- • „Z. - - C The I3eaver .:411.grgs ViSICA*I), Enttot. axu knoramoz ribAiks, p., Decetnber 25..11.8M, -no piper from 'this. office rent Wejk, bnr-hands are unanimonsly in favot - or"rtitudllg at large"Aniind the y holi days: -A.siwe hari not•nrissed a paper hefOre sit* Wit presUnt connection with - the Aryls, Impi4that-4-mr delinqueucy or: this toCtitilon wllLhe "overlooked:' g - • ronoEri\ letter Wis set nitiint,a . few days. ago, Purporting tole writteit by Gen. Dent, a brother-in-10v of Gen. Gr4ot.,. in which it was asserted (bat if the' lat i leer became a can didate fm" rrcsident, he world not be the epr.- didate.... or a pitriy;but the candidate of 'the Y,pcopie. This letter indticek a pica deal, of .. ,:stl4kling" on the. part Of the Democrats, -as well:as those Repntilleans, who are nu .4iiiendlytotheGeneral, 'the laughing. hemi ' ever, war soon ended - 11y, • Generil Dent's ot- the nuthorshi p of the letter referred and his pronouncing it a. forgery, written . for the purpose of,injuriug,General Grant. • •k , Otv the ISth -Inst., the President sent a message to Congress, asking that body to rec. ogrilze in a suitable - manner the services ofi General Hancock as coininander of the Fifth Military District. A ,cerresponaent of one 1 - of the 'Sett , York papers speaks thus of the ; '`message and its reception t 'Vie president's Message. landing Gen: Han; .tobk. was read in both HouSes to-day, apd is - the topic of 'conversation, this evening. 'The . members generally taktit,as a cool pieci.of . stupid impertinence on tho, part of Mr. John ' son. It to hut. a partottbe phintlitals being al..' ' ranged liere:bv Johnson. Seward and Co.—. • to . have Gen.- Hancock made the nest Demo cratic nominee foe the Presidency. Mr. Johnson's' friends' say it is a snub to - Messrs. - 'Pendletcm, Seymour, rind other aspirants for Ole Deniocratic Presidential nomination who ignored Jahnson'in the late political canvas ses. The Theirs are - figuring conspicuously in the husiness,and their idr;a and that of Mr. Setiard's is to have Gent -Hancock run as a. Conservative Democrat. Mr. Johnson opetily .• expresses himself as in favor of the plan, and -so also do most of his Cabinet. All -41 e ofH vinl patninagebf the Executive will he turn ; ed In to help Gen: Ilanemk. and. - friati pres - mit indiaitions.bis name will he very promi nent in the coming l?emocratic -.Conven . tion. t • flusx.snoss of a linenclaltcharacter have had reeidente in Congress for sonic time past.— Ontlie litlt:inst, Senator Sherman' of Ohio, of theFinatice Commiree of the ' Senate, re ported a bill, which, with some foot titodifi-' cations, will more than likely become the law in relatiOn to the much talked of . Bond goes- I 1 Mein. . . . -• • 1 • Section Ist provides that the .Secretary, of "the Treasure shall issue registered and coupon I •bonds'in such form and' of such : denominations i as lie May see proper, payable principal end i interest in coin, and bearing, interest at the rate of six per cent per nnnum. These bonds I to be payable in forty years front tltte, and to be redeemable in coin at the pleasure of the United States after ten years from -date, and to i be IsStied to sivainnutlie sufficient th - cover_alll ontstandingioi-existing oblizations'of the 9431 1- 1, ernment, end to he disruled of exclusively ti 1 taking" tip the'seenrittes of the United Stitt s. I_ ' Section 2d specifies that the bonds tints s- i sued shall be known as the "Coniolulated debt ; 'ot the United States, and the saner shall be ex. 1 enwt front State" and municipal tiixation,ancl internist thereon and income therefrom Shall -be exeript,trom payment of all taxes or duties to the Unite&States; and in consideration ofl •• such exemption, theTraasurer of the United I States, shall reserve one-sixth of the interest • on the bonds.; One-half of this sum is to be _ paid ton . the. States -according to..population; mathe other half to be applied to the pay.: ' mutt of th..! Saiinit fl debt: - . ; • - . • . , Section 3d. substitutes for, the sinking fund . as provided for by th(!laws now in force, the plan of 4lppropriatutt yearly from money not otherwlSe appropriated in' the Treasury, a sum which includes the ainount necessary for, payment of-the interestand.maturingdebt,and " one-half of the reserved tax as aforesaid shall amount to--millions of dollars, which sum; - 1 . during each fltiml year after the current year, ,;,„ ' shall beapplled,to the reduction of the public debt in' such manner as may be determined by the Secretary of the Treasury,ersas Congress ( ' . may hereafter direct.: . . [ The bill further prOvides That the brindi known as the Five-Twenty bonds shall, at the expiration otfiVe years Irom their date, at the ' _ option of the holder thereof, be- changed for the, bonds authorized by this act; and such a s , arc now redeemable. shall he presented for ex- change on or before the Ist day o f November : duty of Congress to Order the 'payment of our •next, and not thereafter, and the residue to be i national debt in greenbacks. This . would • prevented on or before the expiration ,of five 1 flood the country with paper money, raise • war:sirOm their date, and not thereafter, and ; prices to four or eight timea their present val .- sech 'exchange shall be made at such place - i tie,. and end in a condition' Of thingi similar iM and dersuch relesand regulations as the .to tit which existed in the "Southern Con, Secretary of th^ Treasury may prescribe. I . federsey" at thotimeOfits e.ollapse.. It may •: ._ Section nth Provides that the holder-of any' be, however, thatthis is just , what the lead of money of the United • st a tes to the era of the Debtor:me• - want. ‘ • ~..• - nitionnt of t.10'),. or multiples of $ LK' m , ay ''.. .......----- , •i e • i 7l' • concert the same into a bond for any amount, ; _ Con. PARER, ofGeneral Grant's staff, oc. the / tote so received to be held in the Treasury' cas i„ am i a good de.il of gossip ,in Washing- ns ' art of the reserve already: provided for, ton D. C. last week. He was to haie been lin•the •holdeifrOf any of the ,Five-Twenty 111 married on Tuesday tole Miss Becket, a belle : bo } I chi, or of the bond; contemplated by tins of•that place, ink when the appointed time ; .• rk f t May demand their redemption in laWful : arrived, he. failed to make his appearance, and '' money of the United:States; and the Trcasur- I could not ,be found. In . a day or:two after-_ er shall redeem the same in lawful money un- ' Wards his whereabouts became known, and ' • leas the amount of United gitates-..nots then ' his reasons for "defaulting" in the matter are. outste . biling. shell be equaletc:-$400 t 00./0 0 0:1 thus 'given : As is well known, he is an • Indi . • - but such bonds shall not be so redeentaltle af- an, and has tube hearing of his intended mar ier the rei on of- •.' iiimptispecie . payment; and vine, sentiome of their, members to Wash the •• ~, --,, . - , 'Seßretary of the Treasury . , in order to car- , ingten to prevent it. After arriving there ry out the foregoing provisions, is required to thetenticxxl him to their roomdhere drugged maintain tri the Treasury a reserve of not less him heavily, kept hin d t _ in that Condition for , than 450 ; 00,000 of lawful money; similar in 'sixty hours, and then - - abandoned him with • ' all respects to the United States notes author- • the exPeetation that he would die from the • - lied by, law, provided the sane -shall not at effects of the dose. administered to him.— any tithe exceed.s49o;oo o ,o oo . In order to on' 1 Strange as this story is, it is credited In Wash . - able the Secretary of thWgreasury to redeem 1 (noon. The wedding, which was thus . pre .the secnrities of the United States held abroad. : vented, will take place in a few days. ' • , ili is fbrthltr authorizeil to Issue hM 2 ds - -PaY 3- 1 . Me, principal and interest; in coin; in Frank- 1 1 A "TELISURAIIt front Washington .on the , . 1." fort or l i ondon, -- hearing interesteat the rate or 12th iniite- stated. that while. thei National • 43i per,centuut Per ,annurn, payablt semi-an- • Republican Committee wasin session in that orally; at a ra_k_ofexchaugeetpiivit enttofi.-m city governor Want of New Jersek ittiChair ,, ' francs pet dollar, such bonds .payable in 40, titan, made emotion to change_ the name of years and redeemable after 20 years fr"mt the party front Natictal'ltepUblicail to Ns - date, at the plea etre of the United'.:States, In • .`tonal Union. The 'ew York: Tribune or mitt. at . 1 . like rate ofexeltange,..and.lii - be. is- : . . sued tit an amount not exceeding $500,000,600 "-WA Monday, says :- r • • to - be : exchanged for-an equal. amount of Five-I -• We areauthorizeit." . to state that no -Monett: ' twenty bends, or.disposed of, on such - terms ; was Or favored;ln the National,GotpmiV! not this than pat intawful money as the See- 1 tee by . Gov'. Ward, Ghairnian; to Changtithee relartmay • deem best; but thepxpenset of thilitame freenNationalltep i nblican to' Nahanni •. sale or eki•ltabge of said bonds - abaft riot ex- „..1.-"niort.'NotiropoSitien for change .of-rdithe. ceed thc.diffetentx between the - .said', rate . c•C, tu any . 'shae'was '.- - be f feta", the 'Ciiiiimittee, excliange and therearket rate of exchangs on' which would have hid:, no _rarer to Change •Loculon•or. Trankfort. '., • , Ithenanto ofthepartyLorgantitition: h' . . ._ , - lIEM= 12211211•3 riles 'Li • • AT tiße Democratic meeting •Iteld here'on last MOnday-one.,w..*k ago, at comuutt(Ce oa resolafions was appoitited, :consisting of_ the folloWing nained,persons:, E. P. , . Kultn4) :l 3.B. 'French, W. W. Simpson, - S. Dickey d J. H. Citnningliam This Committee retorted sdveral resolutiOns.• .Thefollowing,isthe first 1 one or tys series: . • • • Rd.qolrerf, Thatlthis ; Convention, represent ing, hi leist, :3,olYfor the voter% of Beaver coin- 'ty, tatraestly Condemn the effort being made _to break down ,the.,Deinocratie - press of this county, by a multiplicity orlibel suits, com menced and carried on by partisan offic.i hold ers. That theie suits are not prosecuted With' any yiewto the. public good, but to.gratify, personal malice and accoinplish politfcal ends, is clearly apparent, train the fact that the ed itor of the Ruffle:l.l organ, who is able to like prosecuticins, is permitted to go unpunished and unrebuked. t i - - - ......_ If the last sentence in this resolution mans anything at all, it means that the ,Rtpub lkon paity of this county is tensurable for not hay, iog comnienced a prosecution for libel against the eclitiir of this Paper. AS it is not pretend ed or clainied thatwe have libeled any mem ber of .the RTubliean party, it ;follows of, course, 'that if any of its members began a , prosecution ttviinst us, it would be .in the in- wrest of; and for the benefitof the Democra cy'! Now, according to the . light we have,, the Republicans of this county neyer did and; do not ra' -contemplate doing anything of this kind. They area generoushody oftnor- tals, altd for their tolerance in this particu- ler, theitleserie end we hereby tender them -, our unfeigned thanks. Wc can therefore dis miss this part of oar subject by giving ex pression to our feelings in this wise: Astilte Kuhn-1 • Brilliant committee 1 Magnanimous- , ,;.- - Republican party 1; ' , , . ~ , At the same .meeting in which _the aboite resolution was passed, S. B. Wilion Rig.; of this place made a speech. In that address he told his bearers that he had not read the Ar gus durine,the last campaign, - (?) (he is repoit ed to have told thirtto every he has addressed for the last twelveyears) but was informed that we had libeled Hugh B. Anderson, the Democratic candidate for Treasurer, and that it was Democratic for bearance that had shielded us from prosecn. lion thus far. If Mr. W. will' kindly bold MS aversion to reading the Argwrin::abeyance for a moment or, two we will tell him exactly what the Argus did not, and what tt did charge Mr. Anderson with during the last campaign ; It did not tell the voters of the county that Mr , Anderson had stolen a 'coat from a "certain fishing party near Beaver Point.' .It did not insist that a lot of "spOons belonging to anotit ei man had been taken frAm his pocket while 1 Veing ejected from the owner's premises." It' . I did not insinuate that he had stolen a pocket-1 book belonging to a, man that was - hurt by a, passing train of cars. It did not charge him! wit h having"olisce'nely torturel a Finlllboy," I - nor with being a bar 7 room loafer, and a com mon drunkard. It did not 'claim that he bad I embeziled - pablic funds confided to , : his caret nor did it accuse him of haiiing •Swindled the I State or of hiving made a fortune out of the necessities and wants of its soldiers. • But. the Argus did say that he was permit . ting his Szlrl, who was living with him at the ',time, to.insult the loyal people of the county 1 b2,*; proposing t sell them a disloyil book. It Idid Ray in answer to an appeal made in his , behalf for votes on the ground of his charita ble disposition, that, he had treated a distitute- I women and her cluftlien in PhilliPsburg with I 1 more severity' than a 'true christien spirit would warrant. , It did arty in answer to a sim -, liar appeal'for votes for hini, that he had not i managed his private a ff airs successfully, and that this circumstance should weigh . heavily lagainst selecting him as thefreceiving and - dis- bursin,g officer of the County. ; ,' This is the sum total of the Arguis charges i against Mr. Anderson. If that gentleman be i lievas that a judicial inveetigatien of these , chargesfwill put him in amore enviable light than he is now in ; or if it will soothe the sav age breasts ofJlemrs.Wilsnn and Kuhn to con duct a. prosecution for libel against us, it only remains; for us to say : Go ahead gentleman and "stand not upon the order of your going, but go at once." '' s - • , • BUT a year or two ago the DemoerseyWerk 4l the "hard money" party of the country..- Then they took delight in holding up a green hp' elt' and pointing out worthlessness,as coo Pared with gold and silver. "Give the Dem- ' cieracy power" said they, "and we will destroy this worthless paper money, and, give the people the coin they used to have before the war !" But a change has tome over the Spin it of their dreams ! Instead of being a 'lliara ' money"' pay now as they were some years ago, they htiv e taken the gr4und that it is the • BOTH .110 : :Upee' ' 01 Coitreassdpu medo` if last Friday, to e4roseagaln ok the 6th Janu ary.; A large number 4 - liwirtant bills were Introduperl. preylaw' 'to the adjotifuraint.--7 These will•be Wien tip in regular order, after the holidays ant ovet, and upon their pea : , sage:- -The . `eintrttry will asvalt with anxiety the passage ot all bills 'relating to the fhnukees of the country.' The Banner Repnblican• ,ConnV • of Pennsylvania. During thc, last politicalcaMpeign the e- Publican State Central Comnitttee to give to the COunty making. the biod return compered with l the vote for 4oveknoz Gent y, the large and costlyfleg which Sven suspended acres Chednitt street; titiladelphia:in front of this beadquariers, After • the election was ore the tepublicani of thumildn, Schuylkill, Perry; Vnierne. atid Wafiti.",teieb submitted their claims foir the contested Prize. 'the return In these Counties waves folloWs Daernr.s.--Vote 1866-4/miry . Mal, Cly mer 4:36l—majority for Geary 1.390.- Vote 1867—witliems 5.2475har5w00d , ,8,847—ma jority for Williams 1.409. - Declitse of vote 1867,444; incrensi ofmaiorits 14. Tat7rUNTL—Vote 1866—Geao'' 8.783: Cly mer 12.:147—inelcirity for Clymer. 11,1154. Vote 1867—Williains 7015. Sherwood 10,- 404--majority, for Sherswood 2,419. .De erease of vote 1867, 748 ; decrease of majority,, te3n. - • PEIIRT.—Vote 1806— G eary 2.581, Cly mer 2.49 s—majority for 'Grary 86.• Vote 1867—Williams, 2.427. • Sherwood 2.292-- rmilority for Wiliamsl3s. -Decrease of vote 1867, 154: . increase. of Majorlty, 49. • Scurvt.n'n.a..—Vote 1866 — (teary 8,793, Clymer 10.514—mitioritv for Clymer ,1.721. Vote - 18671Villiama 7,250. Sherwood' 8,- 380—mniority for Sharsvcood 1,124. De crease of vote 180' .1,537 ; decrease of majority. 587: WATlCE.—Vnte 4 lB Bll —Genrc 2,357, Clymer 2.BB3—majoritY for Clytiier 526. Vote 1867 —Williams 2,820. Sherwood 2,1;86--majwity_ for Sherwood 266: Decrease vote 1807, 37 : decrease of majority 260. - After giving the matte a careful consider ation the committee decided that iviiple county was entitled to the banner, and to her it has been awarded ; but it wan also de termined that the gallant struggle of the itepublins in Luzerno county, thatstrong hold Of Copperheadism, should .also be rec ognized and encouraged, and andther fbig is to be purchased and sent thither .with the compliMents and thanks of the committee. We congrattilide-our friends in both counties no this honorable recognitlen of their. services. —State . -Guard. t . - ST. TIIOII[AS. When Mr. Jefferson bought of France for $15,000,000 . the vast region then ktown as Louisiana—a mighty empire of the Most fer tile land under the sun—he 'frankly avowed that lie had no authority for so doing—that he had utterly transcended - his constitutional, power. He declared that Congress migh.dis avow his act, and,leave him to brave, the consequences. IHe held that the Constitu- / tion should be amended in order to legaltie his purchase Which must otherwise remain ftj gross -usurpation. 'lf anv one had told him that his act was valid without - the assent of Congress. be would have deemed that super serviceable chainpiore,a fit tenant fora straight jacket. ..- President Johnson and Secretary Seward have chi osen to iniate a negotiation for the of the Danish West India isle of St. ThomaS, `and another even more signifi-. cant—the two comprising an area of less than one hundred square miles..., The stipnlated price of these two iskts—for which-t1,000,- 000 would be exorbitatitia $7,200 000.— The ,IYarid assertathat, though We' ari3 to pay [this vast amount, Denmark is to receive "AG; 000 less—this nice sum sticking to the fingers of certain go•betweens who arc kept - out of sight. Con it ress has been , repeatedly In 'session while t is . dicker was in progress, and Might have been called at any other, time. Yet its advice or, concurrence wait never. Oka— There hat been no pretenSe of deterring to its authority. And while the Danish King reserves the right of consulting the "Rigs dag," or 'legislature of his realm. the Ameri can President -does not even hint that Con gress has any voice in the, mafter. ' The I treaty is Made ; the consent of the . islandeis Ito the transfer solicited a -clerical townsman roof Gov. Seward sent tliTther to secure that consent; and we daily expect to hear that -the transfer has been effected, although neith er the American People nor their represent atives have as yet pad a word to say in the premisea . If Congress should succumb to this glaring I usurpation and weakly vote the money, it I were abSiird to elect another Congress. We niay better hand over the Governmert and the Treasury to the President, and. bid him ,do with cacti as he shall see fit. The National . I 'Credit will have received a fatal shock when it shall thus be established thattlie Executive may buy Greenland and a billion of 'dollars I for it whenev r ho will, leaving nothing to, I either House ut to levy the requisite taxes i f l and vote the tinonev. - Though St. Thomas were as valuable as tuba—and >t is not a hun- •dredth part so much—we trust Congress would deal with this-assumption of power as it deserves. Let it be settled evermore that the People's money.ean only be disposed of by the People's chosen representatives.—.Y. Y. Tr ilmne. • . ' . ,"1: at 'Village Record, in responso to a para graph that recently appeared in these columns 'gays : "Mr. 'Hickman was at Washington on bus- Inessentirely private, but not political. He is not for Hancock, or for any.other man, for President, who is not fully identified with Re publican principles; and so far from loivering the platform of the Republican-party, he is In favor of elevating it still higher. Sir. Hick; man will s go to Harrisburg in obedience to the call of the people of cheater county, and will be tonna the advocate of honest legislation, public economy, and high-toned Repubihan ism." THE New York Leader of the 14th says : "One of the .Tribune staff; who has very caret fully examined the immense mass oC Repub. can,fxchangec received by that paper, says tbai„ so far as be his gone 63 journals have expreSs4 tbeir preference for Grant, 13 for SalmOn P. Chase,'4 for Sheridan, and 6 scat tenng, and that for the Vice Presidency 12 support Wm I). Kelley, 7 Schuyl6r Colfax, 4 4 George S. Boutwell.4 Reuben F. Penton; 2 John A. Binghain and 6 scattering. "Cunsza,like chickens; always come home to roost," says . the proverb. The earthquake which Secretaty Seward recently purchased wi h the Island of St. Thomas has got as far north as Auburn, where, on yesterday morn. lug, the tremulous lightning informs us, "buildings were•shaken to their foundations." Dr. Blackburn lives in history as the impor ter ot yellow fever for political purposes; but his genius never ventured upon the' Imports Bon of real living earthqtakes. The President loses no time in putting in his answer -to- Grant's celebrated "private 1141 letter." • . Gen. Hancock- has scarcely hegtm his Overturning of Sheridan's work in Loral L ana; but the 14tle he hes alreadyncumplish moves Mr Johnson to intrude upon . Con *rest; atrpetlal Message calling their *ntien trot' tothO fads, and extolling- - the heroism, patritithot, Oelf-denfal. and high Roman virtue `of the •.• present' Commander ot the Fifth Military District, It. May be al( very well for Johnson, but bow long can Hancock stand it? . . ina SEEM tifi; 4 s e e,. Ria; O . Mak hi* written , ll* MOIS iotthin t iettir Genlaid e oek,'". roathre to , his Mt - kW •oP limos _farce fkisninint ciitaniv . utetibg!` itajlittary Midilet The ostensiblefoispciSiof ti elem? id -to - flint Abe recent appointment of the writer, art. Secretary of Stole, Coniained in the suspend ed-Order id' i ldow4may not be ' confirm ltd.. .We s foir ) ,4)f*m most Pc4nt4d tilirtgisPkis . :;- • '-'‘ - 1 - - -- - .' - - When hos_appoimmontivisiannonnred liY our - local prints, no ontoould Lave been more suriirird thau molt 0 had sought „Itothing at the Hands of that by officer, and; a re wird for , the political whose opinion I 1 hold dear, will ce • ' emo from ever obtrodinc upon bit: r. Had the for iner,been contiriteditr - and,l am Pentad* id chat his Milt noir have cord fly andtlitafiallY aie. certain -that of re.. catlatzactßlVand / 4nr, : notone of them ropti *via ' tad - to be miserableger': tailor 4 apostate PreildMit, There- aro rebels. =maims and abject "enough for- this sere* bud* like AVMs about your headquattrap and stinging, loyal . repotations—."Alogs easily wort to fawn on any man. "'the officer who sufrers them, arid in stalls thim in 41bn° places, 4eceptis a draper-. ate risk: - -" • I - • •tipeakinkor other matters, -Mr. Pitkin re. , 'Maria' that " every official indirection is s dan ger for which the best field credit does not eompensate,"•and adds • It is tylien it soldier mitoses in Lis Initial .or.der r that the military should defer- o a civil authority; which Is ferwith. -recommitted to rebel hands, either that, he has su'ddenly ceas ed to.aspire tei bleb nationai ends; or that his patient waiting since 1861 for a chance tosur. I render to the enemy )3 at :length .fully re warded. That - enemy is at least consistent, has not changed its front, hasliot forborne its old heredes. I . 4 • ' - That cannot capittilate with you suffice; as a reason why my name should no longer be entertained at headquarters with-reference to I a bureau of this State.' Yonradvent, Bir, has - lent renewed cheer to titie class or our people —it is a class which, bY its prlctice upon one Convention, can fondly.dream a grim murder or another now in'aession, in this city—which . lias already itrsovglit on? public trusts for its Monroes and Abe 4 ants% who n impatiently seeks to render loYalty again a discredit and a peril, and which May rersnnnbly confide its l schemes to him, whose enviable dlstinetion it is to be not only one of the five district cora manderathat can disOnvee more force Ina mad whim of the Pr*dent than ins solemn decree of Congress. • The writer then refers to the statement of Gien.rfaienek. that -be "had. .been informed that the administration - of criminal. jilatice in the-cyrta hint been clogged, if not entirely I frustrated '" negm jurors; and after remark- I, . ing thic ) t "it is easy to oleternune whence this ' information Collier td theVenefal, adds Men who have lust Idoffed their rebel uni forms, and as prolleielits in partisan shame\ have been virtually promoted • to your citilr, staff; men, the final chapter of whose btogra-1 phy will be, in bin:many eases, an indictment; men to whom the insulting color may • East back the odium of having defeated the ends of justice. A. dozenliands from which, sir, you cannot wash . the red smear of rebellion may shoot erect Vitt juror's oath as they-once dia, to a Citizens. • The fidelity of their observance of the latter vow is i perhapi the best lesson I for your espousal of tlze,erbitntry.jealettsy of the jury box., Whenoir, 'not one of your 10-J cal misadvisers shall longer crouch at youf heels in security treini, his dues, and when a' -better authority than yours shall hate declar ed, ifs soon it will, thst a temple of justice can question no color extkep' that of crime, you will discover that the'black juror will neither "fustrate nor clog the administration of jus tice,".and especially of what some In this core tenuity may well complain of not having yet received "crititinal justice." The subject of the Presidential aspirations of Gen. Hancock argt alluded to, and these re= marks are made. • , • But someone nittatfarant thrust his feet into the President's shock and- your evident wil t lingness, General, 110 to be persuaded by a I Democratic nomination excites less solicitudoi for the nation than for yourself. To - the American people, however belongs the tint fotin upon your back, and I cannot believe they .contetriplated that it WAR to be used through this districi, simply for the purpose ors political einvassmith itsipocketsidistendell with the sufnmaries of Johnsorilturspeeches, collated in havenee At the White House, and issued here as "general orders.! -The letter concludes in these emphatic amnia frlti: ' • Our present convention has two imperative , duties to perform—first, to rend with its two hands, white and black each of your adverse orders to tatters, to decree every local post va cant, and to cancel every distinetion (if race; and second,to place those hands austerely upon our comMander's shouldersk-and 'face to face with him; with the ;firmness of a jtist, defense with honor for his Stars, and in all charity of distinctly to admoniah him that the mistaken purpose his embassy, if unfortu nate for Louisiana, s tenfold more so for him selt Johnson'ti Scheme to. Secure the , next Provldettey. .Tohnson's oft-reileitteddeclafation of regard, for find abiding Confidence in "the people"— his transparent demnegueisni—were not without motive - Even at a One Wben the' whole nation Was ii.gusted with his action and utterances, he kepi his eye steadily on the suceession in tie White House, and has ever since been shaping his ends to' accom plish that' result A. Washington cdbrrespon dent exposes the scheme, and gives( the pre:. grammo which the President has liud down in order to mein' hid. nomination on the Democratic ticket. Having thus far failed to command the support of the Northern Dem ocrats,such support as looks tewards his nomination--.-he naturally feels indignant at them. lie has done all in his power to secure l their indorsement for the Presidency, but they stand aloof, regsoling him as too 'much crippled to succeed in the race. He his now; in a rather startling programme. laid his plans for making them come •to time. Tcn: nesse° Is the field chosen for commencing the scheme.: The bitterness of feeling existing between the factions in that State iss - expected to culminate nettapring, at the 'county elec tions,in the prostaitkm of the elements op. posed to Johnson's policy. Some thne in April Johnson wilt "show his inuatir and advise the holding of a Constitutienal State ;Convention ; at any time, and the' reconstruo tion of the State Government. In return for this service, Johuran j expects to have the inctontl vote of Tennessee pleged for him. In this wanner it t is expected that . Tennessee will be "redeemed." This State secured, the ice wile be.bredran. - The correspondent serf : 'By ar similar strategy, the ten. Southern Stateir k will be wheeled into line.. With the pres - lige ofsuccese in Tennessee It will be an . easy 'Wetter for htr:'Jelinsort to declaii 'once the time for enrolling the 'Monstitution • is -at hand—that ; ths &inhere States are ;in the' Union (be has said so in a dozen messages already), and Utak:they' have a right to regu late their own Mks and lake part . in' the coining national'. election. The rewnstrec tion actswill be *aide a nullity, by ordering liffl . ISE= UnCIC Sal .'netruntir i pnin4 their own businessand mattott aloigs, •In order to do this, Groat scllibieoustalln rebrnary,i atm? ta tbq six -nioikthtVaitule ..of Oa Tenn- Office bill, and:Sherman or Han- . r - IV the latter dai:e' din the .War. robab the /- _ • Citlica ad inOrim;while the Semite wimagie over; such nominatioiii •as Jobnaati may choose - to 'make.. rettpp Johnson natti rally expects the dear . ..tar of suPloce: from the States he libenites. , With the elec torstVotea of eleven States thus sOpred, he he eXpeeta to present to the. National Demo cratic Convention, the alternativei of making him their. DOOM* -or of certain defeat. Such is the startling, but perfectly legitimate, programme. outlined for Johnson, by his friends in Washivienn,and m far as Tennes 'see IS conternol, it meets • with unstinted' approval at ,the haids df lifelong personal 'and ritilit icid enemies of the Pi erii dent, -mostly old line Whigs. The Democrats, cannot well gainsay it t hemuse it is precisely What they would Mir in. power to-day. Thy condemn -it, however, as making the Southeiin States a mire foot-ball betireen Chase and 'Johnson. There are many drawbacks:. to the comm. malion ofthis scheme, but with alj these the friends of the President are sanguine, and fuel Confident that bold' action wilt overcome all obstacles.. ' ENTELL -totter 'tom Senator The following is a letter frvan fSnator7ll - id Hon. John C. Dnderw , 'Judge of I the tinted States District Court rVirginta, and one of the delegates to the Co !With:mat Convention at Richmond : ' ~.. -.'- • , SENATE CIIAVIIIE .., WASITINGTON, D. C., Decie es 17. Hon. John UndeOrood : Div DEAR Sm—l received ye r note yes terday, in which you ask my views touching the proposition to disfranchise all persons In . .1871.w1i0 cannot d ead-and write. -•` If such a" proposition is dernnisly pressed by .arry.num bet of persona,. they iire,doubtleas influ enced to it by the reading and writing provision in tile Constitution of Massaelmaetts. That Pro-, visiondisfninchised no one; -it ' seettre.- the -ballot to all who possessed it, and applied the eddeattonal test only , to thou who cable of age: or *ere natumlid after its adoption.-- If a proposition is to te put in yoUr constitil tinn of an educational test in 1871, to appg only to those - nho Mile of age at that date, ' are naturalized; &lake up their' residence in your State, it would be' in accordance with the oft quoted previsiori in the constitution of; Massachusetts. Stiehl provision might be I an incentive to youngtnen of both racesto , better qualify themselves to the exercise of the elective franchise. Btit to takefrom tens of thousands of colored men to whoa 'educa tion haa.been denied, and to whom suffrage has been given, a right so essentialito the se curity of their lives, liberty and property; and to disfranchise thousands of poor white men wh . l have never" enjoyed the' ririceless; blessip t , 0. botiminn . sehoots, Would be a. great; wrong a measure utterly indefensible.— Poor laboring men, °more than any other .1 elks, need the ballot for their security. Tg- i norance; ifit be-loyal, liberty-hiving and „lust, , is safer than intelligence that is unpatriotic, unjust and selaili. NI poor man hi the ; possession of manhood suffrage. shall have the ballot taken from him by my advice or with my consent, unless for crime - Whed shivery, the prolific mother of all our woes, •perished;and when the - civil war end- I I ed, I hopedthised nothing done for revenge. I bin nil for security. Heart, conscience and reason bade me strive t.O seinire equal rights , -', for lilaCk men, protection for the loyal, and 1 i forgiveness for the disloyal. It `seemed to me to he a duty of patriotism, huraanitf, and 1 ' Chiistianity to lift up the poor; secure 'the i , rights of the weak, and to forgive the erring. r j hope our friends in your Convention.and in 'Conventions of other St.stc , i, will inflexibly ~thaintain the equal rights of all the blacks and whites, and deal generously with ,those I, who raised their hands against their country • It seems to me that the - poliev that, thall se curely hedge about lihd guard the civil and political rights ofall, dud deal mercifully and generously With our erring countrymen, wilt ' hasten the time to be striven, hoped and pray ed for,when the bitter-memories of the bloody conflict tlimngli which we have "passed, will, be forgotten in the ehmnion enjoyment of im-: partial liberty and 'equal justice, and in the general prosperity a-.-1 common renown of our native land. •.' I ' • •' . , T.'.. I am, dear sir, ;very truly, • tllzriny WlLson. [Sig,iled] c . ,The-force of the time of public opinion, and the almost absolute certainty that Gerieral Grant Fill be the Republican nominee for President, renders it quite unnecessary to re peat ' tile . evidences of his great • popularity which come to ustrom all quarters. Never theless the extract:below will doubtless helof interest to the general reader. A correspond eat of the Chicago Tribune writing from St. Louis; says: - "his well known that In. the Baltimore I Convention in 1864. the Illsbouri delegation, i being opposed to Lincoln, cast their votes fori 'General Grant for the Presidvey. nigl is a i Singular 'condition of things for 1867,.10r it i Cannot be truly said that the Radiadslnow favor General Grant us their! first choice.—L Still it is evident to all thinking mindslliere that General Grant will be the Rcpubpain nominee for 1865., As it Is Useless to *gist this itovement, our 34issonri It' adicals are one i by one aegidescing in the necessity, and de, 1 daring for Grant as the coming .dtan. -lit is ; understond Senator HendersOn is a hearty suppOrter of General Grant; and that he"pro posmto make a speech in ibis eity, shortly, favorable to his acceptance 'as the •Radieal candidate. ..There is every prof ability'that ere sixty days have rolled around there' will be 4 Grant club in every ward in„St. Lotti&— In the interior, the sentiment in favor of 'Gen eral Grant is even more unanimous - than in St. Louis. . • The Grant meeting in the old ,Cradle of I Liberty-Fansuil Hall, Tioston—was large, enthusiastic rtn, in every. way a great suc- , \ \ cess. Of it the Arirt7!iaer says : ' , • "It Was Mtge., tit. nsiastic, and greatly TO - \ sembled the gatherin fifteen years ago,when .the merchants and .1: inees tnen - of Boston were more in the habit f assetribling In this histirical building than they ' have been of late. As our readers ktiow, none of the, usu al efforts were made to insure a large meeting. There has been no . parade ,of the name:: of speakers, and the pificial announcement was olds.s., made yesterday morning. - Nor /did it have the appearance of a'mere political glith- , eying. It seemed more, as it . really wee, sui : assemblage of business men, to compare yiews in relation to' the remarkable !man who is - ,destined to be the next President of the llni ted States. - , , The Atlanta (Ga.) Era says: "The Who e . nation is rising en inane for Grant for 'Pris -, 'dent. - Let.the _colurrin move forward. ' Onr camp-Argerburnkrlghtly to day; and 1868 will inaugurate. a brilliant Nture for the nition. , . 4.- . . Vile Lake fihore' Railroad Trap • edy. - ~• 1 .. A terrible. ticcident occurred at 'Angel a, lk V. en the Lake Shore railroad, last week 4, The two rear cant of a passenger, train welt th`mwit down an embankment some - fi ft y fee in height. The care immediately took llre,ao Were iundstante 6oe;ld be Tel 'mut, tix t 'ty persona Were buried to Oath. - The liuffa4- 'Io Exprese . of last Seinday sip • The fearful accident at AngOlg Is `still the 6r:staid theme ofeltehtsses et society. In tlili city. The itro‘vss of identifying Mkt:Palen ly ing at Union Chapel, oppreite tide Central ~::. . .... -: ~~. .` :;~ . E SUFIEIMAGE. Presidential. !ERE De" Innlitinnentreq.4nof. The Plane in thr amtinnenr.-- whtkiconte frout,ffiditht parts -in e heineh ce friend* and , selatiTei known totail been on the ill-Gated , train. exne•initancerf_they discovered the 'pblect albeit. search , among Ve.unbinlleil bodice which were** . examined, btit most cases they Passed around to Ue remmints of Men and women Vint in the 'boxes on !the right side of the roton, only to turn away.with tearthl ayes end berating hearts from Abe bor esinke. The dreadful thought that tho object of i their love was lying among the bi.sekeFted 'fragments of humanity caused a drearineatof the soul which - was plainly shown upon theti limes, and many a sympathetic tear was ibtOty the spectators. - The railroad 4.nd other - 9,Mcials are =tiring - in their efforts to ammo the identification of the remains, and in all prgbability.it will ere long be ascertain ' 'ed ' very nearly how: many and who *ere hill ed.and burned.. The unclaimed baggage of the paisengers is being carefully eatamined, and the least circumstance likely to be duos , in estabilshingtbeludividualitypf the burned uoted.! '- i " . . • 7 • . pOND/TION OP TIM MINED. • Therelscema to be no mum 4 3eil to ect that any of those in the rear car wore totally de stroyed.„l The heat was most. iritenite..but not sofficienpy so to burn,the entire. body. The limbs o r many - nre goner-burnedi away—but the trunks are not destroyed.. In every case the 'amine form . can berecogniZed at a casual Aare, bot not the sex. :Twenty-0Z burned I bodros- I weieqemoved from the tat s by the' coroner .and his assistants, and laid . • eby side on the ice of Big Sister Creek, under circum stances and in sech a manner that there could lie no possibility of a mistake as to the exact number-23. Of this number three are'nn douLtedly females: The reports •of the PasSl engers that there were between fifty and six ty in the car when it went over the bank are not considered reliable., It iswell known that quite a number having`seats In the cw were at the flint:Lel the accident in the smoking car; several jumped from the ear before it was thrown from the track, some escaped after it fekand some were rescued. alive, and others were taken out dead arid bu'r'ned, 'Wt. not in cluded-in those placed in the boxes of charred bodies. rirE atm- VISIT THE BCE}_ - Camner Richards and the juryi accrimpan- Ica by Superintendent' Reynolds mad -a few other gentlemen, left the city about iNO yes terday morning in a car specially provided for Angola, to view the scene of the late ea lamitrips accident, and to make the necessary incluines as to its occasion. As the matter will soon be thoroughly investigated, we shall not now express any opinion on the subject, but simply confine ourselves to the cases of the sufferers lying at Angola, whose names have not yet been recorded, as• well as any fresh circumstances, relative to the affair which appearworthy of record. , . GCiiierOl Oberidan'S RepOrt—His Behnke of . PresidesitJohnson. .After•referring to his organlitition of the military forces of the - Departmen,t he pro ceeds to say that ;"oil the 3d of March, 1867, au Act entitled 'an Act to provide' for the more 1 . efficient gofernment of:the rebel States' be ,came a taw, and he was assigned to the, com mandl[of the Fifitt - Dilitrict, comprising th State of Louisiana apd,Texas.!' • • 1 ~ • • . • • .. • '-,. ti lt •'• , • • ' The report concludes as follows: AsSioning,comm aid attic Fifth 'Military District on the 14th of •Mareh..lB6;, I fbtind upon examining the ilawthat I was. mciiiffed "to protect all persons and . property; to, 'sup- - press insurrection; disorder, and violence, and to punish, or, cause to be punished all- dis turbet's of the public peace anil eriminats.!'i _ To accomplish this purpose, and to [reor ganize these two States as loyal to the govern ment, I had a • small military form and the auiliosity vested in me by the law. I finny oucha close examination of the existing civil , governments ofthose two States, that nearly. levery civil fimetionarY, from " the - Governor down, had been soldiers Or aide's and abet tors in the rebellion, and that in !nearly. all cases they had been elected slit confederate grounds, and solely for serried rendered in their attempts to destroy the General,Govern ment. ' In 'fact, many. if\ not all, had adver tised-when they were candidates, their ser vices in tills respect as a meritorious appeal for 'votes. I found, also, that they were near-. I ly all disfranchised by the law, and were I substantially aliens. It is scarcely necessary to state that froni this condition of affairs nearly every eiVii officer Within my Command was either openly or secretly opposed to the law,. and to myself as the authority held responsible by the order' of the Exectitive of the nation for Its faithful 'execution. ...It tyas 'a difficult situation : in which to be placed, renitered still more so, by the k)parently, open aympathyof the President i trith,thefunctionaries abort alluded . to. I makes this remark; n 4. ationlarge, • but Simply 441 fin ttrOpiation. . . To have attempted "to prot6ct all persons inl their rights: of person , and property, to:suppress iiiiurrection, disorder and-violence, and punish Or cause to be pun ished all disturbers of the public peace and criminals," and reofffanige the-States against all this pr,hver and influence, in accordance with the intentions of the framers of the law, without exerting the right Of . removal, was shindy alsnrd. . . It wood have taken years for military . coin-` missions to have ,tried . those cases of viola tions of the law 'alone that wtjuld have oc curred in exact registration of the legal voters of the StateS. There was only one . eon rse to pursue, and that ivas to, removn everS: -civil officer who did riot faithfully eitecute the law, or who put any impediment, in; the way of its executiOn---"and this course* was' adopted: In puramnee of the same. I decided tone the authority Vested in me as leniently as possible; to..almost allow myself to •be foicedt to the wall by open overt acts before: action was taken; andl in every order issued the cause of removal was specifietL I had no, desire to oppress, and did not oppress: • I only wished to give security to all good citizens, and did so, and insecurity to all. office-holders . who failed to carry out the law, or' who put im pedimenta in the way of reconstruction. I nave been charged •by the 'highest au thority in the nation with . being. tyrannical and partisan, and I am not afraid to, say, when such ehargoi are made against roe, that , I feel in:My.heart they are untruthful. •In all I my dealings with the people of Lonisiatna and .Textuil wasgoverned by honor,' .justice and truth ; [no political influences or interests were allowed to Control- my act;ons. j car- vied outthe law with satisfaction to all 'except those whom it disfranchised and a set of dishonest, political tricksters who ,I had previously denounced,' and 'mho sought *0 . ke Use of the law to obtain place and po !rut Mon ;and the whole system. of reconstruc t ion was faithfully and successfully pushed, forward 'to near its completion, with ••energy. tuideConomy, rin t t u il ui tte Ist , of Setitember, 1867,Wh0ci,1 reCeiyed eral Orders- No. 81; dated. IleMlif ' of. the Army, Adju knit-eleneral'a - Office, Washington,' August SS, 1807, relieving me from the coremand of the Fifth Military Dlstrictoufd assigning me to. the Department of ttielfbixinri. „ In conclasion', - I take the greatest • pleasure', in reporting 'to - the General-in-Chief • thei cheerfuland able manner in which all the' Officers of illy command' , perfained thehr difficult and respbusible dutVes. • _ I um, sir, very raiebtfhlly rota obedient servant, - " i P.H. SIIERIDiIq,' • . ~,:, 'Major General. • - Brevet Atka' GeneinT Jo n A. Rawlins, Chief of Staff, Washington, lbi,J C. • • A vomm brick of the insp. 'lMit ; order,' who . Vffire an Unshaven thee, beeanse, tulle said it kinked foreign;lately accosted. ~Yankee, as Minn% "I say fellow, some intirs think I am a Frenehmin, and some take nid Soria ,Etalyean; ;low what do you think lam!" "Wael, I think you'r a darn'd fool," replied Jonatluni.' - • r.. _ . <~~--- ESil ,4110 IllffrifilXlSES OP MI 617,§c lus C ber.e.to Zeoutany' township . Beaver county, pa, oa a f ar f.aly.lailJottY hamt,or eberprome whit l a y crac o ff latt ear. - sotoe with 'hole throagli left ear . and mom with crop off of left ear. ant aboutairo• thirds of the hock w ith sto mark at all. 3 . he bg and LS ce me format 'tore nrop. kparikargea and .take iiws y =GU. cocan d • •Im" . _ _ BM!M ED , i 3 TliE BESI' ctim4eg EVER OFF EITED To YC „L‘Agente. One or two dsie` t ime will secure e wee sawing. Machin . eh • 64 , k -Dress, or some other article of eciimir a: ',FREE OP CQWrt Averts wanted everywhere. ea sod A few,, far t4e.: beet One Duller Pawnbrober'e . the roatitiy. Send for Circular. S. C. T sos a.. co„ , aedarriT:Sra. listacr:er 8 Banton, Ns*, HOUSE 'AND'. LOT FO - SALE: AcompoßTAßLt ~ um WELL FLNISIIED TWo story briek,reoldenee,sltuated on the North dee of rbird street., West of 14 Court Bowe. Fi e 0,64 In trout and water Will be sold low it aptilketion be mate limn. • .11AS SUCItEEIty. Cor. 8d Street aid Public Square, dect4s'B7. - ; - Bowyer, Pa. P. S. Possession given immediately. 'Desirable Prolierty•For_Sale, • • A VALUABLE AND DESIRABLE TWO STOy lA. brick residence. of eigbt rooms and full ;,.I.int, lotja cared for aide at ,a low rate and reampabls . • , terms:''' - Loti4containa fine fruit' grapes, berries, ,tc; good Mstern and all necessary out-banding, inpudlag. stablet Th'sitcuttion is in one of tho best thoroughfares of Bowser. Apply to •-•' . . . M. A. SNNEii. - Somerset, Ps., or d. 8.11.A.RF4. • • • !Beaver.. deaY67lt. k., COllV'etrAl _of ITOLDERS OF JrNE AND JILT 7 . 30% CSV II hare them eenvetted Alto the - • New 5-20 Gold..uoupott B ond, , • . • On more adcantageons toms than the ewer= e; rates. by sendinver presecting their i'.4110 to tr.; d•zini delivered immecli telt. or sent by exmsti ' Aoents for sale of pacific • Railmsd 'Bcntte.— Highest price paid for GOvernment'sectelles is ex.... change for same. Sistpen cent interest paid on de. posits.. Money loaned oaf Government Bode. ' I . • . • , .. JAIIIESV. BRADY it CO, • • - :Desks in: 4orernment Sceuritia, . ~, • • . . •• Cor. 'ourth & flood s.ts., 1, • , .. !PITTSBURGII;:PA,. Patent Bell Chnra Dasher: ~,. • , • . rrHE UNDERSIGNED RAVE ITRCAIISED THE . ..1....• right to numnfacture and sell in Beaver, Co, Pa'. Wallace & Cockerelt's Patent Bell-Churn Dasher. Tan i leading feature' of this inveunon is in having gi bell . shaped dasher, provided withmore or less holes. lead. I lag from the exterior to the interior surface, the mi -1 of each of theim openings being perpendicular to .1. tangent at the. int of the cane, where the: hole 61. • ; cated. i This dasher will be sold on moo:table tern=. 4 Township •rt hts • will be disposed of to Inirti , i ; desiring to purchase.; The folinswifig testimoniAls ma l4rhoW the estimation in which - Mid dasher is held lig ;,those who have given It a trial. . . . • We the undersigned. do hereby certify that wa need thaaboye chatmdash and;aould not he..witho4T f iffor doublet th 3 price.. Mrs. D. M. Doneboo. Yi John Caughey. Mrs. pionias McCreery, Mrs. Saw I Ramsey. ' Stu: Being engaged in- the Dairy' business for I nnmber of yeartva, d having tried everything nen funfun rn Chu lino. Km ounce Vours the beet laboreming chine yet Vied a cheap nay.' •I f. . . . Jos. Agnsmoo. Apply to or ° . ' FeI,NDLKT NDERS9N. or itS:l!_nbE dee..i5 . 67:3t CHRISTIVI A S GIFTS ! C EIRISTMAS ''GIFTS 1. TOTS! TOY! TOYS! TOYS! TOISI:ToIt! TOY!. TOYS! 110IXDAY. PRESENTS TIM:A - DAYS PRESENTS 3!i2r.l:riglinur. 7 s ~ULTr3C~II~~ Bridge et., Bridgewater, Bridgi Bridgetvater logrArvtira att.ritETuRNEDTRov NEW lORh -Ll.7haveleletted'ihe lafriestand noir!' ariedato , or l'axiety Good , ever offered.' in the enttnty. vri. I VI as usual. at the lwst ad.) friends, lam thankf o ul e for p po ast h favor... , zin(Vhi'qs, yo will 'call 311 d see nit. It Would, be to co r merate each and every 'article. Olit':Ftoctijd equal to any retztil.Variety , tivelith., country. ' - B. •MULHEIM. . . , . 1101.11 DAT GIFTS I , . . . ,•.. HOLIVAI GAFTSI •. -. ' . . . , •. - • . AT . . . . , .. . • MR S. M..L ,DONLEV , A . . . .. ...... uN TIIE-DIAMOND, • - . • - . . . , PartfoliO4, Photograph' Album*, Jail: Li}_ i• • dies.; Purses. _t. , • . • . , E • LSGANTLY BOUND BOONS, INCLIVIG !dim Brans'a works. viz: Beulah. Maeada. Ines ind St. Eliiiii'Chirdrena' Libraries. latest NOM, Children.' Toy' Books. Doll Books and Dolls. Bli Wood and Wax Jewel:T. Pencils and ,l'encil Sharpen , en, CsOOket Needles, 'Hair Brusbea' and de a ratlC :it. tY notions. ' 04'01: _ - - • TO Tilt PUBLIC. - • IT O AWIN BEEN CREDIBLY INFORMED THAT -1-1. di ff erent parties have been guilty of pufebaeg sacks that had once been filled be us, - and' on we had placed oar brands, and rehlling them alth as inferior article of Spur, and then selling the earne as flour mantactureff by its thus being guilty of PT trathrgit,. base ftsud Upon us and, also en the pub we desire to erpdbe the baseness of ench bring them tojruitice, and we therefore P erm r rtWS. of twe n t y-ffee dollars, to he paid to any p utu 7r mu illf k bnalsh us with sufllcient evidence to convict sal of the fraud aforesaid. ff'llFon. n Edgar, Mellon a Douglas, J. W. Baperintendent Beaver - Falls Jar. E. R. Alesander• BUCCEI3BOI' to VMS= & deOralanL , - . . ... . t.. ln the Court of Camino' balvintllne sar VS. ' , . Pleas of Denver County, 0.73 B:B. ffacock, T.C. Tern3.1.Q47., Foreign rkt- Ramat, anu oth- attachment m lors.uolP , .i t. ers, whose names Nov. 19,481,1. iin moan , W til art unknown, do- : CourVgive ' judgment !V ,the and le bright:sines , underl defendants: 1 Neff and ` 861, ..A of nam the ~e ..Allian sty ce .of N claim. being filed, Reile. Prothonotary, to boles tAtt n,'ct;, 011Bompany.`!' ', ' . llgths in above case. J 4 2 o iti Pl'oth y hereb ll giv Otar en fa.office, on tilt Mad d th &Lo aulgigeff Win be t l an ge 03 o the 16 ~.„„ n A.' at 4 p. m. JOBil CA L.'"' deeireratiar. Fro. . , . . ! , BLANK S! • Mdk LANK DEEDS, ARTICLES OF A altEE36" lear Surainerne.Sabprentre, Warrants', CUOg n „,„ - " --- nt .; 'lte".dc.,an always be had a the Arra Give a' - c""•.; cheap . . they eau be bought uliewbero. : all. • • Bca‘er. Pa.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers