The Beaver Argus. (Beaver, Pa.) 1862-1873, June 26, 1872, Image 2
The Beaver ATgus. t. wEyAND, RUTToII aWD.Paoriorrou. Beaver. Pa.. Jane 26th. UM. THE Philadelphia Prev (Forney's paper) says that Russell Errett, the. chairman of the Eepublican State Committee, conmdes. in private eon versat ioe,that the Cameron-Mackey-. Treasury Ring Sti►te ticket will be overw h , tlmingly defeated at the Oc.. t ober election. 'rut: Cincinnati newspaper :ire largely occupied with the settle merit of two disturbing questions. LtT us suppose that the following One is,why Judge Stanley Matthews '. . u no h t:ce is7 ap 4 pea : ted in the A ItGus of Feb. should suddenly have been retained The ecideo B Ittitt;on. by the Administration officers msith . a $lO,OOO fee in a Government ease to be conclusive trcharaat,ttioVaantdacctr-etnAne after his declaration that he purpos- t r i u l i e ma . l i i i i e l t l i nt lo it i bers, lea rural of the tritest kind. ding some little official position ed supvortiug Grant instead of ()roe- i for t • t abut r trat! - It t eras P a t en Cudl; there i remelt:to no doubt rpose ley if tie should become the nominee i of . beartiiiing the pubrig. tu n t ut at t co t t he eo P l a rly to of the Liberal Republican - Conven- I cixt ' n ee les rk . e N 'a ti l ur i tti7u7oVer d e Va C d tk etn hi tot ni ro i ns f n an re 4 l h el i t; tion, and did not regard he Tariffi i i i,'„ h u i6 .q c u b t a te r g:' ell V l , ' , e r t t t ve ni t b n e o r w o 7 y fi l l lt ni t c reenta qoastion as of importance enough tol ar we c h ni ev a v a rw o d u u t u h r but that 111 the ugly things and ttit entene any division. The other Ira, - a rtnodent of Ne:Drigh alt strict) true;t w r i u c e in ; t a ty nd ;r w e ere u vr h e t ‘v !tether it is true that Mr. Settle,the' i t r i - m ai p . ru n e a r f r i h rg le ..t ke Q n n e n to ei r .4 t to liltb. a ii nd th tt ti lhe ri w sSThe President of the late Philadelphia 44 . u 0 r wart -book whenever Itllleame a tall: rk p itcri. le a longetory short, be ought to be In the 4'4 mvention, was there only Paying.. -therr•nitvuttary: and made to puffer In the Iteeb for tor the ' eitraordinary privilege lit; .ti.,. mans chg, (7ll u l i s t . ; r a r: t ti t erLl and moral driumuen received of repreienting the United; But Bill i. 4 s harp, plausible, and titan Government as Minister to Pe-! has :lbumlaut means at command. ru thou t going from North °arca inft drawing SlO,OOO therefore, and eon dußing his North Carolina business: without interruption. The Commer cial seems ta consider - hot h of these among those things which no fellow (la n understand. IP there is a man living who thoroughly understands Aznerlean 4 politics - and the wants of the Ameri can people, that man is Horace Gree-': ley. He has had every opportunity, : ter acquire this knowledge, and these: opportunities have been improved i0:1 thr utmost. In a government de-1 riving t its powers from the consent olthe governed, and whose foreign. kral domestic policies receive theiri . , shape and color from the popula'r' will, journalism furnishes the very hest political school. The suceessful. conduCtor of a great newspaper must posses not merely an itc 7 ".E. curate comprehension of the worksz lugs of the governmental machine in the past, and thereby obtain a clear. and vivid conception of its merits : and deficiencieS but he must hive so to speak-with his finger on thel popular pulse, and catch from thence those premonitions .which betoken? the coming of events whose direction' are to be controlled by prompt anft ju. • dicious statesmanship. It is from: his observations and suggestions that.' statesmen derive most of their ideas,: and not unfrequently the measures. which change the fate of nations. The diplomacy which brings peace at home and respect abroad, origin ate not in cabinets or congresses, but ill some humble • editorial room, %1 I are the i notate surveys the horizon with impartial eye, and points Out the path of safety and of duty. It is t Dress which makes and unmakes Presidents, which sets up and polls down administrations, which dis p.oses deserved praise :and distri- . , butes merited punishment; and he' who can property wield this gigantic . engine, must have the most valuable: f those qualities which enter into', the composition of an able ruler. 'ono but a first-class intelleet;. could gain and hold the rank , which Mr. tira. , elZy occupies la the jourualS istie profession; and to the ample bruin with which nature has endow=: NI him, are 44tigt.ij h , Tolie4erience: and acute observation. It has been his business, as well as his pleasure,: to study closely the shifting phases. of national affairs during the last for= ty years; and a disciplined judgment,. hacked by an hor*it purpose, has enabled him to look below the sur;- face of things and grasp the rause* ‘% here others saw only the effects ie has been as ready to rebuke -the hlunders and crimes of the Republi raii as of that of the Democrat lc party; an.i, whatever differences may exist a- t,S thecorreCtness of his views, the ; bitterest enemy will not deny Ilia(' they have been dictated by conscien-: tiouseonviction, and advocated witW, a zeal which springs 'alone from pas . l triode impulses. Mr. Greeley is now, and always litis r ' been, both by agsociatimi and natm: ra I •ytnpathy,very close to the masses: ,f his countrymen. He awinvesti-,-I pattsi their condition, political mull -.Hal, more critically than any man.' ~f hip day; he requires no en lighten ment &met:ruing their needs, no en-1 ~,u ragement to see that those needs') are .41 far as practicable supplied. Ile; \% 1H bring to the presidential chair—': sh ,, uld he he elected—a ripened drain, all incorruptible integrity, any ardent loveof republican institutiomr, and principles, and a generous ambi-' , L/1111 to earn the gratitudt of a and inteliiwnt people by faithfully,. and honorably discharging every du t y impel on him. Nor will these . dutics he embarrassed by intAguesi ( - ,.r a second term, and thus the inoA dangerous temptation to misrule can beset an executive is:Avoid- ; ad ante. With the above qualifications, the vour s e of Mr. t ftwley—if may he easily predletctl. Honest, and honorable himself he will select Lon- f est atui hontxrahle men as his couusant jors; and no considerations of private 1 feeling or political expillienvy will ma l ice him to prostitute the public. -ervice to personal aggrandizement, r reward partisan services. regard les.s of the necessary qualifieutious. _ 7 Loving the whole Uttiou„ - and not a , I art of It; regarding the'. Northern: and southern people as metahem of the same fatnilS, and entitled to Ulu . _ same rights he will; by his. intluence , , and example, remove the last ves t igeS of the rebellion, and give us ..nce more a united and happy coun try. dm inisterinFT equal and exactjus t ice to all, gnmtit4, , exclusive privi leges to none; fighting corruption whenever anit wherever it shown its head; recognizing and respecting the -operiority °idyll to military author t y,and opposing that tendency to cen t rul izat ion which has lately grown to :in alarrnin: ex tent.the nation under Ills guidance will go back to the solid li , undation, and learn again the les sons of liberty regulated by law which Jefferson taught. A lust for new ter ritory will not lead him to insult weak qationalitleci, ignorance or con tempt of international ut,ge will not induce him to cnplil.the republic the b u tt of England and the laughing stock of Europe. He will aak for nothing which is not right, submit 'to nothing which is wrong. A horde ,of hungry relations will not drew : sustenance from the public, and oftl-' -cers of the army will not be detailed for service at the White H°° : bribes, in. the shape of presents Will not be accepted as a part o f the per quisites of the chief rnagtstraey. and the first offite in the gift of the peo ple will not be u sed ass huckster's stall 'for the emolutrient of the tem privy occupant. Horace Greeley is pied ge d by his record, by his charac ter, by every thing which constitutes his manhood, to make a President worthy of the name. He uses his wits and money to avoid arrest, bestows presents upon men of influence, is an active man in his party, knows how to run poliths and in his turtrbecomes a candidate for office, succeeds In getting the nomi nation, whereupon the Auct•s Is ex pected to come out in this style: It affords as no litt'e degree of satisfaction to AUZIOPUCV to our reader., that the Mon. William Suilthers has succeeded In obtaining the nomina "en' rnote ar cite ry ee f r o ; at; that could Thtabe made. Mr. Snitther's ability, integrity and moral fitness ors WeibkrlOßlD to be of the very filgtimt order. De should not only be cordially supported by every Republican In the county, but we are inclined to think the Democracy ought to r , for him too. Hurrah, then, for the lion. Will iam Sint there and the man wbo hurrahs for any ot.e else, or double anythlre,: we may say in the future in his behalf. can hare "a bead put on htmself by hailing UM on the street. or calung at .the A Rg; rs office at any hour between I.un.np and nun down, Sundays excepted. Of course, the above is all supposi tious, but how far short of the reali ty would come if the advice of a large number was heeded? For months past the ARGus, and nearly all the other papers of the State, have had matter in their columns all go ing to show that General Hartranft was a regular Bill Smithery in his of ficial transactions as Auditor Gener al. Now, iAvever, he happens to be the Republican nominee-for Govern• or, and because some of UK decline to throw up our hats and make asses of ourselves by declaring him to be a paragon of honesty, Ate., we are ac cused of "treachery toward the tick et." Not only are politicians mow ed,,in making charges of this kind, but ministers of the gospel are help ing it along. God pity such duty teachers as these—they netsd recoil stinction themselves fur worse than on those for whom they pretend to labor. THE Electoral vote has been print ed from time to time in the papers, but it 'has generally been incorrect, because it has not included the sup plemental apportionment provided fur by the last 101 l fur that purpose. The following table is accurate, wn tainim.,, the additional delegates to represent the Congressmen-at-large, given to a few of the Ea.stern States for their fractions: 1.11113.• K,•utuel: y .. 1 New 11n1Lipshirt• . . 5 Teilm-rew, 1 \ ern - loot . .5 1-as warb *et t.r . _ t 1111110(P 4. Mit.oourt Ithotle Islatill ti Arkansas t‘inhecticut New York. New di.trttry XS 9 Vluricla . • - • - ..... • • - . . . Pen ter. ‘l% . Worconsiu . .10 Virginia i tornia North Carolina . , Stintrrsots . huntii Larull.n.l . ura,aim .. 3 . 11, kitunam . ..... 5 A lubanni ' Wert Virginia. „I.;".Cevada . ...... 3 Luiiirial S (4110 I ..eloreuskeL EMI It will be seen that the total electo ral vote 4 - t;7. Under the Constitu tion a majority of all is required for ehoite. This w•.ill he Isl. A. MonN EY BATF.s,V. S. Attorney for uttill, is now in Washington city consulting in regard to Mormon 'nat ters. He has drawn a Grand Jury composed of six Saints and six Gen tiles who will present six test eases against Mormons for polygamy under the law of 1.462.. The cases are to be tried in accordance with the last de ,:ision of the Supreme Court, and the object of the trial is to have a final decision from this court upon the several cases under United States law brought up in a regular way.— The District Attorney says plural marriages are tkvreasing rapidly, and if the Supreme Court decides against the Mormons the cases to be pre sented, they will give up polygamy. Is regard to American indirect claims a Geneva special dated June 22d xays the question has'been def initely settled, and in n manner un expected ty the members of the ('curt. The American agent and counsel having been iustructed to declarel that the - United States did not se a money award for indirect messes, but only desired the settle ment of the principle, Lord Tenterd- en, on the part of his tioverument. (railed attention to the article of the treaty whieh give. 4 the arbitrator.; onlyTiuthority to consider claims in relation to money award, and sub mits that since the United States de clared they did not_ seek money award for these classes of claims, they could not properly he entertained by the Court. The Atneriolti eounsei thereupon demauded judgment on this issue by the Court. The court took time for its decision, but is known to havy decided against the adinksibility of the indirect claims. the. jud g ment will he (It-slivered, it is mid, when the Court meets on Wednesday,. thc. 29E111 and :: is rei*rteek-.10 - -lig , •: , liS . 7efitiit Ile to hut .Ci&Vern ments. ONE of thestruktn.rest of the Admin istration office-bidders at Washing , - ton, last ‘veek. made an estimate of Horace Greeley before the Baltimore Convention. The fact is the more atewort hy because the officer is one of the shrewrieq observers of Politi cal events, and one whose jnrignoent as to the nature is received with res pect everywhere. !Le says that be has little doubt that Mr. Greeley - 14 . 111 have 517 delegates out 'of the 7'4 - en the first. ballot, anti tn:tt of the alele gates already chosen by the several States 317 are favorable to Greeley and only 11 against him; these being from Oregon, Delaware. and one from West Virginia- Eie also says there is a powerful effort making on.the' part of :gime of the old Bunkers of Coe Democracy to defeat Greeley.te fore the Convention by a "coup de t, "and circulars 'fir great numhers havebeen cantldent*ily sent abroad for that purpose; The scherns,as de veloped is to secure the States of Arf, anuses, Georgia, Ohio, Illinois, Tex as and New Jersey which, It is held, would do much toward controlling the Convention. The oftim-holder, however, unhesitatingly admits that Mr. Greeley 'will be nominated, and that the contest in .Noveinter will be a very close one. A UEL i ABLE repOrt COMPS LO us that a large body of Indians have started for the Texas frontier, determined upou commencing a general Indian war. Already Iwo tights have taken place between their advance and the whites, In which four of the latter were killed. We are thus seeing the /Imo pro gramme carried out by t fie savages that has been the rule for years. It ,seeitis that the only thing left for the Goyernment Is to send such a force against the incorrigible Indians as will entirely defeat them, and then to put them upon their reservation and keel them there by actual force. There is no truth in these Indians.— they willfool the Government, and make every kind of promise when taken at disadvantage, but on the first chance they will rob and kill the very people that have spared them. The Peace Commissioners, • the Friends,and all the disinterested and honest men who have been trying to christianize the Indians cannot deal with these troubles. In their place must be sent the army. There is no other way,and the sooner it is adopt ed the sooner we will stop the mur dering of useful and valuable citi zens. -•••- H Fr. 11 , 41: A ND . Till ERE. —During' a recent trial at Rock port, Illinois, Judge Laird interrupt ed the testimony of a lady witness remarking that it was opt relevant.. The Lady raised her head, and with a look made of injured innocence, inquired: "Well, sir,am I telling this. story, or you T"l'he Judge allowed her to talk as long as she wanted to. —ln one of the courts a juryman being galled and not answering, the usual notice that he would be fined was pronounced against him; upon which a person who stood by said to the Judge. "You may fine him as much as you please,but I don't think that you will recover the fine, for I saw him buried about a week ago. —An important discovery of coal has recently been made near Mis souri Valley, lowa, threk , veins hav ing been struck ranging from thirty to forty-two inches in depth, eighty feet below the surface, and the indi cations are that they will yield abund antly. Sirong indications of coal have been found near Council Bluff of late. —The statement' which has been going the rounds of the press to the effect that Hon. Charles Francis Adams, nominated by the Anti-Se cret-Society Convention at Oberlin, was a Mason, is declared by his son to be without the least foundation.— He says that his father never had any connection iNith Free Masonary. --A few days ago the water.; of Lake Ontario rose two, feet and three or four inches above the ordinary lev el, then receded about the same dis• tanee below the usual level, making a variation in the height of the wa ter of nearly nr quite four feet and a half eye .IwglitNA44 l oMin Maze for the eommot ion. —At Skal n Francisco Tuesday even ing of last week ,a cornet appeared in midheaven. Moving rapidly and somewhat irreguhuly,it passeirl across the sky northeasterly,and disappear ed. Apparently ascending again, it come out like a star of the first mag nitude. The tail was wavey and lurninous,like rose colored vapor. It was in sight R ix minutes. —Accidents are numerous in the coal regions of l'ennsylvanki. Dur ing a recent week, four men were burned by explosion of fire damp, one by explosion of gas, one killed 'by a blast, one car coupler lost two fingers, a boy was killed by the fall ing of cog wheels, and numerous minor necidents,all of which occurred in the vicinity of Tamaqua. --There died in Massachusetts late ly an amentric genius named Sol. Hewer Sanborn, who by will be queathed his mortal remains to Dr. Holmes and Prof. Agassiz, to be pre pared and placed In any museum of anatomy chasm by them. Of his skin, two drum heads were to be made, and given as souvenirs to two friends of his youth, ttmd in return, they were to have beaten upon the drums. at the base of Bunker Hill monument, Yankee Doodle, at sun rise every 17th of June. —Well, of many and of various libel suits have we heard, but never before have we read of a libel suit brought by one man against nineteen of his fellow creatures ! In Howell Co., Mo., in July, 1870, a meeting was held which passel retolutinns de nouncing Col. Monks and his friends as "a law defying clique." Stung to madness by this action, the Colonel has sued the nineteen who voted for the resolution; and what is more,has laid his damages in the ;weet little sum of tiixty-tive Thousand Dollars. If he should recover, the nineteen min hold hold' another meeting and take up a contribution. —ln The Elmira Daily Gazelle we read of the dreadful effects of the Philadelphia "enthusiasm" upon a delegaWby the name of Bridgman. This gentleman, who is the editor of The Perri Tan EXPkatir. -from the litne or - Ms - reaching - Pfitindelphur until the moment of his departure, shouted, baWled. yelled, and roared fur Grant. 'Now end then he stopp ed to eat, or to drink something, tr& ter which his shrieks were more piercing and his Loyalty more thun derous. Unaetfect of this was, ,fiat when he arrived at Elmira he could not speak above a whisper ; hi s hand s were blistered four blisters deep; his nails were all knocked off. and each thumb was worn otf up to the find, joint. AU the hair was singed from his head by the fervent heat within, and "one eye was closed out of re spect for the loss his hair." "Cer tainly," says The fkrzefle "a more frightfuL.,demonstrution of the terri ble effects of 'enthusiasm' could not be imagined." Commenting upon this physical and psychological exhi bition, The Gazette says: • 'We think Bridgman will get a Post Office." 'What.. does this mysterious and'oe cult suggestion mean? -,:An Austrian is said to have dis covered, by means of a tnicroscope,in a stone takeri from the pyramid of Dashour; many interesting particu lars connected with the life of the an cient Egyptians. The brick itself is made of the mud of theNile,chopped straw and sand, thus _confirming what the Bible and Heroddtus have handed down to us as to the Egyp tian method of Besides these materials, the microscope has brought other things to light—the debriss of river shells, of fish 'and of insects; seeds of wild and cultivated flowers, of corn and barley, the field pea and the common flax, cultivated probably for both food and textile purposes, and the radish, with many others known to science. —The riot which recently occur red at Smyrna between the Greeks and Jews, Is said to have arisen o of the prevalent Eastern superstition' that the Jews mix the Wood of Christian children in the unleavened breed for the pass overrites. As it happened, the. body of a Christian child which had been mhising since the previous day was washed up by the sea. A report was at once spread that its jugular vein had been divid ed, and the excitement among the Greeks soon manifested itself. The Jews wherever met were ill treated, and two of them were murdered.— The victims were old women, and are said to have defended tneiuseivc s with much bravery. it was not until the garrison of the town—three hun dred stroue and other forces had been called out"that the riots were put down. PENNSYLVANIA. Senator ,McClure Opens the Greeley thmprogn in the North—A Signiji mot Speech. MANsrtmo, Tioga euunty, ra„ June 20—Senator McClure, dropped in upon us yesterday, and delivered the annual address before the Annu al Apwiciation of the State Normal School last evening to a very large audience. His subject was "Our Teachers " This morning he visit ed the Soldier's Orphan' School, and addressed the pupils, with Repre sentative Mitchell. A joint commit tee of Republicans and Democrats urged him to deliver a political-4'd dress, and he tinally conseoted to speak this afternoon. Business was generally suspeilded, and nearly the whole cominualy, of both sexes, met In the Town Hall this hot af ternoon and he Lull an address of over an hour in length, with pro found attention. He spoke very dispassionately, but positively of the demoralization re sulting from unwise and selfish per sona! rule in the State and nation, and urged that party lines he disre garded to maintain the manhood of the citizens and the supremacy of the civil authority under all circuw• stances. lie did not name any State candidate,s, but urged that no party prejudices should make Republicans vote against those candidates who are honest and competent, and have honest surroundings and associations. Professor Allen, founder,,of?the State Normal School, Judge 110,mphries, Colonel Johnson, ex-Representative Elliot, and many others of the lead ing Republicans of this vicinity. participated in the meeting and are working actively for Greeley, ThP War-horise CameribP. The Washington correspondent of the Cincinati Ctanerrial says: Poor old Simon Cameron has also shaken the dust of Washington from his feet, and, nursing his foxy nature goes back to Pennsylvania. Quueroa was ruined when he win; mail man of the Foreign Relations ee in place of Mr. Sumner; vie . .Mx 441 1 MICIT Intelligence with re spect even to our Own country,to say nothing of foreign countries; without the least understanding of what the "term international law" means; with ignorance of geography,know ing nothing of diplomacy, destitute of any appreciation of the value of history and precedents, with no skill in anything save the manipulation of party politics, and he brought to his new duties the intelligence only which taught that he was in every, respect unfit for the place. The main duties of t he chairman of Foreign Re lations have, therefore, fallen on the second member of the committee, Mr. Harlan, who hag managed thew without complaint from any source. Cameron himself has been absent :ouch of the time during the past sea-, sion. The fact is Cameron is ton olds to perform the active duties of a sen ator. Ills strength as a politician is daily failing, and were It not for the , l doz. bottles of champagne which he daily drinks his doctors say he would decline rapidly. His age now is very near seventy-four, and-there are but few men who have attained his years who have had such a restless, labor ious busy life as his. Repose he has n"ver known. Whether controlling a newspaper managing a bank ,super intending, a railroad, running a eon vention,governing the politics of the state, or a public officer, his life has been one. of unceasing care and anxi ety. lie,hits now formally given out the word that he will no longer he a candidate for public Dam, and when Cameron says this he means more than the vice-president does by his words. ' The attitude of polities in Pennsyl vania anti the disorganisation of the renublican party there are due to him more than any other cause. He has lost his skill in managing, and the mutt of lhe October election in i that state will show that when he wrought the nomination of Hart ' ran ft he struck a more serious blow to the administration than auy of its enemies could have struck. His term of service in the senate expires with the time of the present admin istration, March 4, 1872. Forney on the Situation in Pennsylvania. The Philadelphia Tress, which suppbrts Grant and Wilson, but re ntutiates Ifartranft and Allen, eon taids the following in its issue of last week: • Oar only danger, and the only el ement that bodestirunt and Wilson evil in November, is about fifteen hundred corrupt politicians, all told. These are threatening the independ ent and honest Itepubleicans, who have resolved to defeat a part of the Stale Tie k etiwi t h edefett t of,tirrent 'if they: &via-how triEtheirilletation and acquiesce in the seleetion of the men they have chosen to rule over this grand old commonwealth and control its finances. .• The threats of these men would he impotent and meaningless but for the fact that the entire, machinery of our politics is in their bands, and the knowledge we have that they will hesitate at nothing ~to accomplish their base ends. They are acqUaint ed with the Tweed-like methods cf defeating popular will by ballot-box 'stuffing and repeating, and they have a long purse and a flexible coucience. They °fierily boast upon the streela that they will count-in their man It the majority again. 4 him be' not too great. If, as we eXpect, in the . eveut that they do not yield to the demand of the people and remodel thei r ticket, the seal of condemnation is se t upon them by an overwhel- I • ming majority, they say they will re . aliate upon the'Zieuleixadent Re pahlionas, who hati'e never faltered In -their devotion to the party and - who are true to GrOint, but who will no longer subMit tO the rule of crime and rnomupeteney, by voting for Greeley and counting him in in No v—ber.e ; hiorticrikii* a, rs a fliorly-spid, defer scheme it Lai *rid WOrthy of the Ofn• BOtwill It win? Will the peole of Pennsylvania, epos Whose rig if sods indepeodwe thee@ Men haire been yearly :chins- until they think that the Republican voters of the state are but slaves to do their bidding and edify their will, allow these unscrupulous end toriiipt trick% stern to succeed? We think not. We know - lher-Temgnize the-greati-dis• grace and danger of continuing the rule of the men who are attempting to rear a Tammany Milt in, Phila.. clelphia. They are faithful , both to their country and their • party, and they realize that the men who are engaged' in this plot are. a4anger to the one and a disgrace to the other. A V BASEL ABA NDULNED. 4 RemaraL fe Voyage—Pratire Wor thy Conduct of the Ondain of the Norwegian Bark Aristides. , Norwegian-I:lark Aristides, Olsen, from Barrow, arrived June 16 at New York. and anchored on the Bar, and the next morning made the following report: Took the north ern pas-sage and hail fine weather; has been nineteen days west of the Bunks. June 5, latitude 42.35, lon gitune GO 30; fell in with the Norwe gian brig John Anderson, from Phil adelphia for Stettin, its a sinking condition;. took off captain, his wife and nine men, and brought thefts to this r rt. Captain Ander son made the ollowing report: Left Philadelphia may 24 with a cargo of 2[436 barrels of petroleum; had fine weather up to June 2 in hit. 2950, long. 6553; when I discovered the vessel hail skung a leak. I plac ed six men:Altai round the leak increasing. 1 then put Of hands to work at the pumps, and continued pu mping night and day un til the motaing of the sth; at 6 m., 1at:'4225, long. 60.3 G I sound ed the pumps and *found six teen feet OfWater. The men being complete ly exhausted from steady pumping, and seeing the water gaining on them, refused to stay. by the vessel any longer. I saw there was no pos sibility of saving the vesse).- 1 came to the conclusion to abandba her. 'I at once got one of the boats. out and placed my wife and live then in it, and made her fast astern of the ves sel. I kept four men on board with myself. The vessel at the time with steering N.. by E. At sp. in. the . Norwegian Bark Aristides, Captain Olsen, from Barrow for New York, hove in sight; seeing Our signals of distress he bore down to us and took myself, wife awl crew, eleven all told, on board his vessel and brought us to this port. 1 wish to return my sincere thanks, on behalf of myself and crew, to Captain Olsen and crew fur the kind manner in which they treated us while on board their ves sel. BULTA L TR E ATITIENT OF A WIVE A Man Chains His fife to a Heavy Height—A New Method q! Curing Intemperwice—Burns .Her Mouth with a Poker to Prevent Her Put* ling the Intoxicating Cup to Her Lips. Last night one of the mayor's pa trol had his attention drawn to a bare headed, lightly draped woman, who had a heavy chain padlocked to her neck, and a large metal weight, weighing fully thirty pounds, at tached thereto. Thinking she was an escaped lunatic, he at once took her into custody and lodged her in the lock-up. She gave her name us Diza Martin, and stated, while they were relieving her of her bonds, that the chain and weight had beet] plac ed on her by tier husband, and that his cruel treatment to her had been such that she left home with the in tention of drowning herself. the was Wet on Market street by a coup le of young men, who dissuaded her from the rash act, and she was, when utptured, wandering about the steetw in an almost exhausted condi t inurningr_Mayor litacktnore instituted an investigation, and there she informed him that her htisband's name is Arthur Martin; that he hud been in the habit of treating her in the way that was seen the night be fore. Sit? also said that on last Fri day lie had deliberately heated a po ker red-hot, and burned her with it, and that his object in doing so was to prevent her from drinking liquor. The woman's appearance Was unser able in the extreme, and if her state ments are correct, we have here a turn pie of cruelty in our midst hard ly second to that practiced by the most savage barbarians. Martin wu.s arrested this morning at the instance of Chief-01-police Ir win, who trade an Inrorination charging hint with austult and bat tery. A Le...icier reporter visited him in cell Nu. 6 at the lock-up, to see what munner of man it. was that could chain his wife and abuse her as he is alleged to have dune. We found him to be rather a large, re spectable looking individual, of Probably fifty years of age, and giv ing no 'tut ward signs of being such a brute as was supposed. lie, in short, looks I.ke a sober, well-to-do dray man—that is, we understand his bus iness—and one not likely, so far us we could judge, to be gutlty of the conduct presumed against him. But, nevertheless, appearances in this instance were deceptive, ilisstatement is briefly this, lie IS u draytiatti for S. P. §hriver 811(1 With his earn ingssu pportii it Wil ily bteludiug hituaelf, wile and eight children ut bis'houSo tin Seventh av enue near the foot of Prospect street. For a lung time back Mrs. Martin hus been so addicted to drinking that she has not only been perbectiy useless in taxing care of her children, but has made away with considera ble of his money and brought re-_ proach on his good name. .1n order to stop this he concluded to take the law into his own hands, and in or der to do so effectively purchased a chain Mal secured her to a bed every morning before going to him hiburs. It did not appear w work well, however, for nearly every time she managed' to break away, and would be absent when he returned to din ner—in short, Woultknot be at home again until lie would' send the chil dren skirmishing around the neigh borhood for her, when she was gen erally picked up in some out-of-the way place in an intoxicated condi tion. lie hail applied this treatment for several days back—we don't know how" long, and , he will not state the length of *late.' But last evening She broke loose and was locked up. lie says the injury on her mouth was oi , eisioned by it folk though in relation to his burning her on the mouth with a poker he is ret icent. A hearing was ghlit the prisoner this morning and the information having been read to him, he acknOwl edged he had chained her and detail ed the reason ho had for doing ea as given above. He attempted to Na di.), himself because of 4he trouble the intemperate habita of his Aide had given him, and described •at sonic length how she stole money from his clothes wherewith to mini fy, her cravings for liquor. No long er ago titan Monday he says he entailed a ten dtillsr note from pocket-book. When naked Whet he he had' burned her. Monti) with a po ker; hn'eqnlvomttert anti rand he Old licit remember hr - haviang done so. The mayor held him in : s l o )ll ban to answer a charge of aggravated as sault and WWII, and 6004 accounts he was In search of the requisite bondsman. The chain with widely he secured her le' heatry enough 'to• hold a dozen women. 16 is just lotigeiroUgh When doubled, u. 3 he wa4 the - babit of rigging It, and beingidtaehed to her net*. and the weight toi hold her in a very uncomfortable titon . o . lg Pos tnre while sitting down. 'The out rage In thus' binding her, waft one that not even theft-eeastaniewhieh b 6 alle r r than I thirtninTlgro l such a xamplo' of Olm eat sUptlar Well 'individuals *lll adopt some othe liftettkod of faniily disciple. OM. Labrador. The following details have been rep , calved oftlie ,items of ;bows -fishing Messikl'Huntstani iforty-flve men, on the coast of Lablador, April tremendous gale,set in fruin the north-east, and the teld.fee - was ;quickly broken up into floes, „mid . formed into one of those drifting "packs" that are so dangerous. ' Stores of huge ice-bergs were also moving about, rending the field-ice with their! Wows, its If with the'luun mer of Thor, and dashing against each An wild commotion.. The fierce nor'easter was pressing the ice upon the land, and under the lee of the vessel, grim and frowning, were the savage shores of Labrador.. The only ehahce of the Huntsman lay in battling her way through this pack near the shore, so as to reach the, 'more solid ice at soniedistance, where she might fled a harbor of refuge. Fora titneshe fought her way bravely dodging the onsets of the tines, es caping marvelously the crush of meeting iceberg', and seemed to have a charmed life. Out before she could clear the dreadful pack of ice mon sters that wereroariug around, night came down, dark as pitch, and the storm seemed to increase with the night. Blinding snow-drifts swept along the sky—the freezing spray fell upon the deck—the wind howled aloft, the noise of the crushing floes , was awful. The ill-fated Huntsman was now at the mercy of the waves,. • and in the grim darkness nothing could be done to avoid peril. AboUt 9 o'clock a tremendous sea struck her, hurling her bodily on Fish Rock, where she began immediately to ' lireiik up. Three of the crew leaped 6Verboard,. hoping to escape, just as she was about to strike, but the poor fellows were struck by a floe and killed in a moment. The remaining fifty-nine men took to the rigging, as the sea was breaking over the ship; but they were only a few minutes there when the masts went overboard hurling the whole of them into the: seething chtddron. Forty-five of them sank to rise no more, or were crushed amid the floating ice-masses, the captain and his son among the number. Seventeen managed to scramble. upon . the ice, but in most pitiable plight; some had both antis broken, some broken legs and ribs. Only three escaped uninjured. What an awful situation for human beings! Lying maimed on the ice, writhing in agony, the sea drenching them, the tierce nor'easter chilling them, darkness around, the blows of the frost giants resounding on all sides and making night hideous. At any moment the ice on which they lay might be rent' in pieces, and they buried into the boiling surges. No wonder they almost envied the fate of their comrades, now at peace be neath the waves. When morning at length broke a ft er the dreary hours of that terrible night, they saw a - veisel at some distance vith the au spicious name of Rescue. The poor fellows managed to crawl along the ice, aiding one another as best they could, the sound men half carrying the others with broken limbs, and so they passed over nearly a mile of bro ken ice, and at length got on board the Rescue, more dead than alive. One of the saddest features in this ease is that the wholeof the men who perished belonged to one little fishing village, called Buy Roberts. which is now iitterally a "place of weeping," for there is !hardly a faintly but has lust a connection or member. CEZZI The Democratic Bugbear What Is ? From the Hartford Post plod_). The great, and indeed almost the only argument fur tfie re-election of President Grant hrthat his defeat will be the defeat Of the Republican party imir the restoration of the Democrats to power. 'There are seine e i r wmema. vi.rulliblAca V 111.1“ are engrosses with hat view of it. They wring their hand* .over it. Aud they want everybody to vote fur Grant and say no more about it, because if they don't there's danger of the dreadful Democrats cowing back and electing James Buchanan orJames K. Polk, or some such dead person. Well, we hope we have a proper horror of a Democrat, that we appreciate the pure cussedness of the :creature, and have an adeinate con ception of the dreadfulness of his possible return. But let us turn over the possibilities of the case - a little. Buchanan is dead to begin with. So also: are James K. Polk and Franklin Pierce, awl a good many others-- Let's not be afraid of them any wore. We have had a sort of idea that the Rebellion had been put down and the war ended; that the Union and its authority had been restored in all the States, Sli very abolished, and the freedmen given the ballot and made citizens, Do you suppose thezeliany danger of the re- es tablishment of Slavery? tti of the disfranchisement of the blaekst) or of n new rebellion being started by the men who worried: through fouryears and tailed in Un i t one they made such long and careful preparation for? It you do, by all means' vote to perpetuate military: government and continue the rule of the carpet-bagger and thief in the south, till the country lies desolate and the danger disappears. Would it be a calamity to have Camerod displaced for a man like Buckalew,, or Chandler for a sober gentleman, or . Pomeroy for an honest man, or Howe for a statesman? Or would it be disastrous to the country if such': then as lien Butler,and Farnsworth,- and the gang of railroad congress-: Wien should be omitted from a eon.: gross and their places occupied by . different—they could -hardly be ot h.; er than better—men' Greeley - Is Running In Spite of the Newspapers. From Brook's . N Y. Express: A morning journal, anti ey, has quoted, and k yet lam many, nay, very many, .DoAterrati Journals, that oppose Greetera nom ination at Baltimore; but the com pilers thereof do not seem to com prehend this fact, that Greeley is running, in spite of the newspapers, as well as ttic politicians. All, or nearly ail, the old Republican politi cams in Cincinnati opposed Greeley, sod were for Adams and others; but ,but from the hopper, enthusiastlmlly, too, came Horace Greeley. The tact is, the, people have got it into their heads that Geeeley is their man, their canditlattilbil4m op mile of -the newspapers, anti of some public men, "too, hut Stimulates their seal. Once In every ten or twenty years the people break loose or, the Presiden .cy, and they are running loose now; and we do not see how we can mike them, either as Democrats or Repub. limns run-with "the machine" unless "the machine" runs with them. The more time Democrats have had -to think 6 1Qreeley, the more they are running for him, as we ace and hear. from all the DemoernlicConventl'onS, save that in little Dete‘tate- it is not only a spontaneous outburst, as in Teunesaee • and New-York, but a conclusion—a logical conclusion—as In Indiana, lowa, Kansas, Wiscon ,.• /nisei:mit pay, everywhere, ex. et Pt DeleWare. - Flab' Iletroweeo q Mau *ad u ni eau. The Indian papers _publishthe fol lowing account: , •4A Inarty'Of iix na tives coming toward Deyra through Mohun Pans were attacked by a hye na; it made straight atone of them, and flew at his throat. The poor fallow stretched out his hand to keep off his assailant, on which the hyena bit them severely; his companions, instead &coming to his aid, took ref uge in some adjoining trees. The man, finding himself thu4 deserted, and his hands In a mutilated state, pluckily turned on hisgeneray, and his noaaar r ititt f Out in the ° ilseistance. By this means hrfiecur ed the animal, - an d hi s & • *dons, king courage, came ~owg from' heir secure position,,,.. add biltabored o brute to death Altith 1/ : saw the unfortunate man at ` t rio pensary, where he had-gone to have his wounds dressed. anti was shown the head of his enemy having his teeth marks on the nose. I believe thlikla.alsubek•lindlwienl44l4llße in the annals of natural history, its a hyena is well knokrb - as a %cowardly I brute, never venturing, to attack man, but preyitft:chtefir tin Acogik carrion, and yt2ung children. MISSNE I LLIE . GRA thrrespondence'llduiein and Queen Victoria. The San Francisco Chronicle has received through private sources a letter written by Mlss Nellic Grant to Queen Victoria, ptevlouS to her re: ; cent visit to Windsor Palace. Its charming sitnplielty and thorough good sense, if t be authentic, put beyond qtlestion all dotibbras to the nature of the visit and the feeling which prompted It. it reads as fol lows: LAICOLEY's HOTEL, May, 1872. My Dears Lady and Queen:, am embarrassed at the honor of an utile- Jai request, given through a high of ficer (your Lord Chamberlin,' think ), to he presented to your Majesty. I should dearly love to see you, that I Might tell my father and mother that I had tima been latxtoreti, :I atn but a simple American girl; that I am the President's daughter gives we no claim to your recognition as a sover eign. If. with the kind lady who is acting as my chaperon, I might visit you„ I should be very glid. Our sec retary of k#gatinn hints at sixtic.pviii teal signltiouice in this opportunity. cannot so interpret it, and would not wish to be so reccAvO,beaiuse it would nottleitcaSTern IlutbAg tn In Aerinan t 7igl Wtkiti c atai I aim sure father would not desire me to appear other than Illyfignpleaudyer,y hum ble self. If. iiith this explanation," your Majesty will allow Inc to visit you, I shall he greatly honored and be very,proud. I have written this note of my own motion, and because I think it the right thing to do. I am your Majes tVlafreq'obedientservant andaduair er. • • 'lqr.t.r.te GRANT. The reply is equally refreshiug,and betrays a spirit which does more honor to the British queen than mul titudes of other actions for which her subjects have loudly applauded her. NVIN WOK CASTLE. Mut& gen ie (Irani: --I have instruct e 1 Lady—to convey to you this note, and we shall receive you as the daughter of your honored parents, without the intervention of our high officers of State. I shall accept your visit as an "Atnerican girl," and there shall be no other significance in thefaet than your kindly expressed desire to see the lady and not the sovereign. I shall find it pleasant to forget that I am Queen in receiving you to-mor row afternoohatpur palace of Wind sor. ' • - • VicToBl./.. tte-There are ten papers published in Lancaster county, which is, per haps, the most intelligent, reading, and Republican community in Penn sylvania, .Of Uwe ten papers ; six are Republican, three Democratic, and one Greeley. Of the six Re publican papers only two support the candidates nominated at Harris burg for Governor and Auditor General with an , VAteartiness or strength. um., the l'olks freund, German, prints theentire ticket, but has nothing to say in its favor. The three others. the Erpre.cl, daily, and the Inquirer and Enterprise, weekly, oppose its election with all their:o4i... ity.— Philo. Press. - - - -.0- • I.- ---- NOMINATIONS. hF.FORIL BEPUBLICA N. Pr...laden/ —Horace Greeley. {'ice Pr eazdent—B. Gratz Brown Dl= Premdent—Charles Francis Adams President—Charles li. liCkirctrti LABOR DEFORM : President—David Davis. Pre,rident —Joel Parker. Governor—William P. Schell. aupreine Jtedge--Jimem Thompson. Auditor General—Elias BillingfelL NATIONAL PROIIIIIITIONI4TN. Pr esident —James Black. I'. President—John It assail. PENN..TLv&HIJ STATE T►IIPEUA bit - 6 TIciELT. 1.0 rernor —S. B. Chace. Sapreme Court Judy. Joseph lieuderaon. wlitor Go rat ISprr spanizler onti ',amen-at- Largo - Geo. F. 14‘ Far laud. A J. Clark sod ',1e0.). Bo.h Bradford;' It EP 17 fil s ICA N. Pre.4l4..leatt- lytisla S. 1; rata. V. r exit 1 eit t.- -- 17 (-Pixy Wilxo ii PENNnYINANIA IMPULILICAN Go I et-nor-4 oho F. ki art ran ft. 8,,pr . , me Judge—Ulysses Merenr.: A udd or ietterai 1 larriaon Allen Ceniyrr.e.♦atea at Gary —Harry %%1 lie, "mut ue I Todd. Delegalea at large to (Anis 'l Ctonvention. William M Meredith. Philadelphia: J. <lining haze Frit, linrry WMu Imilaual William Lilly. Carbon; Linn Bartholomew, H N. McCalipter, l'emer, William H Arm atrang. Lyemning . William Davir. Luzerbe; Jar. I. lir) un IJIe , Lasicartrr; Samuel Hi anIDOCk, Wayne; (lea V. La“rence, Warhitigtmi. Dtts White, Allegheny, W. It Arney. Lehigh; John H. Walker, Lelligh sTATE EI.ELTFuItA L TICK ET Electors at Large: I Adolph B. Borte 1 John M 1110111VMUll .Eleaors I Joseph A. Bonham, 14 Jr.2l)n Piteernore 2 Men:no A. Davis, 15 S. fret nun, 3 ti. Morrison Custer. Ils Jesse Merrill, 4 Henry Hunn, 17 Henry °daily, 5 Theodore M. Wilson. IM Hobert Hell. fi John M. Boomsll. t 9 John M. Tturnipeon 7 Frauds Schrierier„ ,110 Isaac Frazer, s Mark M. Richards, ;21 George W. Andrews 9 Edward 11. Green, '2l Henry Lloyd. 1 HI 1) K. Shoemaker. 19 John J trilleripie, II Daniel IL Miller. 24 J,,meH Patterson,' /2 Leander M. Milton, IS John W Wallace, 13 Theodore Strong, I.li Charles C. Bind. BEAVER CIPUNTY REPUBLICAN TIVK ET : Delegftte to ( kmatitut toms!, aenvv-nt eon Henry thee. Congress—William troury. Senate—J.B. Rutan. ..4 amembN—S. J. Crk.ari. , saoetate Judge—M. 1,3 w reuee. Mere—Chem herlin White. /leg. cr . Reeortler—James 1. Stokes • (11erk of (burl—Jolly' C. HarL OtThrtatesiorter—Dattiel Neely. H..Direetor—John White. AudieOrs—Chas. A. Hoeft—Dr. C c. Riggs. (brutter—Danlel Corbos. rrustee.v—l). McIC hiney —Sarni. Moor- frIsOrRATIC 41*AT,13 TICE KT . . i. • dove rtuor —rharlem ' 410 ek slow . , .supreme Judge—Ji 'es Thompson. Atittator Gencrai-- illiatu Hartley. Oongre.e.nneu at Large—Richard Irani, 4Jiktiles H. 14opkIne, Hendricks B. Wris4t,-- I)thegl7tes at large to thee (IN nen ai Cbub,taloa.. Jemniab ti. Black, ))Sorge W. Wciouwaril, Win. Blulcr, P. llk 04.1fran, It. A. imailiertua,,A. A. ?ur inal:J. dime" Way, lieu. )t. DS./ 11, Juba ..A cenip• cell. Win. L. Corbin, Wm. Q. Smith (Allegheny). in. J. user, S. 11. Iternalaa, 8. C. T. Dodd. Klee/ors Th es i s . 1 Barger 13 David Landenberg Stephen It ,Aadersun 14 Jesse McKnight John Mallet 15 Beaty Wells George It Bern I Id Henry J Stable. To inauea. Iz P W.Chrbity Isaiah U Haupt Is F Lagaa . . 1 $ . auttuel A 1/).r l 11 'Luxelam ilrotru $ devise U Hawley ,1() Fred 31 Kobboson $ libido 13 !oral,. . 41 Johan-Wlhula 10 11 Reilly •.:1 ritilip H iitevenson II Jvien Knecht 1.1..../ttim I) Bard 11 Weed W iluest..r It ticarvu W Miller New Advertigements. A dininitotration Notice. T ETT6ISI4 of kdrointstratiort.ou themstate of .11.4 Hu:tr R. mattersee, hire of the borough or Sea •er, deer:nod& baling been granted to the un deratzned, all perrons Indebted to said eetate are requested to make friumpt milieu.. And these haying Maim or demands against lA* fame. tp make thorn known, to the outieroli k ir N )e' '• d without &im ley. TuartfrP A. AN RsO, f. Adminfatratrii. aver. Pa, F.xceutrix' Notice. ' • ..FIsTATH Oft Jonti JecKAIIAN. Deamed. 7 - . LA MM tsitatirentery to Abe swan of Joho udlidetteo tate of Bre towtoblp af Industry. =of Besror end Still of Ponoslhiselt dee firettivbers greeted to Vie ashes her. melding in • dd tors elf perione Berton claims ar demands makers the o tad% of the geld decedent eee teaseled to make knows the 01Q10 tOotwitliulare*sederltbont.defiti, 0/1141‘.1 JAW. JACS.N. Beeentris._ vlllarpiaNtritiont here !Ned OrntiOnerlied Ransom. they *re not ptOVs • people—rather 4iirthe - tiprobate *ter in fact they 'never Went to chOcli. Once, howev ,er,theAtmily we*Erevailed upon to attend preaching. When they made their reluctant and tardy appearance the services had begal,oo 4 1e r . had hardly hiked 'fhblr 'seats wh en Ehe pratather...gave nut Abe—ADA ...143 7 1n4 reading it sotnewhat t ,thur4 "Return, ye ransom sinners home." "All right," cried the head of the Ran some, getting in a rage and clapping ills.,kat on his head. "Come along. old woman and _gals, we'll go home fast enough, and everybody in his old church Itnows we didn't want to come." . , ,Nero Attvertimen ..Borough OrdinaucA.t. Samoa 1., Bet; inuserid hy Wu, Burgesa and Town Clogyucli or the 'borough Of ee'Beaver, kid ti la hereby enacted hy'the' afrthorify of the `'tartar, ' Teat on and after the lUth day of July, Itfig, it shall uot be lawful for the owner or owners Mto permit the stoma' to nio at targe,withiti ita of the borough, of Beaver under a pen , airy of one dollar.. Ste. Y That it Shall be the duty of the High Coaatable the borough Aforesaid, and t n : ts hereby sott:llied ahorr-kohl.° without anyol,ho er warrant tharKilhdregildaillitti*MB 4 to seise trig geoltaopeft',ltumintatjarge wl4b2 Abe Malts hforesAid, *tid sell thellonie within Mk day. thereafter at public sale. baring first given notice of the time and place offinle, by at least three advertisements put up In the inbet public places l ii said tairough, /direst four . days before the day of mini*, and after Mating suck sale eakel Constable shell d.elnet liana the Oroteeds thereol the penalty imposed by toe first section of this ordinance, together wltn all costs and charges at tending the seizure. keeping end sale., and the hallinto it any he stall pay poet toth e ' (o " er Dr Owners thereof upon dema-id made of hint for the same. Proritted That If the owner shall prior to such sale. paltiosaldeoto , table the penalty Use posed by the fliret section of this ordinance, toe gether with all charier mud rialteroaat., Irtlan it skill be his duty to deliver the *lrmo to Pint °Wm,. See 3. That if any person shall willfully ride, drive, or lead any horse. mare, geldimg or mule along tint Ofttlittilde walks or public-fool in the borough of Beaver. they upon con viction pay a fine of not less than one or more than flee dollars and costs, and n default of pa) - ment luny be eonimitteo to theloch up for any period riot exceeding forty-eight hours. lac. 4 It shall be the duty of the if igh Conrsta tigAr soy appointed pollce_oilllcer of the leer upon their owa.Siell Bonet [toffee Onahccolutiqn , ore yreeetl- Jug section of nos ordinance, and without any iverrant than is herein contained. to or tog and convey. any person or persons so offend ' lug before the Burgess is ho stall, u; on due proof of his or thutrguilt, impose the penalty prescril cti by the preeedim! section (:. Pree'l. u/ Coun cil JUS EN! LP:DUE Srereforty. Approved J use 21. 1`.71. B. TA LLOS, Iluryeae. - 1 + - ot 1114 W i Partition.ll; 1 Jeltne vo. F. M Matinin,4 o ,ard Malle ry, John Forryth, A. W. firown„fratul Kennedy and William 'neatly In the Court of Common Pleas of Beaver county. No I. June - term, IrMt. 17rerge deyartEttiOneigereoda: And now, to wit June iftb, 1r179.4he rale. writ , hating been returned by the Sheriff, and the re• turn thereof approved by the Court. on motion ul .111C0. Wilson Moore, Attorneys for plaintiff the 11COutt grant a rule on the oaruer. plaintiff and defendants, and all other* interested. reqtdritg them to be and appear at a Court of Common Pleas to be heldin Deaver, In nod lot said roomy, on the tlr.t Monday oftietdembler next, that and there to accept or refute the real rotate in said writ mentioned. at the valuation thereof, out upon It by the feigned: add In ease of the neglect ar ce fusul of said parties Intake the same, then to stew cause, Many they have, why the rattle phould not be sold according to tarn by the Court, Bracer eauortr, Sc. A true copy of rule JOLIN Prot&molar y REAL A rr EST : - JOHN UR .4:LiNG, Sheriff. 'l'lll. cut EAT Musical and Gift Carnival, Dodworth's ll'fnqd-Renowned Band Veiller tile directiu❑ of HARVEY B )t) WohTli of New York ( r:.I i 1;.: - Al //I , in I r• Ab , o, the queer, of vw_. 71 rr..l F S Ste VAN ZASPT The Meth; _!aielted Vlutimirr and n And ollwr urea! arPere. 111.7111 , 1 th;: Mr, liEsT the rt•nos‘u,-.1 l °met !,,lonat FALLS FIELI),-RM'llEsrEit N Judy 2d, 3d, lila and 51h, !572, Wilder the Illauunoth Tent. need [3.4 ,attson by Ddte C. T. Barnum for hI two t:11,1)10. - 1! hetng the larr.t C.:lllva, tent m the uorid ttrre concert• each tlr..t three day, the tuot day two concert., only. by all the city hun,l, July 2d. ad and ith, dirora open al lu a. nt.. 2 p m , and 7 p. na. July Nth. ()nor. np..n at ue In. and 'p. to. ' Ttn• !stet day the di..irthlwon sill take plat e. Tht• 'will he the larrept Ntuale4; Ltru,val e‘er held lu I - :5,000 GI Yen to Ticket Holder,' without an y lireerve There gtf4 con.l.t of tto , Lticnst Valua'Ate, Harr Elegant and I Corot:, 1111(1 r ty TICKETS ONLY ONE DOLLAR. Every Pt•,4,0 purl tlCker 11321 y 11. Coale the poseep.,,, .r ,11.0.%11•1 pri, • 1'146 fireal ea rut r , ii 814•-.1n-lbvid. COT141"tIII,: t W Malt 1 , . 1.•.1.1- [.',mum's Mack Waul. 1 , uLd , plen,llll forming Ow 111,••1 111.111..m,r1,1 THE ELEGANT LAND,U coActi Made fir the El r 11 2 . awl A did t.,dd Mounted littruenr TL.• Magnideent l'arh,r and liedne.m Set I,r Fur 'Owe 131441 e. for the t,rauti Duke e The Jfisiiithire.Veamboat, Proridence, Made °lStlier and Gold `or the late ‘i ith a Mastual Hot attached. which pity- • tour. The lieftetifill white trick Pony. The Mammoth Ox, Weighinz 4,000 lb., .An number of „. l'ree. azta Aants of the Bareit Ktneja.' In gadttio u to tW.O. ittaltetadal Bth : BC:tidos are Irina dietahle other4 , clnaistlurof Splendid Far n It ore' .Yettietry. Rattd Bronee 7 Avtieles i Ware, and many other snicks of bifouterte and rertl,; Seethe Machines. Pianos. organs. Mr nestles', Trunks and Satchels. OIL Paititihipt and every variety of Parlor Ad arnme.nts, Furs, Car riages, l'hromos and silk dresses and Patterns. e!e. In a word, tho unparalleled utunher of 1,2t111 splendid gifts valued at $173,000. to hetbst tributed. and every holder of a dollar ticket standi a fair chance of becoming a rich man PLAN OF 111‘1.1111BV9ION. One hundred and aerenty•five tb.imiamd nitu hvnt repreaentlug the number 01 ridieta la.and, ill he placed to one shunt. and cards inecie4ed with the name of the etta nill be placed to araajtb e; Prom ?bore wheelk, ti number eml ti gift be draw n i‘tnualtanconm!y. the number drawn to each instance taking the gift drawn ilt tie name time. " ktfmriferoi for tteketo must 'be addressed...lA • GROWN E U. ELLIS I Manager. r.Vr Y 011.1% STATIEl s ," rrAti,'S? . thAv e ett Commercial Raildlittg.T Lie 1500,..i BOGGS & BUHL. 128 FEDERAL STREZT, A LLIWILEINY CITY, PL r, • oilt. riag a cow plute usSetirtment :or THIN DRESS 'GOODS THE MOST TEMPTING . PitloE9. With. jaintwhe ClotllB, 25 cents; ' LISLE TintEAD POPLINS, 15 cents; iOO PIECES ODENADINE, AT IS, 20 AND 25 CENTS. 1 CASE oRGANDIE LAWN, 15 cents; JAI' SILKS, 1 1 1:R1: SILK CIIAIN, AT fri CENTS; its goad as any 7.T cent goods in THE MARKET; St' ITS ! SLITS ! tf4.Bp Ala) $ ntHl, $646 lintl 1.01111, in vtlkyr-ftir. ice-st 1, les. C4L,I. AND nE coNviNcED BOGGS & BUHL. 1.".2 , !.4 Federal St., Apr10:7:2:1r1 ALLEGHENY. I'A 'l7 'r .14 - E.;141 &IN 'l' IA7 ITII the School board" ``rr on school Ballang ISChool lax lvvy . . .$110.m; :II ISLutr a ppropri4tiatt... •••• ... SS St) Beaver tax r0ix.44..... ....All Cash for old houee._ S mt Lo.t ts OS Per cent. oft' AMOuritiittoireheti....„. TtelburerviluittottPctut.:*e... -'.lll 'Fr • fit 'll 7,k • Balance duo the town.hly on ..11001 hind from Pater-A:lark. , ..62:9.15) Building 1evy.,..,. Debt. .. ' • " Treaaurer and ss7i 4I Balance dn.. th • tottnotatpt on tyolkting--- fund from Petri% Mark VrikaAHret, Warl. B. F. itHQDRY: lieltAti WM. CAROpligibc 3PCOrt. leCi a lTjAn. I rig' eke to. *due DV *Wk. Ind Adopt this worbbd ut Alripg buttes that I lave eeveral 70,ing can for Mee. that .are fterlat the: are all well bred. being acme DI the Pesonshite. Dar. ham ut4 AlleThey. W. W. laWni. F. -- 1C t'Ac E SEWING MAGiiiNE. W FEED, 140C3L IiT.LTCIi. Tkoneare some potota to a sewing tosetg a , that Ladles &editor to - teeekalto. about* rake law consideration. natnel: : Lightneao of running, Ease of Management. ; Capacity to do the work required, Freedom from Nast.. and Mon-LIaWIDI to get out of 4 , 1 „ We claim that Ina IMPROVED ELLIPTIL seises all therm points, and that. a I. FAMILY MACHINE NOW MANUFACTURED , A n d we solicit en etarnlnatino r f it, wanted in every county, t., wh om u, win most liberal terms. EATON BIWA. “' feb21,.13' 19 Fifth Ave„ li t i.n tnti, WANTED. znezi,(l,,lizie;:lergent Business that will Pay to per day ; can be ',untied at your wiltuAinnea, and is strictly houorable. &m i d tu , ramps that will enable you to go to work Addrea .5. LATHAM & CO., 'irSaw • 1 sin Washlujiten , Boator, M L SECERITV TRUST CO, Incorporated by the Legislature of Pelais No. (>4 WOOD STREET, ri-rreicurtGll. kUTHORIZEDCAPPILL, - - $1,000,01, C A UTEII PR RPETUA L eIIE,II,ENT 1411n:s T. BRADY, ;HON. H r .KNI GHT H I.:FAUNHSTO(.IC, IIAHTLET HowA Hi) DANIEL Et - Av EH. L J BLANCLIA RD, WM WILD!. r FETTERMAN, HINGEHLY. HE:N TEL DAVID ,J V. biL.BUNALD. DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT BONDs I)eposite solicited and interest allowed on SAME, SUBJECT TO CHECK Div Idends Coupons, ..tc,Collected ...about Llarz ALL CLASSES OF sk:cultrriEs Bought and Sold oa Onninin,ion JOHN Scorr, V i c.. Pr eo•t., Vu.,t Charlet.ton. It lt couttLAN, Coleman, Balm 63 Co., Duquett e Iron and Seel Works 11. L &ar.Y•N. PrPstdent iterchsnts• and in, lecturers' National Bank. S. HT.Ab. President second National HILL HON J. M. KIRKPAIRICK., Judge of the Dom: court. Ms. JOLIN E. PARRE, Pheltm, Y4riCe S I o P. U. Huntt.t.a. Merchant. B P Jambs. Jones & Laughlin*, Irun-R'orl• BeNJ. SisoEILLY, state Printer. P. FORD, Saw Work,.. Wm. M GOURLT, Wm. M. I;ortnty & r. ) Hos . Joairrn WALTOM, CORI Merchant Wa. 1 . Jottrirro.s., Wm. ti Jnilinstun & Cn J J 4:ILLEMPIL, J. J. Htllespte • ti. P•ctaoa, Whole ale Dealer Iu 113 t,. t ak. nip t Furs. .1 V. 3tcDoaat.L CO4l Merchnut. (jus, - .. iv, N. P Fel knnni. .100. M. liazzani, Sptcial attilitton ci, /11 to In reiti ^J; ov.vne, in Rr•f ricio• tecuritieo. Tr , rxte.i. .4 , ll , 4tni‘f and Indindual , !part: .1 V H A COF'F'IN Tres•arrm. e`SIJPEIZIOII" RT 11 ENGTLI, SIMPLICITY. DI - ItA. BILITY.NEATNESS,LIGHTNLSS Of DRAFT, AND EASE of MANAGEMENT Farmers, eansrat your interest and buy THE MODERN MOWER, Dirpenalbg with Cog Gearing and onbatitodunt 1 WOR M W (TEEL AND SCREW which la warranted to out wear any Machine, 1114 from P 1.5.111 to MOO over the old style Geared Machines In cost of replacing, gra: KYLES M•LUINC FOLLY VITATUIASTED r( ) DO ITS'Wt )ItK RIGHT, or no Sale SUPERIOR, MACHINE CO.. Wheeling, W. a. IMIEM PUIILIC SALE I 1 C und,r.ign,.l will otter at public .sl, , :I*/ Livery Stahl,. in Rochester, Ben‘er (*linty, Pa., on FRIDAY. JUNE 28th. 1872. followinT prop,.rtr, to wit My env, 1.11. 'RAY STOCK. consisting of CAIIRIAt.4ES. Ll - otas, nap vy Wagons. Spring Wagons. "guns, Sleighs, Harness, Saddles, Bridles, Ito bolo', 11/Ciiiire And ALL OTHER ARTICLES übullN• lirtm bond to a First:class livery Stable. Tyrm,l.:'4erai. Sale to Commence at 9 a. um., And continue until till is sold E :5.1* POWER k Radical copy.) j,•14 iw HOUSE AND LOT A'r AUCTIO N. D 4 Thursday, June 20th, p. to. - 4,111 he affe red at Pnblir Sale. on the Premises, that destrab;r and handsomely located Brick Dwellins; of "Roomy, with frame stable, carnage how, and o ut. buildings. lot and improvements. situate In the most desirable part 14 ROCTIES7'ER. The ICI I• lAfeet square, and boundad aq three. aides t. , eta, and on- the fourth side be the elegant emends of Dr, A. T. Shallenberger. late t apt Maratteti proverty. TERMS will be made known at the time of 'ale For further Information, a.ply to (.018-IW.] DR. A. 7' • RALLIINBEIttiEtt _ . _ IPcohatri,o'nenient ! GRAND CONCERT DISTRIBUTION OF LOTS POSITIVELY TAKE PLAVE! Azi ADVERTISED, ON Jukr Ivo, Ore. not> BEAUTIFUL. BUILDING LOTS Will be Di@tributed By a Committee Selected by Audience. - $l.OO. citi 31 'WON) GEORGE 11. %HA NA FELT. ; ENEIt.II. MA NA()Pta /2 Tuna) AVENUE, • L' XRCUTOR'S NOTlCE.—Letters testaments. ry Paving been issued to the undersigned to.. the vet Clement of the estate ot tiarepta W. Duette, Jeirease.d, tato of Darlington, Beaver county. Pa . thereLue an venous indebted to *id estate apt - htivoy tictitted that unateillate mpg:leo ta reoair eig and all persona haetocelairna against the same, will present them duly authenticated for settle- Itatnt.: w litaritUittt 1.1T01.6 , 14 Ar'r. porxeo TUE VERY BEST ..... DAVID iinE,A, 1111{ - I.l . 4c—r(Jits; rr li i r 6E9E21 C(Jfr IKI3T :\T 1 2 ' 4 114.! , 4 VT' I .E. I . V MEI OE WILL l'ltt*Obitrich. MA.