iThc Republican. Gioaoi B. Goodlandir, Editor. CLEARFIELD, Pa. JL. ' WKDNEBDAT UORNINO, JULY M, 1ST. NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC TICKET. 't VOB niUDHT! ' SAMUEL J. TILDEN, o m TOtS. 1 ro vies raraioiuti TflOH. A. HENDRICKS, Of IHDIAIA. Reader, If you want to know what li going oa la tbe bualneae world, Juet mad oar adrortltiu eolnane, tbo Xpmal oolumo In poruouinr. Congrats lias not yot flxod a day of adjournment. . (Jon. Franx Boigle now "fights mlt" Tildon and Hendricks. Tlioso tax-payors who are in favor ol public plundorcr will ot course vote tho Hayos tickot. Those people who are tired of boing robbed by thoir agents, will ot course vnto for Tildon and Hond ricks. Tho Philadelphia Times advises At torney Gonoral Taft to koop a close oye on the newspapers, or he might bo removed, and otherwise not know it. Harper's Weekly wants to know: "Is Tildon a sale man 7" Tho World re sponds:, "If our momory serves ns right the names of the safe men ore Harrington and Babcook. The appropriation bills are worrying through Congress one by one, and in a few days more the members will bo ltd tree to nttond the more important duties of tho hour, such as making campaign specchos and calling one an other namos. . A lUroBM Strom. Tho Cincinnati Enquirer aayB: "Gov. Hayes signed the bill increasing tbe iees and emolu ments of Ohio officials $5,040,000 per annum in tho aggregate Such a man may bo anxious for reform, but ho gives us no promise of retrenchment. On our lourth pago will bo found an interesting history ot the celebrated Winnebago Chiof, as well as Govornor Hayes' explanation of bis lettor of ac ceptance Tli oso two celebrities aro now exciting public attention, and tbo reader should peruse everything re lating to them. . The Uarribburg Patriot says : Hon George A. Jenks wbo represents tho Twonty-fiflh Congressonal district will be renominated unanimously by tbo Democrats. He is so popular that tho Indiana Democrat says a district con forence is superfluous. Tho people have already put him in the field. Tin Ex-Uovirmos. Tbe Belletonte Watchman says : "GovernorCurtln now sits in his shirt sleeves and slippers, and congratulates himself that ho was not nominated for Vice Presidont ol the United States." More: He will Mart for Indiana about tbe 10th day of September, and stump that State for Tilden and Hendricks. The Belknap impeachment case Is drawing to ft close. Mr. Blair began the argument in Belknap's behalf yes terday, and after Mr. Carpenter and Judge Block and throe of the mana gers lor the House have each bad a day's talk, tbe Senators will begin to make spoecbes to one another. There ire only seventy-three of thorn. Robert Lincoln, tho only living son or Presidont Lincoln, who has become disgusted by the revelations of crimes practiced by his party fnonds, has ta ken tbe stump In Illinois for Tilden and Hendricks. He declares against the frauds porpetrated by government omcials as vehemently as a a Demo crat, or any other honest man. Hatih' Bchimi. The New York Sun thinks that Hayos' proposition to keep men in office as long as they are faithful is a bold proposition "that the eighty thousand office holders oi the United States shall be converted Into s permanent aristocracy, holding their places fur life a proposition to over throw tho government of the people and to substitne for it a government oi established office-holders." Sinco Hayos' lettor of acceptance has appeared, every office-holder has put on a double coat of war paint That document, in effect, says, those in office now worthy of the position, should al ways remain in office. Thus he pro poses an aristocracy of ofllce-holdors, a feature never dreamod of by the Constitution makers, and for this avow al every Grant office-holder has taken off his coat and gone to work. But it will not win. t "CnooanonBan.' Oa Saturday laet, on Infor malleu mado by Mrt. Thomat Uinkoy, 1) lilriot AttorBOy Jemae r. oilllikan, or Ilollldaytbarg, and L. H. Poffenberger aod Lerl KaoUofAI tonau, were errf itd, sod after a nenrlog brfora Aldormaa MoCoralok. were held la 11,000 boll eeeb lo uaewor ot eourt tho ohorKO of oottling a "eroektd" wbiaky ooto la a "erooked" way. Ai ieeea Aaua. That is right Grantism may bo ft "grand moral idea'' in tbe Adminisra tion of National affairs, but it should be kept out of our local matters. Tho devil has general agents enough at work to corrupt frail humanity with out employing a more retail dealer. An Explanatior Wartkd. Tho Now York MethodiM, one of th lead ing organs of the M. E. Church, seems to be dissatisfied with some of Grant's conduct, remarkablo as it may soem because its editor and tho Presidont have been as loving as twins, and now to bo quitting him, la indeed strange : Wo aro ansoBg thooo who Bellaee that Prool. drat Grant ought to esplala to toil Ohriotiaa Batten why bo has pardoaod eorea gangere ton v loud or aalog uar anoint powere to Id la defrauding tho roroaao ot tho llallod Btatea. Wo oinroMod, two wooki ago, a foar tbat Uio whleby ataa wooid tool bo book la po Tleled b ittrioi of dofraadiog tho reraaaa, looka tarv badly to at t and tboro aro lallmntleua tbat (ha not of Mr. Brl.tow'e Jeil-blrda will oooa bo Jieeuj rroo wtnga. Tbo leeet nrejudleed obaorv. -ore will laroluartuiilf think of tha oharga, tbat anipaign faada aaoja la JS7I fatal tho Wbiaky gtrng. aad aok hard qaealioao. We never export the editor in ques tion to say anything in favor of ft pern ocratio candidate, but we hope he will continue in Utft line of Impertinence until he gets an answer from "the gov rmavnt" on this moral question. ' THE "TIMES" ON HAYES. Tbe editor of the Philadelphia Time, who by the way knows all about it, evidontly fears that the election oi Hayoi would only be ft continuation or Grantism. In criticising nayes loitor of acceptance, tbe editor says: "There is no probability mat Air. Hayes will take just the saino viow of tbe I'roslUOIlcy tin a iwreuimi iiwrtiuia- ite that Mr. Grant has taken ; but this view has boon so generally con curred in by the men who are now or ganiaing Mr. Uoyoa' campaign that the country ought to have some dofl nita exnression of disapproval, which would count for more than columns of glittering generalities. Ul course Mr. Hayea does not approve of the Presi dent's carryings-on. Wo can take that for granted. But Mr. Secretary Chandlor approves of them highly, and Mr. Chandler is tho chairman oi Mr. Hayes' campaign oommittoo. Mr.Soo rotary Cameron approves oi them, and Mr. Cameron helped to nominate ao tually did nominate Mr. Hayes at Cincinnati. J udgo Taft appears to ap provo of thorn, and Judge Talt is one of Mr. Iiayos' own set How aro we to know that Mr. Hayos' civil sorvice reform will wash any bettor than Mr. Grant's, or that his Administration, brought about through the efforts of Chandler and Cameron, will bo an im provement upon that in which Chan dler and Cameron bear s conspicuous part ? Wo do not say all this in any hoetilo spirit to Mr. Hayes, whose per sonal characteristics do not run at all in tbo way of Grantism. But the gon tlomen who aro backing bim ought to consider that, in carrying tbo party, with its record of the past eight years, he is pretty heavily handicapped, and that it is too much to expoct of bim to carry Grant and bia Cabinet on top." The citixen over twenty-one years of age wbo does not "see it in that light" must bo very blind, indeed. Camoronism and Grantism have been boiled down so thick that it is impossi ble to soperate the two clans, and Hayes is now the ohosen instrument to still make tbe consolidation more per fect, with tho additional viows of ad ding as ft codicil the feature of an offi cial aristocracy ; that is, once in office always in office, just like the senior Cameron, who wants the line continued through his son, now in the War De partment, and to whom Hayos has al ready promised the place. . Thi Frisoit Cainc The Times man seems to be greatly dissatisfied with our county prison. Ho has crit icised the building, up to June court, from the outsido, ever since he came to the connty. Sinco then he has been playing the expert niBido, and after taking a viow of both sides of that aw ful marble slab, he condemns the whole structure as unfit for decent man to stay in. Well, the individual who libeled Gov. Bigler, of which no notice was taken; libeled Mr. Arnold, for which ho paid a fine and costs, and in the case of Mr. Wallers, tor which be was convicted by a jury on one bill, and plead guilty to another (so as to let his bntlios out), and for which he is now in prison, with a heavier pun ishment hanging over him, has little compunction when lying about a jail. More, this fellow has libeled Br. Wil son in the most outrageous manner, and the time ior a prosecution is not up yet Ho has libeled Senator Wal lace almost weekly, and without any cause whatever, but the reverse. Ho has also libeled Judge Mayor, as woll as others we might name. This is the record. Is it a valuable one? Will another lesson do tho fellow any good, or is he consummate fool and black guard, bound to disgrace himself and all his friends T Tin SimRENca. About tho time Silting Bull and bis allies killed about 300 white soldiers in Montana, ft riot broke out between some bad whites, and worse negroes, at Hamburg, on the Savannah rivor, South Carolina, resulting in tbe death of ball dozen negroes. Requisitions have beon mado for more troops at both places. The Radical Congressmen from South Car olina at once noliflod tho President that not ft soldier should be taken from that State to avenge the massa cre of the 300, but they demanded that 3,000 moro soldiors should bo sent into that State for tbe purpose of killing off a number ot the whites, and for olec tion purposes. Reador, tboro you have the Radical programme.' Not ft sol dior to avenge the death and murder of wbito men, but thousands lo rovengo tbe death of a few negroes. Again : If thia soldior business Ib in order, wby have they not boon ordered to the an thracite coal regions to avenge tho death of the scores that have boon kill ed within tho past lew years by the Molly M'Gulros. Are not white men just as good as Alricans? I. - L ... 1 The editor of the Pittsburg Commer cial is one oi those enterprising jour nalists wbo is constantly discovering something now, whother truthful or not Here is the last specimen i Tho OlrfrU Omilf Tim, aa ladopondaat popor wna ifomooratle londooetoa, taya to Ma roadora "Hayoo and Whaalar that'a jroar llok ot." Good OBoogh. The "Domocratlo tendencies" will be news to the few renders of tho shoot Indicated. Our Information is to the effect that the editor is one ot the blackest Radicals In the county. And yot, Mr. Errott has the impudence to Uito that he Is a Democrat Errott, Mackoy k Co., quit your cheap lying. Yon will have sins enough to answer for ftftor tho campaign is over, with out introducing jail-birds and common libelers to help yon through. Tbe ed itor of the Timet is in jail, and of course supports the same ticket that Avery, McKeo, McDonald and their confeder ates aro clamoring for. How natural for "Birds of a feather etc. larrotMATlo for Votirs. -Many voters aro annually deprived of tho right of suffrago by ft neglect to com ply with Clio requirement ot the law relative to aswsmenls and payment or taxos. All ponons, to seen re tbe right to vote in Pennsylvania must be assosaod two months before the elec tion and have paid a State or county tax (either will do) within two years. In case the tax is paid this year, it must be a month prooeding the eloo tlon. The election will be held on "the Tuesday next following tbo first Monday of Novembor," boing this year the 7th day of the month. Mon- day, September 4, is the last day for Doing assessed. Tuesday, October 5, if the last day for securing naturalisa tion papers. Tuesday, Ootober 5, is that last day on which taxes can be paid in legal time to volt. The above dates should be oarafully romomborod and acted on by all voters. WHAT GOV. BIOLRR SAYS. Mr. Biglor was in Philadelphia and called out by ratifying club, In that city few evomngs ftftor the St Louis Convention, and In alluding to. 'our nominees said i . j J "I congratulate you upon the choice of tho Convention. vTwo hotloi tnen than Tilden for tbo Presidency and Hendricks for tho Vico Presidency could not have beon nominated. As to their availability tlioru van bo no question. In times like these it is something to rejoice about, when there is so mueh duplicity and corruption in public' places. 1 never liko personal talk about men. Wo are all human, but I oan say this about tbe candidates, knowing them personally I do not know iu all this broad land mon bettor fitted for the Presidential and Vloe Presidential seats than Tilden and Hem dricks. 1 fool liko thanking tha con vention) not only for the candidates, but for the principles, which glvo us ft taste of tbe ancient faith ot the party. The groat industries of tbe North were never so prostrated as they aro now by the Imbecility of the men in power. The country must be brought back to its ancient simplicity and purity if wo intend to have another Centennial cele bration of American Independence. have heartl it alleged that 'hlden was op posed to tke" Democratic nominee in this State and Ohio list fall. 1 met Mr. 7VI den repeatedly during that campaign, and I can say tui allkoation is mot cor rect, lie lamented tbat our nomlneos wore placed on such platforms, but noverlhcloM he thought that ft better man than Judge Pershing could not bo elected. I think tbe bitterness at pres ent evidenced against Mr. Tilden will pass away when tbo truth is known." Wuo's to Blams? The Albany Ar gus, in allnding as to who killed Cur tor, put "tbo govornmont" on this footing: Total ausibor of troupa Id tho rogular army - W,r9 Katnbor of troopa drogoonlng tha floats... 7,0oT Nuiobor of troupa at raaruHlDg autloao... .4.116. Nombor of troopa la aorlbara forU aad poat 4,8M Number of troopa with Cualar (all maaaa- orod) ........ ' ! Nnmbor of troopa at bono 00 a flail..... 10,Si)t Nombor la tbo wooda aouawboro, l.&OS Nambtrniaalog - - 4,vl The Argus man mukos two good points in this statement Tbo first is, there wore too few troops in reach when the scalping commenced, and tho second is, that wo are compelled to pay for rations, clothing and wages for 4,705 men who bavo no existence. We wonder what portion of this plunder Bolknap tell heir tor ! A Straroi Conmbsion. The editor of tho Now York, Tribune, who is in tbe habit ol overlooking the virtues of Democratic nominees, runs bis pen ovor tho paper in this nay: "Thuro is no nonsense about tbe genuineness qf Til den's professions or tbe practical charac ter of his reform. Not at all." Now, whut astonishes us, is, that tbe editor in question has prided himself lor years aa political roformor, ready to take any acknowledged statesman ior his candidato who would plcdgo bimseirto clear out tho rogues who aro robbing the Treasury. But when the man is found lor him, be goes a Uaysing, sim ply paying the foregoing tributo to tho ablest and boldest Refurmor ovor put on tbe stage. A dog cheap Reformor yon are Mr. Reid. , Hi Unpirbtands tui Sion. Tho New York Herald teems lo oompre heud the signs of the timoa. The edi tor ft low days ago said : Unless the Radicals put an end to this new episode of Cicsarism, this business of degrading honorable men to please Boss Shep herd and avenge Bolknap, they may as well close their canvass. Hayes andWhoelcr; will be whipped as bad as Scott and Graham." Tbey carried four States Massachusetts, Vermont, Tennessee and Kentucky. Hayes may carry the two former, but he will be defeated in the two latter by at least 40,000 in each State. ' Carl Sahara la oat foe Baooa. Aodfoal JU- Well, ao ho was last full, and stumped the State for him. But why not men tion some other outs since you com menced. Is not Post Master General Jewell out for refusing straw bids? la not U. S. District Attorney Dyer out too, lor sending lot ot Grant's "crooked" whisky dealers to the peni tentiary? More:. Isn't Belknap In tbe same boat and Babcovk ditto? be sides those who have got out oi tho penitentiary. ". Intkristino Doc. ; hunts. On our first page will be found tho proceedings that occurred at tho residonce oi Gov e rnorTilden, when the CommittcoofUie St Jonis Convention waitod upon him to inform him of bis nomination, as well Mamlltcxtofhlslifcand public service in which ho has engaged. I.ot every body read those documents. Next week we propose to lay the autobiog raphy oi our nominee for the Vloe Presidency, Hon. Thomas A. Hen dricks, before our readers. No. Tdrii. Grant has sent no loss than throe namos to tbe United States Senate for tbe office of District Attor ney of Delaware, two of which ho has been compelled to withdraw bocauso of the publio clamor raised against them. They wore both notoriously unfit lor the positions, besides being the confederates of the greatest rogues that over infested tbo State of Dela ware or the National Capitol. Grant's experience does not soem to amount to much on the right side. ' A Prrttt Repormrr. Wm. H. Kem ble, tho notorious State Treasurer, and of "addition, division and silence" hab its, is tbe Pennsylvania committee man, who is to manage the Hayes can vass In this State. Ho is the man who helped Goorgo O. Evans to rob our 8tato Treasury of three hundred thou sand dollars, killed Evans and pocket ed the money. What a bully reformer he will make. "Hail Columbia," eto. Ohio even Looks 'Like Tilden. Tho battle in that State is becoming unexpectedly exciting. With Judge Htallo, Fred. Uassaurck and General BrincorofT coming to the front oi tbe Tilden ranks, and plunging in ior an aggressive campaign, it is noticed tbat oven Ohio is to bo contested step by step in October. All of these ablo Liberal leaden supported Hayos for Govornor last fall against Alien. ! - - - - . Indiana and Jefferson counties con stitute ft .Senatorial District. The Rad ical oonforeos have iuet,o,nd bad forty three ballots and adjourned to moot at Indiana on tho loth of August The Demooratlo conferees met In Punxsil tawney on tbe 21st Inst., and without doing any further basinese than or. ganliing, adjourned to- meet on the last Kritlay ol September. "THE CON FED ERA TK COX an ess." This is tho term tho Radical luaders apply totho,. Demooratlo I Congress, Wuioh has bee unourtliing ail manner of crjinos flwnniittod tutdor Grant Co., at shell tjivniendein to tax payer!, updjiayu humiliated every oil lion in tho land. But fur tho election of a Domocratlo Congress, a corrupt militury despotism would have been foisted upon us, and we would bavo been banded over lo a band of the most corrupt mon that over disgraced any nation. No greater Mossing uvor fell to tbo lot of any people, than when tho great majority declared for a Dem ooratlo House two years ugn. ' The editor ol the Baltimore Qaiiite, iu alluding to tho linmonso hlossings conferred on the people by "the Con federate House,": enumerates some pt the work In detail, ns follows:' 1. It has not olocted ft sneaker liko Schuyler Colfax, who used his high of flee to onneh himself. It has not elected a speaker liko JamesG. iiluino, who used his position to Influonoo leg islation in favor of railroad subsidies ; who acted as the agent of a Are arms company; who sold rulings and legis lation for so much cash down In tho sliapo of railroad bonds. 1 2. Since it met lust Docember it bus not boon devising wuys and means, day after day, to got money out of tho Treasury. On tho contrary, it has cut down the extravagant estimates ol tho departments, and if the Senato will pass its bills, has reduced the running oxpensos of the government nearly forty millions ot dollars per annum. Instead of making places for tho crea tures of tho administration, it has abol ished overy oftlco that wus not abso lutely uocoHsary. 3. It tias not legislated a Freud man's bank Into existence and placed Mn tho power of a lot of men to steal tho savings of tho poor colored men of tbo South, amounting to millions of dollars. On tho contrary, It has taken the robbers and swindlers wbo did tbat infamous work by the throat, oxnosed thoir rascality aud diroetcd tho officers of the government to send their names boforo the grand jn rim. 4. It bos cone iuto President Grant's Cabinot and dragged out of it one of his trusted advisors, who abused his high place, who robbed (he dead vet erans of tbo war ; who aided in cheat ing tho living soldiers on the plains, who demanded money for overy ap pointment ho mado, and brought hint to trial for his many crimes. 5. It has shown how the funds of tho so-callod departments of justice have beon used ibr'tbo purpose of control ling elections in the South and In tho North; how tlio President put his hand in the public treasury and took out money to aid his own ro-eleotion. It bos exposed tho villainy of Williams, tho rascality of Davenport and the gen eral corruption of that entire brunch of tbo public service. '6. It has stretched its hand across the water to London and saves the honor of tho country by collaring tho minister and embassador extraordina ry wbo was using his influence as our representative to "bull" a worthless mining stock and rob tho English peo ple. 7. It has shnttercd the District of Columbia Ring into a thousand atoms ; indicted Babcock tor complicity with snfo burglars ; mftde'Harnngton ft fn gitivo from justice, and oxposod the rot tenness and corruption of tho present Commissioners. 8. It has instituted ft rigid scrutiny iAto the management of the Navy De partment, exposed the corrupt opera tions of the Cattails and other plun derers. 9. It has laid bnro tho straw-bid sys tem in tho Post Office Department, and proved that the country has boon annually robbed ot hundreds of thous ands of dollars for carrying letters which wore never written over rontes tbat nowr had an existence. 10. It bus exposed the infamies of the Indian ring, shown now tho In dians are driven on the war path, that army contractors may be enriched, and the P reasury bled.' 11. It has substituted silver for the wretched fractional currency as a stop toward specie payments; matured a tariff bill which, if the Senate would agree to it, would do moro to start our idle mills and furnaces and factories, and restore prosperity to all classes than any measure which could bo de vised. It has takon tho control Of our Indian affairs out of the hands of the thioves who had chnrgo of them so long and placed them whero they be long, in the War Department. It has rcorganitcd tho army, and closed a thousand avonacs of fraud and corrup tion in every department. Takino Tueh Back. Tho Times says: "Merritt has intercepted tbe few' hundred Indians who wore on their way to join Sitting Bull, and having driven them back to the agenoy, will proceed to reinforce. Torry. It is lo bo hoped that tbore is somebody at the agency to koop the Indians there; othcrwiso. tboy may be Intercepting Terry and driving Aim back some fine day, after tbey have replenished their stock of arms and ammunition." There seems to bo as much "tum-foolory" about Indian warfare to-day, as there was a century ago. Hurray ! Hay csism would be Grant ism ovor. High salaries for officials, corruption and plunder, business pros tration, laboring men seeking work and finding none. Hurray for Whayos and Hocler. Those men who have had thoir wages reduced under Grantism, from two to ono dollar per day, and no work half the time at that, can have tho same blossing continued lor four years longor by voting tho Radi cal tickot In Novomber, Hurray 1 1 Hon. Geo. A. Jenks offered a resolu tion in Congress last Wednesday, which was adopted, directing the Sec retary of the Treasury to have a care ful survey mado of tho Union and Cen tral Pacific Railroads, for which gov ernment bonds wore issued. Tbe ob ject of this resolution is to ascertain whother false measurements wore not mado, thus enabling tho said roads to secure moro land than tb,ey wore onti tlcd to, Death or a Foriirr. Archibald Henderson, once a prnminenl. tea bro ker in Now. York, but who failed in business and committed a number of forgorics and decamped, died recently in Havana of yellow fevor. In a letter written shortly before bis death Hon derson described himself as subsisting on a borring and a plantain a day, with no place to sleep aavo that which the occasional chanty of an acquaintance obtained for him. . Congress has just appropriated f 250, 000 for torts on tbe Velio wstono, in ac cordance with tho recommendation of Gonerals Sherman and Sheridan. The same proposition was rejected by tho Radical committee of the last Congress. Had it boen adoptod then we might have beon spared the Indian troubles that now afflict tho borders. An Investigation of tbe Chinese ques tion Is to be mado by a'jolnt Congres sional committee following tbe adjourn. mental that body. "OUIl DANGER" 1'nder this caption, the editor of the Now York Jierutd, points out, In true colors, the real danger which threatens the permanency of our political insti tution!.. The editor in question seldom, assume ato lay down true Democracy as defined by our party, but in this In stance ho bus hit (he nail right on the head, and we, theruloro, give our read ers the buneflt of his warning. Read and ponder what he suys: "Of the evils which bad government has brought upon the Republic, and which are a danger to the purniuiionco of the Union, corruption is one oi the chief. If it could be destroyed by tho removal ot unfit nieu, by the impeach ment of llclknap or by sending a thou sand thieving officials to jail, it would bo a trilling danger. Hut tho task Is not so oasily perlormod. Comiptlou is not tho incident ot an administration, which dies with It; it Is a disease which id inherited, and our next President cannot hope to escape the consequences of Grunt's weakness any moro than an innocent child can escape constitution al predispositions Imposed by consump tive naronu. This implicated evil of o yarning, plotting, running ami tie grading national trusts to personal ends, can only bo expelled from tho government by a long and continued effort. Wo are firm in the boliol that if tho corruption of tho govern inont as it bus been ruled by Grunt should be permitted to multiply upon itself a few years longer tho downfall of tho He ptiblio would be as certain as tbo full of tho Roman A'mplro or tho rain of the Napoleon lo dynasty. But this is not the only great danger which the govornmont has brought upon tho Union. Centralitation of power at Washington is pcrhnis a more immedi ate came of that jealousy, suspicion and four which have lessened the love of tha people than even corruption. The Union was not established for the purpose of ruling the whole country from tho capital. Its objects and pow ers were clearly defined in the consti tution. But there has boon a policy of encroacument ana usurpation. We would say to the next President, who ever he may be, "Take tho heavy hand of the administration off tho Hlates." Tbore is no longer the pretext of the war for this interference with the sov ereign parties to tho national compact. It has prevented the pacification of the Month, aroused the indignation of the North and threatens to be as pernicious in its influence in the West Never until tho unjiistinterferencewith States and tho tondancy to centralitation is checked will the old, fond, enthusiastic passion of the Union be restored ; and those who would depress that noble sentiment are tho enemies of Liberty herself. "The leaders of both parties In this political contest would do wisely to ro lled upon the great changes in tbe con dition of the country. They will see the Houin with no oilier reason to dis like the Union, now that slavery is aostroyeu, than me mere memories ol the war, which aro fading, as the ntuart rebellions in hngland vanished from English politics and appeared in poetry and romance. They will see tbe West a giant power, which baa no motivo lor uistrust oi mo union il tin government does not interfere with tbe development of its prosperity. Tbey win see tue racinc aiopo, a younger giant, growing up by tue side of its mighty brethren, rejoiced to maintain tbe Union for the glory of all, but un easy under the fear of con trail tod inton feronco. Tboy will seo tha Kastwhere in the Union bad its birth, conscious of tbe fact that it is no longer compact ol the Atlantic seaboard, but a coded eration ol the eontinont if they com prehend these charges they will know that tho Union is not to be ruled with imperial sway from the capital, and that its dangers are, not what they were in Washington's time, from with out but from within. The Cincinnati Convention gave these subjects no con sideration, but Mr. Hayes has ample time to express bis views in tbecanvass. But whatever may b discussed in the canvass the vital question is to bo de cided by tbe next administration. The fute of tbo American Union, for a hun dred years, perhaps, depends upon what is done in the next lour, ana in all the work before us nothing is more important than the removal of corrup tion by the slow, steady process ot ro form, and the destruction of centralita tion by an immediate change of policy." Our readers cannot fuil to remember that when Grant accepted tbe Republi can nomination for Presidont, he made tho most abject promises of reform. Of course bo didn t mean anything. Hnstow labored nam to reform tbe Internal Revenue Department by pros ecuting and convicting the whisky thieves, and in his hunt aitor them he even wont to the White House and dragged out ono of the president's own family. But this stirring up Grant's friends of the Whisky ring did not suit tho President, anil ilrislow was turned out of the Cabinet. District Attorney Dyer, of St Louis, preceded Uristow, because ho was too active in tho prosecutions, and more recently all the most valuable subordinates in tho department have been given thoir walking papers. And now comes Com missioner Pratt's turn, who has boen notified that his room will be bettor than his company, and he is to go the first of August. Grant don't want men about with such prying eyes as Uris tow, Pratt Dyor, Ao., for they sadly interfere with the business of his friends, and as they are all turned out of office tho poor, prosecuted Wbisky ring will now have peace. When our readers come to read this paragraph, they mast bear in mind that the Cincinnati platform endorses Grant ,nl1 t''l II ayes tells the peoplo ol tho United States that the resolutions ol that platform aro In accordance with bis views, and that he "heartily concur in the principles they announce." The i.r - ii . . election oi jiayes meuns i lie perpetua tion of Grantism. Hayes' Letter. Tho sum and sub stance ol Govornor Hayes' letter ol aocopUtnco is, that ho does not proposo to disturb anything. The parly ma chinery ot brrant & (Jo. porloctly suns him. Ho will only take down the sign ot "Grant 4 Co." and put up Hayes & Co., who, thankful for favors sbown the old firm, will solicit con tinuance of patronage to the new con corn, who intend to prosecute business the same old way. The Govornor takes especial pains lo state, "all tbe old clerks of the old firm will bo re tained," Ao, Ao. This is about what was expected. Should tbe country be cursed by oontinuod roign of Grant A Co., with simply tho proposed change of sign, the people will havo but them selves to thank for whntevor follows. If the bitter fruits of the post sixtoon years have not sickoned the nation of the present dominant hordo, nothing they may suffer in tho future from that parly can. Jlut we do not behove in tho election ot Hayes A Co.. and we do foel a moral cortainty in the election of Tildon and Hendricks, for our faith in human nature is not yot lost In IH72 Horace Greeley did not get out the Demooralio vote within ono million of ballots, and vot he had one hundred and thirty-eight thousand store while voters than Gon. Grant Tildon and Uondncks oan get tha entire party voto and go In handsomely. New York Dny-ZtooA. ' ""-oi Iowa papers stale that the intense hot weather of the past two woeks baa mado a wonderful obange in the whoat and corn crop of the dtate, and added limy a million ooiiant to the value. NEWS ITEMS. A street pnvomont of uIk Iron Is soon to be triod in Paris. Kx-Gov, Horatio Seymour la seri ously ill at Utica, N. V. ' John Mogul lo In Jaif In Erlo for dealing in bogus five cent pieces, There was ft snow storm In the Sierra Nevada Mountains July 4. General G. B. MuClullan pusses the summer at Cobourg, Canada. The grain crop of Texas Is so lurge that there is no market for it at home. A whito variety of wild strawber ries grow profusely in Sullivan county. Korty-sevon hogshonds of raspber ries wore sold In New Castle within two weeks. Tho Crawford county tulr will be held in Connoautvillo during the first woek in October. With Humuol J. aud Thomas A. tho Buds, will find there's well, some thing hot to pay. ' - A Chicago lruit dealor announces Fifteenth Ainundmont berries for sale. He probably means blackberrios. A hoavv flood has ooourrexl on the Southern Mississippi, and tbe loss of crops ana stocks lias liueu Immyise. Mrs. Rachel Cook, orSummit town ship, Crawford county, celebrated her ono hundredth birthday on tbo 13th lust. William Caluy, aged thirty-two years, was found dead in bis bod at ft hotel in Williamaport on Saturday a wouk. Gonoral M. W. Bennett, recently nominated ny the I'residont ior Uovor- nor of Idaho Territory, doclineg the omoe. Tho unprecedented sum of 17,002.- 931.26 wus received for tbo sale of postage stumps for tho quarter ending June 3U, 1H7U. Mrs. Gun. Custor Is left absolutely alone in the world, having neither fa ther, mother, brother, sister nor child, and now no husband. Mrs. John Kaute, ot Lancaster, is the latest victim of tbo lamp.- She at tempted to fill tbo lamp while burning, with tho usual result. Coincidence of ideas. "Doff thine .Konitn crown I" says Bayard Taylor in his Centennial ode. "Shoot the hat I" says the street Arab. Pennsylvania mines and markets more than one-half of all tbe bitumin ous coal mined in the United States ; average over 8,000,000 tons per annum. Tho other day. In Now York, tho thermometer, exposed to tbe sun. In dicnted 128 degrees; lbs highest re cord ol boat in that latitude since 18-ia. Israel Wasbburne, ovor ninety, and father nf many of the noted W ash- bur nes of tbo country, lias at his home in l.ivermoro, 31 sine, a confirmed par alytic Emery A. Storrs, counsel for "Boss" Hessing and other convicted whisky ring men of Chicago, has gone to Washington with a petition for their pardon. Moody, the Evangelist will devote tli roe months to the regeneration of Chicago prior to January 1, 1877, when ho will turn bis attention to wicked Boston. Tbe receipts show that 766,921 deadheads have visited the Centennial Exposition. Of this suonstrous num. ber, however, only some 200 were journalists. The rolling mills belonging to tho Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company at Cumberland, Md., suspended opera tions on naturday, tbe lDtb inst throw ing out of employment about six hun dred men. Colonel W. 8. Gridloy, of Jackson, Mich., is preparing a history for tbe Centennial of all persons born in tbe United Stales during or before the yoar 1776, who lived to reach tbe age of 100 years. Tbe export business oi Boston, last week, exceeded any previous one in the history of the trade. The total value of exports since January 1 are fully $4,220,000 In excess of the same period last year. Edward S. S tokos, who shot and killed Jamos Fiak, Jr., in 1873, has ar rived at Auburn Prison, from Sing Sing. His sentence was for four years and with tbo legal deductions for good behavior, he will be discharged in Octo ber next Reports from all parts of Kan sas agree that the crops this year will be the largest and finest ever harvested in that State. Most ol the small grain is already harvestod. Corn promises an enormous yiold. Tha weather is very favorable. Tho live stock display in tbo Cen tennial exposition, which is to begin on the 1st ol September, will comprise 5,000 head, exclusive of poultry. Tbe livo stock judges will make a gonoral roort on the origin, progress, develop, niontand present type of each breed represented at the show. The carpet manulactories ol Phila delphia employ 651 power looms and 3,109 hand looms. Ihese looms have a capacity for producing annually 25, 000,000 yards ol ingrain and Venetian carpets, a total much largor than the capacity ol all the other carpet factories ot the United States outside of Phila delphia. The cottage of Goorgo D. Pull- marl, at Long Branch, was robbed of diamonds and jewelry valued at I2,5"0 recently. The thieves entered the sleeping apartments of Mrs. Pullman, whero tbe property was kept In a bureau drawer. In the same drawer was 13,000 worth of jewels, which tha thieves failed to secure. ' Tho Clarion Democrat says: There is a curiosity at tha mouth of MoLano's run on the rivor some two mile abovo this place. There is an opening in tho rocks, porbape an entrance to some kind of a cave which has not yet boon explored, from which oold air comes out, and on Friday last partioa found ice in tho crevices of the rocks. Curi osity seekers should explore this region. Tho entire woslern portion of tho town of Domossvillo, Ky., a station on tbe Kontucky Central Railroad, was burned at two o'clock on Wednesday morning, the lOth inst The most im portant losses are tho store, dwelling house and large warehouse containing 120,000 worth of tobaooo belonging to J. M. Stevens and Dr. MoGill's office and rosidenco) Slovens' loss is 130, 000; Insured for 17,000 in the .Etna. On the 25th of August there will be novel and exciting eontost the harpooning of ft whalo in the quiet waters of tbo Schuylkill. Half adoten whaling crews will be on hand from tbe coast of Now England, with com plete outfits, to participate in the sport On the following day these visiting whalers will race In whale boats, two oars on ono side and three on tbe otlftir, for medala offered by the Centennial Commission. Judge Harding, ofLuxorneconnty, recently delivered an opinion on the subject of taxation, in which hs do cidod that "parsonage belonging to churches or religions societies, as well as Institutions denominational in char acter, and not 'of purely publio charily,' are no longer exempt from taxation for county, road, oity, borough, poor and aehnnl mi - - - . tina. nn n u l....i .1 live fiat hereafter mak them so. I bey should, therefore, be returned, valued and assessed like other properly throughout the Commonwealth." THE SILVER BILL. Tho following is thu full text of the joint resolution for Hie Issue of silver coin, which has passed both Houses of CoiigroHsaud nowgues to the President for his signature : Resnlord, o. That the Seeretury of the Treasury, under such Mmits and regulations us will best seen in ft just and lull-distribution ofthe same through the country, limy issue the silver coin at any time In the Treasury to an amount not exceeding leu million dol tlurs in exchange for an equal amount of legal tender notos, and notes so re ceived iu exchange shall be kept as a special fund, separate and apart from all other mutiny in the Treasury, and be ro-iasuod only upon the retirement and dom ruction of a like sum of frac tional currency recoivod at the Treas ury in payment ot dues to the United States, and suid fractional currency when so substituted shall be destroyed and held as part of the sinking fund as provided in the act approved April 7th, 1870. , Km 2, That the trade dollur shall not hereafter bo ft legal tender, and the Secretary of the Treasury is hereby authorized to limit from time to time the coinago thereof to such an amount as ho may deem sufficient to moot ex port demand lor tbe same. Seo. 3. That in addition to tho amount of subsidiary silver coin author Itod by low to be issued in redemption of tho fractional currency, It shall be lawful to manufacture at the several mints ami issue through the Treasury and the several offices, such coin to an amount that, Including the amount of subsidiary silver coin and ot fractional currency outstanding, shall in tbe ag gregate not exceed at any time 150,- 000,0110. Sec 4. That the silver birlllon re quired for tbo purpose of this act shall be pirchosod from time to time at the market rate by tho Secretary of the Treasury with any money in tho Treas ury not otherwise appropriated, but no purchase of bullion shall be mado under tbis resolution when tbo market rate for the same shall be such as will not admit of Its coinage and iu issuo, as heroin provided, without loss to the Treasury, and any gain or seigniorage arising Irom this coinago shall be ac counted for and paid into the Treasury as provided under existing laws rela tive to subsidiary coinago, provided that the amount of money at any one lime invested in such silver bullion.cx- clusive of such resulting coin, shall not exceed .'UU,WM). ON THE DEFENSIVE. Tbo Radical press is moving Heavon and earth to put the Democratic party upon the defensive in the present cam paign. It cannot be done, it will not be done. Radicalism is at tbe bar, is in the dock, representing the crime and corruption of many yearB, yet bold and brat en in iu effrontery. The peo ple, represented by the Democratic party, are its accusers, and before them stand the discomfited thieves and das tards of the hour, awaiting judgment No, we are not on the defensive, we have the bullies who have traitorously condemned tho laws, by the throat, and they must not be permitted to es cape punishment We have no time to stand babbling with the publio ene my, no time nor disposition to reply to tho calumnies they have so often, and now again attompt to ase against our standard bearers. We aro intent upon tbe business in hand, and have no time for baby talk. We shall pay no atten tion to tubs thrown to the whalo, but direct our whole power against the present rebellion against the laws, nor shall wo lay down our arms until it shall have had rooted to it deserved punishment. We shall lay bare its seams and its sores, and show to the world ita hideous and foul corruptions. Tbe cloak of loyalty has grown all too short to cover tbe rascality of Radical ism, and its leaders now seek to divert publie attention from the main ques tion by belching forth malicious and pitiful lice. We mean to mako their efforts absrtive. Tbe Portean shape assumed by the enemies of tbe people shall no longer delade, no longer lure them from tho right path. Tbo ques tion now is, "shall we have a just ad ministration of the laws or remain un der the Bulo of robbers and plunder ers V The people will answer in the affirmative to the first proposition, and hurl from power the representatives of ft party whose acts, hereafter recorded, shall fitly find place by tbo sido of tnose mat nave "damned to eternal fume," tbe enormities of a Catalino and a Sylla. Columbia Herald. BY THE QLrEEN. In the Woman's Pavilion at the Centennial, tbore is to be found a num ber of articles of Queen Victoria's own unly I of t attainments in various kinds ot wo men's work. In tbe case containing samples irom tbe royal school oi noodle work aro somo napkins spun by ber majesty, with the monogram "V. R." in the corner, inclosed in a wreath of vine leaves and bunches of grapes. A very gorgeous fire-screen of purple velvet, embroidered in gold thread and purple floss, bears the card of "II. R. H.," tho Princess Beatrice, and a heavy damask curtain, with narrow velvet border, on which are sprays of white lilies and buds, is labeled : "Designed by 11. R. H. the Princess Louise, of 1orno." Tins lady bos a docldcd- tal ent for drawing, aud also models in clay, and in another case are shown two panel pictures in water color from hor pencil, ono a spray of wild pink honeysuckle, and the other a bunch of field daisies. There are number of etchings by Queen Victoria, most of them copios of Landseer s animals, but one of tbom n-prosents bor daughter Victoria when a baby, seated on a rug, surrounded by toys. This bears the monogram "V. R." in tho corner, and the dato, "22, 8, 1841." . The royal artist uses this same monogram and style of dato on all her pictures. Just this Time, ano I won't ask it ant More. If you'll only cloct me President this time, says Hayes, I'll novor ask you to do so any more. But somehow this "won't wash." It ap pears that Hayos has quite a reputa tion as the great promisor in this re spect it's an old stylo dodge of his. The Cincinnati Enquirer says that when Hayea was first candidate for Congress be promised a fellow aspirant that he wouldn't ask it second time. But ho did whon the second time camo, got the nomination, and got linked by Gonoral Banning. And In 1875 he promised that he wouldn't be candi date for Govdrnor against J udgo Tall, but he was nevertheless. And about as much faith Is to bo put In his latest promise about the second term for the Presidency. But it's immaterial what he promises In that respect, for the next President will not be named Hayes. On Samuel J. Tilden will re lieve him from the trouble of declining the second torm by bealing bim lor the first . A Growl. The New York Trilunt complains that the Democratic House of Representatives has turned out of omoe capablo and worthy men because they were Republicans. This is very probable ; but, as they filled the places with capablo and honest mon, tho pub lio has not euthjred thoreby. On the other hand, the rale of President Grant baa boen to tur out honest and calla ble Boniblicans tamuM then man Aon and capable, tmi fill their places with mon woo are not n.otoq for either oi tha above qualities. Asd the publio service has wffered thereby. Now, Why not give ns ft small growl over this latter "government," movement. SNUBBED ALREADY. If General Rutborford B. Hayos Is not a mere appondugo of tho Grant element why is he not permitted, as the nominee ot tbe party, to have some suy in thu conduct of the campaign 1 in tue appointment oi tno iiupiioncau National Executive Committee Hayes' wishes are contemptuously d isregurdod. Ho wauled his special friend, ex-Gov. Noyes, appointed chairman of that (Jomniltl.-e. nut INoyes was ignoniiii iously squelched by tho crowd and Zaik l'liaiidlor waa appointed, ('han dler has appointed W. II. h em hie as thu l'uiinsvlvania member of the Com mittee. Kemble's name is but unotlier word for political corruption. He is the author or the lamous phrase "ao dition. Division and Silence." This Executive Committee Is composed of or controlled by the offlci il thieves ut Washington and olsowhere. They aro running the campaign. They will con trol Hayes after the election, if they succeed, just aa much as they control him now. No matter how good an old gentleman he might be if this Grant gang would let bim alone, ho is their man to all intents and purposes, u be moulded like clay In the hands or the potter. In this matter of the appoint ment of a National Executive Commit- too to manage tbe campaign, Governor Hayes has been treated with a con tempt and an indignity to which no j. r. ..i.i i i. man oi proper spirit wouiu uavu auu initted for a moment. His submission proves that be is without backbone and that bis election would be four moro years of Grantism, with nil thai tho term implies. Venango Sjiedator. There is likely to bo fresh trouble in Cuba over the Chinese coolio question. It is asserted tbat when this class of persons are once lauded Usin the soil of Cuba they are in reality sluves for life, the redumption clause of the con tract being practically meaningless, in order to investigate tbis mutter, a Chinese Commissioner visited Cuba, and his report put the question in J"i h a shape that the Emperor of China is sued an order forbidding the emigra tion ot bis subjects to a Spanish colo ny. At tbe same time ho applied to the authorities at Madrid for the loca tion of Chinese Consuls in Cuba to take care of the inloresu of the coolies. This application was denied, and to add to tbe complication Spain has dis patched an agent to China for the pur pose ot re-openiug the trade in coolies at all hazards. Thus tbe matter stands at present The slave trade used to put money into '.ho purses of the rulers of Cuba and tbe ring by which they were surrounded. That has been vir tually abolished, and now the same men or thoir followers have taken up the coolie trado. But tho threats of Spain to ro-open the trade will hardly be carried out, for tho sentiment of tbe world is too strong against it for bor to venture upon the experiment TrtE MonERif Martyrs. McEee, McDonald, Avery and Joyce aro pre vented by their prison bars from tak ing an active part in tbe canvass for Hayes and Reform, and their pardon at tbis time might have a bad effect on tbe party. But tbey manage at inter vals to communicate with the outer world and to send to Boss Sbcpberd, Bolknap and Babcock assurance oi thoir hearty sympathy with the cause ot political reform as represented by Hayes and Wboeler. They are suffer ing martyrs for their party, but when tho contest is at an end they will be restored to tbeir political associates by an exorcise of executive clemency. Professor Bell, of Boston, and Sir Wm. Thompson, the celebrated elec trician, have lately mado some Inter esting experiments in tbe transmission of vocal sounds and instrumental music by telegraph. An organ in the Atlan tic and PaciAo Telegraph Company's office in Boston was played, and the different tunes were easily distinguished by the operator in Now York, and conversation was carried on between two Boston offices. A few days ago conversation waa carried on between Boston and Rye Beach, New Hamp shire, which are sixty-nine miles apart. $nu gmarlisfmfnts. QAUTION. All pmoni r hrrcby eutioDd agN.n.t trrjtliBK or hovrboM-iiaf Mm? Cocsr, pauper f BarDiiU bettngh, u tb Ovmoara of .mid Ivrr oaf t. will fmtj bills of hr ontrtMinr. JAR. ft. WKT.KL, JOHN KINK, BirDilJ, Jaly S6, UT -H. Orrrtwi. c AUTION.- All poraoaa aro bo robj oootioood aralnat ear. obaaiog or la aay war Boddliag witb tbo f..lhio--log proportr, aow la tbo pomaoioa of Willlapa Ogata, jr., of Bradj towaabip, rla i Ooo browa aaaro, 1 bay bono aad baraaaa, 1 Iwo-borao wag. oa, 1 boggy, barnooo, oook atora, aawlog aiacbioo, obai ra, bouiabotd iMraitaro, 1 ahovol, loag plowa, I ooara, S pfga, t aeroa of oorn, 9i aorta oata, 4 aeraa booaaboat, bay and vhoat la tbo bora, saw lega aad taa-bark, aa tho lama waa porcfaaai.4 by aao at prlraoa sola ao tha I1J day of Jaly.ood It loft witb blai on loaa esly, tubjoot to any ordar at aay Han. (I KO. W. OtlDK.N. CloorSold, Joly M, 1ST Jt rpoWXSHIP STATEMENT. JACOB DIME LINO, Dialrirt Trotoorar of Boiga lownlbip, la aeooont witb tbo Hahool, Rood aad Poor fuado of said towaabip, from tbo 13th day of Jaao, 1HT4, to tha Ittb day of Jiiao, ia;ti SCHOOL rUND DR. To Aaaooat of Ord.ra laaaed ....!, 11 IS To Bolaaoooa Doplioatoof 17 all l To " ' la baoda orBrixh -. I Kir 91 To Aaa't ol School Iu aatoartd for 'To.. I,WS TS To Ara't of anaootod School us rooolrad from Co. Trooaaraa tl 3ft To euro appropriatiiaa for Ui. Ml Tl CR. By Arnooat of Troahora'wagai. 11,(1 By Aai't paid for fool and watingoarlaa By Aat't paid for rapaira M By Aoi't of Neoroury a aolary Br Srhool ordoro radoomad 1,-1 By Troaa. par oontogo oa aamo By two data at aiaaiag Doiilioato By por oaat. oal oollootiag bopliosto of Wo-To .... I By oionarattoa oa Iloplleota ol 74-TS. By por Waplo,Wallaoa A Urahaa By Aaa't aaeolloolod oa UopUootoof 7 I By .. n By t By Sebool Baoaoy la Troaa. hands........ I S.021 tl ROAD Ft'ND DR. To Road Ordoro draws oa DlaU Treaa.,1 1 011 U To Aaaooat of aaatod road tas aaieaaad for l7a, oil i To Aaa't of Joha llaoror'l doplieau..... IS III ToAa'tofSoaiool8tott'tduplloato.. SI0 4" To Ami dao Trooaorar...... US 79 !, OS CR. By Baporrlaor't wagoa, J. Maaror $ By " g.Hloll ... By R.aad lai worbad ant Moarar By " - Slott By oioaoratioBB By Troaa. par ooaugo nn Hy Haadrloa aa par billa HHH By Aoa't of road ordora rodootnod li sts ss POOR rt'ND DR. To Ordrra laaaod oa Dial. Troaa I IIS Tl To Aaa't of Poor Ul aaaaaaid for lata... 4o II To Aaa't dao oa daplloatoa for 'f S-11 la hooda of Boisoh - 189 IS To Aaa't roe'd frost Balach, Oolloaur, duplloato of '7J-14 M j 1.17 Kl CR. By Amt pnld Ovarooora for tlano ,4 ts to l.tt II lly - " tor kooplnf nnupora H By " roe'd froal liana Boiaob dupll oato at U7-'l By Coltaatort por aaaL on aaaaoWMH. lly aiaaorattoaa , ........ By Aa't paid oa aodora not llfvod - By Ool tartar1 a far Swat aa dep. af lift By TraaaaMC'o POO WktlaMNMH.HHHN, By rod oal tea aft par aoat. aa tit H. By eaoaeratieaa on duplloato af l7t. By Am'l eel looted oa dup. ol l7S 14... Uy H.,. By boi ol Poor fuado It Troaa. baoda. (4, tS IS 40 II vt I as 7 t 41 "4 I 17 II ST mi so 13 M OS tt Atteet i W, f. BRADY, Clerk. H.ias is i.W.KYI.KR, R. TIKIMPHQN. ORO. HBRRITT, bji, July tS, 1-St. Anditora. fjfiv di'frttjfmfnls. RARE CHANCE.- A Tbo auliaerlbor boloa oliot to roiira friai vminoaa, win oii,oao m aia nulla BlUHIH, Tou aro la ouanactlno wllb Colllariaa, aad rarj doalrolilo, tho traila balng gaaraotoo I. a pftr. Honiara uldroai, W. J. JACKSON, . SI ato Collars, Ooolro Co., Pa. Jolj SO, to IL UOITOR'S NOT1CE.- In tha oalota of pator M. Smllb. loio of Bora aldo towathip, CloarOold Co., I'a.. dro'd. In tlio Orpbona' Court of CUarflald ooaoty. Tho Bodvraignod Auditor, appointed l,y tha Com! lo naka dialributloa of tlio helaaoa la tbo baoda of John 0. Ounnar, Aduiiolalraior of tbo obovo ottato, to and among thoao anlillod thoroto, barol.y glraa notion tbat bo will auond to tha dutioa of bla nppointmant, at hia offioo la Cloar flald, oa tbo Stb dor of Aogurl, 1876, allOo'olook a. lo.f whon nod abtro all iataraatMl aanr attaad. A. II. KKAMKR, ClonrSeld, July II, IS7e .1t. Auditor. . TRUSTEE'S SALE -OF- Valuable Coal and Timber Landal Tlir will Im Mid kt tfa Court Ho uii, la ib borough of CicsrflaliJ, on TueMUy, Auguri I, lHl, tli nodlTiiM bftlf part of nil iboM threi Artla trswU of Und ilut la Woudtrd totraibip, Clfarfitlti oounljT, Pa., dtMritwd u follow t No. 1. Being part of th John lUrrlfoa rarray, boMadoil hy Until of JnMpb Httt, Jobs Pbilipi' btvin and otborf, eonUloitig 1J4 aeraa, 141 prah i aod aJluwaooa, jNo. 1. Btiojj parUof tbt Jot. Crr aad Jtibn HrriMa aurti, bowled by land of Jmmmt llaaderanaand olbr eonUiotng 100 mmn$ aad i poroba aud aJluwaaoa. N. S. Bain part nf tb urroy, bnoodad by Hm Jrraon aod otharr, eobUiniiiK J HI aorta and at In tinea. -Tha who la being part f tha laodf fornivrlv af Ungb llndftmni'a taU, od aovaf od by valaabta white piae, k and keailoak llntMar, Wtlbit, chair. siis.o Ini, OttrSlmlA . ei-twIt, and nndarlald witb beary vvina af Iba Mobnoon aoal which baa hran opoaad tbarwoa. Tartua rtatonablt and nad knows oa day of aale. A. O. TATB, Trail for O. W. Cbarcfamaa'a aiUt Clearfield. July 12, 187ML B O ROUGH STATEMENT. JOHN O. CONNKR, Dlitriot Troaauror, la oreount with tbo fuuda of tho boroogb of Buru aido for 1S70 : DR. To Dopliento for borough purpoaoa.. ,JJ7 0T CR. By amount aiprndod on Btraeta li fly abolamout of 6 por oaou on SS.:tS...n. I M By Trooaurer'a por nontoga M IS SS By BUok Book Tor AadiUira . So By amount paid oa auudry ordara. ........ . 101 S3 S7 7 POOR FUND DR. To Daplioalo of Poor Ui, 137 S To Coah of J. t). llaDdoraoo 1219 4 ...... I 00 521 "t By abatomont of S por oont. on AM.44...4 I 11 By por aonlaga on tUlO.M 10 91 By amount paid on ordora :u ot 147 II By aavoaal avor paid by and dao Troaa.. ti 17 SCHOOL, PCXD DR. To amount of Duplknto, 187S $.IM 17 To amount of School Houaa ronu I tt To amount roecirod of Colloxtor Ids S7 t.1."" 14 CR. By umount dallrnrod to CoUoetor ........ MJISS ST By amount paid on ordara M 184 It By nbotamoot of o por oont. on 109.11... B 4S By por ootn oa M4.97 II 74 By ono boi arayona SO By exonorottona II SI By bnlanoa la Troaaaror'a baada..M..WH. 11 II t:0 14 JOBS n. REED, JAR. MeMURRAY. PHIKKA8 HUTTON. Anditora. Bornaidr, July 29, 1870-SL I 1ST OF JURORS. J Liat of Jarort draws, for Sptenbr tna, A. D. 170, to b bald on tb Ab Monday of Sap tmbr, (2Mb day J, and eonijpa for two weki : L.R. Hrrll,ClrllJ, J. MHiaugbty. M I E . it - C lMn aon , N wbnrg 1.W. Dotta, Heeftria. . Mebafl'T, Bell, tl. W. Campbell, Ball. K McDawaU, Bradford. L B. Car.1l, Brady. Phil ip Arnold, Brady, R. S. Stewart, fllraxd, R. GilL bbaw, (Joanna, B. W. Raoordi, Urtbtw A. B. Tat. Uraaawood, Jo. Bcrrkay, Hoatoa, J W. Potter, KarthaM, John Fox, kaai, A. Hamnhror, Law 'net, S. I ma . Lawrae, A. Hallitoa, Morria, Cbaa. Clearer, Peoa. H. Votbcra, CoTingtoa, A. oarnart, Utwalur, Jaa. Btoon. farfuaoa. 1 6. J . Uelnett, I'aioa, TRATBatf jenoftt. 1 waait. O. C. Woo re, CUartald, 0. H. Hatronl, " R Hbirk, " Joha Gulieb, M Jaa. Cooper, , Reg. (iearbart, M J. L. Kill?, L. City, J. W. HalTer, Oaoaola, S.H.Hiadraaa, baoearia Jaa. Krt, Btoaari, Tbo. Qroota, jr., Boe'la Daniel Bonrk, Bell, W. B. MeUbea, Ball, Sataael SandarliB. Bell, Uaorga Leeck jr. Blooai, Jciak. Oraffittt, Bradford Jaoob W ilium,, Bradf'd laaae Wtlaoo, Bradford, R. Llerjrd, Bradford, John Hhafler, Brad-, I l W. ThntntrioB. Bradr.1 Joba Punk, Delator, hand Burbat, Deeatar, laaaa Moor, Fargvaea, Aajraat Kogeux, Uirtid, Mark WiImb, Uoabea, John Lytle, lirauam, Jaa. MeUuIra, Urahaav. Win. Bellpflraaawoooi, F. 0. Bowman liutoa. Arebey Jordan, Jordan, Joba Butler, (of Uea.) Lawrnaoa, A. M. Reed, Uwrervea, Lewia I roaa, (of Wa.) Lawrcnoa, J. U. Moore, Lawrea Cbai. Duff, Lawrence, Henry Oroa, Mom, David Fleal, Monii, Joba Kaeigb, Morril, J. R. Nenderaoa, Brady J Zaa. Kuller, Uu-tu, Joba linnet, Horn. s. U. hnetler, Urady, " m. Howler, I'a in, Geo. lUrtifelt, Bradr, I jane MeKeowi, Pen. J. Chapman, Barni.de, I Jeanne Digjiot, Wood', TarBRi jo ao at 2d Iteik. J. B. Wcttel, Bartuid, J. F. Nearer, Clearfteld A. F. Mlteball.ClnarAeM M. Rottorf, Clrt.eid, I. Thompaon, Cor rill L. Shim., WsllareLan, M. II. Weld. Baeearla, rtob'l Priori, Heooaria, Saml Btirr. I)tcana, John CanBiagbaa, Bell Franc ia lluib, Uugga, A. U ear hart, Brad lord, Jainr HoHr, DurmiJe, I. McCrarbra, Bnrniid L. lleok, Hunt-aide, Joba Rohieon, Cheat, Andrew Frailey, Cheat, J. M, Belter, Coringtoti Jaa. Kopbart, Decaltf, S. Carrr, Fergaaea, Joba Hila, Fergueoa, Fred Croaa, Fergaeoa, Kllit Irwin, Uoabra, R. K. Bbirar, Ooabaa, W. H. Stanley, Uilwb, Lnk Millwood, t.u lick, Tbomaa Siallh, Jordaa, Jama Caiaiaart, Knox, J. L. Thompaoj, Let at X Lawhaad, Uwrenta, W. Spackman ar. La J nb a Ardoj-y, Fike, Joha banlap. Pi be, K. McCrarken. Pifce, J. M. Chaa, Woodwtr. W. Henderaoa, " TOWNSHIP STATEMENT. X DAVID REAM. I.l.tr.ot Traaaararof Bndj toanahln.in account wttb aaid tow oi hip, for Rt School aud Poor fundi for tb eurreat year: OAs rtrvni Dtto Tt. amount of Read Tax leried HW To baek ta of 1874. Ill Balance , MTV By worb duno oa roada by altlaooa.. lly olonorntiona Hy book tag for ISJi.... lly obalomaBt By Booka ... .. By Troaaaror'a por eaalago..... By Ordorh rodormad . By balanoa nt loot aottkmont ...$1,171 H . HI ... 1 ... 1 "3 OS' arnoot. rrs pa. To balanoa nt Wat aalllamont To amooot of Donlicato for I87S To Rtnta appropriation To amount from aale of booka, do To amount of Intaroat till dnla vrti " By amount paid lo Traohrre Br ahou-mout on ll.ts? at t por oral lly eaonarotloaa till IB7& . By baildiBg and repairing Br lot from Jobn Dulloia lly fud lly Secretary 'a anlary H lly rent, repairing, Ao - By Troaaorer'a per ooaUgo oa S.I.boo... lly bolaaoo la Troaaaror'a handa By bolaooo la Colleotor'a band jydjj; pooa rron pa. To bnlanoa at oettlemenl To nuiount leried for ISIS ..- l 1, . - , . L . I' ..I .1 ij emtieo, paio ior unplug o. .. Danville Uopital - R immii Mid for oMimj aervuio. ...... By oa l paid for koepiaf Lydla lieoror, f fP" 1 , h n. ' i er a . I Br " " J. Hamilton By It eon, Hamilton A Co By A.M. Draaokor By Board for aettliog ... By t'lark ....-.. By - i. ti'nbnnau, keep's peeper, lly " wlteeeeoeler Jeo. Milee.. - lly " " OlnoreouroH - "! ut . a " I" hy bolaaoo In Trenaarer'a bonJi By baloneo In Colleetor'a bande.. ... r" Wa. tbe AudllorOof Brady rowklf. t, eiamlnrd tho aeooaaU end touch" w Baame, Dlatrlel Treoaarar af aaid lowaiaf. them na nboro vtntod. .,, Allrati PAlll.l.llD'Hbl, J. W. CORP, H. HABTUKKLT,.'' lien. d. A. """-.a Lulher-horg. .laly II, W.-t.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers