"Sri NEW SERIES. ' W ft EMU UK A I i JL is published every Wednesday Morning, at One PoLLAR AND r ifty VKsis . ur.um ti.ivn.hle in advance: Onb Dol lkk and Srvestt Five Cents, if not paid within six months ; and Two Dollar if not paid until the termination of the year. No subscription will he received for a shorter period than sit months, and no BuLscriber will be at liberty to discontinue his paper until all arrearages are paid, ex cept at the option of the editor. Any per itou subscribing for six months wil he char ged Osb Dollar, unless the money i paid in advance. Advertising Rates. One inscrCn. Two do. Thre do 1 inuare, 12lines $ 50 $ 76 $1.00 2 .iuarcs.T24 lines 1 00 I 50 ? 00 8 quares,fs6 lines 1 50 2 00 3 00 3. months. 6 do. 12 do 6 lines or less, $1 50 1 square, 12 lines 2 50 1 squares, 24 lines 4 00 S squares, 3i line 6 00 jialf a column, 10 00 One column. 15 00 $3 00 4 50 7 00 9 00 12 00 22 00 $5 00 9 00 12 00 14 00 20 00 35 00 'gutsmtss Curbs. DM'LAUGHLIN. Attorney at Law, Johnstown, Pa. Office in the Kx-t-hange building, on the Corner f Clinton nud Locust streets up stairs. Will attend to all business connected with his profession. Dee. 9, 1863.-tf. WILLIAM KITTELL. 2ttorncn at ato, (tbensburg, Cambria County Fennd. Otllce C'oluatulc roi. I'ec. 4. lRfi 1YRUS L. PKkSHlNG. Yn. Att.knk.v at Law. Johnstown, Cam r.a O. I a. ttVu e on Main ittre-t. Mond nor over P.iiik. ix2 K. T. t'. l. (rilnvr, PHYSICIAN AND SURGr.ON. rt-udt-m l.i professi -ual st-rvie t .!t.Aeli! of K li ENS 11 U P. C, , ud urroUl'l.!. vu inilv. otni.'K IN UL0SADi: RtY. June ."., lMi4-tf the J. II. scunliiii. A T TOR X E Y A T L A W . Ehrssiu-h. Pa.. OPKICK ON MAIN -STREET. THREE DOuKS F.A-s'r ok iHK LOGAN HOUSE. lUxcndcr K, Iho.-'y. it. I.. Johnston. Gt;o. W. Oatman. J0HKST0N & OATMAN, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Ehensburg Cambria County Peun.i. OFFICE REMOVED TO LLOYD ST.. One door Wesr .f R. L. Johnston's Res idence. Dec. 4. 18l. ly. 1 I I OIIN FENLO-V. Esq. Attorney at Law, Ehensburg. Cambria county Pa. Office on Main stieet adj 'ining his dwel ling, ix 2 PS. NOON, ATTOKNT.Y AT LAW, EHENSBURG, CAMBRIA a).. PA. Office one door East of the Post Office. Feb. 18, 1863.-tf. JEORGE M. REED. ATTORNEY" AT LAW, EBENSBURG, Cambria County, Pa. OFFICE IN COLON ADE ROW. March 13. 1804. AJICHAEL HASSON, Esq. Attornkt -Lf A at Law, Eoensburg, Cambria Co. Pa. Offiicc on Main street, three door East ot Julian. ix 2 W. HICKMAN. B. . IIOI.I- G. W. HICKMAN & CO., Wholtt&jile Dealers in MANUFACTURED TOBACCO. FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC SEGARS. SNUFFS. &e. N. E. COa. THIRD & MARKET STREET. PHILADELPHIA. August 13. 1863.-ly. w. n. MAI. JOHN R. nAVtHGV M A I R & DAVION, IMPORTERS AND DFALERS IN SADDLERY, CARRIAGE AND TUXRK HARDWARE & TRIMMINGS SADDLES & HARNESS, K. 1ST, Wood Street, , r PITTSBURGH. PA. IAt?TSlXS BEST OAK TANNED UARNL&S. SKIRTING AND BRI- DLE LEATHERS. June 17, 1803 Jy. F or Rent. . AD office on Cnntr slt-f nfxi floor norm or t,sq. Kmkead's ofBc. Prs-ession given immediatelv. JOSEPH M'PONLD April IS. 14. - - v - v tv b . 77E BLESSINGS; OF GOVERNMENT, LIKE THE HELMBOLD'S Genuine Preparations. COMPOUND FLUID EXTRACT BUCIIU, a Positive and Specific Remedy for diseases of the Bladder, Kidneys, Gravel, and Drop sical Swellings. This Medicine increases tho power of Di gestion, and excite the Absorlent into healthy action, by which the Watery or Calcareous dej.ositions, and all Unnatural Enlargements are reduced, as well as Pain and Inflammation. IIELMP.OLD'S EXTRACT BUCIIU. For Weaknesses arising from Excesses, Habits of Dissipation. Early Indiscietion of Abuse, attended with the following syr.ip toms: Indisposition to Exertion, Loss of Power, Loss of Memory, Difficulty of Breathing Weak Nerves, Trembling. IT..rr.r . ,f lVls...lp Wa.UffUilie.NS. Dimness of Vision. Fiiu in the Rack, I Universal Lassitude of the Muscular System, Hot Hands. Flushing ot the Body, Dryness of tho Skin. Eruptions on the Face These symptoms, if allowed to go on, which this medicine invariably renoves. son follows ImiAtttncti. Fatuity, Ejilejjfic Til, In one of which the Patient may expire. Who can say that they are r.ot frequently f.llowcd by those "Direful Disea-s.- INSANITY ANDCONSUMITION." Mm are aware of the cause .f their aufl' erinif. lint in -lie will confess the record of the IiiKane Asylums. Ami M'lanchjf;t Dtath by GmiuMffiun l ar ample Aitrtess to tho Truth of the ai Mrtion. Tie CoiitMutifiH ffe rftrtel icith Ortjiitic Yca!:itets requires the aid of Medicine to StrciiKlheu ami lniiorat- the SvMem. WhUh IlKimi'.LP'ii EXTRACT Bl'CIlU nra rial Jy does. A Trial .1! coiiv'nec tlie ir.ort -V.eti:al. V KM ALES Yl.'A A !.!' 'T,M. I ES Jit a-a mi ATr.it": fttcxlmr ti & ti.e Ex'r.'.Ct ti-l 'iU is i:t:i 'lUal'.ed ov alV olhT n it.e ly . a1-" Ch'oroi.-. or Ri t .ntiii. 2i.lariv, l'ainfii'iirss. or Snrprej-si -n f Custnmiry Eviuations. tlceatr I or Scirrhous state i'f the I'terus, Ix-uehorrl u.' i i-r Whites, Sttri'.ity, and f t all compl-.iut Inci'h i.t to the s!-x, whether arising from 'ndiscretioii Habits of Dissipation, or in the DECLINE OR CHANGE OK LIFE. tono mi iUds'im. Mercury, or. m Je'i.iant Miliciii'- Jvr uiijJfa.tant awl dun rr"i.i dufax'.'. IIELMP.OLD'S EXTRACT RCCHU AND LUP'tOVED ROSE WAS -1 CURES SECRET DISEASES In all their Stages, At litt'e F'xif-'nsc. L'ttie or no change in Diet. No inconve nience. And no Hxis'ire, It causes a frcfpjout desire and gives strength to Urinate, thereby Removing Ob structions, Preventing and Curing Strict ures of the Urethra, allaying Pain ami In thtmraation. so fr -quent in the class of dis eases, and expelling all Poisonous, Dictated and wnrvout M'ltti'r. Thousands upon Thousands who Via re been the Victims of Quacks, and who have paid heart fees to be cured in a short time, have found they were deceived, and that the -rOISON" has, 1 y the use of "Power ful Astringents," been dried up in the sys tem, to break out in an aggravated form, and jwr after Marriage. Use Helmbold's Extract Rmhu for all affections and diseases of the URINARY ORGANS, whether existing iu MALE or FEMALE, from whatever cause originating and no matter of HOW LONG STANDING Diseases of these Organs requires the aid of n DIURETIC. HELM HOLD'S EX TRACT RUCHU IS THE GREAT DIUR ETIC, and is certain to have the desire! effect in all Diseases Jar vhich it ut Hecom nietuicd. Evidence of tlie most reliable and reopon sibh; character will accompany the medicine. Price $1,00 per lottle, or six fot $0.00. Delivered to any AdJiess. stcurely packed from obsei vation. Describe Symptoms in all Communications Cures Guaranteed! Advice Gratu-J Address letters for information to II. B. II ELM DO LD, Chemist, 104 South Tenth st., licl. Chesnut. PhiU HELMBOLD'S Medical Dqxd. HELMBOLD'S Drug and Chemical Ware house, 594 Broadway, New York. BEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS AND UNPRINCIPLED DEALERS who endea vor to dis-iose "of their r" and "other" articles on the- reputation attained by Helmbold's Genuine Preparations. Extract Buchu. " Sareaparilla. " ' Improved Rose Wash. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE. ASK FOR HELMBOLD'S. TAKE SO OTHER. Cut out the Advertisement and send for it AND AVOID IMPOSITION. AND EX POSURE. March 9. l864.-ly. The Hf and services of General Grant, for file hv .lAMERMURRAT. DEWS OF HEAVEN, SHOULD BE EBENSBURG, PA. WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1864. t'rofn nation or I lie l resident's Urouud'M by a Aegro l'ic-ulc. The 4th of July, 1864, witnessed what no other day in the annuls of our country ever saw. On that day the negroes of Washington city ussembled in large num bers on the grounds south of the Presi dent's house, and there beneath the very caves of the building erected by white men for the residence of the Chief Magis trate of a nation of white men, made a nation's park the chosen scene of their feasting and revelries, under the sanction of that nation's 1 'resident. The incident bears a terrible significance j nation who have proved most terrible to j passed and presented to the President for Irownlow, whom the Advcrtisrr pro from the circumstiuiccs connected with it, the country the truth of the old Human j the nccustomary approval. Which shall "ounces to be "sound on the goose." and the horrible condition into which the ; maxim of "whom the Gods wish to de- j prevail f Shall Mahomet "o to the I this endorsement it may be a mat- country has been placed Here in the Capitol of the country, on the banks of ; the Potomac, within the grounds sur- rounding the country s Lhict .Magistrate, ; assembled a vast herd of negroes to enjoy j themselves in the gayeties of a pic-nic. i Phe warm July sun, bediming in a cloud- 1 less sky, shone upon them, protected from V. V . .. . J . a .u . . J J branches oi tnc tuiCKiy clustering trees. ; 1. I . I' ll 1 . . .1 I he breezes from the blue Potomac cool ed their dusky brows. The fountains sparkled in the glittering sun for their de light Their hearts were cheered bv the gavities of the occasion, and joyously ex .v...v. v...,-....., ...... v - cited by the thought that in front of them was us l.o se who, to bestow upon them ; such pl.-asures, had stecpel the country I dynasty out of wer. With the Divine to the very dregs of the bitterest cup of blessing surely ujhmi our lioly rnterpri, woe ever h ld to a nation's lips. we shall raise the standard of Union and And but a few miles away from them. Constitution, so dear to all patriotic hearts, beneath the hot glare of Virginia sons, and in XovohiIkt next announce to tlie and in tho stitling atmosphere of Virginia bleeding and dissevered Iiepublic the joy swamps, rendered still more honiMe bv ful tidings of p-ace, happiness and re U:c decaying corses of thm.inds of their ; stoivd Union under the just and beniiievnt Comrades, toiled and fought the noblest of j the land. No tre s to shelter tlwu no cool river bn-czes to refresh them n fountains splashing inu.-ic on the i.u tor l . i them. ParcluHl with heat and worn with t.ifh.;r l.ea.f- M.lVnrt bv n eo - ! o iiviir.-v- r .i ii , i ,. i, ... i tions ot their noble comrades nlioac dead I , j bodies filled every mile of that terrible , 1 " I march from the lfappidan to the Appo- . . c .. i ., c inattox visions of the happv 1 ourths of ; i v w ... i m . i o. Julv stealing over their mind.-" tins nob'e j r P. .i . fl x.,- . e ti army of ichte men the very flour ot the i , , te .i ,.,1 t- -.i i land were hurling themselves fruitlessly upon almost impregnable fortifications at the commands of a head long, and unre llecting leader, for what ? That the ne gro should have the privilege of enjoying himself socially and pleasurably on the Fourth of July in the public grounds of J the Nation's Ca- i a'. The question may lie pertinently asked, i for what are we now righting, and to what are we tending, when suMi disgrace ful scenes may be witnessed as the legiti mate result of the efforts of those in trusted with the management of the war? We see the country torn and rent, tears in every mothers eye, ago.iy at every fath er's heart ; the proud prestage of the great Hepublic perhaps? forever gone ; con stitutional liberty and law ruthlessly im molated upon their own altars, and con temptuously trampled in the dust ; the last and the brightest hnjie of humanity withered in the grasp of cowardly tyr anny, like flowers in the frost of an au tumn blast : law, order and securily be neath the iron heel of a fouly corrupt des potism ; with the insane cry still coing up for the continuance of this infernal dance of death : and as compensation for all these, we have the proud elevation to social and political equality with Ameri can freemen of a race indelibly stamped by the hands of the Creator with the mark of degradation of a race whose finest instincts area coarse brutality, and whose highest inspirations are a beastly sensuality. Great God ! t this a com pensation for the in ffable horrors of the sacrifices the groaning country has made for the past three memorial years ? Is this the restored and happy Union the Re publican uty promised us should emerge from the fiery furnace of this unholy war! Or is it but an experiment on the part of these blood thirsty and visionary fanatics to overturn the immutable laws of phys ical nature, and by destroying all that is dear to man, attempt an improvement on the work of the Almighty ? It is well that the peopie should ponder these things. It is well that they should think deeply upon the fact of negro en joyment of the delights of life purchased at the expanse of thousand of lives and countless millions of money. It is well they should ask themselves crushed into hopeless poverty by the unendurable weight of public debt their sons dragged oflf by the conscription like sheep to the sham bles their recollections of past glory and their hopes of future greatness alike buried in the inextricable ruin to wbicb all things are tending, merely to increase the CBBB nleaeures of and inferior race- which a I"' , . r tm and immutable tnntmct of our na- DISTRIBUTED ALIKE. UPON THE HIGH AND THE LOW, THE RICH AND ture has pronounced unfit for any nda- j tions with white men men but those of j a servile type. And it is especially well i that the people should ponder these things j President Lincoln lias issued a procla when this party whose policy inaugurated j mat ion consisting of a virtual declaration the existing horrible condition of affairs ! of his superiority to Congress, and his in in whose treacherous embrace Union and j dejiendeneo of Congress, in all matters Constitution have perished, and who, in ; connected with Keconstruetion. The the name of Freedom, assasinated Lib- j President has a plan of reconstruction. crty at the very foot of her altars who pulled down the temples of constitutional t devotion, and dedicated graves to the wor- I ! ship of the falsest and foulest heri.sies that j consistant with his, and exclusive of his, 1 plains the notoriety enjoyed at this mo j ever disgraced the political religion of a j which took the form of a bill regularly I ,neRt "J tnat clerical ruffian, Parson stroy they first make mad" when this i pai ty, we say, come before the people, and gravely demand that people's support : because the country s salvation rests sole ly with tJtcm, it is well that the' should j deeply meditate this "hiring inconsistency ' this worse than suicidal policv this horrible but legitimate n shilt of liiack Ite- - ' - . - . . . I .1 . .1 , . it cannot no inn me jeop!o wilt sur ort th'm. (d, in his jitice, has an other and a more merciful dostiov fvr Amei i(!a. 'Hie people of the countrv- arc too intelligent to be decievisl longer by r...a..... ...n.-i lH (j , them any hevd too patriotic to hesitate 1 .briition soplnstnes 1 earnest to pay a moment in tln-ir attempts to hurl this sway of the. tini: honored and time Mired and time ther- j dearly within the domain of the Iegisla-principh-s. nWW- tivc deprirtmci.t of the government. Mr. ished Democratic ton I'w'vii. ,. , . '"'T: V . 1 lie .tl Hiking ol ."New Mates. , . . . "- '" AU..,.l,r...,u) ,,. u . ..... io iuaKc new relates, to give iiueoia c; io iii.ti.e iiciv .lilies, 10 iliw iiueoiu c.ec- ' . " tonai votes, out feverai very extraonluiarv i." i , .1. .. , c . - . boy, a scrivener oi the I resident, ("Pri- , - , , v vate Societal y is the phrase) was inaue ,,,-. J , . . ' , , a Major m the L. b. Army and des- ' natcneu to r Iorida to order an invasion , , - , ,h u.iLiit: tiivii: ii liii it iucl ti? riiji; 1,."00 lives and several hundred prisoners at Ohtstee of which this mere boy be came a hero (h-ouicc.) The next most extraordinary thing to work up Lincoln's eleclorial vote, was bringing into our union of States, several Territories none of them with a jKipula tion as large as a New York ward whereby such great States as New York, Pennylvama and Ohio were to be tjual ized in the United States Senate with 2 I these unsettled Territories which were to have two Senators in Congress as well as New York. Nebraska was one of them in which (census of 18(50) she had 28,841 people, and but slightly increased now, in consequence of emigration to Idaho and other places more west. JJut tly Convention to create a Constitution for Nebraska, preparatory to admission into the Union, recently assembled at Omaha and this Convention wisely and well, and rapidly, too, in fear of being overridden by office-seekers for United States places, voted not to come into the Union, and so President Lincoln is dis appointed at least for one year. The Nebraskians "calculated" that it wad cheaper . to be supported by Uncle Sam than to support Uncle Sam, ami hence they have declined - to come into Union, until the Union frees itself a little from debt. sr Joubert de Lamballc. in the Paris Hospital, has the reputation of loving the knife and saw : he loves to hew anu liaCU the jioor patient brought to the hospital, to show off his skill. After one of his hist operations, the resident stood looking at the two pieces of mortality lying on the surgeon's table. "What are you do ing sir !" sharply asked the surgeon. " I was waiting for you to point out which piece is to be put to bed, and which is to be buried." C- An Irishman went into a telegraph office, the other day, and earnestly called out ; " 1 want a clane shirt sent by tele graph from Manayunk immediatelj'." He was referred to the "clothes-line telegraph. Hallo, there, what's your hurry ? where are you going f " Going, I'm running for an office!" "What office ?" " Why, the Squire's office. Blast it, I'm sued !" ea-Hornc Tookc, "when asked by Geo. iti whether he nlavcd at cards, replied, I .-II I.: r.. "I cannot, your .waic-ny. n n o 'oLrinri.' knave. Prom the World. Tlie new UecoiiNtructlon Proc- ! laiuallon. promulgated by him in December last, at the opening of the session. The two j houses of Congress have a rival Dlan in- 1 mountain, or the mountain come to Ma-' hornet The President declares to the j country that he will not yield, and that 1 C"oii-n ss must. Had h. signed the bill, i the new states sponsibility, h.i states w hich he, on his sole re- as pretended to erect in ' I-oui.-iat a and Arkansas, would fall to ' ' the ground. This obvious consequence of I extracts from a speech delivered by Mr. j the bill he proc laims to the country, and Hrownlow in New York on the 23rd ult. ; assigns as a rea.-on for refusing his signa- ! "If 1 ha'- lowcr, sir, I would arm and 'i tm " ' uniform in tlie federal habliments every I 'H.-'s is the most extraordinary treat- ! Wl''r mI T and catamount and tigt'r iimnt ever Ix stowcd by th- exw.tive i ",h1 W m,1 C. n,Vunla,r,:4 of Atncf; ill! .1 . lit:ii! tif n iopmmnt on tl?g rpni!nr not , a legislative assen.oiy. . veto, is a . legitimate exorcise of authority coiderml ! ' nv ttie jnstitution ; out a veto, when i the two houses do tKt overrule it, is sup- : ... .. '.'ill st the action intended , ... . . e i substitute the will of ; , ... ... . .. I p)sil merely to arre : by C ngress. not to 1 the executive lor the loint will ot In ; Siiate, House and President, as Mr. I Lincoln assumes to do by this strange j proceeding. The subject matter of the bill which Mr. Lincoln refuses to sign, is ; Lincoln himself virtually admits that i Co;igre-s has powi r to presenile the nieth ! od of reconstruction. lly what right, ! then, dors ho not assume merely to arrest j the will of the two houses (which he may) j but to substitute his will in such a way j as to clothe himself with the whole legis- lativc authority ! Neilhey the Senate a- lone, nor the House alone, nor the Presi dent alone, can wield the legislative au thority. The two houses can wield it a lone, in spite of t lie President, if two thirds of each so determine ; but the j President has no power but a qualified negative, which Congress can overrule and yet Mr. Lincoln instead of awaiting the action of Congress, anticipated it and now when Congrvs? has acted, he de nies to it even that poor shadow of power which consists in a veto on his unauthor- I ized proceedings. He can arrest the will .l I .inrri-occ liiif t ..MirrT-oc innof nrrrtsr " - . ' " tus, even in a matter which uuijiiesuuiia bly belongs to the legislative department of the government. Congress passed an act which declares their disapproval of the President's unauthorized recon struction measure?, and he proclaims to the country his purpose to nresist in those measures in defiance of their disapproval. Mr. Lincoln does worse even than this, he superadds insult to usurpation. After i vctoiwr an act of the two houses by com municating his objections, not to them, as ! tnc .,onsuiili!on requires, oui io me conn- i aou also. try (which looks like supercilious appeal ' " from the agent to the principal) he grn- I Some sciouslv condescends to adopt the plan of j ,:ilted fur a fu daiz for refreshment-, Congress in States where it may not in- j you kant gudgc a man bi his religgun terfere with his own, and where the pco- j rnnc more than you kan guge his shurt pie may chance to prefer it. That is to j t tjlC sjzc cf the collar and rislbands. say, that while it shall have no force j . . anywhere as being the will of Congress ; tS"At a recent exhibition of a menag it mav prevail in some States as having j crie, an elephant was seen to pick up the Ilie permission of the executive. It it is a bad plan why ioes no permit ns auop- i J tion at all T It it a good plan why vetn it 7 hethpr it l"K hml or , ...... . food, what ngiit nas ne to suostiiuie a . representatives of the people have official- ly condemned. If the President coma ,.i : t;n ., l.,tl tin. verv least he could do, in consistency with the respect he J passed around a plate thct had some mon owes to Congress, was to withdraw his ! cy on it, but I didn't take any." own plan, which that body, to whose niTiVUILU IUU UUlt r-ui pvi iiiniiu jk ui i" a t.sh Ktl.y vl tint ii.ttt mnttnt I mlrki-r4; to the people to support him in taking out of the hands of Congress a subject com- mittcd to them by the Constitution, is a vcrv lK,ld stride toward desiKitism. To t 3 I., ...l.x.l er.f nowl lint 4. ,. I partially ermit it as an act of concession, what Congress had commanded as a gen- j eral law, is of a piece of Cromwell's driv- j ing out Parliament at the point of the bayonet. Tlie mildness of the method , merely marks the difference between a . man of cunning and a man of courage. If Mr. Lincoln is so independent of Con- gress that tho two houses cannot obstruct his will. Congress has ceased to be any- thin- but a sham. His virtual veto is it.?...,. t-.., tto iriciinr In In! nwll ; t,o.m.. -......... .... f.- unauthortzrd plan when ( ongr n has con 1P a twinkling, i THE POOR. VOL. 11 NO. 29 demned it, and his affecting to permit on his authority, in some cases what Con gress intended to command in all case?. on their authority, are ominous indica tions of the determination of Mr. Lincoln to release himself from all congressional as he has already done from all constitu tional control. When the revolutionary pot begins to a great deal of scum and dirt is thrown to the surface, a fact which ex- ter of curio.-ity to know what hissenti- menls are upon the great issues before t,lC country, and the character of the S'-10- on which he is "sound." U u liave ,,( I'1' Hsurc, tlu nfore, of laying be- ,on- 'lir fi-aders a tew feathers plucked ,rom tUv ZCA'' 8 tai1- ,n the f,hape of some IT I V tJlnUIiC lit I UC &VUiIlll3 VI f iUll'ia. . and South Carolina ; every ncCTo iu the , , , .. . Nu,hern Confederacy, and every devil m hell and pntidenioniurn. "ThU war, I say to you, must be pros- ecutel with a vim and a vengence, until , ,,. , the rebellion is put down, it it extermi- e . - , .. .... nates from the face of (iod Almizhtv s green earth every man, woman and child ' south of Mason and Dixon's line. (Cheers. 1 ou nave not teit the enects ot war ! jn the Loyal States, but you are going to i now. I know that little man Grant he is ttie right man in the ngtit place. 1 am willing to see Kichmond captured by him; but if I had my choice, I should choose that Kichmond nn' Charleston should bo taken alone, by negro troops, commanded by Hutler the Beast. "Sherman has the finest army in all the world not less than 150,000 all told. He is gradually advancing into the heart of the Southern States. He will take that country. Grant will take Kichmond. And we will crowd the rebels, and crowd them until I trust in God we will rush thorn into the Gulf of Mexico, and drow n the entire race, as the devil did the hogs in the Sea of Galilee. "When we come out of the war wc will coinc out with "00,000 or 000,000 of tho best soldiers, who have their hand in, and would as soon have their hands in a little longer as not. Then I am in favor of giving old England a turn (Cheers.) "We can whip the Southern Confeder acy ; wc can take in France and Eng land and the whole civilized world, and I want to carry it on till wc whip all of God's creation." If the annals of civilized man have anything to show more detestable and in fernal than this, we should like to know it. The reporter of the New York Tri bune a paper eminently "sound on the goose" is rcsfxmsible for the "cheers" appended to the above, and we have no doubt that he made a true report, the audience was undoubtedly "sound on the Dtxtton Courier. truths John Drown lias j loose hay witn nis minK, wnen an insn- ! l 1. f 1 i nan exc.a. ..eo. . u u, u o,.c , is that atm hay wi , his tait i 1 m ' ' littlf olrl rrtnrimirr fmm rhlirr.h - - - o n ...1 . l ii r u ! time m her life, related what took place, ;iuiunS umo .mn i-m- ".. ... ! her childish innocence: "That a man $7 A school mar m, in England, has , - - . i '1'" v " ..w.. - i -nient If the boys disobey her rules, i".th"r hcadf d Pours ld water into their trousers leg. Query : ! d shc Punish lhc ?,rls! CyA dix-tor s house should have blue pill-iars in front. OrThe Iiest of friends fall out. teeth arc no exception. Or ; tsr woman had better not marry j widower, if she finds that he is a widower j iv trade. " r man who inuit a woman in the .. i ,- I.rl. t nroll htarlight. probably expect i. to g-t a uiT I 4 I i I 5 ft i ; L I k. - I i.