EDENSDURC, PA., FRIDAY, OCT. 4, 1873. " Democratic State 11c tie t. FOU (KIVKKNdK, AN DUE W II. DILL, of Union County. ruK MBl'TBSANT GOVIRHOR, JOtl FEU TIO, of CrawTorJ Couuly. FOK Sl'PKEME Jl'IX'.K, MKSHY V. ROSS, of Montgomery Conuty. 8KCUKTARY INTERSA1. AVW AIK9, J. SIJirsoN AFltlCA. of Iluntiugdait. Democratic District 2'iket. roR t oNOKisSi Uit. A. II. COtTHUTH, of Sotuar'. Democratic Connty Tiht. ASSEM Ht.T. i r wnrtnilt'KF. fonMniiigh Bareik ; jJllH rt.NI.OS. Ehcr.sbur,. KKllKTeR AD Br.COHPBR. JOHN O. LAKE. F.heiitsbui. TIIRASfRER. 1U. A. TEAfiI.EV. Jobtntown. rny vissioEii?, J-MN rMIHELr ronemftiigti BoroBi ; fifcuUOB Ul'llf.F.V. Kl.ensburjf. POOR DIKECTOH, JBSSB PATTERSON, Johr.ttown. pritvETon, 1IBSKT PCANLAN. Carrollcowt. ACKITOM, PntrTP T. "KKf.f.V. Pnrlf Twp.; j PATKICK DILLON, Elder Twp. " Is the Sheriff's election proclamation will be found an act of Assembly, passed Ust winter, Tor tbe taxation of dogs and It,, protection of sheep. Every voter abould read the ac!, as it will be submitted U the people for their approval, or rejec- j tu.n, at the approaching election. Wb direct the attention of our reader3 , .i..r r,rrimi of the sreech of lion. A. H. ' tftjn. I ' - x ..... Dill delivered at (Jreensbnrg USl ween j aud publistied elsewhere, in which he dis- imies the money question. Mr. Dill ; Uinlv aud so directly to the rrnni " " ------- j - - - Mtbiect, that no one can have the least dif- , flcnltv in comnrehending the sound and ' practical views he enfoices. The New York Worll makes a "special flf I"'' in its prospectus published else where in our paper, to furnish the Weekly World, an eight-page paper, from now un til January 1, 1379, (rArr month), (or ten nt, postage prepaid. The same edition f the paper will be sent for one year for . dollar, or for six months for fifty rents, with the postago prepaid. Most persons will bo surprised at these remaikably low offeis, but a3 the World never proposes to do anything that it docs not peifonn, it i will make its offer good to any and all per- J sons who comply with its terms. Read the prospectus, and accept our pledge that for ; !;, ot hundred, or fifty rent, you can j iftt.d tho neatest, most disnitied, and in very respect the most interesting Th-mo- t ratio oaper published iu the Lulled Males. ..4--a Missouri baa her Harry White jnst the Mm aa I'ennsy lvania. His name is John j T. Crisp, and he too is running for Con-J gresa. As White's soul yearns for the i Coiiomaugh and the Kiskiminetas, so ! Crisp's heart bleeds for the Missouri, and j lie aays to the voters of his district : "Elect me to Congress and I will niako a channel in that migli:y Stream iweiuy leet, ot-t-p from the Yellowstone to the mouth, and when it is done I will turn my eyes to hea ven and say : 'Look at it. What God in , , , . . .,1 T tetided that gieat river to be, 1, Crisp, have 1 ; made it.'" And White says to his con- atilueuts : "Elect me to Congress and I :n .1. -1 , . i. i.-;.i,:m;,.u0 n,-.A tba 1 , , 1 C'onemaugh from the month of the one to , & . . . , : the headwaters of tho other, and when it i ' ia Qone 1 will luru toy eyes 10 ue..rii .11111 . aav : "loog at it I v nat inw intentieu . . . . r , . . these two little streams to ba, I, While, have made them.' " C) Tuesday next the election In Ohio, Indiana and Iowa will tike place. Con gressmen a-ill be elected in each f.tate, ' while in the two latter States members of , the Legislature will also be elected. As the Oreenback party is in the contest fully quipped wilh its candidates, we will not attempt to express an opinion as to the re sults. At best it would only be a mere gut$. v natever may oe me complexion , of the Legislature in Indiana, it is admit- '; t 1 that Daniel W. Yoothees has made the most brilliant campaign ever known in that J H'ate, and that as a stump speaker he j atHiiris unrivalled in the great West, which ! L.s produced so many well known men of i that type He lias labored botti nnlit and ; day has addressed over seventy five mass j meetings, as well aa numerous township meetings in close counties and if he does not win success, he ha shown that he em inently deserves it. The race, however, ia not always to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, -- The venomous assaults of the Johnstown Tribune iu its weekly edition upon Gen. Coffroth are growing small by degrees and l...ot ifulltf lex. Tt commenced three weeks ago with a broadside of almost eighteen columns but was only able last Friday to furnish nn Installment of three. If its editor perseveies in repeating his charges, it may be that eventually he will believe Hi them himself, for some men are well StUCK IO as giMHl as tlie trutn. HOW tiianv votes the Tribune will succeed in makin Tor Coffroth is a question which Ihe Republicans in this section of the eunty are just now anxiously discussing, j Itceitainly will not drive any votes away; from him, for as an old and knowing negro ... .. . . . In Greenville, Soutn Carolina, said to a young colored brother who was denouncing Wade Hampton when he visited that place threw weeks ago: 'Young man, stop a dimmycratie candidate isjist. like rVrrmeat the more you thaw if. ihe bi'jferit ieeU.'' After Coffroth is elected the Tribune man will be amaaed at the size of tho piece of Fo.nerset "Air ment' which for the pat two mouths he U& bueu Hying to uiaati- Lilly' Lie bailed and Clinched. I t Two years ago lust March, William Lilly, J ! or Washington, was examined as a witness ! before the Honse Judiciary Committee, i then investigating a charge against Charles j Hayes, a member from Alabama, of hav ing received several hundred dollars for appointing a young man named Beardsler, from New York, to a Cadetship at West Point. One of Lilly's specialities was that r or buying Cade'ships fiom members of the House, and ho was to swear the charge against Hayes through before the com mittee. In the course of his testimony he stated that about twelve years before that be Imd paid A. II. CofTtolh, then a mem- . bJr fix tinld or nine bundled dollars to : a j point a young man to the Naval Ac cademy at Annapolis ; that be bad received f 1,200 from the young man's friends with which to purchase the appointment; that be never saw the young man ; that he could not tell bis name, but that be resided in New York, or in its vicinity. The editor of the Johnstown Tribune rolled this story of Lilly's under bis tongue as a weet morse), and scattered several thous eand copies of bis paper containing it throughout this Congressional district, in ' order to injure Gen. Coffroth aud defeat I bis election. The name of the naval cadet appointed by Gen. Coffroth was Edward j J. Bet w ind, who then resided at Saxton, j in lieu ford county, and a gentleman named John Fulton, then also living ia Saxton, but now a resident of Johnstown, gave him (liei wind) a letter of introduction to Gen. Coffro.h, urging his appointment, j and it was made. We now ask an v honest : 1 man lO turn to another pari Ol our papei ; and read the letters from Edward J. lier wiud and his brother, Charles F. Bet wind, to Mr. Fulton, in reference to this matter, and then tell us what they think of Lilly and his sponsor, tbe Johnstown Tribune. We knew and said it was a lie at the verv . . i i. . i . 1 1. . r j : i . i . -. . i . . ouksei, mm mnu ino I'couuus buuw iiiai, it is without a shadow of foundation. And thus has this balloon oT Lilly's, inflated wuii peijuiy, wiien pi iCKeu wua tne pin j : . , , -. ., of truth, collapsed and fallen flat to the j earth. UI course we do not expect mat j tun j riCune win retract the libel, its editor not being a man of that kind, but look for him to reaffirm it as it suits him from now j until the election. He delichts iu such ' low arts, and in the work of defamimr . j political opponent knows no such word as fail. But it is now harmless for mischief, and having, like spurious coin, been nailed to the counter, there it will icma.n. F. F. Drwf.f.s, Chairman of the Green back State Committee, and Francis W. Hughes, the Gamaliel of the Greenback party in this State, both reside in Potts ville, and both of them having traveled ex tensively ovei the State since the com mencement of the present campaign, ought to be able, from what they have seen and heard, to form a reasonably intelligent opinion of the relative strength of the three candidates for Governor Dill, Hoyt and Mason. They are as wide apart, how ever, as the north and south poles. When Dewees returns from the interior of the State to tho Gilai d House, in Philadelphia, !. .l. .- I. .. .i . i "- iiietuiiieM, is between Dill and Mason, and that Hoyt I . ,, . , , . Id practically out of the race. Oil the very Sime dav Mr IIiitIipr nvtVe th state same aay, jur. liuglies makes tue State- ment to a newspaper reporter in the oil re- . c ion. that eithpr Ifovt rii "Tnsoo will n . , , . . , , viM,ivt i.v. viaraftf ftlftft lift 1v-U. coming out tho hindmost of the three. 1 1 . 1. .Ul. J - rr i I n o uaic uti a vci y cin.ii Kill) IB u ilieiencc i . I lit itnimiill between t wo I i i eent.oetr lodoin ! -. v. ...v.v.. , . . . , t whose opportunities for obtaining reliable . r .. . . - , , 1 till. .-ri n Im r. . . .... r. ,..-.1 ,. 1 ft.! 'llft.vl j ft I JrtIO U'i 11 LMCtiaCIV 1.11? INillllCy I and the conclusion is irresistible that the estimate of neither of them is worth a row ' . r pms. No two intelligent Democrats, ; . . . ... ... ' , nor any two intelligent Republicans in the: , ress opinions so directly ! I ft-l..l,C. 1IU1IIU tTAl.11 in conflict with each Other. Last year, ! to nomination. My immediate relatives, ' hatistioi: of her war for t he overthrow r N'a- Fl some time past the work of construct r. ... n,n . ,t r- , 1 as 1 h.ivesaid, tieing ignorant of my application, I poleon. There were Secretary Shermans in ing has been somewhat impeded throuch Dewees, who was then as now the official I...1 r 1 . 1 a ft . 1 .3 . ,. , 1 I1 P-'Jt P'' -JieenuacK j vote in Philadelphia of at least th irty ' thousand, whereas it was only a little over fi thousaud, while Hughes claimed one! bundled and fifty thousand in the State, j and only got one-third of it. As prophets '. they labor under the same disability that ' Cassandra did at the siege of Troy. TriE deleeates to the Democritic ;t-t ' inc. ucie.iiis iu ine iemocratlC State Convention of Massachusetts who refused to take part in Ben Butler's political circus ' at Worcester, met at Faneuil Hall, in Bos- ! ". " 'J g, and nomma-; ,ed Ia" iAte ticket, headed by Judge , Abbott for Governor. They have thus ; ed their own integrity and maintain- " -; oik"1,iiioii 01 itieir pany, j winch is far more important and infinitely more Honorable than any temporary success .. . .- , i tliey might have achieved under the lea- 1 dership of a political buccaneer like Butler i 1 r uuv.i,aii-ci iikc uuuir. We are Lilly prepared for the development ! , , ... ' Ol some ricil ar.tt rare results ill several I .males hl me .yvc:uoer election, but we w iil not conclude that the end of all earth ly th ings is about to happen, even if iu the boiling of the political cauldron the hero of Foit Fisher should float to the surface ,... . .1 1 , .. . ext Govern .r of the old Bay State He seems itlst now to have under his con. I ic rcciusjusi now id nave under Ills con- . trol some of the most powerful elements of ' , , . .. . . , , j success, and that It It so is one of the ! greatest wonders of the day. We are aware that the political sins of the oeoi.la ' 1110 PeuP' ; J i 1 -"ey can on.y oe sum- m a. ik v f 1 . . . IL . .n "loueu ,or a visitation or Uut- Jpin ln it8 worst and roobt ff--vated i m , , woman of South Bend, Ind., who by haid woik and economy had become i . . . i. . , . . . : I r , ..... ouicj.eoueoi, unu , uaugnrer mat was Slowly dying or consumption. As her mother would not even give her child the necessaries of life, the invalid requested the aathoiities to admit her to the poor house. While she. was there the mother learned that her child's expenses would be ' assessed upon her property, and so sent to have her bioutlit home in a wheelbarrow, S'rangers intci fered and hiied a can-age, but. when the poor girl died it was with great difficulty that her miser-mother could ht induced to bury her decently. Another Lie Nailed. Ceneral Coffroth Vindicated and the Liars Exposed! The Cadetship Story Contradicted by the Cadet and his It rot her ! The fillrTjcinrr falvn nnd malicious rharffe whk mnrlA ntraii.Kf. llpnoikl (Toft roth hv the ! Johnstown Tribune (General Campbell's j organ) in its issue of September 13th : Prominent among the disreputable arts of j the Democratic nominee for Congress, stands . the Naval Cadetship sale. We do not ori- inate this charge, nor do we allude to it sim ply as a charge, tin t we po furt her and name it as a fact, substantiated by sworn testimo ny elicited in the course of a Congaessional in vesiijaiion, rontucted tinder the auspices of the X LI Vlh Congress-a Democratic Con- William Lillv, a Domocratic attorney-at- ; ' law, then aa now a resident of Washington ! City, purchased of Alexander II. CoflVoth, i while ;he latter was a member of Congress, I the nomination to a Naval Cadetship for a I I yonng man named HEUWIND, who pro- ! fessed to be a resident of Saxton, Bedford j i county, in Mr. Coffrotli's Congressional dis- j i trict. For this service Mr. Lillv received : i 81.200 from Mr. BEKWI N D'S "friends or i 1 relatiyes, which be agreed to divide with i I Mr. CofVrolh. When be proceeded to pay j ! Mr. Coffroth the ?f0O due to him, Mr. Cof- I ' froth borrowed S'00 or ?:?'i0 of Mr. Lilly's share and nerer repaid him the amount .o bor rowed, thus realizing S") or SHOO for his services by a piece of sharp practice. This occurred during the years of 1804 to 1 !!, and the facts in the case, though often sus pected, were not really made pnhlic until an iuvestigalion in 187t accnieutally revealed the iniquitous transaction. Tbe following letters, wbich came into Cien. Coltrotli 8 possession on Friday last, ! show how ulteilv fals and malicious tbn aoove iniamous attack ol the 1 nbune is : non . r,' xvir r-I enclose letters from the Messrs. Rerwind bearimr on the charires maile in the Johnstown fVrrktu Trirune of thel ith Inst I have made inquiries from a sense of dutT, ! iiaiuly instrumental in sending Mr. E. ss I wus main J. Herwind to you for his appointment. The letters are full and emphatic in the total annihilation of the Lilly assertions. Prom a lon? acquaintance with these R-enfle-men, I beir to assure you that you can place the fullest confidence in them. What they have stated in these letters will be, if necessary, tuip plcineiued in any lcral shape that may be de manded. They are hith-toncd. moral irentle men. Very respectfully, John Fui.ton. Johnstown, Pa , Sept. 20. 1S73. r;. .1. iiCRWtvn, r.s. : T 1 1 1 . . . . , M T l rr in .-,r rninw.: run 11 ri'iy III mp Jdnn town Wrehlu Ttihunr. In it you will seesom i Ji .??V.Mtme' toU.'e ixavai Academy at Annapolis. As I irave you a letter of introduction to fjen. Coif roth, I am drawn slightly into this political Storm circle.; I write you. therefore, to inquire If these charges are true or untrue. Pid your parents reside in New York State? Did you mv or cause to tie paid to Gen. Coff rot h tl.SiW) for your Pi"intmenl? lid you or your au-ents. by Wll- merit r mo you or your airents, by Wll lly, pay for your appointment in cash. j nam 1,1 or in any other way ? Please look over Lilly's sworn statement and let me know the truth or falsity of it. I teel that we should vindicate Gen. Coffroth if inno cent in this matter. Very truly. Joh.i Fcltosj. 42 West 20th St.. New Yoiik, Stpt.21, IS7S. f Sir My attention having been called to a copy of the Johnstown IVrtHly Trihmir of Sept. :tih, which contains, among thcrs, the charge that money was paid to Hon. A. H. Coffroth, Repre sentative of the lfith Pennsylvania District in the Connress of the United States, for my nom ination as a l "adet. to the Naval Academy at An napolis, in lSftT. I beg to say. as an act of simple justice imu rikriii, inn. sucu cnarge is utterly groundless. The circumstances connected wilh ' my (appoint merit were as follows : When my noui'iiatioii to the Cadetship was made I resided at S-ixton. Hedlord county, at I nnd in the Imiiwrliiiri. rii'iniii- ,r whioi. '.i...n ; my home had been tor a period of t wo years and ! several moiuns. my parents then resided and I still reside in Philadelphia, never having b .-en 1 residenlsof any ot tier State t linn Pennsylvania, i l made ine application of my own volition, without the knowledge of my parents or rcla lives. My first application wa for an appointment Of lit run f'mtn I'muwlniir I innol., ... riorsed by Senator Cowan. Col. John W. Forney Congressman Hale, and others. President Lin-' Presidcnt Lin- ' ,.,,1,, received m- verv kindlv. t,..i a .i.... Ht u,e ,,mo he f'areil be cou.d not mve me an appointment. Ascertaining that a vacancy ex-I isled in the district iu which I lived, 1 changed : lny "I'l'lication to the representative or the -lis- 1 triet. being in Ihis endorsed ty Mr. John Put- 1 t'ivii ami Mining Enuiineriif the Hunting- : doll and Itroad 1 op Itniiroad Coinpanv, resident ' at Suxton. mid lv riilur rni7..tiU .,r 'i. ..... ! i passe.: tnrougn the regular course at the Aca- OCinV. gTll.1 Iiiated in lsit, served nine Venrs in 1 ne navy, ami was retire. 1 in is.. lor injuries re . -r-ivr-d in the nr-rtormance ot din v nt M.-.ft t... 1. . u:.. : . r . in'Bno 1 ins sir, ie.-, coveriiig i nirteen yen rs, t "ti -i iicni.i ini3 ciiaige o. irregii aritv made .. ....i "... : f '""j uinui ,,r mi 1111MK-11 .igniusi my uoilllutll oil and Ml- r,(,iMtn,f.nt " p , , , I made no promise of money or any other n..u. T......i 1 ..... ! . . c...i . ... .. ..... . .. ' ' . ' ft " n,.j.iiK 1 1 y II OUI l T I O l never raysclf paid any one for such noinina- : tion. and never heard of money being paid or ) promised by my relatives or f riends, or expect- ! ed by those who had aided ;ne in any way to se. cure the position. To the best of my knowl edge. I nei'er saw Mr. Lilly, upon whose evi- ' dence the charge against Mr. Cotfroih is based, I and certainly never had any communion ion : with him, personal or otherwise ,m reference ' could not of course have aided me 111 any way, much h-Si iu the manner detailed by Lilly. In brief, I pronounce the charge, in cssentiai and detail, entin ly false. Witu esteem. Your oli't M-i vunt, Kl.WARP J. ItKHWIVn. TT. S. Vrr. To John Fulton, , ! . 1 .. ' - -.sit., j oiiusiowu, i'a. Johnstown. Pa.. Sept. (. jv;n CrtAS. P.erwini.;F.s,.., 104 Walnut St., Philad'a Itr.ir Sir When your brother, Mr. K.J Her wind. resided in Saxton, 1 gave him h lert,..- Gen. Coll roth. Ihe member of Congress trom j I hut district. 14 run u ... w t-.hi . i . - V. j.-.ftft ... 0 . uer was I appointed as a Cadet to the Javal Academy at ' muin' hi . . ie."' r,,Tro,n recently been nominated for Congress, and a charge is brought hu-m,,. ! him of receiving direct, or hy an agent, t,2ii(l i ior ine appoint mem ot your brother. I send you a copy of the Johnstown Tribune in which ines- ciiHigesare rriaoe. What do ou know about tl.em ? Ts there nrv 'n'-w Yo.'V tyi Tas 1 "nt Vo' K Irom him. Very truly, John Filton. 1(U wai.m-t Sr.. PiTilad' ., Sept 17 13-9 J.Kt sue 01 tne jonnstnwn ii iot.aol the :ith. were me'nts roVMV. Wm.Tbiy rrdingheT: ment pit my m-otner iy .Mr. coffroth to the Naval Academy, They are untrue from the beginning to the en-"""'-"" - thewh-dc-cloth-nnd ,i, editor a comm. tits nr.. I....l ..: ment lf niy brother by Mr. Coffroth to the man's testimony, not on facts, they also are not ! rename. To have no misunderstanding. I would rn I 1 c n 1 . . . Iti 1 1 i- cl.ti. 11.. if .1 .-1 .....- - . 1 1 ' ...... .... .i--..tr,. ... in hit con- '"e logical iruosoi unnniMiti iirtKers anil po- sidemtion was ever pal I to Mr. Co IT rot h, direct- ! litica! brokers who speculated on the woes of ly or Indirectly, nr to nnv other person, for my the people. Kn forced contraction of the cur brother s appointment to the Acadrmy. Mr. ; reney and now enforced resumption have made Lilly states what he knows tube untrue when ' broken fortunes, widespread idleness in place he testifies that l.'l wa paid to him hv my ' of requited labor, terrible want in the midst of relatives or anybody else for his appointment. plenty and given the country the disorder that I beg also to endorse your letter concerning ' is the growth of despnir. These evils, which my brother s residence in Medl ord county ; but I now affliet the nation more Profoundly than I must again contradict Mr. Lilly's statement even war itself, are not the otTsnrimr of n. ........ tl."t mJ".,,r,,,h.-r Vn"rn V.rII' Y"rH nr i"itu nf rtur; tune prior t the. an.intmnit. i 1 I",,ht whether the young man has ever seen New ork bernre he went to Annapolis. He 1 was born and raised in this State. The editor s ' r: . v u pareins nvo in the Stare Parents, to -ny certain knowledge, ever lived : there, or ever remained there twenty-four ... ..... ..riuirrui nis imimji-. o try wurn in wnicn mn oe ciirrntmi'at fttUl 1 M ft ll 1 W V ft (Tt tf n .(,AOBJ ar. WT n m I L . m irnith i wel.a n,V ramfir nZZ ' tue apnoinr ment reierrca to Yours truly. Chas. F. BicawiNn. Nsw York. Sept. 21, 1378. Dear Sir You may fancy that I was astound- I ed t I he infnmnris statement in r-..tr ..-,1 ,.. ; naval appointment some thirteen vears since ' made in the journal sent by vou and to which yon so kindlv called my attention. I enclose herewith a brier retinal of the en- ' t!re charges, which please have published over ' inv signature. i Exclusive or the severe reflection upon my-j self nnd upon my relatives, if i but due fieri ' Coffrnth, to whom I feel under such deep obli gations, that these infamous lies should be emphatically and specifically contradicted. I wish that yon would, upon the first oppor tunity, express to Mr. Coffroth my pincers re gret I hat hi kindness to me should have been the origin of such a tissue of falsehoods, de signed for no other porposo than his Injury. Please send me a copv of ihe 1nrnal in which my letter may bv published. With esteem Very sincerely. E. J. IIHIIWIND. To John t'LroN, Johuerowu. Dill on the Currency. HONEST MONET ANI PLENTY OTT IT BUSI NESS TO RKGCI.ATE THE VOLUME OF CI R- KENCT BAN KINO TO BE SIMPLIFIED AND FKEE EVILS OF EN FORCED RESUMPTION ARRAIGNMENT OF REPUBLICANISM. At Greensbuig. Wednesday evening of last week. Senator Dill spoke to a large and enthusiastic audience on the financial issue. and discussed it with a degree of ability ana canaor iui comraamieu tue iiearty . I""- "r'i'tZ'"" V'f . n t'-n in favor of the honest payment of all oeois, pniMic aim privaie ; n ih ueiiiinciai ion of repudiation in every form, even under color of law, and bis masterly defense of the constitutional standard of money as the only rock of safety for government and people, elicited the most enthusiastic re- spouses from bis hearers ; and his protest against the arbitrary regulation of the vol ume of currency by Presidents or Cabinet olhcers or by the capricious views of Con gress was received with universal favor. His review of the resumption policy of Sec retary Sherman gave the clearest compre hension of the question to all, and when be exposed the needless enlargement of the debt and the contraction of currency to compel resumption, when the whole busi ness energies of the country are prostrated, be startled his audience with the conclu siveness of his reasoning on the subject. The speech throughout was listened to with the most profound interest, and did more to settle the views of this community on the money question than anything that has been presented to them. The following is an abstract of the linancial part of his sncerh He had no irlitterinir and flexitile platitinles to offer about honest money and the honest payments of private debts and the honest maintenance til t tie national laitti-piat itiidea which could be as plausibly interpreted alike to the hard money and thesolt money voters. The solvent citizen, nr the irovernmeni, hesaid, that does not pay debts, accord in it to the terms of the contract, must be dishonest and no tech nical plendinir, no cunninu- sophistry, ran even excuse, ir.ueh less justify it. The credit of the (rovernmcnt is It very life, and he who would '' Stroy it by repudiation, however indirect, is as much its foe as he who levies war against it ; and the private citizen, who has the ability to pav, can in no way within the lines of intcKrity ,,..,i,a.v .h.t ,IV .m- o.ij i w . ... .1. . . , ,i i s vs i cm o iti ts a n 1 1 1 1 in 1 1 a 1 1 ie volume ot curren if it were possible to do it under color of law. cv, hut it practically forbh! the increase of Ours is a iriivernment of law, ami justice and money hv the onerous evictions imposed on equity are tho leading attributes of our laws. bunks. The hank now pav hihih tl..iiii.im or 1 he constitution, to which the Itemocracy has ; ta xcs. nat ional, state and municipal, and nearly ever oowod with reverence, has fixed gold and : );.ii!Hi.(.iu a year in national taxes al.-ne, ali o silver as the standard money of the Cnion, and which the borrower must Pav in addition to the it is in accord with the accepted theory ol th civilized governments of the world. tYoin Hint standard there can be no departure without violence to law and destruction to public lailh and public and private prosperity out tne I Maudard money is not now, never has b 't-rii nni. j never will be Ihc chief circulating medium of a country so varied in its pursuits as is nur. Paper currency is indispensable in all count l ies, and more indispensable here than in any other nation because of the greater individual energy and t hril t of our people. In no ot her nut ion 1 1 -ity do the people so generally possess nod so freely use money in their ordinary ways of life as In the United States, and in no other nation ality is wealth so widely diffused and so tickle in its smiles as here, where intelligence is lim ited to no class and honor and fori uue are o;ien to all. A larger volume of money in proportion to population is, t hen-fore, needed in this coun try more rtian in any other, and it should be lim ited solely by the wants of legitimate business, and not by the arbitrary decree of a president or asecretary of the treasury or by the ebbs snriltlowaof political I ides in Congress. All such n g jlations of tne volume of currency stamp uncertainty upon our financial policy and par alyze Industry by ceaseless distrust. We have seen a president arbil rarily and lawlessly dirt. et the issue of millions of currency when it linan cial panic threatened the defeat of the party that happened to rule at the time; and when one executive can do so without accountabili ty, what may not a future president or minister of the treasury do to promote or hinder the prosperity of the nation as cupidity or ambition may dictate I" n,5' judgment there Is but one sound rule ny which to regulate the currency of thecoiin- In'. It is to mainiain it a eoiiiil in value with gold and silver, the const i tut tonal standard of ! money ; io maiuiaiu ine simpiei nun cneapesi chn n nels t h roiig ii w h ich it can reach legit imate Irade. and limit it solely by the legitimate (Jo- matins o: tne business, mien-sis oi rue country 1 rredi-einablr luiiicr is a Iii noon lis tuce. tor all mom y contains on its face the promise to pay. and it is as poison to healthy industry ; but redeemable currency, maintained at equal val ue with the constitutional standard ol the na- tion should he accessible in such volume as the varying wants of trade require. Ihe volume of currency should be ne ondLt he control if gamblcrsand speculators. uch as have depress ed all values in a dav by locking un money, and beyond the nower of partisan officials to em ploy it as a factor in political campaign, at the com of 1 he stability and trust of business. Tin-re are times in the history of all nations which sorely tty the people anil severely test fixed la ws of public sa It-ty, and such calami tons tides are readily seized upon by the reckless ami lilt: L.M I llil 1.1 lliail.lllll.' a 1.1KI1 01 1 ll.:t'lise III1 p. ace of the reigti ot law; tint, however ex- haustively the extreme powers of governments in ust lie employed to preserve government ns the Inundation of order and prosperity, the sanctity of ordained authority cannot lie sur rendered without teaching universal contempt of law. The suspension of specie pay merits has become a suprem necessity at one period or j another in the history of every nation, but the j laws, and the people have adjusted themselves ' to it until the restoration o' prosperous irntus- j try and healthy iraoe restored resumption just as a body prostrafd by disease is restored by p.ttiently aiding nature to effect a cure. Kng- I land suspended specie payments for nearly a 1 quarter of a centurv to recover from the ex- ! Una. rl.. ....... ...0 1 ...... .1.. .. ........ by rrimpi.on"iHwV nl-n and enToe r.': sumption; but they hd to recede from ih.-ir ' own folly, repeal their own statutes, and finally when they did force resumption but a litile in advance of its attainment by the natural laws of trade, they gave p.ngl.ind her bitterest cup of m ist or'. une. There, as her. resn mpt ion was embarrassed and delayed by the efforts of am bit ions leaders to win the laurels of specie pay ments, and there, as her", the increased distress of the people was the result. We have in obe- dience to supreme necessity, suspended specie payments and accepted irredeemable paper tor sixteen years as the price of saving the t.'nion from dismemberment. In the meantime the l-gal tender currency of the government has I be.-n alHrme.1 hv rl.e hiu-hest liiriieial ir.l, ...... I of the repntdic. and to its interpretation of the law all must bow. 1 he necessities ot . war gave us the national greenback currency ; it now commands the uiiqiialifiej favor of the people and its validity is no longer within the bounds of dispute. It is confessedly the best currency the nation and the states have ever had, and it Is now one of the ineffaceable features of our linancial system. When war ceased, loavinpr us with a large volume of irredeemable currency among the pei.ple.it became the duty of the government to do as F.ngland did - bring about resumption by the natural laws of trade, and await its com ing in such manner as would tiring no needless Shock lo business or disturbance in the chan nels of industry. With the txiu ml less resources ofilhe country, with the exceptional energy of our people, wilh Ihe most fruitful crops from bring about' resumption without serious de- year to year, with every element necessary to pression of business, we have had the most sweetin.r embarrassment and hankninti-v as .ft.A 1 : . : . r .1 ... . . . , "y- ! they were the legitimate price of the preservation of our f ree insi ittitions thev could 'e endured; but thev are the causeless sorrows whioh come from abused authorit y and from the most profligate administration of tnunici- pal, state and national gnvernmenl the country ...Tr.r-i . 1 1 iiesrfti'u. 1 o ei. i orce i ne con r racr ion or the currency was needles wood purpose ; made the natlo ss. It served no nal faith no bet ter; gave no more healthy Impetus to trade. To enfore resumption in advance of its natural corning through revived industry and general prosperity, was madness worse, it was suici dal. In city, village and valley ; in all sections, all classes and till pursuits, Ihe tearful monu ments of this national suicide are visible to all. Here in the mountains it is felt ns lreonit? .& the marts ol commerce, and wherever the hum r. industry should be heard, and wherever the sails of commerce shou Id be spread, there ma v bff scon thecaim of death that ha settled on onr onco Prosperous people. And who must answer for thi9 suffering and prostration of a ' -rre,,t nation? Itepuhlicnn misrule is unqnes- i ''""ably its author, and Democratic rule is tl.o only means Tor its correction. T1,e Itepublican financial policy holds the wor'l of promise to the ear only lo break it to the hope. We are told that money Isahundant So it is where tt i not needed. We are told that banking is free to all. So it is-to those who are willing to lose by banking. Money Is a drug In the great money centres. Millions can there be borrowed at low interest on gov ernment tVind. the securities held only by those who have no need to borrow ; tint your rarms. your slock of goods, your forests of boundless wealt h. your individual energy and Integrity, none of these are foundation of ere tlft, and you eao borrow only from the usu- I ter, nnd your values are stendily shrinking be- cause of the universal distrust thHt prevail In ! all channels or enterprise. VVe ar MM that : contrnction hs not been the policy of the pres ent H.IministrHtion. The stH lenient ts false. It Is not only false ns to the record, tmt il-.e record is essentially falsi" us it is pr.-sentod to the pub . lie. On the 1st of January. 1T". the paper enr I rency of tiie country was 7S-..M'I.Ii-"i ; on ttie 1st ofaJune, 1S78. if was oOi'-inilv.triven Ht 's7.:Kd. ! OitT a contraction of J'.5 Sil .fiS : hut the con- traction that is now in pi ogress is not visible in i tilt: . . n ... . rtn i iihi;' ui i iit: i n hih j . .-. . - Sherman is determined to resume specie pay ments, whether the country is ready for it or not. The debtor must pay whether he is sol Tent or instil vent. nnl the resumption policy of the Republican party is Hie irreii! source of the iillenesss anit prostration that prevails in busi ness circles to-day. While wo arc regaled with treasury bulletins, tclliuir of the retumlinsr of the debt and ol the stronir condition of tho treasury, it is not told that Vr. Hayes and Sec retary Sherman have increased the funded d"bt lJll.tC-.970 since they came Into power, and the annual interest paid In day, notwithstanding ; the reduced issue xhlbiis. an annual increasfi of f1.Sltt.JilS over the hiuiuuI Interest paid wh. n ' the present Ilepuh.'icnn administration nrtned ( itself with fraud and forced Its way into power In d-ftncf? ot the solemn verdict of th nation, j ', These are the liR-ures from tbe record, anil I . ; challentre contradiction. Mr. Hayes found the : debt l .'.'.C.t''.C."vtii when he came into office : to- ! . day it is f.ss.(i70..V'0. I do not charge that ibis i : money has bwn prorliir atelv wasted and that ' t he increased exhibits the excess of irovernment expenditures over receipts: but I do charire ' that the debt has been needlessly Increased;! that t he money received for t he new bonds and applicable to the redemption of the old bonds, is locked up in the treasury, withdrawn from the channels oT business, to enable Secretary Sherman to force resumption in January next, rea-ar.lless of the bankruptcy he irives to the pr .ducinir classes or the cost to the taxpayers. It is simply multiplying the already intol.-rable sufferings of the people to enable a political trimmer to win the empty bauble of resump tion by a forced policv t hat deals destruction o.i eTery side. When resumption can come as the e wilt of it prosperous reoT.ie by na'ural laws ! stump for the democratic ticket in Indiana ! Namee, the driver, were ki'led Ti d the loic or requite.1 industry, it can come i and hio before the close of the campaign, j riage was attached to the f, . c,r a national blessinif : but until it enn so come I . . ,, , 1 n V ""erl p'(.Cft. ey who attempt to enforce it must be hope- John Sherman's brother-in-law says ; S'on 01 1 atrick Duffy, and, wf.m ).afw. nn (is i they i 'of' incompetents or the deliberate authors of Wiintnn flistres and ruin tn the conTitrv I T regard the rem-dies f()r these lonur contin j ned ItennMiean wronir-i as simple and certain j We must tind some means to revive our Indus- trie! and restore ireneral prosix-tity to the country, and then resumption will corno itself nnd come to stay. Until then, it pinnnt come tint wilh fresh cvi!s in its train. No law can rore? it, tiri!.' M r. Sherman's fatal policy be sustained, ny which the treasury can n-ither in all the money by increased loans, Hiid then keep : t in the t reasu ry van Its, so that no I url her redemption shall b? neccss.iry. The irivern tneiit can thus resume and I he industries or the nation pei ih ns the price of resumption, iii i Kniv iiiiisi ur iiiiinr ire,- in inn an li is oiiw only iii name. O-ir present iialiorml biinkinir j I'-u-it jmnie value of loans, an I the only channel i by which, money can rcf-ch the pcoplo is so I costly and complicated that tiorrowers oulsi ly or tne great tnoriev centres nnd no monev to lend, ami capitalists decline lo invest in riation- in ti;iiks. Our banking shou Id be free from all i taxes, except such as other lika propertv pim a : i It should be relieved of itscumbroiis cornp licit j ti.ms which make dead oitpital and Xiensive machinery, and it then should be inexorably j limited to a just rate of interest. The goverri- ment should furnish a uniiorm currency for , banks and forall its own direc t ncs. nnd every j dollar issued to bunks for circulation fdiould i suspend interest on a dollar of the national "nn. i ms M-oum oe simpic jusiiee more. It j would be statesmanei..,.. and It would be com- mon setose, dub r stu-h a system, no shock wiiuid come to the banks; no loss would come to any clas; 'latiking would be free in fact; currency wouid regulate itself ty the vartable necessiues of trade; and th channels tor reiiehiriu legit imate busincs w iih government money wotild be cheapened and extended into every centrcof industry where capital could be Safely employed. We want the increase of the national debt and the contraction of the currency lor the purpose of enforced resumption, to stop ; we want the onerous taxes now imposed upon the only channels through which the peopie can obtain money, to be repealed ; we want bank ing to be free; we want a uniform currency issued by the government and lo be redeemed by the government ; we want the volume of money lo be oont rol ed solely by .lie wnnts of the leuitimnte business of ibe country; we want t lie government lo cease ci-rrc.nt ing its own money by ret using it f..r debt due to the government, and we want retrenchment and economy in every depart merit of authority. muincipni. suite arm nation . I. lre-se are the Sources to winch we must look f..r restored prosperity, and re-tored prosperity m"ans re sumption th it will lu-r. "I hcse views I regard as n ju-t interpretation at ihe deliverance of the Pittsburgh convention on the tinanciul is sue. Jletum of Jirazilian l'ioneer. ENCOUKAGINO ACCOUNTS KKOM THE MBDEI A AND MAUOHli KAIbKOAD. Among the arrivals at the Washington Hotel 011 Saturday last, says the PliiUikl phia Record, are the names of J. Howard Hiestand, Harry B. Kinpurt, J. B. Brown, 1.11 Dliler, Jr., and li. li. Lvans, who have - ., , 1 . J'" ' -- amuimi, ra7.u, where they have been engaged since Feb ruary last 111 ttie consti uctiun of the Madei ra and Mamore Bailr ad. These gentlemen left San Antonio on tho 31st day of August, on the tug Brazil pro ceeding to Para, where they le-embaiked on the City of Para, and arrived iu New Yoik on Fiid.iy last, making the entire trip in twenty tight days. They report the enterprise of the Messrs. Collins as heinc it tlo o. .....,- . ;,. .. h , , - T . .....v. ... -.... .,, uoouiiion. . .... . f "ie" the Climate, aggravated by a want of proper kn.o of food to subsist on. llecentlv five hundred natives, have been engaged as laborers on the road, and these, wilh the men who have become acclimated, form as large a force as is required. Iu ihe supply of materials there is no lack. Referring to the complaints that have been published through private and public sources of the hardships to which the men have been exposed, these gentlemen say that there has been no needlets suffering among them. That tho men have had hardships to endure they say is not to be denied, but they have been only such as migh: have been expected on going into a torrid country, unused to the climate and shut out from all civilization. Everybody was inexperienced and as ignorant of the proper ai tides of diet as they were of the language of the natives, and as a conse. quence a large share of the sickness has been attributable to a want of proper kind of diet. Canned fruits, vegetables and meats are now being sent out in large quantities and regularly distributed among tho men. There are some, they say, who will never be able to endure the climate and these are coming back to tbe States. About ten miles of the road have been graded and three miles of this distanco are now completed. The engineer corps have surveyed about seventy miles of the road and are pushing rapidly forward. These gentlemen speak confidently of the com pletion of the road at the expiration of three years from the date of the contract and say that the most difficult part of the work has been completed. The completion of the road will open up a valuable trade with Bolivia, particularly in the article of india rubber. Even now this pioduct of the country is brought in paddle boats down the Mamore river to the Madeiia, thence down the lat'er until they reach the first falls, when it becomes necessary to unload the boats and haul both he boats and their contents ovei land around ihe falls, then launch their barks again and paddle down the river until the r. . 1 1 .. ..A ..A i i . .. n.- ij icrtciieu, wuen tne work is arto- icpi-rtici, nun ko on uiitii ten falls aie thus passed, the last one bringing them to the Falls of St. Antonio, where the na tives are met by traders from Para. Yankee enterprise is not alone represent ed by the Messrs. Collins in South America. Already the invincible and ubiquitious sewing machine agent has found his way into this far off countiy, and, according to the statement of these gentlemen, in eight shanties out of ten along the coast of tho Madeira and Amazon rivers there stands a sewing machine as a monument to the in riustiy and intrepidity of the Yankee sew ing machine agent. A"-irj and (f?ter Xottnu. r r . t':y : .v lamny ot seven perwiiis h. m inn nig ton, ()., ate last year 1,1G." pies. f Four men now livintr at C6tletoti. Vt.. Lave bad between them twenty wives. An eighty-year-old woman at 8 baron, Vt., is sultei ing from berBecond attack of r -Hooping cougii. loo n.w odiiici ,,tr ft-Fir wr quite agea and in leeble ueailu, is living at New Kochelle, N. Y An Kpiscopal minister, aged 149 years, is said to have been discovered in IJalti- more. His preaching days are pretty much i over. A woman In Herkimer county, Mo., i recently set f(ot upon a snake, and her ; glossy black bair turned white in a few hours. Generals McClellan, Hancock and Iiuell will attend the lennion of the Army of the Tenucssee at ludianapolis next inon'h. T wen iv.flua mfiiistorc 5nclnr1infr t vpIva Catholic priests, have died in the cities the Southwest since the beginning of the yellow fever epidemic fm-,-, vt Tl .lamaica, r., 4orn Willi nn ......a ...... .... ' most most, exclusively ji exclusively American population, there are 112 families that never attend milies that never attend lat have no I.ible. Mann, of Independence, brated his 105th birthday, church, and 14 that Christopher Mo., has iusf celel He has a sou only eight years old, and is the father of twenty eight children. General James Shields, who is rccov- e ring from a severe illnens, will take the t. . II 1 I . : i . e . 1 .,11 : .nil iiuiicM ,iuii ii is tiit'ti i in" i'uuiii; service. cil, as me puonc service tired of Honest John, there ought to be fair basis for an an angenient. j lie wonderful vitality of Ionian Unr- fin, who has lately died in Lod i, O., aged 10.J, was shown by the fact that be brealli- cd several d,ys after bis limbs were lifeless, although he had not eaten for a week Hon. Henry M. Payne, of Cleveland, says the Democrats will cany Ohio by 20,- i 000 majority and that they :ll elect thir teen and probably fourteen Congressmen. A J'ayne-ful picture for radical contempla tion. A priest at Lawrence, Mass., reached the churcti where he had to perform the marriage ceremony a little late, and in his baste ordered a couple of the guests dojvn to the altar and bar! begun to marry them ere they could explain matters. Hen. Hill, of Georgia, says: "I begin to think that the Democratic party can never be killed. Secession did not kill it ; the har has not killed it ; fraud has not killed it; it Las not killed itself, and it will not die." A convict in the Joliet (111.) prison banged himself in the solitaiy cell n which he had been kept several days for wiiting i t, -.i . ,e',cr without peinu.SMon He had served several terms of ordinary impi isonment, but utter loneliness drove bim crazy. Elder Stevenson, a Mormon missionary, incidentally pioposrd matrimony to a wid ow r.nd her two daughters iu Hickman county, Tenn. They said yes, and are now on their way to Salt Lake .L'ily, where the marriage ceremony is to be pei formed. Henry II. Kaiiffnian, a son of Hamil ton Kauffman. of Oliver township, Mifflin cotinfy, on the 24th of August fell from steamer plying between Sioux City, Iowa, and the Black hills countiy and was drown ed. His body had not been recovered at last accounts. During a quarrel at Allentown, Pa., on Sunday afternoon, between two fai mere, j named Jacob Kitssiev and Elias Lina. t j living on adjoining fauns in Jleulelbeig township, Kit-sslcy atruck Lins in the face with a chili, causing alm.tst instant death. Krcssley was taken lo Alleutowu aud lodged m jan. u nat les 1 ompkins, a stove mounter, of Pottstown, met his death under peculiar circumstances. He ran a small piece of iron in his eye, and a friend attempted to remove it. Tompkins got a f and fell out of a second story window, resulting iu the breaking of his neck. Hov. A. II. Anghe, a well known Lu theran minister of Gettysnnrg, died sud denly on Saturday on the fl air of the Cen tral synod, convened at Mittlinlown, Pa. He had made a few teniaiks about chinch papers a few minutes befoie bis death, and intended preaching in the evening. They must have queer ideas in St. Pe- tersburg, says the Hartford Times, or-jvhat manner or man Gen. Grant is. when, in honor or his arrival, tliey played all the fountain-, in the city. About two bottles ol choice old double-can Russian rum would nave cost cousulerably less, and would haTe been muv.li more acceptable. Ex-Govei nor Curtin has been noniN nated for Congress by the Demociats of the Twentieth district, and as a nomina tion in that distiict. is equivalent to an election, the people of Pennsylvania are to be congratulated upon the fact that they will have such a respectable addition lo their Congressional delegation in the next Congress. Letters from Northern Ohio express the confident belief that the National movement is showing signs of fa'igne. It began so eaily, they say, that its spirit and strength are 'lagging, and it would poll fewer votes to-day than it might have done two months ago. Doubtless the best test of these opinions will be the election returns after next Tuesday. The wife er S'ephen Butler, of Wayne, Michigan, a lady of excellent connections and the mother of three young children, procured her husband's razor and, shutting herself up in the house, deliberately cut her throat from ear to ear, falling dead on the floor. In this condition the lady was discovered by her husband, who had been called fiom work by his little boy. Three yellow fever nurses, sent from Norfolk, Ya., to Memphis, attempted to return home on Wednesday, but were put off the train some miles fiom Norfolk, by order of the health authorities. They managed to elude the police and got into the city late at night, but were arrested and taken to the pest house. Their clothes have been burned and they will be ptiictlv quarantined for ten davs. A . veracious correspondent writing Blue Bell, Monteomerv countr un from der date of the 27th instant, thus indulges : "I saw in a barn here this morning a cat squatting in a hen's nest covering five kit tens which were boin during the night On the cat's back sai the hen and under the hen was an egg just laid. All parties seemed to be satisfied with their situations and there was no threatening of a strike." -a. man, said lo bo a man, was found i yesteroay oy a Howard visitor, savs the Memphis ArabincJie. sufferiinr ,mt i.,tf " r ,1 i- w,c last agonies of delirium tremens, wr.o i..t-.i now nine iii ins nouse three children ' sick with the yellow Tever. At the same i time his convalescent wife was just able ! to sit up in bed and muse a new-born in- J fant. It has been said that Mine me devil. VI. Anns-ftl. a. ....! . ... t failt in neii, put tliey are not all there. We have some of them in Memphis to day. A young man went to the scene of the Princess Alice disaster to identify the bo dies of two drowned relatives, fell into the engine room of the steamer on which he had taken passage and was torn to pieces The relative of a git 1 w ho escaped has been pes-ering the Mansion House Committee for compensation, her dress having been torn by the boat-hook lXh w,lirl s,)e hauled out A tradesman in Tottenham ( om t .o.td placed h box outside his shop with ru appeal for oennies ; in one wetk there were put in it 300 pennies. Atitifr forirk t. a n ft . well in Hocktown. near T ;n.-. ' of i O-. 1 : . ""OIIMhit-. . - i uiuy looinioj. Jie.ore he down be told bis fellow dirfri. i felt vet v oncer : "but." i"L ' . ; Lg iie. j might as well d ie to day as any o't,P . The other diggers, two in ni;ini, , rr ' at him, and the foreboding was fo 'f f i in about an nour a lieary atonp 1 r - rw j I'Tciii'iturti uutni'i mat Was tig to-. , clown, and struck the bottom lt' St.':..".' and thud. Cupp was in a lj ken from tbe well, dead. The fallen tipon bis beut neck, breakin'V'1,4 6tantly. " !&- Two little boyg were put in t'. it oke, Mas?., jail, for stiir pii)r i,.,''" .1 ' -T- ; a tree in the park. Soon af-11 ; jailer beard their voices. IV.j,, j,;, ';r I cell, be saw both on their t ..,.. . .'t: ; please let tis out of this j Uct- a.y 1 never do it aeain. nemr ..'.. i one nobbing culprit, while 'he 'r.i' '- j repeating the Lord's prayer. 'i'laT " . " 2f. wl n a .f tl.. 'tJi'd. of j words plain, or the I.id i words plain, or the I.id wo,' ... j. c: yon." 4,I try to, Jimmy but I" T lr4 t st I can't," said the other ro d ,t Ski. 1 t o.l,ml,l(iil O,. i -i . en t.,:h i T.ft''.-ft'lft-4 i l. i'lAYCIS. It, A , tliem out A carriage containing tie fi j Mr. Callahan, a tailor, of i;r,x,'v 7 f ! nisting of Mis. Callahan. ),?T daughters and a niece of Mr Cal'ui l"' '", j struck by an engine at the L.', ' i" " railroad crossing at Atlantic and !! ,! i' J avenues, New York, on Satir.hv ' ! tluce of the occupants as weii i, i' . ii.or IliA mrr u- . . i , .. n1. L " ft-i i u k ov a ;ra ip r 13 ; " ! nn.i. mi an t a j Callahan was taken to U,. ( j!T J -j'ij j "where she died. The drift" and t('j ! weio nntcn ou.rigni and tlietwodaujh.,.. ' considerably injured. The niece s . : -Miss licomond, years of ape. - ! ginecr and conduct-.T were arros-oi Edward O'Meagher C 'ld. m. f ir wt a rope was wove and a coffin prei.a ei ,-, the occasion of the rst-cu". i .n ,f ,. Lai kin and O'Brien at Maiichv-ier, ar- vri in this city yesteiday, says il,e N w rt nn of Monday, on the feamer M Ten years of confinement inliidis'i has tin tied the hair of his c-in,pani..,.li e;. ody, gray, while that of Condon biii w.f touched with tbe sane hue. r.f-,io. j experiences of these two men :1 en ,,:r, ,f t oidinary romance aie tatbe. ( oni'im H to 1-ath, rcsj-ited on the eve of extcuri foiced to pass long intervals in tlie !i..".j'e of doubt and uiicci tainty, irnmu.ed in ,. itary confinement, diiven to tlie f:;if sickness by hardships - L -cli premCj t . be lifelong, only to be s i.i.itnlv ii,-.;.; forth into the broad glare of tiiiei;tc tJ freedom such is the retrospect of n iles, who now tread the ttiec. f Ntir Yoi k. The steamer Adelpbia, runnir.j . tweeil South Norwalk, Conn.. a:ii New Yoik, burst her boiler while ai-ncli i: tbe dick at Dorian s Point on s.. U:,;.v. There were two bundled pa.sein..':$ , board, and ma:iy of them e;e i jnel Among the killed iepiiti-d nji t S.v'.ir.iiT night were Mrs. Bo dc. wiTi-cf the $:": of the South Not walk M. K. Climch; M: and Mis. L harlcs . L ud. T Newbu y- port, .Mass.. the sister and br...,r a ' of Mrs. B.vile ; Henry Allen H ii iW. f X", 1 1- . 'i:z..i. T . . ,, -ftOinaiK , j.iij.iu liflis, sou oj X.f !n) ! Betts, or Wilton; (ialniel Ilovt, of ilv lem, N. Y.; C. H. Find, of Oliii; ai ui ktiown woman, aged about twen'y vei-s, supposed to belong in Nc Vrnk! S 1.5 of the most heart-rending scent- occiirt... One man. whosename could not !. ... afier the accident u-cgnlzi-d Lis 1. i:.;v1 wife, from w hose mouth the M y ...irj m streams at every lucath. K .e I . -i suilcied ereatlv. Phsicians riul tte-f. j tning in men power to anevsate tl.tiri... feiiii-r. An Astonishing Fact A la-;" -v portion of the Aiikti- an p.- ) a-e io-Ur dying from the etiVcts of I j.. ; r .'. -ordered liver. Ttie result vt lht--r upon the masse of ititeliig.-rt a-:-l v - v people is most alarming, innkii g, !::' R : ? a burden instead of a pleasai.t ex'b-t t enjoyment and nsefiih-.ess as :t 1 1 i. There in no go.-.,' rea. .ti for rh:, if y. n . ! only throw aside ptej i.!u e a: 1 r-k-l " take the advice of I rnggists ad yc-.r f-'-' ' and try one bottle ot Greet.' Ani: F- -r. Your speedy relief iscerta'a. 1! .: of ,o:tlp!" or this w,a-v.to lr5 vi medicine l:av- t-f '! ft iltue, with saCr-fa. t-.-ty f 1 ? 7. -" """l l""' ' '"V ' . rev' all Druggi.ta on the Western C.,,".".-" . , . " OIISnDIEIE PURE GUM RUBBER BOOTS -ing frse from adu.terfi.tive -. 'Tr.'.-'-i fi lonprr arvioe than er.n.ri-. i Rubber Tl.ftf-tS. Their frreat popular-tv 1 ns ie.'. t - fT chenp imitations, having a hu i - thia season the "CANDES" CO. VARNISH Their TURX GUM FOOTS. mn,1 t.i "".! r" them from th corridor, kir. I. .i ' - ; Rl'PKER LAPEL on ti.efroulcf Ing the inscription CUSTOM MADE. PURE GUH. I flr'l - . Theae P.ftot ti t- rotent T"t Piste, w-hich pr-ve:itieiee) o quickly, and tliey id hi- t-' '-l r i it- Outside Stationary Slrap Inad of the vetr incorve-i-i.t 'rap. ueed on other nifckea i f H - ' ASK FOR THE "CANDEE" BOOT.,. AUDlTOl-.-S XOTICE.-TI"J li i t nr IS v Ik i ft. t a . .. ,,fl,iTTt',T"r K. j 1.111 r I 1 1 oV 1 1 .Mil , rejiert ilistribm ion of the tun. Is in tt t .1. t'hristv. Exeenter ol Y. X. flir-'J ''r, ; s."b.wn by i,ts nrst and prtti . notines all persons interrstr.l tni lJr " .. ! tothr,i...J.. . ...'.,n.,..i,t t X-' t & Lirrn-imrt, on SATratuv, me -, Tonitn, 1S78. nt 1 o'clock, r. "t"" all parties interested nmv t!ni l i' ''", '.. .. T. PT. AI.V1N EV A. Aa Ebcnsbnra:, Ort. 4. lSTS.-at. AU D IT O IV S N 0 T I C F..-T1.J dersigned Auditor, appo'.i j i- T. -1 . ' . . ... t. .1t 1 I'rbhsTis' ( onrt of t'anihria coun.y o tritmtion of the funds In he li.tn.i r ton. Administrator of Isrsel lo u.-r ur J.-T-- . . : : - r;- . n. .in. it -i. n lownsnip. dec tl. nrn-e - f..f ,;.iv" Sons interested that he will ' t. nl ''i ,,,',, ri ot r:Ui a.M.intiuont, at ti! otrt-f In t on Miisiht, the -Jl.t inv ot t r.-i-s ., , r. M . , when and where all pnrtir iiiU'n- attend 11 they think pn.prr Ao 'it r. Ehenshnrir, Oct. 4. 1TS 3t. . - Jo 1 1 x ,m r i i vn v. M v 1'HVSIl IAN AM' (;,'K'lf'.',l.''l". TlNV K! Hi'1 t'suibrls counti- la ilil calif I .f a ;. , Ilia rMeai.-c ol Jas. T. HartJ. t-"3"" -ti. '
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers