floonatms *moat W2ll. U. JACOBY. lE'diOr. WERNkSDAY,..... ..... 9, IR6B. To Debtor. ottbe *Democrat. We hare upon our Issikrattmerous 'c p:mots which will eggregate a large sum of whiab we aimed greatly in need. Come of them account! have been standiny, six years or wore, and no attention has been given to Who repeatedly seat Theme old accounts mot be paid at owe or we rill be COW pelled to plaarthem in the bands of a justice. We intend sending out bills to all indebted to the Democrat either for subscription, job work or advertising, cud hope our debtors will favor us wi.i a prompt response. Our nowaylal Trouble The Remedy Congreee 'has 'proved Deelf incapable or unwilling to adopt such Bunch', measures as are needed to relieve the business of the country, and the warner public sentituent is concentrated and brought to bear in favor of practical monarch the better. It is only I by ibis means proper action can he scoured. All agree that the high rite of interest mild by the. government is a hindrance to every specie+ of individual enterprise. Let this be the Snit point is which to demand re• fors. A large muster of 6vc•twcuty bonds are now redeemable at the option of the governments Let them► be taken up as epeadily as possible, and bond, at a lower ramp of iabrest substitute I. The difficul. ties of the present system are well set forth by the Doylestown Denmerat as fellows In cootie of tworersation, the other day, with a Coaservative of Repubiican proclivi ties, lee made thin remark : "There must tet t►omotbing wrong when I cannot borrow the thousand dollars on my real estate worth forty thousand dollars." We agree with hint, for indeed, there is something wrong. and the sooner people cove to understand what that wrung is, the sootier it will be righted. This state of things really exist, and men everywhere, in all communities, begin to appreciate it. What used to be the easiest thing, when there was money to Ivan —borrow it on real estate security—is now about the hardest, and unless there be some change brought about it will become tail! more dealt. Now what is the matter that this state of things should exist? The an ewer is easily made. The goverweent with its paper goes into the money market and overbids the .fartuer and all other persons whose wish to borrow on real security. It not only pays greater interest, but has the happy faculty to exemptikt its own bonds from every description of taxation. The security it gives is of a lower grade than that of the landholder, nevertileleee it van borrow as much money as it waste those who wish to borrow on 1101i.i.:4 or land find it alneet impossible to do so. The government monopolize the ►coney market and drives other borrowers out, because it gives a higher interest than individual . ; can afford to pay. This is a true statement of the me, and this is the reason why our Diem!, 'mentioned in the beginning of this article, could not borrow live thou•a el Jul. Lars on real estate worth forty ihouseud. Our readers irrespective of party. will agree that this state of things should net exist in a free government where there is supposed to be equality of laws. The gov• ernwent amid individuals should stand on the same level in the n►oney market, and the law should not give either party an advan tage over the other. The government too- Deputy over inveettnente works another in jury, it makes a great deal of capital unpro ductive. We have now locked up in ted States bonds twenty-five hundred mil• lions of what is really dead capital It yields nothing to the bolder except the an ted interest, tied the eotnery beeomes no rioter on account of it. How much better would it be were this immense: amount of capital used to open new farms, build towns, and erect manutketuring establishments.-- W bile it lies idle it bears none of the bur dens of the country, mid the holdere of gov erntuent securities are created a fevered class. Notwithstanding all this our bonds sell at a lower figure in the money markets of Europe than those of any other country. Even those of Turkey and Morocco bring better prices, and while our 5.20's are worth but 74 cents on the dollar in London, the English Commis are worth 94 cents on the dollar. Whether this arises from fear of reputation, or other causes. we shall not discuss ; but it shows that the government monopoly over the money lender, exemption trout taxation, se., which works an injury to real estate, have failed to 'mike our se curities as valuable as those of other come tries. ,Now this state of things ought to be rem edied, and the sooner the better—and how it can best be done will be the great work for the incoming administration. We want to see the time come when the government, the man who wants to borrow money to help to pay for his farm, and the pour mau who wishes to build a new house, will all enter the market on an equal footing, and can on ly offer, by law, the same rate of interest.— Bat before this can be brought about, there must be a new issue of government bonds which bear a less rate of interest than the present, and are not like them entirely ex. ewpt from taxation. No principle is better settled in this country than that every des cription of wealth and capital should bear &Just proportion of the public burdens, and until it be carried out in practice there will not be justice to all classes. Tr ta announced front Washington that President Johns* has informal the con gressional ootemittee aprudahrd t. ihui4 on Wm that be wit not pliant his aintmEnses asge until Wednesday, Thogast) in , which case we will giro ha:tour roiders next mak The sine of delay is said to be . tiat4 Ike Presidiat is awaiting further adriceititin Vngland, the benefit of which he &tiro to The Minimills of the Democratic I'►# a s y. While Vorney'l% /OWN awl other boasting untruflArl 2irci al fewspaper:: are mit ol•iteroy votiees irl th. Dettworatie party, the N. Y. ,cry saveitioslY iod inates to thew that thttire is Rule mind fur such worsens:int jubilatifin, It stuns up the row% of the hue election hdlaws Though the licpublieuns oloninnd i n 16 ,mt. eonte,t nearly three-fouriblof the pre.idential Eltworts, the Ithunecrnts are in a mnjoricy of only about 279,11:110 in a pop lar row of flow:HO e., only Pai r nn lr half per cent, This htatttnacut eshihils in P triking light the important fact that the disparity het weewthe two parries fir less than would seem in be tndieated liy the number of the elentors ehn:sw by trek. Despite their overthrow in the late l'Unl• polka, the Democracy remain a rely, pow erful poly. No ortoiniwnian in our history Improved through tosih severe trials and been compelled to bear such ou3 burdens as has the Democratic party during the pat fourteen years. Nevertheless, in sphe at them adverse drevmstonees. and of she dead weight they carried in the revolutionary poiitic of their candidate for V ice. President. the Democra ey exhibited unexpected strength in the late contest, and now stand upon the edge of the battle field in powerful numbers, and under remarkable state of diseiplin. A fair estimate of the number of white men disfranchised by tyrannical teal-lotion shows that they amounted to nearly btu a million. Had the people been prculitted to vote ;wording to the prtivisoais of the 'oo stitAtiolL the popular majo;ity for Se: mow would have been as large as it ows is :air Li rant. The elect inn was controlled by d os potic acts of Congress, en f orce d by a „ law ' ink tlnhy. In some States the fillet to vote was denied tq all the inhabitants, in lithor s to tt considerable pot lion of them. The De weeniey were beaten by brute ['owe alone. They knowhow they were treated, and err able to see how victory was wrest e d from their grasp. They naturally feel indignant, and their resoluteness purpose is conse qmintly entirely unshaken. The Sao very properly describes the present attitude of the Democratic party us "standing upon the edge of the battle field in powerful num bers, and under a remarkable state of di;. cipline." There is no demoralization in our ranks, and our hosts will enter upon coming contests with the same indomitable enemy which 6a always distinguished them Believing in the immutability of the great principles upon which the creed of the Denaiera tie party is based. the leaders and the masses are alike confidant that they must tri-oi: us, sum as true of public opioion takes place in this eoun• try. Nothing can prevent the speedy over throw of the corrupt and tyrannical party now in power, except such a change is the organic constitutions of our gut crow:tit a., trill deprive the people of control over it ,Sti soon us e:et.tion become perfectly ifece again, the relit.) of Iladiealism must end, amt with lite t,iunipli of the Democracy the mane: I wt ewer uteri :1 new career of pros y. , . s I, t f nerr. ..."`TIODES Or * IDE PACIFIC RAILROAD. The two great rouges—the Rocky Moum taint and the Sierra Navatlas—have been etetssed by the great Na Maid Railroad•— This quitentlons work is being pushed rap idly onward along the intervening valleys. It was thought by many, that it would be by the mountain barrio's, but the 10: U:t has tArtivinced the world that no ob• stacks van impede the progress of' the gi email! scheme ; on the contrary, the ener gies of the cottony hart been redoubled aims. they have arrived at 1)16 deist, and as they advance tt4y itte l ease in s p ee d, m ar th e y a re now laying six mil.e4 of track every day. Twelve hundred miles of route be twetn and Saeramento are made by the locomotive, and only about five handled miles of road remain to he completed, halt' of which will be finished before next spring. if the coming winter should prove an open one. This marvelous progress a ff or d s ev i. &nee that the overland radioed is nu longer a Ilititter of hope and conjecture—it is almost an assured success. ll=l Chief .lu,tice Clia.,e did two good things in opening his court at Richmond 41.4 week. Ile ignored, repudiated the senseless and barbarous ironclad oath prescribed by the C mgressieual and Legislative and be denounced the monstrous fraud.: of loyal ea.: 4114 and loyal bogs, who oppre-.4 the people by ineren4ing the burden-, or tux it,n with their mutorscl,:s4 r.Mberien. The :41 3 , people trho believe or pretend I,P I , viieVil that poor nom pay no tare - were hand zminely rebuked by the Chef Justice, when he .aid, "Frauds upon the revenue are fraud., upon the whole imilyt o.' tax pliers, and no one who cats, drinks or wear., or is sin het ed under any roof, however bumble, now escapes taxation. When it is remem bered !hat ont a the five hundred millions or dollars collected annually, over too hun• died millions of it use stolen by GI overnment officials, some idea can be formed of the extent to which the poor arc defrauded and oppressed by this thing at Washington call ed the (Juror/ncut. =I How ARE You, BoNus?—Thos► persons who voted fur Grant because they are the holders of a few bonds nod thought that the bonds would rise in value under the Radical administration, will be gratified to learn that they are worth just three coots less on the dollar since Grant's election than they were nefure. What stub 'the Radicals did craw down your throats! if Want continues the Radical Congressional policy, your Wads will WOll be worth nothing ut all, and the time for trading "greenbacks" and wood, cord for cord, will soon arrive. not DtsvilacrioN.—'Thejury in the case or Gun. Cole, who was tried for the murder of Ilieettek, have acquitted him. Before rendering the verdict the foreman rtated to the judge that the jury bulievell Cole to be I , erfeutly bane a moment before he shot victim, and a moment aturwarilg; but they we r e n 4 to hilt Reality nit the precis,. moment the ,hot wattired, attd thot douht bias honor said the dittndont *ad entitled to the benefit of. Tlitilt a very line ilistim% don, and, if generally adotited, win acquit [COM iIUNICIarI). 1 OUANOM Are. 7th, 1864. co r w.. . _ lbw 5ir : .'.,,,,,. tem is your ritalk bireftwi ' 'oil `llO , ' or 74 null co 'doming? it dur ing ihe .41 s hin weather cif the pert mon th he was ' chi t e , math melkollY, is to be unable tO et, to the misistunee or those whom * h Veered, be WOO Mtlllllly boffoZta ali 11,46 time. How is the promised premium ? Ts it possible that those fingers so pluthennitical are also so benumbed that he dilatant, vim tore his well filled purse in time clutches of those members which have infuned to in l'hin will? If an, and ho wishes to wait the return of the 'balmy days of spring he. fore he willies the award. let him, Mr. Edi tor, Fly FO; end if' ho will furnish me his copy or the .ohition in question. I will agree to allow oar Mend "Ohserver" to keep lii , wonderful prize, providing he will wait till "smioncr, with its dews and showers, has muss," before M. *pin "opens tire" without ammunition. M. %von the election, the beaks prom ised that in the event of their sueßems at the polls, a new stream of prosperity would 'flow upon the cowry, and a good time gem orally would make the people happy. Well, the election came, the Penns-racy wertyle• flitted, Grant was chosen President, and h e w stands the record today? No sooner was the result 34 9 :1 Wiled than the money market stiffened, angry clouds darkened the financial horizon, a new national tax hill is aunouneed, to grind down the people still harder. In this way the blessings of Midi ealism laigh ten ! 'fit vitt scions to I.)e u mutiny in Governor Ceary'. cam)). Fitsgil.ild's City Port, ta wny; intcn ely pap t h e following trilmtv to Mop.: Tem. ;ea ry i traveling and beg4ing day and night in ker.tre x re-notninati , n. 110 eorixe., implores. promihes. threntenm, whine:d and !Tice. Never bt rore 1 i ~,ueb a •veniele been perm in chi. Sim i ,. W. W. letchnni and General Hurry White are his competitor,' hob abler and better men, and neither el them liars." That is wetly plain talk. Brother Rad i• mils should nut thus unn,h each other's dirty linen. Lin us have peaee SIMoN ( Fatos plutigcs that neittnr bis son nor his son-in-hw !.(t asil!ut.t f:r the "rniteti S nee. , ; 4 1‘,11,. fltt the family i- eoncorncti, tho I.le :..!1; is ;nt por:ant and netes , ary, I,to the lie are concerned it was entirtly ueueee,eary. Either otie or them stand , a better cl.anev .of being t.tttuk hs lb.:inning than tube call ed by the unblie to fill an official peritiott. t?tuntt's &tars, however, as Simon knows, have a potent effect upon the Radical party. PHILLIPO ON Ottaxr.—Wendell the great light of h 45 very lit tle faith in General Grant, judging from his recent utterances. In a late speech to the Anti-Slavery Society, ho said : "There arc matny who believe that the Republican par ty have caught the biggest Tartar this time that credulous mortals were ever doomed to entry. and that in less than one year the itwoming loos will they ol his own housk hold." THE flarristairg State Giwtol announces that Morrow 11. Lowry, Senator from the Erie distiict, has writttn a letter in which he declares he will not vote a dollar of the State's money to educations! institutions which retu,e to admit, without distiuctious, students, or all sexes, race and color. Lowry is a eow•ishwt liadivaL fie leads his pa'rty in this state, but they always man age to mutt up to his standard a year or two after 4 he has wade an advance. AT the meeting of the Electoral Colle g e or Penn.ylvania, 'rum. Mar.hall, the presi dent, untie a ripeech, in which he claim al that the eleenun ui Urant nontot uoiver:al negro muffruge. All the ltatlwal nolNpaper, in the State are talkin,4 the p.ante wr)'• Tmtarn r ftvs.tsun.—A entUon occur roi between two ste.ttners 0,1 the Ohio river tot Friday night last, resulting in the losa of between wventy and eighty lives, quite a nunther of whom were ladies. Soon after the boats struck they took fire and both were comunted. ME New York Spirit of the 7111( says the term, or : , urrender offered to Oencral Johwort by General Z"hernitm, and for which tienerul !Actin:to me, rtuhlesply wert, dictated by Pre-ident Lin coln ehb the concurrence of Ueo. Grant. =9 `rift. IVEtv YoRK 11Aunt , suyA: "We have rep , nt, which smotti to ho uuthentie, the 11 , 1,,, -vat of the nom John Morri-sey ht the mat Home will be contested, is spite of his htge majority." Of vourse, majorities are eowquelice when a pettßoGiAt is to l'ettioVed. TfIF Democraey ',oiled in Ponn.ylvania, in ISO 3, 25!,00 votes; in 1865, 216,0 u; in 290m0u; in 1667, 267,000; and in isr,x, 321.000. Sixty seven thousand of an inerem in five years is not ulna evidence of either a dying or dead parry. GEn. W. AUXANDER. recently the rev enue colteetor in Ife:kt, (valty, int , 1 , -, convicted or receiving kite>. t tit%stlkre, who tiefitra ih” 4)7 mtu,tot out of' the tax en whi.ky. Tut NtAr YcHi; ihone new admit. that the expenditures Ctn. the army during I tittl will Lo at Ictlbt slW3,ouo,uou• Before the election all the liadival new:papers in the uountsy declared that it would not a• mount to one hall'uf that sum. Fitton F Plot.str, ESQ.—The splendid canvass this gentleman made for Congrues in the Bradford district, salting Ulysses Heron, is without e patrolled in the State, m ercur ' s nu o r ity is but 311, whilst liart rantr e luejerity in the same counties was 1178, and . Grant's in Noveitiber, 1,310.—hu• war 011.0111. Genet Butler dined at the Democratic Manhatten on the 3th, is company with &War 'little, both being gue. , .te or Itiolisortil4ll. We tract the old t , ,pcou thief irit,,,wing to creep back into the Qig;l Aprettittee girth in this torn are said to be engird. ...Boston buffo sn►uke a ttemsand sews per day. ...The report that nebula)id, the me& eine man, is insane is untrue. ...The entholies of Pontine ire building a large church. ...The majority agalnd negro suffrage In MiNAtari is ..,:4,435. ..A lady of At. Louis me birth to four cleildron, last week, three girls and a boy. ...A Dli•sir«nppi V►►per says, the crops of that Slate that havo not failed lid, season, ore "pumpkins and boy babies." ...Figs are grown in Chillicothe, Ohio, without difficulty, and they dte equal to any of the imported. drunkard A a nne•herne car allured 4 lively midnight Scene in Boston lately. —The Union Pacific Railroad ph►cnrda, posted up in Chicago, anaeunce "only ten days to California." Radicalism would trio us of all rights except the right to pay taxes and the right to starve. ...Texas claims to be a "land of milk sad Loney," lieouu'e you can get cows there for $4O n dozen. —.Thad Stevens' ghost Pays it is glad im pettelitnent didn't teavteed. Repentance conies rather lute in this caw. ...The Church Militant—Six clergymen were at the polls peddling Radical tiekets 24 WM cams, Mo., on the day or election. ...A Montreal leper comrcains that tic supply of water in that city i., so Anti, that the people are obliged to giro babies beer. ...Gov. limy has appointed CO. John M. Thoutioon, of l'emeille, to be Super iutendent of the Arsenal ut Hard:burg. ...The Venom:rats of Tennemee are al ready talking of nominating Andrew John- Pon a% their candidate fur Governor. ...A hadl6ll', ILYOrding to the latest (Ml niti.n, is a mut/ Rho has 1114. the UpPOrill• njty tit' 1113 k ine u woman miserable. - l'eultry thieves. See that your k 'At* , 4.!liti turkeys rueat high until alter the holidays. ...A grubbing machine is ono of the latest Mt/cottons. A machine fir supplying grub would be rather an acceptable invention these high•priceil tittles. M. liannajoeal editor of the &wh im Ophiitm, WO: , the anther of the article for 'AMA Rives Pollard n,u ls , .iszinated in li ;almond. ...Re Clevelaw] ' , h,rter rtsye. pitni for ''women who hero become dieguht• od with their husbunth" is to be established in dm city. ...The ?slimistippi Valley =Num 708,- 0011.00 U acres of the finest land in the world, or space fur one hundred and fifty Sow of the size of Magvachlt4ett.., ...Some twenty Donocratic riper+ in t h e State hare alre.nly expre.:A a preferebee fur Gen. Cam, of as the In lit Denali:retie eamlidate for Governor. ...It is said that tho earthquakes are working northward from the trop;.., tont mit; 01 MOM be 1 , 10611 to make a milli at Washington about this time. They have ken fielding a Woman's Bights Convention in Boston. A set of old maids and termagant wives want to cute, and to perform ether unfeminine things.— I Fled Ihnigla4s was Olit , of the Ppoutem r,roo. win utplerlook to get a free linev4 ma the U:va that be mu % a rail road man is found Iu have slooko , n the (loth ; he was It rail lode man, but n fellow haul hold of eavh end of the rail when he rode. ...Whisky was sheriff of Chicago last year. The sheriff or Chicago was fii , nerol Beverage, and the general In:verso of' Chicago is whisky. Ergo, whisky was sheriff. ...The 11ev. Dr. Boynton, who does the praying for the Rump Congress, threatered to flog Gen. of the Freednicn's Buten% The pious Gement told him he had better try it. ...The Boston /Jot says "A Sunday pa• per rays it is in Nip 0r women voting, if they want to. Wu should like to see the MOH that could tuako thew vote, if they didn't want to. ...The bridge between Wrightsville and Columbia, has now reached the York noway shore. and die workmen are engaged input. :ing up the mhos. It is opposed that, it will be open for travel by the first of Janu• ary. ...A Wwhingtna correspondent writes: "It is a singular fact that, no Prwident of the United ;States, up to the present time, has had a child born in the White House." He adds: "It is understood the fact will not exist long after the 4th of March next." ...In 1561 the cry of the Radical leaders was "Onward to Itiehmend 1" Now the cty of the same chaps is—" Onward to IVashington 1" The first of these et ies ecst tfse t3overnmfmt three InntliLd thou.and ir it thrnin hundred tinUkun in in...1,y. : , iv: r el" the iVyorning was zsite“:, w•hieli ocuitni d in Luzern(' twenty in July, 1775, is Mill living at Westchester, %mi. 5 his person, Amos Adams, at that tiwo five years old, was, with his fluidly, turned into the wilderness, and compelled to walk 150 miles to Pislikill, New Yolk. ...It has been, pretty plainly, hinted to Grant already, that inweaehmens awaits him in rase hi , should, like ,lohli,en, at• tempt in "kick oy i. the trseus" of Radical ism. Should those tactics Ail, they will nu doubt next suggest the rosurrootion of John Wilkes Booth, the first exocutionor to the Rump Congress. ...The majority of men in this country take to office as naturally as pigs and duck. to mud, negroes to autihinn and sleep, lays to mischief, or girls to babies and di Throw on American up in the ntr fire miles, wheel him around Gre*Tfigaintnituos, and when be rows down his artntantatretched to the utmost for an ollee. ...After the let of January neat, appli cants muet pay firty per vets of their in debtedness to-reeetee a dloolidso under the Wink rapt law. ~..Weleari, the ifildet o is *lll in Didde ftird, Me., awl, in roosegnettoe of his lame neee, hes given up Ina it. to braltibr tra present. ...A detractive Lc occurred on Market rued, Philadelphia, on Thursday one Tim lees is latintated at 11:00,000. Among the nffireri vole T. Morris Ill'itrelt & Co., druggists, lii whose establishment the firo OrieThatted by the accidental Inca. in of a lamp in the bawls of a boy, in the cellar. ...Two prisoners who recently escaped from nn llliuoirf jail, afford = a remarkable in• stance of Anurbeful consideration in a mt. went Of 11Cre.S, After havio:! ;11!'tted and bound the Jailer and roiled hint into ill+ mil, they kindly pot a ' , Mew under his head and spread a blanket over him, and told him to ring the hell it he wanted anything. _Gov. Hoffman, of New Yerk, received the largest vote ever east lot Wily eninlklnto in that slste, it: 438,440, and the largest vote ever eaq for any eatoli,lste in any I: 4 tate in the Union since the ibundation of the govern Mee —.A report frmn General Sheridan an smunces a battle with the Indians, near Beaver ('reek, Indian Territory. in which over one hundred Indians were killed, two white children n'enptnred, with a loss or thirty five or Sheridan's men. —Rill McDonald, colored, has been elm. ed a justice of the peace in Smith county, Oa. beating two white Radicals, who are said to be much disgusted at the negro's pudenee. ...A tioniAelleadot negro girl is in New Orleans. Pie t.r heads talk with each other, and as one poasesses a soprano, and the ether a contralto yoke, they slog a duet( —Twenty-nee day' hard labor wn.; the rentenee of an English laborer who pulled a carrot frau* a field to eat when he was hun gry. MVRDEN OV A Carew.--A special dispatch from Plinio, lowa, situated on the Chicago and Northwestern Hailrmid, says : On Sun day morning. November 27, Yellow Smoke, Chief of the Omaha Indians, visited that place, and during the evening he was drug. ged wish liquor by a wry of revile, with the intention of robbing him during In, night. A quarrel ensued, and during the fight Yellow Smoke way struck on the head by one or the party, smashing his skull in. lie succeeded in getting to where there aro several hundred Indians encamped, about four miles east of the town, and expiry! on Wednesday morning. Nothing was done in the nutter until last night, idiot several .were smstial ; but one of the principal par ties is still at tarp,. Thu chief was always noted for being very friendly, and strictly honorable. His band comprisos sonic 1.441 warriors. who. °wording, to repert4 are gath ering in last, and are greatly excited. They buried Trim yc-terday. rrotti INV asekinglott. NVAsuiNtrroN. thy. 7 set.owl reirdat s,ntl ihnol irregular peso.hoitits Fortieth 4'nm: s o:: I', ae ei K ey leality. Thew wa , , a fith to; vim in Loth iloir.ots. and, notwitti,tart , iit,i; the letiontowy thy: weather, dot earn tior, and yolie:iet, ',vac well fidiai with Pomeroy in the Smote., and Kelley in the House, put in proposed amend:octets to the Constitution, proltilliting the state limn regulating the lineation or tuffrag.4_.!, so as to discriminate agsinst the negro. This prem ises to be a leading topic ot discussion, at least this winter. There is no ides at pros ent, trees among Ilailietes, that anything of the kind will Ist done Nevertheless, it may be urged, and dually deletes! to 13th It is now detinitely millerst od. and en inmealficed in ('engross, that the stoical 31easage .1 . the President will not be se m i n until 11 ' elillt104 next. It VA% just mole plt.led at the Tres-limy printing Olive I i• attertioon. There is a great scramble loosing newsiepts Ithil obt.on solvanee copies. but iodic:l6ms are that they wi!l ;,•,; hp Ate. For the first time in the history of the rvertiment, a negro appeareJ on the door or the lieu-c tu-days claiming a seat us rep• reseutative front one of the Louisiana his. tricts. in place of Colonel )lana, deceased. The claimant is a medium-sited mulatto, named Mcnerd. lie was sent here by the I Rid of white Radicals in Louisiana, who threw out II sufficieut number at votes cast for his competitors to ekes him (Ilenard) to Congress. His presence on the floor of the House attracted considerable attention, especially among hi. Radical broth en, a majority of whom will probably vote in favor of refer. ring his credentials to the Committee on Elections, an I tl,us quietly lay him on the *heft: The annual term of the Supreme Court emuni..need to-tiny. It is geberallybekred here that the Court will suaiiin the opinion of the Chief Justice in favor or qua-ping the inilietment against Jefferson Davis. The appointment of Colonel Florence as Arsersor orthe Second Pennsylvania Pis. trim, gives general 4irtiAtetion hero, but doubts ere expreßsed contenting his CUIr firuiation by the Senate. Harper's Monthly INlassurlime Iv unquestionably the best, sustained work ur the kind in thu world. lore is what the press my 's: The most popular monthly in the world.— Neu' York Utswerer. 11 c must refbr in terms of eulogy to the high tone and vaned oxcelloice of Harper's Magazine—a journal with a m inthlycircula clan of j7o,isio come . in whose pages are in is, found some of the choicest light nod general reading of the day. We speak or this work as an evidence of the culture of the American people; and the popularity it ha ,, minim.' merited. Each !umber contains fully 144 pages of reading-inatter, appropriately illustrated with pond wood cuts; and it combines in itself the racy monthly and the more philosophical guar terly, Mended with the best features of the daily journal. It has great power in the dissemination of a love of pure literature. —Trtelmer's Guide to Americo,' Literature, Loudon, We as account for its snocesi only by the simple feet that it meets precisely the pept ler tnete, flunii.llMg a variety of pl , eamng and instructive reading for all.— Zion • !kr aid, Boston. Trams FOR 1569. Harper's Magazine, ono year, $4 00. An extra copy of either the Magus:tie, Weekly. or Rater will be supplied gratis ter every Ciub of Five Submathets at $4 oil pitch, in one tcolittartee : or Six Copies .ur *2O 00. Sulsieriptimis to Barrer. Magazioe. Weekly, slid Bear, to one addresa j 4 i year, $lO 00; or, two of Barpor's Folo& eels, to one adsinsaa for mmo year. $7 00. i . Back numbers tee be supplied at any II afs‘iirillFß &I BRO tin,. . • , IA t 4 II A (Ni t ,. Set, 04w ; emPti.4ll, riirt_li seven , LIM In t own relining, its 040 be y reastivaik at 'espies* p ;it to ,4114 leitfr_,_ Warne. fling!, we. t lif , lotkpard, $3 in petit Abin it Is iontN by load, watt paid.' The postage on !Terror's %saline ii 24 vents a year, which must be pubn at the cub scriber's po4t-oftice. Subsertptions sent front IllitiA North Astetiean Provinces mud be accompanied with 24 eents additional. to prepay United Suites postage. Adds.* IlAttr se & Items., New York. How ono* do you hear the comi I tint from mother and rather that their SOU or daughter bl not well; that they Fiore no ap• petite ; that they reel languid; that their head admit' that they are growing thin end Path, and iliat they have no lire or energy That they are low•spirittml, and per rektly itampacitated to participate in any pleirmre, or pm m stay tbr mental or physical ditty. And the question is« often what shall I do tor them? or, what .hall I glen them? Our anoear 1., let .Lam toy Plantation (litters nesl«trittrly three times day, and our word for it they will recover. MAQNOI,IA WA Trn. —S perior to the best imported German Cologne, and at half the , No. 9. I= Tai (/ (VAT I'wn'iu.v. ANNIYAL.•-11 . 08. frtter'h iitlited States Almanac for 1.169, Cr I distribution, ',rag', throughout the United ' States and all civilized countries of the Western Hemisphere, will be published about the first of January, anti all who wish to understand the true philosophy of health should read and ponder the valuable slur. gentian;,; it contains. In addition to an ad• inirulde medical treaties on the clauses, pre. vention anti rare of n great variety of eases it eminnees a larv' amount of into,- intere-ting to the merchant, the 111101111110, the miner, the tiroier,the pl.mter, and mofessiimal man ; and the calculations have been made for such meridians and lat. junks io are most suitable for a mined and comprehensive National Callendar. The nature, uses, and eatnuirdinary mud• tart. etfeets of 110STETTFR'S num ACII BerrEtts, the staple tonic and alterative of more than half a Christian world, are fully met liirth in its pages, which are also interspersed with pictorial illustrations, val. 'table reteipes for the household and farm, unitising reading matter, original and select. ed. Among the Annuals to appear with the opening of the year, this will be one of the nio , d HATO, and two!, be had 17,r Me ask ing. Send for coi.iers to 6, , Central Mlimifirtorv. at 19.1.10:rah Pa- or to the nearest dealer in 1105TErfEll S STOM ACH Haft:RS. The Hitters nr.e sold in every city, town and village in the United State:. MARKET REPORT. Wheat per buAel, $2 00 Be, 1 MI Corn. 1 (10 Buckwheat 1 91.1 ()Mg, (11ovemod " 7 10 Flaxawo4i, " 250 Dri'd applea " 2 50 I)routoes, ... I tlo Fluor per ',arra,. 13 tut Rutter, 50 Yams per & net* 25 Tallow per p•r:tol • 1..0d Shot*!dem " !lay I.er 1,41,... lk AD , " CUTINICM UNTO. 71.3.14, will Ie 4peeial Ifiret• int at 1 11 1111,P1Mitt0/11 t f tit 14m , u•utt►t Nutt ' Powell rand Anosi.34ol.m. at e , o'4l u on rilloffill wt. int. trout.. 1 , , • •,11.14 , .., Ihr• tuwl el orMaile. 241,1 to•ow.. ro • • tit • tty cow.: ..intlenn 3ln Alt 1 It^ lineytt ....1 1., di" It •has April In tlrpt Panto« r. am. rt ; %ct.ck tr.., ininber 1.. tt. Otte DAN I to Art X I. ..ttot tlta wito do ...dud Trea•urrt" alter IM.. w4hl Peet*. thry J 1. 1 4 , 044 2to t,t. X%! I be *Mend .5 by addlb. IY Neb.yrio, : AI. r.r,tv tato stltv ihrip 44441.1 raxorlh hi will Itt.• Itfrit in the Tp. 4 .p1y... 4. th•Vir Ih. I , t 1... wir 4. 4 nut B wow, tir J. J. ..k.PISSN. Kassa. ferlary. P•thdeept. iKe Y, feat -St • IJUnisie SA I.E. Tho imliperoper bni..ll at ?uhlie Pee or S. litribiN,, dor 261 h day of win r, 1 r6ti, At Kio 1101.'. IN I:4lnwinam. tr. es.. 1011. wr 11111 deal one Intl or ill that crliAlt4 T 1: T 0 I.A N , taw.. sago.. rrankila t wn.hir, Ihnhitidim emmly.Ta..about 41 mile. +r. , o 1:414% i./a, mistrimmg 163 3-1 ACRES, Imre or Ire,. wills the A , Vinior 3.111116 LOlly. Itrab.a I iggln. lamb Loh 1101 otoor, The ins.' orcmenl• therenn cenaltd of a Ma ...qv 4.. tuna hotter barn, • two •tnrY t (4,4131. 4, 11111111 al Ow nunriati ,re. k. cad other mil 1.11141,454, /WIWI 4 11 / *err. th..rect .Ire 1 . 4111 M land. the bet then tattered with heavy timber, mulct patty Pier. tiereture. /be.. wee si well womb the et tesainn of estpii.diaia and Sale W eusuol.ert• as f o duck.. M.. on Mali day. wince...ll'mila will be. m u le knows. by *A NllBl. Atitelnirttetot or lhe tame of roar dcalthoired. (ale U 1 F ' rrde►kk Nualdammy town,. Pa. Ilse. 0. teoe.'3e. ESTRAL C a m e to th e probioe% iir the subeeriber, Jo eiwaw Om. we or shout De VW of Noveuebek NV. • swell WierfE In wombs, Mr ene4llloo. The NMI will row, feewert PM , 411!1 , .4 4.e ihu law Atom. P. e. per. I. iv 44 BOOTS o SHOES. The suboe , ther hail on loud, ut his roll known rrlebll• !meta on kWh rtrres. frw Armes 'Wive the Court lioule, rime pith., the litre.% and loot ieleete4 mut meat or BOOTS .IND SHOES, Of till Itt ev , r ofTeged to lb.' public llio ptite. or r ooth Rs t. all el of ptirdboo ro ,VIEN'tI Ott os.n et vb., item the prat) doe• ble. o oted 141.1 y to fb•e•L ri, I'.ll So well Ito 11,1111511.% Merl. I.' Choldr , to•' aito•ea, la 0141:41/11firty /1114 WaPoirtl..l Inn. "( the 1,..g w imp totter.. 111. r t • be frond Ile oe• ir to esti ...penal Air... 10141 to Ills itock Wen I. V I' or vi later wear, a. lackg ut 4naraual eat elltuce. /lATP► AND CAPS. Ile has Mao ■ NI! and compl , ce enllvelion of 111114 line Papa .1f e.•rr)' Clad 1•nl of 1!r I.C. t moat apprnvt.d aplua The r•auaar as T sl.wk •••• teen In Ih4l FURS, Of &Mo. Fitch 10 1 0, riuno,l, and various I.4firr Minds. I 'Afro : enrn.t, Mutt , and anti urn. Opuivne brave, npa. onti`. o lers. notice. liollee Is i , quest , ..l for thew+ Furs as II Is ICI• lain iwus OKI sin be ab41n4.14 pissah, re A largo eaperit.n.e patlll.• inn apeerti n that all the above afti•tra %Et at fund of tto. rile MOT ga•Ullf, as they Mat loom referted with the greattst cam, both as to waterlaf and w.f. gunship. ny an weans 'top and 28114111 W thn .t.ok twhictt Paula, ing t•ltorwherf, as aspen** as well as Ottotp Whirlatest era) th. H. C. MOWER. Illinowsloarg. Pa.. Dee. U. leGet AGENTS WANTED. Fltl t. r fito h. pr ennin , i.- pliiii 61.1,1 lii h te rn. 101 r niro,lo I ko. M ii)rldo by .esiirla IN. Nit pl 11 IN INCliteli EAME FA)111.1 ShWIN(3 I M.O. Fort Viraulra mit whiremit t; ROWCItit it Dee. 31-1311 3.0 Sew k TOl3l et., rbileole lOW re. ITAIER4 owl MEN' S & CLOTH! 4 1 0 GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS. SOUTH MAIN STREET, Below Merkel, opposite Cornll'n Store, (terms.► 111 1 119 If AOTICE. Alf partaroa tuning lonewittod tuarrteat s with She saborrotrrr are t.tittetatt ea oat at tbr lesttriews awl or tilt the same two•A Ilse till et rA r ,, mho, 411.1 the 131,11 N trt Decesam , . N. IL% 'fis...3s, Y. C. IlAttlitiNtlf. J. H. MAIYAIS GROCERY, SHAW'S BLOCK, MAIN ST., BLOOMSBURG, PENN. ExTR A FAMILY FLOUR Cr!ebi 'Ant , / oh hood. Alm,. FEED PROI7SIi.;OI. Of silt korai, tboap for CACI ,'k Ca,ll lurk! for J➢uttßr and Egffi. t 5. 1*: LADIES' DRESS MIND. NE W / SU/ 0 N.t Rt. A' WINTER GOODS. libOotrigned wt.ubl tospi-ttbilly Wits the atortitiiiii of the rttisont tt Ibis and ♦teinUr. In the it new rind ti., tut *brie iolfloo4 gai n 0t.e.441 40,4 , 3,4 of . to ph iihrki Watt 0114 I hair helms. *herr they ate prepared vi r o r g iVi aegis & tkwava, Coats, dta in tht Watt idyll,. Alto ottl rittleran frr Lai Ilirt.na•-a and ftdatrt and tot t hildren's war. Girt theta a call hry haat tvottlittah nt lit Orli , hew and cheap fir ,n,h I , 'LIA A & SAW. 31. Oronmobure, Sot • 3, PO'. . is 15th) ICOLLmniuk UWE NTT TEACH.. ERS' IfisTirrt, "I'E. 71 , Mr 21-tteLtrs and Ni 14,4, Itr 1 The Columbia County Teachers' Institute f►r polg will be held iu the Literary Insti tute Ilan. 11loom:lure. cx,tun►cnem on hloNtiAr, the 14th day of I.4:4:lotbEn. 11 fli. Kt 18 tiett.l4: P. M., and dosing on F!ida}• flight 4 , f thtt rau►e week, unless the Teachers in attend:imp ifeAn• n 1.4.1 4 }ji11i of two wear. AllT.giehers.lmo, Directors, and friends of ILducuti•an arc invitcil to attend. will he given in Ortlwitraph7, !k n ifing and Elocution, Penmen,lip, Arite• nietie. Genre'.lt,v, Grammar, Theory of Teaching, Iliprorta the Cniteil Stott . * and other brunches e study. and oVening turn delivered Ly the following newel Ed• ueii nro : PROF. S, W. CLARK, of New York, sir dwr of chili's Urnu,mnr ; IIV CR. Principal of Illoons,borg Normal Selma! and Literary lo:titian; Penr. U. D. Wittun, of Orsegevilll Academy. Columbia Vi hla V : PROPS J. W. Flitnty, t).% VIII C. Jowl'. F. M. 11.t.rts. and 1. 0. Itritr, of dm Illoottn-burg Normal &h u 1 and Literary !imitate. The attention of To:triter , . and Dim' DT called to the following pi OVklOill of dm School law : "Aecording to the Art of Assembly. ap proved April 9th. IM(,T, tinder which the Instittite the roll of mculbers inapt be called 'at Ica:t twhw each day;' a ma trittee of five teachers on Pcimanent etr tifieates must he chosen by ballot ; teachers may attend the Institute and be pall the district the same as if they were in school ; and those who 'absent themselves from the Institute of their own (-minty. widoost •• good reason, miy have 'heir went of profe.- swim! : , pirit and zeal indicated' bv certifi cate, of a lower grade at t he next Vzionina dem" Ses Nina. &livid Jewrsoil. Noy, ISO, pp. 272. Last year there were only al of one heti dred teachers in attendance at the Institute. There should be nearly twice as many this year. It is hoped directors will in all cases encourage their teachers to attend the Insti tute. The onirnittee on Permanent Certificate. will be ekoted Tuesday niontinp. "in Rtero RS' 1)A Y ... In secordence with the Pnggektion of the State Superintendent, Friday, the. ISth do* of December, will be c•pccially devote(' the intereet, of -Sam! Pircctors, when it is hoped a large number of directors will lea' present. .1, P. WirKETISII.IM, Esq.. Slate upper intendent, will probable be in attcwianee this (lay to anaemia the tenehetv tied di' rectors. C. 0. BAItKLIKY. Co. Supt. Commou Sehoolo. Illoomehurg, Nov. 16, IsBg. FORKS HOTEL, GEO. IC MAIGER, Proprietor. The Mance will known hotel bre recently under roue ladleal choir... , in itr into rnul nrrettpurieutr and t:g p rnprb" 1. 44, id , W 11 re• hie f.neer etretom and thn travelllnr nubile On, Ogg etc mutati o n, roe the comfort or hit, ourto urn ...rout to mono to Use fy, Il Mille will alnye he found our plinf, mint old) i. 1111 h 111111•Iiitilid o i PH withal the delkacle..ol air sea-ON. Ilk. wine nN Ilgionra (el/trot knot popular beret's.. known at . .4111HOOry.') skurchnie , l duvet fro* tun importing bounce. arm a n, llrely pore, rind etre re rook's' dent , . He I. lbaak f .l l ro. p ?ern! pntoonsire in hit, peat, tad will rout 111141, to ee..r l / 1 3 it Im the Alter". • 111;01tOu W. wAvaita. Jun. 13. 18414 —tl: WELL DIOGiNG. -- •the • nn , rry.lAM eV.* lIIMIrs In pAhllt I•aer Ally that h. is a piatt.tal sAtl I■ pr•pan•d in 0,1 tt nii, nn P .tt .r•Ce lion" lbs h..•t realsonAhlA •Arm* 14s be. hail in hi. limo •Bert• ruler In rroiarkekle immures 71•Aso withlaa ANyttilug duos in hie lin. would do wall to tilos Imo atrial Witll.ltil Illowlrbierg !tic 111, -AND IILOOIIFIR KG Pi. of raurtbio County ~