V- '-" 'TITO WWFFWWH ; P'r':v Plf;-- - .: : Li T HE I1, if1;..:1 ' : :.' TUESDAY, A$ GUST 14, 1866. ' f , ' .'k ,ri ; " . NO. 19. .-T.--'a.ivii r-: : ; ir ? i . 1 1 1 .... 1 1 i . ,j , ... .. , , - - r . VOL PUBLISHED BVEIIY TUESDAY. II. L. & X7i? MYR OYER, EDITOIIS AND PP.0PBI.ET0.Kf. , ' j Gjf iferal Government, W often invoked ?ih in keeping the- South lout of the- lJaXu ' ' Esteaordinary' Casa of Attempted Kurder- 512 Weekly, Do. One year, Six: -mouths, I1? Pm oy ine radicals tO nrotect them m Thev a devn nnmnnt nf tho rmli i mi1", lawlessness and crime, would nromnt- has for months nastWstamntWIlv' n ' Caiied lhtO . renilisition tn" nn-Pri'A . fiprl Pvorw nnrrinVe f4f nri,JA U lo j (.Mil t. T w w wivfj v. I wi iuiiv U KM w 111(1 i H-j .j vyuiiti, cuiuiuc us miuwu iu ten against me courn- iney Cl 1' 111 I rI '.IMFII YIUI 1CI 1 it rt l n1 vnni-kl. - - A. . avn.h. . J i. I . AT. J ' " 1 - 1 t i laws, ciiiii miiivtii' mm i".mi- i i i i i rt ii i r.v wirii T rnu i iiptipq urn , THE SHOAYMAirS C0XTET3HIP: The Philadelphia; Ledger, of Thursday, relates the following: . ': . , Late on Wednesday night officers of the; BY ARTE XI US WARD. Thar was nffectins ties' which made mn fifth ward were attracted to the house of . .h.ai?er arter, Betsy. "Her father s farni 33 00. 2 00 ::RATE OF ADVERTISING, j i Square, (l.inch or less) first insertion, $1 00 . :,.(o .15 6o .9 00 ; xraic . peaceaoiy to assemble" m accordance persistently jgnored all Evidence of r w t the expressed guarantees of the Great ing fViendlinessiind lovalty on the I C ilaHer, Should, however, this last hone the South: ami which:! with trkl. . : each snbsequent insertion, ... . For one yer, one square, . , . . . . . . . . '. . . . , For six months, j " r. . . For three moathf? " ...... fi 00 k or lnarter. Column, o square 3 raox.iiis, 25 00 " 6 " 40 00 " 9 " 60 00 " 12 7.1 00 'For Half Column,! 10 squares, 3 40 00 6 ' 75 00 ' " . - 44 1 00 00 12 , " 125-00 20 squares, 3 monthsf .75 00 G 125 00 " . 0 . 150 00 12 " 200 00 o he continvKxl iiickle, aci , "M M.u:c:ii, ailUum i.MB ijroneny consmut- encv, nave seized upon every nnvnl DdlnOWerleSS to turn ' asidn thfi orpnt rtnL Inr.rt1 ragq contemplated, the hnal resort of free- loncinff the eru of militafv sunremak i mfH uvinotiu ub uifus, uie iun exercise El ias Hull. -No. 417 Gaskill street, bv cries of murder. " They had some difficulty in ettectirg an entrance, and when they did 1 they discovered that an attempt had been made to murdfii-ATr. Hull hv two .olorprl iTIPn -KTIirk TTrtl"rt AAnAinl.l.4 s-ift-ft It -.v.., ..t,v ntio luuvCuicu. uii 111c piciiiio.s jined ourn; their cows and ourn squenched tljeir thirst at the same spring; our old mart's both had stars in their forreds; tho measles broke out in both families at hourly the 'same period; our parents (Detsys and mine) slept, every Sunday in the. "same oflntJiiell' jio human hand could prevent it t (I t T . . - j-" srjgnpana aetermination to protect thern- J upon f ft jpe s ib every hazard and at every! ex-god4e Id I htrntityi ' - . ; ! severe :very PI0- . He had gone down into his cellar kitchen at meeting house, and the nabers iised to ob i. ; u! - nr -rr , t . , . , Rprvp "hftw thirk thf Warns it Pms cs air Nothing is too great, nothing tol small. e l"esc.or Mrs' uu,,na. naa .De.en at! Tf "c -XlVt ?n tho snriflfr .nf ior mis rposeine j spint wnicn seizes , . , J . . . - . .u n)-N j k "f t a hatchet. smr von r.?m t.rr 10 hint--mm l'e 3 1 a' V0 see our several moincr ut"J'i S I 1 tv tills I lUli. U LJi t,ji:i .... - o if For One. Column, jj rAdvertisuKiinti " . insertion. . TWOHEK'S TTJALS; i' - . Pots, kettle?, and nans. - ' - : , Fans, kettles and pots; r - :,. il am eick of their sight, and v,-oiald give -them all. 'pJut my children;are morbl, and enunot live yn xue acenx oi a nosegay lair; To nowrets rich arid rare. dwells wit 'severer', fwjj its every not, as a Dmsaa tI . , p .. xa - ti ... ay'8;and; mine) with their . gowns; pinned i amaiignaiper- nftnn. , . ' , ' - up so thev couldn't. silo", cm, effectiouately r - i n. viui.n i r i i i i. h i:h ir. I I ( 11 it i i :i I'll i.i, . . all m men of property ) in PhilaiUlphiii, ofj disdai ,fer Ht.cit All;' to 'SiK M h7.K1 Altbol hd lile See,V ! 1" ' mVl ! .U?h .Stake 10 blm.d- i 'f.f? 4:,,Jl 't th rad.ci net. j K "l! ,11" i'dnt tell her of the BreS which was rogin jy iqverlook what must follow, as. surely ! All is ma as ma render, fihtj fbllowa darkness, if this Radical the radical' caused The ess, unrebuked and unrestrained, perversion that represent precious service to f. mt,. Af u " u i V lu "II f in" my buzzom. 1 .'c., Ulb lUUIUbl Ul I CI 11 llMJillltl. llllll HUH VVilN same presents a not PrYjP? out rntoJts na tlie negroe fr isiLt I : , No u th j- mere 1 1 oc Is o f thes 'iTmii&ZLt&Jiaa Wth . ltVifc.,i,k- " mvou aatwfcMiiTTu ici luuibii- luyju uiuuii uuuiy, oi. 91 uuuoiB ui wilier ,rt,i r.,n f; ; r,;AK rhn lilill UUL IWU .Il-aLt'l Ul lUULlillS, : WIIU. Ill thitjcounting- rooms and dainty parlors ii- Tnb, soap, and suds, .' Knd:;;'soop, and tub! - i Sly arms are red, and my fiifgers spread', i . With this loTi?icontinnerl nib. i !$on may talk of the rippling ln-ookfj, ; jf You may rave of streamlets fair: ' j ! t would take-theswaters of both I ween. I lo maKe taese ciotncs looK clear. I Wood, chips, and coal, " Coal, chips, and wood: , I've arranged them as well as I can, . S! '1 11 TVI I TITlll f 1m.wt rtrtrtl . t ou may sing of the sturdy oak, ' hi You may praiscf the lofty pine, ' would rather have some splinters noxv X- To kindle this fire of mine. ; I i . It i'y hard indeed to reign ' ' I . In kitchen and parlor, too, Undto meet yotir friends with a cordial umile, When you gmell that' burning stew, ffo fold your hands, and be calm, .' - I Ancunsist on a longer stajr, Vheh you know.'your bread is being scorched, s Ana mo soup an Domng away. ft ; ' ':: -::-'-, : 11 . Oh, I wish I had never tried : A lady's position to take; '. ,Oh, pity me.ye who dwell ' : - I In cabins with one small room; ' ? , !Oh. mtv me ve who never know ; What it is to handle a broom. - ' - f h.. - , !' - ' ! !H ADICAL. THREATS TO EKE AS TJ? THE PHILADELPHIA CONVEUTION-rTHE EE ;STJLT0F MiY ATTEMPT TO E2LCUTE THEM anspug ollices, concocled.and instigated the qeep villainy, would - be -sought ;out anfrdund to powder beneath "the nether mi jstone of the people's wrath.' It is fol y hny longer to blink the truth, fearful andl! fippalling though the vision .of thel fu turie tnay be. One fact is certain and may be tv ied upon as fixed and settled any attiiir pt to "break up" j the approaching Qorv mtion' will provoke a spirit in the brt s s of the friends of the Union and the Co istjitution but little dreamed of by these mi ierjtble "architects of ruin.". Those who sot? the storm ! must not j complain if they art IcTn pel led to reap the I whirl wind, j It ma?f lie that the lie w civil war, so anxiqus 'ly' pes ired .by. these wretched fanatics, and so laboriously prepared for by their reck Ies and unprincipled leaders in Congress, marihus be quickly inaugurated! We aral no alarmists, but silence now would bejwbrse than 'criminal, f - As ' unwavering i of.1-; the- Freed men's' Burt i d try to uo it out my V9' c l taken into custody, 'v.. ... - . i tung would kewollupup.agin tha root ot oeffllB bv -mi j -.-.r '" . ,. ' ' - mv month -" Rt.ir.lifh.nr' lik ilPhthv-to -ft. '1H. AJ,e oiprpu-men,' wno gave uis names oi i-. . ; . : r-rrv - cini ; my iios iiKirTroiaaiajtv-'1 1 rn door., . . Tho Eeal Head of ths Pralaa Army r ?; v "T-Tho Eoyal Cosnaander. r'; r' Biiuxx, July 14, 1SGG. ,Qen.V"onMoltke ns retired to hisj quarters, and is closeted with hisjmans.- makin? new nlan.s for tin i . - o i further progress of the campaign,' and for the occupation, of Vienna. This skillful strat'gist, who has been the chief director of the movements by which the three Prussian armies, starting from different points, were collected at the necessary hour on thejfield of Konniguratz, has never,':' except at that battle, appeared in the': front of the armies. Some dis tance in the rear, sitting calmly nt his desk, he ho3 traced on the mnp tliej course of his troops, and, by ' uieans of the field telegraph, has flashed Jiis orders to the different Generals in ; more inlmrdiato 'com-'; mand, with such .skill; and fore-- -.,( rv.rv crniiMi:itn)ii ii I A quick, light-btuu eye, a Tn-ti Toic- head, antl a well set-figure, inark -i i DaiMinswuie skoo house wnen it was uisi ar Kitchen. i t-' i - . , i painted, and looking verv simple I maKe ested, ; ana, - 1 ,i ' , P " i i 1 i , , no doubt. "My left arm ockepied in bal he colored , '... . J , , - - iy - lunsin miself on the fence, while my rite nan llur kr ! ' anrc6nsistent friends of j law and order, hijyi n the dreary past, counselled in eve ry linstance, patience and submission to ; jth Jaws, and " the men wdio executed thtjipl no matter how ' burtliensome, iwe her4;tjday, enter a solemn protest against the I rdvolutionarv schemes of thesG"'dark pblti!cl gamesters." We speak not ; to meap nartisans. we speak, to the brave, thaHol. and the true, of all creeds and an parties, vve speals. to men "embarked '!! The Philadelphia Age, commenting upo the rccenttatement ot . the corresnonden !q the N. ;Y. Commercial, that the National I Philadelphia Convention was to be violent ;ly broken up by the rhiladelphia nremen, faided by released soldiers, pronounces it fsfander on the firemen, andderiies thai; ! there is any organized plan to disturb the I Convention by mob violence. The Ages continues: 1 ! . . J l Bad and utterly reckless as we know the fbjl6wers of Sumner and Stevens to.be, wej vtdo not think they- are yet ready to .."cry jhavoc, and let slip the dogs of war," ill ftheir own midst, and by their lawless con-. !'lii-f lnniimiMtu eonnna nf r.nrrnr nnn npsni f lotion on a soil (where peace and 'quiet are But knowing the animus onfa common voyage, whose certain'des- eitner common saietv or common JL li "A VU liUlliU M i UO' A V . ; a colored individual loses an eve, or a ncht i Ar?i. - j ur:n:. t ' u... ; aiin a ba ! in which a rohol rnwHv ki ran TTninn mwrlv . ... s . - .. 'Twni ji ra m still nitfi in June. All I , V J " - 'had hired them to put Mr: Mull. out ot the . . - r j:l...k., h n as an intAll,.At,,l nm! .nr,T.;,' must oe regaraea as ;an indication, ot :.Wflv; thjlft ft, ftftnn -9 f,m :nh WJia mnipfc. naiu.r was.nusnc ana naryeuei uuiw . general law essness and dis ovaltv. The ! ' T ; ; , 1, J , . rV. "J the sereen si ens. I sot with Betsy Jane "' ' uul u,uu11 Hu,Chk 111 action, lie A1 ; i v i "7 i eu ana ne receiveu tne Key oirtne lire: ;, r iL , . T wr l intention is the samem every mstanc.3. It , proof from thenit he'was tc gfve them eight I ?" tjicfense of her farther s pas tur. Vted is to keep alive ill feeling between fcorth nmidred dollars. The facts that Barker ! M" ,iro pull n .lowers and South, and betweeii rjices in the South, hiu vjsited thu housc an(1 had beei. c.; and drivin the vyoodchuck from his native with the viewof justityr, g the programme ; sented to be the cougin of Mrs. IIul, 4m ; lair (so to speak) with long sticks. Aal proposed by the rad.cald , fco confirm this Th .llso su5d that Mr3 , wo sot thar on the nce, a swmgjf our Not a week passes without an illustra-' rr,,,, Oiim;ffo1 .uisrtpUnio .i i-f't"two and fro, blushing as red as the tiori upoirthis head. Ere the ink is dry!u,i i j .i n. i -Ti i'baldinswille skool house when it was fust , , t-. i . -r , o i 'UU UUIICCUICU tllVUl ill LUC UClltll rviiiic.i. wmcn accuses rresident jpnnson oi murder, i rp. rt TTrt r nr f r.u mi.LL rtrt tt ' lhe young man Barker was arre: u liB M11,u ui ail -uu.u t ogcther with Mrs. Hull and the owiuici hi ma uuu, suintivyiierc 111 vxeurix i i : ukr- MA -wm . . U . - lllCll. 1I11J il I Inl I III.1' HI HI) (. IIIIjI lIlrLlI IlliLll.la I . . . . . s forthwith aery is raised tor re-impos;rg rr .i , A ,-3 was wound Iuvm?ly round her waste.. 4 i i v W ii "Mr. Hull testified to the circumstances;. T , . - .J J ., . . i i: . - martial law upon that; State, and lvnur .r.. . . i u- it j a i ,1 c eared my throat and trcmblinglv sed, , i a . xi i- . i ot the attempt to take his life, and said that ! tll7 , J' r, nN .1 . homilies are preached upc n the inerad:caoe T , ' , . , i- "Jietsi', you re a Gazelle. i P when he went-home he found the Iihtj i- . . . , . c. -tL-uX,! df-pravity and treason of the Southern peo-,.!' l4. n , . ;.i I thought: that air -puttv fane.-1 I, waiteu i- r- i., I , i nearly out in the cellar kitchen, where it ' . : . 1 ,x , . .L pie. From another quarter we have the ..t-.-i. i i . i -1 ' to see what effect it would have upon her. , ,i , -tiiii- was-usual to keep one burning; that he did T. . . , VJ . v ,-. . a .. news that a black man has lost his life in a s nnr n ,n . pa, ... ' , ; It evidently did not fetch her, for, she up street brawl, origin of which we know i " j i j Vr u 'i i .-.. i and sed, i ? ,i.I i. -i-r? i bedroom and asked Mrs Hull what was the 1 ,r ', , , j nothing, and again the country is edified- i xi i i. ji u i i- I ' You re a sheep! : ; iiJULLur wini iue lamp, to which sub renueu 0 T n T T ... , i,t,4i,i that it was out of ofdor. fUc then said be I : S . "". Jane' 1 'hmk very muchly would go down stairs .and she followed Ul.o't believe a word you ' sky-so him down, and-white he (was engaged on i - t , ... . , . , y. . ; . . , ,. the first floor, she passed into the kitchen! ..... i . Of course, the journals which thus pan- i- . ,.u,. ....... ! shehtfehed away rom me. ,: der to seotional preiudiee, and feed the . . , n i 1 : "I wish thar was - winders to my sole, . I J , r . . - to 0-0 1 1 n stfiira lint Khr n.nlliwl him to rrn , . ' passion upon which the; radicals play as a L nn a i ru , 1. j. sed If "so that you could see someioi my key to nower. take no notice of incidents tt. v " ' -l, - . , ! feelings. Thar's fire' enou2h m here, sed and demonstrations at variance, with their policy. For the manifold signs of return ing reason and loyal ty j which have been visible in the South, they bave had no word of encouragement or even of recognition. There has been a .plentiful record of out- rjratTmmrnr " I ' the, potato while' verv small, thu3 benes without number; but our radical opened and cried murder: th'e men then ran ' , .i von t listen tar- your,non. anyfq)ttn5-the germ of-, the d,senSer Arttomnnrorioa HoTro nrT hiion nnnoQf Pnniirrh . . - - t nnrrnr VvtVlll'Vl Ul lO UUT V IIW V Vvj-r IIVIVJV IIVUII on 'the other side with despatches touching the divine mission au, as savins is to prudent in discourse, and so guarded in his speech, i h it from this qua ity and his wide knowledge of hurowean languages he is known in the army a a man who is silent in seven "tongues. ; Careful and laborious, he has work ed out with his own hand and him self calculated almost every detail of the operations in which he has taken : Europe by surprise from the ligiitnmg rapidity of his strokes and the tremendous consequences ot his dispositions, before which the Aus trian army has withered away almost before it was gathered together, and . 1 ? '. 1 1 r 1 n 1 which nave won lor mm irom his countrymen the title of the first Europe. Cor. London Times. t 'A A A " siratemst in agency between white jvlolves and black lambs. we kept out of cw Orleans, stat- tinM is ruif7-: The scars of our people are still fresh, and the! wounds of manv of our brethren are Btinbleding. Let the ghastly door of the fTe riple of Janus be kept closed, at least km fl;tle; widow puts off her mourning and ha Smother no longer weeps for her stricken hilii. Let tlie wise and I patriotic policy the peace was a second time disturbed by di lindtew Johnson, who has sworn to pre- negroes firing upon white citizens, vve ' ! f - . il -r- - 1 1 1 ' i ' I 1 ' 1 1 it J 1' 1 1 l envre tne unity oi tne itepuoiic ana main- venture to say, coo, mat tney win not in aitof thq sovereignty of -the States be per-f dite save articles upon the. lawlessness of lttedito produce its legitimate results Vfii!Vicliot7r tho mnegpc n r "nrnaf.W" with hinai TT 1 I 1 J j 1 i.W I CllUilS. X lltll O CiiUUU 111 Oil 1UIIJ 111 U t k y tJ viaw u w . Ver- circum- stans.j She bowed her head down and commenst cnawi'n the strings of her sun bonot. ,rot,i. ,1 1 - J " 1 i ; -i ! I, strikm my buzzom,' "to bile all th vault door, when he heard a noise inside; , r , . J . . , . , . 1., 1 . , , , , i beef and turnips 111 the naberhood. he turned to go back, and the men jumped i . , -t ,. 1 , r., . , A . 1 1 suvious and the critter aren t a ci n nr.. nnrl nnn nt thtn sfrnrk him in th. lnjirl " - I WV.V. ......... ....V. with a hatchet, knocking him down: he was then jumped upon and throttled, and T. .11 I.' .1 1. . 1 1 I IT t 1 1. ueiuKU ngnu mat ne couiu not cry a.o.n.; , v , f :ir t npr full hite Tin: Potato Rot in Iowa. The -Potato rot has made its ap pearance in Iowa. Upon close and repeated examination, it has been ascertained tnat a smau insect m the vine of the potato is the cause of the mischief. The insect i3 very diminutive in size, and is generally fouud.oc-au downward. It is sop posed to enter the top of the vine wr.ue it is tender ana growing rapid ly, and works its way , down into t now reigning. In the quiet humble homes of the peojil-j-io the crowded marts of trade and eomrnece, "where passionate dircord rears etenial Isabel" his name is blessed as their friend ajid protector. Night and morning, from a thousaud altars, prayers ascend! to tor his welfare and' preservation. if tbe crisis comes if the storm breaks, a ndf the volcano vomits forth its '. fire and blood lit will be' found that there are mil- 1 i: heaven ils offirii te freeiiieVi scattered through- outjithe iDnce distracted, but now united, ikorth apd South, ready to throw them SelTSps injto the yawning gulf, to do battle tor the treat Tribune ot the reople. to enter these items up; of the account. They hf sight the despatch fronr Js ing that, after the termination of the riot, opened and cried murder; tne men men ran ' , 1 T . L I v 7 f , J ,i.:lr i 1 - ir ii and concealed thmnselves. 'Mr. Hull further '? ;Jus1t(. W slratc out :?h tW' t U It V1 " 41,0 T'0tat0 stated that his wife had said at the break- ; If mcan SKt,,n enla ges and matures. r.-, .i.v, i-4.rti.. i-i.rt 1.., .7. u i... ,i l t M IN. j I . r.,.- 1.,1.. 1 . r 1 .-v ,Trrt.,l.l Krt rt ,l.,.l J- il l. .... ' - . ., , i; I konsidered that air euufffor all practi- , . , r ,, i i it - 1 cal purposes, and we pei'ceeiied lmmejitely kept as much as five thousand dollars in . 1 ', ,. . . ; J.. ' ... wt, t t. 4. , to the; parson s and was made 1 that nite. his fire-proof, he supposed the object was to ; j1 get the money, as well as to get rid of him. t fc. . r ; ' , w: c x.n of experimenting in raisin-r tov ' iuuii iiiiuiiU ii iii.-.u;u 11.11111 .Tv-t.w wi i o o "rtc. ' Ton a ceo in New Jehsey. A number etabliseed a tnr, a slort distance front Camden, N. J., lohe purpose Philadelphia, predicated upon the doings of a couple or biacls. cut-throats, as reporceu yesterday afternoon. Had the attempt at murder occurred in Charleston, and had the Mr. Hull is a barber, whose place of busi- j ,fV.a". ' 11 l;"1 o.Q on nuMnnt Cfrn.,f nhi, sml i ealetoii station, Va. The two colored men were hired assassins been white there would be no end to headings and essays upon instead of black, the sensational the subject. rv-..r.r. mwi I Thia vear it is estimated tliAv wii : u . i rtUrt..rtO., 1 jcaiCLUU KtULiuu, y a., uu .; nio uiuuue ouu - j ness is on vnesnut street. aDove oeconu. ; ,. .. . ... .i....ju... ir a-- fAiT li&iiv.i. m if uu l. a. i rr. . L iiiiii.iII ii I iiiiixrw ' -i, l xiu.iiii(ii ia rauiwiu. rein cst-iiiiuv; uimacu i --. : : ... commiiieu , .: i i t a... r7... rom a lie d of twpntr .htps. Tho a ;i leiJCiitT I'uiiuveu ov uhilmu i : t j " " --iV --k thiivvA ot i t rm ntnn ivturrliip ni1 il o ' J i .v ri n """."-Vr " u instruct the negroes. . One of the negroes, n many places ot bouth Jersey Mull nn.l Knrtnr nn fliu i hornn nl oinomp. : . Ci I - I . 1 . . a v v.- .5-- pleased with the proposition, ' invited is peculiarly adapted to the cultiva ing to kiii ner nusuanu. : . 7 . . ' j t .m of th nrtin b. ;a e.,;,itut Tv VnvvnMs-V's: Tlrrr att avh ttip ' iintirthivfiilliiwinfr Sii'ndav. when he aften- parties design to appropriate larg ; Slave Trade The"Freedmen'sBureau : ded a funeral meeting, and . took up !a col- tracVs of South Jersey laud to rais- The folly of this method of ministering to having controlled the destinies of the negro lection only to .buy the logs for, the school ino tobacco. narfisan nppiiirhf'ft is ns .nhvinns ns its mis- nomiljit inn at. t.h South for now npfirl v two : house, the liiireau would. nav the teacher. I chievousness. What wqu the Richmond editor who 'Vwlnr.h nmmntnrl tlin Jihovo nross slnnder t . ,i ' j-..-.j..- . 0-. ; fiilltr rrvn cr? rvi 1 q fVinf thnra n ri 1 n n m nprs i n . j the Radical ranks "willing to wound, but " yet afraid to strike vve beg . to oner- a i. TuvtT it ain rrma nr TPiunn w nnwina rn r n oem j. Igy fl . IIUIII VVVIUO Ul 1 1 111111 ijr ma v tuu iv vuv.ov ii Peculiar advocates of law aud order, who. if is alleged by the -Commercial -8' corresj I gUSt LOnrcnTloil,-trc, UU rcnrdecS f vvuu great aisiavor ' by the.!liadicftls.TT' I j The National Union Convention,1 which Jwill assenible in thi3 city on thjc 14th in-j ' fstant, being a perfectly lecal bodv. conveni jeii- tor the single purpose ot sustaining Jtjic) President and upholding the Govern4 wem oi theoU. fe., now threatened by inaJ Hgiiant traitors, wTe presume that any at tempt to disturb its peace, or, in the slight- est degree, interfere '-with its deliberationsj will meet with a prompt and decided check Ion the part of our city authorities. Comj jipdn . safety, if not common prudence, stern-? Jly demands such. action. -.'.It must not be I supposedand perhaps it is! well to under stand it now, that the people would tamely I submit to such an outrage as is suggested fin the paragraph we have quoted." In tho Uime of actual war they mav be willincr to f I postpone certain, rights, but in a period of .proiouna peace, tney will insist on a; return; Of all the ailcinent landmarks, in such a I Frcirk the New. York Times, (Eepnlican.) k The iFalsehpod and Exaggeration of the Radical . Press. manner as not to be disregarded. Anion those ' inalienable 'privileges which '7 their fathers imagined had been secured to their posterity f 01 ever, are freedom of speech1, the liberty of the press, and, in concise and significant language of the Constitution, "the right of. the. people peaceably to assemble.'? j Hence, we reasonably infer that in the event of the contingency referred to, the municipal arm would be unhesitatingly raised ; to pro tect th e people 1 n th em ngh ts; and that failing, the stronger power of the j 'pie course of the radical press in regard totihepiw Orleans riot would be more tol erable ill it conveyed an impressien of dis interestedness or sincerity. Considerable aUtjtiva'ndes might be made for the extrava- "gartce &n an attack upon -the populatioix of h gifeat Fbity. if the aim clearly were to briraer tle nonulation into more heakfv ac- r -i jj - ---- -- j ,t cord with tile Republic. -The elevation of slaughtdted negroes into martyrs might : be excusable if there were any tenable ground oribelieting that it proceeded from a hu- maneTarja an unselfish concern for an igno- rant anaj hardly-used race. J3ut tor this charitable interpretation of the course pur sued byjliadical journals, there is no roOm. It is at I'jariance with indisputable factsfor tneir course is intelligible only when ; we staHi wiiir a distinct understanding that the ajni-of radical iournalisni is to intensify sectjonajj bitterness, not to promqte section ai harm toyto foster the feelings of auger and Jest ran gem ent as between the Unionists of tie$ rth and the people ot the South to aid tie purposes of those who Would ride into power on the strengthof a pretended sympathy with the negro and, under khe plea of protecting the blacks, would sub jecS the majority of the whites to insult and oppression. ' . 7 . i- 4 ; j Thus considered, the intemperate misrep restalpn of: affairs in New Orleans, the uncrupRilous and unjust abuse of President Johnson jfor his conduct in! relation thereto. ana: then wholesale imputations upon 1 the loyalty and humanity of thu people of Lou isiana, become clear to the most superficial observe They are parts of a wel 1 coi 1- sidered jscheme to help the radical party d be thought of - years has succeeded in developing what the should gather to- Tribune justly calls a "diabolical system of gether the details of a single month's mur- kidnapping, being the trapping of freedmen dera in the city of New 'Ybrk, and propose on shipboard at Pensacola Bay, and, selling to hold the whole community responsible them as slaves in Cuba." ' for the record? Or of the New Orleans We have nothing as yet in relation to editor.who should parade a late case of this matter but a brief report from the matricide-in Connecticbt, as a proof of. Navy Department, . some : of our , naval social disorganisation in the land of steady officers having ventured to trench sofaron habits? Or of the Charleston editor, who : the-despotic authority of the "Freedmen's should cite cases of lawlessness' from the Bureau'Vas to interfere with this revival of sparse settlements of Iowa, or the remote the slave trade, and to stop one of the region of Nevada, as evidence of anarchy in vessels engaged in it, oh board of which the great West? He would be laughed at weie lound no fewer than " one. hundred as a fanatic or a fool. lie would be told ; and fifty freedmen," on their way to be He collected a considerable sum from the hardcarned s'avings of the negroes, and then borrowed a horse from another negro to go to a neighboring saw-mill to buy the logs, i Winston and the horse have not been heard of since.' Rich. Dispatch. Scakcity of Mackerel. Th Capi Anu (Gloucester) Advertiser ;aysj ' ' ; , "There never was before such a scarcity of mackerel in our market at this . season. At this time last year, from thirty to forty sail of bay- Some children playing.near Agusta,' Ga., men had arrived home, and business on the 2d: found a lump of gold weighing was eleven ounces, in a ravine, and several small- The er lunips Were picked up in the -vicinity. 1 dull j On th 3d three more lumps, weighing res- and pectively thirteen, nine and eight ounces, titioh among them vvheu a trip ar were found in the same : place, bv the owner nvesi.. Prices are daily advancing." rt . . . . m . ' . l" I'll .' I ' ot the land. They are purtectty sona ana .. ,-r. nure gold throughout. Regular digging How nE Fooled 'En.-r-The Ral- quite lively on the wharves. fish speculators find it rather pickings at the present time, there is quite a lively compe- that exceptional cases of crime prove noth- ; sold as slaves in Cuba., If anything were ing save that the millenium has not dawned needed to justify' the President's veto of has commenced. Ten thousand dollars I eighj Progress says that as Sherman's upon ! the world. He would be reminded the "Civil Rights bill," and to enforce the has been offered for. an acre and refused, bummers were on their inarch from of the danger and injustice of hasty, general- necessity of remitting the protection of the The affair creates much excitement, j . jGoldsboro' to Raleigh, a shrewd far ization, and would be, told that, despite ; negroes at the South to the regular tribu- 1 , - . I men in the county of Johnston con- these drawbacks, the North and. west rank ! nals of justice, it would be this flagrant A Tennessee paper mentions quite ;a cu- ceived a .most happy idea, by which oil a level with ,the most civilized cornmu- nroof that, under the oneration of a Bureau nities. Why. shall we qe the South? Why shal il differently with which enjoys absolute authority over the we exact from ! civil and domestic life of the emancipated Southern cities a more profound respect for negroes, hundreds of these- poor creatures virtue and law than existsj among ouiseives can be enticed on board Northern vessels Why shall we erect for he Southern people an( carried oft through districts ruled by a standard to which wej of the North have ; ''Assistant Commissioners" from Massachu- legree of general j setts and Ohio into slavery under the Spanish he North , would ' fia The revelation made by the report Let it be ad- fipuprnls Stlm-m jinl Fiillerton had riosityj in the vegaable line in th'ehape he succeeded in protecting his family nf tim 'pnrs nf rom crowing from the 'same I andl saving his provisions. He se- stem. not attained, or affirm a responsibility which in! be indignantly repudiated? Away in the wilds of Idaho, midway between Salt Lake and Oregon, the ?iir is thundering and the earth is rent, by a f att ract as imposing as Niagara. It is. called the "Gem of the Mountains, and haseen cured a federal uniform and donned it, 'and as the army approached his premises, they found a guard on duty, rigidly obeying orders, and swearing he , would shoot the first mail that touched the smallest ob ject Soon an officer of rank-rode discovered-less than three years, ' and 1 seen ! along and was approached by the mitted, once for always, that, apart from j prepared the country to expect "no positive bv scarcely as many scores of " white men,Uguard"-. with a request that he the rebellion, Southern citizens are neither j g00j a,u nuich positive evil froin the sway better nor worse than' Northern citizen And let us not forget that since North and South are bound to dwell together, and to share the future together, the sooner they of these "Assistant Commissioners, but 1 illainy such as the Navy Department has now exposed must startlo even the most fanatical into niiesrionincr'a' svstem which get back to Friendly terms the better it makes such'things possible. N. Y: World Will hotnr thain i A Young Lady's Chances A young lady thus describes her; feelings and courts sympathy. We hope she'may soon realize the change that she so devoutly, wishes: . My heart is sick, my heart is sad. - ' Bat oh! the cause I dare not tell, 7 : 1 am not grieved, I am not glad, 7 ; I am not ilL I am not well! - I'm not myself, I'm not the sanie; . . I ftm, indeed, I know not what.- . ' Fni changed in all, except ia name. rru.. !-:7.,n :0 01 n fof AC i ;a wnnl.l irmnt bun a guard! Colonel a chasm of 15,000 feet wide and l.OOO feet1 B-. ascertained th'e fact as re in depth. Richmond Enquirer. : ';, : , -'-i lated, was highly pleaded, and put j . . j .. ; ?two good men, on guard at that . A rural . chan visiting Grand Rapids, "place, as a compliment to the ingc- Mich., got playfully drunkrwhen observing nuitv ot the larmer. a bull pup, he went down on his hands and Mr Lever tells a good anecdote of an I- knees! to have a little came with' Hiim. 1 . "Ccme, Bob, how much have you rishman's giving the password at the bat- The. pup feeling cross, grabbed him r by the cleared by your speculationst" said tie ofFontenjoy, at which the great Saxe nose, .-ind after much trvirig ond twisting ' a friend tr his companion, was Marshal. "The password is Saxe .'tore it off' ',,:-: .''':.:.1''t r "Cleared!" answered Bob, "why Fve'cleared my pocRets. i , j - 1 : - - ."AH, Jemmy,'' said a sympathiz- ing lfriend to a man who was just too late for the train, "you did not -runlfast ' enough." "Yes, 1-did," now don't. forget it, Pat," said the Colo-; ; J - Lt- 1 . .. nel." "Sacks! Faith and I will not. Wasn't Ax Egyptian Remedy for uk-stroki:.; my father' a miller?" ; ' - '. t "r-ftA,' cntleman..who lias traveled exten- Who goes there?': cried the sentincC sivelylin, ther.East, states 1 Vtliatlin-pgypt, at his post. ' ' ' '.!'" . . . . -where j su n-stroke is off re.q uc;i t ' pecu rrence, 5 T-- ivKflS wicj n nn Arl 'onrl inn snrt t b A r:lli lllinl Vi Knit, ill VVUtiTT nilll liOUr' of whispered howl replied: " " ' ' it into the sufferer's ears, thus speedi(y fe- "said Jemmy, "I ran fasteuougn, but : "Bags! yer honor!" ! " k" ' !i lieving him; ' - - I did not start soon enough.