Clearfield Republican. (Clearfield, Pa.) 1851-1937, October 06, 1875, Image 2

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    She gtpublitan.
Oaoaoa B. Goodlandir, Editor.
CLKAKF1KLD, Pa.
WIDNKSDAT atORNINO, OCT. Mt.
' Reader, If yoe went la know wht la gelng oa
la the brain... world, Jail reed oar edrartillng
olamai, the Ael eolneia l partlcBlar.
DEMOCRATIC atTAiae TtCltelT.
FOR tiOVBRNORt
i CYRUS L. PERSHING,
. 01 sebaylatU Ceuely.
' FOR 8TATB TREASURBRi
" VICTOR E. PIOLLET,
( , . Of Bradford Couaty.
! DBMOCRATIC COUMTV TICKET.
, roe BBSaTOI.
Dr. T. JEKF. BOYEK, of Clearfield.
(Sabjerl to Hi desi.ioa of tee DUtrlet Ceafereaee.
roaraaaei-BSB.
J. BLAKE WALTERS, of Clearfield,
m ceasiafteaBae. -CI;ARK
BKOWN.of Lawrence.
THOMAS A. M GKK, of Boll.
' voa Aanrross. . u
O. J. KRAGY, of Beocaria.
BAM'li A. CALDWELL, of Bradlord.
roa eosoxsa.
J. B. KKPK, of K.w w..kifli -
Manhood I Kbehpom ! I Etc. We
have positive proof before us Ibat a
Radical -who is bossing ti secret oath
bound jxAittuil organization in one of ibe
election districts of this county, offered
for a consideration, to throw the vote
of his Lodge for one of onr candidates
at the primary election. The returns
show that the contract was carried
out. The district was carried threo to
ono ovor. all others. Now, we would
just like to know how much freedom,
manhood, etc., there is in a game when
ono man, and a Badiral at that, sells
100 voters on the same plan thnt a cat
tle dealer sells so many beeves to th e
butcher t Will some of the ttock sold,
rise and explain to freemen what the
elective franchise is worth under such
arrangements. Democrat, bewaro !
Demagogues are on the wing and are
employing all manner of schemes to
cany the cloetion.
The Ohio election lakes pluoe next
Tuesday, Oct. 12th. In 1873 Allen
had 813 majority; in 1874 the Demo
cratic candidate for Secretary of State
had 17,202 majority.
The Erio Dtsjmtch says : A masonic
impostor, gotten up extravagantly, and
styling himself Dr. J. M. Ogdcn, from
Texas, has recently been victimising
the fraternity in adjoining counties.
ClXBMNti. Wo notice that the
, Democrats of tho 19th Ward in Phila
delphia, have organized a Forshing
and Fiollet club, and call it the City
William A. Wallace Hub, in honor of
our distinguished townsman.
Democrats of Clearfield conntv I
Vat newoi hurt lwtter auuittry ticket
tnan you nave now. ee mat not a
single name is erased. Every man on
it will be elected by 1,500 majority, it
, our friends turn ont to the election on
Tuesday, the 2d day of November.
Tub Old Ohis Hhelved. The Bible
Evangelists have been superceded.
Moodey and Saukey are now christened
such. ' We presume the improvement
will be some new Gospel according to
tho Evangelists Moody and Sankoy
publishers. . "The Amoncan Evange-
lists' is the last orthodox arrangement,
ai i j-i. .j . a i
To Yoiib Posts. A Washington tel
egram says: It is understood by all of
the Ohio clerks in the departments that
It will require a very good excuse if
any of them should not go home to
vote at the ensuing election in that
State, as now more than ever the ad
' ministration expects every man to do
his duty.
Lot A I, TarKDr.n. Kx-(iov. Curlln,
Hon. Samuel Calvin, formerly a Radi
cal Congressman from Blair county,
and Hon. Morrow B. Lowry, recently
a Radical State Senator from Erio
county, arc stumping Ohio for the
Democratic ticket. How is that for
high X The prevailing corruption with
in the Republican party is driving all
goou men oiu oi ll.
Thanks. John C. Barr, Reading
Secretary oftho Democratic State Com
mittoe, has our thanks for a pamphlet
eopyof the proceedings of the Erie
Convention. The work has been mag.
niDcontly executed by tho MvGluugh.
Jin Bros. 114 south 3d street Philadol
peila. It is an excellent compilation,
showing who each delegate Voted for,
for Governor on each ballot taken. '
A Fa milt He rus. The Vnit
League Club of Philadelphia, at a re
cent meeting, denounced the Ropubli.
can city ticket as cormpt and do
mandod its withdrawal or defeat The
Pilgrims rule the Republican party ia
Philadelphia and the Camoron-Filgrim-
T Ti : 1.. .1 C . . t .
a nwuij, '""H w,f ouiia, jxuncsv
tnen will not be found in either crowd
and as a consequence nro leaving the
Republican party by thousands.
L . . .
Wo are sorry to lose from tlie Edi
torial profession U r. Henry L. Dicflun
bach, of the Bloomsbnrg Columbian, he
having sold that journal to Messrs.
Brockway & El well. The Columbian,
under the management of Mr. DierTcn
bach, wa one of the ablest Demo
cratic papers in Pennsylvania. To the
new firm we wish an abundant harvoet
ol nowspaper honors. Mr. Brockway,
was formerly conuoctod with the pa
per as its editor and proprietor.
O via board. Brother McPik, of
the Cambria fYrtnum, was a candidate
lor County TniMurer al ths late pri
mary election in Cambria county. In
stliading to the affair he says :
"While we have an abiding faith In
the tiiroerity of those of onr editorial
aVolhrea who have offered ns condo
lence In oar failure to secure the nomi
aation for Cauntf Treasurer, we beg
leave to assure than that if fAqr were
twice as sorry as they are they couldn't
be half as sorry aa tor are about the
outcome of the venture."
Welt, editors have DO basins te
rone down to running for office. Tiir
aims should be higher I l
KICKED OUT. I
Public opinion boa compelled Colum
bus Delano, a member of Grant's Cabi
net, to resign, aud retire to private
life. Ilia corrupt practice in robbing
both the Government aud the Indians
had become to notorious thai even the
schoolboys were aware of it. Andyet,
Grant loathes to give him up, as will be
observed by the following letter of con
dolence Issued from the Long Branch
eat of Government. The l'rosldaot
says :' --
Long Branch, Sept. 23, 1875.
Di'ir Sir : Your loiter of the 15th
of July, tendering your resignation of
mo omoe ot Nocrotary ot the Interior
was duly received and bas been held
by me until this timo without action
because of the continued persecution
which 1 believod and believe was be
ing unjustly heaped on you through
tho publiu press. I only now tako
action, because the time is rapidly ap
proaching when the Secretary of the
Interior will have to commonce his
labors preparatory to rondoring his
annual report to accompany the Ex
ecutive message to Congress. I there
fore accept your resignation, to take
effect on tho first day of October, leav
ing a little more than two months from
the iuduction of your successor until
the assembling of Congress. In ac
cepting your resignation, I am not un
mindful of tho fact that about tho time
of the meeting of Congress, ono yoar
ago, you stated to me that you felt the
necessity of rotiring from the Cabinet,
and asked me whether I would prefer
your resignation so as to havo your
successor confirmed by the Senate dur
ing the last session, or whether 1 would
prefer it ti.a,ll... Afy enowe we
that I would prefer not having it at all.
That wrb my fueling at the timo, and I
now believe thnt you havo filled every
public trust eon (1 ilex I to you with ability
and integrity. I sincorely trust that the
future will place yon right in tho esti
mation of tho public, and that you will
continue to enjoy its confidence as you
have dono through so many years of
public and ontciul mo. w itli continued
respect and friendship, I subscribe my
self very truly, your obedient servant,
U. S. Ghant.
Hon. C. Delano, Sec. of tho Interior.
If what the President says is true,
then Prof. Marsh and Mr. William
Welsh, and a host ot other Radicals,
must bo notorious falsifiers. But as
they are all number ono Radicals, we
will not debate tho question any longer.
Th E Senatorial Conference. The
delogutea composing tho XXXI V Sena
torial district met at tho Shaw House,
in this place, on Thursday morning,
the 30th ult. The conference is made
up as follows :
Cratro woalj J. F. Urpliirt, ).l. Froaafool,
eert W.MoMaOoy.
Clearttld ooaoljr II. W. 8mUh, 1. 1. Thomp
son. Wm. 8. Bradley.
Cltatoa eouBty Ooo. A. Aufkaabauxa, Fattl
8. MorralL W. II. Cloafb.
The conference organized by elect
ing Mr. (iephart, of Centro county,
President, and Mr. Smith, of Clearfield,
Secretary. The candidates arc P.
Gray Mock, of Bellofonte, Dr. T. Jeff.
Boyer, of Clearfield, and S. R. Pcale,
of Lock Haven. . The conference re
mained in session until Saturday after
noon, and after having balloted ono
hundred and twenty-ono timet for
Senator, an adjournment was carried,
to meet at Tyrone, on Thursday even
ing next , Tho balloting during the
session stood mostly three votes for
each candidate. Occasionally there
would be four ballots cast alternately
for the candidates.
How l)crivr If Ihn OnmWMltA
party woro in power at this timo and
the work-shops closed, manufactories
stopped, all the industries languishing,
and thousands of persons being sold
out by tho sheriffs, the prostration and
distress would bo charged directly to
the Democratic parly. And on Wed
nesday evening Inst, the Chairman of I
the Radical county Committee in his
speech in tbo Court House, had the
christian fortitude to prove that such
was tho fact, to the entire satisfaction
of hit own mind. , How many of his
hearers believed him will bo pretty
correctly acertained aflor the Novem
ber election. We supposo his next
effort will bo to prove that blaok ia
white, which he can establish just as
successfully before an audience of his
kind. -
. L U :
Hon. Wm. A. Wallace's Speech.
This speech will be found on our first
page this weok. No other document
bas received such a wide spread circu
lation for a long time. Even out in
Ohio it is being used for campaign
purposes. The faot therein has startled
tbo whole Cameron ring which has
put McPhurson on the slump and
dragged ex-Treasurer Kcmble out of
his lair where be has been burrowed
for over seven years. But tho fucts
cannot be overcome by them or any
other enemy. Reader, give this speech
an attentive perusal and call the atten
tion of your Radical neighbor to the
startling facte therein set forth.
Pretty Good. Senator Morton of
Indiana in a speech at Pittsburgh last
wock said: "Why the Republican
party was born in Pittsburgh, Allegheny
county, and of course tho party will
not be ignored in the land of its birth :"
Had the Senator looked at the election
returns of last year, he would have
noticed that the Democrats carried
that county by over 2,000 majority al
though it had declared fur Grant by
over 10,000 in 1872 and it it pretty
generally believed that the tame thing
will occur thit yoar notwithstanding
the "bloody shirt" speech of Grant's
mouth organ.
"Goon Time." Messrs. Loo A Shop.
aril, a leading lloslon Book Publish'
ing firm bat the audacity to fail these
good Grant times. Their assets are
tot down at 9152,200.12, while tho lia-
bilitlot amount to 1578,230.14. The
Committee report the causes of the dis
aster as consisting In an exoess of busi-J
ncss expenses, deterioration of stereo
type plates and the loan of credit.
Several of the creditors witbod security
for the notes and were willing to take
fifteen cents cash. How consolinr
fifteen cents on the dollur sounds to
the creditors.
Ex-Prosidcnt Johnson during his life
received a twig takea from the willow
which band over tbo grave of Nspcicoa
Bonaparte oa Ht. Helena, which be
planted In the gardon of bit Islo resi
dence, and which hat now grown to a
stately tree. A twig from thit tree
will be planted over the grave of Mr.
Johnson, on Johnson's Hill.
W. P. Jinley, of Clarion, wot nomU
nated by the Republican Senatorial
aonference, held at Irvington, on the
tli Inst, tor the Senatorial district
eompoeod Um eoontjee of Clarion,
Cameron, Forest and EHc,
TUB IiKMOCHA TICS TA TB COM
MITTJiB. The first meeting of the Democratic
State Committee wu ,uldtut ,1014
Wulunut slreoi, Pbilailelphia, on Sat
urday a weck.1 George uhn, of Alio-'
gheny ; Austin C. Maury, of Philadel
phia, ana1 J. C. lllbba, of liucks, wore
chosen Secretaries. The letters of ac
ceptance of Judge Pershing and Col.
Piollut were road, when Chairman
Wright read an address to the people
oftho State, which was ordored to be
published In pamphlet form in connec
tion with the platform and letters of
aoccptauoo. A committee on tlnanoo
was appointed, consisting of Daniel M.
Pox, John O. James, Wm.'T. MoOrath,
John Ilohblna, Geo. B, Rime, Wia. L.
Scott, Martin Powell, Owen Jones,
Robort L. Cochran and John Mackin.
The following genllemon were ap
pointed an executive oommittue : H.T.
Sellers, A. A. Laws, John M. Campbell,
Thomas A. McDovitt, A. B. 1ongaker,
Jacob S. Dillinger and W. XT. Iionsol.
. As an evidence of earnestness, wo
mention tho fact that forty ot the fitly
members of the committee were pres
ent at thit session, and that the utmost
harmony prevailed throughout. We
are satisfied the gentlemen composing
the committee mean business.
Wo will lay the address and letters
of aeccplanco lcfore onr readers next
week. ' '
Poor Ames ! Gov. Amos ot Missis-
aljt liiMkaa a) fiauUc ajval lu tun
Prosidont for troops. He alleges that
negroes need protection, 'although the
peace reigns throughout the State. The
whole trouble is explained in the fuel
that Ames wants to be eloo d to the
United Status Senate, and tho State it
almost sure to elect a Democratic leg
islature, which would toave him at
home. In his lost appeal ho invokes
tho President to send the troops and
lot the "(xiiuni" rest on him. Tho peo
ple are willing that Amea shall havo
the odium but not the troops.
Ames, tho carpet-bag governor of
Mississippi, as an outrage manufacturer
is not a brilliant Success. The people
persistently refuse to get up an insur
rection to oblige him, and the Attorney
General .will uot let him have any
troop to dragoon them into il.
VOL. M CLURK ON TUB MM E
CONVENTION. i.
No journal has so ably discussed tho
result at Erie, as the Philadelphia
Times. In one of Col. McClure a able
articles, found below, he expresses our
iueas lar better tnau we can and wo
f;iro our readers the benefit of the fol
owing extracts, lor which wo ask an
attentive perusal :
"Tho world moves, and things, must
be taken as they are. It is idle to
curse inflation and at tho samo timo
delend tho unnatural causes which
have giveu it birth. A drowning man
will lake a logical way ot oscaiie il it
is presented to him. He will take a
life-preserver, a canoe, a raft, a pole, a
rope, Out il notuiug olse oncers he will
seize a splintered most or a stray ice
berg anything that promises hie and
land. He will not stop to discuss tho
science ot navigation, or the theory of
tho gulf stroaius, or the circles of ocean
cyclones, however important such
things are to Die world. He will con
sider tbo ono question of usuaue trom
his misfortune, and will accept what
ever oilers immediate deliverance. . It
is iust so with the industrial class of
A eilllSylVttHliata.jttjr . Tltnluvunnilk
or labor nor bread. The hum of their
mills and the rudo music of their forger
and factories have died out ; the farmer,
the manufacturer, the operator, the
merchant have uo lalior to offer them,
and they go homo trom day to day to
renew tho hopeless buttle with want
They remember that a few years ago
there was inflation, good wages, pros
purity and ploiity, and they do not
stop to read "Carey'e Political Econo
my," or President Grant's veto nics
sagoSjOr Senator Jones eloquent tributes
to bullion currency. They want money
because they believe that it will start
the milltand factories and mines, quick
en all the arte riot of commorce and
trade, and give them labor aud food
and ruin menu Commerce in its cen
tres will plunge its conservatism to the
front and the nightmare of the Com
mune will mako sad unrest in the
counting-houses. Bankers and money
changers will recoil from this bold as
sault upon their trade and rally to ro
tcnt it j but all such will be appalled
as thoy note the littlest ear of industry
whon the appeal it made to it In
1872, when capital was aroused by the
threatened election of Greeley, indus
try cordially responded to its call
Both were prosHiroua then, and change
was just what neither wanted. Now
both are prostrated, but capital can
live and wait labor starves and can
not wait. Taxes are oppressive, offi
cials have high salaries and plunder
with impuuity, and debauched leaden
dclyovery oentoi nonestpublicopiuion.
The campaign starts a fire like in a
dry siubblo-tieid. It may be quenched
ana me nuo lurnea dock into tne loeb-
Icst ebb, but it is improbable. At first
blush it looks like destruction, for it
win swoon mo Held as it now promises.
and the only question it whether tho
barm and fences can bo tared. Un
less stayed by some now unexpected
hand it will defy all ordinary political
eflbrtt to arrest it in itt course, and
mtny who tremble at it as it flames
kiss each othorover the rotton political
stubble, will rejoice that, wayward as
it may be, it will leave none of the
serpents and vermin alive. It will bo
a deliverance from a nest of political
mousing owls whose destruction will
justify even tho sweep of the flames or
the hurricane, lunation it tbt patent
panacea of the chronio sufferers of all
parties. It haa the aumwirt nf Knth
Democratic and liepublicin organs in
oue-third of the State, and Republican
conventions in counties like Allegheny
li uuuumcu ii, vuju,, it la not
limply a siocifie it is an universal
remedy for all our political ills, and
they are innumerable, . The whole
catalogue of diaoaset known in materia
medics has its counterpart in the list
oi political epidemics, nebavoepi
cootyand bay lever and bronchitis and
mumps and measles and small pox and
levers and jaundice and oholera, and
inflation curat thorn all. It balliwnt
the starving and idle into a clear and
pure atmosphere, and nro noses to ear.
ry them ovor the yawning gulf of want
snu nantnipicy, and land them lately
on the other shore. It ia a tide that
bos swollen in a moon, and may break
and scatter in a day, and if broken the
fragments will be ot little valuo until
recast in another campaign. Pershing
conserves it decidedly by bit honest,
manly attributes, and will savo thou
sands of votot from those who reject
lbs fliUorm while Piolctt will lash the
waves and ewe)) their furv. He will
go before the people with hit own haw
seed in hit hair and the fragrance of
Nis own oarn yara ou qu btml. and
with tbe brofiied face and bard fist of
the plowman and reaper will speak i
eloquently of the wrongs of labor oftori
an. urant ana party have given us
universal demoralisation in biiineet,
in ftnanoa, in official nlooee and In poli
ties, and alter towing to long to the
wmnwinq m aoeui lo otTOnned In Its
anirrr revolution, and then, ia the full.
nest of time will eorae prosperity and
peace."
LETTER MOM GOV. BtaLER
OS TUB 1S.SU US OF THE MY.
The oorroaiiondcnoe below between
loodiuir buainuos men of onr town and
Ex (Jiiv. BigloTj boarfug ojN' the issues
now before Abe peopleisopponitiio and
pointed enough to be understood by
overy thinking man, The Kx-Gover-
nors letter should be rend by all.
CtaaariaLS, Fi.taept. Sets, 1ST!.
Hon. William UiskRa t
lumr tor Ai jfoa dll aol airlva aora la U
la ipaak at tao putilit laoatlog aM la tbo airly
part of tho wool, sad aa wa loara that yiar Caa
laaolal auliaa will aiort llkal.r profaal our re
tare aatll efler tea oloeltoe, wo huuld bo glaj to
bavo yoar rlaw, la tba form al a lallar lor pub
he naa, aa tba pulltloal aondiltoa of Ibe eouair
aad ia referenoe to Mrlaia a.aMttsu ol ourraaty
laat aare reoeouy antes, tear intaet.
Jaaaa T. LatiRaao,
Ja. II. Oaaaaa,
JrnKr-M Shaw,
JmTia J. Fie,
II. W. Harra,
W. W. Bam,
A. 0. Tars.
r. o. HiLi-ae,
' Jtaaa 1,. Laivr,"
R. II. Haaw,
R. V. WiLees,
A. H. Suiw, .
U, W. Moeaa, .
' Clearfield Pa. Oct. 1, 1875.
' Gentlemen : I am in receipt of
your letter of the 30th ultimo, asking
my views on tbe present political con
dition of the country, and on questions
of recont origin relating to tbocurreiicy,
Ac, and I havo to say, in reply, that 1
fool myself highly complimented by
your request, and shall comply with it,
to tome extent, though 1 tear that
views to nastily thrown toirolbor may
not prove specially interesting. You
are quito right in concluding that my
Contcnnial duties will keep me out of
tbe pemlinir political campaiirn. 1 his
letter will probably make up all the
part I shall have therein.
This content on the part of tho Demo
crats is to be conducted In tbo interests
of reform, and I shall call your atten
tiuu in the correction ot such ovllt as
strikoiuessmostdangerous. Amonget
these are inndelity and corruption, in
the execution of public trusts, thu evi
dences of which have been developed
within a decade of years to an .xtent
truly alarming. In the management of j
municipal corporations, thu govern
ment of Status, the performance of
trusts merely ministerial havo these
evidences of political demoralisation
appeared, but no where to a more
Hulling degree than in the Congress
of tbe United States, where tho public
servants aro clothed with large discre
tionary powers. The remedy for these
evils rests with tho people, and the
people alone, and to their intelligence
aud patriotism we must look for meas
ures to preserve our elective aud repre
sentative system of government. Self
government is the American boast, and
it is truo that even tho humblest eleo
tor has the opportunity to impress his
will, in some measure upon the policy
of tho country If his representatives
act in good faith with him ; but where
the candidate promises ono thing and
thou, whoa he becomes a representa
tive, does another, tbe olector is cheated
out of his right of self government ;
and when the representative, having
thus violated his word and betrayed
his constituents, by the use of extraor
dinary and corruptidg influences, suc
ceeds in sustaining himself in bis de
ception, then, and to that extent, our
beautiful system of Belf governmcnt be
comes delusive and fraudulent. It is
rather natural to boast ot the preroga
tive of an elector; but we must not
forget that Its enjoyment is accom
panied with grave responsibilities. I
desire to impress upon you, and upon
all good citizens, that it is not only
your right to exercise this prerogative,
but that it is your duty to do to intel
ligently and independently, and, so far
as in you lies, in such mnnnor at to pro
mote the public good. I am, perhaps,
as generous in my nature as most men,
but in the present condition of public
morals I would excuse no man, of any
party, fur infidelity in the use of a pub
lic trust. He who gains popular lavor
by promising, deligenco, fidelity, Iru
gslity and purity in tho management
nt'grt!Arrtnwintnlarruin;, and tlt.vn.AAur
io, wnen cioincu with official au
thority, practices prodigality, corrup
tion and usurpation, should be hold to
have committed tbe unpardonable po
litical tin and should thereafter be
denied not only public confidence and
favor but good social position. 1 tell
you, my fellow citizens, that in this
matter of good faith and purity in tho
performance of public duties, you can-
nut i to tin ngiu. ine stunuareu Ol
morality tnd integrity cannot be placed
too high. Just in the measure you
indulge official short cominira, do vou
part with the very essence of our re
publican system. And nothing that
we have witnessed for a decade or two
has bad a more demoralizing influence
upon public affairs than the gracious
countenance and social, and olticiul re
cognition extended to men who have
tarnished themselves from head to foot
by the cormpt use of official place.
Men who merely croak about those
things, but never lift a band to correct
the evil, full far short of their duty.
Those who desire to enjoy tho bloasings
oi our repuhiican eoveminei.t must
recognise and perform tbo duties it
imposes npon themj unpleasant though
they may sometime prove to be. They
must attend the polls and the primary
meetings of tbo people and see that
faithful and competent men tro selected
for puhlio trusts. '
1 be Union Lotgneol Philadelphia, at
a recent meeting did itself groat honor
by rejecting from Its party ticket the
names or those believed to be corrupt,
and I am sure we art all proud of our
excellent candidate for Governor, Judge
Pershing, for having put a heavy hand
on men of his own party who had been
convicted of corruption In the exercise
of a pnblio trust, lie has thus indi
cated clearly enough, tbe part lie will
take in all needed reforms.
1 In all thit I do not of. uourso. mean
that publie men are to bo condemned
before thry are found guilty, nor to
give countenance to tbe slanders that
are too often started against our bent
public men.
it irvw louricen years since we'
Kenu oilcan party possrwsed itself of
complete control of tho Fedoral (lov
ernment, in all Ita departments, and at
tained to power in most of tho States.
In calling it lo account for its steward
ship, it would not be fair to overlook
tbe trying teonee that marked thnt
period. ' To look upon the result of lis
administration, as flowing Imm a period
oi K'tcs, wouia De to rentier lis con
demnation overwhelming, without even
the show of defence. For one I tm
willing to concede that large and loose
expsnditurot, abnse of power, and Bor
ons precedents were the almost inovita
bloresultsof acivil war. I have always
held that they displayed more wisdom
and skill In the management ot the
war than they did In the civil policy
that accompanied the war; and that
their management of the country was
better during than since the war.
The great error during the war, in tho
civil department was the law ol Con-
toss arbitrarily setting apa legal ten
or in the place of that provided fhrin
the constitutien. 1 The immediaiaelTcct
of this moasare was to enhance the
nominal value of every article enter
ing Into the prosecution of the war.
thereby adding at least thirty three
per cent, to the total cost of tbo strug
gle; besides, It Imposed the most intol
erable wrones noon nrivate citisane
ana acrsngea ine enure commerce and
. v .. ' .. :
trade of tbe country, and indirectly in
spired a spirit of speculation and prodi
gality in all the department ef civil
lite, from which toe country it nmv
suffering and will continue to suffer
for a eVcatia or mere to come. The
answer to all tbn fa that It wot a war
measure and that the war could not
bive been proteontod without it. Mr.
Norton and others who claim fur the
Kepnblietn party tbe entire honor of
Having tavetl the Union, make no oon-
testfoa from thit high claim becaast of
in meant employed. 1 wa In Wash
ington during tba pendency nf tha
measure, and 1 have alwnyi believed
that money could have burn raised by
telling tlie iMinds ol Ilio iluvornmeiil
at a iimsonablo discount, but on this
point I here was groat diversity 4af opin
ion. The lata Judgo Collamer, then a
Ilepublican Senator from Vermont,
made a must convincing speech against
the legal tender aubonia and favoring
the sulu of bonds. My recollection is
thut Mr. Fessenden,.th'uii Cbuirmiiii of
the Committee of Finance, in the Senate,
agreed, in the mum, with the picture
of consequences of the legal tender act,
drown by J udgo Collamer, but doubted
the ability oi tho Government to raise
the moans, to go on with tho war, from
bonds. Mr, Slovens, as Chairman of
the commute of ways and tuuuus, whs
for tbo legal tender, rrirurdloss of the
Constitution, or the future oonsequuuou;
ami all agreed. a 1 am sure 1 did, that
if tho luo'i r ,IJ not be raised In
unvot i-i' way. then the livul tender
law must bo resorted to, and it was
adopted.
It Is nmieuessary tn picture the con
sequences that followed this htloinpt
to set up au arbitrary stundurd of value
against that recognized by the world.
'1 hose are fresh vefore all. Then, as
now. the Icinil Un der was measured by
Hie gold standard. Greenbacks depre
ciated to such a ilegree that at times
they were not worth 40 cents on
thu dollar, and they woro seldom worth
75 por cent of thiir faco value during
mo war, whilst lie nominal values oi
all kinds of articles were enhanced tn
equul ratio, Inspiring a most reckless
spirit of sjioculntioii, deranging and de
moralizing tbe ettire business of the
country. Seldom, if ever, was a meas
ure fraught with to much harm to
those whom It wa Intended to benefit.
Hut 1 have said tho civil policy since
tho wa,r was weak tnd unwise. It was
so in the measun thst those in au
thority seemed U' fail to comprehend
the sil nation, or else were wanting in
moral coinage to struggle with the
iriininlio evils that ' had resulted from
their own policy. The continuing of
cnoi'iuoui taxations, al the close ol an
exhauslinir war, was a policy eminently
unwise. It was so, because the (Mxiple
needed reliel Irani harassing demands.
Still more so, because no one could fail
to see lliul I he war had mailo It noces
sary to indulge in enormous exiendi-
turcs aud In dangerous practices, in
auiruratinit a habit of loose and demor
alizing legislation, not suited to a con
dition of pcaco and to the exhausted
state of the country. A iiolicy tho
very reverse should have been adopted
Taxation should have been remitted
down to tho lowest dollur consistent
with tho faithful payment of the inter
est on tho public debt and thu una
voidable expenditure of thu Govern.
nicnt. The Treasury ought to have
been impoverished as a mutter ot jus
tice to the people and safety td the in
tegrity ami purity of legislation. It
was too obvious thut in the demoralized
condition of legislation, any balance
that might find its way into tbo Treas
ury would be applied towards corrupt
ing and visionary schemes. They did
not only not adopt this wise and pru
dent policy ; but they embraced and
extended instead, the most monstrous
schemes of prodigality and corruption
ovor witnossed in any country, tending
to bvget tho wildest ideas of nominal
values, and of expansion and and speou
lation in all departments of Industry,
inducing the investment of borrowed
capital in all kinds of schemes, result
ing in a production far beyond the de
mands ol tbe country. t this policy
may bo justly attributed tho present
prostrate condition oi our material in
dustries. A nd latterly those evils were
aggravated by tho attempt on the part
oi the Administration to exorcise tin
warrnmoa aiunoniy over sovereign
States, involving dangerous encroach -
mentsontherightofsolf-govcrnmcnt.all
caicuiateu 10 ooget aoums as to the.
fulnm nf tlm luinnlrv ind tn nti,.M I
............ . ,
S!.lh..l!l'0.,tf,'l'.i .T
b Slntes, ami that enlarircment
oftho limits of trade so essential to the
material welfare of tho country. In
addition to these errors cailfe tho tin
noccssury enlargement of tho public
service aud an increase of compensa
tion to those engagod therein, totally
unwarranted by the condition of tho
country. Had tho reverse policy pre
vailed, ninny,' very many millions
would haro been saved to tho people,
and the good name of the country
would have been spared the reproaches)
inai nave come npon it by the dcrolop-
mentof many schemes It prodigality
and corruption which brought thellusn
of shame to every honest man's face.
P.,r, m .ll !... i.... :n
.. . " " - ..l"""" .
the main mission Ot the democratic
party when it comes into power. It
will stand pledged to inaugurate a sys
tem of rigid accountability on the part
of all men In public trust. Dispensing
with every employe not absolutely
necessary, il will reduce the current
expenitnrcs of tho Government to the
lowest practical point Whilst cxocirV
ing tho laws ef the United States in
letter and spirit, it will accord to the
States tho fullest right of self govorn
mont, and it will curry out tho letter
ami spirit oftho amended Constitution
without tenror favor. It will hold the
military In strict subordination to the
civil authority, ami never nse the
nowt-r of the fonnor. exwnt in .
UlU
of'alisoliito necessity. IndwJ it should,
as promptly as possible, Dnngthellor
eminent bnolt to iu oriiflnnl simplicity
nnu puritj-. n mist aoinj
thintrs, it will ondnavor to
an era of trooil will, and estnli
fidence and fraternal afToetion between
tbe neoiilo of til divisions of nnr mnn.
try the Kust ahd West, North and
South thereby cnlaririnir the inter
course between the people and reviving
tli oho business relations to essential to
tho welfare nf all sections. This cannot
bo brought nhout by the nngencrons
and oppressive policy of tbo present
administration,
i mean an I nave said
to apply to Htate as wr
as national j
ntruirs.
As to the absorbing question oftho
currency, I do not see how my views
can bo ol any practical service at this
time. I hold, and have always held,
gold and silver to bo the best slnntlard
ot vnlnos, not only because of their In
trinsic value, hut because the offices
it becuaso the office
rLTa
I regard a paper cir- l
they perform as
tcrnntinnal. und
dilution mlccmnble therein as tho beat
currency for onr conntry. As I have
already stated, I regarded the depart
ure from that standard at the time
it occurred ns a grave error in the
policy of the Government, and I deem
the return thereto, so soon as that can
bo accomplished without distressing
cmparmHsment to our pronuetivo in
dustries, as the host alternative before
us. I have, boaidcs, a real desire to
see tho precious mctali pcrfnrming the
offlecs of money once more; to nave
them In the reserve depositories
throughout the ronntry the tills and
stock ing lega. Hut this can never bo
so long as the legal tender set tip by
Congress exists. It is too obvious to
admit nf dispute, that two kinds of
money tlirTenng in valuo cannot circu
late at tha tame time. The most
precious will retire and the least valua
ble will be constantly on the tnrface.
Thut the legnl tender, forced upon all
in the payment of debts, hail tho effect
to retire the precious mottle. They
booatno a commodity to be purchased
at prices at various as the fluctuations
of tho standard set up by the (iovern
menL Uold and silver aro standard
Value common to tbe world, and
in the commerce between nations
all other standards will be meaanrod
thereby. Tbe difference that exittt
among men of tbe Democratic faith aa
I andorttaud It, is not so much about
the superiority of fold and silver at a
standard pf value) gn(j Lngaj tender.
at it it aboat bow to get bock to the
gold basis, and what tee is to ba aide j
meanwhile of the legal lender let qp
by Congi'uss as a war measure, and In
what way tho present hanking system
can bo improved so as to cost the poo-
pie less, aim ui niriiixii capital at lower ,
rates of iiiiurut. Pi shall not attempt '
to discuss tUco piostiiitis at kemrtb.
There will Ih lisae eiioui to do tide
bclbro the subjot' can bo- referred to!
thu only tribuiiulouipvton( to dispute!
of it. It would tut Is singular if the
m,liiniiiMitr jliaomuili.ii ..I' tl.i ..kl.u.l
throughout the country which suenisj
to fill some with so much alarm should
Iinire a blessing in disguise, for the
leinocrals may in this way develop tbe
beat remedy for present evils bolero
the responsibility of action comes upon
thorn. , ,
' 1 Uiink,tia'prcMii banking system
suscoptihlu of great improvements and
at lur.dievutuiug tbt iauk circulation
with legal tender notes or tome other
unlet so as to savo the interest on the
bonds bold fur the protection of the
bank circulation, it would surely be a
very desirable thing to save this enor
mous annual expenditure, if it can be
done In a war consistent with the
fiilth of tho Government which must
bo bold inviolate under all oiroum-1
stances. ": -
' 1 doubt the' wisdom of attempt
ing to force resumption by contraction j
of the volume of currency. I fear the
policy would be too severe npon tho
industries of the country and npon tbe
debtor class, nor do I believe that re
sumption can be brought about In thit
wty by the year 1879, and all will
agree that if it cannot be successfully
brought about, it ought not to be at
tempted. The attempt will keep the
country In a feverish condition up to
the time mentioned, and then resump
tion per force of law, on a given day,
may pmt a haaanlous experiment.
The history of Pennsylvania furnishes
a lesson on this subject of resumption
not unworthy of notice. In 1842, when
I was your representative in the
State Senate, the impulsive inclina
tion was to require resumption at an
early day, but alter full reflection it was
deemed best to name a very remote
day, and measures were adopted to in
duce the banks and other institutions
to begin the practice of eiiecia pay
ment long in advunce of the time fur
resumption named in tho law. This
succeeded, and resumption day at
tracted the attention of no one, where
as it was obvious that bad tbo practice
ot siiccie payment commenced on tbe
day named in that law, it would have
been followed by prompt and disastrous
suK'iision. I am strongly inclined to
the opinion that when the country
gets into condition to tako up tbe
quostion of specie payments serion.ly,
a similar policy would bo judicious. It
will requiro something of this chtrao
tor, if not a fiscal agency, with plenty
of coin to give us permanent resump
tion. And those who think the vol
ume of money too small, must not for
get that the addition of the coin of the
country will add a handsome turn to
that volume.
It seems to IrO conceded, goneruliy
that expansion would be injudicious.
I almost regret that the Industries of
the country cannot ho revived by a
remedy that could bo so promptly fur
nished ; but you know it is not capital
that is needed to move the productive
energies of our great industries. It it
tho want of a market for what they do
produce that is the most serious obsta
cle in the way of a perfect revival. At
to iron, ooal, lumber, oil and manufac
tures generally, there is a great turphti
on hand now, with ability, on tbe pres
ent capital and preparation, to double
the production.
But I forbear. The limits of a let-,
tor will not suffice tor the discussion ot
anr one branch of this subject, and
you must accept the faith that is in me
1 rather than look for the reason there
' for.
Wbot Wo nood u tbstt. expansion of
. . ... 1 ...
niimness ana enterprise in at win n
f'-o"' K"t govornmenti from that
economy in irovemmental affairs. Ntato
and National, that will relieve ns from
unnecessary taxation, and that confi
dence and good will between the great
divisions of our country, that will en
large our home intercourse and increase
home production and home consump
tion, and that sound currency which
will place our commerce on an equal
footing with tbo other nations of tbe
world. '
Much bat been said in thit Slate
aueut mc Keeping oi lue puonc money,
..I , r.L I,,
""n10 77 f
I " ubjoct As to an alleged defal-
rorsin aoepin. lueoccounia.ii ia uue lo ,
: tlta twin., .f tlta KlalM lliul il.mi
I " , , , i" 77, , T Ti
tioa should be eettlod by the most
thorough and conclusive investigation.
No honest man will object to this. If
there be no such deficiency, it is due to
Ibose implicated that they be vindica
ted. , If there bo lucb defalcation, thon
those who have committed the crime
ihouM be uunislltxl tO the full extent
of tho law. The currout diitica of the ",0' '"" dwaiiia boM,
Treasurer .re toopl.in tonel extend-7SSStlMj'jffZ:
ed explanation, lie IS paid a fixed power, tbarooe I sin, bariaa lbar.ua a Uraa
salary for bis servious and all the lone- Jll,r baio.ii, aedaiber iiabar, aed
fit. of th,-. rnico. boloiiK to ,b. p!rJt
SUlte. If lie deposits the publie mnn-! lar al tba door. Thu aad tbe rollowlei twe
ioa where a porcentaire for tho uso of IT0" 11 tb. eeatera .art of tbo
. . , ? . I HaTBaldavlll. anal hl.
'i I ... I II I .T A ... a
I " u" iow, yiaiamuunt, trw
or ".",Bli bolo"R tn tue nd not
to tbo Treasurer.
A word about the caadidatue nomi-
.iK all'theselfinR poroonally. and am
to inaiiffiirato 'amiliar with bit history. Ho is in
establish Con- ""7 M,nM Proper person to fill the
I ni,Uld 1 kn0,r udK IVr-i
I niB oflic of Uovernor. Ulessed with
' strong native talent mil favorod with
Bne acoomplishmoiiU, ht can, and will,
nil tbe office in a manner to promote
tho wollare awl gratify tne pride ot
tne people oi the statu.
1 Col. I'iolott is extensively and favor.
ably known. The duties of tbe place
Sir which he it a candidate are purely
ministerial, and he hot the ability to
oarry thorn out to the letter, and tbe
eon ra go to investigate the Treasury
aown to tne Bottom dollar, i . .
With much respect, 1 remain,
ouri obediently,
' ' Wm. Bioixa.
0oVK"MtNT Compliment.- The
Vcnang0 Siwfafor says : The roslgna-
tioa of Columbu. Delano, Secretary of
. . , . . , ' . . '
miv aiiivrnrr, uaw vow. uvj.mm u, auw
President, Mr. Delano's lu tier it dated
July 6, and Is supposed to have been
on file since that date. ',' Like Laudaa
Ict Williams, Delano leaves with a cer
tificate of good character tigned by V.
H. (I, To makt hit vindication com
plete and forever set at rest the dam-
aging chargei of a Mr, Marsh there
should be a meeting of Indian Agents
and Supply Contractors called In tbe
Cheyenne region to prepare a testi
monial for this great and good retired
Christian Statesman.
WoHKiNiiMiN, lUvmnxs. That
Democracy propose t revival of our
prostrated industrial; redaction of
taxes ; the abolition of Utelee extrav
agant expenditure ; a cutting down
of tho enorniout official nitric now
paid; a lopping off of all sinecure
official positions; and advocate a re
turn t borne and economical govern
ment. The Cameron-Mackey ring til
Oppose this programme.
Tbe Bollefotite Watchman declares
that tbt Iladical oaudidate fur sheriff In
that oowsily has about at taueh chance
te be elected aa Beecber bos of being
made boa eunuch In t Terkleh harem.
Which It rather goad lor the ir.uVA
"""i DBf an exceedingly slim ibpw far
the Radical raadfdat afbrexeahL
5f drfrtljrmfoti.
Si
4
0)
4
Sheriff's Sale.
By ttrlee ef aaadry write ef FM faaaat ia
acd eel of lee Ooart of OoaiaMB Pleaa of Clear
laid eeaaly, aad to aw direoted, there prill be
eipoeed la pabUe eale, at tbe Ooart Haaao. ia Uta
boroaib ef Cloaraele, ea leterdey, ike tH day
ef OotoWr, Kit, al I e'alees. p. m4 tbe fel
lewiBg daesribed real estate, la wil:
All abet mtela treat ar plana ef lead llt-
.... 1 1 . L . J. . . ..
. wwaaatw, vnwrweiw ewaaiT. reBB-
aylraaia, bales part ef a treat Bartered oe War
i ZL, uSSZ .' "T,. ., bl'd
S&SSVJff, llX,
laarii ef llrueeaer aad eartly by
be Beia aoetb eea baadred aad aixta.twa
! P"ee
perebee, auire er leer, te a baeiloek I tba eat wait
; b,"uid..f uViS. wrtlvirt, TZSZ'mZZ
alihty eam panbai te eaeUer BeeHec i thaaaa
UM, to butt : thtM b MM WMt llztr tttnrrik.
w, r Wm, to t poit t Imom hy mm umttk
eat kJrrl m4 twMtjT-tm y mot r
lets B a Bert I Oeneo bf BJH it. aaa IiibInJ
aad forty erree aerabaa, Blare ar kw, te alee, ef
braiaatat; aoalalalnr aaa baadrad aed Iwaal..
k..Tlo.aiU VTTi . fjT",
ell eena aad forly.lwe far.be., am ar (aajad
b.riai aboal t.a aat abarad. aed a lara. br
A I... all ibal enuia treat er aieo. of lead et
aata la ClMrla d aoaaiy, Peea.ylreaia, bamf
pert of a trerl earr.jrd ua lb. aforeuid WarraBl
r... aaee, eoeBBad aad daetribad, e. foil
wltt .-lBiac al a sort, a eeraer elleed. aai
lTjSTtK
M uM -t eid irM lie., d b, i.od m.
rayed t hew aad tatith eratk aae buadred aed
"f Jes Drra.i.r. jN theae. by u.d
tweaty.lbra. parrha., wiora er ieaa, Ui e boailoak tj
7 a., aaar.yaa w tie Doit .Mt one baa -red
aerobe., sere or leer, b a htesory 1 Iheaee
Berth ea. baadrad eed teaaly tkre. parebe. te
pleoe ef bag ieaiag, eeleiaia( Mrealy-lwo aerea
aad etfhty.twe aerobe., atere or lata, aod th.
aaaal allo.aaee af ill per .!. far reade, ha.l.g
aboal forty aare. elearad aad wader ealliralloa,
ellh a food ereherd of aholee frail, I., d.ellinx
hoaara, ear bare, Bad other eatballdiag. lharaoa,
UM baleee. beieg eerered with good tieibar, ead
all briag aadariatd with rateable dapoiiu af eael,
lieiaeteae, aad ether atiaerell, aad good laaaia
water el th. doar.
Alee, aH that eerbla traet ar rlaea ef lea I
atlaato le Objerleld aeaaty, State ef Paaaiy Ira
ale, beieg part ef traot aarreyed oa Warreat
Ne. Stit bveadad aad deerribad er follewa, to
wil i Beglaaleg al a baatleak. a eoreer .1 foar
lerge Iraou, wunau ..etkared Mel, Itm, iailt
aed laae , u.aea by Ike ee.1 boeadary liaa ef
No. lbt and lend eoar.yed U Hbaw Batllb,
eeeth aaa baadrad aed eighty.earea paraaea,
aiare er ea, te a poet Ibeaee by lead eooreyed
te Ueslel trababw, waal ... keadrad perakee,
ore er leu, te e poai , thua. by laed eoe.eyed
te Da Bola, earth aae haedrad aad eighty earea
peroaaa, ejore er aw, e e peat al Iba earth
aeaadarjUoe el trail Me. IMS (aalhd a while
pine ia dead lo Dalol. il thaaaa I,, -.a n..
aae baadred renhar, ajar, er leu, la kagiaalng i
eeaaialaoaa baadrad aad lea aare. aad fort. .
lore er lea., aadallaa, .aa. at !
ernk, Oa., aboet etity arree .laarad ead ta a goo
male ef teltlrattea, with a IraLelae. large bear,
leg erekard ef ebolae frail ef epple., iaarhM
eharrlee aad pleats, a bara sad alhw oatbaddiai.'
ead geed reeaiag wek al lbs dear, aed all ...
arrteia allb ralnabl. dapoait. ef eael, liajniaas
.ad other ataerela. aad a atra. let ef m. ii--.
ee Ike aaoleared pertlaa af K. letiad. take. I.
iri "d H SB eow e. I. preparly ef J.ha
Taaai ee Site.-Tb. arl,
ioa er eaa at ablet '
e mail be paid at
tgnaeale I
prop.,,, !
egele at
H.na a. win oa aparoraa, etaarwlee the
etaatet.ly pal ep aad aaid
Ike eapeaea aad riik ef Ike pereek le h,
wee etraeh ef , aad wke, la eeee et delolea
d...la.., al I
each ra. eel., ahell make food the eaaa, and ia ae
la.laaee will Ibe Deed be preeeated ia Coarl for
eealrmallea aaleot tea mueey le eeteelly paid to
tee abort!. W. fc. atcPiKksON.
tea.trr'l Orncs, I Bberif.
Cleartela, Pa. Oat. I, lire f
DMIMSTRATOK'S NOTICE.
Ifetlee le hereby airea tb.l l-.il-.. -r ,j.
atralrlratlea aa theenaleef JOkUH HOCK UN.
amar, lalaef tweaeaa Iw.., ntaeraeM a9rr.
BBamagaea,
ban kg alali
treeeM aha
WIO .IBM.
meal wltaeet deley
saiAst at MiLPanliAND.
art, P. , Oek Itk, 7 ll.) Admlahrtreier.
jsTiifcr-
terayad away rreai Ike anali. mt tb. k.
mrlbe. at Oarlaglea tewaeblp, ta the latter perl
ef May kit, lee reeaa eteara. akaat ta. uj
a beef yean abi, eae ef taeei la melee aad en
eed, UM ether Is akM aa Meek eaelted. Aar
ea
wh pet umynkuj f
rewarded.
maas taaeutau paymeat, aad tbe lor U.Bi.Mioa bat if tba aerea. aa .ill-! 1
at er deme.de agai.M ike a... ,m Iks right i. rat. ritril take eadabmri W .. .
a ervaerlr aalbealeaaead toe uiu. I de.U lio k. I. . ...... . . " ,m' I
, . .... mi, .... prooeee an serllleale of n.i...li...i-
Ifgal Adrfrtisrmfuttf.
JLKCTION PKOCLAMATfON.
WHKRItS. l-j w AH mt tbt O.orntl A.
Mbl uf ib Cmw.wrts-tli "f tVn Th.ni.
m.lkfsj tAm Art to rvful.it lb- fyhfu-ritl fc.Mll..
Hit this (JoMui.nti'b,"lt it tnjula.J mourn
b lib .riff wt lb. MrW-i annul , to fir ),. t?
icjtiot ff Mieb ClMtrM. lbJ la) wbTt u be
bM, .u4 lb. gfloer to b FUotr
TafRiiKriita, T, W. ROftfl MrFIIKRRO.V, lligb
Bborir of UltarB.ld uiiaty, do brbr g It I'ult.
Ii Nolle Iti tli elector of tb fount of Ctr.
It Id, tbit gDrl IU will U haltl ua
TtiMAtr roi.Lowu. ra ria-r M iiotrnr No
aMaa (be. tb 2d of (bt aioMbJ, it tb
wvtJ Imi.oii e)itriei ia aaitl count)-, a4 abich
Mm and ptftM th jMfthlHl voter aill voto
For (ofraoa fr Qfiimmnr of th CoMiawa-
VtaJlh of lMu.lruia.
fat oo rfwti far TMaa-rt-r of tb Com-'
wiib or taBiylrM.. , .. . .
Fur oa pfoa for Hanator, la rriraMat tba
aoaitUu of CUarfluUp I'utiira and Cltalo i la
tba tstnrrsl AtmMy af thii Contain?? tallb
fur ena yrr.
For it arava fjr lb ofle uf Coantj Trrajarar
wf Clcmrtleld ooantj for thro year,
or thra r for tba aalna f iaatjr Cwm-
wUiuatref l'irlld aouatj fur ibra jar.
For ihre proai tor tb othi of Coaetr Au lltor
f CWarBald aoaat;. far tbra raari.
foroae prna forth etflo of Ciualy Coroaar
a tlaarltld aoaalj far I faro jrar.
Tb lton or tb eouDty or ClrrflplJ will ukr
aoii tbt tbe aid lwiioa will U held at tbe
following yhMea, tU j . u
fieeearui low o. hi p. ti tb I'oloD Hold! la UIcd
Hop.
Jial towoiblp, tb boM af Robrt Hhafy.
Bloom towD-bip. at tba ao of Um lata Jataoa
Bloom, Sr.
Bog towDiStji.at tbe boa of K'lwH Albert.
Breuirord towmhip, t th boM of Joob Piero.
Brady town -hip, mt tba borne of Wa. wrb worn,
la Latberaburf.
Binifid tuwnihln, mt Yoanf ivbool hoiue.
Baraeide boieugbmt th publie imiWl in
Mid borough.
Cbaet lowaibip, at the ittblic obon. koa bear
Btaioa Horabaugb'f.
(Wrifld borooy;b, at the Court llrxj.
('ortagloo town-blp, at tb acbool boa la Mat
ton bare.
CarwautvUl borough, at tba boo af tb lato I
laaveHi DIOOM.
IMlr lown.hip, al Contrr echoul hnaM.
Iwrautoa townititp, at b bewM uf John tlff-
rjr, fornwri acrupid J Tb. Kobifoti, (Uroo.1-
waj.j
tfirord towimbip, at Cotigrm Mill at-buol buute.
Uoibm tuwaobip, at tba pttblic acbtrwl bouM al
Sbawwill.
Graham towanltip.it tbe bout of Jacob Hubler.
Urwtiwuod towoiblp, at tbe pablla houa ef
9aaiul Hullgaa.la Mtd tewuiblp.
Uullrb townibip, at tbe publie 4iool bona. Id
.! ill.
HuattJB lovtiavhip, at tb hnuae af It Wibou
llwkrtadal bwrough, at tb publie bout of Wm.
Parker,, ia aaid borough.
Jortlu towofbip, al tb public ebool buuM, ia
AniMiavill.
Karthau towuibip, at Dridrti' acbool bouse.
haul towimbip. at Turbo IIiU rbul buaee.
Lawreitroe towuibip, at tbe i'-ourt Hotife, ia ll.r
eorouirb ef t;ieHiM.
I.umtnrr Citr ooroufrb, at IbetaulilieMbovlhoaM.
Mom towo'htp. at Ibe bo tine forintiljr ooeuintni
by 1bu9a fcyler.
Nrw UanbingtiHi horowb. at tb pul-lie erhool
jiwiiurg tMtroujta, at , Mia borwuga.
Oerwwla boraugb, al the public boa of Jdik
Hofl, ia tald iMwough.
Prna towaobip, at tba hotel fbnaerly kept 1
W. W. AnderMio.
Pik towanbip, at the houra of tba tat IutdU
BIoom, in Ibe lumugh of ('urwenavillt.
I'ltiuD towu"bip, at tbe honae of I). K. Bruhker.
Wallacetoa taruaghe at lb pueblta arhool baua
la iid boruMgb.
Wvodward towoehip, at tba boa of Thomas
HeaUemta. . .. , , f s .
AN ACT rrgvlatini tba toed of toting at all
election ia the ecreral aoanttet of thii Cora
uawealth, approved, the SOtb 47 of March,
A. 1. I MM. tit: -
fiat'Tiot 1. Bi it aea-r4 bf tb Benale and
Houm of lttprrntativeaof tbe Connooerealtb of
PeBbeyltenia ia Ucaeral AewnMj net, and it i
beret7 enarted by authority of the lauie, That the
qualified toten ef Ibe aereral eounlim of tbi
Coianua wealth, al all geaorU, tuwnthip, borough
and fperial eirclinnf.are bfrvbv, hereafter aulliur
itrd aad rr)utre4 to vote, hy IkhHt, priated, m
written, or partly printed, and partly written, mv
orally elaMifted aa followtt On ticket ball em
brace tb niaci of all jntifre of eourtr reted for,
and to be labelled, autiide, Mjdeiary :" one ticket
ball embrace the nuri sf the slate IIoert TOtcd
for, and be labeiksl, ' ttate ;M on ticket ekadi eei
brane the man of all county oArwr voted for,
laeluding affirw of eraatvr, Metuber, and Bomber
at aaaeml)lv. if Tntad for. nnit mnmhsn .if I'nnaa...
if Toied for, aad be Ubelled. -oonatv f otie iirkM
hall embrace th nam en of all townnbip officer. ! P"11 hy aueh ef it oftoer. aod aaeh awora aa
voled for, aad be labrlled, 't own chip t" one lick- I -i""'9 th eourt -hH appuiat, la tba pr
t hall tMbmc tbe hiiim of all borough aBar ' "B0 r )0t wf eourt, mmd
voted for, and be labelled, "borough;" and each I rot",rM certihod and eertttcatai of eloeiiea ia
elaw he depnited ia frepwrata ballot boxes. e ndw xb al af tba aoeirt, a U new re
A farther roppleurat to the Act regalailng qir doa by tbe retura Judge, and the
olaetioa la thif CaMMoaa-ealih, ai. proved "u m ttod and eertlfie i shall b raade
Jaao.ry 3$, aad Febrmary 13, A. 1 15; 4 : aiaauor of rroord im mid ourt. Tb aaaaioas or
waatf rm rotts aaa to kk aart orhi..
Brr. . At all ekcUoaa b-ralur held under
th lws af this Communwfnltb, th polls bull
be opened at Mtea o'clock, A. m., aad cbimd at
sarea stikwi, r. m.
WirMTBRI '-
aa a inarai-wBRl. T
Islriet where a vactm.
Stc. . In Blletortloa dlstrieto where a
eVlt9 b" i ''totioB of the
tMeert or o hero tee ia an lectioa board herele-
7 .1 . , MJ V: "UmW
formarf th Jodge or Judges of the Court of Com-
teiv. sejtM i ia nrvpsr eouty snail, tea days
se, ar - aiaoiioa, appaial
'mi or
UTi. T . Tr" 7 "J fU reliable amube or freadohaU te die..re,
Jort t .la.1,.0 ,. ,d ... d,.t,lct., and la II .ll, apo. h.M a. amy b. draaad
H 11? a r-s""1 "'l by tb. wurt,aeJ e. aanla.d : bat
party, aed Ibe jadtaafalarrteb.lleelleean all aUai.ll.ae of palpeble freed er Bjluaee
.Jl iLKl"." ." V I .ball ba dnadad by Ibe ea,d eoerl wllhia Ibra.
J d'"' " srly .. ib. , d.y. H Ike day the M.rao an kn(bl lata
ar jengM ea. aw.rt.ia Iba laat, aed ia aaa. af j ooart for ooapabuioe, aad tao aaid iaqairy .hall
L.-'.'r'."!.'' 'h r'r I be d.rud ..I, u tH-J freed Vt ...ka,
nTT" " "'K'1 Ten? ef 1 be Jad,M , ,d .ball aet be deeeed . ld,al adioduabo.
rhall ealeet aae el aaid impealara,'aad the ejtaer
y jeofa er jodf.1 aball Mlaet lb. alhar.
6so. f. Wbeeerar there Iball ba a vaaan..!
aa .Iretlee boerd ea Ibe moraief af aa eleetiea,
aid taeaaay .bell ba Iliad ia eoeromilty with
.xLtfag law..
Btrtc. or aLBirfioa iirrli taal
tar. a. At tha euaetaa ef tba Mil. .ii .i
Ilea, it .ball ba tba dau af Iba ladaa. -I
far thai, ra.ee.tir. diiutela te deairaala aae ef
iaa waoa. e.ty It .ball he at here le
eartody the reajblry ef eatera,aod U aiaka the
enlrie. tb.rala rae,oirad br law, and it ahall ba
tb. dety of Iba alhar ef the aaid larpeetore ta
reoetre aod aurnber tha balloU prorated al .aid
elertiea.
Dae I, AU etMtoa- by the eiUteai .hall ba by
h.llal; erery ballot rated .ball b. eatalierad ia
the trder le wbirh ll .bell
bV. .u.w 1 T4, ,b
. .7 .1 , 1" a!."" l l
, u " " I
aeaiber raeordad
ep,,e Bite tba Bene
aeirad. Aod aay rotar rellag twe er atere Hob
et,the Mveral tlrhat. Berated ahall aaabh.
.i l . " , - -'- "
tlrbat. Be rulad .k!! mmmi. a.
akW .Mb the ...bw -rrr.ooodlb7.ilh
t. ;i7.T'' "! epoe hi. lk,t or eaaa. I
lar .-ii. l.. . v".
lb. taeie to be .rln-TiXl ""JT" JLT!"
aitliae af Iba dl.t.l.i I. j'i..7 "" 1
...r. m .IB.rt.rd aol la d.ailo. bo. ai I j
Aall mmmm -..-J . . . . . J
uti!L2 ?u . a "
a. ...I V "" '" !
i Ji,,'Zl''?'?,' "',J i
eaiMi. la a edtt
.liaotaraalark. ,
, , hi mnj .iMtiua n-I.I ;
eder th,. Ml .kail. bafaM u.lu ......
of eeob ether. Ib. jadga .ball ba more! by the
aia.rily la.peeter, If there ahall b. ,Mk aaor
lly ia.pactor, .ed ia aaee there ahell ba Be aaer.
ity laipmor lb.a hy a Ju.Ho. .f u,. peaoaor at
de..a, and Ik. laafaotor., erarreer. .nd .lerk.
ehlb..w.rahylb.j.dju Certtleatea ef eaek
.wnrlog er effireiag .hall be del. et.de out Bad
igae by lb. aS.rri ee .wora. and ttlwi b,
Ike eaoer wbe admlaluered Ihe oath. If aor
Je.lge or ajlaorlly ierpaotor rafa.ei ar fail, k
Je em ef .Utloa la lb. ,.. .
VT '"L" " " eayeSWraf rtl
ball ta wtiaoal bai., Irn drty w if .,
l b.,.. .7 . " ,or"J"-s,b ith-
...r. wbM he wee aT I 11 kTZ.!!
T2LLT.lL1:f?m?', ''
eea yaar ar aelh ia th. duaraelM ef Ike Mrt. I
aea-aaeiaraBBa voraa. 1
Sr II. Oa the day ef eleetiea anr nam. !
wboe, Bene .hall aet appear ee the r..lI7. .r !
totera, ead wke .1.1.. ui. right le role at LlJ
elMlioe, .hall prodaoo al loan ea. eealiLdVl- :
W ef th. dinrict a. a wilaa.. to lae neiileaoe aT
lb. ri.l., he ,ka dirlet i. whleh 7, ,u, to !
i"" a"?' feradlng eeld elaeilo,, .bi.b wit
aa.. .bell b. ...r. , rtraavi, and bb. .
wrlltee, er aartly arltu. aad JTiT. . .V
darll to the laet. etaled by hiei, wblrh a4tril ' "' """" " 'T eleetiea. th.. lb. panoe
aball dalne clearly where Ihe roaideeee le ef Ike W k,r 'ee'red Ike eerond kighl e-
pmea a. eUieiiag te ee a reler, and Ike aereoe I ' '"' ''' lh" erlt praaMra; .!
e. .leiaiing tbe right be rata .ball alee tel. aad 1 M " te'PSofnr la hi. ple : end le
rabwrtb. e -rm... or parity wriltea aad riartlr i '" mM eemred ta. huh-
prlntel aAdartt, rt.liog lo the boat ef hit know ""Steref rote, fer iMpartor ahall aat.tt.nd,
ledge aad belief wbeu and where he wea bora", 1 "" f"?"" " PP"iel ee UpK-
Ibat he ha. heea a aitlMa ,.r , k- ii.i..j o . . . i tor at hie aiMel aad ,. aaM tha n.rana alwlnd
for aae Booth, aad ed Ike Commonwealth .1 ' "' "" 'ld. thee the la.uwlor elio re
P.en.ylraaia; tk.t ha ba. a...ai i. .i. .. oalrad the blrhett aeelber ot eoto.. ah.ll anoeiBl
P.Bn.ylrM.1,; , h. ba. wg ,, u.',: ,
on.aallb eae jar, ar if formerly a aaallSed !
eawter er eetive eora .Itiiaa Ik.rnf aad be. ra.
sier tberefrem ead rataraed. aha he ... .ij.
ed tbereia aia meatba aoal preoedm. eaid alee"
Ilea, Iket he k tended I. Ik. d.atrio'l U .kWi
ke .1.... I. be a retar tor lb. period ef al lea."
! twemoatha immedl.My preeedine eeld ela.il!!. . ;
it,-, k. k.. . ... .. T eieaiioB 1 ,
i ...-J ... ...
wetoa
tb h. h bet mered ,b. dia.,1., ,,".'
r-r - ..M.g iBaratai ti,a ka tea. If
iwmtty-lw. y, al .g. w Bpward., p.ld a St. .
.My te. wlthl. ,.. j.., which wee Berime
w," k- L".r",,kt"4 "-'
at. .k-Ja kl ,",'i"" "
iMb.".i?r.:-rr.dk;i:r.
. V r i"T aaamiBauea aalees th. af.
I..I er d.tlroyad, that ka aerer reeeld ... I
Ii ka. ban
aad, If a e.lorllH rlllira. iball alu aula
When, ,
i U.lle Htatee, er II bera eleewkor. abTii T .. . . " sre hereby M,io.cd .J.le.1 f
Me that be he. be. B.tarall.ed lT. .Zl. 'a he aaaew... ef Wm Kiedef-
II a.b.pbyrmJa .I bi iJkT-Z J I""' ' U"d' e,p, IN. fall "t
i earn Uat ee b a a.,... i ...... .
hV la et Ihrtlai. .1 mahlag ..Vdai;1 Mh..,. iS'.to,T...rh ..."
age ef Iw.aty aad .af It.TS'il-T.' ? "" I ' ''f " 1-et.aa, eae set hnbr, let ef
tbel I. he. bBTrilTf TbTyiIl' '"b. ' "4
ea. aeeaik. aad b- likl?.! ,.kt.l'."ltad ,u" i keddiag. a a. eot obra. m -UA. Iw. ae.h I.M
mere laerefram aad retaraed, (haa ke ka. It
VlH'"'s ' ethlTia.. Vr-JTiw toM
rhTi.'r r. dirt,,rMti,
ke eatliad i. w,
av p.d taiM. Tb said aAdavlt f
all piie wahiag ueh elaiui aad tb aaldat lu
ui I e wiiu.ta to ibeir roiideua shall be pr.
i t red by ibe aleettoa board, aad at tb ales ef
he wleetlna lh-y ball bo eaeloead with Ibe liii of
voiwrf, tal.y hat, ii. utir psra ruJrd by
Uo to be llel by lh ratura judge whb the pre
ib-motart, aud shall rawala oa He iberewlil la
tbe pr'HhuaiAjrVl uSIoe, tatijeet t ef aiiaatioa
aa other eleelioa ppor are. If tbe eloaiioa o8
eer abaU tut that tb attoaat posaa all tba
Irgt qua lit. call una of volr be shall ba pen it
led to rutr, sod bit uaaa iball be added to Iba
lit vf taia'tles by th eleelioa oArsars, tb word
"tai" bt-iiig added ober lb elalmaat aaim to
vote oa lav, aad tba word "ago" where he elalaa
to vole ua age the Man word being added by
tba clo ki ia aaob aM respeetivaly oa iba llati af
trou roliag ml saeb alaodua.
ciiALLixoi or BaaitTaaaa roriaa.
8fcc. II. It aliall b lawfu! $ot aay quail 1 4
itiea of tb dialrtet, Botwithstandiog tb aana
uf th proposed rotor U aoaulned on tb lltt of
resident Uiabl, to ehallenge tb vol of loch
pereon, whereupon tbe aan proof of tba right of
tuflfige a auw required by law shall be publicly
Made, aad a" ted oa by thealoetiot) board, and tb
vttte admitted or repeated aaeordiog to tbv.
drnee. K'-ery pertua elalaiiag to bo a aata rallied
trlllieu shall be rerjuired to prodae hi nataraU
it tioa ertilcate at tb election before rotingt
erpl where he bas been for trey aan aaaateutiva
iy a toir la it dutnet ia which baofvrthie
vote, and on lb vol of aaeh perroa being re
eoived it stull be tbe daty of Ibe eleetloa oft ear
to writ ar aUinp aa autib eertiloat the word
"voted, with th day. Moaih and year, ad it
au eleelioa offioer or offieert iball raeelve a a
wnd rote on tb aam day by rtrta of tb net
oerti floats, rxeept wbr eoai are a titled 1 vote
beeausa of Ibe naturalisation: or their father,
they aad th peraoa who shall ofer loeh M ond
vol shall ba guilty f Mia'teaieaaor, and aa
ooorietiou thereof be wtod or IpMrifoaod.or beib
at th diserettoa af tb ooart, but the line iball
uot axooed Ire hundred dullsrs la aaeh aa, nor
tb inpHMunentaaa yaor. Tbe like paoif fame at
ahall be mlietod oa aonrtelloa of tb oAoar of
election woo shall aegleet or reluee to Make ar
esuie to be mad tbo endorsement required as
-foreratd oa aatd tUtuiftliiatiB erttaoaia.
, m.ui't or tttnr or t teflon orriria. .
Pkj. IS. If any election o floor ibarf refuH f
nvgleot t require saeh proof of tb right or aaf
frage as la prescribed by this law, or tba law to
whieh tat u anpnlraat, from any persoa af
fariag t tto wnoM aatae i eel ea tb list of
as lotted voters, or wboe rigbt te vole it ehal
leug4 by any qualiaed vaur preai, aai shall
admit such person to vote witbool requiring mrb
proof, every person so offending snail npon eon
rielion b guilty of a mlsdeineaaor, and shall ba
saatcnoed for every ub offonoe to pay a Ineaot
exceeding tr buadred dollars, ar to undergo aa
in prison want aat era than on joat.or both at
tb dlaertioa of tb eoart. , ,
cAntAH or two vorat ar rat eovar.
ftr, 11. Al soon as tbe polls ahall alone tbeaf
deer of tbe election shall nreaead to aonut all
lb vote east for each oaadidate voted for, aad
Make oat a full return of th sum ia lrip;iat,
with a BBtura sheet in additioa, in all of whioh
th votoevruoeived by each oandidi shall gir
an aflar his or her name, tret ra we rue and again
in figure, nnd shall bo eignad by oil af said of.
Boers, and t-rttnd by overseers if iy, or if no
so certified the overseers and any uftzer refuting
to sign or certify or either of the to, shall write
upon each of tbs return, bis or their reason lor
not signing or eertiffiog them, fas rote mmm
M eoaisilad tkiH ofse ptM.rlm mmd fmlm Jtctartd
'real tie mind-tw to tie ciliactia prttmt, mmd m
kntf ttmUmtmt Meaneo tht veea recetseaf by ear
c Hdisf.rr tkaii oa We ( eigeed y ( etnim
ojfietn as oh a the note is &mm1rd, nnsJ tk
ai is immfdiAtttjf patteH p tit 4r nf tkt
reriea 1hm tr turmifioBt tkt neiiV. Tfc
triplieate returns shall be enclose I in envrlopvi
and be sealed la the presines m( tbe uA;w4,
aud ono envelop with tb oosealrl return sheet
given to the judge, which shall contain one list
of voters, tally-paper, ad onib of a,re, nn 1
another ol' said en Velupe ahall b given to the mi
aonty inspector. All judge living within iwalr
miles of lb phstbeootary' oAo. or within
tweaty-fonr miles, If their residence be in a town,
village areity oa the lino or a railroad leading
to the county seat, shall before two a'oloek, put
meridUa, r tbe day after the election, and all
other judges ibeU btWo twelve o'clock Meridtaa
of tb second day alter tb election, deliver amid
return, together with ret am sheet, to the pro
tbouotary of the court of common pica nf tha
county, whieh said return theet ahall be tied, and .
th day and htmr of I ling marked thereon, and
sbsll be preferred by tb p rot no notary fur pubtie
inspection. At twetr o clock oath said aeoeai
day following any election, the prolhoaeUry ef
tbe ooart r oommoa ploas shall present the stid
ratarai to tbt said court ; fn eouaue where (here
is no resident president judge, tb ar-iau judg
es shall perform tbe duties i mooted anon th
ooart of owMuon tdeaa,whib sbail aoavea for
said purpose ; Ua reterns proeaatod by iba pro-
' atroertry bivli be epeoed by aaid court, aadeoa.
m epew v ut puuna,ajni ia oaM
tb return af toy lee tioa district ahall ia
nitsasag when the rcturas ar presented, or in
ease al eomplaiat af a. qaaiided eieetor aadar
eaiu cuarging pajpani iraud or nuUki, and
t IM-Tttowlnsly s)oir.ing th allegad
m
it. ik. ..... trK.n :
i miertnn a
I lb, mri shall examrae thTitar..
1 and if in the Judgment of tb. eoart It shall he'
; .cosasary t a ut return aaii aourt slvall isiu
suM-ary prvsifOM nginat tb nlectioi
nnd overseers if auyTof tb leotioa din
o&cers
any, of tb cleotma dutrlct com-
plained of,
to bring lbm forthwith into ooart,
I with ell rlaatiea papare la taoir poianiioa, and
t eooolod. aay aoataat bow or hereafter to ba
prarld by law, aa d tba other ef aaid triplieate
retera, ahall be placed in tha boa aad BieUd ap
with tat ballele. Kothini ta thii aol .ball ra
qBire tba rat.ra. af eieeti.B af borough er lowe.
abl eaeer. te bo at.de la the eeart aa duaHad
ia tat. eeotioa, bet all aba retera. ol the cleeUae
ed twraahip aad bereaf h oOioir. .ball b. ae
aloud i. a reeled earer.diratlad le tb. prolb.ia.
tar) ef tba eoart af eoaueaa plea, ef tb. pr.par
eeenty, aad .bail by aoeaa ee. of laeai be daliv.
wad late hat eSioe eithia tbra. day. altar .rrrr
.eob eloelioa aod Sled tbaraia. Ia coantiM
warrw there era Urre r erare judrM' ef Mid
eonrt. batrard ia tbe law. at laart Iwe jadrce
aball all to ounpete aad oertify rataraa, obIm.
aoaroidably prarntad. If any af th. uid )(
e. .bell hiaralf b. . eeadidau for ear oSea at
aay elecU.ia he Jliail Mot .it with th. eoart ar
eet ta eewotiag ttt. reMree nasi Bleetiee.aad
is ea ta. etbor ja J(... If aay, .ball aol ,
"7 ell be ao Jadr. o.al-
iaa. ia aoia taa raid e
.,
lad la hold taa laid eoai ea,lur iaa aroniio..
.hall ha ..J eo.ntt.te
ef thu an preeaal and able le act, Una aad te
Utw of ,lli, tea eheril
eed eooely eoataiiuiooer. ef Ik. proper roe.lj
e."V"" !
'V el weoai .ball Bare Bed aaarctM all tb. pa.
"r " P""
-Wi
" ' ' """"' 'h Hoard .1...
"'" esltd.te for a.y H-, at Ibe rie,
' "'" Board i. r,rrf
.toaa of tbt. erattt.B r bot Bone ef tea aaid .A
, h . u. . -t -. .1 .. .. , .
,n.,u. n " ."a ma. RDin ll ninm
ta aonat enaer ina prorisiooi al thl, l.jtloo.
.fa all eledloar kerealW th. ecnilo.1.
of aaturatit.tloa, if gaaeina, BhaD ba eoortaiire
r(d..oeof Ibe ladlamaatioacd tbaraia, eel vbtre
lb. imi. off.ring to rota tiaiatf Ihe right aa
th. aya.ot ef Ua, the eeaeipl af .ash t.i, if
"geed by lb. propproaio.t, .hall b. tbe eridraet
thereof ( ir ra.b poraoa dear not prodooe .n?b re
e ilpt, Ibra Ibe payoMat ef thetai ma; b. prurel
by tbe oath at .Bob poraa, dr eUi.r erUelM,
.taring waaa, where aad le yaont eoeh tai eel
paid.
Nollr la furthrr hereby ejlrea. Tut
.ball bold .. or epp.l.t...l of t,..t .t.r
parano. aieapt jaeueai at lb. I'aate, ea.
aayin.erpor.tad di.l,ict, whrth., .
P"Ml..f thl.
er Bay oily ar la.
a. Kleoetire er J.dln.1 4
State er of lb. l .iUl StaUa,
ear eity or inoiroaratoj dirtri. ani .IM
that ar.Hr atMahnr af dinaraa. or at lb. Stale
'"t-stare, er ef Ibe eoaaatoa er ealnt aooerll
".' "r " eeiila.er of any meorporelrl
sre by law iaaapAkle ef hold,., m
Mre,"n' ,k " " ae-
re,"UM"1 Je. ls.pe.ler er Clerk ef .;
" " ,h" C.-..-..l.h.
p g ,v poaiiiiia utritibnn,
1n Saae th. p.raoa who ih.lt here raeelrrS let
eroiiil hlgh.it Bomber of tim ft,r reiperror, rbiH
'"f ' pleoe ; ar If eay reeaany eb.ll raa.
Itoae ia th. hoard for Ike .put. of oe. ber after
the t'mt lied by law for Ibe epeetag ef lb. .bx"
tioa, tbe aoaiilad rotare of lh. to.nahip. .aider
dialrirl for wbi.b Bark .Beer ehell bar. b.ee
.i ..j ... . : . .
aimiaa, araMBI U u. nha at alaattaa. .1.11 a-
' u ' aamber I. Ill .ooh tv-mf
i )u .... ...
Alee, that where a jadrad. br ai.ha... at aa..
roidabl. aasideot. U enable to attend aooh arrt
ing ol Jedga., tbra Iba eertilfoete er telere .ball
he takea charge af by aae of tbe to-pref.
olerht of lh. eleelioa of Ihe dlelrlet, a ho ah.ll d
ead permra Ike d.Ura rraalred af eeld jadf. aa
ebl to attend.
1IIVKN ..,.r my dead and seal, el Clenlrla,
Pena, this eiilk d.y of October,
I. (.) the ycer of aar Lord aae tbaaread nf"
,"''TrBC
r Bandred and Beeente.lre end et la.
BI tae l ailed Stele. Ihe Bienj.
.. u
W. It. NorUr?rV0!l, wiC
QlVTIOS.a ; J.p; f ; :(
4. eaa takn. Iw. leehleg I"".
let erereeke, art Uawere, aaa eea, let ef hay. eel
let at pekalaeo. Tble property wa. percbeeid bj
aw al CaaMsbla'e eale, aad at haft with haa
Ieaa eabjeel te my order.
ra.Rk'RICK ISAM
Troetrll',, Pa., Oel. itk, lit ),