.-. TUB , "CLEARFIELD REPUBLIC! V inUIIU IIUI wanstlBAV, AT 0LIARFI1LD, FA. fcSTAHLIBHRD I l ilt largeet I'lrtalattaB efsuy lewopaK.r la North Central Peanut Ivsnls. Terms of Subscription If pail la advance, o within I monthi.... M) If uid after S aad before months 9 Bll 1 If paid efter tho explretloB of moBthl... K i Rates oi Advertising. Tranalent advertleemente, per eqaere of l lineeor tr.i, 1 timet or Mi ei r,r each eubaequeot ineertlon e A iinlnletrutore' aaM Executorl' notices 1 61 Aulitore' actio". 'J ' CtuMon. and K.truya 1 Die.olution notloee Prole.elonal Cord., lluee ar la,l year...- i oa ! Loral antieea, par lino B 1 YKAKLY ADVERTISEMENTS. ! I Uerc 0 ?! , J .,,o.rea 00 I oolumn- tj a 10 OS 1 oolamn.. 1M S. B. OOODLANDER, pobll.bor. I iauyfrs' Carfls. TT W. SMITH, ATTORNEY -AT- LAW, Clearfield, Pa. T J. LINGLE, .aI'TOHXEY-AT-LAW, 1:11 Plilllpeburg;. Centre Co., Pa. yipd R OLANPDSWOOPE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, I....... ..Ml. rUaFft.ld ffnunlv. Pa. oct. 9. 'IB-It 0 SCAR MITCHELL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CLEARKIEI.il. PA. jT-nm la Ibo Optra llouae. oelv, 'Ta il. 1 R. W. BARUETT, IJe , ATTOBNETB AND COUNSELORS AT l.AW, CLEARPIEI.D, PA. Janoary 80, 1878. rSRAEL TEST, ATTORNEY AT Clearfield, Pa. aar-Ofoeo In Ibe Coart Home, LAW, IJjll.'M Til. M. McCULLOUGH, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CLEARFIELD, PA. offi -a In Ha.onie building, Second elreet, op po.ite the Court llouae. - C. AliXOLT), l.AW COLLECTION OFFICE, CURWENPVILI.E, ,:s ' Clearfield Count. Peno'e. I4J s T. I'.ROCKBAXK, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CLEARFIELD, PA. lUtoe in Opera Home. ap 2177-ly gMlTIT V. WILSON, vtttornty-at'lMtr, CLEARFIELD, PENN'A. HHt-mn la the Maeonlo Building, orer the County Naltonul Hank. Iiuar2-S0. Tll.LIAM A. II ACiERTY, CLEARFIKLD, PKNN'A alind to ell leael bu.lo... wllb i,inpln ood ndelitT. febl l,'0.lf. WM.I.IAa A. WALI.At' DArin 1. aaeea. joaa w. waieLBY. a r r. WALl-Aca. UfALIiAl 1? ISu-ti K hrtr.nn, ISu-eee.nrr to Wallace A Kiel Jinn, I A T T O R X K Y 8 - A T - h A W , Ji.nl'71 Clearfirld, Pa. SXYUKR, J. ATTORNEY AT LAW, CLEARFIELD, PA. ifliee ia Pie'. Opera Uouea. June 3, 'Itilf. g L. McOEE, .ITTOItJtrEI'- iT-LAH', ' DuBois, Clearfield Count;, Penn'a. jrer-Will attend prompt ly lo all legal ba.lae.1 eatroHed lo k oara. Ijeall, 'all. TBOI. . MURRAT. CTBt'l aoBnOB. JURRAY A OORDON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, CLEARFIELD, FA. -OSee la Pie'a Opera llonee, aeoond floor. V.107I foeara a. H'aaALCr. - babibl w. a'cfanr. rcENALLY & McCUKDY ATTORN KY8-AT-L AW, ClearBeld, Pa IB' Legal bBtineu attended to promptly wllhj Adelity. OtBce on Beeoad atreet, above :ba Flrot National Bank. j.n:l:7 Y - KllAMKR, A T T O R N E Y - A T - L A W , Real EaUte and Collection Agent, CLKAHMEI.I), PA Will promptly atteod to all legal bu.lneae en tra.ted to bit tiere. pV-Omo la Pi.'. Opera lloaea., Jeol ne. J. F. JIcKENRfCK, DISTRICT ATTORNEY, CLEARFIKLD, l'A. All legal bueiBoae eatraated to hia eara will ra ealre prompt atlealian. r-OAee In Ibe-CoBrt llou.e. 'eugl4,IM.y. .1 OUN L. CUTTLE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. ' tud Heal Eetate Afreut, Clearfield, Pa. Ufnee ea Third atreet, bet.CkerT A Walnat. Reepeotfally effera bla earvieea la aelllng aad buyiBg laadl la Clearfield aad adjoialng yara ea a aarveyor, flattera himeelf that be eea . reader aati.faotloB. IFoh. Iet3:tf, ' yitpltiaiis' Cards. JJR K. M. SCIIEURF.U, IIOMdOFATUIC rUYSIClAN, OOea la reeideaee os Firet at. April 14, l7t. Clearfield, Pa. 0R. W. A. MEANS, I'UYSICIAN A SURGEON, DI'BOIS CITY, PA. Will attend profaadonal oalla promptly. auglllTO , JR. T. J. 110 a F.R, I t'HYSICIAN AND SU RO EON, ' OBea oa Market Street, CloarlelePa. V-Ofil koarai I to I a. m , aad 1 to I p. m. ,JU. J. KAY WRIQLEY, I UOMlKPATHIO PHYSICIAN, ' le-Omea adjoining the rerldenra af Jamat Wrigley, Kaaj., on 8ecnadlil., ClrerMd, Pa. ,jl,,7 tl. R. H. B. VAN YALZAH, CLRARtrtELU, FEB' A. OFFICE IN RKDIIIRNVR, CORNER OF FIRST AND P1NB rlTKKKTN, OBca koure-From II to 1 P. M. . May II, D VL J. T. BUHCUFiKI.D, lata 8arfoB of Ue ttd t.gimenl. Paaaeylvaala , ' Volaatoere, havlag retaraed from the Army, ' orlere hie prefoeoiBBl earv iaet ta thaaitlaaae ef Oteeraeldaeanty. tXr-Prereeeloaal oalla premplly atuad.d to. ''fie aa Beaoad itreat, foraierlyowaapied by Jr. Wood.. (apr4,'M.f 10H PBIXTIlaO OF KVRRT DIi.RIF tloa aeatly eieealee at.thll oBoa. CLEARFIELD GEO. B. GOObLANDEB, Editor , VOL. 51-WII0LE NO. Cards. TimTICEM' a ciiwhtahi-kh' r." Wo bave printed a largo aambor of Ibo Bew VKI BILL, aad will aa Ibo receipt of ly. five mmiia. aioll o midt i ey addreee. I WILLIAM Jl. HENRY, Justice or taa Paid Ann Scaivanne, LUMBER CITY. Colleetlooa ai.de and monoy promptly paid oor. Artltloiof agreement and deadi ol eouveyanoa aeotly oieeaud and werranled eor raot or ao charge. A'iy'71 JOHN D.THOMPSON, J utile of Ik P-cj n& St-rifMMr, C-.rweBiYl.le, Pt. .CollMtloDl -.. nd pktd '. money promptly fabll'TUf HENRY KRETH, (oeruno r. o.) JUSTICE OF THE PEACE roa sill, towsemp. M.r a, I8TS-ly TAMES MITCHELL, Square Timber & Timber Lands., jell'TJ CLEARFIELD, PA. REUBEN HACKMAN, House and Sign Painter and Paper Hanger, Clearfield, Peun'a. fcej.Wlll execute Joba In nil line promptly a.n In a workmanlike manner. apr4,7 JOHN A. STAPLER, BAKER, Meiket 81., Clraraeld, Pa. Fro.b Breed, Ruik, Rolle, Flea and Cekoe B band or made lo order. A general ae.ortmeal of Confertionarlei, Fruit, aad Note la itock. loe Creem and Oj.tere In eeaeoa. Salooa Bearlj oppmita Ike PoiloBce. Prioee moderele. Meri.li I l.-'Th WEAVER &. BETT8, OKALBRe IS Real Estate, Square Timber, Saw Legs, AND Ll'MBKR Of ALL KINDS. i-0oo oa Reeond .treat, ia rear of .lore room of Ueorge Wearer A C. Jar '7 lf. RICHARD HUGHES, JI STICK OF THk'pEACE roa Uttatur Totrnthlp, Oueola Mill. P. 0. II oflloial bu.ioei. enlrarted lo blm will be promptly atlrndod t. meh2ll, 7. TTAKRY SNYDER, II BARBER AND HAIRDRESSER. Shop oa Market St., oppmlte Court ll n. A eleaa towel for every eurlomer. A leo dealer ia llo't Hranda of Tobarro and Cltara. ri....U P a It. 'a JAMES H. TURNER, Jl'STICK OF TnK PEACE. tVallaretou. Pa. M- He ha. prepared bimeelf with ell tbe oeoe..ary bleak f..rml ondrr tbe Pea.icB and Bonnty Uwt, at well al lilank Deede, ele. All Irgal metteri entra.ted lo bii etre will rerelre prompt etlenlioo. Aley Ilk, I87t-tf. XliREW HARW1CK, V Market Htreet, llearfield, Pa.. HABi'rACTVaaa AMn dialbb in llnrnem. Bridles, Saddles, Collars, and Uorst-h'vrnishing Good. pVAW bind! or repairing promptly attended to. Haddlere' Hardwire, Horeo Brnabea, Carry Combe, Ae., alweya on band aad ror aale at tbe lowe.l eaah prloe. (Mereb 1, 1179. G. H. HALL, RACTICAL PUMP MAKER, NEAR CLEARFIELD, PENN'A. r Pump, elwaya ob hand aad Bade lo ardor en ahort aotiee. Pipea bored oa raaeonable tamaa All work warren ted to reader aatlafeetloa, and delivered If da.ired. myltilypd lAvery Stable. X tbt.1 h ii do folly prapaj- to vfoomo 4i.t kll im thi wty of furnlibing 1U. hi, Uukk1 Mtvddlu taod Huttui. 9 tht iborutt notie and n rtuoiitbl Urni. KtwldoDMOB Loooat itratt, bitUHD Third and rourth. UKO. W, OBAKHART. lltvloU. Fab. 4, 1874- WASHINGTON HOUSE, OLKN HOPE, PENN'A. rpilK aader.lgiied, having leaaed thia aom. X modiuaa Hotel. Is tbe village af filen Hope, le aow prepared ta aeeommodelh all who may call. My table and bar ohall be (applied with tbe beat the market effnrda. (IKORIIE W. DOTT8, Jr. Illaa Hope, Pa., March It, IHJ. tf. THOMAS H. FORCEE, DBALBB IB HENKKAL MEIiCIl ANDIHK. (.RAHAMTOK, Pa. Alao, eiten.l.e Btaaafaotarer and dealer la Saaare Aimoerana sawao i,amoeroi an iinaa.. er-Ordera aalielted aad all billa promplry Hied. l,Jyl'l E. A. BIGLER & CO., DBALIM IS SQUARE TIMBER, and maBQfantirera af ALL HINIMOP BAWtl) I.IIMHKM 7'7I CLEARFIELD, PENN'A. I.SNYDER, PRACTICAL WATCHMAKER ABB tilALBB la Watohon, Clotka tnd Jewelry1 0n.aa'a H-m, Mtrht Stmt, CLKARFIKM), PA. All hind, nf repeiring In my line promptly at- enned to. April In, 1174, Clearfield Nursery. ENCOURAGE HOME INDUSTRY. riMlK BBderalgBad, having a.uhllahed a Ner- eery ea Ibe 'Plha, ahoat halfway botweea Clearfield aad Parwaneville, le prepared to far- aiak all klade of FHUIT TREKS, (etaadard aad awarl.) Mrergraeae, Bbeubbery, terapa Viaee, Ueoaeberry, Lawtue, Blaokberry, Htrawberry, aad Reapberry ViBee. Alao, Hiberkaa Crab Treea, galnde, and early eearlet Rhebarb, Ae. Ordera prompUy attowded to. Addreaa, J. D. WK101IT, aepIO . Carwea.ville, Pa. MEAT MARKET, j F, M, CAED0N 4 EE0., . Oa Market St, ana dear weet of Meealoa Uoeea, CLEARFIELD, FA. Oar arreagemeate are rf the meet eomplete eharaoter tor furatebiag the publle with Freeh Meateof all hind, aad of tbe very beet Quality. Wa elaa deal la all blade of Agrlenltaral Impla. mente, whieh e heoB OB eahlhllioa for the bea eflt of the aablla. Call aroBad whoa Ib tawa, aad tahe a look at thief e, ar eddraea aa f. II.CAKDON A BR0. Claaraeld, Pa., July 14, im.lf. f ltarRtld Inimrann trrHry. ieaaa aaaa. cabboix l. bidpi.b. Kinn eY BinitLV, jitmi. Rrpraaeat the following ead other Iretlaaa Ca'a C.mpeDle.. Aeaeia. Liverpool Uadoa A Oli.be V. N. If.l4.ul.gt Lyaonlag ea malaal Aeeeh plena. ,W,tao Phmnn, of Hartford, Cana . 1.(14.013 laaureaoe Oe. of North Amerlra ,4.1.74 Berth Brltleh A MereanUle U.B. Br. I.7AI.MJ Soottlah Cemmereial U. S. Branch. u 7ll,l4h Watertoaa Ia4,llt Treveleri (Life A A eeldeel) ........ 4,ale,4f4 Olllee oa Market SU, epp. Coart Uoaae, Clear field, Pa. Jaaa4,'7fi-lf. & Proprietor. 2.CC7. SPEF.CII .... - OF..,.. . ... Hon." Tin. "A; Wallace, OF PENNSYLVANIA, In the Heaiate ar the I'ulted Htatea, Monday, March I5lh, ltw,. a . MAIL TRANSPORTATION DE-' -. F1C1ENCY. " ' The tSenatu a in Commitluo nl' the Whole, proreodiid to conoiilcr tho bill ( U. It. No. 47311) to provitlo for a de licienry in tho apprnpriiitionn lor the trnnsportatlon ot the mail on mar roiitett for tho finc-al yer ending June 30,1880. Tho bill wattrcporU'd Irom thoCom mittee on Approprintioni with amend mentH. The limt amendment was, in ejection 1, alter the word "year" in line 8, to Htriku out the following words : "At or within contract prices ns they oxinted on February 1, 1H8U : Provided, That upon any route where there hm been an increase ol the original eon tract price during the last or the cur rent lineal year lor expediting the de livery of mailt on any nuch route, at the ratu of more than 82,500 per an num, the compennulion lor expedited service on nch route ahull he reduced to the term, of the originu) contract, on and alter the Int day ot March, ; and nothing herein contained hull he construed to require the re duction of the number of trips per week over any mich route below lliu present number." Mr. WALLACE. Mr. l'residont, by direction ol tho Committee on Appro- Iiriations I move to strike out "nino iiimlred and seventy" in tbe original bill, and insert "eleven hundred" in tine 3. Mr. DAVIS, of West Virginia. I suggest to my friend Irom Pennsylva nia thut the question now is on strik ing out tho words iust read. Mr. WALLACE. I desiie to liavo this amendment como first. M r. DAVIS, of West Virginia. Very well. Mr. WALLACE. 1 desire to pro pone on bcliulf of the Committee on Appropriations and amendment in line ;t ot the original Dill; to sirme out, "nine hundred and Bevunly" and in sort "eleven hundred," so as to make the appropriation 11,100,000, Tho ICE-1'RESIDKNT. The amendment ia in order. The question is on the amendment ot tho Henutor Irom Pennsylvania. Mr. WALLACE. Aow, will the Secretary read the bill as it will stand i if tho amendments of tho Committee 1 bo adopted. ! Tho Chief Clork rend us follows : j "That tho sum of $1,100,000, or so much thereof as may be necessary, be. and the same is hereby, appropriated out ot any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, lo meet the expenses of inland mail transportation ou slur routes lor the remainder of the current fiaonl year. During tbo ro- muinder of the current tiscal year no lurlhor expediting ot service or in crease ot Irijisonuny postal star routo shull be maile. Sec. 2. That tlio lurthor sum of 1100,000 be, and tho same ia hereby, appropriated as aforesaid lo enable tho l'ostmaslcr- beneral to plueo now ser vice as authorized by law : J'rovidtd, That the Postmoster-Uoneitl shall nol horeattor Lrnvo tho power to expedite any contract either now existing or nereatter given lo a rate ol pay ex ceeding 50 percent, upon tho contract an originally let." Mr. WALLtAUr.. Tbo Senate will see that this bill relates, as it now Htunds, entirely to the transportation of the mails on alar routes. Star routes, as I suppose the Senate under- aluuds, include all other modes of transportation of the mails than thoso by slcamboutand railway. Thisscrvice includes two hundred and fifteen thousand miles of tho transportation ot the mails in every section ot the country, whilo transportation by steam boat aim railroad includes about ono hundred thousand ; no that there are about twice as muny routes paid for under the head ol star service us there are under that of railroad ami steam boat service. Mr. CONKL1NG. Will tho Senator be good enough to repeat the miles ? .nr. wALiij.u;ri. two Hundred and fllloen thousand by star service, twenty-one thousand by Bteamboat, and seventy-nino thousand by railroad. The amount appropriated lor tbe pres ent fiscal year fur star service was 15,900,000 ; the amount appropriated tor all other means of transportation, 111,300.000. Now, whenco crmes tho deficiency, for this ia a bill providing tor a de ficiency, in tbe transportation of the mails in this particular way f Tbe actual cost of tho transportation of the mails by Ibis mode ol service lor this fiscal year under contracts aa they now exist as shown by tbe report of the Kixlb Auditor or tbe Treasury Is ,033,uiiu, J tie amount apprnpriuted lor thia fiscal year is (5,000,000, show ing a deficiency of Il,Lio,OuO to com plete the service on its existing; basis. The Senate will understand this is not on the basis ol the contracts as origin ally lot, but on tbo basis nl the eon tracts as they exist at this dny. Who is to blame for this deficiency I Why does it exist? Why did Congress not appropriate too amount necessary lo conduct this service to the end of the fiscal year, tbe 30th of June, 1880? Congress did appropriate all the money tbo PosLOfflee Department asked for this form ol sorvicv, 15,000,000. The deficiency exists because additional speed and added trips and now routes have been pot by the Department to tbe service as existed It a year ago. From tho Department the answer that comes to Onngress is that there are two thousand new routoj eroated, fur the inauguration of service on a portion of which B-tlJ 1,000 have been used during the current fiscal year j and it is also answered that the in crease in publio business, the Increase in the demand for mail transportation. tbe large Increase In tho general busi ness ot tbo country bave callod lor an addition to the mail service by giving more trips and by tho expediting; ol speed on old routes, and that those were not Calculated tor when tbe esti mates for this fiscal year wore made, What is the demand? The I'oeb mastor-Ueneral on the 8tb ot Decern bcr, 1870, sent to Congress a lotlerr asking that (2,000,000 bo appropriated tor lite purpose ot meetinit tbe de ficienry to cover "the necessities of the sorviee or the country durine tho cur rent fiscal year." . With that hs baa also sent to Con press a loltor from the Second Assistant Postmaster Ges oral, which 1 will read to the Henate: Peeverwa DvpAarvewr, ' OrrtrsnrSaoeffB AaeTpeeTweTra (fBOBRAt., Aeaieate,D 0, Mereh , law. Bta t I have the honor ta etate that taa ear. re prietiea for lalead mall tfeaepertaliaB aa eter reaiee lor taa rnrreai a.eat year aaa praeea ta. CLEARFIELD, eelBoleot to meet tbe wenta of Ibe rapljly grow ing eervlee. Tbe ennual ooot of the eervioe aow IB opera tion la I7,MI,0I, wblla theapproprlatloa ia but $:,y00,0UO. Not only will the proeenl appropria tloa allow no Inereaao of mail faollltiee during tbe year, but It will be neoet.ery to oartell tbe e&i.ttog aerviee in order to bring ita ooat within the expropriation. Relieving that thi. eaii&ot be dona without great Injary te men, deaervlng oommuaitiaa, aod further tbat preaalug Beoea.lty ell.la lor inorealed aerviee Ib menr pleeea, I venture to auggalt a method of rebel. During the four flaeal yeerl la.t pa.1, namely, 11,70 to 187V, there bea beta oovared book into tbe Tieeaury or unaiponded belanoea of eppro priationa for inland meU traarpurlatioo tAimj, 4SS.27. Ia view of thia fact, I here the honor tore, qurat your reoomm.ndatloa lo Cnngreae that about one half thia amount, eay il,llll,ill0, be reapproprieted for mail tren.portatiuu on atar routea. Thia will enable tbe Department to maiatein the protest eervioe, and bealdea aflord a margin for tvaaonable and aaeetiary tBoreeao during tbe remeioing fiaoel yeer. Veryaro.peelfully, Ar. TII0&. 1. BRADY, Second Aae't Poatma.ter-tleneral. Hob. D. M. Ker, Poatmeater. General. Hero it will be noticed that the amount stated by the Department is t7,i!20,000 or (1,720,000 iiiBtead ol (1, 103,000 elated by iheSixlli Auditorneo essury to complete the service for tho current fiscal year. These oro very strunge figures. They domotistiute very clearly that either the Post-Olllco Department did not know its own needs or that tbe Kixlh Auditor of the Treasury does not know what tbe ser vice requires to complete it lo the end of the lineal year, lor while tho Postmaster-General Buys two millions aro necessary and tho Second Assistant Postrauslei Genera! says that$1.720,000 are indispousahlo to carry Ibiougb ibo service, tho Sixth Auditor says that (1,155,000 are all that is. needed, a diftcrouco ot $565,000 between the Second Assistant I'ostmasier-Goueral and tbe Sixth Auditor. The conclusion is forced upon us either that they had sotno other pur poso to serve, either in the incrense ol trips or in tho increase of speed upon these routes, or that they proposed lo huve onongh of money to do all that tho Post-Olllco Department saw fit It) do during the current tiscal year. It is our duty, of courso, to take the charit able view of tho subject, but I desire to call the attention of tho Senate to tho discrepancy in these figures. The Post-Office Department link lor (1,720,00(1 as a deficiency lor this year, whilo tho bixth Auditor or tho Treasury demonstrates that it takes but at the outside (1,155,0110, making a difference ot $505,000 between the Auditor and the Post-Olllco Depart ment, From this standpoint It is certain that tlio House ot Representatives was justified in initiating a careful-inquiry into the subject matter of appropria tions for this Department and probing it to the bottom. The House bill ap propriated but (1170.000. Tho demand of the Department was (2,000,000. Your committee have adopted what is substantially the amount fixed by tho Sixth Auditor of the Treasury, as nec essary to conduct this sorvico to tbo and eflho tiaoal year upon tho bssiaol contracts as they exist at this hour, expedited and increased trips, and altogether the sum of (1,100,000. Mr. TELLER. I should like to ask the Senator it (1,100,000 is what ho reported ? Mr. WALLACE. I will give the Senator the figures in a moment. Tho figures are as follows ; 1 read from tbo roportol the Auditor: SeMMura elafvoMNleAowiao lAeeeteaale. fce f fee- fere, amid Beat ( le ee imtd, aceortftey le tee reoerda e tkUofitt, eel o lae opprowriufiM. for afar rraeaperfnnoa or tee Jiecai erareaiiieg June tfv, ISOV. Amount paid aa an- - ' oennt at quarter ended Kept. 0, la. l,r.77,:i.6 Amount aapaid ob ao- eount or quarter ended SepL III, 'IP. 12,718 Oil Total for aeld ijuarter .,..,. Il,tl,07i 74 ,mouot paid en ae- eount of quarter ended Deo. 31, '79 l,OJ,.',77 21 lnouolunpaidba ao- euunt of Quarter ended Dee. 31, ';.... 110,1111 77 Totel for aeld quarter l,Tf,J,7 01 Amount unpaid on aeeount of uui r lereaaing moron di, mnv M i,bus,iii ay Amount unpeid oa aeeoeat ol quer ter ceding Juae el, ISsO l,H9,b55 71 Total 7,1S,S.I 60 - F. B. LILLatV, Aeting Auditor. Orrics or taa Avntvoa or van TuBAaoar. T-oavHB Poar-OrptcB DaeAaTuear, MaraBId, ISS0. If wa deduct from thia tbe (5,900,- 000 which have been appropriated fur tbia service lor the carrertl tiscal your, and tbon deduct what is tho probable amount of fines upon tho ooulractors, which will accrue in the remaining quarters ot the year, which we call male at (55 0U0 during the pant two quarters it was $101,000 we have tbe amount actually necessary to continue lbs service to the end of the fiscal year on tho basis of existing contracts, (1,100,000, which sum 1 am directed by the Committee to move to insert as u part ol this bill as the amount neo essury to conduct tho service to tho 30tb of Juno, 18S0. The amount In the House bill was too small by (130,000, but tho Depart ment asked (000,000 more than was needed on tbe tiasls nr the enntrnnta as thoy now exist. Tbe Committee nn Appropriations ot the Senate havo tuken this viow of it; that it is our duty to vole tbe money needed lo carry on tbo service on its existing basis to the ond of the current fiscal year, but no more. We are willing to put under the control of tho Post Olllee Department so largo a surplus aseithor $505,000 or (000,000, but we woro willing to treut it as a valid ex isting survicu in lis presoot condition until ths end of the tiscal year- - Mr. CONK LI NU. What is to bup pon tbon, on tho 1st of July ? ... ; Mr. W A LLACB. The regular Post Office appropriation bill will be passed before the 1st of July lor tho succeed ing fiscal year, which will make tbo necosMiry appropriation of what Congress judges is required to conduct the service lor that year. The pur pose ol tbe Committee is simply to provide that ths Post Oflioo Depart ment should ksreoopnlrcel as our agent in creating the sorvico nndcf tho law as it now exists, thst wo would vote the money needed to carry . it on for tbo present, but tbat we would exam ine tbe subjovt closely and bs governed as to tho suewnding year by ths tacts developed. Tbo proviso in tho llouee bill sus pends or destroys all expedition above (2,500 over the amount ol tbe original contract ; that is, wherever the Post al sstur-Uon oral, nnderautborilr or law, had increased the rapidity with which the mail was carried, and agreed to pay an amount exceeding (2,500 there for, the House proviso out down that expedition or increased rapidity ol transportation absolutely and without discrimination. There were 107 pi those routes, all of them wost of tbe Mississippi Itivor, and the contracts upon all ol Ucm would be changed in terms and amoonu. Many of them were largely increased by reason of ex PRINCIPLES, NOT MEN. PA., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 14, 1880. pedited lime indeed, 1 may say enor mously Increased. For instance take tho Fort Worth and Port Yuma route, oxpedited in 1878. Tbo time that was required for the transportation nl the mull from Kort Worth to Fort Yuma was shortened some three days, and the amount allowed by the original contract (13-1,000 per year for carrying tho muil thereon was increased in umount for the added speed to(20!),000,an increase nf (105, 0(10. The route from Hock Crock to Fort Custer was expedited from (10,- 507.12. Tho route Irani Bismarck to Fort Kongh was expedited from if 2,35ft to (70,000. The total increase on existing con tracts for expedition on these 107 routes made in tho last nsoai year, not in tho current fiscal your, was (MO,- 810. The total eirrmint ms.lo in this fiscal year was (.108,010, making a total increase of (1,115,705 for expedition or increased speed alono. Hero is a tremendous increnso in tne cost ol tho transportation of the mail by slur survico, $1,115,000, when the whole cost por annum is about (7,000,000, hence conies tho power lo do this r Where is the authority under which tho Posl-OffiVe Department can dnthis and bo within tho law ? I havo tho sections ot the Revised Statutes ami I will read them : 8ic. .11100, ComtifBoatioa for additional lervloe in earrying the mail ehull not be in eaeaea of the oveot proportion which the original oomp.n.e lioa tM-ara to the original aervioet aad when any each additional eervma 1. ordered, the aum to be allowed iberefor ebeU be aapre..rd in tbe ord.r. and entered upon tha bouke of tbe Department; and ao eompen.atioa ehell be peid fur any addi. Uonel regular aerviee renirou ueioie toe la.uing of auch order. Sr.c. 89111 No extra alloueBee ohall be mode for eny lncree.0 of espaaition la carrying the mail anleea th.reby the employtaeotof additional etork and earriera ia uadeoecrifary, and in eueh ca'e the addl'lonal ournp.naation aball beer BO greater proportion to tue additional atook and carrier, neeea.arily employed then tbe aoiupoli.a. tion ia tbe original eontrect neera to tbe atock end earriere aeeeaasrily eaiployed In Ita execu tion Tlieso aro the Bcctinus under which this power is now claimed and has long been exercised. Mr. JlcDOMALl). 1 wisti to ask he Senator a question. The Senate Committee on Appropriations bave in creased the amount ot the appropria tion in tho Jlnuao bill '. Mr. WALLACE. The Senntecom mittco have increased tho appropria tion in the House bill from (070,000 to $1,100.000 Mr. McDONALI). Wbero is that increase found 1 1 havo a copy of tho bill. Mr. WALLACE. An amendment proposed by niysell to bo inserted now by direction ot tho Committee. Mr. hcuuhalij. ii ones not ap pear in the printed hill. Mr. WALLACE. It does not. Mr. McDONALI). The increase is from $070,000 10 $1,100,000? Mr. WALLACK. Yes, sir. Mr. McDOXALl). Is that under stood to be a sum sufficient to carry on tbo present servicer Mr. WALLACE- Yes.sir; we based our r.etimatn on the report of tbaHivtb Auditor of the Treasury, which I have iiiHt read to the Senate. It will bo seen that an exercise oi such discretion at is vested in this De partment by tbe statutes I bave read has in this instance been such as to strike tho ordinary mind with force as almost an unlimiied discretion. Hero is an increnso of more than a thousand per cent, on the original bid, Tako the case of the mail Irom Bismarck to FortKoogh tboincrcaso istrom$2,350 to $70,000 : from Rock Crock to Fort Custer $10,508 to $H8,7G8; yot tho power to do thn plainly exists under tbe slalUo. Mr. TELLER. I should liko to ask the Senator a, question. Take the route from Bismarck to Fort Keogb ; is there any evidence that there bus been any violution ot the statuto in tbe additions! muney allowed ibom ? Mr. WALLACK. Cortainly not. I am not attempting to arguo that there has been : l Know ol none ; out i am commenting upon the provisions of these statutes and tlio practices under them in order lo demonstrate thut the discretion given is enormous ; whether that discretion bus been exorcised wisely or unwisely is for Congress to determine. Tbo Department has too much dis creliun on this subject. Such is the con elusion thut all of your commitleo como to. No Senator can lnko these statutes and read them and seo tbo practice under them without coming to the sitme conclueion. This is loo much discretion to vest In any execu live officer. No executive otUoor who desires to perform his duty with exact ness and without reuroacli nut would shuddoi at such a responsibility being vested in bim. Mr. TELLER. Iloesthocommiltce propose any chance In tho stututes ? Mr. WALLACE. They do, and this bill contains it. The excuse given lor this discretion, and it may bo a valid one, is that tho bids originally put in for the carrying of the nail in this character ol service aro too low lor thoir oorformance, and as the Depart inent is compelled lo accept tho lowest bidder it does so with a full knowledge and unuorstuiuling that tlio service is to be expedited or tho number of trqis increased, or both, and then tne rim master Gonuralcun give tho contractor hat he thinks will pay bun for carry ing tho mails anil what snob service is justly worth. lho Department is compelled to take tho lowost bid and then may in crease the pay, both by authority of law ; the whole thing simply results in this ; that the Post Office Depart ment can make just what contract thoy plcaso, lor they may mold every con tract by the expedition of service or tho increase of trips on any given route. Thispracliceoiight to bo ended. Tho policy of these statutes is a'tnnst unsafe and unwise policy, and tho practice, under them opens tho door tbrfav$fjtirtof thogrusnoat character, and if corruption has not already en tered thore tl certainly cannot luil to enter at some not distant day. Kocognizitig this as a plain result I also quote what tho Postmaster (ton era!, in his last annual report, said upon tho subject of those laws: "The operation or tho present laws regulating lho increase of compensa tion for increased speed and increased frequenry of servico upon star routes rosults in groat, loss to the Govern ment Those Isws (sections 3000 snd 3901 of the Revised Statutes) havo boon In forco for many years, and aro the Source of nearly all lho deficien cies in the appropriations for star service which navo cor been created. 'lt frequently happens, especially in the mining regions el the West, that, at the time of advertising, sorviee is nol required upon now routes more frequently than ouco or twioe a week ; but alter the contracts bave been mado and sorvico begun, population Increases alone the line, and an increase of speed and more frcnuent service be come necessary. Under such circum REPUBLICAN. stances it is clear that the rate that was reasonable tor service once or twico a wook, through a sparsely settled region, becomes exorbitant when multiplied by three or six to cover duily service. I woultl there fore recommend that section 3fll0 be so amended as to permit the Postmaster-General to advertiso for new proposals for tho increased service, the contract to bo awarded to the low est responsible bidtler, as usual. Sec tion II! Mil should bo so amended thut when the cost of incroasel speed would amount to more than lifly per cent, of the cost of the original service the Postmaster Gonoral should re-ad-vertiso for servico at tho increased speed." Thus it will bo seen that tho Post master General bimselfrecognir.es the fact that too much discretion is be stowed on bis Department and recom mends a change oi the law. Your com mittee have added to the socond section of this bill the following proviso : Providnl. That the Po.'.maitor-Genere! ohall not hereafter havo the power to expedite any contract either now exiating or horeerier given to a rata of pay exceeding od per rent, upon the oootra.rt ee originally let. If that proviso had been in force be fore 187H wo should havo had no com plaint on this subject of'inereased expe dition. Tho largo increase could not have boon made ; the contracts could not have boon changed so enormously; tney would have bud lo be surrendered and new ones mado. Another objection to ihis practice is that, under tho law us it now stands, there is no competition for tho increased expedition or for tho increased number of trips. Tho Post-Olllco Department is compelled to giro the increased ex pedition and tho increased number ol trips to tho contractor who has the route. Tho Department has no discre tion unless it forfeits the contract and relets the whole. The House bill strikes at ull of these routes, 107 in number, without dis crimination, and does not conduct the service to tho end of the fiscal yeur upon its oxisting basis. The bill, as amended by your commitleo, conducts tho service now in existence to tho end of the fiscal year, but allows tlieso ques tions of wrong or fraud or increase lo be settled and adjusted in tho bill for the coming fiscal year, when wo shall havo carefully examined all tho fuels and are able dispassionately and judi cially to apply tho knife if it bo the remedy. Contractors and omciuls are equally within our roach, but wo must act ou facts and not upon suspicion. Tho evil effect of the House proviso which strikes without discrimination would ho lotind in tho cao of tho routes to Deadwood or to Lcadville, where within tbe last eighteen months has grown up enormous communities, wbicb required nioro rapid transporta tion of tho mails, and an increased number ol trips per week. Tbo power to do what has been dono existed, and in tboso cases tho Postmaster General exercised a proper and wise discretion ; and no nunator surely will sny mat baoaueo tho increase is ovar(2,5IO upon thoso routes wo should strike down tho servico from lho railway to Dead wood from a fust muil to a slow one and give thorn a freight wagon in room of a pussungor coach. Tho etl'oct ol thut would he felt at onco in tho East as well as in the t est, and so it would be with tbo routo to Leadvillo. Your committee hove differed with tho House upon this subject and have eliminated from tho bill tho proviso which struck down all tlieso routes, because thero was no discrimination among them. It is a sweep at the whole and has cut them all up by the root. The etlcct woultl bo to change fust routes to slow ones. It would have deprived wholo communities of tho rapid interchange of business Inter course between them, so much a char acteristic of our people. It woultl, as 1 have already said, prevent the rapid transportation of mail matter from New York, tbo heart now of tho min ing interests, to Leutlvtlle or Deadwood and to all the mining camps in the West. Bosldes that, it would havo given to tho express companies the opportunity lor carrying that is now possessed by tho Government, and whero a fust team Is given by us a slow ono would havo been put in its place, whilo the express companies would have reaped tho profit, VV e had serious complaint beforo tho committee from contractors who alleged that thoy had taken their contracts in good faith, bad thoir allow ance for increased speed mado in good faith, put upon their contract route large expentlitures of monoy in good limb, and thut the effect ol tho House bill was to financially ruin thorn. Bo foro tho sult-committoo one of thoso contractors presented ' a memorial which 1 will ask tho Clerk to read as showinir tho effect of the House hill proviso upon existing contracts. This complaint has reference to one of lho routes 1 have already named. The Chief Clork read as follows : Wa.sisorna. D. C, March 1.1, ISSll. fb f Ar fTAaf mna o la. eeo.ena.onHr f tee .-e- nfe Committee ea Approria'feae Aaeiao ia eAaroe Joeat OIH moaieg aa cparcprtatioa Jur tht yo. Imt ilar errrt're : 1 re.nertfullv eubmlt the follnwlng faele In re gerd to etar route no. Ill lO.Wyomiug, whieb 1 em eonlreetor. Thi. route run. from Rock Creek on the Union Parino Railroad hv Fort Pettorman and Port MeKlaaay ta Fort Colter, Moataaa DhS milee. It wae advvrtiae.1 by tbe roat-onee Deportment, eiae lit, lain, eervioe tft commence Itjloner I .f s, for three) tilpa per week. I bed that part ol ,1 between nool ureeB anoi Ion retteveian (looked, and aalried tbe mail during the Mummer of IS7I. I wae a bidder for the through eervioe at $IS.77S per annum. It wa. awarded to rieorgc U MhDoaoagh (loweat hldder) for (11.777 per anaum t waa afterward earteiled forty mile, and tl,2ll.7t deducted, leaving 110.907 li. 1 .eld my atoch to McDonnugh. He waa declared fail ing contractor by tbe Poet-OtSee Department ebwat April I, 1S7I, aaa the inroUee ea Bta rea. tract were oRered the eervioe. I being aware that a good end feat aervli-e woald heaeeded, aad had already bean aeked tor by the military ot ratte Vetlaraiea, MoKlanev end Cualera, alao by the lerge aattla end mining Intereate of thai country, took thia route from tun auretice end went Immediately to work to atoch tha route and build etetiaae. I eoeeiaenied the eervioe April la, ItTS, tri weekly, with eight deya' time each way, pay, 11(1,007. 3. Th. Idng time wae ohleclloneole. I wae, howeeever, eora polled ta aee It in order to krwp wlthis the mail IIBT. Petltioni and reaue.te from all parliea Inter- e.lad were aeol to tae department praying lor dally earvlea and a ahortar tine. Juno II, I STB, tha Department ordered four addltloaal trie, per week at aeoat of $l4.00u.rtfi, and aa OAPeditroa of lima from eight daya to three deya and threw hewra, at a Boat at ant.xoi.xi per eauam. H rale 1 only required eight etatieaa for eight daya' time in-weekly, twenty-four etetinna were required for three dev.' time delly. I built Aft' of tha iweety.feur etelloea at my ewe aoet, aad aeeieted la awi Idiag lho atbera. They were eleekad w lb bar ABd IratB tolaat lo Juae I, isso. Corn la all ahl,.ped from Omaha, 700 mile, by re limed, ead thea heeled tha rraglh of tho route, Io( mile It averages me S3 aa war buehel, de livered aloag tbe route. Hey ia out ea the Use, aad eo.u from fill ta loo par tea ; having often M heal It sny milee. I have twa haadred home sad melee, with aa entire aalfll af hacka, huexbwarde, haraeoe, Aa. now la aaa bb thia 31 roilea ofriad, put there at great eapenee ta meet Ike aerviee erderad hy tbe rW-Omee Department, la ardor t atook thia roael la the ehor! tl given me, I aaa forced to borrow $-lS,0eu In money. Ta lake off tha evpeditlaa aad cetera la eight daya' time, wblam I will ha eaeanalled te do. woald Bet oaly deprive deeervlag people of the beet moil fee llitiee, bat would throw a aurplae ar .tack aad grata, aapeld fur, aa aaa aaaaa, which eertoaaly erlpnle me Bneeelally. Fort Fettarmaa ia s Ave-wampaay peat t Fort MoKLaaey ia a aevea-aompaay post Fort Caater le en elevon-oompauy poat, and baadquartera of the regiment, Ao You can readily eeethat half daily or three tripe per week, wi'h thrao-deya echedule, would be fer preferetde to delly oorvioe with eigbl-deye aehedule. ' I bave tha honor ta he, very re.pectfully,yoar obedient eervant, M. T. I'ATaicx, ,ti Contractor. Mr. WALLACE. To that is append ed a certificate by the I'nited .Htutos district judge of Nebraska, with whom I am well acquainted, as to the chai se ter ol Mr. Patrick as an honorable and upright man. That route was expe dited from one hundred and eighty hours to seventy live hours. 1 also havo a statement furnished me hy Vaile, Minor k Co., of the routo from Bismarck to Fort Keogb, which 1 ask the olerk to read. This routo was ex pedited from eighty .four hours to sixty fire hours. The Chief Clerk read as follows : "Wd now call attention lo tho routo Irom Bismarck to Fort Keogh. ' Saint Paul is the nilllilary headquarters tor all those Northwestern Ions. Prior lo our taking the above route all mail mutter for Fort Keogb and in the other forts in that region went tlown to Omuha ; thence lo Franklin by rail road ; thenco north about lour hun dred und twenty miles to Helena ; then east to Jlozenian and F'ort Keogh, making a eurcuit of near twothousund four hundred miles, one thousand miles of it by stage when its destination could be reached, and is now reached in ahoutsoven hundred miles only three hundred miles of it by stage. There was a weekly mail from liisiuarck to Fort K oogh via Fort Huford, Ion r h tl nd red and fifty miles ono hundred and titty longer than our present route. Through the intercession ot General Miles, Congress established this route on a straight line, and except at tho ends, not a person lived on the lino or within fifty miles of it ; not one ponton had ever been over tho line ; there was no track or trail even. We surveyed tbe road ; built mounds in sight of each other so that we could keep tho road across tbo prairie ; mado approaches to streams : built bridges and lorries, houses and stables, seventeen in number; dug wells and built a road through the bud lands, which Were considered quite im passable. "This road cost us near $ 10,000 bo foro we received one cent ; and would havo (Hist the Government more than (200,000 to havo done the same work. Tho building nf three hundred miles of road, through a period wilderness, und the worst Indian country at that timo in the I'nited States, was a task which has never been attempted before in this country by private parties. Tho result is, thut each one ot our stations is a fort, as wo must keep men enough to guard our stock, for if the1- arc stolon by Indians the mail would stop. and the Government does not pay us for stolen stock, and we cannot afford to suffer tho loss. They do not oven bury our men who are killed. HV must protect three hundred viilcM of mail communication, which the (lofcrnment teas not able fully to do boloro our day, thereby saving morotltsn f.Klli.uno per year. Again, tbe txovernment pays tor transportation ot soldiers and sup. plies on tbo straight line over which we have built a road, and on which we travel moro than one hundred miles a doy.therebysavingthecost ot one hun dred and filly miles of transportation, which amounts to a very large sum. On tbe slow time and small mail wb could get along with thirteen animals and twelve men, as wo could travel, liko ths Arab, with our tents and pro visions, making twenty fivo in all. By expedition to lost lime and six trips per week, wo estimated it would take 150 men and 150 animals ; but to-dny we have 200 men on the line shoveling snow, and 200 animals. Wo make every trip, although the railroad can not make one trip in two weeks. Our animals' legs are skinned by tho froscn snow from thcirhoels totheirgambrols. We incase them with sacks, wet, which quickly freeao, and in this way only can we travel. Al tbo ratio ol 25 to 300 wo woro entitled to more than (1C0.00O undertholaw j but wooffercd lo accept (07,050 lor fivo additional trips and expedition. But in this offer we made a great mistake. We did not know that it snowed nearly every day for four months in that eountry, and the thermometer fur weeks at 30 to 54" below xero, ns has been the case this Winter. Wo did not know of the blir.xards that would cut the flesh off men and beasts liko fire, or we would not bave made it. 1 Tho current quar tor will not cost us less than (30,000, leaving only $10,000 for tho remaning three quarters, less deduction", which may bo onc half, for not running on timo." Mr. WALLACE. There has also been furnished tbo sub-committee an expense account of several routes by one of tho largest firms carrying mails west of tho Mississippi River, (iiimer, Salisbury A Co., from which I road an extract as to but one t , res stack Bttta neorBt. Mall pay :I115S, Sidney ta Deadwood. per an'mfi lJ,J21 00 , Cheyeona t Deadwood, per annum; leJ.MOO 00 Total pay per annum I tS.IJl 00 F.tpcaee aeeount from Juno 1, 1879, to November 0, IS7S: Kmployee ooeoael....M.. ...... ........... Klpen.o aeoount - llraia aeeount . Hey aoeount... Hoard aaeeUBt , ... Toll eoooual ,.... Damage eceoaot West aad tear aaeouat...M.....H.... Sis mental H......MH. Double fo, the y'eer .1 lBloreotaalaeoe:n)eBlBIM,OaOat III par cent, per aaouoa - IS SIS ii 11(1111 43 il.SIO II S.I24 03 r,j t as . .U0 04 Isu SO I1.MS at 7I.I1S 17 I !,.., ol lo.oon oi Total fot tha year....... Total pa; per eooum., U,4M M 4l,l2i Ot t Kxeaeaef expeaaee over reoeipte...B ll.Velt 64 Showing that the businoss they had built up requires a largoly increased amount lo conduct it over tho mall pay, and that the compensation from the mails Is but a trifle as compared to tho whole compensation they receive lor tbo passonger and other work douo on those rouloa. They carry now about fifleen hundred pounds freight daily, and the rnto they receive is about six cents per pound. I have referred to theat apeoilio cases of complaint id order to lustily tho action ol tho committee aa lo the House proviso. There is another point of view in which lho action of the Sen ate committee will be soon to be bettor tor the Governmont than the House bill. It is that tbia bill Is cheaper than the forfeiture of all these routes under the proviso in ths House bill. The amonnt of ono month's pay, wbicb would have to he paid if the contracts were all lorleited on one handred and seven routos, wonld bo 1207,113. Tbe amount appropriated hy tho House bill lor the present service ia $970,000, making a total of (1.237.113. Tbe amount required to continue tha sor, vie on the present bases, as show by the Scares of the Sixth Auditor of the Treasury, is $1,100,000, tbe amount of Ibis bill as wt propose to amend it, TERMS $2 per annua is Advance. NEW SERIES-V0L.'21, NO.. 15. The difference and saving to the Gov Arnrmmt hv l.tds hill, therefore, is (1H7. 000 over tho House bill, so that from any stand point this is hotter than thej adoption of the llonso bill. Wo were asked to do two things ; to slop fast mails on all tho routes wont ol tho Mississippi and to ruin contract- ore who on the laith of our luw admin istered by our agents had spent liuoi sums ol mooev. Iti.dit here. Mr. 1'resiiieul. it is wir,e!""""i'l''tu""n. which would destroy to distinguish between tho action of the PoBt-OHice Department and tbe rights of theso contractors and tbo in terests of the people. On the one band our people want rapid transportation of the mail ; they do not waul tbe mail carried on a rude wagon, but on tbe contrary they want it carried just as rapidly as it can bo transported in overy locality. ' So, too, in regard to contractors, do man who bos colored into a contract with tbe (iovornmcnl on tho faith of its laws, under power given by the laws lo agents oi tbe tiovernment, in the absence of positive proof of corrup tion, of Iraud, of wrong, ou tbe part ol the man thus contraciini;, should be stricken down. It ia infinitely better for us to suffer for a timo, to bear these wrongs temporarily until we can put our hand npon the wrong, until wo can discover whero the corruption is, it it exists, and then at once forfeit bis con tract, make the contractor pay lor do bauchini; onr officials, and punish the official who is guilty of corrupt con duct in ruloronce to their contracts. This is the view the committee took of the subject-matter, and in the ab sence ot proof of corrupt conduct on the part of any contractor wo t'id not feel warranted in striking down ull these contracts ; but we belioved thai it was wise and just and propur to con. duct tho service upon tho basis on which wo find it to the ond fit this fiscal year, and at the same time await the action ol tbe House in its search for the thieves, and ii they find them the Committee on Appropriations will be among tho first, without distinction of party, to aid in punishing them, whether they bo found in tho Depart ment or among tho contractors ; but we did not teel warranted or instilled in striking down ths public servico on suspicion, in lessening the muil service to lho people in the absence of positive proof, or of any proof, nor did we feel justified in ruining men financially who aro not found to have beon guilty of complicity with lraud or tainted with corruption. Ho have guarded this subject in regard to the fuluro by ad. ding the proviso I nave already read. hen wroug is tound tho (senate, act ing in its judicial capacity, will bo ready lo try and punish, I have nofonnty- doubt ; but tostrike men before wronir. I t, ,,i ,,', ij .;,,. is fouud is to punish with passion and repent wben cool. 1 make no defense ol the Post-OfHco Department fur its unreliable figures. I have no dofonse of it for the initia tion of tbo expenditure of more money in the fiscal year than tho law author ixod it to expend, hut have aoted tion what we regarded as a requirement tbat the service should go on upon its existing basis for this year, and tbat there is not yet sufficient ground either in law or in fact for stopping that servico. This we thought warranted us in reporting the bill in the term bo fore tho Senate. The fact tbat there was no wrong yet found as connocted witb any of these contractors war ranted us in sustaining the contracts to the ond of tho fiscal year ; and when we find, if we can, beforo tho bill tor lho next fiscal year is completed that fraud, corruption, or wrong do exist, that any of these contractors are con nected with thorn, 1 shall be among the first toaid in forfeiting any contract that oxisls.in tbe hands of any of them and in punishing them in any mode within our power. But, sir, as I have already said, It is better for us to sudor for a time than to lesson tho means of business inter course. This bill contains those two ideas, that we wish to continue this service to tho end of the fiscal year upon its existing basis, and that we will not punish any man lor corrupt practices until they aro shown. We also desire to bring to tlio notice of the Sonato the fact that those statutes are full of opportunity for favoritism and corruption, and tbat they ought to be corrected and amended. WliA T DHl'yh'tXa COSTS. AN fcSSAY BEAD BEFORE Till I'M ION temperance association, at pennviixe, by Joseph m. spencer. 1 presume few persons are aware of how small auma run up to large amounts, constantly dotting tbe way at regular Intervals, and I am inclined to boliovo H men could see tbo ond Irom tbe beginning, thero would be comparatively few caught in the trap, to the numbers tbat aro constantly traveling the broad road to ruin. As I propose in tbis article to illustrate to this audience nn outline of what drink, ing costs, 1 will ask you to be patient with me. I will begin with what it costs lo be a moderate drinker. I havo supposed that moderate drinking might consist ol three drinks a day-morning, noon and ovening -and haveenlculatod the amount that would be expended in thirty years. We say three drinks a day, at ten cents a drink, makes thirty cents. Now wo calculate thrco hun dred and thirteen days in a year that our laws allow a man to drink at tbe bar, would make $93.90. Monoy be ing always worth its interest, we cal culate the compound interest on this amount lor twenty-nine years, which, including the yeur it was being ex pended, makes the thirty years, and find the amount to lie the round sum of (504.45. Then running on success ively and giving the amount of each year for ihirtv years, wo find the aggiegoto to bo (7,412.0ft, as follows: ....-17.41! M This amount to some of yon may seem to be an exaggeration ; rat I can assure yon that if everyone 'man or womsn-ewho spends thirty cents dsy unnecessarily would lay it away, and at the end nl tbe year put it out ob interest, as here indicated, would, at the cad ol thirty years, find bim or herself in possession of the above amount of money. Now, if this is only moderatedrinking, where will era find th immoderate drinker " As tome drink regularly and some only periodically, we oan make no dcBolta estimate of the amount expended ; but wb presom very few fall below, while let . (3 OS'lSth MS is 2d Ii ink Ja tit 3d .. le eO,lth.... 2 .1.14 4th Ill Sl'IOih 1S7 4S 4ih........ Ill 4!eih-.......... una tih .,.... . 121 7 ll.t ......... MO 14 tib - 1.11 a!IJd ! BIS AT !...,. Ill l!d . MobS Oil Ill SI tub ' SSlsl l.llk...... ' IIS SI jttik ...- S7S 17 I lib Il-S SJ'ltUk......,....,, 7N !4 I7IB I7 .V27th 4!tS 13th I M ISlh .... 41107 lltk 200 7i:lib .. 471 Sw lout..... . 1117 Total......... ...... .......... many far exoeod tbo above Mtianate). And iB this all? Mcthinks wo boar the answer simultaneously, "No!" If this woro all, we oould stand it; bat tho dark side of the picture is not turned yet. Can a man's lifo bs Tat ued with dollars and cents? Can his happiness or tbe happiness of bis tumily bo valued with dol lars and cents? It would bo a happy thought to know that thore were none that could answer this quostion experimentally. We read in our Testament (and wo must take this for authority) that a drunkaid cannot enter tho kingdom of Heaven ; and again, "what will it profit a man if bo gain the wholo world and lose bis own aoul?" Now, hero is the point that everyone who drinks ought to mako a pause at. - Slop and oouaidorl 11 ore, lho lip of truth declares It shall be so and so. Shall I continue In my on ward course unto lho bitter end ? No, I fellow-mortal, it is bettor when one finds be has token ths wroug path to "p short and return. - lVrhaps the ""ay may bo far spent, and thero be no '" t0 lo"- X"W, in the. preceding quotation, "what shall it profit a man," c. there seemed to ha a gam Indicated on lho one side either u power or vwiullh. or emolument, or semie other , tbe divine lifo in tbo soul und blot out lho chances of fuluro happiness; but with the drunkard it is even worse than this. For he squanders bis for tune, ruins bis reputation, robs bis family, destroys his own happiness, and also, in a degree, that of his Irienda, and finally his hope of a happy immor tality. Now, this is what I have figured out that drinking costs. What do you think of it, friends? Can anyone, alter bo comes to himself, go on in this downward course? Who would not say, "1 will arise !',' Arise from where ? Tho (.ntier? Yes; Irom all that is low and unbecoming a gentleman. I will arise to a higher life, and 1 will go to my Father, and present myself pui and nntieliled.and then receive forgive ness and mako all tbo household glad lor thero is moro joy over one siunor that rcpuntcth than over ninety and nine just persona that need no repent ance This is what the Temperance people are working for to reclaim. May they labor long and earnestly, until tho tide rolls over and echoes back-: "All is well!" SOLO. We're nothing for temperance, we're doing our be.l i We're a bend of true workers up In tha weal ; Tha time it i. pealing, 'til precious ao know, And we'll work for Ibo eoooo wbererer we go Till the we to pee.ee over that doe. aot real, sna tne ecno come, naca: -no reaomgour oeai. We will add to onr 1 Biona and .how forth oar might Till all aball come in and acknowledge the right, And the wave peatel over the tela to tell. And the echo some, back : "All la wall !" EDUCATIONAL. ' RY M. L. McQUOWN. Every school teacher should keep an ''Educational Scrap-book " Prof. Youngiuan's school opened ou Monday last with good prospects. Let every teacher in tbo county re view their work and strive to over come all thoir weak places before the opening of another term. James M. Porter, of Pike township, and Merlie E. Muines.of Bradford, are the latest arrivals at the Lock Haven State Normal School from Clearfield porinlendents will meet at the State Convention in tbe Capitol building at Uarrisburg next Tuesday. Clearfield will be represented. The Tonnvillo school undoubtedly caps tho climax in number of visits during the term. Mr. Liirbtnor, the teacher, reports 162 visits Irom parents and 10 from dirvctors. Next I From reports received we learn that 104 visits Irom parents and 10 Irom directors were recorded on the report of Fairviow acbool, in Penn township, and 75 from parents on tho Coal Hill school report. Tbe pupils ol Harmony school, in Burnsid township, presented their teacher, Miss Ida Neff, with a valuable gift on the last day of their school. Miss NclfBtands high in the confidence and esteem of her pupils. John C. Barclay, teacher of tbo Now Washington school, under the bead of remarks, says : "Tho ed uentional meet ing on the evening of tbo last day was well attended. At tbe close of the exorcises prltes wero awarded to Cora Mahaffuy, JossieMcMurruy, Delia Mc Murray and Ash D. Bennett, jr. The nrc.entation prieecbes Were made bv Hov.'s Hull ami Ague, and J.ll. Kelly, Kq. jrivo directors ana twelve patrons visited tbo school during tbo term." M iss Clara Barrett, teacher of Spruce Flat school, in Gulicb township, re ports tor the month ending Janu ary oTb,18H0: Whole number enrolled, ao ; por cent, ol attendance, :i ; aver- ago attendance, 40 ; visits receiveu from directors, I ; pupils missing no time, 16. Fourth month ending Feb-. ruary 19th, 18S0: Whole number en rolled, 67 ; per cent, of attendance, 90 ; average attendance, 49; visits from tliroctors, 1 ; pupils missing no time, 17. A number were absent only on day. Filth month ending March 22d, 1880: Wholo number enrolled, 55; average attendance, 48 ; per cent, of attendance, 90 ; visits from directors, 2; visits from cilieens, 8.' Fifteen missed no time. Several were detained by sickness. Interest still good. kot.L or HONOR. Tbe following is the list of names of pupils received for the "Roll of Honor" tor the woek ending April 8th. Tbe names appearing in this roll indicate that the pupil attended every day nf the term : Pennville school, io Pens township Gilbert Durnel, Harry Walker, War ren Rowles, Mary Pifer, Padie Dough man. Radakor school, in Brady township Emma Marewine, J. C. Harman, H. PoallelhwaiL. - , , Aurand school, in Brady township Lcwia II. Hchoch, Milton Aurand, Katie Schorh. Osaeols Primary School Mamie Logigsn, Willie MoCully, Patsey Fo ley. . ,: I isceola Intermediate School Carrie Askey, Alice Adams. Bradford Independent Bchool Clar ence Lansberry, Alios Lansberry, Roy Harger, Ralph Lansberry, Salt Liek School, in Karthatia town ship Frank , White, Willi , White, Mary White, Callie Fisher, Bertba lleckendorn tnd Sophia Fisher. Troatville School, in Brady township Daniel Hi. hell, Epbraim Schocb, Ooorgie Weber and Lltisie Bonsai. Iiocktnn Indopondenl Rchool VTm. Laborde, Charles Beer, Maggie Bra buker and Jerusb-l)rubaker. Curry School, in Pike township Chiloe Starr snd Davis Bloom. Clover Hill School, in Lawrence township Anna Wrigley. Stony Point School, ia Ferguson township Master Blake N orris. ' West Libertv School, in Sandy township Hsrbert W. Lindsey. FrenchvilleSchoel, Covington town shipCharles Wanchet, John Wan cbet, Jerrwne Piearrl. " - East In Jlois School A oca Rep sher, Fhoebt Zierdon, James Setrle, Boy Osborne, Ret F.leederi, Bennie Loring, Leroy Pearl, tjeerga Beard, Sarah iliger and Henry Pearl. , New Washington School Sue GsJ laher, Ada Gallaher ' and Hylen Mitchell.. Firs other ra rated but one Jr . . .