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, , ( ,:, v ;!,;' ; . .-. , .., i j r: i ! ;' , ; r, ! -J i -:-' -' ' : ' a i i -jc- I , . ; r ; , . .- Cii v, rri j-.Vi- 7 ; ,,' ," t. , '" ', rilBlSBKD Ewry Thursday Morning, by I pyiTRO CTJNEQ, ; EDITOR AXD PEOPKIETOU. Havinslately received a large of no w and beaut ifulJob Type andother prli t ing tuateriaUls now prepared to do alliiBd of Job Work.fiach as . - -. f : CIRCULARS, BILL HEADS, HAND-BILLS. "- BLANKS, oj POSTERS, n LABELS t ; Programmes, Cards, 3bc.t TSBMS. izmuntbt,; - - - 1 ' - 1 No paper will be discontinued nntll nil ar mraget arc paid. Single copies, five cents. '.'.'"''I,'!' j X: Number 6'! Done on the shortest notice, and ln?a mini that willbe satisfactory to all. 'i . :" .....!. ; ,.j.., .... ..mi ..:,.,.;..: i - . . " . -. -, , . " ... r : : tin: y l-.O: ::: or. Volume xxm ; , .; XOU All ,:su: i'1' .) - un lull 0 . .1. .;: : " HOOFUND'S GERMAN BITTERS, Hoofland's German Tonic Praparad bylr. O. M. Jackson, Philadelphia, Thr Intraductioa Into thla country front Oar many occurred In 1825. .THEY CUBES TOTJB FATHERS AJND MOTHEES, And will com too and yonr children. They are entirely dlnnnt from the many prepa rations now lnaawsi awasnaiths country eallsd Uitters I I or Tonics. lby arc no I I tavern prepa ration, or anysssUan aaUsBthlng liks on bat good, .honest, reliaule medicines. They an Tht frtmtert known remtdict for . Jjiver Complaint, DYSiVEPSIA, Nervous Debility, JAUNDICE, Diseases of the Kidneys, ' ERUPTIONS OF THE SKIN, nd all laesaa arising troin a Disordered Liver. Stomach, or IMPURITY OF TUJt BLOOD. Constipation. Flitulenoe, Inward Piles, Fulnesa of Blood to the Head, Acidity of the Stomach, Nausea, Aieartburn.Diegustlorl'ood, Fui neaa or Weight in the Stomach, Sour Eructations, Sinking1 or Fluttering- at the Pit of the Stomach, Swimming or the Head, Hurried or Difficult Breathinjc, Fluttering at the Heart, Chok 9Ha. in or Suf focating Ben ff : TXsationswhen la s LvintU MM toature.Dim t neaa of Via aamw' ion. Dots or Webs before the slight. Dull Pain in the Head, Deficiency of Perspi ration, Veilowneas of the Hkm and Eyes, Pain in the Side, Sack, Cheat, Limbs, etc.. Sudden Flushes of Heat, Burning in the Flesh, Constant Imaginings of Evil and Great Depression of Spirits. I ... i a f . Jit 0Mt tndieatt oStuue of Hit Liver or Digtttivt Orgam, combined wUA impart blood. Hoofland's German Bitters Is entirety vegetable, and contains no liquor. It Is a compound of Vluld Extracts. Tlie Itooc, Herbs, and Barks from which these ex tracts are maie are sntlaered la Sermany. .swassaw A elnal virtues T W d fromll JJ cUnllQeasT All the tuedl jare -extract-f hem by a C hemlst. These extracts are then forwarded to this country - to be nsed ex pressly for . the manufacture of these Bitters. There la no alr.o- nolle substance of any kind used 1 In compounding the Bitters, hence It Is the only Miners that can bo nsed In eases where Icon olio stimulants are not advisable. Hoofland's German Tonic ft s comtinatioa of all the ingredicnti of Of Bitten with purs Santa Cms Jam. Orange, etc it used for i tame disease mUkt Bitlert, in eases whore some pure atcotiolic stimulus is ra auirstV' Ton will bear in wtintt Utnt these reme dift ore enlirely different from any others advertised for In cure -of Utz tnta named, these being scientific jprep&rations of medicinal smtrmets, while the oUirrs are mere decoctions of rum in some form.-' The TONIC is decidedly one of the most pleasant and agreeable remedies ever offered to the public. Its taste is exquisite. It is m pleasure to take it, while Us Life-giving, exhiU mrating, and medicinal qualities have caused it to be known at the greatest vf all tonics. ! DEBILITY.' " r . There it no medicine equal to HonflanVs Ser mon Bitters or SBSMsaasiaayj Tunic in cases of J)ebility. They . lil sumpart a tone mud O'tur to tlte Ij m : whole system, mtrenathen the apssMBlBB- ' petite, cause an onjoymentof lhe.looi,enub'e the tUrmach to digest it, purify the blood, give s good, sound, healthy complexion eradicate the yalow tinge from the eye, imparl a boom to the cheeks, and change the fmtient from a slvnt'breaihcil, emaciated, w.ak, omd nervous inouiui, is s full-Jactd, stout, and vigorous person, . Weak -and Delicate Children are lua.ie stroiia by uiii ic liit ters. or Tonic, in lact, liicy are Family ItledicliieM. 'J licy fan be administered Willi pcifect safety to a ehlll three moiitliH old. Hie inoxi delicate iuiualc, or a man of ninety. . . ' " These remedies are the best Blood Purifiers ever known, and will cure all diseases resulting from bad bit out. Keep your blood pure ; Icep four Liver in orassDV . der; keep your digestive organs II in a sound, he thy condition, 1 1 Rly the use of these see Mar cn remedies, emd nf Urease unit ver assail you. . The be men in 'he country recom mend them. If years of hane 'reputation go for emyming you must try these prearations. i'FOOM HON. GEO. W-WOODWARD, CbitC Silsuea of the Supremo Court of rena- ' ' ' w ' - ; Aj-lvauia. ' ' PantnsLrnii, March 16, 1867. I tnd " U'toJlu-iTs German Bitters" it not an ImteaneaNng beverage, but is a good Untie, useful vn disorders of the digenive organs, and of great menefit in cases of debility and want of nervous mction in the system. .1 , ? . Yours truty, , ( GtO. W. WOODWARD. FROM HON. JAMES THOMPSON, Judge of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. 1'hii.klphia, Aiirii 1866. I consider Bitters " a ww in ease er i4 Hoofland's iruian valuable m' di et t at tacks tlon or Iy- of Indlges aensla. Ii can certiiy this from nmv eiei-iivce of it. lours, with respect, JAittl-.S IHomFSOIt, FROM niftrjOSEPH H. KENNARD, D.D., jiitif of ifiaVenth BapUst Church, Philadel i ii i 1 ' : ubla. Da. Jacksos Dbas Sis: I have been fre fjuenUy requested ta connect my name with recom mmdntitm of different kinds of medicines, but regarding Uie practice a out of my appropriate sphere, I have in nil cases declined ; but wiiA a dear proof in various instances, and particularly in my own f amity, ef the usefulness f Dr. Hoof, tanrfs ttrrman Bitters, I depart for encef'om my usual course, to express my full conviction that tot general dHily ofthe system and asnaelaliv forassaw eaaaaaMver Com plaint, It is a safe kd, and valuable preparation. In I t-l tome cotes it may fail t but uuaanai Sl ly.ia mot not, u wilt be very beneficial to Oum wlto suffer from the above causes. , Yours, very rente fully, - ' J. II KMNHAKD, ' f ' Eighth, below UooMt tstrecL n: r..,lfc:,.fo-. CAUTION. .- BooflaaoVt German Remedies are counterfeited. The genuine have Hi signature of C. Ml. Jack" son on the front of Uie outside wrapper of each bottle, and the name of the article blown in each boute., ,Ml others are counterfeit. Price of the Bitters. $1 per bottle I Or, a hall' dozen tor 5. Price of the Xonir, 50 per bot Fae4 Or, a half dozen lor 1 so. The tonic is put up in quart houies. Recollect 'that it it Dr. HonfianaVt German Remedies that are so universally used and to highly cmS"TT'laBBav mended; and do not allow the II SxKOruggistt to in duce yon to take 1 1 myUttng else thai he maw say bssaasnaBB just at good, be- aause he makes a ta.uer nrotit on it- These seem ones will be tent by express to any locattty upon afpUcatioutoth '. isp ; 'h ! ' ;.!.-, i -. .. FBINCIPAIj OFFICE, At the German Medicine Store, , jWf. SI AMCH STREET, Philadelphia. t' "!';" IioprIetor, fmexlf 0. 1C. JACKSON & CO. Jr''f,-' .- ' ' ' ' . , These Bemedles are for sale by Druggists, storekeepers and JMedl elne llealers every where. Do not forget to examine well Ik WtKl yes) tug, is order it get the genuine. - M' KELLY & HOYT, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, lTppCr Sandusky, rt- Ohio. Office in M" Kelly's lllock, up stairs, Main street.-, ...... n nolg'60-tf a. M'&KLLY. , i..,.,,. r H. A. IIOVT. DR. G.-T. McDONALD; - , PHYSICIAN A SURGEON. Office with Dr. Crcssinger, over Itecry's .Store. Will at tend promptly to all professional calls. T. E. Gibu.. . : : " A.' Kail CR3SELL & KAIL, Attorneys & Counselors at Law, Upper Sandusky, O. ' Iffics: 2d F!oir, Ueerys liloek. J. D. & C. SEAKS, 4 TTORXEYS AT LAW, and Claim Agents. - Claims for back pay, bounty and pensions carefully and promptly attended to. Office up stall's over the First National Bank, Upper Sundusky, Ohio. ' ' tf .'. scnAEFER. a. a. wuitk - SCHAEFER & WHITE, TTORNEYS and Counsellors at Law. Par ticuliir attention paid to Notarial and In surance business. Office, i'ierson block, up .tail's. jnl 2-ly DR; A. BILLH ARDT. DEALER IN DRUGS, Medicines, Paints, Oils, Hooks. Ktatiouery, Wall Paper, etc., in Post Office liuilJiiiK, Upper Sandusky, O. JOHN PAUSCII, KIVKLER, and dcalera in Silver AVare ' Watches, Clocks, Cutlery and Fancy Goods, .'o. 8 Uoberts' ltlock. DR. D W. BYRON. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, office at his residence on corner of Fourth St. and Wy andot Avenue, Upper Saudusky, Ohio. " MACK'S HOTEL. " CAREY, O. David L. Michails, Proprietor. Formerly proprietor Shade House, Attica, Ohio. Good stabling attached. . - ,W. A. WEIDMAN, MERCHANT TAILOR ard dealer in Ready Made Clothing. Gents Furnishing Goods, etc. MeComieli's block, Main at. U. Sandusky. ' WARPOLE HOUSE, ' JW. GERTIG, Proprietor, Main st. Ex- ccllcnt accommodations and reasonable terms. An excellent stable attached. OLIVER & PFISTERER, MERCHANT TAILORS.anddealers in Gen tlemen's Furnishing Goods, No. 3 lieery's Ulock, Main street. - HENRY MADDUX, .. .. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Uppers amluskv, O Office 2d door North of Warjjple House. JERE C. GROFF, D EALER IN FAMILY GROCERIES. n. T. VAN FLEET. - - ; O. W. SMITH. VAN FLEET & SMITH, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Marlon, O. Office in Campbell's Block, Main street. Busi ness attended to promptly. Have for sale $10, OOO.OOO worth of Real Estate, consisting cf Farms. Lands and Town Property in Marion and adjoiniugco unties, and thewestern States. H. FLACK & CO., f-JliOTIIIElIS, and dealers in all kinds of Fur7-' iLoTirrii No. 2 Ayers' Block, opposite the Court House. DR. R. N. McCONNELL, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, ofTers his profes sional services to the citizens of Upper Sandusky and vicinity. Office south room McConnel's Block, second story. O. FERRIS, PHYSICIAN & SU RGEON. Office in Beery's Block, second floor, iu the office formerly oc cupied by Ferris & Byron. . HUNT & WATSON, DEALERS IN DRY GOODS, Groceries, &c, corner Wyandot and Sandusky Avenues, Upper Sandusky, Ohio. MILLER & SNOVER, DEALERS IN FAMILY GROCERIES of all kinds. Roberts' Block. The highest price paid for countrj produce r BRUNNER, McCONNELL & CO., DRUGGISTS, and Dealers iu Books, Station ary, Fancy Goods, Notions and Patent Med icines. No. 2 McKelly's Block. WYANDOT COUNTY BANK, t'PPEB SANDUSKY, OHIO, BUY and sell -Government Securities, Ex change. Gold. Silver and Uucurrent Money. Deposits received, and a general banking busi ness conducted. Collections made and prompt ly remitted... Interest paid ou time deposits. 7 G. W. Beery, Pres't. J. A. Maxwell,, Cash. STOCKHOLDERS, t H. BEKRY, .'.r "T - J. 'A. MAXWELL, 0-i W. BE2HY, - - - Ii. B. HAKBTS, SEW "YORK. " FRED.. ELLSWORTH'S T IVERY & FEED STABLE. Horses and ve IJ hides to be had at anv hour of the dav. Stable in rearof Van Marter House, uilli 6ui : Notice to Teachers. The Board of School .Examiners of Wyan dot county, Ohio, will hold meetings I jr the examination of teachers, in the town of Upper Sandusky, as follows: On 'lie 1st and 3d Saturdays of September, October, November, March, April, May and the first Saturdays of all other months. ' No certificate will be granted except at a regular meeting, nor will any be granted unless the applicant appears in person and submits to an examination. ' Written testimonials of Moral Character will be required of all applicants and those who have taught will be required to present testimonials, showing their success in teaching, andsigned by the Local Direc tors of the school in which the applicant was last engaged. ; : Examinations- to commence at 9 o'clock, a.m., at the School House in said town. Applicants are requested to be punctual, as none will be admitted into the class after tue examination has commenced. By order of the Board of Examiners. ...... HENRY MADDUX, Clerks January 3, 186B.-tf. ; Notice in Partition." "Fanny Morgan' and Alexander E. Thomson, her guardian. Emily S.Mor gan, John L. Cook and Gre.orjriana,Cook his wife. .Frank Ii. Morgan. Kush Mor gan. Louis N: Morgan, Jos, Mountjoy and Penina E. Mountjoy his wife. Jef ferson Morgaru Charles Morgan, Grace Ann Morgan and James Morgan, and John R. Large, guardian of the said ilharles, Grace Ann and James; Daniel Fergtison-Emily VVeaver, Henry Veav- er, John M. Ewing and Sarah J. his wif. Smith Keifer and Mary his wife. Jame A. Ferguson, John M. Ferguson, forge W. Morgan.' Elijah B. Martin and Mary E. his wife, John- Paulltn and r unny F. liis wife. John Morgan. Maud M. Morgan. Blanche B. Morgan and Elijah B. Martin, guardian of the said John, Maud M. and Blanche B. Morgan ; Robert A. Morgan, Sarah E. Morgan and John Paullin. guardian of the said .Robert W, and Sarah E. Morgan, will take . notice that a petition was filed against tbem on the 8th day of Decem ber, A. D., 1868. in the Court of Com mon Plea3 of Wyandot county, Ohio.by James ; Morgan and is now pending wherein the i said James Morgan de mands partition of the following real estate lo- wit: The west half of the north-west quarter of section elevenfll in Township three 3, south of Range fourteen 14 east, in . said county ol, Wyandot, containing eighty acres, and that at the next term of" said Court ap plication will be made by the tsaid Jas. Morgan for an order that Partition may be made of said premises. December 10th, 1868. J. D. & C. SEARS, 4-6t Attorneys for Petitioner. ; Reunion of Array Officers J; The Reunion of Army Officers at Chi cago, last week, was a grand affair. Ad dresses were delivered by Gens. Cox, Crufflcs, Cogswell, Belknap and others.- A mass meeting of the grand armies was held in the Opera House, which was presided over by Gen. George II. Thomas, and General W. T. Sherman delivered the following address of wel come. The fact is, the country may well be proud of Sherman as a speaker, as well as a soldier. As we remember the great General's services to our country and read his patriotic and gol den utterances, tiur heart silently, and earnestly proclaims : Long live W, T. Sherman. , ; Here is his speech. Head it twice : I Fellow Soldiers : It is made my pleasing duty to address you, this eve ning, words of welcome for the deeds that have been spread beforayou. From the city and from tlrccount'ry, from the town and the village, you have ccme to gether,the representatives of your grand volunteer armies which responded to the country's call in her hour of clanger, and fought her battles, sometimes side by side, and sometimes far apart, yet al ways in unison. iCheers. Ather bid ding you returned to your homes, as farmers and as mechanics, as artizahs and as citizens, and after a short rest you have again assembled as it were upon a pinacle bi look back toward that vale wherein you struggled so long, to point out to each other the spots of greatest interest and to live over;, again those hours and days and month of deepest anguish or of joy. .1 know that you have laid aside forever the feelings of animosity and anger which you may have entertained, and that you have dropped into oblivion the little jealous ies and rivalries of the hour. .You now stand here with hands extended in fra ternal friendship, who have rather glo ried in the right to defend the flag of your country on land and sea. You have fought for the Union of our fath ers cheers and the flag of our whole country. Cheers. Noinore self-glro-rification now animates you, but a just pride in 3our own actions, and a deep, intense love of the comrades who stood by your side in the hourbf deadly strife and shouted wi' h you in the hour' of victory. Cheers. Happily, my friends, you did not belong to that class of our people in whose hearts was planted from youth the pernicious doctrine of State power, and that the citizen should love pjM-fc f tbe-ooiinfr-. Latter, tbarujlie whole. Applause. You were reared in a better school and taught to revere the Constitution of your whole country and to love the wise and genial influ ences under which are assured the larg est measure of security and happiness consistent with the safety of the whole. We believe that the willof the majority should rule; we believe that in this we have discovered a panacea for the ills that have, from the earliest history of the world, ravaged and afflicted the hu man family. But we were no exception to the general rule that minorities will not always bow peacably totlie decision of the majority, and foundjthat we must maintain the privileges of our birth right by force. You may search history in vain for a more flagrant violation of faith than that which resulted in' our civil war. Never were a people more ruthlessly, more unwillingly dragged into a long and bloody conflict, and never was the occason so utterly unpre pared, for the attempt to prepare for the danger was called cowardice, and the whole civilized world was taught to be lieve that the broad stripes on onr flag were to be trailed in the dust, the sfars sunk forever from the view, and that our fair fabric of union was broken, up beyond recall.. Our attempts to reason were laughed at. Our laws were deride ed to scorn. The public wasseized,and a war began. Men wasted ; their elo quence iu the vain attempt to avoid this storm, statesmen exhausted the last peaceful remedy, and not until this time was the. last arbiter1 resorted to.' The volunteer soldier then stepped forth in to the field and offered his life and his services to defend and maintain the government against all its'enemies.and swore oil oath that rebellion and anar chy should not rule this land of ours, but that liberty, justice and law should be restored to their rightful throne. Cheers. .He has kept his word, and you now behold the good ship ot State again full rigged and once more on her free course towards a glorious future. You know that flag' is still there. Cheers. There has' been lost not a stripe. That same flag we have follow ed so often in the glare of a scorching sun, by the. moon's pale beams, by the light of the blazing, pine torch, now waves aloft in victory and peace. .- Shall 1 not, then, claim for you who repre sent this ideal volunteer the higher hon or, yea, the highest honor that is con ceded by mortal on earth. You can easily reoall how long the war seemed to us in its progress, but how short, even now, looking back on after "a pe riod of a little more than three years. How inconceivably, short," then," will it appear to those who, a hundred years hence, will grope through the pages of its history t(Y learn of the eveiits anr' causes that led 5,fXK),6bo ot people to re bel when no single act of oppression or tyranny was ever alleged.- We owe it to them, while still In,-' the vigor of life health, to record the parts we played in this grave drama of life with the mo tives and feelings' that actuated .ns through its various- stages. Many a time and oft you have lain upon the bare ground, with no canopy above you but that of heaven with itshostsof glit tering stars," and I. know; yon have dreamed of a time t come when seated in peace and security, surrounded by admiring friends, youWould becrown ed with a tiara of light such-.as now hangs over your Leads. Accept this, then, as the fruition of yourdreams,and enjoy the hour. Cheers. Four of your comrades one from each of the the armies specially represented here will address you, and tell you of the deeds - you have done. Give them a willing ear, and when you go back to your homes tell them all that these ar mies, though dispersed in the flesh, yet live in the spirit as strong and enthusi astic as they were four years ago, when in tlte very death grapple with the ene mies of, our country and CJf Civiliza tion. . . ; And now, in the name of the commit tee that has made these preparations, I extend to all a cordial greeting; to the veteran of 1SG1, to the recruit of 18G5. yea, to the convert of the very list hour of grace. In the name of the peo ple of Chicago, who have provided the means, I bid you welcome, and assure you that a seat awaits you at every fire side; and in the name of every patriot of the land, I give you welcome, and tell you that the lightning's flash is not swilt enough to satisfy their yearning hearts to know what is done here this night. The presence of the men about mc,. their high ofllce,and the duties they have left to be with you here, all attest the interest and grandeur of the occa sion, and in' their names too, comrades all, I bid you thrice welcome. Tre mendous applause. Gems from the Authors. ! More is meant than meets the ear. Milton. The noblest mind the best content ment has. Spenser. Days fleet by and eke the year. Chau cer. He prayeth well who loveth well. Coleridge. Sweet is pleasure after pain. Dryden. He that is down can fall no lower. Butler. " '' " : Our acts our angels are, for good or ill. Fletcher. 'Tis beauty calls, and glory leads the way. 2T. Lee.. ' Order is heaven's first law. Pope. Virtue is her own reward. Prior. That life is long that answers life's great end. Young. Blessings ever wait on virtuous deeds. Congreve. " . ' ,: . Learning by study must be won. Gay. ' .... , Soar not too high to fall, but stoop' to rise. Massinger. , : ' Just men alone are free, the rest are slaves. Chapman. Stretch not too' far the wide mercy of heaven. Schiller. Who knows most grieves most for wasted time. Dante. He tempers the.wind to the shorn lamb. Stearns. , What learn we not within the school Or TUTC. fno, . The weakest goes to the wall. Sha'ks peare. A fool must now and then be right by chance. Cowper. ..... Sweet are the thoughts that savor of content. Greene. Learn to make others happy . Shelly. Teach the young idea how to shoot. Thompson. The more we study the more we dis cover our ignorance. Calderon. None but the brave deserve the fair. Dry den. : ' Dare to be true, nothing can need a lie. Herbert. The child is father of the man.--Wordsworth. ' Your own poor self you are, and must remain. Gothe. Attempt the end, and never stand to doubt. Herrick. We are born not for ourselves alone. Cicero. One should know one's own ability. Juvenal. A book's a ' book, although there's nothing in it. Byron. Let the dead past bury the dead. Longfellow. A thing of beauty is a joy forever. Necessity is the mistress of the arts. Pliny. - Where ignorance is bliss 'tis folly" to be wise. Gray. A fellow feeling makes one wondrous kind. Gerrish. ' '" ! ' ., . A: Like angel's visits, few and far be tween. Campbell. There's a gude time coming. Scott. Cutting jokes have a bitter , remem brance. Tacitus. All gifts thou canst not in thyself combine. Homer. The mind's tEe standard of jehCrmatfe Watts. Alas! for the rarity ol Christian char ity. Hood. The best laid schemes -of mice and men gang eft a-gle. Burns. Books cannot always please, however good. Crabbe. He who ordained the .Sabbath, loves the poor. Holmes. "; ,t .T : No good e'er comes of leisure idly spent. Sophocles. ' ' Truth crushed to earth shall rise again. Bryant. : Honor is talked of more than known by some. Ford. 'Tis only noble to be good. Tenny son. Content's the greatest bliss we can procure. Bamsey, - Hew have all", they need, and none have all they wish. Southwell. -, - i : Every man has some deed to do, and some work to work. Owen Meredith. , Earth's noblest thing, a woman perr fected. Lowell. - By having nothing to do, mon learn to do evil. ; , 'Tis virtue makes our bliss, where'er we dwell. ' Rev. C. M. Cramer, Gen. Grant's brother-in-law, is American Consul at Leipsic. He has recently written a letter to the Secretary of.tate to advise that all American citizens de iring to reside any length of time in a German city provide themselves with passports. :. Though, no pass port is required for traveling from one German province to another, yet the' police regulations 'of cities demand, that a foreigner : shall- have some such certificate of identifica tion before he can receive a permit of residence therein. Removal of Disabilities Hope . ' ful Indications. Our latest dispatches from the Carolinas furnish indications of a growing desire for the 'removal of whatever disabilities still remain in operation there. The Governor of South Carolina renews a . recom mendation to the legislature for the adoption of a liberal policy on the subject; and the North Caro lina Legislature, has before it, with many.:evidences of approval, a pro posal -to petition Congress for the abrogation of the only remaining form of proscription , which affects citizens of that, State,.,,., ' , , , With a ppuple of exceptions, the Constitutions of the reconstructed States, together with the legislation had under , them, may be claimed as proofs of the rare moderation and unappreciated liberality of the Southern Republicans. They en tered upon the possession of power amid strong temptations to abuse it. The majority of them were objects of Democratic persecution, and the whole of them must have felt that they were engaged; in a contest, failure in which would be followed by wholesale disfranchise: ment. So far as they were con cerned it was not a struggle for partisan advantages : it was a battle involving their own , rights, with a consciousness that defeat would entail odious and humiliating pro scription. A certaia bitterness would be natural, and even excusa ble, in the circumstances; for it would be the product of long-continued injustice, and an apprehen sion i of further ; wrong. And yet, aside" from Arkansas and Louisiana, we search in vain for the enactments which Democratic majorities would most assuredly inflict upon colored Republicans. The Constitutions fram ed by the Republicans of North and South Carolina, Georgia and Flor ida, and made valid by Republican votes, are marvels of magnanimity; and the Constitution of Alabama has, by. subsequent legislation," been divested of the illiberality ' which in the first instance crept into it. And now leading Southern Re publicans advocate the abolition of remaining disabilities, over which Congress alone has control. Neith er in South nor North Carolina is there . any disfranchisement. The only disability existing in either is the exclusion from Federal office provided by the Fourteenth Amend ment, which Congress ; may, by a two-thirds vote at any time remove. It is with a view to the removal of lliis disability. that. Gov. Scott in vokes tllB TrtT-TTJ7CTErtrcn-o-f dio CjUtU Carolina Legislature. The ground on which he places his recommen dation shows, moreover, how promptly an-- abatement of Demo cratic hostility is appreciated by the Republicans. 1 The fact that, since the election. Wade Hampton and his South Carolina associates have evinced a disposition to accept the new order of things is the basis of the plea on which ,.-Gov. . Scott is prepared to ask . for Congressional interposition. In this respect, per. haps, he does but apply the recom mendation of the Chicago Conveu tion, one of whose resolutions was a declaration in favor of "the re moval of the disqualifications and restrictions imposed npon' the late rebels in the same measure as their spirit of loj'alty will direct, and as may be consistent with the safetj' of the loyal people." But it is a good sign that the men who - most promptly! desire the execution of this idea, are Southern Republicans, to whom the , Democratic Press, persistently ; imputes aspirit of ha tred and uucharitableuess. ; How unjust is the allegation, these ex pressions of current opinion from Charleston and Raleigh sufficient prove. -- - -. - The convictions in wheh ' they originate are not confl.ied ' to the Carolinas. Both in Tennessee and Missouri the subject of disfranchise ment, as the result of local law, engages increasing attention. In both too, influential exponents of Republicans opinion are found on the' side of liberality, and as Friends of a speedy amendment of the ex isting Franchise laws. Senator Fowler and a defeated Republican candidate for Congress are among the friends of aohefliatory policy in . Tennessee ; and even Goy, Brownlow 'is not averse to a par tial abatement, of .disfranchisement. The discussion iu Missouri' has brought out similar expressions of opinion, and there, as in Tennessee, the mor enlightened policy of tol eration must ultimately prevail.,, As the excitement of the rebellion, and of thei political , struggles which have succeeded it, dies away, we confidently believe that tire Repub lican Party ever3'wuere will be al most a unit in favor of the course suggested at Chicago, and now echoed back - from Charleston. JV. Y. Times... -r- - George A. Stuart, formerly Pres ident of the Christian Commision says: "After Gettysburg, I tele graphed to Boston, 'Can I draw on .yon for 310,000 on sight V It was stuck up in the Exchange. The merchants at once formed in line to put down their subscriptions. In half an hour the answer came, 'Draw for S60,0Q0.'"r , These terrible Yan, kees what would our civilization he without them ? South , Carolina's : securities are improving in the markets: Of course they are. Her change from bar barism to- Republican -"civilization has naturally increased the faith ot the world iii Jier future. The little State of Calhoun has been behaving hefself admirably of late. It is o tieeable that the States which were the worst whipped are doing the best. ThiB is logic. Cinn. Times. 1 1 : l From the Zanesvillc Signal:! ' r Waking up the "Nagrur." An excellent joke ia told of some wags at the Mclntrie House a few nights ago. . We giye . it, as, we heard it. ;A gentleman;of the .Me lisian persuasion, called late in the evening to stay all , Bight. -Being a stranger, he was made the victim of a practical joke... One of the ,wag3 represented himself to be the. clerk, and upon Pat saying thathe wanted a room," and that he also wanted. to be called, for the 4 o'clock train in the mor'niug'; he was gravely in formed that the only possible chance to accommodate him was with a 1 unge in a room occupied "by the porter. Pat didn't like the idea of sleeping iu the same room with a nagur, but one, of the conspirators furnished the darkey with the req uisite stamps to treat once or twice, whereupon Pat concluded he was pretty ','cliver for a nagur, be dad," and he guessed that he could stay in the same room with him for two or three hours, "if the gintleman from Africa would stay out all the time, begbna." So friend Pat was con ducted into his room, perfectly .u.npJ conscious oi me iact.tuat tue pro prietor and actual clerks knew uoth iug of the joke that was being played on him. Overcome with fatigue and swordflsh, he soon fell into, a sound sleep. His tor r.entors theu went towork and blacked his face and hands in the most artistic s'yle. At the proper hour he was called and repairing to the Depot boarded the train. As soon as it . became fully light, Pat happened to notice himself in the mirror. Ac explo sion followed immediately. "Bejabers, where's the conduc tor?" shouted Pat. ,r That gentle man at once put in an appearance. "Well, what is it you want en quired Bill-: ' "Want is it? be dad. Why, sir, be jabers there has been a" mistake made, sure. An didn't I tell the clerk at the Mclntire House to wake me up for the 4 o'clock train," and here he's went and waked up the nagur, while I'm there' slapin as sound as , a roach, and Dennis McCarthey is- expecti'n' me to his weddin' the da:'. Stop the train and let me. get off and I'll go back and give it to them swately for not wakeniu' me." However, the train was not stopped. " v The Velocipede. This recent French invention i3 attracting much attention and bids fair to become in general use. The Scientific Ameri ffn givp.i thp folio wlngdiscriptiou of one manufactured by T. R. Pick: eriug of New York ; The reach or frame is made of hydraulic tubing. Pickering's is made by gage, just as sewing machines, Waltham watches, and Springfield muskets are - made, so that when any part wears - out or is broken, it may be replaced at an hour s notice. Its bearings are of composition or gun metal,-, and the reach or frame is tubular, giving both lightness and strength- The hub of the hind wheel is bushed with metal, ..and the axle, constitutes its own oilbox. . It differs from the French veloce in the arrangement of the tiller, which is brought well back, and is suffi ciently high to allow a perfectly up right position in riding. The stir rups or crank pedals are three sided with circular flanges at each , end,; and as they are fitted to turn on the crank pins, the pressure of the foot will always bring one. of the three sides into proper position. They are so shaped- as to allow of the U3e of the fore part of the foot, bringing the: ankle joint in play, relieving the knee,, and rendering propulsion much easier than when the shank of the foot alone is used as iri propel ling the. French vehicle." The con necting apparatus differs from that of the French bycycle in that the saddle bar serves only as a seat and a brake, and is not attached to the rear wheel. By a . simple pressure' forward against the tiller, and a back pressure against the tail of the sad dle, the saddle spring i& Compressed and the brake attached to it brought firmly down upon the wheel. , Another Election Bet Paid. The Lawrence (Mass.) American gives an animated account of the wheeling of a negro from Methuen to Lawrence on Saturday, by D..II. Patterson of Methuen, i n fulfillment of an election wager. A large, crowd of people assembled to seethem off. The negro, a young man from Con cord, N. H , weighing about one hun dred and thirty pounds, was duly mounted upon a wheelbairow, , and, preceded by the Methuen Cornet Band and a company of ,T;inners, the line of march was taken up, for Lawrence., Handkerchiefs . waved, the people cheered, cannon . roared, all the steam : whistles iri : town acie.uued their iotrdeafc.- The wheel barrow was painted scarlet with black stripes- On one'" side was 'Manhood. Suffrage ;" on the other "Freedman's Bureau,' and. in front "New-York can't 'be beat." A comfortable seac with a high "back was provided for the negro, ho ri ding back to the wheeL Mr. Patter son wore a tanner cap, and on his back was, "I propose to', fight it out on this, line if it takes all summery" "Let us, have peace.' ' . " The negro wore a whjto, cocked hat of the RevoluUonary 'style, red cockade, aiid n black feather.' lie carried'out his part of the ' affair in good style. ' 'Tljie road to Lawrence was lined with carriagea of all 'sorts" and Crowds of people. " At Law rence there was a great crowd, and the affair was brmigh; t '. a ' close with' some speech making and a goo,d deal of. cheering. ; , Mr". Nichols, with' whom the bet was made',' walked by the side of the wheelbarrow to Lawrence. i Position in Sleep. - ' 1 Hall's J ournal of Health says : It is better to go to sleep on the right side, for then the stomach i3 vcry mueh in', the ' position ' of a bottle turned upside down,' and ; the con tents of it are aided in passing out by gravitation. If one goes to sleep on the left side, the'-'operation of emptying the stomach of its contents is more like drawing water" from a well.-; After going to sleep, let the body take its own position..': If you sleep 'on your back, especially after a hearty meal, the'weight of -the di gestive organs and that of the food, resting on the great vein of the body, near its backbone, compresses it, and arrests the flow of the blood' more or less, u If the arrest is : par tial, the sleep is disturbed and there are unpleasant dreams. If the meal has been recent and hearty, the arrest 13 more decided ; and the var ious sensations, such as falling over a precipice, or the pursuit "of a wild beast, or impendinsfi dangers, and the desperate effort to get rid" of tnem, arouses us and sends on the stagnating blood ; and we wake in a fright, or trembling or feeling ex hausted, or in a perspiration, accor ding to the degree of stagnation, and the length and strength of the efforts naade to escape the danger whea we do fall over the'- precipice, when the trembling building crushes us, what then ? That is death ! That is the death of those of whom it is said, when found lifeless in the morning. "They were as well as eyer they were -the day before ;" and often it is added, "ate heartier than common 1" This last, is a fre queut cause of death to those . who have gone to bed to wake no more, we merely give as a private opinion. The possibility of its truth is enough to deter any rational man from' a hearty meal. This we do know with certainty, : that waking up in the night with painful diarrhoea, : or bilious; colic, ending in death v. in a very short time, is probably tracea ble to a late-meal. The -truly wise will take the safe side.' ' For persons who eat three times a day, it is am ply sufficient to make the last meal of cold bread and butter, and a cup of some warm drink. ; No one can starve on it ; while a perseverance soon begets a vigorous appetite for breakfast, so promising of a day of comfort. .. :., .. " Make the Horses Work , . Horses were designed as beasts of buaden, to relieve mankind, from fatiguing drudgery. It does not hurt them to work hard, if they : are twtflliLJtindlxIt is not the . hard drawing and ponderous loads that wear out horses and make them poor, baulky and worthless : Lut it is the hard driving, the worry - by rough and inhuman drivers, that uses uo more horse-flesii, fat . and muscle than all the labor ateamper forms. ,. ... . - Consider the ponderous loads that many teams ; are required to ,,cart every day, and several time3 a : day, and yet they appear to grow fatter and stronger every year. They are treated kindly. On the other hand, other horses, that do not preform half the labor, soon grow poor, and give out, and the . next we hear of them as, they died with the harness on. , Hard work does not kill them ; but the worrying, fretting, and abuse did the job. i Horses will do all the mowing and reaping on a large farm, thrash the grain, pitch the hay, turn the grendstone, saw the wood, and pre form almost all the heavy labor that farmers have been accustomed to do, and grow fat, if they are - not worried and jerked and kicked about as if they were a living footbilL JV. Yi Times. , ., ..... ...., Siug-nlar Railroad Casualty. f. M. j.JE., Van Steenburg, Cashier of theBankof Peekskill.N. Y.,came to lii3 death on the 4th mat. by . an act of imprudence , which ought to serve as a warning to ail who ride on railroads. He leftNew York for Fishkill at 5 o'clock the previous afternoon, intending to disembark at Fishkill Station:'-.He secured . a seat in the last passengar car, and before the train reached Peekskill fell asleep. After than - place, had been passed, and when the train was within two hundred, yards of , the draw, .bridge above, he. suddenly awoke, and, being confiised , suppds ed the train had . just - stopped at Fishkill. , Eutertafning this, i lea he he hurried to the front platform of the car and takiug hold of the rail descended to the lower step and jumped off, still holding, on to the rail, expecting to be compelled to run a little ways before letting go. The train, however, was running faster than he supposed,' . and the moment he struck the ground, his legs were thrown under the forward wheels of the last car, and both were crushed, the right one at the knee, and the left -just above the" knee: Not a soul on the train knew of the occurence. As' already stated, he died' the " next rhorning. -Toledo Commercial. : ' ;. "I didn't like our minister's ser mon las t Sunday," ' said a deacon, who had slept all sermon time, to a brother deacon. .."Didn't like - it, Brother Al ? Why, I saw you nod diug assent to every 'proposition of LUG auuaaL. I have got a firrst rato recollec tion, but no memory. " lean recol lect distincily of losing a ten dollar bill, but can't remember where, to save my life. V':f"' 1 ''" r " : vr.i)v- " i -i aiois '. :: : 'A' Massachusetts clergyman ure cently elucidated the familiar image of hope being like an auchor to the soulj by saying. ' 'My friends, Tsup pose you' all know what '. an anchor ia. It is a kind of a: thing to get a ship under a good headway with." , Interesting Facts. G1S3 windows were used for lights in 11S0. ;, r., ... . . . . . . - .. . Chimneys first put In houses in 1236. ' Tfcllow candles for light in 1200.' ' Spectacles Invented by an Italian, In 1149. -: Paper made from linen, 1341. Art of printing from movable type 1110. -...'.. ... ..... , ,:: Watches first made in Germany In U17.' - - Telescope invented by Porto and Jan seniloOO. : -J --. ; .- -r T . Tea first brought from China to Eu rope in 1G01. T Theatre erected in England by Shaks peare in 1603.' iJ-i ' " . Thermometer invented by Santori ous in 1G10. Circulation of . blood discovered by -Harvey in 1619. , . Bricks made any required size, 1625, Newspaper first established, 1629. Pendulum clocks first invented, 1639. , Barometer invented by Torricelli in 1555.- ; , ..... ' :-.', 1 -. , , Steam engine invented in 1649. Bread made with yeast 1650. Cotton planted in the United States IU 1759.- . , ..;:.' . r - Fire engine invented, 1685. Stereotyping invented in Scotland, 1785. ; - " - . . ' Telegraph invented by Morse In 1832. The first Daguerreotype made in France, 1830. i. . ,-. . Russian Comments upon the Election of Grant. . The Moscow Gazette, of October 27 " (November 9), has the following com ments upon the result of the Presiden tial election in the United States : 'If Europe presents a spectacle not : altogether quieting, an event has hap- .i pened on the other side of the ocean which will not be without good mean ing, even for Europe. - The biilliant triumph of the Republican over the Democratic party in the United States, and the election of General Grant aa President, is an important event. What is in America called the, "Republican" party- U the national party, and has as its basis the unity of the nation, and has not drawn back from any sacrifice to save the Union. ' Opposed to it is the so-called "Democratic" party, opposed -. to unity, anti-national, in which they rebellion ai d treason which nearly ru iiW the government have taken deep root. Tiie treacherous murder of Lin coln almost tore from the Republican or national party its victory. Bat the troublous time approaches its end. The strife between the legislative and ex ecutive powers which characterized the administration of Mr. Johnson, who leaned -toward the Democrats, will now cease ; and with the induction of Gen. Grant into the Presidency, the national polity of the United States will take a new and hitherto unprecedented devel opment, both at home and abroad. Another Democratic judge in Limbo-He gives Bailin $5,000 , James A. Estill, Probate Judge of noJmes county, Ohio, who Has been' running up and down the land for the past month, endeavoring to keep out of the clutches of Uncle Sam's minions, was on Friday gobbled up at Wooster Ohio, by Deputy United States Marshal Daniel B. Funk, and brought to this city. Judge Estill is one 8 f those unfortu nate Democratic Judges, who, as charg ed by the grand jury, out of love to party jet his zeal overstep his prudence, and in the heat of the last political cam paign placed himself in that predica ment that the grand jury saw lit to in dict him for issuing falsely made, forg ed,, and. couuterfeited naturalization-, papers. Immediately after the finding of the bill, a capias was placed in the hands ot the United States Marshal for the arrest of the Judge. Captain Ab bott, Deputy United States Marshal, . visited the Judge's home at Millers burg, but no Judge could be found. Saturday, he quite unexpectedly turned up at Wooster, and undoubtedly quite unexpectedly to him, Mr. Funk also turned up. " . - Judge Estill gave bail for appearance at the next term of Court, in the sum of five thousand' i dollars, and was dis charged. Cleveland Herald. , Measures of Peace. The New York Herald says,edito fially : ' : ' "We learn from the best attainable authority that Gen. Grant ia emphati cally' in favor" of so amending the i; Constitution as to limit therein the President to one term, and to make universal suffrage to male citizens, of all races and colors, above age of 21 years, the supreme law Of the land. With regard to- universal ; suffrage, we suspect the " Constitutional . Amendment, artcle 14, - which pro- ! vldes that the several States may regulate suffrage each for itself, but in proportion as the suffrage is re- -strieted representation shall . be re- ' strietedf is not considered a settle ment by General Grant,, but a rule-': apt to . result-;-in endless' troubless i'roru the conflicting plans likely to be adopted among the States. Hence, hd doubt, General Grant has conclu ded that an amendment making uni versal manhood suffrage the supreme law of the laud in all States and Territories, is the only decisive so lution of this otherwise embarrass ing question"." - Any body can -tell where light ning struck last ; but it takes a smart raau to find-out where it is going to strike net time this is one of the differences v between learning and wisdom. , i -; . ; -: The Albany Journal thinks Gen. Cole goes out into the world with the mark of Cain upon his brow. If yousee a man with such a mark you may know it s Cole. . , I don't care how much a man talks if he will only say it in a few words.