TILE ERIE WEEKLY OBSERVER. ornck I. Toe pa? 40ssz - Vl' a aTut TUE i BCILDIWIIOII,WI'. " anti STRIUn. OPTO IDIT RniF t IiCNZT3 —one Squats of Ten Linea one te• tertian I'6 Cen , s ; two leoertions $l,OO ; three tomer. norr 51,25 ; one month $1,60 ; two months $2,60; Oros nro.ll6 4 s 3 ,' s t.eix Cant ii $5 0.1; one year $600; other ileio.rtisem , ..nte m ; . 4port/on Three rates 'eiu, be striet'y &deer, :I. ; Ilia.4 . llf:tani•4 by special on'Clet 0.7 at 0,, option of the po`i:lehern. Angi. SO Noiires, Straps, Bit arras acid isle advert/as 1,51,. , 0:c50 Notleee Local Sot e.s sire rents% lii.e; Ifirrtat;e Notices?' ;Ty. net sea's a pieiet oirltuarr Notices (arse tlitret Haire , a rat, lit) nee ceuti r.‘, tine Or.ginet poetry, no. rte at the '1 the r.itt4),T,• one il•thir r erl."iw ~ll adrefUag tieuts be.coatinaed it of the }.aeon 11.1ierthICZ. until ordered raeilled period I* ; ,o tor it, iopee••.• - Two t; er ^Lawn 11l sd rr \ 6,i -Wa beat Jebtatn i r tba.“lt4 , , ell artt la .1.1 sal %orig . In t t , ,at talv 1,1 entrust. , l t, u§, to equal 10 le 4.10•:+6.1.hu1.ut ouGirl# of the Itrzewt carte, • WHITII k BRECI4T, ratlishars A FACT GENERALLY KNOWN, Ti rAT the variety 01 new style Bed ,teal.., cf Gothic, eotta,z., Congreua, Round Cur nt:o•auip Soft, Jenny Lind and other patterns, with t rp., ttat• airdstraiff , ont,Land•owtely veneered Flurenua, 11w:we. iireatfa•t, Centre and other Tablevi, in.atriote Qaster Stands, Cm rt at.d Damask Lounges, Hair •nd oea trait dlatt.assen, Feather Beds rod ItolPterm with 0 Ler n , tlf halo ruraeturn,ko. till ....,,,utcturcd ;rum well Feaauned ltuctel. h: „,...nop • by expe it 0r...4 srarlionen %ad not hy cppr, nttee tor style, quality and low Fria.... 1 hilt defy .reet2 dealers to uodorsell me Feather; tv.nr.,t an d k . n e ievt, Parlor, Haelzi , —., Sewing, 'ars• and other Chairs, r f Eaot. ru cod We•tern man, .lure, are hielnry 6.l:ed aud glued, making thew as 0 or fdner part of the chair, whore othera made and b' no rat",..l. cliarvtde. Wood WU); amt Sarar, are ehaira of Lard roand• tLrLiu,:h tie coat and clued, war. mated to tux!. ;ainted, and can't be bee. for tt , en,:tn, prier and Lamb. Spun,: Redo 1 bare ao,troter 3,e) ani Lave the at teatimotriale with a li•t of ri,••• 0: 411.00 i• a,u[,1.1 art.:inn:Lon. •rucLinig I to! P.ll, p'ILZ ifter !Ctsrp t!xpeneice all • LQatendlog 4.lth un tmo once ,les.;erA, t tan detarintned to c2ll pria f.. Rico worth for your l no, and do j,gtie• t all alto tred.wt.l.l 1.1111. Z.. 31114 to, Lint, tortldr• SIP; toenbe , tore. Pay, Produ , ,e tal.ea a , fair market rained 5,, pa. . E Nar55 , 5 1.,411 5 ,55 5 ;a0 , 5 neat c,r ,s•r of nth .street Pa. . 5; v,. ELLSEY 1.1 a. i Cot•lrtlt..ll r"110611211111. WHOLESALE I;ET AI L ti ROCEItY SPORE. P. A. BECKER, WiIuL4.3ALE AND IIETA I. tiROCER, the Party Frene4 Strut, IeJkAP+N Fe J'A C.S.I t2..0 r nf itta communiti to 1,:s1.,•• 01 - ZOCERI I : - AND PRON'ISIONs, ttb,rh Le IR J1 , 1;0111. at the e",!: I 1,011 1.. T •uo Rs. TFFEE-; TEA:, roßAccos, le 14 prrprt l4 l to pronto .1 rho ;Iv. }II n_..A 2 .1: sl4 X Otlperka Irt iI V R E LIQUORS, a!, ,lu,a tr ! 4ht,11 kitivea thy lair ullui4 ' ratdt• ••t • 1., ••4 • I eroata slid a full ~alt t II e. \1•1,,y." aprll'6•3tf. MANHOOD; -4 -imltiow Lost ! how Restored; PI • Etycelopo. Price 6 Cents. s:atL:re, Treatment and. Radical I rr .;'ern'nal Weatneas, sr., all •• an inv:nntary .. !nti,t4 Cdnrumrtmn Mentxl and ray , NI P 6, Its . ROW r • J. (TINF.R.WI3,L, fit. D. ho.ntwut tna the enzcequfpe v e of e: ::•11:1. •r•hev.: wl:h Lt 101:w112 t!'l • • .lu•tict. in 741:1...t. m ~} 1, , 11:•1.4. 0 I Pti"Pr •rorimmil de ' rrvar•ty now ••re,,..70 a+ ft , hpte l l Lc th. 4-00. . . E.kitkr4,, tulif w 1 kit ererV on. 111 01 to C 110 1•••• •,• .1 , , Ikr *11.• ;pakt , • . VI , •,i.k-r,0.! tylmtrarns of ,r t.l :! ...I ••••: • .Li • 1.• • t • ••• •1I • .1 lArral, of . pt. .. • I j • Nil, bv ad- EMI= GROCERIES! GROCERIES ! YLIOLEsALT AND RETAIL P. SCHAAF, Piii,Ct;tl Ir Zr.l h.* opesed 4t)ro No. 2 ,Hughes' Cloak, Erie, here Le a lie 4 on hand a large supply of GROCERIES, CROCKERY AND WuODEN WARE; IVINE• I 9 LIQUOIt;i, CIGAILS, as re ry , ping utu.lly f.,r. tale is as oatablialunaut of :ha fond. r.. , ohnch as any other atom to the ty. jezto'64tl. ,1 A Irttlj4. JOIN CIL NEW GROCERY STORE. laLd,rel,zned hare o'ec d a nor Grocery Store, on the - LAST SIDE OF 5 TATE ST., ..9al HO-UST PORTE OF RAILROAD BRIDOZ, iThere they intend keeping a fall sapplylof ustUCEUIES, PROVISIONI4, VIC ViTS, • CliOpliEta WARE. NUTS, • IiAMILICEOTIO,OI. IONFECTIONAILI Val WIL LtSW tspAKßj TOBACCO di CIGARS, And everything smally em hand In as astablishassot at the sort. Ivo an determined to offer a, good inducements aims, Other dealers to the car. sod tort., the pabae to coondent that n'e can ialt entire en:trfaett.m. octlrdatt i'. A. IVELLitali cart. OYSTERS & CLAMS. THE Subscriber would respect fatty Inf-rct lea frea ?a 'tact...starlets it, at ht II at Maotd otatd, No. 2 Washington Fish Market, New Twit, At 4 is prep.:n-1 t' turoixh uOti , 77,1.11110 AT-, 4. ,, TAI:.(IANTS k. £ WILMS with the Lei OYSTERS AND CLAMS. .:torte, ttt Vlotr,a`e taffy: at emit En • at t e t.uct_t Pit'cLEL tr . lllUr cr loom tho Uonntry Promptly Attended to. 'Z. 3 --cv.t.ral!l•3 P. , k1f.1 Juce,•:.), C. FFEY 11. S. 10-40. LOAN. p• .-7 IT!V<tt. Ilk Or r 1 ,,- P1 0- ri • , 'r no.: C. h a Bank hereby It..apv'tp . Vel to r.r....rr talfer.pt , octi to • rut , : •ti • a u ; 4hrtt e aet of LINA tr!e, ,, ciabl. at 'la .; 19 ye .74;aad par '• • ,•, ILt- - e.e.t fi e Mit V.., se Dot ever • ••• ,••• .y or h , r '• 5 rit vt, I rit%er :fez eared re Coupon -r I •:•...st Coupon •Irr alout.. the 4•S of April • to additlng to the • 4 a iry I.er Al mousy. • 2sl t • ) Notes. ,•i, p mt. for - • -•• :r a %lamb • 411 4 • r 1 4 • roa rt. t_t• r- ~ ~. .~ s . 4 e ..-ttornioatloDa • ‘-1 , .C , ' 'l , :and Con e • $ C.•• • ilvfe, iSOOs tad =EI a • tan'. f •h+ Treuur•. Tf rIACFORD Ca•tilet I= C. ENCELHART, Dealer in Boots & Shoes vsrr ,rrt• R 01 , CUT3SI MADEBOOI'3 AND SHOES! ~.ke n,ctu,„l, I return-, •1 •h • tb:-.1% mot ' rblie • . • ~-1 . e !,544. • Le. - -to .ne. et eadini • t • : • t !.. c,•.•inza , .ta 4.1 the saw* ••-• t:ae t: ntt am slit kn. 'Y \ •:7)..iiit e /ei AS CHEAP, If .at di I:St e (leapt", 11:• .1 %se -7,2 r .•I;lscaktogt ''••••• t 4 • fnr whi:b leta r, 1.4 b A •b. 10:,T theaSuper• •nf t!trln‘ 441 \lzilll 1 Cl' PP I 6 Plumer Patent Last, • •-• ;,,rr : t. , mars Car Pluaarr Patosit Boot', rAirptt4r , ilobtjiallad -.. ttr.lll•Llr, tir 1 Ji.a•l kt-p ha-d A Vittii , ./3 of 11111 Last 1, %LS, ,t az 4, Ata.. - Ican Ca fazol Kip.. R•rair.n:att-¢ , vel so mrll:64tr. W E ARE oFFERING • %, erre a•srtrtra,t o. Rabb, G•o4b, Coat 1 1 / 4 Dolt Ht.: 4 , 4 31MM mad imamessagta ter r..xsas, Forts iloatuaes. Forfamerr. a716-1a zgsui y, C .rk. +s`•6 ', • . • '' . • . • •'-'l. '.: '' • ',. 4 • '. - ' 1 . i .'-'' • ' '.' • 1 '. , -',- 1 ''.. •., i t ' ".', 4.1 ti; s “.!. ~, • : - —.'... , . .i 1• , . , : : , ' , ~. . , • • , . ,•, . , , . . .. . . . . , . ....,..., . . • • . .._ • - . -4 .I, :-• ~ . ~!, . ,C:f ~' , V" ' ~! „ J. -.; 4- - I , • •i , • . . , ... ... , - . i . ..4- • . , . • \ • —•• ' . i •, i .' ,'''..- ' ' • • ii i . — - • i . , " • , ~ .1 :!, i • . 1 ' - ." VOLUME 35 The Proud' Miss Mcßride. Johu 0. Sass has Witless good many, things, Out nothing bettor than thi following eouelotoo of "The Prowl lass Ilaridet-1 Of all the notable things ou earth, The quota' thing 4 the pride of birth Awing Ulf "Awes Peuo•raey r bridge across • haLadrsd year*. s : Without a prop to arra It from suusts4., , Not 11111111 a eoaplo *froths Vara— di thin for laughter, Map and Jews, ' L alaurriets aristoarsty I flippant!' upon It. iny snobbish Wendt 1 ! Tour tiacifly thread yoseean't anoand. ! . - without good maim to apprattand i - Yon may dad It waxed on the *dm end By soma plebeian voeation I _ Or Worse than that, your boasted Una ; May end in it loop of affront*, tirinn, ' , That plagued soma worthy relation. Bsesase jos amid' In worldly Min; Do not ba hsughty sad pat on sin, With insolent pride of station. 1. Don't be proud and tarn up your notei At pnarrr people to planer cloth's, 1 Bat learn Lir thrilline of your mind a repose, That all proud dash, wherever it grow. Is subject to irritation! Frailest it'eeeltrame% Letters et Leeeptu'tee. I.XTTEIt OF Ont. FILZSIONT. Nrw Yoag, June 4. • Messrs. Worthington G. Snethen,j of Ma ryland; Edwitril Gilbert. Casper 'Butz, of Illinois ; Charles E.. Moss; of Missou ri ; N. P. Sawyer, of Pennsylvania, Com mittee, Gesnuntx In answer to api 'letter which I have, had the honor receive from you on'the part of the representa tives of the people assembled at Clevriand May 31st, 1 desire to express 'my thanks for the confidence which led thorn to oiler me the honorable and difficult ritisition of their candidate in the approaching Presi dential election. Very honorable because in offeringlt to me you act in thejname of a great number of citizens who seek above all things the good of their country, and who hive no sort of selfish interest in view. J Very difficult because in aneepting_ the candidacy you propose to me, I am exposed to the reproach of creating a schism in the party with which I have been identified. Had Mr. Lincoln remained faithful to the principles upon which he was' elected, no schism could have been created and no contest could have been possible This is • not an ordinary election, it is a contest for the right to have candidates. and, not merely a t•.sual election for the choice among them. Now, for the first time since 1856, the question of constitutional liber ty has been brought directly before the people for their serious consideration and vote. . The ordinary rights secured under the Constitution and' the laws of the i eountry have been violated, and extraordinary "powers have beat usurped by thc Execu tive. It is directly before the people now to say whether or not the principles es tablished by -the revolution, are worth maintaining. If, as we have been taught to believe, those guarantees for libertg, which made the distinctive vtilue and glory of our country, are in truth;inviol• aiily sacred, they there must be a protest against the arbitrary violation which had not even the excuse of necessity The schism is made by those Who tome . tba choice between a shameful silence or a protest against wrong. In such consid erations originated the Cleveland.Canyen tion. It was among its.ohjects to arouse the attention of the people to such facts and to bring them to realize that While we are saturating Southern soil with!the best flood of the country in the name of lib erty, tat save nay parted wets et at; some. To-day we have in the country ;the Abu sets of a military dictation withoutits•UblOTl of action and vigor of execution. an ad mistration marked at home by disregard of Constitutional rights, by its vielation of personal liberty and the liberty of the press, and as a crowning shaixie, by its abandonment of the right of asylum dear to all free nations abroad. Its course has been characterized by a feebleness and want or principle, which has mislead European powers azid driven them to a belief. that only commercial in terests and personal aims are cincerned and that no great principles are involved in the issue. The admirable •amduot - of the people. their realtneas to make every sacrifice de manded-of them, their forbearahce and silence under the suspension of everything tint could be suspended, their Manly acts of heroism and sacrifices, were all render ed fruitless by the incapacity, or; to speak more exactly, by the personal: ends for which the war was managed. This inca pacity .and selfishness natarallylprodneed such results as led the, EurUpein powers, and logically enough, to the conviction that the North, and its greatly superior populatiOn, its immense resources and its credit, will never be able to recover the South. Sympathies which svOcild have been with. us from the .outset et the war, were turned against us, and in a way the Administration has - done the i ountry double wrong abroad. It created hoilility, or. at best Andiffer enc., among those who wetstd taro been its friends if. the real intentilms of the people 'could have been hater k n o w n, while at the same time i! negle/ted no o casion of tusking the an Jai hutnili tting conoessions. Against this dislaitous con rdition of affairs the Cleveland Convention IRIS 4 11. protest., 1; ,. Tile principles which form t l e hams of its PLitforna,: have my tinquali fi i and cor dial approbation, but I cannot so heartily concur In all the measure, which you pra= I pekoe. -- i -1.. "I do not believe that feCtifistation ex-• ter4e - i- -to ; tile - proPerti cif 14 - rebels is pmaticible, and if it Were ao,: I do not I think it a messnrelof sound ;silky. It is in fact a question "longing to tbst people ' themselves to decide, and . 1401 proper oc• casion for_ the exerdise 'oflql - teir original and sovereign authority. As It war meas ure in the -beginning of a refrolt which might be quelled by prompt !severity, I umisestanti the policy of coriditistion, butt 110 t as a final =alum of reoinkstraction IMI TWO!DOLLARS PER YEAII,,-IF;FAI:p:IN ADVANCE; $8.50 IF NOT 'PAID .IThittl 440,3 Ur _Tat, Yttiti,:,7 after the suppression of an ininqection. In the acqustreents which are to folio! peace no consideration bP •enaptiutee can, consistently,' be admitted: T..b.ii:ollfect of the war is to make peraienently secure the peace and happiness orate whole country, and there Was htit a single element in the _way of its attainment. This efenient of slavery smerhe consid- ered _practi4lly destroyed in the 'noun try, and its needs only your propoite' d a-mendinent. to the Constitution to make, its extinction complete. With this, extinction of slavery the par-, ty divisions:created by it have disappeared and if in the history .of the country there , has ever . been a. time when the American people, with out l regard to one or another of the polittcal divisions, were called upon to give 'solemnly their voice in a matter which involved the safety of the. United States, it is*ssuredlY the present time. • If the convention at Baltimore will nom inate any man 'whose past life Justifies a well grounded confidence in his fidelity to cardinal principlei\ there is no reason why there should be any division among the really patriotic men of the country. To any.stich L shall be most happy to give a cordial and acti v e \ suppOrt, own decidd 'preferetima utsto aid in this, *ay and npt to be myself 'a candidate. But, if Sfr.i Lincoln be renon4ed, as I believe it would be fatal to the Country to endorse a policy and renew a power which has cost usl the lives of thousands a men and needlesTly put the country on \ the road to bankruptcy, there will remain\uo alternativo but:to organizii against him every elentent of coniciintious opposition with the view 'to prevent the misfortune of his re-election. In this contingency L. accept the;•nomination &t Cleveland, and as a preliMinary step, I have resigned my commission in the army. i 1 i *, This was a sacrifice it gave me pain to make. But I had for a long time fruit. ' 1 lessiy endeavored to obtain service. I make this sacrifice now only to regain the ' liberty of Speech and to leave nothing in the way of disdharging to my utmost abil `ity the task you have set before me. With my earnest and sincere-thanks for your expressiops of confidence and regard,and Ifor the many honorable terms in which 1 you acquaint me with the actions of the 1 committee, I am, gentlemen, •• ' Very respectfully iind truly yours, J. C. Fannon?. , . i Naw YORK, June 4. GIISTI4ItN..4 have received Yon? note 1 informing me officially of my nomination I by the Radical Democracy at Cleveland, on the 31st tilt., ca their candidate for Vice, President of the United States on the ticket with John C. Friozont ezu their candida.tefor President. I have been accustomed to regard sim'- ply as a duty performed, what you are pleased to represent as personally mere. torious, and to regret the physical disa bility which' alone withdrew me from the immediate acme of war. i concur in the action and agree with the principle of the convention whereby its'iweittli resolution, the question of re cAmstruction is referred to the .eonstitu tional action of the people. It wisely cOrg• mitted teltbem an trine peculiarly within the province of the future and not yet sufficiently emerged from the war to war rant posinve opinion. While I have ever . suppos, d l corifiscation and use of the pro perty of an enemy id arms to be a lauda ble exercise of en established and essen tial rule of. civilized war,l. am pleased to observe that the convention when, assert. , tug the jastice of the principle, intended to remit its exercise. to' the discretion of the people hereafter, manifested through their representatives in Congress, when '_considering the paramount question of re construction. - . This *as judicious. For indeed so blen ded musk be the various methods of. aefr 1 questration, confiscation, militaryiabsoik ' 1-tion and! occupation that shall hereafter I, co-operate to evolve order from confusion, and to rSatore the Government, that it is 1 difficult; if not impossible, nose when 1 affirming the principle, to provide for its application. -- • I have the honorigentlemen, to 'accept. 1 the nonzination far Vice President, of the ; United, ; States which you have tendered me under the direction of the committee. I an 4, very respectfully pours, • Joss C:CCURJLITZ: Marti-a note of it, that sixty-seven - Re publicaps by voting to- - ley the following resolutii3ns on the table: That i the Union is not dissolved, and that whenever the rebellion in any One of the seceded states shall be put down or tiubdued, either by force , or, voluntary submission to the authority of the Consti tution and laws, such state shall be res tored td all its rights and privileges Under the constitution of Such state and the Constitution of the United States, inclu ding this right to regulate, order, and con trol its own domestic institutions, tree .from all legislative oreaecutive control. voted that the Union - ,Wis dissolved, end that when a state is subdued,,or `rettirna .to its 411egi.tric4, it is not e s, state of the Union.' TrtiDDte4 STILI4SIVO 1100 of secessi, nism h is won more adherent/1 than ;we tra4' suspected. . 1 - COV9) ZTAND - Ur.—W conatantl,y bear the friends of Mr. Liticoliv aeftipg that, whateier may be hip error* endeborteora would be highly prejudiellilla the interest,* or t h 'cauncrylk:iifrpt soother mau in hi* plloa. Ia reply io Ibii wimp tion, ell exchange saiaaslicsaity asys r endure the re tiree/eta, of iir*.shici A tOti icijorY, coukt.socomaktkletelifelf tethz returo of :Linoolft to "40,00414 - , iirghTit..-"cbrifel ston. . . • .• Sont time since a um in 314t00, minted to exkthis en Egyption.mo fumy, and.%nes4. to thetcoOrt hoorfif is it ?"1 , I.liiirod this, ji s !ilige. Egipt,iszi munino,, qui ciitlpAo`' , `tbis'•coOt'N'orre ; than t*e thnnso o l,:i.eir4. 11,14.7.1,'4 ihi showrnin.- ‘":1110, limmiliandr-zlyears old szeiajumping-lOLA few "sad 4 the critter ilin?" =3Eci====O=Ml MEI ERIK PA4,BATURDAY MORNING, „ Doak!. • It there is wolf a disease as • national: itanity l. the American peoPle bare it, in iti mgt &vital form. They ere Ina deliriniti —.a wild excitement—en uncontrolled; e*; inteasifies every effort, dead; ens l jeveri sensibility and forces -theta ori= mid it a; break-neck speed. They have' warms the grandest scale, the most ei pensive finance, the heaviest taxes, the most . abserb politics and the worst forms of irreligion. The sober plodders „A 1857 —whom a financial crash involving a few millions slat aghast—rush on in 1864 with *hurry and whirl whioh Would hold se naught such crises multiplied an hundred f - iild. A million of soldiens,fight in battle thirty thousand are placed hors de {cobra by one day's work—eighty thousand hos pital beds are scattered over one section Slone—but the more fearful the slaughter the ; wilder the excitement of the people; the" greater the whirl and hurry; For three ye l aila the delirum has been intensify ing., Nothing can check it. Older na tions wonder and fear the catastrophe; butitill aids strongest of all nations rushes on, taxing every energy, exhausting every effort—literally tearing out its vitals with the unnatural force of a maniac.. Gold is banished from the country. Paper of all kinds and quantities takes its place, yet ,tuck is the demand, that a quasi: . Uwe! a mile of printing presses, working day and night, can scarcely provide an ade quate supply_ National loans, 'without stint or limit, or provision for pay-day, are retitle and , greedily taken by the people. Four thousand millions of debt are rolled as quickly almost as the 'waves-of She sea rolled, up by the winds. Every State , an , d county and town has its scrip and ben a. Brokers and nioneyeahangera mul tiply. Every conceivablerepresentitien of value is \ invented and scattered broadcast. Interest hearing notes, .serip, coupons,' %; seven-thiA es, ten-forties, five-twenties, certificates, reen paper, blue piper, gilt eged paper, t !parent paper, postage cur rency, five cent otes,—in short everything which only the b 'no of thosein delirium could think of, is t h rown about its, the representative of so ething supposed to' be the credit of the Visited States. Besh els of it are carried in and out of banks, bags; ull fill the merehtin\'s vaults—a des- . en bunk note companies and heaven knows how many printers grow rich in its manufacture. It is staFaped . d pasted and tinted and scrawled over "R egis. tees" and "Treasurers," and if about like chaff before the wind raised y the storm of this nation's delirium. Eterybpdy h speculating. Stets le is !attires manufacture corporations by the . wholesale. 8, many applicants are there , that general laws have to be'passed - to bring entire classes to life. Every . one'ia a banker or miner, or an oil dealer. Even women and children, invest their few dol larJ in shares, and watch the wheel of for tune. It is all cent-per cent. and huge. divi fiends. Ordinary gain i are laughed at: Pa, per money o iti he. - poveled iu far more quickly than by tits old ;mortgage and ground rent process. nil wells and cut pita mid ffold mines and quicksilver veins are much better than , the good old tangi ble three-story house and lot of bud ; so the whirl and hurry, gain on, and the pa per flies, and all get rich (on paper) and labor', the harder and 'fiercer. .. ' _Law -making is conducted 'le the same ii•ckleas manner. Congress appropriates • aliundred millions in a single-day, with. out a word said, unless it be a joke fronz Stevens, or a snarl from Schneek; The Legislature of this State puts bills airotigh at a fabulous rate, and in a single.day wilt establish a dozen banks, and •a score of other corporations--besides iridironing Philadelphia with railroads and gerry mandering the entire Deniocratio party out of their proper representation. Very little talking is done; 'it is all money, money, ' money—bribing and voting all day—gatnbling all night. Every, conceiv able scheme is concocted by this law-ma kers, to il:iverturn sober sense and estat lish move generally tho ' l national insanity. At Washington it trail onfseation, eaten ciliation, miscegenation, and negro-Oil ism. Harangues which deserve the,inad hoar are applauded 'to the echo. Mezi co is spiropriatea, England defied, France Insulted; Canada threatened, and 'all with- Out tiny -settled purpose or any idea Of consistency or reason. It is all httin and rush-4he "previous question" and the "inotiop to expel." A convocation of maudlin debancbees would be more sensi ble lawL makers than the Congress' which sits in Washington. The people at large are es mid os their representatives. In the citiesitis 'll show and glitter—grand equipages—fine houses —gaudy dresses—prohtle extravagance.— Politicians must be radical or they are no where: The clergy must favor the tam t fearful blood-letting or they love their pop. ularitY.- The negro cannot he employed or respected. he must be adored, hived. venerated. He is uo longer eu interior— nor eietr an equal—be sits in the highest plsoesi and has More care, end fuss, said trouble taken (or him than 'was ewer bet' stowed upon the whit Tao itt 8 1.':1 i. ilaA:e. ing has yet oboruetr4l it. Day Jty goes taster. Debt, fMd trouble, and war are ptishing it on. Some day all this in- i esnity Must reap its fruit, and if.tbutfriiit is not of the bitterest; the most' terrible miseiy, the most completot4estrttetiort"Of everything which 'was once of blue or veneration in_this land, we have hat road history aright.—Phila. Age. Di . fOo5TID wiia vii_tzavies.„--Fiasnaus D; Keyes and Al . idri!* Putter ecently muiered out of the vulunteerierviettaa brigiuliai generals to matte icon for pout' ical favorites, have realgued, their , reopee dye-positions of colonel of :the 11th and 14th, infant:l, regater. arinie ..f.4aated with >< military service which *Fun on=e ,pollticsl basis. Ilotborenplcl.4ul triadliaeoerslalse,hkillleirad t 16 faithfully. MEE MEM = .. . A 'lettee l frOili'll' meddle& otitis ilie fol 7, losiiiol4ofinieisiititents 01l fire man.' rize'iought,- 'arid filiditie - tiiiik le tlitit 'after is teirible 'e'en - kat of perlisiii 'hodrs . duratlon, there. iih'oalci be is tinaß's•proportion ot killed scad'wdlitytedl ' . Yen o'reee'ne+tir in battle you would not ;mesa' these'-isere half the readout shots' fired that there' =are. Why. sir, I, have seen wholo—rogiments brigade. delivesing their firer k wben I waasttre that they did net even wound a single . manj Such firing ? besides wasting the augslutlii tion, does 'not intiugdate the , enemy at all ; on the other band, it makesi then%e feel , that there is tut little -dermal', COD* quently hells more bold, and delivers hiss fire . More accurately . Besides, if men are allowed to make three random dischargesi it seem to , become a habit, and they ba come so etcited it "it that they would hit him. Jost! itt that way battles are often lost, while the company commander, if Ii Would only stop it and show them that) they were going no good, hey would soon become collected, _and, • • for they once knew their folly, would, .f their own ao cord, are deliberately, an • probably save the day af4er. it bad bee • comparatively lost. , "Why, in battle y.. often see com pan,' eimininderi chergi.g around with their swords flourishing as .ut their headi crying outs 'Give it to air 'boys ; ;give it Co them VI manifesting i themselves and creating in others all the'excitement sible. Nowa second ttio ght would shoal to their better judgmen that they were doing more harm clang ; for men be• cons so excited under isn h circumstancee that they would is an elephant at tett step.. Yon often-aee the bove blustering around when the enemy re at least of at a distance or one th d yards, and to. hear the roar of iciusketqty and the excl. ted cominanders, you would suppose they would soon come to a haul to hand contest, What is it that excites a 'man in battle, Why, it is the danger; I you shoot at a man mine; he is veiy muc excited ; shoot itt him a 1 hundre4 flick , and miss him everyAiree; and all his ear and ,•excite'. mentia g6no Lbut_yeser 'e your Ilia untp, yon can cl'o soma don, and whi p they Cono-into Iheme; , wound hie neighbor, kill from him and let.hino - e CMnMEI Rift` antral .11 . The Cincinnati Quoit., annoupees that General Crook's army is again in motion ! this time dtrwet— for - - Richmond ; whic h means,.et ti , urse, • •tlitat be added to the Alibi of the-Botoniso, or tie put in 4me position to «i=ooeriite'in the siege uf `c47l, 'rtsti4 been made public by; oae of our efty \ t . --- u paperstbat Gee. Huntr;t r largi4 tobetlded to General Grap's iritaFmar4. and that the junction place:: By What routs tliesc\two ocropemling columns ere to reach Ilio\intind is nclt, stated.buc it'fi enough to know that Gab. Grant is ratite,- ing ataenormo4 army f r the'sie,ire of th e n • Gate.Tio . with the aFU of the. sortlawest,\itt al o on the way to join hint!, ;14.3 Tito tame con i & West. 'Sven' available sent to Ctert:Sherman.. a brilliant (Aber. with. fr )ra tbR transaiii.3iS3ll4 stood to be na the row may baanri ever Virginia;iperlia.p.iLbutf the great armies. . So - General SeAtterat 1 - 114' Line tJeant, , and it to thet indebted for three yea - Grant. lhowever;belier contratitm, a very ditfer. and wiLic•his aid he p Riehntend 'and - Atlan beart tat the Confeders , l come d:re new general. i• wondent. . . I .Ahe Was i*aseld. - . i i The following "bout eis" were addeci to the Abolition structure Of outrage, and des potism iin only ten day :. ' ' - i Seizure and fiestru lop of two New Yoilt Paperi. ,, ' .• ' ._. 'i - A telegraph line cl7l and iti officials imprisoned.. . . . A citizen of ID,hio seizei and hurrielt off • , 1 to a distant dungeon. _ , . It , A. B sitimore, newspaper suppressed.' A isockseller'a ahop.in Baltimore chased and - it ownero sent tn'priuus.' , . 411 obese acts were committed by { the administratiets, not, .the patties thus orttraged.!bad . guilty of eriirles, i Smsse but foilpolitical offe rof the most tri fling:klind. And yet a portion of the Tie*. ple chickle at these polio acts because they , ire .gopposed • annoy Democrats. The.. ..;writice their on lib,rty; and. Make s k !slater of their,childrni for the attire of en j6yini a little political' triumph. they Will inilyrealiis their - rolly when theirlown liberties, BA well as tiat of: their political 7 .:-"n6Citifi ended'. ' When some morn . _ - 11'4 rise to find tbst insteid of living in'n free,reitil)lic; tfteY ire sulifecia Of an em P it ?'...4 u t lil l "4!°:7 Mon `idrer tiftz, - ' . , A Gam Hit.—We Alhe ether iiroi . li Ttit r *wiiint - a •liettoded :il4#o,4beii,'liiikii::: ,:. . _7 Viiii" Velne ow- dr ,the 11 , 46)04ii1l 44iii:4:7 it. 140 ii)ldter 1 vrtus . - detSndieg the: halm of r.hie- isvorite Wm441413A-T, tOrt2t4Pleilie."frourthe' ta ~...„...:. .--Y*, ..grials. - mime se "• to maser, *der -feyliofFitti "iiit:# :111int:vrtpkt.Ahk? dick..." ene4oXim:_ ll Fiitht. a :44i,.. i tY. eltga4 You ret ~i irereidewn- he zoom lighting 1P4 4 . qr . lt i Mitt - 0 0 follovi4n44 I 4 / 4 44:P4 1 ; 1 0:.19 7, ,: " ', ‘ A T iaiiii 4 ,Sl' :l 4 o3l t lariats; seeking his4umat i:ot i ecsitile he Kkhiehrmere shag , del.,. Faii. }p i s tos• 41Vi4V,00 ' : tt* l r• 'l . .44 acsk* rad *hint mid lert.--"TorO`iairn: . • • .. . • ; . J:M• 1. - .s=N•Aloi'.o6-t . v%;"" =EN ; i t I I= Many inquiries have been made about Gen. Grant's politics: . I am happy to in form your readers, from his own lips, to what party; he belongs and under what banner be Marches. A near relative. of his has been passing some time in this city. While with Gee. Grant in the -.W,est, be. fore he was made Lieut. General, the friend said to him t "General, I have been inquireciof to -day about your politics."— "Did you give the parties any informa tion?" was the, quiet qhery. "I did not," was the answer, "for I don't know what your politics are." Knocking the ashes focus his' cigar the General continued:— When I resided at the South I . had the opinions and prejudices of Southern peo ple against the Republican party. I bro't those °pinto:Pa and prejudices with me when I came to Illinois: Mad I taken active part in politics, I should have been with the party opposed to the Republicans. I watched .Mr. Lincoln's course and was satisfied with his patriotism. But these are pot the mes for parties. Indeed, in this crisis there can be but. two parties— those for the country, those for its fo'es. I belong to the party for the Union. Those who are the most earnest in carrying on the war 'and putting down the rebellion, have my support.. As a soldier, I obey the laws and execute the orders of all my su perior.. I expect every man under me to do the same." When Mrs: Grant left Washington , for her Western . home, she Temiiined a short Aime in this city at the Fifth Avenue Hotel. Several gentleniev called upon her, and in the course of the conversation congratulated heron the die vatioe-of-lsetr husband, and expressed a .hope that heiwnuld be successful in this campaign. Her whole manner, quiet, dignified and reserved, seemedto express surprise Abet any one should doubt his success. Pausing a moment, she replied ^'l have no doubt. but the General will succeed, for he is a very elutirutte inen.",-, This remark ended the conversation. ',.A: Galena neighbor of the General has been 'stopping here soma time, and seems near ly confounded with the sudden gmwth of his neighbor, the tanner. , He can't ac count, for it,for he was not a marked man at home, and nobody supposed him a great man ; be seldom talked, ' asked no advice, gave none to any one, but always did what he screed to, and at the time. his ninthei, the wood mite it, and the dal eradia. is going on at, gin soldier being L an. A. J. SraitS, voort, 20,000; moo . reg 00. to tiodir• to elattanoogo. ft:Abet\ 'east -4o ertainly lon i 4 depo\il at sin's favorite lints- worthies. ara we of wasteful war , in General eiri. , lit gars of persln, posoi to capture the brains shd IT. _ Let uslai viel- I:hfar he has done NUMBER . 2 • -; Bird illerdir. :Ciro tofteiNsti tho &Cowing tom PI utt to it* Attie. t{ t. of our btli•killors ' • Who Itilloct Coat epottowt 1 .1:•iiobl throe tea 9. CearLoy; , alit is sty tasttloy, t=ad Coot Wbe bhs dlel . "4" sig Cadorptiar, "And I blood spuroirklller A! l Alto/ him 4-4." When dance era hte gran ? , "I," Wild Mr. Blom RIM Oieeo-dy aed Red bug, "WWII daemon hie tram" WhV Lep for hie iosa kV' s'eld 'oasis Wheat-shoot, halt aid Flower-bad sod Reel. "We'd weep for big lore" , CCorrarpondeo es Bottoa 4 burnt. Qaidf about Gen. Grant. lobby. Uweln. Our worthy President, familiarly caged ''Old Abe," has a hopefulson—the offshoot of .his loins—the heir expectant of his' house and thron - e.. This...aspiring youth" j -=riot he, hosiever, who "fired the Ephe- j slim dome"—is ot draftable age, say about 1 nineteen years old. sow, every time a I proclamation is issued. ordering anctiter I, conscription, we hear the name of• this i lad mentioned, and the . wondeir is in eve- I rybody's mouth whether he will be caught j in the net. People will talk, and they are i so uncharitable as to say that whereas so 1 many mothers have given up their opts to die in the "slaughter pens," and to sacri- Ace their lives on the altar ot their mull- I try, that itis. Liticoin and hir worser half I shonld freely yield up Bobby to the,same end. \ Certes, there is some—a good deal I —of Philosophy in tlis;'and sundry pep-1 I ple go farther and say that this scoin of I : the royall,we were were about to write "loyal!' 1';ould n\t wait to be drafted,but should, volunteer attce, and thus set an exam- , ple to others hose "patriotism" . is begin ning to fisg....te should like to-see him fighting as a pri4te 112 the ranks ; but,. if this is too low a eta ion for his . "Vaulting ambition," let hi s nerable . and vener ated "parient" secure hiat a commission in some regiment composed of "American citizens of African deseen ,". that he may flesh his maiden sword upp the field of battle,,aad by his valor mak)s \ the name of Lincoln. immortal I Who kno s but what he may prove a very Hotspur i chivalry, "pluck up drowning honor by 0 . locks,". 11\ or "snatch it from the pale•faced oon 4 .'" If he shoulefall, .why then—recede at in Past. Tug Ma or Paocagss. 7 We copy the fo - lowing delightful paragraph 'from the . Pittsqurg qauttc : " During the debate this atternoon Senator Sumner left - the Senate. chamber for a few moments, and returned through the main doorWity—with it a colored may *. It was Col. Ea ' eat Ron main, t'.t. e.. ...sr, d'Affmrs of syti. who s+...i titled . IT virtue If- his iplomatio 1 - 'iti.. l3 , ti) ll W. with hit. ...era, the Senators representing the States ofilie Union. :He is e gentlemanly-looting person, faultless ly dressed." and of . .pOlished manners.- 1 Heady all of 'iltieedinirdstretion Senators onirip promoted •to And conversed vth Itrine- • • .: - • . ileneigetniy Seward, writing to a MEMI meeting oft 13i . 11 S. Christian Commission Philsdeleffs,spesks of "the ford States. the loyal Governors. the toijat Courts, the Zapf Minister". the lord Coaittle; the toyed ' Doctors. sloe heist Teachers,- the loyal Cler- I gy, and the loyal Press. as maintaining the Xitiket.! We shall by , And by hear of loyal cl;Wkney stweepeie w loyal-boot:clean en, loyel.Mgriatkidlars, loyal soft soap deal ees, laVal LINPF,OI 3I - Pip and loyal 1°.141. Of lclel *47" oiet,bara, apaw and to -17 P 1 r 1- . 11 P I V I kY Itinntsotablitiyaisti, bet. ins declaredifrodi the pulpit that 'lobs Brown was a!seound haus chrlst,ls Das• e:tertitio • Bernina. That Mr., Fiat. hai Made him self • secon.A Balsam's ask; provided that nothing herein contained is intended to slander the originalass 131104meg/4 that Mir. Fiske Isis lineal descendant. - - "Biwa you read.XeClelhoes Report f" said *gentle:um to i radical. !' kin, and I don't intend to. We don't ware for Mc .? Clellan's Report. We go by the records that - ird in 111W - War'Depitrtnteint. and those prove him a traitor." "My friend," was the replE, lif yoo had read the report yots-would be a wiser Man than to make such a milli remark, to the report isethe record, and the docitmenta are all in it. McClellan proves‘verything he states by the) Contemporary; documents, and yon would do well ici - studi them." Asat.rrzon, Titerrols.-.-The.only North. ern man, sinCe - thewar began, known to thave furaishet , materials of war to the ConfederateS is'Kr. EfaiveY,tißepublican, and - now Lincoln's Minister to Portugal. 'lt is alsO a fact that the only persons .in the North keomni - to.. have ; furnished ma• tetials of-war to the Confederates, aro Re publicans—Such as PalmFr e Collector Bar. ,ney's: clerk, and Chairman of the New York Republican Centrill Committee.— Lincoln proinptly put him underlederal protection to shield-him from prosecution 'for his crimes. • OLD tarts 'WEtros.—The Louisville ad pays the following compliment to dia . titiguisied New Yorkers "Washington Hunt is one •of the New York delegates to the Conservative National Convention which meets st Chicago in Jury. The Old. line Whigs Of the Empire /lime are enter ing into the Presidential contest with so. customed gallantry and •fidelity. Und• r the leadership of such men as Fillmore, and Hunt and. Hall, and Granger. and Ketchum, they will form a glorious divi sion in the; grand army of conservatism, and will perform glorious service. A. no bler body of patriots the world does not contain." Gas. MeCtsturs—A Goon Max's Orrs. ' ton. - -AdMiral A. H. Foote, jwtt, before his \, decease, said ;"I have the highest opinion I of Gen; McClellan. He is an .eicellent man ; a min of principle, and one to be depended on; a man of piety, andjust the man for the plat*, (the Army of the Po tomac) but he worked with his bands tied, and of couise he could not do sa he would. The government would not let him."— This brave and intrepid man was not goierned by say party intrigues. The • most radicial cart certainly find nq fault with Admiral Foote's devotion oto the Union, foi his life waa his offering, and his deeds on the Mississippi and Tennes see will remiin an everlasting incinument to his metruny. - - _ • A desperate attempt et Tape by anegro man upon. a .very respectable 'white girl bat fifteen years old,. was made on the 19th tilt:, near Niasawango'bridge, in this county. The circumstances are these l'As the. young ; lady, is Emily Flemming, .dapghter Dir._Boberi Flemming, resid. Ingaboyaftetir mile"' from Snow liill, was p• ott the morning of the above ditialone from bither's residence to visit 'a friend not far tlistgint,-she was way laid by the negro, Jacob 13,yezt;w12o crept up behind her and suddenly seized her, placing his band upon her mouth s, forci bly a= to Cut her under-lip neatly through against -a 1 footh. He then dragged' Lax about Q.t. hundred - and lifty, yards into tue woods, and only failed in his diaboli cal purpoile from the screams of his in tended victim together with her great strerigth. He:eft the prints of his fingers upon herf neck in his effort to chaise her. The fellow was captured on the Saturday following and lodged in the Snow ETillj where he awaits his doom. Worcester Sizelet. I A Book which no Democrat Should be Without. " Flys 4lrsttacr. Potzrzcat TSX2I."-I'n-, der this title, 8l D. Carpenter, Esq., editor of the 31adiion (Wis.) Patriot; a former resident of this county, has issued eiboolt which. is by far , the Most valuable that has appeared on the antsjeet - of the ten and 4ts causes: It may, in lotion, be appropria!ely Styled's Democratic, History of the Rebellion, ,in contradistinction to the many garbled and unreliable :,books pretending to give an aces sult of the origin and progress of the war, which- have been written by Abolition authors for Abolition purpo. see, and hooded over an unsuspecting 'and too easily doped country. It differs from any of these - so-called : histories, though, in the fact that it gives Aocumentary proof foe every assertion that it mikes, and can be relied upon in every particular. Mr. Carpenter has made a decided hit in this work, and if it reaps . 4 reward consistent' with its merits, it will-have the largest ciron laden of any that has been announced for the last ten years. It it fast the thing that has long been needed—a teat.book to which Dem. . Carats otn always refer for proof to sustain their arguments. .. Whoever has* a copy of this wail' in his possession," aye a eotempo ra. ry, L , need not fear to; be Galled 'traitor.' 'Cop perhead' and the like, for all he has to do will be to pUll the volume out" of his pocket, and cram 1 i few Abolition seutenoes down the throats !of those who assail him,,and they will soon leant to let him alons.7 Commencing with the formation of the Eiders! party, it followaithe ehequered and Inconsittent career of the opposition down to, 'the present day, \ qttoting from the sentiments of their speakers end editors, giving their platforms, comm. in their - act,, and professions, and "hewing the. 4 endeiCY of them all to produce the very &midi n - of 4_eiril wee and deopolimn which now : over the nation. .There is hardly _ au evett which has occurred sines the ao knowitd nt of our national indepeidence, but is treat in at stoner lose length. The tuit l / 4 book 4. somplets totirlopedia of political knowliedge. lii r endorse it grimily, bat not with t e too much of warmth. It is one that ad' socrat Wald do without, or, ones having,. sioWhf tie without,, and, as such, We commend itthe attention of our party !fleas everywh The pries le $1.59; ii t if soot, by mail, 5L.76--I.ll \ litre trlllty - fiTO Gents being needed to corti . st". . So. 14. Carpenter, has made urea Le by wk nay :eider , fro m this section , be seat to the 66arvcr *Moe, and Will vi prompt ~ . ttentem. , -.._ , mil \ _-w. remind oar residers that Will. Ass d ties tigserfer oaks sne silt es ed trip soy isustsliilissai is North Brown' vbs. of for doiag Sob ?denial. i n Soidlef Voodoo Bills. litootios Tialisks. Buds. Blsoks, or a•, siod of risiikos, V p0 n 4 210 . will lii4 . it. to tik.i!'"Araater• !Overlie 6' COL " —•— ` 5 . 4-424 it , MEI
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers