floontollittg tryattrat. =I I'M. U. JACOBI', Editor. WEPNESDAY. 51 4 31, 9, 1808, Democratic National Ticket. FOR PlocqiNr, lORATIO SRYMOUR, DP NEW YORK. ron NTT raEsinEsT, FRANCIS P. 11T,A414.111., Mlssollti. Aim Democratic Male 'ticket. YCH ArDITOU (ENERAT., 110 N. CHARLES K BOYLE: or PAYETTE COVNTV. nAt SlTVErnit (IENERAL, GEN. WELLINGTON H. ENT, or CVLIJMIH?s .41 Al NT V Demorralk. Comity Ticket. ASSEMILV, 6 EOM ;F.; scorr, r0M74118 4 10NER, WM, ISTRITT ATTORSI , X, K B. IKE11;.11 Arbrnm, A. J. A LIII:Pit4ON srtivrstiu, ISAAC' A. DEWITT. Republican Meeting. The Republicans of this town held n meeting on Market Square last Tuesday evening. lier getting out the Band and parading it about town lbr an hour, quite a number of people cane together at the des ignated spot for the meeting. The majori ty of the andietwe, we should think, was iernoerats, who went to the meeting out of curiosity, to hear what the defenders and supporters of the Radi ca l party had to sap. The disappointment ran be better imagined than described, when it was announeed that the speakers who were expected hnd not arrived, but that the meeting should not be postponed, as it was the intention to make use of "home material." Joshua Menden hall, of Franklin, was called to the chair, and a lot of the Iladieals in town selected as Vice Presidents. The organi zation being effeeted,l'apt. Whitmoyer, the Pine township boy, came forward and made one of hi, not very enthu4instie speedw:4. We do not know how long he talked by the watch, but the time seemed terribly long to us, and after he made his exit we failed to discover that he had proved or settled any thing. The Captain labored hard and earnestly, but all to no pirpo-.e. Enthusi asm could not be produced. It was not in the crowd. M. M. I: Velle, Ashland, who was here attending court, was not intro duced to the audience, and delivered a spread-eagle speech, making, no doubt, the best he could out of a bad cause. lie spoke of our financial condition, expenses, receipts, and approprit.tions ; but his whole talk on these points was a good deal mud dled. Ills allusions to reeonstwetion wet !e rather vague, and made no impression. If wo. should say that his eulogy on 4:en. Grant was not what it was intended—able and proper—we would be perverting the truth. Al a soldier we have not one word at this time to say against Gen. Grant. Ile is running fur a civil not military office, and it is his qualifications for the office of a civilian that we will discuss in this campaign. The talk of speakers about the General's good fighting qualities has nothing to do with his holding the office of President (provided he can get it.) To say the lea: t of Mr. L'Velle's speech, it was well receiv ed by men of his political persuasion. Col. Samuel Knorr was called out. Ile stepped forward to the foot lights, made a few remarks, excused hinisdf en account of the lateness, and retired. A few cheers were Kilt up, the oiler n►cwbers of the Radical party getting in their "Amen," and the fizzle adjourned. GRANT VOW :i ritiNcipi.r%;.—The Rattles' candidate for President, during his trip to the West, gave vent to the following opinion : ''The Demorrats are making a great fuss over negro suffrage. As for toe, I think that our colored fi•ilow citizens have just as good a right to vote as the foreigners have." flow do you like that. Irishmen and Ger mans, who followed Grant to his butelier fields in the south? Do you believe that negroes have just as good a right to vote as you have? If so, vote fir Urant. But, if not. put your shoulders to the wheel and help the Democracy to restore this govern ment to its former condition of white su premacy and grandeur. FEw better campaign documents could be eirculated throughout the North than the southern rebel newspapers.— Thidica/PaPin Yes, especially when you go to work and publish garbled extracts from the southern press and misrepresent the southern people. in order to make capital tar your rascally party. Commissioner Child's stateur ta concerning (:eneral Grant's refusal to bring Lome the sick Union soldiers, with Beast Butler's report of the matter, would be a good document for the friends of the sol diem who died in southern prisons. Why do Radical papers refuse to publish it ? SENATOR WILSoN, in Lk Maine spetch, FAN the Republican party were demanding the elevation of the negroes to the height of citizenship, their exaltation to equality of civil rights and privileges and the crowning act of all the prerogative to vote and be voted for. liadieals of Columbia county, hoist yom colors and face the 'mimic. CAN'T BrAu.—The New York %Mame declares that " about nine tenths of the Ilouuocrats cannot read." What Mlly, then, it is for the Mongrel's to be distributing documents among them. The great misfortune that the Mon grefs can't understand what they do rend, and won't read anything but lies if they can help it, The Democracy In Motion! (IRANI/ DEMOCRATIC MEETINU AT ORAMIEVILIAII 5000 People In Council: On Saturday last the Democracy of Or ange and the surrounding townships, held a Maas Meeting in Megargell's Drove, near Orangeville, Columbia county. The people began to gather about tt o'clock, and contin nod to come in until late in the afternoon- Delegation after delegation arrived, headed by bands and martial music, till the grove, large as it is, was litterally filled with hu man being anil every description of vehicles. The delegations from Bloomsburg and Fish ingercek attracted no little attention. They were large, having excellent musk, well supplied with flags and banners, and con veyed some handsome hickory poles upon their wagons, all having the appearance of old Democratic times. Tho meeting was organized at or about I (AM& P. it. The following persons were announced anti made the permanent officers of the meeting : Pox/Vent—lron. JNO, WHEYNOLDS. Pier NA/cats—llndson Owen, Berwick; P. Everett, Benton ; Wm. B. Kovno; Bloom ; George Scott, Catawissa ; Stephen Poho, Centre; John Zaner, Fishingereck Barbi D. Albertson, Oreenwood ; Charles Neibart, Hemlock ; Silas W. Mei lenry, Jackson ; John i‘lortlan, Mount Pleasant; Capt. States B. AI. Yants, Mifflin; Isaac Mellrble, Madison; David Hildebrand, Or ange ; Benjamin Wintersteen, Pine; Wm. White, Scott; Montgomery Cole, Svar ka Se, e,t,,e,',g —John F. Derr, Jaeloon ; C. Barkley, Bloom ; Cyrii 11. McHenry, FiAtingereek : Eyer, Hreenwood ; 11. B. Itiekettv. Orange. The meeting wag addressed by Hon. V. B. Ilnekttlew, Victor l'iniett, F. Clark, Feki.. and Hen. W. 11. Ent; after which ihnlge Derr rung a campaign sung, when the meeting adjourned with cheer,: for the Presiticntiai and State Ticket. This was, in all probability, the largest pelitieal meeting ever held in Columbia county. It was orderly, and all passed off satisfactorily. Tho people seem to be fairly arropcd and Are anxiously Waiting the day of elortion. The hotel•keepers and citizens of Oratme ville did everything in their power to enter t tin those in attendance, for which they are entitled to many thanks. Large Inemorralle Riccilng In Illioonndonrg. The Court Route .01101 to ('l,l utmost at pooto. On Monday evening a Democratic meet ing Iva.: held in the Court !louse, in Blooms burg, which was largely attended. It was organized by the appointment of the follow ing tinkers: Prt,bl, o—lionttT F. CLARK, Esq. rice AysOhats----iram Derr, Peter K. erbein, Charles F. Mann, Peter 11 eimbaoh, Main Suit, Pt Or Ent. Saerrt~rr;is—Capt. t ;co. W. Utt, Capt. T. lt. Millard. The Prer.iflont on taking the chair made a few remarks which were well reeoivol. The meetin7 was then addressed for two hours by Senator linekalew. lle mad,; one or his logical and argumentative speeches, and held the audience F pen-bound, save when interrupted by applause. At the close or the Senatn's remarks, t;en• Ent was called out. He made a few well-timed remarks, tiller which the meeting adjourned with a Fong from Judge Derr, and cheers for the Democratie National and State emliflatei. Death of ex-Go.. Se 3 nzoaz• Ex-tlovernor Thomas 11. ; 4 eyninur died at his residenee in llartford, Conn., on Thursday evening last. lie was educated at the Middletown 31ilitary histitute.studied law, and practiced the profession ; was Ilep rusentative in Congress from Connecticut from IA3 to 1513. In 101 he went to Mexico as a Major in u New England regi ment, and was promoted to a eolonelcy. In isc o n h e was e l ec ted I;overnor or Connecti cut, and was re-elected three times; was minister In Russia during Move's adminis tration. He was a prominent member of the Masonic fraternity at the time of his heath. Ile was sixty-one years of ago.— Poftiot. Witobr.w.r. NraDrat.—On Saturday evening two rien went to the house of a colored man named Jambs, ne ar Vaneel•nrg, Lewis county, Kentucky, and deliberately murdered Jacobs and his wife, the latter's mother, a blind woman over years of age, and a child of Jacobs, a boy some fourteen years old, The latter lived long enough to crawl away to the house °fa neighbor and give the alarm. Another child, a little girl, managed to escape. On 31orolly two men, named George Kinard and Bilyew, Ivory arrested and fully identi• tied as the perpetrators of the horrible deed, by the little girl, and after a preliminary es amination were !Idly committed. "Nmorm IN TOE ml—The con gregation of the First M. E. Church of this place had a nigger thrown into the pulpit on Sunday night a reek in the absence of their pastor. The more sensible of them left the church, but the negro-worshiping portion bowel down to tht ir 117110, !WM Walt a view of prejudicing Irishmen against Frank Blair, the New York frilmal publishes an address, said to have been pro nounced by him befiire a Feni a n or; affiza iion in lsrA, in which he is made to speak disparagingly of that movement. As there was no Fouiun organization in this country at the time specified, of course the tale is cut out of "whole cloth." But there was such a thing as the Blieveganimon fund.— Will the Trilmur inform the public what became of it? Ti' somebody would only Fong n freedman alive, flay it earpet.haggcr's hide froni his body, or insult a Yankee schoolmarm in the South, he would entitle himself to im perishable honor in Radical estimation at this particular time. That party is sadly in want of something of a sensational order to fire the publie heart. Won't somebody trut 1 on somebody LI,V, 1.1.0.0, 4 Iteninrkable Coincidence. A gentleman in one of the Dppßommits at IVashington has made n drove ry which develops one of the most remarkable denten to be found on record--to the super stitious, one absolutely startling. Many of our ruleri of the earth were firm believers in destiny, and long before there rise rot a confidence in their exaltation that nothing could impair. Napoleon and his first wife had their prophecies and omens which were singularly ; but neither the realign tion in these two cases, nor in any others now of record, were so remarkable es the coincidence developed by the discovery of the combination or figures made by the gen tleman in Washington, which is published in the Notional Intelligenrer, and which we give below. In the first place, the alphabet is numbered from A to Z, 1,2, 3, &r., up to 211. A represents 1 and Z 26. Taking therefhre the letters in the un i te "Seymour and Blair,' ' and represen t ing each letter by the number it represents in the alphabet when we added up the whole, we find the total seek produced is 177. Then take the words "t; rant and Colfax" end add up the numerical representatives of each letter, in like manner, and the aggregate product is 110. Add together 177 end 140, the total of two electoral tickets fir the ]'residency and Vice Presideney, now in the field, awl we have the aggregate 317, which is pre cisely the number of votes in the Electoral C o ikee Ihr 'President and Vice President. The lidlowing is the table A I S Pi t 1 7 H 2 F 5 it IS (' I Y A 1 4 M 13 N 14 ' I/ T "0 F' ti 1% 21 11 7 11 IA A N If 1 ..... 9 A 1 I/ 4 .1 1u N 11 K P 4 (' 3 1,......12 I) 15 Df ....1,1 B 2 b 12 N L. 12 I.' 11 .....15 A 1 A 1 1'......1i1 1 .... . . 0 It IS-- 41 —.IS 140 177 111) 1 . .....21 • 22 317 The number of W votes in elector. X ...,24 al college. But ti carry the comparison still further we have ela.sifieti the vote as it is now eat. eulate it may probably stand from the light before tts at this time, and we find exactly the rune result: 177 votes for the Demo cratic randidates and 14014 the Republican ticket. No other classification of the votes can he made which has greater plausibility than this. It will be seen that the Radical's have all the benefit of the chances of their oppressive measures in Missouri and other states: Seymour (;rant mot Blair. and CoUlm Alabama 8 it Arkansas 5 0 California 5 o Connecticut . .... ... ti 0 1/elaware..... ... . .. • 3 0 Florida 0 3 lie4rgia 1) 0 Illinois 0 in Indiana 0 13 lowa 0 8 Kansas 0 3 Kentucky ... 11 0 houi%iana 0 7 Maine 0 7 Maryland 7 0 Massachusetts ..... 0 12 Michigan o s Mintowtta 0 4 l'llississippi 0 7 :\lissoun 0 11 Nebraska 0 3 Nevada.... .. .. .... .. 3 0 New Hampshire.. 0 5 New Jersey ... ... .. 7 0 New York 33 it North Carolina... 9 0 Ohio 21 o Oregon 0 0 Pennsylvania ."ii o Rhode Island 0 4 South Carolina.— 0 t; Tennessee 0 10 l'exas ti 0 Vermont 0 5 West Virpinia..... 5 0 Virginia 10 It Wisconsin 0 8 UOIIIIIEILE IhsTORY o A th,l' TTON. needier T3111n., who died recently at Horenee, was one of the peatest gluttons of modern times. He devoured in the course of twenty four hours a whole quarter of beef; a breakfast, prepared lig ten or twelve persons, he would dispatch in a very few minutes. Ile ate limestones, corks, and nearly everything that fell into his hands. .1 favorite food of his wait snakes, which he relished bettor than the fattest. eels. Do devolved the largest snakes lie got hold of without leaving anything of them. When lie was once employed as assistant in a hos pital, he seized a large tomcat, and was al ready occupied in tearing it alive when Dr. borenili, chief surgeon of the army, was sent for. There he held the eat by the neck and tail and tore its belly leaving noth ing of it but the bones; whereupon he gnawed, like a breast of prey, at the skin, to the horror of the hospital assistants who witnessed the repulsive Set'll.". These assis tants said they had seen him drink with the utmost avidity the blond of patients that had been killed, and others caught him eat ing pieces out of the corpses at the charm! house. When it finally speared that this cannibal had devoured the whole corpse of a child, he was dismissed from the hospital, where lie filled everybody with unspeakable horror. Ile died, twenty-six years old, of a putrid diarrlea, resulting from mortifica tion of the bowels. Tar NEW YORK N(1=03;3.-1%) DPIIII - ts of New York have nominated for Governor John T. Hoffman, the present Mayor of the city, and for Lieutenant Gov ernor Allen C. Beech, of Jefferson county. Mr. Ileum is one of the soundest and most cultivated gentleman of his party in the Empire State, and is personally, ex tremely popular, and it is fair to say that a more worthy or gallant standard hearer email not have been selected. Mr. Beech is less widely known than Mr. Boffman.— He resides at watertown, where he is a suc cessful law practitioner. lie is a life-long Democrat, and in the northern part of the State is esteemed as one of the pillars of his party. The New York State ticket thus far is, without doubt, a good one. THE Radicals clamor incessantly about the "fruits of the war•" Well, don t they en joy them? They have the stealings of the Freedmen's Berm; the "ndseellancous expenses" of Congress, amounting to near ly two millions of dollars per year, and all they have and can plunder from the South? What mere do they wont? Why the elec tion of General Grant, in order that these toothsome "fruits" may continue to fall into their baskets. When a Radical talks about the "fruits of the war," examine his carpet bag, and lock up the spoons. ...A California doctor says the use of to !Jame will prodeou Who Newport Grant and t The ramie/ Ara mime of the naval worthies who support want and CoMix. Ain't they a beautiful set of rapseallions? The infamous Parson lirownlow, who said he would rather go in hell with a loyal negro than to heaven with a copperhead, Carl Scholl, who publicly ntmoutepd that God was an imaginary being, the RIM° only fit to ammo children, and the Christian Sabbath a relic of barbarism. Den Butler, who voted sixty-fire tittles for Jeff. Davis In the Charleston Conven- tion, and afterwards turned spoon thief. A. Alpeora Br:envy, an or eonvict from Sing Sing, and a colored carpet-bagger who wants to go to Congress. Parson Kallock, who was expelled from his parish in Masoachtmetts on account of his beastly conduct. Hector Tyndale, who applauded the bru tal conduct of the murderer and incendiary John Drown, and who is now the Radical candidate for Mayor of Philadelphia. Nathaniel P. Banks, the hero of the Red River expedition, and who, in 1H.56, pro posed to 'let the union slide." William Lloyd Garrison, who denounced thin !Won and the Constitution as a league with death and a covenant with hell. John A. Bingham, who assisted in the conviction and murder, by a military Com mission, of Mrs. Surratt, an innocent woman. Edwin M. Stanton, the tyrant, and who helped to slaughter Union soldiers in the South by refusing to accede to a fair ex change of prisoners. Simon Cameron ' who was compelled by President Lincoln to resign the office of Sec retary of M ar, on account of corruption, and was censured by him own party in Con gress. John W. Forney, the foul whelp of sin." who was forced to resign the lucrative position of Secretary of the Senate, by Si• mon Cameron, on ac aunt of his rascality. Morton MeMielmel, Mayor of Philadel phia, who " went a fishing" . when President Johnson visited that city, and grossly in sulted the Chief Magistrate. I'. C. Callieott, who is now in the peni tentiary of New York for defrauding the government as Revenue Aker, James M. Ashley, the great impeacher, and the companion of the perjured cillain, Conover, Turner, dm negro in the fleorgia Legisla ture, who denouneed the white men of the county, and announced that "he intended to calla convention of his people and send for carpet-Loggers. scalawags, Yotd:yes, a n d an y body for a Legislature except Georgians.' The President of the 1 'nion League at Anderson, Vies, who is now in jail for stealing. Horace Greeley, who wanted to "let the wayward sisters go in peace" when seeps sion was fimt threatened in the south, and as much of a traitor as Robert E. Lee. Joe Brown, the founder of Andersonville, The spies and informers s.:ho were oignn ized into a band of mercenaries during she war, and levied black mail on peaceful and unoffending citizens in the North. The loyal leaguers who incited the masses to pillage and arson, broke into private man sions, aestroyed printing offices, and muz zled free speech. The contractors and jobbers who grew rich by cheating the government, and helped to swell the national debt by their karful frauds upon the Treasury. The party, which, according to Dawes, a Radical Congressman, stole more from the nation in ono year, than the whole expenses of Mr. Buchanan's administration amount ed to in lour, it composed of Radicals. The men who have increased the pul•lie debt, augmented the taxes, broken the Cnion, sneered at the Constitution, adro eat, negro equality and negro suffrage, dis franchised white men and enfranchised ne groes, &e., will support Chant and Culffiz• Jlew do you like the picture? THE Philadelphia Ay. says: What of Pennsylvania? W'hat will she do in the coming contest? are oft-repeated inquiries. Our reply k she will do her whole duty.— During the past week we have seen several gentlemen who, in the rotine of business, curve traveled the State from the Delaware to the Ohio, and the reports they give of the tone of public sentiment everywhere uniformly point to an overwhelming Benin cratie victory. Our infbrmants are gentle men of intelligence, who would not misrepresent facts. Their opportunities for observation have been very extended. In the large cities and towns, in the retired vil lages, and throughout the rural districts, the universal cry is: fiive us a change of rulers. Any change must be for the better. We have had our fill of taxation, of negro supporting, of' constitution-breaking, amid' rottenness, fraud and corruption. We have given the ltudieal party a fair trial. For eight long, weary years we have permitted it to control our national affairs at the dis cretion of its leaders, and what have been the results? Judging from the present state of fkling, Seymour and Blair will carry the State by such a majority as will bury Radicalism forever in the Keystone Commonwealth. QUESTIONS FOR Tut: Promm—For Aud itor General whom will the people choose? Charles E. Boyle, the Democratic candidate, a man of integrity and capacity, against whose character not a word even of suspi eion dare be breathed, or John F. II artratift, the Radical candidate, whose chief recom mendation has been that he was a soldier, but who now labors under the unrefutod and irreffitable charge of yuficial navondoef, in this, that he fiethori-.• the payment qf flalomeadS ati dollar.l it tioloi ql w One or the other of these candidates must be elected Auditor General. Which one shall it be ? The man of irreproachable (diameter, and acknowledged fitness, or the man wh o occupying the post of sentinel over the Treasury, tidied to protect it? For Surveyor General whom will you have, people of Pennsylvania? General Wellington H. Ent, Democrat, an approved soldier who bares upon his person the scars of natual conflict, and is an intelligent, hon. cst man, who would honor the office, or General Jacob M. Campbell, whose sol diership is to be inferred from his title alone his deeds in the field being unknown to lione ? The real moldier, who marched and fouglit and bled, or the one who, we believe never smelt powder burnod in the face of the enemy ? You must take one of them. (loon wise ly. —Mon ing Theriot, WitOTE ''FLAITSITINCI LIE ?"- The New York Courier dissipates the pop ular idea that the late Mr. Halpin° wrote the famous nihrtne stanzas "Tear down the Flaunting 1.41 e." The editor says: "'Clint desperate pit* of doggerel was written by an Englishman named Bowervem. Bow eryem took it to the Tribune othee, and of it to Mr. Charles A. Dana, who was the editor of the Sun. Mr. Dana refund it with proper contempt, and ordered Bow cryman nut of the office• Boweryem found llomee trecicy, and Horace wrote on the ropy, with his own hand, the order, 'lnsert, H. and it was inserted in the Tribune, in obedience to liornee's order." —When the malt of the election in Wil mington,Delaware, was announced, the Radicals claimed diet -their eandiduto fur Mayor was elected by over lta majority, New it has Wien to 41. rut much of a 6buwer after all. "I any Sure they Won to do Right." Every honest man who really desires to see our distracted country restored to peace and prosperity will greet with satisfaction ti little news item received from Washington a few days age. It reads as follows: In consideration of thegiews of General Reseerans, General Meade called upon the President on Friday and spent several hours at the War >cpartment and army headquar ters. I le speaks in the most cheerful man ner of the condition of the South and the Rotumal good conduct of the people. Ile remarked to a friend to-day : am sure they mean to do right." The abominable falsehoods, misre . present• ations and perversione, coined contrived and uttered daily by Greeley and fleecy fbr two years law, are all blown to the winds by this little sentence spoken by an honorable man. When General Movie, who has been long enough in the South to make himself acquainted with the views and feelings of the leading men of that section, tells the northern people that he "is sure they mean to do right," the malignant fabrications with whieh the Tribune and the Prfss have teemed for a long time past, and which have been reproduced by a thousand of' the small-fry papers of the Radical parts., will be seen by every man of brains in their true light; and the contempt of those who have been deceived by the unscrupulous fidsifica time will not be overcome by any sophistries which they can invent. General 3leade has fixed the brand of knavery upon the brows of these unmitiga ted scoundrels, so deeply that all their art cannot erase it. They will now pour their • streams of vituperation upon .leade and Rosecrims with the same vitriolic tempei' with which they have directed them against others who have refused to aid in their in famous work, unless the cowardly rascals fear that some indignant of these officers ' may loose patience, and treat their epidemics to the excortiating application of a cowhide whip, which is the only argument like to make any impression upon such naturer. Their railing and lying have done their worst; and the slow-moving hand of time brings out the truth. There has been nei ther sense nor reason in the measures de vised and enacted by the malignants in "Congress" to secure the votes of southern States for their party. The attempt to; establish negro rule under the power of On. bayonet has, proved a fiailure ; and those who have made it now find that they cannot con trol the votes of the slaves they have eman cipated, and their only hope now is in pro voking hostilities between the negroes and the white . people, to give the radicals an ex- • cuse tin' increas ing the military force and ' the profits of contracts and plunder, MI the industrial and business interests of the country are sacrificed to enable them to perpetuate their power and drive the men try on to the ruin which is staring us in the face. The testimony of' an officer so much re spected its General Meade will be received by the northern people in the sane spirit in which it is given. They know that he is not an ambitious politician, and that neither himself' nor his friends have obtrusively pushed him forward, although he won the culminating battle of the war. He has shown unusual modesty ; and he is univer sally regarded as an unprejudimd and fair minded man. - - Thepeople of the northern States now know that southern men have honestly ac knowledged their defeat in arms, and can didly accept the situation in whic h they are placed • only contending fur the rights guar anteed to them by the Constitution, and which no honest man desires to withhold from any portion of the American people. Their property has been destroyed, their laher system subverted ; they have many diffienitioA to contend with, but only ask to be allowed to improve their condition by an exhibition of their own energies. : n orthern men will now see that there is no necessity for the vast expense of a standing army in the southern States. and no honest use for such a politico-military machine as the Freedmen's Bureau. 4 ;own! Meade's as suranee of the disposition of the southern people to do right makes it evident that a very hirre part of the expense and plunder of the Federal government may be at once lopped off, and taxation proportionately re duced. The little sentence uttered by an honest man will lie regarded as a harbinFer of that real peace and good will for which well-meaning men in all parts of our country long and pray. It will he to the ears of the plunderini Badicals and shoddy aristocrats more feattul than the tones of the raven's voice when he naps his n inv. against the windows of the And croak:. devair. They will howl and writhe mkr it but the cures 01' (lemons are the prab.e4 of honest and true-hearted men.—/helly 0..$ A MisnsoTA iLtuv.—A traveler in Minnesota has mine across a nine months' old baby, whose "measurements" he gives as follows: twenty-sit inches in twenty.four inches around the chest, and twentpeight at the hips, ten anti a hall' inches at the In WeleS of the arms, eicht and a half at the wrist, twenty-two inches at the thighs, and cloven inches at the calf. Estimated weight, fifty pounds. Ex-C,ov. Turoms H. Summit, nr Con neeticut. died at his residence in Hartiorl n n the 3d inst, of typhoid fever, aged 111 years. Thus has another distinguished Democratic statesman passed away. He served one term in Congress, four years as Governor, and was :Minister to .11us4a, dar ing President Pierce's administration. He was also a colonel in the Mexican war. ...Grandmother Posey, the widow of a Revolutionary soldier, and aged 102 years, recently died nt Valley Forge, had ten chil dren, eighty-one grand•ehildren, one hun dred and nineteen great grand children, thirty-three greut-great-grand•children, and live great-great-grand-children. " A rare old plant" was "Grandmother Posey." .Wanted—Radical vaizabonds, idlers, and loafers, to go down houth to preach "loyalty" and "mules . ' to niggers. In re turn they will be sent to Congress—salary five thousand dollars a year and stealings. The only outfit necessary will he a carpet bag, a paper collar and a fine tooth comb. ...The House of Representatives of Geor gia, by a vote of S 3 to 23, have declared no goes ineligible to office in that State, thus turning out twenty-five members. Sambo SNIT:II'S vengeance. Carpet-baggers, look out. ...The Harrisburg Slate Giotoi says the llndical party have the largest and dirtiest lond of political sin strapped upon its back CVVr carried by any party. An hon est confession is good for the sou), you know. ...A IVestern Radical paper announces that lighting : Johnny Logan is in Egypt. Illinois, skinning eopperhcalls." Johnny wanted to skin Northern Union men in 1:401, but the Confederates would not have him. ...The Radicals n►ake as much rum over Vermont 05 if this was the first time she ever strayed from the path of virtue. But as it is their first baby this year, they have a right to crow lustily aver it. ...C. A. Mayer, of lAA haven, is the Democratic nominee fur President Judge in the Twentytifth District. Of utiurf‘e he will be elected. l'en niul SI'I9NOII. ...Seymour is Tam ninny fur the lied• lents. ...(Irant's lire is not iwureil. Ile has no polioy. prettiext girl in Illnom wore n Sey mour bodge. ...Grant's home is in Illinois. That ac. counts for his being pitch a great Sucker. A young lady desires to know if "Eight I lour Bills" are the same an Sweet Williams. ...Out or four hundred and filly soldiers stationed at Sackett's Harbor only nine are in favor of Grant. ...The biggest brieklayer's strike was when the Lowell bricklayer struck Beast Butler fur insulting his wife. ...The reason why t; rant clubs style them selves "tanners," 1$ heenilMe the Radical party has proven itself so expert at "skin ning" the people. Chieago RepeWcon advises that every negro hhall be armed to the teeth in ell his outgoings and incomings. "Let IN have peace." ...Virginia Vienna Schenck has been re nominated for Congress by the Radicals in the Third District of Ohio. lie will run upon a masked battery this time. ...The young lady who wax frozen with horror, and nutmegumitly . melted into tears, was carried out and con , agiteri to a watery grave. —Full details have been received from Al parts of the country of the, emelition of he crops. On the whole, the reports are very favorable. —John Quincy Adams, the grandmin of old John thine)? 41 , 1ntii.4. 14 again the Dew ocratie candidate for I iovernor of 31otwo• ehtisett?,. ...Brick Pomeroy his n Rtntult of Gen. Butler with n spoon on each rhoubler. Ile has placed this statuette in front of his of fiee and written antler it in largo letters, "Thief, Robber, Woman Insulter." ...Springfield has produced a curiosity.— It is a two-cent piece, genuine, placed in a missionary contribution box by a younc man who has a hank account of Mem thousand dollars. .The brave General Wool denies the lie that . he refused to shake hum& with Gevernor Seymour, when they met in the cars on the way to attend the funeral of General liussdl. JOHN iIfCIiNAN is expected to follow Massachusetts Wilson in the Maine cam paign and to repent lti:4 last winter slander, "thnt an intelligent nigger was better enti tied to the eleetive franclike than the Catholic." his Wilson, of :Ilassaelot-cibt. in lus Maisie f , peed', eheses the Detenetney Iterellse they are pledged for "that utwon stitutional, im-Amerienn and wicked mon atroeity—tt white man's government." ...Columbw4, Ohio, has a singular story that a portrait of Thaddeus Steveno, hang ing in a store, lately fell to the floor, and a close examination of the wall, nail, cord, and frame, failed to show any good . reason for the accident. The buperstittons are pleased to have something to talk about. ...A }•oung lawyer 'in Chatanqua county, New ork, having been tusked to run for Congress by a committee of Radicals, de clined. saying: "It is trite that I left my flither's workshop, studied law, and have been admitted to the bar; but I firmly, though respectfully, decline to take another downward step." MAleelcn. On the 224 ult., by Rev. William .1. Byer, William larks, of Danville, and Miss Anna S. Price, of Locust township. On the 25th ult., by Rev. W. B. Fox, Horace Bower and Miss Rebecca Smith, all of Briarereek. On the 26th ult., by Rev. W. W. Care, assisted by Rev. S. 0. Rhoads. .Iw , eph Swank and Miss Mary Longenberger, all of :%1 Whit. On the 31st ult., by James W. Kitehen, Km., Peter G. Moss and Miss Sarah Kith ler, all of Boss township, Luzerne county. On the sth inst.. at the M. E. paramme, Bloomsburg, by Bev. .1. A. MeHick, Benja min Bennet and Sophia Bloom, all of Moorsburg, Montour county, Pa. DIED. In Light Street, on the 25th ult., Charlie, son of Cyrus Graveling, aged I year and 10 months. In Bloomsburg, on Saturday mornim lagt Charles Livingston, only :..on of L. 11. & Sarah Jane Mendenhall. aged I year and ti months. "Suffer little ehihiren to come unto me. and MOM' them not fir of such is the king dom of heaven." 111 RH ET IC lEP4)II.T. Wheat per Mullet, `f.. , s) to Bye, 1 :Jo ('OM I 35 littekwlleat I no Oat` , . CIOVI L'Ped " 7 on Flax.werl. 2 I tri'f I apple; 2 .",11 Potatoes, '• I 2:1 Flour per barrel 13 00 Butter, Eggs per d0zen,........... Tallow per pound, Lard Manus, " Shoulders, llay per ton, Dissolution Notice. The partnerelop heretofore or Wing between John L. Long one Joseph Long under the name of John L. Long h Co., nt atainville, Cottonton County, wit.: tbosolree by ntotual Consent on 13th ilitY .1 Ammo.. ter's. The hooks, woos kr., non in the hands of John L. Long with when, ali OltitieWrits must ho node. Joliet I. LoNit. Soot. P, It. 1.41N,t. NOTICE. that a report tsin eireulalion with. effect that I took n hllOlll-1110 belonging to !leery Eye,, of robtogereek township, and Mot A. W. l'atterenn. of Ifishingereek, and Seinnel Bogart, rif Orange, have been given eurrency In this oranital, I take this method of correeting the report by pro. moulting it 4 wifely false, and without (motilelion or (AWL es it has been Outwit to injure, tor more t h ut t o give meaouoyaour, fr LI, RUG A ItT. Eidltrow teak, dept. PUBLIC 84 LE Real 1:4In I e 146 Personal Properly Wl.l be capnii il In publir wile, it lb.' pteson fe „ r the inll.4erilirr, 1 1 1dif. 1 11/1 0 town. , lin. I l'him hi 4 rfiglr , lv 111 h, Inne. 1,. In ./1,,,,VV111r, M v 11110 111. • Win. rent. prolg*, .1111.1 e elil 551111 feel front tahl 1.. el In Arplh. 1 , 11 Winds nen smiled II (rime Mu,. gnint inn Moly 1)IVEL1.1 N(; 110I'SE, fin 1. u noun, iud a impol 1111rfl. Aiin O. Odlnwint porronul pm„ttv In wit : five florid 11or•ro, too. op:in or RNA CAI ring five 1109.1 Moir!' 'ON . ow. I'm, h or ,. e warm. ono firol 1 . 140. 'ring htte Iwo burnn wmon, mi. Iwo Isom.) ofi. twto• borer olehtb, TES IIEAD OF 11/17NG c.tirrfx, Iwo oil of tinnille. Vain nafinnie,lllll/11111 ii 11( ?fir. linen 1111,111.1 1 .1, Oro , grid of Ity n, one 11..111.er, non r mmHg mill. one I frnil 1 vs' lief Priam, martini*. Ihfce heed ciottoro. !down. It WOW+, 1111.1 /oil IMO., rs ,„„„, Itell.ll 1111)Ve. 11110 plll/10/ with 11Iot of othr / lemm.httlif Arid klt, h,o Inn 1.11111.. 1: 1 111N1:1 , 1VM blow Prot a, Aur.lolw.t. j • 0.11 the oirenglll of uld nap Ih. niIA nnol hilovrteog pinliti”o of 'online Try thlil .1.1.111. 1 0 M.,111 toy Ilse A 1,I)F:11 1 • 11MVItrA): WliftKO., 40 North Vroui Streat, rbilad..lplll4. tteptamber Y. 1.1. r ly. Softer to Tearberm. EvonotoletSoer or 'feather , far the ro Diploids or rroloompo I Cnlutly , 14 111 le• luvl , l nl the 14.11.1WiliC 11111 0. 11 and plarr• • row l'afrott Ir. arid l'rankl tt. at Calm. ftepteon her 141 h, : net ot irk and Droareteek al n• twoelo, So•pl. ; Mame and He ever, rialoorolle. Sept. 16th, Loe too pud Ileprologrreek, al Poalotarroo. S•pt. lIIh M.111.i0 al 311111onvolte, Sept, IAIII , Crulto. nt Centre. voile, Sept, 1911 1 , Manipur, et Ils ttlriril . / Selo/pot lialore, (rept glob; Hemlock, At Mirk 111,111, Sept. CAW Mount Plearant. at iallee'e Yrluul Il,nnc, Sept 211111. m aim ,. A t urapgry , ll. , , Peps. *Au, Scott 111 I.llChf vtreci. Sept. Vtio ; Puebtnttnrrk ut 11111wnl.tr, Sept. , Lipton, Savona:or and Jackson. at Heaton. 1../e• lot: .4...1 rov., at ‘lollvilfr, Urt. Wawa' nod / , 'lrrVyloll4ll. 11.1 :1.1. Yprrtol x.sioliontiottp well be Pahl et the rolTire nr thur (*mossy etoperontepolent, pt 111. bar. on the tith 1.1.1n11..r awl 111 e :NO p.l No% The e a animal will he opentod 41 In re, lark W. tn. titi 6 . 4111 Inir• sho..IA appear at w.•.'■ iminiit ton for iho A{•trbl oil iiiakei application for II jiNtiorp ore it yip 41C4 to bo pfese.lll. 0.‘11K1.1 Y. I. Coliney rule 1. Staleintast of sfount,• Fund or Cs tNYA:illf A M ow NAIIIP )It 14;7. April ittl, 1,40, lioplirno. I 15 , 4 r) •. Inoid 1,.% Icon County t..uu lr 11, nowt of onrrnt.•.l I 4.1.1 1111 I •toirtirel to l'onosty 4; ..... '44 for r..11..r1i00. $1.04 40 n v em l. of ,•trevr. qOl.l Ptiowtetlion. IV et ,r. '• sm o I U. r,,,, k .1 1.1411 JII I 111 11 . 1.44; 0 0 •• '• •• H u h i . 4;044.11 oil 10.11 .01 4 ,, t I:010 MI •• •• . to Tr.....01•r f••r 1.04 r.OO .4... t.t! 111 •' •• .. •• C.dl.•rtor for r ........ P 44.00 1.'41 30 1 1 :1 1 anro in hands of F. L WWII/4rib To, :wife,. " 1 " Au:. 1%1,0 E. W. CLARK & CO., /1.1 NKER X, No. 31 F wtL l'hird St., l'hilailelphin, GENKUAI. AGCNTS Volt National Lilo Insurance Co. 1111 t l'Narn STATES OF AMERICA, 111 ' , glows', I 0 &athirst \:• , t, .hrsey. Th. Nalhoial I W. lii•olanterolotany eaa carper , by tiforellai Act 1111 . vital July t 3, 11b'. wilts a Cash Capital or $1,000,000, and H DOW 1 heronghly otgaaise•l and ro.pareil huoine.* I.llwral tent/. ofrerc4l ooeuts and rolsrirorr, who ar•• ure led to ayp l y ai rnpothr.r. F • JII eaiticolopo lo .11 a opleration al nor °thee, halite.] to the rneem.l story of our Itankisot where Co /ruler* and Pamphlet.. fully der. rite 1.12 the :40448114m0 oQ••rrd by the 4. . 11 4) 411 Y. NW 1 . 1, had. Appltristinna (.1 Central and Wertern Potently,: Ma tub. 014.!.., la O. S. Ittltte Ell.. Ton tn.la. N. Cl. %8K h en.. So. 24 flonits Third Sheet. I lithdt.ll.ll,4. Augn4 lii -IY TAKE NOTICE. The on , irr 4 igoe , l , Malt Liptio in ihr T“wo-tlip of \Vitae. wiry:. I.nz - rne o onlitY, hereby retie nonce that, in arriirdniirr with an Art of A,oiohly..ipproved the fourth tiny of April A. It 0.00111 •'Ait Art in relation to tho pate, pen and (11.1..111041 of t,ntta, ho Wad i barrel, 1014* or the mannfartorers of Malt Looms, - tlo.y Wed in the °dire of tho Prothonotary of the flood"; :dotes:lo. n ite4cription of their private Mark, 10 , 01.1 rd upon the eaternal 10111 , 101 of troth heads of such quit, hogshead, hLrrel, rasa or knit, in nl,OllllOl offer their Malt Liquor ti» pale ; thnt *not marl: riifirktn of the following totters, gr. ST." ; mot that any persona who shall aPl i t' l lit ti,tr awn Ilrn or rennin 10 41011Vrr 1 0 111 , 0101 0 fr111 01, 1 or in any way 011011.110 the Brant ninth any own bait. hoasheail,lintral, rash or ksg, arth he draft with arroriltog to law. N, B. Ey the a.. of Amononty nt,,,ge riled , it is rtat,,4 ter hn eninttMt tor anv per.on 40110 r than th.. wl'e °WIWI I N , ll, mntilete or destroy : r or M M at • A to ft Mtn W A WII, (M, keg, am, duly 1,1,,n 44 or stamped by the mv /INV MIN + 0 .4 , 1M1.0, is 111•1114, 101111pilablO by a tiny of olio tor 00,1 i hat tel, &e.. +.4 In. , lir.t ottenr.e. and I.y a Ann of f:0 and raqn . t.nnat , 01 front one to three nmatila for $.109,111 , 1a .Suge; , t S, FOR )411.E. The undersigned wit offer at private t•ale. hi* AND wyr situate on Main Went, and known the .I:nane,4 property," containing !hint* two fret in frnut ; mrtnate on an alley in the mar and an silky on nMglt viol west mote, with a good well of water and ,olhe excellent fruit on the lot. The pea. eerie I , ihdesirahle ono The terms will .ho made easy, and posecsvoin given nn the &On( nest Aped. WrOHNEIt. Moom,burg, Aog tem. N4)ncE TO STOCKIIOI DIAS. Notice of heselty given that the first installment of subscriptions to the Normal School KmNiue, was dime on the fir of Jame, amt red to be prompt. I y paid to the Treasurer. Alen unpaid otbsettptionf to the Bloomsburg Lib ersty Institute:, which must he paid An the OW Phteh must be settle , l. CM MENDE:UIf:IIJ. Ip loon 'berg, Aug. R.'treasurer. 11. I) ( I W I 1.1,1 AMS PO RT DICKINSON SEMINAUL IVOR BOTH SEXEWI Thin lattitution haa everything in the way of woo y and loialthin I wool ni location, oliperionro ability of locally, and earnr et and thorough itoOtts, ion in a rrm. rounmE OF STUDY to eminent, it to 111 A (OP ttdo of o.lscation, Chaves moderate. Next Term will commence August Mth... Catalogues sent on application. THOMPSON MITCHELL. Williamsport, hog. 12. IPt4 tt. President. The Haasehold Gas Machine. At Pori /ping ihrelitrogß, Slmw, Paetorce4 Chvrehts Piddle Builifinv, 117th Gos. GAN WI VIIOUT MIRE. OR HEAT, The Fimplicity and cane by which then Machine to maimed, as also ita economy and great mad, rec. ommenda it to pobtte favor, Call and sea machine to operation at the glom Mall , llll4lorer nii4l SOO. Agent. DAVID JONES. Tin Furnishing Store No. 733Orcen sp. rll tbnoshrititt. soot! for I nonrated Circular, Aug. 19, rtk. 3111 T ll 1 , 1 Al IIIC11:11 'ItA COLLI4; a Pennsylvania. re•ntganiaed is 100 as ilk Scietitilir &boot. int,* contSeit nt iitOrlittiOn to General :J. ileum. Aviculture, Merriamkat and lJivll cirerlieeti tra, and I:Harrah and Ilatonal Literature , The r;a,ii Kam lowa July leJth, and end, tlecvut• her WO, Prue. particulate apply to JAS. V. MAME, Vito Preoet Agrtcultural Civllrge, Ventr• 1:0., 1 . 14. *8581.14t11 'l'6l V/21 1 .41 a witot,Es.tut i ly I costE.C2ZONERS AND FRI IMltlinf4, A;L 11;1 Mirth Third .)IIT', I'll I LADELPII IA. Ke'Oolon, l‘totortly attended to I , t.. MEI $.1.11" .11 slPil +4 030 GEM BACH & WITGMAYI:II