ? Throw away your party prejudices, and think of it. takes twenty thousand soldiers to enforce riegto equality in ten States of the Union. According to Radical usage each soldier costs two thousand dollars a year. It can thus he seen that forty millionsofthe people's money is squandered in order to obtain the votes of negroes for General Giant. Arc the tax -payers of tho North cootent ? gdT The National Intelligencer, in a lato issue, adverts to the increased cost of running the legislative machine of the nation, and shows how the people are fleeced out of their hard earnings in that direction. According to the Intelligen cer : The bills brought in by the Sergeant at-arms of the Senate and House are frightful. They are salaried officers, and yet are allowed to charge mileage and to collect fees for summoning witnesses ami bringing in members, which may be call d shameful extortions. It is understood that the Sergeant-at-arms of the House has charged for over two hundred thous and miles of service since the meeting ol Congress, in summoning witnesses for the impeachment and other investigations, for which he receives 520,000 above and be \oni bis regular pay, and superadded to five dollars per head for every member absent on a call of the House. In other words, he has been, consecutively, nearly nine times round the globe without ever leaving the Capitol building, and is paid lor it at the rate of ten cents per mile.— The Sergeant-at-arms of the Senate was equally benefited, and, perhaps, even a greater degree. lie summoned witnesses From Alaska by telegraph, and was paid precisely what they received who made the whole journey. This is the manner in which the taxes wrung from the people are expended here. And yet we are told it is all done according to law. If so, why not repeal such glaiingand indefensible abuses? So-called committees of retrenchment waste months in absurd schemes for reduc ing the protection to our citizens abroad by abolishing small missions which aie absolutely necessary, and yet they tolerate this system of fraud and plunder right at their own doors, and encourage the mo-t profligate expenditures and open thieving about the Capitol They cutoff arbitrali ly some proper salary or officer, and cry out " economy, ' while they open a source of corruption, and defend it by precedent or convenient contraction of law. Kadi-* calisin has symtemaTtzed plunder, and the people's treasury is regarded as the spoils of office holding Jacobins and "loyal' rogues. The Radical orators and journals are fully aware of all these facts, and hence th y appeal to the passions and prejudi ces of the people on past issues. They are afraid to face such fact 9 as can be gathered from the records of Congress and the books of the departments. Hut they must do so. When they talk of "traitors" and "copperheads," we respond what have you done with all the money stolen from the people ? The proper an swers to all the clap-tiap appeals of the Radical politicians are such facts as we are daily presenting. We have brought a great national robbery home to the Radical party, and at the coming election the tax-pavers will gibbet tue robbers. — Ex Nine Cogent Reasons Why Gen. Grant should be Elected. 1. Because be is General Grant. 2. Heeau>e he smokes incessantly. 3. Because be can "talk horses" scien tifically. 4. Because he is a statesman. (Should any ill-minded copperhead ask where he learned statesmanship, we answer : first at school, second in the tan-yard, third in the army. 5. Because he battered down stone ramparts by, almost literally, hurling liv ing human beings against them. 6. Because he lon district in ihis county, shall annually : on the last Saturday in August, meet a' the place of holding their General and Town- i -hip elections and elect three suitable per- 1 'suns to serve as a Committee of Vigilance | for the en-uing \ ear, whose duty it shall be to superintend all other meetings of the Democrat electois of their district. 2. At the same tone and p'ace, shall also be elected 'wo delegates to the Countv Con vention, who shall on the following Monday, meet at the Court II >use, in the Boro of , Tunkhannock, and after organizing by elect ing one of their number f>r a Pre-ident, and : two Secretaries shall proceed to nominate . such Dis'rict and County Officers as are to | | be voted for at the ensuing General Election elect Conference (or such Di-triet officers ; as they sha'i nominate—appoint Delegates to ; | the next State Conventi >n and a Standing Committee for the County. 3. AH Cmnty Conventions shall be held I with open doors. 4. Al I candidates for nomination shsll b< v ued for vied voce ; and the one receivin- a m-ijorify of all the votes polled, for an) office shall he nominated. 5 The Convention shall keep a j mrnal <>fj all its proceedings which shall b-' dulv pub lished in the Detuocra ic paper or paners o' the County ; and any n >m'n'u>r. not mtde a conformity wuh the forgoing ru'es shall be j declaired void, and the vacancy r vacancies so occuring, shall be supplie 1 m the manner hereinafter provided. 6. The Standing Committee shall consist l of nine Democratic ci'izens of the county. who snail ho d iheir office for one year from : | and aftej the date of the election ; and Hi i shall be their duty, during that lime, to call 1 at all County Conventions, Mass and other , meetings of the party—to fill all vacancies of I the Ticket, occasioned either by the .lectins- j 1 tion of nominees, by a want of conformity to j I the foregoing rules, or where the Convention j | shall have faded to make a nomination, and , • also in special elections, where the necessity for doing so occurs after the regular time (or : hid ling County Conventions—and to fill I vacancies in the Committee Vigilance, occa | snmed by removal, death, or failure on the ; part of the citizens, to elect him 7. The Standing Commit'ee shall annual ( ly hereafter, in i*-uing the call for the elec tion of Delegates to the Cmnty Convention, cause a copy of the foregoing ru'es to be pub hshed in connection therewith. 8. These rules may be amended, or new I ones added therein by a general meeting •( ' the Tetnocratic cit'zens <>f the countv called j for that purpose hv the Standing Committee or if the same shall piss two successive Couu ty Conventions without amendment and not i otherwise. J V. SMITH. Chairman Standing Committee. THE NEW POST OK ICE LAW.— The new postal law just passed by Congress! contains some important changes in the : busim ss of conducting the business of the j department, and as all our readers are more or less interested in sending and re ceiving letbrs and newspapers we publi-h some of the provisions of the new law for ; their information The law provides that I all letters or. which the name of the sender i is endorsed shall he returned to him if not | call for within thiity days, it doubles the ! | compensation of post-masters for the pay ' tnent of money orders, hut reduces the fees ! on the same. It permits weekly newspa pers sent to regular subsribers in the coun ty where published to be delivered free of postage from the post office nearest the place of publication, it also autli >rizos the issue of duplicate money oiMers. This law also makes it a felony of high charac ter to use postage stamps a second time kowingly and authorizes the Postmaster General to prescribe a uniform for letter carriers, and m ike it a misdemeanor for any one else to wear the same. gy Money and arm% theft and mur der, that's what reconstruction m aus Brownlow wants $10,000,000 an ] 20,000 troops. Negro mi.ilia hills have passed tl e pretended legislatures of Alabama. Arkansas and Louisiana, and the first move of the carpet-bag men in Congress was for full pay trom March 4, 1867, though only-elected in 1868. Colfax was first elected to Con gress as a Know-Nothing, and he is now ' running on a national ticket with a Know- Nothing, If he kieps on in this kind of i. company, he will be taken for a fool him (self %t last. Facts for Working-men. While the producing industries of U,< country arc unjustly taxed, and the ahno-t intolerable burdens of the war rest up -j those who fought the battles and r , M > J the sacrifices, those who till, d land- tof produce supplies, and those who lahor-dl in the workshops, the organs of the RadiJ cals are asserting that the bondholders an. the men who pay all our revenues. ThJ organs of the Radicals in Lorain countvj replying to an article which rucently ap-c pearcd in the Plaindcaler, sncc ringly Ea j, that ''not one laboring man in every hunl dred pays a penny of taxes to the Gov.l ernmcnt directly." True the man does not pay his taxes directly, the Government, but every man of ser,.. knows that the consumer pays the tax u-. on every at tide manufactured by capita. A practical working man, a few dst{| ago, being in our office, handed us t.> | following, which in itself is a volume oil argument to show that the poor tnsn pay taxes : Radical legi-lation requires the COOMJ. tner to pay all taxes. It taxes' the hat on your head. The boots on your feet. The clothes on your person. The food you eat. The tea and coffee you driuk. The pot it is cooked in. The cup you drink it out of. The implements on your farm. The tools you work with. The paper you write on. The pen and ink you ue. The papers and books yon read. The furniture in your house. The gas or oil you burn. The coal you consume. The stove you burn it in. The irateh you light it with. The medicine you take. The tobacco you smoke. The pipe you smoke it in. The di-hes on your table. All you eat off them. The laboring mari of the country, who ! owns a little house anJ lot, which he ha-, earned by toiling from eaily morning to night, pays State tax, county tax, school tax, road tax, upon it ; while his next door neighbor, who is a bondho! it r, own ' ing $50,000 in tli • bonds, pays no ta.x-s whatever, draws interest in gold, laughs at his unfortunate neighbor, who has his I money in a i ttie home 1 If tbe masses of the laboring men desire the equal taxa tion of every species of property accord ing to its real value Government boD .s and other sectiriti- s included, if they want one curren y for the Government and the people, the laborer, and the otfi e-holder, the pensioner and the soldier, the produ cer and the bondholder, they will not vote the Radical ticket, but wdl vote for that of the Democracy. Cleveland Plaindealer. Radical Rascality at Harrisburg. The Ilarrisburg Patriot has unveiled a precious bit of "trooly loif' rascality at the Capita!, that is a very fair specim u of the WAV the thieving party which rules and robs the State manage the bu-iness. It seem- that an account was presented to Auditor General Hartranft and by him audited, piss d an 1 paid by the State Treasurer for S7OO sa'arv due to one A. C. llvus as Paster and Poller last session and 81-' mileage, in all $712. This liyus. it further appears, had applied for an ap p diitin -nt as Paster and Fol ler, but fa 1-1 to get it, and went home. He nevei per formed a single day's service for the S;at<\ He came to Ilarrisburg, however, a'i drew the amount as stated above frotu the State Treasury. The Patriot has been endeavoring *o trace out the authorship of this robbery to the party patticularly responsible; but thus far the endeavor has been fruitless. Whether it is Hartranft who passed the account : Speaker Dsvis or Clerk Self ridge, who certified to it, or Represent.* tive Armstrong, of Lancaster, who appears to bavejbeen interested in putting the bo gus claim through, or who wis principle in the robbery remains a mystery, and will, doubtless remain so. The tiutb is, the-e Radicals thieves at Ilarrisburg an I Wash ington are too well organized arid disci plined for justice ever to be able to over take tliern. Ttie only remeJy the people have is to drive them frotu power and elect honest ineu. From one erd of the country to the other the cty goes up from the people that we must have a change. The farmers de mand a change; the merchants demand a change ; the laboring people everywhere demand a change ; the tax-payers demand a change : the lovers of the Constimti >n demand a change ; the white pcop'c say they must an] wi.l have a change of ad ministration. ANOTHER GUN —A LITTLE BIT A LOUD Onk. I—On the 13th in-t., the Territory of Montana held its territorial election. — Last fall the Democracy carried it by eleven hundred, this fall they glory ove: a majority of twenty seven hundred. An in crease of lfioo! How are you mule rider ! 'Rah for de bureau ! SENATOR FOWLER SAYS OF BUTLER: k 'He is a hold genius that rises above the dusty and tortuous paths of the common sneak. He mounts upv>n strong pinions high up in the atmosphere of never-ending and uncontaminated falsehood, and basks in his natural element, lie is a tbaroug hred. No trace of truth contaminates hi v*ins or stains his memory. lie seeks to perfect the false by eliminating all th true. He is the immaculate and protean liar ot the age, as well as the very god of theives. editor of the Pre** thu* spokts of Governor Seymour in June, 1 S6-t:"lloo "or to New York ! Her Governor ha* ''acted like a man who knows when the "time tor partizanship is at an end l' el [ "gallant Seventh is now at Harrisbnrg. and "side by side with our brave Porinsykat ians i "preparing to resist the invaders. This is the true spirit of brotherly love." l'eun sylvania will not lorget Governor Sey mour iW Do you want to pay taxes for bond-holders—vote for Giant and Col i fax.