'IS " p OBSERS ER. "ro.IITX•OBSTRYSII BVILDINGF4 " STAY' STRarr. reo , VCR MOI ST NI. 0: „.„_7,,,,[1,,1,LAk,_ A , IP I . lYri CYNTI.I 1,1 ;li 1 11. ad.Ance ; T,li..st: Dott tos if (1.4 , 1 fi, ,sp.. 1 , 0,9 ..f il,e Pll. 1:n1 , .. 4 ~. .„, 6c atetyti , .11 : .• 1 fleet Cara a 0 3alto” ~,,, vrs,_ for sntiare tit Ten Lines one in -1 (b; t,o ii t .ertions„,sl,7s ; three 1., ~y); ~, ,„,,,,t,y $2,50 ; two month" $3 ZO• ~,,,,,y4,50;e12 months $7,03;0ne year $l2 00: dreri.een tits in proportion. These rates tnetly adhered to, 12111. is changed by n..thi ~rst the cptien 'of .he publisher'. Audi tier., strays, Dirories and like advertise% ,js2m; I.:ininatrator's Notice' $B,OO ; 1,,,,,,1 , Tv e, ,,,,,, li n e; llarriage Notices:mm.ll.r -cot, . r ;,,,, ; obituary'Notices (over three lines ~,t) tre ren t, rev line. , Original poetry, on. „ ,c,,the request of the editor, one dollar : , . - l et i y !re-tureuents will be continued At dlso , vron advertising, until ordered 'et;.. ' ' bi Li , ~,:re:nen, unless a specified period la 1;r1, (Jr their insertion. `"o' _ir e bare one of the best Jobbing ~o, st4te. sod ire ready to do all work in ~,..,..±..., glak be entrusted to no, In equal style 0 et ,, 1 ,,,m , .r.t putehle of tie largest cities. ce l llEieittlns 'should be addressed to N 'N W lIIT3IA NI, Editor and Proprietor. 11811 1 ; ( SS I - irectory. rr, ifORIINT AT LAW. Ridgway. etice in adjoining Counties E j SLAKE ' r 4 fill aso p •gr. IL CUTLEIL ArrogNx T AT LAlr,Otrard, Erie County, sr • ot!ler ;:warless attended to wits WET)1 031:, • A.,,,,wiTT AT LAW, iL Walker"' ,Of .7„, in ty woe. sue, PS. ' Mu' 7'64 EN,Ili• itootsitcrit ind DesLif In Atationory, 4 gs.-tenet wmpaperN &e. Country des.lort st er e aadir Drown's floteylrontlng tho Park. UtRVIN. ATTORYITIN /aro COVIIIIZU.OII3 AT Law. fog Elt-rk, near North Wcit comer of the -4 -•- 9 ILO EIENNETT , ' i r mes mr rue Pzade. Ocoee second ‘e Mock, French Street, between Fifth and jnnels-2. ofk WI LISU qy • Art n KMETS AT LAT. Ridgway, Ta. Cameron and Jefferaon oonntiss. ;VV. DsnYt6s-I ,o ] W. W. WILBUR. N 41.1 1.0019 IrsTia 0? TUN PIKE, Partgoa Most, !..; West of Farm Hall, SriM, Pa. %S. Crirabi(g. rr)..,,T AT I,Aw AND JUSTICI OF TITIC PEACH. in t t.:1,a2 Canryancer and Collector. Gat,tuildin3,g3utlie it corner cf Irlfth and iplWad t SIOUX. hurt Ccusuninoza, at the neer t iz l e laze. bag • cr band a lame amenrt. ;rnteeire.Prrrieinne, Wood and Willow Ware, Tnb‘ren, Sezor., ke . to which be re r eelis the att•nt:cn nr the public..attaded that Fer.-as gpoS lArgiitus u can be bad to any part nipke. triar3Olite-lv IDORLE, f IRLDRN Miscracrracas of Stays Enirbaaa,Boilera Arricrltartl iv.pltrannta, Railroad Carl. M. A. GA Lint-AIM. Arrow= AT law—Offles on GM street, ly opposite the entrt How, Nrie, Ps. N,l C. Blit3B6r _ PuLts nr DST G OODS . Gaocrisrss, Marlys" Nails OWL ?Lister, eta, cot- Strth street asd ?Olio KS* Pe. jantV Nosnowto, LITERT AND C • htb 'between State and French; let on remonahle termt. _ VERY AND N%1.1{ 11T . r • , Coasza mFiuntol( • ' Apt. . FUCA?, Prnrietat. : ' oatind at imlerste prylK,A:1110"01111131:•.: , EISICAKEM & Stfe* • - W *caw& ano asieo. * Dausaila tr and Prolisioni r Flour sual 711•1401,000 fad Ware, Wlnn,Liviars, Tobseseo, &Wm ke., gat' , %text t 'form et House Pat tislatmt tmlusriam 'F m t'r6S-tf RigTIAN Kirr.s.MEß, Neer Io Gr.mies, Prodaes, Provision., Tv:rrs Inl Moon Wars, Wines, Liquors, &e, ~vorito the Poeta:Hee, Efle,,Pa, ourg'l3 5-1 y E. MAGILL, es" PErtreT, (MCA in Roterrit 48 et. ..j:e,k,nnrtla side of the Park, Erie. Pa. 12e. 3147.1.:PP.1. HOUSE DI NINt. 1 1 41 , 1.—DiutcrLY orroeirt tot PARPIIIIMI.k Cn , I,T, PA Being newly fitted tip In the wc:l.l N!,l . th., in now npPi t) the public. Urals rrt.l tr on th. arrival of all Paraeliter Trains, eitiA• t!ar. OAKLEY BROS ,Propnoteti, fl. (113, 'Borne Ft INDIA, BLAME 'awn IdAlgurAcTr a Story of Rindierneekit'a Block, Erie, Pa LE HOTEL, Waterford. ra•• ROURIZT Leaug, PROPRIZTOIL M. SCCOMMOdationl, and cal einl attention riven to =fort of gneate. ap6.65-1y• V. BEST PIANOS IN AMERICA Li made by $. DRUCKER k CO ' :G Sena Tbetol., lITITES WHILLDIN, M. D., PHIIIIOIA7 4.10 SChXIIO 2a floor Beatty's Block, West Park. Erie. Pa, Milord, Chrlstlan h Store. Redactor Juan W Miami, FlithStreet. Eaat of Freuch. boon-8 to XI a. 1., and 2to3P. X. EL U. Y. PICKERING, DENTIST. :1411's0! the rennsyleadsla Collor of Dental Sat ..US in Wright's Bleck (over Viers & -5 !%,, rie, Pa. REFERENCE lIT TX/MISSION. N ?.rm,l) 10. S., North Seventh street, Philade! L Biekiogham, n. D. S., No. 243, North Kin th .91.110,4011 z. I GrTAIII. OTANI SITISG. & kTIOE AND CoCISZLLoIitS AT I.AW ri'a O' SPRING Sr., opposite Crittenden Hall r Pa. Collections and all other legal bast : , rAwtor 11 7cnanzo, Erie, Warren and Forrt ct,r,r/e.Ztoe -etolly and promptly. ss,cso—W©. Galbraith, Whitman & Brecht Sill,Spencer k Warrin, Erie, Pa. z. R. Errorn. lion. S. P.Johnsoa, W. D. Blown '.l,:at Clark, Warren, Ea. OTICE. Darling mai Mr. W. Sharer are no longer ^nibyne u szents or otherwise; nor JITI repreuntations or leit , lne whatever. t'ashl have bseo duped I wish to say that the elle moo'!'. re;rtratPd poqrk.ar it Co.'s Pianos and the . - HLM'III eat”net Organs lot western Penr.svira t' - e. the !Ake to the Allegheny mountain; is in U:y a mu.* w at any other person may say, nr , g,nrehasin; such inetrumehts of any other •::.,: u ku are liable to be etlleti upon for my sus sIISHER, AGM? FOR DICRIR BROS. and DRUCTOIR k 1 •.n.10rt.., the beat now trade, and Macon 'lre4r4t.trona Old Pianos taken In exchange. 'nod. TastlexceUnion Mille, Erie Co., Pa. 4alrt; RIZ COMMERCLU. COLLEGE. FACULTY: rr ot—Renlent Princ;pai. Geo. W. GI7XXIIION req., Prot. of Comm Prcial I aw. , !tl.ptnr Simpli9ed, new Claasification of Aer • O.A.:tlsl anCoess Practice, Ornamental and Boat - ?en:unship, Commercial Law, Commercial Ariih •k.c., for ladies and gents. She ~,l ivnry Cards comprehend the whnte basis of ::`sentre atloants, and exhibit every possible Teria nmr and closing books. No expense will be te cute thin a oleuant, practical and per.na t' .4 n. n, " The City of Schools." Practical Am aral; h 'il 1, 1 emplo Terms—Tuition fettliytiNg ed. and greatest in t'oant.',,. Send for Cir.ulars. T. Co.OK l'eLE rorraiLY, lIL.TWE S :I ECOND TMRD ERIE, PI3IIA. .t" hay , associa•ei themselves, under la ot;le of Webh & Chills in the Pottery boil al styli, on the c nal, ttwilen 24c°11 Oa. plironaz* of the customers of the ol f 4 cash.ro of the public generally, proculein • r 2 t+aost tuleavor to give perrget an•lsfaction k aEO. P. WEB% JAY S. CHILIDF!. CM 11"iiI1NON & WI 41.1A3H4. Sluctrusoas to Wholes J.lforton, s and Corir•lslh, o Merchants, Wholesale dealers IT] B:torohloos Coal. Ar«ola for X. Y. Pe);;lr'e Ltoo of Steamers. :but Pobllo Desk, jar.4'6s-Iy. S ?ono PERLEY, (Late of the S. Tretrary Department sad i-411ra.thi CoMmiuloaer for Soldiers, Waahingtori, , n LI Gen% Chum Art, Clark'e Iluildins, N. W corner ' l ‘opperlt e lit haabyterisa (bire.F. 7 rie all Cirll elsirna collettrd with *debt) mad. 1411 renoiona obtained and eollected. Appl'aUone N Promptly attended to. Mr. P. having had eve oziendence la the detail, of the.ealltiOnn lA, feels toandent he can reader most satisfactory —. Pressoating all Wadi of Goerriment elem. ,VOLUME 36. Special Notices. TII Ft BR 81.11 BA :1111 Elt, an F. mint of Warning I and En tfinclintt ll•n—publithed by How. ard .liAnclAt d refl. frPe g • in sonled envel• Aflirraz. Dr. J. 110CG1ITON. j‘ll'.3l ly. ' l'h dad, Iphla, Pa. IVI 1.1 TY, Seminal Weatinesa, rte., ram be nimbi by ono who ha+ cured himaidi and knn• dipie of oth.m will tsllyou nettling but the 51,111 k. Ad helm with stamp, BOX 57, Boebnie MO= IK YOll WANT TO KNOW A 1.1TT1.11 OF E V Fit Yr lii , ;(; rEll,tiOu to the human system., nude an.lfernule; the comes eon Vestment of Monsen the tn,rriacre rnetorne of the world; how to wiarry well, and tholaand things never published before, read the re steed and enlarged of MeotnAt. Coantow 811X1111, Clifton+ took for cnrioue people, and a good boob tor every 'ne. 40() p a g es . 100 illastrat;nne.- Pries $1 60. Contralti table s lot free to coy address. Book' may be had et the book etotellkaLtrill be sent by moll, post paid, on receipt of the pine Address, R. B F00TE,31.D., em 1130 Broadway, New York. fllO CONSU3IPTI —The Adr•rtlsee haring been rest ,, te , t to health In A few weeks b 7 a very simple remedy, atter tissi , e 'offered serer*( years with a ItCrere luny atlvltion, and thy dread dies..., Can. gumption — t ie ansmny to tasks known to his fallowlinf• fa: ere the deans of ears. Tn all who d+•ire it. be will read a eopy of the pre seription used. (tree of charce.) with.the directions for pre/wing arid tiring the same, which they wilt dad a sere cure fir C •v,nmpticn, Asthma, Bronchitis, Cold', Co.isha, thc. The only object of the ad rertiser In send- Inc the orescriptioe is to benefit the aglletsd • and spread information wh'eh he conniv., to be invaleablet and he bnp•s every setimer will try It's remedy, as it will cost th , m nothing, and may prove a blessing. Parties wishing the prefer pl ion, rat s, be return will pl.a•e sddr.sa Rev. ting slit) ♦. it 11,80h1, dec2.B GS-Iy.• Wirlamsuargli, Sings Co., N. Y. =l= - - - - 1111011le OY YOUTN.—A gentleman who has sofferedfor years from Nereoue Debility, Pretaa. turn Nosy, andatl the greets of youthful Indiseretiett, will for the aoke sottairm humanity, mend free-to all who need it, the recipe and direction' for making the eh= pie remade by which he was wired. Sufferers wishing to pufit by the advertiseee experience, can do so by iale 41.rFstre JOHN R. OGONN, deet'S'6s ly. No. 13 Chambers St., N. T. STRANGE. BUT TIIIILTK.—Ieery Toting lady and gentlae•an in the United •tatea can hear something ve:y much to their advantage by return mail, (free of chalee) be addresaing the undersigned. Those having fo. re of beleihenabogled wril ob.ige 17 not noticing this c•ld. AU others will please add-e.ra their obedient 'err ant, TllO4. F. curia's, de4B'Bs-Iy. 831 Broadway. N. Y. oct,64tf. vacvics , AIIIIIHOSIA Volt TIIE UAIR. The Orighott and Genuine A nbrosia - is proper by J. Allen Ileevre and is the bed hair dressing and pre. servative now in use. It sto;4l the hair falling out, closes It to grow thick and long and prevents It from turning p-rrnaturely gray. It era linden dandruff, elean• (4, beantitlee and rendsra the li•ir soft, g'nuy and cur ly. Bny it, try it ant ba convinced. Don't be put off with a aptitiOne *dials. Ask Tor Reeves' Ambrosia and take no other. 'For sale by Dnigiiste and Dealers in Vancy Goods everywhere. Pries 25 cents per bottle-84 per d' see. Addreva, REEVES' AAt DRO3IA DEPOT, 62 FultonSL ,New York City. of Dlt. M 41.1.Yr4 CATARRH rINICIFF.—This Snug Lae thoroughly proved itself to be the beat "allele known for curing CATAReLI, COLD 11l SZAD and HIADACHX. It has been found an excellent remedy in emu cameo! Soap BT co. PlarillSe has been removed by it. and Heamia hes often Leen greatly improved by its um. It le fragrant and agreeable, and gives Itild$DI ATE. RELIC to the dull heart , pains caused by diseases of the Heed. The wen:tallone after using it are delightful end invigorating. It opens and purges out all ob structiona, strength,ns the glands and glees a. healthy i!..etton to the parts affected. More than thirty years of mac and use of Dr Marshall's Catarrh and Headache ilnuff has proved its great value ipr,all the common diseases or the head, and at this mo.. Wet Milan& higher than ever before It Is reeommend- Sod by many of the best physician; and is used with great suceiss and ratisfaetion everywhere. End the Certificate , wf Wholesale Druggists in IFS 4 : - The undersigned haring for many years been acqualn tad with Dr. Ifsuilmlrs Catarrh and Reada.-he Anuff,and mold in our wholesule trade, cheerful] , state that we be lieve it to be equal, in every respect, to the reenmttienda• titles given edit for the cure of Catarrh Affections. and that it is decidedly the best article we have ever known for all common disease' of the Bead. Bank Perry, Reed, ASIMUD & CO, BrnlFtl, 1411313011 & Co., Reed. Cutler k Co., Seth W. Foyle. Wilaoa, Fairbaok k Co., Boston ; Fleuphew. Edmauds & Co., H. H. Hay, Portland, He. ; Burnes & Park, A. B. & Sandi, Stephen Paul & Co., lirael Minor & Co., MeCasano & Hobble; A. i. Soorill & Co., M. Ward, Clogs # Co., Buil k Gale, New York. For axle by all Druggists. Try it. sep2l.e4-ly -r OVA PERIODIC tr. DROPS. I THE GREAT FEMALE - REMEDY FOR IRREGULARITIES. These Drops are a scientifically eompoundsd fluid I reparation, and better than any pill ,powders or nos trum,. Being liguM , their action is direct and positive, rendering them a reliable, speedy and certain crone for the cure of all obstructions and sappressions of na ture. Their popularity La' indimted by the fact that over 1O),000 bottles are Connally slid and consumed by the ladies of America, every one of whom speak in t'-e strongest terms of priue of their great merits,— They are rapidly taking the place of every other female remedy, and are eons dered by all who know angbt of them, as the rar; a t, safest and most infallible prepan- Una in the vrorld; for the cure of all female comelalnta, the removal of all obettuct.ons of nature, and the pro motion of health, regularity and strength. Itxplicit di rections, s.atinc when they may be u.ed, and explain lag when and why they ehould net, and c 'old not be used without producing effects contrary to nature's olio pen law!, will he found carefully folded around each bottle, with the written signature of John L. Lyon, without which none are genuine. Prepared be Dr. JOHN L ISt Chapel street, :few Haven, Comm, who can be consulted either per sonallr or by letter, (enclosing stamp) concerning all private diseases and femaleweskrureses. Sold by Dragging everywhere. C. G. CLARK k CO., s-ly Oen'l Agents for 11. S. Aad Canadas. anlols I y D IL. TALBOTT , 4 1.11.1. 1 1. (ANTI-DYSPEPTIC.) Compo.se I of highly Goomtrated Extracts from Roots and Herbs of the greatest mental vain,. prepared from the origaal pmeription of the celebrated Dr. Tal bott, ..nd used by him with remarkable aseoess for twenty years. An infallible remedy in all DISEASES of the LIVER, or a4y derangement of the DIGESTIVE ORGANS. They Care Di arrhee a, Dyepepaia, Ber)fula, Jaundice, Billousneas Liver Complaint. The well-known Dr. Mott stye of these Pills : " I have need the formula from which your Pills are mule, in my practice for over 12 re's they hive the finest el feet upon the Liver and Oireative Organs of any midi clue in the word, and are the most perfect Purgative which has ever yet been made by anybody. Thee are safe and pleasant to take, but powerful to curs Their penetrating properties stimulate the vital activities of the body. remove the obstructions of Its organs, purity the &nod, and enpel disealte. • Thee purge out the foul hninors which breed and crow distemper, stimulate sluggish or disordered organs into their natural action, and impart a healthy tone with stieogth to the whole system. Not only do they cure the every day come p slots of everybody, but also ()moldable and flangerens diseased. and being purely vegetable are free 6i p. rink or herrn." They create pure blood and remove all impurities from the system, hence are a tioaltive cure for fevers, Headache, Piles, Iferearal Disease, and Hereditary Humor.. Dons—for adoPe, one Pill In the morning ; (or children under 8 years, half a Pill. Price One Dollar per Box Trade supplied, or sent by Mail,et paid, to any part of-the United States or CaCanada' po . on receipt of price. None genuine without the Lac-eicalie signature of V. Mott Talbott, M. I) V. MOTT TALBOTT & Co., Proprietors, °WBS-1y , No. 62 Flatten street, New York. wx wiLLING Sr. LYON SEWING 31ACHINE CO. Office bit Broadway, New York. .rearoarrly.—Mbrr a fair trial. if any person does not reps: d tlle Finkle & Lyon Sewing Machine as superior to any machine in market, he can return it and have his money. it has taken many of the highest prises—is less is , roplicated than any °the! , lint class machistr—does a wider ,rangs of work without changing--requires no taking apart to clean or oil, and no 'gammons' to pet nes die. rygulate tens on or °pent* machine. N.ll—Any Clergrman Feuding no two orders for Ma chines, shall receive one for himself sa a trement. The same proposition is extended to Professors and Teachers. We have now completed our New Manufactory at cost of "woe 12Q0,000, including NSW PATIIIITI and Nor portent trrrnovicurirP; nod the &sprat of the above pro position is to Bemire the immediate istraduction of our improved machine into every town of the United States without incurring the great expense of a traveling agent. Thu proposition cannot avail in towns occupied by our on ID agent". Please nand for desitiptive Catalogue, with samples of sewing. ;smut! L11C1173 LYON, fiec'y. A tiOOD COERCE FOR INVESTMENT. For sale, a fire tyre lot, situated on Pennsylvania Ay enue.bytween 12th and 11th streets, Brand's' addition to the e.ty cf Fria, and near the Machias Shope of the P. kE. R R. Alan two city lots, Nos. 29 and 81. corner of Plumb sad Buffalo streets. The • bore lota will be sold at a bargain If applied , for soon. Enquire of jalB-31.• T. N. AUSTIR. D.I.SMOLUTION. :The fkm of AA ik Warner Is this dardissolred by mu, teal consent. The bnsinea• will be zoodueted by Wenger Brut:Ars who are authorized to ella to W. BELL, Tr. b 7 tTTCi;.-111 persons indebted to thelate Brm of Bell k Warner are requested to call immediately and mettle. •Those having clams will please present them jslB-4t. ' WARNER BROTHI3O. THE M AMOS( 6r. HAMLIN CABINET OPOAS forty different steles, adapted to iserrd and secular tactile, for $6O to $6OO each. Fay-one gold or Wirer medals, or other first premiums awarded them. Illam trated Cateleenes free. Address, NILSON a HARLIN, Boston. or BEASON BROTHERS. t. York. AWES. REAL ESTATE FOR MILB. tlareral very °hot% basinesi vitro oa Stida Stmt. be between &mirth and ICleftb Worts, Sant eds. ar. of fered for oats on vary resoosablo tom, if apppod tot Swain of waistTM. a. OALIMAIT2, Agooli n 0401641 . . ~. .. . . . ~ . . . , . THE . . •i , TERIE •.., .:‘,. ,___.. _ ...arr.__ ._-.,15m6. __ ...., ___ ~.,.....t. , .4.. ~_..,...._), •._ 1, - --. N. - . . . . ' . . . : ~ - - 1 • • • .. .0 Fil IS E RYER , 1 . l e , ......._......._:. . TWO DOLLARS AND A.HAtF- PER YEAR, IF PAID IN ADVANCE; t 3.00 IF NOT PAID UNTIL THE END OF THE YEAR TUE PIMA? STRUNUTUININO TONIC (Not a Whiskey Preparcti 44) IIOOIi'LAND'S GERMAN BITTERS 1 will elms petdllty rosulting from any cannswhataser, Prostrstion of the gst.m, carload by sorer' hardships, ospomirea, (nen or diseases of ramp life. Soldiers, dtisibay naafi Sr fem.la, adults or youth, will iind In thin Bitterns pars Tonir, not dspandont on had Honors for thoir almost sol rsen'ons affect DTSPIPSI•, diseuee reenltivg from dleoftilers of the Liver and Weather organs, eilleovildtiV liOOFLANb•S GERMAN BITTERS. This Bitters has Performed more cam, give, War ratistacilse, has store testimony, has more raipaetabla people to roach font than any other article in the mar ket. Ws d.fy any one to coatrediet this assertion, and will pay $1,090 to say one who will prodsea a eartirLeats rablished by as that is not genaina. 11042FLAND'S GERMAN BITTERf3, Will cure *eery eau of chronic or nervous debility and diseeipe of the lddoeys. Obsenre the follevieg symptom remitting from diaortiete of the diireetive organs t Conettpation, Inward Piles, Fullness of Blood to the Bead, Acidity of the Stomach, Nauss, Heartburn, Dis . 4 for Tow!, Fulness or weight in the Stomach, SOW it:notations, Slaking or lflutteriscat the Pit of the Stomach, Swimming of the Heed, Yarned and difficult Breathing. Fluttering at the Heart, Choi lug or Suffocat int Sensations when in a lying posture, Dimino of Vis ion. Dots or Web. Wore the olgbt, Fever •nd Dull Pala in the Deficiency of Perepirati ,on Yellowness of the :kin and Eyes , - Pain in the Side. Back, Chest, Limbs, &c, Sudden Flushes of flea% Burning in the Flesh, Con- stant Imagining' of Bell and great DepresSion ofi grits. Bentsen, that tat linters I• not atehoolio, contains no too or whidey, and cannot Drake drunkards, bat I. the beet tonic in the world. RWAD WHO SAYS 'SO. From Dm W. D. iierto!l ) , Pmlo! of Tirolith itaptlat =E=n Gentlemen- I have rowntly been loborbag ander the g.eireasing effects of Indigeetion, moth spianied by a proe traGon of the nervous system. Numerous remedies were recommended by friends, had ammo of thee tested, but without relief. Your Goode:aft,' Gareth Bitters were recomtnended by persons who bad : tied them, and whose favorable me ition of the.. Bitters Induced me to try em. I =net confess that I had ao aversion to Patent Medicines from the Whousand sod one" quack ' , Titterer whose ouly elm seems to be to palm ad sweetened and drugged Iletiqy upon the ethim.aity in a sly way. and • teed. nay of which. I feu, IA to make many a con k • ed drunkard . Upon learning that sours was rally a edichcal preparation I t.ok it with happy effect. Its set • n, not only upon the stomach, but upon the nervous cyst m, was prompt and gratifying. I feel that I have dart great and permanent benefit from the nth of • few tthm. Very respectful: tours, W. D. SklG/RIgD, No. 254 Thadamaxon St. From the Rey. E. Ti Pendell, Ambition tditor Christian . . Chronielo, Philada. I have derived decided boned t from the use of Hooltzurs G•rmsa Bitten, and f feet limy privilege to resommood them es amulet valuable tool. to all who are suffering from gesorid debility or from Masons arising tram the demists eat of the liver. Yours truly, L D. TINDALL. Prom Sar. D, Yampa, Pester of the Paassywelt Baptist Church, Thad& from the many respectable recomuseadations given to Dr. H oolland's Herman Bitters, I was induewl to give thus a trial. after sling mistral bottles. I found than tob • good reload for diroility, and a mast extollent took for the ato D• mcniog. From 8.,. Tat. Smith, Pastor of the Illacen town and Killeillo ( . f) SNOW Chuteh,e. Maio& used In n u . 411:12 y a number of bottled of your Hooflands Gennan Bit I hays to may I regard them as an excellent medicine, e lir adapt* to remote the diessoes the: ire moat wen • strengthen and la►igorate the system •hen debilitated, sal Sr. use fel in disorders of the Iran, loss of appetite, ha. I haws also reonnmended them to several of my friends who hare tried and found them gnat', beneficial in the restoration of health. Tours truly, WM. SMITH, 966 Hutchinson St, Thdada. BEWARE OF COUNTEREITS. wrappe hat Se* t the signature of " is C. W. JACKSON* en the r of each bottle Should your nearest druggist not have the article do not be put off by any of the Intoxicating preparations that may be offered in Hipline. but send to as and we frward. securely packed, by express., ®Principal Halos and Wasufadory, Ifs. ell Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa. JONEci & RVLNS. Oneosseors to C. M. Sidman & Co.,] Proprietors. For eels by drnegitta and deniers in every town In the UnitoilStatwe.decree ly. , . H 1113 B li E L ' 8 GOLDEN BITTERS. A PURELY VEGETABLE TQIC. INVIGORATING & STIHINGTHENINGV % ', Fortifies the 'palm against the evil elects of mnrlmist some nets. cure Dyspepsia. Will ens, weakness. Will curs General Debilitp. Will cart Heartburn. V, 1U seroHeadaslta. VI ill cure Liver Complaint. Will excite and crests a healthy appetite. Will invigorate the organs a d4astion and moderate ly (news the temperature of the body and the force of circulation, acrUng la fact as a general eorroborant ot.tht• system, containing no poisonous drugs, and IS THE BEST TONIC BITTERS IN THE . WORLD. A fair trial Is earnesUy solicited. 620. C. }WHIM & 00., ?Tapholes% Hulse% N. T. Central Depot, Awe - (can Express Building &I HUD SON ST., NEW TORT For sale by all Druggists, Groom, or manna & HOADLEY, Tr* Wholmale Agee and for sale by Hall k Wartel,,Carta k Caner and WU kine R Booth. octWild. NOTICE TO PERSONS !LATINO PRODOWg !OE SALIC We are now roasting a Market Liao from iris to B. nova, on the Philadelphia a Erie railroad, ann wtah.nL .scarp all kinds of VIORTABLES AND COUNTRY PRODUCE To eirry , lt on, have artablished a Depot on FIFTH STRIENT, Ice the rear of the old Reed Bono. BETWZICIT !MATE AND TRMICH STRUTS. Where we will be ►t all than ready to receive aad pay - the HIOLIB3T MANZI? NUCL. - for the mac All haeier Produce for male are requed ad to ere us a call. Isqulrt for Nartei Depot, Fifth St. aliglo,lB6J•tf MAY k JACKSON. Geo:mums : OttOCELLIES A? WHOLESALE AND RETAIb, • P. SCHAAF, Would reepeettony Inform torethe public tbst bn !meow/4 , 4 Stn Sin NO. 2 HUGHES' BLOCK, ERIE, PA:, When he will always keep on hand•la:psalm', GROCERLI3I CROCKERY AND WOODEN WARK, WINES, LIQUORS, CIGARS, And ererytbing isnally for isle in an establisimm nt tha j*smes as reasonable se any Other trr. lJ efts fa* ri• LICENSED AO:7IOM= AND GENERAL BUSINESS AGENTI (*taloa Houses and Stores kr those vaatiag.and naa rum, Hotels and Dwellings., with or without tbse farattare, for those airing aeousekseplog. 4i3ect, ba y all blade of STOCK IN TRADE, MER4IIANDISE 7I . MOUSZROLD FURNITURE. OARPETA,,ISTOVES, PICTURES, MIRRORS. MUSIC, IN AND OUTDOOR IFFROTI. RD.. kO. Those • Ming to sell by private contract. sad adman , money on any useful property tnteaded for unmarred sale by auction. Those baying or estliag oan hear to their advantaips by applying to ans. at On UNION FURNITURE STORE. actirebtf. Iris, Ft. EAGLE FOUNDRY, PRAM 8?, ABOVZ THE RIIITALO BOLD, !RIX 3.1 HENRY, BRYANT & SHERWOOD, (111101181/0“ tOWIMP • WOW 1111.1110/4X111=211 OP PARLOR, COOS AND OFFICE STOVES, Ti a Sam IRON Vail, AND ALL =NM :or IKON OARING& Crory Stove said by se wasmetel to en estleesollos. Kettles SlSgh-eluse, Sadlioss, os Mid or maw deems,' to asks novo LID Puss Nam of sapatmosioussil door WI &Ms est blob • &1 sada Sitr dial deer mt. ibis le all we oak. =We WANT UMMWOODI ERIE, PA,•THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 15.1866. Nr-N - The New Popular Song. Father, dear father, enure home with me now The clock to thi steeple steins one; Ton sail on were C7lllla I eight home from the shop, As soon es y..tir day's w o rk wee done. Oar tiro haa gone oat—nor towels ell darb ti And Inotheesboen waiting sloes tea. I With poor brother Benny, so sick In her arms, And no one to help her bet me. Com• I coma home I came hew I 1 Pima, father, dear father, come how! ' Father. dear father, some home with nm now 2 The clock is the steeple etriks t two; • The night hu grown cold—and Bonny is worm—; But be hu been calling for yon. Indeed its is worms—Ys says be will di., Perhaps before the morniog shin dawn! led this is the mum* she sent me to bring— Come quickly, or he will be gone ! rather, dear father, come home with me now t She clock i• the steeple strikes throe; She house is so lonely—the hours an so long j ! For poor weeping mother and me Ye*, we are alone—poor Benny is tad I A nd gone with the angels of light; Aid those were the very last words that he said:: .1 want to Itisa papa good night?" Come home! toms home! come home! Please, father, door father, some home I A "Pungent and Vigorow3". Speech. In the debate on the 22d of January, upon the Freedmen's Bureau Bill, Senator Cowan, of this State, made the following spirited re sponse to a speech by Wilson, of Mas sachusetts, delivered on the same day. Mr. Cowan, it Will be remembered, was elected u a Republican, and 'throughout the war was recognised as a member of that party. The Washington correspondent of the Franklin Repoiltory.an out and out Radical,ssys "this same man is now urged by strong backing far a cabinet position, and there is reason to 'be lieve that if the cabinet is to be reconstructed, Cowan stands a fair chance of tan appoint— ment :" Mr., President, I shall be obliged to apolo gise for not being able to attain to that sub. lime height of bragging which has character ized the honorable - Senator Pram Massachu setts, but I will endeavor to state if I can a few plain facts for his consideration and that, of the Senate. Of course, I have nothing to say with regard to myself. My course here has been open,'and I trust without any con. eealmeut. It, was never very difficult for the. Senator to understand exactly where I was.- I believe, however, I may say that, in advance of him, I was the first man to say on this, floor that, in going down South to suppress: the rebellion, it was perfectly proper that we should treat the negro precisely as any other man—if he was an enemy shoot him ; if be was a friend, use him; and that was as far as I intended to go. • But the Senator asserts here in the face of the Ssaste, sad in the face of the American people, that he and his compeers, forsooth. the Anti Slavery Society, have destroyed slavery ; that is their work ; .that is the re. stilt of their twenty five years of toil and struggle; that Is the result of their agitation and their speeohifying and their extensive knowledge of the negro and the negro char. toter, and he relates some incidents. I am not very mach in the habit .of, relating inci dents. but I will Maio Ong icar th•b•••fit the honorable Senator. Somebody was talk ing about him and his society the other day, and stated that they bad " negro on the brain." Some one who was by satcl—" Well, that may be ; but they have not much brain on the negro," [Laughter,] and that, I think, Mr. President, is about the truth of it. Who destroyed slaYery, Mr. Proudest! Had, the Anti Slavery Society any agenoy in it t Did the Anti-Slavery Society.or its rep resentatives upon this floor at the outset of this war declare that they were going to des troy slavery ? No, sir ; but crouching behind their shields at that time they resolvbkonan bnously hers that they were - not goW to destroy slaveiy, that theyF i ; to teat_teat_ war to support the Consti r 11 the laws. How long ago was that! Wo da ys after the battle of Ball Bun, and the starch was all out of the Anti-Slavery Society ; it had not a boast; it bad not a threat; but, is I said before, creeping down behind its Ahoy, it said to the century, along with us whoierere honest in our utterances in that resolution, that it made war for the Constitution and the laws. I ask you, Mr. President, if the seoesaionists of the South, in their great madness, in their rage, only akin to this Northern rage,• it, antipodes, had not made war upon the Gev eminent of the United States, would slavery have been destroyed ? Would all the battles of the Anti. Slavery Society, and all its traota, and all its preaching., and all its sermon- Wings in the world have ever achieved that great result if it had not been for the folly pd Madness of the sebessionisus of the South iho went to war ? Let the honorable Sesete stand square up and look that fact in the face. He had war at his elbow. Who fought the war? Does the Anti-Slavery Society say that if the Army of the United States had not achieved victory after victory, had not sup prey" Ai the rebellion, slavery would not have bees abolished? Who then was it that abol ished slavery? The gentlemen who talked or the gentlemen wtio acted ? ThiSenators who wielded tongue and pen, or the hard headed and hard handed soldiers who wielded the saber and bayonet? Let the country answer. I would like the honorable Senator to go out and tell our war worn soldiers who won this victory. , ' And a word now as to his course and mine upon this floor. I can tell to-clay that be and his set were really—l do not say they intended it—the allies of the rebellion; they were Its main support and strength ; and wheri,Jeffer son Davis comes to make his dying confession, if I should chance to be at his elbow, I should want him, in that last moment, when the truth comes to he told, to tell who it was that gathered the. whole South to a man ►round the standard of rebellion; who it was that down there infused the bitterness into that fight which characterized it'from end to end ; who it was that enabled that weak people to make such a tremendous struggle as that the world never uw the like of it, and I will tell you who he will say it was. He will tell you that when he started he had not half the people about him;, he will tell you that the secessionists of the South who went Into that rebellion were not half 'of the people. Who, then, drove the other half to him 2 The Bel tams Anti-Slavery Society that, when we he the cannon roaring,and the saber clashing, d the bayonet thrusting, and the work going n, could not keep its tongue, and must be ma n the people of the South believe that the war, instead of being for the Constitution and the lure, was to abolish slavery. What then ? If we bad friends at the eutatart of the struggle, we lost them then. Now, Mr. President, I ask again, who fought this battle? I tell him that it was the Army of the United Stales that killed the Percy'. It was the Aisay of the United States that-met this Hotspur of the rebellion, while the Anti- Slavery Society was down upon the field of battle looking out from under its shield' and claiming the Constitution and the laws. But now, sir, now after the victory is achieved, after the battle is won, you will never meet a member of the Anti-Slavery Society who has not this dead Hotspur upon his back, carrying him out and pretending that he killed him.— [Laughter-3- And almost every one of them Is saying—fill your father will do me any honor so ; if not, let him kill the next Percy himself. I look to be either earl or duke, I can assure you." That is the language of this party after the battle is over and the victory won. By the by, they do not give ns the same assurance that fat John did, for said he—" If I do grow great, Pit grow less ; for I'll purge; end leave sack, and live cleanly as a nobleman should do." But, , Mr. President, instead of when growing treat, growing less, theyttreptollen to intehosennenadimanslons under thedpresinui of this thing which they oppose they have achieved that they wan well nigh to bursting. Thshonorable Senator lays they are going on ; • ice, and let every body get o:t of the road.. ,That may do for people who can be frightened; bat that party has not been given to frightening anybody heretofore, that lam aware of. It is exceed ingly fertile in abuse; it never undertakes to meet • man's argument except by ridicule and by sneers, and by all that kind of ma- Milieu which a weak man always uses against a stronger. The honorable Senator may go on in his course, and we will ge on in ear course. We think that instead of his hiving had to carry us through the rebellion we have had tq carry him ; that if there was any load we had it to bear. Ido not undertake to sty that the honorable Senator did not intend well enough ; but he has put himself cut of the pale of re ceiving the benefit of that apology which might be made in hie favor by assailing the intentions of others. Who made hint a jadge and a ruler Over Israel ? Who authorized him to say that I despised the laboring man ? I think I could prove by good witnesses that T have done such days of hard work as that Senator would have hardly survived. And when he talks about me or the gentlemen with whom I associate hire as not being the friends of the poor and the friends of the humble. he speaks without the book. Si 'Outright does h 5 arraign me as not desiring the prosisrity and the greatness of this country ? Is it not my country as well as his? Rave I not as many interests at stake as be has, or any other man? Sir, whams speech requires such make-weights as that to extend it over a period of 16 minutes,it bad not be better made at all. Hereafter, whena question is befOre this body,' and is to be met, I hops the quedtion will be argued, and the question alone.. I have raised a simple question of eonstitu tional law ; and the Senator says that,the Constitution has been dinned in his ears for five yeari. Yes, Mr. President, and yon might din in it for twenty, and r doubt, whether he Would appreciate a single principle which is involved in it. Te the Constitution to be nothing? Is the oath we have taken to sup port it to be nothing ? Is constitutional learning t 3 be sneered out of this Chamber t Is a conscientious desire on the part of a Ben, ator to do - his duty as a man should do it, and to carry out in-spirit and in truth that duty which has been intrusted to him by his con stituents, here to be made a subject of reproach upon this door. And is a man not to bo sup posed to be orthodox, not to be supposed to be patriotic, unless he believes in all the vagaries and all the whims and the ethnology of the honorable Senator from Massachusetts, who has traveled, I suppose, over onehnndred and fifty thousand miles, and has made soma twelve or fifteen hundred abolition speeches ? I can not tell how much a man would know after he had made twelve or fifteen hundred speeches on one side, at one end of a house, where there was nobody to reply to him ; 1 think he would become so confirmed in 'his crotchets and so full of his absurdities by that time it. would be utterly impossible to teach him anything afterward. Who arrogated to themselves superior know'• edge of the negroes t We di I not ; but I have and do again arrogate for the men of the South who live among them, who live with them, a knowledge, of the negroes and of aegro char. eater superior to that of a man who lives in a New England State, and sees a negro one* perhaps in three weeks or a.month. I should think it most extraordinary if such were not Ike ease. Presidcot, I come back again now to the question before the Senate. It is simply 'this, whether, in the first- place, we have sutherity to create this bureau with this jurisdiction at nil ; and the question that arises upon the amendment which I have laved is whether we have o right to extend it into the ltiyel States. It may be said, I know, that it is to be extended there simply for . the relief of the freedmen. I sly the fi 'the freedmen of-Pennsylvania ask no re li ef from the Freedoms' Bureau. Pennsylvania relieves her own destitute and her own poor. She is not a pensioner upon the United States 'Government for any favors of that kind. I 'say, too, that if it is to extend beyond relief, and to administer municipal law there for the benefit of the freedmen, Pennsylvania admiii isters her own municipal law, enforces her own police regulations between those who inhabit her own borders, and sho does not desire any such contrivances. this, but world rather repudiate it and spew it. out of her month. ,Mr. President, I am aware, and I hay...long been aware, that it is of no use here with cer. bits Senators to appeal to the Constitution. I know that it le of no use to appettito the put *conslonotion which hu been pat upon that instrument. I know that therWore Sen. store who think certain things oughtsto be done, and 'no matter what barrier stands in the way they think they are doing God ser vice when they overleap It. When was was -raging over one half of 'the Republic, when it required ail the energise of the loyal por tion of the Union to sustain that war and to I support the soldiers in the field, I have often kept silent, and have not, as 'often l as I otherwise would have dose , raised mylvolos against these violations of- the Constitution. Now I propose targivetts notice as well se the honorable Senator from Massachusetts, and it is that from henceforth I will resist, as long as I can, in my.humble way, every measure, no matter what it may be, that I believe to be a violation of thi fundsioentallaw of I this nation, and which to mo is sacred as the will of the American people. Sir, what is that Constitution but the exponent., the embodi ment, of the will of the American people ? Think of it, sir; packed into this small vol ume [exhibiting a copy of the Constitution,) is the will of thirty million people; not the will of a party, not the will of a faction, but the will of all parties, the unanimous will of the American people. Who dares violate a provision of it? Who dares thrust in his will instead of that will? Who so Arrogant as to assume that they will substitute their will for this great will, which Is to be our guide and our rule of action in this body Gentlemen talk of the right, and of God being with the right. and all that kind of thing ; and yet they forget - this stored truth, that here is our letter of attorney, here is our warrant for what we do, here is cur authority in the premises, and the man who goes a step beyond it, the man who violates it, is guilty before that God, to'whorn the gentleman sp. peals with such facility, of perjury. • The gentleman assumes that God is on their side, and that God is with them. So might a man sesame that God is with him when he acquiesced in anything that took place in the universe. I suppose the gentleinan will hardly deny that whatever does take . plans in the • universe, takes place in accordance with the will of God, as a whole lie is omnipotent, and it must be so. Whoever acquiesces is the decrees of destiny can very well boast that God is with him of course; but short sighted, finite mortals as we are, not knowing what destiny is to be in the future, are not authorised in making any such boasts. Mr. Prisident, I hope that the operation of this bill may be circumscribed, if it is to be come a law to the States lately in rebellion, u those are the only States over whom we can have a shadow of pretense for exercising this right, which most be a belligerent right, if it is any right at all. I sax conceive how sew might suppose that, owing to the fact of the previous belligerency, title bill would be demanded by a certain state of things there ; I can conceive how any one might be misled into that error; but I cannot see hew gay. body can imagine that there is a right ntait.. Ins in ibis Government to extend the open don of such a bill over States which never were in rebellion, and which never did ottouPy an attitude of belligerescy toward the United States. The Chicago R.Ougtant recommends John C. Breckinridge to the Democra s as their candidate to succeed Mr. Davis in the United States Senate on account of. his agency in getting up..the Why not recommend some ultra radical t Breckinridge may have done more than =lira abolitieniatl to.ipoo the r but he didn't try *Wm NUMBER 35. ♦ Woman's questhia. Before Itrurt my fate to thee, Or place my hood is thine; Before I lot thy tatare Rl•e Color sad form to mloe; Before , f,peril r thee, Quattoo thy soot to-alght for mo. I break 0 . 1 slighter bowls, nor feel ♦ amity of regret.- ja there ose.llak senile the past That holds tby spirit pot t Or is thy faith u clear and tree As that which I can pledge to thee ? Look deeper stlIL It thou owl feel Within thy Inmost soul Thatthoo haat kept • portion beck, !Mlle !hare staked no wkolo— Lot no Wee pity spare the blow, Bat, In true mercy, 1.11 me ie. Is there within sky hart a *red Which sane sanoot fnIQII,? One chord that any 'other hand Could better wake or still Spoilt now, lest at some (stare day My whole life wither or decay. Could's!, thou withdraw thy bawd elle dlr. •nd answer ti me dent, That rate, and that to-day Y mistake, Not thou, had been to blame ? • ' route soothe their isonseaucto thus, bat thou Witt marsh • sad awn me now. I duo not how, /4 eon. too lat•— othoo all 7111101•14 . toy Tato— : Iliad zoay tau, , idi risk lt aIL Nay; =seer •• The words wo . Yet I world spa So comfort tk Whatever osk m Itamsmber / ~i of All Sorts. The Philadel . p .is Age uys " there is no doubt the Preto ent will veto the District of Columbia ne:, . Suffrage bill." - President Joh . son thinks the passage of the unqualified suffrage bill " untimely," and in that opinion he has the support of three quarters of the people.--Syracute A Washington correspondent of the Cincinnati Gazette discloses that a move ment is on foot in that city to form a Na tional Party, which is to include Northern Democrats, Southerners and Conservative .Republicans. Said the President, but ten days ago, to a distinguished public man of Obio,speak-• ing of•the great question of restoration, and of the policy which, in his judgment, leads to the end the quickest--" My bag gage is checked Lltrough on that line." A Washington letter 'says "In dne time, Congressmen will ascertain that they cannot denounce the President and op pose his policy at the Capitol, and then come to the White House to ask and to receive good placis for their friends." We hope so. A Washington dispatch states that Sen ator Dixon disclaims having Anything to do with the publication of the Associated Press dispatch containing an account of his conversation with the Presideot. Ho lis tened to what the President had to say, and the President alone is responsible (or the publication of the dispatch. , The Coneressional Committee have gone to make their annual visit to th. -Lunatic Asylum here.— Wathington Dispatch. The country would be the gainer if the. entire abolition part- of Congress went to the Asylum and remained there. It is the' proper place for lunatics. President Johnson has recently ex pressed himself as follows : " I not only consider the rebel States as in the Union, but more in the Union than ever before, because now their laws are more republi can that-they ever we&e." The 'radicals deny that the Southern Stateure in the Union at all. It is said the bill to give the District of Columbia &delegate in Congress will be' passed directly after the negro suffrage! bill, and the negroes are jubilant about' electing their delegate to Congress. They say, by all sticking together, as they will, they can run their man in between the two "white trash" parties, and they say when they elect him, " Gosh, dat nigger take de front seat by de Speaker !"• Gen. Banks does not believe in the an-; nihilation of States. He said in his speech , before the Soldier's Convention; " he was not one of those who hold that the rebel States had been destroyed, and he did not, wish to see established a system y bf terri -1 torial gov e rnments therein, requiring thel maintenance of a standing army, with all its dangers-to the spirit and form of repub lican institutions. I Mr. Latham, of Va., in his ,eenh in Congress on the Bth, said " the H o use had been told by Union men, par excellence, that the States lately in rebellion were' out of the Union, but look on the stars and stripes which wave over this Capitol.l Did the /louse endure a ' flaunting lie in its presence f the number of States of the Union is represented on that None are delicient." DID NOT WANT TO GO TO TIM W''►ls.— man in Texas who did not want to be forced into the Confederate army, donned a home-spun gown and sun-bonnet, and toiled for two years on his little farm at Ait sister, come to stay with her front a distance, during her husband's absence in the Confederate army. Another marl lay for eighteen months in the cellar' of his own house, even his neighbors suppos+ ing him in the Confederate army. " A Ft ' Movsitisr. " Mack." the Washington correspondent of the Cincin• nati Commercial, who wrote the capital burlesque report of the visit of the so ! called Reconstruction Committee to the Southern States, which was published. in the Obzer# some weeks ago, has resigned his position as clerk on the Senate Com mittee on Agriculture. It gems that some radical Senators took offenos at his suet- useful effort in ridiculing " Thaddeus di C 0.," and attempted to have him removed. I He didn't give them a chance, however, to gain a petty triump h over him, but re signed ou .the first intimation' of their movements. It is said that the radicals will attempt to hue him removed from his position as Senate reporter for the Associ ated Press. • The Louisville Jaunt, whose editor re cently visited the President, says : "We expected to find the President weary and worn and haggard. Never were we more mistaken. Ile was in the finest and most vigorous health, his face as fresh ss in ear liest manhood, ere the 'storms of State' beat upon him, and as calm and , serene and cheerful as if only the responsibilities of a private citizen rested upon hire.' It would have been evident to ary one, set int him as we saw him, that he is afi resolute, self poised man, confident, at not vainly or arrogantly so, in his ' . strength, and u immovable as a rook or mountain in his own deep and fixed purposes. His will is like his frame, arid that is of iron. He does not permit him; self to be annoyed or worrisdor vexed or harassed or thrown by' any combination of circumstances from his firm centre, end this, no doubt, is one of the great secrets of his extraordinary power of endurance, If the radicals in or out of Congress think that they can, by word or adios, drive_ • lure or in any way move such a man from his purposes, occupying . .. As-fi b -does the highest place in the nelson, and knowing hi ms elf by experience to be equal to the dimolUsseig itognwA.dntiot, they will net thesisolver man , deplorably in .or. am"'-. • ilosaAtrawsiost PLACID ox vu Peo nes Eamea—•A. , , hill has been rented tee. the increase remnrylvao hiking (clean of the salaries of late ' cers. It proem - v. - it to 'give' the 12ioveroor. • atter the expiration orthetermef Curtin, s6,ooo'per annum after the first of June • next, the attorney general: tolreeeire $3.- 600 ; the Aw. etary of state, auditor /Mk rid andp — essurer $3,000 each;, and' tlli , surveyor general and superintendent of , Unman schools, $2,400 (gosh ; each mem ber of the Le/04am*, $1,000; each judge . of the 8a me Court, in full, for pay mid mileage, 5,200, and the chief judge/a® • 4 i(dditisnali; each, Taw Judge of the Courts of Corrunon Pleas of Allegheov, 2 s4.4oo; each providing judge of the several judi cial districts of the Commdnwealth,s3,2oo; ' and each assistant law judge, required to be learned in the law, in full pay and mileage, $3,000, except only the holders • of special courts in othit judicial districts tc remain as heretofore. Each associate ' judge of the several counties, not required to be learned in the law, to be paid as fol lows : For those whose attendance at court does not exceed four weeks, $2OO • , Between four and six weeks, $240; be• tween six , and eight weeks; $300; between ' eight and ten weeks, $400; between ten and twelve weeks, $480; between twelve, and twenty-four weeks, $550; and' all DX• r ceeding twenty-four weeks,. $6OO. These last figures include all pay and mileage. Are we to have no end of an increase of the people's burdens ? THADDIIIB Snvires.—The Albany &nom/ ' pronounces the address of Thad. Stevens infamous, and declares his "assumed lea dership of the House is an unmitigated ; misfortune." It says, further, that: " If it had been determined to produce a divisiois between the two branches of the .4.dministration, this Pennsylvania Denton ; would be precisely the man to inaugurate I it. His theatre is anarchy; his weapon, , denunciation ; his ; work, disorder. With . out parallel in ferocity and coarseness, he / nevertheless possesses a measure of politi ail ability which magnifies his capacity for evil and prompts him to the most shame ful acts." All of which is true and forcibly spoken; but goes for nothing when it is remember ed that nearly a solid Republican vote was east for the measure that Mr. Stevens ad located. The politicians of the, Radical iohool lament Mr. Stevens' honesty and I bad manners; but they applaud his policy and sustain it, with their votes..Ms " parity for evil " would be very small If the strategists who affect to regard his denun ciations as infamous would separate from ) him. Wno TOLD ins Teirrn.—When tllte ihru °erotic papers, previous to the list &sue election, charged on the Republican' lead ers that they would attempt to place the ) negro upon - equality with the white man, the Republican impart denied it, and de-, Oared that the charges were untrue. Sno-, Cessna, the Chairman of the Republican Atate Committee, issued an address to the! people of the State, assuring them that , : therowas no such issue before the people 1 _ Ind that the Republican party intended nothinr of the kind. Now, what are they Fining ? Stevens, Sumner, Wilson arid oth ers have introduced at least forty proposi-' lions into Congress to break down the.. barriers God hu established between the, ',black and white man. They are attempt-. ing to do it in the District of Columbiii; :and in all the Southern States wand amyl 'will try it in the Northern S tates as soon: las they, can. Sumner has even introduced. a bill into the 11. S. Senate to allow ne , groes to sit on juries with white men. Our white laborers and mechanics, many of them at least, will notice the danger they are in until it ii too late.—Easton dr- IS ma • • • The manner in which our military he roes are letdown to their original level ? on their return home, is sometimes more amusing to the looifers on than flattering to the subject. A cue in point : Gen; Sam H—, went out 4n a regiment from the Badger State as captain. Before he left the rendezvous he was promoted to cola= nel ; and for gallant conduct in the del& was brevetted brigadier general. On hill retirement to civil life he told a• friend "they let him down easy." At Washing ton it was Gen. H.; at Madison, Col. H.; at the town where he organized his nom: pany it was "How are you:Captain t" and when he got up to S., where he resides, every boymith a freckled nose was shout ing, "Hallo, Sam." The Chicago limu, in alluding to the belligerent resolutions of Chandler of Michigan, lately offered in the-U. S. Sen ate, looking to a non-intercourse with Eng land. says : "If Chandler wishes to get up a non-in tercourse with something that will greatly damage the other party, let him pus res olutions decreeing non-intercourse be tween Chandler and whiskey. This would be an immense loss to the opposite party. This in the only kind of non-intercourse that would not inflict the greatest amount oliejury on the party that adopted it." Ten 'Questions Pertinent /men it Impertinent. Some years ago there was a member of the House of Representatives from (what was then a State, but what it is now Ito body knows, having, according to the Stevens-Sumner doctrine, committed sui cide) Tennessee, who was very much in the habit of asking questions of a charac ter similar to the following, and refusing appropriations ofpublio money upon very democrstic notions of public economy and privateintegrity. That game State had, at a later day, another representative, who was also much given to such pertinent, or impertinent, inquiries. Neither Andrew Johnson nor George W. Jones are now in Convess, and Tennessee is forbidden to send other men like them. For thit State, as for the foolish virgins, there is a shut door; and, therefore, we venture to offer in the World a few questions from the home of Jackson,and Johnson; I. By what right is a frigate of the Uni ted States navy, or a transport belonging• to the War Department, employed at pub lic expense, fog a pleasure trip either for the health or amusement of the person or family of a public officer who is paid a large salary ? IL Do civil offioers who voyage about in government vessels receive their salaries while traveling at public expense but not on public business ? lit. Do the vessels of the navy, when used as private yachts, introduce cigars free of duty ? IV. By what authority do members of the Cabinet order `.'special cars" to be sent oc railroad routes foi the special 'imam. modation of themselyes, their families or friends ? V. Ore such "special cars" paid for? If so, by whom 2 If not, telt, yott VI. Is it proper or becoming for Cabi net Ministers, receiving lugs salaries, or for members of Congress, receiving pay and " mileage," to accept or solicit . 'panes" over reilrondstit Steamboats Vll„lfinathiber .of Congress or a Speaker of tire House, become an Hiner antrecturer, does his pay as "Speaker" or , "member" continue while absent from Washington ?" Does be travel on .his "mileage," the pay for his lectures, or on "free passes!" . VIII. How long will it be before mem bers of Congress, or Cabinet ministers will eipect that their "free passes," on rilTroad or steamboat lines, include , their jamas as Well u themselves? IX. When any of them travel in Gov. erdmeet ships, are they supplied with food =nor "free," al well as with " free " X. Is there any lumber of Congress, in either Ilona% with courage enough, and with skirts olban enough, to dare investi gate, and obtain hue, full and satithotery answers to any or all of Woo quotiono IS