Vaitionte #atiottai. A journal devoted to the principles of the Umex REPUBLIC.A..,N PARTY, and Local and General News; is published every FRIDAY MORNING. KINSLOE & RRO. Editor's C.- Publisher's OFFICE, High Street near the D1(1111010 TERMS, $2.00 IN ADVANCE No name placed on the list without the price accompanying the order. RATES OF ADVERTISING WEEKS. 1 IN. 2 IN. 3 IN. 1 1.00 1.50 2.00 .3 2.00 2.50 3.50 6 3.00 4.00 0.00 13 5.00 • 7.00 9.00 20 9.00 13.00 16.00 • 52 16.00 24.00 30.00 WEEKS. 4 IN. 1 COL. s COT,. 1 COL. 1 2.50 4.00 8.00 12.00 3 4.50 6.50 11.00 20.00 0 ' 7:50 10.00 10.00 30.00 13 12.00 18.00 30.00 45.00 20' 23.00 30.00 45.00 05.00 52 36.00 45.00 - 65.00 100.00 Legal Advertisements at the usual rates. Business Cards, per year, SS.OO. Local Business notices, 15 cents per line for each insertion. Transient advertisements must be paid in advance. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. - . A BOYD HENDERSON, ix. ATTORNEY AT LAW,. Bellefonte; Pa. Office, northeast corner •of the Diamond. May 1, 6S-ly. W H LAUMMER, • iTTORN EY AT LAW, Bellefonte. Pa. Office with the District Attorney, in the Court House. 'ay 1, '6B ly. ORVIS & ALEXANDER, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Bellefonte, Pa. Office in Conrad llouse, Allegheny St. May I,'GS-Iy. G. LOVE.-ATTORNEY AT o LAW, Bellefonte, Pa. Office with Adam Hoy, two doors below the MSS Build ing, Bich Street. 5ept.27,137-Iy. Cl D. G RAY.-ATTORNEY AT L .LAW, Bellefonte, Pa. 011ie° with A. O. Furst, July 1P,'67-1.y.- :\I'L LINN T INN FURST, ATIORNEYS AT LAW, BELLEFONTE, PENN'A inn. 81,'60. 3 'ALLISTER & BEAVER, .g. ATTORNEYS AT LAW, BELLE FONTE, PENN'A. 'HAD. P. STEPHENS, 1 ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office on cot. ner of Allezheny and High streets, Bellefonte jan.2o'l3O,ly WILLIAM P. WILSON V,TILSON & HUTCHISON, v.v ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Bellefonte, Centre cuunty, Pa. Collections, andnll other legal business, in Centre and adjoining coun ties. promptly attended to. Office in Blanahards' Law Building. Alle gheny Street. • Oct 19,'611.1y. PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS PHILIP S. FISHER, M. D., pfiysicrAN AND SURGEON, Zms, Centre county. Pa. Understands bath Ger man and - English. - June s.'llS,}y. DR GEORGE L. POTTER ()tiers his prolessional services to the citizens of 3ellefonte and vicinity. lie may be found at his residence on Howard street, next door to E. C. Itulues' residence. at all times unless professionally engaged. aug,.4, 1365.-3 m. DR. R. D. TIPPLE, Homeopathic Physici .n an& Surgeon.. Office in old - Conrad - .House, 2.1 Floor, Alle ghany St, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt atten tion paid to professional calls. Jan.loAlB FAR. GEORGE F. HARRIS, ,L,PPILYSICIAN ..S; SURGEON, having his office in the law-office of the late lion. Jas. Burnside, on High street, will attend prompt ly to all professional calls. mayl2.'6s—lr. I) R. BEATTIE OFFERS HIS PROFESSIONAL SERVICES TO the citizens of'Bellefonte and vicinity. All calls will be promptly attended-40. Office on Siting street, one door south of Wingate's Dentistry. apr7,1865.-ly DENTISTS ----- JOHN D. - WINGATE, D. S. D E N T I S T. Mee on Northwest corner of i - ,114*,?4,, Bishop and Spring sts. Ath nine, likaat exeept, perhaps, the first two weeks of every month. V#;t..Teeth extracted without pain. tt,ilefootc, feb.G,l SAIL TIOALSBURG DENTAL OF -13 FICE. - k .t . i ,„ J. IV. RHONE. most respectfully form; the public that he is prepared to execute any description of work in the line of Dentistry. Sati.ifaetion rendered, and rates as moderate as may be expected. May be found in his office (Writ, g the week commencir.g On the first Monday of ea 2h month, and at such other times as may Le agreed upon. Nov. lot .•ly. TOBACCONIST el T. FRYBERGER. 4-; CO., ._./,,, Dealers i❑ superior SMOKING AND CHEWING TOB.AuCO• L. ;;EGAT:S OF THE FINEST BIIANDS, store i❑ the CONRAD 110IISE, iiellefonto Dre.i3.'B7-Iy. CLAIM AGENT B. HUTC II I S 0 N, . 4 1k .L - 1, MILITARY cLArm AwExT, will attend to all biu , iness Cutrust , oi to his ears. 0 it with W. I' Wil.tv , n. Esq.. 'lci!efobto. April 2: , .11 '65. BANKS AND BANKERS I=l • President. Cositier. iIILLIKEN, HOOVER & CO., _Oa CENTBE COUNTY BANKING Co., RECEIVE DEPOSITS, AND ALLOW INTED.EST, DISCOUNT NOTES, EIBUY AM) SELL Government Securities . , Gold and Coupons Jan.3l,'6S-1Y MOSES Tllo3ll% , ltZs ItOIST. ?JCT.% TO.A TIIOMPSON, McFAIMANE t COIIPAN I', BANKERS, AGMCULTUP.AL COLLEGE, PEINN'A, 1! Ils F:SS PLACE, C r.NTP.P: FLU:N.ICM. "PP Int , :reFt p. iJ on Time lic,poAts. - VIIIST NATIONAL BANK OF LELLEYONTE, PA ," J. 1i.114p.::, i: \T 1%4- t..gl ;Air ti/ 1:110..d !ME I :,i': Its t, , A...i it.1 , ..... t.,;1 1. , y i'l A::41 ,1.; ,t 1. k . G '_ ..... 1. .::. 1,..: ! ai-d 4 t :.,~~: EMI= e,(111 , . ; .. ... . Y.Lf r 11,0! -• • of , vizo. Li) my goil-1119111C1' ; why not itt nr; vimitlierincog? tit: It ivan, was in ,,SN'ef'6r,y FOP , ' /. 01 Ftlid Ft Week ftrtiV me Q i xo , •)' ith ' .[From the Huntiegdon-Globe. 'WALLACE AND HIS COFFEE-POT IN THE POLITICAL CAMPAIGN OF 15670 • Twas eventide:—pest supper time— ' The shanty table cleared ; When' to the door a pilgrim came, With dust upon his beard. . Ile asked if Collins' boss -was in— Arid could he with him speak ! Was ushei'a in—Politely told "There stands the:than you., seek." The boss inquired \rho lie was- Said : !Tray, what's to befall us ?" He said bring no evil news ; • • My name is William Wallace. • . "I want two hundred men to vote The Democratic ticket; The nuniber needed you can call From this secluded thicket." The boss replied "Sir, all my gang Are fresh from Erin's sod , And have no better right to vote, Than Aaron's magic rod." "I have that fixed," the piles. iui said, . "The papers signed and sealed ;'? There's naught to•do hubwrite their names, When ballots they can wield. ‘And as the documents are fresh And have ,no badge of age, I have - my coffee-pot along, - To tan the snowy page. "We'll boil them for" a little while' In coffee strong as lTe, - When they will pass official gaze Detection will defy." Like Barney, then the cook was told, -To put : the kettle on; • • While from the check-rolls were transerib • • ed . • . The names that stood thereon. The boss and pilgrim bOiled them well To look like copperheads.; And then rejoiced—nor felt the tramp Of conscience's stealthy treads. A. 0.1 The jop•wgll done,, the pilgrim said : "Assess and swear them through ; Our chance for victory depends On what you thus may do." And starting off for other fields— • coffee-pot in hand ; Exulting, said : "Aladitis lamp Did nothing half so grand. "Let orators their speeches make And editors indite ; • With this good coffee-Pot, I can Be victor hi the fight.„.. A. B. IIUTCIIISON "Two hundred voters to the gallon, Its conquests are and more ; Ne'er whiskey in its pahniest . days, Such splendid trophies bore." Tims on his pilgrimage-he went From Centre to Luzerne *. Baptizing in the wilderness. With coffee from his urn. And as he went, he sang this song; • "My magic coffee-pot--' You've raised us up ten thousand- votes— My bubbling coffee-potl "Hurra!" he yelled ; but as the voice Careered amon, the trees— He hushed, in fear his secret would. Be borne upon the breeze. Like painter from the holy land, The Keystone Club lie sought ; Ile hail no palm-leaf in hiS band, • But bad his cofiee-pot. October seventh, in the night, They heard his glowing story ; - And straightway placed upon his brow The laurel wealth of glory. 'NM -thundering 'shouts that sh6ok the house-- With gin and joy so hot-- They throned beside Columbia's Eagle, The glorious Coffee-Pot. • THE HEIRESSIN JEOPARDY. • It was one day when I was about seven years old, after the unusual bustle in the family. mansion, and my being arrayed in a black frock; much to my inconvenience in the hot month of August, that I was told my enthu siastic old uncle had gone like a lamb, and that I was the heiress to ten thousand per annum. This informa tion given with au air of infinite im portance, made no very great im pression on me at that time, and, in spite of the circumstances being reg ularly dwelt on, by my French gov erness, at Camden House, every iIQiIIOUS misdemeanor, I had thought little or nothing on the subject, till, at the age of eighteen I was called upon to bid adieu to Levizaz and piroquettes, and hear my uncle's Will read by my guardian. It furnished me, indeed, with am ple .materials .for, thinking. Dr. Marrowfat's facQ . 'neither human or divine, appeared positively frightful as he recited its monstrous contents. It appeared that my father and un cle, though brothers, had •wrangled and jangled through life, and that the only subject on which they ever agreed was, supporting the dignity of the Vavasonr Tinnily. That, in a moment of unprecedented unison, they had determined that, as the ti tle fell to my cousin Edgar, and the estates to me, to keep both united. in the family, we should marry. And it seemed which ever party violated these precious conditions was actu ally dependent on the other for bread and butter. When I first heard of this arrangement I blessed myself, and Sir Edgar cursed himself. A passionate, overbearing and dissolute young man thought I, for a husband, for the husband of an or i than—of a girl who has not a nearer relation than himself in the world—who has no father to adVise her, no mother to support her, a professed rake, too, who will merely view me as an in cumbrance on his estate ; who will think no love, no confidence, no.re spect due to me; who will insult my feelings, deride my sentiments, and wither with unkindness . the best af fections of my nature. No! I con cluded,as my constitutional levity re turned—l have the greatest possible respect for guardians—revere their office, and tremble attheir authority, but to make myself wretched merely to please them—no ! no ! I postively cannot think ofit. Well, time—who is no respecter of persons—Went on. The gentle man was within a few months -of be ing twenty-one, and, on the day of his attaining age, he was to say whether it was his pleasure to fulfill his engagement. My opinion, I found, was not to be asked. A titled husband was procured for me, and I was to take him, and be thankful.— I was musing on my singular sitta tion when a thought struck me. Can I not sic , : him and judge of his char eha by himself ? This w , awni ...Alen he pays anannu- .7. 17 tillrGnitr, I= t , ...V.. , :f Vy, :•,,tA. VOLUME XI. J. SEWEL STEWART . , . , . ' b ' .. , . . . . . . . .-i-r- ' ; ••:' ' . • ,• ! ,• . . .`. ' -:;.'''. ' ' . . f i 4 -r ''. ":- ,-• 1 • . , .. . -. v. . , .. • . . ..1- . . ,-.. 7 • c....,. v. -•- • r,. ~., t : •^‘ . .: ' . , • ....7. , . % :':`: . i...:.., , . , , .., ...,. , .-- . ~.. t , -' ,- .- - - - , •z:4,,„,i11 ., :', z'4, ,-* . - ..„ .„ • . ...... • ' . >3 ., ,7:• .':'-' . , 0 . . A . : --- , „,..,:,,,......,., ~.i.....,,...,•:,,, • __,,.. ~,.._.,_,e_.,,.. ~..._ _. „,. .. .„....,,...„..., ..c: - ...IL 4 . '.. I.• ' ' ' -;...;:;,' ...': - .. 4 t ' '3 ‘ .. -.. -,.; , :-;: --!...' I • r ........‘ .„.._ . ' . " 1" . - 4', •'• ‘ , .:C. :4, .. l, ' .:‘..i 'l 4 -.. .,'' '' •,..• ~ Z c .'g• 12 •?.' :11, ‘4 ;?•." ' .'. . - .1 • •• ;7" . : ••,..• , - Z ...... ......5 - .. f. :-';':•"::: . c:::: + ... ~ ...,..,•• , 32 .. .: c..... 1 ‘ 4 * ... 2 1 , -..' ..a(l ' •• ...,,, ,i..., : : -.. .e .:,": ... • ‘ .-.' ~ : .-•;.. V. J•• •••• • ~... -.44 .... .. . 2 4 _ , 4(-4. 1., - 1-'!,--; ..arc '- z 4 p.:', , -,-.,:, , . -.., . ..3.. -, ,----, --,--- '• without horses, without servants, to all appearance a girl of no preten sions or expectations, and avowedly dependent on-a distant relation. To this hour I remember my heart beating audibly, as I decended to the dining room, where I was to see, for the first time, the future arbiter of my fate, and I never shall forget my. surprise, when a pale, gentlemanly 'and rather reserved young man, was introduced to me for my noisy, dis tracting and distracted Baronet.— l'recionsly have I been hoaxed, thought I, as after a long and rather interesting conversation with Sir Edgar, I, with the other ladies, left the room. Days rolled on in suc cession. Chance continually brought us together, and .prudence began to whisper, "You had better return home." Still lingered—till one evening towards.the close of a long .tete-a-tete conversation, on my say mg.-that I never considered money and happiness as synoymotts .terms,. and thought it very possible to live (M, five hundred . a year, he said, "One., admission more—could you live. on it with me ? You are doubt less acquainted," he continued with' 'increasing emotion, "with my unhap -py situation, but ..not perhaps aware that revolting from, a union with Miss Vavasour; I have resolved on taking orders, and accepting a living from a friend. If, foregoing .more brilliant prospects, you would, conde scend to. share my retirement—" his manner, the moment, the lovely scene which surrounded us, all : combined against me, and heaven only knows what answer I might have been hur ried into had I not got out with a gaiety foreign to my heart—"l can say nothing to you till.yOu have in person explained .your sentiments to Miss Vavasour: Nothing—positive ly nothing." "But why ? Can seeing her again and again," lie returned, "ever recon cile me to her manners, habits, and sentiments—or any „estates induce me to place at the head, of my ta ble, a hump-backed blue stocking, in green spectacles." "liump-backed ?" "Yes ' from her cradle. But you color. Do you know her ?" "Intimately. She's my most Tar ticular,friend !" • _"I sincerely beg your pardon. I hope you're not Offended '?" • "Offended oh, no, not offended. Hump-backed, of all things in the world !" And I involuntarily gave a glance towards the glass. "I had no conception," he contined, as soon as he could collect himself', "that:there was, any acquaintance." "The most intimate," I replied, "and fcan assure you that you have been represented to her, as the most akwarcl, illdisposed, young man liv ing." "The devil !" . . "Don't swear, but hear me. , See your cousin. With her answer you shall have mine.''' And, with a lu dicrous attempt to smile, when I was in*monstrously inclined to cry. I contrived to make my escape—l heard something every .much "Damn Miss Vavasuor," by the way to my . own . apartment. We did not meet again—for the next morning, in no very eviable frame.of mind, returned home. A few weeks :afterWards; Sit:Ed gar : came ,of age. The bells were nnaino• the biceieL . —the tenants were carousing on the lawn —when, he drove up to the door.— My cue was taken. With a large pair of green spectacles ou my nose. —iu a darkened room-4 prepared for this tremendous interview. Af ter hems and haws innumerable, and with confusion the most distressing to hiuiSelf, - and the most amusing to me,: he - gave Me to understand that he could not fulfil . the engage ment made for him, and regretted it had ever been conteinplated. "No —no," said I, in a voice that made him start, taking off my green spec tacles w:th a profound courtsey— "No, no, it is preposterous to sup pose that Sir Edgar Vavasour would ever connect himself with an ill bred, awkward, hump-backed girt l" Ex clamations and explanations, laugh ter and raileries, intermixed with more serious feelings, followed, but the result of it all was—that—that we are married. -4-.•-ezt> A STOIIY OF LOA The long time ago . of which I mea n to tell was a wild night in March, during which, in a fisherman' s hut a shore, sat a young girl at her spinning-wheel and looked out on the dark, driving clouds, and listened, trembling, to the wind and the sea. The m orning light dawned at last. One boat that should have been T iding on the troubled waves was missing—her father's boat! and half a mile from the cottage, her fathe r ' s body was washed up on the shore. This happened fifty years ag o, an d fifty years is a long time in the lif e fifty years, is a of a human . being; long time to go on in such a course as .the woman did of whom I am speaking. She watched her father's body, according-to the cust om o f t h e people, till he was laid in the grave . Then she lay down on her bed and slept, and by night got up an d set a candle in her casement, as a beacon to the fisherman and a guide. She sat by the candle all night, and trimmed it, and spun ; then when day dawned she went to bed and slept in the sunshine. So many hanks as she had spun before for her daily bread, she spun still, and one Over to buy her nightly candle ; and from that time to this, for fifty years, through youth, maturity, and old age, she has turned night into day, and in the snow storms of winter, through driving mists. deceptive moonlight, and solemn darkness,that northern harbor has never once been without the light of the candle. How many lives she saved by this candle, or ho* many a meal she won by it for the starving families of the boatmen, it is impossible to say; how ninny a dark 'night the fisher men, depending on it, Went fearless ly forth, cannot now be told. There it . stood, regular as a lighthouse, steady as a .constant care would make it. Always brigther when daylight waned,, they had only to keep it constantly in view and they we're safe; there was but' one thing that could intercept it, and that was the'Rock. However far they might BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 4, 1868. have stretched out to sea,. they had only to bear down straight for thatliglited window, and they were sure of Fa safe entrance into the har bor. Fifty years of life and labor—fifty years of sleeping in the sunshine— fifty years of watching and self-de nial, and all to. feed the flames and trim the wick of that one candle ! But if we look upon the . recorded lives. of great, just, : and wise men, .few of them s can show fifty years of worthier, certainly not of more suc cessful labor. Little, indeed, of the "midnight oil" consumed during the last half century so Worthily deserved the trimming. Happy Woman I and but for the dreaded rock her great charity:Might never have been called into exercise. But what do the boatmen and the boatmen's. wives think of this ? Do they .pay the woman! No; they are very poor ; but poor or rich, they know better than that. Do they thank her ? No. Perhaps they feel that thanks of theirs would be inade gate to express the obligations, or perhaps long years have made the lighted . casement so faMiliar, they look upon it as a matter of course. Sometimes the fishermen lay fish 24 her threshhold, and. set a child to watch it for her till she wakes; some times their wives steal into her cot tage, now she is getting old, and spin a hank or two of thread for her while she slumbers ; and they teach their children to pass her hut quietly,. and not to sing and shout before her door, lest they should disturb her. That is all. Then• thanks are not looked for—scarcely supposed to be due. Their grateful deeds are more than she expects, and as much as she desires. How often in the far distance of my English home, I have awoke in a wild winter night, and while the wind and storm were rising, have thought of that northern bay, with the waves dashing against the rock, and have pictured to myself the case ment, and the candle nursed by that bending, aged figure! How delight ed to know that through her untir ing charity the rock has long lost more than half its terrors, and con sider that, curse though it may be to all besides, it .has most surely proved a blessing to her. You, too, may perhaps think with advantage on the character of this woman, and contrast it with "the mission of the Rock. There are many degrees between them. Few, like . the 'rock, stand up wholly to work ruin and destruction; few, like the woman, "let their light shine so brightly for good. But to one of the many degrees. between them we must all. most certainly belong—We all lean toward the woman or the rock. On such characters you do well to speculate with . me, for you have not been cheated into, sympathy With ideal ship wi eck or imaginary kindness. There is many a rock else where as perilous as the one I have told. you of—perhaps there are.many such women'; but for this one, whose story is before you, pray that her candle may burn a little longer, since this record of her charity is true.— Jean - Ingelow. ===l A MAD WOLF ON TEE RAMPAGE A letter from Fort Lamed to the Leavenworth Tiwes tells the follow ing: A most fearful. and appalling circumstance transpired at the fort last evening. While a t party of ladies and. gentlemen were sitting in front of the beautiful quarters of Col. -,Ed. Wynkoop, Indian Superin tendent or Agent of several warlike tribes, the entire party commenced a beautiful song. While the melody was ringing in the night air, a mon strous shaggy and rabid wolf dashed madly in the midst of the party,.first attacking Lieut. Thompson, Third U. S. Infantry, tearing and lacerating his limbs in a most frightful manner. The monster' broke away, pursued by Col. \ Wynkoop, and his chief scout, James Morrison, who had lost no time in procuring proper arms. Before either of these fear less gentlemen however, could over take him the wolf had attacked the sentry at theguard house, whom he also bit savagely, the sentinel having fired, but, most unfortunately missed his aim. From the guard house the wolf next clashed over to the hospi tal, and made an assault upon one of the men there staioned, almost tear ing his right arm from his body, after first taking off a finger entire. He then attacked and mutilated a colored soldier of the Tenth Cavalry, and subsequently entered the quar ters of the landress, while she was in bed, but owing to the thickness of the bed clothes, fortunately failed to inflict any serious injury on the poor woman. The maddened creature next caught sight of the sentinel at the haystacks, who almost provi dentially, shot him dead. Besides Lieut. Thompson, there are three persons badly bitten and mulitated by this monster. =l=lll GO TO CIIITECH •There is nothing which helps to establish a man's character more than a steady attendance at church, and a proper regard to the first day of the week. Every head of a fam ily should•go to church as an exam ple. Lounging in the street and bar rooms on the Sabbath is abominable and deserves censure, because it lays the foundation of habits which ruin both soul and body. Many a man can date the commencement of his dissipations, which made him a burden to himself and friends,an ob ject of pity in the sight of enemies, to his Sunday debauchery-- - -Idleness is the mother of drunkeness. The Sabbath is generally an idle day ; therefore if it were not properly kept, it were better struck out of ex istence. . A TEXAS man gives it as his opin ion, when importuned to take out a policy in a life insurance . company, that a fellow's life was so mighty uncertain about there, it wasn't worth insuring. A DRUNKEN Englishman said to Judge Ledwith, of New York, on Wednesday, of last week : "Your honor, I'm a nobleman in disguise." "So I perceive," replied the: Judge, "you're disguised in liquor, and as drunk as a I=l TAXATION OF 11. S. BONDS. SPEECH Or MR. BLAINE The following is the Globe report of Mr. Blaine's speech, delivered in the House of Representatives, June 23, 1868 : • Mn. BLAINE. The fact That the bonds of the UniOd StateS are ex empt from State and municipal taxa ation has created a wide spread dis content among the people, and the belief prevails guLte generally"that'if this exemption could be removed the local burdens of tie. tax-payer would be immediately aful essentially light ened. Many persons assert this •be lief from a spirit P' mischevious de magogueism, anl,:many.do. so from sincere . and conSeientious conviction.' To the latter clas I would beg to submit some fae and suggestions which may gre i ally - modify, if not entirely change eir conclusions. t The total gold earing debt of the United . States, ifhe conversion of seven-thirties coipplete,, amounts to a little more that - 42 ; 100,000,000 ;; of this sum total something over $200,- 000,009 draw bil five per cent. hi ,. terest,'a rate notsuacieritly high to provoke - hostility of - sugueSt the: .x ne cessity of taxaticw: 'lndeed it ~ may be :safely said tlAt there has never been any popubt dissatisfaction with regard to the 'li - on-taxation of the i five - per cents., -4 being agreed by common - conSer,that such a rate of interest was no :-unreasonable on : a loan negotiated4it such atime, The agitatiOr may,: therefore/be rerfarded:as substantially confined to the six per cent"; gold-bearing bonds, which amount - to thelarge aggregate 'of $1,900,000,P00.' - 'Many people honestly but ' thoughtlessly believe that if this class of bonds could- be. taxed by local ,authority the whole' vast volume *resented by . them would at once - he added to the' - list of the assessorit- It . is my purpose to show very briefly that this .con elusion is totally unfounded and er roneous, and that if the right of lo cal taxation existed in its fullest and amplest extent,- but a minor fraction of'the total =bunt of bonds ' could by any possibility be subjected to any more local tax than they already pay. : . The entire amount of these bonds as I have stated, is $1,900,000,000 ; and of this total, by the hest and most careful estimates attainable,. at least six hundred and fifty million are. now held in ' Europe. This amount could not therefore be reach ed by any system of local taxation, however extended, thorough . and searching. Deducting the amount thus held abroad we find the amount held at home is reduced to $1,250,- 000,000. - - But of this ;$1,250,000,000, more than one-third, or to speak with ac curacy, about $425,000,000 are held by the national banks, and no limn of property in the whole United States pays so large a tax both local and general as these banks. The . stock depositories, and the deposits which these $425,000,000 of bonds ~. . ... represent, pay full local 'tax at ' the highest rate besides a national tax averaging about two and a half . per cent. Were the power Of local ta..x ation made specific and absolute on these bonds, they could not yield a dollar more than is now realized in that direction. It thus follows that the 1,250,000,000 of bonds in this country, presumptively escaping lo cal taxation, must be reduced by the amount represented by the banks, and hence we find the aggregate falls to 825,600,000. ' The 'reduction, however, goes' still further, for it must be remembered that the sayings banks have invested their deposits in these bonds to the amount of 175 ; 000,000.. In some States by local law - the deposits of sayings banks are exempt from tax ation, as an incentive , to thrift and economy. • In other States where these deposits are taxed, as in Con necticut, it has been held by judic ial decision that the fact of their in vestment in United States bonds does not exempt them from taxation. Hence these 175,000,000, thus in vested in savings bank deposits, are either locally taxable, or if exempt it is by State law and not by virtue of the general exemption of the bonds. It thus follows that the 825,000,000': must be further reduced by this sum of 175,000,000, leaving but 650,000,- 000 not already embraced within the scope of local taxation. But there is still a further redtictimi of 30,000,- 000 held by the Life Insurance Com panies and held on precisely the same terms as the 'deposits of sav • ings banks—that is, either taxed lo cally, or if exempt, deriving the ex emption from the local law. The surplus earnings and -reserves of these life insurance companies in vested to - the extent , of thirty mil lions in United States bonds are just as open to taxation . when, investrd in that form as though they were in State or railroad securities. De ducting these thirty millions we find the untaxed bonds reduced to '620,- 000,000. And still there is another large reduction ; for the fire and marine insurance companies and the annuity and trust companies and other cor porations which cannot readily be classed, hold in the aggregate over 125,000,000 of bonds, and these are held on precisely the same basis as those held by the savings banks and life insurance companies. . These nu numerous corporations have their capital stock, their reserves and their surplus earnings invested in Gov ernment bonds to the extent named, and they are in this form just as open to taxation and are actually taxed just as much as though they were invested in any other form of security. Making the deduction of this 125,000,000 we find remaining but 495,000 ; 000 of the six per dent., gold -bearing bonds that are not al ready practically subjected to local taxation. Allowing for the possi bility that 100,000,000 of five per cents, are held instead of six per cents, in all the channels of invest ment I have named, and it follows that at the outside figures there are to-day in the whole country less than 600,000,000 of Government sixes, not fully subjected to the pow er of local taxation. And these six hundred millions are rapidly grow ing less as the various corpoiated in- stitutions I have named invest their ;funds more and more in the boobs. These institutions desire a security that is of steady value, not liable to great fluctuation, and at all- times convertible into money; and hence they seek Government bonds in pre ference to any other form of invest ment: The high. premium on the bonds induces individuals to part with them and hence they are readily transferred to, corporate ownership, where they become in effect at once liable to local. taxation and are no longer obnoxious to the charge of evading or. escaping their just share of municipal burden. In 'the hands of individuals the bonds may be cOn cealed, but in the possession of cor porations concealment is necessarily -impossible. . If ; these statistical.. statements : needed any verification it would be supplied by an examination of the income returns recently made under oath and published in all the large ,cities of the country, disclosing the fact. that the amount of bonds held by.the wealthy men of the country has been continually growing less, just as they have been absorbed by foreign purchase and by corporate investment. The correctness of these income returns in reference to the investment in bonds* will be ac cepted even by the incredulous and the interest of those making them was to, exaggerate rather than de preciate the respective amounts held by . theni. Instead then of 1,600,- 000,000 of these bonds running free of taxation it is clear that 'less than 600,000;000 are open to that charge —less than one-third of the whole amount. , Thee remainder, largely more than two . thirds of the whole, are either held abroad where no lo cal taxations can reach them, or they are held at home in such form as subjects them to local taxation. And now let us suppbse that we, were in possesSion of, the full power 1 to tax by local authority these 600; 7 1 000,000. of bonds presumptively owned by. individuals! Would we realize anything from it? On its face the prospect might be fair and inviting, but- in practice it would assuredly proVe delusive , and de7. ceptive. The trouble would be that the holders of the bonds could . not be found. No form of property is so easily concealed, none so - readily transferred back and forth, none so difficult to trace to actual ownership. We have hundreds of millions of State bondS; city bonds, and railroad securities in this country, and, yet every one knows that it is only an infinitesimal proportion of this vast investment that is ever represented on the books of assessors and tax collectors. As a pertinent illustration, I might cite the case of the bonds of my own State, of which there rire over five millions in existence to-day, largely held'as a favorite investment by the citizens of Maine. Of this whole sum lam safe in saying. that scarcely a dollar it found on the lists of any assessor in the State. And yet the facility .for concealing ownership in national bands is Tar greater than in any other form of security, andthe proportion in the hands of individuals - that would escape the assessment of local taxes may be inferred with reason able certainty fi•orii the analogies I have suggested, and which are fa miliar to all who have given the least attention to the subject. Indeed, I venture to assert with confidence that if the power of lobal taxation of these bonds were frilly accorded to day, the tax lists of our cities and towns would not be increased on an average one per cent Many of those who to-day may be ambitious of pa rading their bonds when protected by what is deemed an offensive ex emptier], would suddenly have none were the. power of taxation applied to them. Indeed, the utter failure to realize anything from this source, if the power to test it were granted, would in the end create more dissatis faction than that exemption, which in theory is absolutely of no conse quence whatever. But it will be asked, "Why don't you tax the bonds by national au-- thority ?" Granted, it will be urged, that the power of local taxation would be nugatory and valueless, "that affords all thefstronger reason for taxing the bonds by direct Con gressional enactment." In answer to this I have. only to say that a tax levied directly upon the coupon is simply an abatement of interest, and that result can be reached in a better and more satisfactory and more hon orable way. The determination manifested by this Congress and by the great Republican Convention at. Chicago to maintain the national faith has already worked a large ap precntion in the value of the bonds, and with the strengthening of our credit, which results from an honest and high-toned policy, we will speed ily be able to fund our debt on a lower scale of interest, running down to five,'four and a half and ultimately four per cent., per annum. Should we proceed, however in violation of good faith and of the uniform prac tice of civilized nations, to hold back part of the stipulated interest instead of effecting an honorable exchange of bonds to the mutual advantage of the Government and of the public creditor, we should only punish our selves, produce calamitous results in the business world, and 'permanent ly injure our national thine. To withhold one per cent., of the interest under the plea of a national tax this year might be followed by withholding two per cent., next year and the three per cent. the year en suing. To cuter upon such a policy would produce alarm at home and wide-spread distrust abroad, for every man holding a bond would have to count his rate of interest not on what %vas stipulated in the con tract, but on what might. be the will and caprice of Congress in its an nual withholding of a portion of the interest under the pretence of n tax. Under such a policy our bonds would be returned upon us from Europe with panic like rapidity, and the drain upon our specie resources would produce an immediate and disasterous crisis in monetary cir cleS. If even one half of our bonds held in Europe were suddenly sent home it would drain us of 250,000,- QOO of specie, and the financial dis- tress throughout the length and breadth of the land would be beyond the power of calculation or imagina tion. And yet that is the precise result involved if we should follow the policy advocated by those who urge us to tax the coupon and with. hold one or two per cent. of the in terest. Let us reject such counsels, and adhere to the steady, straight forward course indicated alike .by policy and good faith. And let us never forget that in the language of the Chicago platform, "the best policy to diminish our burden of debt is to so improve our credit that capitalists will seek to loan us mo ney at lower rates of interest than we now pay, and must continue to pay so long as repudiation, either partial or total, open or covert, is threatened or suspected.'• DANIEL S. DICKINSON ON SEYKOUR The following is an extract from the speech of Daniel S. Dickinson, delivered at the great ratification meeting held at the Cooper Institute in the city of New York, ,Oc tober 8, 1862. As Mr. Dickinson was a life-long Democrat, and in a position to be perfectly posted on Mr. Seymour"s record, the picture he draws may be 'especially refreshing just now to those Conservative Sol dier's who, at their late Convention in New York, committed themselves so unreservedly to the support of the Democratic nominee for the .President : When s most atrocious conspira cy which ever desecrated earth found development in an assault [von onr national flag at Sumter, and in efforts to massacre a half-starved garrison, placed there in 'a time of prothund peace, according to uniform- usage, for no other offense than asserting the supremacy' of their country's Constitution, and giving to the breeze, as emblematical thereof, the glorious Stars and Stripes of their fathers—when the 'brave volunteers who were hurrying to the defense of our nation's capital, to save it from mob rule, and rebellion • and confla gration, were bleeding . by traitori Us hands ; when strong men trem bled, when women wept, and chil dren instinctively clung.oloser to the maternal bosom; when. all communi cation between the loyal, States and capital lima cut off by rebellious for ces ; when the President elect of the United ,States . had . then - recently reached the seat of government, when duty called him,, by a circui tous and unusual route, and in dis guise, to escape the dagger of the assassin, and when our land was fill ed with excitement,: and Consterna tion and alarm ; when `shrieked . the timid- and stood still the brave,' and th&conflding masses looked about to see who were the men for the crisis, among the citizens of the Empire State, 'who had borne a part in pub lic affairs, and were naturally looked up to as examplars .in such a crisis, he (Horatio Seymour) hired himself away upon the double quick in the opposite direction (laughter), and for nearly half,a year hid himself among the lakes and rivers and romantic woodlands and inland towns of Wis consin, and his tongue was as silent on the subject of denouncing the Rebellion. as those .of the murdered volunteers, whose "ghost walked unrevenged among us." (Sensation.) There we may suppose .he basked and balanced and watched and wait ed, and turned and twisted (laught er), until autumn, when a small knot of defunct., defeated, desperate and despicable politicians, who had for years hung upon the subsistence department of the Democratic par ty iu this State. catne to his relief by entering the field. (Laughter.) They borrowed without leave the the honored name of Dentocraey, under which to perpetrate their cov ert treason, as the hypocrite. "Stole the livery of the court of Heaven The serve the devil in." Their disgradeful and disloyal rec ord stands out as the doing of men too stolid in political depravity to be gifted with ordinary instincts, and too regardless of the popular will to be mindful of shame ; and the defeat they experienced at the hands of the people, should serve as a warning to trimmers, an 1 traitors, and parri cides, and ingrates, throughout all future time. This moveinent drew thV secluded one from his hiding place, he .and came forth with all the courage of him who, in a conflict with his wife, be ing driven under the bed, while re maining thus ensconstd, declared, whether she consented or not, he would look out through a knot hole in the clap-boards so long as he had the spirit of a man. (Great and re peated laughter and applause.) He entered the political canvass, and on the 28th of October, 1861, a few days before the election, made a great speech, the burden of which was an apology for the Rebellion,' and a con demnation of the administration for having meted out the rigor of mar tial law to these in arms against the government. Though abounding with flimsy disguises and sophistical generalities, it contained one point worthy of not only notice, but of the severest reprehension, and heie it is : "If it is true that slavery must be abolished to save this Union, then the people of the south should be allowed to withdraw themselves from the government which cannot give them the protection guaranteed by its terms." What ! Place this glorious Union —this heritage of human hope—this asylum for the world's weary pilgrim —this refuge for the oppressed of earth, in the scale of being beneath the black and bloated amid bloody— the corrupt—the stultified and stul tifying institution of slavery ! No Sooner than see this Union severed, let not only the institution perish whenever and whenever it can be found, but let the inhabitations that have known it perish with it, and be known no more forever. (Tre mendous and long continued ap plause. "'That's so." 'That's the talk." Three cheers ) And yet this returning fugitive from patriotism proclaims as his creed, in effect if not in terms, that if either slavery or the Union mug be des troyed, it should be the Union. And the name of this man is Horatio Sey mour. (Sensation.) NUMBER 1. A FEW WORDS TO THE mum We know not whether any words we utter will reach any con siderable number of the Southern people, yet we desire to place our selves right on the record, and at least to discharge a duty we owe to the soldiers, sailors of the late war, and the cause of loyalty, peace, and truth. We wish to utter a word of warn ing against the men who propose to re-open the orama of war and revo lution. No graver mistake can be made by the people of the South than to repose confidence in the "fire eaters" of other days, who now are using all their power to inflame and drive them on to certain ruin ; and, on the other hand, to trust the Nor them demagogues, who now make them promises of orthern rebellion and blood to regain "the lost cause." The leaders of the South in 1860 taught the people that there would be no war—that "the North would not fight"—and that if there were any fighting in the North it would be done in - New York, where the workingmen would rise, and Yankee soldiers • would •be shot down in the streets. Even Jefferson Davis said in Washington before he left his seat, under the assurances of Northern al lies, that . "New York would give twenty :thousand recruits to the Southern army." And now, jour nals like the La Crosse Democrat and Metropolitan Record are broad cast over the South, filled with prom ises of the alacrity with which the North will 'aid them in the use of •"the bayonet."' • We warn the South that the lead ers who thus address them are only hurrying them into a deep abyss.— We warn the South against being betrayed by the 'political mock-auc tion men and pocket-book-droppers who promise such immense strength to their cause. It is nothing but the rabies of disoppointed ambition. Not one in ten thousand of the Northern people went to the help of the South in 1860, and a smaller number will try it again. - The people of the North love the nation—they loie the old flag—they have an unheralded feeling of union and sympathy with the South under the terrible calamities and losses it has suffered :under the demands of her designing leaders. They look at slavery as lost by the great con vulsion of war—they see the ruin, the countless graves, the wreck of hope and life to hundreds of thous ands—and they are ready to grasp With a warm hand all who are will ing to fail into line and submit to the new order resulting from the contest. But they do not and will not consent to see a new attempt made to settle the questions.of a Democratic gov ernment with the sword. Abide by the verdict of the ballot-box. If it be against you, discuss, appeal, and try the cause again. But, remember, that the people will not submit to have periodic war to gratify the am bitious men who happen to be de feated at the polls. We think we are's* in saying that if such an ap peal be again made "to arms" the result will be that the South will find "its last ditch" so deep that it will have no resurrection. The peo ple have submitted to the burdens of one long and bloody war to maintain our nationality, and they now desire peace, and the opportunity to repair the losses, and work off the burdens. The new agents in rebellion will find their hopes fearfully blasted if they build them upon the promises of the La Crosse Democrat, the Me tropolitan Recoi d, or the Cobbs and Hamptons of the South. The true - course fur the people of the.Sonthern States is to treat these "fire eating" mouth-artillerists as they would a Chinese lantern—hang them up for people to look at, but not to be deceived by thefillse lights they throw out. . Scorn and trample the corrupt journalits under foot, who are simply manufacturing Northern sensation sheets to skin the money out of Southern pockets —and then leave them so empty that their customers will hardly have enough left over to buy a cartridge or a ramrod ! Southern men and women in New York ! You can reach by your cor respondence, and your numerous family ties and business relationships, every corner of the South! Warn the South against the snare ! The men who promise revolution cannot make good the bond! In the day of trial they will be found bankrupt in muscle and helpless in the sinews of war ! They will hunt creation to prove an alibi, and leave you to your rain ! Be warned and be entreated in time! TILE Kentucky Times says : We venture the assertion that if Blair were elected President instead of Vice President, and there should be left out some States of the South by virtue of the recent legislation of Congress, be would wipe it clear out, take possession of the White Ilouse, and blot out the record in infamy made by Congress since 1365. Z=l LEAN CAI-mt.—lt is not profita ble to sell cattle to the butcher, till they are well fattened, as a fat cow, or bullock, will sell for more, over lean cows, than it costs to fatten them. Feed roots and meal plenti fully, and keep your animals in their stalls in the winter season, and if kept warm they will take on fat rap idly. WE predict that ex-rebel Commis sioner Robert Otild will come to grief in his effort to establlsh•thc in t-4111°ns charge he makes against Gen. Grant. It would appear after the Democracy rendered the rebels all possible aid to hurt Grant on the battle field, the rebels are now de termined to aid the Democracy to beat him at the ballot box. As the first failed, so will the last. I=l Ex-Gov. Bramtette or Kentucky, is the head centre or the Ku-K'ux in that State, and is in a meas..re largely responsible for the roign of terror inaugurated there. So much for the rebel wing of the Democratic party. ADAM was the only man that never tantalized his wife about the way mother used to cook. Miscellaneous Wits. New York has a French Grant and Colfax Club. A fatal disease is killing the chick ens in some parts of Berke county. General Kilpatrick will arrive in this countryfrom Chili on the 15th of September. The Northern New Jersey rail road boasts of never having killed a passenger. Gen. Sheridan says he deems fur ther forbearance with the Indians impossible. A. J. Herr, of Harrisburg, is spo ken of for speaker of the House this winter. Peaches will be scarcer this sea son than they have been for several years. The Utah grasshoppers eat win dow curtains, much to the disgust of the female saints. First class butter Sells in Mifflin burg, at 25 cents, and potatoes at $1.50 per bushel. The Cumberland Valley Railrtrul is to be extended to •Villiamsi Maryland. The wheat crop of Minneso: estimated at 15,000,000 bushels, is of the best quality. President - Johnson arid Hancock declined attending cratic picnic near Washingt„ Montreal (Canada) cattle art: in considerable numbers from . known discease. The cattle disease increases a: the cows belonging to dairymen Cincinnati, Five hundred new lawyers hung out their signs in New during the past. year. The Seymourites of Mar•_ sneak out at night to cat down ory poles erected by Grant and fax. clubs. A prominent lowa Democrat slys that the Republicans must go out of office next November, either by the ballot or the bullet. Alfred Alexander, colored, who was to have been executed in Phila delphia, On Tuesday of last week, has been respited till September Bth. Lewis Thompson and Homer Lane wrestled at Harrisburg, on the 20th, ult., for a purse of two thousand dol lars. Homer was badly beaten. Fully three thousand persons heard, and applauded Carl Schurz,s ad dress at Johnstown, on Tuesday evening of last week, The Harrisburg State Guard thinks the out-door .experiences of the -War, the cause of the great in crease-in the number of camp meet ings. The Reading Adler (German pro rebel paper) speaking of Thaddeus Stevens, says : Thank God he is out of the way. It would be equally thankful for the death of every loyal man in the country. Ku-Klux murders are on an in crease in Missouri. The last victim, Judge Morris, was guilty of the un pardonable crime of exerting his in fluence in favor of Republican senti ments. It is claimed that 8,000 new build ings will be completed in Chicago during the present year, before the close of the season, at a cost of from ten to twelve million dollars. A Quartermaster's clerk has rp cently discovered in a corn-bust mattress, on Sair Padre Island, n--,- Brazos Santiago, Texas, a rusty ket containing diamonds and err aids estimated to be worth 00. f Gen. F. S. Heintzeiman and are sojourning at "The Grape. Lancaster county. (.4e n. man's father is a resident or 1, heim, Lancaster county, «•here General was born. The authorities or established a re,,ular hat borough. Peddling on s prohibited, and dealers al ted from buying in cinantity market hours Shirt collars and dickeys arc made of wood. First steel can then India rubber.. The steel pl. out after it bad cut three n. throats; the rubber yielded the after it had suffocated several • by its putrescent and sulphu odor. The latest invention eon.: of dickeys and shirt collars of wo , ! Erank Blair now occupies vary much the position of Benedict Arn after the arrest of John Andre. All that Blair once fought for he is req , lv, he now says, to fight against. Tin wants to undo his own victories s , lll cast down that which he built. Letters continue to be received in `Washington from the Southern States urging a session of Congress in Sep tember. At first these appeals came from unimportant sources, but now they come from leading and influen tial men, among whom are. many Senators and members of Congress. A Columbia (Pa.) paper makes the following ungallant announcement : "A talking match is on the tapis be tween two women of this town, though no bets have been made as yet. The time to talk has been set down at forty-eight consecutive hours. Both will win." In his niessage to the Senate, in December, 1867, President Johnson said : "Salutary reforms have been introduced by the Secretary ad in terim, (General Grant,) and great re ductions of expenses have been ef fected under his administration of the \Var Department, to the saving of millions to the Treasury." The Harrisburg Telegraph perti nently remarks : "There is not a sol dier in the Commonwealth but what knows that what is called the Demo cratic party to-clay refused to give him the right of suffrage while in the field ligthing for the life of the Nation. Knowing this soldiers, . you vote for the eantlidatagvho in the lead of that party t y Vallandighatn, to Nvl um 'Soy In, is largt•ly intlebt oil for his nomi• tion %Moroi the following sc: motif, on the 6th of ,fitly, 1861, before the battle of Bull Ruu : this unholy and unconstitutional I satle figtitist the South, lin the n of the insurrection :1;1 , 1 innrih which she has been subjeet,and ‘vhich she is stilli.ithreatvned, the torch of the incendiary a 111 dagger of the assa4sin over hei, my most cordial synipa are wholly with her.