The Beaver Argus. J. SU:WAND. Iturroa ♦ND PROPRIETOR Beaver, Pa., Joly,24th, 1872. J c DGED by the profound, eloquent and red-hot editorials in last week's Radical, we take it for granted that its editor had an unusual quantity a stimulant in, around, - nr some& where near his person when he wits getting them up. Perhaps, after these are only the fore-runnersW the "little hell" he promised his friends in the East sometime ago he would get up in this county as soon as the campaign opened. Ckil- A. K. MerixnE, Chairman of the Liberal Republican Committee of this. State, has made a novel bet with Mr. Alvord, the Chairman of the Liberal State Committee of Indi ana, in which it-Is agreed that if In diana gives Hendricks for Governor a larger majority than Pennsylvania gives to Buckalew for the.same office. then the Pennsylvania Committee is prevent the Indiana Committee a flag worth $.500. In case Pennsylva nia gives Buckalew a larger majority than Indiana gives Hendricks, then the flag comes hither. THE trial of Stokes, the murderer of Fisk, which has been bn Aland for some time past, was concluded on the 15th inst., in New York. An im mense concourse assembled at the Court House to - await the return of the jury. When the jury entered, the - foreman' announced that they could come to no agreement whatev er. The Judge, therefore, discharged_ them, and Stokes was taken back to the tombs. Among the jury reports i- one claiming seven for murder, four for manslaughter, or murder in the third degree, and ont for acquit tal.- An application for hail will be made in a few days. " C'oi„ S. D. FREEMAN', the Greta elector for the Fifteenth District of this State has tendered his resigna tion of that position, and declares his purpose to support Greeley for Pres ident and Buckalew for Governor. ieneral Thomas L. Kane, the hero of the Bucktails, has also declared for tireeley within. the past few days, and will give as much attention to the canvass as the condition of his wounds will permit. Daniel Kallifus, esq, Mauch Chunk, the same gentleman who made a speech in the Court House in Beaver in IS6B, in favor of General Grant; is -about fo commence a canvass of the State for Horace Greeley. Among others, it is reported that A. T. Stewart has given $30,000 to aid in the election of Greeley. A Philadelphia dispatch saga. Ga lusha A. Grow, as well as Andrew Curtin and his Secretary, Coffey, are eoininehotne to stump for the Gree ley ticket. ii()N. ANDREW STEwART died at his residence in Uniontown, Fayette county this State, on last MoadaY, aged s years. fir. Stewart served a number of terms in Congress, and was always looked upon as a reliable, able and upright man. His leading characteristies were indomitable per severance, self-reliance, unswerving devotion to principle, and fearless and persistent advocacy of those measures whict► in his ripe judgment were regarded as best calculated to promote-the moral and material in terests of the,,State and Nation, He was for many. years regarded as oa of the foremost-men in the country, and able;}, safest, and most influen tial political leaders in the State, and notwithstanding his advanced age, his ad vice and counsel were frequent ly sought during the trying period of the rebellion, and since. THE Radical, of last week is strong Lool aL its arguments: C ILRAH f.,r Grey ky and Free Trade "Gitt . ..ELt:y and the Ku Klux lox-ever!" To F. ED IS !or Greek). TAMMANY is tor Greeley." lAKEY HALL is fir Grueleyt' IMAII for h recley the Rebel hid): 1 - :vElivuonYvi, f,.r I.; reeky. - Getirral ForeNl, who inunkred the cotorpo aL Fort I! , ten . Greelev. EvEitincrny is tor Greeley. A. 11 Stephrw., Vaee Pre.qi,lent ol the Southern l'kTte,lvracy, iN tor liretney.- E% ISOIoY I, Igor iirtuley. flexure gurd bur Greeley', " Eti EltYrukDl 11. tor Gretiey. J,ll . Ua Grevlcr.- These ten editorials in the Rudieut (and we copy them entire, i knocked the Greeley sentiment in this locality into a cocked.hat as soon as they Lip peaml. They struck nearly every body with convincing force. (the fel low, who had bought a picture of the Farmer of Chappaq us at (incr threw it into a red-hot stove. Another, who had invested a day's work in a white hat ''tune itinto G 37 pieces, as soon as le got through renting them; and still another, who had wailed two dollars fur the Tribune' that mot ni Ntarted immediately atter the train, overtook it between this ant/ Baden, brought it to a .stand-still, and took his money out of the pouch again. Lots of other intelligent Weil acted' equally prompt in the crisis. Excite ment reigned all around. The great body of the people hardly knew where they stood or what to do, Rot here, as well as ever ywhere eke, there are some perverse "cus.ses.' them, oven in our presence, was stn. pad enough to declare thatCohQuay %vat:fighting the rebels harde r noir Mem he, did during the tear, Auld instan ced sonee of his performances on this side oL Fredericksburg in At this • we got angry, and was Just going to reach for the lel low's neck, when the tibia came athwart Ater mind that we had not been well for the last two weeks and we were not clear on the question of i results. We, therefore, choked down our wrath and let him " speak his ' ' , ewe" unmolested by us. • We think .119 w we will call him to an account at some time in the distant tuture for the remarks made on t (KW-Aon. After all, he is a "low vilikau," and, probably, not worth minding. A, !natters stand now, however, Gree leyista is a dead cock in the pit in this county, and if t 4 anething is not soon done to resurrect the cause of the Philosopher, his coke is dough. That is sure. TIIE Raditial produces several ar tichai clipped from the nous or 1871 to show that our hostility to the• Evans-Hartranft-Mackey swindle 6 of recent date. That Is true. A year azo, six months ago; yea, even three months ago, we knew little or noth ing of the abominable transaction which now fills nearly every person's mouth. We were groping in the dark then, as were all others, e xcept the immediate plunderers and their friends. :since that time, we have seen affidavits, figures and facts suf ficient to put thesaddie on the proper horses, and we have no hesitation in sa ying that, of all men in the State, Hartranit and Mackey should be the l as t persons to ask the people again to entrust them with responsible po sitions. THE Commissioner of the General Land Office has decided that soldiers who entered homesteads prior to the passage of the recent act of Congress family known as the "Soldiers' Homestead Law," are entitled to have the time they served in the ar my deducted from the time hereto fore required to perfect the title to _the homestead, the same as those who have made entries since the pas sage of the act in question; and, there fore, soldiers who made entries under the old Homestead Law may obtain their patents by making proof of ser vice and showing that they have complied with the law and regula tions, without waiting for the expi ration of five years from the date of the entry of the land. WE give our Grant - friends 'fair notice that the Radical editor is about to, sell them out. Ile is full bent on coming out on the winning side, as he is said to have done in the Cameron-Curtin Senatorial contest of 1867. Just now be is writing and publishing articles In favor of both Greeley and Grunt. This is done to show the friends of the winning can didate, after the election is over, that the Radical was red hot for their standard-beater during t he climpaign. From last week's Radical we clip the following editorial articles: litlittAti for Greeley anti a Protective Tariff." " GREELEY and Negro Sutfiage for ever.- EICKRAH for Greeley ! " GnEF.LEY and p uhlicrn ESSE "iltAttt.tu for Greeley aml the Unton! lithe Radical's readers have yet .to learn that "for ways that are dark and tricks that are vain" M. S. Q. is peculiar, we can confidently assure them that they will not grope in ig norance very long after the elections are over. lie will be able to prove then by his own paper that he advo cated the election of the candidate who won. Congressional and Senatorial Republican nominations for ourdis- Wets have not been made yet. The Congressional eon feref F; net at the Monongahela House in Pittsburgh some't wo weeks ago, and after a few ballots adjourned without making Si nomination until the 7th of August. The Senatorial conferees met on the 19th at the same place, and without ck:ining to any conclusion adjourned to meet again on the 9th of the same month—two days later. To the un initiated these adjournments would indicate a severe struggle for the no►ninations, while ti►e truth is, two of the candidates—ono for Con gress and one for the Senate--could have bagged the nominations in five minutes after the first meeting of . the conferees, had they felt go disposed. But they did not want them then. They wanted time to look over the field arid to canvass the chaßces for an election in4lclober hence their cow ferees moved for and carried an ad journment until in August. If, therefore, the prospect Is invit- ing by the time the conferences again assemble the parties alluded to will be nominatol --one for Cngress and the other fur the Senate. But, on the other hand, if the nominations are thought not worth having, then Mr. Henry, of this county, wiil be given the course for Congress and Mr. tclioriald, of Washio,gtou eau nty, will he allowed to take the Senatorial track. We knOw whereof we affirm. referrlnce to our 'columns it will be seerr-that D. Sankey, eig., editor of The Lawrence Journal, is incarcerated in the New-Castle jail, under arrest fur an alleged libel against a U. S. office-holder of Law rence County. It, is about time this thing *if attempting to prevent the press from exprxsing friud and cur ruption on the part of office-holders and ring managers, by instituting li bel suits against editors and pub- fishers—which are never intended to ne prre.eeuted, but only instituted fur purposes of closing out further expfi sures through intimidation—should eLtiSe. It has been practiced in this county, in Allegheny, and, in fact, by the Cameron-ring managers of the State at large, until it hai grown to he a nuisance which needs abating. NVe think in Mr. Sankey's ease, it will receive a merited and cititly re buke; as ho is determined the mat ter shall come to a legal adjudication. In his ease, the alleged being against the !,rwenilings of a public officer, the truth may he given in evidence; and it is more than proba ble an action for false imprisonment will be instituted by Mr. Sankey against the prosecutor. [' - t[t•: (;enevit correspondent of the canton Wortd, says that appended to the argument of the British agent before the Geneva tribunal under the ti ft h ankle of the treaty is the report of the Com nimzioners of the Board of Trade relative to the claims of the Cultist States. After examining these claims, N. - hicai were fur seine twenty-live millions of dollars, the that eight Mill- Comm bisioners say ion of dollars will Le Ellthlicnt to cover it. it is impossible to give any idea of the probable duration of the present lesion of the Geneva AT bi ra Cam . The gent lernen connected with the Board still preserve the most profound sect eey on rbe subject of its proceedings. The Counsel of the GoNermhents of Great Britain and the United States refuse to an, saver any* etlmmunieations on -the questions pending in order to pre vent the interfereom of newspapers and the polk-zibility of their exercising any influence on the minds of the ar bitrators. Hereafter the Board will bold five sessions per week, sitting every clay except Saturdays and Sundays. The London Observer's eorrevondeut at Geneva writes: If the reward of damages mad • by the Board of Arbitration Is substantial end liberal, England and the United States will be friends, if trivial, a datigerousstate of ill-feeling in 'Amer ea will be the result. HERE .2144 D THERE. NAM New-York —Gold sold in New-York on Mon day last at 1440,341- -If there is one thing we want settled it is the Great-Sea-Serpent- Snake Question. It was ferociously discussed when we were a tiny—so it is now we are a man, and so perhaps it will be when we are no more. It ought to be settled now, when the great Prof. Corbin declares that he lately -saw three r - . 3-j Sea Serpents. One of them was "enormous"—big enough, in fact, to compel an altera tion in the course of the vessel—say 1,000 yards lung; his tail was fan shaped; he resembled a cobra; his head was like a bull's; his eyes were large and glowing; his head was sur mounted by a horny crest; he swam with incredible velocity, lashing "the sea into a foam like breakers dashing over jagged rocks." Perhaps he knew that the Professor was looking at him through a spy-glass from the quarter-deck, and cut up these an tics in order to secure a good report of his agility. —The broken fra,onents of the fashionable circle remaining in Wash ington have been treated to a real sensation. The name of the holy who assisted in furnishing the exciting gossip, is withheld from the public, but the gentleman's (?) is given as Captain Buckley, of Natick, Mass. Miss is a lady of about 35, very pretty, wealthy and fashionable, and after a short acquaintance with Capt. Buckley became engaged to him. The wedding day was fixed, the eve ning and the guests came, but the bridegroom did not. A carriage was sent-to his hotel, and returned with the news that he had left the city and whither he had gone no one could tell. No clue is given to his sudden disappearance further than that he had heard that his fiance was penni less, and he had supposed her to have $40,000, Of course, as is always said on such trying occasions, " it was a happy escape" for the lady, who by the way seems the victim of an un kind fate, having once been engaged (to the surgeon of the same regiment the promising young captain belong ed to), and her first lover having died 0.1 the very day they were to have been married. —ln The Jewish Times of last week we find mention of the return of Pro fessor Gratz and Messrs. Levey, Pot zin, and Gottschalk from Palestine. Their report is set down by The Jew ish Times AS "an additional argument against the folly of encouraging the emigration of the Jews to a country which has no other claim than that -of a venerable monument of the past." There are now, it appears, about 16,000 Jews living in Pa'estine, and their average state of culture is much below that of their fellow re ligionists in Europe. They have no visible means of support, spend their time in idleness, praying, and Tal mud reading. and foolish pining and sighing on the ruins of the Temple, eking out a miserable existence by the charity of the Jews of Europe, America and the contireit of Aust ralia." Curiously,,flffiligh, the memo rial of their visit by Prof. Gratz and his companions also suggests " the general elimination from ail Jewish prayer-books of the portions refer ritiOo the hopesof Israel in the res titutihn, of the holy land to the pos session of Israel, and the rebuilding of the Temple by Divine Provi. denee." The Times considers "it not only w folly but a crime to feed the siekley imagination of poor, ignorant people by this hallucination; as if one spot on earth had a greater value in the eyes of G-od, and prayers sent up to I leaven from a certain 1(611 . ty find sooner a hearing from the Throne •• Divine.'' —fast-office editors must he more cautious. here is one whose ignor ance has led him into a very "indis crete" assertion. Some one having told him that Moseby had declared fur Greeley, he alludes to the Colonel as "Guerrilla Moseby," and thinks his change of shies ought to be a "good thousand votes for Grant." Now, as Moseby has not deserted Grant, the inquiring will ask if his championship is not good for m thou sand votes for Greeley. —The Baltimore correspondent of he New York San a sketch of Louis Wigfalt, so long United States Senator from Texas. He is describ ed as an Original, quaint old man, uite like those nice old "Southern Colonels," who, in by-gone days one used to read of. This charming old man delights to remember and dis cuss the days of his youth. Especial ly dear to his heart. is the remem brance of his many encounters with the Brooks family, of South Caroli na, and he tell 4 with great gusto of a little of in which he shot one Brooks, wounded another, accepted a challenge from a third, and in the duel which Wowed, 4.mgerouily wounded him. —The New-York Expreztx says of ;reeley's prospects in the Stale: Two or three days pas:sell among the peo ple of the interior of this State, eSpe vially along the southern tiers o f counties, adds to the c.‘mvietion that Greeley will have an immense ma jority in the State of New-York, and with the aid 01 the Democratic vote; - - - a larger majority than any Presiden tial candidate here ever received In any like colite-t. The Democrats I take to Greeley kindly, and so, in some of the towns, do one-half of the' Republicans. We hear, indeed. of towns strongly Republican whero more than one-half of the voters will support. Greeley. —Coyle S:1111 has at last acquired a "dear little isle of his. own" away off in the South Sea. It is called " Tu tuila ;" not a very beautiful name, but 't will do. Having aumeti pos session, the next thing in order is to send George Alfrend Townsend out thea"to write it up." If Walt Whit man ain be spared from his clerk.hip at Washington he might aceompany George to prepare a poetical catalogue of the products and resuurt of the island. A South Sea "yawp" from Walt would be an interesting contri bution to the statistics of Polynesia. —Louisville is in danker ofthe fate of the cities of the plain., The Cour ier. Journal says that "from the 10th of April, 1809, to the 10th of S'eptem her the same year, twenty-seven houses were struck by lightning in that city. In 1870, during the same oeriod, twelve houses; iii 1871, nine houses; .►nd in the present year, slum the 10th of April, thirteen hous es have been spruill, some of the number . seriousllk damaged." POLITICAL. —Connecticut lia.4 fifty-five Gree ley clubs, formed entirely of Repub licans who voted in ISGB for Grant. —Hob. Ignatius Donnelly has written a letter declining the Re publicair nomination for Congre In the first district of Minucsota, and announcing his adherence to Greeley and Brown. --According to present indimtior.s seventy thousand honest and patri otic Republicans in Pennsylvania will vote for Greeley and Brown. Phi/ad. Banner. —Eighty Republicans of Hones dale, Pa., have signed a rail for a meeting, for the purpose of Wining a Greeley and Brown Club. It is re ported that not a Republican vote will be east for Grant in Bethany, Pa., which has always given decided Republican majorities. —The Richland (Shield and Ban ner, published at Mansfield, Ohio, says: On a square tight for Mayor last week in the village of Lexing ton, a Republican stronghold in this county, Mr. Fry a life long Repub lican, but who supports Greeley, beat Mr. Sowers, a Grant man, thir ty vote. --Speaking of one of the Ilumu's at Washington city, a correspondent ut the N. V. Tribuise says the Gree ley [nee are 20 per cent of the entire number., and it is asserted by careful men that this is a very low estimate of the Government Mikes generally. Some tro so far as to say that a mu jurity of the 6.000 or. 8,000 clerks em ployed in Washington are secretly tur Greeley, as well as several heads of bureaus. —The "Greeley and Brown •Club" of Chappaqua ha ve proposed - tot hem selves what is in atlprobability the inost ambitious programme ever adopted by a politieul club; that is, to enlist in their membership every inhabitant of the county within a circuit of ten miles in every direc tion from Mr. Greele)'s farm. It is scarcely within the limits of puma ! bility that the natural spirit of pro test in the human mind shall be so far exercised as to all:Av the full ac complishment of this plan, but the enrollment tips already begun un der the mint favorable auspices.' Some of the best men of the vicinity have been chosen officers of the-club. —Commenting upon lien. Logan's recent speech In lialestiurgh, mitt declaring that it embodies the same glories which the same orator formerly attributed to the Democrat ic party, The Chicago Tribune pre sents this summary of the effort: - Farmers, are you not prosperous? Don't your cows give :A quarts of milk a day, and don't your outs grow 40 bushels to the acre and sell tor 27 caws? Don't your wife have a new baby every year, and don't you send one new pupil annually to the pub lic school? Isn't remission of sins free to all of you who repent, and can't you have a pew in the church by paying for it? And now I-de wand of you, as farmers, as hus bands, and as Christains, under what political part) hove you enjoyed all this prosperity' Under the Grant party, you answer. Then vote for Grant." —Alluding to a Washington dis patch in its own columns wherein cienator Cameron is represented as seeking with much trepidation a eonferenee with Grant on the sub ject of Pennsylvania polities, The ilettle Iph la Press effect ual I y 'slags the rumor that it has declared a truce lir its hostility to Hartman. La menting the :,trite in the political household of the State, The Press de-- dares that it is not at - Witted by per sonal feeling against liartranit ur Cameron, but is simply discharging its "plain duty as an honest journal ist when we represent the popular sentiment against lien. Hamantt and demand that the Personal ltule which has been exercised to punish the oldest and hest Itepubliclins of the State, simply because they Da ve hot bowed to the cap of most terminate on the Ith s f March,ls73." In conclusion it says: `•To such au extent has this opposition gone that if The Press to-morrow were to dare ni favor of I tart ran ft and Alen, it would produce no other effect, than to lay it open to the charge of insin cerity an4l selfishness." —General Milo S. Miscall, of Indi ana, who was a Grant elector tour years ago, has written a letter an nimbi:lug his intention th supporting the Liberal Republican candidates. I le.saye: Mr. Greeley I regard a much bet ter man for this crisis titan General Grant, and he is certainly running on a inte.:it better platform. He has been a much better Republican than Gen. Grant, because, wade the latter was voting the Democratic ticket, Greeley was educating the public mind through long years up to that standard of right and justice which rendered it possible for the Republi can party to exist. I f therer had nev er het natty better Republicans in the country than Gen. Grant, slavery would exist to-day as it did twelve ur fifteen years ago. * -* * The Democratic party having en thusiastically endorsed and approved of the prmetp;es of the Cincinnati platform, and, also its candidates, it matters not to inc how wrong they may have been in the past. It is a blessed satisfaction to me to find them right now, and I pity the pa triotism of that man that could wish them back again upon their WA plat form, with a representative loan thereon, simply because it would be easier to defeat them that way: (In the contrary 1 say they are deserv ing of infinite credit tor having ta ken the stand they have, and I pro pose to move on side by side with them. —The committee appointed by the Baltimore convention, of which Ex- Senator Doolittle was chairman, to notify Mr. Ureelcy of his numinia tion by the Democracy, called upon him at New York last week. Mr. Doolittle then introduced the members of the Comm' nee indiv - uany to Mr. C.; reeley. ‘‘ hen the ceremony of introduc tion was over Mr. 4 ireeley spoke as follows: I should need time were I to attempt ki i reply tiny anti fully to the iMpurtant, and i need not say gratifying, communication. IC may be that 1 ?mould reply in writing, but as 1 trove lately addre,sen a letter. which has been pretty mely con sidered, to the Liberal Itepublical Committee, it may nut be necessary. 1 can only say now that I accept your nomination, aeeept it gratefully in the same spirit in which it was uttered. [Cheers. I am at present in a position which doubtless many would rt,, , arrf us a proud one, but which is still au entuarrissing one, hecause it involves the temporary, and I (rust only temporary, annoy noyance of a misconstruenon of my motives on the part of sonic of my life-long friends. 1 am eontident time alone is necessary to vindicate my motives to all emend observers, and to convince all, indeed; of the disinterestedness and patriotism of tile course 1 am pursuing, and in tended to pursue long kietore i was ais-ured of su much co-operation unit symptiihy. (Cheers.] The time will wale, and I trust in Chid the uppor-" tunny, too, when the world win see that you are - DU kV Democrats be cause you have pursked the course you have, and that I um no less a Ite• publican because I accept your nom ination. l Ilt re Mr. Greeley', voice faltered with emotion. I am not much. In the habit of reisnving nom- Miations fur the Presidency, [great laughterd and lain consequent able to reply as readily and fluently as I 'ingot. [Renewed laughter.] I can only say I shall be happy to see all of you, or at least as many of you as um come ; to my humble far ititr home, where I shall be to-mor row, and where we shall be able to converse and confer more freely than here. If you will come, I shall be happy to mute you welcome to the heat the farm affords. More laugh ter and cheers.)) -And so I simply wish you farewell. --- RARTILANIFT A 8 A IFIMIAN- CIEIL. Charles T. Yerkes, the Philadel phia broker, has made a sworn state ment that he haS purchased and . sold stocks of different kinds and carried the same with the money of the Com monwealth which J. Y. Ilurtranft had caused to be deposited with him by the State Treasurer. This is what constitutes John P. Hartranft's stock gambling opera tions in the money of the people of Pennsylvania. Buying and selling stocks for future delivery Is a bust !less which is not held in the very highest esteem by the plain people of Pennsylvania,even when a man con ducts it with his own money. It is, at least, not such a pursuit as would constitute a qualification for the of- . flee of Governor of, Pennsylvania; But when an official, charged witty the r es ponsible duty of guarding and protecting the finances of the State, earriespn his stock gambling opera. tions lkith the public money, the transaction becomes a misdemeanor punishable by the laws of the aim toonwealth, In the very face of the clearest proof that he has been em ploying the money of the people to gratify his own greed and avarice while in the office of Auditor Gener al, John F. Hartranft has the hardi hood to solicit their suffrages for the responsible and honorable office of Governor of the Commonwealth.— Do he and the ring who sustain him Imagine that the people of Pennsyl vania have fallen so low as to prosti tute this high (Alive to the keeping of a man who has shown his utter un worthiness, even did he poBStWi time capacity for the discharge of the du ties? . In his affidavit, Charles T. Yerkes further states that on the Itttli of De cember 1870, he did pay to John F. Hartninft, Auditor General, the sum of 82,700, " which sum was derived "from profits on parchwred of loans of "ths commonwealth and sales of the "same to the Sinking Fund, which "sales we-ac made on the 20th of "April, 1870." This isall clearly and circumstantially narrated. There are day and date and exact amount. No one pretends to dispute this state ment. llartranft has testified to the inuocense and the high charactmof Yerkes That, his relations with liar tranft were profitable to the latter there can he no doubt. As Auditor General and cx-otficio Commissioner of toe Sinking Fund, Ilartnaift was enabled to engage in the speculations described by his broker. lie th':s abused a high official trust in his greed for money. That profit of $2,- 700 belonged to the people whose bonds he was purchasing, and not to him. Who e‘er-teard of Secretary Jordan, a colleague in the board of Sinking Fund Commissioners, stain ing his bands with these sordid and dishonest speculations with the pub lic money? Instead of soliciting the votes of the citizens of Pennsylva nia whom he has wronged, let him make restitution of this ill gotten money and retire from the contest. Although he is doomed to certain de feat, that will not be a creditable page in the annals, of Pennsylvania which shall record the fact that near ly three Winfred thousand of its vo ters were induced by a blind and big= pled partisanship to prefer this greedy stock-gambler the public money to that able, pure, and incor ruptible statesman, Charles It. Buck alew.— Lbw. Patriot. ---_ 4) 44- - SUMNER'S SERVICES Irhut a Grant Journal Thitil.-;3 of Grunt's Eitenzey. From Cot. Fume), I'r It will not help the csuse ofthe Re publican party or General Grant to abuse and disparage Charles Sumner. lie is one of the gvandest historical charactersLotOur Mlle, standing aiz most alone in the fmmensity of his Intellect and the sublimity of his pa triotism awl integrity. Ife is the ideal of a democratic Senator in to Republic approaching more nearly the Roman model than any man that lives to-day. !Ns life is a rec ord of absolute fidelity to aberty and human rights--of that rare virtue that clings to right in the abi.-,ence of reward and at the expense of prefer . 10 the soruggie against slarery and caste •he has been the foremost Mail in meriNt, and through all the mutations of our polities, the aposta cy of some leaders and the lake warmness of others, Charles Sum ner has been consistent in his rigid derotimi le, Eepabliranisni in the widest meaning (If the term. It is said that Mr. Sumner "has done some -ervice for the black man as against his Democratic emit-inks,'' but It was the great Republican par ty that gave li n t liberty. tit izeoship, his rights as at human being, protec tion from Democratic Ku-klux, and laws which compel his enemies to treat him as a human being and not as a beast." It will be readily grant ed that it was the Republican party of the cotlntry that did all these things for the colored man, simply because every intelligent man knows that in a free land the act of one in• divhtual could not effect so much, but the Republicans did nil these at the instigaition of Charles Sumner: indeed at Mc coerrion of• his mighty brain and eloquent tongue. lie wits 00 emancii ationkt before Abraham Lincoln dreamed of issuing his proc lamation. Ile advocated univemd suffrage in, the Senate years before the Republican party in convention assembled had the temerity to say 51) slight a thing as that, while the suffrage question in the loyal States belonged to the people thereof, at the south it should begranted to the loyal blacks; awl he alone, even as late as the last session of Congress, of all the Republicans in the Senate, dared advocate a measure that gave the laztek man the last full measure of liberty and eginitlity. ! . b II .• run, Y(och.•• (t.r.,nl the Llth,o,thr "Is it too minteti," asks the Wash ington ( "Mr the great Re publican party of the nation to ex pect Irian their hret hero in Pennsyl vania that they will fall into line, close up their ranks, Rll4l bring their victorious columns to the polls in overwhelming force at the I /ember en.c.i/in, and taus guarantee atiollier Reptiotican triumph in November: - Yes, it is asking entirely too much. It o' tool/amen to ask honest Repub licans to repuulate the spirit If not the letter of that plank in the 1111- 14)1)111 - platform supposed to especial ly embody the views •of General Grant which declares that giving oth ces as "rewards for were party zeul is kindly and tha t "honr.fity,ejkieney, and jidelity'' shall alone be made time "essential qualifi cations fur public tamsltiffil ,4 ." It is because tney tielieve in that princi ple of the National Republican party, and because they know that General liartrunft's conduct as it public utfi ter doe, not square witn it, that thousands Of Itepublieans wilt not vote for hum. And if the facts con nected with his complicity with the Treasury Ring are as well known at Washlngton• us they are known here It Is nut creel tab.e to imr friends there to ask us to sacrifice nom prin ci pie and manhood by endorsing such political - iniquity. It is asking "too much!" It is too much to aste - the "breth ern" in Pennsylvania to repudiate a prominent Vrinciple in our 'State platform, which declares fur the in violability of the sinking fund, by placing in the Auditor General's office the man who led a gigantic scheme for despoiling that fund of over nine millions of bonds placed there as a sacred trusts. The true to s . t of Republicanism N fidelity to principles, and it is asking too much that we should ignore a principle which, like this, is of vital import ance to the very e o the Common wealth., • Beildes, this is asking too much, because no such sactifiee of principle is tiemssary to insure's victory for Grunt In November. „Let those who think ~an October vlttoryl , essential to ..sucts iu November withdraw the obnoilouS (=diddles and give us men in whom the party have con fidence, and 'there will be no doubt about the result in October. Why should two men be allowed to jeop ardize the success of a great party. TIIE, EROIC 1111Wa AN ifEEN =MOJA A ORPAIP , i: ;:c The Cimeron ring is the a:Witting blight of Vermsylvoin. Hart** is its Selected candidate foe OVertior, for whneo.it - is prepared to fitteritioe Grant.himself. ; Phitadelphia is its headqu rterd, and I thete,':,if Cowen- Hates ifs vo!itteakeneFigfes,;_rostpumo turing. toloriti litrgt!:etvotigh, to overmatet he hottest oppOSMOn4na jority Of Abe : ran Witte Et4i*, its e6rl4lolreletiee-find *Wet 'are not cenlifed to Philadelphia :city and county,' the I.3tate • gov ernmerit„ "(TrnigiOrt . In. ilk; control, and Inuit:lsec.! his Pritteri!ivith shameless recklessners, that the names of the ring tnanagers—Cam eron,-Hartranft, Kembie and Evans —brave long since become a byword and token of reorn throughout the State. These men have carried their heads so high, and plundered the treasury with so cool - a deliberate ness, and defied punishment with such audacity, that their very ex cesses have aroused a general feeling of alarm, and provoked the people to an investigation of their abuses. And they are found to be so stupen dous, proceeding from a clear and comprenensive plan, that the fear is now excited that nothing will soon be left if these corruptionists are al lowed to continue in power. For ney can think of nothing to which to fitly compare the last condition of the State hut the unhappy condition of South Carolina. The ring is open ly accused of being as greedy as the CU rpet-bugers of the South. The ring corporations are fast eating out the substance of the people. The public funds are turned from their proper uses into the channels provi ded by this central power. _The Philadelphia Press is assail ing this corrupt clique with all the vigor pt*tsible. and its damning -ex posures of its guilts are opening the minds of the people to the clangers around them. , The Press /refuses as yet to give up Grant, but it rejects Hartranft with hissing. It does not scruple to warn its party that by persisting in running the Cameron ticket for State officers, it surely haz ards the success of its presidential ticket in November. But the infat uation continues in spite of all such warnings. Cameron would be like ly to be advised by Forney least of all men in Pennsylvania or out. Both of them profess to advocate the re-e -lection of. Grant, but their present difference breaks down the only hope of succe that is left in them. Cameron will not surrender Har tranft to any clamors whatever. Ile manipulated the convention that put hint in nomination, and he had a purpose in it that he need not expect to relinquish now. There is an af fair of the state treasury that de mands Hartranft's continuance in office, about which Cameron is far more solicitous than he is al)out the re-electitm of Grata'. Awl for that reason the local contest will be as close and bitter as any in the history of .Pelinsylvania. Cameron long since learned the power of money in nolitim and he will employ it lavish ly to compasl his ends. He will al so he reinforced in this respect from Washington, and powerfully at that. Nothing can avail to break up this compact tyranny, that sports so reck lessly with the welfare of two mill ion peOple, but their resolute and united rising. The signs are in the highest degree favorable, and with so sterling a candidate as Buck:Mew, who addresses the people himself on the Issue of the hour; there are confi dent hopes of effecting the ring's complete ()% crthrow in October— 80.. fon Post. —The Prep'n•• ntail Getierul Hurt- rainfi. I; rent stress is laid by the Republi can journals which are advocating General Ilartranft's election, not withstanding the damaging charges which have been proved against filth, upon the kindly expressions wkillt have been used by the editor of The Procv at one time and another con cerning hiin. In IStis, when he was the Republican candidate for Audit , or I general, and when his record was • yet free from any suspicion of dishon esty or oflicial malfeasance, we labor ed zealously and unremittingly in his behalf. Naturally we then en dorvd him strongly and unequivo cally, having no reason to doubt ei ther his abil‘ty or integrity. Again, last spring, when General liartran ft loomed up prominently among the candidates for the Guber natorial nomination, we expressed our unaltered faith in his probity, notwithstanding the fact that his name was suspiciously coupled with that of the convicted defaulter Yer kes, and with other transactions in atlpatiblewit h the duty of a sworn officer. We hesitated then to believe the charges and insinuations against him, and, actuated by that personal regard which we have always felt for him as a soldier, a patriot, and a man, refused to declare him guilty while yet none of the ad verse charges had been proved. Nevertheless we felt that the can didate of the Republican party for Governor of l'enns,,lvania in this very critical year should be, like esesar's wife, above suspicion. We knew that the popular indigna tion against official laxity and cor ruption. which was so fully aroused by the Tammany exposures, and fur ther excited by the revelations inci dent to the Yerkes and Mareer trials in Philadelphia, would carry certain defeat to any party in the present camt.itign, the reputation of whose caralidate4 was not unsullied and their character andve reproach. The spirit of reform thus fully awakened, we foresaw uould not down at the bidding of either a nominating con vention, party managers, or party organs. Idenet we reasoned, entreat &l, counselled, and warned against the: nomination of Ifartranft, com prehending as clearly at that titne as everybody does now that his Hee tint' was simply an impossibility. It rte&led no prophetic laiwers to foresee this. Tine lieint.eratic papers then prudently silent about the dark cloud overhate , ing the head of Hart ranft, only too glad to see the Re publicans tie themselves to the sup port of a weak man, immediately af ter the nomination began showing up his record. They found it but too easy a task to wove all and more than had been charged, and we eon fess that we ourselves were totally unprepared fort he hid ictment which hats been brought and , übstandated against hint. 'Still The Pre. , :s hesitated, even w herteonv need , to pu the charg es, speeitimtions, and evidence sus taining them, and was content with opposing both 11artranft: and Allen on the general •ground that they were unfit for the petitions to Which nominated, and t'vellk • 'Ciindidate;3 Who endangered thEr-sticem of the ticket, anti that theytautheen.forctd upon the party by =the eorrtiptett un emn Ring. If they wouldonly have retired for the good of the party, or had Wen Withdrawn, we would wil lingly haVe spared them - the morti fying, expose of their malversations. Our words of counsel were spurned and scouted. Our forbearance was rewarded with a.chorus of calumny and threats from the Cameron organs. The soiled characters of the objec tionable candidates were 'sought to he cleansed and harmony In the par ty ranks to be restored by a concert ed series of coarse yersonarattneks upon the editor of theepaper. When the tactics proved unava- Iltitthey endeavored to-, secure- our acquiesemce by milder means. The fable of the old win and the boy, .4 ) the speliing-hook,has been reversal- But neither slander and Viilification, nor entreaties from Mistaken friends of President Grant, nor proffers bur threats of any kind, can induce us.to s,ultify ourseiv tad violate thelac- It compact between . The Press and its readers, by which we are bound not to advocate the electiim of tuen whose unfitness is_plainly estalifish ed.—Forney's Press. A Lie Corrected. From The N. Y. riktees. If we are tdgetieve the Grant pa pers, Horace Greeley and Horatio Seymour some time past made, di rectly or indirectly, by themselves, or through other parties, a bargain, whereby G o v. Seymour was to sup port Greeley for the Presidency, and to use his influence to get. Greeley nominated for the Prmiitiency by the Democrats. We are authorized) to state that the charge, in whole or in part in the warp or in the woof, is a lie, made out of whole cloth. We should be glad, if we could, to char acterize this invention of the Grant• ilea in language more polite, but when a lie like this is deliberately coined and circulated, and when an attempt is made to link the name of Seymour to any political, peisonal, or other bargain like this, there is but this one way to meet it. Equal ly false is the insinuation that any Democrat, in high place, low place, or out of place, has ever tamed a word of expectation to Mr► Greeley us to public (Mice. All assertions to the contrary—Mr. Greeley him seil being our authority—are sim ply lies.. [lt did not seem to THE TIMIUN while to notice this, any more than the scortes of other foolish sta rie.s about Mr. tireeley, which no body believes. ! s lut we cheerfully make space for the above.t—Lit. Tribune. ON • - A Bullet la a Man's Head Meveu Wears. At the first battle of Mana.ssas Virginian, named t rocket Urilyson, was shot in the bald, tile bullet en tering 'the temple, passing through the inner ear, and lodging in toe back bone of the ear, 1k here it re mained until recently, when•a physi chin extracted it. Upon boring it to the bone with a tretlue, the ball was found so tiruily imbedded that it had to be clipped out with a chis el. The lead removed weighed half an ounce. Mr. Urayson went through the operation without liking chloro form, exhibiting great coolness and fortitude. Once during the opera tion he called a halt, and after , eject ing a mouthful of tobacco juice, coolly laid his head on the table and in formed the doctor that he could now "go ahead." lie was doing well at halt accounts. CIIAULES SIIITINEII. f Ills Letter Declaring tor :lir. Greeley- The following a correct version of Senator Suoiner's letter to Mr. Iteavis. AsitiNGToN June - L. I'. keariz: DEA, u fint: I think that on reflec tion you will not think it advisable fur me to write a public letter on the !natter to which you call attention. Mr. tireeley and myself have he n fellow laborers in many things. \Ve were burn in the same year, and I honor him very much. Iletwten hint and another peron, who 4414111 be tiainfless, 1 ant fur him earnestly. I shall b, here fur ten days longer. The Republican party must be sav ed, and what I can do shall be dune fur it. Very truly yours, I'HAnLE.A St:MN En LINCOLN AND GITLEELEV. A Letter Irons "Ir. Lincoln to Mr ==l The .Evening:Star ofyesterday says: Apropos of the Priidential cam• paign we have been shown the orig inal of the foljowlog letter, by our contributor, "4„.;0u1t0n." The letter has never before been published: [ Private. =I J. W. FUICN In', Esq.—My dear sir: Yours of the 'l2th is received, and for which plemenceept my thanks. You ran scaretly place a higher es timate on Mr. Orenley than t do. And yet it will be a matter of great difficulty to• deal satisfactorily with all out! friends in New York. Keep ing t he public interest in view, I shall do my utino4t to deal justly by them all. Yours, very truly, A. LINCOLN. ••I'llatztsitieent Eche." l'p in the Lehigh Valley there is a hotel keeie er who has A inimntaln about a quarter of a tulle (ruin his house, and it occurred th him that it would be a good idea if.he could lix things so that a magniticent echo could be heard from the mountain by persons who stood at his hotel and halloed. So he engaged a hey to secrete himself behind a clump of trees, with orders to repeat the words of any cone talking on the roof of the hotel. After practicing to 'hake sure, the landlord announced ore day his disco% ery of the echo, and took up a lot of people to en joy it. They called for half an hour, but nu echo responded. At last, when the landlord had peewit° crimson with rage and was abobt to give in, the echo came, but not in the shape expected. It said: "Hill down to the spring fur moth er. Fire away now, I'm all right." The guests smiled, and mine bust disap peared. IL is dangerous now to men tion the word "echo" at that hotel. NY's NomiNA / rioN 41001 not in terfere with the sale of Clothing now go ing on at R. Steinfelti's, Broadway, New Brighton. 4ew Advert iseme la is The Best for All Purposes, Nlnro easlly managed, s n are• darable, raid rate; lighter I Ilan any ,Ilaehine In the mark. t easily cleaned and Le pt i.n tier ; large lall)1)11...:, 11,)1 , Is wira- much ilk read as any other shuttle. Lock mht, h, alike• on both c.l4les, self al j , Bting lI mzion: Justly Popular. From the first. the " DOMESTIC " has rapidly )nereasell in popular'.ty, until t”. (} I I,Y, in the npinirn 1.1 all .experlyncell Sewing 31 :t.• hilie men, it stands forth IT_RIV _A_I,L.F., D ! IL is gaining favnr much faster than :my other Machine herembre presented to the public, which can he seen /tom its cacreas ed Wiles last year over the'preeeding, being OVER FIVE HUNDRED PER CENT No Machine is h creasing its subs and gaining public favor as rapidly Ili. the 31Z) Conilo • Th s.4s a consequence of its ST.TFMR.IOI2,ITY TIV3I. ROBERTRON. Agent. Beaver Fails, Pa. Call and examine the Machine. jr24-9m. .N92 , IINA.TION S. REFOII4.I BEM 111.1 CA N. Pre3 Went }tome re(: ey. Vice President— B. Gratz grown A NV- A.se N President—Charles I ra rwi.t4 Adams I'remecieat—Charle4 11. flQtvarti LABOR RF.FORSI Governor—William I'. Scholl. • Supreme Jut/ye—James 'rho:Dyson. Auditor Gem-rat—Elias NATIONAL ritoI'IBITIONISTS. President—James Black. V. President—John Russell. / 9,,, MNTLVANILA PTATIG TESIPCILANCIE virkev. Governor—S. B. ('ba se . • Supreme astir! Jtuip• —foveph flendereon. Audiior General—Barr Spangler. l'origrcientrn•al-Large - tko. F. atrlriu• land, A J. Clark and Beni. li.u.h Bradford. tr.F.Puict.tuAN. Pre. ident--Ulymmis K. Grant. V. President.---Ht•nry W'lar 4 ” - YENNSr LOAN IA ILEPUBLICA N Governor—John If. Hartranft Supreme Jtalye—Ulysses Mereur, Auditor General—Harrison Allen -Congressmen. at Large—H arry White, Lemuel Todd. Delegates at large to Conal• 1 convention Willlllll 3t, Mat:dial, l'hiladeluilla. J. 011 ham Fell, Philadelphia; harry bite. indfaurn William Lilly, Carbon Linn Bartholomew. ! , cii uy I kW: 11. N. Alcealister, Center; AV inilllll II Arm strong, Lyroming : Wllbam Uuvfe , Luzerne. Jue. L. Iteynonlo, Luneneter: ,uiuuel E Ditumucii, Wayne; Oro. V. Lawrence, ton. I)a% oh N. White, Al W. 11 At - by. LOansli; .loin fj. NVldlicr 1a high sTATE zLEcroitAL TICKET Etrefor.l of Lori /r I Adolph If- Boric, 9 John Elertor4 : 1 J,444-ph A. 1.14411Lna, 111 John l'eponor, 2 Marcus A Darla, i t:l S. Fre. onin. Coale:., 1.. Jrse 514.rrt,1. -I henry Bumm. a Belay I 4rtady, 5 Theodore M. Willmn 111 Robert ll.lnhn M. Horatian, 19 John M. Thompson 7 Fran.. I, Sr hi tr.dur, 211 I..a.ic Frazer, S nark 51, Itteletri.ii, 21 I...urge IY. Andreiiri 9 +Award II Green, X 22 Ilenry Lloyd, 19 1) K. Shisemaket, .11 Julio J 11 Hamel It. Miller, 12.1 J.lllleM ralterl.4lll, It I/1111de( M. n John Wallme, 13 Theodor, btrom;. 24i ChurlcA C Boyd. BEA VEIL 4',UN'cl" REM: MLA(' A N TleK ET : heiega.le to ('onstaittional thui,ent John N. Purvianee, Butler count , " ; T. It. Hazzard, Washington county. ongre.ls I lain If enry. s. .vs, mid,/ -S. .J Cr..ss. I .Ju.tgr -- .N 1 1,1;1 rence. A'he —Chary herllll Whlte. neg. ,C 7 Rceorder—Jarne, I. Stokes oi er I: of ( ourt John ('. hart Commt..poom-r—ktiiicl Neely .I'. 11. Dirertor—John \N hlte. A nelttorx -Chas. A. ll' ru Rigge. oroner-- DAM iel ('or bus. Trextre.v- MeN Moor head. I)IiMuCRATIC LE tu. EET Goreruur-- rharl es R. It low Napreme Judge—James Thom psi.H.L. udilor ()Entrat—R . tII lam liar dry c'ungreAxim-it ftollllrd Vuu x Jatzle4 11. end rtekx /3 Wrigb t. I.h. Lep, Ut larq. I,ton! I f" `• (;el.rge W. WOOII Wm 131::Iter. IS t,uwun. It A. L• u nhertun, A. A Fur man. James Ellie., (~O. M. Da.l John A Camp b.. 11, Wm L. Curbl)t, Wm. 11. Sm)11.1(A// , 'Jtamy J Barr, S II S Dudd. Fl _tor, • 1 Thous.. J 11,trzer 11 Racal Loiidenber::: 'I Ste4,llen 1) And. - tr 4 ,11 II jc.. , Mr Knittit 3 John MatTet 11 henry Well% 4 114 , 4 4, 4 re 14 ilerr• 1 1 , , Ilenry .1 se:thle r, jr. he ailed. l l7 le W Lliri.iy irgle,4lllll It Haupt 'l. IS - I , lm,ni F L 04,4341 74tirnuel A I)'r j'4 113 , •einn BrOWII r. Jerre li 11liveley l'.ll Fred AL Itublneon 11 lllrain I; 4,:,l r '4l J•klin It WllOO4l 10 B Reilly •-1 - 1 l'lll ,1p If Ste.er4yon 11 John linecht V, John 1) Bart: Ii Fred W eldr,44• r 1 1 4 ~,,,,,re l A' ]Heiler Rowell & Co.'s Advertisements. 11' 1u( wAN A GOOD SCHOOL FOR YOH BOY, ‘VHERE HE WILL. BE Well Taught, Well Fed & Cared For, Amid happy HurroundiziLN. h•m I CHALNltiElikillit'ltG. .4( . .41)1:M Y. stir NI A li D , Pr .11, spa:. 1 harnb••,..l):l% , r., Lebanon Valley College, I. td u , ,;". C , rim A 1 , 1 For the L 11 lIAMIInNi). A COTTAGE SEMINARY FOR YOUNG LADIES, At Pott.town, Itlontzomery Co., Pa. (In Reading It. It Tw,ut) -ec uud annual i.e....n0n Ope•III. iI th situation healthy and heaut (' and Malle•niatteal ~f -turfy-thorough and pr•Vtl. It, F,,r ul tr, nn, tam... , ful pat - net: ire, t,e.l t I) Stl_ll,s, Prthrliw , oLLE:ItTE & 011.11Eiti IN. sTurt "FE, NewHuwtfl , Cunt,. rr, r krit", .•• I.•_ , Sr hmels, P1(1). ;,I athirrr,.. t•L) Niu 11 .I_l i P:ll.t r: I) 1.,?': AAJ, ~ Y . .JAMES FISK .J R. COnLlltlo Tweed, .to., ; tin thmut.i.ll 111.rk,r, tl.e tow, try hrr the Iti,t thre••)oll7*. and what Grain 1.:11,, nhout - M.A. 'ls Flllll Y pa , .: , •• Ad ttre,. :1 ,, Y York BOOK U l , 16 rtrvet, New York, Callipaium Goods for 1872. Agents %%auteu 'or vat t•unpatgla liounA. • ~ 4 11 al s ight. jity IW le e ttrent prqrti. Now )19 the drat' Send nt once for destriptive circulars and Plitt. !Ale oi our qua - Steel Logrovirtgo or all the (113 'attiates. Campulgn ibugraphloa, Claims, Pilate graphs, Badge-,, Flaiza. and ever) thing; snit ett to, the Imes. ten dottara per day eaally made Full maniple* r..-ut for .$3. Addrerne., S.oone G001,R1.E.17f1.:3": Park Row, New York. .___, , ,,f,,7, lea '. I4 .— :INOA 2.... ,----- li la 14'*\ 61- -" 'N OES W__A ........ ..... .:C . .',..! , 7 , ci .' V .... JEWEIRy4, 4 SILVER +i ‘,'' ' . THOS.MFFADDEAIJR. ..-.52§,iwz... 41.5"Avt.PITTSBURGH. t GENTS Wanted. Agsmta make more .i. V money at work for 11, than at anyttiMy else tinniness light and permanent. PArltcularr fr.e li, STINsoN ..Si Co., }'i., .1,1 P ,, b/tAitent. Port land..!itaine U. S. P lWA '( e ) en C t ( e ) .. L N 'ireliar l' a ß L B . $ 290 BARLOW'S INDIGO BLUE is the cheapest and best article in ihe Mu - Let for nttts C(t , theo. The ,p,eitultte hao t.)011) Bar 's and N 1 i hls.rtzer's pane on the label, Cad to put up at Witthertztr's Wm!. Store. Na, Iti):1 North Second St.. Pitt ladelphiu. 1). R. \V ILTBEitiom, eropri• e'clr I , oy oale DruggiAto and _ _ B,pz.r. l all Fiesb-ht ThlryiLl or, x rbry tone or ih.• :ma 11, , il.gt,ilon Tdr - rant . • /ift.l"te .1(-111.S.11::• ..tp• us.• , l rot!.pt people a. a ti•Ano ut rclit.,ll, , z.ui dvaoge- Meat o, the .4.llntit 11, ill t.r eud lute.t i , • Iost:A:WIN II removcaobbiruction. a Illit , l): p 3 .11 Aud It, r aft vizor to the 0rg . 11.1. tt uu 11 it pzir to- n , t 41.7tIlotes 501.14 131 All. W 114.1. 1, VI". $ I 000 r,,• 74. , .4 IlAnd, 11 Litt. or Piles that DE RINI. 14,41:4-4 . , tail. to Cork:. 111.. pre• pareal to CUIV the } ', 6u`, 311 d. Sol.; tirllegi-1,.. 1 itr. . i l.ou jy3l 4a t I.).lllNlr.ri:Alwx :\ t; I At.ito JA:ttl•r- .111.1 i ntr3l.loll on the e, , tni, t.. ,i ;4 ,• NI, (It or_, dPr d, la], of (.1111,1) . :.user, blid Matt. .t 11 , •00 61 - anted to the , til , ,crlber, in said rustn-ttip, all per:"n. 1111 1 11/.f d. - totiti s irp4 value , t the er , Lale of Ow maid lit r r. ply,brd 111 nuke 4,tnr,% awn , . In the on MA .\ M, t 7 El )1; JI t 01l Adlll,lll-t-rdril, is 4,14, lON' ADJ I .1, Bt M c C;IOIE.Ti IP CD I) 4C111.7.1:75, 1.1 1/-A1 . 1i.1.1 AND B&sT SCLICEN !NEU t Plttilz., 50 Ctle , Extra Quality, Cm .h Orders by mail promptly ;mended to. Agte, rry town. .1 W. boil.://ton, liestuut Manufactur,r of nod l arpet.' C. a be chrrted !!) a !rook. D. IV ,Ann.trr. 'A. V. 1, ommit rr Bridgewater Marble Works. EALEBStn ItaMutant! American Marble. All If l kind,. of Marble Monumental Work (Iwo: t% Ith Leal ut,ei and 411.p:itch. Privre. 1,3 A cable and ha tut tact ton guaranteed. Marks t t rev Bridgew•ter. Pa. Iv-n- 1 Lltilt SALE—It. ttrat-rate Cow, the ) , •ar. old Apply at Tim A ro:t • office. 1y24-it • Dividend No. NATIONAL DANK ..4" BEA v Elt CuI:NTT, N hiIIuKTON. July 3, 141. I TUE lia-ltd of Direclor.l•4•l. l a Mink liav • nth, day declared a Difrk:od of FOLli l'Ett CEN I' upon the Capital Stock for the kW aim nionilla payable forthwith. free of all tar jr24-3M , . EDWAItII 1100 PS, Cashier. LIME T LIME T LIME I vont and after April flrit, we will be . .nrepared I: to hirliteh rofttentern with fr‘stt bumt, Little of best qualityat Putters' Vanport. marAl-tf.) JOHNSTON a CO. Miscellaneous. . N 11; w rkrt ANV IL , ' 1 , : I EI3, t.4"1" (1, There are some pulnte Id a /4•l4..taft ffiarlL,Lo• i h „, t ladiea cleaning to purchtini4 consideration, harni•ly • I,lghtneas of rususiug, Fare of Manazemeni. C'aliar.lty to do the work requo...l Freedom from Noi.e ano Non-Uablltty to .4,t ot,, We claim that the IMPROVER ;,,,, kiennee tbcre polott. • ar.tt thnt ti TIIF: EKY RES V FAMILY I A('ITINE NOW MANUFACTURED. And we solicit an examination ,-f wanted In every county, In o teen most liberal terms. E 2L1 . 0 11 ROM ro,l 19 Fifth Ave. I•usker:o, - - ALLEGIIEN I (ATI S'rA. I -13 111 I. 131 N NVt.)OO I> ult N I 1(, 1.411 ( , ,. .Nreo , e/g., Ilataxterx, /land pat!? en/ and noit.cd. ready to WILLIAM PF. , . . ror. 11-t•hett.r ME !?,, i TONE), i I 4. !•-•.+;; •ft.J4 ! fi 1 , :;Iyi,;!!„;,:: I,{ 1...u.1 , • • %V E irate on hand ft Inre e, le, 1. 01, !Shell cork. 11, !I ttr nn - rent in,. than any utter firm in l'Aw.• v erect Moninnel. --tones, en:! 04. t. ( . 1f work lA,lore t-I-ev, hers- n- ;:narnntee to (L. zi • ,1 re-ent, had is t,t e- um and our se irk a 1 ihe tan .Nlu.rble . 11,1 Is, klll3/1/41/1, and :".• defy C01111) , 1 It I.lli lapr -I)r. C ( ALPS INSURANCE COMPANY ERIE, I'A. Cash Capital $250,000 00 Asssets, Oct. 9, '7l, 31 1,948 29 Liabilities, - - - 5.200 00 U NOBLE, Pri.4nL ut p \ \ II Mr:. T[1,14 1" [ ; , „ , [,w. u W 11311”11, [bin ur , Ittrant ( . 11nr14, II 11 , . 11 S W It Sit-mit II \V Notw:••. J .1 II Nc.t. W II A r In• ur p. F rr. = \; , )11 , h •fs . l) •,.. ;., : ti • ; BANKING HOUSE JameN ('0 R. F. I:1'; I.‘ I A \ .1 , • I', 1-'it 1 'a Governicht Sectintids, Gold, 2llvci‘ 1N.I) ('Ol'l'(>\~ ON LIBERAL TERNIS At..l A 1,. ;Al liannu,g 111.1.11,,,, CIS PER cf \f INTEREST uu • notive ,11 3 . 1 ! .1 U 1E T, 1311 A DV ( 0 lit>tit•t. in • IN nil. I:WCIZT 12, 11111'..1 . th.• part d• • Heal K..no•• ,•1 Mary Mr Ed. ay. NVl.:tam . Int-rmarr., Th.wha.: 4.; trn• :nr , -rnlar . t.../ \\, :• • 01 .lanle - . WI: % , :th d•dth 11 d dlternaarrty.l Sap • . Mar 7. 7.. !dl r.... and .1 tmrs M 1 • • • of Sarah .1 tit M try M, Elnetly .11,1 if nnhor I hl`,l TI • Mary t,•r „r :rod Mary MrElln..l , . h I;nardlan Flcntin:.; TIL • .• • an Itintil ,, i(l , ll.. On the red; c. . Mary .MeElhelly. deta.a...ed..• -- of land sdautn In 11,;,,At.i: aid State of -, al. , ' th.• n,,rLh IT) the idyl...dr' tt 10 • tworg4. !VI,. • • ••• • ' "Drat.kAtatuplon's : Hannah Barnet.: heir.. lioniatnin 111/1. -'• • etjhfeen acr,a. of land. • •- held On th..‘promdwe on Ow 1 , 1'2. :12 which rime and pia... • e,ted an. lire, by nontiod IT. c•• • 5,12 •• Ildbal,duly 17.1.'2 .1 IV. 13,1%._1?1i.E1Z iStlector to 113rker 111 111•.1 L.•Lt Itt 1" I • CHROMO LITHOGRAPHS ith•lF;(ls, ph. :1,1 Frame. of . A, Nth) , !,nit(ll,i• Principal Office lilt W. Filth St. Cincicn TR. onlyfrilndion in the .-:;50,000 00 IN VALUABLE GIFTS TO BE DISTRIBUTED , L. D. KI N E . ` REGULAR N1411i1.1 GIFT Enterprise To he Drawn no t np, Augu.t :,. 1,71 ()NI.:(iItAND ('.‘PIT 1 t)1 5=5,000 IN ti(>l- 1) ! Two Prizes, $l,OOO Five Prizes, tircellLack' Ten Prizes Of $lOO ()no Fa II y Car riago a.) , 1 .llorses watt Silver-Mount , I II." worth ;31,500! one Ilorse and Ibiagil ' fed 11 , 1'111 , AS tr.,rlh ,‘,., one Fine-toned Ito,exvo,,l FIN e Fatnlly 'Seeing; M:tchales, .ser , e $ 750 Gull and Si/..r Lerer tin 0111 trt,r(kfront f 4211 • ititest' tinld Ixotalne my, • Solet :0-1 Double-hailed ' eh uu mpooar, Pho,ograph A Ileao, .le, elf: , A A Whole Number Gifts, 6,00 0 Ticketd I.imitert to 5o,001). A gvnts \V mord to Scll Tit ral Prcni i!I !).• Sinai. Ticket., C; Six It Let. , , E. • - ete, $lO, Tweety ti‘e flheulare contaluieg a fell lha Per l ol , o Of the In3rtut.r of '.r' formation to reference !t/ tte diotrthn" , r'. Sent to any one orderine - them Al ,f-lef• be addree , • - e0 to ee, 101 I%' in h t box I/(/ ‘ l o l .T°4st) Oth 'Fh-et " Cr' 14;'I"EPILi Li I' IBM , Es STA N I 1;:' okiAL.u , Sampson Standard '" AINo, Store dz tiaggat: , ' Trucks, Patent Penh Drawers . , a k ui l,t ic ! cers's Supplies SCALES REP: F i,. SOLDER & M'CLUUG, General Agents, 63 Wood Street, Plttsburzt , firtiend for 'Circulars and Price 1.1t4t. 111!M ! R lnll , E H II II 0 I I I!,• • • , I F•t`.l . . • =I ME ITEMERME il iß 184. „ , ,