tit 13 hurter. THURSDAY. MAY 25th, DIGS r e.xas. Viettaros at Ott news is tui Pauni op Adam. Special Notice.. ri' - W. dolts to obtain a toriespondent to .ter, township in nu carroty. Political sassy, ire can obtain o nbandanos ; what we want (I the local news front all parte of the onanty. Any person intik% to as inn de pend on haring Manama kept etristly confidential : and i I be but rears that the cannonnstation is not In proper rhubarb!. publication, we will pot it In eppro vista trim irr The boor at which flu Observer to pot to piles . week, is 2 rich)* on Theirsdayiltentoon. A dwirtise• ni,,,tq will be reesitiki tip to 9 o'elook or the dal' of Po& itratiou. f r City sabeesibete, served by canter, will backfired n. ly erniii yet year oars. Persons wbo fall to t, vi 13 theiryapent regoluiy wail eostfor • &Tor by notl ty us of 11. e sax*. We prefer to bays all subscribers 1.. can cooreolently, µwore thelz yelpers at the ogee M publication, - 1W AU Advortbrobrouri, Job Work and gabocriptloos Jong perilous wbooo resposalbility is cot known to the Rublistirs, out be pia is itiliosw. Tux Lancaater fieriligaseer h a Paper with which we fall more in love every day. Ha editorial department is especially well conducted, and we find it ()AL to resist the temptation to clip the artlolin out end publish them by the wholesale. We hope the Democracy of glorious old Lancaster are 'giving it the protit.thle patronage to which it is entitled. The Truth of the Record. Pilo Chic•igo Convention, and the reso lutions prise,) by that body in condemns- Ow course pursged by the Admin. kly ion, are igain thrust beiore the • pub be for (64.1, by certain embittered jour. n‘ t i anal politicians, and judgment is de tuande4 by default. The course of these Jan -411 and persona is in very bad taste at the present time, end them imputations are as untruthful as they are ungenerous. No intelligent, man in this country con scientiously believes that the Democratic pin ty has been untrue to the Union dur ing the fone - years of terrible civil war through which we have just passed. That party; on the National election immedi ately preceding the war, cast nearly one h the votes of the Northern States, and its r mks contained fully one•half the fighting force of those States- Had the Democratic party really occupied a dis loyal attitude in this contest, had they er ,, ,n abstained from participation in it, we would not now be rejoicing over the downfall of the rebellion. The "Southern Cinfederacy " would today be aNiubstan tial reality, tyld _nett _ Davis. instead, et beeng a prisoner, would be firmly WA lished in Sichniond—perchance in Wash iueton. Thi4 has been no party war, nor is any political party entitled to claim the honor attached to its auccesafaMermina tion. The Democratic party differed with the Administration regarding its line of policy in carrying on the war ; but it was an open, manly and legitimate difference of opinion, founded uponconscientions con viction. The Republican party, bent upon making the most of every advantage, la bored assiduously to make the people bet lieve that the administration and the gov ernment are virtually the wale, and that oppOsitiou to the former is hostility to die latter. But this was all done for politield effect ; the authors of such charges knew bet ter ; and this was the sole ground upon which charges of disloyalty were based. The Democrats, even when smarting under these galling charges, never for an instant turned from their devotion to the Onion—never abated their 'efforts in sup port of the war. As a party, they have as proud a record in this war as their po litical opponents. They have given their men and their money with only one thought—that of restoring the Union— and they have made ell political questions subordinate thereto. Democrats and Re publicans lie side by side on every South ern battle-field, their loyalty abundantly proven—their bodies a silent rebuke to those who would make political capital by imputing disloyalty to the parties repre sented by either. Fasts to Relied Over. 1 tf we would 'win back the alienated af fections of the Southern muses, says a sensible exchange, we • must show rather the disposition of friends than the dispo vition of conquerors. We cannot expect that they will feel very amiable towards • us as long m we treat them AS vanqpished Eubjects. if we would restore the old fra ternal relations, we must' I:like heats toi, show the old fraternal ciOnfidenon by , granting them the same civil rights that we enjoy ourselves. Military rule is odious enough even in a despotic country ; but in a country like ours it is especially repug nant to the popular sensibilities. Every day that this rule continues beyond what absolute safety requires, increases the dif culties of practical reconstruction. The sooner, therefore, the positiart Q(' the tiovernment toward the people at South id defined, the better for th. .ate -eta anti ,t they are to ..mg line between forgiveness is to be are to be visited with the Ai.• • L them know just wb►' expect; where the tetri'r punishment and (Irwin ; whn penalti- / OE d of outraged justice, sad who are become subjects of clemency and con 6.3ence. That certain of the more promi nent leaders are to be punished is assumed on all hands; but it cannot be too soon proclaimed who are to be regarded as fel ons and who are to be repAded as friends. At present there is a painful feeling of un certainty existing avneng the people of the South. It is due to them and to us that that feeling should be removed with as little delay as possible. And now that the speech-makers are beginning to give him a little peace, we trust President Johnson w ill spea k t o tb4 doluded np...40t , South in such t• rills as . 4r fears and inspire them with eauti,iu:a Tits New York Daily News suggests Gen. Sherman as the Democratic candi date for President in 1868. If the News wants to kill Gen. Sherman as a poilitical aspirant so effectually that he will never he heard of hereafter, it could not pursue s better policy than to admits him as its favorite candidate. By the way, is it not a little inconsistent, not to speak of the absurdity of the thing, to see a paper which refined to mapportilem. itesCiallms• bemuse he was in favor of enforcing the authority of the Union, now maggesting the intwkanceeeldlalsoldier of the spar as a candidefe WWI I ketreisbalekt —Quick. Warp, sad INadlint. 4 _ Thiel} is a question to which public at tention . rmAt, •be immediately diverted ; and in the answer to which interests of the greatest magnitude are involved. We have had, from the Secretary of War, va rious announcements of retrenclunenta about to be inaugurated, but it is if,tori ous I hat very little has as yet beet) ar our plished. Our national obligations still go on at the rate of over two million dollars per day. runitin , the national treasury us debt Tully n• million dollars daily, as the receipts Irons internal revenue scarcely exceed, if they reach,-the letter sum. It is clear, therefore, that We ttinat have a much more sweeping retrenchment then we have yet sejti To go on borrowing at the rate of forty utillions per weak, alter peace has been practically declared, will soon wreck our credit at house as wall aw abroad. We very much doubt whether the immense subscriptions to the popular loan will be accepted abroad in the spirit in which they are blazoned to our people. " What recklessness," will be natural ob servation; "immense sums borrowed "daily to support a military establish. ' ment Ihr which-n 4 further use is pre " tended t" 5 .. It is given out semiofficially that the army is to be maintained for some time at One hundred and sixty thousand (160,000) men. Thonfth the necessity of so greet an army may be questioned, let us first consider bow much this army even ought to cost. 'file cost of the French army is ' two hundred dollars per annum per man. The cost of our army for the fiscal year ending July t, 1860, was sixteen anti a hall million ($16,500,000) dollars, or fully a. thousand dollars per man. The cost. per man irrla small army is necessarily much larger;than in a large army. But, under Mr. Stanton's utter reckless and improvi dent administration ,the national armies have cost fully twelve hundred dollars per man per annum, or six timer as much as the French army. The pay of the pri vates in our armies and various contin genti to officers were largely increased by the last Cengress. The pay of the private is now sl4per annum ; his rations ought not to coat over a hundred dollars per annum, Making nearly three hundred 'dollars, and allowing an equal sum for or ganization, ammunition, and transports floe; we have about • $6OO per man, or. $96,000,000 pe: annum for the proposed army of 160,000. If the army can be re turned to the regular officers, and freed from the peculations of the politicians who have obtainsid position* in it, wo real sure that the expenditures need not ex ceed $75,000,000 on that account. This would be too n n to hope however, and we allow in our estimate a round hun dred millions psi annum for the expanses of the army, after the utmost retrench meet proposed - ahall have been accom plished. ! With respect ;to the navy, people will be less tolerant of expense than with the army ; because it is felt to be entirely unnecessary. The country is not willing to pay anything for " glory " or " show." "Ciood wine needs no bush:;" our military prowess needs no blazoning to the rest of mankind. For the peace year above named the castor the navy was a littlei more than eleven million dollars ; the necessity of maintaining fleets of gunboats on the rivers will prevent a reduction of expenditures tolhat "sum ; but double the former'peace cost would be sufficient; 1 yet we will be liberal and allow thirty millions per annum for the navy. Next cornea the interest on the national debt. The interest-bearing obligations of the government, when the loans now on the market shall have been taken, will call for one hutuired and eighty millions of dol. lan per %TIMM, or forty millions of dollars more than is required to pay the interest on the national debt of Great Britain, heretofore justly regarded as a wonder in finance. The civil expenditures of the government, including the expense of col lecting the internal revenue, cannot be placed below a hundred million dollere per annum. This gives the (oilowipg total : Army • ' $100,000,000 Navy • " 80,000,000 Civil list -' g 50,000,000 Interest " ~. 1.80,00031,000 Tptal . $410,000:000 This is sou $ 60 , 00 0,000 Per annum greater than the expenditur es o f th e British empire. But is wbftt -particular hale we overdrawn it t There has been as yet, we repeat, no ooasiderable retreoehment, except what was inaugurated by OWL "rant HOW Wl ibortant the work of retrenchment now . fwill be best understood tram tbe - unleaa it is entered upow -- McCullough will kr' . in, _met that, at once, Ms. .e expended the money which 000,10/1 aia hands, end the public mans of ratisiel has placed it • trvour , , 'wilt become eshemsted before _ingress can, at its regular session,; ac complish any action for its relief. Then let us have retrenchment—Al:49kt sharp, and decisive—and every friend of Presi dent Johnson and of the eountry-will join . us in demanding this of- Ur. Stanton, or that he vacate his office.--IV. Y. World. Tat New York Thiess continues to talk common sense on the subject of military arrests and Walk with all its to. customed energy and ability. Hadnuoh language as the following appeared in a Democritie paper at any Period during the last ,four years, there is not a lepith. lican editor in the country who would not have branded it as the rankest" copper imadista." Says Mr. Greely " And, now that the rebellion entsli ed and the war this side of the Ifue&appi ended, the era of holl4oechiny, War cane autocracy, and the military trials of civil ians for common law ammo must she.. lutety and promptly elope. It has no lon ger an excuse, much low a justification. Four years of Fort Lafayette clisepline must suffice to give a relish to ages of liberty defined and pretected by law. We beg our National authorities to realize the public impatiens on this heed and hurry up their ofikial notification that the privi lege of habeas corpus is tutored." • Ws know not which to deepleethemat --tbwin temperate actions of nosy of oar political opponents. reraltiag in crarartily mob attache and the distraction of print 'in; °ekes, or the symphaneY of some of 'the Democratic pram. la thole elf.rair to pander to temporary paraterpmaisa. TM Wowed peepl• of $, Oda bat* slatted • •••19•444 ilah at airrilla Male 01 914 GENERAL. NEWS. The Arad! with . t he Soul li 11.1 , r tir4l. Of regtalions, Fein' "kV let to the 18th inst. inclusive. fitly •es ads, exclusive of Government traworts, have elearelfrem New York for ports in the Sauth -I.lllllolreil Se ostautkree ae4 star yet orin syr, 4 lo t hesis, •Ot these,' eighteen hives ,dared foOtiohniteed siva ether Jae's' gees *iris; :fir New Orll4l - a+ siz.for Charles Lou; 1161110' fOr IntaillgtOn thrie for Beau tort; four for Mobile, and ten for Savannah and Fernandina, Fie. The Enropean papers oontais many further tribute* to the memory of Abrahent Lincoln. The-eity of Palermo has called one of -tbs. streets after him. The Empress of Frenee bee Written a letter of condolence to Mrs. Lincoln. The Bavarian Chamber of Deputies Imes uneajoionaly passed reaointions of sym pathy with the American people.. The managers of the iron works at Troy lave stopped work, end say they cannot re sume it agaio esoept with a reduction of fifty per cent. on the wages. It is stated that the Government has is- Gently obtained private letters of J.W. Davis, clearly implicating him is the leassons as sassination conspiracy. It is said that the rebel @overeat' Magna', of Bout% Carolina, and Wade Hampton, the rebel cavalry chief, were both et tlolumbia, the capital of that Stitte, on the 10th Ina., engaged in conscriptirig Ail the matte they could lay their bands ou, for a continuation of the war on their own account. Jeff. Davis, with hie family, and ;encamps. stud by Alex. 11. stereos, Clement C Clay, Col. W. Reagan, Gen Wheeler end others ar , rived at Fortress Monroe on Friday. in the steamer Clyde from 'Hilton jleatl. It is at present unknown whether the plirty will be confined in the easeisales at Fortress Monroe until the day of trial, or be taken at once to !Weshission. A. religious revival is is progress in Phil*. delphie, and preechisi and extra religions services MI held is Weill churches every evenhtir. Secretary Seward bee entered upon his oil eat duties. . A freight locomotive on the Chicago, Alton flt. Louie railroad exploded on Thursday, fourteen miles from Chicago, instantly killing the engineer, firemen and a brakeman. Prince Citirtschacoff, in the absence of the emperor from 81. Petersburi, has sent to Pd. de Stoeckel, the Russian Pilinistar at Wash— ington, an eloquent expression of ttorrk:st the assassination . of President LizooK . tad vans sympathy for the Govertnitent and peo ple of the United States in this their hour of An army of workmen, come seven or eight hundred In all, hitherto 'employed in the Brooklyn Navy Yard, have received notice, that on and after Monday next, the Govern. meat will have no further occasion for their 111117100. These inolude carpenters, painters, blacksmiths, engineer., and common laborers. The effect ot this, together ititi the immense immigration that is steadily pouring in upoa us, to say nothing ot the large number of hands transferring from military to civil Life, must be to crest, a glut in the market for /attar. An order has been burned !from the War De partment announcing that all persons found in arms against the United States, *sat of the Mississippi river, will hereafter be considered as guerrillas and punished with death. Gen. Frans Sigel announces in the Boni more Koko., of May 16, that be has become the editor and co-proprietor of that paper. lit is republican in politics, The MOlaut Queral pt the United BOW has bees dirsoted to muster out of service all unemployed general officers whore services we sot seeded. An order has also bus Issued for the dlecharp of fifty theussad employees Of the quartermaster's department. Judge Boiad of blarylasd—widely Item. one et the most determined that Stan--lutspharged the Pomo% JAW , o f Baku. awns that whoever shell, 1 4107001 4 , arrest G IS. Wass is that Wilk skit 44 %h arm by cowls martial will be lieble,tc" AK:Atha auesc. . Tlito ecersily smith, .gh price of hoar at Boise 14411 _,__ ° ',... ° , 41P' mated on the let of April is ts• PRilmr """ 4resk and raid upon the dour isSeres " 12) %e dieturbanoe was gashed and the ' P ri°4l.f . dear reduced. W ales meetings are being held throughout north Carolina. A large gathering Was .'to canvass at Raleigh os the 11th. The Washington Nati:mai in tetligeacer saye that th* rebel ram Stonewall was supplied with Coe at nallata t and that the Oct will kid to a rentanstraaee by our Goverzki " at ' Gm Van`. o r Ncrth CaroSas, has been arrested at the hones at hb father. - 411 .111.1 is 84 / 1 " 611 Witty; hit said he is to be tried for trainu. ra. -JarolA *Ad t Alegrspitio communication is bias *stands& in North Carolina, and at bare ise begla•Sing, In that regard, to assume their ancient ikapeet. Oe the fasisniag of Wednesday, the 17th, a colored ginti got into a Pine street Phila delphia passenger car, sad• refused ail en treaties to leave the car, where his presence appeared to be Del desired. The conductor of the oar, fearful of being fined for ejecting him, as was done br•the judges of one of the ocusts.itt *similar case, ran,the car off the track, detached the horses, and left the col ored man to occupy the car all by himself. IN spent the whole of the night there. The conductor looks upon the part he enacted in the Mir ass splendid piece of strategy. The matter created quite a sensation in the neigh borhood where the ear was standing, and crowds of sympathisers honked around the colored man. •, Tit* Oostodorsto Ism Steams 'which u rico& it Rona& oa the 10th, woo ozpootsti to Lean that poet on t4a 14th. Neat bar any at Sanwa no Ira vistiod by Sputa any °Soon and Gavatuneat Adak. Tbs Stow van La aolanadtd by Captain Malin,fima ley it the ettestrAi. Bawd Vatted Maus Mists hue bean sail attar her. Dispetehes say Putt the reel leaden Getes weed snd , Clump Ferguson are coutraliting treat depredations d_o the defenseless people of Emit Tinteessee. large amebae of the parotid prisosers ot, Lee's sad Jehestea's armies . us trwiellsg through East Teasesess, robbing awl . phut daring the people geserelly. Tiamotii-toir busdred Oostederate prison sirs at Cusp Chaie, Oldo, os Vlahtuday took the Wait at Amiss* and ware disakarpd. *he Oscura et thump - Morton, tadissapells, fr *sang alt Salim' the oath sad rebus.* to bases. - . . , Ow. filmotaa, it Is gated, toe posattood to prowl from liskotoad, to Witobiattoa by boot, La ood.r to tangly bdoro NN Oosstittoo oft Oho Oossibtot of tb• War. Ifs &Wood po. rompiatily ud prooooded oval's* with his tionP• tiotee of the tees 1 , 4 Lad sn reader show how trighffutty the mule papa- Wien of the South has Lees wasted by the aserr-40-1110e$4111sititio. fr etitibitaiNes4 , he nearly suoileiteied t /it few soatita ego a gefte6l eoneettdoilea of eetigsalas sad refit tarots Wok plate to meta at tha trolP . ft 009% whole regimeata tinsi:Amees;usink,e . , oae iineassad mss Int iseiralianglieette4 is ale eotopootoo of hoe taut lily ass. TM fitoolog trine mitt tateilkoes Use relktpt ITerdse's Copy Ihitabalteg reseal sad absent 3 Ten regiments - consolidated, rig men ; three regintenta, 210; twenty regiment*, 827; shov es, regiments, 819; Ors regiments, 469„ re presenting 100,090 men on the original rolls; one regiment, 201; sight regiments, 424, re presenting 10,000 Tem troops ; one regi. mina, 40 left oar of 1,200; reser" artine l 7, ten batteries, 660; seven regiments, 419; eighteen 'regiments, 719. Single regiments consolidated, end not represented above, showed the foihnring embers on their rolls : 21, 82, 16, 40, 124, 22, 60, 31,186,24, 41,65, 180, 35, 60, 11, 42, 0), 100. Bight companies °anaconda:el anionsted tai 88 men; Ave companies, 68 ; tea companies, 82; eleven sospealw, 69; ten companies, 65; fifteen oompsmies, 64; ten companies is one ease, 81 ; in another, 69, The ever:lgo in Lee's saps before consolidation one about 80 men to the regiment, and those corps re presented over half the army. Gem Bates' division bas lost soca general and Bold ofßeer and three.detuthe of the rasa In bailie, sizes the army left Dalton. It loot thirty per emit. at the battle et BentonviUs alone. Other fitotwOf the same kind might be stated, if it Were possible to place the matter in a stronger light. Three robbers broke into a house in Berke county on Wednesdey night. They were re sisted by the bungee, and one of thew was killed. flows women in the house were beat en with clubs. It is now staled that: the paper found on the person of Booth. impliesting Jeff. Davis in the crime of the tormer, was In cypher, and that it was read by means of another docu ment erratum In a similar character previously found in Davie' bons* at Bichatead Gen. Johnston is Wild to bent Charlotte, N. C. He mode application to tive United States antkorttiee to low permitted to go to Canals, but was mauled. HI now intends going to Florida. . Barium attars $6OO for the dress lc . which Jeff. Davis le said to have bees captured, sad two Chicago teatimes are ploadiag to be al . • lowed to add the liaise gamest to the .2ittliwo titaness of the great Northweeterw A aeries of defeoefve works for the• proteo T tiou;ot" Pao:areal and other Csoodlen 011102 le 14 b0131511/11111111fa. A aew and remarkably well executed cotto— aeireit—a two dollar note on the Batik of Glen's Fails, N. Y.--has made its appearance. The loss by the destruction by lire of liter. riot & Co.'s foundrey in Philadelphia, on Wednesday night, is estimated at $75,000, mostly insured. ITEMS OF ALL SORTS. Heenan, the bruiser, has married au En glish girl, and ~ retired from publio life," to spend his declining years in keeping an inn. Nevada, st the baby Statio" of the Union, prodticed lam year detest millions in silver. That child of Uncle Banes was (*Mainly born with a diver spoon in its mouth. If you lore others, akey will lore you. If you speak kindly to them, they will speak kindly to you. Lore Is repaid with love, and hatred with hatred. Would you hear s sweet plesaant echo, speak sweetly sad pleasantly youreelf. Queen Victoria sent $l6 to a Mrs. titans the other day for producing triplets. The unfortunate huebaud would prot e bly not have regretted if the amount bred b een ten times $l6. Nearly every postmaster,: le in the habit of rettienteg papers to P e ,,ushers when not taken out of the eitiee ' V ciis Is not what is required. The post onioe- reguiationsreiulrit postmasters to write le . publishes, not only notifying the* ue papers are not takes; bet also giving 8 44 reesons, when ssontalsrablit, that they are • not token. The Chiang° Ihkais says that Mrs. Lineeln insisted upon Oak Ridge cautery as the last reetbsig place of her husband, because she felt that Its quiet retreat would be more consistent with his Republican tastes when Wring, than a site In the Goatee et a noisy oily, and hfs cause she did not wish then who hut always been his emcees, to direct where his remains should be. A man with a lug* family was 'complain. lag of the difficulty of supporting all of them. "But," said a friend, "you hue some big enough to earn something for you now." "The difficulty is they are too big to work," was the answer. A good many, fathers find theniselires in the same position. • A obild speaking of its home to -o Mend, was asked, 4, Where is your hone I" Looking op with loving eyes st its mother, she replied: "Where mother is!" Wee ever a question more truthfully, beautifially or touchingly outstared? Women in Haverhill—the lowa from which went the Arst petition ever presented to Out grew, asking far a dissolution of the Union— got op a mob the other :14U and abused and insulted one of their own set in consequence of false allegations (simulated by tattling mis chief-makers. • ' , Mother, sold, little Ned, one morning," after having fallen out of bed, "Mother, I . think I know why I fell out of bed last night. It wan because I slept too near the place I got in." Musing a tittle while, as if in doubt whether he had given the right explaudion, he added : No, that was not the reason, it , was because I slept too near where I fell out." It the pictures of Sergeant Corbett that are published in some of the sensatiou papers are genuine we - think Boqth's fete was hard enough. To be shot by such * leaking nun Is puhishusat mous* ens for as asessais.— ffpriserikki•Rapabiicse. We era freosestly asked what ths verde ai lite Toupee Tynan*" need by Booty, the. assassin, man. We sourer that - they see Lida sad uses " Nat theists sf,lVreate Mae It is the suttee Tire= sad Was trstes s sea Nun king witha sword sad lasing his hot aside aselt.-.-latiber- North Adams is known as *pleasant Tillage la the Barkehlrs MUSS of Maeaekusette. .4 flw days sizes a laysterleas gastlereaz' a 'triage, swiped board at the ellhge hotel. lie desired that ao person would speak to its except the landlord. was - seed !Oa* and welt droned. Seiteral WWI attempted to nuke Ms aliquot:taus bat failed. Finally bolder ones appeiated s ossaittes of tee to it him They did so sad slated their bail- SUS. Hs eyed *ear and replied, ia tus e ma'am suds minima. I was atsvforod is Now Tort of s Wary aim. Ili Wee sta toast no stint rows is Lag also or a His V North MIMS six nostko. I alas the hot tor." ,thcisdie• Istire4, sad st" ll 4M war notropla atria & ' A witty Amor asp tbet tit *us is -of pablis buisit v iammli Lt Wiser 444 boil* Ono, eat ham the wit* am gepAT sple bAiIisMINW Young man pay attention. Don't be aloe: er, call yourself a lOafer, don't keep loafer's oemptny, don't hang about loafing pines•artrit for riatitufg *ad- board youroali tat to sit aroma day after day, or stead around Garment with your hands be your pockets. Bettor for your own•raiods, better far your owit c rwsp•ot. Bustle about, If you mina tot 4 7 4ljoittifitig sebueile about, Many • floor phys!ajsa hakkobt•load • rest patient by ridlus itsati T to at/and en iwagiusrriso. A quire of •Id ippor tied with red taps, ;carried nadir • arryir's inn; nay proCuri Win hie first ow, and make his fortune. Suet! Is the world; to Wen that bath shall be given Ft droning ansktioniplaininr, keep busy anti mind your chances. •A Resto.—The Wir Depertmeut tlas re ceived the bittt of s tree two feet through, , from in front of one of our eirthwitrks on the oldbattle-field of Bpottayly yds, from which thetree.top Lad been literally shot off, with bullets. Twenty-eight pounds of leaded belie hints been picked out autl yet hundreds re main imbedded In the splintered wood. It at treats peers) attention. There »fides in this tap. says the Osoaa loess (Iowa) Welchem., a : gentlemen who had his neck broken. is January, 1849, fifteen yearsago. lle is quits au snivel man. a good sitisen, watt has a good prospect of living to a Sipe old age. The dislocation of the spinal vertebra) is complete, end his head is sup ported upon his shoulders i4v beutleges around his forehead, which are fastened about hie habit under the arms His muse is David 0. Whitt. The ask tree nailer whirh Gratit talked with Pemberton, and arranged the terms of the Surrender of Vicksburg, lams been annibi• Wed by relic hunters, and recently a party dug into the ground ten feet for the roots of the historic oak A strange sort of person, named Sophie Gibonse, died a tow days ago at Cambridge, in Guernsey county, Ohio. It was always supposed that the person in question was a female and for twenty years the, public re mained in ignorance that the would-be woman, was in reality a tow Not until after death was the deceptioti discovered. 'During all that time the man has dressed as • woman, tutleolated with women, and had been em ployed as one in doing all sorts, of rough housework from place to place. There ore aix hundred miles of etreets in the 4[4 of Itrooklyn, es ascertained by nasal surveys by direction of the Common Council e ciontroittee on renaming and renumbering the streets. correspondent says that hi the rebel troops of Johnston's army moved off, after the surrender, the prevailing sentiment among them was, "We are overpowered, but not subdued." Remarks such as these were quite common, in doleful chorus,— " I hate the eight of a Yankee " "I Intend to observe my parole. If I am ground down 'boo bard I will Leave the coun try.“ '• Let's all go to Mexico." ", By God, it I catch a Yankee entering my house I'll shoot him." "Before I'd let a Yank marry s aiater,of Line, I'd kill her." I wonder it they will insult tt." "Andy Jell i son's the meanest roan in the world.•• "Two years ego - we :would not hive sub edited to this." *, Ws bass lost all or aiggera.' Rrca AND Pooa izz• a imr.-..itrealtb, it ie said has wings, and upon its pinions takes its Sight is an hour widen we think we have it firmly in our grasp. By a private letter, of a very late date. Tie learn' that hundreds who regarded themselves rich on the Sabbath of Jeff. Dania' Bled, arose Monday. morning to find themselves beggars. Going to bed Sun day nightwitb wallets crammed with Coated erste bills, they arose next morning to and that•they could not purchase a sandwich and a imp of coffee with a wheelbarrow tali. It was a making day—the day of evacuation— to the poor. .They all had more or leesof the rebel currency, which was a total loss: The @strains 'Way only could face the storm, they -having laid up gold. come citizens of Troy on Saturday last for. warded to Gen. Grant a present that will 11 take his fancy." It is a box of cigars, ono hundred in number, of the finest brand, and costing $lOO. Eac h has a paper holder, and the box itself is got up regardless of expedite." • If Gen. Grant is the man we take him to be, be would much rather have bad his Troy ad mirers lay out their money is same more sen sible investment. How TO SUSTAIN A Peres.—The Dayton Journal gives the' following sensible dives— tons ' Ist. Subscribe anti pay for it. 24.1. Oet yottr neighbors to take it. 3d. Sena printing and advertising to the (Acre. 4th. Help make the paper interesting by sending local items to the editor . Will our subscribers Plasma practl'oe upon those ruble. Amami nes BUTS.--.." You are made to be kind, gensenue and magnanimous," says Hor ses bisan; "It there Is a boy in school who ben a elnh-foot, don't let him know you ever asst it. It there Is • boy with ragged'elotitee,. dont' talk e,bout rags in his hearing. If More is a lame boy, assign him some part of the pm. whioh does not require, much running. ft there is a dull one, help him to get Me les sons." The oath now being administered at Rich mond is what is known as the amnesty oath, and is as follows —, de solemnly swear in the pretence of Almighty God, that I will heave forth faithfully support, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States, and the union of the States ,hereunder; and that I will in like manner 'bide by and faithfully support allege of Congress passed during the existing rebellion with reference to slaves, ao long and so far es not repealed, modified, or held void by Congress, or by decision of the Supreme Court ; and that I will in like num= ear abide by sad faithfully support all reels mations of the President made during Out existing rebellion, baring reference to slaves, so lest sad so far as sot modified or doolsrod void by doololos of the Supreme Court—So kelp me tied. An Arkansas letter to tbo Obiosgo ?Wham draw a repulsive pletare Of affairs lin Mit State. Tim members of thii am legislature are • drunken filthy set ; poor etbitis throng about the tomtit end will do notking so beg as they can beg or itesi redoes ; tie negates ars dying of surfeit and dirt, and the general immorality is Awaking. Mr. Liasohai a gnu dlath ersw as murdered by the /salsas in 1774. The Mayor of Springfield, , Meesschusette, W anaouseed that no one is to be compelled to " short their colon " in ant town. A clergyman, catechising , ' the youth of his dank put the tint questioh from catechism to • girl; What is your F onsolation in li fe 104 Is death ?" The girl smiled bet did not ewer. The . olentimau •fasisted. " Well, lift!' NM as s "Macs I rust tell it, it is a yogY4 Witter named boarding on fourth street." roma of itioamOnd aro ikeirli aU dromoti la mourning. Sad lava boon tb ravagoil of d.M Virilikia. We hive now ten uew territories welting to be made Steles. They are : Wyoming, Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montane, Nebres. knotiesiiehhhio. titiehAta W. 1146414.404.• There wee something of an incongruity in the mottoes of i bore window in Portlantl, on the ocoulon of the recent funeral of. the President—" in God we ; Irust." it Teems A me# reesetly broke a ii marriage be osuai tap, lady : did 1301. ponies good 'convey sellout poterd. _=A wieluid editor, in COM. orienting upon the test, Days: -"lie should have married Ler and thee refused her a new` bonnet, to have developed her powers of talk." Fully half of last year's wheat crop s in iliohigerkila still in the bands of the lamen t and more than half the crop in Illinois is yet uusold s With a tolerable crop this year,.we shalt have brestistufra plenty and cheap. . A lady correspondent begs us to suggest that dr. Davis should be compelled to wear the usual costume of women during the p eriod of his imprisonment. No woman, she declares. could wish him a severer punishment. She adds that if he were compelled to run in that 'dress one hour every day, as (*At as when he wan eaptared, it would probably be the death of him.—N. Y. Tribune. There is a man out Wt4t who claims to cure disease by laying ow hands. That is nothing marvelous. -We have ourselvss, says the Bangor Whig, when young, been cured of moral obliquities by the laying on of the parental hanti—earerely: A fashionable tadiets' toilette now-a-days consists of rats, mice, rabbits, Grecian curls, waterfalls and Email do Paris. Barnum has offered $l,OOO for the pillow upon which President Lincoln's head reeled when he died. Re wilt not get it, for. the bed— etead and the clothing wilt be sent to , the Patent Office. BPECIAL NOTICES. Poor Tom's a'cold." Row warm aoe'er the genial BIM lay look in kindness on the earth, in Tom Jones' reins no cheering warmth Dispels the gloomy sorrow of ,hls soul. Dyspepsia, like a goblin, bunts him down - Ague, grim chamberlain, lights him to bed, While Dullness, Vertigo; and headache dire, With fiercer aches combine to make him grows. Ile wise, poor Tom I And hearken, Thomas,.to instruction : Per all thy ills a remedy is found, A panacea, certain, pleasant, sure. Plantation Bitters—S. T.-1860—X. A wondrous Tonic, made by Dr. Drak a,j Will kilt the demons that tny stomach. vet,— Will slay thorn, Thomas, for thy stomach's este. New life. new strength to thee shall come'. By using this Elixir wonderful. Plantation. Bitters will restore thy health, Thy troubles cure, and leave thy mind at peace. Two bad cases of Piles oared by Dr. Stria- Wad's Pile Remedy. Mr. Glass of Janesville, Wisconsin, writes for the benefit of all who suffer with tha Piles, that be bas been troubled for eight years with au aggravated case of Piles, and his brother was discharod from the army as incurable, (he being quit . * para lyzed with 'the Piles). Both these diet teasing eases were cured with one bottle of Dr. Strict land's Pile Remedy. The recommend* Lion of these gentlemen, beside the daily testim anlele reasieed by Dr. Strickland, ought to co *vine,- those suffering, that the most ,aggr.orated claronie cases of Piles are cured by Dr, BUtak land'e Pile Remedy. It is gold by Drut tgiete If erywh e mar3o-Bme ow STOP TOOT SORATOSIING !—Which you Can do if you drive the impure, hot and acrid 'mat ter out of your system by taking inwardly Carter's Compound Extract of Dandelion and Bittersweet, and applying outwardly Carter's Yellow Ointraerit: Hundreds can testify that they have used these articles with entirejmo cess and satisfaction, after having used many other things to au purpose. Therefore, we say use these two articles and atop that scratch,- leg. Price of Bottle and Box together, one dollar and fifty cents. sold by Carter it Car ver. tf 66 Canut thou not minister to u tainddisesadd, Ara, with some sweet, oblivious antidote, Clesnee the foul bosom of the perilous stuff Thst weighs upon the heart ?" Certainly ; Plantation Bitters will do it when nothing else wilt. luelardholy, Deptlis elan, Hypochondria, Insanity, all spring, more OP lass, from a 'diseased siomaab, gad th is Plitattatitia Bittet.s is a sure cure for. There' is so mistake about it ; Dyspepitia, Headache, Dullness, Ague. and Low Spirits must yield to the health-giving end genial influence of the Plantation 'Bitters. If you are is doubt, I make one trial and be convinced. "Zonads, show Me What WWI do WonPt weep? woul't fight? woul't tear thyself ?" _riaY, day, calm thyself, and use I.lr. 1). IL Bettye's Liquid Remedy, which will renovate your head, gently remove the deposits and Incrustations which have been terming for years, and drying-up the fountains of health, restorti the various glands and membranes to a healthy and natural action, when good humor in your nature will again prevail. - We call attention It) the advertideatent of X. li. Rolm & Co., V(10 hove a large assort ment of fashionable and valuable imported Jewelry, the whole of which on account of the fall in gold will be disposed of on a novel principle, giving great inducements to buy ers, and offering, ceteusive employment to agents. For full particulars see our adver tising columns. American Ifitsioal Instruments are 'winning golden opinions abroad. A recent number of the LeipstO Sigmas, the;leading musical Jour 'nal of littrope, mentions the superiority of the Sims & Hamlin Cabinet Organs, mulatto tared in Boston, intimating that these maw feetarers have discovered the septet of avoid ing' the harsh, reedy tones of other instrtv :cants of this clam Tan THROAT.—Families would do well to keep always at home a born of Brown's Broil ehial Troches, a simple but most marvellously efficacious specific for affections of the throat. alforling prompt relief in eases of coughs, voids, bronchial troubles, etc. Singers and public speakers will find them also excellent ;to clear the voice and render articulation 'wonderfully espy.—Menthly Maga:inc. Bsows's Bunactunt. Taocuss.—We would call the special attention of clergymen and teachers to " Brown's Bronchial Trochee." It is well known.to onr readers. that we do sot admit medicines to our colamits. We ad vertise thee° 'troches, beriause, after t a trial, of theta, we are satisfied that thee are the best thlatof the kind extant.—Cfacagor&Aool Journal. "Liiss there a man with soul so dead, Thstmerer to himself bath said" • ?hat Dr. D. H. Beelye's Catarrh ftemsdy in Um Ha Inas Ultra of all Medicines, always effeetlag a permanent cure, as thousands upon thousands are constantly testifying Parity, parity, purify the hlood with Ayer's Bereaparills, end the humors, derangements and distssipers which pervade the system et tide season wilt disappear. We here tried it and speak with knowledge.—sx DIED. aLLUNIAX—At North East, on the morning of the 21st lust., of croup, Freddy Augustus, youngest son of Thomas and James 8111i man, aged 7 years, 11 months aid 21 drys. NEW FURNITURE STORE: J. H. RIBLET do CO., World. »spatially Won't the pataia that Um , ban apittmd• PIIIIINITURE WARE-ROOK, IN GABLE'S BLOCS, Between Sth end 9th Streets, an State, inlets Mtn Astro% to loop earaaatti ea Lad a tail assartamat at ID WM NOM , ISSIMORIL, • W i a li zaapatatslii *Wait a Aar; at=WIT • pat. J. IL ~ IL. W. wow& A FORTUNE I Employment for Everyb ody a rm y mama( Jetraltv. Walebr., h u l a , mood tttof., .41 , / OP. Ware, t:.-rnet, Wrench Mager !load.. o rdrt h SSIIO,OIIO-- oil to to, .old whhou t r, .erve. SVerrY oQo tie Ina Milos Volaubt.. 1,1 wt. 1/ le 'l,' II $ 4alTI C I. k .... Galata' ‘3,1.1 buotioK-earn oraMb-44 . -,., • t, Ladlee (101.1 Koomeiled e 0. ., a atrl.., ' ',. l Quite hautoK i1,, , 0, plitv..r w1t, , ,,, ~ .. OoliVill Gold Wntelwat, thrilifla tiro,. - G Plate.l W I,t ...10, in ,`..livi • i', a.. • . G o ld P 100.41 Wi• t.'.., F "to,. I.• I r„ I, ,„ • Diamond rtnv,. ~ _• . • ,- Gold Vast all. I Neck chant.s._, -,, Gold 0va.)03.1P-liSt.o , lris - ........ _ Citoord Gold liroc..l , •t a - Chatelaine cb%lo , owl Goard c10.ti,.. - I Solitaire 2no 0 , 11 , 1 ti r , 0r10.4 . I,Ais Sad Vito,. t elle LS twt•cite. , ... _ „ ' t Corti, 001. rut i:otwrala Gr. m0t...., Voidst, 141, I.AYA. :roil Flor , t.t,t .• f• ar tiz . . Coral, ()pal. •tml Cloorald Car ',top. _ • Calitunua lli ,m4md Ilremt poi,. "• Gold Yoh awl vt•NI, woleil k...,,, „,, . rob and Ve.t flit I,•m-01S , IPs. .... SCllitAiire Pit. Y. MI i tOI/N. A i ad*, eh. - . . ‘, Gold Thimbles, l'et,c, lA. Htl . .. iiiplatart. L , Q.1V . 1 , •. ..., . .. iltttiture I,(wket--.Nttir: ri win; • Geld Toothpiclui, ct.illseA 0tr,.... .„, , _ .. . Min Gold nine, ii . ths i d Gol.l I:mg, ~. , Atone :lest oud r+gyirt• film. .... _.. , Caliteraia Diameud Mere leadieie Jeretry irs o iet‘ -.re( Awl Giitti ._ _ Lediaa' Jewelry - ea leas ---C.seniqe, Pesti, . , : 1 Gold peas, silver e . too. holders and 1,..„, 0 , Gold pens andgold mounted hulth•rx ' '," , Gold pine and gold exteusiork 1ic1 , 1, , rz,.._ ... ', ,'' rile*: goblets sod drinking cope ~_, . , ..., . Sliver Goldoni, Frilit, and Cake tankkti ~ . ~ Shiny tea and table spoon!' and fmkr, 1 ,r.,,, * Z 4: ' Silver plated tel pots and coffee nrog - :," ', Silver plated ice pitchera sod m01a5.,, , ,,,., , , ' ' flee 'hat We wort popular sod wol •:, *Audi maji of our eatohliahoteut : Vrout the "Dispatch" of letyrelry "W • tukt• phroure to e.tilm4 the tot...Dt readers to the unuouut , m , m: of Great Ssle of Jewelry, Silver liras, en our facertixin4, c %Ito wtr,• with the si t emtwry ur this tiro} and tlemeu s'ori,u.: un 1 lot, go ods, for variety au! etti.ot, (11.1.• elle led." 'From lh • •• T••ror of F.v•ilL lf "Menem l?1,v 411 n C., .t 4 I; r..3t t` • • j„,., opened on the I .tit ult not W• 1 tru •11'.• t Auer dlnollAof 1A wti e, eslll , , 0.• , liniment in thln 'NI,. I t•il• i 111 •.• VW AIM 111.1,1.41. ••, • rendered nearly impaanable 1,, th • i„,•,.,, Moab, We I,tvihet l•r r ‘.l • •••, F"'.r“ , • 1”. .• Our latx.frumas %Lc/old t r•C• Ratio:tent of Mar.arg. Dovaugh .s.; C.., ;,,, k if they wink to iodalge %aware, -v. r 211: they will tong remember. Su , h a ; Hike, gar Ith, Jewelry of every - 13 nue, kinJ an.l .I.lkett , ,,,List, before witnessed. Their nitror an 4 Mat,: sad almost casts into the abode 1.14 a “tior tabllabinerits which harp long been 11,•• It fa estimated that their stuck is one million of dollars." Mow You Can Cet a Prig, Seed Tvreuty•tive Cents to ns, and as Anna us, eigitii it we will fWi i you A Celliitirato shosILIK are entitled to. If the article or articles . r.lvn sand back the Certificate and 'One Dollar and t; forward to you the article no matter how cogth:,lll be. If the article ie not w hat you wish, state, e send the Certificate and dollar, what other arlr. same value you prefer and we wilt flew) it. ii more than one Certificate send tre It and we r dye; for $3, eleven ; for 15, thirty ; for SW. Sib, one huudre.l. Agents are waute , l in the Anny and in e. We have an ila111.0• ,, . st , rek of goods to need a large ;lumber of Aortic Our t . are very litequi soma even or nur malting from Ifr to SZO a day. We tor , r e nt. on 0,1% t ttc Lc.tt. d th,, .40.1 pnra it• In—, • lees 111•11 $1 for eiv.lit ar Write your uOroo and a 'ir . only what is necessary. Gi 4,Kt. tit. UR VA 1:(:11 14 Mititisol ARCA.NA. WATCHES An Elegant Novelty In Nate The ca,, .1401 rl) COWPailei Of ta t Ll'ti , reut ale corittia, r Of SO I, productug an et t• t tto carat gold., vitt. ,1 trclua, which •‘,ll color. The; at. , tit boa et 'tot forded at (WO eighth the foot 'r t. • destined with Panel and shield itt ta ro.::, Path Pro, and engraved in the ex , 'tasted Gold finwitri g LOCUS, acd sad clearable, and ro exiot an ortitatir's defy dettotion Tho cuovettnent well know. .....t .1 toter Watrit (.1 .ct tt are superbly ti olehed, hariuß ea t ., ' ' eased bridge : l, ado:tiding resulatot, ottt, , and the nopitivcd jewelled actt, t, c skeleton bandit, 41/t1 to warranted n ' •, These viroit,ho, If thyt.o •11:1 • Wing for Ladle, and are tilt Hut A • six will b, OF,I)C 'ha ; 00 0 twat .114 • . ty eat tor •••-• .•! Gee watch In t': ^ which du lit tollr It, , ,;li: tilay/I'ti • :', a I .1 .; , elltE ;1 tci 01 , 11 It It. I • /NUM; PI WA i" t• • • fir art:, , CITY FIRI ItasllhA NUE CU • II tItTEOII3II, 1 14 t ' /NPORPORATED lei, t,"t It. 11. 1141 V I NSU It A Nt't*: in t lie \ n ;.l s.ta. IWO t•t!fittl.. .1 a, F W t !MI Administrator's Not y Ell' E 118 OF A Dlf I N IST It Al JILA. the ertate of CAI 414 es Colt, duces Deour township, hrie mouth Ye., having to to the uu‘lerslomi, nutlait-is isetthy urea Lug ciaitul against the tistlr4dtate to p‘rewt: Arty authenticated: tat eettlement, nod U. latemsetTe4 indobtad to the Mae Aro t..l,rt Ailment un or 1, , ',tr.? the arst at dagest. .rtl:3El4-1 WA LDRON, Atha , Illeaat; April Ittds. raio multi:ft Viltit.4 fe 0 ittiAN 44 l • DEOINN, tIA )NilSll3.-14;wr3 way tkottzht 01 ptat,hataa44 as instrument nosy or at any futurb tiro" RhOlad unto] for Itatotaia 4-11Viu Whielt to tar ad.lre,4 entirely l't#4 of experig44 f coniaitut much ininrmatiou Ithitta will t U.. Pltril tustromeut, Nurh a, "14,,w co Jo 1 .4 0 a 'Coital lagruta44a:,' 4., the Ore;an, - t• odor( 43t tt,4441 .4.41.1 r, !, 4 1%.44.4t5; 4.t.; , 4* ~JA 13,41414. HASO' L Fi %tl t 4, 211 Wi44to,, Rns3,lthe A. {YiticiilL¢•tiet ;Su( •:., . nest friend, Luther - A, Nu. ••• ••a." Eddy, TS 11. iarat 'S • k; Alias No 7, 1 , .;•-t;I:v' Spencer k. Ilarviu, AU 'y tot I'd, Issas proclamation in Abo%.. nf sziaylr 611-4 w • t STODD PUBLIC Y. • n( Lira U. Tr,t an Pennsyllauis Cotrunosionor to: S 0.(1.0 Claueral Claim dyeut o with Attorney et Lao.. Wayno Hutt Awl Civil claims eollecit , l utter pant). Penoiona -obtained an , lr by =it promptly attendod to. Mr 41 11 „Imre esporienee iu ttio lot ik 01 tte partmetits, contl.l.tit 10. cut re I l