Carlisle herald. (Carlisle, Pa.) 1845-1881, October 13, 1865, Image 2

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CARLISLE, PA.
FRIDAW, Ot: E 0131.1111 13, 1565.
S. Di• PETTENOILI. & CO.,
No. 37 Park Row, New York, and 6
State Bt. Boston, are Our Agents for the II tilt cu.
a those 'elites, and are nuthorizod to take Advertise.
ant. and Autinnriptions for us Rte], 1.1010,1 rates
~THE ELECTION!
PENNSYLVANIA GIVES HER
VOTE FOR THE UNION CAN
DIDATES 1
Hartranft-and Campbell Elected by
Large Majorities !
UNION GAINS F. VERYWHERE!
At the time of leaking up our paper.
(Wednesday evening,) we arc of course un.
able to give exact returns of the voting done
on last Tuesday. It is, however, conceded
on all hands that we have carried the State,
and that LIABTRANIrf and CAMPBELL have
been elected by handsome maj9rities! Phil
adelphia gives nearly 8000 Union majority.
The Chairmen kif the Central Committee:-
have taken the vote of 1862 as t h e basis of
comparison in estimating the gains or losses
of the respective parties in the ditl'erent
counties. Compared with that vote, the
present returns ghow large Union gains if)
every county, sufficient to indicate a Union
majority of from 15,000 to 20,000! Ti,
Philadelphia, we have elected in of the 17
members -9f the lower House and both the
Senatms. The result in this State is grati
fying in the highest ,kgro, 21i111 henc.Mtrth
we need anticipate mltr.mble i%,ith the 1),-
m , )eracy. It has finished if,
leaders are disheartened and it, member,
disgmted. Ileneef rth it will mily he re
mem felted on at count of the frequency of it,
detects, and its utter helplos,mts. pi&
lical organization
Gut'. Union, hub
ernor of ()hi., I,y :ri,(11)11 inaj ri nn lth
Li% sintur , W.•
as yet n reterns from the .0.10. r
voted this week. In our noxt we ~ I mll l oth
link all the returns its 1101_ pith eon)
tis the reSIIIIN ,tiggc-t
I'lll. R.E,UL I' IN '1 II I, II
l!ninn mml of thk 1. ./11111!. tutu.l,lA , ..th to
.•ongruttilate themselves ~11 the
they non e on Toi•-ility Ii NVith the tear
ful odds that were again , 11-.& thedi-pirititm
effects of heavy defeuts ever since 1860, t
could not he expected that our county ticket
would succeed, twirl it would m. t have ex
cited much •tirprise tutu the mujorit‘ tignim;
us liven increm:ed, (Mr opr, menu- w, .re o,oi
fident of running. their nutj4.rity h , 1 (Ir.--
But. our friend, were hot•disheartetted. anti
went into this mount, with tt will, cud th,
refmlt shows how touch con ip• iteColllllli,ll ,. ll
by It little \ igorotk exertion. We have re
duped their itutiortty tlic :-:•tute Ticket to
loss than •,.1), )1 gni!, of lour, ov,
the election of and !WWI' ili;in 250 ov.•1
that or lost Fait. Thi , i. il . ul,\
and if our fri,n(ls will k l ul their mrtwt ,
and work :lit ,“r tio• Nv.•
may count ccrtainit 1,,t1),• 1
(ainla..rland from f)cmocratic wi.rulr mi
placing hex in 1 7 »ion rank,. WII can
do it, if w will
tiv...~~,~......
k . NE\ Uri ',lgo', 'Nit", I. MEN' - A in
gular relil2;imis hogun in
England it ll•v: ago. 11 i , nropn...od
to 'laity the loonillt r 4d . th, Itii ii h. Ntoirin
Catlndie and Gr. -I; litit , 2l) , - , it. fri,isdly
cotn•nunion, and Ow pub:ii• journal
that three hundred
1111 V•• aaa, nh d to thy- . 11h
tit/II is fortiii.(l 11,
thi• .of th, cnity
Christendom,' to Milt(' in a bond of ifiti•r
cessory prayor :anal. uu al. I Titoy aro
net asked to compromi 0 any
which thoy, wrtap,4ly, la,111111.ar;
they are Aiffilll •1 ,1 :.•t1 I.! unit ILr tho pro
rnoti(th of a high awl ',rho name,.
of metnlwri are 14, ,4,•1,i .tri.•rly private,
and the only “hiigatb`in opal thus , .
who join lit , • 1, CI, daily 11 , . ~1.
tlioit form 4.1 pra:,
the case of priest., the olft•rine.. at least nta.4•
in three inontb:‘, of the Holy SatTili,T
.NIINEs IN VIII(IIN1
mond I?epublie says Ow g.:1 , 1 .if Cit
g'nia are 1a; rirh as th,,R. "r k
iekloll, tln• iif do: Molvin void milli
on Itapidan ri th.
North with
and is setting to work to d,,v,h,p
of his fortutiatm
ow. ing the White Hall 6;0,i lliti nno r.•.-
suming operation, wait to hands. They
are abodt ereetimt; the ittrgest rntnp mill
ever built in the South, met contemplate
having in atteceedl•ul opr•rntion at least 1:11)
stamps before the end 0. the Tyt•ar. The
Bowdin copper initie it "wing- re-tiptoed.
Other mines are /11,0 Opelllllg, tend huhdred4
not yet . touche I, but event valuable, are
temptingly inviting capital, and labor
to come and develop their hidden wealth.
GEN. BAKER, the Government I)mecti ve
says a correspundent'of the New York Me
': atd,linsedieurthed n schenao whiib embraced
the robbery of u large amount of government
funds from the Post Quartermaster's Sa fe at
Lynchburg. No leis a pursonago than Brig
Gen. J. 0. Briscoe, of the 100th Penns*.
nia Volunteers', who has coMmanded the
post at Lynchburg since Lee's surrender, has
been wrested on the charge, together with
A. W. Lackey, stiller to the post. General
Briscoe; is in Irishman. The plot appears
to 'have. hceßelaborately contrived, And only
failed through Capt. Alberger, to NOM]] the
secret waß . coripded " ;• givin4 information to
thii;',Goliernment. Briscoe himself took the
impression of the safe key in wax, and sent
Lackey to Philadelphia to get the duplicate
made. Wheiti the day came; fOr carrying out
the scheme, detectives were on the watch.—
They saw Briscoe unlock the safe, load him
self down with coin ah 4 greenbacks;
followed him le-bis office and arrested him
in the very net of malting his illegal beoty.
' • -A very itnportant suitbaaheen
inatitut
ed :the United 9tates , .t,ireuit Court at
Pittsburgh, by'sonni'perties, against prather
Duncan; of Pit City. The stit, is
brouib i'o'enforeti.aaeontritei of sere of Out
celebrated., ?Tfolnyieu! Fartn t 't, !on Pit 11910
creek.. On this farm tiro' located the
also, the
complainants alleipt a written .
contract of sale gf,the farm for thirteen hull'
. tired thousand dollarit, itild that the
,tion ~ thofartn lute ao greatiyiterettaeAlh at
'Prather afe Duncan .iefuse ,to can pet the
.The vsniu of the pr`opr
• , ely in ye' .
ed'ih.tbiioiuit- vatitnatett ,it Ire" four-
flvo ouillione of d 9.11411,7, ,
=V
•.• • ,
gdvetelOiv . etiiiitnis e. trit ' ete truth dif
ferent speeches Made by President JOHN
SON during that iieriod in whicly , eho has
Men pr-unnently connected with the great
events which have been and'are still Bgila
ting the eoun.ry. As our Democratic friends
are eom.tantly asserting that Mr.' Johnson
has 11J N,ays. been_ a Democrat ; that he. has
never uttered any sentiments that they can
not endorse; that they agree with him upon
all the
and
questions now at issue, and that
they a nd they only are his true and honest
supporters, we hope they will henceforth
hold themselves to the support of the princi
ples herein forth. When the ideas ex
pressed by Mr. Johnson become leading
features in Democratic platforms; we, may
give them credit for sincerity and reaso ably
expect better things in their future history
Ilium' is recorded by their past.
ANDREW JOHNSON
r ,ngress and Oat cf C'ungre.qs.-11t.4 Men
sn, es and Se/1im0:03.-11c Is No Compri,-
Career as MaLiary (dui:craw..—
.blunt Ilryhls to AU Men.—ldeas utt Aeur-
gantzation.—Treason Masi be l'uniehed.
GIVE EVERY MAN AN INTEREST IN THE
COUNTRY.
In his speech on the IlumeAlend Bill in the
Senate in 18, - ,8, Mr. Johnson said:
There is no Willi reliable as he who is
cstod ii, the wellure of his country;
and who are more interested in the web
c of their counter than those who
hare homes ? When a . tmin lies a home he
has a deeper, a more abiding interest .n the
country, and be is more rchable•in all things
that pertain to the Govvrtunent.
roiiatd, wh,-n he goes to die bal,,,t_box,;
in sustaining in every
our lie institutions.
7 "1 know there ore ninny, awl
even ,onn in the, Democratic
are a little timid in regard to tru,t
ini; the people with too intich power. Sir,
the people are the ,afest, the he -t, and the
Mod! relialiii•liaig;lnelit tit • pottier, it . you havo
at population of tins kixd. Keep up, tin inhi
l111• 1•13 , , 1111 • illibtliCrllCy on the OM ,
11t111 , 1, Illitt it rahtile.ilii tit:other: lot the
cut-. tntunt.nn tlit• ; it thew.
[hive the potver. told your Governnoou i, al-
Chen vott need not fl,ll'
knots, jo:,1 r.qoarlied L
111111 ~otit ;Pro ti I.tti it'11i4.111:2," the:
151.191!, ; I,ut tilt•l 1,111 l/m• from
iltt l'it!rt , t , tl 111 111,1' (ittVerll
- Vllll , hate i i mnitit 11,1e1,41 , Wll
oar., tor. Even tf wo
.1,1% •„ni ZI III:III Wll4, hilt, MI riii.,•os, iu th!-,
country is not ;nor,• t,1ia;,14.
Ines Iloilo
IBIE=I
• • I hind 1,1 t,11,. ii 01111 111311 • . •111 100
td ; 1•;,11 tt2l:lt.'d ;
II
IrEli=l
4, 11th LI m. \V , 111 , Itlid, "II lI Ii nIILII 11'11 t'
til.tt In liired.• 11l (;„d
tIt;II Im n VII , IIO
1111 In' 1111111 t•IIII hi.
BEM
1 klf I )
I. 111 , . r.• ..11-
.i •.V1•11 Wl . ll illll\ ; IN. II 1•- li, ji •
C.• 1111.-4 111,1'11 (i4 , d111%.• 111 ellarott.r and
rabic gover.ting 111111,•il.
elevatting wir
1111111 -itch II
1,1•1, c 1 ii tll•11 l',lll
1.11.11. \ , )11. (.1, .411,
.•)t slty, in.itt;tir.ll
gr,
v , r 191,11 ,l'i'llt1•11 ut till- (;•J‘,1 . 11111 :1111
1111111-11 d it, 144 111 , ri•41.411114! 4,1 11444, u'1144
:It 1)t - '11 , Wrai , .
ir .11 WI 144 ,
:441:41444 5. 4 4'44141 lat.eimlTVCA
•':";• , ti14 , 4,11i10n It I, Isi
I'll-I , d Witt' " -
Cllll 11.•, 011.11. bo :11 11,,•
IJIi•IJt API utilt•l'. ? UV il.lt • \lO folltl.lllll.'
ill OW turul II 1:111.4 . - tl ••I,\ 011111!1 , 1' 1.. t
litstm.y 1111,W01' JAIL , ‘ lll,-L1,.11..
"Air. Jetlursun boPnln t,. 1.111/1k !Mill CHU IJ
V,11.11 tII ”1 111111-.
fpw cuur ,
1.1 Jijiled. .. - ;k•lintt , "II oori 114 ly It .; : ,t• t t
: - ; , •tto.t.or Alien, of Ohio, Lhu qttesti,,,, • \V h, t t
41 ,, ntoorttt.y ?' w ,,.. t h,.
I~iC: • 1.) , •111..t•I'll , y t, n 111 bo
1.:1"‘V-
Wt•nini
old
111 4%1 p4iinii
hilg.:o tli • la \% 4.1 ti.Litir, l,vi vzoinlg thu
law of tIIP land.'
In Ili,: Ir in
ntr,li)eceinblir, 1;0,
•• :WI a C. , 1111P1 , 1111 , . 'l' !WI" c4oiscrvd.
tip !I Iho
11:0'1. ..1 1,11C,11
tit , 11 , 1 I.'lll , ft , l , Xlini in 1111 y
1 , hall •, .islditg Cur
not thit.; th,
~.;. !... ittproini- I Nk ., ililyollllg. it
^11 . P , 11 , 1 h.. I . .kr I!lrtt \llr, II I. right mill 11A
=,,11.11d.. in ;t.....1r. If it th,,,„
11 , 411 W , ltd.. It. iti".n th,- grt•,,t. ,rl .
1-1,;!11
501111111i1, Art. pi, th,
t , riti. it t• 1141 11 . 1, , rt:11:1
u. \\ . l.;F•ll arc C.,wevtl , 4l.
ull.l ‘ , 11 , 0t1 , 1 Itli . 1,1%
I -hall go for .mm.l tooht• 1)\ - Cor
wn.•ndnirtits this
. 1111114•11 , 1 e that thwy lin- right. 1111,1 upon no
I ittii not for ~.ont p rm,l l ..,ing
right with IV' right w
lit a 1,, • t 111 (11.:11oinli
pow ER 4,1, 11V1 , .1: , 1Ir; ~ N SII'I 1
• AltA•t' having btleit titirtureti lino( 1.10-
1. ,, t,;1 . 11 to) all
tvt tuns_ rt.o•lirti Pl.riolit to. Inc ,11-
I,,wed. ut IH•r,r0;11 vodition, to. it itlitirawli , ;lll
th.• Utti4.ll?
ti.; it; Allot Ni•ii , ;ll it• it is au
art It• slto it tvill
Ire it ,tfece,:iiii rvv.olution. lt'shrolo.t•::
tttkc'tiu• iwn,tlti , •' and
1.-..r.)rs of tie' law.
there t, allothOr tple-11011 that
,liggent:; itseir In this eons•ctinn. Kt
during the last Congress, applied for adtni,
sum Into this 1:111oll. She assumed to be
State, and the difficulty in the wa3 was a
provision in her Constitution, and the Mall
ne . r of its adoption. We (lid not het I{llll,B,
in. NV., did not question her being aSt te;
but on account of tho Ilinniwr of forming
her Coll,tittitiOn, stud its provisions, We kept.
liuusus Otit. \V hat is Kansas now ? /63110
11 State, Or is she IL Territory ? Ines she re
vert htiek to. her territorial condition or pu.
pila g e T Or, having been a State, and having
applied for admission and been refused, is
she standing i•ut II State? Von hold her is
a territory ; you hold her as II
You prescribe the mode of electing the mem
'burs of her Leg shittll u, and pay them out of
your own Treasury. Yes, she is a provillee
c. strolled by - Fedel al authority, and her
hIWR are made in conformity with the acts
nt • .Congress. Js she not a territory? I { think"
she is."
TRArroits syouLn BE ruNic.RIED
In his reply to Sunntor Lane, Dinrth2::
1861, Dir. ,TOll nson said:
Show me the man who has been engaged
in these conspiracies; show me who has been
sitting in these nightly and secret col elave , ,
plotting the overthrow of the Government:
show me mho. has tired upon our hug, has
given instructions to'talce our forts and elle
torn houses, one'arsenals and dockyards, I
wilt'show you it traito'r. 5 . ' 0 *
That being done, were I the 'President -of
the United States. 1 would do, us 'Thomas
i /
Jefferson did i'l 1801,1 with Aaron Burr, who
WLIS charged / vith' treason ; I would have
them arrest° and fried:for treason, , and,lf
convicted; the ,eternal 'God they iillOtlid
eliiibr the p Multy of .the law at the h a ils of
the executioner., Sir, .treason must be putt%
;shed:.. Its enormity,' and the ex ' tent, and
depth.of Om offence rnust be randy known.,-
The time is not, for distant, if this Govern.
wont is preserved, its Constitution obeyed,
and its laws executed in every department,
, whe'n.,:Something of this kind must he done. , "
Tun POW . nn' ' 'oir • CoiinitkeS' ri;;;Bi t , kiL
'• • ' F " I.lo,fluit Ei . ''''
: ' ' '''
' - '
. .
.• ate ttpeeeh'• urging ilut ,- o..k.pulAion
of 8 eru tor beim v ing written a
ier'tio Jor;'l)tv
"7;:"1801,
.• • • #...• •
4411 r. President, / bold ilint under thcklon
stitution . or the . Unitcd Stites we clearly,
hoye the ficiwer to expel'n LI:10113 r, and that
=IN
I=l
IIL, 111.
E., n,,
i.nly
at.,r , p! 101-
It I, th • . 4,111
=ID
MEM
. .
tOti'lkithatit our al:at - unlink the ehititicter'o , ; and ‘vhile it does not &Ontravette'the
judicial body. At is not neeess iry to. exercise of the war puwe • by , the
lirticies of impeachment. p'referred by tne•i? rresidetit in his Emancipation Proclamation,
other House; it is not neces sa ry to organize lit einues stamped with the atithority,of the
ourselves into a court fur the purpose of trial; p9eple themselves, sting, iu accerdance
bUt the principle it:tiro:id:and clear, inhereql4.4iin the writ-en rule of thir'eupreine law of
in the very erganizat•omnf the body itself,'' the' land, and must therefore give in ore gen
-that we havitthe power and the right to tik.• oral' satistact.on and quietude to. the ,dis
pel any member from the Sill ow whenever trained public mind?'
we devin.that,the public interests ore unsafe
in his hands, and that ho is unlit to be a
member of the body. We oil knew, and
the country understands, that provision of
the Constitution which confers this power
upon the Senat . Judge Story. in ewe
menting upon the case of John Smith, in
connection with tini provision of rho Con
stitution to which I have referred. mod the
following language:
"The power to expel a member is not in
the British House of Commons confined to
ottiinces committod by the party us a, mem
ber, or during the session of P.orliainent;
but it extends to all cases where the offence
is such as, in the judgment of the House
unfits him for parliamentary ditt ‘ ivs '
The rule in the llouse of Commons was
undoubtedly in the view of the framers of
our Constitution; and the question is has
the member unfitted himself, has Ile disquali
tied himself, in view of the t•xU•aordu nu ry
conditi , in of the country, from discharging
the clutie. of Senator?
* 4 4 " Mr. President, suppose Aaron
Burr had been a Senator, and after hi , ac
'quittal he . had come back here to take
seat in th , ., Senate, what would have been
done? According to the doctrine avowed
in this debate, that we must sit as a court and
subject the individual to all the rites and
toehicalities of the criminal proceedings,
could he have lwen expelled .nd yet is
there at SellaDlV here WII , I would have voted
t.. allow .I.ltron Burr to take IL ' , I'M in the
senate after hi, acquittal by a court anal
jury '! : tli lire is not a Senater her , who
would base done it. Aar,m Burr ‘‘ :rigid
in court and he was found not gu Itt ;
\I,L• I,lllod 1it0(3.., 1.111 WH.: Lite pLiohe judg-
Invnt of this nati4 , .. less sati,tietof Ills guilt
inan it' he had net been ticquitled. What
is the nation's judgmnt, settled and ti xed
That Aaron Herr wa, guilty of troas.m•
nttlwithniandivlq' vo•litiitt , d by It cur
and jury.'
NEW . .NIEN MICaT LEAD IN THE
hav, (I, cr..,•(1
ctf.rmil qopliration 1,, , Lw, , t.11 you :nil th,in.
Hi 4 tor, mu,[ a la'W
I Bet if brmi;Ahl, I; , r‘vard are I. yi•
f1a117." anil 11 , Voltp the 1 - 1:a , 11 i' , .llllg ill 1110
I Siallh. Y,nl not-1 -11,1 a pair ( • I‘ti I
' '' , l . /./1 layarl are
%•t• that t ,raill
1.! • [RI
It V." , •11;
111
tliul 1. tht• v.;ty tf) it.
'rut. MiLtrAttyl;,,vEß,4.t
In t lipp•al to tht
)1,.r.•1, :31 1. I •
,H 1 :1 li1111..litn'ill•
C1i.1,1 St••11 , IL1 11.4 h••
guarani \- tit or% : - .1..•n• in I Ili.;
,„ „ ~,•,„ Ari. •n eli I',
r.l, fi NE ur tf 1. /
• y .Ne,rl•• ; 1111,1 ir,rin \lll • 1 , , \
ak. Ltd' 1114• pll. tJf in arty
BLit , •, can thtS tA,•%. 1,, -
g•.vonitii-fit,
MID
‘,11.11 (lie 4 , 1 Li.:
C.1111 , ..1 , 11 , • 4.1 Elio 1 , 111.1.111w:118i
4,1 ,•tir 0•\1.1 , 1) e
,•\ th • ~ .ifitr‘
1.011,1. ,11.111,.111 ,%1111.11 II 11111 . 1 run I-ralii•.
Ttil- t , 1 , 11.2)111.)11 1.11 t•I'11:11 'lit
II 1, lit, I have I„•••11
r , •gtilar
c-,,101,[1.t1 M ll ,t,, r y
:" oir. pr,•,•n,
ru U./LC. I.
I. Vv
inIV ..ly 1111
~h/..•11, . 1,1.11 ”, may r•-
I LI, [II, , 111,1.tion
t
1 ail 4,1 Cho
1,4. Lb ; - Ntal.,, and F4,14.r,d, Aval.t•tl, cabor by
I , l‘ 1)% . 1111•
itintddt,ti 1 , , a i,,Nver in 11,,tiltly L.. the
Innaaniental law of Lilt. Stab., and Allinvl',l‘
!" , :itit3ll2ll 4,flj •a s
Lillt•11 /111,..r, 1 1 IV, 1111 111 t i• Snap
411111.• that th , p•Ii1111. rut. p,;l,•,;khly :k...•11)1,1k!
OA till' 1,10144 1... x It.cl
uwn cla.h .•. ( )tiv•rw;•k• :Lnart , :iy
%ad, and in. nian • •
1.11, 11. 1,1.1 ILI , •11111
1 Ili. I ,I;,ve
Hato 1,0. 1111,1r.i•
010 :";(7LL, 111141 luulltc Ruc. faunent, fr , an
,•1' lu•u h 1
intcllig..n,•. :lad la•,itan4 11111'
ik. Utill , l 1)111,11 10111 \ tl'lllll,lll.
'lf well th..
1'1.1114'0.111 'their
Cllll h .v ;a•inall':'thl
'lll,lr
',lt vi , "' • •, :u•-
corillat t ly I
To the priitoctioni,
of tli.. II: ifficil All their
extended and their
as hen Hindi , Ttiose tvb
tli mid et ary night of .1;0
rebeilion Moe maintained their allegianee
to the Federal Government will
,u.iing snit misguided will be welcomed
on their retitrii. NVIIIII, it may become
nee.- sary, tii vindiestieir the e iohtted at
lees, 2111 d 111 reasserting Its on-
It erial •tvity, to punish intelligent and
in high places. n.. cro,y
retaliatory or t indit•tit e 1101ICN will ',adopt
in s private,
unofficial e•apae-ill, liltlt
IIII••LIIit‘ to Or•
coal rot ;t:l pust acts and dee
laration. is iitlicied upon the
din.; i•i`itt•••
11, OW 'testacy of the lIIWS.'
getie, ttml pr.sastilings who
hilt/Wed a treasonable spirit suininar).
after his anti "he ordered the 11.1y,,r 1111,1
City Council of Nashville to Lahr the malt
Cpon their det lining so to,
(1... their plimits vt,crii declared vacant,
appointed, and then were sub
s.smently ineare.tritteti in the pmitisitiary,
The Press thrittighout. the State tvi s placed
under proper supervisi o n, and it \vas stain
understood that spoken or written treason
would subject the ttlfentlers to justice. Lt
April the editor of the Nashville Busse/
wits arrested stud his paper suppre:sed. Judge
Guild, of the Chancery Court, was also
imprisoned on a charge of treason.
"An election Mr Judge of the Circuit
Court of Nashville having been ordered,
Turner S. Foster, a well Ithown Secession
ist, wits eliosen. G-overnor, too- much
of a law-a tiding citizen to ignore an elec
tion ordertsl lhim.rlf , gave. Poster his
commission as judge; but fearing that he
might abuse the power thus vested in him.,
ordered his arrest, and sent him to the -peni
tentiary on the same (lay.
4. Later in the sumo month si x' prominent
clergy non of Nashville, wt u not only en
tertained treasonable sentiments, but boldly
preached ...them ..from their pulpits, _were
summoned before the Governor arid desires"
to takethe oath. They. requested five dityri
to decide as to their course, which request
s granted. At the expiration of that time
they declined to turn from the error of their
W Whereupon live of them 'were sent to
prison, and the sixth, on account of illness,
..paroled.
UItGES THE PA..riAGE OF 'PRY CON:4SITUMN.
AL` AMENDMENT. •
in June, 1864, Mr—Johnson was nominated
for Vice President by the Repubrean Union
onyention at Baltimore, and wrote July 24,
his letter accepting the nominal on. In this
hewrote
"Ti' ie. vein to :4ttelillirlo reconstruct the
Union with the distracting denim' of sla.,
very , in it.. Experience has demonstrated
it's ineempatibility with free ; a d republican
governmeuis, “nd it would be unwise and
unjust longer to continue it es one of the
institutions,. of the country. • While
iriained subbrdinate to the..Constitution.anid
I,iWa Of tlfe United States, I yielded to it my
support but Whefilebecatne rebebious, and
;attempted to rise above. t e Government,
and control its irction, threw my huMble
'influence against it,
Tbe mode hy.which this great chang9—
ethancipatien 'of the AliVe. 7 -eitii be effected,'
it propertylTuind :in the power to 'ittrietnif
the. Constitution of the United . States:," T
plait is effectual ariilof no doubtful , puthori
IIE AI4IIOVE9 THE REPCIBLICAN PLATFORM
n By recurring to the principles contained
in the resolutions no un ,, nitnouqly adopted
by the Con‘entiou. I tindlhat they substati
tmlly with my publ;c nets mid opin
ions heretofore Made kIIOWII and expressed.
are therefore most cordially endorsed and
approved, end the nomination, having been
eowerred without any solicitation 011 my
part, is with the greaten' pleasure accepted."
U It. JOHNSON PROCLAIMS EMANCIPATION ♦ND
EQUAL RIGHTS IN TENNESSEE
Jr the 24th of October, 18134, .(r. Johnson,
the Miiitary Governor of Tennessee,
ad
dset.sed .an immense audience of eolortd
people at Na. heille, He said: tr.:\
•' Colored Alen of Nashrilte.—You have all
heard of the Pre ident's Proclamation, by
whieh he itunoun:ed to the world that the
slaves in it large portion of ihe Seceded
.ititten were henceforth and forever free—
For certain reasons, which seemed wise to
the i'resident, the benefits of th ,t Fort .111:t
lion did not extend to you or to pun* native
State. of you, consequently, were left
in bondage. Th , tasktibuideris scourge was
not yet broken, and the fetters still galled
your limbs. Gradually this iciggity has heel.
passing away ; but the hour has , corne when
the last vestige orit mitt be remo ed. Can
seciitently, too, in it.hout rcfcrence to vi the
President or any other person, have
CO 11104 Q: and, ,t:itnliog 114-re upon
'he cuts of the Ca pool wai t lb, past b Slnry
dfe
~'a te to witness, the pres , nl , uudition
to and its fulure fn rneuroulyt I
Andrew .Johnson, do Aerphy peocluim free-
Iv•oad, and uncondli,nal, lu (Ter,/
url,l i,r Tenuessec.'"
Mr kinviiln evidently appriiveil Hi',
Por h.. reprovea Mr.h.linson's
I=l
-•rmtktnv mill to i1w,•.1:-....,11tnvn,
"1 11111 no agrarittn: I wish to see secured
to t•very tu a, rot!) or uoor, the fruit: hi
lotus! ry. (4... i. or I.
.11 0 to ts,,l that tvliiit lie Ills by hi
skill or ut.eut, or In right
t , ,,y iii I ht, :114,111- Itut I. igh
i fo .
21, 11111111.11,1 „f• a is
ant the simnel. ‘1 1. ra 11011 it the Iwltvr 1••,
all rmuccnlcd. It is wrong that Mack Cock
til
ME
IMMIII
Rod unpaid I.thor, phunl.l h,v n 1 loop I
so lit:g.• :tod
i ' voot , to ~.y th. 1 .r:1111111 , 11 , 1: id:M-
I.IJ 1"11, SVPrE. 11111 , 11'd
noiong, , t tonoli,o•
11,11,1 ;.trui,r,,, it ivoold gi , t• luau) gill) I
I HO l', 11,c Ell ,
%%.tg , int•cli enrich lie
fo,: . rill, coil:yen ;I( the ies of [ride.
;,.. (;
hitt t ar th.•
guilt Stan::
•• itt thi, cr:i•ivil I,f riit t ir v i:
1111 , 1r , 11 , C1.11g ‘‘ hilt it
10•1,1 , 0. li. II 111111 rahluyuV tin
pa , s, I :1111 :111114,i 111.1.1 , 1 , 110 , VIS .
ill :IS in lilt' ditto of night
wt:,, than y to itit•
I mil iit•
Ftli
re allr Nllyiroll Fr.:\ ela
i•-, ((IA Ilia eXt•I(1111.1t11,11 (4.1 , 1•;,11 . 4111 11 1
1111 , 1 l'1il ( t•rt•It 1111111 the lLpHui r .11 , g (IV; 1 11.
20111111 , 10 d •' uu ‘l , / , 1 1,
11.i= 11 (11(11,11 S1,1111 . ‘ , 11(•re 111 1111 , t111111( . 111
1110 groat Iturk \Hitch he (10-I, ( zas (a la0:1 111111
111 lu ll,tll 1111.111 s (111 r.11..!1•11111 , 1111•. (UPI (
1.,1111 . .‘ , 111r .1111.1 — ,\ 111 ( . 0111e 1 ,, ywir
‘vtli hr r1.•1 • 1 . 111((ri In yon.:
W.llll Id() ‘ II(/ (l',lllll. {01:
e.I the cro‘rd
Well, then, - repinnl the , pe,tker. "limn
ter , 11.111 ill` I.MIII/, I Will
ant lead you through the Red See of
11er I/I 11,,C,-
DEM
HIV ,V , r1 . 111 . h 1 e,.1111( ry. II ,N 11111,0 e 1.11 , 1
4 rights his ll'itmitt. I Spi!Ak,h,o itl/0•11
of I ,;11
'lll , l 1.1 •lll.llli4ht ,fre.ll
.•
to of trot justo oto trioloph.to,
t r , Ilt 111 . 111. lit) linger our
oi own, witetlit r white or black, shall
utr,l 11,1.
~triF in ,chi L %%.,• .11 , all
I bust, I know,
tot I on ; :s, mill all sit ,I 1 rejoice
re.ips tho helot iit its owl]
owl lint every man illt a 1 . /111' 1 . 11,111• f• •in flit
race or life."
==l
1)t, the 3 , 1 of 18w, Mr. .1,,1)ti,0n,
C:11•11 Vice \S'.l4 led out to
tpturo Lt ii
..\ls' :tn. nuts, my Crim.d.. nln , iiisi up I
great that berm tniiii•
1 / 1 4 t.I 111 1 . 11 kJ 1;0%1 1 111 11,111
tti i t4 ttlltt - 1 .1 17it1 "1 , 1 Illttlll
free principles. ;toil eimientesl by
Isesst blood of the Revolution.
• lust its fis s or tf ietkic,cy
ul my opinion, evil-iltsers Ise plinrsiti
cd. Trvissmil li, the highest dime linown iu
the s sitsilogne ul L'fl Me-. 111111 11l II 1111 Shutt I,
f it—for him that is, tvillinig to I ft
111111•1 ssi.s.tisiss the nutliorit) of
ilie tuition I Assittlil <ay death is too I.A:y
pun,sliment. 11l mdion is Ono treason 111 11 , ',
is, 11111111.1 traitor., must be punissilis
ri ;I 1/ .1 Si,, nil power
brolo u. though toe . % 111 be ninths to feel
ot their crime. Ism s ms Iris' (I-.
bust• hailers in your very midst, unit trea
son es, ds rebuke S i,
tlt .t, 1•Ik.-11 1 !WIT. It I, not the men Its Ilse
who :ire the gre its . A traitors. It isss: t h e
111 , 11 Wlllt 11,111 i•ocistinigeil them to imperil
tomnl,%es, Is the they themselves have re-
t. hume , expend] ng their 117C11118 and
] exerting all their potter to overt row the
-Got ernment. Hence I soy this: 'The holtei
to intelligent influential traitors.' But to
the honest buy; tO the (deluded Mal), who,
hove been tideeived into the Rebel ranks, 1
would extend leniency; I wool. say, .Ite
turn to your allegiance, renew your suyport
to thd Government, and become a good cit
izen ; but ..lie leaders I weuld 110 . 0 g. 1 hold,
too, Unit wealthy iaitorsshould be mode to
,reintinerate thosii'men who have as ii ,llllSC
quence of their e - ime—Union men who hove
lost their property, who hove been driven
fr ,in their homes, beggars and wonderers
anions straniers. It is well to talk about
these thing~ here to-day, in addressing the
well-informed persons who compose this
audience. You can. to a very great extent,
aid in moulding public opinioll, owl in giv
ing it n proper direction. Let us continence
the work. We have put down these traitors
iu arms i let us put them down in low, iW I
public judgment, and in t.O morals of the'
world."
On the 18th o. April, three days after he
- had beeome Presidht by the death df Mr.
Lincoln, he said to an Illinois delegation
Here, gentlemen, you perhaps expect the
to present some indination of city o 'e poli
cy. Ono thing I will say. livery era teaches
its lesson. The times we live in are not
without, instruction. The American people
must Ife taught—if they do not already fuel
treason is it crime, and must be ilun-
Wiled; thnt the cinverinnent will not always
boar with its enemies; that it is strong, not
only to protect, but to punish. Let it be .
engraven on every heart that treason is a
crime, and traitors shall suffer its penalty.
"When the question of exercising mercy
comes befori , me it will be considered calmly
. iincijudicially-rementbering that I am the Ex
-'eCutive of the nation. I know men !eve' to
. have their names spoken of ,in connection
with acts of mercy ; and hoW easy it is.to
yield to this impulse. But we must not. for
get"that what May oe mercy to Ali e individ
ual is cruelty to the titate.,, ,In the' exercises'
Of mercy there ,
left that'
this high pro notice is, mit 'Oed te relieve
the few at, thelexpenseof the Many. Be ak-,
sure& that I shalt never:forget that I am not
to consult my o(vrr feeliiigs alone, but to gl4.
an ancbunt to the Whole people. :,:41rmesty
to the many; justice to the loaders."
To a delegativp of loyalr,Sonthenfjui?n,
later .. day, ' ;
•t But while in moray we retneinber jntitice,
in thelangnagn that ,bas been uttered, Leay.,
justhetwurd4 . ho .!?11(19ra, the conscious lend.
ere; but I also say atnnesty i conciliation,
clemency and mercy to -the thousands of
our countrymen whom you and I know have
been deceived or •driven into this infernal'
rebellion. And so ..I returned to where
started from, and , again 'repeated thtit it Is
time our people were taught to know that
treason is a crime, not a mere political - dill
erence,•not a mere contest between two Jaw s
ties, in which one succeeditdrdind ' the: other
has simply failed. They enlist knoW it is
treason; for if they had succeeded, the life
of the nation wduld have been refs from
it—the Union would have been destroyed.
Surely the Constitutimi sufficiently d tine:
treason. It consist, in levying way
the United States, and in giving ene
mies aid and comfort. With this del nation
it requires the exercise of no Oren t{ acumen
to acertain who are traitor,. ft ` requires
no/great pet ception to tell' who have levied
war against the United States ; nor does it
requir.- any great. stretch of reasoning toils
line given aid to the enemies of
the United States; and when the Govern
ment of Ow United States does aseertain
who are the conscious and intelli g ent
the penalty ant the forfeit should 1.10
paid."
" NVI! have seen that the Government is
composed of parts, tatch essential to the
whole, and thMossential to each part. Now,
if tin indtvidunl ( part of n State) declare
war against the whole, violation of time
Constitution, he, as t citizen, roil. led the
Paw, and is responsible for the act as an in
dividual. There may lt,,nioro than uneithE
vidtml : it 111:t'- go I'll until they become
parts of States. Sometimes the rebellion
limy go on increasing in nuniher till the
machinery is, lit erturn,(l, and the
country become, liken than that is p:iralyv.cd
tail ,111• 13tit we 1111li in the Constithtiot,
a great panacea provide," It pre.viile- that
(111/it the great integei
shit 1 guaranty to e ac h :tate (the illtt.gt•l',
composing the whole) this t:tmion are
i mulhican form of tint 1.1111111.11 t. Y 1•..,
1,1,1'1111M 1111: heel' ramptmt; and set aside
the machinery a State for a time, timer ,
-taihis permit Inw ti, I.OlllOVl` 1.11 t• 11111'111p-1,
31111 rovitaltze it ;Awl put it on its feet again.
* 41- '• Upon this idea or (lostr”.ying
my position has been 114.1.1.1,,r.ry well
lotoivn. and I 11410)111,0 U 1 (.11:111g1. it nets,
and I ion glad le lieltr its reiherailt/I1 am the
p r ese nt occasion Som., mire -mitt-tied with
the Mon that States are to It, lost imterritori
- 1111 , 1 her di i•th,,, tbou r
iet Smtes. limit their ftn :11.1L111
'milt hl-11 -11-I.' 111.41. 311 1 it is a In c.oi -
'ttu Mimi obligation tte 11111'i• 11/ , 111,
•-1 , 11 pit tll St:111.- :11 the 111—‘,-I.ill 111111
Ili•%\ • 111 , •11t loan orn
.00nt. .\ Snit, ni.L I, t (;ov,rnmont
111, ;tl' /tll.l Lt 1:11k . lp , 10.-
1 , 11 I 1,111.111(11i h„-i• 1 , 1 111 Lk.,
I \\ Ilk II II I\ 'lit. 1111 k, r.•hodion .01 , 1
k . 1111“.., .11( Wltlltkllt inqiintion, II I=-Ull
Slalkk. I
11111 1 1 IL II kilkll:2;iiiillh 111
Inc ~ IL. Stun. , tt In•rt. Itolu
armit's ve holm houton burls ~r ox poll. d,
~Lro ino
./, 1 1%• • •1. 1 • •I•tli/ ',rot, 4 . 1 am, 1•• •• ••• •
• them 1,4,u
I'll:- 1, 1111 t l'‘V it I, L'X1P1 . 1 ,, 1 . 6 ut
onformity wOll my undor , t
!Ivory (;,.vt•T Thon
adjn-ting unit i,uttu,q the (illl.l'lllll , lkt
ll..kiL Itgailli. I 0111:1, III.• IJ rile
\vork 11111-1 IkN , Ink„ i t ,
I, to Lc nl r,od until It
ttio,t
,tler•O•e'l p it., rue
awl lilt' , 1110.4•11l , .i . tilt' it(wirtli•hl:lll 11,1lri
has :111 0111,,r1Liiiity 'air
,11111.; 11, 1 ,11 . 1,111 al 1111
1),11 . 11,j, 11/0 1,11 , ,1, • 1/ , ,11 WI E
1ia 1 ,1 . 11 11111 . elitIVII•r"11 hit the l • 0 11 , !illiVil..V
,o 1 more v. - 1, 1y to 111,11111
111 1 11' 1 1 1 • C1111 . 11' 1 .1 111 . 1 1 ,111,11/V0 11, tOr
, Illt • 111,e Wllll,, 141111 • 1 . 1111,11 ‘Va' Of a it—,
chameleon hoe; hut we quit,: iitler , tail
vtn tilt. Ina kniv,— ;Intl are
13i1ctile brito..c
',II -park wubout a thot t.o I'M_ ::nil
u, the IIII•••114 , Mr. ralop144•11 1.'4,444... or
goon ~ l imit I.vt'ytl Ve, Mr. Itoeltitel.
e.innot h• tioventage. .\ t ihe Cutlers'
Ftei-t on Thursday, the holiruirathio
~a- I how 1 , •-o1- „ i:on ,•i,l
Iho-,
Aaid wen iii , short ; but -t II th ,
publte has , hat i.. ii re
111. k , ,11‘../. 1,:11. , !I he, not f „ r, ,, it - i,--
thr
110 ha I Milli , id i,,,,,-
',lnn by .one occa-non , kind.
ii i'- not a plea,allt teak to cLit y.tur
word , . and yet. if he spe a 4,_ a t e ll. u nut
what the metuber for Shetliebi lie- to
110. y.:ir Ilt•
11.i.0, , ed tau 1 • :1111.01 . 01' of frciit It Ili l e ,_
guag more worthy of lidling-geh , the.. of
11,.•1111,1:1•41 . and he dwelt
upon tile slain wit had bernilon hon
our of England ex.
( . 1 , 1111 ,, y /It with ti.l•
EIIIIIVrtIr ail the French. Yet to-day he lied
em0gi4.444 the very alliance lie bad ttn..o
night it. rOlidt•l' ; to 11(•1•11. , W 1-
lila It 1- a gintrairi4•44 for the peace 4,1'
the world ; and b collie', that the Soy reign
whom he had \little,' -everei,ed his p'wet
for the b,• ll ,•tit of mankind.” It i- ,t
shorter tune since Nir llooltci, tle,bered
inn( the 1,1 . 1 pie Lit England had no for
relorin, told :mewed at the females who still
r •tuttined taithful to the principles of 1,11,r.
alism. Yet to day he is obliged to t x press
prole ;It dm triumph Lit Literati
it~the bnt ckctiun, null to auk lioWiedgo With
almost cizaggertitcit enthusiasm that the Eng.
bsti nation bi still "wedded to impittv,immt.
desirous of improving and going onse
The perk 11, again, is counted by niomn_
since Roelinek delivered vellent-nt phtl
ippies gatie-t. 1.11 , ,• IL -c tra ty uUscrl led
by our lioVerl,tilent during Un , Aluero . :111
%Val', and Sough u , embroll 11 , , in a eont,44
with the United States on boinlif of the Con
rederney w h tot. ItALVI ing to its flail at Ike
11101M•111 When lit, ,1)4,k1'. ll4oth
llig lett for him, therefore, but to lank, no
mention :7: , ,,,ithern client's, tied
console him-eli with all ill tonlp•rcd and
silly sneer at the American community ea
riot outlying pOpllllttl. , ll. - ItV ith charm:
teristic insolence. Air. Roebuck informed his
audience that, "lin did not care about the
11 . 1, do not the truth Lit Bus
asgertion - . We never -opposed for otic,sing
lit, tuuuicnl that. the 'Teat 4ser cared nr any
thing or anybody Lin the face of th.. earth
except .I.tiot Arthur lihebtick.
tit course, a gentleman who wishes to ills
tin,uish himself in the' barking, watchdog
1111 e of bueuiess must expect to lied that he
has sometimes barked at the writ g perSoll.
But even Tear'ein cannot Iffie the perpetu
al invitation to stand upon !Its hind legs be
tore the visitors at whose heels lie hits just
been snapping ; and therefore it is it curious
problem why Mr. Roebuck should so con
trive to plaice himself in situations from
which ho cahoot escape without discredit to
his reputation for good sense, if not for goou
feeling. Our explanation is, that the mein
ber for Sheffield is chronically in, a false po
sition. Nature intended Min for a bigoted
Tory, and circumstances have made him as
sume the character of IL Liberal. ' Conse
quently, ho professes a creed which -he_ does
not understand; and plays a tart 'whose es
-sun alai-requireineets - uro - ttrhim - imin terigiz -
Having no wide sympathies Or popu
lar aspirations of any Icind, he cannot place
himself in harmony with tau cause lie repre
sents. ,He talks Liberalism as a foreigner
speaks English, knowing the woods, but nut
appreciating the genius of the language.—
lt a commone,sneer of Conservatives that
old Radicals become:tin:sta. nehest of 'l'ories
and the taunt is Era enough with respect to
men who, in the hot time of youth, .when
the worl d - lies before them and their-position;
has to be Made; tailor up. the„areed of prog
ress., They are Reformers- partly because
Liberalism is the winning creed ; still more
because, though the world linty be the- best
uossible of worlds, it is not 'ordered- •,fur the
best so fair as they themselves Lire Concerned.
goi . ts on and their own position
comes secured, they begin to loolc . at things
from a very . ditffirent point of view. ,•:Their
Liberalism being entirely of a persontilithitr
aeter, it dies Away 'when it has ceased, to 4IW
identical with the prospects of their own nd
varietal-lent. • Ailtd,the member tor, tiludlield-.
been a nobleman • pr baronet,'he would
doubtless alive followed the exaniple of-Lord
Derby and Sir Edward .Lytton_ and become
a staunch supporter of that Conservatism he I
scorned in. his youth, , But:itetier 'having at
tained an Andependent,poaition, 1)06 obliged
to go on Unwitting a Shibboleth:
him has lest all . meaning.. Mean is ti,deep,
truth in Itubehia!B ateepuut Of the charm pds- -
MEM
MEM
=I
His I DE. As OF REORGANIZATION
TO an Indiana delegation ho said
th o
1:=11
r. 1tt , ..1111c1. i , a 1,-ych,111.,.2,it•al
=EI
aessad by Panurge, which„eouts.l.viive a Mull
from all mortal tont or inala - 4, and had but
one-defect—Hutt
owner did ri o t
in it. The Pantirge oi polities ha:, no faith
in the talistnan'oi Liberalism, and theteter:e.
s to him it is tieleles, and uproll ;able. .1n till intin , dia . tely before us, his very latest
deli verape . e, Mr. Roebuck declared with a
native earldom. that Ine heard so much a lit
tle time ago about a Conservative reaction in
the popular 'ninth, that "be almost believed
in it ;" ittli4 the e4,llfei,i4+ll light
his vagaries. flaying hitmelf no confidence
in his own principles, he cannot unders4and
that to others they lire a lying truth and
power. A protossed pilot on the ocean of
politics,. he is in fact a inaviner without
chart or compass, trying to goes.: which way
' the wind is like y to 1.11,,w, and glassing in
vain.
LETTER FROM ENGLAND
SIIEF Ft ELI), (Eng.) Sept. 14, 1805. I
Dn..in. EnAl.l.) : hen a foreigner tidies
ulr ht, residence in England, In seeins to im
bibe, liking with the log, sniolco and bitter
beer, a ,tiong appeti e for Held sports-; sin It
is Illy case, and as a initural consequence, I
linve been to Inineaster to see the, great Pt.
Loges run.
l'ilder a scorching sun, the all-absorbing
I,eger 1./tty of 18,5 dawned with Inure th,in
lt,tlati I thousands ut the r ,
eing multitude , together front nil parts or the
I`ntted Kingthinl, dispelling frlllll the mind
all ree,,llection thti soaking w t nes,,exl upon
the lawn o taw du tag the rave ,I 1 last year.
At an early hour, 11comipanied hy five
other lovers of out-door sports, I enseonsed
titv,elf in it little ninniltus, wade tit bunt
11(1 having windows which (lola o l lrn , '
rather a. good sort of tiling in winter,
beitreely agreeable when lie thernionielei
.toad. at 90' in the ,hinle. The road wan ,
lined tvit It itettple, whit ,ttented to have 110i111-
ttt go ill the race, nor 11l go to
work. nor yet to leave it oboe. The,t• pro
pie want iiP Fee tilt mornings turn nut—thy.
well-inatolind pair., the
trotter,,, and well
nial,•• tip the (lit-ty train on Ili, road. When
they get tired watching the moving "...how, i t
nlit•lip one, in, Lilo:,r the vehicle,. pity the
piper, they can shut their month-, which, la
it rntinantiered, aro Isept open in: 0 ,ort
,tippieniental pereetitit e (acuity in and of
th,• r y e. , an l 01 their oiv. -west will, retire.
The cues to of thinett , lltti• pre , entetl Itutt
nititeuranett wilt h i< new (11t,•1t etl ut nety-
Iml r• "ttnintutetl. - The pavement- it ''l
J unwed millitettitle er all .ire:, pattern-,
:111 I. I 1111:2,:lt
111111 . % ttt \V.11 , 1- tilt• OM.
thlt ii r wort. IP(.1•11p11,1 nt ,I!‘,•1.-
w rli n'l
tun , : •• I liiiulilr rnJ;. - thr , •• u,l 1:1•011. ,
••nt, tttt 1111 kit 111, ,
Iv,„[
t ht.
hit 11ttl'It Vt . 1 , 1/111t t•lttttl4l) to 111 \ ttotift
funds.
(11i "Ill' my :ill.
.\\ i .11 , 11111 . \ ( • 11 ;AI,
,)/ I;r:ina (111 tow
to %%,1,(2(1 "1/(113
0!I ‘.1111 . 1 . • .i11•1 . ,1. •.
t
1111 . riu (11,(0V121'111:4 11, 11/ 1111111c;.( 1 111 t 111 el•
1 Ntl 1,11 t , 1(11%1.1,
111, "1.111, 11 1 sc:401;11 .fl t• 1 ,11,11
\llll/ 111:e1111111:i1111 d 1111 1 .
Olt` 111 , 1 1 -1 1 - 1 , 1 . 11 ;111• 111 /11111
ill, 11111111, 1111(1
t0., , k40n 11,,/, 1 , 1,1 II; 111i . 1111,11, I , 1110
11111(11' hy 1. 1 ' 1, 1P111 11 11 11 , 1,.t.
I I • fl !
LI Cd II \ I V
1t..11y -1;01 . ,11111.1,• to% cl lln o'l I• 1 II
11411 d,, :1111 ..I1
1111..11, it 1,1 ~ 11:iII4pri L aii 11 -I:'l,,
vt Lh' 'mi...., 'I:, I ht•y
I t'! I
1,11 11 I h•r I) n gaup
/IL
lie 1, , 1' 111 , 1111 . , Ilhd 11e I ' llll 1.11 , -
gll, - . •twiglibor, owl
\Ow tlw -11101, 11,, lit,
t '' i ` ""t",,,' "I Lin "1.1"""'"
:• ILw awl di
\,lr. ,t 1 1 4•1 :M11111111.114, “I 11 lh r,lull 1111,1 1111
~ ,1 111111111. 1 11,1'y C1111r11(2tVI', are 114•111,1 hull
NA 1/1' he 11, 1110 uulurtilnatr wi:4111, wlw
dr.•••
111111 !wok• a twil: Wr
\, buts gr' at and Nut ' win g in
titl awl
tit (I 'li II ('II tfw svtits of the. bu-s,
nd \VIIII 11111 . 14 et 1; , I: tip uu Lll4' %Ninth, -
1 , 41111,14 ~ Irt•:,:w Iwtir
-1;1 wow. d awl 4 11l 1 , 114 11, .111
1111 ,1 11 ., Wllll 11 . 1 , 1',111, 14, '• 1,11, lutd
all - j , •l , y. 1(11(1 r .‘s 11-
:' , 44) 41111,11 HI , 1.4 r 4)1
tt lw•lt ptur cum . :1..11,h nI lart•d rwlwr Li,•Ltvr
),•1 w hull at Clllllll
4,1 'O,ll 1 , 111 , 11,11 , d ;it tlw (Hu,.
Ehu,'lzilid is, lull it A morwaw jit-t w , un.
t. (% ,•r\ tt rrl. ;
!Awl:, law Naval I)111, -. at l ' w,twt.
Iwwt hero, and \v , • ;tro xpecting Niro
I Inrr,ligtwi, the lute 41 ..r
11,• 1 , ;•:1 , 1 - nr - (:rout Northorti
1.,1
plon call it, cliow
{•I . L. r. ~ .I,tick figuring 11,
Wail II: , 1,j,..11 ~ulic 111•
can:. “outkiying poi
clittl, '• tid:ing
r•i•,•iit havoc 1114• c:111.1.. ill Clic .' 4 ‘ , I1111;
It lEt• i•Xp4 elution of till ch o ler a ~re th e
11(111.
bt•gitto:mt - to di , turb
1111 . 1:ceta•r, ,, t . the In I relatid.
rttllowitig i, cut from a daily itaia•r:.
lw Fellow tall talk 01 the cocain ar
mada, whivli IS to (1651.1 . 0 y tL,, Saxon, HMI
restore Iruland to the irtt-lt, was the. (111.1,01
h‘.1.1 at C' rk
yv-cvrday. tuirler or
t.kiic,•onot of rho (tottitty-I,,rd
rl'ia•re w,•ta. Irt totwistratt. pretcot, and the
Enrls Ilnotlon Ittla Shannon wort. 111114 , 11g'
the spottl:ers. It WU.; tl/
(i0V1•111111MIL ft,l' an 1111•1'0/1,i , Id . military
1111t1 p. 11,.. .1 it incrt.a,o 1,1)11 C ,
1 . 1'1•11m1`41 CMlllt f“ri•i•
i. atiginento,l."
Tio.. followin g ;..,! the oi nuu of the
leading l'ory Ile \V•1111111.1' .11 thy pil'1111!
The conitnander thi, kVad
doll, has evidently had no lured-e inf"rnin
tin tit the ev,las which fulluty vl the stir.
rondor of G,m. L oe
701111, Lill•11•1411 . 4 , , 1 / 4 1,14 , ccrl
refusei. upnn iinir•ri..et data, n
strike Iris flag, thrw.v hi, guns ”vorin,ard,
turd "eniivprt" . his vessel, by nwans of s 144. V,
cunt 411' pant and tt rn-arrnngoment of dvd.k
ttcounuu dution. tukin g 'this very
peaceful ~ .airt, o , he sw,”,ps 414 , 11'11 11111 1 11 every
thing that earrics tint stars and stripos and
ev..n such small door as the Arctic 11,0 t ul
whalers attract his awkward attentions.—
..Worn big Ile ra
ly OHO who remembers that this is the
newslaya which boasted of havin4 the in
famous "Manhattan" as its New York 'cor
respondent, will not be surprised at the style
of the above. Yours, R. M. S.
. Alin fillil , '';',.. , 011111 - t) ,It'7)1q1;1E)
AN A PPR KNT101; WANTED.- A good
buy is wanted at this office to learn the art
and mystery of Printing. A lad of 16 or 17
years of age would be preferred.
Also, n steady, faithful and obligipg hand
to carry' the papers.
tiEw GooDs.—lessrß. Greenfield
Sheaf:yr, et tin:it-extensive Dry Goods Store,
East of the Market Hooke, have just received
an extensive assortment' of new and 5619011-
abk goods, suitable for Fall and' Winter
weamtto which the attention of the public is
directed. ;Their stock having been purchased
for cash Tat the time' of the reduction, they
will be enabled to, dispose of their goods •un
commonly low. Read their advertisement.
THE FAIR.—The Eighth
hibition of our Agricultural Society corn-.
menced on Wednesday morning, and will
close on Friday afternoon. The attendance
is unusually good, and the display of artieleS
very fine. 40' • we have neither time nor
space
,to give, this weelc such a'notiec as wo
could. wish, we will defer giving. particulars •
nr4R next, we6k , 'when rye : will, notice,. it in
ex, ensio.
SUDDEN . DnArti.On Friday after:-
nooirlast,,it man aana3d DAvt.R . JANtis, well.
known to allpur eitiaona,.waa fetunti dead In
,ati'out-hoo-in Abe rear of 'Martin't4 Hotel.
I,IIE LIKE he i URI s l .—.ThoSe Wishing
to tilAnin-the beet Atubrotypvs, Curd de
Visites;:Photogritidt4, Aln.uld call
without (lvtuy et I,r:slit...Ws l'lnirminArli lc
GALLEtty, in , Zug':- lulu. the Mar
i:Pt The SlLLiSracll 11 will be
ECM
I)i , ,nicAytos Up THE ASHLAND ; 1..N1
la-d, the Bth thiq
buntitiful, (7emetery wa, . dedicated, with ep-
propriate religious rrrrrnoinic:, as ii phasi
sepulture run• the .1,,1. Thu Roc. cler g y „f
tn•ro in ationilaiiiT, and it
leading part in coraltaaing.
The day was beautiful, and jut irn in . 4 1 ,4! con
course of citizens, young and old, were ul on
the ground!, to wit nes: And participate in the
c..roilif l%verb t hint; d
oir ill it twin lier, and t h e
people in attendance evinced much intereg
in the ex s ereises. Their serious and r,sp , cttul
o..lciesciiN'r;) and the, earnest attention ilivy
twillif ,, sied,,howed that they looked upon the
occasion I. no eointnon on,
The services were opened 1)y \l r. Ewis(),
who read the intention and ple*re 4 the or -
igititer. , (d . thi• Institution * to th•lil
th, which
were ;Omni, to he dedicated, when IteN. Alt%
felleNve . with a 1 ., ,v appr,,•
Tht• foll,rwing wee., 1/I,n iii. ()t-,1,•r
1. Opcniiip Tym,d.
P ,,, gri' , ibir , eo; , ,),.••- S. rill Li
1. —Roc U. C. I'. \V I Nu.
5. . r. 11. M.
0. P 1 . ,. ye . S. SPII 1.:4•11 ER.
7. ti, L. M ;‘,
b. bra , ' ,i 1) to.—Bl rui, (.114)11t,
D i . „ 1„ 1 „,1„ n
Iry Whl/h;i~llP' j.k11 ,, 1N• .rf
it. a, a rtitt , t
111,t1lIctiVe. 111 Eh ui
"r it.
111.• L nni It. nu nti Wing iti ti•l tit- iit
,d ins h,Lvdy pimo,or. CN!IP. h. r.
\‘;), 11.1112,111 1 , 11 :t
V iuL ril
i hi. H.. .‘1;111. llr,nl, i'111•11 i III:11111 1.
111 Wii . o•ll yin I , IIM AI ;2:1 , 1111 , 1 , 11. n I
I .i ii•. I'll I %, hi, II
en. o
itig it flint .•v,•r‘ 1,1-11
1 , 11 n V. 71 I .1 A,111,:11.1
C , lll , 1 , 1%; ,11`.1.i)
pr•Tri.ti ';•-•1111 , 2, r;•k‘••
t \\ NI. AL 1. N:ltt (;o•U .1 \
\lr. EW I
I . lll , 'lsiirl-0. tINV.•
ti.
i I il
c•itiz II; will ...11 , 0 th. ir
ser \ -1ui•~li;c
NV( , 1,111 - 11 flint (; , •11 \kW in :1 , 11 71
Unu• i•.tII
f 1,1011,11 1, ,r 1 11 , Q • k , 112:11.in 11r11 r til•lt
alllll.l 4,bii/i11.111.1
and England is Lva.
f.uirl~ L.;.
,•vr•ry lutrt .1 emin
tr.\ , rit• till, rl \Col: ju-t
4,r tio• lit,
e.purilry
The it! oh
t•v• , 'llrnt :trtil 1 ,, this
ti - 11 1
ln• IL t“ 1111.1, • T•t,
Li it. It
hiittiir, i hey
tii ii ;1 p.llllll. \1'1,1 , 11
54,111, 11.‘k itn l't ha, k h:i.l
1.1.rr•1'211..' 11; nn 1 1 1,111 ,
lII.' 11ov:11'11'1V
V.11111 , 1 , T 111 (h.` 111 it 1it...111:M.0 of 111,
tvhich (ltir
ti
try 11.•\ , •1' 1.11 ,, W11
I.) be Ict'd i.lllOlll Ali 1 , 111 , ;t14. 01111
tho .=priii2; -11M111..V. \\
11/X1.16:1111. ~ t) that thin• rnn he to, .•\ ~
that k..,re. Tho l'arini•r•dtiriw:tho war havo
!.2,',.W11 rich ;old reveled in Inxiir‘ and abitn
\\ hil-t the other cla,ra )1:,vo been ini
ori,liod and pinched by want, and grat -
it) their -,rdid they
‘k ould til,•11 the 11,t potin%- front the Itene-t
""l.
".„
r
"iguinn the ~r
I,ot the people take , tlri !natter in hand
:Ind fr.,ln 111,,lr•rnShy
-1.,e1:-,• until they know k‘ lion to aid: to roa
,:onable priee f"i• their itn(i \v,•111.1.
that,tylio remedy cannot
fail to prove ctiectual.-
)1()RE ExTim \ paper
h a , t a l i , h a frightful Iva', tipwar , l in price.
I the prig " L,f all inantlin , ture,liati,•ios
nn 1" 1, ;2,-oing. iii. 1,y"tol till roam. It
clinT . w.4l. in um ny that nd
vnn,..• iII pricp, are the re- , 1111.1 . coral'ina
s", ~ 1 1"i11(1 ttit • the sub
jf•ct onric itth•iition tiller it- nliqaim2. and
whercvor -uch a cla,s nre found su,rum Lining
,tioli• it purp.=o. hochltii SI111111(1 111. SO
(of] I 11 0 11' 11/11' , 'St rot.-
(Jut(' !..htrulnrrl.
=I
THE .I.‘t ENDED Scurow 11,16\t,—T l ie
8(.1,0,0 Law, as amended last, winter. does
'not permit children, tinder t.ix years old, to
attend the 'Piddle tichtads. This wise action
of 1,1 - .. e law -makers ,will receive the hearty
commendation of tractors, and at the sante
time prevent the infant minds front being
over taxed at a time when they should be
free from restraint. •
TO ,MA E CIDER VI N FOAII,—A IRMA
•
faimily in the country have the mate
rink for manufacturing pure Cider Vinegar:
if they will only use them. Common dried
apples is all you need to mak() the best cider
vinegar. Soak your apples a few hours. 7
washing and rubbing them occasionally, then
take them out of the water, and' thoroughly
strain the latter through a tight-woven cloth
—put it into mjug, and half a pint of tuulals;; -
_sos_to_a_gullon_ of_liquoc,-and-a-pieco-of-com
mon brown paper, and sot .n the sun orbs
the lire, and in a few days your vinegar will
bn lit fir use. Have two jugs and usq out of
ono while the other is working. No)family
need be destitute of good vinegar who will
follow the above directions.
POTATO Eti.—We learn thatthis favor
ite species of the' " vegetable kingdom" is
unusually abtindant this season, the crop
having been heavier and better than for many
years past, and the potatoes of a much huger
growth t h was al moSt ever known. Many
of them - weigh froni one to one 'nod a half
and two pounds. The abundance of this
whole 4 me and necessary vegetable ;Will be.
good nuws to eonsuniers„and we trust the
price ; will be, in some proportion, at least, to
the simply.
E0f.11.0 . :- . --Tbere" will be an
eolipse of the slut on the 19th instant.
path.of ,the central eclipse begins at Wnelp.:
ihgton Territory, , on: Puget's ' SoCrid, and
pasSes southerly through - Montnnii t Idaho,
Southern Missouri, Wthrforn Tennessee, and
diagonally through Georgia to Savannith,'
and then' across the Atlantic into Africa.", ‘
i 11.• I) .1.1. ;.11... 1,1;1
11.1H . N' 1 . ,111111.• , IN Ii
(l i\l.fl
rh , thing ni r. rwr.
an , l ;h I,,‘‘
Olr.=l':ft.yb tYrel.4 rc
lined Cool 0:1, the . 1111 car load brought
Cu tulicrliwil Valley Rad Itaid, re
ceived m. & Sox, inch
otilired I v them o lilt a houseliill or Grocer
-12111”.11,WIlrit, Cedar . and Willow
\Vero, and
will please call nod i.xiiinina their stock of
good
4N1:1,1„ the Tiavell r‘v Agent foir
Wih•ox Gibb;'s 11Inehine," is
stopping in town a rew day,. Pt rsons do
siring Sewing Ma.•liitit; will do werl to call
and examine thew, at Mrs. M. NEFF'S Mil-
Alain street.
P T Fit F. Et 1 Esq., offer:: for sale
ro.iden,,..; in thr• Borough of
. first-rat, Ilnlul Property
at 'toiling t•Tring , . This last named prop
erty. in the hand, of a "thoroti_ , ltirtriness
11111. or of a compawt. of c.titillifisis, could
Ite wade onc of the tioNt charming sumrncr
rr , ort , in tin , State Surrouncltiti its it is by a
Itlicul lora pliintirtil country, pictitrtisquit
n ry ,trrzii of pure water,
t in.: Spring- lloter could i i made,
hit] , outliiy.tit,ti money. one of the trust
profit:lld.. in the country. For
wit tin ilk, • .•nq iii n I lin. //err/hi office. M.
o's Bw:T():, "
—By the
t0m.00.2,- o h,•,,,0 thm (Mt
Jill!, "I . Ih , 1111‘1•1,•. lul ‘I . IIiIIIIItVII a Ill•W
1(1,1 .• 1 . ..1k, :IVO 1 . 1111 ' Or 111/til,llS,.
111,1 1, Ih1• •• t.lllllll . - right d l / 1 !11•1111'
laidioi
gL1,C,...1 ilk that cli\
trill t -oLnlit 1 ,, 1111- !WV,' I , llaS , r , t 1111,1)14•
rri,itri,rir. or the New
c",,,„„ f•riet/
'l'll,l k. ll I find
ropiilly •\ :Ind \l, , rtlty of
1.1-•111g /11) 11111t1V:l If/11 lIIV.II 11/fig C• -
i. 1 / 1 1-.11 , .\ 1111 . 1'10M 11111/it. , . 1 111 ,. :111 the new
6 , o•pit2; Ih,ir ~ills in
;di nl pre
\ tlin ,•fitralltl• 1/0/i4.-.. 11111. lo•ity
ile4 Ili 1.111. r 1 ,, Iltt•clit Ire trip,
..1 1111;11 h\
111,•ir ttri,Qt-
II 1 ill- &pal 1 Ile I irlak _
- • 11 11,11. .1 , 1 , 11118.
1.•,1
lit t !it; ; r I I ••• 1,, ~11,•;• LC, ;;;;;;;I ;;;
II v 1,1 ;I; I/I I II;•
r I Isl. II 411
•ILII;;•.i ,11;• ,
It I , d .1;;•III• li, \VII.. •• ••;' , I11 . 1•11 Ilmi
1;• I II;• Il;•• l•-1-,;111 I' , •,'Il.1•• a it ;Z;
It 11, I • ..;;II• .0;s I Ih• 1111 I.1„• ,1 (1
II -1,11. t w, ;15 1111 ;II 111 , pl /11,
, • lli,l in I•i I-
IMMI
lIIEI
lIMI
•.I rt•iill 111.111 ', , 11
111.
I,.krt•
. I. 1 %%IP 11,1 1.11. •
't .1111 tt •\ ~I 1 11/
• iit • `1[!I 1.1 .
.4 111.. prm
i'.ll.4l.C.r.l. LIIAL
tt-
BEIM
=EI
MIMI
ME
tli., i • tir-t
,••,11•• • •••:‘,•.1," i- t...•
MEI
I -I. HI; 1:4 )
11;1- lit • i 1. ,5:112. .11 1 , 1,1111 e
“1 . . 1.;,..11 L Iv:
!.1. iI t I' ,11; r t •l
In 11 , .01 1 1 , 10 :111(1 , 01-
t I :It Until \V,111 , •-thIV 11i2:11t.
k\ ny
pr. nt .1. \V,\ !tN El: i‘;‘ ,
. ;Eh,: I,* :o'll. \ 1111,11 , 1 t• [0
t.q.tl hut -h.pri titn--tintt
"t• inn h
:illit.llg 1.1',11 , 11(1:1/111, ot‘ the
V,, ~f 33.
I. "I' I ,•"11.4i,,, - ,,tion in
vier_: n -upply
I , t• a \ t is it4.•eiN J a minnioo , ll.;
• , rv.• Ihont in a
•
I• noun nt ,•.11•:,••4(\
itll,l fin,po, o l.
11.,•\•..1 flux ('.
1;11 , - pr. :t.•11,,1 nl,ll - .111,•11 v.•, , (111)1.•
n I I'. 11. I , ,\\i:l
.•rt•,l tlit.l.:ll;tr•z.• to Ili , :try' Ilev.
I N. IIAY, t.) thi• rotopil`.; Rll , l
I It , I)r. II ‘1:1'1-:It I lii•
\\'. n•
IF.;h Ic n vivo :11.1i1" .lil int.% tln tI h IhnL to
tt..• tr..,it it- hay Itti. a Nvritit n "tit
wit-. th.• ttli.t....ititittte ul Ili°
t
Tio , no\ t rpf Pr,•-1) tore gill bt• hold
ut Newville.
T ()1):) \\'l , l,l'olll. — r rliti
N,•%\ . v Sliturdoy
In-l. Om , (),1,1 I.' , II \\,•-•
.it Nett burg .
i ' f th" ,Inc.
in NetylittiL; . The
ww" quirt' . 1 " 1"11)'''1",r "fli tir • "Per b"n
dr,i t h,. ,iv
1—,”1 I). \Vii.EitnY.
noninted 111,, , 11 lt splendid t•ii,trg - er.
(..111 , •1 arCill, were
erectell in dill, lent part., of till 10%5'11, 111111
the ‘olole pr'-ont,al n • ,ac rtn,l ros
live ' A 4D111.1 wn , erected in
the - , inare. and Idler
1,115..0.; thrnu,it the ,tha.a•t, the 1110111-
i/or:. or till , ()..d..r affil ta N'a,t en, \l'ti
:o , send.ted in the whet, the
„N,
4 , 1 ,,,, 11 . 1 1 with prayer by Rev:
I. SHOP:'SI.%K . tlftor WIIICh all ..6111,111
and pi,nppriatA• adds'.- ihdiv,.r,•,l
IVIi.LiANI KENNEDY. E - .l.,4tillippcti: tirLt,
iit emicatzi , .ll of which the itti . lelh2 l. tv.,s
with the bvihdietion. l ' htt (21111111-
liersbizru; the .1401 and Plait lyllallal•
11111-ii ed a,,tiehtthori in the.vitlley, enlivenetl
the , it . ett,loti with 4.lelo2:iitfut
IN )lENIOR —At 3 late meeting
tattle Union Philog.ophi.tal Society or Dick
in-on C,dlege, the 'following preamble and
re,rdution~ were unanialmisly adopted:
11"tta•auc.ts: It has ple.ised the Sanreme
Disposcr of events, in his, infinite wisdom,
to remove by the hand of Death, Isaac B.
PARKER, Scm, therClore be it.
Ka ,decd. That in his• death we have lost
one of our oldest and most iutluenhal Mein
b,r4. anal I,lll' who by his activity and talents
contrilmted to clevate our standao•d of use
:and excelluuee, aaid our tee..
ord such as we can refer to with pride and
pleasure.
Re:ruttier,. That it is with deep regret that
we have heard of the death of Is.t.xe B.
I'AILKEit. tion., :lIId, through our on n loss,
can mid do most sincerely condole with tho
friends and relatives of the deceased.
Rcsolrcd, That tee as a body attend the
funeral, and that the Hall of the Society be
draped in mourning for the usutil peitiod.
ReHolved, That a copy of these Resolutions
be sent to the family of the deceased,. and to
the "Carlisle Herabi," Burlington "Dollar
Newqmper" and "Church Recorder" for
publication.
CHAS. J. STRING,
,CHAS. B. RehiLAND, Committee
A. D. B, zimik:.ku„
1111QNEY: MONEY
' Iffoney . Saved. is Money Earned.
;TAlt ERS, Mechanics and laboring
t , your !Mortals. if you wish to save
monex, boy your
.
BOOTS, 616110E5, HATS AND OAPS
et I'LANlt'S.Cheap Store, South Wett corohr of North
lianoner , and Meant Abu), midway between lilt
dium's And Wetz-1%. 116tvlo, Carlb.M. 'Where flouts,
-h en, Ilatn and daps eau he had tram thai comMone,t
article to the very bent quality: al. ouch prices that
slur. eampati len. -Do and see them
' Remain er the stand. sleuth West corMer'of North
Ilanover St , and Li runt Ailey. midway b3tWeen Thu-.
aimit's and WM zel'a !fatale.
0,1 hor U. k 115..-4(
ITCH ! ITCH I- ITCH I
- - ,
S 'Lel TO.li ATOLL' SallA Tad !
• • Wheaton 9 s- -- Ointinent, • •
. ' Will cure gie . lteh in 48 'Hours.
LSO cures -SA LT ' . .121.1EU31,
aild, all ERUPTIONS OF
.Tlli,Sgt s. Pike tiq crntes _ For rah, by all Drue,l , ts.
Sty towline '4lO cents to WIAIEKS POVITAt 8010
4aelsto. 170 Washington, street, Unstop, Masa. it will
be 'by mail, frea'ief- postage, to any pint of
ti ,a United 8tsloc!1. , - .
-•-
80pt. 24 1861:3421.
=
H hill vni lost
1). pr,o4