Bloomsburg democrat. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1867-1869, September 30, 1868, Image 1

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    OL. XXXII.
OFFICERS OF COLUMBIA'CO.
President Judge—Hon. William Elwell.
Derr
Associate Judges— { P r etor K. 'llerbein.
Proth'y and CV k of Courts—Jean Coleman.
Register and Recorder—John G. Freeze,
John F. Fowler
Commissioners— Montgomery Cole.
1
David Yeager,
heriff—Mordecai Millard.
Treasurer—Jacob Yoh°.
IL. B Rupert,
Auditors— John l' 'Hannon.
Jacob I . fat ris.
'Commissioner's Clerk—Win. Krickbaum.
Commissioner's Attorney—E. H. Little.
Mercantile Appraiser—AV. H. Jacoby.
Conn!) , Surveyor—lsaac A. Dewitt.
,District Attroney—Milton M. Traugh.
Coroner—William J. Ikeler.
County Superintendent—Chas. G. Barkley,
Assesors Internal Revenue—R. F. Clark.
John Thomas,
Assistant Assessor— S. B. Neuter,
Daniel McHenry.
Collector—Benjamin F. Hartman,
Bloomsburg Lllerary:lluslllule.
BOARD OF INSTRUCTION.
HENRY CARVER, A. M., Principal and
Proprietor,
Professor of Philosophy, &c.
Miss Sarah A. Carver, Preeeptress,
Teacher of French, Botany and Ornamental
Branche.,
Isaac O. Best, A. 13.,
Professor of Ancient Lunenages.
Charles E. Rice, A. IL,
Professor of Mathematics,
F. 31. Bates,
Teacher of Book-keeping and English
Brandies.
Miss Alice M. Carver.
Teacher of Instrumental Music.
Mrs.
Teacher of Vocal Music.
Miss Julia Guest,
Teacher in Primary Department•
Spring term commences April lath,
Illoomqbarg. March Is, I sns.
NATIONAL FOUNDRY.
41t1."'t 111.00MSBUNG
-
LUMBIA CO ” P
tint
er,l Hg
robeeriberi proprietor
m of the shore mooed ere
, i lenitive ft/OW.l64l,point, Hi now
Prepared to teethe OfdPf%
for
All Kinds of Machinery,
Mr Collieries, Hogg Furnaree, Ptationary
111111.1. g, THIREVIIIING ACIIIIIEN, Ike.
He is also prepared to make Ptovea, all shire and
patterns, plow•lrous, and everything usually made in
Pret•el l ese Vonndries.
His estansive facilities and practical workmen, war ,
laid him in reeviving the largest contracts on the
us let reasonable terms.
ICS brain of all kinds will be taken in exchange for
tasting,.
vat,This establishment is Weald near th e Imekawa
Illoomoburg Railroad Depot.
1111.1.31YER.
Illnomiburg,Sept„llll, WO. _
N EW RESTAURANT,
to 13hive'r Building on Main Pullet
WM. GILMORE,
Informs lint citizens inr Ultnimehtiri end vicinity tint
he has opined a New
lIIESTAIJRANT,
n this place, where he invitee his old friends end
enotomera toe! Ili and partake of his refrerlonentc—
tt to his Intention to keep the hest
LAGER BEER A ND A LE.
constantly Ott hand ; AI a, Fortes. nataaparilla. Min
oral Water. Fanny Lemonades, Raspberry and Lein
en Syrups, can always be load at his Restaurant.
Ito the eating One he presents a
MISS Or MILE
net •urppaned in Om place ; via, Pickled Oyaler.
clam, Bairdinex. Fiala, Barbecued Chicken, Pickle,
Tune and Boer Tongue, dm., am lie Mon /lag a it,
article of
Cigars nod Chewing nbocco
fa, his tuitional". 110 - * Clive him a call.
Inammaburg. June 13, 13011.
OMNIBUS LINE.
Till. undersigned would respectfully announce so
the citizens of Bloomsburg, and the public gem
'rally. that he is running
an OMNIUUN LINE, be-'
sweet; chic 1 lace sod the dif•
form gall goad Depots dal. . sr ,_di sr
ly. (Sundays emoted) to
Fannon with the several Trains going South a West
on the Calamitous and Williamsport Nall grail, and
with those going North and South on the Lack, k
Bloomsburg Road,
His ownisuaess are in good condition, comma
Mous and comfortable, and diaries reasonable.
[Cr Persons wishful to meet or see thsor friends
depart, can be accommodated, upon leamineble
(barges, by leaving timely notice at any of the Ile.
tele,
JACOB L. GIRTON,
Proprietor.
Bloomsburg, April 27, V 364
New Millenary Goods
At the Palley Store
AMANDA WERKIIHISER,
(arccuson TO NAST 941111Mi1f.)
moomeniuno, PA.
The public are respectfully informed Mot they ran
he furoished with eviorytoing It the Millinery line
upon the most reasonable lemma, end in ponds lint
surpassed for style, beauty, Or 1111,11 1 / 1 111) , 1.1 111111
town. Her Series styles of buts. honnets,lllllll other
articles Fur WOlll/711 and Misses wear, ON hemitilla
and well ealeutnted to suit the tastes of the lame
flotidious. Give her a tall More on Ma in siring
(north side) below Market,
NEW BAKERY AND CONFEU -
TIONERY
i3Basaaatbillific Ettancipar2
ON THIRD STREET,
BELOW MARKET.
BLOOMSBURG, PA.
J. P. FOX, Proprietor of this establishment, would
vellOwetfully Infests' his old and new customers, that
he has everything thud unit bli new stand to en
able him to furnish the■ with DREAD, HAKES,
AND CONPNCTION OHM, SA beretolora,
rr Hereafter all persons. who bare hero furnloh
.4 with Me, Lager Deer, and Porter, by the whole
half, or quarter barrel, will sail up°. WII.LIAM
DILVIOHZ. at his Saloon in
Skives' Block, Main Street,
who has been authorised by the sudereigned to mil
the same. He will constantly hasp a supply on bend,
which wilt be sold at the thereat mullet rtes,
He, P. ham In miaow .vlth hie Mae y and Una•
fitted up rooms for the isle of
iCE
to all who may favor him with their eastern. He
Is also prepare dto mate tee Cream In terse quint.
Ilea for parties. public or aortal gatherings, as the
Cu. may be. Everything pertaining to his line el
homes, will receive careful and diligent attention.
cr. xi is to his customers for past the
anteand most cordially solklis a continuance of the
. J. F. 110 Y.
April 3, 1607.
11111141114/1114, March let, SW&
IPWe bed to Inhale you that we are pre
pared to offer for your IWO portion out usual
%Bonn meat of INILMIHRIf 00000
Consillited of the newest shapes In Strew 0111 and
10111, Hate, Sonnets, es. Velum, Hll Goof Rib.
Woe, Flowers, Feathers, Ruches, Crapes, loader.
Ilralde. ornaments. Re. arc. We shall be hippy to
wait on yea at oar Stove, or receive year orders
TOPA:, for Cash. Yaws. it, It. WARD.
Ma 111,-Imo. ?foe 161, 103 ♦ 107 North Second
Jkreat I larlelph is.
OR. W. H. ORADLEY,
(Ws Mamma Medical Dirieter U. B. Arm 7,)
Physician and Surgeon.
QT ()Mee at the Lotto Hotel. Bloomsburg. M.
Calls promptly &Headed to both night and day,
Bloomsburg, Nov .tt.
0
0 RG
•
•
floontobre Itmotrat
TERNIP,-119 00 In edirenen. If not Feld wothin
SIX MONTHS, 311 mite iddltlenel will be r &reed.
Nnreper Alseontineed Neill wi li er greys
ere paid except et the option of the
RATES OT APVERTISII4O.
its Line rOJUTITUTI C 1140A1111.
One squire nne or three Insertions AO
Every subsequent Insertion lees wrenl3,.
PP4CII. IL Ra. MC OM IT.
One squire. 1,00 7.00
Two squares, 3.00 3,00
Three " 3,00 7,00
'our squires, 0.00 co
!bare°lninu, 10.00 I 11.00
One column, I 13,00 I 10.00
Execuonr• end Admlnfillrator'e Notice. IAIO
Atoll itor'• Notice
Other aqi vette." meaty Inserted accord'', to 'pedal
comfit.%
illislefirs ■ntiees, without advert lament, twenty.
cents per line.
Transient adverileeinrinte payable la ash ailce all
inhere due after the lint insertion.
New Star-Npoogled Banner to
Nutt the Timm,
0, say can you see since the war's deadly
blight,
Our time honored flag, without sadly re•
gretting
The fate of a people who sold their birth
ight,
And behold now the sun of their liberty
setting?
And the tax we now pay (near two millions
per day),
Gives proof that fanatics and tyrants bear
sway
W bile the :1 ar•S pangled Banner in mockery
waves,
Over Isnslholding tyrants and to:•ridden
slaves.
The brave soldiers who fought amid trials
so sore,
As they thought—lor the Constitution
and Union ;
And hoped they would see when their perils
were o'er,
The States all united in friendly commun
ion.
But now they behold from our rnion of
old,
Many States stricken out and by "niggers"
controlled,
While the Star-Spangled Banner deridingly
waves,
O'er a country destroyed by fanatics and
knaves.
0, what would our sires, who for liberty
bled,
Think to sea their homes sunk in such
vile degradation?
The South ruled with bayonets, powder and
steel,
And the North under bonds of most gall
ing taxation?
Could thev rest in their graves while their
children nee slaves,
To those shoulder-strapped tyrants and
bondhohling knaves?
While theStar-Spangled Banner doth taunt
ingly wave,
O'er these war blighted realms of liberty's
g rave.
The black Mongrels say they will fore.: the
States all
To accept "manhood suffrage" and "mis
cegenation ;"
For %idiout it they know that their party
must fall,
And down goes all hopes of our Mongrel
"New Nation ;"
And they know it' they can't get old Useless
S. Giant
To be their Dictator, their schemes must
aVauut—
And the Sour-Spangled Bannner in truth
way yet wave,
O'er the land of the free and the home of
the brave.
Speech of Gen. Richard Cleaner.
lk Abandon* the PrOral PhrlY and Sup•
ports Sqpnour crud
General Richer(' Coulter made a speech
at ligonier,in WeAmoreland munty,recent
ly, which we wish our Radical "friends of
the soldier" would read and publish as a
campaign document. It certainly contains
valuable information for unmilitary citizens,
as well as soldiers.
We present the subjoined exttacts, and
ask the particular atteniion or our Ropubli
can cotemporaries to the charge, made in
the blunt manner of a true soldier, don
Stortbin Ie4rOZICII the private records of die
War Office.
Let it be kept in mind that it is a Union
sokiier who wakes this charpe and not Rob
ert f)uld:
"the agitation of the slavery question
and the election of Lincoln !nought on the
rebellion. In the campaign of 'GO a hue
and cry was made against Lincoln, and it
was then threatened that if be was elected
war would ensue and that the Union would
be dissolved. I voted for Lincoln, and was
willing to take my share of the war, and
did take it, for the purpose of settling the
question, it' it could be settled no other way.
was elected and war came, and during
its progress the same cause that elected him
in '6O required that he should be to-elected
iu '64 ; the question had not been settled,
and what had been agitated at the canvass
and fought for at the ballot•box was renew
ed on many a battle-field, and the struggle
went on.
• • • •
Even France, in her most despotic days,
never made such proscription as the Repub
lican party nom propose to do in the South.
Why should the Southern negroes be allow
ed to vote? What claims have they to su
perior merit? They aided and assisted in
the rebellion, and they built the vast earth
works fbr the defence of Richmond and
Petersburg, the taking of which caused the
shedding of the hood of many a white tuan,
and the death of many a true-hearted man.
But it is not the white men of the South,
according to the Republican programme,
who are to govern the South—it is the New
England carpetbagger, manipulating the
nigger, who is to hold office and rule the
rebels. They make officers of those that
please them, and of those only who will
PURLIIMED NYINT WRUNDIDAY IN
BLOONINIUBO, PA., BY
WILLIAMSON! 0. JACOBY.
4 OD
0 00
0 30
0,1 00kr
WOO
BLOOMSBURG, PA., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMB R 30,1868.
observe their own purposes. Arkansas
Ima two Senators—one ovum front Wieeon
sin, and the other from Minnesota. South
Carolina has a Governor from the army,
and so in other of the reconstructed States.
They pick up a fellow llysm anywhere and
make a Senator, or a congressman, or a
judge of him, no matter what his State.
We become accustomed to this state of affairs
and laugh at it, and it sounds like a good
joke on the rebels, but let me tell you it
will make trouble in the future ; it is but
the entering wedge of similar operations
here at home, and you yourselves may some
day feel its effects. I say here, that could
this state of things have been foreseen in
1864, when the men of the regiments whose
term was shout to expire were asked to en
list for another period of three years, to
stand by the government awhile longer—
could it then have been known that such
governments would be established, that such
poor, helpless wretches as we had turned
into Washington from Culpepper, along the
Hammes road, and Orange Court-House,
should be allowed to vote, and the white
men be prosetibed, not a veteran would
have taken the oath of re.enlisittient.—
Bounties and furloughs would have been
rejected, and all along the Rapidan would
regiments and divisions of men have
turned their back upon the enemy, and
marched away from the conflict. The long
lines of true men, who raised their hands
on Isish in renewed obligation, would have
mined their films homeward, and abandon
e I in disgust the bloody struggle which was
to have for the fruits of victory such wrong
and such injustice, I speak now what I
know, and I see men around nut now who
know it as well as I do, and who will tell
you the same thing.
General Grant now mends on the Repub .
lican ple,fos in as the exponent of the Re
pu;slieatt party, and es against hint I have
nothing to say. I sewed under him too
long 10 speak with disrespect of' him now.
Ile was succerslul, and that, in these days.
is the test of merit. lie may have commit
ted errors, but it is too late to go over the
ground now to point theist out. I honor
bins as a soldier, and deem him highly fit for
the position he now occupies. But he has
peen nominated, not because he was the
choice of the !cadets of the Republican
patty, but because he was the best man to
fall back on. The leaders did not want him,
but they thought that you the people want
ed him. and tlitough him they would gain
your vat-.. 5. They are afraid of him, and
he is stuck up as a mere puppet and thr the
purpose or blinding the issue. I have no
objection to Giant, but I believe if he is ,
elec.ed, Washhurne would in fact be Presi-
dent, with Colfax as an alternate—Grant
would be President by brevet, with the
honor and emolument, and should he dare
thwart their plans, at once meet Johnson's
fuse, and be sttai3htway impeached and
thrown overboard, Ile has been used as
the tool of men who have ruined you—
ruined, I say, or why, with an incense of
live hundred millions yearly, during three
years of peace, should you he burdened
wish a debt increased two hundred and thir
ty millions more? And here lays the secret
of their desperate and unscrupulous effort
to carry the election—they have squandered
too much money fur which they cannot ac
count—they cannot afford to go out of pow
er and give an account of their stewardship.
The private records of the War Office bare
been destroyed. Stanton, who is a vaga
bond, a villain, and a murderer—who is re
sponsible for the horrors, the sufferings and
the deaths of Andersonville—dared not
leave behind for investigation the black
record of Isis misdeeds. His life would
have been in danger should they ever come
to light.
But the Republicans say that if Grant is
not elected, there will be another war and
another rebellion. But now who is there
to rebel, who is there to make and carry on
a war? Is it the Democrats here North?
Why should they rebel? They will have
elected their man, and they will be satisfied
and will want no war. Is it the men
at the South who rebelled before who
will do it? I think not. They will be the
last men ever to rebel against this or any
other government. They have bad enough
of' it, and there is not a man there who will
shoulder a musket in any such quarrel.
I saw the feeling and disposition of the
southern army at Appomattox Court House
during the four hours of truce, and while
each army lay in sight of each other, with
pickets thrown out, awaiting the result of
the negotiations. The officers and men of
both armies mingled with each other and
interchanged sentiments and feelings. I
rode through the rebel lines and among
them. They were whipped and badly
whipped. They acknowledged it, They
were worse than whipped ; they were stare
cd, and starvation soon subdues an enemy.
I saw the feeling of submission that was
exhibitee there—the same feeling that has
prompted obedience since—that has kept
down gum Alla bands, and mimed the order
there has been there since. We divided
our rations with them ; my own commissary
fed them, and the very men who but an
hour before had been training artillery for
a desperate struggle shared all they had
with their oonqueted enemy; and did it too
with a manliness and good feeling that
would have made the men blush with shame
who since then, have tried to !vaginae the
question there settled, and who always found
it cheaper to talk than fight, and not half
so dangerous. The man who talks about a
revolution with pas Is a fool or a knave—
there can be no rebellion there while the
0.00
0,00
1 111
11,40
30 00
10 00
ti.oo
40,4015A0
30 00
.00
memory of the hut ono remains. Who,
then, is there to rebel, if neither the Demo
orate nor the South ? The South rebelled
because they were defeated, and could not
succeed in their plane. There are none to
inaugurate rebellion and war except those
same "truly loyal" men who now talk about
war. Nobody but this same valiant Re
publican party to raise a rebellion to satisfy
their thirst for revenge at their disappoint
ment and loam of power, and to cover up the
traces of their misdeeds. It will be with
them alone to introduce a strife which will
be fiercer and bloodier than the last.
The election of Seymour and Blair will be
of immense benefit to the country. They
will come to the administration of public af
fairs endorsed by the people—their election
will check usurpation, prodigality and waste.
Their election will afford a chance for the
investigation of what has become of all this
money, of all these thousands of millions of
dollars. The Democrats do not fear it, for
the last eight years, and their skirts are
clean. But somebody has been stealing, and
stealing a good deal, and the people want to
know who it was, and the search that will
be made hereafter in that direction will be
sharp and dose."
The Condom of Darnlna the
Dead In Japan.
A letter from Japan says : The burning
of the dead is largely Factioed among the
Jnpaneme ; end of the alkyls() different
forms of worship piecticed here—all equally
false—but two demand burial in preference
to ineremation. My acquaintance with their
mode of burying the dead is limited to two
funerals, which casually came before my
notice. On one occasion I was returning
from a walk, and my path led beside one of
the little mummies near Kobi, in which a
small pariy was gathered. It was the hour
of sunset. a fitting time for an event of
tender morrow. The mourners were dressed
entirely , in white, which contrasted with the
gaudy robes of a small group of priests.—
The corpse, in its enclosure, lay upon a bier,
and en offering of green titre and of towers
ass made as though to the manes of the
dead. Then cane the beating of bells and
the clang of cymbals. The receptacle which
contained the corpse was shaped like a half
band, and in this the dead was placed in a
sitting posture, and all vacant places were
filled with combustibles,
The I. iewls now all gathered round it and
commenced a low, plaintive chant, so monot
onous that it seemed merely the repetition
of a name, which I suppose to have been
that of one of their dietics. They then
separated, and only a few remained to at
tend to the final service. The receptacle or
ergot was placed over a stone trough and
covved with a heap of fuel. All gathered
in a close eitele, and the nearest of kin (in
this instance a wife) applied the torch, and
as the flames ascended the monotonous chant
and the sound of cymbals were renewed in
mournful colleen. Excessive A, ier was de
cently restrained, except iu the ease of a
little boy about ten years OA, who wept
ps~innnly, and was taken aside to be Com
forted. The group broke, and one after the
other departed, leaving the wife above re
ferred to atone, the image of sorrow, and
apparently unable to tear herself from the
ashes of her husband.
A Distant Relatlou.
Au incident occurred some time ago at
Cincinnati, on Ward the shunter Buckeye,
just as aho wad about to depart for New Or
leans.
A tall countryman, carrying a pair or sad
dle-bags on his arm and covered with pers
piration, and who looked as though be
couldn't tell his head from a bunch of shin
gles, iu-led into the cabin, calling at the
top of his voice :
`Naar isColonel 'Mclntosh? Is Colonel
Mclntosh on the boat?"
No one answered.
"Well, then, whir is the c.ap'un ? I must
see Colonel Mclntosh."
On being informed that the captain was
on the hurricane deck, our inquiring friend
passed through the crowd in that direction.
"Haul in the planks and shove her off I"
sounded in his ears just as he reached the
deck.
"Stop her, eap'un—atop her I lam not
going to Now Orleans,"
"Run out the plank I Ashore with you,
then, quick 1" shouted Captain liartahorn.
"I say, cap'un, I want to see Colonel Mc-
Intosh. I must see him."
"I don't know hint, sir," quickly answered
the old sea dog. "We can't wait—go
ashore. Haul in the plank, I say,"
"Oh, cap'un, I must see the kernel—he's
a distant relation of mine, and I never saw
him in my life."
Now Captain Hartshorn is a warmheart
ed man, as every one knows. The last ap
peal touched his feelings, and he kindly in
quired
"How:near of kin are you to the gentle
man you are seeking?"
"Why, cap'un, ho's the father of my first
child l" •
"Cut off that hawser and let, her go,"
were the last words heard. And the boat
and the man that was in search of his rela
tive wended their way to New Orleans.
A NEGRO tax oolisotor down South, called
on a white man for his taxes. Says he,
"Mr. Smith dii is do moon time I call on
you for de taxes. How de debbil d' you
'move we culled peoplo am to lib, if you
white peoplo don't pay your taxes. De
freedmen's beartro—dot's not sulliciont—
dat's not sufficient. White folks why don't
you Psi uP r'
The TOME Witness.
A little girl, nine years of age, was a wit
ness against a prisoner, who was on Biel for
a orime committed in her father's house.
"Now, Emily," said the counsel for the
prisoner, upon her being put in the witness
box, "I desire to know If you understand
the nature of an oath."
"I don't know what you mean," was the
simple answer.
"Mere, your Honor," said the counsel,
addressing the court, "is there anything
Amber necessary to show the force of my
objection? This witness should be rejected.
You see she does not know the nature of an
oath."
*let us see," raid the Judge. "Come
here, my little girl."
Assured by the kind tone and manner of
the Judge, the child stepped toward him and
looked up confidingly in his face, with a
calm, clear eye, and in a manner so artless
and frank, that it went straight to the heart.
"Did you ever take au oath?" inquired
the Judge. The little girl stepped back
with a look of horror, and the blood man
tled in a blush all over her face and neck as
she answered--
"No, sir."
She thought he meant to inquire if she
bad ever blasphemed.
"I do not mean that," said he, when ho
saw his mistake. "I mean, were you ever
a witness before?"
"No, sir ; I was never in a court before,"
bhe answered.
Be handed her the Bible—open.
"Do you know that book?"
She looked at it and answered, "yes, sir;
it's the Bible."
"Do you over read the Bible?" asked the
Judge.
"Yes, sir; every evening."
"Can you tell me what the Bible is?" in
ed he.
"It is the word of the great God!" she
answered.
"Well, place your hand upon this Bible,
and listen to what I say ;" and be repeated
slowly and solemnly the oath usually given
to witnesses,
"Now," said he, "you have sworn as a
witness. Will you tell mo what will befall
you if you do not tell the truth ?"
"I shall be shut up in prison," answered
she.
"Is there anything else?" asked the
"Yes, sir ; I shall never go to heaven,"
she replied.
"Ilow do you know this?" asked the
Judge again.
The child took the Bible, and turning
tepidly to the chapter containing the coat
mandinents, pointed to this one—" Thou
shalt not bear fal.e witness against thy
nciBhbor." "I learned that before I could
read."
"Has any one talked with you about your
being witness in court hero against this
niiu ?"
"Yea, sir," she replied. "My mother
head they wanted me to be a witness, and
last night she called me to her room, and
asked me to tell her the ten commandments;
and then we kneeled down together and she
!ward that I might understand how wicked
it was to bear false witness against my
neUtbor, and that Clod would help me, a
little child, to tell the truth as it was before
Him. And when I came up here with fath
er, she kissed me and told me to remember
the ninth commandment, and that God
would hear every word that I slid."
"Do you believe this?" asked the Judge,
while a tear glistened in his eye, and his lip
quivered with emotion.
"Yes, sir," said the child, with a voice
that showed her conviction of its truth was
perfect.
"God bless you, my child," said be;
"you have a good mother. This witness is
competent," he continued. " Were lon
trial for my life, and innocent of the charge
against me, I would pray God for such a
witness as this. Let her be examined."
She told her story with the simplicity of
a child, as she was; but there was a direct
ness about it that carried conviction of its
truth to every heart. She was rigidly cross
examined. The counsel asked her many
troublesome and awkward questions, but she
varied from her first statement in nothing.
The truth so spoken by that little child
was sublime. Falsehood and perjury had
prcceedcd her testimony, but before her tes
timony falsehood was scattered like chaff.
The little child,' for whom a mother had
prayed for strength to be given her to speak
the truth as it was before Clod, broke the
cunning devices and matured villainy to
pieces.
I need not say that the man was found
guilty, and that be was sent to prison for
nearly two years. I hope he was a better
man after he came out.
A PENNSYLVANIAN KILLED.— Cincin
nal4 Sept. B.—Yesterday afternoon about 5
o'clock, a man named Thomas Lindley, a
stranger in the city, came to his death from
the effect of a pistol shot through the tem
ple. It is thought to be the work of his
own hand, and yet as the affair occurred in
a disreputable house, and as indications of
foul play are not wanted, there is a suspi
eion that other hands may have fired the
pistol that did the mischief. Mr. Lindley
had papers on his person that showed that
during the war he had been a member of
the First Pennsylvania Cavalry. Ho ap
pears to have been about twenty-five years
of age. How long he has been in the city,
who his firiends are, where his home is, no
one yet has been able to learn,
I AM HYING.
The following beautiful poem we copy
from the Memphis Dulictin. It is rarely
we find such eontirbutions to the columns
of a newspaper. It is sweetly, beautifully
said :
Raise my pillow, husband, dearest,
Faint and fainter comes my breath ;
And them shadows stealing slowly
Must, I know, be those of death.
Sit down, close beside me, darling,
Let me clasp your warm, strong hand,
Yours that ever has sustain ed me,
To the borders of this land.
For your God and mho—our Father,
Thence shall ever lead me on ;
Where upon a throne eternal,
Sits his loved and only son ;
I've had visions and been dreaming
ger the past of joy and pain
Year by year I've wandered backward,
Till I was a child again.
Dreaming of girlhood, and the moment
When I stood your wife and bride,
How my heart thrilled with love's ttiumpb,
In that hour of woman's pride.
Dreaming of thee and all the earth chords
Firmly twined about my heart
-011 l the bitter, burning anguish,
When I first knew we must part.
It has passed—and God has promised
All thy footsteps to attend ;
He that's more than friend or brother,
He'll be with you to the end.
There's no shadow o'er the portals,
Leading to my heavenly home—
Christ has romised life immortal,
And 'be lle that bids me come.
When life's trials wait around thee,
And its chilling billows swell,
Thou'lt thank Heaven that 1 m spared them,
Thou'lt then feel that "all is well."
Bring our boys unto my bedside ;
My last blessing let them keep—
But they're sleeping—do not wake them ;
They'll learn soon enough to weep.
Tell them ofien of their mother;
Kiss them for me when they wake ;
Lead them gently in life's pathway,
Love them doubly for my sake.
Clasp my hand still closer, darling,
This, the last nilht of my life ;
For tomorrow 1 shall never
Answer when you call me "wife."
Fare thee well, my noble husband,
Faint not 'neath the chast' ning
Throw your strong arms 'round our children,
Keep them close to thee—and God.
Cot. V. E. Mallet.
Voters of the Thirteenth Congressional
District, you have placed in nomination for
the office of Representative in Congress, a
gentleman who is truly a Representative
man. Having worked his way up along the
arduous avenue of life unaided ; gaining
that practical education of men and businss
that comes only by the most stubborn attri
tion, and subtile observation—he stands be
fore the people to-day—the peer of any
collegian, the second to no man in versatility
of talent and rare forensic ability, in North
ern Pennsylvania.
In Victor E. Piollet, you have a man
capable of defending your interests before
any tribunal. With the moral courage, and
positive force to stand up and do battle for
the rights of the tax-ridden masses, by
speech and protest in language unequivocal,
ith-ficaul of silently voting or mysteriously
cliluppeni ;nu, when que4tiotut of ,clouldfill
popularity aee to be acted upon !
Fartneis, you have in hint a defender of
your calling ! one who has followed the
plow "foam early morn till dewy eve," and
eaten !mail in the sweat of his face, through
the long, hot days of summer—feeling that
rich consciousness of duly well performed,
that only ho can feel, who has "caused two
blades of grass to grow where only one had
grown before."
Business men of all kinds, we call upon
you to look to the men who are to shape
the destiny of your future. See t 9 it that
they are men who are interested in advanc
ing the poluctive intlustiy of your country.
Discountenance the men who would array
labor against capital by levyi'tg unequal tax
ation, or by the exemption of any one class
of standord values, from the payment of
their just proportion of the national indebt
edness, equitably resting upon all interests
alike.
Begin a system of retrenchment and re•
form.
Curtail the vast expenditures, each year
growing greater—labelled miscellaneous and
inctiltstni. Set your faces against corrup
tion, and give your support to a party of
equal taxes and just laws, whose advocate
and representative stands boldly forth, in
the person of the man who heads this ar
tiele.—/Irculford Argus.
RADICAL patriotism pays well. The pres
ent loyal Congress will have bad not less
than seven sessions, when it shall adjourn,
to the joy of the people, on the fourth of
March, 1860. Seven sessions secure the
mileage of every loyal member no less than
seven times; and the matter of mileage
alone costs the people for this Congress not
less than a million of dollars. For seven
consecui ive visits to Washington the Radi
cal member of Congress puts his hand into
the treasury of his beloved country seven
times, with unctuous thanks to Heaven that
he is no copperhead. The salary of a mem
ber of the Fortieth Congress will not be less
than ten thousand dollars a year, inclusive
of mileage for those even who are ()caper.
tively near the capital. For the Butlers and
Washburn, the Ryes and Pomoroys, who
dwell at a distance, it will bo more than
double ten thousand Why then should
not these patriots make frequent adjourn
ments and draw much mileage? It is the
only way they can be compensated the their
great service in siring the oilmity.
NUM BER 82.
Lager Beer not Intexicatlnc
We saw the man last night who won't be
lieve lager beer will intoxicate,
He stopped us on Vine street to say
"Hos' harneoss bev'ege M the 'odd. Nun
can drink IBf y? glasses's never fee it mono I
am this minit.
A man drinks whisky an' he shows it.
Drinks Inge' bree'n don't ah•sh•show't an'
al'ys did. Look at the noble Germ' pop
poplash'n. Never pete'm toirtoweeted,
don't ye, so am I.
Lager beer has no more 'feet on men so
much wa'er. Can walk (hie) hole through
leer or see a crack in'r aide'alk wells any
over man. Bet ye two doll'en half fiiean.
My house' find his was home whole keg
beer outsi'fus.
Y'sayrbeer ',drop memory. 'She. 'Mem
ber better to-day than I ever did to-mor'r.
'Rah for—who's that gem's nominated at
—where was our convention held? What
am I, who are you an' how! Please tell
toe'f Seven street runs down etrue' ra'ruad
can get a hac'n go my way. I don't who
has.
We left him, satisfied he wait right; lager
beer in not intoxicating. Oh no.—littsburg
Chrmikle,
==11:1
All Sorts of Items.
...The "wicked man's" cigars are the la
test novelty.
—"Sand)°, did you ever see the Catskill
Mountains?" "No, Clem; but I've seen
the eats kill mice !"
..."Ma, what is revenge ?" "It is when
your dad awl& me, and I hit him with the
broomstick."
...Ephrata, Lancaster county, Pa., Las the
honor of being the first place in America at
which a Sunday school waa established.
...A man who will take a newspaper for
three or four years and then refuse to pay
for it, will steal his grandmother's night-cap
and sell it for whisky.
...A young lady in Philadelphia is making
a bed•quilt which, when completed, will
measure eight feet square and contain 3,747
pieces.
...A man in London kept the body of his
dead daughter in the house seventeen days,
until he could get up a raffle to pay the
funeral expenses.
...Hunnicutt told some Richmond negroes
that Democratic flags were treasonable, and
ought to be pulled down. Some tried it on
and let up in the hospital.
...The "wickedest man in Troy" wears a
Seymour badge upon his bosom.—Journal
The "oldest toper in Troy" wears a Grant
badge on the end of his nose.—Argos.
...A courtly negro recently sent a reply to
an invitation, in which he regretted "that
circumstances repugnant to the acquiesce
would prevent his acceptance to the invite."
...A Yankee wishing for some sauce for
his dumplings forgot the name of it and
said"here, waiter, fetch me some of
that gravy that you swallow your dumplings
in !"
...A Mongrel exchange asks: "Are you
going to let the rebels govern?" No, sir
and therefore we are going to put the party
led by Phillips, Sumner and Butler out of
power.
..A man on Cape Cod having advertised
his wife as having left his bed and board,
she retorts that she went away for a couple
3f weeks to earn her board, and that the
bed belonged to her mother.
..At our young lady readers would like to
take away sun burn, they should take a
handful of bran, pour a quart of boiling
water on it, let it stand ono hour, and then
strain it. When cold put it to a pint of bay
rum. Bottle and use when needed.
...A crippled soldier, who can barely got
his living, with the aid of his pension, by
peddling books, is made to pay $l5 by a
Radical assessor; $5 for a license, and $lO
for the privilege of traveling with a horse.
This is one of the beauties of Radical legis
lation.
...A story is told of a young lady teacher
in one of our Sabbath schools, who one day
asked a youngster what matrimony was. Ho
mistook thu question for purgatory, and an
swered, "a place or stow of punishment,
where some souls suffer before they go to
heaven."
...Why is it that when people meet on
the street they invariably stop to talk right
in the middle of the sidewalk, and will not
move an inch for passers-by, who must
either walk around or be jostled by them.
Why can they not walk along if they de
sire to converse, or if that does not suit can
they not step aside.
...The "wickedest woman" at South End,
in Boston, has been discovered. She g oes
to ride on Sunday, never goes to church,
attends from sixty to one hundred dancing
parties during the season, drinks up her
husband's medicine (whisky), and smokes
up his fragrant Havanas.
...We would put Democrats on their
guard against believing the Radical stories
of this and that prominent Democrat hav
ing gone over to the enemy. They are play
ing a brag game in this respect, but it will
not work. Who will seek refuge in the en.
envy's lines when he is on the point of lay
ing down his arms?
...A broad-shouldered German girl re•
eently met an exquisite on a street crossing
in Cincinnati, where one or the other must
turn out into the mud. The exquisite
didn't care to dirty his boots, and in an• in•
suiting manner ordered the girl aside. Her
reply was a Now from the should*, which
off his foot into the
stepped over his pros
' dry AIL Bully fbr