The Beaver radical. (Beaver, Pa.) 1868-1873, June 13, 1873, Image 4

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THE BEAVER RADICAL.
SMITH CORTIS, EsiTOB.
BEAVER. PAh
Friday .Uorolar, lass 13,1873.
Republican District and County Ticket
Aawabljr.
8. J. CROSS, Rochester,
(Subject to decision or District Conference.!
Prstheastury.
O. A. SHALL, Bridgewater.
JAHRS Hi MANN, New Brighton.
Q. W. SHROADBS; Moon tp.
Jut CeusilMtoßer. -
JOHN WILSON, Chippewa tpT
9t
Poor Hoose Director.
SAMUEL MoHANAMT, Economy tp.
Auditor.
J. P. CULBERTSON, Booth Beaver tp.
Knutees ot Academy.
R. 6. IMBRIE, Beaver.
P. L. GRIM, New Galilee.
*‘ Retolved , That we condemn as wrong in princi-
pie and moat demoralizing in practice, tbe late
xongreesion&l retroactive salary Increase and all
kindred legislation."
Now, it is true that Congress passed the
“relroactive'salary increase” bill, bat it Is
equally true, that it never woald have
reached the stature of a law had Presi
dent Grant not favored the measure and
given to it his official signature. He
made it tbe law of tbe land ; Congress had
not tbe power to do so. Hence, we moat
respectfully ask tbe chairman of that
committee on resolutions to point out the
justice of condemning Congress, and not
tbe President, for giving us the law to
which reference is had.— Argu*
The resolution is clear enough and
needs no explanation, but to en-
lighten the dulness of the Argus.
; we may observe that the bill is con
demned and, of course, all who are
in any way responsible for its pas
sage into law according to their re
sponsibility. When the Argus as
serts that the President made, the
law and that Congress had not the
power to do so, it talks incoherent
ly. We bad supposed, until now,
that Congress had power to pass a
bill over the President's opposition.
What does the Argm want ? Does
it favor the retroactive salary in
crease ? If so, why not speak out
and let the people know where it
stands? It is not likely that the ac
tion of the Republican party will
please it now any more than it did
last Fall, and we presume that its
editor will be one of the <( all eth
ers" mentioned in the Democratic
call, published in the official organ
ot the Democracy of Beaver coun
ty.
If the Argus was not anxious to
find fault with the Republican party
it wonld have stated, unless igno
rant, that the retroactive feature of
the salary inerease bill did not effect*
the President and therefore he
could not have been influenced by
any personal motives as doubtless
some of the members both Republi
can and Democratic were. The
President received no back pay, the
increase of his salary did not take
effect until the commencement of
bis second term. In regard to his
approval of the bill, it mast be recol
lected that it came before him not
by itself, as a separate measure to
be acted on,on its own merits,but was
put in the Civil and Diplomatic
Appropriation bill which contained
those appropriations necessary to
carry on the Government and hence
he could not veto the back pay sec
tion and approve the rest of the
appropriations. The whole Appro
priation bill had either to "be
vetoed or approved, and the Presi
dent could hot veto it on account of
the back pay feature, since Congress
had not time to agree upon and pass
an other to take its place. Con
gress doubtless was afraid that the
President would veto the bill with
the retroactive section ih it if it
came before him by itself unencum
bered and therefore included it in
the Appropriation bill where he
would be forced to give his signa
ture to it in order to obtain the
needful power by which to msve
the machinery of the Government.
The Argus like the dog that barks
at its own shadow, makes itself re-
diculous by its fault-finding and
empty noise.
The Beecher - Bowen - Tilton-
Woodhull affair, which has long
been the subject of gossip in pri
vate circles, and been scattered far
and wide by means of Woodkull A
Cloffiitfs Weekly , has lately been
revivified by Beecher himself and
the publication ot an old and re*
markable covenant between Beech
cr, Bowen and Tilton in reference
- SS£S=-
r*. . v
to the scandal. The press, with fe\s
exceptions, remained silenfcuntilihe
publication of the covenant and
Beecher’s card; then, ad if impa
tient from long restraint, nearly
every ’paper in the country had
something to say on the subject,
and the general opinion thus ex
pressed was one of doubt and un
certainty as regards the truth of the
slanders, and a universal demand
that the charges be examined and
the matter cleared up. The Wfti*
"■* . • | ■■ r
nabt itself does not seem io possess
a very high tone of Christianity, ’
and the herculean efforts which have
been made to suppress the matter
are calculated to create suspicions
of the truth of what is alleged.
It'is reported that Plymouth
Church has decided upon an inves
tigation, which should be exhaus
tive and comprehensive, thati the
truth or falsity of the grave charg
es, so freely, boldly and circumstan
tially made, may be certainly known.
THE CONSTITUTION Al. CONTEN
TION.
Although it has been difficult of
late to always obtain a quorum,
yet the Convention has been mak
ing quite rapid progress towards
the completion of its labors. The
open or endorsed . ballot clause in
the section on sufferage and elec
tions, was so amended as to make
the endorsement of the ballot op
tional with the voter, thus render
ing the change of little use, and
making it conform to public opin
ion. The people are not willing to
forego the secret ballot for an im
aginary reform. The Convention
has reversed its former action in re
gard to a liquor prohibitory clause
and voted down by a large majori
ty, the amendment on that subject,
which was passed early in the win
ter, when a majority of the people
in the State were supposed to be in
favor ot it The fifteen hundred
dollars increase whiph the members
voted ibr themselves was a piece of
work not unlike in appearance, die
Congressional salary grab that was
so universally denounced by the
press. It is very probable that
$2600 salary Is not too much pay,
considering the high prices pf (bring
in Philadelphia, but all the mem
bers, when elected understood that
they were to receive only filOfcO,aod
to increase that aawiit becaase
they hsd the power to do so,by their
own votes, looks very much like
what has been dabbed a “grab.”
As a matter of record we give,
for the information of the public,
the official vote:
Fob a Salas* of $2,500. —Messrs;
Achenback, Addicka, Andrews, Baer, Bai
ley, [Huntingdon) Baker, Barclay, Bar
tholomew, Beebe, Bowman, Brown, Cas
sidy, Church, Collins, Corbett, Corson,
Cronmiller, Curry, Dallas, Davie, De
France, Dodd, Dunning, Edwards, Elli
ott, Ellis, Fell, Gibson, Guthrie, Hanna,
Hazzard, Heverin, Horton, Landis, Lilly,
MacConnell, M’Culloch, M’Murry,
Mann, Mantor, Mitchell, Mott, Niles,
Palmer, Q. W., Parsons, Patton, Pughe,
Read, John R., Reed, Andrew, Sharpe,
Simpson, Smith, Wo. H. Stanton, Stew
art, Temple, Van Reed, Walker, Wherry,
White, David N., and Wright—6o.
Fob a Salabt op sl,ooo.—Messrs. Ai
ney, Bailey, (Perry,) Bannan, Bardsley,
Bigler, Black, Charles A., Black, J. 8.,
Brodhead, Broomall, Buckalew, Campbell,
Carter, Clark, Cochran, Fnlton, Gilpin,
Gowen, Hay, Hemphill, Kaine, Knight,
Lamberton, Lawrence, Lear, Littleton,
M'Clean, Newlin, Palmer, H. W. Patter
son, D. W., Pattersop, T. H. B-, Porter,
Purviance, Reynolds, Kooke, Rosa, Rus
sell, Smith, H. Q., Smith, Henry W-,
Strothers, Wetherill, J. M., Wetherill,
Jno., Price, White Harry, White, J. W.
F., and Worrell—44.
Absent ob not Voting —Messrs. Al
ricks, Armstrong, Biddle, Boyd, Carey,
Craig, Curtin, Coy l*r, Darlington, Ewing.
Finney, Funck, Green, Hall, Harvey,
Howard, Hnnsicker, Long, UacYeagb,
MiCamant, Metzgar, Minor, Furman,
Poiviance, John N.. Bunk, Turrell,
Woodward and Meredith, President— 2B.
We think the members of the
Convention had better endured
the privation of a little cash than
suffer the loss of reputation which
will be sure to follow their actions.
Goveenoe Straw, of New Hamp
shire, was inaugurated on Thurs
day, June 6th, and delivered his
message to the two Houses of the
Legislature the same day. The
document gives a clear exhibit of
the State affairs. The financial
condition of the .State is sound.
The total debt pi the State Is a trifle
more than 14,000,000, of which
$6,000 was paidduring the past
year,“ and it is estimated that an
_ THE RADICAL : : FRIDAY, >H?NE 13,1813.
average yearly payment of $126,000
will cancel the entire deht in thirty
years, the' date of the maturity of
the last State bond. The savings
banks indicate by their prosperity
the prosperity of the* business in
terests of the State. There are sixty
one banks, whose aggregate depos
its are $28.462.539 98 :
surplus 11,296,242 29; total psssetts
of depositors $29,758,782 27, whioh
have increased during the ye4f
per cent.,
4otnai
positors of $4,019,413,69.
number of depositors have increased
during tibe past year 7875, the total
number at the present being 94,665
nearly one-third of the' population
Of the State. The institutions of
New Hampshire, like her mount
ains, are on a sound basis. Schools,
charities and reforms all flourish.
The Governor recommends and
praises the Centennial Exposition,
and says that it will enlist thp
whole American people in its favor,
and will be, as it should, the largest
and finest ever seen, and a-most
wonderful illustration of the pro
gress of the country daring its
brief existence of a century. Gov
ernor Straw also recommends a Lo
cal Option law, and a revision of
the State constitution.
The Argits asks why the Repub
lican Convention did not condemn
General Grant for signing the re
troactive Congressional salary bill ?
We have stated tie reasons in an
other article, and now ire, in torn,
enquire why the State Democratic
Committee did not request their
Chairman not only to denounce jtbe
the usurpation of Federal au
thority in Louisiana affairs, but also
to condemn for passing
and the President tor approving the
back pay salary grab. The Chair
man of the Democratic 'Committee
was in Congress, and of course was
directly benefited by the bill, and '
is his mouth sealed because he was
in fhvor of the bill and iks
his extra money ? or what in' the
matter? ..The Louisian* difficulties
perhaps wlll afford sufficient- am-
munition to carry on the campaign
this Fall, but we should thinkd?&t
opposition to something, neaohome
would give better nhmMsa«d«uw
•use. The
Louisians, is certainly not very eo
couraging, and it is probable that
Republicans will be able to agree
with much that the Democratic
Chairman will say on that subject.
TBB WUWQBTB PAKBICIDB.
Mansfield Tracy W alworth, a
literary Iran and author of flashy
novels, was shot by his son Frank
(aged 10,) in New York on the 3d
inst. The elder Walworth was a
bad hnsband and lather, and had, it
seems, been in the habit of sending
threatening letters to his family
from whom be was separated and
creating in the community an
impression unfavorable to the chast
ity of his wife. The young man
defended bis mother against the
father, and in order to settle some
family matters appointed the meet
ing that resulted in the shooting of
the father by the son, a crime that
shocks the moral sense of the coun
try and reveals a condition of society
that if startling. The crime is
horrible and the coolness of the
murderer and his assertion that he
had committed no crime is almost
beyond belief. The- first impression
was that the boy was insane and not
responsible for bis acts, and it is to
be hoped that this may turn put to
be the case,bnt the facts,as publish*
ed, rather show the deed was pre
meditated and cowardly executed.
The father is taken at a disadvan
tage, and shot down without warn
ing, and the parricide only regrets
the murder on account of the effect
it will have on “his family.’* Was
there ever before such hardness Of
heart, such presumption, such pre
m
atare growth of independence ?
The most monstrous orime in the
calendar is committed withont re
gret as to the crime itself, and that,
too, by a mere boy, brought op in
refinement and moving in respecta
ble and fashionable society. When
such a orime is poiulble, well may
we ask from whence did it spring ?:
where were the, accrete of its hid
den growth? on what nonrishnrent
did it feed ? Is: yOnng Walwdrth
only an example of evils nhderlying j
society of which we- are ignorant t
parricide iI iihnatiira!,' : and 66 ? "dei
testable that the old Greeks deemed
it to be impossible ; bat, what was
Impossible then seems to bepossi
ble now in a Christian community !
POLITICAL.
, —Colt). H. Jones is the. chairman of
the Blaircouotj' Republican Committee—,
.a good selection.
R, & McCreary, of Qi\ City,
has been renominated for Assembly wilh
out opposition. j
—R. R-ChTte«l if » Cnnnuiieforlhe
Republican nomination for Assembly in
Harrisburg. > *
—The Democrat* and Liberals of Ohio
have decided to hold their Cohventionat
Colfimbus on the 6lh of August.
—Mr. George P. Greensbarg, is
the choice of the Republicans of West
moreland bounty for State Treasurer. '
. -r-The Cincinnati, Chroryiele and th?
Toledo Blade toot Gen. Joseph!*. Haw
ley, of Connecticut. fob next President.
—Mr. Alex. Kennedy, of Johnstown, is
the -Johhetown Tribune's candidate for
Assembly on the Republican side in Cam
i bria county for next fall.
—E. H. Wilcpx, Henry Butterfield, and
Mathew B. Barr are rival candidates for
the Legislature in Erie county before the.
Republican primary meetings..
—The Warren county Republican Con
vention will be held on monday, June
23d, and tbe primary meetings? on the i
Saturday previous.
—The,President has appointed John A.
Bingham, of Ohio, Eqyoy Extraordinary
and Minister Plenipotentiary of the Unit
*ed States to Japan, i V
—David Bantey has Wen solicited by
tome Republicans of LeWirence' county to
hm lor tbe be gives bis
consent in a kind of a way that to say the
least is Sankeyisb.
—A private dispatch received ih Wash
ington from Montgomery, Ala., says that
fov. Lewis (Rep.) has appointed Robert
C. Brickell (Dem ) Chief Justice of the
Supreme Coart of tbe State, vice Peck,
resigned'. i.
—The Republicans of Venango county
have nominated the following ticket:
Asrembly—Hon. R.D.jl’Creary; Treas
urer—MaJ.Jainss F. Mackey; County
Commissioner—o. B. Lytle; Coroner—
James Hughey 2sq.; Auditor—-Isaiah
Myers.
—The Republicans of Franklin county
have nominated the following,ticket :
County Treasurer, Jere. Cook; Assembly,
Wm H. Mackey; County Commissioner,
He*. Keefer; Director of Poor, Amos
Stooder, Auditor, Col Wm Dizoo; Juy
Commfasoner, A. EL Bttei; Coroner, Dr.
B.GChritaman.
—The Republicans of Butler county se-
Iwaad the fbHowiiggen tleman oa Solar
day as their nominees for the county of
fices to be filled this Fall: Assembly—
A. L, Campbell and David McKee; Com
missioner—J. P. Christ ley; Treasurer—
Campbell; • Jury Commissioner—
T. W. Kennedy; Auditor—E. 6. Duncan.
—The Stale Journal says: We learn
by private advices from Arkansas that
Senator Morton’s health has greatly im
proved, and that he will leate the Hot
Springs for hie home in Indiana in a few
days. The news will be a source ol gratifica
tion to Senator Morton’s many friends in
tbe city and throughout the country.
—The Democrats ofGreeo county have
nominated the following ticket; Assem
bly, Thomas Laidley; Sheriff, James P.
Cosgray; Treasurer, Samuel Bayard;
Commissioner. Robert Smith; Auditor,
Corbly Orndoff; Jury Commissioner,
Thomas McC lenatban ; Poor House Di
rector, Isaac Mitchell; Coroner, Lewis N.
Johnson.
—The Democratic State Convention is
to be be)d at Wilkesbarre on the 27th of
August. Hon. Samuel J. Randall, chair
man, has been directed by the State Con
vention to properly express, in bis next
address to the people of this State, a
sense of indignation at the course pursued
by the administration in the Louisiana
troubles.
—The New York Evening Poet says .-
“President Grant has filled the place of
United States Minister to Japan by the
appointment of John A. Bingham, of
Ohio. Mr. Bingham is a man of honor,
of ability, of tact and of presence, and
will undonbtedly represent the United
States in a thoroughly respectable and
efficient manner in his new position.”
—At the Republican County Conven
tion held in Pittsburgh the 23d Inst,,
Hon. Thomas Ewing and Hon. J. W. P.
White were nominated for the District
Jndgeshipi Hon. George H. Anderson for
Senate Senator; and Messrs. H. H. Mc-
Cormick, 8. J. Waittwright, J. C. New
myer, A. B. Young. A. C. Hays, B. C.
Christy and Henry Gerwig for Assembly.
—A convention of the Republicans of
Greene oonnty, to be composed of two
delegates from each township, will meet
in Waynesburgb on Tuesday, June 10th,
at 1 o’clock, p. m., for the nomination of
candidates for county officers, and dele
gates, to the State Convention, and for the
transaction of other business as may
properly come before ft. : The Republican
voters of the oonnty .frill meet in their re
spective tdwnshfps on Satdrday, Jane
iOtlu between the Man or two and five,
t. il, andiolectby.btllottw6dcfegatcs
from the bounty eonven
., • •“ f. * >-’■ -Vi-jf 3 -'-I*; •> V-.-.-ri- -
Hon.
- —Frederick Carroll Brewster is pro
posed as a candidate for United States
Senator* to take the place of tfobn Scott,
at the expiration of bis term.
—Theßepublican primary meetings in
C/fawford county will take place on the
19th inst. The candidates for Senate are
Hon. George R. Anderson and A. B v Rich
mond, Esq.; For Assembly, M. M. Oliver
Jr. , .and Fred. Bate* There are six can
didates. for fAssociate Judge, nine for.
Treasurer, and one for Auditor.
“ —The Delaware eoun ty Republican says:
Curd edges should be like Cam's wife,
“not only pure,: but unsuspected*” Wfl
wk?«« ww u»i
position—Judge William Butlei comes up
to that standard. Ho man in the State
can question either bis moral' or political
integrity. We should deplore, as a publlc
calamity, any complication whatever
which might defeat the will of the people
expressed for the nomination of Judge
Butler.
' *■ :'h
: k
—The Berks and Schuylkill Journal
says; "The annual political County
Meetings in Berks will be held during
the first week of August Court. The
Democrats will call their meeting for
Tuesday, August sth, and the Republi
cans either the day proceeding or the
day following. For the Senatorial office
—the one of. most importance this Fall—
there will be a spirited contest between
Senator Davis, and Daniel Ermer trout.
Esq. The old Assembly ticket will prob
ably be renominated
—The PottsvHle, Pa., Miner’s Joumrl
says: It is safe to say that Senator Ran
dall will receive the Democratic re-nom
ination for the State Senate. Strouse is
off the track, and Hendler basso frequent
ly declared himsnlf “not a candidate for
nothing,” that the rank and file have
taken him at his word, and will not insist
on making further persona) sacrifices lor
the sake of the party.
—The* Republican primary election in
Armstrong county Was held on Hay 31st
with the following result: Assembly—
Thompson, 1992; Hunter, 1826. Treasu
rer-Piper, 861; Monroe, 815; Elwood,
793; Hamilton, 710; Coulter, 648 ; Black,
227. Sheriff—Williams,764; Wilson, 790;
Neale, 588; Marshall, 528,- Heckling, 441;
Hiller, 885; Scott, 821 1 Nicholson, 302;
Ambrose, 192. District Attorney—Cros
by. 1760. Commissioner—Herron, 1406;
Craig, 1258; Cowan, 764.
Shaefifer, 901, Robinson, 557. Jury Com
misioner—Glen, 882.
—The following is the ticket nominal.
«d by |k» Allegheny County Republican
Convention yesterday, and which will be
dected oS the Second Tuesday of Octo
ber ; Fteaideat Judge—shomas Swing.
Associate Judge—J. W. F. White. State
Senator—George H. Anderson. Assem
bly—H. H. McCormick, J. S. Waiowright,
John C. Newmyer, A. B. Young, A. C.
Hays, B. O. Christy and Henry Gerwig.
Treasurer—Samuel Kilgore. Frotbono
lary—B. F. Kennedy. Coroner—William
McCallin. County Commissioner—Au
gurtns Beckert. Jury Commissioner—
John McClelland. Director of Poor—
Thomas Varner.
—A Farmer’s Convention, composed of
men of §1) parties, was held in Washing
ton, lowa on Monday last, to nominate
candidates fur the Legislature and county
officers. Every township in the county
was represented, and, judging from tbe
vigorous tone of 1 the resolutions, the
delegates were a resolute set of men.
They dedonnoe the State Legislature for
failing to pass a law regulating railroad
rates, and declare that no candidate for
tbe Legislature will be supported who
will not pledge himself to vote for such a
law, and to refuse to accept passes or any
other petty bribes from railroad corpora
tions. The candidates whom they named
are reqoried.in accepting the nomination,
to abandon ail former political connec
tions, and to profess allegiance hence
forth only to the interests of the farmers
and workingmen. It Is expected that a
State Convention of the same character
will soon be held in lowa,
—Massachusetts Republicans seem m
be actually alarmed at Gen. Butler’s de
termination to seize the Gubernatorial
chair by force, and to fear that he Will
win in spite of his unpopularity. A
Boston correspondent of the Hartford
Courant gives some insight into their
trepidation and their schemes to defeat
the chief of the salary grabbers; -‘I
hear of no one who is likely to be run
against Gen. Butler in the Republic Con
vention, except Gov. Washburn. The
more bold^—and I thing the more saga
cious—of the Republicans would like a
resolute and plucky leader, who had
qualifications for the stump, and would
face or follow Butler in his appeals to
the people. Nobody Of this kind is as yet
suggested as having a stomach for such a
fight. Judge Hoar, I hear now, will op
pose Butler’s nomination, and perhaps
address the people on the subject, before
the Republican Convention Is held. The
best coarse for the anti-Batler Repub
licans to-pursue is to take the ground in
advance that they will not support But
ler if he be nominated, and to justify
themselves by declaring, what they un
doubtedly believe, that be is not a fit
man to be Governor of Massachusetts.
Let them give ont beforehand that they
will bolt, and tbereare thousands who
will follow them. They may not succeed
in defeating him but they are stronger
on bis trade than they ars on any other,
and ih another year the party would' be
purified and the State would be with
them.”
„ LOCAL ITEMS.
Assure.—C. w. Taylor, Beaver Falle- p
Pugh, New Brighton; J. Ro^hegJ
TO ADVJEBTISKas.-The r* '
Radical Is the most extensively
tated Weekly Newspaper in Wcaul’
Priunylvaiiia.
* Pittsburgh Rmiroas
Whig Accommodation, 9,19 a . ffi .
,37 p. m; Express, 7.07 p. m.
Asrlwal «ad Rspartnre ormaiis
ern 6.45 a.m.; «mve 8 « 3 * B B
toto kawa 9p.m. ? arriv e ,atB^
Th< attention of lk ß pobUe i,
Mtowta* O'. UmttaMw, rtteh “
Th* Radical to4aj ; ppOM
tfew Ad?—Chi*. B* Bsnt
Statement-National
New AdT—Psnsywttt, Bennett* bo.
New AdT—Stows * Holdoway
New Ad*—Hassell A Bro
Teacher's Examinations-JL l. Knight.'.'. ’ , u .?.
New AdT—Wemrer A Co ' * "
Admt’a Notice—Benben
New Adv—Borrows* Co ,
Financial Statement-Brighton townehin
Special Notlce-J. A R. Harsh*;... ZT
Spedtl Notices—S. *J. Snellenbarg. ®
Special Notice—A. B. Clark 4 h ''
Special Notices—Hartzog A Beam ,!
We are indebted to our Kansas corres
pondent, Sadie, for Kansan papers.
Comer of Broadway and Lock streets,
New Brighton
Buy your shoes of Hartzog & Beam’s.
The June term of County Court
commenced onMonday. The attendance
is large and business brisk.
Two entire new two Horse Wagons, for sale
at Bpeyerer £ Son’s. fehai tt
Comer of Broadway and Lock streets.
New Brighton.
Buy your shoes of Hartzog & Beam's.
Commencement exercises of West
minster College, at New Wilmington,
take place this year on Thursday, June
!9tb.
Corner of Broadway and Lock streets,
New Brighton. If
Oaiters, Slippers and all goods in
summer wear, at Hartzog & Beam’s.
We had a delightful rain on Tuesday
morning. The growth of all kinds of
vegetables is rapid and luxuriant now.
June bids fair .to make np in some meas
use for. backward Hay.
Novelties in Ladies 1 Shoes at Hartzog
& Beam’s.
French morocco summer f shoe for
ladies at Hertzog & Beams, Broadway,
New Brighton.
The 10th Regiment, Pa: Reserves, will
hold their next annual reunion in New
Castle on the 4th of July. The oration
will be de livered by J. Q. White, Esq, o!
Hereer.
.Newport lies for ladies, and Oxford
ties for gentlemen, at Hertzog & Beams,
Broadway, New Brighton.
Comer of Broadway and Lock streets.
New Brighton. tf
The bridge over the canal at Mahon
ingtown, was destroyed by fire on Friday
night last. The lon will prove no incon
venience to the citizens in that section, as
a much better crossing can be had by fill
ing op the canal.
Comer of Broadway arid Lock streets
New Brighton. tf
Just received at Speyerer A Sons from the
Bast, a full stock of dry goods and groceries,
which have been bought for cash and will be sold
cheap. Please call and examine. mySO-3t
Hartzog & Beam , successors to Uin
stead and Hartzog, manufacturers of and
dealers in Boots, Shoes, Gaiters and Slip
pers. Specialty, fancy wear for either la
dies or gentlemen. Broadway, New
Brighton.
Warning, —Read this and then do
not fail to buy a bottle Dr. J. Magin
nis’ Persian Oleine, that is if you wish to
keep in your boose the best known Rem
edy for Cholera, Cftdera morbus. Cramps,
Dysentery and Pain of all kinds. Price
50 cents. Sold by Druggists, dealers and
Agents.
There will be an Ice Cream and
Strawberry Festival in the U. P. Church,
on Friday evening, June 18, 1873. All
are cordially invited to attend.
Swiss walking shoe at Hertzog &
Beams, Broadway, New Brighton.
Hertzog S Beam, 'successo rs to Utn
stead & Hertzog, Boots, Shoes, Gaiters
and Slippers, in endless variety, wear of
every description made to order from
the best material at short notice, on
reasonable terms. Attention to orders
from all parts of the county. Fine wear
for Ladies and Hisses a specialty.
The Media (Delaware county) Ameri
can has been enlarged to a ten column
paper and is adorned by a new and capti
vating head. This enterprise o( the
editors, Messrs, Vernon & Cooper, is a
gratifying sign that Republicanism _is in
Br flourishing condition in Delaware
county, and that their services in the
cause are properly appreciated.
NovelHeoin Ladles* Shoes at Hartzog
& Beam’s.
lee CoH Sparkling Soda Water, Savored with
Poie Fraitbyrnpiß, always fresh from Hugo As
Mattie Fountains.
Icly
...U
...C