fjje gemocrat. IIARVFW SICKLCn, Editor. G TUN KHAN NOCK, PA Wednesday, Aug, 17 1864. The War. The war news of the past week securs to be of an uninUreating character. The plan of taking Richpiond and Atlanta by direct attacks Reims to be abandoned. At both these places the rebels seem to be now rath er taking the offensive. We should not be surprised to find the rebels making some flank movements'' that will raise the seige of both these places. Admiral Farragut is attacking Ft. Morgan at the mouth of Mobile bay. The Rebel vessel Tallahassee, has cap tured several more \essels. The late inva ders of the state are making a safe retreat down the Shenandoa valley. A band of guerrillas lately made their appearance at Arlington heights near Washington, and captured several Federal Cavalry. Gen. Burnside, the man who issued the famous order No 10—"squelching copper beads," for denouncing which, as Tyranical, Vallandigham was banished, has hitnseu been squelclud and banished to Rhode Island. It seems that his conduct at the late Peters burg massacre does not meet the approval of hi 6 sup riors. The nigger division under his command, instead of making themselves the great heroes of the war made a most dis astrous failure. Burney is dismissed because be canHOt make a " w histle out of a pig s tail.'' . ■ <♦- ■ • -—— Organize ! I i The necessity fur a thorough organization of the Democratic party was never more ap parent than at this time. If the country is saved from utter final dissolution and ruin, if humane liberty is preserved for ourselves and posterity ; if this tide of fraud peculation and corouption which is now eating out the ( ▼ery heart and vitals of ot>r government is ' stayed ;if peace shall again smile upon the j land, ana a cruel, devastating, barbarous; and bloody warfare shall ever cease ; if our j hopes and destinies shall be wrenched from , the inrare clutcu of a heathenish; despotic buf foon and idiot; if, we say, these objects are attained, if must be by an immediate and thorough organization of the Democratic elements of opposition. The great ordeal] w ill soon be upon us. A short, sharp and decisiva campaignist now about to *pen. — But about twelve weeks now remains before, the most oventful day in the of a great nation. That day will probably settle, forever, the question whether in America,, free government, founded on the will and consent of the govorend, is a failure or not Whether the patriotism, the wisdom he trials and blood of our fathers have been exerted and spent in vain, or not. In view ; then, of the great interests at stake, of the ' great dangers that threaten them and of the j struggle before we cannot too strongly j urge upon our friends the necessity of organi zation. Let clubs be organized in eveiy town, in every nook and corner of the town. Let no man neglect his duty but free'.y give this time, his talents and his money toward the accomplishment of the work to be done. Let no man deem himself an unimportant Mtcr in the tnatte/. An earnest effort ou tt:* { art of the democrats in each town ship would secure from five to twenty votes for us which would otherwise be lost. This j in the aggregate would give us at least 20.- 000 votes in the State, and assuming th'c two panics now to be equal—a majority f..r Con stitutional Union principles of 40,000 voles. MATTERS of importance engaging our at ter.tien this week, we defer paying our re spects to the thing that travels behhid a beet, until the rest. If then, we conclude to waste ammunition on s-uch email game, we may take a feather or two from his soar ing wings. WHY NOT.— A large number of Repuhii nnn profe&B to disapprove of the course pur sued by Mr. Lincoln ar.J his Administration ' in the prosecution of the War, a;.J who will •til!, in all probability, vote for him i.l No vember, We have heard men of this class say :" I ara no h litionist. I want these troubles compromised, so as to put an end to the war and dratts in tho future. 1 am tired of this war, tired of taxes, and tired of drafts. We believe you are sincere, gentleuaer., n what you say, but why not, since your p si tion is the same, unite with those who tl ink as you do, and elect some man to carry cut your views, Lincoln will not. lie has de clared that the abandonment of slavery is the only terms that will be listened to for peac! You Will be welcomed into the ranks of those who desire Union and Peace; Why not labor with them ? WHO is for further prosecution of this war? All who are getting rich out of it. and a3 many fools as there are left alive in the coun try. After the experience we have had the man who believes in the possibility of con quering the South tsi fool indeed.—Ex. <•- TJIK success of Gen. Grant's flanking is so great that Lincoln has felt the necessity of calling into the field 5(0,000 store men—to be, we suppose, flnnhed into eternity in the same ''glorious" way as the millions who fcjve Veen sent before them. D-lcgate Elect ioi s. The Democratic electors of the several j Townships in Wyoming Uutiniy and Tunk- Launock Borough, are requested to meet at the several election Districts on Saturday, the 27th inst., between the hours of two and five o'clock, P. M. and elect Delegates to re present them in County Cmcention, to be held at Tuukhannock, on Monday, the 29th day of August, 1803. VIGILANCF COMMITTEES, The following named persons were return .ed as vigilance committees of the respective j lowuships for the ensuing year, j Braintrim; E. J. Kcency, Wm. Neigh, ! J. J. Knapp. i Clinton ; Lewis Armstrong, SamT Carpen terf J. G. Mathewson. Eaton ; John Ney, Alexr. Rogers, B. B. Harding. Exeter ; Thos. I). Headly, Wm. Cool baugh. John Workheiser. i fulls; G. \V. Sherwood, D. C. Post, D. ' C. Scott. r rorkstoa; Albert Girey Ciaptmn Hitch cock. Dan'l L. Yaow. Lemon ; 11. B. Travis, Geo. Lewis, Ziba N. Smith. Meshoppen j Jeremiah Allen, .Joo, Win ans, S. J, Cortright. Mehoopany; Richard Lott, Moses, S. i Kintner, D Webster Sweatlaud. i Monroe; Danl. Morgon, Wm. Schooler, | Sam I. Billings. , Nicholson ; Dan'l Decker, Edwin Step j hens, Joseph Bishop. j Northuioreiaud ; Gordon Pike, Miles Eg gleston, Theodore L. Shaw, i North Branch ; Henry Champin,Wellington Iloxte, Rtjsse! Cas son. Overfield ; Chas. M. Diily, Isaac Lattier. Andrew Ager. Tunkhannock Twp.; Ehsha Jenkins, John W ilsey, E l Simpson. Tunk Boro. j Geo. D. Williams, L. C. C'onklin, F. G. Osterhoi.t. Washington ; J. U, Luce, ;Dan'l Stephens David Armstrong, Windham ; Peter F. llope, R. L, Palmer, . J. 11. Rogers. RULES FER TIIF GOVERNMENT OF DEMOCRATIC CONVENTIONS, &.C. 1. The democratic electors of each election district in this county, shall annually, on the last Saturday in August, meet at the place of holding their Genetal and Township elec tions, and elect thiee suitable persons to serve as a Committee of Vigilance fur the ensuing year, whose duty it shall be to su perintend the next election of delegatg to the County Convention, and also to call and superintend-all other meetings of the Demo electors of their district. At the same time and place, shall also be i elected two delegates to the C unify Convert- 1 tion, who sha'l, on the following Monday. ! meet at the Court House, in the Borough of] Tunkhannock, and after organizing by elect- j ins one of their number for a President, and j two Secretaries, shall proceed to nominate ] such District and County Officers as are to ] voted f. rat the ensuing General E Let ion— j elect Conference for such Datrict officers as J ihe/ snail nominate—appoint Delegates to I the next State Convention and a Standia Committee for the County, 3. All County Conventions shall be held j with open doors. 4. AM candidates for nomination shail be voted for viva voce ; aud the one receiving a majority of ail the votei po/!ed, for ar.y of fice shall be declared duly nominated. 5. The Convention shall keep a journal o all its proceedings, which shall be duly pub lished tn the Democratic paper or piper* of the County,; and any nomination not made j n conformity with the foregoing rules shall | he declared void, and the vacancy or vacancies so occurring, shall *be sup plied !L (he manner herein after provided. 6. The St&udiug Committee shall consist of nine Democratic citizens of the county, who shall hold their office for one year from and after the date of their election ; and it shall be their duty, during that time, to call all County Conventions, M iss and other meetings of the party—to fli! all va cancies in the Ticket, occasioned either by the declination of nominees, by.a want of | conformity to the foregoing rules, or where : the Convention shall have failed to make a nomination, and also in case of special elec tons, where the necessity for doing so occurs after the regular time for holding County Conventions and to fill vacancies in the Committee ofYtgtlance, occ lined h; rc ! moral, death, o rlailure on the part of the ! citizens to elect thorn. 7. The Standing Committee shall annually hereafter, in issuing the call for the election of Delegates to the County Conver < >n, cause a Copy of the foregoing rules to be üblished in connection therewith. 8. These tules may he amended, or new ones added thereto by a general meeting of the Democratic citizens of the county called for that purpose by the Standing Committee or if the same shall pass two successive County Conventions without amendments and not otherwise. C. M. KOOX. Chairman Slanding Commit Lee. PjiOM.rT RE?I.T A post office clerk sent the following to Allbrooks'a failed Stales Mail: •\A man called at our general delivery one day, when I happened for the moment to be engaged elsewhere in the office, lie >vhist iadjqudlj. I stepped to the window and savagely inquired, u whose dog he was whist lirg for V " One of Uncle Sams pups J" said he, quite composedly. I had nothing to ■ i A CLERGYMAN, writing to the Bangor Whig, advises all his brethern to pray for rain. The Whig thinks if they are as suc cessful in this as they were preaching the country into civil war, tber| be a deluge ♦ TUe Milk ia the Cocoauut"—explained . Factor yville, Pa., Aug. 13ih libo4. KiIITOK DEMOCS.IT, Sm : —ln your 'pa per of 10th inst. you ask why, if the people ! of the north are so eager for war an i crush | ing out the rebellion, we have to pay such large sums for volunteers ? Why is con j scription necessary ? This may be a mys te ! ry to you. living in so dark au 1 benighted a part of the land—but up we goto i church every Sabbath ; and get posted in ; political matters. Up here too, Mr. Editor, wo have men of the *' rail grit." Long be j fore the war broke out, they said : if those | southern chaps did flare up, and give us*a j chanoe at them, we wobld go in and give j them such a drubbing, that when they got j out of the scrape, they would'nt know them ■ selves or country. Some f the bravest of us j said we would go in, if we had to wade in : blood to our knees. But when the wai broke out, we thought it too small an affair I - i lor us to trouble ourselves much about it, but concluded to send down 75,000 of our i ' boys, who, — being eager for the fray—went in with enthusiasm. Well after having sev eral littie affairs such as Bull run, we found their ranks thinner] and Abraham calling for 300/ 00 more. We hardly understood tins; but on asking our seers (preachers) why enr ooys did not prevail, were told that: The £ord was angry with us, because Abraham hail not "proclaimed liberty to the captive," , and until this was dene cur sons would continue to be beaten and e'airt. When tins I c&tne to the ears of Abraham, lie immediate- I ly issued his famous " emancipation procla > mation"—and about the same time called 1 tor " 500,000 more. ' Well, the men and tne proclamation fought on ; bat b >th to gether did not prevail ! After marching and countermarching, flanking and being flanked we bn; ] our armies wasted, and Abraham called tor " 30),0dd u ire." Tins rather as - tonished us, a i<: we con uited < ut seeis (the preacher?-) again. They told u-> tha' Gud j had a controversy with this whole natien— ; and is " determined to punish, us for our sins, and thejsu s of our faibus, ha cause they dd not commence this war, s toner,—an 1 that Deity will not be satisfied with the blood of j our children which has been sacrificed on I the altar of their country—that the war will ! not end until some < f the best blood of the j country is sacrificed. We again consult the j oracles (preachers. )They Tel! us they have ; discovered the very thing required—one j that will answer a double purpose viz: a; a better soldier, and better Llood for the j sacrifice. Now the answer toy. r first in quiry is plain—we waut a better quality of blood than white men can furnish, and bet ter soldiers than they make. Consequently the great demand and rush now being made for the belter article, has caused the high prices. Do you tee it 7 Your second inquiry : " Why are we so often called upon for new levies" is partly j answered by the above viz . ha t er blood u 1 wanted as a sacrifice for our sins. Another j reason i that when we exhaust all our flank | movements on the rebels we have to resort to ether means. Yu probably remember pome years since, when they tried us on the j Missouri compromise, how we took the un- > dor ground Kail Road and run their niggers ! into Canada. If I understand the present I strategy of the war, we are going into that I again, We have men enough for work abuve j ground, but recruits are wanted for the un ! dcr ground work. I know the Republicans | complained of "Little Mac" fur usiug the i Si-ade. but bis was only surface work. The I present plan is to he low and dig deep.— i Having answered your queries permit me ! to ask yon a question. The North had ! 20,000,000 of men, and the South 8,000,000, j when this war commenced. Why do we now have to go on their *ide of the line to ' get men to whip- theui out 7 A SUBSCRIBER. Note—lf wa aaoplea tho theories, which seems to he industriously preached aad inculcated in the neigborhood of "A subscriber." —In reply to his question ;wo should soy ; that our folks ingoing south alter men, were in quest of "better blood," — 1 for tho sacrificial offering. We do not believe however that our negro-worship ping raicrs intend to allow the spilling of much nitrger blood thit is too precious, with them, and is i being saved for "miser gene tic" purposes. Tho ob- i joct of the war, ns now declared, is '•theabaudkinintnt j (Abolition) of slavery," The pmclauiation abolish- j ing i iving turned out like the 'Bull against the comet."—The army having f-i'ed t cat h nigger*, i as well where they ain't, as whore they are. Ahra- ; ham has concluded to bring to his aid in the Lu-i- I nass every abfe Loiiiid white man of tho north. — j And has allotted to each, the task " buying bog- j ging' ,car.£scntir.g, or stealing a nigg-.,under joenal tv of being drafted and led into a slaughter pea him- j eif, by such accomplished butchers ns Popc.lJookor, j Buraridt and the ' Beast." What he intends t> do with his niggers alter he gets then judging fi m the past, is to put them into the Royal Park, aronn l the ; White J louse, to cut nigger aatiea, sing nigger songs and otherwise entertain his royal highness Ahra- j ham the ' Bo you sou it ? —_*. Why is the War CoNHX.reD.— No un- . prejudiced citizen be he Republican or Dem ocrat, can longer doubt as to the true answer to this question. Jt is clearly developed in ' Lincoln's communication "to all to whom it may concern. It is because Lincoln Qares more for the ; nkg no than for the white man, —prefers j freeirg nkujsoe* to saying the lives of white 31 EN. If we had a President who regarded the j rights pnd interests of white men, North and South, the war would in less than ten days. A QmRT. —Will some Administratis an inform us on what principle tho exem, .on of men from taxation who hold from #I,OOO to SIOO,OOO of United States securities, can le ! justified,when the laboring mas, the mechan ic and the manufacturer are 'axed in a half a dozen different ways, and to such an extent that they can hardly provide themselves with the necessaries of life ? | In his inaugural message President Lin ; Coin saiu : " I understand a proposed amendment to tho Constitution (which amendment, howev er, I have not teen) has passed Congress, to 1 the effect that the Federal Government shall I never intefere with tho domestic institutioos jof States, including that of persons held to j service. To avoid misconstruction of what , I have said I depart fr in uiy purpose—not '. nrt to speak of particular amendments—so far as to say that, holding such a provision to now be implied constitutional law, I have no objection to its being made expiess and irrevocable." It was in the same hour that Mr. Lincoln said that he should soon have taken the j inoat solemn oath to preserve, protect and ' i defend the' Constitution, Mr. Lincoln, after indorsing every Aboli tion measure which has been passed in Cuu gress, now perjures himself View with the declaration that he will not listen to ov> r tures of peace til! ihey propose u the nban doumeut of sjavery." Couch is a Major General in th ; army, lie is now it sum* in command at Chambersburg. Ho too issues proclamations sometimes—as dues peacaable Abraham an 1 avoid-tlje-drafi Curtiu. II.; it.su .1 cue last week which takes tho rug elf tie bush. IL j tells the people Lhat the coming of the eue my is not impassible at any tune during the , summer and cm ing fill ; ( | U t' consoling ' to the people of Pennsylvania who hare ' p'aced 300,000 men at the service of the ■ National Goveamnent.) lie therefore call* ! I upon the people to arm themselves with their ' sunt guns, many of which wont kii! a snipe | at 20 paces, and take to their c >rn fields, hay stacks, black-berry-bushes, for c> ver. • from which they are to " kill the maraud- ' ers: M Such stuff is signed "D. N. Couch, Major General Commanding." AU hail, tue ' | great corn-dodger L >ans> .Hoe User. Hi r 'Em Again. —Mayor Gucther of the j city of New York closes Lis Proclamation. , c ailing the attention of the people of that j city to the observance of last T mrs' ly, as a j day of fasting, humiliation, jcc., as follows : ■ To t!*e ministers of the various church cs jon whom will devolve the duty of opening j prayer in the presence of their cang legations, j and especially those ministers who have in- | j culcated the doctiines of war and Blood, so j much at variance with the teachings of their j Divine Master, I would humbly recommend j that they will, on that solemn occasion in- : j voke the mercy r f Heaven to hasten the I relief of our suffering people by turning th j hearts of those in authority to the blessed way9 of peace. C. Gopfkey GI NTiiEii, Mayor, j Ptou on the Taxes—Tho New Y >rk- j Times, a Lincoln Organ, colls fcr more ta res Tt saye ice must t ax more heavilj. We now have : Federal Taxc?, s"2r* State Taxes, Borough and Township TaX<-<q jkst s ehool Taxes, Bounty Taxes, Conscription Taxes, Militia Taxes, Special T axe, License Taxes, (T Road Taxes, Pior Taxes, nternal Revenue Taxes, Income Taxes, and a heavy ddi I tional taxation fur everything we eat, drirk> arnl wear ! Oh the beauty of keeping Lincoln I in power. | A Minnesota paper leru that from different parts of that State the distress cre ated among the families of conscripts beggar* description. One ho ap pointed to deliver the notices to the "unfor tunates" was so much overcma by the heart-rending scenes he was couipellled to witness among the wives and children after delivoring two or three of the " death wur | cuts," resign tos cummissiuo, saying ha hai j no taste for such badness.." Stoppe dße si nest. The enororaiisly h.igh , : taxes imposed by the new revenue law* upon : the busiuess of cigar uiakixg have caused a ; great many maufactures to suspo:i<l op r.i- j ( (ions, and close up their shops. In sume < 1 c./iiuties taf this State largi' numbeis oi i i hands have been thrown out ol employ ! ' rneut. ' Tin; Monroe doctrine, that no foreign gov > ( trnment should ever be permitted to gain a j foothold on American soil, has been aband n-, 'ed by the present administration, and ann m her of the hated House of Hapsburg, has been i 1 made emperor of Mexico, right under Lin- j , , coin s nose. | The Peopte Want Peace—We greatly ! , mistake public opinion, it seven tenths of the People of our entire c milium-,) are not lively ' ; in earnest for immediate Peace. Lincoln has declared the War, new dcva*taliug the land ' ! and filling it with desolatiou, blood and j deatn alone to be prosecuted fur tho *' Abo ; lition of Slavery"—a Negro war. In vv / of j 1 ilus tefriblo state uf aiu,ii, it becomes the . duty of all good people—the frieudsof white uien's lives and liberties—to assert and inain j tain their independence, for themselves aud ( posterity, by effecting an early peace, and restoring our bleeding country to its wonted j rest by changing its despotic rulois. Blessed are the Peaca Mikers. for shall be called the children of Gud, sai., tho ISa VIOR. I Aiiiert Tike's library, wantonly destroy , ed by Ltnooln'a soidiers, is said to have been j worth SIOO,OOO. There is not another gov ernment in the civilized world that Would i peripit its soldiers to Uestr >y or steal books I of private libraries* j Vrndnllsm. The* burning of Chamber-burg by Ihe rtb ! els :• an act of vandalism which den rv. * O Mt ftcftives, tho severest dennnciaii-.n. HY have denounced the excesses of our own troops on Southern Territory, and wc are no less free j in doing th© same when the torch is applied by those in amis against ihe Federal omhori i ty. We do this on the same principle that i we denounce Mob law by the abolitionists in • the-Norn, and would denounce i' equally it Democrats were so recreant to their man hood and their principles as to engage in like | lawlessness. The rebels say they destroyed Chambersburg in relaliiti <u for the destruc j tion of southern towns an 3 buildings by our i troops. Even that would be no justification in the estimation of men who th ink tlivi this j war shout 1 be conducted on civilized and : christian principles. But it will be a lesson j to the Federal adiniuistra'ioii to guard here after agains the excesses of our it >ops. if it lias any rcgird fur tjie property of tl.o-e w!n : support and sustain it. It vv lii not do for t our administration to say that our burning ! and devestaiion was unauthorized and that I j the perpetrators were punished. Xeitiur Hunter or Banks, or any others, who hav.> inarched by tho hght oi burning towns and ; v: Mages have been censured, and even iit-Id to ian account or questioned. (Jur troops have burned Washington, in NYrrii Carolina; , J .ou-on vi lie. Florida ; BiuU'i"H, S ill It Caro . /.na ; Jacksonville, Florida; Biuli'ton, South | Carolina ; Banks burned the city 1 Alexan- j | dria, in Louisiana, and Hunter destroyed j j almost everything as he went in WY-terii j I Virginia, In Kilpatrick's ra'd, it is sa: thai j one division destroyed everything it en .e across, and other divisions were not much . less destructive, INcii Churches and sc! o! I houses were made to share the same iVe ns other j. .pile and private building. If such J things aie to conupue our whole land wii. i become depopulated and desolate Chain beibhurg now is.— Ltbunnmi Adceshstr. \ —— • The Negro Ahead, —The late i;.w o Congress .ucr asing the pty of the Amy ; did not p'aCe the white a id the blue!-; t'.>or>s 1 ; upon an equality. It gave the negroes Je cided advantages. For thetf \ i'c troops the 1 increased pay coalmen .'ci on the Ist oi M 18(31 ; for the black on the Ist of J iruary, i 1801 —thus giving the negroes more pay tiiau 'die white soldiers for the perio 1 of 1 ur months. The Pennsylvania Reserves were mustered out of the service about the m J i die of June last. They did uit ice ve th is i increased pay. They went through Gen. Grant's campaign from the Rap lau : > Bub- j beda Church, a', the old prion 'i te doT r enei* between the services reudered by that ; I iviri; n to Gen. Giant and t! >• Govet lom-nt, j and there of the negroes in the same anny> ! during that campaign, will he J.ily recordedj ' in history ; the d iff: re nee in their nay wii. he found below : PA. Reseats. THE NY ,a O EirstSug't §2O §24. Sergeant 17 20. Corporal 13 18 Private 13 16 4.fr- ~ T koi bee is Camp —Mr. Lite 'a ha- nu t j with another '* peck of r rouble.*' A pack i f ! disappointed abolilionnts of Uhi<, chagrined at the defeats, and overwhelmed with ragt j at the poor success attending Mr. LiiieoluY war measures, are out in a manifesto recuri- j mrn ling the czliing of a new convention to j mtet at Buffalo in Hoptemfmr, with the re quest lb; Liucoln and Frrmont withdraw u. favor of a new man. The Lreniv.rr J'o-/. Mr, Chase's organ in New lY:k, favors this move. It is therefore easy to trace the paternity oi movement to the defunct Eg Barms <>f ii treasury. Bat there .s sin-th;i in this movement that does not appear at first | sight. It ha-> been a cardinal doctrine of the j Republican party, preachers and all, that j Lincoln is 'he Government. Now to ask | the poTern.iifent to " wittidrsw in favor oi I another," must be double distiile t Trroion j £y The political rats are all dcecr'trtg the ! sinking ship of the admitns'rit : in. In.a I- j dition to the sulky attitude of some < f the : leading city Republican journals toward the j government, quite an iinlxr ! suvriler c >un ; try prpcrs have taken down L iicoln's iv. - and announce i that hereafter they will oc cr.py a position of armed tiiuirn'ify or open opp siti'oi}. Several of tlcKaiib.i- and Mis- i Si url j urnals have gone over to FY f.m->\ r, j t/h- Suffo'.t; (L. I.) ffeialtl is for tl e Ctreigo nominee, while the last New L >nd n (Ct.) f Chrdiiicle holts outright an! declares it purpose to do its worst again*', the rail split- J t. r. j Several hundred negroes had a" ju i bi'ee' v on the President's grounds" a' Wash- 1 ington, on the Fast day. The'shod ly organ [ at thai city *avs that the darkies " contriv i • .to rend.. a c 'nsiiu-r'.hie am ant of amuse 1 ! me;it ; * * every contrivance, icd. id, j j that c uld -dd to tho pleasure of 'ho time I I was brought into energetic rrqtii-otior..' | That's the Lincoln style ; cJI on white * n i to bleed and die, that negroes in iy bee une ' electors ; call on whit" men to iu-t and pray, ' and turn ytur gfounun into a Jones' Wood I for the Accommodation of Ediiopians. I'r ih- | 1 ably the white bufTjon rubbed his ban Is in 1 i glee at the antics or the black buffoons in ( ! the garden. " John," said a stingy old hunk to his ' i hired man, as he was taking dinner. •' do i | you know how many pancakes you've eat en No.*' " Well, you've eaten fourteen i w " Welt, said John, you count ani I wiil ! eat V ——• .i. ►— —- There aie nearly one hundred thousand more women than men in Massachusetts and 1 just ns u*ny men who wish to their har".s | now, they were women. lOGAL AND PERSONAL JW I ''3* ®EC R GAT, LU T act AA-our Ageut in RECIRIN# rtceiptuiy MIO.-R.PTUM f, R B E NOUN Branch Detu ocrat A:L NS'TTICT pant HIM either on .uLwrripti. IRFORADVERNSINGIA.IL BE duly accounted for ann ie tu il tho 51:111 U if paid to u.. A Cieat Outrage.— ln the late draft I'etcr >1 hce and Xath an Purdv of tbc Borough of Provi ivn. ; DREW j.ruei AND were iiotifieii;to repirt om tha -oi.': of THV month On Monday eveaipg HUT, how ever. two of Abraham's men called upon .hem and t.uust tciein into a carriage, and trough them to tht Barracks and DEP.NIIED then, within its walls. The outrage justly aroused the miration of every per son made a-qaainted with the CIFTMNETAM*., w.tij , out regard to poiitics. It wtil REQM BUT A few inote uenionatrations of like character to g i T . i vote in opposition to Linceln. V.'e are infirm ■ ! the eases are likely to <ome bw foro our courts for adjudication. It ia titne auch ia fuanas ii, fractious of civil rights hud an enJ. Rg i*ter Scranion, * a > the A cterang. —Montrose was saved from th* last draft by GETTING credit for veterans WHOM TNCY promised to pay, but have not, as yet.-- 'I in 1 lowr.s had t funii.-h both men and money. ~ heier tly. when the Borough Council were preparing LO fulfil the contract with the veterans, a "pressure" was made to deprive them AND their widows and , orphans of tho hard earned money, so that this in tense-war to the end community might escape < ..her fight NG paying to suppbrt this "glorious war for freedom," WC hive not the names of these wLi'E-fe 1 iher ; IT riots, but shall unearth the whole tacts an I let tho public take 111 inside view of pat ■ cut-patriot is:.;,— Montrose Democrat. . —v vi uie disorder's "ft entails. "That it is far superior to any other remedy vet devised, is known by all 1 who have given it a trial. That it does com-, j bine virtues truly extraordinary iu their effect upon tiiis class of complaints, is indisputably proven by the great multitude of publicly known anil remarkable cures it has made f the following diseases : KING'S Bvil OT Glandular Swellings, Tumors, Erup tions, Pimples, Blotches and Sores, Ery sipelas. Rose or St. Anthony's Fire, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Coughs from tu berculous deposits in the lungs, White Swellings, Debility, Dropsy, Kenralgia, ' Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Syphilis and Syphilitic Infections, Mercurial Diseases, Female Weaknesses, and, INDEED; the whole 1 ' *NES of com plain ta ♦* j Jlurfcal— Tho Normal Musical Institute now in SC n IT THIS 1 iucc in charge of I'rof X. E Perkins, J <>.) MONDAY evening, LEST, gave a Grand vocal and , LIST:URNCI.t ii Concert, ct tho Presbyterian church, f.r R, hi h a limited uumber of tickets were issued at ! '..'5 vents each. We were prevented by ether engage - 1.. LIT? from attending, but hear the entertainment very h'ghiv vpoken of, by those who were present. — Two other Concerts are alvertised to he given before the vi :3 of the In-jii'ute. ONE on .Ifjal W 'evening . iu-xt. And one tn Tuesday Evening dOth insf. Certainly, no K-vcr of good music should fail J to ntteii 1 <ve or both of these. Tho Institute NR IS attended OJ ."X.elieni, tausirians aud singers ■ LI'IIIII -evrra! of the C>tatejof tha In ion, making a combination of INUIUII t -U oi JSJJ rare oc;ur ' I/avid PatricV— :-.AO! 1 well known and highly I USIIC. TED ,'ETIDOFU of Ovcrf.eld Township in this Count}*, while cussing ihe strcot at this place on Monday i;-t, was rua against, knocked down ml j run over hy A mat?, who ivitl a span of horses AND A J: T-voL '.- 'E . Y..N W.;s doing sme citelcss driv- VG ABOUT our streets, LH-U$H he received severe ui.-es and narrowly oscspcd being killed it is C.'IL'CIIT his injuries are not of A dangerous charac -1 Gr. }VE hare ol serve ii several iiu'ances recently, of : RS kind OR cangeTous NR. 1 furious driving in ou -;-ee-, T y VIE. who eo:a auiious to show off them- S-L.-ss .0 t'.vir 1 • r J . The siwasr A stop is put to . this hy car authoriti-S, an! persons are taught that 1 J .. • sfi-et filled with people PAASING to and fr IS n ' ii p-oper PIDCO for such exhibitions, the Let ter it wi 1 be for the lives ani secarity of cititea ; and ;OJ R.rnors. Died. j AVKKY---7n L.-:I U ON the I.J'h i .ST EJS.n Forrest iiil'.int son of MILES au I Juno Ann Avery aged J nioo.hs and 2ti days. 1 NESTLING of "ur household band, To .I.pear in glory's lan.J, Still I CLASP thy little hand, My <'.arlitig, Oh- my darling" v V.'II-n thylrtle form I pre- l* Ac I gently laid thee D .wn to rest, O ! tho anguish in my l.reaxt My darling O'U My darling. TIIY. liitle voice no more I hear, My yearning aching heart to E'ne*r Thon'rt gone to God I do not fear, My dariing Oh. My darling. T crii! try R.n gnere frr thee no more, BUT meet thee on that happy shore For thou art only gone before, My dariing GH ! My dariior -1 '■ Camp Meeting i There W'U be a Cainp Meeting held under th" SUPERVISION oftho Evangelical AS-sociatian on the old ' '"'dairy farm' owned by Mr. Young in FallsTp AVyo— I ruing County ; to commence THCRSDAV SKIT Ist 1864 N. B. NO huxtering will be allowed, U A DIETTEBICK RREACBCR in charge. : EtllTOßor I)v. Bear Sir .--Iv'ith rour permicaion I wish to say to the readers of your naper that I will send, by ' return ma-1. < all who wish it (free.) a Recipe, with i lull directions lor making and uing a simple \cg.t --i able b :1m tiiwt will effectually remove, in ten daya t Pimples. Blotches, Tun, Freckles, ar.J all luipuri -1 ti.s otthe Skin, leaving the same soft, clear, smooth I nnd lieuuliful. T -.vill a! J LR.ii. free II THOSE havin B.ildg Heads Bare F.VRS, SIIUPLO directions and infortnation that will enable them to start a full grow th ot Luxuri -1 ant Hair Whiskers or a Moustache, in less tha I ; thirty du_ 9 Alt answered Ly return mail AND without CHARGE. Respectfully vonrs, 1110 S. .F. CUAL'MAN, Chemi,t 831 Broadway, New Yord. ' I v 4 UL O(v A CARO Tt> THE BRING. ( OWALLOW- two or three hogsheads of" BucLu | O "T'ltiio Eitj'.ors," " Sarsaptrilla," " Neryooi ; Antidotes." Ac., Ac.', A*, ani after you ire SAT £EJ I with the result, th N trv one BO* of OL.D DWCTT K BL'CHAN'S ENG 1,1811 SPECIFIC' FILLS ; be restored to health and vigor in less than thir.Y ' dnys. They SEE P'treiv ve*etable. pleasant to OKC promjit A.P! •slatary in their effects on the HRO;E " down OND shattered eons'itution. Old AND Y 0UNG enn take them with advantage R >rted N ' ! N in THI FT ted State- only BY 8- S. R Y- No. 427 Broadway, New FORK. (, JT Agent for the UNITED P. A Eox ol the rills, securely P"' : KEIJ ; H ' J ! bo mailed to any address on receipt >! P R ' FE 'I A I id ONE DOLLAR, post paid—money - i the Ageut if tuliro SATI'FA li >u is act GIVEN I vi low.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers