TT A.Xl\ra"y SICIS-IjEri^'ruiirletor.l NEW SERIES, gr;nirlj pfmortal A weekly Democratic paper, deroted to Pol- y VL ties, Ssns, the Arts an 1 SawiHM&e. Pub- " ■ PjrrT'f . fished every Wednes- ___ day, at Tunkhannoek, LjSPj p BY HARVEY SICKLER, I'eVmS—l copy 1 year, (in advance) $2.01. I not pain within six months, $2.50 will be charged ADVERTISING. 10 lines or , < j /ess, make three 'four tiro three ' sis one one square ireek.f reeks tno'!h'mo , th ino th near 1 Square 1,00 1,25 2.25 2,-7 3.l'U 5,00 2 do. 2,00 2.50' 3,25> 3.50 4,50 6.00 3 do. 3,C0 3,75' 4,75 5,50; 7,OtL 0.00 i Column. 4.00 4,50 G. 50 8.00 10,00,15.00 do. 6.00 : 7,00 10.00 !2.00 ! 17.00 25,00 do. 8 00; 9,50; 14,00 18,00 25,00 35,00 1 do. I o'oo; 12,00! 17,00 ; 22.00. 28,00 40,00 Business Cards of one square, with paper, S5. JOB WOB.K of all kinds neatly executed, and at prices to suit the times. business Notices. f t ECK H. H ITON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, V J Tuiikliannoek, Pa. "Sice m Stark s Biick Block, Tioga street. \UM. M. PIATT, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Of. \\ See in Stark's Brick Block, Tioga St., Ttink fiAtiriMck, P j) R.ckS. W, LITTLE ATTORNEY'S AT, Ik. LAW, Office on Tioga street, Tunkhannoek Pa. H. COOPI'.R, PfIYSK IAN A SURGEON • Newton Centre, Luzerne County Pa. r IME FOR FARMERS, AS A FERTILIZE Li for sale at VEKNOY Meshoppen. Sept. 18 1 5 6' T V. SMITH. M. T). PHYSICIAN A SURGEON, J • Office on Bridge Street, next door to the Demo crat Office, Tunkhannoek, Pa. PH. .T. <' BECK'MII . PHYSIC i.VN V SURGEON, Would respectfully announce to fh< '3 itizrn? of Wv ming that he has located :t Tuukhmnock wh er he will promptly attend to all calls in the line o his profession. ttT Will b found nt home on Saturdays o aoii wee WALL'S HOTEL, SATE AMERICAN HOUSE, TUNKHANNOCK, WYOMING CO., PA. THUS csfahlirhnient has recently been refitted and X tarnished in the latest style Every attention is il ke given to the comfort aud convenient eof those w'.io patronize the House. T. B. WALL, Owner an 1 Proprietor. Tunkhannoek, September 11, 1861. -m" ■ . . NOTSTH BRANCH HOTEL, MESiIOJ'PEX, WYOMING COUNTY, PA Will. 11. C OUTRIGHT, Prop'r f T AVTNG resumed the proprietorship of the above I 1 Hotel, the undersigned will spare no rt to render the house an agreeable place ol sojourn tor all who may favor it with their eust >m. Win. II CCiITP.IIIIIT. J use, 3rd, 1563 Mians iahl, TOWZYYJDA., PA.. I). B. BARTEET, [Late ol the BBUAINARD HOUSE, EI.MIRA, N. \ r . PROPRIETOR. The MEANS HOTEL, bona of the LARGEST and BEST ARRANGED Houses in the country—lt is fitted up in the most modern and improved style, and n pains are spared to make it a pleasant and agreeable stopping-place for all, v 3 .'2l, lv M. OILMAN, DENTIST. -=s-_'*Sa - % T CSILMAN. has permanently located in Tunk jVjL• hannock Borough, and respectfully tenders his profet*£>(kn| services to the citizens of this place aud unrounding country. ALT. WORK WARRANTED, TO GIVE BATIS rAOTJON. 1-^"Office over Tutton's Law Offico, near the Pos Tffiee Dec. 11, 186 <. A GENTLEMAN, cured of Nervous Debility. In competency, Premature Decay ami Youthful ErrorJ nctiralee by a desire to benefit others, will be Nappy to furnish to all who need i . (free of charge ), the re- ipe aud directions for making the simple remedy ! used ia his ease. Those wishing to profit by his. anil possess a Valuable !-<■ ,w 11 reicivo "the catne, by return maßi (carefully sealed ) by addressing ' JOHN B. OGDEX No- 60 Nassau street, New York. ♦SI-n-iO-'dmn UE NO OTHER !—BUCHAN'S SPECIFIC PILLS are tue ouly Reliable Remedy t or all Diseases of the Seminal, Urinary and Nervous t=ys ems. Try one box, and be cured. ONE DOLLAR A BON. One box will perfect a cure, or money re toded. Sent by inai 1 on receipt of price. JAMES S. BUTLER. Station D. Bible Pouae New York, „ General Aar M ACo T)° TO'' WISH TO BE C'l RED ? ! .n C j HAN s kng, - , SH SPECIFIC PH.J.S cure, ess than 30 days, the worst cases of *KRVot;aaF.ss iu[si eney, retn tture Dacay, Seminal Weakneos 8 lnr,!,r y- Sexual, and Nerv - I rmc "".r 11 " naU what producedui, onZJ f I 01 1'" £f r bol ' Sent > by mail : on rscerpt cf an order. Address, '''**■ JAMES S. BUTLFR, Station D, Bible lieuaa 91 fbm M A New York Bf!Y .• pott's Corner . OLD ABI. Old Abraham, my jolty old Abe. When we wore first acquaint. I thought you were an honest man. But nothir.gof a saint : But since you wore the Spanish cloak, You love the negro so. And hate the white man so yarn do, My jol y old Abe, uij Jo. . Oil Abe, j'dly ol d Abe, What do you really mean ? Your negro Proclamation is A wild fanatic's dream. The war you did begin, old Abe, And that you surely know ; You should ha- j made a compromise, My jolly old Abe, my Jo. Old Abraham, my jolly old Abe, Youi darkey plan has failed. Ere this you know that cruel war And taxes you've entailed In th : s unhappy, land old Abe, Is weepin *, wail, ani woe, That you can't cure nor we endure, My jolly old Abe.my Jo, Old Abraham, my jolly old Abe, The blindest man can see The Union you will not restore Till every negro's Iree ; And equal with the best of men, In arm and arm cab go, To vote as you may wish him to, My jolly old Abe, my Ja. LIMPE.V LAPRIB. THE MODE IN \YI1( II SOLDIERS SHALL VOTE, The following is :m abstract of the bill pre v r.btng the manner in which the soldiers shall vote : Section 1 Provide? that whenever anv of the qualified electors af 'his c >mmoiiwealth shall be in actual military service under a re qnisition frvtn the Pr*ident or Governor.and coti-equertlly ab>ent on the day of holding general, special or Presidential elections, they shall be entitled t > exercise the right of suf fiagt a fully as if tiny were present at their proper place of voting ; and the right of sncti v< ters ts r.ot to In- impaiiVd oy* reason of hw being credi'cd f-r bounty in any other locali ty than his ac'ua! residence. Section 2. A poil is to be opened in each coinpanv.coiuj.o-ed in whole or part of Peon ) Ivatiia * ihliers. at the quarters of the Capt am or ot her officer, and alieh-ctor* of sani Company who idiall be within one mile u' such quarter* on the day of election, and not be prevented from returning by the proximi ty of the enemy or orders of Commander*, shall vote at such head quarters, arid no oth er place. Officers others than those of a com pany, the other voters detached aud absent from their companies, or in any military or naval ho-pttal, or in any ves*el or navy-vard, may vote at such otht r polls as are most cou venient to thcui. When there are ten oi more electors un -hle to attend the c inpaoy polls or proper place of election they tna_\ open a poll at each place as the}' may select. Section 3. The polls are not to be opened before 7 o'clock,and must be kept open three hours, or if deemed necessary in order to re ceive ail the votes until 7 o'clock in the even "g- - • , . • Section 4. Before opening the polls the elec tois present shall elect, viva voce, three per sons for ju l.es, and the judges shall appoint two clerks, and prepare boxes for the bal lots. Stclnn 5. Before receiving any votes the judges and clerks shall be svvurn to observe the law and guard against fraud deceit, and this oath must ie entered on the poll book and signed by the judges and clerks. Section 6. All voting shall be by ballot,and the applicant to Vote, if challenged, must be examined u ider oath by the judges as to his r ght to vote in the precinct -n which he claims residence Section 7. Separate poll bouk shall be kept and separate returns made, for the voters of each city or county. The poll books shall name the company and regiments, and post place or hospital in which the election is held. The county and township, city, bor ouirh, ward, precinct, or election district of each voter shall be endorsed opposite his name on the poll books of which each clerk shall Keep one. Section 8. The tickets shall have upon them the names of all the officers for whom the elector desires to vote. Sect'on 9. On receiving the ticket the judges tnuT pronounce audibly the nam • <! the elector presenting it, and if satisfied of the right of the elector to vote, and he is not chal'engcd, shall iLposite the ballot in the proper box while The clerks r.-gister the name and legal residence of the v iter in their poll books. Section 10. At the close of the polls the number of voter* must be counted, set down, and certified at the toot of the poll books. Section 11. After the p<>!l b>ks are count ed the ballots are to be counted, each reading the name thereon, and the third stringing the Tote of each county on a sep arate string, and carefully preserving the aatne. "TO SPEAK HIS THOUGHTS IS EVERY FREEMAN'S RIGHT. "—Thomas Jeflerson. TUNKHANNOCK, PA., WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 14, 1864. Section 12, Where two tickets are folded topether, both are to be thrown out, and where two ballots are voted together for that office. Section 13. Each clerk shall keep, in addi turn" to the poll book, a list of the voters for each county, which shall constitute part of the poll ha. Section 14. The number of voters on these county poll list must also be set down and certified. j Sections 15 and 16. Prescribes the form of poll book, and the manner of entering the returns. Section 17. After eanvasing the votes, the Judges w ill -eal up and send the poll !>• lists, and ballots to the Prothonotary of the proper county, and secure the other poll book, lists, to be called for by the Com missiom-r appointed under the act. If not called for within ten days, the second book, &.C., are to be sent to the Secretary of the Commonwealth. Section 18. The Prothonotary must fur ni*h the Return Judges with a certified copy of returns so received. Section 19 and 20. The Return Judges are to meet on the Second Tuesday of No vember to c unt and enter the vote of sol dters thus returned. Section 21 In Presidential elections, all returns received by the Secretary of the Commonwealth are to be compared with the county returns, for the correction of the la' ter. Section 22. All elections are to be subject to contest as under present laws, •Section 23. The Secretary of the Coin toon weal tit i* required to provide asufficnni number of cpies of this law, together with ••xtracts ftotn the general election law? bl ink forms o' poll books, il v Gsts, an 1 ri urn*, p's age siatiwis, etc., arid forwaid th<- -ante by Congress, r otherwise, to tit ° com manding officers of companies, detached post* and hnspiiajs, who shall deliver the same to ihe election judges on the day of election, but no election is to be invalidated by rea. son < f such blanks not being received. Sect, r24 25, 26,27. The G vernur is 'o appoint- such commissioner*, not exceeding one to each P ■ jinsy lvqjna re g merit in ser vice, as *ha!l be necessary to carry out tln law. Said commissioners are to be sworn to fulfl.l their duties,under penalty of §I.OOO or impris r.uient foT one year. Tbey are to deliver four copies of the laws, and' at leas t ■wo sets of blanks, to the commanding offi. err of ev ry company and part of company j pr. v;de for opening pulls, and cail for one c"p; of the p 11 book after the election.— They are to be paid leu cents per mile for tiavt Uui.r tu and from their respective regi ments, and may act as one ot the company polls. No failure ot comnii*i< ners to visit regimwil* invalidate any election under the act. Section 3#, 29 The officers authorized to conduct elections are to be subject to the utia! penalties for non-fulfilment of duties i'liey are to receive no compensation. Section 30. V\ hen the Sheriff issues his proclamation for an election, he shall trans mit immediately copies of the same to the troops in the field from the c; untry. Section 31. 513,000 is appropriated to carry the law into effect. Section 3& 33. Where less than ten per sons are separated frotn their proper compa ny, they "Stre to vote as follows : "Bach voter is authorized, before the day of election, to place his ballot, properly folded, in a 6ealed envelope, together with a statement signed by the voter nod his commanding officer, or some other wi tnsss, atid duly sworn to and certified betore satd officer, or some other competent person. This statement must set forth the following facts : The name and proper residence of the voter. An authority to some qualified voter at the place of his residence, to cast the ballot for him. That he is in the active military service and give the name of the organization of which he is a member. That he has not sent his ballots to any other person than the one so authorized. That he will not attempt to vote at any poll oponed on said election day, at any place whatsoever. That he has not been dishonorably dis missed from service. And that he is now stationed at —_, Slate of Said sealed envelope, ballota and state ment are to i>e sent by mail, >r otherwise, to the proper person, with the endorsement on the sealed out thereof, "Soldier's ballot for township, (ward or borough) in the county of &c Sections 34 35, 36 37. The alector to whom this ballot is sent shall deliver it un opened, on the d<y of election, at the proper polls. Tne election officer shall open it in ?he presence of Ihe hoard, and deposit the ballots and accompanying papers, as other ballots are deposited. Th • person delivering the ballot shall be compelled to testify on o*th that he has delivered in the same state as when receive I, ai l that hi has not ofiened it or changed or altered the contents. Without such the vote shall not be re ceived. The right to rote of the person sending tb ballot mj be ebaf!enged. the 1? U*' > t a ... * i 4 V i • V? • same as if he was personally nresent. Any election officer refusing to receive anJ court such vote, excepting when fraudulent, and anv elec'or to whom such ballot is sent re fusing to present it at tha proper poll, are punishable ami one year's im prtsomnonf. Any person making false oath touching these matters is subject to a penal ty of 81000 fine ami five yeai's imprison ment. Section 38. The Sacrelarv of State shall prepare and furnish the nece6>ary blanks to carry out this act. Section 39. In case of an elector in mili tary service on a vessel, (he master of said vessel shall be competent to take affidavit and written statement of said elector. Section 40. Assessors are required to as sess a county tax of ten cents on every non commissioned officer and private, and the usual tax on every commissioned officer, known bv them to be in the military service of the Lnited Stales or of the State, in the army or navy, and when names shall have been omitted they most fie added on applt. cation of any resident of the district. Non. commissioned officers and privates are to be exempt front all other personal taxes while in service. Assessors must receive this tax from, and furnish a certificate of payment to any citizen offering to pay the same for said soldier Where the name has been entered on the assessment books no certificate of as. cessment shall be required. The eertificite of payment shall set forth the naute of the person for whom the tax is pard, the date of payment, and year for which it was assessed. This certifi cate shall only be evidence of payment of 'axes, and shall not preclude a demand tor other evidence of a right to vote. Ttte pen alty for non-compliance on the part of as. sessors, collectors or treasurers shall not be less than S-9, nor more than §2OO. THE GREAT CRIMINAL CASE. THE PEOI-LE OF THE 'Supreme Court of the CSITKI* STATES r Ballot-Box.—CL-tofcer rerun* C *ti i November terms, THE AH-JLITIOS PART V. , 1564. Indictment drawn up and presented by he working men of New Y .rk. representing he "lolling millions" of the L nited State* "f America. Is is charged sgainst the de fendeni in this case, ( the abolition pa- fcy.) i hat- It has consigned to untimely deaths, five hundred thniuand human beings, the gr<-a* majority of w*h*m were working men, pro ducers, contributors to the wealth of the na tion. It has arraved brother against brother,ami A pitted the father agair.st the 6on, in mortal combat. It has deluged the land in blood—whitened the fields of the Sduth with the bones of the slain. It has brought gr<ef and sadness to nearly every fireside. It lias opened up broad avenues for specula 'ion and plunder of the public finances. It has deranged the currency of the conn tly. It has enlarged beyond all necessity the pubiic debt. It has taxed the preset generation beyond all precedent and entailed burthens that will fall with crushing weigh upon unburn millions. It has taken from industrial and productive, pursuits over two millions of men. It nas shielded the rich from the clutches of repeated''drafts," by the payment of sum? ( to them petty and insigm ficant) to the Government ; while it has compelled the tolling masses to enlist, for the plain reason tiiat their actual necessities required it for the immediate support of their families. It has given us shinplastcrs. green paper and petty postage stamps for the common currency of the country. It ha 9 created a fluctuating and uncertain standard of value. It has used the people's money withont legal authority, in useless ;nd vain attompts to better the condition of the negro, at the expense of the white raca. It has inaugurated schemes to thwart the plans of the Almighty in co mingling the races. It has allowed defaulters and defrauding contractors, paymasters, public officers and even private individuals, to swindle the peo ple out millions of dollars, and has dared to send some of them on foreign missions as a reward fur their rascality. It has ignored well established laws of Congress. It has disregarded the Constitution under the plea of "military necessity. It has taken the edicts of the Presi dent as laws of the land, which laws they contraven ed. It has indemnified public officers from suits at law for damages on account of outrages upon the rights of citizens. It has arrested good and true men and pa triotic c ; tizen6 without legal authority; drag aed them from their homes, friends and fam ilies ; sent them beyond the limits of iho States in which they resided ; incarcerated them in bastiles, and falsely denounced them as traitors. It has trampled down the great bulwarks of civil liberty, the freedom of speech and of the prese. It has abolished the writ of habeas corpus a right which no other enlightened govern ment under heaven wouM seek even to abridge. It has set aside our system of trial by ju ry, and substituted arbitrary power for the laws of the land. It has declared military control where the civil tribunals were in tfie faithful discharge of thru legitimate duties. It has created unnecessary departments in the General Government, thus causing more expenses, increased taxes, and heavier burthens for the people. It hrs organized new States from the mere fragments of the original j admitted members from these so call d States to seats as mem bers of Congress. I? has Eeai its spies and informers through the principal cities aud towns, to listen to and report the muruiurlnge of the people 'oucliing the manner in which the Adminis tration is conducting the affairs of the coun try. It has regarded opposition to the Adminis tration as opposition to the Constitution and Government, than which there can be noth ing more false. It hao inaugurated a system by which one tenth of the citizens of a State, instead of a maj -rltv, may form a Stale Government. It has prohibited the ciiculation of news papers in the United States mails because ' hey criticised and opposed the acts of the Administration ; it has actually suspended their duplication, and placed a censorsnip i ver the press and the telegraph. It has circulated falsehoods and suppressed the truth. It has multiplied, to an indefinite extent, the number of sub'ornate efficials, simply to appease the per*istent appeals of inere dema gogues and political paupers. It has disregarded the reserved rights of the States, It has invoked a spirit of mob-law, which has developed itself id the principal cities in the destruction of lifa and property. ft has destroyed immense amounts of pub lie and private property; imposed on industry burthens too grevons to be borne ; enriched 'he tew nt the expense of the rnanv ; over ti wed our hospitals with disabled men, and crowded our streets with life long cripples. 11 his inflamed a!I the baser passions of the human heart. It has established '' National Banks" in every no ik and c-rner of the land, a system or finance universally repudiated by the peo p'e. It has allowed military' official? to inter rupt our system of election by ballot. It has intermeddled with the religions institutions of n oitry. L has attempted to disgrace representa. lives of '.he people in Congress for daring to express ihetr honest sentiments in regard to the war and its consequences. It has .scoffed at every preposition mitted to Congress for an honorable settle, mi nt of our national troubles, and stigma tized all pi-ace proposition as "dishonorable." It has declined to restore the ITnion unless the Southern States will abandon slavery, thus making the will of the President, in "tead of the Constitution, the law of the land. In a word, having filled half a million of sraves, and filled the country with, millions of widows and orphans, it now. refuses to make peace or restore the Union until white men and negr<es are reduced to a common level—until our heretofore proud white re public s -a'l become a disgusting mass of m ngrels and hybrids. TIIK TYPICAL NEURO —An Englishman, by the name of W. Wmwood Reade has been for several years past exploring central Africa llis picture of the real Atncan or typical ne gro, is one that will nut be altogether relish ed by the miscegenationists of this country. He says : "The typical negro, unrestrained by natural laws, spmida his days in sloth, his nights in debauchery. He smoaeg haschis till he stupefies his senses or falls into con vulsions ;he drinks palm wine till he brings on a lothesomo disease ; he abuses children ; stabs the poor brute of a wome'n whose hands keep him from starvation; and makes a trade of his own offspring. He swallows up his youth in premature vice ;he lingers through a manhood of disease ; and his tardy death is hastened by those who no longer care to find him food. Such are the "men and brothers,' for whom their friends claim, nut protection but equality." THE WAT THE WIND BLOWS The New London (CONN.) Chronicle, a Republican pa per which has b.*en carrying the names of Lincoln and Johnson at his head, has now pulled them down and bidden Old Abe " good by." The editor advises his partisan friends to reap what such "copperheads" as Greeley, Bryant, Weed, and, Brawnson have said of Lincoln, and then to disgust the man ifesto of Winter Davis and Ben Wade. He respectfully withdraws from the further sup port of "Honest Old Abe," and expresses his belief that "the intelligent and observant poi tion of Lincoln's supporters will gradually work around to tho true knowledge of his character and be governed accordingly." It doee really seem aa if the very bad fWleo out of the Lincoln Tab. -a it * no:o. j ..V Tjejums: ay.oopEH Aigmxac THE CRITTEXDEW COMPROMISE. KEEP IT BEToKE THE /SOPLI. The following resolutions passed the Uni ted States House pf Representatives, Febrt* try 11th, 1861, by a nearly unanimous Tote: Re<olve d, That neither the Federal Git */ * ernment nor the people or governments of th* non.slaveholding States have a purpose Constitutional right to legislate upon or in tar. fere with slavery in any of the State* of the Union. lies ilvtd, that those persons in the North who do not subscribe to the foregoing propo. sitions are too insignificant in numbers and influence to excite the serious attention or alarm of any portion of the people of the Re. pub'ic, and that the increase of their num. bers and influence does not keep pace with the increase of the aggregate population of the Union. Congress, by a volo nearly unanimous passed the following resolution, on ths extra session of 1861. which expresses the voice of the nation, and this is the true standard of loyalty : '"That the present deplorable civil war haa been forced upon the country by the disun. ionists of the Southern States, now in'arms against tho Constitutional Government and in arms around the capitol ; that in this national emergency, Congress, banishing all feeling of mere passion and assentment, will recollect only its duty to the whole country ; that this war was not waged on their part in any spirit of oppression or of any purpose ef conquest on subjugation, or purpose of over throwing or interfering with the rights orjes* tablished institutions of those States, but ta defend and maintain the supremacy of the Constitution,and to preserve the Union, with the dignity, equality, and rights of the sever, al States unimpaired, and that as socn as these objects are accomplished the war ought to cease. THE ORIGINAL PURPOSE 0V THE WAR'. General McClellau's order, August9th, 1862. says: " The General commanding takes this oc casion to remind the officers and soldiers of this army, that we are engaged in supporting the Constitution, and laws of the Cmtod States, and in suppressing rebellion against 'heir authority ; that we are not engaged in a war of rapine, revenge, or subjugation ; that this is not a contest against populations'; but against aimed forces and poliiical orga nizations; that it is a struggle carried on within the I'nited States, and should bo" conducted by us upon the highest principle* known to Christian civilization." Ia be Hmest I Lincoln's In iugur | Lincoln to tut Reb ut March 4th 1861. |el Commissiontra t 1 declare ttiat I have | July Bth 1804. no purpose. D.RECTLY | Aay proposition <>r INDIRECILY, to | which embraces the interfere with Hie in- | restoration of peace, NMtiiiinn of slavery in ( the integrity of the the States where it ex | wh'le Union, AND iats. I believe I have | TITE ABANDON? NO LAWFUL RIGHT J MENT OF SLAVE rO 1)0 SO, and have j RY, and comes by NO INCLINATION |an authority thai 10 DO SO, ** * * jean control the ar rhe RIGHT of each j mies now at war State to order and I with the United control its own do- | States, will t> recsiv uiestic institutions jed and considered by according to its own | the Executive Gov jndgrnent Exci.retvc- eminent of the UtK LV, H to ted States, and tfß* " the balance yf powet be met by <>n which the j erfec- terms on substantial tion and ENDURANCE and collateral points;- of our political fabric' and the bearer or depend bearers thereof shall ABRAHAM LINCOIN. have safe conduct both way a. ABRAHAM LINCOL* A GOOD REPLY.— A sturdy sergeant of ona of the Massachusetts regiments being ndliged to submit to the amputation of his hand, thy surgeon offared to administer chloroform as usual ; but the vcle r an refused, saying : ''lf the cuttiug was to be done to him, he want ed to see it," aud lying his arm on the table,, submitted to the operation without a sign of pain except a firmer setting of his teeth as ha saw struck the marrow. The operator aa ha finished looked at his victim with admiration and remarked " You ought to have been a surgeon, my man !?' " I was the next thing to one afora I ao listed." said the hero. " What was that ?" asked the doctor. '' A butcher !" responded the sergeant with a grim smile, which, despite the sur roundings, communicated itself to the by standers. j C2C" Artemus Ward writes that he is tired of answering the question as to hoir many wives Brigham Young has. He aaya that all he knows about it is that he one day used up the multiplication table in counting the long stockings on a ciothes line in Brig* haurs back yard, and went off fooling disay THE Republican papers do not publish th protest of Wade and Davis, against "Lincolna usurpations." It is a loyal document fro© loyal men, quite as good as thesspeechess s Di x and Holt, but no' publish*! They do net pubfi* u Fremont's letters of lato, ttor Sen. Cowans speech, nor even Forney*# lead er in the Washington chronicle, and Press. Nor do they say that Thad Stevaoa ia kick ing out of th# traces, What'# the matter f ' W.ll. What's the msMer ? VOL. 4 NO. 6
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers