VOL. XXXII. OFFICERS OF courmistA Proiflent Jmtg.. --lrion, William Elwell. Associate t i r e n t l e N err l i er nun. p ru dey an d k Courts—Jesse Coleman. Ro g i a t er a nd Ikeorlier John G. Freese. f Joint F. Fowler CommiAoers-- -; Montgomery Cole. 1 David Yeager, Kura —Mordeeai Treasurer—Jacob Yolie, L. It Rupert, kuditors John P. llatmon, I Jacob [Burk Nitutuissiouer's Clerk—Wm. Kriekbatuu. Vonnuissioner's Attorney—E. 11. Little. Mercantile Approker—W. Jacoby. !outily Surveyor- -Lome A. Dewitt. District Attroney M. Trough. cruoncr---William J. Ikelcr. 4 'minty Superintoolent--(luts. ti. Barkley. A ,,, e40p; Internal Irevenue— R. F. (lark. ( John Thomas, .Nsl.istant 14 , P.^.(1r"""' S. B. Diviner, Daniel McHenry 'olleclor—Benjamin V, Barthian, Moomsburg Literar) Inglitute. 130.1111) OF I NSTIIt VTION. II EN II V CAE V EH. A. M., PrinciFtl l'roprietmt, t wra Plitheomity, Nli-4 Sarah A. Carver, Pretteptrocs, TV:whor or Fintli. Botany atatOrtlamental Brattehei. lav Bet , t, A, .11., l'r.tro.isor!of Atteitmt Langmigt , tt. Charles E Nr A. It, Proli-÷or J Mathemittivs, E M. Yeavherl3.tok-koettlitg and Enzlith Itrattelte.t. Mi.. 4 Alio. M. Carvor. T,,, t eher or he4romental Mmie. T , ather of V iwa i kw Julia gain Primary Pcpartmear S ntm eotittatmett April lath, I Sei l / 4 , itbtat , bitrtr. Match N. N 44. DR. W. H. BRADLEY, Moo:ea Army,) Physician scud Surgeon. :# hi Ow Eork// 11010. ill mumborg. Pa I ails promolly .11+ , 101 , 4,u bob +tight and rloy. Htooombory, 1vr0y,.,11, Immy NATIONAL FOUNDRY. I,OOMSBURG, Co„,PA. I Hi: 41114eriber, proptietor I 4 the akeve itattlegl et 'onive e4t4httshmentas no* , epare.l to receit,tt orth:ro All Kinds or Machinery, • •t. r•ol,rie4, Must Furnucee, St:mollhty 1:1101WA t Tit II Oil/ INC; M t Ar r MOW StOVe., hit eiarx and WO% 11 ori., and every Ming mitac itt rto1111141W•4 the mmse. tnrigcier and prnMical workmen, Wet. me, to tet nun; the leletet rontteLte 011 the re,40.1104 , 1,0114 1 -; rain , 4 411 klildS wifi ite Wien in exchange fot , 4-111 , go. w-ar ttm luerbeetwa n.e N Meineweteterg theimeied Deepen. l'ElFelt 1111.1.'4'1'VA. 14!ootro.hiirg, VIEW It EST.II *HA N'r tfilii , lthg 3tuin t WM. GILMORE, ”f Motirofiburg and VlClfilly Olt has ap, itlti a %.,H= kt.%►TA Rill NT, n Ott* piaar, whrtl• tic inyttra hi. cod irtenda and tr,ol,ol.lVryi tOthli nudpartake "I• hk.mirc.htuentis.— n ra WS intention to kelp the b,,,g LA V EI: BEER A Xl.) A LE. onotanti) on hand ; 41'4, Port< r.Sarsaparilta, Min 4Voicr, Fan, y Lottodtade,:, Ita4pherry and Leta ~.i.eyranA, ran alwayo he had at h,,, Restaurant. 140 ttw eating hue he pir,Aeut, xxx.z, Or rAltil not a+apua~ed to taiir place, viz, Pickled nyclocc Bariltiiev Barbecued Chicks, Pickles Tc*lre nod Beet' Torrio., acz,, dox. Ile al vo iris a poi vrtich. of 74de.i (Ind Cht.iridy 7:dree“ 1. , r 1 / 1 4 .3.tonit•to 27" rtiv.l4uu a rail tiluoutsbatg. Jam: 13, IMO, OMNIBUS LINE, rritiguna.,„, g ....l would respectfully announce to .1 the citizens of Bloomsburg, and the nubi l e gen. aridly. that he running un ONlNtlit'S bc tween this lace and the dif. ~•.ils;;;;;;'airk4* recent Knit Road Repots dai• . .Jlll * .as ly. (Sundays mewed)) to connect with the savers) Trains lining South a West out the eatawissa and Williamsport Rail Road, and itn those going North and South on the Lack, & Bloomsburg Road. Ilia °MN litUrtz-CR are in good condition, commo dious and comfortable. and thanes reasonable. " Persons wishing to meet or see friend, de on rt rest be arrow moil aced, upon teasonnbte .harges, hy teac mg timely notice at any of the Ho. JACOB L. (IRTON, Proprietor. Itinotin.hurs, April ;27, IoC4 New Millenary Goods At the .Pottett Mort! (4 . AMANDA W . I.:BK.IIEIBER, 'go dURY PikIKULLY,) lll,ooMihttlth, PA. fhe public are reopeetrully informed titnt they can be furnished with tVerythifig to tho litAnaryy ling upon the host reasonable tams, and in pada not surpassed for style, beauty, or durability in this town, tier spring ovine of hats, bonnets, andother articles for tNomea and NUMMI wear, urn beautiful and well calculated to suit the taotta of the most homiletic. MIT her a call Store on Ma in turret toetth *Wei below Market. raprartiti-3m. ENV BAK EltY A, NI) CO N HC -" Ti ONEIi Laiasa4alitkliasszkr.macentatt ON THIRD STREET, RELOW M A RKET. BLOOMSBURG, PA. I. F. PDX, Proprietor ot tine establlohnient, would reopeettuity intbrai his old nod now rustomere, thus he hair everything fitted op at hie new stand to en nide hint to futnielt them with BREAD, emms. AND treIIYPECTIOVERItIet as herepitore. "ird - Her* after all persons, who have been furnish ed with Ale. Leger Beer, and Coder, by the whole, ldi, or piarter barrel, will call upon WILLIAM tHi.muitr., at his Saloon in Chives' Block, Mein Street, who hue touut enthuriae,l by the umlurnipned to orell tnt>'mow. II e wlllt , ott Manny have a 'amply on hand, trill be 'aid at the lownet maraca r.-tee. Mr. V. has in entitle , . with MP ant y and Lou. tketi . :Jett , — fitted up mome for the WOO Of ICE CREAM, t e, all whl may favor him with their rollout fie 1 4 also prepared to make tee eff , 4ol in large qoariti ties for parties. {midis or social gatherings, ns II"' tame may he. Everything pertaining to his line et Rnstneee 'seines eareffil and diligent intention. lre lie is thtiolifiii to hie cuehoners for past fa yore, and most cordially saiicita a continueoce or the Nittle- J. F. FOX. April 3,1 V r1itt...1n.1.1.1114, March Ist, MA 1% u.,44.g tot throne you that we are pre owed to otfer t fer year leeptut mu out usual assortment of MILINERYtOCK)OB. enrisittii4 of the newest shapes itt MOM Shit end ffiMp Hate, Goonete,ilic, Velvets, silk Good Rib• b oas , Floweret nether*. blather, Crapee,, , loodesk Weide. ornaments, Sic. We shell be happy to Newton you at our tittle, fot receive your nrdert— Nices tow fbr Lash. air, li, WARD, Nos, MI e- ,Nwttz Woad 6,0 , tiqt,ita, . _ . ............ . i' .., - ... •.•-, As IV ow . .BLOOMSBIRG ........ ...... . ..... ) . F M 0 CRN T ....,........... Vloontoliurg pcmatrid. runutstm FSFAIX WEDNEADAY IN 1111.00318111110, BY WILLIAMSON 11. JA COBI% TEAM',-I`3 uo in advance. lr not pole within SIX MONTHS. be cent' neilltlonal will be I greed. 07' Nopaper tiletentinued moll' all in NNW are paid except at the option or the editor RATES OF ADVItItTISINO. nen LIMN COMOTITCTI w POW". One equate one or three Innerilone. ..... Every subnenuent Ineerilon loan than 13.. 11P4r11. 3re. hit. In One 'gime, 2,00100 1 I 1 COO I COO im Two ogrep, 1 100 5.00 I 0,00 0,1/0 'Mtn ~ 5,001 7,00 8,30 11".40 PIM/ pquaree, 0.00 $4lO 10,01) 114,00 Ilalf rOlOOlO, I 10.00 I 110.00 14,00 11$ I'M One column, II MO I 1 0 ,00 r..V,00 I 30,00 fiseroter's and Adininietreter's Nome. .... .3,0 n Auditor.* Notice. Other advertixements Inserted according to epecial contrast. Hominess ■ousts, without advertisement, twenty. came per line, Trnnelent edvertlepinente mantel In edt one° all inhere due after the Oro Innation. Katie Lee and Willie Gray Two brown heads with laughing curls, lied lips shutting over pearls, Bare he white, and wet with dew, Two eyvs Murk and two (TN Nue, Little girl and boy were ! t h ey, Katie Lee and Willie limy, They were standing where a brook, Bolding like a shepherd's crook, Flashed its silver, and thick ranks (11' green willow fringed its banks: Halt' in thought and hall in play, Katie Lee and Willie Gray. They had cheeks like cherries red ; Ile way taller--'most a head ; She with arms like wreaths of mow, Swung a basket to and fro, ", .!Vi she loitered, half in play, Chattering, to Willie Gray. "Pretty Katie," Willie said Anil there eame a dash of red Through the brownness of his cheek -Boys are strong and girls arc weak, And 111 carry, so I will, Katie's basket up the hill." Katie answered with a laugh, “Von Anil carry only half .lad then tossing hack her curls Boys are weak as well as girls," IL, you think that Katie gues.4l halt the wisdom she expres,e,l? Men are only boys grown tall; Ilearts don't change much after all And when, long years from that day, Katie Lee and Willie Way Stool again beside the brook, Bending like a Atephortra crook— Is it strange that Willie said— NV hilt. again a dash of red Crossed the brownness of his cheek, "1 am strung and you are weak ; Life is hut a slippery ste,p Hung with shadows vold and deep. Will you trust me, Katie dtar— Wulk beside me without filar? May I carry, if I will, ' All v,,nr burdens up the hilt?" And she answered with a knelt, —No, but you may carry fiat!: ('lose ',psi& the little brook, Beading like a shepherd's crook, 11 . a. , Iiitig with its salver bandit, Late at,il early at the satvli, Is a cottage where today Katie lives with Willie Gray. In a porch she sits, and to Swings a basket to and Vastly different From the one That she slating in years ngnne ; This is long and deep and wide, And has—rockers at the side! Frank P. Blair Defines his Po sition. WAsnINGToN, June 30. Co! Ja.g. 0, Beo,rdioad. DEAR CoLunt.: In reply to your inqui ries, I beg leave to Fay that I leave you to determine, en consultation with my friends from Missouri, whether my name AA be pre-ented to the Democratic Convention, and to submit the i b ilowing a- what I OM bider the real and only i-sue in this contest. The reconstruction policy of the Radicals will be complete before the next election ; the States so long excluded, will have been admitted; negro suffrage established and the carpet-baggers installed in their vents in both branches of Congress. There is no possibility of changing the political charac ter of the Senate. even if the Democrats should elect their President and a majority of the popular branch of Congress. We cannot•, therefore undo the Radical plan of reconstruction by Congressional action ; the Senate will continue a bar to its repeal.— Mnst we submit to it ? how can it be over thrown by the authority of the executive, who is sworn to maintain the Constitution, and who will fail to do his duty if ho allows the Constitution to perish under a series of Congressional enactments which are in pal pable violation of its fundamental principle. It' the President elected by the Detnoc raey enforces or permits others to enforce these Reconstruction acts, the Radicals, by the accession of twenty vpurieus Senators and fifty Representatives, will control both branches of Congress, and his administra tion will be as powerless as tho present one of Mr. Johnson. There is but one way to restore the gov ernment and the Constitution, and that is for the President elect to declare these acts null and void, disperse the carpet.* State governments, and elect Senators and Epp. resentatives. The House or Itepreentlt.- fives will contain a majority of Di:limonite from the North, and they will add the Rep resentatives elected by the white people of the South, and with the co•operation of the President it wili not be difficult to compel th, Senate to submit once more to the obli gations of the Constitution. It will not be able to withstand the public judgment, if' distinctly invoked and clearly expressed, on it its 1:10 pre BLOOMSBURG, PA., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1868. way to avoid all future strife to put this issue plainly to the country. I repeat that this is the real and only question which wo should allow to control us : shall wo submit to the usurpations by which the government has been overthrown or shall we exert ourselves for its full and complete restoration. It is idle to talk of bonds, greenbacks, gold, the publio faith and the public credit. What can a Demo. eratie President do in regard to any of these with a Congress in both branches controlled by the carpet-baggers and their allies? He wiH be powerless to stop the supplies by which idle negroes are organised into polit ical clubs—by which an army is maintained to protect these vagabonds in their outrage upon the ballot. These, and things like these, which eat up the revenues and resour ces of the Government and destroy its cred it, make the difference between gold and greenbacks. We must restore the Consti tution before we can restore the finances and to do this we must have a President who will execute the will of the people by tramp• ling into the dust the usurpations of Com gm's, known as the reconstruction acts. I wish to stand before the Convention upon this issue, but it is one which embraces everything else that is of value in its large and comprehensive results. It is the one thing that includes all that is worth a eon test, and without it there is nothing that gives dignity, honor or value to the struggle. Your friend, el 30 ...50 000 4 I X 011 'IO 00 A Word to Laboring Men. Poor white men are falling victims to the heat all around us, as they toil, toil for daily bread, and for money to give the tax-gath erer. Thousands of poor fellows have left their families at home in the morning, gone forth to provide for the nest day's necessi ties, and never returned. A paragraph in a newspaper records the fact that a man has blett sun struck, or it may be that scores are included in a few lines, and it is said "the eases of stun stroke wore very numer ous," Down South,. the thick-skinned, thick skulk(' negro, who could bear any amount of heat without serious incouvenienco, and certainly without danger, is taking his ease, or doing the voting for the whole country. le is not working at all, badly as his labor is needed, yet be is living at the top of the heap, and getting into legislatures, where laws are made to govern white folks. How is this? Who has reversed the or der of nature, and who is paying the expen• spas of cuffee's subsistence? The poor white Wearers who are falling in the heat of the tun are supporting Meeks and whites both. They are bearing the whole burden of the country ; they are not only keeping the lazy negroes at the South. supporting the army which is quartered there. and keeping up the carpet-baggers who swarm in that ardiet eel couutry, but they aro also paying millions of dollars in gold to the capitalists of the country, who pay no tax at MI. Ever; 'lay the pour man most work harder and grow poorer, while the rich man works less and grows more wealthy. Yet, the party which promised so much for the poor has been in complete power fi l e eight years, and all the chauges which have taken place have been the work of their hands, and not of ours. If the laboring men, the bone and sinew of the country, have received any benefits from their administration of the government, let them have full credit for it, for we certainly had no hand in it. But if, on the contrary, the poor man has been dragged from his home and set up as a mark to be shut at, if his taxes have been increased, if the price of living has been doubled, if' all together the poor have been oppressed until they are sinking from exhaustion, we bear none of the blame, we had nothing to do with it. Nungrelism did it all, and has fairly won all the praise and all the blame which can at tacit to their eight years administration of the government. But it is time laboring men were waken ing up to their interests. We propose to lighten their burden at least one-half the first year we have complete power. Will the people give us power? Are they tired of feeding and clothing negroes, and porting armies to keep their brethren from exercising the rights of men? If they are. let them stand forth in the dignity of man hood, and place in power a party which never betrayed nor oppressed them in the past, and which alone can save them in the future. Dem acre t is li itschuran. S. Startling Fart. There are one hundred and fifty-six mem bers of the South Carolina Legislature, and of these one hundred arc negracs The whole amount of tax assessed upon these representatives of the people and property of the Palmetto State, does not reach $5OO, and many of them cannot be compelled to pay any tax at all. These sable vagabonds clad two U. S. Senators, whose votes will mom as much in the upper [lotto of Con gress, as those of the Senators from Penn sylvania. Of course, the Senators to be elected by these blacks, will be "carpet. 'stagers," who, in order to retain political power in South Carolina, mu. t pander to the wishes of their colored constituents.— Such is the work of Grant's military recon struction. The representatives or idle thrift less, worthless, vagabond negroes sent to the United States Senate, to kill the votes of Pennsylvania on all questions of 6mtnee, taxation, tariff and the interests of white civilization! Shall Grant be elected and this hideous fraud be perpetuated? —A popular stopping place—lirawly Sta• 0 A Western editor thus describes the effect produced by the numerous founderies, iron works, d.c., et Pittsburgh, Pc: Pittsburgh people never have fresh air except when out of town. They live on coal smoke and floating cinders. We in baled seven tons of coal the first hour we were there. The people breathe awoke, eat smoke, chew smoke, and carry it loose in their pockets. It is now seventy-two years since Pittsburgh has been warmed or reach ed by the sun's rays. Once a streak of sun shine, of several years' condensing under took to penetrate the cloud of smoke over the city, got lot, became smoked, and fell like a standing edition of the Black Crook. The ladies use smoke and coal dust to protect their complection. Little boys and girls stand on the corner with wet brooms and sponges to wash people's faces for five cents. Everybody is of a color in Pitts burgh. At the postofftce window the clerk distinguishes people by certain signs, it be ing impossible to see their faces from the layers of dust and smoke. We saw a little boy crying on the street because he had lost his Niter, who was six feet ahead of him in all the darkness. Every one is mourning in Pittsburgh. A barber once went there to color hair and whiskers. He man busted in a week 31en kiss each other's wives in Pittsburgh, unable to tell which is their own only by the taste. Women send their children on er rands, first writing on their faces with a thumb nail or wet stick. People feel their way by doorknobs, and read by raised type. FRANK P. BLAIR. A man once Ftood in his room wish his window raised—changed his shirt nine times in four minutes, and only got a clean one on hin► when the window fell down by accident and kept the smoke out. Bedclothes arc unknown in Pittsburgh— just leave the window open and bhect. of smoke rettle upon you like ucw. , papers from a machine press. Some years since some snow fell into that city from a cloud of smoke—the smoke was not hurt, but the snow looked sick. When looking at a watch to see the Wlr it is the fashion to light a match. Men carry lanterns to see how to shake hands. They mike black broadcloth by hanging a spider's web out till filled with smoke, and use hot coal dust for pepper.— They roll the smoke, sweetened, into sticks, and sell it for licorice. Still another name and a new bit , iiiess for Grant. The Tri/pme de;:lares that his moue is "Uncle Simpson Grant, — and that he ham gone into the 'olitelotites” business. Here k tli, handsome way in which it notices these interesting facts: "rnolo - Simpson has for AI& u t i• forms of the Pendleton curt. The ritimee, a: usual however, can only IT half right. U. S. Grant may very well stand for — l7nele Simpson Utant•" An eminent shipowner of this city remarked, when one of his friends remonstrated with him for ordering the word "Asha" to he painted on the stern of a vessel which he desired to baptise in honor of the largest of the continent:, "lf A, s, It, a don't spell Ad a , what in thunder does it spell?" In like manner, if 17. S. G. don't stand for Uncle Simpson Grant, we should like to know what in thunder it does stand ewe But if U. 8. U. has bought "the uni forms of the Pendleton escort," it is not that he may sell them. Finding that he ex cites no attention, and receives no cheers on his western tour, the Radical candidate has made up his n►ind to disguirc himself and his suite in these Democratic costumes, in the hope of thereby receiving a better re ception. The Pendleton men ought to have foreseen this and guarded against it. "Give me your card, sir v:elaiuted one angry student to another at Bob Sawyer's party. - hive you my card, sir ?" responded his an tagonist, "not 1, indeed ! you will put it on your mantle piece, to snake your friends be lieve a gentleman has called upon you." A SAD MliTAKL—People not well post ed in biblical lore should be a little careful how they quote from memory. Very grave mistakes have occurred before now ; but the }Whring, told by Mark Twain, shows con elusively that different commandments refer to different things, and that the captain un wittingly made n confession : "Why Captain, you appear to have a very bad cold." "Yes, mtulan," said the captain, who is fond of working io his garden early in the morning, in his shirt sleeves, "I suppose I deserve it; I caught it while breaking the Seventh Commandment, last Sunday." The party, male and female, started and kinked blank ; and then the lady who had brought out the remark said, as well as a choking fit of laughter would let her: " Well, upon my word, Captain, consid (wing the unusual circumstances of the case, and your present surroundings, it was bra iy neeessary for you to enter so much into partienlays When the innocent captain got home, he found, to his dismay, that the Seventh Com mandment does not say "Thou shalt remem ber the Sabbath day to keep it holy I" A tirslguatonovetnent is to bu made in the next Legislature to increase the pay of jurymen. Two dollars a day in a paltry sum far such service 4, at least those who have their boarding to pay, think so. —A lively urchin accosted a traveling dealer on Market street, the other day, and cried, in an earnest voice "Mr. —, please give me an apple; my brother goes with yo..ar el , do A Western Editor Describes rittiburols. Tarte Simpson Grant. =:= Why Grout Should not be Eele— ted. If none others could be named, there are two substantial reasons why General Grant should not be elected President of the Uni ted States. The first is that ho is not qual ified to fill the office, and the second on ac count of the political principles he professes to represent. We have never met a man who will say that he possesses the requisite qualifications to fill the office of President. His most ardent admirers will nut say that he does. And hew i 4 it po—ible that he should have them? tic has never had experience as a i statesman, nor has be ever held the simplest 1 civil office or appointment. In all matters of State craft he is as unlearned and unso phisticated as a child. Ile is totally igno rant of the essentials necessary to qualify a person to preside over this great country as 1 Chief Executive - knowledge and experi ence. He who supposes that any man can Ibe picked up and put in the Presidential chair, and can, as a matter of course, dim. ' charge the duties with intelligence and 'ht• dotn, is very much mistaken. Knowledge and wisdom are as essential to a statesman as a mechanic, and he who undertakes this calling without qualifications will fail. The Pres; tent of the United States needs great capacity, great experience, anti great wis- I dom as a statesman, none of which General IGrant has the credit of possessing. He was nominated simply as an expediency can. didete. Tho Radicals have no man of their own who would stand a ghost of a chance of election, and therefore seduced Grant by the nomination and induced hint to become their candidate. If a person wished an agent to conduct any business, whatever, he would select one skilled in the particular occupation he was to take charge of. If this is important in private pursuits, how much more important is it in the manage ment of the intricate and important affairs of government. The people cannot expect their public business to be well managed in the hands of en unqualified agent. No Sabbath. Ina prize essay an the Sabbath, written by a joerbeyman printer in Scotland, which, for singular power of language and beauty of expression, has never been surpassed. there necurs the following passage. Read it, and then reflect for a while what II dreary and desolate page would this life present if the Sabbath were blotted out from our cab eulatiun "Yokefellnw ! think how the abstraction of the Sabbath would hopelessly enslave the working classes, with whom we. are identi fied. Thick id' labor thus going on in one monotonous and eiernal cycle, limbs forever on the rack, t h e fingers forever straining, tien brew forever sweating. the feet forever plodding, the brain forever throbbing, the shoulders forever dropping., the loins for ever nehirg, and the restless mind forever scheming. "Think the beauty it would efface, of the meirpheartedness it would extinguish, of the giant strength it woubi tame, of the resources of nature it would crush, of the sickness it would breed, of the projects it would wreck, of the groans it would extort, of the lives it would immolate, and of the cheerless graves that it would prematurely dig! lice them toiling and moiling, sweat ing and fretting, grinding and hewing, weav ing and spieuing, -crewing and gathering, Hom i ng am i d reaping, raising and building, digging and planting, unloading and storing, striving, struggling—in the garden and in the field, in the granary and in the barn, in the Newry end in the mill, in the warehouse and in the shop, on the mountain and in the ditch, on the road s ide and in the wood, in the city and in the country, on the Rea and on the shore, on the earth in the days of brightness and of gloom. What a sad pic ture would the world present if we had no Sabbath." Staying Damn Church to Head. Some stay away from church to read. They say they can find better religious think ing and teaching in their books than in any of the pulpits near thew. Suppose they can. Do they yet the better 'exciting? Are they really at home for purposes of religious culture? Are (bey actually growing better, mom godly, by this reading which keeps them from church? Let them be honest with themselves, and see if this is not a flimsy excuse fi,r spending their Sundays, not in mere religious reading, but over all sorts of books. Even if they give their Sundays up wholly to religious reading, they have generally mistaken the aim of public Sabbath services if they think it can be thus met at home. God expressly commands us to "rever ence his sanctuary," to "lift up our hands in his sanctuary," and promises to come unto us and bless us there. We should go to church to worship; to worship publicly and unitedly, as well as to receive instruct lion from the preacher. Would an Ismel. lie have been held blameless who never went to the temple-worship because he had a roll of the law at home? But the church Ker• rive is, in a sense, our temple-worship. No ether appliance of religious culture can take irs place. Abolish all church services, and you abolish Christianity. He who stays regularly sway from church is doing what little he can to introduce heathenism, He is contribn.ing his influence toward seoular izing his columunay. If his way was uni versal, irreligion amid be dominant, and the nation %mit slowly sink hack into an atheistic barbarianism.—Fhrish 17sitor. —Why does a young lady love to waltz ? .01.3* She ?owe oggin'• Charity In the hour of keenest sorrow— In the hour of deepest wee— Wait not for the coming morrow, To the ill and suffering go; Make it thy Sincerest',lmmure To administer relief— Fully opening thy treasure To assauge a brother's grief. Go and seek the orphan sighing— Seek the widow in her tears; As on mercy's pinions flying, Go, dispel their darkest fears; Seek the stranger sad and weary, Pass not on the other side, Though the task be sad and dreary, Heeding not the scorn of mide. Go with manners unassuming, In a meek and %Met way— O'er the father no er presuming, Though thy brother sadly stray ; 'Tis a thtvioni kind compassion— 'Tis His righteousness alone, All unmerited salvation That around thy path has shone. When thy heart is warmly glowing With the sacred love or prayer, Be thy words of kindness flowing Not as with a miser's care ; DtrrY e'er should be thy watchword— Pity drop the balmy tear ; Always toward the fallen cherish Sympathy and lova sincere. All Sorts of Items. —Sheet music—The cry of Children in Led. —Greeley aim that "truth will out.' Certainly, but not from his mouth. —Radical songs may be properly styled "singing psalms to a dead horse." —An honest man is the noblest work of God, but the edition is small, —ffole•in•the•Day's widow is worth two millions. A fine catch for some young brave. The La Crosse Dentnerta hat.; a corms. pondent who hurrahs for "Grunt and Grafi. tax." —The discussion of the temperance ques tion, as applied to candidates, staggers Grant. —Wendell Phillips shrieks to "shoot the de. ertem" Does be want to decimate his own party ? —A man in Norwich dropped a lire coal into a bombshell "to hear it fizz." He heard it. —A locust stung a Radical editor out went the other day. The editor survived, but the locust died. —Ben Butler says the national debt must either bo paid in greenbacks or repudiated, Ben is a good Radical. —"General Grant,' the trotter, is dead. His namesake is about to make his last ap pearance on the course. —The Glenwood (lowal Opining says that the grasAoppers are destroying every thing but gram widows in that section. —The New York Timm fears the Demo cratic majority in that city nest fall may teach 90,0u0 votes. Shouldn't wonder. —An the magistrates elect in Shelby county, Alabama, are negroes, and not one of them con read or write. Who wouldn't be a Radical ? —The Radicals propose getting up sing. ing clubs for the campaign. Bingham wll sing the "Hangman's refrain," and Butler "Spooney Bill." —What is the difference between the Em peror of Russia and Useless Grant ? Wen dell Phillips answers : The one is a despot and the other a whisky-pot. —The Radicals say that Grant carries the banner of peace and forgiveness. This is a mistake; he marches to defeat under the banner of vengeance and hate. —The Radicals, in a spirit of infamous calumny, say that Gov. Seymour inherits a propensity to madness. 110 won't be half so mad after November as they will. —Frank Blair fought in more than two score battles, and yet he is denounced in unmeasured terms by the men who stayed at home and sold shoddy cloth, bad coffee and paper :soled shoes to the soldiers. —A man, in telling about a wonderful parrot in a cage hanging from the window of a house which he often passed, said: "It cries 'stop thief' so naturally, that every time I hear it I always stop —Down in Mississippi, at a colored Sab bath school, a few weeks ago, a teacher asked the question : "Who died for you?" After a spell of whispering, and a spell of silence, a little nig, about forty years old, replied : "Abram Lincum." —A poor scamp left his with in a great rage, declaring that she should never see his face again until he was rklt enough to come in a carriage• He kept his word, for in two hours afterwards he way brought home drunk in a wheelbarrow. Turnow Wen's OPINION.—The Rad ical newspapers generally appear to think their readers have no sense, and that it is only necessary to abuse the Democratic can didates. Thurlow Weed, the shrewdest Republican politician in the country, enter tains a very different opinion. He says, in the New York Co/miter/7M: "Governor Seymour is not to be beaten by being called a copperhead, or Frank Blair to ho distanced in the race because he is called a revolutionist. Ridicule Seymour as some Republican journals may, he is the most popular man in the Democratic party." The small fry of Radical editors, whom Greeley so aptly styled "narrow minded blockheads," would do well to make a note of Mr. Weed's remark. "OR rot n thottgana tmignes"w••BB the urchin remarked when inxide hcro.l4-A NI:11111:41'k 2 St ronl4" Drink. The history of strong di Ink is the 1.. I of ruin, of tears, of blood. It i • Merl the greatest curse that ever ....outer tl earth. It is one of depravity's worst tr Ia giant demon of destruction...Nleit is earthquakes, storms, conflagrations, fie. despotism and war ; but intemperww. the use of intoxicating drinks, ha- en volume of misery and woe into the -.r. or this world's history, more fearful terrific than either of them. It ' Amazon and Mississippi among the tiv . wretchedness. It is the Alex:K.ll,4r an I polean among the warriors upon the pc mid good of man. It is like the pale l • of Apocalypse, whose rider is )).• ; 011 at whose beds follow hell and deists net It is an evil which is limited to no ace continent. no nation, no party, no ...,•:.: I period of lint. It has taken the 1 •,or I at his toil and the rich man at Id- 4.. I senator in the halls of state and the dr.. lon the street, the young man in hi, ~ • tics and the old man in his r e.... 1 priest at the altar and the layman Il• I pew, and plunged thorn into a coma it 1 llt has raged equally in times of war an times of peace, in periods of' da pr••- • and in periods of prosperity, in repel and in monarchies, among the mit - .1,, 1 among the savages, Since the tin.. Noah came out of the ark, and I.' .1 vineyards, and drank of their - io• . read in all histories of its terribl• .i... and never once lose sight of its I late is bloody tracks. States have recot 1.'6 aetments against it, eeelesiastical p ~. have been imposed upon it, soeieti... I succeeded societies for its cum feinted but, like him whose name was 1. _'...n man has been able to bind it. roc tl four thousand years, it has been r... rage the world, destroying some a virtu • s f lest flowers and some of wisdom ;s fruit: I It was this that brought the original et t of servitude upon the dceendants el' H ' that has eaten away the strength of empt wasted the energies of' states, blotted i the names of families, and crowded h. II s tenants. Egypt, the source or s t ien, Babylon, the wonder and glory of the w • —Greece, the home of learning a n d o f erty—Rome with her Closers, the Rost of' the earth—each in its turn had i. I lacerated by this dremlfel conker worm, thus become an easy prey to the II tr.. It has drained tears eaough to took a expended treasure enough to . : 1 t;I:t. , . curiae, shed blood enough to r. 11, It and ! waves of every ocean, wrame, o.: 7 ilug enough to make a chorus to rho ;.;:t tations of the under world. Si; o I r mightiest intellects, some of ifs mo-t : i emus natures, some of the happiest hot , souse of the nolle-t, tel of moat I has blighted and crushed, 4...1 buried squalid wretchedness. It hay sal 'p every jail and penitentiary, and ahosho , I and charity hospital in the wet pith I . ar I anti. It has seta forth begg , Ali t .. 1 i street, anti flooded en my city with I • a. i ity and crime. Awl it ha-. w • hap-, •I I more towards laingill: call!. : 01 4 Le!: i get her, than any etw other form of t i Coubl we but do up this one owed .11 1 and sweep away l'orever all the r• -nit I thi s one total. of :..in. Ity w001 , 1111,,11, 1 i such thalgs as pri.ons, a stt i n n s, e h., houses, or police. l'he children of ha,e want would sit in the halls of plenty. tears of orphanage and widowho o d. disappointed hope, would dwindle it goodly measure. Disease would he rol of' much of its power. The clouds w, vanish front ten thousand afflicted I.ot And peace breathe its fragrance on world, almost as if the day of it- r... 1. tine had come.—nr. ,1. A. .`hiss. A Wwtstustrrox special to th e I' . +. Age of the 29th ult., says: A large ma ity of the members of each house of 4 gress have already left fur their bon, . the Capitol to-day presents rather a 1. appearance. The Democratic and It t Congressional Committees have their quarters in the building, however, and .: a large force is employed sending out d merits for the pending Presidential c paign. From present indications it i likely that there will be a session in tcruber, but as the matter rests w ith ) gan and Schenck, it is, of course, impt Me to tell what these worthies will tto w the time comes round. It is observed the Radical leaders, and even the 1;11,m are more cautious now than they were w the New York nominations were first i n : They declared then, as will he remein ht., that they would have no trouble in clef ~ ' eyntour and Blair Now they ‘ay it require hard work, and some of the u sagacious men of the party express opinion that New York. Pennsylvania Ohio arc already lost to the t ;r a m This agrees with the i)emoeratie the matter, awl the probability is that the expiration of the first autumn na, the liadicaln will dim-twee th a t been "reckoning; without their that the election of Seymour ,ttol It; I,r foregone conclusion. A Wrsmitx papa ~ays that a , Grant WIII cowing off the cars at St, I. he was stung on the nose by a 10 , 0 mediate!y aflerward3 the locuo , • with terrible convulsions, an , l time died in a lit of delirium ircnicn... and bad whisky ar. in .Icmaml when locusts are bed. A North rap.!inii • ; •ro famine in I ire, at/tin:going to W ineton to prevail upon t i ongreiA hi irgl tw