branch pfwwtiit HARVEY HlCKTiftn, I'ruprlrtor. | NEW SERIES, A weekly Democratic *,_, paper, devoted to I'ull y Si •• New*, the Art* J| rjnl j and tocianoa* Ac I'eb- " > I j A i*k*d every Wedoa*- pay, at Tuakhannuck "*Jf fW# Wyoming County, Pa voA J \ I jXj jj / BY HARVf Y SICMR Ttrai l cpy I year, (•*!.*.**-* > , >:t BQ . Met paid ntna *ii mmutis* *•' 50 •'' u <***•* KU paper will be DISCONTIMirD, until all ar r.aragc are paid, uulea. at lb* upliuu uf publisher ADVlinTiaiNG . It! lints or /#, m ike thrtt /our tieo tKrt* sis on* *nt *'ftiure <rccAiircA* fto'th • mo th mo'th yuir I Suaare M*l 1,25 2,A 2,-7 5.1 U u„ 2 0. 2,50 3,.'5 350 450 b.lO id 3,'00 375 1,75 : 5,50 7,00 9,(0 4 Colaum 4 (ul 450 *0 -00 10,00 15,14) 1 Jo blA' 050 10,01. 1 IfJOO 17,00 35 CO I u'oo 7014 00 IR.OO 25 35,U0 1 du EXECI TORS ADMINISTRATORS and AUDI- J ToK S NOTIC ES, uf ibe usual ieugtli, 12 50 OBITUARIES eiceeJing ten tin**, each ; RELI tilOl S aal LITERARY SoTICES, not ol geuera intereat, oius ball Uie regular rate*. Huaiucas I ai d* of one 4Uare, with paper, 15 job wonit ef all kiad* neatly executed, and at price* to *uii lb* Uiue*. All TRANSIENT ADVERTISEMENTS and JOB WORK tru*t be paid for. 'the* orkrrd business dlotirs. HS. COOPER. PnYSU'IAN A SURGBO* . Neat, n Centre. Luierne County Fa. RH. I.ITTI.E, ATTORNEY AT LAW liftee "U Tioga meet, TuukbanoockFa CiKO ffoTUTTON, ATTORNEY AT LAW f 1 utikboui. 'k, Fa. Ofi. en Mark * Brie ack, Tt'.ga street. \l' W. W PIATT, SI Y A1 LAI 0 \* ice in Mark * Brick Block Tioga St , Tunk haaaock, Fa. 1 > If. .1. A'- 1' I <'R KH • PHYSICIAN 0* BlHtiEO*, Would rerpartfullv announce to iba ctti*en*o IW y- Binc that he bo* located at Tuukhauno. k bera tsa iil promptly atieuJ to all call* in tba lina of hi* profendon. , jy tgjji found ut bom* on rmturday* of aab aeea £% Burhlft House, I llMtlllSiU l{<i| I'KNNA. Th- ui.lemrnet ha vine HtfW par. ha*ed the •• Bl EIILtK HOI SK nv. ha* already cow tneoced 'h alteration- and • i-rovcuenU •• will render tki* °'d t l4 "* P"P u ' i,r u ~*' '"i 11 * l! Dot * u P e " not to iBT ilotel in the OH* of Marnelure A c.otinnance of the ebhi f.atrouage u retpect felyanUcilwd. Q£r| j BOLTOX WALL'S HOTEL, AMERICAN HOUSE, Tl']fcH AX*<H k.. VOMISi: CO., PA Til I c ritabluhm'iit ha* recently been refitted an furouked in the lateet rtyle Every attention Will be riven to the .onitort aud voarewUt.ee of thoee MMO (Atrußilf ibf JH T B WALL and Pr\jpn#U>r : Tunkhannerk. September 11, 1961. NORTH BRANCH HOTEL, RfcaUOPPEN". W \UMIN< COtNT\, PA- 1 %tm. H. ((WTKILHT, I*rop*r HAVING reined the |.r. | rietoreLip of the abort | Dubai, the uuder.igt.r i a ill epare no effort to render the hvuee ar. agreeable pi<■! of aoyourn for all who may favor it with flieir •• aii wno W|B || COKTRIGUT. Jane, 3rd, ledS Uffaus ©fltrl, TOWANDA, PA. D. 13- BART LET, | Late of the Rainusaai' Hot've, human. N Y. |*KOPRIk£TOR. The MF AN- 5 H°TF!., i nne if the LARGEST and HET ARRAKGKi ll<>u#e* in the eouatry-It la fitted up in the a d modern and improved style, and no (einf are rpared to make it a pleasant and agreeable Mapping-place for all, r S, 021, If CLARKE, KEENEY,& CO., aaai racrraawi am wh<iL€*alii l-rai t* in LADIES', MISSES' & GENTS' filkantjCassinurf iEM* A*r> *'SB- MS IS HATS, CAPS, FI RS, STRAW GOODS, I'AKAHILh AXD rMiIKEI.I.Afi. . BIFFALU AND FANCY RuBES, 840 BROADWAY, o iiSi K or Ltosin eracaT, HiS# • r ruw, . a. c itutr, . a. ufaaaar. S M. OILMAN, MliUll AN, ha* pennaaeatly located ia Tunk • hatua-rk Iteroug' , and respectfully tender* hia prelwwoeal mo iom i- the ciuseiu of Uus plaeo and urroundiug country ALL WORK WARRANTED, TO GIVE SATIS FACTION JS Ofioe orar Tutton'i Law Oftew, Mar tha Pea •e* 11, Mil GQO3) 35 TO HOUSE .KEEPERS! F rank >l. Buck 11m jui uMotJ, at (he atur* ho a** furu,*r'jr oo cupted ty C r, M*rU, ou Jour below Balaam'* llolal, in l aiikhaiutuck, NEW GROCERY AMD Provision Store, •her* b i* prepared to Mil *v* jibing in th* ho* ul Fatuuj tlrocan** at price* far thoa* kara lotora uktU fur ihaui 0 11 u >Utck *u (elected aid purchased by MR. A. G. STARK n partus whoa* intimate with the red*. aud dealer*, enabled bun to purch*** at price* LOIIE THAI TIE LBIEST. Mr Stark'* *er*ica* a* *ala*iaan, also, have been secured. In the line of Groceriee and Provision#, I can Mil li'iod Molaaws at *1 per Gel Good Brown Scgar at 12| cts per lb Ne, 1 Mackerel * 4 12| 44 ' Cod Pub 44 9 . u u New Met* Porn " 17 44 • 44 Cbeniical Soap "* 12| "* ** " Salerata* u 12J 44 44 <>r >ond Coffee 44 25 44 44 " Fxtrs Greeu Rio Coffee 44 40 44 44 44 Lrd 44 2 0 44 44 • Kice 44 15 44 " " Cracker* 44 1 0 44 44 ,4 Ani all other articles at correspondingly low prices In tke article ol Teas, both as to prices and quality, 1 pffij ©mnpftilion GINGER, PEPPER, SPICE, CINAMON CLOVES, NUTMEG, MUSTARD, CRE A M 'T A RT A R, RAISINS, FIGS, POWDER, SHOT AND LEAD. Flffl AID UTS If All MB. -ALSO FLAVORING EXTRACTS FOR PUDDINGS, 11HS CI'STAKD AND ICECREAM. 0 SPICED SALMON & SARDINES in hnaee— a fine article for Pic-aie, flaking and pleasure parties, Ice Cream Constantly on hand, ani furnished in aay quanti ty desired, on short notice* MACARONI— FOR SOUPS. M.MOKKI) HALIBUT. 0 A Urge and varied assortment of LAMPS LAMP CHIMNEYS GLOBES AND WICKS, ALSO Kerosene Oil. o N. 8.-WOOL, niDES, PURS, AND gHEEP PELTS, purchased for cash or trade, for which the highest cask prices will be paid. ©all aali fiarajnt. *. 1 W P. BUCK. Tank ban nook, J uaeC ?U4M **TO MHEAk Hl THOUVHTtt 111 KVEHY VBKJBIUIIIi KIGUT. TUNKHANNOCK, PA., WEDNESDAY, NOV. 22 1565." port's toft. I'YBBERM TMIIhISIO, l'a baan thinking, I've baan thinking, What a glorious world war* thia, Did folk* mind thau own buain*** mora, Aud mind their ueighbur • lam. Fur luttanca, you and 1, uiy iriaod, Ar* *adly prona to'talk Of uiattar* that eonoarn u* not, And othan' fbltiaa mock, Ira baan thiukiqg, if wa'd bag in To unnd our owu affair*. That powibly our naighburs might Contrive to manage their*. We'ra foult* *o-*gh at homa to tnand — It may b* Lrua of othar*; It would ***ui etrauga, U it wore nut, Sine* all tuaiikiml are brother*. Oh ! would that w* had charity For erary man and woman, Forgiven*a* i* th* mark uf thuaa Who know 'to err ot bam on Then let us banish jtaiousy Let s lilt uur talicu brolbar, And a* we journey duwn life's road, D<j good to one another. §elfrt Jjtonj. SUMETUINU ABOUT WOMEN, BEING ADVICE FROM A FATHER TO HIS SON. Some days since 1 administered to yen a short but serious hit of tdvtee concerning whiskey straight and whiskey sour or rather as to what sort of people they are who drink these alcoholic compounds. Your trunk is now packed, your boots pinch your feet no more, the maternal apron string is severed, your sister has abstracted the last twenty greenback from the mardct dole, and yon are ready, eager, and ripe for the battle of with all its mvsteiie* of bard up, and mise ries of down at the heel. There is one fsct ; and that is, next to an hereditary fondness for whiskey, you have another weakness—women. You need not blush. I always regard the sudden flushing up of a man's face as prima Jacia evidence that he has been at something of which he is ashamed. Now, no man need to be ashamed of fondness for women. It is nat ural. It ts human. Woman is divine—es pecially after dinner, when her temper has been crushed down—flattened out beneath a tremendous weight of roast beef, potatoes, and apple pudding. Before dinner she is variable, sometimes nervous and always box ing for something she has not lo*t. Com mend me. my son, to the woman who dines heartily, and minds her own business as well as tbat of her neighbors ; who does not niaks a tea-vat of herself, and who can drink a cup of Young Hysoo withont sweetening it with the shreds of scandal she has picked up in job lota in the street. A silent tongue in woman bespeaketh longevity, love and the meekness of submission. There are di vers kinds of women, my son. Women, were they alike, wouldn't be worth as much as one of the luxuries of this world. Variety, my dear son. is not only the spice, but the comfort of life which perhaps ac counts for the tendency of some married men to go abroad after those comforts which can be had at home, equally as pleasurable in their nature, but which from long familiarity do uot have the charm of novelty. Man will as be has ever done since the world began, continue to run after strange goda—particu larly if these strange goda wear crinoline, have dimpled cheeks, rosy lips, roguish eyes, and are all the more complaisant with an in crease of worsbioers. Women take to flattery, my son, as natur | ally as men do to their morning eye-opener. It is the sugar of their existence. But woe to the unlucky wight who does not under stand the art of administering it. It has to be given with care. It must be prepared and put up in doses to suit the patient, like medicine. Some women will take flattery and adultation as the glutton swallows cream tarts, and are nnhappy and miserable if thay miss their daily dose. Others take it well disguised. The plain, unadoring article dis gusts and makes them qualmish. Others again, pretend to abhor compliment in all Its forms, and yet are only fishing for a larger share then of right belongs to them. At the first nibble they toss their pretty heads and curl the inviting lip. an\l ate ready for a wholesale bite. When a woman tells you ahe detests flattery, my boy, don't believe her. The heart of woman is like a fort.— There ia a sally-port somewhere, by which all its loves, desires, fears, and hates comes bat, either. singly or in fall battallion.— Through that sally-port, my boy, you can enter and capture the entire garrison, haul down its flag of deflanot, and run up your good eosigo of victory. But you must first, like a doctor examining a blooded horse, find her weak and strong points, study her every motion, mark her every word, never allow a glance to escape you. There never yet lived a woman who could not be conquered. I any that advisedly. Women was born to be married. To her, even in her younger years, the coming man towers in the dim future like the vieioo of a colossus looming up through the misty atmosphere of a dream. Uer deatiuy U man, and without hiui sho does not fulfil her mission ou this footstool. There never vet lived one of those rusty uoudescripts, yclept old mails, who lid not at some period of her unhappy existence, have & hankering after a man, and that par ticular mau did uot conquer her, and save the world the uifiictioo of an old maid, and gaiu for himselt a good or a bad wife, as the case ought be—was his own fault. He per haps was alter some pet fancy of a school girl, and she, not admiring him, married somebody else, and so made him a bachelor. 1 think, were l.au old maid, and had been 4 *crosed in love,'" 1 would,out of sheer spite, uiarry the Ural man 1 could get hold of. I d have satisfaction d I had to uurry forty men to gel it. Old mails are like some politicians 1 kuow of. They ruu their career upon the one idea sv stein They have but cue idea, and that is their first love. That failing, uicy are ever after out at sea, floundered about, always wrong side up, and go down to oblivion, loavmg DO vestige behiud in short clothes or long stocktugs to commemorate their existence. 1 especially recommend you, my hoy, to avoid young ladies who, wheu on promenade addicted to that style of locomotion which is not to appropriately deoomiuated wrig gimg. The woman who wriggles when she walks reminds me of one if those little yel low, cropeared poodles that dance, and twist, and squirm about whauever you look at them. The woman who walks m this fash un, 14 generally gifted with a small quantity of braius, is devoid of common sense, full of vanity and self conceit, fiery in disposition, tickle, and for all the ordinary purposes of matrimony, is as useless as a refrigerator is for a hotel in giber i. ller whole life is sitnply an elongated wngula of wasted hours, lost opportunities and disappointed hopes. On the coutrary, my son, do not choose the woman who walk* as though she were a greuidcr in disguise, inarching with solemn tread toward her That wo man, were you to marry her, would march through your whole married existence, tramp ing under feet your eveiy delight, crushing your authority ; until at last there, eves,dim with age, would tearfully behold you cringing to a petticoat, and trotting along behind your mistress,with your ears laid meekly back, and looking ten times more pitiful than a whipped cur. These walking woman in youth are proud, imperious, wilful ; in miJdb age the same, with the addition of a tow-colored moustache and neuralgia in the head, and in their old age so awfully spiteful that eveu that beat friend of disconsolate ancient womanhood— the cat—shrink* away from her presence. Ah, m) sou, if you wish to display your good taste ID the cultivation of female socie ty, avoid tall Women of the unbarred, tele graph pole order of anatomy , avoid the squeezed up tumbling style as well, aud do not be taken in by chalk, rouge, cotton and curls—nor with too white teeth. Dou't be 'edinto error by a pair ef pret ty aukk-s and do not let a pair of well turn ed i-boulder* turn your bead. Remember that etpccially in the sea of wumaukiod there are as many fish uucaught as have been hoot ed. Woman with light brown hair and blue eyes, of medium height, plump hands~ah ! my son they are the women for men to love, cherish, respect and treat as if thuy were an gels. Snch angels are never enter'.ai red un awares. No pane man. full of bea! th, passion, and whose vigor has not been prostrated by a continuity of Trout alley whiskey can ignore their prsseuce. If he does, he deserves to be kicked to death by shrimps. The brown haired, blue eyed woman is am iable in disposition, true as steel, and with him she loves, never jealous. Jealousy, my boy, with the majority of woman kind, like variety to man, is the spice of their t x stence. They revel in il,aud like the locust eaters get wild, crazy over it, and finally either are booked (for the K'rkbridge Institute or to go i ff into the chronic hys tcric. * A jealous woman is a fool, and w.th such a woman for a wife, the husband is a greater fool than she, if he does not give her cogent reasons hobnobbing with the greeny ed mon ster. A red haired woman is apt to be steadfast in her affections, and to umlerstan 1 the art of cooking catfish and baking shad to perfec tion. She has a temper not particularly even is inclined to break out like an epidemic— when least expected. Red haded women, my boy, are very fond of being widows, and of moving from place to place—at least that is my experience.—Your mother's hair was slightly auburn, but durixg the first five years of our married life it gradually assumed a darker lnt, which (act I attribute entirely to ner sudden acquired fondness oc her part for pork and beans. 1 attribute to the harsh ness of my hair altogether to a too great par tiality for hash in my younger da> s. I have noticed, my son, that people who eat too freely of hash became sour and morose in their disposition. Corned beef aid cabbage auperindune inflation, and is a very aporo piato diet for politicians and temp*'ranee lec turers who happen to be long in body and short ia mind. Never marry a short, dttninuiiva woman. You wiU never be able to find her when you want her. You wvll be jual aa hkely to bae her some rino tn. rntn*: aa o. Lilth* moamx ha*t> a trrr al prwcAuwf A* maaiag with wjmen s husbands. la taot ao far a* my ahwrttlKW —lake haa a ruW.which ia madv all the atrwe/er by the ekeefiKwa— httie woawu arw alwaye at L Uhw the shtpjack oti the surtacw ola pond, they are never quiet. What you want ta a wotaaa who atepe 4 cas!?y and a quarter nag— ooa whoau manner and mind rviutnde you of yotar moth er. For to you and to all wn?n, looking back through the lung line of dead year* iato the paradise of youth, the mother *e*tm peti tion. It ta the uuune of mother that M the aynooyiu of home, llappy ta the maa who sees in his wi.e something of aclton or words, that brings hack a memory of his mother His home will be a happy one. Select a w.uiau tor a wife who think* aa much oi a stxpeuce a* she doe* of a sii* dj\o, and you wtll be able always to have the former in your pocket and the latter Sue for her. Economy, with a doe regard to cemfon in the household;' is an assurance to her hus band of success in business. A :tch old w slower in Canada is said to have practiced a very artful scheme to gain the hand of the belie of the village, iie got an old gypsy to tell the young lady's for tune in words which he dicated, as fol lows ; u Jiy dear young lady, your star will soon be hid Cur a short time by a very dark ci juJ, but wheu it re-appears it will shine with unia terupied splendor until the end of your days. Before one week a wealthy old widower, wear'ng a suit of black and a hue castor hat, will pay you a visit and request your hand m marriage. You will accept hu offer, become his wife, and he left a widow, in the posses ston of all hi* properly,'before the close of the year. Your neat husband will be a young man of whom you think most of at present." Three days after, the old gentleman, dress ed in the manner described by the gypsy, presented himself to the young lady, and the ra&r riage followed. The old gentleman did not dm as was still lives, although he has grown a number of years older in the service of the young wife. ; *I DOJTT CARS."— Yet you do, and there's no use in trying to deceive 'jourself with the sophistry ot those words. The best and noblest, the truest and most generous part of your nature does care tor the unkind, cutting words you have uttered to one you loved, in moments of pique. You may carry yourself so proud and defi antly, you may never drop by word or look the dew of sweet healing on the wound you have made in a nature as proud, as sensitive, and exacting as your own ; but to yoar hon or, be't said, you aro better than your words and away down in your heart lurks shame and Mpentaooe and sorrow fur them. You may carefully hide them both, and io a little whi'j thev wtlT be gone, for oh ! it it very easy to make one's self bitter and proud, and cold—very hard to keep one's self sweet, mellow and charatabte ; bnt there must be some pain, and some struggling be fore you can do a mean ungeoerous thing to one who loves you. and have your heart en dorse your ' I don't care !" And how often are these words uttered, when conscience sternly refutes them ; and' how often they harden the heart, and keep the feet in the way of evil. Be careful, reader, when you say, "I don't care." TRI;TKFUI.SC.V< or A HERO It ia related of Lord Nelson, that while walking out one morning he met a httte girl crying bitterly.and upon asking her what was the mat ter, she re plied that she had broken her pitcher with which she had been sent for milk, and afraid she would be whipped when she returned home. Seeing that he sympathized with her, she held up the fragment!'and artlessly said, "perhaps you can mend it,air." "No 1 can not do that replied he, "but I will give a six pense to buy another with," Oa looking in his purse, he foand he had no change, and said, "I cannot give it to you now. but if yon will bo here at this time to-morrow, I will meet you and give you the money." She went home cmifortcd. And told her mother the story with snch confidence that she was excused from punishment, on condi tion that the gentleman kept hia word. Be i fere the time came. Lord Nelson received a letter asking him to go to a distant place to meet a person whom he greatly desired to see. He hesitated and thought that such a trifle as giving a little girl a >ixpease ought not to keep him away, bnt then he had giTen his word and the little girl had implicitly relied upon it. No he would not disappomt her, so he sat down and wrote to his Iriend that "owing to a previous engagement," he vhonld be unable to see him at that time. Such an incident adds lustre to the world wide fame of one of England's moat oelebra ted heroes. Tbe St. Jjruhbury (Vt.) **tVeduiaa' says that the potato crop in that locality is laree and excellent .■ The only fault ia that they grow to large that they haee to be "btl ed" like Joah Billing*' Shanghai rooeter— "yne end and at a time." Pi HTWf . SO.OO PSZI Awr#lU MM VOL. o NO. 16 li*TTUMi OS IS THI Wwu—Ttot art many J.tiaraat a*a ol fttna* *a ib On woriJ ; it Jooa dm aiway* •* % trealdeal oiiaoaaj, or Wa • i>{ Um la look *p la villi vaadar. ieaa* .fa bad &*bt fcr 4 J JO a b ui ike wactJ la W cbta sJ li4y % ia**daf dV naddiaac>kc<¥ **• uuf 0; loW Milia %ad ladaau >b~ *< ad ai id> aad tajjr,ia fttuag ea; la W %oJ wi Vfba*.-iaj, iaataad of di-aaiai*d and qaarraeauw. * ea ; la *aek a* ifehgaalhr in Km niir\ iWacv *> ia k= prwHW. .4 £HtUg Mj B ikrfl, k*B va tay aw profartv ATTENTIVE U> KA AKO*. tiuuagfe iii&cuuiea lu gnat avail know i*Uye a *kad be A *** la kiuMwif tad u atbec* .Ifcciug a jual aiaoif b la kta M - auwt* ami thai he Ji £umg a* a ike vorid. hi iiay ma wy inilti •as i*y li u p>nika to jet aa wtlk aaaa mmm ; iir It * a auataka tkat • awl *• i lac a #Md deal AII Wke * can <l* aaiiamg- kNana v o<Um kwiUtf Uma html paraa l' K ece aw BUN it*?* towatu tet'.am oa uua i i wipt KM**i —many fwofie iag aeaotai je mma thair tjr altogether because A*y 4*Bat sea lint napa tod ilmntxi bib as BBich iurn.uad u&eoa ua all adea; tod aa it lap - pens thai '.hot* mmm v ad vkick can • not ae baagni iuf money. Those woo wmk ta apt oo tn the worki aiu.it have a alack A patience ami persever ance. ui hopetrn cuaadacce. a *diDgaea t .earn, and a diapoeiuoa net ea><v caat AJWB I by ArScmt.e* and disappoto ÜBaals. A Ulac* Every man who supports the AWitioa Re publican enemies of civil liberty mutt btush with shame as he reads their record, thus briefly, but truthfully traced by a cotsmpory -The Republican party has existed but ten years, it asp red r® the eewtroi of peblic alfa ra when the very same of a Federal Tax CElector was unknown. It has Sett a pub lic debt as gigantic as that which eats the substance and impoverish rise condition of toilers of other oouatrtes. Up to the tune it came mto ptwer the liberty of the people wee heid to be a sacred thing. It struck down ka 'jtiu corpus ; it denied trial by jury , it pro hibited free discussion ; it filled our bastiies with prisoners, arrested without warrant, and imprisoned without trial. la a word it es tablished precedents for the exercise of every right claimed by despotic government*.'* RxxEYßKii THE Pooa—These cold blus tery nights which we are now having are on ly the remainders or forerunners of stem old Winter's icy chains that will soon be grappie ed around us. Many of us will rejourn at the approach of the sleighing vid skating season but let us not forget in the ume that there are those ainong us whose blood thnlla with horror as they hear the keen autamial winds whistling around the corners and through the cracks of their airy cabin*, which are only warmed by the genial rays of the tun. There are such h mes in oar midst, where stoves are not to be found, mock les© a ton of coal. Then let ail those who are so fortunate as to be blessed with plenty for their comfort through all the changing masons u remember the poor." Cbef Justice Chase has notified the President that after thorough and careful examination into the whole question, he can - not preside over the court for the trial of Jefferson Davis in the city of Richmond The reason he assigned is that there is no regularly organized court in that city. Thus the government is all at sea again in regard to his trial. The President maintains that be cannot be tried at any other place. The impression is that he anl! be released with the understanding that he will go to Europe and not return, or, in other words, to ke ex patriated. .V. }'. World. The Somerset county Demot: an that 1 the twenty seven return judges of that coun ty met on the 27th ult, to count the soldier election returns. They had one vote only to count, which has thus cost the county just one hundred and twenty-five dollars ! Ia Bedford county there was only one Tote to count, and with about the same result as to cost. W • believe there was one vote of thia kind returned to ibis county. Whether the re turn judges met to count it or not, we are not informed, but think, they did not. The law on ibis **bjecl seems to require a change. Will our next Legislature look to it ? If negro suffrage and exemption from tax ation of the United States bonds, are wot the stock m trade of the Black Republican party, why is it that the Black Republican press and leaders are advocating and defending those measures 7 An Abolitica paper aajs the Coaatitutioa has itniTtd lour years of war igvMl trai tora. We are glad to hear it ha aorriTed. As it has not been much need ot knte, it to be in good coadiuoa. Radical Editor in Connecticut said a few Aaj since, "The lAosocraiic partjr w dead, stark dead We ifuuM hke to aefc him, savs the Arte Mi tea R*jt*Ur, if ho ka't think it is tboot the fieieat corpea ha aar -watched wtth T"
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers