v r X VOL. X 1 ALIL • OFFICERS or CPU 31131 A CO. President Judge—llon. William Elwell. Ilm Derr, Associate Judges-- j Voter K. Ilerheio. Proth'y k of Courts—Jesse Coleman. Register and Recorder—John G. Freue, Alien ;Mann, .101111 P. t ,‘lontgomtly Fberiff—.3aniel Treasurer—Jhn %mid Snyder, Auditors— y 1., B Rupert., (Johu I'. Hannon. Commis4oner's Clerk—Wni. Kriekbaum. Commissioner's Attorney--Fl 11. Little. Mercantile Apr:timer—Capt. Cleo. W. Cu, County surveyor—lsaac A. Dewitt. District Attvoney—Milton M. Traugh. Coroner—Williem J. Ikelee. Comity Superintendent--Choy. CJ. Barkley, Assesors Internal Revenue—R. F. ( John Thomas, As Want Assessor— jS: B. Di v iner lL Ikeler J. S. Woods: I'. C o llector—Benjamin Herman. EW STOVE AND TIN SHOP Mnl STREET, (NE lIRIX OPINI 4 ITEI MILLER'S eTolte,) 111.014 , 16111:1V.I, PA. WIC underolanad has Pat listed up, and opened his two STOVE AND TL MUD!', In this slime. where lir is prepared to make op now W ARK of 111 kinds in Ills flee, and do r' snit , iut with firmness Slit lisp,trb, 44loll the most ren• mumble terms, lle almi keeps On band SToviN rrl various psuerns And styles, %Nett he will sell Spell terms to suit nurehaimrs. Gies In.. MI. Ilw it a ern4 mechanic. end 4e 1111 , 04 of Olt .mh yummier. JACOB MCEZ. Illom44torg, Sept, 9, 1966. I pLASTER FOR SALE. Th 4 urOerstenocl I. 4404111 nm; up 4 i t 'he pErq renvArg 70. Nod wv tllNr 10 the public it ME UU.AUItL.O Novla *culla White rhutier prepared ready far dee in VllOll , *tl,l 18 day time from trio Orel 1 Harea ,w—rtr11,141.34. J, MeNISCIi. CstawNs*. ]nn. 23 . NG? BuOT AND SHOE 8110 P. OSCAR P GIRTON, iwaparttolly thforma tha hatolie that he Is hoo*Fora tom), to ussouthUots ittott* of jwi BOOTS AND SHOES, 1r 16 at the LOWEST Itsvitte Pekes ; nit *butt notice and in the Lett bent end Intent of ytri Mr, Girton, (ail Is well , niniwn in nlanintnini:, 1.4 had runny years of 0111r41044611 oxprri net tt Itil a r..p• otatom for good work, integrity and bouorahle deal. tit unourpawd, Pure r t twines' nn &nth Not r* , !lief of Mara and Imo etre , lA, X. aittini . ll Store. 11lomat:ors. W. 14, PA FORKS HOTEL, GEO. W. 11‘r GER, Proprietor. The foov. , well known lintel line recently tinder Rohe rethret chhunee in it* internal eereildninciiti., end its prnprieter delimiting* in hie Milner mid the Itevelline piddle thet itir ecenaiinditutidno Or the conitiirt of hie gaiesie use peened to eons. ua She country. Ili. ti t bit. wait Owe} be touissi top toted. tint mitt with isinststettel issiels net with ei the delicticie. of inn owe•on, Ilit wine Red tit nor, ;patapt that pnputat Iwiteragt known at. pllrPh4fl44l 11440. 0 , 141 t se iiispesitstst neue.•e, ate en Streln pure. and free Ise in sill issoitonets* cliespos He le theinkint torn Ittwrat tinttnitigiv in tire put, end will eenttnue to dented it in the Centres tiantar. M wiaa itlll4 I. IRA -0. 31ACHISE AND REPAIR SHOP TUC owleritignste aottld wait respertrotty on• toologe to Itor pobtie groorialy, he it prop4re4 in UMlte aft kinds of MACHO:VIM at 1 , 174T11 MO AR rtir :Sint .to tPuotos nom where he ,40 ajwart be Pima re/14) to 4.. 011 1.100 ui rnpall hg.inr,fn.ling Threshing dim Woes, and to ,hon.nif &sod. rAnhing vt. ALso. TritNi VIII. Nit /IMO UP Or 0,011%11 Atilt At.'111 1 0:k ditno 011 thlort tinlalt., to a ennui workmanlike Man her. upoo tba most reagnash , 4 nit long, k%perienen In Inn bntinatt- in Curem4rt In Of , lam. Id Mout of this plo . e, for (+Net 0n..! years, Wafral44 hint In reyfngt h nt an fan atie enure pdallaeliail taVnt httn with thee , work, . . 11:330 , 143 33,34 cg, N3:3333. :3 PA INVENTORS' OFFICEq. D'EPINEUIL & EVANS, Ctvtl Engtnect* and Futent datiettam No. 4:ts WALNUT STRUT., rILLAMMiIii IP*TCVT iiiAirdii,i—f!iindidintioniii ttiiguiei , ring , itritaghting and nod 4.4101 Iliad. Wing and tkliAtify hue n i d ta aiteatian given to ROI:Cr En CASCrtanit rcitevets. Althiiatie of aft Paco:whit (mnin Patent tithEtt pr~nnu d. V. U<--nave yunr.i.ivra ut^lens trantde and tray. Ohng expentecat there u noteetaat heed far pertim. at interview with tin. All Itiiiilungs With these Oltb to r enti be tritiiimefrit in Writlll4. For farther I 111 , 1 , nintinn iltreet an abate, with twerp etiolated for CIO , CLIO with rrlefeintii9i. 414 d id, Vida,— FALLON HOUSE. erne tohteribar having purchased the .kralion 1 Haute," In LOCK !MAVEN, Pa., frigtetty of E. W. (happy, ray to the friend. t , t the linuve, hfa sthonititunees, end illa polo tic eentraliy, Hutt trn intoth• to keep a 11, , itS, with His urethoutioistionr nod ce.rnr. r t• of AMA humbly solicits thew patronage, a. orrimmtn. L a t o .l on %idiom House, Ph iladelptua. Loth limn, Dec V, I,m, ISS LIZZIE PETERMAN, WouW annretnre to the ladies Of nionnistorg and the puldle generally. that env has junt teemed troy the eastern eNivs her •-• lowing and Sunifficr .or Pugh ♦t MILLINERY GOODS, enneisting of 411 mike s tieeelly found in Met chine *!Vinery Mores, Net peels ate Of the bent quality *Ad moonythn moA lineihinini and einintinot Intim market exit an=t examine them (or vner.elvec Nobody hnuld p etwee .10ewtt,:re h‘ tore eleetin• Ply Min et , ell et seeds Beller it Wade to nay , on the iihortn , t notice. or Starr on Nta,n otrett, 3d d or tielnw the store at Mendounnil It Rupert. Manntabuti, May Si, 184 —tt NEW TOBACCO STORE. H. H. HUNSHERUER, Miin Street, below the " American Ihntte," il4oollllllllinifi g PA,, %lore he harp' no hand, and fillrillehei I.t h ehurtle ona cneri.l node, et Philadelphia (leo net) puttee, FINC MANI) PLUG TOBACCOS, DOM COMIC AND IMPORTED Clan au kiodi of M (PK ING T011,1(.1'0, eing.,lllPerteltiffini and Hrlet Wood riiirc, sod 1 1 1 Weiler oettemine to hie (rode. rrTbooe 1.111111 .tl4ll dealere In elms end chew. leR Nowene woold in well in gli Y hies 1 , 1•14 nI romdini to the •liie• for every A/11 , 111 they e p 4 ICdI IS IRuf lhoee pccovs, November 71,11tre4.-- BL OMSI3tRG Vioomolturg ►emocrat. T$ rvisuquin EVERY WlDNEsmty IN litmoMsitritti, Y.L. ny WILLIAMSON U. JACOBI:. Tot MA, • niit ti3t4 within ;JO rant.ntirlitinnal will ho ! .^- p hoot 411 AA MANE* ore pefA rtetlit ut the np'ian nt the RATER OF ADVERTISINO. Lit LINtA COABAITIMS A AtiVAIL OOP slunre one or three insertions $1 5n Ev+ , ry sobseivient insertion loss roan 13... .. 50 ` ntw *pow, 1 Q.OO I 3co 1 4.00 1 0,00 1 10 00 ! '1'1 , 40 tooo4wo. 1 3.0,4 1 5,4,0 0,00 1 9,00 1 14 00 'nave .1,40 1 5,00 1 3.00 F..." 41 IrMO I 1N,414. Poor 0404 res, 1 0.10 1 t.. 1 ,0 10.1, 0 1 14,00 } 10 00 Half r. , 1011 , 11f 1 11“ , €) 111 04 t 4-00 i 1, 1 401 ;i0 0 ' Otte tolown, I 04,0 11. 00 441.40 1 00,00 1 .5000 14404000r4 004 /4,loonieruMes 14;011(41. . . 300 Antinne. Notwu., . , , Other n.tveribwinento inset tut: neuntdln4 tosPertal cant rot. Inu.thuuo notion.. ultimo ndvertiwntent. twenty. tents per lulu. rtatmtott tvivottiliensviils payltrie ill *Annum ntl oth..to due ntlet tha Jim ntertiwi. outlet: In 01/00'41 Murk, Cor Hain dun iron Stfroto, Addregw, W. H. jAerniY. frionmobilrg. ColimPlia County. Va At a dinner, lifter the dedication of a rutty Ma',11.11 1 : MAN in Aurora (III.) recently, a gentleman lead the followir g poem, which was boisterou.dy received. That gentleman, we opine, is 3 lAitiCi3ll and is evidently eonnting upon that good time coming, of which Beecher recently spoke, when WolliCh can rote. [Prom t/c Ciac;atuuti ./hAonic Revive.] A Mason's life is one that's free— Not the lire tho' et mortar and bricks Det out of nights enioying a spree, And playing astonldiing tricks. While the ,hex at home are waiting, Neer dteaniing it all a dodge, Lot thinking the sad beisting 1,1 e ci4el by "work at the lodge." Whe,e they meet upon the level, 'Po pat , upon the square, Ant to 'aim, the rely devil, While eolv : iegAte,l r • If a I:leficlor r.hap in hiM oourting days tiros weny of being tied, Il.ah de , : and me, almost alway.=, hip fair fluleines',-- The o.sie-t way to elieape zwhik And in fret bone calls to dodge, Id to FLA; the aid Or a Mason friend, AN' loin Masonic Lod g e. Where they meet, ,te. The women don't like :th%ono— Don't heliere in them the 1-astr— From the tiler at the mamma Te the fellow in the E 1.1.4. Le , lce meeting% are but Corers To hide some larking dodge— Leek out when mate, and lovers 111% ”busine-4 at the " Where they meet, Now whatc'er the Mason'A aner,:t Be their faith in goat or rant, 1 - 10 their Onler tro or evil, Worth* bles.ine or a thi in keep it annt.r and cosy, Lot them worship fi in a h t t hent be sedate and prosy, But at rue as they are born, We'll yet meet them on "the level.' Ansi 'ere we part be " , ninare ;" r ,, r at same Lthice-hell revel, lint women niil be there. Tian 10 , P bctirlc the ....inner Who it: in the l.trt hr ++r tt ;II hint lather thianer, Thn; L A he rely he Int—the beat ; An nil their grand regmin-- SLin. n;• ; For wnnten nin 7 n:1 fn.,: I Thoneh thy tinnit na , ..t en a l e vel, An lila ni:. ire, they eau rare the devil— they Ke• n elanire fia;r. Gumacs unbtirxr '.!: r TV) S r. urts. —Nearly e•-• ry r :attire letters from ehl snh %iietr, t money to renew their sub' s-riptions anti ldiing us we need not he so lartictibm about stopping it the very day the time expires for which they 33 have ;,aid. Our rule is advance ptsyment, and when the time expires we invariably strike out the name, uniess by an over-sight ea' the mailing clerk it is omitted far a w,: ek or so. Wo make this a rule--if we break it f r one we must fir another, end that is !:: 10. We enter no mime upon our ;::.: till paid---if a man wants to b o rr o w m o ne y f r om us we lend it to him, but that trans e•thi is never shown upon our sub eip•hot book, And if we send a paper without pay from a party, we take the money front our private purse, pay for the same, for such time as it is sea and thus keep our hooks nod lonixe‘-• in hand. 1 We mean no offense by discontinuing a ; man's paper whets his time runs out. We do not see the books—if we should do the mailing ourselves 'mull take twelve days where we have but six. We have no ob i jeetien to giving money—to spending money i for subscribers in such beverages or amuse motifs as they de: ire when we meet, but I would not send a paper to our grandfather, 4 e ven, one moment lower than it was mark ! ell paid. This is-the rule of the office—it is business—the civil, who would deviate from it would lose his plase instantly. It may seem a small matter to the subscriber, bnt in the aggregate, whore we have thousands and thousands of subscribers, any one will I see that we cannot, live except by attention to allitents husine 44. nrk.V Thateroy, M.. Tito following was found posted on the wall of a country post office : "Lo9t a red kaf. 11c Innl n wite :pot on I of hi. behind leg'. Ile was a sho kaf. I will give three «billings to evribmidi to bring him how." Kir A lady wiNhed a Beat. A portly handsome gentleman brought ono end Booted her. "Oh, ynu are a jewel," maid she. "Oh, nn," replied he, "1 u a jovller—l have juet ect the jewel." BLOQ IIIF MU MASOXUT. By .► I.IDY I=l ISBURG, COLUMBIA CO., PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 1807. Wild 11111 I'm Story. It was in 'f'd when I guided s detachment of cavalry who weir coming in f ro m Cm ! , Floyd. We had nearly revile , ' tho [anus line, and were in South Nebraska, when one afternoon I went out of Camp to w) to the cabin or an old friend of time, a Mrs. Waltman. I took only one of my revolvers with we, for although the war had broken out I didn't think it necessary to carry both my pistols and in full or'nary scrim mages, one is better than a dozen, if you shoot straight. I :aw some wild turkeys on the road as I was going down, and popped one of 'em am thinking he'd be just the thing for MIMI Well, I rode up to Mrs, Waltman's. jump• ed off my horse, and went into the cabin, which is like ►uo4 of 00 cabins on the pr►urer, with only one room, and that had two doors, one opening in front and t'other on a yard like, "How are you Mrs. Waltman?" I said, feelling as jolly as you please. The moment she raw me she turned AS white AN a sheet and Felts:lied : "Is that SH? Oh. my nod! they will kill you! Rum run! They will kill you? 'Who's a goin' to kill ? Said I— ' There's two that can play at that game." "It's M'Kandlas and his gang. There's ten of them, and you've no chance.— They're just gone down the road to the cern-rack. They came up here only five minutes ago. 311;andlas was dragin' poor Parson Shipley on the ground, with a lariat mild his neck. The preacher was most bad with choakin4, and the horses stamp jug tat him. M . Katellas knows 3crbringin' in that party of Yankee Cavalry, and he s gears he'll cut yer heart out, Bun Bill, run! But too late. they're coming up the While dm wst talking. I remembered I had but one revolver, and a load gone out of that. On the table titers {rani a horn of powder and sonic little bars of lead. I poured gone^ pow+l-r in the empty chamber and tanned the le, after it hy hammering the barrel on the• table, and had just ea►pped the ttittltt` —hen I heard 31'K:1111 :at; St it:N I• " * I ' • 1; 71 11 ' ut.-% 4in hint ~~~v i! a t—a wart ;ike. I never I.IU t I sloul 1 1. , A vv that ) ) The hi story, rose from Lis seat. and :tr.nle '..aelt and forward, in a state of great excitement. "I tell what it i Kernel," he resumed, after a while. "I tlen't mind a scrimmage with these ftilorq round here. Shoot one or tea of them and the rest run away.— But all of M'Kandlas's gam; were reckless, t,l>tudthirsty de% ils, who would tight as tang as they had strength to pull a trigger. I have been in tight places, but that's one of the few times I said my prayers." "Surrthul the house and give Sim no q uarter!" yelled 3l'liandlaq, When I hear that I hdt as quiet and cool as if go : o f t o ( + tw i t I ittoked ro:ta 1 .110 rt. • and saw a hmakini rifle hatigio' aver -it , that loaded!" said Ito Mr , . Wa't... 1 the Igor thing whiApere I. She vra3 so frightened like cou'dn't siwuk out loud. "Are you =tire," tethi I, as I jumped to !,..1 an 1 eltizlit it from its hooks. th.m.:ll my eye did not leave the door, yet I 01,11,1 I othlol yes again. I put the revolver on the bed, and just then 31'- Kandlas poked his nose inside the doorway, but jumped back when he saw me with the title in my band. "Come in here you cowardly dog!" I shouted. "Como in here and fight me!" 31 :Karam was no coward, if he was a holly. Ile jumped inside the room with his gun leveled to shoot; but ho was not quiek enough. My rifle ball went through his heart. fie fell hack outside the house, where be WAS found afterward holding tiLlit to his rifle, whieli had fallen over his Ilk disappearance was followed by yell from his gr.nir, and then there was a dead silenoe. I put down the rifle and took the revolver, and curl to loy*iß "Only tix shots and nine men to kill. Save your pa..Aur, fur the death-hug 'a coming!" don't know why it was, kernal ; con tinued Bill, looking at me inquiringly, but at that moment things seemed clear and sharp, I could think strong. There was n few xecondi of that awful NtiNess, and then the ruffians came rush ing in at both door 4. How wild they looked, with their red, drunken Ewes and inflamed eye shouting and cussing ! But I never aimcd more deliberately in my life. line—two•—three— four, and four men 11.11 dead. That didn't stop the rest. Two of them tired their bird gum" at me. And then I felt a sting run all over me. The room wag full of Tra got in close to me, their eyes gliir'na out of the clouds. One I k n ,,e ; 'th my fist, "You are out et'. • • 'while," I thought. The ono:A tbct (lea i, The other three clutched me and orweded me into the bed. I fought hut I brr',:e with my hand one • iv• lie hnd his fingers round my thy "we I etr,lid get to nly feet wtt Wiwi( n r".• breast with the stock of a rifle, an fell the blood gushing out of my non and mouth. The I got ugly, and 1 rooember that I got hohl of a knife awl then it was 4.1 (+lndy liko,'ond I W 34 wild. and I struek Favaga blows, following the devils up from one side of the room to the other, striking and mashing until I knew every one was dealt All of a sudden it seemed as if my heart was on fire. I was Heeding everywhere, I ruNhed ont to the well and drank from the bucket, and then tumbled down in a llnuthlog with the intense interest with which I had followed this strange story, all the more thrilling and when its hero, seeming to live over again the bloody events of that day, gave way to its terrible spirit with wild, savage gesture. 4. I saw then, what my scrutiny of the morning had litiled to di, cover— the tiger which lay beneath the gentle exterior. "You must have been hurt 411[1°4 to death," I said. There were eleven buckshot in me. I carry stifili* of them now. I Was cut in thirteen places. All of them Lad enough to have lei out the life r,•f a man. But that hi,-,ed old Dr. Mill= pulled me safe thro' it, after a had siege of many a long week." "That pra:er of }'ours, Bill, may have been more potent for your tartly than you think. You should thank God fur our deliverance." To tell you die truth, Bernal, reliondt-1 the Neout, with n certain solemnity in grave lie, I don't like to talk about iiich thing 3 to the people round bure t but tiler, feel sort thankful when 1 get out of a bad hue pc. The Great Secret of Masonry. One of our exchanges relate, an' anec dote of a brother who is noted fir his acts of charity, and who is withal a manor good presence and a great favorite among the la dies—so much so its to cause some jealousy on the part of his worthy spouse. One eve ning a bundle came to the house for ;Ms. Labe llcd, "private." Of course this was sufficient for female 'oesdnrs indingea iii an inspection. Iro.'m ;c -rania! blankets, 'icily-linen, gse . stir astonished vision, am.l iir ea m, et 1 4 ,, fine. through her eraim "Poe ' , id M1:111 Cattle in, and after tea, when the w:fe Mid discovered in his eye the treachery of his r:t.tAA I—he took the bundle an I a.ni out, but net alone, for the jealous with was on his track. The fitithless husband little imatined that she. who sup posed herself so !tinily wronged, was hover ing after him. Ile halted before a small tenement, width he (*mond, Hers she paused to huld a ••:t , • ," ar. What tias tie 4to billow she 1: , • '.t, hut doter mined to rouse the citadel ; knocked and hastily brushed I Tit the little child who answered the mnimon.• steld in an im slant before her a-teol. hel hishanil, the embodiment of injured Her fed ings were ahout to find expression, when the scene torero her caused her to pause. A palo and care worn man, :hiverinz over the exp'• log einbc-s of a • at: fire, a I nor co- it VI- MSS 4.1'1 •tlotn bet hu.s'atn I..tt t:r and w:4 - aan, satisfied that she Igul discovered the great secret of Masonry. Fiuxrs or Il ixon. —Colonel Montgom ery was shot in a duel about a dog ; Colonel It i r i p A y i n o ne :0 , 0,i1 a ;...rvant , Mr. Feath er.tou in one ab=gut a north ; Sterne's father in pane about a go and another gentleman in one about an "acre of areho vies ; one onioer was ehalletred fw merely asking his opponent to enjoy the second goblet ; an I another was compelled to fight about a pinch of snuff; General Harry was ehallon by a Captain Smith for declining wile. at a dinner on a steamboat, although the Gen bad pleaded, as an excuse that wine invariably made hint sick ; and Lieut enant Cowther lost his life in a duel beeause hoat refitted admittance to a club of pigeon shooters. In 1777 a duel occurred in New York city between Lieutenant Feath erstonhougb, of' the Seventy-ninth, and Captain McPherson, of the Forty sound British regiment, in regard to the manner of eating an ear of corn, one contending that the eating was from the cob, the other that the grain should he cut MT hem the cub before eating. Lieutenant Featherston hough lost his right arm, the ball front his antagonist's pi-tol shattering the limb dread fully, so much so, that it had to be ampu tated. Graham, Major Noah's assistant editor in the National Advocate, lost his life in 1827, at the duelling ground, Ho boken, with Barton, the son-in-law of Ed ward Livingston, in a simple dispute about "what was trumps" in a game of curds? 4r7' A top has htun invented in Paris, called the prolific top ; it is set spinning by of a thread and needle. As soon as it is fairly in "notion, a ball dozen small tops conic out of it—how? that is the inventor'', secret—and begin to spin around it like the satellites around Jupiter, and after some dine the top reabsorbs thew+ der An Ohio editor his 'canty had new shirt collar presented to him; and hi to now waiting for soma one to give law I, Yo he may be able to put the oulear to use, "at present it is a portbet superfluity.' Stiar An exchange says that law:, ors down South, since the superseding of the civil authorities, will have to address the courts, "May it please your shoulder stead of the old formula, MEI DEMOCRAT. IlVendoll PhMinx and Grant. We notice that a letter is being protunl gated through the loynt press, conveying the present impressionsof the arch-agitator, Wendell Phillips, upon the political situa tion—together with his recommendations as to the proper measures to be taken 10 his adherents. As our readers are not much in the habit of looking in that quarter for counsel and advice, we shall not trouble thane with this letter in ester:so—anti we only allude to it because we wish to make some remarks upon a theme which we con sider worthy of serious consideration at all times but especially now, when. in the stir ring language of Hum D. J. Walker "the very limndations of the government are rocking on their base," and it may be that it is to become a "mere mass of broken c damns and mouldering ruins," Wendell Phillips takes occasion to enter his protest against the redoubtable Grant as a candidate for the Presidency. We don't often airier with Mr. , but in this eme MT most heartily coincide with him m i d curiously enough, for the very stone reason. Phiiiips has no confdletim in ()rant. N. itliar have we. We never had. Fie i 4 - n-itbee nor flash, nor good !anther rine." Phillips; says "many earnest Raid , eal% arc urging the nomination of Gen. Grant by, the lb , publiettn party, because, say they, if we don't nominate him the Democrats will." "Here is a pretty spectacle." quoth "Pepuilimrs urging the nom:- nation of a man who is such a swiss that he will •nit either party in..lifTerent!y." We d m't pretend to give the exact language of Cdr. Phillips, as we have talk ; lt.id the plq,er C - ntrlining his letter. But , the sena., is as we hare above recited—and the epithet ,Swiss 14 certainly Phillips' own. Now, we agree with Mr. Phillips in this— that, while we do nut know exactly how rar Gen. Grant may possess the requisite char ` r era and qualdication, , of a hid cal no ninee. fin tli«ki'dn't.) express no opinion on that ; vain+, s*c are very cute that there is no «j oi e. ; tree +'r I. ..• ;;*.ii•tie about bite to render him wolva la to the great mass of the Democratic party. We have had to resent, and too severe an experience on this rub. jeet, to WI soon again, and suddenly, int, a x similar error. We have always had very decided opinions against military chieftains as Presidential nominees or incumbents— and, as we turn our eyes toward, our afflict ed rioter states of the t. 4 eettll, and be =hold, at this moment the .;p; mtede there afforded us, of what the Late Bev, Sydney Smith used to call the - -quart men in the ; round holes - -men pared in positions for which God and nature had equally denied them the preper qualifications—military men, whose education and habitiof thought and action totally unfit them for the rune ; tions of the statesman, sent into the South to take out of the hands of an unwilling pe , pl, the control of their own civil and don, .stir affairs—we feel, more strongly than ever the soundness of our views on this p-int. and shall never cease to lift un oar voice in earnest protest against the pul i,;;; that will surely ruin any party—and spiel; la our humble judgment did more to detnoraliz emaeeulate, and finally to bopeitAy merthrow the old Whig tarty, that, any other one thing. The nomination ; of that pompous old humbug, Gen. Scott, ; sealed the ruin of that once formidable or ; canizition, and it was beaten out of sight, ' and scattered to the four winds at the elec. then which flalloyed. 1111111 Now, we do not wish, to he lob t.tken--- nnr to be supposed L include all military men hi one general condemnatirch We could not be so unjoNt. We hay , . many n o /de and true soldier:: in our ranks, of all grades, and better, braver and nifire eonsis tentand steady Dements do not cx --men who have mare: lame sacrifices of prot.es sional advancement to their sincerity and fidelity to political principle. These bravo men will, on reflection, concur with es, we doubt not, nn the general policy of military nonlination3. But we have peculiar distrust of this moan Grant. Wu watched his course, with considerable interest last. fall, when he vitas "swinging ar.sund the cirele . ' with Prcebh nt Johnson and suite. A great deal of unnecessary fuss wa; made over him, we thought, and too much trouble to asmrtain hit precise opinion of the "question of the hoar" taken by all rattier, considering the exact value of the article when obtaiael. Om day he thought this, nest day he thought that, and one could have supposed that the illimitable universe hung with speechless and rapt excitement upon the lips of Gen. Grant for the magic, sentences of his lime This was all very foolish, of course, especially as he lrol, at the outset, declared that he would not meddle with politics. Ile was a soldier, who "accompanied the Presi dent in obedience to the command of his superior officer." This was a very propel position for him to take; if he had adhered to it no one could have complained. We h uld not, most certainly. But the wideness of his duplicity, his epquetry with the Radi cals, and his betrayal of his tacit under standing with the President, were numerous threnchoet the journey. He finally left tho l'reaicetul.4l party, to . pursue his journey alone, and one fine morning, shortly before our own Slate election, we were greeted by dispatch from the impressible Grant, aim ed at our gallant standard-beerer, Hiester Clymer. A more outrageous, uncalled-for, and ebu , ive despatch we never saw in our whole experience of partisan malignity. This filthy production was bedaubed all over the fences and dead-walls of Philadelphia and other large cities and towns of our state as seen as possible, and there remained us' til after the election as the "Opinion of GUM Grant." We could multiply examples of the impertinent interference of this "great military chieftain" in WM Writ outside of his province, but our apace forbids. We have said enough to shots that he is hardly the MO for the Denovracy of our Mate or county, to whom alone we use supposed to addrer.sing ourselves—and to repel the as. sumption of Wendell Phillips, that there is any danger of the nomination by our grand uld party. of ~101 an indifferent speeim t n of the "soldier and gentleman." We sincerely believe that the Denerratie party will sten I firmly by its cherished prin. and criminate as its (adiaste for the Presidency, H9lOl. ropte , entative statesman, With t•rt ..11 a IMM we her no 1 ,- .ar but th a t we shall ma-rli foour,l to a brilliant awl lu mn ra y,, victory. "Awl all the p. , lple say, amen."•!,exa me rtion. O:ir I Iva I.sßs r. There is a delicacy about, :1... rtiC:rllll of our first biros, which we no: , dare eons !nit to paper. All the ft elit sts of th., finer sensibilities are so wrought upon, that to hring them up and nieutiott them among the more common subie,:ts of life, seems almast a violation of the sacredness with Which the heart still holds them. We regard them as the heart's purest and Lest affections, for they were formed when the heart was young and drank acs tweedy from love'. , perennial sto . int+. Oar first ie.. 01l tre , it i hob Jr aol twee th.itec ...sea 'Tem the heart iss intooot ..o:nst .1 e the info nee. , of the.:. , idt ts,-.l 14+4:1 u- in after of to he' den ups, and we drink because it is natural—drink because it is to sweet the effect is at once impressive and The influence vide!: 'owls a love exerte, if its secret workings are rightly regard.. must often be bent:tickl in its results. Wh that holy :art etien really and truly exi-ts, there can be but little room for any of tho..e f.tornts of fury ultielt sometimes rise up to take post . , isn o° the ? , )01 It drives awry tlrs malt„otont pt s er, and make• the ha man breast, through it., benign in:loetto.e, fitter place fn. a holy and puma! :rit to dwe'l in. Our forts love! It it; 3 t urea which we love ;niler. al.though its man,t, voices may wake us tta 1; the:. are themeriestrc wcull not exchanto; In t ; a nythin g on e;.trth. They arvit as ts a'At; t halm when the object which prole t.. 1 ;hew it ; with us to give us con,olatiett. Ins. The editor of the * Cormartio-,1 Jooramf tells the fallowing story We have been informed that a short time ago a n'rm her of gentlein,a were conversing in a hotel not lila a dozen miles from Carmarthen Thu subject teat a politieal one, and the con duct of John Bri4ht was condemned in very strong terms. One of the company was a short gentleman, who did not join in the die oussi ni, but by and by loft the room. Cal. ling the waiter to him eat I, "If any of the gentlemen in the sill .dng-ruom a •ta who I am, tell them John Bright." "Ves, sir.' said the waiter, seeing the joke at once Sure enutig:ll, upon his entering the room the man was aske I if he knew who the gen tleman was that had left. "The short gen. demon who went oat jag. now ?" "0, that is Mr. John Bright, M. P." The cm,ternation of the party may be im agined, an I they were not a whit more cone Ihrtahic when' Mr. John Bright" again en tered th, room, • livery one apologized, and the honorable gentleman graciously pardon el them all ; remarking that he was -o often the o'oet of calumny that he was quite used to it, 'Chat the gentleman didn't hap !nt to be Mr. Bright, though quite bright in his ow u wakes the juke perfect. of its kind. The Ott wa' not discovered un til after the perpetrator had dep teed. Br:Atm—Let me see a female pomeitsing that, beauty or meek and modest deportment of an eye that speaks intelligence and purity within—of the lips that speak no guile ; let ~,.e in her a kind end benevolent anon, a heart that can sympathize with die- tress and never at .k 11,11 b thebeanty that dwells In "ruby lit "," or 'Towing trestes," or — snowy hands," or the forty other et eetct. - ts which some of our poets hsvc harped upon for to many ages. Thew fade when touch ed by the hand of time ; but those ever en• during valitice of the heart shall outlive thus reign, and grow brighter and Cruller as the ego of eternity roll stray. nia7* ..I_ , Yrrant girl in Berlin fell againpt a red hot 2itoyc and burned on her arm the date ISO, which was on the store. The physician who was called on to minister to her looked at the date branded on her arm, and shaking his head withdrew, remarking that for so old an injury there was no cure. GAY' "Oh ! my dear child, how came you so wet?" inquired an affectionate mother of her Ron. "Why, ma, one of the boys raid I daren't jump into the crcuk, and by jin• go, I toil you I ain't to be dared." tar A wan a short distance out from the city says no one need tell him that adver• thing won't CaWIC a big rush, for he mirer ti.ied ten twitch: of grapes for tale, anti the next morning there wasn't one left--the 'boys stole them all. Pr Lucy Stone once Paid "There 6. cotton in the ears of man, and hope iu bosom of women." Lucy malt a mi-take, and got the cotton in the wrong place. -_r "You bachelors ought to be taxe,l," said a lady to a resolute evader of the name. "I agree with you, madam," was the reply, "bachelorhood io a great luxury. WINE AND OI'IIERWINE. Miondship'm but a 1-ututpar swallow , 11,,11 iabrighter than the Nun , tho world IS 04 WS hollow Ae the barrel of a gun. Eye N arestlzzled Ly the blending 01 the Inoe.4t kind of thou, And the knee 'l4 always Lop ling To the Duller, not the Crane. 31ode ty uo inure avuileth 13rtis4 is eutrent everyuhPri. lltool.le light or virtue paloth In tip; wore mat:riding gisr.. Bora3 l 1101‘1 , 4 Porn imto diautuuda shim. Iltetr A tvi 410 Ugh tuvl In tiv, fir , of tit: Awl stilt isa:,ing I bow we, thunticr Ail tlw - bevcn ago:* tlatowli , At earth art wt. gain awl w(!ndor the next wil9 1);:nr, U 4 tt, The old. nulap4, the final night ' 'the ti ;keit,anal, tits "hitter 4:4p " Thou iot ua pbiy cur parts Clean our tikirt illl4 rsatil4.l thMil white, White GOD ttill hold t the curtain up !iletratrl's :►ett . 3kanslon. The ma t :la.:old awl new Lutll• ing, now king t.reetad in thc Filth At enue, and corner of Thil ty.P.tti Tit t.t reet, which trill ho the (cto , •• Iv. or .11 , •aander T. Stewart, ta la•••,-,:( ••• 11;• tt.t. -11 4 -re.tortly to all lima 1.• n int rr,ttod in ita On • Arnation. , tt vetart• i‘a rattt rn or Omar f,e'a e l ,(711;or t 111,1tht are tl titv their in a erry creditable and prait,otterthy tnanw. It is viewel and looked at ley dein alio!, or (1,1 , c!.:::4 or our vvho ttavev.e rt . r.kt noon ino,hing. It r e,tintated n hen ;aunt :et , : lit oiji cost about Zi2.on 000. The arehiteetura', orna mental and cha etc designist!!k, are ail purely Corinthian. For elegance end 1 (fi tar, So taros it has relitiotsed. it .uttliti, In fret s there is no to compete with it in tin. eityof New York, it heini.teonstrue, ted of the purest and frc..t 11,4:12t. Some e.-titnate msy be rote , - 1 of the eo,t, when it known that it in limit not only e 1 the ben rouble, but that the iron 'rot k, alone will ex etn-d tZurt,''o l , and that it yid be fire-proof from top to Lofton) The roof is beautiful!, 111161 , 3, being in it •e!f a mass of iron, and the eiv.tinew Intro pail- lin the United State.,. At t} u main zntranok diet,. are two was ._.- ise stone of marble, which are plaztd on t.ithrr tide as cheeks for the grand rump.— In the entrance iron pillars are erected pnt roses for ,upperting the ficors ranch is also the me in the hen:went, as well as in the first, Pecond, third and attic omits. ThetAe are chaste and laintiful, fully capped th nnwe.t t'n 'whim 1.7 trle, The first floor contains a ptirlor, twerq. four by forty-six feet long. reeep:ien room nineteen by thirty.taco fer , t, ioolit ti'Atetren by thirty-two feet, with breakfut, room and butler's apsitniet.t, The main Le,,„ leading from the entranee to the pie ture Fatkry, will be ..ixteen feet w!,le anti tifty,i.t feet in length. There kill also I e a trar •r 0 ball 1'.144Dg from the main hall, tlbi,ll will gilts ingress to the various totals, which will f, e fourteen Chet with ; an d firtyoight The 111111.1 e stairs will be twenty feet by twn. ; • nine. In the wain hall there will itho be a number of massive Olaf , , with full Corin thian ears. The picture gallery will be of tnagtdricent finish and beauty, the same as the other grand apartments of the buildings, an -1 will be lighted up with spbenclid chand• alien, trhleh will be of superb style, as will al.. the drawing r3t,nt, parlor a rj reception rooms, The tn....mint story will be nppropriatc to the uses ani npartment of the i-ervante. They will he nicely finished, a nd will be ten feet six inches in ceiling height. The first in Rings will he lighten feet nine inches in height, between beam?, sec oni-story, tixteen feet nine in •he., third story, tilteen feet nine inches, mid the rourth story nr attic niil be ten feet bettetn the hems Tho porieoro, iorriders, pttpolu and rail lop; tt ill far evel tlo,l of any other man cdot ever col - vs.:nevi in the city of New York, what the entride railings aurround inz the man, im will be splendidly put up at a great ro:t, and wI be of the newest, style and Onli h. The grand hall, ',tate and other non's, will be ;Applied with the newest and inert eotly style of furniture, and-still be lighted up with magnificent and eaiit4 ehandliers -- The dormitories will also be ihnilarly finish ed. The sofas, table, chsir , Be., of the dinine, drawing, parlor and reception roma will be a Riper') eight to witness, and the picture gallery will be a pattern of elegance and beauty. Such is a faint and, brief de iswiptitin Cr this splendid structure.-- V Y saw. llua anybody a niekelpenny of 13L3" The Washington P,7r there is an ac tive search for them, and that they are coo. ridered worth twenty-fiveCCTltSeach,becaum they have been almol , t, wholly withdrawn from eireulatiom, and will he very valuable by-and-by in eoMpleting , eollectione. Thn penny in gnm.tion will be remembered at hearing on one race Or :•e; mown:ion of an eagle. I' 4 an obi hretp.h,r, his at.orkinge, rhi.h Ii ha, iird darned, to a maiden lady,Will) eonten?ptuorr•ly remarks, "Pretty good for a man darner." Where npon Squabble. r , ..to'nm. "Cho , l enough for a woman, darn her, Mr "Biddy, did ru_nut an a the (9 ) ffee in Retail it?" "YeN ingot I pia in Pour, tiler were hai I had in ure mutt ur them" Biddy sus (Land out, 11.