TIIE REPUBLICAN. JUDSON HOLCOMB. t CHAS. L. TRACY, JUDSON IiOLCOMD, Editor "RE:Wolin tile taxes. hon,sl expenditures com petent officers, and • no steating.'! garpers Weekl,y. U 'Wend in the Post 0111:e at tauaada O?D fLAsS SETTER. HEADQUARTERS' REPUBLICAN STATE CONLIIIITEE; Si. Olond:Eiotel, Arch above 7th, THOS! v. COOPER, Chairman. Lrecis ROGERS, .DI. A. AR'SHOLT, C. L. XACHLE, HalthY SVCB. SAII'L F. BAER, WS. I. NEWELL. JOHN IAcCULLOUGH, Secretaries REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET. STATE TREASCRER SILAS M. .PAILY of Payette County A man who from his youth up, has fought the battles of Repnplicanism in a region where no hopeiof success could add vigor and zeal to the contest, and with no reward save the consciousness of having served the cause be loed. A mai who has attested his love of :liberty and law, by service on the field of glory and of blood, who won his promotion- in the glorious,Pennsyliania Reterves, from Captain to Brigadier, by meritorious service on the Yield. A man who stood in the red hell of battle at Drainesville, on the Peninsula, at Gaines' KM, South Monti tain, Antietam, Fredericks burg, arid the Wilderness, and who bore wit ness with his blood, that be loved his country well. .He h - ears upon his person the rough scars left by the cruel cannol ie ball, and will carry to his grave the- evide of his patriotism and courage. =- Re is able, and woithy to lead Republicans .to Victory as he led his regiment to war. (Speech of Attorney General Palmer, in Be publican &ate Voncention.) REPLIiLICAN COINTY TlCktis. SHERIFF.• WILLIAM T. HORTON, of Tore, Township PRO77IOIVOTARY • DAMES H. H.WEBB, of Smithileld Township TREARrfIitER: - EBEN LILLEY, of Leßoy Tow_trebly. COMMISSIONERS: DANIEt. BRADFORD, • of Columbia Township• • MYRON KINGSLEY, Standing Stone Township. AUDITORS JOSEPH .T. HESTED, - Of Albany Township W.: W. MOODY, of Rome Township. munnoii TUESDAY NOVEMBER *8 THURSDAY, OCT. 27, 1881 Read the sound advice given Re publicans by Hon. Edward McPher son in his speech at Pittsburg, found in our columns, and follow Stand by the Republican ticket. Don't desert your colors. The camp of the enemy is a cold, uncomfortable political shelter., , Hon. Wayne McVeigh peremp torily declines to remain in the Cab inet. Who will take his place as Attorney-General is not yet deter mined. Hon. E. B. Morgan, who was nom inated by President Arthur for Sec retary of the Treasury, to fill the va cancy occasioned by the retirement of Mr. Windom, refuses to accept the appointment. The appointment of Mr. Folger, of N. Y., is now talked of. Hon. James N. Tyner, First Assis tant Postmaster—General, seems to be badly entangled in the meshes of the Star—route frauds, The mote he tries to extricate himself the tighter the cords are drawn about him., We have suspected for several years that be needed to be looked after. Hon. William Windom, Secretary of the Treasury, has been re-elected to the United States Senate by the Legislature of Minnesota. His re- tirement from the Treasury portfoli which he has so ably administered .is greatly to be regretted, but the loss is partly compensated by his re turn to the Senate. The Hon. Chas. S. Wolfe, independ ent candidate for State Treasurer, is -advertised to address a mass meeting at - the Court House in this place, on Friday evening, 'October 28th, at 71 o'clock p. in. While we do not agree with Mr. Wolfe in the position he has taken, yet we believe him to be an honest and upright man, and his fear less tight against the bosses in this State to bo inspired purely by conscientious motives. Mr. Wolfe is an able and eloquent speaker, and has spoken to crowded houses in his campaign throughout the State. Mr. Wolfe will undoubtedly attract a large crowd by curiosity to see him and hear what he has tosay. Not. the least interesting feature o the Virginia campaign is the ill-con ' coded desire . of the Bourbons to kill off the Liberal leaders, and their determin ation to drive the Liberals into sending the challenges. The challenged party E uo some advantages, among them the ipossibility of cheap martyrdom. They bave lately been doing such wretched shooting in Virginia that this possibility may be regarded as somewhat replete. and yet it exists; aside from that is the other fact that the Liberals, having appealed to the country for sympathy, cannot afford to send challenges. Most of all Mahone would injure his cause if he were to fall into the Bodrbon trap and have an encounter with Early, or even go so far as to call him out. A staff correspondent of The Press Rends an interesting letter on this phase of the campaign.—Philadelphia Press. THE DUTY OF THE REPUB LICANS OF BR4DFORD. ljul. ss Republia , tr s ure prepay d to abandon their party and it.itiint— honored plineiples, there eAn be no reason assigned for their reusing to ut support the uomiuces of the pally he approaching election. Griot.' anecs there may be, but these are not ofsucb a nature as to render any candidate upbn the ticket unworthy - of support. If it is contemplated by any Republican to vote against any one of our candidates for the purpose of inflicting punishment upon cer tain party leaders, let him pause' and seriously reflect before doing so, what will be the effect of his vote. There can be but one affect, and that will be to help the enemy at the sac rifice of principle. The place to in stitute reformd is in our primaries. No one who observes the signs of the times can doubt that the popular sentiment of a majority of the Re publican party, was honestly and fairly represented in our last nomina sing convention. Objections there were to one er two of the condidates, notably to Hon. throes H. Webb and Daniel Bradford, the former for Register and Recorder and the latter for Commissioner. The only objec- ion urged against Mr. Webb is . t e fact that be has held office. That is true, but no one doubts his compe tency, his integrity or his Republi canism. Why then should he be made the mark against whom the venomous shafts of personal pique against other men should be hurled? In voting against him your vote counts against the Republican party and to its htirt, and" not to the in jury of the men sought . to be pun ished. Following merely personal feelings, we would perhaps have, as strong reasons for opposing Mr. Webb as anyone. As a delegate in the Convention, we voted against the nomination of both Mr. Webb and Mr. Bradford, because we thought it bad policy to place them upon the ticket. A majokity of the Convention decided otherwise and we acquiesce, •• -LA ....I.LlTinkrlninarl Webb is certainlyentitled to the.,grat itude of all the people of :the eastern and central portions of the county for the noble stand he took as a member of the Legislature in defeat ing the Herdic scheme of dividing the county. It 'was this scheme which raised the opposition that re duce,d. his Majority so largely in his : last legislative contest, .and left the impression, perhaps that he is a weak candidate. The cause that operated to weaken him then should strength en him now,. since the folly of the scheme of division which he defeated is so fully demonstrated. Give him your votes and stand in line with your party, and do not give aid and comfort to the enemy. _ etiostic:an. molar. a h r . 1 ON•N• mainly in the eastern section . of The county, to Mr. Bradford, is that he joined with Ransom in locating the Poor House too far west. We thought so at the timelt was settled there, but being done, we acquiesce, and cannot see how any Republican can benefit himself or the public by refusing his vote to M. Bradford. He is regarded as a strictly honelt man : If he has made mistakes, they are not such as render him unworthy of :Republican sup port. He should have the full sup port of the party. f George W. Blackman for Pro• thonotary, William T. Horton for Sheriff, Eben Lillev for Treasurer Myron Kingsley for . Commissioner, Joseph T. Herded and William W. Moody for Auditors, make np with Mr. Webb and Mr. Bradford the full Republican county ticket,' We hope to see the whole ticket receive the full pally vote, and trust that petty strifes and personal prejudices wily at the polls be forgotten. =Let the re sult show that RepubliCans haie stood manfully by their principles. We pledge you, Republicans of Bradford, that on our part there shall be no abatement of our opposi tion to the rule of State and local party bosses. Stand with us then for party principles, and leave other questions to be settled within the party. McVeigh for Governor. The Republicans of Huntingdon county chose three delegates last week to the next State Convention, and instructed them to support the nomination of Hon. Wayne McVeigh" for Governor. " This starts the McVeigh ball in earnest. We second the motion. "The Democrats want no slobbering over them because of alleged misfor time on the 11th inst.," says the Cin cinnati Enquirer. "They nearly. al ways come down stairs that way and are used to it." ,5 "The Pepnay/vania Borsea." At a ineetprg yesterday of the Bapy tist ministers` in the hall of the _Ameri• can Baptist `Publication Society, Rev, G. E. Rees presiding, an essay on Th 6 Divine Purpose in the Present National Calamity was read by Rev. limes Lisk,D. D. After eliborating upon the assassination of Preident Garfield, the reverend speaker concluded by express ing the opinion that the Divine purpose in the calamity was not for mortal man to see. During the discuision that succeeded the essay Rev. Henry Bray remarked that. in his opinion, the pur— pose of the tragedy was to impress the people with the evils of the spoils sys— tem. "The Pennsylvania !Bosses," said Rev. J. 0. Critchlow, "are just as bad as they used to be and we ought to show our power by crushing out the corrupt ion which exists among them." Rev. P. S. Henson, D. D., closet} the dis— cussion denouncing machine politics and adding that "the Bosses should be placed behind prison bara."--hi/adel phia Press. Hon. Edward 3[4Pherson at Pittaburfl. ' Hon. Edward MePherson,whn was a &legate in the State Convention that nominated General . Baily for State Treasurer, and is classed as one of the most able and influential Re publican opponents of the existing boss rule over the party, and who opposed the nomination of General Baily, spoke at Pittsburgh on Satur day evening last, in advocacy of his election. The Press of Sunday last contains an abstrad of his able speech. His views of the duty of Republicans in the preient e;ig,ency is consistent and comprehensive, and so eminently fght that we give the closing part of his speech outlining the policy of the party, as follows : "Mr. McPherson said in commencing that he understood the' meeting to be a Republican meeting. If it were not he would not be present. He then went on to say: If there is any One thing,in which I believe it is Republican principles, the Republican organization and Republi c'an candidates. It is a striking fact that for twenty-one years the Ameri, can people have given their unswerv ing-support to the Republican party. When one considers .the _very excited character of this period the most re—'l markable fact' of history, when you remember that io every other consti tutional country of the world there have been within this time the most radical changes, and that on the other hand, in this favored land of gence and honest .elections, except in the Gulf States, wheie they have • no electisns, the Republican party only has been esteemed fit to lead and con trol the destinies of the nation. It is a thing over which every Republican has a right to grow enthusiastic. There is no reason why, at this period any Republican should turn his back. on the fi4g, but I'do hear a dissent; not, however, upon the ground that General Bally is not an honest nor a competent man, note good soldier, but because he was nominated by infloences not acceptable to some:parties. I was a member - of the Convention Which nom inated General Bally. . That Conuen. irm >sena _ norfantlit Asa_ fair: ed a representative upon . its Commit tees, everything was conducted with perfect parliamentary propriety. When it came to a vote, the Conventions did not nominate the -candidate who was the choice of the majority. Every member k& the Convention was, on motion of a distinguished delegate from Chester County who had not vOted for General Bally, pledged 'to support the nominee. • WHY REPUBLICANS SHOULD SUPPORT BAILY I did not, vote for General Baily either, but I-dm here to-night to make good 'my promise to l support his nom ination as the act of the authorized Republican CAmvention of Pennsylva. nia and therefore binding in good faith Uj?UU eh,. relv .7 • Th-•.•v vav lavalacC r .,.. sons, impetuous end ardent and per fectly honest and - sincere, but carried away by their 'mistaken zeal, who propose to do 'something. else. I am comparatively a,young man, but I have been in politics a long time. I was an. active Whig, -ati anti-slaVery Whig when the majority of the par ty was for-slavery in sympathy and ,cenduct, I was a Thaddeui Stevens Whig when it was popular to be a Webster Whig. I never AVM a Silver gray, but 'a wooly-head Whig. As the lat ter I was sometimes overruled in the primariel:of the party, but I always made it a point to submit to the rule of the minority, objectionable to me as it, often' . , seemed. The man who won't\ 'attend the primaries has no right to grumble. If you want to overthrows an evil commence at the root. . I was often put down in the Whig Conventions.. I knew men of distinct ion who wt re put down at Chicago, but not by,. grumbling. They were put down _by hard work, and they did not bolt the,nomination ,either. I say to you, Republicans, don't ttin away; be pat down-on your tracks; it your prin— ciples are worth anything, stand up and fight for, them. Act Whigs we were often borne down, as these men say they were by the power of the great ties. But the Whigs remained in the organization, and labored, and worked, and so , indoctrinated the great party with the true principles of freedom, that when it went out of existence it transferred itself bodily into the Repub , lic:an party and became its bone, muscle and sinew.: Shall I turn : iv back on my party. and enthrone the. enemy? say no. There stands before irt now; Jig there stood then, the seine old Dem ocaatic party solemn, morose, mischiev was and dangerous. Solemn because the peOple haven't smiled upon, it, morose because they are hungry, and critical because their principles were long since buried out of sight. From this on Mr. McPherson out lined the good which the Republican party had done the country, and as he drew to a close he was asked by borne one in the audience what he thought of Wolfe? He replied that he was not engael in a personal warfare. Mr. Wolfe had nominated himself in opposition to a man against whom he is unable to utter a word, and finder the circumstances the speaker considered his candidacy un fortunate, unjustifiable and unneces sary, and it would be calamitous if it should end in the election of the Democratic candidate. He had, faith in the intelligence of the people to see that no harm should come through Mr. Wolfe to the Rephblican party. He proposed within party lines to. contribute towards making the party policy so honest and up right that it will commend itself to all men. He could not better de scribe.what he meant to say than that he was a Garfield man. [Great ap plause.] He believed in reform when there was anything to refortn, and when honestly beaten he proposed to brgiu over again. Thii duty of Republicans is stickAo their ixist aud . to their ditty. If beaten to-day in the Conventions go to work to morrow ; appeal to the best men of the party s capture the organization if you can and niakeit what you think. it ought to be. It is the duty of Re publican voters to take care of their organization:, Stand by it as it is and elect its I candidates. To desert it now, when fthe "tenderness born of the death of its great leader has not yet passed away, would be to commit in act somewhat approaching the sacriligious. After speeches by United States District Attorney Stone and Colonel Anzi Fuller, of Uniontown, the !fleeting dissolved. 5,1 `What the Erse Hertikt has to Say. ITS OPINION OF mesas NOBLE, TM. DEMOCRAT/0 CANDIDATE FOR STATE TIIFASITBNS.-A WORD WITH ITS CON rzsaloimlim. The Erie . Herald, the Democratio organ of Erie County. which opposes he election of Orange Noble, Democratic candidate for State Treas urer, addresses its contemporaries of the State .in explanation of its course as follows: The Herald considers it 'a duty it owes -to its contemporaries throughout the State to set them right in regard to its opposition to Orange Noble. .the democratic candidate for state treasurer. The assumption that Mi. Noble is pop ular in his own bailiwick and that' he will cagy it with a-"sweeping majority' is merely an assumption. The fact is, My, Noble is far from being popular at home, as we shall proceed to show. He wait the nominee of the democracy last year for the assembly, and, instead of carrying the eity sweepingly a most herculean fight was required to pull him through at all. Hon. Alfred Short, a gentleman who does not •reiside .. in Erie; was a candidate Eat the same time, and the following are the majorities. in Erie city: _ • - Short, for congress - .432 Noble, for assembly It will thus be seep: that . Mr. Noble ran over three hundred behind Mr. Short. Now, in the face of this, how can ski intallianal ilaner tha Lannasztat Tn. North American—whiolt paper' cannot find what there is in Noble's recoil "to show that he-is a public-spirited and upright man, not a millionaire after the model of William H. Euglish?"— how, we ask, can the Intelligencer in vite the North American to "inquire at Mr. Noble's home?" Again, we doubt if the Intelligencei knows how much it is misrepresenting Mutters when it . says: The fact that The Erie Eeei:iiug Herald is not supporting Mr. Noble has been very widely and gleefully adver tised by . the republiclin papers. It does not appear, however, that it is having a damaging effect upon Mr. Noble's pros pects. As yet not a deMocrat has been found in Erie 'who will not vote for him, and hundreds Of republicans will. This is nut because The Herald has not been a very respectable paper, but be- Cause its present, coarse is believed to be the result of a . petty personal pique which the democracy , cannot afford to let effect a state campaign:- The Herald is estopped from saying anything effect ive against Mr. Noble by its own record ed attitude toward him .when a. candi date for the legislators last year. We will be plain with the: Intelligen cer, and inform it most distinctly that it is an error. , If Tiae Herald is not damaging Mr. Noble's prospects, why did Mi. Noble's friends fled it neces wary to start a weak, silly campaign sheet in this city to slander the pro prietors of The Herald? Asia the Intel ligencer's statement that "as yet - ,,not a democrat has been found in Eris who will not vote for him (Noble), and hued-. reds's!' Republicans will"—it is mere moon-shine. There are hundreds of lemocrats in Erie who Will not vote for Mr. Noble,—who would, not, indeed, votefor hint as an assemblyman—and not a dozen republicans whci sal vote f ,, r him. Again, the \ lntelligezicer itatee that the Course -of The Herald when Mr, Noble wee a candidate for the leg i"lature "estop it from allying anything effectual against Mr. Noble." • In this, as in all its points, the Intel ligence? is wrong. An assemblyman is one office—a state treasurer is / another. Almost any MA a is competent to :tot_ as an assemblfm:m—few man can. admin ister the vast revenuer' of a State suc cessfully. But as an assemblyman Mr. Noble betrayed his conatitnents in hie course on the judicial bill. The sen timent of the democrats of the county wasunanimoue against the bill, and Mr. Noble was apprized of the fact. Yet he worked for it and voted for it. He also supported, by his vote, all the in iquitous measures brought befcre the legislature. Indeed, as an assembly mat he was a complete failure. _ The Intelligencer must do the justice to The Herald to say that it shows plainly and fairly that it (the Latelli gencKbas been deluded by the friends of Mr. Noble. Thaabove figures speak for thcinselve.s, a n d 'are very significant. We'assuro the Intelligencer that Orange Noble will not carry his own city. We know whereof we spesk. David. Davis Reproached• Oh, you perfldeous old man! You never shall make love to us again. And don't yOu wink and leer, Mr. D It don't do any good.. Your stomach is too big to be honest. You look like a porpoise and its a mercy how any one was ever deceived by you. Go to! You are little better than one of the wicked, and you stay out o' nights, and there's no knowing the company you keep. You didn't expect it? Fiddle 4icks! Black Jack has bean flattering your fat vanity with smutty jokes and ,promises for a fortnight. Eh? kou don't deserve —1 That you don't you old sinner. You think it very fine sitting up there in your !utiles-- Puffing and blowing like a hippopotamus —but you are only - the laughing, stock of the senate and the country. : Come! none o'that! No ogling, if you please, The Democratic party is nut that sort of a girl. Goon, old chair-warmer go oh. • All this comes from the fact that the broadest thing about you is the seat of your pantloons!—Louis tulle Journal. .400.70,9" - .. - .......,. :-. . -.... .;.-:::: , ( 4 , Tins:: :-,- If r. . t fito4l...kgi4.*tiits:- - cositisitia. , _ .7b the keeirva of Penotsyialitiat • OUrs-is "a government of 'the ; peo ple, by the people, and for the people, —of the `•people, since - all 'authority springs fiom tht.nri by the people, , since their will; when expressed through established voluntary and legal forms; should be respected and obeyed; for the people; in the fact that whatever la time done. should be done for their welfare. lotspted maxims_are these. They are:given shape by the spirit 4f our custom', and laws, and _ direct et pressio', n by martyred President it a time when they had just been saenti fted by the best blood of the . nation. There was an election last year, and the result was confessed on.all sides to have been fairly. reached. ',it showed both an electoral and popular majority for a Republican President and Vi President. The bullet of an assassin has robbed the people of their personal choice; and in his stead they have se cured by constitutional and acceptable methods his distinguished colleague:: Since thelelection, events have crowded thick and • fast, but the on-looking world saw a Republic, in every mate rial view, unshaken by calamity; our own people saw, through the instru mentalities of our laws_ and Conatitu- the tion, a.fatthful reflection of their wii, in the more immediate change incident to the death of their President, and they"had almost permitted their politi cal vigilance to relax and take an in differently easy air, when it was arous ed by a partizan act on , the part of the political organization which did not represent the people in the struggle for, governmental policy. 'For the second time in our history "a prize had been drawn iii' the lottery of assassi nation," by a common, foe;. and, _in both cases, the fee was quick . in the search' for every cumulative profit. The Democratic party did seek - Ns teir 7 tisan profit from the murder of Lincoln, and, unwarned by that experience, in its greed for power, repeated the at tempt but a j week ago. Andrew Johnson's betrayal of the idea that, the legal expression of the will of the peo ple must be respected, was' compensa ted afte: a struggle of many months; the recent betrayal of a public trust by the Democrotic Senators was, so far as we can now judge, - partially met' within two 'days. A bad purpose has been defeated, and while' the will of. the people has not been fully guarded, or their policy guaranteed, the Rept*- , of __the .Senate ,hase at least assassination and for a time cheCked the greed of ever- watchful enemies. The saddeit of all .deaths,_ the legal succession, - the theft of the second place in the gift of the r6ople, and its partial restoration have transpired with confusing _speed; yet not so fast ,but that the reflecting man could give some little thought to the fact, 'that if this gevernment of ours is to be pre served "as of the people, by the peo ple, and for the people," there must be neither direct nor indirect overtures to a partisan foe wilich has never yet bowed to the doctrine—which was: the friend of slavery, :11 a great section the author of rebellion, in yet other sections its eider and abettor—and ,in all times subseqnent to our greateSt civil-crisis, the persistent foe of every advance toward a more perfect freedom. With its inherent belief in Slavery, it ' opposed emancipation, civil rights, school house in the places where it was m ost. needed; 'and instead of • . fa voring and fostering those who suffered for their- country; it has, by every insidious agency, sought to reward those who betrayed it. This is not true of all Democrats, but it is true of the leaders, into.' whose hands power will be thrust by failure to hold Re .publican strongholds. They have a machinery which is cohesive in its power; which permits no freedom of opinion, which never ;divides, and which grinds on until. its own force breaks 'it. The power 'of selection still rests with the Republicans of Pennsylvania. Ohio has riven from her grief to confirm her selection by majorities relatively greater than in Presidential years. lowa makes a , Most intelligent choice with unanimity. The Virginians, struggling to rid them selves of a form of Bourbon rule which is the same-wherever it obtains, were, until recently, divided as to, policies; but in the-rush of events have throctin away every idea; of faction, and are now ready to place themselves in the column of progress. The ,Republicans .of New York. in natural sOlicitude for a distinguished citizen called to the point of danger, have buried-from sight every dividing issue, and now present an example of harmony which has been wisely imitated in ,nearly all other States: There is a needed , unity of watchfulness, to the end that 'the pres ent, and at least the near future of our country may be guarded from possible calamity. Shall we, as Pennsylvanians be less dutiful? When, in the past, sacrifices ,were called for, have we ever, in either - hatred, sulleness or dispair stood off? A claim to patriotsm but mocks the term' when it will not sac rifice convenience, comfort, even hap piness and life for the country's weal. A profession of fealty to. 'admittedly just political principles, is hut sham-and a pretence when it will not sacrifice something to unity,and when it will , not blend a personal purpose into the one which moves for 'the common. good. When public dangers quick succeed each other, when gut a single life stands between approved goverriment and a revolution in politics, there ought to be no mom for mere . personalities, none for the detractioU of friends, none_ for the creation.of f: :ion,and there ought to be universahreurobation 'of counsels which are openly confessed to be in the intetest of the eneniy. Good soldiers do not Stop to dread mere bruises when the battle is on, nor do they march out of the line by either flank at the beck of the foe. - 107 To admit that any considerable num ber of Pennsylvaniani will be less soli citous of the National good than those of our neighboring States, is to belie our past history. The Administration f President Arthur from its very beginning, needs at the least the sup port of all Republican States and of none more than our own i whicl bas proved the Keystone to Republican ism, as she has to the Union. That support can only be extended , through ballots cast for General Bally, the standard-bearer of the party—a gal lant soldier, wonxtdcd while heading his troops, , ascending through high personal merit from the bars of a cap -tam to the stars of a general—now a modest, quiet citizen, not a politician, not an office-holder,—one who earns his bread by' the sweat of his brow— yet far too good to oppose, and of all men the last to be Selected as the victim of spites against others. There was at least fairness in the hissing and ex plosion of the shell which struck him lit 'Gaines' laM; there is neither generosity nor manliness in the at tempt to crush him with missiles. pie flisseilly aimed at others. Our Ndtional Administration in Re, publimin in its make.up and character; we hnow it as such; the world inowa it as such. It can, therefore, only find - support in Republican majorities. We have no other method of' support; the world abrnad recognizes no other, and no persuasion of secret enemies, of demagogues, or Any apparent apathy of the open foe othould be permitted to hire us from the one direct object—. -support of the National Government and the administration thereof. This withheld, and chsgTin and; disaster will quickly succeed each other. 4 . The rasa who can 1?e persuaded to lose one battle, in thqtope that he can more edgily win the next, does not live. to see bow false is his philosophy. The , Republican _ party represents issues and purposes which are worthy the most active effort of all , who be- neve in tie principles which have made our government what it is--"of the people, by the people, and for the peoplii." It represents ideas of admin istration specially dear to all. Presi dent Arthur has vowed that ; "All i the noble aspirations of my lamented . predecssor which found ressioa in his life, the measures devis ad and suggested during his brief ad !ministration to correct abuses and `enforce economy, to advent* prosper• ity and promote the general welfare. to insure domestic security. and main-: taro friendly and' honorable relations, With the nations of the . earth, will .be garnered in the hearts of'of the people, and it will be my earnest endeavor to profit and to see that the Nation shall profit by his example and experience." His faithful adherence to this deCla ration calla for direct encouragement from Pennsylvania. Support. of the Republican cause and ticket will do it; support of any othpr, means. its con demnation.: The administration, its friends !and enemies, and all intelligent on-lookrs 'will say so, and none will. 'more qUickly gloat over such, a calam ity than the journals and - politicians who are now counselling division. . The Republican party is liberal enough for all. Its national deeds and declarations are not forgbtten; its latest enunciation in this State points unequivocally to reform in a plank which received the warm support of 251 representatives in State conven tion assembled • while that of the Dem ocratic party plays with dangerous recklesness on the edges of. commun ism.' Must these declarations in repl pefter,Vtitst, tywohelii—uh. 6 6.444./rigt the irresponsible and the noisy on the rostrum? Only barbarous tribes wild ly follow their howling dervishes. The 'statesaien of • the century have been members of the party. It has counted in its ranks names which have become immortal, and are so con fessed of all the earth—Lincoln, Sew ard, Chase, Sumner, Garfield r— names which are nurtured in our panty's tra ditions even more tenderly than in his toric pages. It is the party of reform, for it is progressive and never looks backward • it is the party of liberty, and constantly • seeks a more perfect freedom. True, some have 'wearied of its good work • some have straggled in the march of progress ; others have re-. garded their bruises moretluin the goal, beyond ; some have even fallen by the' , wayside. but the earnest -and the active still march on add gather as they move. You can on the Bth of! November, next, so snape your 13111101 A, citizens or Pennsylvania, that they will prove the voice of order, p,omotive of stable gov ernment in the State and ;;Nation. If they are cast as the mere - iffaifs of pas sion, the double-edged' instruments. of faction, the world may be .justified in forming a different opinion of our peo ple—for their character will at least seem to .have changed from the sturdy and steadfast, to that which. is weak and vaseilliating. Let nit remember' Pennsylvanians, that there is no " form of mental slavery more humiliating to its victim than that which yields itself captive to every sensation. Iv: *:4ys I (4>: ,):& : v It is considered important that you should be fully informed concerning the manner in which the Republican party baSi managed. the finances of the Comnionwealth since 1860,--the first year that trust was committed to it. For a period of tweuty years the democrats have only had charge of the State Treasury three years, in 1863 under W. V. McGrath, and in 1878 and 1879 under A. C. Noyes. In 1861 the debt of Pennsyluanig was the lar gest owed by any state in the Union, and $3,000,000 was then - necessarily added to the enormous load to enable our troops to march to the defence of the Nation'slife. But the crushing load has been manfully borne,- and hoaorahly paid, until the , debt), • less e vailable securities in the Sinking Fnnd pledged to its redemption, is now one of the smallest owed by , any . State in - debt. The total reduction since 1861 has been $19,033,420.84; and the present, debt is $21,561,989.65. The Sinking Fund 103191111 LS to $8,000,000, making the net debt' 813,561.988.95: When the' last Detni.ocratie State Treasurer handed order the office to the Republican incumbent, a very large sum of warrants were unpaid, and con stititned a floating debt., This has all been paid, and, at this moment, ample funds are held to meet every legal de mand on the State. • ' While thus reducing' the . debt, 'the Republican party has etodily lessened the bineens of the people. In 1866, the tax on real estate, produc ing an annual revenue of $1,000,000, was taken off. In 1871, the tax oil offices, trades and professions, amount ing annually to $75,000, was repealed. In 1873, the tax on horses and cattle, producing a revenue of $50,000 a year, was taken off; and in 1879, the .taZ on coal,' yielding annually $700,000, was repealed. Thus, $15.000,000 of tax on the homes of our people hive been remitted in as many years. Re lief-, to workingmen, amounting to $750,000 has been extended by abol ishing the tax on occupations; $350,- 000 has been•remitted, chiefly to our farmers, by repealing the 'law .taxing live-stock; and $700,000 has been taken off our great coal industry for the past 'year. But this creditable record does not stop here. , While the debt was :disappearing, notwithstand ing reduced taxation, amounting in the aggregate $16,800,000, the State sup .ported her noble charities with a gen emus band, and gave a lavish aid 'to the Centennial Exhibition,- as' will 'be seen from the annexed table: "Pr" el=b'lMZEl2:::l4l3i24l3ll Common Schools • • • 11,919,111.00 " the Centennial Exhibition • 1,00000.00 Making a total of • • 1 ?: . $27,207,150m0 Seventeen years ago", a few profess ed Republidan politicians in this State had shown their capacity for leader ship by reducing the party to a minor ity. The legialsture was lost, and McGrath, democrat, became State Treasurer. Abler leaders came for ward in - thit crisis, and the . Republi cans immediately regained tia-ir sup remacy. These reject*d leaders, un able longer to plunder the State and ruin theltepublicae party; at once 'be. came "Reforpers.' They commenced an attack upon the financial manage ment of our party, it being the subject least understood by the average voter. For hilt a generation these "Reform ers" have'' kept the State ringing with denunciations of a work; which, outside our borders, is looked on and com mended with universal applause.. The Republican voter has been told each year that our State Was systematically and ecguitantly robbed, and that this unending robbery was performed by the State Treasurers, the results of whose It ork is a part of this address. Each year official - facts have been • pre senta disproving these charges, but the "Reformers" keep up the assault, as though the Republicans of this State were without the advantages 'of com mon schools and common sense. The orieuel projectors of this movement have long since. "reformed" themselves into the Democratic party, but the "reformer" of-to•day exhibits the same lofty contempt of facts officially pro mulgated each year by the fiscal offi cers of the State Government, froth which - the figures here submitted have been taken. _ _ On the question of official peculation by the Treasurerscharged with this crime, the following comprehensive exhibit of their work would seem to be conclusive to all who consider argu• meats and respect truth. Of the mon eys collected and expended during - the last seventeen years, the total is as fol lowsi For ordinary' menses of the State Gorenusent, • • - - -- $86,784,630 For the Centennial, Charities, lle• forrestories, etc., - • - • 27,207,149 For reduction of the Slats pebt, • 7 19,033,420 Total. ----- $131,025,205 Of this - vast sum only $18660.94' are not now available, but the Attorney General is pressing suits to recover it, and will recover it from the bondsmen of es-State Treasureri. The State is amply secured. Do not these facts carry us safely beyond the assaults of demagogueS? and do they not compel all who assail to seek a footing alone upon falsehodd and slander? Are they not strong enough to bid us carry our appeal be yond the lines of our party,—into the , counting rooms of all merehants and manufacturers, the gates of our • ship yards and' rolling mills, the shops of our myrids of workmen, and the homes of the quiet and non-partisan=there to ask that a government so careful of its obligations; so charitable to the I lame, the halt and the Blind, so liberal to its schools, and yet so just to shall be perpetuated? • By order of the Republican Stale i Committee, I - THOMAS V. COOPER, • • H Chairman CONRPICCCHIS BY THEIR &BSENCE.----112- deed, men, women and children of all ages, ranks and-conditions, of all naz tionalities, of all creeds and sects, of all colors and of all political opinions, con tributed to this fund to place this fam- ily of the Man who had given his life to' his country nbove want or fear of it —all, with one single exception, for among this long array of names there is not to be found the name of a sin gle Stalwart politician. The names of arnui, 'CM=emir, Im a niu y Ctm Sharpe, and all of that host of Stal wart chieftainS, are conspicious only by their:absence. Not a 'dollar, not a pen ny iron that rich and powerful faction for the relief of the widow and ren of the President Who died because of-his stern; unyielding defense of a constitutional principle.. Attorney General iidaoVeagh, ' by his anal and persistent refusal, leaies the President no choice, but the selection of a : new legal _adviser. President Arthur should see to it - that the new Attorney General is a man whose name will be accepted as an -assurance that the Star-route thieves are to be pursued to the end. Benjamin Hairis Brewster is such a man. There may -be others, but here is a -man already in the case, the choice of', Pentisylvania, represent ing the came State as • his predecessor, whose nomination would mean onlvone thing, the prosecution of the ring, and idiom selection would place the Admin istration above challenge or criticiro on this vital issue. —Philadelphia Press. The statement made sometime ago that General Garfield was the first active member of a Christian_ church eves elected to the Presidency seems, in; a review, to be nearer the ,truth than many at first supposed. _ Washington was the, only positive exception, as he Was a devout Episcopalian. John Adams and his son inclined to Unitar ianism, hut the latter was not publicly identified with that church . ; and about the former there' is doubt. Several of the Presidents became chur4 members after retiring from office--notably , Jack son and Buchanan, and, we think, Polk also. Harrison may have been a church member, but the ease is not clear at present. Jefferson was " free thinker." Most of those not named attended church - more or less, but were not enrolled as church memhers, or if so in any one case, had little to do with church affairs.—Philadelphia Press. Life of Jame* 4. Gaiiiem. The life of the late President Garfield, of B. B. Conwell, published byilleorge Stinson & Co., is a handsome volume of four hundred pages, neatly bound, on good paper. in plain large type admirably printed, and containing nineteen handsome illustrations Vrith a flue steel engraved portrait of James A. Garfield at a fronticp piece. The history contains a gervalogy of the Garfield fsmily.te-.3 iv. them from English ancestry. IS* emigr e stion to this contiy and down to and incl uding the immediate family of the martyred President. history of the early struggles of his par ents. His birth and early development,; , the incidents of his life, his army service.- his• service inCongressi his nomination fur the Presidency, and election; inauguraboir_and finally the assassination.. Fro ; .the. br i ef examination made of-the Truth, we heliepe l it presents a comet view of hill life and public services, and it is certainly very readable and interesting, and well worth the price; in leather $2.00 cloth $1.50. Mr. Wm. A; Slay ter, of North Towanda. is agent for the work. and *ill receive subacnptions for the same. - We hope it may And a large sale. . • .L.IIW AGENTS WANTXD. To sell Dr. Chases Recipes; or II Information for Everybody, in every county in the United States and Canada& Enlarged by the Pub lisher to 618 pages. It contains over 2.000 household recipes and is suited to all classes and conditions of society. A wonderful 'book and; a household necessity. It sells at sight Greatest inducements ever flared to book agents. Sample copies cent by mail, Post paid, • for 12. • Exclusive territory given. Agents more than doable their money. Ad dress Dr. Chase's Steam Printing House. Ann Arbor, Michigan. $l5-3m. arzAm mei lama-Tzar moms POWER. This steam power nu wbeels s portable and may • be eerilymounted hsule , l wttb i a team to any desired point. It id adapted to the propulsion of Tuansurra MACIIISZe, wood sawing; teed cotter'. portable sot mill.. or soy other' light machinery. It it of simple construction. durable and easily Co. Manufactured by Charleserrigo Co., Groton, ToMpkins COunty, N. Y C. W. 1101.40.118, General Agent. Ulster. PA., July 21-u 0 1 .111/ Tasseling!. Back," is the exclamatien of more than one poor haid-working man and woman. Do you kuow why it aches? . It is becautie your kidneys arof over-tasked and need strengthening, and your system needs tube cleansed of bad hu mors. Sidney-Wort is the medicine yon need. "It acts like a charm." asys'lC well known physician. "I never knew it to fail." Liquid or dry sold by Druggists.—Bostcn Post. • `There Is a Balm in Gilead. The success which has Marked the intm duotion of Cream Balm. a Catarrh remedy, prepared by Ely Bros., Owego, N. Ir., is in deed marvelous. Many persons in Pittston and vicinity are using it with most satisfac tory results. A lady down town is recttrer, lug the sense of smell, which the had not enjoyed for fifteen years, through the use9f the Balm. She had given up tier case as i 6. curable. Mr. Barber, the Druggist, has amid it in his family and commends it very highly. In another column a young-Tunkhannock lawyer, known to many of oar readers,. tiia ttfles that he was cured of partial dealt:trim It is certainly every efficient remedy.—Piiis. fon, Pa., Gazette, Aug. 15, 1879. My son, aged pipe years., was afflicted with Catarrh; the nstlef Ely's Cream Bsira affect ed a complete cure. W. E. liammas. Drug , g jet, Easton, Pa. Pike 50 cents. 027-2 w. This ono fact is being Imought before the minds of the people of the 11. Holdall's Spavin Cure is not excelled as a liniment. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. WANTED. A good second , hand Shingle Machine: Address with description andprice, if. B. M., P. O.:Box X. Liberty, 'riogs county, Ps.' - • Oct. 27-2 mos. Great 'Combination. THE DVIIY 11011RNA1 -)AND(-- ! DEMORESTS ILLUSTRATED •MAGAZINE. Both Publications, One Year -.1V11111,...... $4lO (SEAEN PIPLY.)' Dxmousirr's Morrtity is justly entitled the World's Model Magazine. The Largest in Form, the Largest in Circulation, and . the best TWO Dollar Family. Magazine issued. lard will be the eighteenth year of its publication; it is now im• proved so extensively as to place it in the front rank of Family Periodicals, and equal to any magazine. It contains 6t pages, largo quarto, x 113 inches, elegantly printed on tinted Piper, fully -illustrated, each number having steel engravings, oil picture, or art subjects. published by W. Tonnings Demorest, New York and by special agreement combined with the OAIU fOORNAI '4tl kc.o Per Year T COTTAGE HE HEARTH, Published at Boston. - An Mitstrated Magazinn of Home Arta and Horne Culture: Contains Morereading of Pa...ems-I. Down:Eric Wowriv Otall [IRMA SMILES.). sumps. =aa, OLUer maga:atm VI Ate price. Each number contains Portraits and Sketches of Distinguished ;Hen, Superior Home Music, Floral - Articles. Stories and - Adventure., ,Choice Poetry, the latest fashions, the Mother's Chair, the Studint's Corner, • the Young Folks' Window, all fully illustrated. Terms, $1.50 a year, in advance, postage prepaid CLUB RATES We are enabled to Make the folloirizig liberal offer to our readers: To all who - subscribe within two months and pay $2.00 in advance, we will send 'the firrusucart and the "•Co:rracm Elmira" for ono year: This will give you a 'good paper and a choice magszina tor, a little mare than the price of either. Please send in your subscriptions at once.- After January Ist the two papers will be 52.25. HA.R.PErit'S YOUNG PEOPLE An Illustrated Weekly-11 rims SUITED TO BOYS AND GIRLS OF FROII SIX TO SIXTE.E.NI gains OF AGE. Vol. 111. compiencep.November 1, 1881, NOW IS THE TIME TO SUBSCRIBE The YOtleil PZOPLZ his been from the first successful beyond antklpstion.—N. P. Erenrog Port, It has a distinct purpose to 'which it steadily adheres-:-that, _namely. of - i.uppianting the vicious papers for the young with a paper more attractive, as well as more wholesome.—Borfon Journal, For neatness, elegance of engravin g and con tents generally, it is unsurpassed by any publi cation of the kind yet brought to our notice,-, Pittsburgh Gault. 2 Its weekly visits are eagerly looked for, not only by the children, but also by parents who are anxious to provide pure literature for their girls and boys.—Christian Adrocatc, Buffalo, N.Y. A weekly paper for children which parents need not tear to let their children read at the family'fireside:—Hariford Doff,'" Timer; • Jtuit• the paper to take the eye and secure the attention of the boys and girls.— Spring/Idd Union: TERMS. HARPER'S. YOUNG PEOPLE, 1 Per Year, Postage Prepaid,l Brooms Num:rotas Four Cents each. ' The Bound V olume for 1881 Mill be ready early in November. Price $3.00; postage prePaid. Cover for Youso PEOPLE for 18$1, 35 cents; Post' age, 13 cents additional. Remittances should bo 'made by Post-Office Stoney Order or , Draft, to avoid chance of loss. 'ewspapers are not to copy this advertisement without the caress order of HAIIPEII & 13BOTHIEB. Address -HARPER Ie,BROTHERS. • :g• • New York. ORNAMENTAL JOB PRINTING V a specialty at the itzPoimicas (Ake. J OB PRINTING OF ALL KINDS don eat abort notice and rmenable rates at the REPUBLICAN office. ALE BILLS PRINTED at SHORT notice end ressoneble rates at the ItErrs uceie ellice. c - - LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS, NOTE HEADS; he. printed in the best style of the art et the KErvntieix office. • pNVELOPEg OF ALL QUALI _LI ties and sizes a speCialty at the I - UPI:MI.ICM; ob Printing . Office. , tiro faticnial ' , ,,1 ink TOWANDA PA. CAPITAL PAM, IN $125,000 SURPLUS FUN 80,000 This Bank offers unusual facilities. for the transaction of a general banking business. , N. N. BETTS. Cashier. Cuticura Or Blood Poisoning, whieh itelmits lo FEVER SORE. What I tell you ls the truth,. told for no ether purpose but to testify tolhe merits of the "t - 71. CCIII RIMEDTZ.S. 3lr. Frederick Yestpn. Oohs town, has been troubled for years. with a Feler Sore on one of his legs. Last fall sedan whiter he could hardly walk. a step. I induced hid' Ve take yottr Stampmi. 'foil's taken about foie bottles Curtccsa Itesovrt•y, and used the CG - 11.1 and Crrictrza seag externally. Ills leg to day is almost well, and he walks with ease. It • sight to behold—black, and swollen eery .I wish you could iseklis leg td. day. Thochaase would astonish you. . (XIS. Trapv-Aifr,d. LMONTHLY 1882. , JOB. POWELL, President teb. 1.'711•, PT2 MIA Abscesses, Ulcers, Sores, Urban "cicaitoils and Itching liar more. Cured SALT RHEUM. . will llctiousnld, 2.42, Dearborn St.. ebta g ,, gratefully acknowledges a cure of Salt Rheum on head, neck, face, arms and legs fur seventeen years; not able to walk except on hands and knees for one year; not able to help himself for eiaht years; tried hundreds ofzemddles; docton pronounced his case hopeless , permanently cuted by'tbs-Ccricout Ramitnir.s. _ GREATTLOOD MEDICINES. • The half has nbt been told as to the great curs tire powers of the Csrluccha Itsatsviss. I have paid hundreds-of dollars for medicines to cure diseases of the blood sad akin, said never found anythins yet to equal the eirriersa Rawantrm. CIIAS. A. WILLIAMS, Providence, R. I: TREATMENT. The Cnticnra treatment for the cure of fiktn, Scalp and Blood Diseases', consists in the in terval use of Curtcytr. BisorszaT, the new Blood Pori. her, and the e ternal use of .Curicuna and Cc-n -ouns SOAP, the Great Skin Ctiresi. Price of- Curicuss, small boxes, 50c; large es, V. Cr Ilona BESOLVIST. $1 per bottle. Cc . r. 'CMS SOAP, 25c. CUTICLIZA SHAVTA743 SOAP, sold by all druggists. Depot, WEEKS iS POTTER, Boston, MIIIP. CATARRH! Eiiil S•gord's Radical Cure, Complete Treatment For $l.OO. Clear head and votes, easy breathing, sweet breath, • perfect smell,' taste and hearing; no cough, no choking, no distress.• Mei.: happy conditions are brought about in .the aeveres: cases • of Catarrh by that most agreeable, eco nomical, speedy, safe and never failing spenfr, Sangoan's B.LDICAL CrIIZ. Complete and Math b:e treatment, ocuslating.of one bottle of the RaDICAL CURE, one box of CAT.11.6.88.11.‘ SOLTIVrr. and One , iIIII3OTED /16n.A.LE11. all wrapped in 026 .'Nusist. (es IC tres tiashsoui directions, and .gold by'ali di I. Ask tor 26.6.•61"021.1)LAD' CAL CUBE. - • Geneial Agents, WEEKS a POTTER. - ; - • . Boston; Mats RATS, MICE, QAkSO/vs• Roaches, Water 87z.4 and Red and- Black EXTERMINATOR t z Alls43.Z 973 v E e .r z L a ir . Idrs:ATOR and di , . Notes? of bad stnr-ni. - Bsrns, granerl• ar.d households often cleared in single night. Best and cheapest , rermia killer In the world. No fa:l - in thirty years. Lvery box Warrsitted. by all grocers and druggists. Ask fur PAR: SONS'. Mailed for Vc. by WEERS POTTLE:. Boston, Massachusetts. • , -Peterson is constantly improving N. Y.) Husbandman. c CHEAPEST AND BEST! .5'A PETERSON'S MAG/M*E. Splendid rr-minms for gAtting up clubs Large Fize Steel Engraving. 11andsome Photograph Album. Extra Copy for FULL-SIZE PAPER PATTERNS! gar SCPPI.ZUTIrr nil! be given in every "inviter for ISV2, containing a/WI-size pattern for- a Indy :. or child's dress. Every Su;)scriber will recoil:re, der. the year. twelve of these patterns, worth more, alone, than the substiptionpriee.—fa PETEREIreeft MAGIA223s is the bat and etc:pate! the lady hooka. It gives ,more for the money, and combines greater merits, then any other. In short it has the Best Steel Eliemaviriffq I Best Co'.ored 0- Fashions, Best Dress Patten:, Rl - et Original Stories, Beat Work Table' Patterns, Best Music, etc., etc Its immense circulation and long estabbehe.l reputation enables its proprietor to distance all competition. Ia 1582, it Rill ccntinue a brilliamt succession of SPLENDID ILLUSTRATED. - ARTICLES The stories, novelets, etc., in -Peterson" are admitted to be the best publish° All :le mink popular femalewriters •coutribUte to it. In lbei. about 100 original stories all'. be given, and in addition SIM COPTHIGHT Z4.;ocar.ars, by Ann 8.. Stephens, Prank Leo Benedict, Jane 0. Austin, , Marietta Holley, Lucy H. Hooper, and ]lre. E. L. Cushing, The COLORED STEEL FASHION PLATES In •Peterson" are ahead of all others. These plates are engraved on steel, Twice THE -rsTAL, sus, and are unequalled for beauty. They :iii' be superbly colored. Also, HouseholdlCookerl: and other re4eiptit; articles on- Art Echbroidery, Flower Ccdture„ House Decoration—ln short. everything interesting to ladles. Terms (always in advance) $2 :i_year. W usr.WALLELED OFFEnS TO crxas. 2 Cordes for $3.,'X11 With a cagily engrarivg, 3 4.50 1"IICSII! DON'T WAKE T 117.31:: or a haudeome PHOSOGIIAPII Alarm. for, getting up the Club. 4 Copies for $6.60 J With an extra. copy of the 6 - %CO Magazine for Iss2. sis a prem Wm, to the person getting up the Club. &Copies for $B.OO j With both an extra- copy of 7 " " 10.a0.1 the Magaztne for lob:. and the large steel engraving, or PUOTOOrArri ALIIVIL to the person getting up the Club. • For larger clnbs still greater induce ments. Address, post-paid, CHARLES J. PETERSON, 304 Chestnut pt., Philadelphis. Ps iiiirSpeoimens sent gratis, if Written for, to get nn clubs with. -...f.ludispensaline to the Library. Clergymalu. Law yer, Physician. Editor, Teacher, Student, and all of any calling in life who desire knowledge." Encyclopaedia Britannica The American This great work Is oeyond comparison superior n its eloaborate and exhaustive character to all aindlak works. The contributors aze the most dietingatabed and original thinkers and writers of the present and of the past; • • - • This !sine is.the Ninth rwrision in a space of over 100 years since its inception. and this re print, a copy in every particular of the British Edition. is the best and cheapest woric.ever vfer. ed to the American people. - The artieles are written in a .most - attractivir style, and the quantity of matter in - each volume is ono-third greater per volume than in any other Cyclopedia sold at the same rates. - The work COLIMIID , Jausands of-Engravings ea Steel and Wood, ac.. it is printed from entirely new typo made expressly- for it. It will be comprised in 21 Imperial octave vol- nines, four 01 which are now ready, and the see• ceeding volumes will be issled at tho rate of three year. Price per vol., cloth bipding. - - Bold only by subsciptiori. For ivclean rtgel apply to the Publishers. • . J. IM.•I3TODDAra 429 CaltiNVr STIIZZT. • in t2O In 3 f .4a ro rut D. DAVIS' HAIR RENEWER.. No other lienewer yet discovered l) its woi 4 so quickly and sat Lsfaetoril yas 01.1. It win restio gray and faded hair to its original beauty ; it immediately prevent the fslling out of the bait; Reims dandruff, Itching ernptions,:tad keeps tbe scalp clean ; It will cause the hair to grow wilcr 6 it has fallen off and Imparts gloss and fres:uses: 3 ; it softens the hair when harsh and dry and Is ea' tirely free from all irritating matte r; it has* verTtlest reputation and . gives universal fatale" tion.. .Do not fail to try it. For sale by all druilll is ... t . s " , Priee. 75 ete. per bottle. Prepared by Chas. Davis,' Calf** r 4 1 Fat Bale by all Druggitta and D 4111115 EIZIA - '.lll