The Beaver Argus. (Beaver, Pa.) 1862-1873, July 31, 1872, Image 2

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    The Beaver Argus .
1. WETAND. Burros AND Pitorstrron
Beaver, Pa., July Slat, 1572.
THE New-York - Journal, of last
week published a list of the German
papers published in the United States,
giving their present status on the
Presidential question. This list shows
91 fur Greeley and Brown, 28 for
Grant and Wilson, and 3 undecided.
M. CATecAzr,'formerly Russian
Minister to the United States, who
was recalled at the request of Pmsi
dent Grant, was subsequently sta
tioned at Paris. An 'imperial decree
was published in the St.. petersburgh
Journal of 25th July, dismissi ng him
from the Russian diplomatic service,
in cOnuence of his having publish
ed a pamphlet in relation to his diffi
culty with V. S. Secretary Fish with-
out the knowledge and against the
will of the Imperial Government.
JrAREZ, late President of Mexico,
is dead. A dispatch from Matamo
ros dated July 25th, says the public
offices and placesorbusinem through
out that city were closed, and the
national and consular flags displayed
at half-mast and minute guns fired
in honor of Juarez, The animosities
exhibited during the recent revolu
tion had given .place to a better feel
ing. The political opponents ofJua
rez acknowledge his great services to
the Republic, and unile in public re
spect to his memory.
THE State Republican committee
met at Harrisburg pit last Thursday.
The resignation ass candidate for
the office of Congressman at large
was received and accepted from Gen
eral Harry White. G. W. Schofield
was substituted In his stead. For
theadditional member as allowo by
act of Congress, Ger .Charles A 1 'fright
of Carbon county was nominated.
For Elector at large W. I). Whar
ton mi., (colored) of Philadelphia
was placed upon the ticket. This
completes the regular Republican
ticket of Pennsylvania.
AT no time since the war has any
liemocrat in the Northern States, to
-our knowledge, advocated the pay
ing of pensions by the Federal Gov-
F•rument to rebel soldiers, and yet we
were asked to believe that Horace
Greeley and an old farmer named
Carmichael of Otsego county New
York, actually made an arrangement s
six or eight months ago, to do this
very thing in case Mr. Greeley be
comes the next President of the Uni
ted
States. The story is too stupid
to be believed by any intelligent per
son, and it is not one newspaper out
of a hundred which gives it publicity
that credits one word of it. Kny
thing,hoWever, to beat an opponent.
AT the meeting of the State Re
publican committee last week at
I larrisburg, an effort was made by a
number of members to have Hart
ranft and Allen withdrawn from the
State ticket, and two, more accepta
ble candidates put forward in their
stead. This m ovem en t however,
was stoutly resisted by the l ameron
ring, who declared that if this was
done it would in effect, prove every
, charge that has been made against
these men, to I* true. They plead,
therefore, that the ticket should he
left as it was, and "sink or swim,
survive or perish," they would try
to "put it through." Ris needless
to say they carried their point.
THE liinghamlon ( 1.) Repulr
/lean alleges that its editor, last win
ter, saw a number of letters-from
I brace Greeley to Horatio Seymour,
and others from Seymour to Greeley.
'l'hese letters; the editor goes on to
say , contained the terms of an in
trigue between the parties writing
them, to the effect that if Seymour
would .0d Greeley in procuring the
Deitiocritic nomination for the Pres
idency, he Seyinourj should be
made Secretary of State, in ease Gree
ley
~succeeded in the ( lection in No
vember. The Republican concludes
its story by declaring that in one of
Mr. Greeley's letters he agrees that
if elected to the .Presidency he will
favor the.payment of pensions to rebel
soldiers.
In answer to all this, Mr. Greeley
authorizes The Tribune to say that
the whole thing is a canard. and he
also authorizes that paper to ask any
on having letters of his conflicting
with this denial to " produce them
now or be forever silent."
The Tribune's denial will be found
in another column. Read it, and see
how fairly the case is met. Will the
papers that published the silly story,
now publish its refutation? Hardly.
ALDERMAN "BILL" MCMULLIN,
a rough-and-ready politician of Phil
adelphia, was dangerously shot in
that city, on Monday evening of last
week, by a thief named Ilugh fatra.
Mara had stolen a boquet and car
ried it into a saloon, whence McMul
lin followed him. The latter demand
ed the boquet, when Mara drew a re
volver and shot hint twice in the
breast. The wounds were at first
thought to be mortal, but a closer in
spection lea,Ls to the belief that he
will recover. Mara was one of the
parties who, a year or two ago, sbot
the revenue detective Brooks, and
was sentenced for that offence to the
penitentiary for seventeen years, but
was recently pardoned by Gov. Gen
rv. No tittle fault is now found with
the Governor, by the Philadelph taus,
for turning this dangerous man loctse
upon the community.
TIIE Chippewa Indians, it is fear.
ed are about to give us trouble in the,
northwest. Dispatches front St.
Paul dated 25th inst., state that the
town of Brainerd, Minnesota, w:is
filled with Chippewa Indians who
threatened trouble. They had been
ordered to leave, but refused, and
the Governor was called upon for
troops. Three companies left St.
Paul's, on s petial train, to be joined
6y others on the route, for the pur
pose of protecting the lives and prop
erty of-the inhabitants. The cause,
of the difficulty is supposed to be the'
hanging by a mob of the two mur
derers of Miss McArthur.
• Letters from camp Mclkmell, Ar
izonia, of the same date, state that
del - mations from the Tonto, Pinle r
and Cayetero Apaches, and Apacha
Mojave Indians, came into that
place professing peace, but as they
represented only a portion of tribe,
numbering over 1,000 warriors, they
were evidently impelled by the
movements of troops under General
Crook. They were informed that
they must all come in and surrender
their arms and agree to remain on
the reservation. They were also in
formed that they could not show the
white flag, retaining their arms and
drawing their rations, and then re
turn to the war-path when tile pur•
suit of the troops ceased.
-
THE (nrnpaign in North Carolina
has its humors, although same of its
incidents do not argue very much for
the intelligen ce of the t•olored _race,
A correpondent Writing froth Char
btte, North Carolina, relates the fo:-
lowing :
"1 have heard very little said, either in
Charlotte or Greartsboro, about Mr. Bopt
weft's financial statements. His array of
fig,nres meant nothing to the people ,who
heard him. Not one negro in ten knows
the da,rence bet ween 1,000 and It/KWH,
or n hieb is the greater. To prove this I?
have only to 'relate what took place In one
of the eastern c.ingTessionitt distriets ul
Caioli nit only last wet-k. T...e Con
servative and Grant Rer.utilican candi
dates were holding a joint discussion be
fore an audience composed mostly of ne
groes. The Conservative speaker, in re
ferring to the rasailities orthe last Be
publican Legislature, charged wall cm
siderable emphasis that it had stolen or al
lowed to be sto:en TWENTY FIVE N111.1.10N
OF DoLLAR.%!
The Grant Republican orator, fallow
ing immediately after, was unable to deny
accusation and uuwi ling. to allow so
damaqing a charge to pas unnoticed, and
80, presuming, upon the ignorance of his
audience, lie said : ' Now, ledow-eitizens,
you are told that the last Republican Leg
'stature stole 'i,,F.:2:1,00i1,000! Well, what it
they did r Th. I Y.,hif icr the LegisLture
last year spent V.Kiti,9oo—w hat, do you
think of that?" Every collo' ed Man pas
ent )(lied with applause; and the Coast r
vativeeamlidate, lug that it was fm
possible to make 1,15 additive understand
that 25.000,000 was greater than 2.10,090.
wa, obliged to allow ht , opponent to gain
an iniptirtant advantage over him by this
trick '
SrIINELL, Trumhul Seymour, fiend
ricks, Wall ice, N'Clure, Tom Marshall,
Brecktnridge and Vance suppirt Horace
artecey for President. Gerrit Smith,
Cameron, Morton, Mosby. Wise, Kemble,
Bunn and Quay, are fur Grant. Parties
are considerably mixed by this showing.
Whoever chooses may institute compari
son. l'er.-onalities la2ing disposed of, all
good Citizens will licit rtu.ne fir them
selves whether the rule of the gill taker
and nepo'.it4 shall give place ti, an able
and wise administration ot govt rn:in nt
under Horace Greeley--API irrisimrg Pa
triot.
Don't be too sure about Quay be
ing for Grant. We thought here in
Mi.that he was for Curtin for the
United States Senate, because he told
us so:, but it afterwards turned out
that he was for "old moccasin tracks"
all the while. It is quite probable
that he is just now playing another
of his sharp tricks. He comes games
of that sort quite frequently, so it is
stated.
That the reign of pi Nona] partnership
has Inel its natural result in Michigan Is
thus shown in 'Tile Grand Rapids Dim
oerat - : "The fart k, there is nn Itcpu hli
can party in Michig,an. What is i.alled
by that name is the Chandler and Ferry
party. It is all personal. No man in die
party has the bast thueci tor any posi
tion, however bumble, who has not sworn
of not to the party—but In 7-teh.
c handler, Il e owns the patty in t!:e
in l simple, and has parceled out the
western portion (4 it to Ft rry, it in. acts
:Li hi, heu;t m u tt. This fact has prod nerd,
and is pr. 1
K.tican.r. Its le.rit ine.te fruit in a
general and n tilt Tread dissatishieti,in
Men ot indeperletn- e and honor ill)) no
longer eiiii , ent to %%tar the ( . 112i - biller anti
F. rry i flat, ri main in the party, and
vote as slaves, as 11.. - se UM II dictate (or
their own and their friends interestv."
Exactly! And who does not knc i .
that the same condltion of things ex-
Pennsylvania? The man who
doh not wear the Cameron collar
could not be appointed Postmaster at
Vtinport, or Whisky-guager at Free
dom, let him lie ever so good a man,
or ever so efficient a worker in the
Republican ranks. lie must be la
belled "Cameron." or else his person
al merits and party labors all go for
naught, and Ii Would be swept aside
as a "common scallawag," deserving
of no notice from the dispensers of
political pap.
A LA tux number of the taxpayeN
of the (Nattily have made their annu
al pilgrimage to the county seat with
in a few weeks last to settle their
taxes. In paying, Over their money
do they ever take a thought about its
disposition after it leaves their hands?
Here is its history: The taxpayer
makes his "deposit" with the county
treasurer. That officer pays out the
money received as county tax on
warrants drawn by the_ ehunty eom
missioners. The state tax, he trans
mits to 11arrisburg, where it Amid
be promptly used in paying off the
State indebtedness. But that is pre
cisely what :s not done with it. As
soon as these funds reach the State
capital they are not applied to the
payment of either principal or inter
est on the State debt, but loaned by
the State Treasurer to hankers all
over the commonwealth at a rate of
interest running from to II per cent.
Frequently he has a million and a
half of dollars thus distributed. The
interest on this vast sum aggregates
a large amount, and after a
portion of it as a corruption fund, the
balance is divided between the Treas
urer and the nieint.ers of the State
Treasury ring. The State never has
got a farthing of it. this man
agement, it will be seen that the State
Treasurer and his gang obtain, say 5
per cent from the hankers on the
state funds, affirThe hankers In turn
loan these imam%) s out to the people
at, say to per milt. thus realizing
per etsnt net, eac', on capital which
they never earned and do not own.
'l'he taxpayer, therefore uha is , ao
unfortunate as to be obliged to bor
row money to carry on business or
pity luniest debts, in nine cases out of
every ten, pays a heavy interest to
the Stale Treasurer and the honleers
alltnit4 to, on Isnsney which belong,rs
as much to him its it does to thost._
who wake him pay on usurious rate
of interest fur it, use. That is the
way our ~.itiste Treattry is run at the
pre,,kast time. This is the way tlte
money is obtained to corrupt the
Press and the voters of the State;
and this is just why every hanker in
Pennsylvania who has it portion of
these funds in Isis keeping is laboring
hard and spending his elfish freely, to
elect Hart mill (governor, and Allen
Auditor General. The election of
these candidates will keels the unex
, petaled halanee whore it is_ Their
defeat it ill cause it to be taken front
its present holders nad applied to
other and more legitimate purposes.
Now, if the above is ass untrue
"history" or the (lisps:sit:on of our
state tam's, let it I.e denied and dis
proved; if on the other hand it is
true, sloes not the loan who knows
it
_to be s o and who nevertheless
shouts for awl intends to support
Hartratift and Alkti—the representa
tives of the gang, of plunderers,— prove
himself to he either a knave or a stu
pid fellow?
AN extremely looiish idea has b...eti
set afl(xtt to the street that if Mr
Greeley is elocte.l i're , blont, the IC
oariet.ts .4 - the Country become
ruinously disturbed., We have la
bored fora year or two past to dis
cover what the difference between
Secretary Boutwell's policy, and Mr.
Greeley's theory is, and the eonclu-'
Sion we have come to is just this: Mr.
Boutwell insists upon keeping one
hundred and thirty millions of gold
locked up In the United States Treas
ury, while Mr. Greeley demands that
this surplus be brought forth and
once more permitted to circulate
among the people. He claims that
this act itself will not only make
money matters easier throughout the.
country, but will work a resumption
of specie payments the moment the
key is turned and the gold in the Na
tional Treasury_ becomes a part of
our circulating medium. Why the
Secretary of the Treasury does not
see it in the same light and govern
himself accordingly has not been
made dear. At all events hl4 own
explanation is too unsatisfactory to
make Mr. Greeley's plan seem very
"ruinous" to the ordinary eye.
CA s the Lawrence Journal tell us
why it is that none of the neighbor
ing "king" ltepubliu►n newspapers
in the west, noticed the arrest and
incarceration of its editor, on a charge
of libel? They are always ready to
notice matters of much less impor
tance, and their silence in this case
would seem to he significant. There
is some "kink" in the political skein
which needs unravelling.
Tilt as D.+ 1" laSt. the Past master
penerul stopped the circulation of
sub.scrip:' lists iu his department
asking for money to aid Grant's elec
tion. The principal list was the
hand of Mr. McPhail, special= mail
a;4l ut, and WiLS liberilly Sig/led
the clerks of the department, it being
headed, it is by Postmaster-,
General Creswell for It k un
derstod that this was done In conse
quence of a petition which has been
privately cir,ilatillg in the depart
ments complaining of the implied
af.ssessinent and protesting against
the practice, and which was stilt to
the President of the Advisory Civil
Service Board, George Win. Curtis.
It was suggested that, if the practice
was not stopped, the petition with
its list of names would be given to
the public. No order of this nature
has been issued in the Interior De
partment, and it is not likely the
assessments will stop before one is
issued by somehocli..tvhigher than the
Secret ary.
HERE AND THERE.
—The Memphis Ledger has the fol
lowing. "There are at least two
thousand young men of ahility in
Memphis Who, without any knowl
edge of the tread-mill husints, lay
the flattering auction to their souls
that they would Make first-class ed
itors and reporters."
—With an enthusiasm which is
unmistakably heartfelt, I ieorge V.
Train refers to the eX traortliaary his
tory of his life, and sap.: "If lam a
fraud, I am the most successful fraud
the world has ever seen; hut I Mil no
fraud—l am to he time next l'reAdent
of the United States."
—The damage by th t late qoods
in Alabama will mach live million
dollars. The water‘ in ventral Ala.
barna were higher than ever known
at this sea-on. llonNts along the
streams were swept away lby r.cores.
The cotton crop will he cut forty
thousand bales Aloft.
—The colored people of S.ut• Fran
cisco have inaugurated a movement
fur testing their rights in the public
sc•huols. They made formal applica
tions for the admission of their chil
dren in every district in the city,
which wi.re unifo-inly refused. 'ITN
refusal will form the ba-is of an ac
tion at law.
—This seems to he an era of ex
plosions. Almost every week we
hear of the interesting grindstone
exploding, and only the tali* r day a
!risky doughnut went I/II a bit:4,
scattering death and destruction and
ho., fat in its wake. 'Now we are in
formed that a patent Itat-iron explo
ded in . Providence, IL 1., a week
ago, St-nding fragments of iron in all
directions. As long as Inkstands
and paper collars don't explode, we
are. pretty safe.
—A Georgia female baby ha no
eyes, hut has a double set of jaws all
full of teeth. Snifter, who ha-4 heeq
married ouly six months, L-ays th:it
when that child grows up it will be
a "jaw" forever, just as some women
are who have only one -et of jaw,.
But young Jewlicks says he would
just as lief marry a girl with rt dotal,-
le set of jaws and no eyes, as one
with a double set of eyes and no jaws;
bemuse, he says, some women must
have every thin„ they see, and if they
hAd four eyes, they would see so m nrh
that nobody but millionaires could
inatrry them.
• —I). 11. Smith, the younuest son
of the" Prophet" iv now in
tiait I.n City holdintr meeting... 4 on
the,ubjeci of the suece.Ssion. The
Tribune sad.: t"fitis tnovenn-tit 4 .11/
thy part or the Smith brothers I- srti
in;; to form a ino-t important part
in hrlnginu: :shout the final .-e•laerar
ion of church and state• in this c•oun
try, inasmuch as the question of :-uc
eessorship to Brignan Young-is in
volved, and which we predict in ad
vance is going to he the one which
will wreck and split up into factions
the Utah organization at the death
of the leader."
--The attempted assassination 4
King Amadeus is still the painful
subject of spct•ulation in the city 4
Madrid, and the detectives are ac
tively engaged in endeavoring to
cure the principals of the affair.--
Thirty persons known to be among
the If;Wen, in the late I 'arl i-t 111.1%-e
-went hItVP been arrested on suspi
cion of tiein g engaged in the Mot to
assassinate the King and thus effect
the ovetthrow of the government.
It is believed these parties were al
so crigaglid in the murder of Prim.
The prisoners have been placed in
close confinement to await a ti
In a chatty Paris letter we nod
a few hints which will not be pleas
ant to young American ladies who
go abroad, if not with the intention
to hunt, at least to :weept a French
nobleman, shou hione offer himself,!
By the writer it is laid dow n as a
pretty sure rule that "Fruichnicn
who sigh at the feet of the A meri
c.in heiresses are the refa•zeof the
home markets," for French meitht 1-4
are noted for being good mateh-ma
kers, where their daughters are con
cerned, and severe the desirable Fon -
in-laws for thetas:elves There is a
set of marrying young Frenchmen
in Paris, vatbo have more (Hits than
money and' more title than honor.
who have open known to go so far
in their bat after a Huh wife that
they have had spies posted at-differ
ent pensions to watch for American
families with marriageable daugh
ters. And a case hits lately been tits-,
closed, to besettled by law, in which
the lover had agreed with the tnai
tresse deTerision, to secure the assis
tance of \that courvenient person, to
pay a certain pereentageon his wife's
fortune, After the marriage the
husband was disposed to forget his
promise, bat was reminded by law
to keep it. All of which must have
been pleasant to the wife.
—The death of you) Lowery, of the
Robeson coyntY gang of North Caro
lina outlaWs, fully eoldirmed.
Two brother; and two friends of the
late 'Col. Wishart, the last known
v let im of the SWil p deter
mined to avenge his murder. Arm
ed to the teeth they entert4l the clas
sic region of S(..ufileton, and after
waiting fn ainbush from Thursday
night until Saturday tuorhing, had
the pleasure of intercepting the ruf
fian oil his . Way to a political meet
ing. The Sheriff, alter thi• first
gli 111 psi. at the well L nob n ferocious
face ~f tint deal outiaw, paid over
the sl,too:reward ca•red by the
county. •
- 'Moro the "t•:-A•apea nUo"
1- ih,,trilailalion;
rather, once wore w.lw /13 , "C"4:111Pl'1l "
out of it. At St,. l'ltulwho"tf-weitioeti"
without 1.4,1 i hw r hotel or printing
bill,; a few latcr "esw'aped"
from her fiu,hatid, who manifested
no part iivelineAs in harking
her 11 1 , ;w:zaill, a f.)rtnight .11
Sto Franci-co, for
wAlwere nolwody kat vs, lea ). - ing.
her lib,l uit, a heavy washing [MI
an a I:it...little hotel acrount. The
I:l:tiwiewil and en Ildna-4 erea
t rew: who ha V( Ii: 4 11 . 11:11 34.1)).' 1 , ) 111 P
s:orie. related by V.dith about those
horrible Catholi( , , N 1 ill in time ;earn
In loo1; upon 111 r to re illy k,
one of the hm- , c 1)111'1:Owl' , frau.l-i that
ever ill , -,4t);w11'11 Aria ricanatllence.
_.‘ lioor,Michigan lalp,rer \v v. re
cently plunged into thedeepest
at 1!e
-lion by the.d..ath of his wi.e. Oa ar
t:tying her for the gr,IVO lie was
con,o1( d, however, by di,-
coveriCrt hat certain suspicion, leek -
inv, lumps on her legs proved to be
package, omit:lining several hundred
ilt)!lar,;.11 cprrency concealed in her
stockings. - A pi culiar leg-acy.
—The hu.p . ines, of shipbuiliLtig ill
the Coitt..l.l State, 1.4 110 'A' Cl/Tinned
to the lake. While the
shipyards on the Atla liecoast are in
a languishing state, en the lake.; there
isquite a lively business. There are
now about one handled ve, , els:
proct,.., of construction at different
points, a tnaj4ity of which are steam
ers of the larger class.
POLITICAL.
---Cicorge Currey, of I,iizerne coun
ty, lias ileciarcil for rooky and
Brown. Mr. ILiirrcy is a Itti , ubtir.in
of grt-.lt intltieuct, in his locally, and
ht- represented in the
state Bogistature fur v t•ra I years.
s_.tilan Burt Vaulloi - ii
Judge John A. Carcy, owl' , A iht•f
p on d, !tw in! ON of the constitutional,
coo youoion of - 67 anti of the
Cu vro the laiust 14)116B-
I:01 convorts to liberalism ilk Num,'
Turk.
—Col. S. 1). Freeman, of Ale Kenn
county, the root Eleetor tiir the
X Vtli riet (f l'elin
sylvonia, has resigned hi:
the ticket, iind ex pre-seil ter
vi,eo 1"r (Ireeley and l'anwri. 11,i is
4ziiil ill retire-4-w ',tie-Mtn of the
tile strengt h iii hi-county.
.-4;0(... then, sli g ht-1
(.1(v:ion,
do lin, titan(
un , l:•itiwindcr itlljilqj rrigh!-
Pally 10 1411 , 1 W (iit. aU. •till'r
Char:tetcr
\', rill', "ring" (Al itur, itri. in-
—A rine W dkpatch,
441 1:4-4 week, ann44,11: 4 1.41
i.t (71,-o.tiole th a t
tier i= Itrrp.tri:•:r :t !el (or to titt:voitt,-,tl
1,01,1 t. 1
ivi)ri!pg. i h crit•ctiott of
iter , :otts Intr!y,
tHt ;r.1:1! would Ipttr:trry int r •thltri
1,:or
‘,
the iir-t I,;q. r in I,Qt , itinvi to
(,ut for ; the: Cincinnati
lint!Mott. F. )1.
Smith i- Itcy. stf•lla
)1:t: y)l,ly
rt.:,,rni
1,(1•11 contribti
t, r. ivo trite
t,f Ober.;
the 1,,;1 0 %,‘ l o g v„ t g, r tto the re , ult
I In . clott:..titnit titdt. Itucttalew
I wort' ivattin; :::::ttto that
lie: are is, v.lll entry Intlitin.r, nee'
Stud thdt lire( still Ii eh In
propr,i-
Ilnn
11,; 'oven htt- a week, no
1111' dared to accept the
bet.
Schutz 1111:4 lift
f.t or( II
l';I rt 1 I;;t ti
• re •
111 rtinain un
til August Ist, and (In hi, rtturn
will tarry oti a ty%o giver -tow
iu .11;itaa-. Fran thoice he trill
tnahe shorl incursions into Michi
gan, Indiana and (thin, and finally
will) traverse \V isconsiti and littles
t:a, to -4:et:l.:then the rouse of ',host
German lopulatetl stuns.
( intet
ing (.( (,reeler lirown, on the 1:::(1
inst., was one of the largest ever held
in Catifornin. 'there was sluttt • h
making in Phitrs Ball and
stands in the strent..lll(lge John hia
tren pre:414)47g% xvith two hundred
VICe l'resitlents, furl( nut line Itepub
tans and halt' 1 ettioanits.
foe .klltglituy County I temo
cratie Conventinn nrw rnhletl 1:1 , t ,
wte!: :it the Court lion-v. Pittsburgh,
antl djd not nornintite a ticket, hut
adjourned until the 20th of .\ tignst.
Th e y pr9lto , ,e In join hands tvith
satisfied Ileptiiiihnns on the above
date, and nominate a mi vat I iek
to he .4upported thy I leviinerats and
I,iberll4.
Ch(A II n 'At ra ion hits nbiin.hie
ed all hope of I - peony:ling the ilitrer
which exist in the rant iti!rty
in retin , ytvanin. All attefflpt.: to
F et Forney tn support t lieS`ftiP t
ntiled, It is four - ell Burk: flew
will riirry the fitate, Lut the l're-i
-his friends have qrettiv:
hones nt rarryinv Petinsylvtinirt in
Novernhor.
—The Siwring,flehl Repuhfiran
think•• it is curious to 'tote how many
Rat üblic,rn politicians anti orators
are on their t raviqs. Take the f`ll:4`
Oe Pennsylvania, fur instance. amigo
Nilley is in Montana, trying t.) get
r%(I or a troublesome tin )neh la I
afror
-1 ion • while Morton McMichael. lien.
arid Attorney General Brews
ter have fiflintveti den. Ilawley's IX -
ply :111 I gone to Europe.
---Senator Sulonpr' t , now famous
remark -that the liberal mov..ment
o
uleatis simp!y,..reconeillation—b4 v
,llz. ,Thou )I r, Ver themutt:. The
New Orleans Piro . vime -ays - : Senator
Sumner may be assured that the great
nu j Prity , tipporter.l
in the South are novel by this s. mi
niri t. and hope to see in the elet tine
s of :'.lr. (3 reeky the greatest event
sit , ce t:ve war in wiping out mutual
sectional animosities and mak int!
loom for the realities of a free and
equal Union.
-" The Binghamton argain " Is
thus disposed of by Th ,Philarkjphia
Inquirer: "Itls 80 rged with ab-
Surdities as to refute itself; it proves
too much and goes fog far. Charac
ter after all, Is something. and there
is not----an act of. Horace Greeley's long
life that does not refute this prepos
terous narrative."
The !Pittsburgh Post gave - The
names, a few days ago, of forty-four
prominent Republicans of that city
who have eotne out for Greeley. They
Piave heretofore acted with that party
as leaders. Among them we see the
names AT - the Hon. James K. Moor
head, Thos. M. Marshall, esq., John
N. Riddle, formerly of the Gazelle,
Benj. W. Morgan, Charles Arbuckle,
Minas Tindal, etc.
--In Washington, there is a
stampede among prominent Grant
Republicans to the farmer candidate
fur Prevalent. Among them may he
mentioned the following: Dr. F. J.
Lamoyne, a leading abolitionist and
candidate for Vice Pr •sident with
(;errit Smith some years ago: Boyd
Crionrine, late District Attorney,
Alt.N. M. Todd I'si.; Jno. C. Hast
ings, merchant; 3no. M'Elroy, mill
owner; V. Harding, merchant; Da
vi,l Aiken, Insurance agent; and
some thirty others.
- .\ good deal of tender solicitude
is shorn by the organs lest the Lib
eral party -be defeated through lack
of funds. A little reflection will show
them that there is no neeessity for
their sympathy. To be sure the Lib
eral party has no IT. S. Treasury, no
riNtotti !louses, no Post-otTiccs nor
I lag g )vern merit; to draw from,
kit it dots have a more powerful in
li.b.nee, the support of the people.—
AII that money will be needed for
wid It the printing of the ballots. Tt
is hard for the ROJOinillat 10ffiSt8 to
comprehend 3 Ht3t4' of a ftairs. It
will be easier after In xt November.
—The liberal rejawii ca n, o r
vine met in that city on the 16th in
stant, for the pm p0,..0 of flaming a
cam iut;grl (m motion of J.:\.
Smith, Icy., , lislnict attorney of
c.rawf,)r I ointy, .loshua D
e..,i , appointed chairman. Si tech
v, ere !oath. h , ‘, Joshua Donglahs,
o 4 q., J. A. (•-q., D. I', l'icket,
r-41. I'. I'. Roll, e-q., nn(l othe rs.
r; tall{' I \\lf. chosen
re-Hent of the cluo. It: liberal
chit) tonnla.rs Illty-scvell in :‘feali
le, and its members say they will
Inure than troulJe the number in
'lint Crawford Democrat
.:tys the Creole y mytl Will eall
(minty ninet i:i io Au.ru,t, when
they will complete tI tis t,rg.tnira
lion.
-The Pittstnitgli a
;rant repuhlican pacer, sa)s:
Is it not tibiolutely ridiculous that
A lorie:111 , 4 ShOUld denounce the cen
tralizing of power, when they are
th ni-,elves constantly the slaves of
centralization? Do e s not every one
of decent intelligence know that Si
pion Canieron irolitivally governs
Penn-y I vania ? Ile and Thornas Scott
govern this state. Why deny it? All
he rest of the world see and state the
fact. NN'hy should we take the trunb
le to put on indignant airs and pro
claim an independence we do not
po, , sess? Mr. l'atueron can do any
thing he pleases in the stale, except
et 1:1!1 out nil independent newspaper,
and that lie cannot do. Ile has sa
gacity enough to know that he might
as well fight ow.linst the stars. His
-ateli Its are equally wise :
prominent ltopubliciin wri
ting from Milwaukee, thus speaks of
the pros i eels in tVisconsin: "Du
ring the past few days I have min
gle, I freely among litital reds of friends
in Loth parties. A more thoroughly
01 party than the Grant
it ion viol scarcely I,e imagin
,4l. Of the four ltepublican mem
hors of A front this city, three
are doing duty for the Liberal cause.
The lie, aid tno great German news
paper of this c ity, which has a week
ly circulation of (;,001, 'soloing good
service fur Greeley and Brown. 1
Ears Ilnit every itepubfican paper
in (tie :•;tate tirktrtApoused the Libentl
caws., I ac eiri .11nuit(.voe paper,
mid !hot expcetttl to come to our
"hie t \\ eel,. The revolt from
toe ; ; r +ft. tremendous. 'rids
cot,tity moor 2,96 t majority.
1101% i tel (hilt (irtviey s
mojnrity a iil r,•—•;1 `;,(lntr."
-"Hie Erie t4t , c."/..cr From
reli.ible citizens (.1 Cra‘vford county
weifehrti tibt thi• tide toneing the re-
II
a.- :tt eoirkty setting
towards t;rk-e;,-; and Brown iu an
inahner. ( )(the I‘'ettty
t..o.l itternlA 1 . ,. of the
h•vt I. :Ire Itik•rtk, , 111•11: , 11;r4 wich
\ v e il I.ti n •ge li t !ewer' A. I
mon( 'Alla I ). )ug l ia..". 4 , Itea,
Thetn.t.:-. It 'day t .Ittoluey
prtfll. motary
ionlet:rS arc
k;1 ( . I•,i'y to .A.111(./.1.4 the feakt
illg 1„i .e agailltit
i;nott are the
111 rt pub;ic.at
Hat ul Owl:l...idly, J.
It. i hos, Dick, liu%vell
L.:m.o. 5tu...1.:v . ...it, J , tittt It. (In.ty .
;dill \V. 11. t:tt:c',:t, the tuu LittVr
-
cm• . ; ,,,,-lature. It also
..t.t get] .t .....d her of the
lc. the lei.ohl....d.c.,uzity
...e Uneley li It
o -
1.111 4);"T 11 F.l RI F.
n t i :(1 the riches of this
That the Ilitighanuon
ttt:ltta.l rat-tt Itray loud
t to ugh \ pry Grunt editor
iu the 1 . 1,i . p , 1 .- , ;:thts prick up his
C.ll W: jr,6l phough. Itiit they
,111 , 1 u:r liu up, pwidortable sensa-
Lpn, that v,:ts really worth
.\ ett , it;t'ii liitor,
1 , 1111!' With the wilde,t tintbi-
Gto I. had ' , morn that he
:1•.;:::1. eley's
nrnipp “repley's [LH
fkv r t f paying pensions to
it..l e again how Cer
;;Ct rtn:tint; youth wits about
it:
" ~..• .1, .:
" %1,• • • oa, of
r • • - • '; J. p. 1,. .It r••ec , :vlll,-t1 by
,••• ,••• • 1111 , 1 by
• 1 • 0d.4 I. rt., 1,1114 an at.0%%-r
• 1.1 I 1,1;t41. , hi" Ivw• 1111 the
10 I • •
- , I .11.. hi th.•
I i•I
r
.., 1,.1/ i•• • II.T/11 (tut erltititritt
Vt 1..•tl
It, I e el. pl: lit I%er l'el.;;;Te-tt
t I, ol' lint n . ntt the lett. r rare
ml
y i,d tilt. , ina% Itn Luc expr..eult,lll mitt meal,
10.2 ~..I ecrul uimi
.. . ~ a! Oa. 1,1 ti , e:lr:7-
1.1 • •• 1.4 , tiuty. (tared It, Au
-1:11.11; ur O Ir • y .0 r. 11;1. I 111,:43,111,
. • • ~ 4 r”, r rrll lit•
• I' , ll • 'Mr S.l 1111 1 11
g to put:-
I,lli f:1: +11 , .. Ili(' r:( :
ME
I.lr : Thor.. a:we:trod
/,.tpebrwatt of .Jll'y 19:h
t' t ~";...nter.
1111! 1 h./ ...111 11 Wril•
y (It Neer it'll.. to Lestie
tt. InA.ht, It letter Mr Ore...
emt,, th.l
b•u in 11,1., t
l• • • h • •••a - •••1 , !e• peueioninz or :-.:ou.ht•rn
ele• IN 04 41•0., 4•!0 Tlik• :Itt4 Info I talked with
I ann.. tk4 ti i„l,. to y oft' political
0. 'I ..1 . 11111 Nwv. 11:71. Sev.,rtil
•• •••, ••• 0 1 't .0 i N011113..4 Wirtellillo4
• " 1,1 ...en al of I. nita•clzerp let•
• I I irti, .• r hnt no.urh letter
",• , ' 4 "tr i re. .•vhi ire r ,re I conclude
4' 1 .
' 4 4,l ^h' , "
'444 , !brit rov imp ....lon of the
wir,e-41 14 ,4•44,,, 1 , 11 • 4 114 - 11 'rum Parini
• r.• • n ru• 0 1 1. • ts nit he 1110 writted To
tI, I ro a !it. .11 thr Time
' 4 , ruld Once, I ilt,l
BEIM
0...• " 4.•• • ~•• 'moon !(1 , ,, UP n•
• '.• •, .1 ••• !IT nft-irtron. I maw.
1., It of nq I .rcny he uli Itaker..
.rrl,l,
'"""' f '"'n • rind Greripy. UNTIL
writ 'I T:4 I Ilt.T;:Ai r Tio: , TATI:3I , %T 1141,E
nil nrilirk,i' 1.. S. I.'A.l4t.l:NTUrt.
What rt•n Where now he
your trrri!,:,‘ 0;..../..osurc , 4, your ini
pre,zi.:oo4- f•vii!! Wl', your fearful (bin
rf•rq the . .-leetioo of Mr.
l'..r lhts r•-10.1 nenAion
Fluff wa, tho only point
worth not - with it 4 ttkappearanee
the hot tom nut. But (teal tender
ly with hi. , you! hof Oneonta! Hi,
memo try k bad, tint h , . 110:4 capit
al powers (,f harking' not. I li b (ltigit
tO . l Mali(' a 111 ,- -ro . Cr ran t eleetor.—
.Ipq - - )-ork Tr; 7 .)twittlY. 27•
• •-
11:-.Grer:ry'r• I.ecksfattou ape( rd.
Fon t Thy Rpr tntaiiti Repuhlirao
It i, pos-lhie.assome of our friends
ir4kt, that Air. Greeley will make
but a poor }'resident. But it 1:4 un
wke in them to insist that 1 - e was a
failure as a Cougre:,s: man. On the
question of opinion they may be
right; on the question of fact we know
them to be wrong. Mr. Greeley's
whole term of service lin thellouse
barely covered a period ..of three
months. Yet in this quarter of a
year he set on foot three grept reforms
of which the country is - now reaping
the benefit. It was Congressman
Greeley who brought in the first
Homestead bill, who struck the first
blow at the mileage abuse, and who
first assailed the English doctrine.
'•Once a subjact, always a subject,:'
by laying )own in a resolution. the
Ameacan•doctrine that "every man*
has a right to' m Igruh3 from his
tive land to - another; and, in tinenme
ing a Citizen °lithe latter, to'rerioanc
ail allegiance to the former." Not
a veryliad record for tbree months!
WAN IT A LOAPI OR A IIRIBE?
. The charge that George 0. Evans
the swindlingagent of Pennsylvania,
paid Auditor General Hartranksev
en thousand dollars as a bribe, has
been met -bythe newspapers In his
BUppott merely by denunciation and
abuse of those miring the charge.
But this is not the manner in which
this accusation Is to be met before the
grand inquest of the people of Penn
- sylvania. John F. Hartranft is a can
didate for the most important and
dignified position in (he common
wealth, and it is the solemn duty of
the newspaper press to examine eve
ry one ofhis official acts with the ut
most rigor of scrutiny. This matter
of the loan of seven thousand dollars
by George 0. Evans must be consid
ered in the light of the official rela
tions of the parties toward each oth
er and of all the known circumstan
ces surrounding it, without regard to
the feelings of Mr. Hartranft or the
ring who support him.
A bribe is defined to 146 a "price,
"reward, or gift bestowed or prom;s
"ed with a view to pervert the judge
''meat or corrupt the conduct of a
"judge, witness or other person, or
"to procure the performance of some
"act which is contrary to known
'"truth, jnstiee or rectitude." hoes
the traneaction between Auditor I ion
oral Hartranft and State Agent Ev
ans come within this definition? To
arrive at a correct judgment it is ne
cessary to examine all the circum
stances in the•cage.
in AprileSineEvans received from
Auditor General Hartranft claims of
the commonwealth amounting to
upwards of one million dollars for
collection from the government at
Washington. The carelessness of the
Auditor General in delivering to the
irresponsible hands of Evans valua
ble assets of the State for so large an
amount, without requiring any secu
rity, has already provoked sufficient
comment, but that does not come
within this question of bribery and
corruption. Almost one year after
Evans had received The vouchers, he
approached I lartranft with this 'loan'
of seven thousand dollars, aml Hart
ra nft accepted it. The Legislature
was in session at the time, and . Ev
ans was naturally anxious lest the
Auditor General would compel him
to account for the immense assets of
the State in his possession. When
ihrtranft accepted this money all
apprehensions of Evans were at once
removed. It was not likely that an
Auditor General would compel a
settlement when that sett lenient
would require ehe return of the sev
en thousand dollars in his own eos
seesion. So far as Evans was con
cerned this loan had all the vireos of
a bribe. It corrupted the conduct of
the Auditor General. It caused that
(Oda! to negleet his duty to the peo
ple of the commonwealth by failing
to require Evans to-make a settlement
of his fie-mints. It purchased efficial
silence and enabled Eva Os to proce(ll
with his work of plunder. No bribe
that was ever 4 lirered i r Revived
went more directly to its purpose.
'When Evans loaned ll:Wrenft the
seven thousand dollars, is it towable
that the auditor general did not know
that the money belonged to (he com
monwealth ? When George ( e Evans
received his appointment, he was a
poor clerk at Washington, with a
salary of twelve or fifteen hundred
dollars a year. If Ilartranft, when
he buttoned his pocket over this sev
en thousand dollars, did not suspect
that the money was part of the assets
from the auditor general's otlive, he
is more obtuse and stolid than those 1
who hold his intelleef in the nest
contempt ever imagined him to 111 .
What Wolliti have been the ( ele c t e t
the offer of a loan of seven •thousand
dollars on a faithful, viefftint, and
honest auditor general? Would not
the suspicions of such a public serv
ant have been arouse! so completely
as to rause from him a demand of
immediate settlement. or a report of
the delinquent t I the legislature
which Was in session at the very
time? to far front cauran , any sUSpi-
Vitls in the breast of liertranft, his
sense of duty to the people was Utter
ly deadened by the brief.. The loan
of seven thousand tbAlarsi .if there
are any so fastidious to object to the
plain description of bribe) purchased
the silence and neglect of this snlit
or general, and Evans wont on un
molested with his (Hoe lations. ran
any man say this had not all the of ,
to its and eensequemse-of a bribe?
Will any man insist that this money
was not given and received ;is art
official bribe?
Within five months to a day feint
the time of the loan, namely on Ihe
ISth of August, when the revelations
of the Evans swindle were made by
Deputy Attorney General M'Clure.
Auditor General Hartranft returned
this money. In his haste. he return
ed it without taking up his "due bill."
Why this precipitancy unless it arose
from:a consciousness of guilt ? had
not the money been paid back at
once another condition of Oilers
would have arisen. Evans would
have been compelled to disk - •lose the
fact that lie had given the limner to
the auditor general as a bribe, and
1 there would have been an impeach
anent of that official, instead of his
candidacy for governor of the corn •
monwealth. There would not mere
ly have been an impeachnient which
would have ceneigned him to com
plete di.-grace, but there would have
been a recovery of the mouey at suit
oft he ';ontmon wealt h. It was, t here
f ire, safer and w kyr in every respeet
to give back tine seven thousand, es
(-ape impeachment for bribery and
corruption, and come forward as the
ring candidate for governor. Wheth
er the money would ever have been
returned but for the ex teeure made
by the deputy attorney general, is a
matter about which the Felipe , of
Pennsylvania have their own views.
The smiporters of I lartrena may
make what they ‘vil I out of the re
turn of the money, and the due bill
to Evans, but the ease stands in spite
of every attempt at excuse and ex
tenuation the most flagrant instance
of official bribery that has ever been
revealed in the history of the com
monwealth. Yet thereere those who
seek to stain the proud eseutchemi of
Pennsylvania by e l", i ng a be e e e
and eirruptee audifer etmeral to the
office of governor.— Hue Petrol.
The Ofiiehal %c•giigc••iee or Gets
Ilnrtranrir.
When John F. thirtranft entered
Cho auditor general's Witco in May,
1- , 66, the vouchers of military dis
bursenients by the state;from 1861 to
1 s6l;, were st oredstway pn the shelves,
and there they remained undisturb
ed until,l)y reason of their imporitl-
tidy, Golernor (teary and his a c .
eotnplice, Evans, obtained then!
!(t, I 4;").
ti,neral llartranft cannot put in
even t h e poor plea of ignorance of
the pil•scnee of the6e. vouthors on I I;(•
fine; v 4 his office, foT George G.
Evans has presented to him a letter
from tlovernor Geary, June 17,
requesling that the vouch( IN be de
livered to the hearer. Indeed. (len.
I Lartranft himself testifies that Evans
came to his Unice in txtiS for these
claims. Knowing, therefore, that
the vouchers yubstantlating claims
of the State against the United :States
to the amount of over one million of
dollars were In his custody. Know
ing, as he was bound to know, that
the law required him .annually to re
port the condition of these, claims to
the legislature, and: neglecting for
four years to discharge Nis duty as
prescribed by
the law. is it at all sur
prsing that the committee appoint
d to investigate the disgraceful bu
siness regarded tho neglect of the
auditor general to report to the legis
lature the condition- of the claims
flied in - his department elk err "as
tounding state of facts?" There re
mains that other damning fact that
General Hartranft gave up to Evans
the vouchers for over one million of
dollars. without requiring frnm him
any security whatever. The com
mittee in their report say that they
"cannot but express their disappro
bation of the looseness of official
routine" that permitted so careless
or so criminal an act.
General Harttanft was therefore
clearly guilty:
First—Of gross neglect, in faiHng
for four years to take any steps what
ever towards the collection of those.
claims.
Second—Of disobedience to the law
of 1811, in failing to report the con
dition of those claims to the legisla
ture.
Third-Of criminal ea relminess, in
giving to George 0. Evans vouchers
of so great value without even ask
ing from him any security
,whatever
for the return of the money - collected
from them.
Is it not an insult to the people to
ask them to cote for a wan who I- ,
clearly guilty of gros.•+ negligence in
the dtvharge aids official duty, of
disobedience to the law and of critni
nal earelesiniec?- litrrixburg Patrild.
The Disgrace of the Treaty.--Tite
President's ••Wietory" an Utter
Defeat.
General (lratit tvits recently a-ked
ut 1.,0nt . Branch, " How nint h I.r a
victory has England gained in the
Geneva Conference to the matter of
indirect claims'."' Ire replied:
triumph is all (AIN, uu t II great al.:I
important triumph It is. We have
gi , t I he wlio!e (lut,t mil just where we
wanted it, kum 5015..c.,1 as we , „vn.lie.i
it to be."
The London Evening 'l'lefli•upa , of
last Nveck, referred to this assertion :
"Now this reply deinoustrate,la,
absurd it is for little people to at
tempt to understand great question:'.
For instance, the l'nited States made
against Great Britain certain claims
for consequential damages which the
latter power first, last and all the
time, reptidiatt.d. She would have
irthing to do with them, and refused
to have them considered for a single
instant at Geneva. Thot nited States
Insisted and declared they would
Never, Never, U Never! abandon the
indiiect claims at Geneva or else
where, not even it the result were to
be the failure of the treaty. England
stood aloof, maintaining het original
position; sticking doggedly to it un
til one day the( ieneva hoard picked
up the consequential damage busi
ness and pitched it out of the window
sons ceremony.
"The United States, which had -0
often declared they never wuulil
abandon those damages, saw them
tossed info the wire, and did not
even say "We proteq." To the av
erage mind, if there never was a com
plete, unconditional surrender, a de
feat so ignominious and demoralizing
as to_ stand without a single prece
dent, certainly that seemed to he one.
The I 'idled States are great and big
and generous enough to stand defeat,
and they are too great and big and
generous to claim a triumph which
was the ignominioui opposite."
We ' ere w hipped, horse foot and
dragoons at tieneva,and all the world
knows it.
Pt 81.1("FlitUSTS.
()Ile of the most clearly proven acts
of malvorsation connected with the
Treasury Department at Harrisburg
is that the large unexpended balance
supposed to be there is really loaned
out for private gain to a number of
hankers, State otYwials, and political
"chieftains." It is admitted by 11w
`gentlemen most intertsited and
known to all men that the vaults of
the Treasury are empty of money,
and that in its place are a number of
checks, not one halt the fat vain.. or
which could be realiv,ed were they
put - upon the market to-morrow.
They are the pledges to pay of men
who doubtless intend to redeem tla m
and still do so if no untoward
dent inter% ches.
everynolly admits this state
of very tea of the journals
denounce it, illlll thN treater number
preseo ilecorials silenee.
r, i.;:!,-
1.5.e.(1 for the of the i.eople,
21(111.111Y h it'll(' it by surto .irgunicnt-;
as
th:'4t held for nem , :
oriuinu!‘“l- u•:,;(';•a ‘1 slant
Democratic Tr. 'l':c, is
like the plea ui [LC 111,1;11.l •I lii•tel
HP: :1(1 et robinng, his late own
er', a ii11,111p: to
code or moral- professed hy
bor..!lar, and pick-p , wkets, Tmd
entirely mov.orthy ucen 1o d
high
S;ltte like l'enn-vlyan:a.
. .
.`,Lotle•r extenuating it;
(ht. I,tvt that th,• , •
the stlljr`ct,
it i no (Tillie, wh:eil
Lind unsound a plea a- the first ii
tioned. That there is nu 1;i
(ling the practice is owing, lin -11611,i
-bly, to t h e well-grounded inii;c4.,; ( , ll
Unit prevailed about a hundred years
ago that 11:111 V. ith a nice -ease of
honor would be selected to till the
()dices of the communwetilth, and
that they mould them on
strict principles and :Ls sacredly
they would a private trust, and not
for the purpose of inalsing looney.
It is full time that the standard of
oflicial morals, as m. ‘O.l 11 !1-:
- • •-;k • •- •
brains, in pennsylvani a , m, 11 .4 cit•v;t
-t, ti. When new-papers I,rn,: - c--;i1 ; ::
to be restwetalite defend a practice
that has brought hitherto highly r,-
sl
ectable oleo in this (Amnon:l - 0y It,
misfortune and shame, and the 'ista;,•
Treasury to such a condition that an
investigation of it- , acments
eel in the liana. of 11eput.liv,oii,iii.
the ell-‘ation twist Le con-ddered
hig;lily desirable by Well o. !111 IAI7-
- FOriteg's
Chinamen.— tin last Mimilay :L
week ego, about hirt.y additional China
men arrived at 'leaver Falls. They will
be employed at the Cutlery NVOrk , 4 in
that. place. T 1), yo wb hive !writ there
for 4wuu time rt , .. t are gt , t4 .1111-
("U . \
all he i•iiidelited with t:ii•ir
Ilf.W 11,111 P,
(In litst. Wednesday vuo of their uti I/I
•1" (11..11 it Boon nr Fall., and ma. lair
ned uu the following day, ue accord:l[w(
with tho Cli nese Lnrial nererrnm ,
New Advertlsemeuts.
ItC) C . II Z://
Fire Insurance Uolllpan\
If NC/JIM/LEA / Le...A.1:411;e of run',
.y bruar3 , Uflico One ilot.r.
L 1 11 Of /WTI. nat. k:, Loch, ,ter, i:easer
Conn,,
ot counly tuts 1.. t tholr
Ty 11.V , te4 n.::110” I Ela•lAwt. by lb l • ,
AL Lair !tare, lit a rah: !fit
I;ELIALILZ !WAIL k.'I).IIPANI
then:by 3%"1,1114! ti -I.ly
bleat.,t 10 tile adjLettictv. of luso, by Gompal.l•,.
lucland U :a dap
r.o.triD or DIRE , Tun.:
J. V. 24•1)o11,04, t..-orzt; 4'.. Sir•yetur
S miliel it, 111 ...0 1 , L.•,‘;, ~ hi, Kier.
W il ', lam h vilnetly. Joh° I .rd•L.// 4 , .
Oar. 1u3. 1 1.,:i.11411)4‘.1 RAI E tear.
M. t ISMD, if.., 1 ! il 'lt urvl,
D9ald LOPery, .Thilrel Brintnt.r.
=EMI
(7P . M C. SPEY El: 6H, r
.1 31 . 13,0; A L.l, r.
•
It. J. SPL L 1 Elt, T/111.0,
I..7T(grli :NOTICE Fritate Geor.:e
d:!eva..±ed. - Lettere teq•litnentury on the
eetate of (ekag. 51,1 hr, d, cenrtd at. nr rho bon,
of 1 , 1,-en,,tn. h. the coonts Of It over, acd state..l
Penns) lvsalt, having bet-n :, , rauled to the
her, rtreidint: lu Ne# Se‘rtckley torrbshlp, to .I,:d
e"tnity all per mtli haulm etalitva Or dentrindA
t the et tote 01 the ctitt decedent are ht-rens.
I eq v•sted to wake I.l.t•wn the Fame to (be 11110,
deirty ,101 IN MENCE , ..
J ti1y31:72 6t. tael;ntor
NOMINATION S.
lIEFOIISt. ItE1•17.111.1 , 74.
Pre.-.. tricot/ —I tonwe I: ror •i~•~.
rite Pr( sidcne-- B. (;ratz. itrow It
tNTI-+i.~~"vn
PreBideitt —Charlt, Frar“•is Adatrim
V. l're , ftdent—l'ltitrie.. I. Iluward
101011. 111.4 , 0101 •
Governor--William •
Sup r C ute Judye---Ju in es Thoiupaon
dud for (ictecrui-- ELial il ling fel t
NATION AL Paoll InlTloNisTs. •
President —.lain es 1;1 ack
President—Jotin ItUSS , OII.
i •6 NNATLVAPIA IerATE Tt3III:IIANCe TICKET.
; Gerelnor—S. Lt. (lane.
B.Prefite Court Judg4 -JOl.OO Ileaderson.
Auditor reentrui- -Harr Spatig ler.
'Ong rriformen -at Large --lir°. F. Sic Far land. A
J. Clark and !Seto. flush Brutlford
- f yftsk S. r.int.
C. rovicle -11e-nry IV 14') si.
I . I.:NSNYLVANYA ItEMBLICA
(Jo 'ern(,r—Jotln F. Hartranft.
,s'itprepte Mercur.
Auditor Gozertst--klarrisoo
Congr e.samen.at Large— G st•lwifeld
14111 Gel Todd. Charle , Albright.
Delegates a° large la Caa.rt 'oat ,•,dinar
N'lllwm 11 Nkri•ki,th. 1“..'“ I. .. .1
ham Fell, ..itan.A.
%Villlani 1.1.11 y. l'arlx,n ; Linn Barth , ••• . selsuyl
kill; 11. N. McCallAcr, eintt..r. V if ;Lan II
. [LID. .Lis.
E. /tryuir""l-. J.:110,1,!••r. I. btu,
Wnyti...,"(.. \ V. 4-4 a .1, •:1 PI
N. \Vim. 1:• z.,e11). \V if A t
U. W.t:ki•r 1..
STAT Kl. El 11 %I. :1 1 1, 1 C.
1.(, Jo , 1.
1 Adoli. .r .1,1111
1../
1 .icnielytt A 14,1, I 4 Jrll4A
Viartto l/“., VI I J
t; •. .• •••••
5 l'heodort• L. 4..
. 1,, :.1/ ‘ . l :iwaio,ou
7 Fruso S.
Shun M. h. (1••• Ii:•• .
9 I•;ll , vLtd 11 (Ire , i.. 21 111111 j
1:i etvli. .f.
1 ' •
IY I. r .1 • oi. 11' , .•,
k t •/
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ET
, iii.trtt -
.1,1111 I Ailt••• ,I;1111 , r ; T.
11.1/./.ird,
‘.\ tllt.tui 1.1,•. y.
,
; .r. c:
1111—'11,1\ .M,•I;(
tv,
41: ./:ccvnit., I.
riz John C.
I'. 11. /1 / • r ,J r1.:1 \\ r r .
.1 /irit1 r ri • 4 .1.1. ..-11 I , r 1.
111141:-.
Dame; I',,rl.tkq.
I). 14111:, Nl,wr
heave I.
1 , k1M , ,C It.VI IC I tIC. IL'
r •,4 IL i.t:irliaJew.
And.torlatit Hartley
I. t,.,•. -itichartlYauX
Janie 1. ii l 1.111-, 11.1, IriAsli
Wrigh;.
' (;••••.1 - _ , W Wm
i A .1-1:• \ A
1,1, ft...., ...lull: A amp
1,, I. \\ . ! B II
15'111 11 It“,:a.
BEIM
1 r ; : 1...,
11 it A.ll4it r,tti It N 1 tWzbt
:1 .1 , ,kii.:%1111, • '-. 11 , 1 r. \1.•:1,
1 4.eurge It It , t. - . ~. It ;.r..1 -,..1.1.•
-, 'Cu he tilt ', 17 l' \ clittury
t; 1..,i 01 It 110 - ' '- \':' "n!1 I. I.4nTnn
sale.p 1 .k 1 , - ; 1:.---1. , 11. ...n
..1.,..... I. 11 ' 1,) Irr•!.: M i:. '..,....ifi
9 111rw1e 1. N , . • . .'• 'l.. 1: ‘‘ ..,1
10 II lit'l I.
II .1,,15t. hi.. 1.1 . , ./i,nr. i) P...(r.1
1 - 2 Frt•2 11 I; .....' r ~; I ~. r.., \\ 11 0 ••r
Roweii & Co.'s Advertisements,
V, A \
A GoOD'Jab FL YOUR BO
„ 1, „ I
Well Taught, Well Fed & Cared For,
esut. 1iE1{ , .116 ii/: ;.',l)4:til.
J. II Hfi I h it
I t.
- - _
Lebanon Valley College,
HAMU , C I , A ,
COTTAGE SEMINARY
i C• • A
FOR yOUNG LADIES,
At i't,ttftto %1 t ry t 0, 1 Pa
mat fivl ,
!!..
!Ili,'
( NO .. 1 1 .1 1 .1 ;
i r t u t 1,
•
NI .
. I, : rt
.1 All ES 1 ,1 1 S
• .
I')J l. rlltit thirty
ut , Olig - I F.:;I)A.N . or f ) •J d
dress Ne‘rr YE, Zs:
New York.
Canipai2:n ()owls F 611872.
,z,•T tH ~ Laff•, l b.r u.,r
Se/1 at
theta
•1111 .1! ,7t,c7. 1.7 r 7t. ,., rI !,r , . n'ttrw aria I'rt7
1.7777t,77 of I , llr is . , Slit - I 1".:1;:t.1% ,11g , .4.; the t 't7tl.7
77 717.1,,77, I. ,p17777777t nor , .
V.,1:• • 1 . :: 1 ' .7.71 7. .7 17. 7,.7:g soft
.7l t 177• t •1777 Math'
Oilt•olati,sat• tt titt. N_“tt t tt;
I t•tt 1 , " 1'7,r1,. It 7 7%, N.'. 1.7,t,
TO ES
dZW ELiI I i i toSiL VER
THO&.McFADDENJR.
s"Avr PITTSBURGH.
t N• r s vv.t icti tr' m more
. Won't') %to! I; ~t
I'. inn!.
\ -o:. F: I t •1, rB,
Purt-
Ixn•1
U. S I: „ $ 290
BARLOW'S INDIGO BLUE
che,o,, “t I ••• not,• to tie( h.t .
;/; !..,41111.840*
.11d WV 11, z•r - I /11L. c•Il : . 1.• .•I 'I put up
..t r t.' , •I •••N h St.cond
`t• • h W,L r.1:1, Pr ,, pri•
oior. 1••,r e-i os. •Ta
P ••,• 'II • rut
!f- -
rut 2- ,
turnln n•
r dernngt
• •. : vitas*
• •.' t.•; imptirt •
.•,- I egil!:1111fi
-cn .k 1 I. I)
n 1 - 1
4,`• - I i ll r't u
1 ki V ' " • "
Dr: - I' • .
parti expr ,r,•
vi••••••• . 4.0,1 I
i t•, Jr!' 4
k , I N 1. tfl !. -
SA •• I..ert.•t•
EMI
=1
a t C
IMIIII
ALPS INSURANCE COMPAP•.Y
1)1' I; I,' I',l .
Gas', Capital $250,000 00
Assets, Oct, 9, '7l, 31 1,948 29
Liabilities, - - - 5,200 00
U NOliiPre,k.r.i.i.t..T. ;,:. 1.,
11 \V. 0/11,F, Tr , r:
INTIEEM
DI IZErl'01:.
Ilt.tr. t; N, t ; t i t .
ti ‘tt ll,titttnood, dr .
11110 , Citt.•ll P
ID.:11t1 /11• W, .1 •
11, it'. 11 It, It.
II oail..rn'.tt. ,
\V 1:t trt, ~.'• •
A ,
J.l, Ne
1V if 410,...tA, 1 ,, I. 'o,,ht!
Lk
rfkilet,.l ttn - tn.
Inonr. p._-.01 - ,t 0-01 in a. 4 w e n is
4'111.%5. U. 2E .kg't
~11,
Roche, ter, ni
LIME ! LIME T LIME !
101 `lto7‘l ^ttd attcr A prtl tlr.t, oe \,lll be prepared
to furnish rn.tomcr+ u II fr. rh burnt I.lnic of
quubty nt rower? Firms. An port. .
truirliktf 1 .101INSION CCO.
NIE W DRAW
hti , "l" I 9CI( !I I .
There aro lODIC polata !a a .evrow atact,o,
detoring to pnrchane, nik,,nll Ink.
connilit•ral on, namely :
I,i,:rhttiesa of runtang,
Ea.., of Managerntoit,
t.:aaactty to do the - work rep,.
Frvp.lotn (foto Nolne. t0.,1
Noh , l.fahiltty to e, t out ,-(
Wu thorn that the IMPROVED
re-m.e.:k .11 these points. and that it I.
TII VEKY it I'
FAMILY NIA('IIINF
NOW MANUFACTURED.
And we toliclt an examinati , ,n !!.
uruntod In every county, In whom Tro.
M.O. liberal term.. 1t.1170,111111401.,
fel,ll.ly I V.t Fifth Av,
.; •.t.,,iii,:!rt,:i1i..,.;,1.1•,.11:1.!411,11.1'k10:it.1i7,. '..;
.1. ,1. , •,.• I 1.,t1.1,, q 1 ; 1 ; 1 . 1 •46(4. 1 ittt..f.„11,.,1
k t...n . t 11 i14 11 1 i. 1.111. t ' l.l ' l,t ril.'. ll, l 1 4,1.• 11 ; r t.. , ; t
' 1;...,11C11.1:tpt,.1...1,1-.11!:1 1
,14,ti'1ir;'.::,..•1 : 1 • ,
• 11'. . 11,.. 1 1 , ,• : 4. 0' 1 ;''.1 . 1",r 1 .•.. 1 4.11..14::: ~i1 v , ...1.; , ,
'!1. , ,,,,4 . ..L.p„..T.,..,!••,;;L:1:4Lit..,..
W e n o hand rk.. o b
rent. les,t Ihnn ohy other firm nut.: y
r,nn, ‘vish itnz ut VP et \la ,::u., It e
Cnil luA ,O•e., of,:r -for.
1.,.e.W byre. to. tve ft.. A
rl • At .• lt.. and 1%11/ V. uriant our v, ,rl. •.` •h ^
Marble.: MO for uorkmar,trp 3,1 , 1 n , . •1, •
dr f C. PMPeti . 11/[1
IN EI 1: 1,N,3 ut •
I • . tillltt•r or 11, par, illotl •.: •
LI( AlArt' Mer.ltmy, dece,•••
.•,,r;, ‘Vi:;:am Mc .
v. 141 Thol - IMA f•;. SCI 11,11:,
hi• Interim, r , leit Iva l l'herlep TrialloCr. a
White. Hi114,,r• u• .1•1111 r, dec e2 ,..
1,-,1114 tute: i• d %, I.,re 11,A, ielczem.
Nal,ey intermarried INIIII .lames R. Temi
Ltltloll and Jan..? M. Lorton. 0111
ttllll,ol Ltl'ollll. 11 d.-t:.-n.,4 chluzltter
dit Mary IdriElhtiny and John
minor child of Mary
tiir t it tic Ntary tiii
guardian joriitili ti
~n IWO: •I'l4 oil Intl ill , rent! te.tve .11
Mi.r j derrat,d i
iif land situate in Hope, eil twit . ...ill',
and Stat.. n 1 Prniittivaiiiit.
tip• north by the land. of V. to -.1. 1
-11/11 I;ltitf.:" t•n 'tt• ,t heir, e
Sam!' l'lhttopion,
I i/11111101 Burl - n' ilt•I
lienhim!ti
1;:f1(<,11 air.-, 111 Line, nee, r
hr lit ...a the lira 1111.,” ' II the 1 1 .1111. d,v . „.
,A nt It rice' • p'3ee p, I •• Ide
i•lre hen in il , ll 1 1 tII I;Or
3(111
r.
MEM
IN VALUABLE GIFTS!
PM
GIFT Enterprise !
ro bo Drawn 3100(111), utzn.4 ‘l4ll
04 : 1 1 000 IN CO(MA)!
Two Priz,zz,sl,llw7 r , i
Five Prizes, $,. - (on = (rreenlinck ,
Ten Prizes of (
1)
I. i•ll 1, llt
, l ,l
IMMill
int% F.tinny yarriagti
with Sil‘;vr-11.1utinteci arw,A
~~„rih ~1..-,~n~'
i„ I •• , 11V I I:ll,..irlyU th Bgh,ei
Pia h,, worth suti'
1;,••• Aluz Nittchmet4, worth *ll.lO en. h
, „'i ...jar,. l. rrrr Har,rir,p 4rtlM.r
it e,rlhry-,,rra $lO 10 (:1410
1,4,;:r!t:•• i . lll)rtS, Genre
.11 , 1 1) ,, n111.•-plaited Tat , :
.k.htim., 4. • k
Whole Number Gifts, 6,000.
Li /tided 1 , , •-,1,,1"m).
=I
=ME
\V-tro. ,1 !,, :1
r' TieLe
Tv. ent y l'lckrt,
a fli;I h.t /.I
r N%mc
f1,111:11i , •!: in I. I...rolict: tt.t.
ot•r: any °lx ord..rtr: them
I),• nd to ."...11 L.l). SINE, boi .ti
.111!)°,,', (.1 - rice. 111 \V Minh 0
s
Sampsell
Tr tiek , 1'.0,41 t Cash D.1.4.Avi , r , ...c , 1 •
crrx•sSupldhys LES 1;1:1* ‘11' ,1 . 1
St)i.ilLit
The Best for All Purposes
Nlort• (. , •
run , . If :liter Ilan any ) , (:“:111,R• •
mark, t ' : t ch-ane,ltin , l kt•pt t:1 r•
I 0, I, 1:.: , ~ 1
tt• tn%.o.u, shut tlt•. k
t.
t' i. . ,it :11.j".•:::
i• •air
th
a ust 13-
Fr.on Ike tir:t the " ) 1) Xi :"T1 l'"
rapnlly in. rop kl l,,r.t N .l:!lt.
thy, in i!ig. l of t
St:lA till :11,1.11111C m. n; it >i1111 , 1• I 'lt h
tr NRIV 1,r,E1)!
=1
IMI
1t it 11
it 1, gaining favor inin.:lll:: , t, r than .r
i.tnpr Mae
yin In ..41.11 I rom it ,
et/ , :Vt . S 1..51 t al. 41Vur tht• prvectling,l),,""-:
() Lit FIVE HUN I)RED PER CE:VI
\I“, !LW' 1. 4 11.(`:1•:i,111 , .: its .alt •
1•111 , 11 , • 12tV“r Olt'
4:::).mam twig." C.
b. I .111 , r•
tl•.. ~•
SUPERIORI
IN V. R 0 It RT RO N A igr ta .
r l'a. ('all and cc:inlatv tln
)I. IN 1 'lto
Cot set.
bitit.iiros,.July 3 , 1171
Ihiard of Director. of Rank itt,
dry declared n 11n olend of FUt It PEN i'K's
upon the Capital Stock for the last: nix month.
papittle forthwith. free of all tax
j.l '24 3ss FtiDW AHD HOOPS, Ca-hi.r
1 4 -4 0 N. t+ALE--A liNt•rate COW, [hie p•xr , Oili
1 Apply at 'rile Ant.' a "Mee. a
Mlacellaneolts.
,4z 8 ,
t 4
J. 4 '
44'
c i lViA BELE WORKS
IW.H.MARSHALL
MANUFACTURER OF
MONUMENTS;
& GRAVE
())
Nutic•e in Paz-tit inn
ii
1 1 i
G IF T
OM
:-;..)1),(1(1ir (Jo
SINE'S
BM
\
()NE (ilt.kNl)C.\
red .11 , 11 dt.s itojrth li(141
]31;7"
!
ILV\%I:• , i.l ,;)
SCALES.
1"(-)r)vt 1..
non i, In cuter !Iry
I.)iivittexiti INo.
/!:11,
MEE
ME
r •I
u he
OM