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L TTARPrTR, CiSee la J4Lmr4L Block, 24 Story. f X&XS. Twe Dollara pr uiu, payable in ad fim; $2.M within six moaths; $3.00 after the expl tntisa of thayear. v Sttiron la fhow tka Oireak word XataroiT r - SIatkaIro,M ilnifytBg to cImoh, tejnyenata and ra-atura. This article is what iti name ignUSe. Tor preaerrin;. reetoriof and beaatifyxng the homaa Bair it ia the moat reatarkabl preparation ia the world. It im AfaJn owned and P" p by the original nroorietor. and ia tow made with the aame care. akili and attention which fare it a tale of orer one xailUon botuea per annum. It is a most delightful Hair Dressing. . It eradicatea aearff and daadraff. It keeps the head cool and clean, . It mahes the hair, soft aod cossj. . It prevents the hair from falling olL It prevents the hair from turning gray. It restores hair upon bald heads. , Any lad er gentleman who values a beautiful nead of hair shoald use Lyon's Kathairon. It la haown and used 'throughout the civilized world. Sold by all respectable dealers. DEUAS 8. BARNES A CO. New York. Mar. JB-ly ' - ' TIasns 31 aynolla Batlm. This is the most delightful and extraordinary arti-tiele ever diaeovered. It changes the aun burnt faee and hands to a pearly satin texture of ravishing beauty, imparting the marble purity of youth, and the dUttagu appearance so inviting in the city belle of fashion. - It removes tsn, freckles, pimples and roogh-aesa from the akin, leaving the complexion fresh, transparent and smooth. It contains no material injurious to the skin. Patronised by Actresses and Opera Singers. It is what every, lady ahould have. Bold every where. Preparee by W. E. HAG AN, Troy, N. Y. Address all orders to - . DEUAS S. BARNES A CO. Sew York. Mar. 26-ly " ; " HEIilSTREET'S Inimilmble HaXr BeatoratiTe, HOT A DYE 9t restores gray bair to its original eolor, by supplying the capillary tubes with natural sustenance, impaired by age or disease. All ' t'faf dyet are composed of lunar caustic, destroying the vitality and beauty of the hair, and afford of themselves no dressing. Heimstreet's Ini nitable Coloring not only restores hair to its natural coler by an eay process, but gives the hair a uxnriavnt Bcantj. promotes its growth, prevents its falling off, eradicates dandruff, and imparts health and pleasantness rto the head It has stood the test of time, being the original Hair Cwloriag, and ia eon st aptly increasing in favor. Used by both gentleman and ladies. It is otd by all respectable deal era, or raa be procured by j them of the commercial agents. CO. 20 J Broadway, New York, aa'i ft. afar. 26-ly Twa alaaa, 5 eats - Hex lean 51 nstaos; Llaineat. The parties in St. Louis & Cincinnati, who hare counterfeited the Mustang Lihiinent under pretense of proprietorship have been thoroughly estoped by the Courts. To guard against further imposition, I have procured from the United States Treasury, a private steel plate revenue atampj which "is placed over the top of each bottle. Each stamp -bears the Joe tmuU of my Signature, and without which the r-- tiele is a Courterfeit. daageroaa aad worthless imitation. Examine every bottle. This Liniment has been ia use aad growing in favor for many years There hardly exists a hamlet on the habitable Globe that does not contain evidence of its wonderful effects. It ia the beat amoliment in the world. With its present improved ingredients, its effects upon maa and beast are perfectly , remarkable. Bores are healed, paina relieved, lives saved, valuable .animala mads useful, and untold ilia assuaged. For cuts, bruises, sprains, rheumatism, s wcllings, . bites, cuts, caked breast; strained homes, c.r it is a Sovereign Remedy that abould never be dispensed with. It should ba ia every famL'y. Sold by all Druggieta. . I. &. BARXCS, Kw York Mar. 2S-ly - ' S. T. 1S0. X. Persons of sedentary habits troubled witb weak-aesa, lassitude, palpitation of the heart, lack of ape-tite, dUtress after eatiag, torpid liver, constipation, Ac denerve to aaffer if they will 'not try the celebrated - :V " . . . ... - Plaofatloa. PlUerav, which are now recommended by the higheet anedicat autboritiea, and warranted to produce an immttinta beneficial effect. They are exceedingly agreeable, perfectly pure, aad must supercede all other tonka where a healthy, gentle stimulant is required. piTbmj purify, strengthen aad invigorate. . SThey create a healthy apatite. . They are aa antidote to change of water aad diet. - They overcome effects ef dissipation aad Una hours. They etrengtbeu the system and enlived the mind. - They Prevent miasmatic and intermittent (overs. J" Tboy purify the breath and acidity of the stomach. They caa Oyrpepeia and Coaatipatioa. They car Dicrrbea, and Cholera Morbus. They care Liver Complaint and Nervoua Headache. They make the weak atroag, the liagtrid brilliant. aad are exhausted aataaa a great restorer. They an composed of the celebrated Calisaya bark, winter green, naeeaftae, roeta aad herbs, all preeerved in per aacxy para at. vreu rasa. For particulars, see cir-cwlare aad testimonials areaad acb bottle. : Bewnre aflat pectera.' Examine avarv bottle. See tbat it baa aar prirat Xf. 8. Stamp aamaUlated. orer tba cerit, wita plantation scene, aad oar eigaaturaoa a fan steal plate aide label. Bee that oar bottle ia not rallied with eauriees aad deletereua ataC Any peraoa pretending to sell Plantation Bitters either by the gaTloa aad Bulk, la aa lapoater. Any per aoa imitating this bottM, or selling any other uea- xanai taenia, wuetaar eaUed FlaataUoa ' Hitter "or not, ia a criminal under tba C. B. Law, and will ba so preaeeatea by as. We already hare aar eye oa aev era! parties to-tiling ear bottles, de , who will aa -eaaa in getting themselves into close quarters. The demand for Drake'a Plantation Bitters from ladies, emuaaa, aaercaanm, , incredibie. - Tbaawa P" ttie u the evidence we present of their - werta ana napanonty . They are aold by all res- Taetaua araggwa, grocers, physieinas," botala, t lsaia,'aUmmboats aad country storee. - - iv - J " " ; H. DRAbTE CO. 1t;WT ' Broadway, jr.V. Iy narajraavear Ueeian Co. O. ftptsmbaeta, 1S59. 11: ZjiDevc CltHTbiiwU certify tint X .was aernrely i with a diaeeae af tba Xiraa. I. was res - taed ta tor year 45caadiaarian 13 and Jils aad ransar,aa avtso. t asad la am wua great saeeaaa and eaa ysBnmamnif tbea,-a my friends; $o care tba dmeaeea tbey ara janamsinBilsd Jbr; eaavaeqaaatly & atas here, year Agaat informs sac, are altogwLb- . Msiaewy. wiahtag yaa greai saeeaaa, I am 1 a . j " y aa. Bre.atta.aej ,nTr a4 Lr ImVetUea.i freevaebarwa.1 bvaaaill-iTiJir! "-""1 -msm ' Kiaga Co., Haw Terk. 1DITZ1 BY ImrtUatRK-" v , (Uotaft of tJi TJiTTeat EUtei. " lb following ia 4 ataiemeat exhibiting the qnotaa of tba different Sutes nsder tha Preai dent's call lor 'Tare Iteadrad TltooaajK raeat,1 dated afarch 14. 1864, witk all credit dadao- ted from tha deicci addel thereto, exoep. tio? the enliatmeot of vetenui aoJaateers-apto March 1, 1864: ) - If ains. Quota Bndw the call for two hun dred thoueaod roen, llarch 14, 1863, 3,721, Non ber to ba credited, none. . Deflcianciea to be charged, 1,920. Balance to be furnished. 6,641. ' IiAiirsBTKK. Qaota, 288; credit, 160; deficiency, oone. .. Baianee. 2,428. - M A8SACB csstts. Qoota, 10,639: deficien cies. 9,958. Balance, 20,592. VxxaioaT. Quota, 2.300; credit, 2,130; defi ctencj, none. Balance, 170. - Rnoog Icuiitn. Qoota, 1,388; credit, 525; deficiency, none. Balance, 863. CoNNXCTicm. Quota, 3,163; credit, 494; de ficiency, none; balance 2,574. New Yoat:. Quota, 32,794: credit and de. ficiency, not jet computed; balance, 59,230. Kbw Jxasir. Quota, 6,704; credit, none; deficiency, 7,520; balance. 14.224. Pts n srr am i a. Quota, 26,302; credit and deficiency, not (not jet compated) ; balance. 74.127. Dkla wake Quota, 985 ; credit, oone; defi ciency, 629; balance, 1,676. Maxtlakd. Quota, 4,217; credit, none; de ficiency, 17,41 tj balance, 21,728. West VitoiNlA. Quota. 2.051; credit, none; defidiencj, 1,139; balance, 3,190. Distxict or Columbia. Quota, 1,702; cred it, none; deficiency, 3,158; balance, 4,855. Ohio. Quota, 20,596; credit, none; deficien- cj, l,tZ8; balance, 3V,ZZ3. Ixdiaica. Quota, 13,524; credit, 9,939; defi ciency, none; balance, 3,Ooy. Illinois. Quota, 18,524; credit, 30,900. Mich ia a k. Quota, 7.821 ; credit, 624 ; defi ciency, none; balance, 7,187. Wiscossiw. Quota, 7,941; balance, 15,402. Minnesota. Quota, 2,180; balance, 5,437. Iowa. Quota, 6,439; credit, none; deficien cy, 6,701; balance, 13,140. - Missocai. Quota, 3,925; credit, none; deficiency, 4,962; balance, 8.8S7. KEJcrrcxr. Quota, 5,787; credit, none; de ficiency, 9,683; balance, 15,472. Kaitsas Quota, 1,409; credit, none; defi ciency. 1,118; balance, 2J97l Ibe True VavlM of Greenbacks, Many people appear to have erroneous notions aa to the true yalae of a gold dollar as compared with oar present circulating medium. Some have snppoeeJ, for instance, when gol.l is quoted at sixty per cent, premium, that their dollar greenback was worth a dollar in gold. This is a grand delusion, as a few figures will show. A dollar gold piece when worth sixty per cent, more thiu a dollar Treasury note is evidently worth 160-100ths of the latter, which is worth 100-160tb of the sold dol- ar, or 62 c, in gold. Consequently, with one lollar in Treasury paper, you can purcaea 62 cents in gold. The proof of this is, that 62 plus 60 per cent, of itself, or 37 .; is eqnal to one dollar. We think this estimation will considerably enrich, in their estimation, many persons who think that, when gold ia at 60 per cent, premium, their dollar in Treaaurj cur rency is worth only 40 cents in the precious metal. The following table, showing the ore- Ctee value of paper in gold, with the latter at various pi of premium, may be of interest to manyr '- aoLa.tr rtiiirsr wtii wo urn. 1 per eent.... JO per cent........... to par eeBt......... ,99 10-lle. 8 I-Sc. 7 1 2-1 3c 71 a-Te. 40 per cent 50 per cent., 60 per eent 79 per ecat.. M S-Sc i l-zc 58 14-lTo. 80 per cent.. ... .M Mo.' 90 per cent..... I DO per ceat.. 5t 1319c Tli e accuracy of tba above fisrascaa be tested by simply aMing to them that per cent. of each destgnated in the rate of premium. -:LiBtorkV Last Joke. A friend of cars jo the Arasy of the Potowiae, now. in 'Washington, writes : One dsy the President and a friend were sitting on I he Uoaae of Eepresentalivea steps, the seasiou closed, and the aneoibers filinar oat ia a bodr. Abe looked after them with a serious smile. " That reminda aae,w aaid Ira, " of v lUtl ini. dent when I was a boy. . lfy flat boat lay ap at Alton, oa the Utssiasippi, for a day, aad I strolled about the town. I saw a larre stone building, with tnassiva walla, not ao handaoeue though aa tbia; and whOa 1 waalookhigat H a great body of men earn out. Whatdoyoo call that l asked a by-etander. 'That,' aaid he, ' k the Stata-Pnaoa, and ibeea are all the thieye going home... Their time imp" ,Io case some dall Abolitiooict anight tail to discover the place where tha laugh oaaea ta. tn the above "MtUc" it is twrhana nroethel w hxad add, that the bod j of mt aea.pier. ging sVoos th Hooa of BtpiMtJLrinm tn loyal" Abolitiooiatav of thm apppro4d Llo- cola Omtiti?r--& ,zft - 'i ' 'leaas - V -S& X73iAt Aboinrawfta lata Bcav-J ry tbus lCir' MncoU at it hmd. ;haa- repudiatad alike the Cnad ratio, aadhe Chicago pla firm. aad the CoasUtation and th TJniori. ' -It ww w.w;nrWfHJMa loamwama- iWaf abatraradtlnauW 1 Mink owerthe'llewihrf---.-.1 au oMUuuuiAvjnvieiaie. OS UMiaLitatlAMT Urww; a thaitt naa-t mf powar, and ha rflact4 Jmlghty army, it tear it pledge to lrreda;QII trample th e Cknttitntional righls of the State id th da&" 1 --r"- " Jjiot3iet' Attempt: to ncavOeaocrfttio i Oa Moedar, tha 14th Inat another atttaffispt was made by some rowdy soldiers of ih -4th Pennsylvania volunteer (the Shamokln com- pas y) to mob the oSee of ,ih cftDomber-laad County DemoenLx A qua4oftbmbrora, fJpen the lower door aae atfrtptadl lortm vp stairs, bat being met by atem command to naii, may uaeiiaiea. n aue in ldm poaiuon, their com maader, Captain Gad well, made his appearance, denounced the contemplated out rage, and ordered them to leave, which they did. The ofiSc waa garrisoned by several cil ixens who had volunteered"their services, and if the soldiers had persisted, aom of them would have been killed. -".The Harrfsburj Pa., Patriot and Union, In closing an account of thie affair, aay:i ;; . t -:;-' . - . We advise the proprietors of the Democrat ic newspaper establishments to keep arms on hand, and shoot down any ' lawless persons. soldiers or civilliana, who asaaalt their persona or attem pt the destruction of their property. irtue law will not protect them, tbey rnaet protect themselves. ' . A Fair Propositioit. , v It has been suggested (says the Eq iitrer,) by a gentleman who haa devoted some aUtentioa to the subject, that now aa the miseegenatron theory has received the unqualified approval of several of our most eminent ' divines and philosopher, some measures ought to be taken to pot it in practical operation. If a work so great is to be speedily accomplished, we can not begin too soon, nor carry it forward too vigorously. In respect to the mode although some people might prefer to organize a society or appoint a comminsion for the encourage ment of the growth of mulattoes he is of the opinion that a pregnant hint is aflorded by the seduction and assignation r department of oar exemplary neighbor, the Commercial; which journal, it is not to be doubted, would gladly afford all desirable facilities for an adequate consideration. Advertisements might run something like the following : "To Ait TH Pai Dacobtiu or rni Whit Sex. A gentleman of purely African extraction, who has recently become a man and a brother by the aid of our brave country's defenders, but who isn't above associating, oo equal terms, with respectable arbite toiks, invites correspondence with a view to improve the American breed in the next feneration. Beauty and greenbacks at the present rates not deemed objectionable. Photographs exchanged, if required. Address Bojs Riblxt p:o." 11)0 TriLna oa Hiaeegwaation. l6reeleyrae at taai bea forced tor de fine his position upon the miscegenation question, lie does so in a very cautious and care ful article in a late issu of the TriUrnt, in whkh he afgue strongly in favor of "the In termingling of the white and black race, and submit half a dozen consideration for future discussion. Poor Greeley is really an author ity upon this subject. He ia a practicle example of the theory that a black man may be bleached white. Mr. Partoo the - biorranher of poor Greeley, aUtes that the Tribune phil-Oftopher was barn black. On page thirty three of Mr. Par ton's book wflnd this Daxsaea: "To use the lantaaga of one who waa present. aorace ureeiey came into the worM aa black a clnmney." Mr. Parton ia a faithful hia- torian. and would not state what waa untrue. Consequently the miscegenator need no- bet- ill m. aa - -a e . ' . ier niuau-auon oi ineir ooetrinea Uian poor Greeley himself, who was born "as . Mack aa a chiinnev." and is bow as white as snow. when h ia face is clean. -., ; - Ohio Quota of Troops by. District. The following is a statement ol th quota and deficiencies for Ohio under the ; two lat call:; ;:: , First District, hZIS : defictener. 1.4ft8. Second, .1.173 ; deficiency 1.493. Third, 1,206; deficiency. 925. , Fourth. 1.059; deficienev 984. Fifth, 908; deficiency 838. Sixths 1,098; de-ficiency, 1.433. Seventh. 1.089i denieacv 989 Eighth. fi83: deficiencv. 802. Nintb. 170; deficiency. 837. Tenth. L145i deficia- cv 390. Eleventh. 1,006; deficiencv, 1,504. Twelfth. 1.133: dcSeienev. L224 - ThirtMtfa 1,031; deficiency. 715. Fourteenth. L.030: da. ficiency. 634. Fifteenth, 999; deficiency. 727. Sixteenth, 1,007; deficiency; 950. Seventeenth 40; Oeoeiency, 807. Eighteenth, 1,129; de- acieuey bob. Minebeeath, 1,103: deficiency. L.U2. Total, 20,595; deficiency. 18,628. Bai-aaoe dae, 29.223: . A Deserter a is a Dirtr. A big, atrappiag fallow; aaraad George Hill, a brakesman on the alii waukeer'and ' ITiasiae- ippi railroad, ealisted iato.CoIonelSUrkweatlr- er 1st WMooasin regimeat. Not long after wards be managed to obtaia a discharge on ome lying pretext or other, aad came back , to Milwaukee, where fceenltated into th 24th Wiseonsoo, receiving $150 bounty. Q deaer-ted a short distance beyond Louisville, with five others, whom be inveigled off with -hies. H made his way Eaetod Jo tha. eoaraa a few months enlisted into; .two regimen te, get. ting bonaty from each aad deaerting at Che first opporLanity. He remained East from September. 1862, to Jaauary,, 1863t vben ha ka daddled to Fort Wayne, where he became a brakes maa oa the orV Wayue oad Toledo raijroad In Toledo he waa arrested last-July and taken to Columbus, Ohio. He managed to get off by making the ofSoars bellev that h had bttm regalarly darged.- which he ucceadedjn doaug by . alterinr liia discharre from, tha Ut to th 24th WhKonaja. 7b trick waadiaeoverad aad ha M inaj jd eotalowaih Jivanippi rfrer to JUemphuv fiaooawora capped ad went to: EnaLeva ladiaoas shero h ara foaad aad armt4Mi4 eeoA toChAtUnoc.wlvera hi ramaemk,tha Wtl to Nw Jewer. wbtre h ajtlUtad. rot the bounty, deaertad, staat to New Jforkvealiated acaia, got $500 boanty, and the ilcawrted 4 thavtath tkBwtnajaaedtD raarJia&- ada, WaSetw h 1 enjoying tie, oBa)ej4 CaarJ?vaidt a planter toa, amd -ciime up tree ana jtin ot tue orancbea." The negro ebowed no, 'dupoattiow to porqply, and Onlein pfesoeJilb' VeaaorC answered, Wall, look heaX taaasailf t go Bp dar aiv' fairdowa'and. broke tay bectrdai'll ba k tou ard olLtrs c-aL o iroar tocket: lTowlhe lhr tall aad kills' iiiaseir.' dki wrmt 4a Ioas to nobody. .. 4 i5 intcmtn-: florerament tloaey, t& X7Iiax tad '"y" - SeoTiiiirela Cwot : s v lt look plainer aad plaiaer that th a Wal-dron atory ahoot the. ia terrier hetweea Oena-tal IXcCIallan and Law was pepoeejy fabricated by a aat of aniniMiplsd radioal Aholuioa lata,- lor baa political j parpose .Waldron now aay thab ho waa ACsred tnobey by an agent of the War OapartmeM to mak an affidavit, who kept Lint under iuQuaoc of liquor aad got him ta mak the atstament pablished so extensively by th diamaioa Abolition papers. That malignant creature. Gen. ililroy, aided by others equally wicked, eeem to have aeen the maa drunk, aad helped the story a long with oheerfal alacrity, and Mr. Dana, of the New York Tribune, creduloua aad aoaua- picioo, : aad anxiou to aieza upoa any thing that be supposed would aid hi party in th New , Harnpshir electioa, profeased to " believe every word of it VI . The Tribune and the Zae editorially backed p the reputation of Waldron, and thus the testimony was made to appear eonclasira. TbV plot waaMgood-enough-Morgan until after y the alectioa !'' Now rad . WALnBON'S STATEMENT., , A aeries of article having appeared, of which I ara charged with th aulhorahin. about the 7th of March.T 'met a person by the name of Graham, of whom I had no acaaintanc. fie asked m e to wri te a letter for . him to Colonel Sharp in regard to aa account he had with that officer. He told aae that he waa emulov- ed by the War lepartmeot to tend pie to Alien mono. While we were talking about tha battle of Antielam J waa teliina hiea about General Kil patrick, Bufbrd. Merrit aad Col. Camnball making my home a place for eating, 4c this Mr. Graham asked me if there were at times many officers met at my house ; auul I replied in th way of a joke, of course, that Lbey have; when h replied, if you will caaka aa aJQdavit to that effect we can make a good thing out of it. I don't remember what reply 1 made to the proposition, for the reason that I waa la- bonnr under the influeaee of Iioaor for tome days. He continuet to keep this subject be fore me for two or three days, keeping me un der tne inauenee or liquor during the time. Lie visiUsl General Mtlror, ami insisted on ' my going to see him in -reference to this sub ject. . ' - .v . -:' ' ' I went to see General Miiroy, at the-Avea- ue House, in Waaiiingtort, and to back up the statement which I had made to . Graham. hich was that Lee andiMcdellan had an in terview at mv house. We had a conversation on th matter for soma time, of which I do not remember. Oo thelOth of March waa induced to go to thaJWar Department, and i introduced to Colonel Hardee and Mr. Dana, to whom I was ladaoed to aav what I had-aerUrvOrahaalf aad Uen. MITroyi -Mr: Dana made the remark that he believed every word of it.,"The oext thing that happened in this city waa that I was sent afterbvthe com mittee on the Conduct of the War. - That waa the first time I realized the position I stood in. r aaxas Wauao. A ForcIMe 8peech at the Hew York HcClellan Heetlng. 1 . Col. Max Laagenschwartz was the next speaker. He spoke at some length, illustrating the position of the Republican party, by tarioua stories which kept the audiaaee in oon-tiaual laughter. - . n He said ha did not like personalities and a he would not say that Mr. Lincoln' had long legs, and that was probably th reason' why he .had over-stepped - the Coastitetion. The first time that these radical agitatdrbbet got the Teioa of government ia Luein band they have brought on u ruin and misery.- A man ouce went for a doctor tor hi wife and aeked him: "How long have you been a doctor?" The answer; waa, "Twenty-five year." " The man aske t,'Bow many patients have yout killed in that timet' 'Only one,' said the doctor. o he faired the doctor, to see hi wife.'and in a few dsys bis wife died. So the man asked him in great wrath how it waa poaaibla that ho had only killed one person in twenty-five years. Oh." said the doctor, "I only had ooapa-tieiu.". So the republicans in twenty or thirty years have had only one patient, and they have nearly killed bim. - " , - In making thia a war against slavery, they are like the man who set fire to hie house, and burned fa it hi-furniture, and hi wife' bind children, and when asked why he burned it replied, lw kill th cock-roachea.' . It ia im-poasibl to find -what new creed they adopt next. - Itrie emancipation, ecnfiecaion. aani-hilatioa. miscegeaalion. He could ot agree with thia ow doctrine ualeae polygamy was allowed. Then a ma could have a yellow wife from Calaa,. a brown wife from India, tdack wife Xroa" A frica, ' aad a whHtr erif from hi own ooaBtrv, aad so have a variegated familr. and put a sign over thedoor,MUat-ted Matrimonial Paint Shop,' , IQreat laagb-ter.J ..Colone.l .Lancnchwartx eoneioded by reciting a poemano giving as bis final argument.that Geu. McClellaa waa a .military . necessity." : ' " " ' ,,!' ' " " - Freaatbe Dabaaaa flawa) HdHU.'r '---: A diaoatch was received in town vesferdav. stating that oa Thuraday night the safe of tha TreaauroT Of Bubhanaa eoaatyj a,t Indepea-deaoe, Wa robbed ef f2GfiO0LV'Thf arrival Of the train from the West confirmed the bw. though it did not furnish many particular of too trmaeactioeK' Te-aae, aawt -to be one of Herring'e, waa leaall right Thursday evening. Friday morning u waa ad blownopej), the powder ha v ing bean put into the key-hp ? v . , Twenty tousaod dollars were stolen, most- ly.ia grteaWckahough there Waa aorae Iowa . . 11 . 1 1 , -1 mwj a,easjoins anw aiao. stiver Lftoogh) th amount of tha apeo waa probably amaJU N 6 ela t ha $eea looutahf&iberi fevea- hadbeen au ucca .-aaciiewu b jooeria O tQ cam down a far a Manchester'. coaoty reward of on thouaaad dollar 'irpfrered. If mm naNly scent obbifr thxt r the thieve eouia escape if due diligence taosedi - x -i? -f..vTZi mtm eMaoag nt man J vitawujs coaierreaopoo Wnitrjrha ftisioiriof thaAbckidtt tieaat iBtapoliUca. .?sFoe JBtaBCb;-thi 1 taay.a'faV Mr.JQrinoell aaid Mr. Holmes befonf?'-id at awry asteayHhw rar TednocraW He briefly' apaka la dercgatiow of JIcCTcIUa.:w"5o with faia DeosocraUc Irieau; werelatiel wllh slavery, and would go do rn to hell together. V? I . ! AiocjatkjouTa satka ?Jai treao. aad will journal of tha Adoiiafetraiioai party accaa a of avi&lotv if we prist without a word of eo9rant from ouraalvaa, for tha a tio of the people aad of tha party ju at nsrabd. aa article io tha QoastitBticej of tha Uoitad States; and if we .accotapaay tha artici arHh th remark upon it made aaany yeare ego by oaaaaifeoi conraesadiy Urs awest omgiTita- tor that haa writtca oa Americaa Coostitatioa- 1 1 . . nana . -: Ometitutum f the VmHed StalUe. Amemd-menu, Artici II. "A waU rtgulated tatlitia being necessary to the security .of a free Sute, the right of the people to keep and bear arm shall not be infringed." - Skrry'e Commentaries VoL IT. Beok III, Chap. 44, Pane til. ."The importance of thia article will scarcely oe doubted by any person who have duly reflected on the subject.'. The militia is the national defense of a free country against sudden foreign Invasions, domestic insurrection and domestic UBurpallona oTdow- er by rblers. ' It i against sound policy for a tree people to keep np large military establish- nwiw, ana atanurng armicw in um or peace, both from th enormous expenses with which they are attended, and the facile mean which tbey afford to ambitious aad unprincipled rul ers to subvert the Government, or tram Die upon the rights of the people. - The right of citisens to keep and bear arm nas justly been conaidered as a palladiam of th libertie of a republic; since it offers a atrone moral check against thaasurpation and arbitrary power of raters, and win generally, even if these are successful in the first Instance, enable the peo ple to resist and triumpb over tbem. And yet though this truth should seem no clear. and the importance of a well regulated militiai would seem o undeniable, it cannot be dis guised that, among the American people, there is a growing inuraerene to any system or militia discipline, and a atroag dispoaition. from a sense of iu burthea. to be rid of all regulations. How it is practicable to keo the peo ple duly armed, without some organization, it is difficult to sea. - There i certainly no small danger that indifference may lead to disgust and disgust to contempt; and thus gradually undermine all the protection intended by. tbia clans of bu r national bill of rights." 'The life of the Vatioft." What ia the -life of the nation." of the United State ? Plainly nothing else but the Constitution. If all the states by mutual agreement' to-morrow ' repudiate that instru ment there would be the same, number of men and women, horse and sheep,'- coal and gold mines, houses and barn, and hips and " man ufacturers and states. All tha elements of material wealth, all the 'appliances and means of physical and intellectual improvement would exist, and after a certain period of con fusion, all these element would crystaTix into ome . new governmental system. Bat th United State would have ceased to exist lust aaTthe UTuled StAiee made by the 'Arttclea of Con federatioa ceased to exist. j oat what a charter is to a bank, the . Con- titutiou u to the Uaited 8ute. Suppcee some of the corporators have carried off from a bank part of the funds which they contributed, and the Other corporator were.friac to get the funds' back into the possession . pf the corporation, ao' that the bank might go on a usual; that the corpora' or who carried off the fund did so under the assertion that the offi cers elected at the last poll were about to mis use tbem, and instead of employing the fund of the bank in legitimate bankinz business. were going into outside speculations, that the bank and some of it stockhoIdr wen at law. Now, what would be thought of the officer of a bank in sucb a contingency who went oo and did with the remaining funds of the bank precisely what the violent stockholder ' alleg ed they were about to do with the whole,, and what of au advocate who. instead of sticking to the legal proposition that the banks wa en-tilled to the funds, and that the'reiaedy of any apprehensive stock hofdera wa not io abstrac- tion.ehonla admit that; toe ban ar-was to be used for some other than its "legitimate business, and waa going into the philanthropj linef ; ' - ' : " What would a judge eay to any" man who Ulked about the life of the bank 1 Would he not eay, 3tick to-the charter, Mr. Attorney. Tbee people eay that your . clients ' mean to misuse their funds and that they have a right to withdraw them from that misure. There is a question of fact first to be settled the intention to misuse; next a' question Of law their remedy agttinet misuse." If Mr. Attorney were to answer. ''we intend to use the fanda in the philanthropy line,' and though these bolters will lose a little at first I have a calculation to exhibit to your honor which' Shows iafkllibly that ia the end they will be largely the gainers ; in addition to which every prin ciple of Christianity, every piratiort of bu- roanity ." -Vbat Lave those to do with a bank- charter T A aae nothing about them ia it" 'No, your honor we want to pot (hem in it; we want to mak an -inner life far- thia bank to make it a blessing to the world, a type and a beacon,' a glory aad a light; to extend hs usefulness, to create customer, to educate as. well aa to dicout, to elevate a welt as to declare divtdenda. WorUL IVesidnttal'XIoTraeats. General Fremont. The Michigan - JawraaZ, published rn Detroit, and the leading German radical paper of (hat State, ha hoisted the Fremont nag. Two more German papers ia Ulinobw the Peoria DevUck 'Zejtxng and. the Alton 'lTaooavAfernaYe likewise hoisted the ham otJohn C Fremont for the Preailency In 1864 i arid iTTe WUs&' Pemocridr tptiam-e iti prefereace' for Fremont, declaring, at the same time, that it will Toot '. upport, Jr Lin-coin on any condition. . y - '.''.' :t-, X Generar Hafleclt. ft ta said that General. HatTeck Meads ar about taking vtepa to rjUc him betbre the Democratic party a 'a fcandiaataT Every hour th aleidoecop f tb reshWntiar straggle cnaege ; out the IHroocratlo jnembers of Congress xsoniinu to exprearthe most coufidence, judging lr what their hbartrom (heir coaatitaencies, that the Chacaixi aomihee cannot Tail tijj the ucce- ! , , . i ' -.. i-it. i AearoT''-oIhaTged IwhE grav critaea. i Suchre tb hea.W Ja all the joemdtlofNew"Torsf. today.;tThes,e atOrie of pecaUtions, fraud; and corruption "In the tmstom-hbQsl of that city aav com to W so eomatooT tLt Vhey 1rav bowalaioat ceased' (o attract rblieUenUc.A thorough . parii- ErfovnwaJt gH bext tilt aad ejeck a DeracuicreiUent rhea the relga ' of nMerty will' ha resomeji once more in all our public fepartniejits aauoa oi mat concern 14 ciesriy neeaeit,,, meuctnYwiiii tBeaJ.mr.tinec4at Chase -will not do- Itr-wS- taatt - 1 -':?- f!alWHawTbrhwi Preiiic X&ec!ai &a T7crHr3 raea. . A eotumita c persona calling themelve . : - - UMrepreaaataiivas of the workwg paopl of N Tock: pit j called upon Presidaru Liaoo a U Washiagtoo, a ooaphj of days aiaca, prs aentad him with aa addrea,aad told him h waa. their first choice for the next presidential Urn..; Of cocrea these peopl arc bogus worlv ma, aattab very wall known tha iaboriog clsssca of thia city wJl rots in an almost solid oass against .Mr. Lincoln or any other 'out-and-out Republican candidate. Nor will the speech Mr, Lincoln made, to the. bogus me chanic help him with the real workmen. Af ter quoting one. of hi own message touching the relation of capital and labor, he added: None are so deeply iotereated to resist the present rebellion a the working people. 'Let tbem beware of prejudice working disunion and hostility among themselves. The most notable feature of a disturbance in your city last summer was the hanging of soaia working people by other ' working ; people. It should never be so. 'The strongest bond of human sympathy, outside of the family relation. BbouM be one uniting all working people, of all fiauofte, tongues, and kindreds. Nor should tbia lead to a. war upon property or the owners of property. , . . . . It may be the pride of the race which is 00 deeply rooted in the Anglo-American character ia aochrUtian; but there ia no getting rid of the fact that proclamation of equality be tween the American whites and black, which' is contained in. the above, are calculating to. excite all the worst prejuduce of our white laboring population. Mr. Lincoln : overlooks all difference of race and rezarde th white and black simply as laborers, and tell them that they ahould be bound together by the "strongest bonds of human sympathy." Nay. more; the American working-man must consider himself aa one wjth the working-meo of all "nation, tongues and kindread, which of coarse includes evrr race from tba Esoat- naaux to the Hottentot. Thia i aueceeanar tion and nothing else; for the sympathy and identity of interest which Mr. Lincolu desire to see manifested must . culminate in that sublime "mingling of the races" which . Wendell Fbillipfl eelarea to be necessary to a blgh civ-ilization. Mr. Lincoln, therefore, fairly judged by bis own words, must be- regarded n lauding on precisely the same platform a Tilton, Phillips, Greeley, Parker Pillabury, and the rest. He doe not advocate amalgamation outright, but lie doe indorse all the "conditions precedent 7 to it the equality of the whiles and blacks a soldiers, workmen, and citizens, and the desirability of their being united in the bonds of sympathy. The -belie vers in miscegenation may safely claim Mr, Lincoln aa one of their last convert. . Frost the PhOaaelpbia Age. Coloael Dahlstwa'e "Order." On more unfortunate," Ulbic Dxnicvin ha goae te a tJawdy gnae e, andbie mw Dated body for hi wound were hardly healed when he was sent on hi last desperate errand is ad' ded to the beep of dead that haa been piled on th aoil of Virginia. There i something vary sad in this. And it is made more no by the revelations since faia death of the actual object of thia adventure. Ou his march o say the Abolition papers he secured a negro noncotn-batant, and persuaded or compelled him to be his guide to Richmond, through the netwrrk of roads and Streams, great and small, which encom pass the Confederate capital. Th is ne gro, either bv accident or design the former quite a probable aa the fatter from ignorance or stupid' ty, took him in a wrong direction, and Dahlobbx hanged him as an incentive to his race, or a Voltaire aaid long ago of Admiral By ag'a murder, "pour enemtrmer Ueautrer." Thia waa, to any tba leant of it. eh rperjusdee than was meted out to Bob Hoy' spy. It so happened thu again any th demoniacs of the . Abolition press that when Colonel Dalgren' s party dkoovered their error, they were in tb neighborhood Of the bouse of Atr. SeUon, the Confederate Seerata- 2 of War. la their rage they burned it. to e ground, and would, (here again we quote) "have thrown th owner in, if they had founa him." But it doe not end .here. On Dahl-gren'a person, when killed, waa found an address to his soldiers, and an order of the day ia case of success, in which he directed them, after releasing the Federal prisoners, to arm tbem, and "then kill JefT. Davis and hi Cabinet." And thia revelation ia made ad published in'Administratioo oewspapera, and read in leagues and alnba, at sanitary tatra, and Christian commissions, without a word of dissent, or criticism, or rebuke. It is thought all right to murder unarmed men, " if they be "Rebels." Now we have no disposition to overstate- facta, or to do injustie to the dead, who were mere agents or ministers; or to the living, who ar responsible for tbia deed of wrong. We have waited to see if it would be xeuaad, or pal ia ted, or justified. It has been neither, but it haa been assumed to be right; aad findjng it so we pause in eorrowful wonder over tba fact in amaxement at the insanity which, at a merrrent like this, imitates such a mode of black flag warfare. ,. What would ha ve been aaid if on the person or General- Barks dale, or any other Confederate officer who tell i at Abdetaaa or Gettysburg, had been foaadaa order, to , kill Mr. Liacol. Mr, Seward, Mr. Bate, and their associates. What a wail oil just indignation would have been raised at saeh atrocity: Wa trust the War Department will disavow thia bloody order. ; - - X3aocratie Victory in IlarTisbuTsr, Pa. At the jnanieipalFeTection' in Harrisburgh, Pa, on tha ISth iast the Dsmocrats'pbtaiB-ed a signal triumph'. Last fall th city gave only sixty Democratic majority for Governor ; oa the 18th ft gave one hundred andUty-se-yen majority for Joha T. Wilaoe, Democratic cajtdldbte4br -City Ti swi 1 1 , against whom th Abolitiooicte dbaotod rtheir strongest f- iMta. The Teiaocraia elected7 the ClryA edi tor by over on hundred majority, and carried fir out ofth six ward of th city. -If ext rail (hey affl donbtf eeaNujrry, wrery ward. " v- viu.S3t XlATaV rt" ii'viii-. A triberof dwarf anhies fownd fa Africa, 1ff!datl0 wbtala a a tDaftraas, and the other aa a cover. Ex. - Trident Lincoln ought to import a few of then' JW, MXwuhwe-i improva- bia-freed rrKnSuch ear wooU e m valuabljr la ji conXfAftdxPaiamru.P They, wouUU rplendcd stocLO-.-lXis-nate wili the fthe-bd'f ;nilit& theraby W8vtWthe, it: oT Ih mother of these 'brave men. : ' rr Qaaeral XoriTgt'BjA.nvXeavy Porca, - aVftnxtcia; tpca tie Ttwa. - -1 ' ' Carao. Itarcjt 1 Thsteuniir Ilain. frotn NaahvUhv paaaadj Paducah at fi o'clock thia morning. Captain Parker, her. comniaodar. furniahe the following information: , , ; , Forrest;, with about &.000 aea, made a di-ceut upon Paducah about two o'clock jester-day afternoon, capturing ,th city, completely gutting tke place, burned a number of buildings, including the Marine Bail way and ata-cuer Arizona. '- .-: Colonel Hicka, with a. fore aumbering seven or eight hundred, occupied .th tort while Forrest held th town., Three gunboat wera playing on the city at the same time. Tha Continental Hoti waa badly Md BP The enemy made four asaaulta upon tha fort, but were repulsed each time. At one time some of them gained the top of the breastworks, and a few tell in aid a. , The first wharf-boat and about 3,000 people were moved across the rivtr on Forreet's approach. Thee people wera Jn an exposed and destitute condition. . The steamer Joseph Pierce, from Cincinnati, with the Twenty-Fourth Indiana Veterans, haa arrived, two hour later advices. -. Forrest had left Paducah. The fire ia the back part of the city waa dying out, aad the people this side of th river were going back. A number of the enemy had occupied the ; large brewery on Front Street, on whoh th gunboats opened a heavy fire, battering down tha walls of tha building, killing many of tha rebel. It i not known how many were killed in the city. It is said some woman and children were killed. ' The enemy took position in th buildiaa m Front-Street, and fired from the windows oa the upper stories into the upper work af he gunboats, riddling thenvcouaiderably. Particulars of the Capture of Pert Be- : - SttalJ. . .. Foax DxRusjt. March 16. ti Caiao, March 24. This fort was captured to-day by the United State force aader Qeau A. J. Smith. Th expedition left Vicksbnrr en the 10th and landed at Setnaneefort on the UJr niarched to bayou Glace, where Gen, Scurry ' rebel brigade had been encamped, hut tha rebels fled on the approach of our troops. leaviag conaiderable camp equipage and eomraiaaary store. . Smith pr eased forward to Yellow Bayou, where atrong fortifications had bm erected, but the rebel again fled aa we eata up. The rebel were preased and aom skir-m'thing occurred, resulting in the capture of several prisoners, and a eaaall wagon train ; nt daylight Tealsrday th entire coajniand atartad for Fort DeRuasy, 28 mi lea distant, and at 4 o'clock P. M., the 2d and 9th ladiana battar-iea opened on the fort, which replied vigorously with. three of it heavy gun, . - ' . v - Tba rannonads oontinned on our, . when Gen. Smith ordered th 1st and 2d Illinota, 16th corps, under Gen. Mower, to charge the enemy' rid pit and storm the fort. Tha 58th and 88th Indiana, and th24tfc Ifjaajoorl regimeat aJvanccd orr deep ditch and thick abbattia, aimed a gallant fir, aad witb-ia twenty minutes after the order, waa iu4 th color sergeant of the 68th lilinoi planted the American flag apoa the anewiv'a arork. . The victory wa complete, su.d resulted ia : th capture of three hanajed and twenty-live prisoners, iiioludicg twealy-fbur ommiioaed officers, two 9-ioch Dahlrren gans,24-pouad-ere, four 32-poa rulers, twa 6-pou rulers, a let ol small arma, two-thousand 1'arrel of fia pow der, an immense quantity, of aaortel , ainmn-nition, and several thousand dollars worth of couimitwiary stores. Fort DeRueay i 'a' moai-formidable work of quadrangular- abepe and bastions and bomb-proof, covered with rail.; road iron. A powerful water battery counacta with the fort, the casement of which are', capable of restating Shot and shIl of ' the . hear-test calibr. l-v . .. . 1 ,v The position of the guns wa capital for rap-' " id and effective fire ou all boata'atteiMpUng to go up or down the river; about right buadred-negrae were employed for a year iu constructing the earthworks. Gen. Smith will ewper-intend the thorough deitru tion of th forUfi- . cations to-morrow. It will take three thou- and men two or three day to deatroy them. Amoag tha artillery captured are two - gun belonging to tha achooner. Morning Light, tarw rifle guna from the Harriet Lana captured last : spring of Sabine paa, and one heavy gun from the Indianola, aunk rn - the Miasiaaippl river last year by the rebel ram WfbK ai 1 The rebel boaat that their ironclad xar Missouri, now in the river, can sink any. gunboat in our navy. The Webb and Mary Jan are nUo considered impregnable to anj of 'our flotilla. .'.'.r-o -. -i-" ? r I V- , A duairal Porter haa been busily engaged; for the last three days in removing . obatructioaf : from Red River, consiating of raft' and piles-driven into the channel. Transport are now . proceeding up tb river without raterraption A If ew 7aj ef Eofling Zz-i The Norfolk New Regime tall the fbllowing miotj '.' ' "-''. - '-M?-aia . Every body- Vaowa Mr. Charlea wroea-Claffey of th St. W icAoln HoteL tTw Ycr. ad with what gracw a4 eewrUaj b prttiiaa over th gentlemen' great parlor of .that etah-lishment; nie taety dreea, tba grand gold ehaia. the Loni'e f-made watcb a true aa thahsaa, 1 : a - a e - . a . a el a . " in oniiiant aiamona uuoa aod tba glittartsrg nagon tb iiUia tinge oT the rtgbb hand. He was her last week, attired in Aekermaa'a beat and decorated. in Tiffany 'a kWighteet, " and suffered with us, in common dunug- th 'recent "eold aarpJv nt thw Atlaatio' - Hattt-to Mr. Forde Clafley a imajginatioo. . tba Atlao-tio lrftcheav , H pronounced th bed hard, th towel coarse, th heating cootrivaac of the inn bad doridedlt. and U servant doll. H never eoaU get his s done to eait -bine. Oa Friday last be called ApaUo. "Here.", aaid h to th ervaatj "uke ray . watch and . boil my' egg with it jnat three "minute." "Yea. nuuuuV' said A p polio; '111 do that ar," ad so aayiag. fa bounded off to tJkitebLAle time n returned, tba ag pa' th. Mr.. CUfTey looked ghaat,,ajid exclame. Wh What have .you 'dona, manr da - ti Jit -m it, jaai-tree teiaateav-'M tXh gaeataraaw what had ewppnW and xi - : I table wa a wrof-eou,: AfPC-' atooa maia.v. i.e neemea arsreniB sa ute ira-ariaation, for some soluUoo 0ft! au !a'rn cir-riraont of the brakttlB pari' Ir. Fori ClaSty could not refrain troWUthiaiataat, aad tarnimrto J. Tirborvi. said, . L a w in thecoa-lrcon of the prefane man, , the. tail- boir of whoa cart cam oat a h w'al fcen-ding th bid. 'and srilt hie' potatoeev Thfe is nonaaia-ewsaring; I cannot do juatic b-tb Jjsct;: 0-l o sajing. J, pocketed j hi watch, and proccede.1 to devour -his tnoraia ioral. " - ' . ' -' . ' ; ' '
Object Description
| Title | Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1864-04-02 |
| Place | Mount Vernon (Ohio) |
| Date of Original | 1864-04-02 |
| Source | LCCN: sn86079142, Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1864-04-02, Vol. 27, No. 51 |
| Format | newspapers; microfilm |
| Submitting Institution | Knox County Public Library |
| Type | Text |
| Digitization Information | 300dpi, 8-bit Grayscale, Model: NextScan Phoenix Upgrade, Software: iArchives, Inc., 3.240 |
Description
| Title | page 1 |
| Source | Reel number: 00000000004 |
| Format | newspaper |
| Extent | 7958.34KB |
| Submitting Institution | Knox County Public Library |
| Type | Text |
| File Name | 0491 |
| File Size | 7958.34KB |
| Full Text | L TTARPrTR, CiSee la J4Lmr4L Block, 24 Story. f X&XS. Twe Dollara pr uiu, payable in ad fim; $2.M within six moaths; $3.00 after the expl tntisa of thayear. v Sttiron la fhow tka Oireak word XataroiT r - SIatkaIro,M ilnifytBg to cImoh, tejnyenata and ra-atura. This article is what iti name ignUSe. Tor preaerrin;. reetoriof and beaatifyxng the homaa Bair it ia the moat reatarkabl preparation ia the world. It im AfaJn owned and P" p by the original nroorietor. and ia tow made with the aame care. akili and attention which fare it a tale of orer one xailUon botuea per annum. It is a most delightful Hair Dressing. . It eradicatea aearff and daadraff. It keeps the head cool and clean, . It mahes the hair, soft aod cossj. . It prevents the hair from falling olL It prevents the hair from turning gray. It restores hair upon bald heads. , Any lad er gentleman who values a beautiful nead of hair shoald use Lyon's Kathairon. It la haown and used 'throughout the civilized world. Sold by all respectable dealers. DEUAS 8. BARNES A CO. New York. Mar. JB-ly ' - ' TIasns 31 aynolla Batlm. This is the most delightful and extraordinary arti-tiele ever diaeovered. It changes the aun burnt faee and hands to a pearly satin texture of ravishing beauty, imparting the marble purity of youth, and the dUttagu appearance so inviting in the city belle of fashion. - It removes tsn, freckles, pimples and roogh-aesa from the akin, leaving the complexion fresh, transparent and smooth. It contains no material injurious to the skin. Patronised by Actresses and Opera Singers. It is what every, lady ahould have. Bold every where. Preparee by W. E. HAG AN, Troy, N. Y. Address all orders to - . DEUAS S. BARNES A CO. Sew York. Mar. 26-ly " ; " HEIilSTREET'S Inimilmble HaXr BeatoratiTe, HOT A DYE 9t restores gray bair to its original eolor, by supplying the capillary tubes with natural sustenance, impaired by age or disease. All ' t'faf dyet are composed of lunar caustic, destroying the vitality and beauty of the hair, and afford of themselves no dressing. Heimstreet's Ini nitable Coloring not only restores hair to its natural coler by an eay process, but gives the hair a uxnriavnt Bcantj. promotes its growth, prevents its falling off, eradicates dandruff, and imparts health and pleasantness rto the head It has stood the test of time, being the original Hair Cwloriag, and ia eon st aptly increasing in favor. Used by both gentleman and ladies. It is otd by all respectable deal era, or raa be procured by j them of the commercial agents. CO. 20 J Broadway, New York, aa'i ft. afar. 26-ly Twa alaaa, 5 eats - Hex lean 51 nstaos; Llaineat. The parties in St. Louis & Cincinnati, who hare counterfeited the Mustang Lihiinent under pretense of proprietorship have been thoroughly estoped by the Courts. To guard against further imposition, I have procured from the United States Treasury, a private steel plate revenue atampj which "is placed over the top of each bottle. Each stamp -bears the Joe tmuU of my Signature, and without which the r-- tiele is a Courterfeit. daageroaa aad worthless imitation. Examine every bottle. This Liniment has been ia use aad growing in favor for many years There hardly exists a hamlet on the habitable Globe that does not contain evidence of its wonderful effects. It ia the beat amoliment in the world. With its present improved ingredients, its effects upon maa and beast are perfectly , remarkable. Bores are healed, paina relieved, lives saved, valuable .animala mads useful, and untold ilia assuaged. For cuts, bruises, sprains, rheumatism, s wcllings, . bites, cuts, caked breast; strained homes, c.r it is a Sovereign Remedy that abould never be dispensed with. It should ba ia every famL'y. Sold by all Druggieta. . I. &. BARXCS, Kw York Mar. 2S-ly - ' S. T. 1S0. X. Persons of sedentary habits troubled witb weak-aesa, lassitude, palpitation of the heart, lack of ape-tite, dUtress after eatiag, torpid liver, constipation, Ac denerve to aaffer if they will 'not try the celebrated - :V " . . . ... - Plaofatloa. PlUerav, which are now recommended by the higheet anedicat autboritiea, and warranted to produce an immttinta beneficial effect. They are exceedingly agreeable, perfectly pure, aad must supercede all other tonka where a healthy, gentle stimulant is required. piTbmj purify, strengthen aad invigorate. . SThey create a healthy apatite. . They are aa antidote to change of water aad diet. - They overcome effects ef dissipation aad Una hours. They etrengtbeu the system and enlived the mind. - They Prevent miasmatic and intermittent (overs. J" Tboy purify the breath and acidity of the stomach. They caa Oyrpepeia and Coaatipatioa. They car Dicrrbea, and Cholera Morbus. They care Liver Complaint and Nervoua Headache. They make the weak atroag, the liagtrid brilliant. aad are exhausted aataaa a great restorer. They an composed of the celebrated Calisaya bark, winter green, naeeaftae, roeta aad herbs, all preeerved in per aacxy para at. vreu rasa. For particulars, see cir-cwlare aad testimonials areaad acb bottle. : Bewnre aflat pectera.' Examine avarv bottle. See tbat it baa aar prirat Xf. 8. Stamp aamaUlated. orer tba cerit, wita plantation scene, aad oar eigaaturaoa a fan steal plate aide label. Bee that oar bottle ia not rallied with eauriees aad deletereua ataC Any peraoa pretending to sell Plantation Bitters either by the gaTloa aad Bulk, la aa lapoater. Any per aoa imitating this bottM, or selling any other uea- xanai taenia, wuetaar eaUed FlaataUoa ' Hitter "or not, ia a criminal under tba C. B. Law, and will ba so preaeeatea by as. We already hare aar eye oa aev era! parties to-tiling ear bottles, de , who will aa -eaaa in getting themselves into close quarters. The demand for Drake'a Plantation Bitters from ladies, emuaaa, aaercaanm, , incredibie. - Tbaawa P" ttie u the evidence we present of their - werta ana napanonty . They are aold by all res- Taetaua araggwa, grocers, physieinas" botala, t lsaia,'aUmmboats aad country storee. - - iv - J " " ; H. DRAbTE CO. 1t;WT ' Broadway, jr.V. Iy narajraavear Ueeian Co. O. ftptsmbaeta, 1S59. 11: ZjiDevc CltHTbiiwU certify tint X .was aernrely i with a diaeeae af tba Xiraa. I. was res - taed ta tor year 45caadiaarian 13 and Jils aad ransar,aa avtso. t asad la am wua great saeeaaa and eaa ysBnmamnif tbea,-a my friends; $o care tba dmeaeea tbey ara janamsinBilsd Jbr; eaavaeqaaatly & atas here, year Agaat informs sac, are altogwLb- . Msiaewy. wiahtag yaa greai saeeaaa, I am 1 a . j " y aa. Bre.atta.aej ,nTr a4 Lr ImVetUea.i freevaebarwa.1 bvaaaill-iTiJir! "-""1 -msm ' Kiaga Co., Haw Terk. 1DITZ1 BY ImrtUatRK-" v , (Uotaft of tJi TJiTTeat EUtei. " lb following ia 4 ataiemeat exhibiting the qnotaa of tba different Sutes nsder tha Preai dent's call lor 'Tare Iteadrad TltooaajK raeat,1 dated afarch 14. 1864, witk all credit dadao- ted from tha deicci addel thereto, exoep. tio? the enliatmeot of vetenui aoJaateers-apto March 1, 1864: ) - If ains. Quota Bndw the call for two hun dred thoueaod roen, llarch 14, 1863, 3,721, Non ber to ba credited, none. . Deflcianciea to be charged, 1,920. Balance to be furnished. 6,641. ' IiAiirsBTKK. Qaota, 288; credit, 160; deficiency, oone. .. Baianee. 2,428. - M A8SACB csstts. Qoota, 10,639: deficien cies. 9,958. Balance, 20,592. VxxaioaT. Quota, 2.300; credit, 2,130; defi ctencj, none. Balance, 170. - Rnoog Icuiitn. Qoota, 1,388; credit, 525; deficiency, none. Balance, 863. CoNNXCTicm. Quota, 3,163; credit, 494; de ficiency, none; balance 2,574. New Yoat:. Quota, 32,794: credit and de. ficiency, not jet computed; balance, 59,230. Kbw Jxasir. Quota, 6,704; credit, none; deficiency, 7,520; balance. 14.224. Pts n srr am i a. Quota, 26,302; credit and deficiency, not (not jet compated) ; balance. 74.127. Dkla wake Quota, 985 ; credit, oone; defi ciency, 629; balance, 1,676. Maxtlakd. Quota, 4,217; credit, none; de ficiency, 17,41 tj balance, 21,728. West VitoiNlA. Quota. 2.051; credit, none; defidiencj, 1,139; balance, 3,190. Distxict or Columbia. Quota, 1,702; cred it, none; deficiency, 3,158; balance, 4,855. Ohio. Quota, 20,596; credit, none; deficien- cj, l,tZ8; balance, 3V,ZZ3. Ixdiaica. Quota, 13,524; credit, 9,939; defi ciency, none; balance, 3,Ooy. Illinois. Quota, 18,524; credit, 30,900. Mich ia a k. Quota, 7.821 ; credit, 624 ; defi ciency, none; balance, 7,187. Wiscossiw. Quota, 7,941; balance, 15,402. Minnesota. Quota, 2,180; balance, 5,437. Iowa. Quota, 6,439; credit, none; deficien cy, 6,701; balance, 13,140. - Missocai. Quota, 3,925; credit, none; deficiency, 4,962; balance, 8.8S7. KEJcrrcxr. Quota, 5,787; credit, none; de ficiency, 9,683; balance, 15,472. Kaitsas Quota, 1,409; credit, none; defi ciency. 1,118; balance, 2J97l Ibe True VavlM of Greenbacks, Many people appear to have erroneous notions aa to the true yalae of a gold dollar as compared with oar present circulating medium. Some have snppoeeJ, for instance, when gol.l is quoted at sixty per cent, premium, that their dollar greenback was worth a dollar in gold. This is a grand delusion, as a few figures will show. A dollar gold piece when worth sixty per cent, more thiu a dollar Treasury note is evidently worth 160-100ths of the latter, which is worth 100-160tb of the sold dol- ar, or 62 c, in gold. Consequently, with one lollar in Treasury paper, you can purcaea 62 cents in gold. The proof of this is, that 62 plus 60 per cent, of itself, or 37 .; is eqnal to one dollar. We think this estimation will considerably enrich, in their estimation, many persons who think that, when gold ia at 60 per cent, premium, their dollar in Treaaurj cur rency is worth only 40 cents in the precious metal. The following table, showing the ore- Ctee value of paper in gold, with the latter at various pi of premium, may be of interest to manyr '- aoLa.tr rtiiirsr wtii wo urn. 1 per eent.... JO per cent........... to par eeBt......... ,99 10-lle. 8 I-Sc. 7 1 2-1 3c 71 a-Te. 40 per cent 50 per cent., 60 per eent 79 per ecat.. M S-Sc i l-zc 58 14-lTo. 80 per cent.. ... .M Mo.' 90 per cent..... I DO per ceat.. 5t 1319c Tli e accuracy of tba above fisrascaa be tested by simply aMing to them that per cent. of each destgnated in the rate of premium. -:LiBtorkV Last Joke. A friend of cars jo the Arasy of the Potowiae, now. in 'Washington, writes : One dsy the President and a friend were sitting on I he Uoaae of Eepresentalivea steps, the seasiou closed, and the aneoibers filinar oat ia a bodr. Abe looked after them with a serious smile. " That reminda aae,w aaid Ira, " of v lUtl ini. dent when I was a boy. . lfy flat boat lay ap at Alton, oa the Utssiasippi, for a day, aad I strolled about the town. I saw a larre stone building, with tnassiva walla, not ao handaoeue though aa tbia; and whOa 1 waalookhigat H a great body of men earn out. Whatdoyoo call that l asked a by-etander. 'That,' aaid he, ' k the Stata-Pnaoa, and ibeea are all the thieye going home... Their time imp" ,Io case some dall Abolitiooict anight tail to discover the place where tha laugh oaaea ta. tn the above "MtUc" it is twrhana nroethel w hxad add, that the bod j of mt aea.pier. ging sVoos th Hooa of BtpiMtJLrinm tn loyal" Abolitiooiatav of thm apppro4d Llo- cola Omtiti?r--& ,zft - 'i ' 'leaas - V -S& X73iAt Aboinrawfta lata Bcav-J ry tbus lCir' MncoU at it hmd. ;haa- repudiatad alike the Cnad ratio, aadhe Chicago pla firm. aad the CoasUtation and th TJniori. ' -It ww w.w;nrWfHJMa loamwama- iWaf abatraradtlnauW 1 Mink owerthe'llewihrf---.-.1 au oMUuuuiAvjnvieiaie. OS UMiaLitatlAMT Urww; a thaitt naa-t mf powar, and ha rflact4 Jmlghty army, it tear it pledge to lrreda;QII trample th e Cknttitntional righls of the State id th da&" 1 --r"- " Jjiot3iet' Attempt: to ncavOeaocrfttio i Oa Moedar, tha 14th Inat another atttaffispt was made by some rowdy soldiers of ih -4th Pennsylvania volunteer (the Shamokln com- pas y) to mob the oSee of ,ih cftDomber-laad County DemoenLx A qua4oftbmbrora, fJpen the lower door aae atfrtptadl lortm vp stairs, bat being met by atem command to naii, may uaeiiaiea. n aue in ldm poaiuon, their com maader, Captain Gad well, made his appearance, denounced the contemplated out rage, and ordered them to leave, which they did. The ofiSc waa garrisoned by several cil ixens who had volunteered"their services, and if the soldiers had persisted, aom of them would have been killed. -".The Harrfsburj Pa., Patriot and Union, In closing an account of thie affair, aay:i ;; . t -:;-' . - . We advise the proprietors of the Democrat ic newspaper establishments to keep arms on hand, and shoot down any ' lawless persons. soldiers or civilliana, who asaaalt their persona or attem pt the destruction of their property. irtue law will not protect them, tbey rnaet protect themselves. ' . A Fair Propositioit. , v It has been suggested (says the Eq iitrer,) by a gentleman who haa devoted some aUtentioa to the subject, that now aa the miseegenatron theory has received the unqualified approval of several of our most eminent ' divines and philosopher, some measures ought to be taken to pot it in practical operation. If a work so great is to be speedily accomplished, we can not begin too soon, nor carry it forward too vigorously. In respect to the mode although some people might prefer to organize a society or appoint a comminsion for the encourage ment of the growth of mulattoes he is of the opinion that a pregnant hint is aflorded by the seduction and assignation r department of oar exemplary neighbor, the Commercial; which journal, it is not to be doubted, would gladly afford all desirable facilities for an adequate consideration. Advertisements might run something like the following : "To Ait TH Pai Dacobtiu or rni Whit Sex. A gentleman of purely African extraction, who has recently become a man and a brother by the aid of our brave country's defenders, but who isn't above associating, oo equal terms, with respectable arbite toiks, invites correspondence with a view to improve the American breed in the next feneration. Beauty and greenbacks at the present rates not deemed objectionable. Photographs exchanged, if required. Address Bojs Riblxt p:o." 11)0 TriLna oa Hiaeegwaation. l6reeleyrae at taai bea forced tor de fine his position upon the miscegenation question, lie does so in a very cautious and care ful article in a late issu of the TriUrnt, in whkh he afgue strongly in favor of "the In termingling of the white and black race, and submit half a dozen consideration for future discussion. Poor Greeley is really an author ity upon this subject. He ia a practicle example of the theory that a black man may be bleached white. Mr. Partoo the - biorranher of poor Greeley, aUtes that the Tribune phil-Oftopher was barn black. On page thirty three of Mr. Par ton's book wflnd this Daxsaea: "To use the lantaaga of one who waa present. aorace ureeiey came into the worM aa black a clnmney." Mr. Parton ia a faithful hia- torian. and would not state what waa untrue. Consequently the miscegenator need no- bet- ill m. aa - -a e . ' . ier niuau-auon oi ineir ooetrinea Uian poor Greeley himself, who was born "as . Mack aa a chiinnev." and is bow as white as snow. when h ia face is clean. -., ; - Ohio Quota of Troops by. District. The following is a statement ol th quota and deficiencies for Ohio under the ; two lat call:; ;:: , First District, hZIS : defictener. 1.4ft8. Second, .1.173 ; deficiency 1.493. Third, 1,206; deficiency. 925. , Fourth. 1.059; deficienev 984. Fifth, 908; deficiency 838. Sixths 1,098; de-ficiency, 1.433. Seventh. 1.089i denieacv 989 Eighth. fi83: deficiencv. 802. Nintb. 170; deficiency. 837. Tenth. L145i deficia- cv 390. Eleventh. 1,006; deficiencv, 1,504. Twelfth. 1.133: dcSeienev. L224 - ThirtMtfa 1,031; deficiency. 715. Fourteenth. L.030: da. ficiency. 634. Fifteenth, 999; deficiency. 727. Sixteenth, 1,007; deficiency; 950. Seventeenth 40; Oeoeiency, 807. Eighteenth, 1,129; de- acieuey bob. Minebeeath, 1,103: deficiency. L.U2. Total, 20,595; deficiency. 18,628. Bai-aaoe dae, 29.223: . A Deserter a is a Dirtr. A big, atrappiag fallow; aaraad George Hill, a brakesman on the alii waukeer'and ' ITiasiae- ippi railroad, ealisted iato.CoIonelSUrkweatlr- er 1st WMooasin regimeat. Not long after wards be managed to obtaia a discharge on ome lying pretext or other, aad came back , to Milwaukee, where fceenltated into th 24th Wiseonsoo, receiving $150 bounty. Q deaer-ted a short distance beyond Louisville, with five others, whom be inveigled off with -hies. H made his way Eaetod Jo tha. eoaraa a few months enlisted into; .two regimen te, get. ting bonaty from each aad deaerting at Che first opporLanity. He remained East from September. 1862, to Jaauary,, 1863t vben ha ka daddled to Fort Wayne, where he became a brakes maa oa the orV Wayue oad Toledo raijroad In Toledo he waa arrested last-July and taken to Columbus, Ohio. He managed to get off by making the ofSoars bellev that h had bttm regalarly darged.- which he ucceadedjn doaug by . alterinr liia discharre from, tha Ut to th 24th WhKonaja. 7b trick waadiaeoverad aad ha M inaj jd eotalowaih Jivanippi rfrer to JUemphuv fiaooawora capped ad went to: EnaLeva ladiaoas shero h ara foaad aad armt4Mi4 eeoA toChAtUnoc.wlvera hi ramaemk,tha Wtl to Nw Jewer. wbtre h ajtlUtad. rot the bounty, deaertad, staat to New Jforkvealiated acaia, got $500 boanty, and the ilcawrted 4 thavtath tkBwtnajaaedtD raarJia&- ada, WaSetw h 1 enjoying tie, oBa)ej4 CaarJ?vaidt a planter toa, amd -ciime up tree ana jtin ot tue orancbea." The negro ebowed no, 'dupoattiow to porqply, and Onlein pfesoeJilb' VeaaorC answered, Wall, look heaX taaasailf t go Bp dar aiv' fairdowa'and. broke tay bectrdai'll ba k tou ard olLtrs c-aL o iroar tocket: lTowlhe lhr tall aad kills' iiiaseir.' dki wrmt 4a Ioas to nobody. .. 4 i5 intcmtn-: florerament tloaey, t& X7Iiax tad '"y" - SeoTiiiirela Cwot : s v lt look plainer aad plaiaer that th a Wal-dron atory ahoot the. ia terrier hetweea Oena-tal IXcCIallan and Law was pepoeejy fabricated by a aat of aniniMiplsd radioal Aholuioa lata,- lor baa political j parpose .Waldron now aay thab ho waa ACsred tnobey by an agent of the War OapartmeM to mak an affidavit, who kept Lint under iuQuaoc of liquor aad got him ta mak the atstament pablished so extensively by th diamaioa Abolition papers. That malignant creature. Gen. ililroy, aided by others equally wicked, eeem to have aeen the maa drunk, aad helped the story a long with oheerfal alacrity, and Mr. Dana, of the New York Tribune, creduloua aad aoaua- picioo, : aad anxiou to aieza upoa any thing that be supposed would aid hi party in th New , Harnpshir electioa, profeased to " believe every word of it VI . The Tribune and the Zae editorially backed p the reputation of Waldron, and thus the testimony was made to appear eonclasira. TbV plot waaMgood-enough-Morgan until after y the alectioa !'' Now rad . WALnBON'S STATEMENT., , A aeries of article having appeared, of which I ara charged with th aulhorahin. about the 7th of March.T 'met a person by the name of Graham, of whom I had no acaaintanc. fie asked m e to wri te a letter for . him to Colonel Sharp in regard to aa account he had with that officer. He told aae that he waa emulov- ed by the War lepartmeot to tend pie to Alien mono. While we were talking about tha battle of Antielam J waa teliina hiea about General Kil patrick, Bufbrd. Merrit aad Col. Camnball making my home a place for eating, 4c this Mr. Graham asked me if there were at times many officers met at my house ; auul I replied in th way of a joke, of course, that Lbey have; when h replied, if you will caaka aa aJQdavit to that effect we can make a good thing out of it. I don't remember what reply 1 made to the proposition, for the reason that I waa la- bonnr under the influeaee of Iioaor for tome days. He continuet to keep this subject be fore me for two or three days, keeping me un der tne inauenee or liquor during the time. Lie visiUsl General Mtlror, ami insisted on ' my going to see him in -reference to this sub ject. . ' - .v . -:' ' ' I went to see General Miiroy, at the-Avea- ue House, in Waaiiingtort, and to back up the statement which I had made to . Graham. hich was that Lee andiMcdellan had an in terview at mv house. We had a conversation on th matter for soma time, of which I do not remember. Oo thelOth of March waa induced to go to thaJWar Department, and i introduced to Colonel Hardee and Mr. Dana, to whom I was ladaoed to aav what I had-aerUrvOrahaalf aad Uen. MITroyi -Mr: Dana made the remark that he believed every word of it."The oext thing that happened in this city waa that I was sent afterbvthe com mittee on the Conduct of the War. - That waa the first time I realized the position I stood in. r aaxas Wauao. A ForcIMe 8peech at the Hew York HcClellan Heetlng. 1 . Col. Max Laagenschwartz was the next speaker. He spoke at some length, illustrating the position of the Republican party, by tarioua stories which kept the audiaaee in oon-tiaual laughter. - . n He said ha did not like personalities and a he would not say that Mr. Lincoln' had long legs, and that was probably th reason' why he .had over-stepped - the Coastitetion. The first time that these radical agitatdrbbet got the Teioa of government ia Luein band they have brought on u ruin and misery.- A man ouce went for a doctor tor hi wife and aeked him: "How long have you been a doctor?" The answer; waa, "Twenty-five year." " The man aske t,'Bow many patients have yout killed in that timet' 'Only one,' said the doctor. o he faired the doctor, to see hi wife.'and in a few dsys bis wife died. So the man asked him in great wrath how it waa poaaibla that ho had only killed one person in twenty-five years. Oh." said the doctor, "I only had ooapa-tieiu.". So the republicans in twenty or thirty years have had only one patient, and they have nearly killed bim. - " , - In making thia a war against slavery, they are like the man who set fire to hie house, and burned fa it hi-furniture, and hi wife' bind children, and when asked why he burned it replied, lw kill th cock-roachea.' . It ia im-poasibl to find -what new creed they adopt next. - Itrie emancipation, ecnfiecaion. aani-hilatioa. miscegeaalion. He could ot agree with thia ow doctrine ualeae polygamy was allowed. Then a ma could have a yellow wife from Calaa,. a brown wife from India, tdack wife Xroa" A frica, ' aad a whHtr erif from hi own ooaBtrv, aad so have a variegated familr. and put a sign over thedoor,MUat-ted Matrimonial Paint Shop,' , IQreat laagb-ter.J ..Colone.l .Lancnchwartx eoneioded by reciting a poemano giving as bis final argument.that Geu. McClellaa waa a .military . necessity." : ' " " ' ,,!' ' " " - Freaatbe Dabaaaa flawa) HdHU.'r '---: A diaoatch was received in town vesferdav. stating that oa Thuraday night the safe of tha TreaauroT Of Bubhanaa eoaatyj a,t Indepea-deaoe, Wa robbed ef f2GfiO0LV'Thf arrival Of the train from the West confirmed the bw. though it did not furnish many particular of too trmaeactioeK' Te-aae, aawt -to be one of Herring'e, waa leaall right Thursday evening. Friday morning u waa ad blownopej), the powder ha v ing bean put into the key-hp ? v . , Twenty tousaod dollars were stolen, most- ly.ia grteaWckahough there Waa aorae Iowa . . 11 . 1 1 , -1 mwj a,easjoins anw aiao. stiver Lftoogh) th amount of tha apeo waa probably amaJU N 6 ela t ha $eea looutahf&iberi fevea- hadbeen au ucca .-aaciiewu b jooeria O tQ cam down a far a Manchester'. coaoty reward of on thouaaad dollar 'irpfrered. If mm naNly scent obbifr thxt r the thieve eouia escape if due diligence taosedi - x -i? -f..vTZi mtm eMaoag nt man J vitawujs coaierreaopoo Wnitrjrha ftisioiriof thaAbckidtt tieaat iBtapoliUca. .?sFoe JBtaBCb;-thi 1 taay.a'faV Mr.JQrinoell aaid Mr. Holmes befonf?'-id at awry asteayHhw rar TednocraW He briefly' apaka la dercgatiow of JIcCTcIUa.:w"5o with faia DeosocraUc Irieau; werelatiel wllh slavery, and would go do rn to hell together. V? I . ! AiocjatkjouTa satka ?Jai treao. aad will journal of tha Adoiiafetraiioai party accaa a of avi&lotv if we prist without a word of eo9rant from ouraalvaa, for tha a tio of the people aad of tha party ju at nsrabd. aa article io tha QoastitBticej of tha Uoitad States; and if we .accotapaay tha artici arHh th remark upon it made aaany yeare ego by oaaaaifeoi conraesadiy Urs awest omgiTita- tor that haa writtca oa Americaa Coostitatioa- 1 1 . . nana . -: Ometitutum f the VmHed StalUe. Amemd-menu, Artici II. "A waU rtgulated tatlitia being necessary to the security .of a free Sute, the right of the people to keep and bear arm shall not be infringed." - Skrry'e Commentaries VoL IT. Beok III, Chap. 44, Pane til. ."The importance of thia article will scarcely oe doubted by any person who have duly reflected on the subject.'. The militia is the national defense of a free country against sudden foreign Invasions, domestic insurrection and domestic UBurpallona oTdow- er by rblers. ' It i against sound policy for a tree people to keep np large military establish- nwiw, ana atanurng armicw in um or peace, both from th enormous expenses with which they are attended, and the facile mean which tbey afford to ambitious aad unprincipled rul ers to subvert the Government, or tram Die upon the rights of the people. - The right of citisens to keep and bear arm nas justly been conaidered as a palladiam of th libertie of a republic; since it offers a atrone moral check against thaasurpation and arbitrary power of raters, and win generally, even if these are successful in the first Instance, enable the peo ple to resist and triumpb over tbem. And yet though this truth should seem no clear. and the importance of a well regulated militiai would seem o undeniable, it cannot be dis guised that, among the American people, there is a growing inuraerene to any system or militia discipline, and a atroag dispoaition. from a sense of iu burthea. to be rid of all regulations. How it is practicable to keo the peo ple duly armed, without some organization, it is difficult to sea. - There i certainly no small danger that indifference may lead to disgust and disgust to contempt; and thus gradually undermine all the protection intended by. tbia clans of bu r national bill of rights." 'The life of the Vatioft." What ia the -life of the nation." of the United State ? Plainly nothing else but the Constitution. If all the states by mutual agreement' to-morrow ' repudiate that instru ment there would be the same, number of men and women, horse and sheep,'- coal and gold mines, houses and barn, and hips and " man ufacturers and states. All tha elements of material wealth, all the 'appliances and means of physical and intellectual improvement would exist, and after a certain period of con fusion, all these element would crystaTix into ome . new governmental system. Bat th United State would have ceased to exist lust aaTthe UTuled StAiee made by the 'Arttclea of Con federatioa ceased to exist. j oat what a charter is to a bank, the . Con- titutiou u to the Uaited 8ute. Suppcee some of the corporators have carried off from a bank part of the funds which they contributed, and the Other corporator were.friac to get the funds' back into the possession . pf the corporation, ao' that the bank might go on a usual; that the corpora' or who carried off the fund did so under the assertion that the offi cers elected at the last poll were about to mis use tbem, and instead of employing the fund of the bank in legitimate bankinz business. were going into outside speculations, that the bank and some of it stockhoIdr wen at law. Now, what would be thought of the officer of a bank in sucb a contingency who went oo and did with the remaining funds of the bank precisely what the violent stockholder ' alleg ed they were about to do with the whole,, and what of au advocate who. instead of sticking to the legal proposition that the banks wa en-tilled to the funds, and that the'reiaedy of any apprehensive stock hofdera wa not io abstrac- tion.ehonla admit that; toe ban ar-was to be used for some other than its "legitimate business, and waa going into the philanthropj linef ; ' - ' : " What would a judge eay to any" man who Ulked about the life of the bank 1 Would he not eay, 3tick to-the charter, Mr. Attorney. Tbee people eay that your . clients ' mean to misuse their funds and that they have a right to withdraw them from that misure. There is a question of fact first to be settled the intention to misuse; next a' question Of law their remedy agttinet misuse." If Mr. Attorney were to answer. ''we intend to use the fanda in the philanthropy line,' and though these bolters will lose a little at first I have a calculation to exhibit to your honor which' Shows iafkllibly that ia the end they will be largely the gainers ; in addition to which every prin ciple of Christianity, every piratiort of bu- roanity ." -Vbat Lave those to do with a bank- charter T A aae nothing about them ia it" 'No, your honor we want to pot (hem in it; we want to mak an -inner life far- thia bank to make it a blessing to the world, a type and a beacon,' a glory aad a light; to extend hs usefulness, to create customer, to educate as. well aa to dicout, to elevate a welt as to declare divtdenda. WorUL IVesidnttal'XIoTraeats. General Fremont. The Michigan - JawraaZ, published rn Detroit, and the leading German radical paper of (hat State, ha hoisted the Fremont nag. Two more German papers ia Ulinobw the Peoria DevUck 'Zejtxng and. the Alton 'lTaooavAfernaYe likewise hoisted the ham otJohn C Fremont for the Preailency In 1864 i arid iTTe WUs&' Pemocridr tptiam-e iti prefereace' for Fremont, declaring, at the same time, that it will Toot '. upport, Jr Lin-coin on any condition. . y - '.''.' :t-, X Generar Hafleclt. ft ta said that General. HatTeck Meads ar about taking vtepa to rjUc him betbre the Democratic party a 'a fcandiaataT Every hour th aleidoecop f tb reshWntiar straggle cnaege ; out the IHroocratlo jnembers of Congress xsoniinu to exprearthe most coufidence, judging lr what their hbartrom (heir coaatitaencies, that the Chacaixi aomihee cannot Tail tijj the ucce- ! , , . i ' -.. i-it. i AearoT''-oIhaTged IwhE grav critaea. i Suchre tb hea.W Ja all the joemdtlofNew"Torsf. today.;tThes,e atOrie of pecaUtions, fraud; and corruption "In the tmstom-hbQsl of that city aav com to W so eomatooT tLt Vhey 1rav bowalaioat ceased' (o attract rblieUenUc.A thorough . parii- ErfovnwaJt gH bext tilt aad ejeck a DeracuicreiUent rhea the relga ' of nMerty will' ha resomeji once more in all our public fepartniejits aauoa oi mat concern 14 ciesriy neeaeit,,, meuctnYwiiii tBeaJ.mr.tinec4at Chase -will not do- Itr-wS- taatt - 1 -':?- f!alWHawTbrhwi Preiiic X&ec!ai &a T7crHr3 raea. . A eotumita c persona calling themelve . : - - UMrepreaaataiivas of the workwg paopl of N Tock: pit j called upon Presidaru Liaoo a U Washiagtoo, a ooaphj of days aiaca, prs aentad him with aa addrea,aad told him h waa. their first choice for the next presidential Urn..; Of cocrea these peopl arc bogus worlv ma, aattab very wall known tha iaboriog clsssca of thia city wJl rots in an almost solid oass against .Mr. Lincoln or any other 'out-and-out Republican candidate. Nor will the speech Mr, Lincoln made, to the. bogus me chanic help him with the real workmen. Af ter quoting one. of hi own message touching the relation of capital and labor, he added: None are so deeply iotereated to resist the present rebellion a the working people. 'Let tbem beware of prejudice working disunion and hostility among themselves. The most notable feature of a disturbance in your city last summer was the hanging of soaia working people by other ' working ; people. It should never be so. 'The strongest bond of human sympathy, outside of the family relation. BbouM be one uniting all working people, of all fiauofte, tongues, and kindreds. Nor should tbia lead to a. war upon property or the owners of property. , . . . . It may be the pride of the race which is 00 deeply rooted in the Anglo-American character ia aochrUtian; but there ia no getting rid of the fact that proclamation of equality be tween the American whites and black, which' is contained in. the above, are calculating to. excite all the worst prejuduce of our white laboring population. Mr. Lincoln : overlooks all difference of race and rezarde th white and black simply as laborers, and tell them that they ahould be bound together by the "strongest bonds of human sympathy." Nay. more; the American working-man must consider himself aa one wjth the working-meo of all "nation, tongues and kindread, which of coarse includes evrr race from tba Esoat- naaux to the Hottentot. Thia i aueceeanar tion and nothing else; for the sympathy and identity of interest which Mr. Lincolu desire to see manifested must . culminate in that sublime "mingling of the races" which . Wendell Fbillipfl eelarea to be necessary to a blgh civ-ilization. Mr. Lincoln, therefore, fairly judged by bis own words, must be- regarded n lauding on precisely the same platform a Tilton, Phillips, Greeley, Parker Pillabury, and the rest. He doe not advocate amalgamation outright, but lie doe indorse all the "conditions precedent 7 to it the equality of the whiles and blacks a soldiers, workmen, and citizens, and the desirability of their being united in the bonds of sympathy. The -belie vers in miscegenation may safely claim Mr, Lincoln aa one of their last convert. . Frost the PhOaaelpbia Age. Coloael Dahlstwa'e "Order." On more unfortunate" Ulbic Dxnicvin ha goae te a tJawdy gnae e, andbie mw Dated body for hi wound were hardly healed when he was sent on hi last desperate errand is ad' ded to the beep of dead that haa been piled on th aoil of Virginia. There i something vary sad in this. And it is made more no by the revelations since faia death of the actual object of thia adventure. Ou his march o say the Abolition papers he secured a negro noncotn-batant, and persuaded or compelled him to be his guide to Richmond, through the netwrrk of roads and Streams, great and small, which encom pass the Confederate capital. Th is ne gro, either bv accident or design the former quite a probable aa the fatter from ignorance or stupid' ty, took him in a wrong direction, and Dahlobbx hanged him as an incentive to his race, or a Voltaire aaid long ago of Admiral By ag'a murder, "pour enemtrmer Ueautrer." Thia waa, to any tba leant of it. eh rperjusdee than was meted out to Bob Hoy' spy. It so happened thu again any th demoniacs of the . Abolition press that when Colonel Dalgren' s party dkoovered their error, they were in tb neighborhood Of the bouse of Atr. SeUon, the Confederate Seerata- 2 of War. la their rage they burned it. to e ground, and would, (here again we quote) "have thrown th owner in, if they had founa him." But it doe not end .here. On Dahl-gren'a person, when killed, waa found an address to his soldiers, and an order of the day ia case of success, in which he directed them, after releasing the Federal prisoners, to arm tbem, and "then kill JefT. Davis and hi Cabinet." And thia revelation ia made ad published in'Administratioo oewspapera, and read in leagues and alnba, at sanitary tatra, and Christian commissions, without a word of dissent, or criticism, or rebuke. It is thought all right to murder unarmed men, " if they be "Rebels." Now we have no disposition to overstate- facta, or to do injustie to the dead, who were mere agents or ministers; or to the living, who ar responsible for tbia deed of wrong. We have waited to see if it would be xeuaad, or pal ia ted, or justified. It has been neither, but it haa been assumed to be right; aad findjng it so we pause in eorrowful wonder over tba fact in amaxement at the insanity which, at a merrrent like this, imitates such a mode of black flag warfare. ,. What would ha ve been aaid if on the person or General- Barks dale, or any other Confederate officer who tell i at Abdetaaa or Gettysburg, had been foaadaa order, to , kill Mr. Liacol. Mr, Seward, Mr. Bate, and their associates. What a wail oil just indignation would have been raised at saeh atrocity: Wa trust the War Department will disavow thia bloody order. ; - - X3aocratie Victory in IlarTisbuTsr, Pa. At the jnanieipalFeTection' in Harrisburgh, Pa, on tha ISth iast the Dsmocrats'pbtaiB-ed a signal triumph'. Last fall th city gave only sixty Democratic majority for Governor ; oa the 18th ft gave one hundred andUty-se-yen majority for Joha T. Wilaoe, Democratic cajtdldbte4br -City Ti swi 1 1 , against whom th Abolitiooicte dbaotod rtheir strongest f- iMta. The Teiaocraia elected7 the ClryA edi tor by over on hundred majority, and carried fir out ofth six ward of th city. -If ext rail (hey affl donbtf eeaNujrry, wrery ward. " v- viu.S3t XlATaV rt" ii'viii-. A triberof dwarf anhies fownd fa Africa, 1ff!datl0 wbtala a a tDaftraas, and the other aa a cover. Ex. - Trident Lincoln ought to import a few of then' JW, MXwuhwe-i improva- bia-freed rrKnSuch ear wooU e m valuabljr la ji conXfAftdxPaiamru.P They, wouUU rplendcd stocLO-.-lXis-nate wili the fthe-bd'f ;nilit& theraby W8vtWthe, it: oT Ih mother of these 'brave men. : ' rr Qaaeral XoriTgt'BjA.nvXeavy Porca, - aVftnxtcia; tpca tie Ttwa. - -1 ' ' Carao. Itarcjt 1 Thsteuniir Ilain. frotn NaahvUhv paaaadj Paducah at fi o'clock thia morning. Captain Parker, her. comniaodar. furniahe the following information: , , ; , Forrest;, with about &.000 aea, made a di-ceut upon Paducah about two o'clock jester-day afternoon, capturing ,th city, completely gutting tke place, burned a number of buildings, including the Marine Bail way and ata-cuer Arizona. '- .-: Colonel Hicka, with a. fore aumbering seven or eight hundred, occupied .th tort while Forrest held th town., Three gunboat wera playing on the city at the same time. Tha Continental Hoti waa badly Md BP The enemy made four asaaulta upon tha fort, but were repulsed each time. At one time some of them gained the top of the breastworks, and a few tell in aid a. , The first wharf-boat and about 3,000 people were moved across the rivtr on Forreet's approach. Thee people wera Jn an exposed and destitute condition. . The steamer Joseph Pierce, from Cincinnati, with the Twenty-Fourth Indiana Veterans, haa arrived, two hour later advices. -. Forrest had left Paducah. The fire ia the back part of the city waa dying out, aad the people this side of th river were going back. A number of the enemy had occupied the ; large brewery on Front Street, on whoh th gunboats opened a heavy fire, battering down tha walls of tha building, killing many of tha rebel. It i not known how many were killed in the city. It is said some woman and children were killed. ' The enemy took position in th buildiaa m Front-Street, and fired from the windows oa the upper stories into the upper work af he gunboats, riddling thenvcouaiderably. Particulars of the Capture of Pert Be- : - SttalJ. . .. Foax DxRusjt. March 16. ti Caiao, March 24. This fort was captured to-day by the United State force aader Qeau A. J. Smith. Th expedition left Vicksbnrr en the 10th and landed at Setnaneefort on the UJr niarched to bayou Glace, where Gen, Scurry ' rebel brigade had been encamped, hut tha rebels fled on the approach of our troops. leaviag conaiderable camp equipage and eomraiaaary store. . Smith pr eased forward to Yellow Bayou, where atrong fortifications had bm erected, but the rebel again fled aa we eata up. The rebel were preased and aom skir-m'thing occurred, resulting in the capture of several prisoners, and a eaaall wagon train ; nt daylight Tealsrday th entire coajniand atartad for Fort DeRuasy, 28 mi lea distant, and at 4 o'clock P. M., the 2d and 9th ladiana battar-iea opened on the fort, which replied vigorously with. three of it heavy gun, . - ' . v - Tba rannonads oontinned on our, . when Gen. Smith ordered th 1st and 2d Illinota, 16th corps, under Gen. Mower, to charge the enemy' rid pit and storm the fort. Tha 58th and 88th Indiana, and th24tfc Ifjaajoorl regimeat aJvanccd orr deep ditch and thick abbattia, aimed a gallant fir, aad witb-ia twenty minutes after the order, waa iu4 th color sergeant of the 68th lilinoi planted the American flag apoa the anewiv'a arork. . The victory wa complete, su.d resulted ia : th capture of three hanajed and twenty-live prisoners, iiioludicg twealy-fbur ommiioaed officers, two 9-ioch Dahlrren gans,24-pouad-ere, four 32-poa rulers, twa 6-pou rulers, a let ol small arma, two-thousand 1'arrel of fia pow der, an immense quantity, of aaortel , ainmn-nition, and several thousand dollars worth of couimitwiary stores. Fort DeRueay i 'a' moai-formidable work of quadrangular- abepe and bastions and bomb-proof, covered with rail.; road iron. A powerful water battery counacta with the fort, the casement of which are', capable of restating Shot and shIl of ' the . hear-test calibr. l-v . .. . 1 ,v The position of the guns wa capital for rap-' " id and effective fire ou all boata'atteiMpUng to go up or down the river; about right buadred-negrae were employed for a year iu constructing the earthworks. Gen. Smith will ewper-intend the thorough deitru tion of th forUfi- . cations to-morrow. It will take three thou- and men two or three day to deatroy them. Amoag tha artillery captured are two - gun belonging to tha achooner. Morning Light, tarw rifle guna from the Harriet Lana captured last : spring of Sabine paa, and one heavy gun from the Indianola, aunk rn - the Miasiaaippl river last year by the rebel ram WfbK ai 1 The rebel boaat that their ironclad xar Missouri, now in the river, can sink any. gunboat in our navy. The Webb and Mary Jan are nUo considered impregnable to anj of 'our flotilla. .'.'.r-o -. -i-" ? r I V- , A duairal Porter haa been busily engaged; for the last three days in removing . obatructioaf : from Red River, consiating of raft' and piles-driven into the channel. Transport are now . proceeding up tb river without raterraption A If ew 7aj ef Eofling Zz-i The Norfolk New Regime tall the fbllowing miotj '.' ' "-''. - '-M?-aia . Every body- Vaowa Mr. Charlea wroea-Claffey of th St. W icAoln HoteL tTw Ycr. ad with what gracw a4 eewrUaj b prttiiaa over th gentlemen' great parlor of .that etah-lishment; nie taety dreea, tba grand gold ehaia. the Loni'e f-made watcb a true aa thahsaa, 1 : a - a e - . a . a el a . " in oniiiant aiamona uuoa aod tba glittartsrg nagon tb iiUia tinge oT the rtgbb hand. He was her last week, attired in Aekermaa'a beat and decorated. in Tiffany 'a kWighteet, " and suffered with us, in common dunug- th 'recent "eold aarpJv nt thw Atlaatio' - Hattt-to Mr. Forde Clafley a imajginatioo. . tba Atlao-tio lrftcheav , H pronounced th bed hard, th towel coarse, th heating cootrivaac of the inn bad doridedlt. and U servant doll. H never eoaU get his s done to eait -bine. Oa Friday last be called ApaUo. "Here.", aaid h to th ervaatj "uke ray . watch and . boil my' egg with it jnat three "minute." "Yea. nuuuuV' said A p polio; '111 do that ar" ad so aayiag. fa bounded off to tJkitebLAle time n returned, tba ag pa' th. Mr.. CUfTey looked ghaat,,ajid exclame. Wh What have .you 'dona, manr da - ti Jit -m it, jaai-tree teiaateav-'M tXh gaeataraaw what had ewppnW and xi - : I table wa a wrof-eou,: AfPC-' atooa maia.v. i.e neemea arsreniB sa ute ira-ariaation, for some soluUoo 0ft! au !a'rn cir-riraont of the brakttlB pari' Ir. Fori ClaSty could not refrain troWUthiaiataat, aad tarnimrto J. Tirborvi. said, . L a w in thecoa-lrcon of the prefane man, , the. tail- boir of whoa cart cam oat a h w'al fcen-ding th bid. 'and srilt hie' potatoeev Thfe is nonaaia-ewsaring; I cannot do juatic b-tb Jjsct;: 0-l o sajing. J, pocketed j hi watch, and proccede.1 to devour -his tnoraia ioral. " - ' . ' -' . ' ; ' ' |
