The Democratic Watchman. BY P. GRAY MEEK JOE W. FUREY, ABROCILTI EDITOR Terme, ;2 per Annum, in Advance BELLEFONTE, PA Friday Morning, August 4, I DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET FOR AUDITOR 61 , :N. WILLIAM M. N EsS, OF l'llIVI)F1.1'111% FOR SURVIM OR 1:1::\ ER.u. cAr . r..lAmEs 11. (1)()I , Eit, OF LAWRI - Aci , , <or:\ 11 Demooratio County Convention The Democratic N'ggiers of Centro County will meet at ehe regular places of holding Borough tool tournighip election. on I, Vfl 'R DA). the 7th day of Atignggt neat, hetaer 11 till', bourn of threw and seven gg'clog M , 10 elect delegateggi to attend ri convention to log held at the Court ❑muse, at Bellefonte on Tuesday the Bth day of Atiguggt, A It' 1871 Which convention will put in nomination, one candidate for AgAemblv, one candidate for County Treasurer, tag, modulates for Associ- WO Judge', one candidate for District Altor ney, one candidate for ('Ollllll/iN.iiMer, (Ml` candidate for Comity Sit rye) or, and 11110 'all didair for comity Auditor The iltdcirities to h each district entitled 101 (4,111.1., t" wlt Ilidontc, Fl totriri l nnlr.ha r¢ " Philipeassim " • • 2 I n- hil Hogg" Inn ornio ' nrtin F. I gumon " Half Moon " tiowani " Htigton Liberty 1111acion M Pal t.ln Prnn Potter fin.vt Shoe " Spring Tar 14, I%nllser Korth By order of tho enmity rommii tee 11 1 Silll.Fß Chairman Democrats Watch Them! We have been ' , flown a copy of a circular letter from a railical lawyer of this place, to radical politicians in dif ferent iownehips of the county, urging them to get tho.e of their party who .10 not tale nn toll% C. part to pohticm I 0 attend the Ilemoreratic delegate elections to morrow, (Saturday, ) nod %01 e to insirtlet delegatem 40 A 'ippon certain of the Democratic candidates 111 this attempt to control the Demo crane delegatt•P, find therelo the t)el Ocratic county convention, w(• warn the I tettmeents of the county. h an attempt o' the patt rittltealtnitt to Ni cure by trickery, what they are nn :title to nt the !toile Ntt one hal, WI% right to s,..te tit illy I lettiocratic deli .drel 101111 ll° i 1011)! 11.1 V pledgt kieuself In SI/it. 4,11 re flersl . l , • nate!, 1101.1 It I+ the , lulu• of ,%lio are expected to prt,i , le at the .Wegate elrv•unns- the h,4n4hy COlLltillttee Melt to pledge even• titan polineal Foch. IC are un knot.. tt or Ir. doubt NVe have given this warainff.. We hope our lh•mo cralw, Irtro.di %ill profit TWO Lows 11.1taes. e have re eel% e.l, pa) I the Lan cast er Intell,grneer, the following letter, which tee publrah out of comparttion li,r the Afflicted parent, hoping that our excliangee may copy it and thutt aid ur r e .itoring t o a mother tier loAt children II ill, I' (), Lenoir ( o N t, July is, 1.71 I Mary 1.1104111, was lie Newhern, North I arolina, during Ow ear I was taken sick in the year lied, and lii not VI pect 10 live. I had two is() s, toy 011,11 Ihl Idren and Inning no other relation In Newl , ern, I gm o my,lleSi 11A1111,/11(.11 iill4 tune i.; veil,. old )to It man who said hie name wer 11 1 1111 t Holland. and nail he heed to ~i llO, and I gar.' Illy other chlid. John 1./1111,0111,kir011t I i years nil now.)to a man a hire" name I don ' t remillect, I think lie was a Colonel, and said he lived in Michigan After a hard spell of sickness, I recovered, slid in the mune of tied do ask every Mail end lady to help MO i 0 find ray dear children lam poor, 101 l 1 will reward any person a 110 may find either of them 114/111 , Lawson Is slue build, .holl I IAWM.II is heavy built, with large head and large eyes. 1 was raised In I pIIII meinty, N. e If any person ran giro MO Information of my children, they will please address Maar I.rwsori, • Pink 11111, I'. (i.„ Lenoir county, North Carolina. Tapers north and south, please copy I -FRED. GRANT, the eon of the President, who graduated with die• honor at Neel Point, only a few weeks ago, has made up hie mind to leave the military profeesion and accept a civil position ae engineer on the Pacific railroad. This, we think, ie fortunate, ae the American army would not be likely to survive the infliction of two GRANTIS of the Saline family. —The EmprePs Eugenie, accord. ing to the Tempe, on the oecaeion of the Papal Jubilee, sent a letter of co.n gratulation to (he Pope, through the Cardinal Lucien Bonaparte, together with an offering of one hundred thou. and franca in the name of the imperi al family. The Law Library Again. ~ The Centre Hall Reporter, in an nr tide on the Law Library, cite., in justification of the one here, the fact that a public library is maintained by the State nt Harrisburg. We would, however, beg leave to call our colem poraryk attention to the fact that there ii n vast difference betneen R pnbhc library. made up of all sorts of books for the reading and benefit of the pco ple in general, and a private law libra ry, containing nothing but law book., for the benefit of lawyers only, which k just exactly the difference betwedi the law library here and the miscella neous one at Harrisburg. At the lat ter place, the people support the libra ry, and are privileged to take out and read any books they wish. In Belle forte the people also support the libra ry, but it is wily the lawyers that are privileged to read the books. At liar rkburg, there is a-principal and assist ant librarian, who keep an account of every book taken out and note wheth er it be returned or not. Here, there is no librarian, and the lawyers take the books to their offices and never pretend to return them. Yet it is the people who pa, for these books, the same 84 at II artimitu rg. Anybody, with half an eye, can see the differ- MS6 Now, if the lawyers themselves would contribute so much apiece me ry neck, or every month, or every ~irar to keep up their own library, it could be all right and proper. But thin they (1(111 ' 1 do. They ask the peo pie to tiny books for them, and then charge their clients the highest kied of prices for the information which they dem e from thew. Such a pro reeding in, to say the least, somewhat out of the ordinary mode of doing bu- PIIIePP. In fact, it smacks very strong ly of "cheeil," and has a brassy tip pearance that isn't at all attractive. At every court there are from five to ten liquor cases, and all fines from this source are appropriated to the law library, together with all forfeited re cognizances. At the January - term, some 5 , 275,00 were collected in this way, which all went to the libraryi so that the aviiiertion that 0 eavailablfiiii come of the library is only about STS,- -Iti cent.tit year, Is all nonsense. In a liquor case, where the defendant is conticted, the court seldom et er un icy a less fine than Now, say there are lour or lice of these cases at each court, and it is easily seen to what a snug sum the fines soon amount. Add this to the forfeited re cogioiances, and we have quite a hamkome hind that Is taken out of the treaNiiry of the county and put in to the pockets of the lawyers! Well out thr•dt-ciplee of BI.A, 'MINE chuckle oyer this The people are buying them the books from which !het get their legal education, and will hate to pat again lor tic ad. ler they gel when they COMP it consult the 18,W eN. lithe!" trade or I.I"OleSh1011 repots such immunity front expense as this? The doctor, the preacher, the rarpentr r, the lilacksmali and the harmer are obliged to pay fur what book learning they get, but here in Centre roitrilp.we have the funny spec• tack present id of the people paying fur the e,lueauuio ul the lawyers! Take it all 'gall, a is about the roost absurd thing that. has transpired in our coup ty history. If the money realized front these fines and forfeited recognizances, and paid into this library fund, Willi allow4Ail to go into the county treasury, where it ought to go, it would make a very material diflerence in the taxes Newspaporlal \l'il lirimsport Starulard hqn paned out tpf the harid, of .111,1" k INS into those of H. A. Or ERNBEI li4q , late, col lector of this iliairier, arid \V, P. Fr lIKV, late of the Mauch (Munk Tune,,. We lciYll both the re tir4rig and the incormug editors title- CETI —The Tinder Herald, enlarged and improved, now makes its appearance as Zeigler's Demort (die Herald, and looks as lino as a fiddle. 'Uncle ,lafte' is an energetic editor, and makes a good paper. The New York Sun, (republican) h placed the following at its roast head : FOR PRESIDENT Farmers' and Meebanice . Candidate, Tile GREAT AND GOOD USEFUL If. GREELEY, Of TEXAS and fit;,W YORK. In an obscure corner of the same pa per, it presents the following: THE PRESIDENCY 07VICLUOLDERS' CANDIDATI For President, USELESS S. GRANT, TIII PAZUNT-TAKZIL. Broad Guage vs. Narrow Guage Me Ter ErlTOll l l or "Drgocn (TIC WATCII I I " hying mullets' the record of the vote of a portion of the 1,. C.& S.C. It. It. stusultholders, In your valuable paper of July— it occurred to me that an expressien of tiny humble opinion might not he out of phum I Write not particularly of 111, 00111 pant 100 hr respect tie merits or demerits of a lirowl or Narrow gunge It It., but supply lI lh n %ion of creating/I spirit of inquiry In the minds of those better qualified to lodge as to the proba ble effect and / 0111111, likely to follow the eon ,ummaclon of either:proteet Being moved by the sIUIIO ir,1111.1 1110111 0 11 1111.11, I truly believe and ebo.nbl, actuates each of the parties efer ed to t o ' the future notions and general msiut•rity uu( Itellefonto ititul the county at huge ,my limited ex pm wi l e. 4..1.. Inc to favor Ito, broad gulag, In itidulg the terms of broad gulag.. and noir) , gunge, the forme] I ere!. to Om uniform eomie moo.. gunge non ' In evoirral use, and the latter to the nen and unfledged Cionever prounomutru Imul hug about 111 1 11 1 10 111110/1 11 . 01 110011 /011.1 1111.1 111110 ne -I•omplished In the any' of prof - tient realization 1.9 ret,l 11. 4 111110 unit 1111 persons residing 111 the /oral ulboriets, reell/o the hurt filet the 1;4.11,31 prosperity 1111.1 umeerss of their county neat or plume of general market, sertos to promo(/' (lour Intermt I 110[1 11-0111 0 (1,1 ,/// 111111111 0 general pumperltv of /111)C lily or 10x11 must 110110 enduring) be stimulated by /11111 depend inanity 111 0 01 ill/11)1111 100t0/1 0 .. 1111.1 01111, /0.1, upon that Mass of 111111111 Nolorlt.7 pruaitiet of nlitell must 'erg 11 11111 ket In, foreign mantles loud .•it ibis I•, mg tut leumullung new of retvsrmu. 0,- • i ,liar of 4% Molt promotes berms 111 , 111- I 1 111.1 Ku - torrid pmsperuty, N idle umuummiloeum urn Gar lento- onsuunielon Inoue pr 4111 1,, 111111, i.l• 11411 IV el 1110 %1.1.11 , 0 01 Ii 1.1. l'Onlrllllllo to pruu-p qty to the xtent of r, 11,111 , ,11111• ‘10,1 , 1 In. k• 1. go 1.1 ml umpt mg these v 1•11 4. in I , 11,10e11,1 Vfll 11 the I 0 1 t i, 01 It o llololllo 100,1 1111111 1 111./ around her the anon. tunic of rail muumuus] in ouch thoir Tutlnrid fir t,l tilt, fu 1,1011 110 i•J but with hint is Ittutu nrrel ittloiroi , i tvl ttitl Lit Inl n•+ II null wit I irtriill4•ll that loran up .rnt lithe In' Is 'mil lure h. nill3g 111 ryttli. rt ill (lilt In :mil alO hi' I.•mttilling In mivlti Is, trios,. 'ill msumliti Truck arttoit,,llkisr r.•. 1. 1 ,1 log 111.4 t.i•l i I itikorilag.• of oi,f•ry fit , I II I `III tti lull May \4l` n , d 111+1 here Vlllllll, %111.‘ther exp. n of iratet'. r .11.1 , 1e: 1y of t ft - ern the 11111,11 I' , 1111•f11I,x t. led of it— • 1111'1 I .0114.10 , tk; a 111 I 1 1.1.• +lllll , .11+1•11 1111.0. 1 -, 11 4 c1 , 0ii r '1111,1.11., fir. .1. tie r itetp..rt I.r 111.• 111'1 r ,11.1 . 11 -ire• export the I."( the faint or wi.iiv, xi “rtung the Iltmih r 'lll4. 61 , 110,' , h. /11. (1,1 ire in hurl it ,•• .1 the It It 1.. 1 , expl ii.. i.yth.it 111.1,11, rill,. ...1111 , 1'i I I 3011 1., neee....ntl.tliiitt a IF It.fer norti.tr Iritittli.` . 0 'I. , t Ittit I mit t v.elt 114110/1110. , / 1,/ 1111,///111 //1 I• / t1/1 I tti) Irr ernlr Milo 11r, tell...ming tlrrnr• too, Irrat ty lhun they do 11‘.1 rrtlr 11 it entirno mrrillrl rlrrlttigr. 1114. luring ir l t,r..„( 11.11. ("wt. !tor, lltrtli t lir , 11irrikra op Intel grrrlrr I 11111. i 1.4 111,1' 0,1,1 i 1,0 vli 041.4,1 , Ilt1,16; It. 11, f. ii , 1. tl,l that filrr.,w iv. kkl t III• kol. Ikr I. 11,jkh, ire whri,•ii,lxrtt••set i 11‘1,• 111••••1 • ••tit) , l• 11, •• Itn , l .I•••••• 1,1 10,1 111= 1, tlm .tlit. ttat row Ktttiv ‘ , 1.• two t,) of the .01/.1, Wen 111. ItIIUI Ills n ”1 . fir t omit) Ihe hovel's and frvp,rrnt t tivniono,. of Ott.. "40.. 1,14,t41 t. • t 11.• Ir llr I lul it) ti pil 4 eitre ort t hr,of - gmliKe, I ii.l 114 A,, I,ltiat• .1 l Clop rll II -, 11 ti II It y tiwt uu ..lt•t•ilop, a railway t (I.titgla greott "%t hull0).114llv 1,11 14 tlu• air/tug. tn. 11l ,of 111.• t.trin,lr dt•tatl. n1).1 All be /tYltire Or the f,,t thlt the rre+ nt iipprfo e.11,•••ol lel,' been I.1",/git I. I r Jr.''.. ei rI t 111 or ttott totly nl grt tt, Ito,* In lto, earl) pr.tio. tort.. Intl r.l.olorn 1t,031 I tolgttfoit that Ii ill% :111 mir, it., if 111,. tn., , tit lif tlo•Ir et perienee If an* it.lventetrou. ret:ett.ilitt*i in the 10ture eored t and perfee t the IN.trrow Ktlitg o and you Ile, w 1-h to he rived from ,hl fogy eetn, It will he to 1, 1, y matter to 11101 , 1 thin elieme r loge ellerand di...peat . of your brct.l gumtree rolling petoek to .o!!! the "1.1 fogy fond. Willett (0,111 the 1 14( net work on 111 1 , 11 I neat 111 140 11.1varitagen would 4of be ityttlbihlt. In OM e, nt of a furore denlre In C 114111 4, ham n.,rrow to In, 111111 gunge 1 Nis!, h. lie• enrolled atztang the trend. of progrete, hut J , **lre It be of tlio eittl.tan*ial order .Ikly apology her intruding upon your *Twit* and Ilto line/ of your t*.tiler• re*.ite In the doep ur ter* et I feel in lite preeeperity of lily 11/1 I lye Inane for, he it 1011leinhered, thint. while 11 1111.11 111 , 4 r Inerpew y nnll , heepti m 1 ~h,..11 (1 , 111 Ihdlerlinte, I 11c 1., ,wle , lgo. no nthr r Itotneand hope* and I.lp .. t, at nil eitijy day, to reatirit to lily old home to enjoy the plettentlit it.noelatlnn of It. eongen MI people* 14.•hcater N , 4,lsfq t'lth, 1,471 Commissioner Mi.S/4101. EDITOR:I : —Ac the tune for the convention of delegates is near at hand, it s our duty to look around is for good men to fill the various offices, and while we do not wish to dictate to the Democracy whom they shall se lect, yet when men with such great and good hearts RR 11. R. Smith allow their names to come before the public, they should not be rejected. Ile is a candidate for Commissioner, and lives in the very strongholds of thit Democ racy of Centre county. We have never had a candidate from this quar ter, and, as we present a good man', lend us a helping hand. POTTER. —Casimir relating his boarding school experience : Clara--and when do you have yojr breakfast? Charley —Just as soon as the parson gets through reading Ithe riot act over the hash. Clara—Grace-ious. --Prince Napoleon hae been or tiered to leave France. ----The murderer of Marshal Prim, of Spain, has been arrested. (For the WATCHMAN The District Attorneyehlp. Messes. Emma :—We have notic ed articles in your .paper concerning every candidate that is out for nomina tion, except candidates for the office of District Attorney. We fear that the people do not look enough' to their in erek in the selection of a man for the position of Prosecuting Attorney. It is to their interest always to have a live, energetic man in that position, for a slow, easy-going man only con tinues cases and prosecutes slowly, is never ready, and when any case of im portance comes up for trial, puts the t`tiunty to extra expense by asking the Court to appoint a man of experience to assist him in conducting the trial. \Ve have eeen cases of this kind ; it will happen again if a proper man is not chosen., Again, we voters should remember that an officer who shoves business saves us a very great deal of taxes, while one who don't know his business, and lacks energy and ability, contributes very much to the increase of taxes by making long terms of court, keeping juries and witnesses laying around for weeks, when only a day or two would do. We hope voters and tax payers will consider these things. Lf the men who are bona fide an nounced as candidates for District At torney, we have never heard more than use of them try, or even attempt to try ea , e. We would not say one word agalied any of thegentlemen who are candidates, but we do think, in justice to the man, and to the party an well as to the rommonwealth,that the nom ination should be given to 1). F. FORT - We Dettmersots‘ of Pennsvalley remember very well how he'useil his time and energy lor the success of the party, while some of the candidates lor the Sallie pennon refused. We al sn lemember truth peeing and hearing 111111 in the court room try cases with a 4 mach ease and learning almost, as the ablest Attorneys at the liar. \Ve (eel sure if the people look to their in arrests, that Mr. FORTN ' EY will be nom inated. POTTER. 11=13111 A cable dispatch, dated London, July 30th, annDunces the death of lion. John Slidell, in the selerity eight th year of his age. Mr. Slidell was a native of the city of New York, and was born in the >ear 1793. lialung pursued an acade mic and collegiate course ()liquifies, af ter graduating, he read law, and was admitted to practice. idler hollowing 1,14 profession fora short time in his native city, he was offered such induce ments in New Orleans as induced him to go to that place about the year IS3O. In a short nine he built up an exten sile practice, and very naturally enter cd into politics. In 1843 he was elect ed io Congress from New Orleans, and surveil one term, at the close of which, lii 1845, lie was appointed Minister Plenipotentiary to the, epublic of Mexico by President James K. Polk, to adjust the matters in lIIMptIte,WIIIOI snb , e.piently culminated uI the Mexi t . 311 war in May, 1846, when lien Tnylor moved his forces across the Texan 4ontiern. Mr. Slidell's MIRPiOII 11 . 11 truitle.ts of any results, and tend ed to strengthen the war party of that 'hiring the catnpaigna of 1846, '52 and 5(, he triark a prominent part in politic•+. In 1853 be was elected Uni ted Staierr Senator from Louisiana, contnnnrng ii the Serrate for eight years. and witlitirtiwtott; early in the \ ear IS6I, when the Louisiana Con vention adopted Ore ,ordinance of be eeasion. Subsequently, lie was appointed En voy-Extraordinary to France by Jef ferson Davis and took passage, during the month of November, 1861, on the En4lisli steamer 'Frew., in company with James Murray Mason, who hail been sent on a similar mission to Eng land. 11n their passage they were cap tured by Captim Wilkes of the United States Navy and were held in custody until January 186'2, when they were given up on demand of the British government. Mr. Slidell liftlOince remained abroad, mostly ryPrelieve in London, where lie hoe been practicing the legal profession with some success. IN ring hie term in the U. S. Senate, li, WWI a strong advocate of the purchase of the Island of Cuba. Snow Storm in New York State The Dunkirk (Chautauqua county, New York,) Journal ie the source of the following itAti . 'We have on credible authority, the statement that snow tell in the Routh ern portion of the Casailaga Valley, in this county, on the night of the 2lio of July, 1871, to the depth of six inch es or name. We are told that the crops in the vicinity of Levant, Lave been thereby greatly damaged, and some 01 them entirely destroyed, Captain Smith, of the ~ W. and I'. railroad, reported snow in the Casa,la ga Valley at 7 o'clock on Saturday morning, 221, at an inch or more. The snow fell in the village of Forestville on the morning of the 210 so gener ously that the boys in type streets snow balled each other for' full fifteen minutes.' 1!IlE=111 —The people of Twee do riot vote at the coniing election upon the (ies lion of dividing the State. The act di recting a vote to be taken upon the subject 01 division, did' not pass the State Senate. The report which has gone the rounds of the Northern press was started by a tnisiolormed Radical editor in Texas. joyous damsel rushed into a eitieen'i arms at Savannah, exclaiming, Oh, you aro my long lost brother!' she soon discovered h-r mistake, and rushed otrina confused manner, accompaniod by her long lost brother's pocket book. Obituary --The New York Freeman's Jour nal says •there are two miserable fac tions of Iriehmen disturbing the peace of New York—one of which factions, Ribboniem, is distinctly ezcommunica• ted by the Catholic Church; and the other is hated by her, as being, dis• tincily, of the devil.' "Maze Thread on me Ooat-Tall I" The lkely Hibernian who went abroad all day in search oft; quarrel may no longer be cited to banish the blues. If indeed the story ie a joke it types a fact and illustrates capitally, a feature of human nature. How lohg is it since the joint high commission Sat in Washington and agreed upOn a basis of agreement between England and the United States, by which all matteils at issue between the two na tions were, we presume are, to be ad justed amicably ? That was not long ago. The country endorsed the con tract. The senate ratified it. The queen ratified it. Canada accepted it. Three or four days ago, perhaps, Mr. Schenck addressed a-London audience, and lauded the treaty of Washington. His audience cheered him to the coho. On the fourth of July, Count Von lieust, the Austrian premier, congrat ulated our minister at Viennat upon theratification of the treaty i and hail ed it as an earnest of the time when nations should discard war as the ar biter of disputes. All this is pleasant. Any plan' to adjust matters of variance without re course to brute force deserves applause. No man with a good heart and a cool head wants a war with England, oil with any other nation. For that rea son we shall have no war with Eng• land, of course; since dlie theory of our governmental system is that vir rue and intelligence hold the destinies of the republic in Int But it shall go hard with a•politician if lie cannot cook up a cause of war somehow. So, just as all our difficulties were settled, up pops ail island in Puget sound, by name of San Juan, and demands to know to whom its six people or so owe allegiance. On one end o f this island, which is probably worth anywhere f. ow a dime to a dollar, floats the flag Britain ; at the other the stars and tripes. Who shall have it? Well, a e don't know. But the restless poli ticians may calm their apprehensions —there will lie no war about San Juan. But on one side of this island rune a narrow strait ; on the other a broad channel. The question is which is the fence between mother and child—the strait or the broad channel. If we meant lair by each other, would it make any difference, think you ? We conclude that fences and boundary lines are for people who can't be hon est without such gentle compubiton. liar° channel is wide enough for Moth er and daughter to pass without dam age to drapery. liosario strait is also wide enough for two big ships to pass each other without getting befouled in rig.ong. Who cares, then, which is the boundary line? Sonic man who wants to be a candidate for president, perhaps; or .John Smith, who really wants to be constable next tall. The ambition is laudable in both cases. But war is played out. Nobody nowa days thinks it would be the height of happinees to do a red-coat Britisher to death. Nobody cares which side of San Juan the fence is built, and many care less whether there be any fence at all. All nations build fences three miles seaward from their shores ; but slier all, the sea is not to be pre emptied by lwer, king or president. We must all loolc forward to the day when nations will live like good neigh hors. State Executive Committee The last State Convention adopted a resolution qiittking the regular State Committee to consist of the Chairman of the several County Committees, and requirring Mr. Wallace, Chairman of the State Committee, and the two State candidates, to appoint an Executive Committee of eight, on whom should devolve the active work of the cam paign. The members of the Executive Committee have been appointed, an follows W, Cass, of Allegheny ; Wrn. McCleHen, of Lawrence. IL. L. Johnson, of Cambria, Win. Mutchel er, of Northampton ; ',. it. Brockway, of Columbia ; I. A. Mackey, of Chit ton ; W. S. Stenger, of Franklin, and 8..1 Randall, of Philadelphia. The men named have ability and are en titled to the confidence of the Demo cratic party. And, nbw, gentlemen, the work of a moat Important campaign to before you, —Pen nay [yams can he reacued from Itaiheal misrule, and McCandless and Cooper titiimpliantly elected. IV hitt iit nee le I it, iteriect orgaiiir trio., an d a 1 ...:1 of Life Democratic r / I'll4l can unit be secured I, joilienuis I well directed effort foe I mitt re 01 nine hart 110 Ii tank Pal laalell 111.11 it, but. we ! , else , * it will be found equal to the occit.miii The inattiiea 01 the party moat be aroused anti umpired with unreemitting energy throughout the cam paigii.—Lancaster hatelligencer. Ward Beecher, a canting pulpit demagogue, is endeavoring to produce more bloodshed and violence by advising that "the Orange societies should parade' next year witout a ban ner, or an inscription rubbed out." It is wonderful how the principals of the meek, and lowly, and peacable Jesus arc practised by his leading followers in the ninefeench cent try. The- truth is, it is so long Isince Christ lived and taught that his disciples have forgotten his principles, and they have nitwit tingly taken a" new departure." 'leech er might do for an Apache chief, but he certainly iv out of place in a Chris• tian pullet. --Minister Washburne has assbrr ed the French government that persons convicted of criminal acts iii Paris will find no shelter in the United States. Physician, Heal Thyself I The deplorable riot which recently disgraced the city of New York, has been made a text from which a ny quantity of sermons against pie leer. ality of democratic rule have Leen preached by, the demagogue s of th e radical party. The deliverances of these pious doctors have tilled the eel. umns of the radical press durin,, t h e past few weeks. Because IrisTint en in their devotion to tree institutions: vote the democratic ticket, it is a t . tempted to hold the democratic party responsible for the acts of the New York mob. If this he good logie,ili e radical party must shoulder the re sponsebility dor a riot which occurred at Goldsboro', North Carolina, en Saturday last, in which five thousand negroes who yoto the radical ticket were engaged,land which for %Indic. tiveness and fury cast the recent \ew York emeule completely in lie shade, A dispatch to the New York' Maid gives the following account of th:3 riot : "Negro Mob in .North Carolina_ Fire 7'housand Blacks ul tlie publican Convention in Dolilsao,,,_ ; •Wholesale Drunkenness and 1110,1 y Iniliscriminates Shootin g _ by the Negro Mob and the _ Two men Killed and Six 11 - 0 1;;0 4,1 . (lamming°, N. C., July 'l, 1 , 71 During the entire day the town has been the scene of bloodshed and it ettrettet riot ; About five thousand II egrorB ar rived hero this morning from Nlndern and the lower counties on 1111 rtenr sion train, chartered by the repubdean stale executive committee, 10 nit's i an anti-convention mass meetie,r. t , e , gressmen Timid As Ihailed :• 4 iate for ABBOTT, MAR( - UT ERwIN and It, i' ISnnoen were the speakers. I a- r , numbers of the negroe4 11 ere ted upon their arrival, and ina,t nt them bees me th4orderl v, Inc fit who was particularly turbulent, 1, ;14 arrested by the police, hut on their tray to the guard house they were mowed by the, negro mob and the prl..otwr rescued. Some of the colored I ttlict then fired at the prisoner, tviio, after a desparnde effort was recaptured arel taken to the Exchange hotel. About one thousand negroes then with Hul l and pistols made an n.saiilt en tile hotel in attempt to again re , rne prisoner. The mob began by a—atilt ing the police with brickbats nal edits, which was IQllOWed by the use ol tire arms on both sides, until a regular fusilade was in progress. The e x eo, toent at this time (two p mot 11,01 tense, and the white citizen., iii lad hereto taken no part in the riot, armed themselves for any einerg,lJCl that might arise. Some forty or hlit •hor. were fired m all. ()no negro note,. nid one colored policeman 1(1114 I; nit white citizens hurt and wont el. and two colored men woundri, arm the casualties of the riot. Congressman THOM AS, Who MO mn trot of the mob, would not come near the disturbance and made no ellort to quell the riot, which lasted over hour. A committee or citizens, ier pointed by the mayor, requested republican leaders and Mr. Sig n • , president of the railroad, to take 11 , negroes away in order to arrest funhrr blonibilied. virefused to corn dr and then told that Tiling is and I, m self would be held responsible tor l'e• disturbance replied, 'Hold us re•ipie, ble and be damned.' It is true that more people nen killed and wounded in the Nen I,rr6 riot than to this one at flobblorn But it must be remembered tlisi the New York mob killed very sous, while the plundering lire it ow soldiers caused the death of magi 14 nocent and unotrending people the point which we make 14 th,, that if those who are disposed to chargo the New York riot to the account of the I/emocratic party, are honest and en , , sistent they hill hold the rah -t;.. equally responsible in this blood, nisi ter at Goldsboro'. The latter r , w directly out of a political gath,r,ng to the interest of the radical par.‘, while American politics had nt,IL raw whatever to do with the interteri-e , of the Itilibonmcn with the (inv.: , parade. If our political oppommta trill just manage their own houbeh they will have but little spare him t. eritiev , e the economy of ours will :Attend to the sores which to-ter ni the holy of their own orgaiwati is. Ihry ,1:11 hnue ehough to do l' Ammo heal th3sell!"--The /'shim, 1. %TM lir 'we from Me'lleo wake" it probable that the election of dent will have to be decided I, House of (Ik/tigress. The number 01 the Juan'e electors is decreasing, Mint the .1 uttrist majority in Congre— so (wink) as it wits thought it unill't prove. Lerdo and Inez have more strength than it was thought they ins sewed immediately after the Chu 9th inst., and they have noble 3 coin plete union against Juarez. It 1%111 be unfortunate for Mexico it there should prove to be no election by the people, as in a country a here teio lotions break out on the least possible excuse it is desircable that thereslion l,l be no shade of uncertainty about any event CO important as a Presidential election. There to sonic talk about it revolution, but notwithstanding the strong revolutionary articles in the Singio and a few of the more rapid journals in that capital, no revo lution is anticipated and no revolution ary movenitfent is likely to resters !he countenante of the people. 1 he trinntle of Juarez laim his election by a large majority, even if the Mailer is referred to the Hope. Juarez has itis fitulfs, but with them all, he is the beet Pres! dent Mexico has had for years, and his defeat will be a misfortune for the country.—Age —Citizens.ot the oil reg, , ions press value in terms of oil', barrels , Thus hey speak of a faahionable young lady)weai•ing an eighiy.aix barred opera uit.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers