f :. ' A‘Zfi'erms. The Comm: in puplished every Maud” morning. by Hun J]. Sums, at $2 00 par nnnnm if pdd uric”! IN amnion—B2 50 per snuum if not. paid ‘in Idunoé.‘ No lubscription discontinued, unless u the option of the pdblhhet, until all trusts!!- ue paid. Anni-mun” inserted at the musings. Jon Bunnie done with nestneu‘ and dispatch. ‘ Omen in South Baltimore street, nearly opposite Wamplers" ‘Tinn‘mg Establishment “”00"an anmmn Omel’f on théJign. memmm MAKES» Law Partnership. A. DUNCAN & J. Il.»WlllTF.. . ' ATTORNEYS ‘AT LAW, ill promptly attend to all legni business entrusted to them, including the procuring‘of Pension], Bounty, Back Pay, Ind All other cm: against the United States Ind Sm: 4 Governmcutl. ’ , ~ Office in North Wcsf Cornet of Digmond, Getlylbnxg, Penn's. Apri13,1865. u A. J. Cover, TTORXEY AT LAW,W|II prqmptlx “tend A to Collection: and 1“ other bulineas en truuud to him. Offica between thneitockl’ Ind Dunn & Ziegler'l Slorea, Baltimore Itreat Geuysbu ,“Pn. [Sept 5, 1859. Edward B. Buehlern TTORNEY AT LAW, will fulchffilly and A promptly unend to allbna‘meu entrusted :u him. He speak! the German langunge.—- (was: at the Mme place, in South Baltimore "net, near Forney’a drug store, and flour], uppcs‘lo Dunner 1k Ziegler’s More. - Gettysburg, March 2b., ~ - J. C. :Neely, :‘ TTORNEY AT L.\W.-P«micu|:\r Mien- A tioq pni-I to collection of Penny-A, Hmnt)‘, .And Buck-pay. Office in the ‘. E. comer of the Diamond. ' oeuysburg,.‘.pril6, 1363. 11' , . D. McCQnaughy, ' Trrmxm' AT LAW, (omce one door was! A_ o! Uuehler'a drug and'book sture,Clmm _ br-rlhu'z meet”) .\'r-ronvmr nu Bowen-on you. PATEh‘Ts Axn I’ns‘smss. ficunly Land Wur hntq, H-mk-pny suqivnderl (‘l-tinm, and 'all mher rluizus nzninét 11:1.- Govvynmcnt at Wuh mg'un, D. 0.; ulsnAuu-ricnnt‘luima in Englund. I. md ‘.V.|rrnnulocxued and SuM.or houghtmnd highest prices given. Agent: rngnged in lo cnuug wxrmuts in (mm. Illinois nnd olh‘: wwsLem Stiles gay-Apply Lo hm: personal}, or ’ ~.' h-nnr. 7‘ duly-mum, Nov. 21, '53. . 9 Br. J. A. Armstrrng, AYLVE lunmml 'mm ‘u-WISMI'm, York 11 h NIH). .Illl‘ h Yin! hwy-Hui tl' “Ht“?- h an, Avlnm- LIIIIHU. ell-H .hls p «.Yewiunhl n-nic a to 1m- public (Ju!_\ 3L '1: .‘ uim Doctor 0. W. Benso‘n.’ ( VFU‘H 2n Ihr R lallftwl l'olwr. lfr‘ nl mam, _ ful‘mcv I" (n t-u -[1 s‘ by «Dr. KH'lm-I‘U ‘ . l.l'l‘L'l.!¢s'H)‘.\'\', m Jmn 19, 1315:). u‘ ‘ J. Lawrence Hill, M. D.-‘ .\8 his on“ u one : .‘\.. fif- H4loorwr~luhlze “ uw€3é ngtlu‘run clnu- h in ‘_‘” ("mm'qr-r‘hug’ >H|(",.lHld nypouh g’ikag': Mare. “-4.; n- ilwsr within; tn I..l‘v'l: uu_.‘-lh-n(nl Optl l'iu}: pu'foxlun? m: |r~ll9\ H. 211) im‘lud h: c m “Km“: «...‘-1 NH. llm‘m-x. RM: 1). l’. K.- l'\ D. D .If V. IL L. “mum-r, I), 1),, fh-v. I’m: \1 Jw u'..-'. .‘luf'. “.14. .\.‘t‘e’wr. hotly~huv‘;:, .\‘llll H. 133. ’ Dz'. D. S. Pefi'er, RHGTTS'X‘O‘A'X; .\dwnn mun'y.colx\‘rilxcx ‘& Kin: p naive nl‘Jlis yrofi-uiun in nnglt lvrvm-iwi, uu-l u‘nul] I'V'ipVC'r'luf' imm n“ I' rm“; nmi’rtod \vxth PIH‘ (1141 «muffin; dw rldH In v.l!!nnd vnuwk tum. , (ILL. 3, 18“}. ,{l' . . x V. _ Dr- J. W. U. O’Neal’s L 7 ‘ I’VI'ICE 5n 1 UWelHng_ X, E; t‘lll‘ut-l' 01 n“f 0 timnrc .lhul [lxgh’iucmg’kgfl ”W 30.“ run ( h ‘Er-}l_(2-\Xl_\'-);»xrz. p“. . ~ .\'o‘.l‘.o, 1317:. ‘u‘ fiemovals, - 7 ‘HP. underaium-‘L lmiugthv n-uihnrizrd person I {0 make rv'momls intn er (In-9n (‘.-mn— tr: x _ hopox um: mrlu .u ”:11mean (he romnvnl of flu- rcnmln; n!’ drummed ceistiu: nr ligands ‘ u ill “mil ufl'nll-QIVL‘F of (hi: smgon or (hsyvur {a bin " itflnul‘. “O‘IHKIVflI‘ mmlr u ill 4 prompt-nu; -A 'cmfs lo“, and un ML... qurml m “loam-c I'Hl'ill! 1‘”!!!in \lm" h l?‘ ‘5O KOMN-r n! lhf' Y‘l'lUP'f-rr_ Hardware and Groceries. I ‘1”: mhsrribrrs haw just rv'urm-d from ‘ [.610 mid-s win: an illlllll'nth' supply of HARDWARE & (SICUGIL'RU‘LS, “hich the: are onenng .ut thug old aLu-d 'm Bulllmnl‘fl nrwt. at prices to ~uil the huuw. Uur stmk minkh tn pan, 0! _‘ UFILDISG MATERIALS. . IZAIu'EX'I HE“ TUOLS, BLA(‘K.~'.\ill'||’S TOOl 9‘ COACH FIBDIMIS SHOE FINDINGS. ‘ CABINET MAKER'S TGOLS, BtNJSY-IKEEPKIL‘S FIXI‘URES. - ' ALL ~KINDS OF IRON. kc. GROCEBIES OF) ALL KINDS, DILS, PAINTS, kc., Ac. “Flu-1c is no inicle mclddtd in the levepd dfgrlme'nta mentioned übove but what can 11; ‘nd at.’this Store.— kvvxy dam of Mecbnmita 4.15.5129 .u-zowmodnfed here with 1.601: and findinggud HtuthCEpt rs .. can find every article in their fine. _ine u: a cull, n we are prop-Ind to sell usiow for cnlh u my home out of the city. JOEL B. DAKNER, ‘. - DAVID ZIEGLEB. Gettysburg, Mn 16. 1864. § Grain and Produce., - AVX-XG taken the lugtandkomzncdions H Warehouse recently occupied by Frsnk flersh,Bsq., ' . ‘ IN NEW OXFORD, . No In prep'arsd to pay the highest. pdces far -511 kind: of PRODUCE. Also, sell at the low; 4m pricel, LUSIBER, COAL and GROCETUES, 310 p!) description. , ~ ' A.: P. MYERS & ‘WIERMA X. New Oxford, Aug. )0, 1863. If The Great Discovery F {l‘BB AGE.—lnfla.mmnmry end Chronic Rhenmntiam can be cured by will! H- L. 51 LLER’S CELEBRATED RHEUMATIC XIX— TUBE. Many prominent citizens of this, Mid the adjoining counxies, have testified to its grant utility. In success in Rheumatic acac tlonu, he been hitherto unparalleled by any upecific, intrqduced to the public. Price 50 cents per bottle. For sale by all druggists and Itorekeopere. {repel-pd only by H. L. MILLER, .Wholeulo an Reinil Druggiat, East Berlin, 'Adnine canny, Pm, dealer in Drugs, Chemicals, Dill, Vanish, Spirits" Pnints, Dye-stalls, bot tled Oils, Essence! and Tinctures, Whflow Gltu, Pei-(ninety, Burnt Medicinal, Ac" kc. ‘fi'A. D. Enabler is the Agent in Getty:- lntg for “ H. L. Miller's Celebrated Rheumatic Nix are." [June a, 1861-. tf Young M 93 ND OLD HEN, do no‘ gnaw your number: ’A gm} yqqg wives m mar out their precious m- 0"! tbs old Wash-tub longer, but. like W ben and banefnctou, present. them with n' EXCELSIOR WASHER; sud Instead of flown and cross vordr on wash dam, depend 1190!! it. gheerful {pm will greet you. TYSON BROTHERS, Genylbnrg, PI. nun. n, 1863. “ Rattle-field wows. PULL get 0! our Phommphic View: of the Battle-Eds! of Gettphmg, form I .15 m for the Holi§tye.~ The finest yet P 3 «Kym-be seen um. Excelsior Gallery. ‘. TYSON BROTHERS, Gottyubm. ‘ “airbag con swab, 85:61“; % mm, r 9: «1m Dr. noun-a Br H. J. S’I‘AHLE. 47th- Year- umberland Coal! A LARGE lupply chapel-int ’BLAcKssnTn 00.31., now on hand It reduced price. Thin 00:1 in Inperior to I" other: Cod-in the United States for welding and other blukunlth‘ purpose! TE): lilo by' (My Coal Yud, Frederick city, Md Jana 19, ”65. U" Hay and Grain ANTED.—The nubnrriber continues to buy HAY and GRAIN ‘of all kinda, a\ Grnuile Su-tinn.‘ ‘ {Q’Ho‘ «Iro sens, at 1.11,; lowest fuel, SALT, “:11, GUANUS, (kc. ' ' ‘- July 17, 1865. 3m” Cannon’s ' f 1 DIARBLE wonxs, South-em Com: 0! the- Din-90nd and mm more shat-t, ucmly opposite the Stnrofl‘ke, u l-JTT\'SBlf-RG4‘PA. : Exgry description of workvexecutod in the hnt'sl My): of the an. April 17, 18653 If Piano Fortes.- < HARLES .\l. STIEFF, unrucrcu’n or “HAND AF!) SQVAIXE'PIANO FORTES, MnnuW-loryJOf‘. 105 k "T Prunkljn street, “'mexoom, .\'Q. 7 Nulth Li'm-rty Ilreeti f'uuslt'nlly a. Mme number 01' PIANOS of "134 mm Manufacture on hmul,‘ With the Full [run Frume and Over-mung, Emry hub?- mem warumed {or (he ycairs, “am the mi i legc of‘J-u-hzuue~ within twelve months if not rmirvly ufisfauory: Ez-E'ZSe'cmulend Piunos always on hand at prives from 5&0 tr» $2OO. ‘ [Lulliumxc, Sept. 5,‘ 1864. 13' 3121* l'iarps ! UNIS E—The nnduraigned wouk‘l respect- P fully infurm the puhfic‘thut he can furuiph Hymns m‘ the follnwihg manuhcturorl, or :huSv n! ozlur make, it dvsired, at the lowest 1»o~.~1Mc-priv1-s: ‘ - ' < ('m: Klimxr; s SONS. .IYM‘KER Buns. _‘ . “.\ZIJITON BROS. ' q ‘ MIXES mos. ‘ (up STECK. ' ‘ “A. II mum: x m. ‘ ; srxusWAGk suxs. fi—y‘l’nrliculax attunliun is given m the 12- la! ml of Pianos: und when 30 selected, in ad ‘lian tn 1.1.9 unmuf. mun-rs" guarantee, the Pianos are guaranteed by HM. ' s|.\.\s(L\' a: mum: (‘.H'INET URG.\.\S A’XD MELODMNS The re: en! impruvuneuzs in these instru ment; nré such as to fully warrant suyiugthey un- FAR SUPERIOR to any other mukeL. One oflhe best c’videncos o! ll‘eir 'merit is, (hut U!" ir improvements n_:e imihted by other mulmrs. Tlll9 new style: four Mop organ, have n Sub-Ban and Octave Coupler, making it. an instrument Hpecinlly ndnpttd to Church and Subbmh Srhml purpnm. ' - DESCRIPTIVE CIRCULARS “m 1 9 sum hy‘u'r-il :9 persons desiring thnn. Pianos rum-d rvguhuly. Pianos mkvn in ex chx-nge. \ ' PETER BENTZ, e .\'o. 30 f: I.“ Mirket St., York, [’ll. Junt- I‘3, 1.163., Gm Fresh Confectionery AND WE UREA)! SALOON. v ‘ ‘ 'Hy' snhsvznber :especflull; inlorms that citi zens of Bytzyehurg and \ic'mily that. be bus I ('oan ain'ner'.’ E~tnbli~hmong one door can of Hie l-‘agle Hun-l, on Chumbershnrg .sueet, to which he would im'ne then-r attention. Cans, Candies, and every deacgiption of Conflctlonu, together with Nata, Oranges, and all kinds '0! fruits, always on hand. Punk-s. fiublic and private, as well an famio iii-p, will be furnished with all kinds of Cakel, Ice Cream, (in pyramidal turm or otherwise.) and olLer x-rfreehmeuta At theér homes, upon short. notice. ' . - ' Hurjng apem (Hire-time at the bnliness, he flute-rs hmself that he undersmhds it had that ho ii able to render entire satisfaction. (‘an and see his Confectionery. April‘jfl, 1865. -tf JOHN GRUEL 'R. P. Bayley 8: CO., . Emma IN ‘ CHINA, GLASS & QUEENSWARE, PLATED WARE, “.\'E CUTLERY. . . CASTORS, 810., No. 6 Union: Sun-r, Nun BAL-nuonz Sn, , . ' mammona, Mb. , GLASSWARE :-—Tumbleu, Gobleu, Wines, Lagers, Flasks, Btk. Boulez, Candy Jug, De cnuten, Pres. Dishes, Fruit Bowls, Suns. UB5- tors, Cantor Boulea,.Ker. Lamps, Ker. Chim n:yl,Lanterne. Bc. QI'EENSWARE :—Pls¢cs, Flu Dishes, I)er do., Gavel-ed do.. Covered Butters, Tea Pou, Sugar}, Creams, Bowls, Pitchers, Chambers, Basins and Pitchérs, Hugs; Spiuoous, Tea Sets. Toils-t Sm, kc. » - ' CO”. STDHEWARE :——Jugs, Jars, Pibéhen, Milk Pins, &c. [May 1, 1865. 13* .I. K. Staufler, q ATCIIMAKEB & JEWELER, NO. N 8 ‘V North SECOND Street, corner of Quarry, PHILADEL-& PHIA. ' An assortment of ~ WATCHES, JEWELRY, SILVER & PLATED WAKE, constantly on hand, SUITABLE FUR HOLIDAY PRESENTS! fi'Repnix-ing of Watch}: ‘pnd Jewelry promptly attended to. x 3‘ Due. 12, 1864. 1y ‘ ' Hanover 13. Railroad. RANGE OF TIHEY—On and after Turn -0 day, November Ist, 1864,1‘nins on this Bond will run‘u follows: FIRST TRAIN will leave Banner up 8.15 A. IL, for Baltimore and intermediuta stations. SECOND TRAIN will leave at. 10, A. LL, for York, Harrisburg, Columbia, Philadelphia. and the North and West. _ THIRD TRAIN will leave u 2.25, P. l, for Baltimore. Passengers for York sud Emis burg by thin train will be deluyed an hour. at the J" ncfion.‘ D. E. TRONS, flaunt“, Nov. 4, 1865. Agent, . . Pictures! Pictures! EV! KEEPER having pnrchued Samuel L aunt’s PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY, is 13:6de execute work in bi: line equal to‘ any esublishpent in the Sula. If you desire p good likgnm, finished according t 9 {helmcat improyemenu in the at, call at the shore lona-enubliahpd Gsllery, in West. Middle meet. Guiyabmg. [Jam 9, 1866. CA 30 PBOJ‘OGRAPHS of dbflnnhl-ofiindividult, including a num ber ofmir premiums Genet-111. gun the old into John L. Bum. for ale It the connin- a! 1!». heel-tor G 911”), 6.9!”:th ' - TXWX OTRERS. A DEM©©RATU© AND FAMHLV S©URNAL Bpuk thou tho mm. Lot nth-n You" And trim unh- word; fur pray; In pin-n! nunahlno or preum lat atbon but unit (by. Gun! thou tho (net, though cloud: I: nlxhi Don on the nut: (on: Itoop ; noun mg Maw-c no. mo. hm'. «a.» Born. (ruin: the. by tho]: stoop. ‘1 P. 11. run, \ he. than a:- wind. Though nan min { 111-haunt to mac, ' l W. "r. not and. b In. Ind dream ; ‘ The lgfo Inn-t flu! be Mod. E - l mm God bu ut hil thorn- übont, [ I Cry not, “Tho I"in phin 3" Bi- pun: yltbin for thou without XI [and with tail |_nd pain \Ono fragment of bl: ble-Md word ‘ ~{lnto thy upiril b51106], II boner [lnn tho wholn,_hn)!bwd AND; their [ltcrnu turned. PHILIP BANK Show the: :h- light. If consume. 3km 80: no: t!!!\ bush! down, I'm mllut mark my and It: bun: 0’" haul-I, taller and to". Won, 'O. to him oii‘ufoty but, Who enophm ago from youth, rum to pup bu moviwgm, Beam. )1. (can Ih. lrnth' Bo try. to any imam! thought. A And In thy thought. thy lpeecb; Wm than has: nqthy waning bought, 1 Pro-lune than noun teach. ‘ Hold on, hold nn—thßl has! tho rock , Tb. loot u" ‘on thy nu; ‘ Tho flrst‘world taupe-PI mlhlou shock Senna” tlneigsbimng “null While much wiliguu the mint dull clan, _‘ We now no darkly through, And Justified In last, first. » Tho true in H .. mt‘s lrna. , 'H ’ 0 ~ In All the Year Rtundis Hm bit ofgosslp about the German toy maker-=2 In Germany the wood-work, so far as English iip'pmters know shy-thing of n, is mostly in the form of small (rinks-ha and toys for children. TnP prutlur-linn at those is immeme. In the Tyre“. and near the Thurlngiau Forest. in the mid-ll: Stntos of the ill-orgimizvd confedernu‘. and wherever forests abound, lllt‘lc llm murmur; spend much of their time in making top. In the Tyrol. for éxample. luQi‘P lh‘ :1 Valley called theGro-lnerthat. about (wrmy mile; long. in which the rough chm nu: .md bat.- ren sou Will not sulli-u-I to grow corn fur the inhabitants. win are rzlliwr numerous. Shut mi: from the Bgl'lx‘llllurill lanr custo~ mar-y in other (llill‘xcls, the movie earn their head, chic-fly by wool curving. They make toys of nu u‘Wlltf-in' klmh (in which Noah’s Axk :rn male are very pre~ dominant) of the soft uuml of' the Szberian pine—known to the German: as zicbelnuss kiefer. "The tree is at slow growth, found on the higher slows of the vallgy, but now becoming scarce, owing to [Le improvinlence oi the peasants in culling down the for 9.1. without saving or planting Olllk‘l: to succend them. For a hundnd yum and more the peasants have been éJIVPI‘S.‘ Nearly etery cottage is a workshop. All the occupants, male and female, down to Very young chil ,dren, seat themselves round umblv,zmd inahion their little bus of wood. They use twenty or thirty diil Icut kinds 0! tools, under the magic ofwhich the wand is trans ‘l'ormed into a dog, a hon, a mun. or what not.. Agents represent those carvers lii variom cities- of Europe. to dispose ol the wares. ' ‘ , The sons of farmers commonly think their lot a hard one. Unlike most city oaths. they are compelled to perform dni~ _fy toil. ’l’heirJife is not oné of constant amusement. ‘They cannot see and hear as much u their.city cousins. They do not dressk in as fine 0 othes; cannot treat and be treated at the popular ulo‘ons, or visit the costly gambling reports which abound in every city. Some of them feel thattheir lot is indeed a hard one. and their highest ambition is to go to the any and see "all the sights." But let us talk to our farmers’ boys. You are in the right plaoe. You _are learning habits of industry and fiugnlity. By your daily toil you are acquiring a. sound conni tution—n most important matter; and this is one of the reasons that most of our great men have come from farmers’ boys. They have grown up robust, with constitutions that could endure a. great amount of men tal labor, which youths frnm the city, with weak and ieeble frames.;eould not stand. If you cannot see in: much as city youths. neither are you exposed to the vices and temptations of city life. which prove the destruction ol nearly ail who nre_nised in the city. . You are on the right track—ego ahead. Resolve to form no bad habits. Indulge in no intoxicating drinks; if you form a. love for them it in alum» impossible to subdue it. Do no! “quite the habit. of smoking or chewing tobacco, or taking snuff. Read good books ; let no opportuni ty for improvement. pass awa’y’neglecled, and you will grow up useful and intelli gent men. . ‘ ’ . firNo man ever felt anything but irri tation at seeing a woman's gown doing the business of the crossing-sweeper. or attach ed any value to the amount of open work displayed benelth a looped-up skirt. 1f young ladies would but believe it—or rather, perhaps, if they did but attach any impor tance to it when they do believe it—e man will be perfectly satisfied with their appear ance, so far as these considerations are con cerned, if their petticoats are spotlessly clean and their stockings guiltleu of a wrinkle, We do not say that even these chmcteristiee_are to be attained-without some expenditure of money -, for cleanli ness, at. least in I\ew York, is not it cheap virtue, and it is not every dress-maker who knows how to make a dress. But, at any rate, the proposed standard is a good deal easierof attainment than the spurious fine ladyiflm after which So many women toil in, vain; and we cannot but believe that, if girls did but think more of pleasing/the other'sex and less of vying with their own, their parents wOuhl lee reason to bless the change the next time they came who}; over their miliiner's bin—Ex. . fl'ln Cincinnati. on the 4th. a live lion 3n: uniqd around in the procession. .He waved way gnd got. into the crowd, cm :an your consternation ; but- bo was soon tee-maxed by his keep», - w ;- -GETT‘YSBURG, PA“, MONDAY, AQG- 14., 1,865- PIETRY. HE JUST AND FELIX NOT. TOY-MAKING IN GERMAN Y. FARMERS’ SONS “um: x; {mm an mu. tuna.” 1— 0E CREAM. I do not progmae‘to give instructions in ice cream mn ing, for I know but little About it. But *I can tell oftwo ice cream tell: shat. I saw efl'ected not live yards from our door the other day when the thermom eter stood at 95} in the shade. ' Johannes Jaguez, who drives his locomo tive ice cream concern past, our way. right out into Jersey somewhere every day. hill got a voice like a high-presume steamboat. If Johannes had been commander of the Army of the Po'omtc. and knew how to do the thing, and could have 'spoken len con leoutive words of intelligible English. he could have displayed the ’column and 10m:- ed the line ofbattle oLlhe whole army Mil:- out aumul-decamp. He could have made everybody hear him easy. ‘ ~ Well, Johannes was dragging out. through the sand at high, acorching noon, roaring with all his monstrous might. of lungs— “lscream! I scum: !" "Wall 1'“ be dad dmgged of I don’t think you do xcream, mister." wiihquizvd a rural sample ofJersey Tron: nwfiy in yonder, who was resting his panting nagvuuder one of the maple: in from. of our: house. Along came Johannes, bellmving his 1- xremn twice at every revolution of his wa gon~wheeL I brought the Teuton to a bait and purchased a quart; of the frozen fluld, Jersey got a View ol'it, and opened his eyes very wide. "filmy—what d'ye call that are yaller whitestufl?" ' "I—m-eam!" went off Dutchmug, wimh _a roar that. stnl Led Jersey balf‘out of his boots. - “Thundernnd hoop-snakes! I know you scream like a” posseswd. But I wanted to know [hp name of that, are stuff!" I explained —"Xoe Gleam.” - "Thank )9, murm. Ls it good ter eat raw 1" “ob. yes—mi». T: y a spnouful. sir.” ‘ Jersey opened his mouth {iko n four horse : cornsheiL-r, und 1 uhLbed into the chasm ? u. heaped up ppmnful 0| cream. His eyes 9 snapped. he bumped up his back iikP. and 3 then sxftor mvullowing two or three tlmoB,\! Ire sung nul— ! "01:.Jeux ny ! but that nreis good! How d’ye sell her, mMm 1'" 7 “DI-re quullfl' dollars a quard,” Dutch-J man‘fiflill. ' I “f‘€_uiu=-. thn’! are“; profly steep up—but I reckon I mum have n m» for the 0“ was ? mun amnl Lu!» They 11mm seed u'o .«n-h ' :lufl'. lel 13 keep. Inn-191‘?" " "Year. I! keep. gm)! usn never was." ' “\VPH, Lg n" us two quanta." Jar-n y got’ «basket (:ul ut'hié wagon. ,"lel it lump : in thus 1“" - A "O‘v, _vma, i! gheps Monter.” ,' Sn Jory-9y gm h'u tam quarts of ice cream in his Lupin-L. whwh he hung up undu- the black cover at his wagon. where it wne sev eral degrees (mun than an oven'ought to be. Johannes tank his $1.50, and,went on roarmg “way—“_l acre-um?" while Jer sey—well n the “‘old woman," or gals eith er. sees any of mm bnskpt, of ice cream, more than the basket, 1 shall purchase Jersey’s secret‘for keeping the material. HOW BEACON WHITE COURTED THE - WIDOW. . . - The Dmonn’: wagon stoppvd ‘one mom ing belon- \\'ldow Jones' dour, and he gave the usual munuy rign, that ,he \wnnted Fomcborly in the house.-.hy dropping the reins and aiming double with [m elbows on his kneel. 0.11. tripped [he wulow. lively as a cricket. will a u-9mendous black nu bon on hvr’mnw-nhite cap. "Good morn ing,” was mud by both =irles, and the widow muted fur what was fun Lher lo be said. ‘ "We”, Ma'nm Junes, perhaps you don’t want. to 59“ one of your cows, now, for nothing, any way. do you 7" ‘ ~ “Well. tin-re, Mister Smith, you .cnuldn’t have spoken my mind belt". A poor lone woman like me does not kn w what. to do with so many creturs, and] 3mm be glad to trade if we can fix it.” So they adjourned to the meadow. Dea con_ Smith looked‘ at Roan—men at the widow—at. Brindle—Vilma at the widow—4n the Downing cow—t hen at. the widow again -—and'so through the whole forty. ,The same call was made every day for a. week, but the deacon could not decide which cow Ire wanted. At length, on S.”- urday, when the widow Jones was in 21 bur ry to get thruugh her baking for Sunday. and had “ever somuch to do in the‘ house,” 88 all {armers’ wives nnd widows have on Saturday, she was a little imp-menu Dew con Smith was irresolute as ever: “That 'ere Downing cow is a pretty fair cretur," said he. “‘but"—h'e stopped to glance at the wldow‘u face. and then walk ed around her-«not. the Widow, but the cow. “The Downing cow I knew before the late Mr. Jones bought her." Here hesigh ed at the amnion to the late M‘r. Jones: aha sighed, and both looked at are!) other. It. was a highly intervsting moment. "Old Roan in a fini'hful old chh, and no is Brindle-'—bul I have known patter." A long lure succeeded his speech—The pulse w:- getting awkward—and a! but Mrs. J ongp broke out. “Lord! Mr. Smith, if I'm gheeow you want, do say so 2” . The intention: of the Deacon and~the widow were published the ngxt day” A SERIOUS QUESTION. At the close of a lecture on phyainlqu before an evening school not. long since. the lecturer remarked tlul any one was at. liberty to is): quedtions upon the subject. and he would answer them as fur as able. A young lady with much apparent sinceri ty remarked that she, had a guestlbn to ask. thbngh she ‘wau not certain that it. was a proper question—she would, howev‘r, ven ture to ask it. It was as follows: ' 'lf one hen )nyn an egg. and another as}: on it Ind ”hatches out a. chicken, which hen is mother of the chicken 1'" The lecturer said : ' ‘ ‘ “I will answer you in Ymkeé style by asking you a qugstion: Ifn Little, pretty. white. genteel. natifie p‘ulm, sits on an egg of Oriental extraction. and hatches a great homely. splinter-shank“, slab aided. awk~ ward-gained Shanghai, would you. if you were a puHet, own me great. homely. mon ster ?” \ ‘ “No. I wouldn't.” mid the Indy. “Very well,” said the lecturer, “that aet~ Has the question. for it is a principle: in physiology that hens think and act alike 111 all essential particulars." le-The hora} keepers a: Boston hqu agreed to reduce their rates qf charges fifty Icem- u dly. ‘ ' - “no firm in London dartin- tothe unonnl. of wow pet wanna All the Men ht. maximal; rich” THE MILITARY TROUBLES IN _ CHARLESTON. We have been shown a letter from a mem ber of the One Hundred and Sixty-fifth regiment to his brother in this city, giving an account at the recent difficulties result ing in the regiment being placed under ar rest *in. Fort Pulaski. It appears that a slight breach of disciplini was committed by flow of the members while at Savannah, in refusing to “dress up" in the line with negro troops; but it is strongly affirmed that this conduct‘was strongly disapproved by the body of the regiment. who disliked toeserve with negro troops, but valued their reputation as soldiers to do their duty as such under all circumstances. On going to Charleston, they took the place of the Une‘ Hundred and Twenty-seventh regiment. between whom and the iiegrees there had benn a warm’ feud. The One Hundred and Sixty-fifth was detailed to act as provost guard in u porti n of Charleston. and endeavored to perfd‘ the duty of a guard in the preseivation of peace, while the negroes, acting as guards in another part of the city. behaved. with the most reckless violence to the citizens, and in sulted the‘wliite soldiers and even the ofii~ cers, while their own oflicers appeared to be either afraid or unable tacontrol them. Thrmts and fears of arising on the fourth of July. led to the stoppage of a large num ber of blacks who were flocking in from the country, it was supposed to take part in the projected insurrection, and the One Hun :dred and Sixty-fifth, in executing this task, increased the hostility and insolence of the negro troops toward them. Fights were constantly taking place, both day and night, the negroes being invariably the aggressm's. This state ofafluiis culminated-in an attack on one of the men of the One Hundred and Sixty-fifth, who was standing guard in the market, and who was beaten nearly to death by an armed party of negro soldiers, who afterwards commenced an indiscriminate attack on the mniket people, principally women, several of whom were killed. A party of the One Hundred and Sixty-fifth Went ,to the rescue, put the negroes to light. and, our letter says, “made some of them bite the dust." The. next day the regiment was ordered to Morris Island by General Hitch, and ‘the day after a pereon wns sent to demand its colors. Grieved and indignant, the colonel; supported by the senimientpi‘ his regiment, refused to give them up. except upon more explicit orders. Gen. Hatch then came hnd demanded the colors in person, when they were delivered up, but subsequently found to consist of the bare poles only, some of the color gum-d, it is supposed, having abstracted the colors on their way to the boat, ‘the regiment, h6wever, knowing nothing about this until the following day, when the order came to disuim and send it to Fort Pulaski. Some of its field and stuff officers, the letter says, are confined in the city jails, and guarded by negreoffic'ers; and the whole proceed ing is warmly alleged to be the: Work of ueg’rolworshiping generals, who were de~ termined to make mntineers of the One Hundred and-Sixty-fifth, il possible, and to punish it as such at all events, with or without provocatiou.— World. ’ WEBSTER 0N STATES RIGHTS Here is an exlract {ram :1 speech of Dm iel Webster, in 1840, ten years beiore he began to incur the malediclions of the Abo 'lilinnisls: J “I may differ from you in some thingn. but I m“ here any that. as m the docmne of state righta. "-1 hold by Mr. Madison in his last days, 1 do not know that we (”391‘ at. all ; yet 1 am one. and among the fore~ moat. to hold thnt it is indispensable to the prosperity ol'these governments to preserve. and that he is no true friend to either who does not. labor to preserve a. true distinction between both. , “We may not all see the line which di. vides them all; biit all honest men know that there is a line. andfihey all fear to go ‘ either on the one or the Other side. of it.—- It is this balance between the general and the state governments which has preserved the country in unexampled prosperity lor fifty years; and the destruction of thiajust balance will be the destruction of our gov ernment. What I believe to be the doctrine of state rights I halt; us firmly as any man. DC) I not belong to a state? and any I not say, to a state Much has done somAthing to give herself renown, and to her saris some little share of participated distinction ? I say again. that the upholding of state rights. on the one hand. and of tbejuat. powers of Congress, on the other, is indispensable to the preservation oi our free republican gov ernment." ’ HOW THEY TALK. , An exchange says 'that at the late Boston Abolition League meeting, ex-Judge Kelley, of Philadelphiw— . ‘ “Gave notice. that the (Jack (map: mull) (mum! to no all.” term: than that they? their wives and children.should be on an equaliv ty with the whites.and would not lny dowu their Irma and let the country violate ew ry doctrine of the Declaration of Indepen dence. and every principle that. undenie: American institutions.” He declared "that thera‘ shall be no political pm: hplil it can be made on such term: as will place the ne gro on an equality with tile white‘man." Judge Kelley, who utter this lannuage, 'ia a leading Republican Philadelphia. representing that. party in grass. “Out of the fullness o the heart. the mouth opeaketh.” BARBIE KNEW YOU l A maiden lady, residing in great seclu sion. had not been to church for several years: but. on the accession of a amll ‘ property, she bought hem“ anew bonnet, ’shawl. and dress, with the appmpriate 1 gloves, boots, ‘50., and appea’red nn the fol- Jowing Sabbath in, a :ler which almost destroyed her identity vmb the hitherbo ‘ shabby and hoopla: old maid. ‘ Just. as aim was walking up the aisle, and u every eye loomed to be turned upon 'hen the choir commenced singing an an ’them. the burden 'af which was “Hallelu— jahl Hallelujah 7" The indignant spinster 'retraced hei- step. down the ainle‘in high l dungeon, exchiming s "Hardly knew you,” indeed! Why, ‘ this is not the first time I’ve been dressed E up. “_Hardly knew you !” I guess I dOn’t . come here again noon! Impmuz Drain-«A policemn in Bafi‘a la has been fined five dollars for forcing I gentleman in 3 mm railroad cfir to none big new in favorof a lady. The Judge held um ladies—dud no more legal rights mun gentlemen, Ind that yielding 0! seats to the forum WIS simply nu act. of courtesy, which, homukod, ladie- very seldom appreciate. -' two DOLLARS A-YEAR THE RADICAL PROGRAMME. A NEW SOURCE OF REVOLUTION There is no mistaking the bitter hostility of the radicals to the resumption ofpeace in the South and the return of those States to their pristine condition as members of the old sisterhood. Neither is there any possibility of Overlooking the four that President Johnson ’s Policy—“experiment” as they call it—is gall and wormwood to those intolerant, grasping and ambitious demagogues. If they cannot succeed. says the Patriot &‘ Union, in indbcing or forcing the President to change his programme of restoration for one of reconstruction—— which consists in disfranchisement ol' the flicks—they will lay every obstacle within their reach in his way. They will continue to carry on the irritating process, so well and so long known to them; and, by the most base and insidious means, will keep alive animosity and hate between the two sections so l ng as their hot and fetid breaths may hold out to blow the infernal flrmes. Mr. Johnson, having already des ignated his policy and sppointed provision~ al governors for the Southern States, has. so far, thrown the radicals upon their backs, and forced them is on a new tack. They have no hope at ali‘now of a single menl~ ber of Congress being sent from the South as a negro representative or convert to the doctrine ofvnegro sufi‘rnge and Abolition sn prernacy and absorption of the offices and spoils. Hence their plan is to tear down; to deny to‘the'Sonthern Statsga Con gres sional reprsentstion, by refusi g to admit. as Senators and Representatives all those members who shall not come pledged to the radical dogmas. That there is ulready a conspiracy on foot among the radicals to al lem pt this nefarious scheme there can be no doubt. Every day new proof of the pro gramme is coming to light. We will refer to a few of these proofs. In a late issue of the Anti-Slavery Standard is? a. letter frOm Wendell Phillips, enclming another from “an active and vigilant friend" oi Phillips. The friend says : , , "President, Johnson is rapidly issuing proclamations for the reorganization of the l'ebei States. The governors appointed ore old politicians, who know all the ropes—— l-i it not their design, and will they not be able beioré‘ue‘xt December to make all their new constitutions and ‘élect new governors and full congressional delegations? Then what is to prevent those States from pre senting themselves, fully accredited, on the floor of the new Congress. and partici pating in the organization. They will~claim as President Johnson does, that. their States have never been out of the Union ; that the Government declares (as it will) the rebel lion suspended and military occupation ’withdrawn, and that they now resume their relations with the Federal Government, which have been only temporally suspend ed. In this claim they wrll be backed by the whole powerof the administration, and this is the trap to be sprung on us. The Clerk of the House. you remember. presides until anew speaker is elected. I! he had firmness enough to refuse to receive the credentiali- 05 those rebel members. and to refuse to count their votes, this danger might be’ averted. But can we count on so much virtue” in any politician? We may per/lap: bafic {his plan in (Ire Senate. That body being always organized, no members can he admitted without the concurrence of the rest. But how long would even the Senate stand up against the action of the House , of Representatives and enormous pressure of every k'uid '3 I believe that this attempt will be made at the next meeting oi Congress. Possibly South Carolina might be kept out, but even that is doubtful. I may exaggerste the importance of this “mat ter. but that the attempt will be made there can be no doubt.” r a How excedingly arixioui this‘aclive and “vigilant lriend" seems lo be m pravbnt the Southern Smtesjrom lgetring buck info the’ Union and securing their proper commu tionnl representatiori in Congress! How fearlul he is that “the whole power of the Administration” will ‘be used to negure {or (hose, States a Republican form of Govern ment. by being allowed their proper usilion in the Union l “Possibly South garolina might be kept out.” lbul. in this even he is in perplexing doubt. l “(are Lhis “attempt" to gel. imo the Union the runkest treason. this “friend" of Phillips could express no more harrowing nollcitnde at llm gloomy prospect. In reply minis “friend,” Phillips writes an follows : ‘ ’ f "The importance of this euggeetion can not be over estimated, and every means nhduld be taken to event this peril. We have been countln on the possilfility’ of rallying a muj irityghf the legmlly elected membiers from the rebel SLBIeB out of Con gresa,‘nt least till they consented to certain conditions—«rallying, the“ enti-elaivery a~ mendmont and other matters. Some san guine friends (when they can be .lwpt out 'unhl they agree to gjce the rlrgro t/u right ta'vate— But, according to this rebel plot, the Southern members :may enter Congress without agreeing to the nutimhvery amend ment. or to any other conditxions. On'e'c in side the drum. they may “In!“ '1 in all the dit cusséum and ”I!“ afming t comma and their " claims, and my chee'kmate the antivllhvery amendment itself. In fact, our fate rat: in ill: hand: ofJ/te Clerk; oftltc How of Rrprz aenlatives, I know nething about him; but how few men in the hltion could be trusted l to stand firm in tuch a out? The whole 1 North uhould be regain;2 to guard against ‘ thisdenger. ll the rebel States, in their present mooa, cm. in any way, get inside ol’ Gangrene. and wield eighti-tonr votes 1 there. and more etpecially if they can get, there “pledged to auy conditions and wield those votes. then truly, the .‘Sout/i’ viii be a: strong u ever, and the uegroalmust us delenceleu.” 1 Here, then, is the new plot-net a "rebel plot,” however—through which the Suites are to bekeyt dissevered. The Clerk of the Home of Representative: in to be mldethe tool pf the radical». and to nutmeg; admit ' the Southern members nnt‘llfiey ngree'to i give the negro a vote. TW‘Hofiui‘m in to hinge upon thatpno‘u to guarantee and tenure the lutu're supremacywl' the ‘ radical Abolition demngogues. How base -how despicable-how unlawful and revo lutionary i: all this I "Once inside the door” of Congress. says ‘ Phillips; "they, [the Southern Representa ‘ tives] may take part in all the discuuions. and votes effecting themselves and their ‘ chime.” snd why not? When elected. as RPpTElenlaiiVH of States now “1 the Union will they not be entitled to the same righte flatlluse of other Stal'nowill they not be 'fle peers oi the members from New ling ' land (st-elsewhere? If nouthen the Sout h-5 am States will be mere dependencies ofthe 3 Government. their Representatives mere 'tooll, end the people nothtng more than ands. Wm i; be a crime for the M ‘0 become "as mung as pm!" just Ila ho “3“ back in pronpority Ind compelled (on are the gnnding tyranny of m!- aka merely because she objocu to g ruled by aegroes. and, through negro“, by New England’s despicable cormoraau I! fanatics? Wendell Phillipa m not ulonoin this 1110‘- -—he isnot the onginator our the has)!“ The whole radical horde are working “up. Where are uuummqs other ”idem“ on!” existence and progmsul thescheme. which tram time to tuna. we will publish and expose. It behooves the pearls to he ,on the alert. The question of imnion bu now returned to its angina] instigatore~ the New En land‘ Abolitioniate—ond until it receives if quietus (lure. the country an never enjoy peace. If this plot is 1):er in, 1150 Southern States will havéjuefi «use for revolution, and all the conservative ela ments of the Northjwill be bound to rally to the defence of true republicanlam and for‘the overthrow of radical disunioniam. The radicals should beware, for the moment they start the disunlon pmgyunme, baud on negro suffrage, that moment will not their political late an the Originators of di union, war and all the ills under which tho 'mtlon has so long suffered. 0 No_ 47_ The amount of taxation which is now levied upon the people is almost incnlofil-l ble. A large portion of it being indirhot in its nature it- requires some knowledge of figures, as well as of the laws. to propel): estimnta it. First, there is the State an county tax, which. under the war. bountin and thé support of soldieis'L' families; had swollen to two‘ per cent. upon allpmperty, ranl and persOnal. If a mamis worth:sl.o,-‘ 000 he is taxed 3200 under this law, and no on in proportion. ”he has an inoopm of $1,500, he has to pay on it at least $45., making his direct taxes $245. It'ho inn professional man. he has to my $lO if year for 2_ license. increasing the figure to;s2'ss. 0n everything he consumes in the sh pa of groceries and dry goorls there is a of from 50 to 100 per cent. If his dry gal, clothing and grocery bill for the y is 3400, m. least‘ono half of‘it ‘nna been} paid. for taxes. These taxes are swollen in thin way: There is,' for instance. a daily 63 twenty contaa pound on too. pay in in rpcyie. For the lamb year that hu'belcn fif— ty cents in paper. The importer payg that. adds to itthe original coat of the~ten, and then charges irofiu upon Original 'cost Ind duty both. l’l‘he merchant .to whom he sells also_ charges profits upon the cost to himin which the duty is included. no thnt. Hy thé‘ time the articlegeaches the con-u -mcr the duty on tea. has amounted in pnpen to at least seventy cents a pound. This, before the war, would buy a ponnd.of téa. Other articles pay a still highor duty than tea. ‘ a c x ‘ In the article of clothing, for both flcxa, the duties will average more than a hune dred per cent. In other words, everything coats dquble on account of the taxes. The burde‘na of these immense taxes all. {all upnn the labor of the country. The capital‘of the country gets part of it‘s takes back in the shape 0 incxeaaed rents of properly. or cnlmm-ed profitj for goods; but the laborer has no such way of when: Upon his head the whole mush of taxation falls with crushing efl‘uct. , j ' v To some extent,‘indeed, the capital of the country is not mixed. The huhdreds of anthem of pmperty in Goveqmnent‘ stovks are exempt from State and local tax ntion. The rich office-holders in thb ser vice of the. United smeumy no income tax whatever. The poor and middlé chin es, however, probably pay nov‘r (mg-third or one quarter of all they earn to the support of the Gournmcnt. How‘ long can they do this ?—Binghumton (N. Y.) Dunotrizl,t mxme GOVERNMENT sncumir‘ms. New Hampshire has passed a hug; taxing her citizens with ill United Statefl bonds and Government securities held by} them. and there is a similar proposition now pen ding before the Legislature of Conm‘acticut. The lriends of this measure contend that a. privileged class iq created by that law of the General Government. in which its b‘orld holdern'are exempted from State, (bunty and Cor oration taxes. They insist that the hohllrs of United States‘bonda‘ and Government securities should be linked and compelled to pay their portion of theSlcte, County and Corporation expenser, the some so; other personsrnnd that‘the clause ext empting%mm/thcrefrom is, manifestly ille gal, unju _ and odious in the eye! of the people generally. To illustrate its injmtice to the masses; they any. I merchant, or manulncturer, may have my thousand dol~ lurs invested in his business and be obliged to pay State, County and Corporation tux“ upon the whole of‘ that amount, whereas the capitaliet m'iy invest u’like min ill-Go'- pi'nment bonds and. be entirely exempt from taxation. They say this in not right. Do the other hand. Freeman Clark, the Comptroller of the Currency, is out in 319$ ter and says that this is perfectly right. to! contends that New Hampshire had no right to pass a law to tax the U. 8. Bon‘ holders within the limits of that State. sad that her'action will be declaratiéunconstltu» tionul hy the Supreme Courto the United ; Sutes. , 3 _ _ Gav. Brmlford on the Right: of “Daerlers.” lit—Gov. Bradford, of Maryland, an Abo iitionist in politic-1. has wrirgen a letter in which he takes the ground that the nci of Cingress of Marcinjflfié, which acclaru that "deseriers and prmons leaving the state to avoid the draft, forfeit thg rights of citizenship," does not prevent. such citi: zens of Maryland {rum voting—We make' the following extract: J “The queuion has been auggiuted whaling er the specie! pardons now being granted by the President to “lose pittioipating in the recent rebellion could not have the ef~ feel of restoring the right of franchiod'to ‘bnne disqualified by um, act? I mswef no, nnd that neither the iroclnmntion of tilt Presidenl'nor no new; Congrou could make anyone a qualified voterin thlsSmt‘b who. by the Constitution of the am», a declared to be (li‘qualified. On the other hand, no such proceeding: on tho purl. pf the General Government can deprive iciio izen of Maryland of the elective franchisi unless ihe State Constitution has made It timilsr provision,.und; :herelore, though by an act. of Congress pasted in Margin,“ s', and promulgated by n proclamation'ol the Prendenl ol' the United States on the nth oi‘that. month, it was declared that deler' ter: and penan- legvlng the State to nvnid thedmn should forfeit their right. of citi~ mnsbip ; yei, inasmuch In our Constitution makemno provision .for excluding mien per lom iron: the right of Inti'rnge, they‘wonirl stilifif obnoxious to no Cénstilutlonal pro hibition. be quinied to registrntionlf ‘ Negroitm.—-'l'lle nogroe‘s of the Dirtrlct a! Columbia have organized thgmselvglinto a party and now absolutely demand the right. to vote a: all elections. A letterftgm Alexundrla. Va . any: that that plug is now coriapletely under the rula of negro“. ad that all cups in which a negro is coner od ahnll no! he tried bnfnro yhe county ‘or Elly dulhufltios. but before an agent of me Freedman? Bureau. Major General Aug“ in the Nero who mus lrumplea upon me cinl law and erect: instead a mlliury, despgthmn ‘ . carom": have bean finned bleanfinl Gillmore commanding in South 0&0‘ us. which (lii-«t that courts—military can‘t. I ~be established in every 11531 th the State where the testimony 'ofwilneuea in to be when withouts reguyd to color. , WT” CmuEII-"ji‘im. S. C. calaregi sqmiern ‘froifl' the wth”‘%. tutu; Emmi"! in sqmulu whin tr.» élrzk ‘5 alone, d nigh premmd jrizmk gem-and the mum-i:- on, Tim mam Judy mursdjp Mm ner hum aim. ‘ D ‘ TAXATION. , ”‘3” .:.;q‘;,.-' ‘ Mill
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