American volunteer. (Carlisle [Pa.]) 1814-1909, July 04, 1872, Image 2

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    ,Itutrintli roi olnutter.
CARLISLE, PA.
Thors day, July 4,1872.
DEMOCRATIC STATE, TICKET,
FOR GOVERNOR. .
lion. Charles R. BocUalew.
OP COLUMBIA COUNTY.
FOR SUPREME JUDGE,
Hon. James Thompson,
OP ERIK COUNTY,
FOR AUDITOR GENERAL,
William Hartley,
- OP BEDFORD COUNTY.
VOlt CONGRESSMEN AT LARGE
Kleliard Vaux, of Phlladclplila.
James 11. Hopkins, of Pittsburg.
Bend rick B. Wriffht, ofl.nzcrn«.
DELEGATES TO CONSTITUTIONAL CON-
1 VENTION.
1, George W. Woodward, of Philadelphia,
2. Jeremiah S. Black, York.
;i. William Bigler, Clearfield.
a. William J. Bear, Somerset.
' it. William H. Smith, Allegheuy.
«, F.l*. Goweu, Philadelphia.
7. John H. Campbell. Philadelphia.
, a, S, H. Reynolds, Lancaster. .
y. James lulls, Schuylkill.
10. S. C.T. Dodd, Venango.
11. ,G. M, Dallas, Philadelphia.
Vi, It. A. Lamberton, Dauphin.
111. a. A. Puvmau, Greene,
U. William M, Corbett, Clarion.
THE HEWS IN BEIET.
A Ukoruia judge tauv&ileeu years
ago sentenced a man to be hung, and
last month passed a similar sentence on
the man’s son.
Philadelphia is to have a new
post office, which gives the citizens of
that ancient municipality profound sat
isfaction. f •
The physicians of Uew York report
an alarming increase of cancer on the
nose, caused by the practice of wearing
eye-glasses, that are held, to the bridge
ol the nose by a spring.
The June report of the Department
of Agriculture estimates the wheat
crop of the present year at 229,000,000
bushelSj or 1,000,000 bushels less than
the crop af last year.
The courtesies of the White House,
during the next Administration, will
be administered by Miss Ida Greeley,
the President’s handsome daughter, a
sweet little woman of the most win
some kind.
The steamship Nevada, which sailed
from Liverpool, England, on the 26th
ult., brings our 32 u afprmon coiuuraca.
The two hundredth anniversary of
the birth of Peter the Great, was cele
brated with great festivity, at St. Pe
tersburg, on the 11th ult.
The labor strikes in New York,
Philadelphia, and elsewhere are sub
siding, as the employers will not give
way to the demand of eight hours for a
days Work.
The latest Mexican advices give the
usual hatch of contradictory reports
concerning Juarists and revolutionary
movements. The only rumor of im
portance is that Trevino is again march
ing on Matamoras.
Thebe is a rumor that Miss Nellie
Grant is engaged to a Scotch lord. Her
younger brother has gone to Europe to
attend school, and some people wish
the balance of the family would follow
suit add remain there.
Crowding Along —Years ago,
when the country was' only sparsely
populated, there was one inhabitant to
every ten acres, but novy the propor
tion is changed to one and a half acres;
but the adjustment of the acres and
their productive powers to the altered
number and condition of present popu
lation has been neglected.
The bills of mortality for New
Y ork and Paris during the week end
ing May 25th, and for London during
the week ending May 18th, show that
the death rate of New York is much
higher than in the two other cities
named. New York, with a population
of 912,300, had 640. deaths; Paris, with
a population of 1,980,000, had 812_deaths
aud London, with a population of 3,-
251,800, had 1268 deaths.
The California bag of flour, which
netted so much for the Sanitary Com
mission, has a promising rival in a
Boston baby-house, which has been
twice donated to an Old Ladies’Home
and has brought over a thousand dol
lars to the institution already. And
the house is still in the market, in a
hundred shares at five dollars a share.
Baffling is not exactly a Christian in
stitution, but why not make a divine
use of the devil’s instruments some
times ?
It was a wise suggestion to throw
medicine to the dogs, at least before
taking it yourself. A Missouri youth
took some bitters for the ague, and
died. Two' physicians tasted of the
bitters to show the youth’s mother that
the medicine was harmless, and they
died, victims of misplaced confidence.
What amazes us is that Missouri had
two physicians who were willing to
take their own medicine. Were they
beginners or quacks ?
Laura Pair’s case is attended with
remarkable fatalities, Since her con
viction, her counsel, Elisha Cooke, has
died; her prosecutor, Henry Bryne
has died; Judge Sp'raguo who granted
her a new trial has died; a son of Mr.
Crittenden, who was a witness against
her, has died; and now her mother is
dangerously ill. H she had lived in
Salem two centuries ago she would
have been regarded as a witch and
treated accordingly.
The report from the dead letter of
fice reveals a startling amount of epis
tolary carelessness. Of nearly three
million leiters, sixty-eight thousand
could not be forwarded for the reason
that the name of the county and state
were left out of the direction; four
hundred thousand were unstamped,
and more than three thousand were
mailed with no direction at all. And,
strange to say, these letters contained
money orders to the amount of two
millions of dollars.
Maine has one place remarkably fa
vorable to longevity. Her State Prison
has just turned out a hale, healthy,
happy old convict of eighty-four, after
treating him to a third term, and there
is no telling how long he might live
had she not cruelly discharged him in
his did age. But wo shall not be sur
prised to hear that ho has stolen anoth
er horse, or run away with another
man’s wife, or committed some other
peccadillo just for the sake of returning
to his comfortable quarters, and regular
fare, and pleasant exercise in this mod
el institoMon.
A GOOD COUNTY TICKET A NECESSITY
In a few Weeks njore the Democrats
and Liberal. Republicans who intend to
act with us this fall will meet in their
respective,townships and Boroughs for
the purpose of electing Delegates to a
County Convention, to place in nomin
ation a county ticket. We elect this
fall a Congressman, Member of Assem
bly, Associate Judge, Prothonotary,
Clerk of the Court, Register, County
Commissioner, Dlrector' of the Poor,
Auditor, and last, but by no means the
■least,, two Delegates to the Constitu
tional Convention—one to come from
Franklin.
Let the Democrats and Conservatives
see to i.t, then, that they send as Dele
gates to the County Convention, men
of integrity and honor—men who are
not only proof against bargain and sale,
bribery and corruption, but whose
characters will commend them to the
respect of the people. It is absolutely
necessary that we nominate an unex
ceptionable ticket for the support of the
t people at the October election. Hav-,
ing fallen back once more',upon the
Delegate system, let us be careful not
to abuse it as it was abused before its
repeal was demanded. When the Del
egates assemble in Convention let them
act the part of conscientious men hav
ing a duty to perform ; and let-the vot
ing for candidates be by word of mouth
—viva voce. This thing of depositing
ballots in a stove-pipe hat—the hat in
the hands of a dishonest and often brib
ed man—must never again be resorted
to in a Cumberland county Democratic
Convention. We are’-not so much
bound to party as to be again dragoon
ed into the support of a bad man who
receives a hat nomination. It bason
more than one occasion been resorted to
by those who had no strength before
the people, but whose strength consist
ed in their ability to bribe Delegates to
betray the trust confided to them by a
betrayed constituency. We repeat,
that we cannot conscientiously, and
will not, support a ticket nominated in.
this cowardly and corrupt manner.—
More than this, we must have a ticket
composed of men fresh from the ranks
of the people, and who iire of the peo
ple.
The candidate for Congress belongs to
Perry, and should that county present
a man acceptable to Cumberland, (as
we believe she will,) it will our duty to
endorse him. Cumberland haanorec
cgaiirod candidate lit the field, ond wiJJ
have none.
For Delegate to the Constitutional
Convention, let a good solid Termer or
mechanic or business man be selected.
It is a mistake to suppose that that
body should be‘composed entirely of
lawyers. As it is, there will be entire
ly too many' lawyers in the Conven
tion.- We would like to see the Demo
crats of Cumberland recognize the fact
that the farmer or mechanic or business
man is just as. capable to serve us in
that body as any lawyer in the county.’
We hope, then, now that the old Del
egate system of nominating candidates
is again to be .tried—the Crawford
County System having served its pur
poBe_that we will move on smoothly
and nominate the kind, of men we for
merly nominated, and who were nom
inated because of their intrinsic worth.
So mote it be.
A Nice Man , for the foreigners to Tote for.
In 1854 Mr. Henry Wilson was the
chief of the Know-Nothing organization
in Massachusetts, which party, in se
cret convention, nominated a candidate
for Governor, who was elected. Mr.
Edward Everett, who was then United
States Senator, resigned, and the Kno
w Legislature elected Mr. Henry
Wilson to fill the vacancy. Mr. Wil
son did not take his seat until the 10th
of February, 1855, and on the 23rd of
the same month, in a long debate on s
bill providing for the enforcement of
the United States laws, he repeatedly
spoke of the American or Know-Noth
ing party, “ with which I act.” He
claimed to be, and was, the representa
tive of the party in the Senate.
On the Ist of March, 1855, Mr. Wilson,
as the Senatorial representative of that
party, presented the petition of the cit
izens of Boston, Mass., praying for a
repeal of the naturalizrtion laws of the
United Stages. On the 4th of March
the session, of Congress closed, and Mr.
Wilson did not appear again until the
December following. He remained a
representative of the Know-Nothing
party until 1856, when that organization
became a “ national party,” repudiated
anti-slaveryism. Mr. Wilson then join
ed the Republican party.
This is the gentleman selected by the
Grant party to offset Mr. Schurz. He
is expected to draw all the old Know-
Nothings, to take the place of the Ger
mans,
One of the leading Democrats of
Michigan, Hon. John C. Blanchard,
writes in a private letter, that when he
first heard of Mr. Greeley’s nomination,
he mentally repudiated it; but when
he read Mr. Greeley’s letter of accept
ance, and learned the particulars of his
bailing of Jeff. Davis, his views and
feelings changed, and he admired the
independence and magnanimity of the
man. The fact that Mr. Greeley is
honest, and more of a statesman than a
politician, and more of a patriot than a
partisan, has led him to throw out the
Cincinnati flag and advocate its adop
tion at the Baltimore Convention,To
which he is a delegate. A Greeley club
of a hundred Republican members has
been formed at Grand Rapids, and if
Baltimore says the right word the en
tire Democraey will fall into line. The
“ Old Whitf Hat” is sure of five thou
sand, land may get fifteen thousand,
majority in Michigan. This is the way
the Democrats of the country see
things.
A Slight Mistake,— Mack writes
from Washington a story of an unso
phisticated gentleman from the West
who recently dropped into the of
the House of Representatives to see the
sights. Beckoning to a neatly attired
citizen of African descent who stood
near him and who modestly answered
his call, he said to him, “Jim, will you
show me to the barber shop; I want to
get shaved and have my boots black
ed.” This was too much for “ Jim,”
who whs none other than one of the
honorable members from South Carol!-
na—Mr. Elliott, “ ’Souse me, sah,”
said Elliott, “X’so not a waitah; I’so a
membah.” The gentleman from the
West retired, deeply mortified.
(lor.n is quoted at SI.ORJ
Arc They All Scamps?
■la reading the Radical papers just
now we are astonished to And what a
lot of cut-throats, tricks tors, vagabonds,
and whail not the Radical party Is
composed of. Even the very best,
most prominent and trusted men in
that party, are denounced as such by
their late chums and friends. Old
Horace, too, it seems, is quite a rascal,
if we may believe the Radical papers,
although he has heretofore been looked
upon as an honest and inoffensive gen
tleman. We knew that the radical
party was made up of bad material,
but we had no idea that its leading
men were half as bad ns the radicals
are now charging them with being.—
Mind, we don’t charge these criminali
ties upon them, but their own papers
do so. But, if Greeley, Sumner,
Scurz, Adams, Trumbull, Billingfelt,
McClure, Curtin Brown, Davis, Chase,
and the rest are such “ scoundrels,”
what must the others such as Evans,
Hartranft, Allen, Grant, Morton, and
their set be who have been proved by
the record not to be of the angel kind.
A little more rope for the radicals, and
they will convict themselves all as
criminals of the deepest dye.
Still On Tlw.'War Path.
Forney is out in another bitter as
sault upon the personal rule of Simon
Cameron in Pennsylvania. He tells 1
the truth about the manner in which
all the details of the Republican State
Convention were prepared by a small
clique In one ol the upper rooms of a
Harrisburg hotel; he Shows up the
manner in which the decrees of this
secret caucus were carried out in a
packed and purchased Convention; he
lays bare the plots and plans by which
Cameron expects to obtain control of
the next legislature, and to re-elect
himself or to send one of his minions
to the United States Senate. Forney
refuses to be bound by the action of a
ring which makes the Republican par
ty in Pennsylvansa subservient to the
will of one man, and gives fair warning
that political disaster must inevitably
follow sUeh a suicidal course of action..
Hcjs, Samuel J. Bandall has been
appointed chairman of the democratic
state central committee by the Hon.
Hlester Clymer, late president of the
Beading convention. This is done in
accordance with' a resolution of the
Beading convention authorizing the
president of the convention to appoint
a dhairman of the statecommittee after
consultation with the candidates for
go vernor, auditor general’ and congress
men at large. Mr. Randall’s energy,
industry and thorough knowledge of
the political situation eminently quali
fy him for duties of chairman. His
appointment will give satisfaction to
the democracy throughout the state.
On the evening of the 4th instant up
on the return of the Hon. C. E. Bucka
lew from Beading, the citizens of
Bloomsburg and the Friendship Fire
Company, with a band of music, paid
him a complimentary visit.; Upon his
appearance, in response to the call, he
was received with great cheering. He
delivered a very eloquent and happy
address, reviewing his political life,
and thanking the people for their warm
greeting. He was followed by Colonel
Freeze and Captain Brockway on the
prospects of the campaign.
The responses to the Democratic State
nominations are universally enthusias
tic, so far as Democratic journals are con
cerned, while the Republican Journals,
almost without exception, admit its in
vincibility. What would not the Repub
licans give for the privilege of rescinding
the action of their Harrisburg conven
tion, if it could be done without still fur
ther distracting the parly?
Wra. H Buhsted, a millionaire com
missioner of the board of public works in
Jersey city, was sent to prison on last
Saturday a week for twelve months, for
a conspiracy to delraud the city of four
teen thousand dollars- He is one of Gnu.
Grant’s friends and helped to nominate
him at the late convention in Philadel
phia. Birds of a feather will flock to
gether.
The Lebighton News, hitherto an in
dependent paper, now strongly endorses
the nomiuation of the Reading ticket,
and says that “Mr. Buokalew will re
ceive the votes of all honest Republi
cans, and will carry this State with one
of the old-fashioned Democratic majori
ties.”
Day by day Buokalew grows stronger
with the people. Those who are given
to reflection have come to the conclusion
that he is the man to whom the chief
executive office bf the commonwealth
should be entrusted, and these reflecting
people are right.
Has Gen. Grant appointed forty-two
relatives to offices? Yea, say the re
cords. And Judge Hoar of Massachu
setts exclaims in Justification of this
wholesale nepotism “ who wouldn’t?’’
We are not particularly good at guess
ing conumdrums, but it is safe to say
that no man is fit for the Presidency
who would do it.
Fob Gbeeley.— Within the last ten
days the Democrats of the following
States haye appointed Delegates to the
Baltimore Convention, viz—Ohio, New
Jersey, Indiana, Illinois, Virginia,
South Carolina and lowa. All have
been Instructed for Qreeiey and Brown,
Push on the column 1
Nevee before were more self-sustain
ing or telling allegations placed in print
than these contained in - Sumner’s
speech arraigning Grant. The replies
of Logan, Carpenter and other admin
istration Senators were of os little com
parative weight as the fly upon the ele
phant’s back.
Gen. Gbant took with him to Long
Branch, where he means to sojourn as
usual during the hot season, [other
Presidents used to remain in Washing
ton to attend to the public business,]
eleven horses and five dogs.
The apologists of Grant Insist that
Sumner’s speech was altogether too se
vere. By this they mean It Is only too
true. That’s what’s the matter with the
speech.
The Philadelphia Press exhibits the
figures to prove that Hartranft will loose
14,400 Republican votes In twenty-seven
of the slxty-slx counties of the Bt«te.
THEY ABE SELF-OONDHMNED.I
The Golden: Age, one of the ,ablest
Republican papers published in New
York—and old Abolition organ, of
Which the well known lecturer and
politician, Theodore Tilton, is editor—
thus exposes the hypocrisy of the Grant
Platform. Road Tilton’s indignant
comments, one and all.
[From the Golden Age.]
SELF-CONDEMNED.
The severest commentary that can be
made on the falure of Grant’s hirst
term of the presidency Is the platform
on which he stands for re-election.—
-Every important promise which that
platform puts forth for the future is a
confession of the Administration’s de
reliction in the past. Each successive
pledge made at Philadelphia turns
state’s evidence to convict the very
candidate in. whose behalf it was made
Examine some of the point.,
I. Grant’s .platform demrnds a re
form of civil service. Why, then, has
hot his administration already given
us this reform ? The President has
been in power three and a half years—
nearly one whole term. -During this
period he has always had a working
in both houses at his dally command.
Indeed sometimes this majority has
exhibited toward him the subserviency
of lickspittles. They have been only
too prompt to do his bidding. Hava
they not made indecent haste to con
firm his brothers-in-law, his nephews,
his uncles, his wife’s relations, and all
the host of his nepotistic appointments ?
Were they not quick to catch his wink
and obey his beck for the removal of
Charles Sumner from the Chairman
ship of the Committee on Foreigh Re
lations? Did they not submissively
bend their knees with the President’s
in a common and ignominious surren
der to England ? When has he failed
of their votes for any purpose good or
bad ? Never! Why then does his
party go to Philadelphia and through
the unanimous mouth of a packed con
vention demand civil service reform ?
Of whom do they demand it? Of
themselves.’ What thoughtful citizen
therefore can help asking, Why have
they not already inaugurated civil ser
vice reform ? What excuse can they
give for having delayed it? How can
they, ever apoligize for the crime of
having thus far thwarted it? What
will they say of their own orator, Gen.
Butler for denouncing it ? Out of their
own mouth are they adjudged guilty.
They are self-condemned.
XI. Grant’s platform demands the
abol.tion of the franking privilege.—
Why then have his partisans in Con
gress systematically voted against the
abolition of the franking prilege?
Have the not had the fairest of oppor
tunities to accomplish this reform ? If
they had been in earnest to achieve
this triumph they could have done it
at any time within the last tmee years.
To say now that the franking privilege
ought to be abolished is simply to in
dict tho Pctaidcnl and hifl IrieUUsTGr
not having abolished it long ago.—
Here again they are self-condemned.
111. Grant’s platform asserts states
rights. Why then has he systematic
violated states-rights? Why have we
had for three years an unbroken series
of intrusions’ by the Federal govern
ment into local affairs ? Why, for in
stance, has it been the practice of Mr.
Thomas Murphy , and the New York
Custom House to give laws to the Syr
acuse Convention? Why has the
Federal government aided and abetted
the alien and carpet-bagging govern
ments in the southern states, the like
of which for rottenness have never been
matched in our history save by the
Tammany Ring? Why has the Ad
ministration conveniently thrown out
the voces of three or four, four or five,
five or six counties in some of these
states at its sovereign pleasure in order
to keep its own partisans in power?
State rights, forsooth 1 These have
never been so flagrantly violated as by
Grant and his party. To say now that
these rights should be maintained is
only to say that they have been well
nigh destroyed.' And the party that
thus pretends to maintain them is the
very party that has been sedulously
destroying. After three years pf this
destruction the President and his par
tisans have now she effrontery to de
clare themselves in lavor of. whaPlhoy
have annihilated. Such culprits are
solPcondemned.
IV. Grant’s platform asks for an en
couragement to ship building. Why
then has his Administration done
nothing for American commence except
to' cripple and repress it ? Why are
American merchants doing.but thirty
six per cent, of theij: carrying trade
leaving the remaining sixty-four per
cent, to fall as a precious prize to for
eign flags? The Administration has
had nearly four years in which to blot
out this disgrace. Why is its pitiful
record concerning our maratime pros
pects reduced to a specious promise
that, though the government has done
nothbin to promote ship-building dur
ing the last four years, it will try to
remedy this neglect during the next
term ? The Philadelphia statement of
the decay of our commerce is the Ad
ministration’s confession of- its own
mlsgovernment. The President and
his re-nominationists are witness-bear
ers against their own delinquency.—
They are self condemned.
V. Grant’s platform demands that
American citizens in foreigh lands shall
be protected in their just rights. Why
then has he, in an, unhappy number of
signal and flagrant cases, suffered
American citizens abroad to be outrag
ed without protection, and mulcted
without redress? A distinguished
Union general exclaimed with great in
dignation a few days ago, “ The safest
act which any foreign government can
now commit is to hang an American
citizen.” He was partly right. Now
It is not enough that the President
should promise in a campaign docu
ment thot American citizens travelling
in other countries are hereafter to be
protected; ho must also give answer
why they have not heretofore been pro
tasted. His platform-writers have here
again innocently confessed themselves
guilty. They are self-condemned,
VI. Grant’s platform demands that
sympathy should be extended to for
eign nations struggling for liberty.—
This la a bid for the Fenian and Cuban
vote. But has the Administration up
to this time ever shown any sympathy
either with Fenians or Cubans? And
if it is to show such sympathy In future
will it not prove itself guilty for not
havipg done so in the past V Its own
declaration of duty in this respect is the
plainest possible proof that this duty
(if it be such) has been left undone.—
The President and his party are once
more self-condemned
VII. Grant’s platform says that the
public lands should not be squandered.
Why then have his friends regularly
and lavishly squandered them? Let
any reflecting student of our country’s
condition consult the records of the De
partment of the interior, and scrutinize
the enormous and astounding table of
recent land-grants for railroad corpora
tions ! The Union and Central Pacific
have had 85,000,000 acres; the Sioux
City and Pacific, 580,000; the Central
Braden of Union Pacific, 245,000; the
Northern Pacific, 48,000,000; the At
lantic and Pacific, 2,330,000; the South-
era Pacific in California, 8,020,000, ana
the Texas Pacific, 18,000,000; making
for the 'various Pacific Roads a total
land-grant of 148,000,000 acres! Now,
without stopging to discuss the right
fulness or, wrougfulness, of granting
government lands to railoads, what
shall be said of the monstrous solf-stul
tification of a- political party that de
clares against such land-grants, having
itself been guilty of making them to
the colossal sum total of 150,000,000
acres I We repeat, the President and
tils convention are sell-condemnod.
VIII. Grant’s platform puts forth u
platitude concerning the proper suprem
acy of the olvll over the military power.
Why then has the President so persist
ly and defiantly elevated the mlllthry
over the civil? Why did he make an
unauthorized and illegal use of the uavy
in a warlike sot against Hayll? Why
baa he In direct defiance of a civil statute
surrounded himself with military instead
of civil secretaries ? Why, in equal vio
lation of law, is his son an army officer,
now absent from duty in a foreigh land,
pursuing a pleasure excursion from which
such a lieutenant—oven though u Presi
dent’s son—ls forbidden by the very reg
ulations of the service ? Why did the
President’s brother-in-law, a Custom
house officer in New Orleans, employ a
Federal vessel and bayonets, with mili
tary menace and threat of blood-shed, to
overawe the civil functionaries of a state
government? Why did the patriot ic gov
ernor of Illinois find it necessary to repel
and resist the Federal encroach dient of a
military President who sent troops into
that State for purposes at war with its
olvll and local law? Why was an attempt
lately made in Congress, and partially
successful, to give the President power
to suspend the habeas corpus, to clutch
the State machinery of the elective fran
chise, and to re-elect himself by the help
of martial law. If Grant and his body
guard at Philadelphia profess that the
civil power should be supreme over the
military, then by their acts they believe
their words. He and his brigade are
self-condemned.
Now let the preceding citations be
well-pondered. They constitute a series
of indictments which make Gen, Grant’s
platform more against his own adminis
tration. They are the voluntary and un
answerable confession of the failure of
that administration, even allowing its
best friends to be the judge in its own
case. It is the spectacle of a President
put under condemnation by his own par
ty—nay more, of a President and his par
ty making a joint and unanimous testi
mony against themselves. They are
self-condemned. Nothing remains, there
fore, but that they should be condemned
by the people.
CHIEF JUSTICE THOMPSON.
Of the. contrast between the Grant can*
didate for Governor of Pennsylvania and
the candidate placed in nomination by
the convention of Beading, we have al
ready spoken. What-is to be said of Gen.
Hartranft needs no other description
than one of Gen. Grant’s own most ar
dent supporters, Col. Forney has given
in the Press, What is to be said of Mr.
Buokaiew we have said ourselves in
terms, which we are happy to find meet
ing the approval of most of the newspa
pers Representing both. bis own party
and the independent reformers of the
State. The accord of the friends of Re
union and Reform is doing Us own work
rapidly. It. is of another part of the
Pennsylvania Democratic action we de
sire to say a single word to-day.' The
people of that Commonwealth at the
coming election have, by their votes, to
fill a post far more important than that
of a three years' Governor. They have
to choose a Judge of ,tbo Supreme Court'
for fifteen years, and the same wise fore
cast, tlie same really conservative feel
ing which was shown in the choice for
Governor, is manifested in that of Judge.
The candidate is the present Chief Jus
tice, who, elected in 1857, is now draw
ing near the end nf bis term. No one
familiar with the political and judicial
history, of our sister State, need be told
who James Thompson is. As far back
as 1834, when it was an honor to be a
member of the Legislature, Mr. Thompt
son, amid a host of brilliant colleagues,
was speaker of the Lower House. In the
Spring of the following-year he was cho
sen by the Governor—j udiclal appoint
ments being then in his gift—President
of a District Court, where he remained
until 1814, when he was elected to Con
gress. He was then the colleague and
the esteemed colleague of such men as
John Quincy Adams, Gov, McDowell,
Cobb, Wintbrop, Douglas, and the In
gersols. Mr. Lincoln served with him,
and they were friends. He was chair
man of the Judiciary Committee, and in
1854 retired from Congress, declining a
renomlnatlon. In 1857, Judge Thomp
son was, by popular election, placed up
on the Supreme Court bench, and bis
career there is a very bright part of the
judicial history of bis native State.. It
is the proper compliment to the nomina
tion of Mr. Buokaiew to choose such a
man to stand by his side. A character
beyond reproach—a political record, so
far as a Judge can have one, which no
loyal man cun question—no affiliation to
the men or sols of men who have done
and are doing so much to soil the fair
fame of Pennsylvania—intellect in its
prime—ail these, and the unbounded
confidence of those who know him best,
make him. the fit companion of the
statesman who, if all signs do not fail,
and the grand experiment of political
co-operation and reconciliation succeeds,
will rescue the Great Commonwealth
from the spoilers—State and Federal. —
New York Tribune,
Stanton on Grant.—One of the moat
damaging indictments of Grant brought
by Sumner, is the dying testimony of
Secretary Stanton.
The administration Senators, apprecia
ting its force, met it by bold denials, their
only hope being to damage Sumner’s
veracity. ■
But they have made little progress.—
The other day, after Chandler had con
cluded his defence of Grant under pre
tense of vindicating the memory of
Stanton, Sumner rose and read the fol
lowing note from Horace White, of the
Chicago Tribune, the great Republican
paper of the West :
Dear Mr. Sumner : The late Secre
tary Stanton "not once merely but sever
al times expressed to me substantially
the same opinion of General Grant that
be did to you, with the addition that
General Grant' had had been greatly
overrated as a military commander.” As
to the latter point I recall a long conver
sation. with him after the lighting at
Bpottsylvaula Court house, in which he
(Stanton) expressed more apprehension
of the result of the campaign than X had
ever known him to feel concerning any
campaign. He felt that he could not
continue to fill up the awful gaps made
by Lee In our ranks without a further
call on the States for more troops ; but I
suppose you know all about that. Dur
ing a portion of our conversation be kept
Mr. Chandler cooling bis heels in the
ante room, in order to finish what be had
to say to me, a mere Bohemian, although
1 twice suggested that it would be indec
orous for me to remain while a Senator
desired an audieucei
The Grant Senators were not prepared
for this bomb-shell, and Its effect upon
them was moat demoralizing, 'tfhey loft
the field precipitately.
How Grant Received His Nomi
nation.—A Washington correspond
ent says:
The President takes his new honors
with great coolness and indifference
and spent the afternoon out driving
with Mrs. Grant in his new and very
high carriage which has but two seats
the front one having his two colored
coachmen upon it. . They dress in
white flannel suits with capes, huge
'slivered buttons and high- hats. Mrs.
Grant wore a bright blue silk dress.—
The coach with its running gear paint
ed bright yellow and striped with gold,
created quite a sensation.
A right royal turn-put that for tho
President of a Republican government.
The Oil City Evening Register here
tofore independent, has come out for
Buckalow, and favors tho endorsement
of Greeley and Hrown at Baltimore.
THE REPUBLICAN REVOLT,
Since the time when Forney’s Plilla
'dolphin Frees openly refused to support
the Cameron Corruption ticket, a num
ber of administration journals In this
State have constantly and bitterly as
sailed l{fr. Forney and bis paper. Of
tate, however, a number of honest and
fearless Republican newspapers have
either directly revolted against the Cam
eron ticket, or spoken out firmly in de
fense of Mr. Forney and the Press—
Among them are the Doyleston Intelli
gencer, Delaware Republican, Scranton
Republican, Honesdale Citizen, Ddwn
ingtown Journal, Coatesvllle Union, Me
ebanicsburg Journal, Huntingdon Olobc<
Lancaster Express, Lancaster Inquirer>
Lancaster Enterprise,' Butler Eagle t
Meadvllle Journal, New Castle Journal,
Beavpr Argus, and other influential Re
publican Journals, and their action has
caused considerable alarm in the Came
ron camp. The latest journalist defec-
on in the Radical ranks, is that of the
Lancaster Volkqfreund, the leading Ger
man Republican newspaper of Lancaster
county, which exerts considerable influ
ence throughout the State. The Volks
freund of last week, under the heading
“The State Ticket," uses the following
language:
“ It is-well known that there exists in
Pennsylvania an increasing dissatisfac
tion with the nominations of the Repub
lican State Convention for Governor and
Auditor General.
“ The cause of this dissatisfaction is or
iginally to be found in the shadow of
wrong doing that overhangs the public
life of the two nominees—Hartranft, es
pecially, by his being mixed up with the
Evans swindle, and Allen by his vote In
favor of robbing nine millions.of State
bonds.
“ Viewed in the most favorable light,
these gentlemen are politically dead, and
the Republican partjsmust get rid of their
corpses. The Republicans of this coun
try demand almost unanimously the with
drawal of these men, and the nomination
of new candidates.®.
How the Bads Like the Rees.—
Judge Settle, of North Carolina, who
recently presided 1 over Mr. Grant’s
Convention in Philadelphia, had been
an active Democrat, was a Buchanan
elector, and at the breaking out of the
war was a savage secessionist, so full of
it, in fact, that he organized a company
and entered the Southern army as a
captain, continuing in it a couple of
years. But the spirit that has since
led him into the Grant army of public
plunderers began to work, and he re
signed the captaincy to come home and
look after No. 1 by taking the office of
prosecuting attorney, which office he
continued in nntU.the.en4.Df. the war.
When the government pap was about
being distributed he became a full
fledged Radical,
■ Otm NeW Government.—A Wash
ington dispatch says:
“ The President has designated So
licitor W. H. Smith to act as Secretary
of the Interior during the absence of
Secretary Delano,, and Assistant Secre
taries Cowan and Hartley to, act as
Secretary of the Treasury during tho
absence of Secretary Boutwell and As
sistant Secretary Richardson-”
In the meantime Grant and his cabi
net officers will draw their salaries and
loaf at watering places, while the peo
ple pay their deputies for doing their
work at Washington. It is high time
for a change in the manner of conduct
ing our National government.
Whittemopb, the South Carolina
Congressman who was convicted of
selling, a cadetship, was .on© of the dele
gates to the Convention which .renomi
nated Grant. Whittemore also pleaded
the statute of limitations to escape be
ing convicted of perjury. Very Radi
cal politics is calculated to make
people acquainted with strange bed
fellows.
' The example of Grant is visible in
all the departments of Government.—
Most of the secretaries and heads of
bureaus ate on their travels, and Grant
has been obliged to confer on the assis
tant secretaries the authority to conduct
the affairs in the departments of their
respective chiefs.
Gen- Hooker said to the represen
tative of the San Francisco Chronicle
concerning the Aminidab Sleek of the
army, Gen. O. Q. Howard, that he was
responsible for the failure at Chansel-
Torsvllle; that he was Incompetent and
disobedient; that he was sent on his
Arizona expedition to avoid a Freed
man’s Bureau Investigation, And he
said of Grant that “he has no more
moral sense than a dog.”
Harvard Coleeqb has conferred
the degree of LL. D. upon President
Grant.— Exchbnge.
What a beauty to have such a degree
conferred upon him! It would have
been more appropriate had he received
the degree of A. D. S., which means
Addition, Division and Silence!
In Illinois seventeen Republican pa
pers have come out squarely for Gree
ley and Brown. Six German papers
have declared for them; nine others
are opposed to Grant, and two are for
him.
How many of the Radical newspa
pers and politicians who clamorously
deman d that the Democrats shall
nominate a straight out ticket at Balti
more, will agree to support it if we
do?
A correspondent of the Lancaster
Inquirer, (Republican) says there is
strong talk of organizing an Independ
ent Republican Buckalew Club in Mar
tin township, Lancaster county.
Washington, June 20
Decapitating Postmasters.—A list
ojpostmaaters in Pennsylvania, wbo are
opposing Hartranft for Governor, has
been sent ou by Senator Cameron for
decapitation. The commission has been
issued to ex-Congressmaa Clarke, to be
postmaster at Galveston, Texas, vice
(McKee, removed on the grounds that ho
was a Greeley msn v
—The Washington Patriot, next to
the World the most bitter Democratic
newspaper on Greeley and Brown, has
come out in favor of their nomination
—and concedes their nomination at
Baltimore. The World next I
HpC-SEOBEBTABY Seward has deol luod
to deliver an address at Union Collegeon
account of feeble health, and matters re
quiring his presence at Auburn.
Everybody hereabouts believes that
Buckalew, Hartley and Thompon will
bo elected.
The Democrats of this county are
resolved to poll their full vote in Octo
ber.
POLITICAL JOTTINGS.
—Why is Grant like the planet Sa
turn ? Because he is surrounded by
rings.
—A great many people “ want to
know—you know” why Jeremiah Col
bath of Massachusetts changed l)is
name to Henry Wilson. Can not some
body tell us; or if they don’t know
certainly, they might guess.
' —The Pennsylvania Republican As
sociation of Washington, composodien
tlrely of Grant’s office-holders in that'
citJV held a meeting a few nights ago
and passed resolutions in favor of the
due bill candidate for Governor of
Pennsylvania,
—lt costs $240,000 to run the XT. S.
Court in Arkansas for oue year, which
is rather more than the expenses of all
the XJ. S. Courts in the Hew York!
What splendid election fund the Radi
cals must have out there.
We have a further “ drift of public
opinion” this week; the Democratic
State Conventions of both Maine and
Texas, the two extremes of the Union
on the Atlantic coast, declaring for
Horace Gfceley.
Henry Wilson, the nominee of,the
Grant office-holders’ party, is the same
Henry Wilson that originated the
Know Nothing party in Now England,
and was its chief and head-centre.
—A United States Senator to be
chosen by the next Legislature. It is
General Cameron’s term that expires.
The Democrats should be unusually
careful in nominating popular candi
dates for the Legislature.
—A Republican paper says:
“ As far as principles are represented
by men, John P. Hartranft'is the rep
resentative of the principles of the Re
publican party in this State and every
true Republican will vote for him!”
Did he represent the principles of the
Republican party when he concealed
the Evans defalcation and “ borrowed’,
those seven thousand dollars from the
chief conspirator ? We cannot believe
that he represented the decent portion
of that party.
The police of Philadelphia prohibited
the sale of Charles Sumner’s great
speech against Grant in phamphlet
form about the streets last week. Do
these uniformed ninnies suppose that
they can prevent the spread ot truth?
They might as well try to dam,up the
Delaware with .thoii* -UR oiotHo.—
Grant’s fortunes ate desperate, we ad
mit, but these tactics of the police will
not mend matters.
—A beautiful illustration of our
President’s idea of civil service reform
is afforded by ,a single incident. An
unprincipled adventurer named Clarke
succeeded in getting possession of a seat
in Congress, and in holding it until the
close of the session, when he was ousted
out ln disgrace. Thereupon President
Grant appoints him postmaster at Gal
veston, Texas, dismissing a faithful
officer to make place for his favorite.—
And yet Mr. George William Curtis
believes that President Grant believes
in civil service reform ! Such faith in
the face'of such works passes our come
prehension.
EOMANTIO DEVOTION.
A Young "Woman Crosses tie Atlantic Alone
to Marry a Man She Has Never Seen.
The Girard Press contains the notice
of a marriage in that place which
should be immortalized with a Miltonic
epithalamium. Mr. Henry E. Perkins,
of Girard, and Miss Annie Harper, of
England, were married by the probate
judge of Crawford county on Sunday,
the 11th uit. “ We wish our friend
Perkins and his bride,” says the Girard
editqr in unrelieved humdrum, “ a life
of pleasure and happiness.” The terms
are not strong enough. He should
have indulged in enthusiasm for once,,
and have allowed his pen to kindle
with the tender theme. The bride is 19
years old. She crossed the broad ocean
and the intervening stretch of land at
the call of love without a friend to pro
trot her. She and, her plighted lover
had never met. Years ago Mr, Per
kins was in the foreign claim business
in Vermont, and some business trans
action with the young lady’s family
led to a correspondence between the
pair. Prom the frigidity of mere busi
ness their epistolary intercourse warm
ed into friendsliip,'and finally melted
into true love. Three years ago they
exchanged vows of eternal fidelity, and
the wedding-day was looked forward
to as the fruition of their hopes. The
ardent lover then removed to Kansas,
and was looking to put his business af
fairs into such such shape as would ad
mit of his going to London to carry
away his bride. But a very severe ill
ness befell him, and in his extremity
he wrote for the lady to perform the
journey herself. Her presence would
be healing to him. Trustful, constant,
undaunted, she left friends and home,
and arrived at her destination to find
her lover restored to health and impa
tient to fold her to his arms, In rela -
ting these thrilling love passages should
not the Press editor have warmed with
the occasion, and in his benediction
have drawn some little from the vo
cabulary of hyperbole.— Leavenworth '
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the healthy functions of the digestive organs.
Scrofula, or King’s evil, white swellings, Ul
cers, Erysipelas, Swelled neck, Goiter. Scrofu
lous Inflammations, Indolent Inflammations,
mercurial affections, old sores, eruptions of me
skin, sore eyes, etc., etc. In these; os in an
other'constitutional diseases, Walker’s Vinegar
Bitters have shown their great curative powers
in the most obstinate and intractable cases.
Dr. talker's California Vinegar Bitters are
on all these coses in a similar manner, By pun*
fylng the blood they remove the cause, ana oy
resolving away the effects of the inflammation,
(the tubercular deposits) the affected parts re
ceive health, and a permanent cure is edeciea.
The properties of Dr. Walker’s Vinegar bit
ters are aperient, diaphoretic and carminative,
nutritious, laxative, diuretic, sedative, counter
irritant, sudorific, alterative and onU-blhoufl.
The aperient and mild laxative properties oi
Dr. Walker's Vinegar Bitters are the beat saio
guard in all cases of eruptions and maligna* l *
fevers, their balsomlo, healing and soothing
xroperties protect the humors of the muo©».--
dholr sedative properties allay pnln lathe nei
voos system, stomach and bowels, either nom
inflammation, wind, colic, cramps,, etc.
counter-irritant influence extends throughout
the system. Their-diuretic properties .act < o
the kidneys, correcting and regulating tlm how
of urine. Their anti-billons properties stlmuioi
the liver, in the seorotlon of bile, and its d‘®
charges through the bllary ducts, and are su
perlor to all remedial agents, for the euro
billons fever, fever and agae. etc.
Fortify the body against disease by purliyi »
all its fluids with Vinegar Bitters. No opldett*
oaugtake hold ot a system thus forearned.
liver, the stomach, the bowels, the kidneys, a
the nerves are rendered disease-proof ny tu
Br mKEM?o r NS^ Ta ko of tho Bitters
to bed ot night from a half to one and ono-u
wine-glassful. Sat good nourishing food. ■“
ns beer-steak, mutton-chop, venison, roast-u j,
and vegetables, and take out-door exercise.
They are composed of purely vegetable ms
dlents, and contain no spirit.
J. WACKEit, Proprietor; B. H. MoDONAB”
& CO.. Druggists ana GenTAgta.. Ban Francisco
and Now York.
4®-Sold by all druggists and dealers.
July 4, lB73—3ra.—Jan. 4, 1878—3 m.
g CENTS BEWABD.—Ban away from
O tho subscriber; residing In Carlisle, on
1/th day of June, 18W, a bound girl namea a»
ness Fornwalt, aged about 14 years. AJI per? -
are warned not to harbor or trust her on my
count, us I will not bo responsible for ber ira
actions. J* Boanin»
J illy 1,1872-31.
(.NEATLY EXE
•7OU TOUTED at THIS
I OFFICE.