'l'ernqs.‘ The Coxmum is published every Monday morning. by Hun J. Sun”, at $1 75 per annum if paid strictly in Abuses—s 2 00 per annum if not paid in advance. No subscription discontinued, unless at tha Option of the publifiherf until all arrehrgeal are paid. ‘ ' Anvunsuzxrs inkerted at the nsunl ram. Jon Pulxnxb done with nestnesa sud dispatch. 5‘ Ornc: in South Baltimore street, nest-1y Opposite anplers’ Tinning Establishment —“Cqm-n.n anrmuflrncl" on the sign. PR®?ESSI®2§AL $311293. D. McCongmghy, TTORNEY AT LAW, (office one door welt A of Buehler’a drug and book utore,Chnm- E )erlburg street,) Arron" no Soucrron Iron Pun" AID Pnflaxon. Bounty Land War nuts. Back-my snapend’gd Claims, find all other claims against the Government nah tngmnfl). 0.; nlaoAmericnnClnimu in mud. Land Warrantslocuted and suld,or bnuzhz,nnd highest prices given. Agents enanged in lo cating wnrY-nnts in lowa, lllinms and other Western States ”Apply to him personally or by lent-r. . Gettysburg, Nov. 21,’53. ‘ Wm. A. Duncan, TTORNFY AT I.A\V.-—-—oflice in (he .\‘Grlh west: oruer oernlre Square, Grllyahurg, n. . [(lct. 3, 1559. tl‘ A. J. Cover, TTORNEY AT I.A\\',wxll promptly attend to Collection» and. nll oLhcr busint‘ss Pn tnmwl to him. Qlfim between Fnhncstocks’ and D.mner k Zieglcr's Stores, Baltimore street. Gettysburg, Pu. ‘ ISept. 5, 185% » H. A. Picking " ' TTENDS lo SURVEYING, Writing of DEEDS and' WILLS, CLERKIXG 01“ 15A ES, «to. Residence, in Struhzm tovwn‘shi‘p, on Um road lending from (h-nyshurg lo Hun lerslown, two miles from the [armor place. Ulmrges moderntc and sntiar'nclion guuruutecd. Feb. 1, 1864. 6m . ~ Edward B'. Buehler, TTORNEY AT LA W, will faithféllly and A promptly Gut-nil Lu ull husinusontrustt‘d to him. He spcukq the (h-rman Mummy-. Ullisq at the sumo: place, i‘n South-llnltimurc street, near FornPy‘s-«lrug store, and nearly oppnsfile Dunner A; Zigglcr's store. Gettysburg, March 20. . ‘ J . C. Neely, TTORXE Y .\T 3 1..\ \V.—7l’z\rlicx|lnr mm- A tion paid to cdlccliou of Pensions, hmnty,‘ and Hack-Inn}, Ulliuo in the S. .5. corner of the Dunn-uni. Gettysburg, April 6, 131:3.- if Dr. 'James Cress, CLEf‘TIC I’HYSH‘IAX, thankful for pll'h E “C patronngt‘ herewith-e taut-mind to hlm, inturxm hi‘ frimnls that he Mill continue the pmlgtice of h‘is prr)‘eisinll in Gettysburg und viqnity. “Evhutic” mum: to chunwur srlt‘ct. Hence, we Sllcrt thv Irv-It, ~zxfest and most. re liuvae renu-dit-s' t‘mm ull o'tlu-r soctafrian tum“- vvflr“ schnbl“ “hivh hue hot-n rocmmuxcmled frnm.3he expcxivncc and Sum-tinnml ‘hy the practice of the'nhlmt En-Inctic Practitioners, and discard lhuso more injugimxsl sut‘h us mf timony, nrscuic, mewury, blue p 1", blood lut tiug, &c. - ; 4 \Utfive in tlw met and (’l‘ka *treet, in the dw'elliug nwued by Ht-nr)‘ Welly. Gutyshurg, Sept. 2E, 1x63. 8m 0,.1.., .;,__.-_._.._ Dr. Wm. Taylor informs the inhnbilnnlé Inf Hottyshurg and VL— rinxt; [hut hr wull cuminue Un- practiN-pf his p‘rulphinn :nJIJI‘ 0M ~tnn'l, m'xt dour lo the (‘umpilor (HUM, (évttgslmrg, J’J. Thuukml fur lbflrl chnr‘. In: bog-x In rm-civo a Munro of. .future patronage; _ [.51 pt. 25, 1863. ll Dr. J. W. .C. O’Neal’s - FVU‘H and [fin-Hing. N. H. A‘oruer of Bal timore and ihgh \lrc('ls,lleflr l'resbylermn Church, (i_ctty‘b'xlz, I's. . ' Nov. 30, 156.). lf‘ J. LaWrence Hill, M..D. AS l|i§ oflicc um; -»~ a V I I .der wmt of the R “EST-k— -quthernn church in Clxaxnhrrngrg street. n-nd oppmile Pit-king's Stere, wh -ré those wishing to have any Dental Opern'ion [nwfori'xwd are respectful]; invited to "(allL er’hnl-I‘Y'W-ts‘ Dr}: llornr‘rY lh-v. I‘. P. Knuth. l). l) .J-lhn'. [l. L. i'hllluilt'r, U. 0., Rev Pioi‘. \l. Jacobs. .‘rof. .\l. l..Stmvcr. bellysluixr;,.\prilll,'s3. ‘ Adams County - _ ' UTI'ALHiII-IINSL'RAXFHCOMPANY.- D/I Incorpo‘mted March 18, 1551. " _ ovum-IM. Prrxirllnl—Georqo Swopc. ‘ Vin l’rui/IIIII—S. R. Russell. 'Sr‘rrtlnry—D. A. Buch‘lt-r. ' - Trvthuxrr—Dnrirl M'i‘renr’r. ’ Htmrliw (‘mmm’l/cr—llohert \[c‘CurdL Jacob King, Andrew llointzelmnn. .llnmm/erx——Georze Sworn. ID. A. Rnehlor, R. M'Cunly, Jncoh King, A. lleintzelmnn. 1).‘.\11-- Crenry, S. ’l. Russell. J-( R. Hersh. Simuel 11-lrbomw, E. G. Fuhmflstock. Wm. B. Wilaon, til. A. Picking. Wm. B. .\lcClcllnn‘ John “'Ol - R. G. .\l(:Cre.try,John Pickin :, Alli-IT. \Vright, John Cunninglmm. Abdicl F. Gilt, ', Jones [l. Harding, 3!. Eichelberger. ‘ < ”This Gomnnny is limited in its opera 'tiona tight county of Adams. It has been in success l oper-uion for more than «ix years. and in that period has paid all losses and ex penses,wilhuul any mauumnl. having also n large ' eurplns capital in the Treasury. The Com "‘ [any employs no: Agents—nil business being. done by the Managers, who are annually elect- ‘ .ed by the Stockholders. Any person desiring an Insurance can apply to any of {be above named Managers for further information. i [Q'The Executive Committee meets “Abe ‘ office -of the Company on the Last Wedfi‘efieyf i_n every month, at 2, P. M. . - 5ept.27,‘1858. .The Great Discovery- F THE AGE—lnflammatory and Chronic Rheumatism can be cured by using H. L. g! LLER'S CELEBRATED RHEUMATIC MIX ' ÜBE. Many prominent citizens of this, and “1e ndjoinifi counties, have tégtified to its §rm utility. Its success in Rheumatic affec tions, has been hitherto unparalleled by any Specific, introduced to the public. Price 50 ‘oenta per bottle. Fonsnle by all druggistsand atorekeepers. Prepared onlyby H. L. MILLER, Wholesale and‘Remil Druggist, East Berlin, Aden“; county, Pm, dealerin Drugs, Chemicals, 0m: Vngnish, Spirits, Paints, Dye-’stufl‘s, bot , (led Gila, Essences and Tinctures, Window Gil“; Perfumery, PntcutL'Meditines, &c.,‘&c. ‘ ”A? D. Buehler is the Agent in Gettys ‘nu‘g {or “ H. L. Miller’s Celebrated Rheumntic Nixmre." .\. , [June 3, 1861: tf The Grocery Sim—'9 N THE HILL—The undersigned would 0 reepecttnllyinform the citizen: 0! Gettys burg end vicinity, that he has taken the old .md “ou the Hill," in Baltimore street. Gen tylhnr'g,.where he intends to keep constamly 6n hnnd All kinds of GROCFfißS—Sugan, Gol’oes, Syrups of All kinds, abncco Fish, 3.1;, are, Earthenware of all kindsji’miu, Oimcnd in fact everything usually found ‘in n grocery. Also, FLOUR & FEED 01-‘nll hilds; All of which he intends to sell low as the low ug. Country produce taken in exchmge for food: Ind fine highest price given. He flatter: himself tint, by strict attention and an honest ' r. to please, to merits. share of public pa {gage TRY HIM. ‘J. M. ROWE. " Feb. 23, 1863. d Removals. [l‘Hlindcrsigned,being the nuthorizedperson .g, nae removals into Even Green Ceme— “ll,3o?“ munch an contemplate the removal of that-end" of deceased relatives m- gyenda. will "“1 themselves of this season oftheyeu to have it done. Removals made with promptnesa —tenna low, and no efl'ort spared to please. PETER THORN, _ Keeper of the Cemetery. » upon 12, '6O G 0 to Dr. R. HORNE-'8 Dru? Store and get hi! KEDICATKDJ'COUGH CANDY. 2' 11 By B. J. STAHLE. 46th Year- Proclamation WHEREAS the "on. Ronnnr J. FISHER, President of thg sgveralConrts OH‘mn mun Plans in the Counties composing the 19th ln~trict, and Juszice of thP Couru 0t Dyer and TL-rminrr and Ucurml Jail Dt-livpry, fur the trial ufull cnpitnl and other offenders in the mid district aud DAY]? 2139].”. and ISAAC E. W‘iznvu, Est“ Judgt-s of the Courts of (‘om hum l’leus, n_ml Junk-M M “the 00er of Dyer Ind Termiucr and General Jail. Delivrry, for the trial of all crfiiitul and other ofl'cnnlers in the County qudums—lmve iwund thrir Lire cefitflwaring date the 20th day of January, in the year ofour Loin) one thous‘nnd eight hnn -211121. and sixty~two, and to me direl-ted, for holding a Court of Common Pleas, and General Quarter, qusious of the l’cuce, and Generu‘l Jail Delivery turd Court of Uyer and Termiuer, M ’Geuysburg, on ‘llonday, the Ith day 0/ April nul— ' Naggt'r‘: IS HEREBY GIVEN tn all the Justi- s of the Pence, the Coroner and Unnatu ulcs 'within the said County. of Adams, that. the ‘u: than and there in theirproper persons, \\'itll.tlloir Rolls, llvcords, lnunisitiuns, Exam inutions, and other lit-membrane”, to do those things “'llll h to their olliccs and in that hg'lmlt nppcrtzlin to be done, and also, they who will prusocgte against the prisnnori that are or then shall he in the Jail 01' the said (fpunly .01: Adams, are to be thru and there to prosecute u‘gninstthcm as shall lm just. ' .\DAM- lllillEßT,Slncrifi'. ‘ Sheriff's ollice, hettyslnfrg,_.\lur. 'l3, '64. Jury Listhpril Term. , (gin/mo JURY. ‘ Tyrone—Henry J. Myers, (P‘prei’ndnd Andrzv'l Bream. ‘ llumiltonbun—lsanc HarneE,Jnoob L. Firor. - Huntington—Jacob Shenfl'q? (uturd—J‘nmcs Rnbin’sonr ‘ _ Hamilton—John Ru'fl'. . Reudmg.—S:lumon Jau:nh§. - Latinmre—Arnnhl Gardner. A Gerlmmy—Tfli. KTt’in. ‘ ' S\mhuu—-J Jb“ Lynch. Uninu—Jluuivl B.|sehore,sr. ‘ ' Bermqk Ip.—-Juhn Richter. . - . Gettgsburg—Pelcr She-ads. ' ‘ , .\loyntjoy—John K. Lllllé. ‘ ‘ Butler—Jonas ()ruer. " I - )lcnulleu—llm-nry Rice, Sr, (‘umherland—lsnnc Diehl. Franklin—Levi Irwin. __. ,'_ _ ‘ .\luuntplensnnt—Johu Kerrigan. licrwiuk hon—Gmrgc finvis. [ (‘onowago—hhmlom Anlabnugh. I, Lilyerly—W.‘ Shun-r. , i ‘ Freedom—Calvin Krise' _ 0mm“; Jnu'. - Geimnny—Wm. Eilltusul'Juny-s H. Colt-home. .\luunlple-unnlfiluseph Kuhn, Robert S. Lou. Stratum—Philip Donahueljphn R. Felty. ILunlllon—l'uter llalfllein'ls{J:u ob Mock. anklin—John I‘. Huf George'Lhdy. H munuton—Aln:llmm%xckcs, Eli Guchenour. (‘onuwngo—Juhn We.«vcr, Jacob Melhorn. (‘umhorlund—«luhn Marin-lg, JJL'UID “mun-r. ~ Rtuuling—Lrwii Chrouislcr, Andrew ILAmz. Uxturd—JJcoh Klunk. ' Liberty—John McKessnn. . ' llx-rnicklp.—Jaqob Hull. ; - 'l‘) rune—dunes A. Miller. .Bufler—Munin Thomas, John G. Mnery. Lmimorchoseph Fickel, Juhn Stiiw. .\lennllen—A mos Schlosgcr, Suu‘ucg‘filralt Gettysburg—Wm. H. Culp, DJVIQ Kcudlchnrt. .\louutjn) ——John Humor. -. , Ik-rwu'k hon—Francis Struhingor. ' l'niun—Dnrid Buyer, Wm. A. Young. . Fru- 'um—Sunucl Hiker. . H‘mnkuulmn—Leolmrd Kauffiqnn. : r March 21, 1864. Lc _ 5 . hi_( , ,- , . _ ..,,_____-_'-.¥. - Register’ Notice.‘ T 1 NOTICE lg hereby glim mull L‘Pgntues and other persons con cruod, that thé Ad ministrnt‘xou' Accounts hereinafter mentioned will be presented at. the Orphun‘s Court. of ’ms county, for continuation and allowance, (in .\IUXDAYhthe \lsth day of APRIL, 12164, «ft IO o'clock, A. .\l., viz: ‘24. Account of Isaac Brinkerhofi'. Ad'- nlinixll‘ulnr of Rachel Brinkerhofl“. decefl ml, settlml'by John G. Brinkerhofl‘ and Laac F. Brinkerlmfl'. Administrators of said ; lame Brinkerhofl; deceased. _ ‘5 ‘ ‘ 25. The-first and final account of Geoyzel Group, Aiministrator of the estaie of Maria. Mowerv, late of Butler township, dvc’d. ' ‘l6. Tim first. and final account of Gvorge glyup, Executor of the willpf Mary an~ ry, late of Butler township, Adams coun~ ’y, (lobased. , » - 27. The first account of Samuel Brownfi Administrator of Eliza Fried, doceued. ’4 28. The first and final account. of Amos Lofever, Administrator of mi: estatfi" oftl Joseph Dysert, late of Germany township: decqmed. 3‘ 29. The first and film! account of Jacob B. Trostle. Administrgawr of the estate ‘of Maxgurét Fidler. deceased. , 30. ,The second and final account of John Klinepeter and Frederick Klinepeter. Ad ministrato‘rs oLFredex-ick Klinepeter, de ceased. , 31. The first. and fins! account of George Holli‘nger. Adminis_trator of Michael 1101- linger. deceased. _ ‘ J 32. The account of Andrew Wilt, surviv ing Executor chine last will and testamem of Andrew Wilt; deceased. , 33. The second a‘nd final accountof Jo. seph Dysert. Executor of the last wil‘l and testament of Abraham Biehl. late of Union township. Adams county, Pm. deceased, exhibimd by Amos Lefever. Administrator of the estateof said Jose I) Dysert, damned. 34. The account ofp Michael Behder, Guardian of Jofias Eppieman, decmefi. 35. Second and final account. bf Hon. Isaac E. Wierman, dne of the Administra tors _of Daniél F ickes, deceased. . , ‘ SAMUEL LILLY, Register.’ Register”: Office, Geuysburg,} , ‘ larch M, 1864. 13¢" Assistance Needed. _ HE undersigned having heny pxyment! T coming due 'on the In of April, would' most respectfully nls]: those who nre indebted to him to call before that time and make pag- men!» Mgrch 7, 1864 Come, One and All! HE aubscrilger. having rg-openod his Sn - .100!) in the Noqh-enst earner of the Dia mond,invite| theattention‘of his friends and the public generally, to his excellent ALE, PORTER. BROWN STOUT. WINE, CHAM PAGNE, TOBACCO, SEGARS, am. He hopes, by strict attention to business and a desire tq please, to 'rgceive a. liberal share of custom. ‘ H. _W. CHRISMER, Gettysbqrg, Aug. 24, 1863. t! Fruit and Ornamental ‘ TREES FOB SPRING 1864.—We respect fully invite attention to our superior stock of FRUIT AND ORNAMENTAL TREES AND SHRUBS, for the coming season. Our “acumen is large and fine, and trees remark ablfihrifly and well grown: Catalogue! can he (Lon nppflicstion by ms“, 0: at. the ofiice of “The Compilerl“ EDW. LIVANS & 00., Feb. 8, 1564. 3111‘ York, Penn'L , c 4) A DEM©©RATU© AND 'FAMHLV J©URNAL ’ [non Inna-I.] " Son dawn the “reel the soldier] com, . Bohr: pur door may‘ll pun perculnce; ‘ ' )1, filter. do you heu- tfie drum f A And nee bnw :21ny the] ulnnc. ’ What burnings, punk men they 3;! 3 \ Whit lawn: in Win they‘ve left Mind! ‘f We country gtrlu. thnnghfimplar (at, F Among“. mam tan-bum- perhap- mfind.” \A-ycar of dreaming thin bu pan; With enrlieal turn our Row mukel— — Tho day I“ and on lbines hi Int. For uni her Kaye“ drew she takes, - All day the wAits, com-w in, gnaw om, u(lh. hear iou nut the luumru’ trad?" . Pam in (can! hur room nhnut- , At midnight nhneks, .. He‘s dead ! he‘s dad 2“ MISGET.ELLIIT. LIXC'OLN’ S [103715 7' Y :1 .\‘D (U R! CITY. fawn-me Philllpit Agnln-l Lincoln by n ‘ FNMOII Organ. We all fincnliect that wnrthy citizen of Athens who banished Aristides solely be cause it. annoyed him to hear the epithet, “the Jud.” constantly onupied with his name. We have nil bepn struck hy this strange specimgn of political lilmrty, and by the lack oijudgmont in_ the npnllmtinn. It was not became this fintlue notoriety‘ given lotne name oh figizvn of the repuh he might after a. Li me. prfi’ve (lzingernu<, nor ; became the apitlwtnt "just" was question; nblr. that} the worthy citizen ofGrvs-ce ban ished Aristidee. lle wnulii not, even dis-. cuu the. matter, the epiLhiL annnyed him, ’ anil that. was ennmzh to cistmcist- its unini tunatrbenrer.‘ In this we n‘ee an excess of' lihnrty and a lack 0? political education. Now, we are annoyed and irritntetl at hearing the worth Abraham Lincoln and honefizy alway»: coupled together; but being more generhus th:in the excellent Athenian citizen nt‘oretnitl, we propose. before ostra— (mine honest-gtbe from the White House, to coneirier his _right to the surname of “ llnnect." {l‘o call one mini hontst out of :\ populatir‘m' of thirty millions. is not so much nt‘a compliment to him aq n'snrcaim upon all the rest. ' Let us look into his hon esty and capability. Alter three years of patient silence we have n right, and it is moreover our duty, Mr Lincoln, to examine your nets and shot them to the nation.— Ynu commenced‘hy confiding the fate of our cause. the honor of our arins,_and the lives of our/90ml to men having no higher claim to such trust, than a host of voters at their command, whose support you coveted .——En order tqiadvnncor the welfare of the nation. We have allowed'you d) furtheryour po litical and personal interests, and to trans form into heroes men whoseinefliciency hits swallowed up thousands oflives andmill ions of treasure, so that you might be able to dazzle the eyes of the people wilh victories far more than real. We have permitted you to sacrifice tiled patriots, whose popu larity alarmed you and whose energy dis appmnted your calculations. ' We have allowed you to deceive the peo ple; we have let you transform disgraceful defeats into victories; and even we made‘ .150 ou’tcry when you were reduced to beg exoneratinn for acts which have eterna . ‘ disgraced the honor of ourarms. You haVe been unable either to foresee or forestall anything. What hashecome ot‘ the nntion’s enthusiasm? What have you done withi the immense resources, unprecedented in hiétnry, that the nation has lavishly given l you? i You are now a peeling to conscription. , and ,we will not eger into a discussion of the principle itself, but we will tellyou that ‘ you should have Foreseen that the day must come when you would need these men, and that. you weré to blame in not chlling for them when the people’s enthusiasm wasl firut. aroused. when tfiley certainly would, not have been rel'us you. You are to. blame, inflamuch as throuwh your incapaci ty and personal schemes, 'the necessity for such an appeal has become aquestion of public safety. 'You are to blame for de— priving us’ of the services of men who“ popularity stimulated that enthusiasm. You have told‘the country that both the rebellion and slavery were dead; you have told the people that the forces of the rebels l were reduced by deeertione, and that they could not be recruited. fed, nor clothed; and yet you are forced to act upon the do tensiVe; being threatened at all points. Whenever you have directed the notion of our troops they have been uniformly un eucceeet'ul ; yoh have perpetually offered us l the wretched spectacle of splendid resources and excellent chance: of success sacrificed ‘ to incapacity.‘ The only‘succesa which you ‘ came near attaining, but the credit ofwhich we intend to take from.you_,iia due to the incredible imaginativeness' that you have isplayed in describing facts. Changes of base, masterly retreats, and recon noissancea 3 have succeeded each other with a rapidity worthy ofxthegrenteat showman of ~modern times. The immense variety of circum stancesjs only. equaled by the identity of the results. We have: ‘ Sherman's reconnoiSsanoe. . \Smith’a rooonnoimnoe. . Thonias’ reconnaissance. , ‘ Kilpatrick’a rooonnoiuance. Gunner’s reconnoiaaance. .Seymour’s reconnaissance. ‘ ‘ Gilmore’s Charleston reconnoissance. E. B. PIGKING The result. is everywhere the some. ridicu- Xous and oxsnstrouq. The sole concession we can quake to your honesty in, that you have improved upon the change of base in 1862; you destroy fewer soldiers and burn less of the nation’s propeny. How is it, that. after three years of incom garable victories, wool-dung to Halleck’a auctions expression, ‘mnprocedpnted in the military history of unions," you are still GETTYSBURG, PA-, MONDAir, APRIL ‘lB., 1864.. IMEI lQOfifflY. THE OFFICER Before and lab, lbrkhl brunette, A eorbet plulég in hfi pine, Cried out, i' In faith. In] fits KI let, I never law 1 loveligr rice, I count her chums, I mark her we“: Yen, in A year, thin very dz, ; I II!| return I! shot and the" Permit, and cury her nay." “ All Rm' um foolish-[ween yon hard, 1 [now it. by your Cheers hug!“ bloom, And nnw without mother word . You backuurd turn into an room.“ ’ Since man. uhnne’or Ilomylweafmmy Tells u‘e'r thn wordasha thought so dear, While fér the unknown coran than A nighfly player, a nightly tear. THE TRUTH TOl4 I) [From the New York New Nation.] “nun Is nan" AND mix. rnvub." pondering how to pmserve the national Capital and your has” of operation? 'l5 it a "ward for Ruclpsuocesfi, for the achievement of such ruqults, that. you now gsk the uatmn to pms A vbte of confidence and re-eloct you for anothgrmnd perhaps mother, term? ' ~ ' “ In your inaugural address you‘givo a very striking illustration of your 'pcculfi hones ml: by 'pletlging yourself, in accord“ ce with tl9 well-known principles of the\\party - hich had elected you. not to ser’veanmhnr t rm; yau s,jxi(l“this in n. manner which one of your supporters tlien understoolkd; hut your ‘wouls Were evid'mtly «lesignpd t hear a double mgnnjjfg, so that, il'you should, find the sweets of‘ollice more enticing thang ybu possibly nhticlpnted,ybu might clm‘nge' yqur purposel without seeming to Violate ybur promisei.;Cnh"i_lnl people {will see in this n goodndairl‘ more ewdence‘of cunning than'ol’ lmnenty. . , t The w‘hole truth it; thie, ynu'lnro leading ‘ the nation quietlv to Its (lmtructmn by de- ‘ chiving the people as to the’ d'lllgfil“! which : threaten it. Ln the first part of the cum-j pnign of 1862 you gainful :ulvuutngo-s«which ‘ you were nimble to utilize or even retain in 1863. 5 ,l . ‘ You sncrifi’t} the enlirn \Veat, fur ”18‘ capture of Vlck~hurg. and than you pro— ‘ claim to the foul winds that the ){issise‘rppi is! froé, while not a ‘singlc steamboat. cwn nhvigute it witl but being attacked tu- par 1 httptburncd. 3* without every. passenger ‘ having the fear death or captivity before his eyes. l, ' ‘ l To serve the‘ ehds of your cause. you have ade a hero out of u manfiupnn whom you ll ve lavished everything, who hml every 0 stacle removed from his path, Mid who Wilts‘ promptly‘fnrniahcd with reinforce menh mnl>uplilies, while Rmecmns (-nultl got none; and who lmd smirct-ly Wen able mhold, With the immen=e remurcea; at his ‘ command, the ground which hit predeces sol‘ guinerl in with ot'you hy his' own tailepti; You have utlfu'ia'l us thv \llsll'9~alll‘; spen taele of the sacrifice of mantle caprice and personal politicallinteresta, and this in are public, in the mine and underzthe plea of popular sovereighty. . t . And to cap thé climax, you are obliged: to ‘hcnr definitioxls l.ke llll‘: .\n HYH‘l'llllll l tiouul loyal man is one who, although pol: lsiltn-fiell with 2.th mmmrvs taken by the igovernment. approves them 21111 and gives ‘ them his‘cunétunt supp'r’t‘l“ = l It seems glmojt nmvilihle. Are we in 4 Constantinople, in St: lletcrdmrg. in Rome [ol' Lin Paris? Are we thr- ift‘Scc-ntlcnts of l tlu‘fse proud Saxnustvhoiol'med to succumb t to my yoke, or the ill<-_'iuumte ofl~pring 'ol' icmidinals seeking to m‘t'lllL‘ fortune and greatnes's by a perpetud “mi-ship? .Are ,u‘e really the descendant“ of those disc-i,- . ples of Luther and Calvin. who rather tlmn rsul 'ect their r 9359” to {in authority which nth y despised, ‘pmll-rred tn expatriate , th mselves tn those‘almres, where;.through 1h agency ol'lilrcx‘ty, they funnviml our un ‘ tIDII-‘ll greatness whit-u you .H‘l‘ nmw ~trivlng _ to llt'own in a sea, of t:l:\\':lllll('l‘ and (ninth tion, corruptionuull inc-uni» tom-y? Were ouri atricestors to vxtit the tutt'llu they would ' cexitainly be surpi‘iuuluo syn-i lllml. eighty IyQ‘tlS alter the l‘t‘VtllllllUn winch with: lile . and liberty to the nation. the Lincoln party could find no other tlvllmliml ' of loyalty i lha‘n a blind submiayon to the decrees ‘ol he governmenlt. l Elm, we have 6;! multe suhmtfsion ‘xrin three yer xautf wlmi/ . lence? A , h .‘ me true radical patriot: said not long sing}, “We have lost confidence, in Fre 'mo [5. What has 'he doing or said fur a lye ' past ?" ' ~ ‘ 5 What could he do? ' Wlmt, (‘bullUlP my? ' He‘has done foryou what B gilt-r and SWI have done; what We hAvo done: he, lms lbeeh charitable enough to ‘kt't‘p sieuce, land that is more than he would lune I done. In the face of so much lnt‘wtptllllllly land corruption. patriotism uloue has kept ,‘us ilent. Each time that u frefih conces sioa. to foreign powers brought an inning nan’t‘ exclamation to our'lips, we reetrzuned [its utterance. And yet have much grief. land love. and admiration, ncwmpanicd leach hetncomb of these unknown heroei. ~mmv‘tyrs to their country‘who'have fallen. through the incompetenny and the‘ cold nnd‘_ insatiable nmhition of the \ mf-n whose mission it wais to lead our sons to l victim, but who being blinded by politicrtl con idemtions for their personal advance ; m’erlt, led them onlyato a p1011119§5 death. ‘ And you have not displayed more talent ‘ m ehergy abroad. Napoleon lifts trafupleil \ upop the right ofra friendly republic; he has ginsolently notified u; of 1; blockade of the ‘Mexican coast, and tkrgmm l/u Munroe i doctrine in our face. a 0A 3; ‘ified thia blind aim] .. uuu; (Imw years: du -7 e We have. kept Hunt—— A as more genauus tlmi si- We ask. then. who is *3.“ now in America, he who lays down he law, or he wholsubmits wthe some? hit Napoleon the 111, or the succussnr of Waghingtonj God alum, by bestowing uptm the coun try inexhaustible natural wenlch; and mm. ardejnt patriotism which makes every sol dierm hero, has savéd the country from ru in inito which your selfishness would plunge it. this is the secret of the difi'erence be tween your currepcy and that of? the Soutlh. 5 ‘ , We have been imposed upon long enough. The ruin whichnyo'u have been unnlfle to accomplish in {our years, would certainly be fully consummated were you to rhnnjn in wer iour fyenrs longgr.-—’- Your Military (fiver-now and their Provost Maqha‘is override the laws. and the echo of the armed heel rings forth as clearly now in America as in France or Austria. You have encroached upon our liberty with out hecuriug victory, and we must htve both. You have dishonored us around by shame less misrepresénmtions u to our true condi tion. Places that We occupied ll} 1862 are now ”gain in the bands of the :- ball. and God knows whether your prepara‘tiom for the npproaching campaign are adequate.— Cormption has entered into every depen ment of your administration, rendering it a very Augean stable, which needs 3 Her culbiz In your successor. It is time for the light to shine forth and for the truth to fully appear, so that all sincere patriots, all men‘who look for nothing further than the advancement of their country and of liber ty, may rally in one compact body around the great principal of liberalism, and form a liberal party really worthy of the same.— Such a. man can only save the country. Away with all the imposters who have in vaded the temple ofliberty. and turned it. into a. vote max- A. Let there be an end of this rediculou (some of unconditional loyalty, which i only fit to secure “to votes of these f ls, who instead ofdelving w the root of the mafia, blindly believe :11 .the interested falsehoods published by [journals that. are paid to nppland and sub mit. whether right or wrong. , , Mr. Lincoln's honesty is of strange de i uription. It‘conaists in nearly ruining t'hé i country \and in itiiregarding its interests in order to make sure of power for Jour years longer. To our eyes, the man who has de prived his country of: the services of l some ofits best citizens, who has been una i blo to make any better use of the inéredi l ble resources confided to him. and who. all tqr agitating so many public questions with out solving one of Uzbmydirrognrils lii< own ‘3 utter lnP-‘bpflcllyéifi, ofnll the citizens of tho Uniml Runes, the least honest and most danévrmis. . ’ l But evenif' President Lincoln were the ho est man that his paid organs represent .him 0 he..how dangerous would his rc-elec timi p ve to the liberties ofthe peoplemn‘ler existing, circumstances, surrounded us he is. Wllh in‘} military influences that he hasnt his bark! Let us remember the toachings 0 History. and the inflances ot‘ feigned orirca 'mbomlity, all of which have nunltml in (la otism. Sixtm V., the. h tlfz-‘Lllpltl monk ' 1 his cell, and Napoleon ”l. the séntish ( bimch. belong to the same srhoal. The I n who have had to erdnm thnm, elected them in unimpor tant.innlivi‘luulsflwhose c ction wouldlgivc timer for rr-flecunn 'and nsidrmtion; it. will scan bel sixteen years t t France has 'rf-tlected and pomlereil over!) lost liberty. Fearing the unknown and shri ing from the perturbatiom, inci'dentitl t chimize, they have had despotism and ruin which me lending: them inpvitubly to th most terrible of all the revelations that hi ory has hitherto recorded. ~ ~-——_— - —- STATE SOV'ERFIGNTY The Demneriuic Convention that assem bled in Philadelphiamfh the 24th ult.. to select delegates to the .\‘atinnz'il Nominating Convention. to be held in Chicago, on the 4th‘nf July next, ttrchno: a candidate fog the Presidency of the Unified Stan‘s. among other things exlvreswd in one of their reso lutions this sentiment, that “our represem tatives unite wnth therreprt-sentulives of the other sovereigntim of the North in embody ing lhe sentiment nf the‘people in a de clumlion of principles to all the Stqtrs, oln wlmm we relv to elect a President. and bring lmvk peace and union tothis distract ed i‘lnll.” _ . ~ I “The” nxpressinns are objected to by the 7m- (J'fr’lt’li'Cl' union' press. Now there is nothing more (hinge-mus to the liberties cf :1 yenplv than to lose sight ol‘nncient laud miilki: mid one of the evils‘lo be appre hendml l‘rmurthiq war is. of the tem‘porm-y ilfir'trinos of at faction becoming the con - trolling influonr‘e of the general govern ! rm-nt. .\l-nlimn. in the‘ Foderuliats says: .“13v 5 l'n'ction 'l understand a number of Cllll'fllfi. Whether amounting to a majm-iq; or . minniity of the whole. who are united and notuulml by some common iinpulse of pas sion, or of Interest, adverse to Lhr‘ ripht~ ol' 4 other cilizr-ns, or to the permanent rind ag grt‘uutt- ifilm-osts nl‘ thé community.” ‘ " It suit; the fiurpows ol: the dominant faction ntt présont in this country to uphold the ulnnlute sovereignty of the Federal ‘Gnvonnm-ng, not only (or the purpnsés of cnnquering the rebellion. hum?) stifle the exprfisinn ‘of the 'popular will in those xStates that me not in I'f-bellinn. This is zegincod daily. The gm‘ornmenb of the United States is invested by them with all the prerngutivds belonging to those goilorn mc-nti that am ruled by absolute monarchs.- . In-léetUhe oxycutu'e otl'irerg ot' the United ‘ St ites, more particularly the Uliieflixe‘cutive ' and liis'anitmt um slylequgerm the govern ‘ nwnt int-ll". This plnqes power in their : him-ls without even the rnstmints thature iexerci‘xwl in a limited- monarchy; where thevrmhl is obliged,-from tune to tune, ac 'cording- to'the popular Will, to change . ministpr‘i. There is’-a grant diflbronce he -ttseen the exprci-e of extraordinary powers in States in rebellion. and the general as ‘sumption of such powers over citizens of { Suites nnt (-in, whose citizens certainly have a right to question .the manner in which their ropresentaptivea administer the gov ernment. - Alexa‘mler Hamilton, in the Federalist, aiys: “The proposed Constitution, so iiu: irum implying an abolition of the Suite Gwernmenti. make}; them conntilptimml parts; ol‘thé National s'overoignty, hy allow ing them a direct ropresonlatiou in the Rebate, and leuvesin'uieir poseessinnl cer tuin esclmive. nnd‘ very imporlang por tions nfsuvvreign pnwers: 'l‘nis lully cor responxli, in every rationnl import of the term, with the idea. of a Federal GQVCLH ment.” - One of the attributes of sovereignty w maxning in the States ls'lhe manner ofelecb in; u Premdent of the United States.“ The penple oflhe seyeml States do not vote di rectly lOI‘ President: The States vote. The people me not even electors. They in each State choose doctors. Here then the States are egentinll’y sgvereign. There is a Wide distinction between tha‘tfiovereignty that dictates secession Md that that exer cises the right ofchoosing a President and declnfiing the principles thut should govern hii adminisuation under the Constitution. Sovereiglhy, it is universally conceded, rests originally in the people, and with us_, in the people of tho several States. and it is,tha union of these that constitutes the "Ultitéd States" or the “Union.” The sov reignues of the-North, therefore, that. i; the representatives of the sovereign p9O - 01' the several, States North, like elec tors under the Constitution, propose to [nuke a chlumlion of princi les to all the Stalemhnd by the unimi acuon of an the States, they ,hope :0 elect,_ at. the‘ .proper time, and in the proper manner. the man whom they shall choose as theix mndidnte. -—York Press. , ‘ IMMOS=TM!!! Loyalty in 1850.—0 h the first of February 1850, John P. Hale.'of New'Hampshire, presented to the United States Senate two petitions, prayinga “that Mme plan might be developed for the dissolution of the American Union." Upon I. vote being fa.- ken, the petitions were rejected by the en tire Senate, except Jno. P. Hale, of N. H., Wm. H. Seward, of N. Y., and Salmon P. Chase. of Ohio} who voted in their favor. Every member from the South voted‘againsl them. ’l’womembers oer. Lincoln’s Cabi net. and his leading friend in the Senate at the present time, were then for disunion— just as the same ”loyalists” are now. Cheap Patriotism.-—M a m'dillry post where some 8,000 new recruits have been collected, the offiper hlvmg them in charge writes that "out/bf all this number of fresh recruits not a single one can be found who was a member of a wcflléd Loyal Le no.” The officer ,therefore conclude. thahnfioyd League profession: in: very cheap patri -omm. =I fun [mun-n strum BANK! n. 'lt is well known to our readers that, among other dangerous innovations of the "administration is that of snperseding the State B'tnka by Banks of the United States ‘under theQmmediate supervision and con~ trol of the Treasury ,Depailment. This policy is not only dangerous to the purity and liberty of the country, but .when we concider that. under the net of Congress United States stocks. which .will form the banking basis. are exempt. trnme State and mum‘cian taxation, the system becomes onerous upon holders of other descriptions of property which wi‘ll.hnve to bear .the whole burden of laxnttcn. '. ' This suhjvct hm been under co‘nsideratiou in the New Yurk Legislature, and rrccntly a committee. composed we believe of three Republicans unthwo Democraté. made a unanimous report condemningthe manure as unju~t and impolitic. Whilq the *Clerk was reading the reportranal befqre‘ lm had gnne one-thi’nl way through it. the radiéals hecnine nlurmrwl, denounced the temperate arguments of the committee as trenmnable, stopped the turther reading, and attmnptod to suppre~x~ the ilocuuwnt entirely, by prg~ venting the plinting of it. In this, how cwr, they failed, as, when the vote wns called, they could muster only snme thirty or forty votes on 'tlmir side. What may eventually be'the fate‘ofthe mensureiu the Legislature, when the party screws are brought properly to. boar upon tlinse mem bers who are dispom‘d to be sensible and connormtivr‘, we do not venture to predict; but most probably the Bank policy of the adaiiniatrutinn W 1” be sustained, and the people who are not fortunate Pnough to have their property invested ingovcrnmentstocks 'ill hr”. to ho" h " ' ' Zh' '"' Nunlnn-ul, J'rmn_all‘vlvlué-mh—nce on it, "Thu dynasty of L‘urluptionisls mid Ter rorists-uh Washington prqmsq tolevers'e n“ [lns—to cloute a class more. privilpgcd main lheg‘nohihty offinglnnd or the noblcwag of ance be'alore the rf-volulinn which swept mom and their ynsscssmns nwayi—mcxliu guiah the right 9f the Slates- to rusmre the corrupt influence 0! n' Umtvd‘ Stages B-mk, with Ms evu rowel-.multiplied it. hundred fold, and “unifying into every depurbmcxit of society 11an the State. _ l “A voice is mieud by the more moderate i ‘ partiLtns of the administration against this .excess of power. But this remonstrance is drowned in the accusitiom ol"tr(:tuon. in “fronts and in denuncimli vnc. They vote-to fiuppl'P'G the report. They would TEflbO it 11 hearing. They would drawn the voice of lemon by clnntor! . . “We do not propose to enter into the dis cussion; for wn‘th us thequestion is one that no “\Ol'i‘ «(hints of discusumnatlmu n ques ‘ tioh nfprovirhng by law for piracy or forgery. But We will _quute u single punsagjflfmm the ‘ Import: - . , ‘i _ l “'h is deeply to be regrettedthqt Congress ; rims, curiied the immunity annexed to in-! ‘vestments in the stocks and securities of the l United States so fut-as to exempt them from .tnxation by or undo: Stntp ‘0! municipal authority. The primary. etfcct of thisiex ; eruption isl more particularly evidu-ntjn the i {case of c‘orporutions. The banki of this State hold Uuiimlb‘tntes stocks toan amount g far beyond their uguregute capital. r-Could I this exemptiontherot‘ure. be made operative in their Ctht‘, ll tam/d a! once rtmnvc one lum ,' (/rtd and mu: mil/10M of «101/urs from the raucli _ of Sam «ml local tumlmn. 11nd throw the accu y muluted burden ‘ upon .property in other '_fOl'nlS. Whon it is borne in mind that the Enggregate amount ol‘the nntionnldebt isl -7 ready exceérk two thousand millions of ‘ ,dollars. and that an equivalent amount of I property i-s to be withdrawn from‘taxationj, ,we can'nnt but. apprchéndfi dmautroui re suust‘o ‘.he public math and credit trout such an extension of the exemption princié ; le.’ .. l lp “it is‘for this immonse privilege ofexemp |tiom, in some countw-zvol theSn'ite amount- l ,ing‘to 4 per cent, that the consolitht'tmmsts , and ~champiom of the privileged “inks are ‘ conténdmg. The holdersol three thousand l millions of property. are by a Congressional ‘ not otiindutgence,‘made tree of- taxation, l town,city, county,SLtte and Federal. That ' privilege is said tomake udifl'erenoe between the Nationid and State Ban ks urat per cent. 'L‘his discrepancy mll grow wider every year. ‘ And the wider 'it grows the more dangerous the collision when it comes! “For the moment this question istln the ‘lmmls of our pgjit'xml oppnnent-‘z ; a portion of them struggle in avert. a gpneral calamity. They protest agiiust ulna principles, and point to the inevitable end. An‘d yet they commit themselves no (.le ehgrge and bind themselves to the car of those mm are car rying them to dgstru‘otionl They are blmder and more foohsh than We madmen who hold the rains and who drive mldly 0!]. ~ ‘ “We have no sympathy with them. No! Let Gen. Crook order out his military guard .ndarrest the “traiuorsf‘ Lettheold (cries who now constitute the soul and body of the Abolition puty, proceed With their work of consulidutiun; let them create their pnvi» legcd nobility'; let them re-elect the Golden Gulf of a United States Bank and bow down an yon-hip it. ~ ‘l‘tVa would not any this caurseof fatuity, because we do not intend to stand between it and thejudgment that is'm followl Let this folly, lnnuticism and treason pursue it: course to its end. The sooner mo betterl They who would delay ‘it by protests and advice, but postpone the day ofjustioe aid of retribution and of ultimate rectification.” XIOBII ON TEE “MB SUBJECT. 5 Since the above was wruten. the subject ‘ of taxing the capital stock .of banks opera : ling un er the act of angr‘au‘ has been be ' fore our own Legislature. * . l Yesterdny (Ramona 1 bill “to enable the banks of this oommonwealtu to become n. - TWO DOLLARS A-YEAR No_ STATE BANK! sociatiom- for can-yin on the basin.“ of banking under the it" of the United States" wunnderqonsidgrntion in'tho Home of Representatives. Amendmnnu were pmd on the Democratic side to impose nStute tax upon such banks as mny chain to unit tht-mwlvns ofthe privileges at the bill. The Abolition members. with a few honorable exceptiom, (among whom we are slid to find the Chairman of the Committee of Wnys and Mega. Mr. Bighnm, of Allo gheny.) voted pe intently against the ndop-. tion of these :mendmenta. Mr. Cochran. of Erie. during Miacunsinn which sprang up in' regard to the bill. remarked that what. the State wontd lose by the proposed exemp tion of the National Bank: from taxation. could be supplied by additional taxes levied upon cattle, homes. and other personal pro perty; thus compelling the frlnm'ng‘ inlet-rat to furnish the revenue‘hithrr‘to raised by taxhtion of tho bankfi. Messrs. Pershing. Bargnr. Rex and others on tho D'omorratic aide nbl'y nrgm-d thejustir and propriety of taxing banks. The urban Democratia' vole ofthe House was cast, in favor of the proposed taxation, whihnt I” but'uvzn of the fifty-three Abolition members voted to deprive the State at the revenue hitherto derived from taxes on hanks, and to impose the burden of raising that revenue upon the agriculturaljnterast of ”A: State. by increas ing the tax on_ “horsefi. c: [tie and other per ilonnl property." Thehnrd-workingmnaaes can novy see who are their friends and who their Shannen—Harrisburg Patriot (9 (Mon. 7th in“. 29. POLICY 03' TI!!! AIDJIIHID'I‘IIATION. ‘Hon. D. W. Vuorhees, of Indianaiin' his speech in Congrbss on the sth ind!" LEI But air, the snziilnst question embraced within the scope of my remarks "mains t 6 he answerfd M I draw thin!) to I clone;— Has the policy purring-Ll for the last three years resulted in the'formnlion of a. more pcrféct Union. I - No Language that the tongue of mnn can utterwoulgl form as txpressivehn summ to 15th a question as silent survey of the dreadful sceuevwhich lies'hnfore us: A gulf of blood a‘nd (our? and all of human agony which tho nfllictml rune of man can know thin «idea of the dread abode: of the damned, divide: the sum-ring nnd‘miura hle sections ofa once frutvrfial Ind conten ted people Statuxmon ofCllristinn faith, imhuéd wiTh the lofty spirit'of Him who gave. his» blessing to thd merciful. could again sinnn this horrid cl mam null hind to gether Lil‘s torn and bleelling ligamentn of the Unieu. But An evil istur is raging in our sky. and under its mn'lign power thg legislation ’ol' thaland wpbpars us the fren zied.) murderous, vhsjuined dreamaof 1: mm!- man in his cell. - ‘ ‘ -' a Such g‘pennlcmle as now stands in the way of the. return‘of mnn, women and chil dren ofthn South to their allegiance, has no’pnra’llel in the annulu of the human Lace. Avthousimd miles of gibbeta with Ugo dangling h’ultefnnd the‘rendy exeou~ tionerf universal‘cnnfiecation oi propeflty to the remotoa-l, period of an innoeent pos terityg. the nbwlnte extermination of a whole people and the appropriation of tho‘ defmpixlnted country'tn the unspnring (le— munds of n more than Norman conquest; the utter extinction. of every vestigo of our present form of "Government by ”States, all this and infinitely mere is contained in‘the enactments which already stain the records of American legislation. But thy need I. ‘dwell upo’n these e’viildnces of diuuniou? The grant lender of the Administration on. thlfi floor, the gentleman from Pennsylva nia (Mr. Steven!) lms deliberately here an nounced after all unncrificga. sorrqwund loss, that the Una ol'our fathers is dead. and he who attempt: it’s- resurrection in; a criminal instemloi’a patriot. Ho gobs fur ther, and admits all the needed States hhve over claimed—their nationality. They have sought in vain in. all the four quarters ol'the earth for rkcognition. They find it the hands ol'those who speak for the admin iatrntiun on this floor“ ' . ---“. ‘ V .....—.____ . ~ J 22” 'l‘he Nan Ava/1.0.11, (Fremont organ,) 1' nn :1 ticle on the relations of the press ‘3 ‘ ’ the n minidlmtion. makes the following‘ '. _ curious evelntion : ‘- “ But mt hi to‘be thought ol‘nn ndmin- ; , istrntion tht is afraid of its friends. of the presses that elped’lo put illin power? It argues someth 1;. rotten in Dempnrk. The i'aid of the sdm istrntion against the press . l of the countly w. ’not. intended so much_ i, for thodisloyuljou als M the loyal or 319-va .\ ' publican ‘ones; but 1e latter saw it. pur pose and got out of l. : Way. It um: delibe- ‘- I‘ale@,cont¢mflat;¢l at one time to pounce down _. upon cfl'lain quub/ccan in rim/.9. and to (firm! -,‘~ innilhe nationulfltrla two or t '3: of“: principal , Republican publicists «3f the co: try, if not more. , mul'tlle execution ol'thiq d- ign wan only ' (leluygd‘in waiting lm- ~publi opinion So harden sufficiently to mnko it .:I for G a administration to emer‘upon so ‘aznrdoui nu 'cxperiment. Public opinion. nwever.‘ did not rise to than pitch of indu .. ion to justify the movement, and the a‘chem weer ' fortunately for its projectors. abandon - ‘ Imleed,-p|ihilo opinion by degrees rose .. the Republican press fro'm.the dangersro .‘ flaminiaurative intolerance, find that pm: _ is beginning to iaassert its right of speech ' with decided success.” A ' The distinguishefl“Republicsn publicists” - alluded lb must have ’been Greeley, Beech- ~ . er. am! ’F‘iiwn. Cm this he the lesson why these three worthies are not. in favor of his ~ ri-nominfr‘tiun of “ 11-me-st UlLl Abe I” It .54, ‘ may 'account for the n‘nlk in that cooonnut. ‘ ' There is a .moral in this fuck, however, which tthepublican press should hdedw-‘w - Had the administration succeeded in muz- , filing the Democratic newspapers, nothing ’ ‘ under heaven-could him! saved the Repub- " ' licun press lrom lbs sainZe [aha—New or! World. 5 ‘ ' A 00ml Sléry.—Th<~re is a upon! to the slory tuld _M the expanéiq of “go deputy ‘shenfi'fl'mm New FBI-t. it 1.,” who‘nrresfied one 0 \Y. Elder, and started to lodgé Yum in lrasbfirg jail. ()n the wnv, the (again stopped at n wcH .knmvn hotel, aml lo the ctp‘ured while they imhfigml freely in the flowmg bowl. The pn-huer took tl'np. and when h woke found tholherifi" so» at. and s) w“ to lrmburg and voluntarily offered himch' In thejmloyJ who,_ however, would novmke him u. 1i: MIT: despe'rdte extremity he _docidéd to advertise for the lost ahenli‘s, which he did in a neat hmdi bl“. ‘ ~ . O'J Thdrl.—-.Tl‘mdtlvna Stevem—past coin mandarin-chief of the ahtj-masons—hero o! the “Buckshot Wax-"~the Penmylnnil insurgent—in an ~ubunim 'nud vulga- old, blmkguinl. \Vnen ha is flefeated may). men: he seeks retreat. in personalzlmpq; dancer-Baum Post. V t C;;IM=III A Ltbyrintll.—-What a firetty- Inbyruuh. our Republican friends aria getgingdigiof‘ One year ago Did Abe was “the vern menc." Now the most. radical of)“. my are laboring night and day to defeat “that. Government i” \ ‘ min a speech nude in the .U. S. Sou “. a short. tune since. Senator HOWQ cm». waded for the right. of Dulawnre t 6 lend : black man to the Senate. The Minimal!“ News thinks it. would not dewtiom my character of that Wmuch. , amt-country editin- recaind : remik‘ 16000. With a. request toyend harp-t u long as the money luiied. He in ulge‘d in' a bit. of a 3 rec, I. broke. and respectfuflyi' nnnounoedp to $l3" subscriber thn‘woorc“ ding to his own term, hi! laborimion unit can fi-The Troy Whig prpnouuces P 317103. Brownie? the mast consumate bluokgu‘ird and thegmost impinus Masphemer 6M3“ 'tojho 39:13:09 by tbe“rebollion.” Li I: 4- - - » - —< - on“ = #l3lO Nation-l 'Bmks as“; up :12 over the country. Th‘m“ guerriér, and the sooner theibufiblé mil ‘ um. . ‘ . fr. \