1 " Uk V.J IT .V . - .i.-.---i'ija.ai.4.-'i.'..v.iinrjt.'.'.T.-i!.-;---ii'rjij.v :.. Tf ,jr. K i"' .'-T7.: . . ; 4 CLEARFIELD BEPIDUCAV ' milium bvski uiiiuT,ir - GOOULANDER A UAUERTY, CLEARFIELD, PA. B I T A B 1. 1 II 12 I) IK I8T. Tk largeet Circulation of any XinM In sJorlh Central Pniiaylval , Terms of Subscription. 'f paid In advance, or wlthia monthl....M H If (will after 8 and hofort mnnlhl ' (f paid eftar thi isplratlon of 8 uonlhi... 0 H Ratal ot Advertising, rranattnt edvarllaententa.per Minare of l limit or leaa, 1 tlmee or !.... SI For eaeh nuHMfiitii iutertitn 88 Admtnietrelnri'lad Bngillri' nolioee.. ...... t SO Anditnrt' aoticei...... ... 1 B Caution! and R.travl I 80 Dlllolutlon notice! .. 1 00 Prnteaainnal Cardi, t Hot or Itu,! roar...- IMI tonal aotloai, per lint ID i YEARLY ADVERTISEMENTS. I square.... .) iqusrotH. t aqiiaraa .... ,. no ) oolomu ,'..11 oil .15 OS j (minion 44 III ,20 iW 1 column St (0 JJob Wort.' '"" ; blanks-. , " '. ' 1 llntrlo quirt....... At 60 It qultti. pr. qulrt.ll Tft I qulm,pr,qulra, 1 (Kt Over t, ptr quirt, 1 60 IIANDDII.1.8. . f htel. Uor Ion, (2 ) I i ihctl.it or lell.tft ti ibtol, Ji or lul, I I ikatUtA or lati,r) AO Qrtr Ik of took of obovt ot pruportioooto ratio. , (IKnUGR I). HOOM.ANDKR, - tSEOHUB 1IAUKHT V, ' PaMlohorf. joiipi . a'niur, 4 - mia.'c". JIcENALLY & MoCURDt, ATTORN EYS-AT-L AW, ClearHcld. Pa. J!i-Lxi1 kuflnoii ulteniltd to proraptlt "Ilk Idelity. Olllrt oa fiotond itrtot, auoro tho Kint Kltlontl Btuk. :1I:7J illia a. WAi.nra. rnAa pinamo. WALLACE L FIELDING, ATTORNEY. A--LAW. Clearlleld, Pa. jWLtltal kuiioeu of all ktn-li ilt.n If d to with promptnrai ind Bdtllljr. Offico io roil 1-nct of William A. Wallaoo. jnl:7J G. R. BARRETT, ATTOHNKf AND CnllNsRUlB AT LAW, CUKARFIKIaD, PA. Uftvinf resigned bir JuilgAihip, fcs rcinmcd tkt tmolioe of lh l In bit old offio t Clear IfU, Witt ..tttjod the cuurtiof JefTuraon and Blk couatiti whpn ifiraiall Ktaioed fn oonntctioB with rtiident oounnel. J: 1 4:72 T. H. MURRAY, ATTOKNEY AND C0l'NiSEI,OK AT LAW. Prompt attention glren to all Irgul bualne.1 eatruated to hit rare in Clearfleld and adjoining enuntiei. Office on Market at., oppositt Nnogte'a Jewelry Store, Cli'arileld, Pa. jrI4 71 A. W. WALTE RS, ATTOIINRY AT LAW, Clearfield..?!. Vk.OBoe In tba Court Home. fJecS-ly H. W. SMITH, ATTORNEY-AT-IiAW, ti:l:TI I'learlield. Pa. "WALTER" BXRRE Tt7 ATTORNKY AT LAW. OtVa on 8tonl 8t., Cltartald, Pa. aorlt.Cd ISRAEL TEST, ATTORN KY AT LAW, Clearfleld. Pa. jtayftoVia la Iba Onart ilnuta. fjyll JOHN H. FULFORD, . ATTORNEY AT LAW, . Clearfield, Pa. lioa oa Market 6t., itr ioteph Fhwtri' lrnrery itort. Jaa.S,IS71 rnoi. i. 'n.Li.oron. w. m. a'cltl-oion. T. J. McCULLOUQH & BROTHER, ATTOKNKVH T LAW, Clearfield. Pa. , 6aloa oa iLocurt ttrrt, nrar y nppoiit tha ret lJn af Dr. H. V. Wilton. We hare in our of Am one of Kifwwft A IWa' Urp;ift fire and bur gtar proof latei, for tk protect ion of bm.k, dmli, aad other Taiunbla pnjMtri plated in our charge. JOHN L. CUTTLE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. did Ileal Katate Agent, ClearOrld. Pa. OfSeo oa Tfclrd alrtat, btt.Chorry A Walnut. CtWtaapMtfully ofert till larviraa In Billing eld ktyiag landa in CltarDeld and ailjnlning icuntiot and wlib a tiptrlenoa o' oer twenlr rtari M a auretyor, flatter! bimaolf thai da eaa -rtedar tatifaio. I fab- SS'titr, J. BLAKE WALTERS, REAL ESTATE BROKER, tn aaxua ix Saw Iogr. and leiimltcr, OLSARKIKI.D, PA. OBoain'Maaoaie Building, Room No. 1. t 25:71 J. J. LINGLE, ATTORN EY-AT - LA W, 1:18 Oarrola, Clearfield Co., Pa. y:pd ROBERT WALLACE, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. n'allarnton, Clearfield County, Prlui'a wtvAII legal buaiaeaa promptly atltndad to. DL. K REB S, Buooeianr to II. B. Swoope. Law and Collection Offick, Pdtl.fTS CLEARFIELD, PA. John II. Orria. C. T. Alexander. ORVIS & ALEXANDER, ATTOI -NK.YS A T LA H'. Ilrllcfolite, Pa. t"rP,5,',5-7 J. 8. BARNHART, ATTOItNKV AT LAW, llnllrl'ontc. Pa. Will pracllee In Clearfleld and all of the Court of the l;.ll, JuJicial dl.lrlrt. Real eelalo bmioe.. aid collection of rlalmi ade apooialtlei. nl'TI DR. T. J. BOYER, PHYSICIAN AND SI) RO KON, ;p(5ci on Market Rtreet, Cloarlleld, Pa. raay-Ouloa hourt : I to II a. m , aad to 8 p. m. JR E. M. 8CIIEURER, IIOMfEOPATIHC PHVSIC1AS, . Office in klaionil Uuilding, April JJ, 187J. Clearfield, Pa. DR. W. A. MEANS, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, I.t'THKRSIirRa, PA. Will attend profrailonal calla prninplly. au11'7ll J. H. KLINE, M. D., T-UY8ICIAN & SURGEON, TTAVINO looated at Penolleld, Pa., offer! kit 11. pnife.aional eeriieea to tho peopl pliww and aurrounding eoantry. All oalla promptly ailandrd to. not. M ll. DR. J. P. BURCHFIELD, Lata fturnioa of the sd Reglmont, Pennaylranla Voitaittri, kavlng rtturntd froej tba Army, altera hi. prnfaaelonal lerricta to tbieitiioni tf Oltartlald anunly. Or-frof.raloaal nalla promptly etleoledtn. vu.t t Heoaad a.rott. formorlTaooaplta ay Dr. Wood!. (apr,'( tl a . .. " . .. . . I jJe A li u II li T Diva RESTAURANT, Beoond 8trettt CLBARFIRLD, PEKN'A. AlWkTa 1 I,. .J PwmaU Ov.l.r. TrtO reOom. fatJiw, Kata. Crae'kera. Cakea. Claara. Tohaooo, C.r,r.dl Frulti, Oranget, Umoni, and all kiadi t-UUUA'.tD ROOM on aeennd floor. " " p M.llAVllUliV Cfl in win. A 1 CLE irr GOODLANDEB 4 HAQEETY, VOL. 46-WHOLE NO (Cards. JEFFERSON LITZ,' PnYSlCIANiSUROKON, HAVING tootled at Omnia, Pa., offtn kli profoiiloail irtleot to tka paopla af thai laci ana lorroaooinf ooanirT. --All tallt (irovptl altad) to. Offiet tad ronHinca ot Cartla IL, foratarlr oocoplld Pr, !ln, May, ikii. i. aoLLoolvia a.Briirahtf . H0LL0WBUSH it C1EET, ' BOOKSELLERS, Blank Book Manufactarcrs, ' AND STATIONERS, HIM Marktt St., PhllatlelpHta, feguPiprr Ploar Btkl aod Dlgt, Foolnrap, t ... V . I. ImukIh tirt.in m4 IVkll GEORGE C. KIRK, Juiltct of tht Ptaoa, fiurra.vor aod Cuartyanotr, tulhcmburj, Pa. i ' - ' All ou.lntii lnlrutrd to him will bt promptly altioilt't to. Persona wiihinn to employ a 8ur riiror mill do well lo fivt kim a tall, at be flatten kimialr that lit ean render Mttsfaatioa lleedl of oooreyaore, artiolta of at;reeiarBt, and til legal papera, promptly and neany eieaoioo. taaa.an JAMES 0. BAERETT, Jaitiet of Ibt Ptoet and Lioanatd Conveyanoer, l.ullicrbur. Clearfleld Co., Pa. a-Collaetini A reulltantei promptly madt, and all klnda of Itfal lualrumtntl txtootod on ihort notlot. anay,70tf DAVID REAMS, SCRIVENER 4 SURVEYOR, , I.utherabura;. Pa. Till rublcriber olferl hli atrrleu to tht public la tht oapaclly of gorirtntr and Kurrtyor All ealla for aurreylng promptly attanded to, aad the making of draft!, docda and othor legal inatru menta of writing, executed without delay, and warranted to be correct or no charge. ol 1:70 JTaT BLATTENBEEQEE, Claim and Collection Ofllce, O.SC'EOLA, Clearfleld Co, Pa. ir-Conreyoncing and all legal paper! drawn with eecoracy aad di.patcb. lliafta on and pal nga tickete to and from any poiat In Europe procured. ootj 70 6ia F. K. ARNOLD &. Co., BANKERS, I.ulherfburg, Clearfleld county. Pa. 'Money loaned at reaaonabla rat,tl txchange houjrkt and loldl doooaila rtoaired. aad a gea- ttrl banking kuliotaa aill bt carried on at the abort plaeo. :n:li:u JOHN D.THOMPSON, Juatict ef tba Peace aad Scrivener, Curwenavllle, Pa. trfuCollectionl madt ind monty promptly paid over. feh'7ltf E. A. 4. W. D. IRVIN, vrutm in ' Eeal Estate, Square Timber, Logs AND LUMBER Oa In mum Cmm. Sti.ro bnllillne. norlt'71 Curwenaeilla, 1a. " aao. iLaaar aaaar Aunar w. ..- W. ALBERT t BROS., Alanufaclurarl A ixteaaive Dealenia Sawed Lumber, Square Timber, &o., WOODLAMi, rnn A. -Orderl lolieiled. Billi ailed oa abort aotlct ana reoauno,,, icna. Addrtll Woodliod P. 0., Cleirteld Co., Pa. j.U.t, W ALUr.KT UI"IB. FRANCIS COUTRIET, MEI'.C II ANT, .rrenrhvllle, ( learfleld County, P. Kecpi eonatantly on bond a full aiaortmeot ol Dry Uondr, lUrdwaro, Orocerica, and oeerylbing n.oiOW kent in a retail alore. which will bt Mid, for oah, aa cheap at olaewhert in tba county. Frenchville, June I,, icoi iy. THOMAS H. FORCEE, paAiia in GEN ERA L M KKCH AN DISE, fill All tMTOla, Pa. Alio, exleaalva manufacturer and dialer In Rquara Timlwr and Hawed Lumber of all ktnde. s9-0rderi lolloited and all billi pnimpity filled. l-jyim CHARLES SCHAFER, LAG K R 11 EE It R It EWER, Clearfield, Pa. TTAVINil renlid Mr. Kntraa" Brcwtry be XX hopea by ilriol allentioa U bjaintaa and il,. nonurnctore of a auncrlor article of IIEKR to recoivt tht potnmage of all tha old and many Bear cuatonitra. ' J. K. BOTTORF'S PHOTOGRAPII GALLERY, Marktt Rtroet, Clearfield, Pa. JTR0M08 MADE A SPKCIALTr.-V ATtOATlVEU made la clnody at well aa a i .i. -,.,,l,rr oaataotlr on band a good rVortment of FRAMES. rjiEKEOSCOPKB and I STKRKDSCOI'K) VIKWB. rramel, trom any ityleof moulding, madt to order. apr2fl If JAMES CLEARY, BARBER & HAIR DRESSEE, SECOND BTRKF.T, . Jy2.11 CIEAHFIEl.n, PA. It REUBEN HACKMAN, House and Sign Painter and Paper Hanger, Clearfield, Penu's. V.. Will execute lob. In hll lint promptly and In a wnrkiaauhkt manner. t HENRY RIBLI NG, HOfSE, BK1N A ORNAMENTAL PAINTER Clearfield, Penn'a. Tha frracning and painting of ohurrhel and other publie building! will rfeeira particular attonlioa, aa well ai the painting uf oarriagei and alrihl. Uildlng oloni In me niaieai aiyiea. no work wnrranled. Hhop on Fourth atreel, formerly occupied by Kiqnlre (jhugart. 000070 ""g". H. HALL, PRACTICAL TUMP MAKER, NEAR CLEARFIkl.lt, PENN'A. IMT-Pumpa atwaya on hand and made to order on ahnrt notiea. Plpea bared on maaonahlt tirma All work warranted to render atiafaailnn, and drllrtrtd if deaired. , mylillypd i. I II A R M A N, Practical millwright, ' LCTUERSDCRll, PA. Agent for tht Ase-lcan Dnaitla Turbint Water Wheel and Andrew. A NaJbaek Wheel. Can fur nl.k Portable I rlu Millaoa abort nolle. Jrl 1 T I E. A. BIGLER & CO., paii.iai SQUARE TIMBER, and manufaelurira of ALL KISIW OF RAWKI) LLMHliR, 7'72 CLEARFIELD, PENN'A. J OH TBOUTsf A I, Dealer la all kladi af FURNITURE, Market Rtwet, pM dior call Poll Ornio, m 1 JU-dL-W Vi"'T' CLEARFIELD, TA. I . . v.t , i .:. ' ?.. ri 1 in1 '""n "v " J V ' lit ijiil ... .. .... . , : - ,: i Publishera. 2295. THE' REPUBLICAN. CLEARFIELD, Pa. , WSUSESDAY IOKNtK8. NOV. 11, 187. PENNSYLVANIA ELECTION FRAUDS. Startling Corruption In Philadelphia Report of Special Examiner, i . rui!.ADr.!.piiiA, Not. 4, IR7J. A mo8( determlnud invcatigation Into the modus operandi adopted by tha election return judge during; ttlt Into) Stuta fli'Otioim liaa duvelopt'd some eturtlinir f'auti. It i mmier of common rrport both in PliilndoL pli iu and New York that the ri'puted mujiiriliea for the fruhertiatoriul ond other candidate were fur in excuse ot the actual vote; yet the mere parti san among the republicans have the awiuranee to claim thuir majoritiea to huro been lawful votea. Witneai the following affidavit of Albert L. Wil liams, a young expert) appointed by the Court lo examine election returns in fifteen wards. If this will not con vince your readers of the shameless manner in which these returns have bcon "repeated" nothing will : Albert L. Williami, being duly ewora aooording to law, dapoaea aad aaya That bt it twinty thrtt ytara of age, ind reaiJaa at No. M Mell. vaioe itroct, rnnaijeipnia. iBat.apon tht 23th tnet., by authority of an ordtr of tht Court of Common I'leaa, of rbilaJelpnia, kt mailt aa ex amination ol tha return! of Ibt Judgea of ilettioo, in Ibt fltb ioat., for tack dirieioo uf tba wardi U aaid oity. aad madi oopiri ihcmif. That in aid ret urn a, now of noord la aaid Coan, tbeio apptar numeroutaraaurai. alttrationaaad ohanget ot llguroi in tba return of tbt votta uf eomi ot tht eandidataa, and ethir irregularitiea of Ibe follow ing character, to wll i riair wabp. vgr- tat aeea. AHtfd lo. eaet. Olrlalon 1-IIrlranfl....U0 lit no lluokakw.... VI l Dirl.ion -llartraon....3ll 7i lio lluokakw... .1114 lot Diriiion 4 llarlranft.....1l M 10 Iluekalrw....l57 l"7 Dlrliioa Ilarlr.nfl....!.l0 JH0 111 Huckalew....U 111 a- Dirieioa U llrtranlt....I2fl 17 - So Buekalew....lir Tl- Dlrialua lo Hartranlt....l7 17 0 ilaekalew...,IM 11 Diriiion 12 lUrlranll.... 144 Jot ZOO Uuckalew....H 4 aivrat wabp. Dliiiioa S llartranft....llti in Uuckalew.,.1.1 Id Dliiiioa 8 llartnnn....l.1.t iii 20 Huckalew....J0S lot TRKTN WASH. Diriaioa 1 nariranrt....2K4 354 lot Baekalew....lV4 4 thibtbkhts waso. -aem,n.i..m. AO a . . ... goa lluckalrw ...UK I7 Dill. Ion i Smith 218 IUJ 100 Uowen IT 107 ' Dlriilan 7 Huittb 12 2fl SI) liuwin. 170 130 Diriaioa 4-Smiik Ui Ub liowm.. I Hi Ibt aavaTKK?iiR wabo. Return! of tha Firat diTiaion aat la tbi aar,k. SI BKTKCXTN WABO. ' Diriaioa illarlranft....2ll 11! 80 Duckaliw ... i 44 Dlrlfion 8-ltnrnn.....14l 8H 80 llackalew....lS7 1ZT I ' TWKITiaTH WABB. The return from Iki Fink diriaioa If not ilgnad Dirl.ion 1-Ilarir.nfl ...171 108 41 Ilurknlrw ...1(17 147 Diriiion 1-Ilarlraiift. ...'.' Il8 40 H,.ekaliw....:il it Diriaioa 11 llartran't....l0 8:tO loo Butkalew....l.'iS 1"4 Diriaioa 13 llarlrualt ... 274 2-4. 100 Bu:kaltw....2T KI7 Dirllloa 14 llattrann....2l) 208 100 llurkle....I.SS 2U.1 40 Diriiion lllaHrnn....li2 .142 2 u.klew....l21 101 la tht Eialh diriaioa tbt rota for 8. D. Btroeb il palpably lltereil Trom I7 to lot, and in the .Sixteenth diriaioa from IA3 to 183.. 40 TWt-.BTY-er.roB3 WAPB. Tba Fifth diriiion rrtarm li nut lignod by the J""!. . . .. . . v In tna return ot tnt cieeenm oinaioa ibo vote of Walton ia altered from 141 to 182 V- T BiTr-Tntan wahb. Tha Kltvtnlb tnd Twelltb dirlaios rtturnl ara not aigoed by tht rtapattirt Judge! Diriiion 13 llarltanll.... lot zoa ino Iluckalrw....n3 83 Diriiion U Wilson 174 104 20 Hurl. J 11 81 TWBlTT-roUBTN WABB. The Zltreatb divletoa not ligned ky tht Judge. tw kbtt -rirm wahb. Tha Ninth dlviaioa return ia ant aigaed by tht judge, and the retarni of tht Fourth diriiion tan- no! be louBd. Diriiion 4 IIarlrenfl....194 1.14 80 Bookalcw...l40 100 Wellon V8 l8 II ut ley 148 IIS Diriiion I llartrulifl....l4 ill 00 Hockalew....lli 84 DirlrliiB 9 ll.irtn.nfl ...1(11 104 80 UuckAlew....i:i8 103 TWRNTT-IIKTS WAKP. Tht Firth, Htrenth, Eleventh and Fifletalh dl eiiloai not aigoe. by tht reapoetlrt Judgoa. Diriiion 7 Ilarlranrt....ll8 248 It Huoki.lcw.,.,114 04 Diriiion 0 llartranlt ....'128 828 10 Mekaiew..,.aoa Baa ' DiTillon 11 llarlrann....42J 424 10 llai:kalew.,.22l 201 DlrlrloB 1 llarlrann.. ..!" lot 10 BildjAlrw...l27 107 TWKSTT-BB V RJITS WABD. Divillon 3-Uartranft....lfiO 280 lilt Uuckalew ...144 44 -Tho aliiratloa in thii dlrlaien la attended to all oandidatei whole rottt eaceed Int. Dlrilioa t llartrann....l7 1U7 90 Buckalow....I07 47 Diriiion 8 Harlraolt....l4 r 114 80 llurktiliw....lllS 104 Diriiion llartreait... 1.1.1 283 140 Buckilew.... 7T 77 In thia diriiion loo haa been added to all tht other Republican eandtdutea TWISTY BIBTS WABD Diriiion 1 llarlrann ...170 88 Bucknlow.... S7 77 Divirioo i llrirnuH....17 198 It Uuckalew ...IBS . MS , Diriaioa I llartranlt.,,,213 11 80 . Unekalrw....l4l 121 Dlrlalon 11 Ilartranft....t03 111 40 Buckalew.... T 87 Total .8I That tilt abort allertiloni ara lomilimei made ky mtrcly changing tbt Cgunt, ind aomelimea by traaarta, and art genera, ly appartnt at a mo ment', glance. Only Ihoee which art beyond all doubt kara beta bereia abort mtntioned. The liangti Biem to be, ia a great meaaurt, oonfltad to tht Uobtraalorial eandidatea, tha etbarl re- ..irine tha rtaultr party rota. That aomt of Ikt envelope! eontaing tht hoarlr Iliti ol tht di riiion! irt mli.lng, aod aorao of tha dlviaioa fa turna apptar to be altered epoa every candidate, hut lha aorraol rolurn eannot ot aoeurately aaoar- talned, and il, therefore, omllled. Tha rhangaa in the reluml ai aforaeaid amoant to s difftrenot of 3,310 rotri ai afortaaid. ALBERT L. WILLIAMS. Rwora and mhaofibod bofort t thlt lit day f Nor am bar. 1878. Uionoa T. Dstaa. Dtpaly Protbonoury. Maakaiifl. From tht Philadelphia Preta, Nov. 4. When so large u ninjnrity was de clared for the Republican Bute tickut oo the 8lli of Oclobor 'wo slated .that we did hot regard tho result as fraud olont. Onr judgment rosled oo lh PR(NOfLE$;rNOT MEN. CLEARFIELD; PA.,5 WEDNESDAY,' NOVEMBER 13. belief that Getiorsl Grant' prestige and lb deronraliation of the Demo cracy fri sonaeqaence of the surrender at Baltimore had done tht work bat every hour's subsequent experience ha proved system of frauds unpar alleled In ibo records of flections in this country. , The last evidence'! that revealed In th Court ot Commoa Plea on Saturday last, reported tit lenirth In onr local department It doe not depend upon newspaper suf nilses but Is h result of an examina tion made on the ootliority of Judge Pclrce, of th same Court, by a mem. ber of the Munkrpi UJuffi ' AocIV., linn (Mr. Albert Williams), whose af fidavit was road bv the eminout conn. sel of that uoHooUti'n, Mr. E. Spencer Miller, before Hie Honor Judgo Fin letlor. We need only refer our road- era to this painful and extraordinary disclosure, not the Ices painful because evidently perpetrated by Republican election officer, and not th less ex traordinary because, in our opinion, wholly unnecessary, except lo savo from defeat the ohjociioiiuble men on our state ticket. Judge rinletter made a very significant remark on this startling disclosure and billowed il by on order on Frothonolary Lough- ridge, which must loud to still further evidences of the deeply planned con piracy of the 8lh of October last The light thrown on this conspirucj ou Saturday show a stale of afTnirti so di'graouful a lo call a blush ot shame to the cheek of every honost citizen, , ' The affidavit read before Judge Kin letter shows thul various alterations. erasure and changes uf figures sre apparent in the returns j that some of the envelopes containing the hourly lists of the division are missing ; tliut many of the returns cannot be found, and that numerous of them are not signed by the proper onirers required by law to certify to their correctneae The exposures of frauds pcrpulraUd are confined to only thirty-five divis ion of twelve wards. The plan was systematic, and il is tufu to aiscrl that there were numerous cases us yet un discovered of alteration of ihe vote in the other 324 divisions. The divisions in which the fraud were perpulraled includo about one-tunlh of the vote of lit lly. If tltoy r eqttMl In si lent in only one-hall of the others (and fraud In the great majority of litem is not only possible, but probaMe), the voto of Philadelphia was falsified at least fifteen thousand on the evening of ibe 8th of October by the election officer alone. This is exluslv of the repealing, personating and bollot-box stuffing by the tool of the ring on the same day. We now verily beliove that an examination of the entire re turn and a contest in which the fraud commit tod, bul not apparent upon them, could bo extosed, would put the stamp of guilt upon at least five hundred men in Philadelphia, and show that Charles R. littckulew car ried Philadelphia by a clear and ample majority. ' . . , It is to be hoped that such an ex- animation will be had and that the men who sold the honor of the Repub lican party and betrayed the Common wealth may meet the late the) deserve We expect a change lo bo made in our law soon, which, if il will not make the perpetration of frauds at elections impossible, will secure thuir curlain punishment. With this change, an incorruptible judiciary and ptoper public spirit, we are apprelicneive ol the future. Fraud may triumph lor a while, Lul il will not flaunt the evi deuce of its guilt iu the luces of our people much longer. This coniinuni ty, patient and long suffering u8 il is has the virluo and manhood not lo connive at and endorse a wrong When thoroughly aroused its power of truth and honesty will be morn ll.au match for all llio corruptions and weapons Hie ouetiiy can um. Yoimo Louis Napoleon Tho Prince Imperial of Franco is to loam artillery practice in the English Royal School of Cunnonicr. Being a lion. part ho must, of course, be a soldier, however, much lie may be unfitlod by nature to sel squadron in tho field or overlook the divisions of a battle. If hi Imperial father spoke truly he is born liero, for atSearbruck he re- muinod under fir without flinching, Though why the weuk buy was ox- posed lo danger ol all, savo to minis-'A'" ler to his father', vanity, is not clear. If common report Is true, tho young LnuisNanoleon has no military lle. anil his studio among the grunt gun , v of England are not likely to fit hi in for th task of leading vast srinies afield, a did hit falbcr't illutlriou. uncle w,bo.e marvelous military genius ha gjvon all who bear hi numo P'.W I""' " "'". wondrous hold on tho .ffectiont of the "'"". "" ""ny " French pepl. thonKh non. of hi.;" Mwr.lUloii. Mi ton has family have ever been endowed will. ""O". I answer to Sslmalsius, a lithe of J' groat gifts The tie used no South American railway have boon transported al most entirely from California, a the ItBe.eviinH rina nut 1.. llm A itflwa nail. not be used w,ihoul boring th apik. hole with augur.. Tho tie co.t on. doll.r landed at C.ll.o. il.'lll'' ' ', I i . '.' ' . I' ' ,, ; ''The Brevity of Life." 'To the yoang ft doe not seem short It aeems very long. To the boy of fourteen the man of , forty soem a long wny off, and he of sixty removed by an age almost illimitable. Rut time passes on, the aspect ef life change. The ninn of forty thinks forty not nearly n old as be thought it when h was fourteon ) fifty appeurs to hitri but the prime of lifo, sixty, far from aged. When, at length, in creasing years ndmoninh him that his life-work i ended, and that he can enter on no new undertakings, and he Itiok bark to reftott "upon what he bat accomplished, he wonders to see it so little, and is amazed to find the road so short in traveling, which ap peared so long in prospect. He then understands ss he never did before the meaning of Scripture simllo. "Yes," he say to himself, "il is indeed true. Lifu i a a lalo that is told, and as a dream when one wakelh." A moment's careful reflection will suffice, however, lo convince the thoughtful thut the old man' estimate is right, and the young man's wrong. The time, is short, very short, In which lo achieve anything tor God, for Im munity, or for ourselves. , The averugo length of human life is "luted to be ihirty-lhroe years. , This average, however, includes an esti mate of all thoee who die in infancy. The statement of the average life or a healthy man may bo enlarged somo whal. Bnt it is perfectly safo to say that il I not over fifty years. Some live on to three score years, or even to three score and ten, bul more never reach tho liulf conlury. Of this fifty yeurs the first twenty are tuken in learning how to lire. Something the young can accomplish ; but youth is the lime for receiving, not imparting for preparing to achieve, not for achievement Thirty years may be fairly aco-pled as tho average limit of tho working life. Hut no man works the full twenty four hours Ren I, -recreation, food, sleep, Sabhalh, and the enforced idle ness which occasional illness compels, reduce the period two-third. Eight hours a day are as many as the bruin or muole can ordinary Bland. Some uiurv j but pew io vne oesi aa rantaga. Year in and year out oighl hours may be tuken to represent the working day. The working life, then, it not thirty years; it is bul ten. ; And of these ton yoars bow much is necesaarily absorbed by the drudgery af toil, by Ihe gathering of grain thut dies in tho harvesting, and i never rurmrcd into stoicliouack? How nucli in gelling clothing lo be put on and worn out, in getting food to be consumed in use, In building houses to rruutble and fall into decay, almost a roon as their owners? llow much, loo, ef ibis limo is lost in pluns that tonic lo naught, iu sowing thut never reiiv in fighting battles that are defeat T When wo have tuken from our )Ue what lime is necessary for preparation, what is required for rest and recreation, and what is absorbed in la pro and in transient success, tho fragment thut in loll is very small two, iliree, or five years at the most. TI4 Chrittinn Weekly. PROQEESS. I'rrcus implies imperfection, in- cotnp grudi ualiv in mi Itoness, immaturity, hut aleou I development of inherent or powors. That mun progresses ntullecluul point of view, a in id tha rtvolviiig ages, is a fuel too np paroil lo provo in a formal manner Man not a philosopher, a statesman or pitt At his birth. The infant ages lack tho knowledge and akill csen. human comfort. All llieir iu- tint tJ si run, if ins 01 iiusuunury wor uui i-muu ... l , - L ... 1.. oiitl.'iies of really practical machinery. Tho plow, tho hno and tho uxo have enmo In their present dee;reo of per- cction through the efforts of the in- ex-femlvo genius of man during many fbousands of yoari. It is in iracinu; M bislory of tho useful inventions ,nd ol tlie grnouui umu.opinen I'hysieitl sciences, thai tho wonderful lpclty of the hiimnn mind lor growth If "'' t t'" uJntago. Now, iny man of far less than ordinary !enial capacity, and with almost no 'Information touching tho world, can pi'oiluco admirable agiicultual Implo- "''ls t lie giant minus m i i ' woul" ""W'"J , ! Neither could the combined "'tl powers of Greece and Rom wrougnt oiiv a ru, Philosophy isof a very ancientbirth. Tho principles of political government wero in a high state of development niong many ol in ancient pc, o. j Tht old Monarchies, Empires and Re. mat an mo principle" v may be detected til me writing" the ancient sago and poet. Th history of Government is not o won. dorfully markod by sharp anlithlscs ns thai of th Dliisical rieiunuc. Tho )- f "Uerty i. lost In the shadow, of Hnet loo ren.ut. p be .peeiHed. I Bt transformation a w.tcr Into n 'i Trvi'ir T,'TrTv,"Tr :; J) Jl; D 7' : J); : 'I , 1872. NEW stoam, the' conception of Its wonder ful power, and its application to ma chinery, i bounded by counties age of absolute ignoranoe. And so of what may be termed a thousand other discoveries and Inventions, ' They show that the ancient mind was al most a blank in these respects. Even chimney, in a tolerable tense of tho word, aro a modern" triumph in Eng land. Rut wo have not space to pur sue ihe subject. , , ,i . -i; It would teem that tho faculties of Ihe human mind, In regard to the dis covery of the laws and powers of na lufo, have vigor, (aw transoending that in respect lo any other class of objects. Wbilo the tssential ideas of ethics, theology, and metaphysics have stood almost still for ages, (we speuk in the largest general sense), the physical sciences are still in their in fancythough the crowning glory of tha human nice and are now advanc ing so rapidly that the scientist is not fully cognizant of the daily discov eries being made.. Wo believe that a limitless career of scientific, knowledge await the human mind; and ' we think that to this we are to look mainly I'or beneficial chance in the social system of nations. Men will come to know that apecu lstive politic, like any other branch of speculative philosophy, can accomplish bulliltlo for mankind. They will learn thai atale.craf'1, kiug-crait, priest-craft, and witcb-crufl, are arts ol deception, not science ; the arts of one clnss to muko slaves of the others; and that ststeemuiiehip, in the true sunso, con sists in uiding tho people to extract from the resource of nature the wealth which is essential to ihe intellectual development and the moral refine ment of the race. , The human race lives in Kedar a land of shade and darkness.- It is only whep man' faculties are proper ly directed, and when his heart is in spired wiih a divine love of truth aiul genuino knowledge, that he can find his way through the durkuess into the world of light. Lord Buoon did more for the human family than all tho warriors who preceded him, or who have succeeded him Ho is like the sun, not only illuminating Ihe hours of tlta rial'-. buL throw 41 tho night also, and shedding tiKn the darkest hours star gleams from the silent heavens. As lillle a may be ., . t i. . ... -i i ...-i inougui oi ll, wo owe more to a t.ctier condition of the people in regard to tne ncceosuries auu coniiorts til ain-iai and dnmestiu lile, lo the superior order of modern society, than we do to all the political philosophers of all the sges of lime, ll was Bacon who turned mun away from the lifeless regions of speculative inquiry, and directed the humun mind lo nature In her beneficent luws with tho sole aim and purpose of ameliorating the condition ol humanity in the world. This ho culled "Iritit," and il consli- tucd the object of all bis labor. It is lamentable thai our statesmen confine themselves so exclusivity to their speculative profession, and Ihut they are nol butler acquainted with tho facts and uses of scienco, properly so called. Their minds are d H urled by a single rjt-parimenl of study ; and by tho nature of that. Hence, deception is substituted by them for logic and wisdom ; they come to use the people and ofllco for personal and corrupt ends; and thua degrade their j hiirh vocation, rhoro is a relorma- liuii needed in our politics nol the nieru change ot an administration, or of this or thai specific policy or nieas. ure, but a change in the l'u,""ry conception of the auu iraiinii in a freo Government of its end and aim in advancing tho puoplo lo a still bet. ter condition, allowing thorn a release from the old habits of fierce party spirit, and helping them lo co-oper ate with nature in lier eii 't ts to insse i us till wise and happy. Until this done wo shall griiitn un.ler muny evils, not the least of which consists iu be- ing tho mure slaves and piiuU of, bad mun. Ho who bhsll elevate tho ! enliro conception uf a people to n broader una nigner sinnuuru oi end of Government, win uiunn mu i .-. .-- world indoeu WdfAson . I nttindeaicr. How 'Twas Done The total voto of Philadelphia on ihe m Inst., (Iciallv announced ss iii,iiw Tho istry was 103.1100. The popula- , ol th. city teing 674,022 by the . r,g lion last census, tho registralinn was at I snd Amu,.i,. pe..p0 will the rate of one voto to every four in-1 pr,intly ri,,piid, remembering the habitants, at ratio never beard of be-1 uHivi,1.lll r,.,jo wli,.,, e,m0 t0 Chicago foro. Probably the Radical managers , f(ironor. of Wisconsin last thought to intolerably large u vol '' Aulumn ,,,, ti10 ...j,,,,, of the light the full registry of lllfi.UOO wubl le-1 n . feat it own purpnso, tho idea of ono-1 r. I, .,1 il.n dooi.Iu iu Philadelphin A lather living in Titusville, who being volui, being too astounding f,.r' tho country to bear. Consequently Ihe Dotngeraljg vote was simply di-! counted, and the discount auuci to the Ropublioan voto Bnnnot and round bul are so muth . 01.. ... - i .. ... .lot a i.eileioll hv which tUy nuiy' bo disllnguished grestly needed. II the tiring, are tied der the if under the chin-bonnet hi TEEMS $2 per annum in Advance. ; SERIES - VOL 13, NO. 45. The Eoods on the River Po--A Stormy October in Both Hemispheres. Wo find In the New York 'Herald, of the 1st instant, n somewhat lengthy statement of tho ravages mado in Europe by Ihe overflow of tho ' River Po, but can only give tho follow Ingi From Homo we have desputclios which inform ui that, from the over flow of tho river, tho floods on the banks of tho Po ( which course Italy above the boot top from Mont Ceni to tho Adriatic Sou) have out abated ; that four thousand workmen are en gaged night, and day on tho dykes, or levees, to confine the river if possible within its bank; that the damages caused to properly and crops in ilnn tua und Ferrara aro incalculable; that in Ferrara alone forty thousand per sons have been rendered homeless ; but that from all points relief is coming in to the suffering people.. Further, it appears thut may persons havo been drowned, and thul the Italian Minis ter of Public Works, who has gone to tho seeno of destruction, is en per in tending ihe work of relieving tho dis tressed people. Tho basin of the Po ia the garden of Italy, and, from ils fertilo soil of "river bottom lands," as we would call them, and from careful cultivation, is exceedingly productive. The periodical floods of the Po. which wr.uld otherwise regularly overflow its bottom lands in ihe lower rivcr,are now kept iu by its artificial embankments. except in cases like the present of unusually heavy freshet in tho nu merous n ihil turies which descend into the main stream from the Alp. Un usually heavy rain in tho Alps, with an increased disoltition of ihe ice and snows of thuir lofty plateaux, peuks and ridges, are therefore the immedi ate causes of ibis inundation of the Po; and if these October rains of Northern Italy hare extended southward over the Apennines tve shall next hear, no doubt, of another overflow from tho Tiber at Rome. Next, recent deputches from Lon don state that the weather in Eng land and along h-r coasts has' been tempestuous; und from several des patches of the same purport within the lasl threo or four weeks it appears that the month of October, 1872, has ..i.pitmtl. 4Vv-4l. tivotjr retlaaa and storms in the United Stales, in tho British Islands, and across the European Continent lo the Alps, and . . . . , I,,l,u cra, Autumnal rain in both hemispheres are due to the samo gen crul causes or forces operutiog upon tho great equatorial current or cur rents ol tho Atlantic, from tho Gulf of Mexico, the groat rain boiler of the United Stales, to the tropical stream which is diffused around tho British Islands. Astronomers tell us that the ull-siifllcieiil primary cause for this exceptionally rainy A mil mil north of tho Equator may bo found in the tre mendously iiioreased heat of the sun, from its recently Increased volumes of incandescent magnesium. For ihe preseut, however, the facts we have tneminned are particularly interesting i as evidences of Ihe same general causes governing the flui-tualinn of the so sons, from tho Rocky Mountains to the Alps. Here in tho United Slates, from the great Plains, if not from ihe Rocky Mountains to the Atlantic, and from the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of the j. , .uwrenco, we have just passed through some uf the heaviest and most extensive Aulumsl uor'eusiers known in lliiscotintry fur hiany years. Several snow storms, unusually heavy ifl.0ctoher,h:ivo marked the wenlher repert of tho month for the silver moiinlains ol Utah, and doubiless these snow have covered all ihe loftier peaks and ridges of tho Rocky Mountain chain from Colorado up into the lliilisli uossessions. This All (unlnl KCMir)i j word, bus been a r0ll,ilily stoimy one in both hem!, iherC))) w I .!, the latitude of the rjnl0(Sutl.,,,,n,i w,e i)M0 ahoiiiid. j ruinsi this senwin have saved us f((I rt.,.llPP,.m.o of those ewer-ping ,;,.; un,j frest fires which were so ji,nHirons in tho Northwest this Ian October one year ag, tho enormous Jwpring l.-o in tho Alps have flooded tho most fruitful o tne plains of duly. We presume, however, that these imimlui ions have not neeii so !diNM,l(WW us to require Iroui wilier nations a helping hand for the suffer- , , ,,,,. u) But if they want al"l. am a liom uhrotid. they have only to m two or three very eoui table g'nls, placed notice on hi front door ihe other night, which rea l, "Shut down for thirty duys. No slovo in thu pur lor, and but ono lamp A cood deed is never lost; he who sows eourtesy reap friendship, and l.'h. who plants kindness g.lh.n. . -- pleasure vesiuwue. - - , mind was never atonic bul generally Igralitudo beget, rewari I .... I !.-..,. 1 ! ' tmfgnitionrlts New Pntacs. There I no fubjoct in the wbolo range of what may bo termed "politi cal tcience," that ba tt more totrchlng and poetical interest tbtn emigration the voluntary transit which ha been going on for ooniurie from tho Old World to tho Now. If one thou sandth part of the actual Buffering end misery that have been endured no tbe Atlantiu, especially before the day of (team, could b plainly re vcnlcd, the ucgro horrors of tho mid dle passuge would not keep it exclu sive hold on sympathy. " Liko every. llnng elsa In this progroesivoly Chris tian world, much bus been done aud is Going to alleviate all this. But it is not, many month since tule of horror, jon board an American ship, too, broke upon tbe ears of the com munity, and no one tan watch the ar rival of a cargo of emigrant at any one of our chief seaports, and ihis too with all tho appliances which active benevolence supplies, without feeling there are sharp sorrow yet unsolaced. , There are two phase of this emi grant trade, which bave peculiar in terest.,. They both have relation, bow- ever, to the war which desolated, ni; aoemod. 1,0. desolate, Western Eu. " rope two year ago." Tht frontier Frenchman is coming to Amorl'ca bo. cause bo will not live under German rule, and the conquering Teuton comes because be is tired of the trade evon of successful war. He threatens to come in such numbers, that his "paternal government" i becoming alarmed lost in some new war titer crop of men may fail. These two classes come in different numbers und with different feelings, and, it may be added, with the chance of different welcome. It is cheering light to watch tho joyous communion on the arrival of Gorman steamer at Hobo. ken or Baltimore. He seems to find as many of his countrymen as be left at home. Not so the pi sir Frenchman, who comes now. ' Heretofore the exo dus from France lo this couulry haa been very limited and consisted of well-to-do class Io 1871, while there were 118,000 emigrants from the British isles and 65,000 from Germany, there were but 2,300 Frenchmen, and a large majority, nine-tenths of them, were men and women skilled in the. arts of luxury, and sure of success on tho very threshold. Wo aro now to hare a new class, of poorer men, whose impulse to come surely ought to touch some chords of American sympathy. They are not flying, us the first Germans did, from the Palatinate, or, as the Puritan pretend they did, from Holland, or the Flemings from the Low Countries. Thuir soil has nol been ravaged, Von Molike ia neither Tilly nor Tu. renna. Their religion is nol perseen ted. Tbe fire il kindled are all long ago gone nut. The spire uf Slrasburg is untouched ""except by accident. They have none of the ordinary griev ances which exiles fly from, and yet they cannot bear to live under ihe stranger who tore their home, as tiiey think, from the pnrenl stem, and they come to us for refuge and new abode. That they will be cared fur and be welcomed no one doubt. Coiucidontly with this oomes the news, much more material, the con. sequences of which can hardly now be measured, that the Imperial Govern, nient uf Germany is taking, or at least contemplates, the most stringent measures to shut its port, and forci bly, if need be, prevent emigration to the Unil'-il Slates. There seems no reason to dispute tho fuel, and a dis cussion is springing up as 10 now lur Prussia has a right, under existing ircHtiet, thus to interpose. No treaty question exuls in such a contingency, but doubt may bo raised whether, un der the general law ot nation, one community bus the right to arrest in. nocent emigration. A'e eient regno," once a high prerogative affair, has be. como very impotent and obsolete. John tyimcy Adam' doctrine, that CI Ina has no r7ght to isolate itself and excludu trade, had sound sense at the bottom of it. and we throw out th idea, without attempting to elu borate il, that no nation, internationally, ho tho right now claimed.. The incident is an impiessiv one, whether tho effort to bur in the Ger man be successful or not. With it, a. the colophon of Ihe bulky record of German emigration in ibis country, it would be of lull interest to read even the headings ol ihe chapters from th hcginiiing. They are v. rf tarious, and the nonlrasl belwen the aggre. gated Gcrinau of lii-dsy. pnapcr"U, cnicntcd, energetic iu his successful work, and socially and politically in. fliientiitl, and the German ol the h CMsionsI past, Is very striking. oT when voluntary emigration is fuming lo ns in a swelling tide, beating loo on its wao the brightest specimens of intellectual BctniTtplishment, and per. o'sting hcnt-ticlfiilly every avenue of society, wo are to have an impotent aitempt lo dam up the source of sup. ply in Europe, und wiih our Know. Nothing, aiiti-lorcigiu-r Adminislra. lion, no word uf warning that the deed of wrong shul) not be done. H'ciiiflyfn Patriot A strange death oecurrod nr St, Omer, HI. A young mun named Rob erts bey;sn bluuding itt the nose, thon at the lungs, and fin ally the blood oozed out ol tho pores ol the skin. In this condition be lingered three or four duys, when bodied. - In vain do they talk of happiness who never subdued un impulse in obe. Iiiiim. to a nr liminlo. Ho' who nover I sci iliced present to a luture good, h .,..,,,1 1,1 a irnnnral one. enn apmik uf happiness only as tho blind I do of Colors. a' 1. J