The Pittsburgh post. (Pittsburgh [Pa.]) 1859-1864, December 30, 1864, Image 2

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FBIDAY, DECEMBER 30,1834. I
This is the number of free and inde
pendent voters who east their votes. for
General McClellan at tire late Presiden
tial election.. shat Is, to say, by the
grace of oar graceful; elegant, refined
and intelligent President, wp Democrats
were allowed to count at the polls 1*792; ;
877 votes. But by managing ,&je
- palgn •‘in his own way,” through his
satraps and his satellites, he-counts for
himself, (soldiers’ Vote and all,) the
aggregate 0f2,197,117. His majority on
the wholeevote is 40M40—150,000 thou
sand of <thia majority was obtained in
the amy, leaving his majority' of the
people, and counted “in his own way,’>
about 25Q,000. So it would seem that
if every ballot counted for Lincoln was
actually cast by a flesh-and-blood voter
who voted according to his right and
his conscience,. Lincoln has secured
about 7 per cent, more of the whole
home vote than McClellan—in other
words throughout the country, for
> every 100 votes cast for McClellan
about 114 were'cast Jor Lincoln. But]
we don’t believe the facts to be so.
Never, since elections were settled by
ballots, have figures been made to lie
,so stupendously. “Nothing,” said
Sidney Smith, “Is so deceiving as
. figurpa-eiccept facts.” The figures.in
thja case are used to set ; forth the facts
that Lincoln is rfairly elected, and that
he isihe choice ofthe people. Both as
sumptions are utterly false and decep
tiye—and we shall give some reasons.
WeassniUe
- 1. That the number placed ai the
head of this, article hs given to McClel-
Jpn, were all polled for him, by legal
voters—or at least that they contain
fewer fraudulent ballots than were ever
before contained In t h,e like number of
votes at any previous election whatever.'
8. That bayonetsand teat oaths, in
Maryland, Missouri, Indiana, Kentucky
add Western Virginia prevented Mo-
Clellan from receiving at . least 200,000
votes more thanhe received, and would
have had at a fair election in those
States,
y 8. That the fraudulent and repeated
■ TOting of soldiers in Indiana and else
% where—the stuffing ?f hallot -boxes, and
% owning of spldier’B.proxies and the
f changing ofthelrvoteslost our candi
.. at leastanotherloo|o(K).
i -1 That ;the-sba i mefdl intimidation
| . tiaednnnii&Lw ~
t”' .“Owing military or civil offices,' or em-
E common mechanical labor in
f / . ■*»*«?«, Dockyards, . <£e., lost him
I - 3 ff l lhoMands more. We know, per
f ’ : ccnaUy. aome striking instancea in . this
I' - connection.
I? . Th® misguided, or treacherous, or
I • yindietiye coars'e oTmany other Peace:
T" ' who in Ohio andother States are
| snown Bhd shown by the returns to
| , have-vdtedfor Lincoln or refused to
t. •. vote atali.
I ; How. many votes McClellan lost
f - o} -lhe waywardness
a “ d how
I Lmcoln gained from the same
I course we cannot tell—but we
I ;toow that Lincoln was not the choice
I w. these men. They gratified their'
alone if they voted for him. Nor
j ftt h ?^°ice o f Fremont and his
IM ft !™ <i *’ forft,emont Enounced his ad
a
ihlßtariJy, and financial^,^L n or was hi
Chase’s friends—nor of
I 2£f- Darfa who *c dement man
fi wo^dlf* h {B trictery and fraud,
| TOUld have defeated any candidate of.
f «cn^ eb f 11 wottld seem that
f McClellan lost votes for luck of a fair
I - trial, while Lincoln gained’ votes be-
Jv cause he. was tried,and found wanting.
p a. If e :‘ herefore tU “fc that Figures and
§.* have been forced into an unholy
In r£“p o^‘ omake Liaro,a »«' to
** ““* president of the people's chdice-
Er > we don>t for 8 moment believe that
Ik 100 men ‘hat voted for Mc-
re *** 114 lhat Voted f*«r
%- ““coin—nor were there 00 ofthem.
iHlf®* if the people are so evenly di
opinions as 100 is to
[ ■: U 4, this fact should give pause to the
I , . dominant and vindictive party of the
Jhey know, malt ire 1
hOW votes
I ‘ y raod > foroe - and threats
r K andtte y »honld consider that 100 nn .
1 I Sfi e^ e . moK reiiBl ’ le than even
t ‘ ls ® together by deceptive promises
Hew England Principles,”
Secretory Seward, haring p i ayed
mttU the Radi**, at the
* **** 8BB *k»» at Congress; demanded. his
the CBbiaet > 18 “«w, that
the President will soon have to form a
new one, beginning to toady to what he
atyles New England principles;; this is’i
JS'“ ,TO - «i-i5S£
reM f P° 8 ‘«on, Seward
£wm the ot Auti-masonry t i a 'i
Western NewYora,, until, the transfer
of the. great body of the old Whie
party into AboMUonism, Was never any
thing bnt a clever trimmer.
To an invitation to the Puritan, dln
ner .urNew York the other
sept the
Svmm&sggay
53535r ! »2 , &i
srhlch i»r*' BOW beoome nation.i
:.pd wntlmeoti,
- : Ajneilca and Europe,
|1 am dew Hr, yotu very obe<U»t eervent, I
0 H. SSVAXS* I
*v_ ■ ...' ■, ....
i-j ao £
1,702,077.
Does the WojKLlfpve?" T '!'\
Horace QreelSy; in his TAne, when .'
ever the Abolitionists. succeed in some
new undertaking, always announces his
gratificationiWitß'the assurance that the
‘••ffoMd ■; But with others, it Is
pertain that creation has,, for some time
been standing stall. As an instsno# r -we
found-in ourbox-at the Post-offltie, yes
terdaj, a letter'frdm Beiii'ofd, Cayahofa
Co, Qhio, directed , to. “Whitney &
Dunn,”, requesting them to send ’the
writer a copy of the Weekly Iron . City ,
Us he hatt’a desire to VUBs6ribe for it. ■ ‘‘ i
The firm motioned dissolved in 1849
—fifteen years.ago, and the Iron City
newspaper has pot been in existence lor
ten years, at least. The question theii
oecurs.to us where has this admirer of
the old Iran Uity been those fifteen
years ? Has he, like Rip Van Winkle
’in the Catskill Mountains, been asleep
all.this time; and wakes he now to
begin life where he then left off? If po
|he Will, like, “old Rip,” soonidJacover,.
In the absenee .of old faces and the pre
sence of new ones, that very wonderful
changes hare been goingion.
I When our correspondent became'
| oblivions, Effete yeafA'agu, our coun
try was in the full tide of prosperity
I and No internal Commotion
j was threatened,- and she commanded
respect abroad ? heV naine was
known. Webster, Clay, Benton and
GasSjCQmpatriotff.eontraljedthe-political
sentiments of the country,-' and' lashed
fanaticism into submission whenever It
fntriided itself into thed dibpratio.na of
the Senate. No where indeed' . will our
slow and sleepy correspondent ohsarve
'greater changes than in the United
i States’ Congress. ,When Jhewent ti>;
j sleep the great .men mentioned,' with
I others of alihoßt equal ability atfd>irtne
I ado ™e<* the Semite' they sib
I »J».Oefi. MWiftW
ago advanced into dean and slip
[pered pantaloon; ■’ ’Thebr -plkpies are
now flired by Bncfr fahatics ai'y^i l^,n of
Massachusetts; Qatz Brbytq of ittiswnri
the drqnkensChWtdler of- J&Ugui and
£ifieapf this greah- cohntry. intonated &!
[their-keepings -In’ dthtto brAnehes bf tfie
! government: -ti* ■
is ; *entnssnndaii)
theaeacirings bfr’hfflffi^g^erate'snnli'
ta^itral,
ised despotism. B nt ’WC trust that he
may no w remain wide nwtke and that
fieigVfeg’With the
the land,ofdreaniß and legend* be will
live to see the country as united and
bappy as ,t was when he bade the world
a temporary farewell,
Few MOltaiy Developments.
_ A correspondent, of the New York
I fTl la ” n<ier that new
i t h P l , hng deVeI °P meDtB rtgard to
aduary condition of the country,
in be bre MW to /light as soon as Oon
greßaire-assembles. General .Grant, if
is understood is convinced that he has
m ade a great mistake in the
!“Wf ****&: Bichmpnd,
daring the past, year, andiia.de.^”
wTsb’ l having his headquarters in
WMfawto*-aitdaWnaa,ifi fidfcfe;**
confine Jus attention, to,one Irmy but
lT * bnefyißitS to “ll the armL in
n’*. lD ! , , ead of ' "»Wt one
army ail the tlnie. ' ! ■
bera Ptomineot n»em
, Kepublicatt Party,/who con
siderthemael are really in
S advisers
of he President, were influen
«al i “ i Procuring the appointment of
Geneml Grant to his preaen t high rank
thM 7l* ter ' I Y an % betel 3 .‘do hastily,
made a wrong selection; and
[ tot General Sherman, and not General
Grant, w the man whoin they ought
to| have to be the General in-
and among them
selves,these prominent Republicans do
not hesitate to admit Generaf Grant''a
management ca,mpaignBj3f ;1884
haveresultefiin„d,failure; a»dth4t if
it were ttotfornwhatfleneral Gherman
hsadone the aehleyemdht of ottr armies
in 1884 would present but a dlsmai pic
U* campaign! ofVjB@s, the
correspondent in question thinks that
it Tfill bo conducted more than ever
poUdc^^tacipicfl'^d: the
principles ofttiescience If- tv armore
than ever before- ignored. =-Eitermina
tion of the white-people of the South,
and the arming! of allreiavee wirb cai
beinduead-to desert their majrtdrsjthese.
are to be the key notes-of the
ff lgns - The pro-consuls and military
Governors of the Pro*lnc@?fformerl
Statesy iaye thdir in-
oa.these "'Those gi ven
?to General Banks, for->&duigigna and
«bi9Se that have beenagnt fpiteiatraps
Ih^ennessee,
their.regtdtß inithoseStatedi^^^^
of
W. H.' Allen,:' ©Mpi r '-in' reference, toihe
jo P&
portion of the Scrip would act wisely if
tkey would employ another mouth-piece
than the *
| to.
rain lu a "new
says:
In the language of Theodore Parker, one of
her favorite aonej the love of ‘*the altnight ;
dollar” Is the rnUng paaaion of New England
Thiß It the heart sonl and body of all her policy.
•ThttU ifthS
taupn take; "the .almighty dollaffrom her
i* ofr %5W and
'ahe fl re4dy»to ndotaT Bui? Mly letrthe Union;
restore this tutelary god, and then, though t?
rob an u is more glorlona than
secession like a star by
the full blare of noon. “The almighty dollar”
ißi Indeed,-the great light-that itfu bySaitii
Yankeedom. wlthont ‘ whoie-presence 'all ' U
It Us the pne tfea of jfa
- wWoII ebsotbi jlreeft and raWall
the restless enijrgjssorhepoo actiV^sont.
. aa? B IJjat the Emperor, on hls new
tonr to the Gulf States, was expected at
Matamoras on the 10th, and that prep-1
Won U ifut? i be ‘ ng ma<^e for his « ce H
‘ a , n e ! y ' J l^ BD ' that he come
bJf!?™ 1 °. f P nlled States territory. Onr
informant also gays that all the comtner
cWclassea were In favor of the empire
aqtne only mtans to give security to life
and property. General Mejia is said to
o^lr^^.^ Pa i ar, and “aintains the best
order in the department under his or
aers which comprises the States of Hue,
vo, Leon, Coahfula and the district .ol
Matamoras. There was no sighs of a
nemra§h? the bel Btatea . and strict
antnSri* wm observed by the imperial
Sn ' Trade is brisk under the
*S?F ment of order i and cotton was
?[?i ; til %S nce for good qualities .is 400
to 41c. The crops in Texas have been
i “ oat J K)Mlt |f nl year, bnt the cotton
. ,)? has been damaged. In
*vmpn&t 4o ' ooo Mes been ren
beared orno value. The frost has done
Jaying tomakeV nri™?* ®°“ /damage to the sugar cane. We
11 >»K t ? ldalBo .> t i at ** atrength of the
an!biawb&®‘ iH Ip ‘ Texas * 8 35;h00men,. and
jady's sister, Miss .Minnie ‘L„J 1 in II 1 ® best condition;' be-
the sieSheiar*?^ 11 ’ , well led, clothed, and armed—
ttwtitisinwantofnothing. Our infer
■Qf&VtumMtiKa Jp=?“**"»» «wt the blockadt of Galvehton
£^>s*!Yclilatterplaoe oftßnan dibatill sorts of
selected ffmumber of imn r esa!on 8 of thi I into ‘bat . port. He
recently-published portrait of her \l»f tbe empire is firmly
I CBsy» for to frifn/to established, and that all reports about
i America. V ‘° fnend9 lu I eoccesses onthe part of the late Juarirt
_j» • force* are false.
Gyafua
fgHjeiioßn k U. S.'Sizetter- {
i article in .the Pitts.):
.^^rrSPv 0 * December 19th, under'
the Lands andths Stats i9 i ]
• * lar §Sv<|§ Commissioners, or ahmjbifs
have tlie'«istfi§rlBF
scrip griptctTbr
vongress to ini» common wealtK^^ri flr
-whose duty it is to sell the scrip and
vest the proceeds according to law, with
an. intention tp defraud the State for the
side ° f ap ® cal^ ora » clandestine
i * o( thearticle, among oth
“Advertisements were
oustriirely iiresrtfed| weeks since, in
E only, stating that
bldsWouklHra received ‘for these lands
aniwe lear&'that bareiy three or four
i-ios were put in, the expectation among
tae khowing ones being that they would
.nave been opened and the whole award
® tlie 2d instant. Tortunhtely, the
sickness of-the Auditor General preven
ted the accomplishment of the object
evidently intended—thesale of these
lands it; a low figure to harpies .whofan
cled they had chanced on ngood-thing.”
1 pronounce the whole and every part
of the a hove,'statement ab o ut dynntrue.
Whether tho writer was deceived by. the
false representations pf others’ hr meant
to. deceive the public, charges so un
founded and infamons can barm no one
but himself when.the facts of the case
are known.
1 The following are the facts. In -July
last the undersigned Was 'appointed by
the .Commissioners to make arrange
ments for the sale of the scrip, and re
port to the Surveyor General, Not hav
! lngb'een able to obtaih proposals satis
factory to the Commission ers from the
land operators, it was deemed ad
visable to offer the scrip directly to the
people. Accordingly a fuikand explicit
advertisement, dated O.tober3l, 1864
was inserted in several of the leading
daily papers in Philadelphia, Ne.w York
Harrisburg, and Pittsburgh, fodr times
in each paper, offering, the scrip for the
competition of bidders, but reserving
the right to decline any or all bids and
givnig notice that the bids would he
opened ou the first day of December at
the office of the Surveyor General’'in
Among the newspapers in
which the writer-thinks that an adver
tisement must beobacure were tbe New
I i ork Triimns , .Philadelphia Iforth
Amerimu, and United States Gauttee
Harrisburg Intelligencer, and Pittsburgh
Commercial. The ad vertisemeut was
also printed as n circular, and widely
distributed through the post office.
.Numerous bids were received from
citizens of Pennsylvania and other
Mtates. and these were opened and re
corded on the day named in the adver
tisement, in the presence of the Gover
n were
Dias for more than two hundred thou
sand acres at various prices, eighty-five
cents par acre being the maximum. On
I account of tha absence of the Auditor
General, none of the-bids were accepted
on that day, put at a subsequent meet
tng, of which all the Commissioners
were notified, the bids which were con
sidered the State were
accepted, and the bidders notified there
The undersigned has notheen inform
i '■?”?*; muefa of. the scrip was awarded.
| •hat heis authorized to say that no bid of
Ims than 80J .cents per acre,, was accept
yl6e commaaioners accented all
bldsofSOJ cents’-and’iipwards, as I pre
>snme they did, the • ninount sold was
somewhat more than Jforty thousand
.acres. Alter much correspondence and
inquiry on the subject,;i am not inforft-
has put
! -The have Instructed
to continue the sale , of thesoriD-at
the mrmmum price of «s cents pef a &l*
tb»£nJ^ ra - ha W'4»eh sold m
'^ Pr * i B,llo6 ‘he awards to bidder's.
:' As J the writer in the Bitubureh' QS".
• 8 iiif -lhe. scrip is worth “at
S^Sf S C , ! Wch would be
opportunity ‘‘to'clance “good
M B5 and A»t tne Zr° ]C lot ol tile scrip
iu!M d ke a c, °ar prdfit, it he be
per sere B ' oWn statements - »f'*3 cents
■ - . H. Allen.
Agent ftw the sale af the Agricultural
Laud Scrip of Pennsylvania.
From the Toronto Leader.
. Gtmboats on the Lakes.
T bo;prohibition which England and
the Unued States mutually Z“?d
on-theinselves at the close “f the last
war, to keep each, not more than one
revenue-cutter on each of the lakes is
about to expire I n the month of Octo
her last, the Federal Government gave
the leqjiiaite six months’ notice of fhefr
mteniipTtti-discontinue tfe arrange
,o e t end
to tte prohibi1 1o nja ext April - f ßoth nor
‘W< then be at liberty topiaJfa
navakjnanne on the lakes;- * P ace a
ChfiUgQ Qf sq much imnort-Qr>i-o
8t T^ 8 pii °^ co ?erjsh&h i de
fj® 6- .. II wa ® quite optional with the
Washington Cabinet to take the sten „„
which they determined in last October
MjiWPuldnot have been in.the power of
England or Canada to have prevented „
'■rf-theyhad'de«red. Upon the Ixam 'ne'
tion of all the bearings of the moe
think that it will be found that there is
no cause for the other party to the ar
™ S r ei tJ Mch ia 00 'Ee point of be!
ing annulled, to regret that the Ameri
the lake g s, a d B S‘the 9 iMt two Tlhree
seasons; vessels of a strength
beybhd anything that theTce!
wlSonr r?e require i vessels which might
without any great difficulty, beconvfrt
ed Into ships of war, and which appew
to have been built with direct reference
.ln .this way
»dL f sB1)0r8 hav ® been'getting undae
advantage over us; and one which theJ
Would not have obtained if the nmhih?
tionagainst wai vessels beingpl^cedon
thf« lakes .w aa “ ot dieted “ind if
this way.the spirit of the treaty has been
encroached upon, ita letters
we believe, not been fully resnectd
Under these circumstances
thing for us that could be done the
fairest to both parties, is to put
to ths prohibition. ; - - an £nd
■ But-the question of how- a
demonstration is to be m »de rem.i ”
The assistance which England
ways declared her abffi&a *SSL* 1 :
-docks-st home for the want _
La Pf
■ of Monaaiic EStab
t•. •MBBaaflyilte te^Eudi"
: 38-—For several days
‘ ®ljiSS®s®iߧ^tte'hav e been made, and
i Aave • recslvei
- pld in'
; rtadine3s for the.impendingsnnnma^T,:
of-a]lmonastioeBfeblM6ientB^Sfifbb^HS'
ttona-amved yesterday by courier and
telegra p h. In the capital the suppres
sion was carried out as follows: Pmct
“5 lly v a * pidmgbt a oolonel, with a body
.of? troops, repaired to each religious
house assembled the monks, read to
hem e Ji Cero /’ 8 °n rder ’ and desired
f™ k*®!? reB “ y to leave at half past
f «> foreign country.
Of the twelve religious ' establishments
in Warsaw three were exempted, upon
condition that they should receive no
more novices, and thusdje out gradual
* “i 118 wera oppressed in
‘sl“? Mer a to‘ed, the officer in some
cas|s leaving two monks, in others,
three and appointing one of. these as
the “nn”,! ® a[,erior - B ? two o’clock
Jure P / eSBl v n ,T aB completed in this
dom T,. probab!y throughout the king-
J be monasteries remained in the
hands of the military, and the monks
were conducted under a strong escort
at the appointed hour, to the roil way
i TTorff 11 ’ Ad J ntant General Baron
~W lh h i B stafl > superintended their
departure. Each of the exiles received
a 9 “ m M° ne hundred aDd fifty roubles
to pay his expenses. Everything pass
ed off without disturbance. Religious
houses devoted to a charitable purpose
—aa,. for instance, the care of the sick
? nd Y blch fiavein no degree taken part
in the insurrection, remain exempt from
‘ h 'H“ 011 : Wnither the banished
monks will go is not yet known, it is
howo \ eT - ‘fiey will distribute
themselves over Italy and France.
i i-R'jl 111 tB J‘ of the report, drawn up
m Russian, German and French, bv the
special committee appointed to examine
the Roman Catholic monasteries and
tS? Ye 2‘\, lh ™ u « hout tlle kingdom of
bo r t n nf h B3 / 131 appeared. Th! entire I
b ° dy , of evidence, proving undoubted
participation in the operations of the in
surgents, has been given in the shape of
a Retailed register of each individual es
| tabhshment. Nothing has been admit
ted says the report, which has nor been
distinctly proved, but—
incompleteness of
the evidence, the committee has been
thLn b ?h nTe at any other conclusion
than that the monasteries and convents
were among the chief instruments ol
f be revolution, taking therein more nr
less active part. ’'
lowingK: hen diTide9 iot ° ,he fol
“ The condition of the religious hous
f iu a 3 eneral Ww of their participation
m the insurrection ; singing hyms • pro
I cessions ; assemblages of clerical ’ ner
sons to prepare for Qie insurrection
cruiting for the bands and participation
surTenfi °?‘ Utie i ; «° ncfea >ment of in
surgent leaders; hanging gendarmes •
daggermen , administering the odth to
lthfi gge S« Partidpation of In
[thr revolutionary organization - and
Ah re jP 0 , 148 ” actually carried’ out
featnrea P°rtreyed in these chap
tn« nr *?? means ,? fford a complete plc
, compll cated appearance, of
which hardly anything approaching to
an example is to be found in the history
of any other country. 1 ’
. The report concluded: *
‘ Ofthe 155 monasteries and 43 con
vents foontainlng 1,685 monks and“, 49
nuns), ,1 monasteries with .804 monks
! and four convents with 14 nuns, exist in
tl ' av ®s h , on 8f the canonical -rules,
tor the better observ
auce oraacipiine each religions house
shall contain at Wat eight inonks w
earn* 0t '- heSe have been found
guilty of supportmg the insurrection of
concealing bands of individual Tn ’f
gents, of containing arms and secret
Iwwttog. presses, jjf administering the
zfs:’a c W
m°iika, have been convicted of open and
insurrection. 1 ” participati ° n ‘he
T W T 6 l ? d ? noieB of Public Debt
Ar^li> afc ur he fo,,owin S extract from
Arnolds Lectures on Modem flisto-
Suppose, then, that a statesman an
tPn lh d by v, ai L those difficulties, resolve
to share the bnraen with posterity and
dS L'Tho m ° ney by loaDa No
Qouot, for the present, his work is
greatly facilitated; instead of providing
for‘the money which ho wants'- he has
Bnfnh i )rov, de for the interest of it
But observes what follows. In thefirst
o ifhfr by an almoBt universal law of our
snVn r ’ m °” ejr Bgbtlygained is lightly
spent; a revenue raised at the expense
WT" be B< 3uandered
Zll, ,2 y ’ Waste - as usual, begetting
want, the sums raised by loans will
snrns m °^ lybe larffe - N °w these large
sums ard-a mortgage on all the property
abilPv r dUBtry ’ on al > th c skill and
ability of a country forever. Everv
onltrnm 1 "? / r °“ henceforthtas m*
only:to maintain its owner and his fam
jly, and to answer, the jnst demands of
to' M PnbllC Bervice . ifhas i Iso
fbed ?, e °l m 9» extraneons persons
besides the State’s creditors, or their
heirs, who m times past lent it their
money Every man £ko would have
labored twelve hours Tor the support of
is family and the public service of his
own generation, must labor one or two
houra in addition for the support of &
stranger, the State’s creditor. So with
with alMto Perty ’ 811 its mdustry
* ?°« WerB lhns burdened, thus
t 0 th ® very “tremity of endnr
ance, the nation is committed to the
vicissitudes of all coming lime, to run
full fvlT Uh otber nati ? ns who are in
ull freshness of. their unstrained
strength,-to battle with occasioned
f° r ® 8 w . h ' ch try the lightest and stout
till S' b h at m which one overloaded
till the timbers are well nigh starting
?ered ” eCeS3ari ' y e2pect to be f °uu’
a latest from Mexico.
gentleman recently arrived from
Watamoms we have a few item a of
ataM fr ° m that p,BCe np to tbe 4tb in-
Bio, DECEMBER
Amount to f
rate of $7.700.000 nei% n „mg|f g“
Iki&.is reported tMKirariHadßLi
3?®Bph Hooker, atjjiiiwnt
thwHorthern DepaKSnent, IkfHibliar
. j ln P? e spring to an accomplished
mand BBldent Wlthin W 8 mlUtar y com-
Locusti—A Qape of Good Hope pa-
J>er says that rfr&liflishtsoflocnsts have
visited Queen’s TJo.wn.and done .great
tied on some thorn bushes, “which an
peered as though they WCl^oiverCd
n tblck J ghtterin £ br °wn inoss,
kyrhiie alUround-the roots -flie lo&aWlav
about six inches thick?’’ 5 " ' '
, home Secretary has decided that
Mathewa “ entitled to the
who ] e qf the reward.of JE390 jfofe giving
information which led convic®
tgn of Muller.for the murder of Mr.
? ng S. s : , Tt l e . BU ? l has been ordered to
be paid to him in a few days. In the'
meanwhite, unfortunately-Ibr hi£ he '
* aa been arrested for a,debt of £3O by
one of his numerous Small cr&Stora,
whose aggregate claims amount to £560.
Ttoee more of the Saint Albans’raid'
e ’’ 9 ', U -1. B stated by a telegram from Con-,
’ New Hampshire, have Keen taken.
»hey came irom Canada and proceeded
in the cars to Lebanon, where they en-
Usted, with a view, it is said, togeTinto
the enemy s lines. Being detected,'they
were sent to prison. A considerable
| amount of money wasfoundupon them
beside the bounties, which they* had re!
ceived. Still another raider has been
captured at Toronto.
From recent St. Domingo journals
we learn that the'people aw stfif fight
mg vigorously against Spanish domina
“on - f * a meeting of the chief officials
General Salcedo, the Provisional Presi- -
G«« ' ? een re Podiated and General
Gasper Polenco placed at the head bf
fan 1 "' ° D a 016 flfteenth ° f °«ober" the
latter issued his manifesto. He- criti
cises General Salcedo’s
and declares that the Government shall
not be subjugated by Spain.
A Boston horse accomplished, some
astonishing feats oh Wednesday even
ing. He was attached to a pung con
taining a piano, and hitched in front bf
the Worcheaier depot j.-Becoming
frightened, he broke away,
entirely ClrCUlt of th< ? depot, and jumped
entirely over a platform car. Subse
quently he ran into a horee carratfnll
speed and forced his way' emLe”y
ffiw le ß g h s. tbe Sid6 ’ bre&king ti 9 “ct a o d
Pbicb Reobsanhhho His Army —a
gentleman direct from the Trana-Mlg
th».‘o’ 1 De P a 2 ment brings informal
that General Price has organized the re
cruits brought cm of MJSsohH bV idm
Rp?l flVe ,) b ’ H ß a<J es.''General J®
Kelly and General John B. Claif J r
have each a division. Ge n ' eral ’/ e r ff '
Thompson commands Kelly's brigade i
Colonel John T. Coffee has recrSted .
regiment one thousand eight Imdral
Pri° r D n g w °, n '^ e 18th of Number Gm
Price waaispmng rations to thirty.three'
thousand men. His*expedition into Mis
souri was as completely successful as Mi
orders permitted it to be. He has ndw
the largest corps in the Confederate
army, and every man is a Migsourlatr
General,Pagan, whom ■he deffcbed for
that purpose, captured Fayetteville/
With its garrison of eight hundred mere
beV^hfaf
grandfather, Mr ThimM t si™* 1<Ito “ of •>•»
rtmet, Mr, ’sSIH aLggJSSK-i 48
POWDER.
Frangapanl Powder. '
trangapaal Powder.
AT - store
Patent
Patent Medicines PatentMedtclnea,
Patent Medicines,’ sJfd| ail >M..
-iS^aWtsa^
Cine thavie advertised ’ waS?*?* every
thlng in this iin" JC ,u J‘J o®' 0 ®'
&gVe3&.*‘ »* «SMSt*SiS
°® Remenffr t “place A ‘ h slwa F 8
JOSEPH F.I.EMINCP§ IiILVQ STORE
de!9 “ er ° f the Dla “°®d and Markefit,
'wEA~K?hf?: H ’ 8
Costive, mifouh; h d e toSmT,
use, will Bed renewed *?2'.'P me
every organ of tnctr triS^T “ tMe Pewmde
tvcrydoßo makes the bloodnneee ti.
commcnoe in the «rttrfes add P nerves
veins. These pills t™ 11 «»
wrn d^^? U6 p ‘^;^rii,s ,^°”T^^^ m
soon lie cured. No the disease will
®® r ” S VoiSl^?®~' r 0 THK HEBCPB
sure, am
certain to falloy Hoi TVrSri 0 -S,o ,^£lmo * t
uacd occasionally Jarlli T S
*“»“™ »°und health to eleft a n ai ?Pfi®% will
of this **noi it” cannot ret a Sii r^? der
write f t r o° a J he w dr^£ re i z£fi”l’§
S5 n ffiS “oVkMr
h M an o d n b o^^f> 0 -P-^i 7 £ffrro° G ?
»nd *1,40 per box or pot * en,a ’ »
*ZZX: XcTZltn**™™ «r
|“[kethe^mpou° D d a e f^“MAK^wlH^-
the health of the hTlr uJ it UE upon
the juices which sustain It thT, m»5 n l, c< ?? ume
perfect dye la found to beVi it.^ 1 Kenl * l “d
a coloring agent. 8 vluilzlo K « well u .j
. Chrlatadoro'i Hair Pruan....
A valuable adjunct to the .**to V<l^t v e»
! promoting the growth aSI ?
hair, and of itaelf whan the
that protects the h bree from^MM^^^ 18 ," 1
cumstanoes and under all dlmra d “ olr
aMSE?*,* «o. .
JK'jSs'ffS’icipSS
and never fail*. Bead P fi!S^T BI !> ,r 7??P elllc »
male a perfect cure In one CL H 4
smr f ,he “«saSt
os - K«t£:W£*,
’A FACT.
1.. . . .
L h »
thoee ueuaJJv aold for »1 quantity of dye la
j^s^asssfcasstfS
'General A«at?E!GoM!Sr w§V
“•““StsaaßssKsssssfi,
NEWS ITEMS.
&
H ® 8 5
lag I
« ® © a... g . g
<d- rt. . w <
*•■■■ '-■§•■ & :' .. -
£-* .2 * uj •. te
1g S 5
j „ *' 3
2 * i r ,
. fi -°-
to W
§ *f ■ I
1 of
rofiUie enabling Banka
forttenumoMorhinirf 0 beco ? o »**o<latitai*
the .foffifgy “°«»CT the la W ,“
August. A. D jmi *be 231 day of
Allegheny BuhTfri' ts?*J£. e "I°?*holders of the
i county dfetlt»j?,p r t>l f, <^^^C,- pl t* l bug:hi sncl
become <s* t"
tltlAof “Tha AU«aenVl?2«l!?if f ii?‘ enall “ ! *-d
iffiwSSssiS®®
7 £W °»f »*«•
D
% Sdffi Stft “ A P E ™ K STU
lJelloato Diseases
ss^'iwßiSasft
§&£sp»* fc^fsgsgsiba
deSOlt
HOESE. Tr e owom i- » ORAT
Mayor’# Office, and «? 0411 at *&•
five 0.F., or 1. wUI be
Qf Pnn!^
BPHAW S S fair
CONCERT HALL, FIFTH STREET,
lUSKINGUM AND DUCK CHEEK OIL COMPANY,
S£s^?wgK 4 r s ‘“ i '»ra|
- de?3t2w-eod
AHTHOBT WEIDMAfIf, Esg..
W a .t; M A CAMOIDATE mn
ALDERMAN of tiw THLhd waud
ony of PltUburgh, at ttae emalng election
dels
BOOK.BEVDEB wilVT^x,:
IWAST TO EKPult
u thoroughly oompeten* to
» «naU Boofc-Blnderv A £?“ i*"* B of
'■Her. AddrewTr oue b * * Bl * t -‘’ ia *«
I-EWI3 BAKER,
•eplfl
t.* Me*. & Mas. Natioyai. Bass, >
* Max. Basil (
rrrrsßtrsoH, jieceinber tttb, ifftt. (
A® JQXVTXOV/&OB. DtaBCVORfI
of this Bank to serve durinj? the *n«J£_
mr, wIU be held* the BmaSSr
SESDAY. teTlOth DAT^^jSuAk?
iSair mT“ ho jomr
- J OHW SCQT^JIL^p
ow
SaotoißWiui.iSM «•«*.«*. wit gjfc ;
— * &_ ocm&
40 Trails Prim* Dates.
****** ud for Miebj
JSW, TMK&fr BE#H.
.APvamsKMg
I
S H
a b
§ 3
■j
u
s 4^.
■ - Q
i|
S t 3
S - s
1“
O
ee
H
H
IU
CO
U
£
E
0 txj
0 d 5
g.g
u Pi
E .■;
H '
A
HHJt'tS RIfIUCEDr
OLOAKS,
SBAWXS,
DRESS ROODS,
For sale st s great redaction in prf Wl
WHITE, QRk & GO,
No- 2S Fifth Street.
OPEN EVERY NIGHT, AT
ADMISSION S 5
~g* -sj^Sas--
IjSliW ij»>;
fißEiisjMtsiKraiii
dt theipUfadiil l
BOUDAVZ^m,
i* '
a-i
»•• j.
s I
►. y.-.
I |
a - $
BEoe v Store,
a T 5
■?. .
* a
*l. ;
MNE french goods,
BIST QUALITY,
■h I'
| I .
Palace Siioe Emporium,
& i
& 3
3 3-
a «
If the cbespert houjo la the world,
GIFTS!
1IT B INSIST UPOS IX THAT TBB
S‘«
o |
a 2.
WHEELS & m ILSON
sewing macMm:
ma “ “« » oWSKSS^r
*• Voald “r.'taerbrote.glT.
opportune™ «*
WHEELEH & WHSON
SEWING ICAOHIKE.r -> .
Wlllprovato them a never falling Mead
s»ssssaaats*.
iVIIEEI-KH A WIISOS'
g , r
preientlng toher a K - ° JWSjdthaa by
tV HEELER * WILSON
SEWING MACHINE, Aj,
»wm glld-wttfrddmestie
°* her confidence and WOrthr
WHEELER dt WILSON
SEWINQ MAOHDrail’
WHEELER d WILSON
SEWTNG MACHINE.'
OosgragsHoM »re K owon&HagtSe
WHEEt.BR dj. WILSON
SEEING itAOHttrES •
“ FhSS .0 ?o "ho bAve
InSert*3f ine i' n r'?v^aH? our **““**? *“ the
m the bnnde of
WHEELER 4fc WILSON
SEWING, J!£ Afl,H IN,E.
rtWkui&po °
*tti |* 8 »ttachmecta and wide hbw nr annii*.
4,BSS3Pwsss*
thlshuta. r giv« of
«“ .'"tttaSgs&r* * impie * c °” tro '-
more “ to fo ™ »• ."Btche. much
m«hi n^v e£ployln ® on) y “bout ;on#-fourth U>.
EtSrsßSHwa
preparation Wt^dS&ffiSg
WHEELER i WUJoC
WHEELER & WILBON
cbine d*«l they
wheeler a Wilson^
wfietW int«ndWsS!a£S&£
Call early and secure one; ' -■ •
Salesroom No. 29 Fi^Sfraftfc
WM. SUMNER & igO. .
del 7 2f»d&w
t. e. jenkensl
Commission Merota^t,
and ’
pubchasing agent,' ;
MUJtBS Hr ~
Floor, Appu,,
and all Farm Prodnct*
AtSO,
REFINED AND LDBBICATMojiA
"SFSaPSSgLgS - - w«“y^»Por
-ss__jSMfc
Th « Great Pnmtriaf i
HE M A PA KARA.
’ Hemapanaka curea Scrofnla.
Hemapanaka curea Caocerv -
Hemapanaka curea Hiieumjtfiem. -
Hem apaoaka ’
Hemapanaka cure* Intmiam..
Hemapanaka cure* Old SmS” 1
' Hemapanaka curea UreniSS?
Hemapanaka curea
Hemapanaka curea Pimplea an tie Pan*.
HJmapanakacureaErjSSir “* V 4
cnrea UvCT^SSdalnt,
declJpdlnr iorntr
ggESSHSS&S
different kISSSr horaeratal?
teath
f«eat iuuse nka
“iff*? 6 °f *•» but mmttrUli Sjjj
Wboleaale orffera •oUcited. mu, - yr
-=. ; a. ant.Km,
CJ HOW ®HOW, *«. ~~ST~
-Aaoperior article .! nhn. ra.~-.\ .A 3&
Smu, vocumber «e„ m, Maa«OaA’.l2Ss7 •
£?jr"2?‘y° rp, <*-'. s»«j£S3*yg*lWi
htted by Oconto B« ket
sale at low } .,... -. 1 *4<**r. aralta
deSB>lwd
iV ' t ' il WUUnwriTu
JsL, £}«£% lvla ' uaai
w.p.
tjoots as d s b oks m> -
igzmiio
N6w g Biig- 4.
OREATEST VABIETT,
AT THE LOWEST PHIOEJ*
Heinember tiie
Wholesale and Retail.
»v HEEIOiB & WIESOW.
It wjii add yean, to her Ufe,
' WASS&