" ( father braltam" INDEPENDENT AND PROORF:VI V F. I hope the time will soon conic when the wants of the wbble country will he : , uppl tett hy the Fro &lets of home Industry. nANT. • LANCASTER CITY, t'A. FRIDAY, OCTOBER, 25, 1872 OUR NA TfONA L TICK ET. For President, ULYSSES S. GRANT, of Illinois. For Vice President, HENRY WILSON. of Massachusetts. Prestilentisil Electors. Al' I.A Mi L. =alli= LEE Joseph A Bonn:int,. Marcus A. Davis. (I. Morrison Coate% henry Theo. M. Wilson, John M. Broomall, Francis Sh ruder, Mark 11. Richards, Edward 11. thee'', R. Shoemaker, Daniel H. Miller, Leander M. Milton, Throi lore Strong, OUR PL‘tTFOR The 1Z4 , 14:4141ivan party of the Unl , ,,d R.,:endd,•d in National 04)tiventi4444 ill Ow eit \ 4411 the sth and Cali dat, nl •l inn al4ain faith, IN ll' hwy. illlll aIIII , IIIII , CS 110,101)11 uiuni ti Wt,' , ttOIIS 11114.1 , 1144.4 4•444:44tr\ : I. 1)1/11111! eiel ell . 1 44,0' ...4,.; ,9 ;1,1 , v (.410(•,1 Is it II irthn.l roor.L , din 11'.. 111111', 11 I+OllllllV- , 1,14-tVI,II. t•r.t.t (• paled fdur 11)1111..1o...1 .la.; , ,i.• I I'l 17 , 111111:lint :111.:111 , 1 4 .14 ,119 I 1;;‘)11 1, 11 11Ig lit t_ it 1,1111011. d 110 111.111 e' t'.: IVeli'ollll4l ;111 NN I. , ,li,. 111 11V:111111r . 110.01 y 11 1 1 1 1 liii tti 1114$ Ste:l , lllV 'l4ll 11 .t 1 • i.l St111:1111 01 a.7ri•lll 1 I: Wl , ll' 1111 , 1 1111111:1111' I. o lli'y 1,0% I I. 1 1111.1 ii,. 1 . 11d111• 11110 0 11 d 1111.1 ,111111111' I 14(44 been generously auhul and sec, . --mu% ..,11;111. 1 L. the 1.411.11 e lands f ..iven to 0... r ,, nu mignttioll.l !1111 1010V.14”111111.•111 of Ili/. 1C...re:M.., cured from Europe:in 1101%*1.1'S. iiiiitdrei currency lets is'en provided, rep:moil i0n.„1.• u. • dowii, the mondial eredit 141181 I extraorditiar) burdens, add new bond: at lower rates. The revenues have been colleensl and honestly applied ; destine:intim ; o r, reductions of the rates of tax:J.ll.ll,l)w oritad has been reduced .lilting :mold ii.raiit's VIC cv at the rate of a htutdrell millions a year: e•rcii financial crises have been avoided, and pears plenty prevail throughout the land, Nionacolv eign difficulties have berm pieteetelly ami composed, and the honor and plover of the ii; 'ion kept In high respect throughout the world., d glorious record of the past i$ the party's hest ple.lge for the future. We heneve Ilnit the people ~111 111,1 trust the (lovertititent to any pally or vonikit,ation Of nien conaposed (limey of 1 4110 ha% e resisie.l every step of this beneficial piogreSS, if. t'omplete liberty and exact equality In the enJoyttient of all civil, polnieitl and public rigilits should be established and maintained Chroughout the eilleient and approptiiite State and Federal r the low nor its alinnifist ration should 11.111111 01 :lily discrim ination in respect of citizens by reason of rat', creed l color, or 111TV1011ii 1 . 011.1111.1110 f ser‘itude. 3. file recent amendments to the Notional l'on atllutioti should be cordially sustained heeause they are right, not merely toleritimi lamanse they till law, and should be citride.l ont :t0 . ..1.1111g to 111..11' spirit by itmirommte lemlslotion, the einorcement or which viol mil rusted lily 111 the party that stieured tho.e auwadittems, 4. The nati.mal gok .TlllllOlll SIIIIIII4I sock 1,1 nwin taill honorable pea. , 111111 all butprotect nig its citizens everywhere, and sympathizing with all people who strive for yoe tier liberty. b. Any system of the ell ,41 , 111,10 , tomer whi,l) the subordinate positions of the eminent ate V,llllltllierftti rewtmls tor 11% , '1 , parlp• zeal et [.tulip demoralizing ; and we therefore fa% or it reloriti ui the system by laws which shall almhsh the evils ..f patronue, and make honed c, eilleieoev unit the essential ittllll. - ations without pritetteally ereating a Lie lenn re of °lnv... 8. We are unposed to further :zrarit2.4 ref Mt. Intlt lie hinds to vorporationra all-1 1111)it , ,, , 1 , 111•A, toil mand that file hat totial t .• ap.ti t for fret , homes for the people. T. The annual after pacing etirrent eN pendituree, pew:lons and the liitore,l 1,11 the public debt, should tarni,:ll a thoderoto haldneo tor the re duction of the pritelpal and II:, an much nn map he decked Cre a n a tax [limn' t‘tha,... eo anti liquors, he raised id dttill4 11111111 11111.0rta- Ilona, the tttle.t"r winch shatita ta• au adjusted an to aid in Heettring remunerative w ial•,ll', 111141 promote the industry, grow t h and pro Tern) it the whole country. ' . We hold to undytor honor the an,! • elnrs whose valor saved 'I toil' pen -1/iOIIH are a Marred ticht or the mown: and the widow/4 and orphans of those ‘t ho 1111'd for their iiii try are entitled to th....are and grateful people. We favor sm•h additional legisla tion ae will extend the howdy of the government to all our soldiers and sailors whom.l6 11(1111W:01V dl•charged, and who. hi the tithe of duty • ',prattle• disabled, without rewant to the length or servo•.• or UIP Callas Of su it discharge. 9. The doctrine of Great Britain end ether Enro- Man Powers.coneerning Ulegiaure -am, a siii,jeet always a sobjert"—having at 111,4 through the ef forts of the Republican party, been ahan.h•m , .l, and the American idea of the individual's twig to transfer allegiance having item arecoted by Eu ropean nations, it is the linty of our government to ottani with jealous (ire the rights of adopted cif i Lens against the assumption of unauthorized claims sty their former governments. And we urge con tinual careful encouragement and protection of voluntary immigration. 10. The (ranking privilege ought to he abolished, and the way prepared for a speedy reduction in the rates of postage. 11. Among the questions which press for atten tion Is that which C.olleerllM the relations of capital and labor, and the llepubliean party reVOIZIIiZ,4 the duty of so shaping legislation as to secure full pro tection and the amplest Held for capital. and for labor, the creator of capital, the largest oppor tunities and a just share of mutual profits of these two great servants of civilization. Pi. We hold that Congress and the President have only fulfilled art untterative ditty ill measures for the suppression of violent and t req_ autunite organizations in certain lately rettellitoN regions, and for the protection of the luillot ttitx, and therefore they are entitied to the thanks of the nation. 13. Vi'e denonnee repinliation of the pair! , .1, in any form or ilisizinse as ft national clime. we witness with pride the reduction of the principal of tile deaf and of the rates of interest upon the mice, and confidently expect IMO our PYCI 111.11: 11:1- 11onitl currency will be perfected by it re sumption of specie pAymenf. 14. The Ref oil !wal pony of .3 , ; 9'Bth - ins to Ilse loyal women of Afil-rioa for 'lie,. 110 , 11 e 411 . 1'01101110 110. , 11 freedom. Their :cl - to wider liel,l,t of ,•,1 slitraliction. and the 111 . 11) I ~t olcifizims for additional rights rhunLt be trvatim with respectful I • o11siderall011. Ir.. We heartily approve the aeleat t.I rottgreas to isxten.livtg, 1:11.•:y and rejoice in ll:pi:ninth of pew aml fen;tvlntl feeling throwzliont the land. 1 . 1 . I ?fliblic.in party prow r”st•ect the rights reserved by the I,,ttat , illetti,ek , •a :Is carefully a.sshe trotvers delegated by them to tlw State and to the Kimeral fiovernmeol, II moves of the resort to unconsimmo aim laws for the purpose of removing evils, lw interfere lire with rights not Nurrerulered try the people to either the State or National I:w:eminent. 17. It, is the thy ot the I teneral iiiivernment to tithnit !Melt hi May tell to 4-icoortiwo OLIO restore American commerce and Is. We lielieve that the m u test patriotism, the MLIIMPt. purpose, the Hound)the practical Wisdom, the incorruptible integrity amt Ole fierViCOA Of 1 lysses S. itrant have in fli;-1,6 rid him to the hearts of the Alfieri...an tieoillo. 1111,1 with hint at our head we Mart to-day Upon a I,r; march to victory. Be Naturalized. In view of the importance of get ting out as heavy a vote as possible at the ensuing Presidential election, it is to be hoped our friends will not forget that there is probably a considerable number of foreign-born persons in the State who, while their term of resi dence in the country was not sufficient to entitle them to naturalization prior to the October elections, have now ful filled these preliminary conditions of citizenship. The forthcoming election directly and vitally affects the best welfare and advancement of their adopted land, and not a vote of this clam should be permitted to he lost, from oversight or inattention to the proper formalities of the case. 101:11, c,i the klectiffit i‘t 41w , !. \l't. Hotit• (11 !It tlgute-, : t alit .. MID NII r lir 1, I I. li. )1)1,1114 A.!,013 `.l . Dvlegates • .ss,7lr , Delegate,' '3 1 .15,1 `Li , 47, ' A% e rage. These figures show that the defec_ l tion from Ilartrauft was but trilling in the whole vote. The difference be tween his vote and the average of the delegates to the Convention was only 2.328; and the difference between his vote and that of the average for the three Congressmen at large is hut 5,614. Even this last comparison gives a - feet ion Of less than two per cent.—one fourth of which was lost in Lancaster county. In view of these figureß we cannot but admit that the attempted move ne,nt. in opposition to the Cameron dynasty has been an utter failure. In our own locality, we dhl well ; in the State at large, we were nowhere. We may as well face the truth at once. Passmore, Polegro‘e, devise Merrill, I lenry Ileherl Joseph M. Thompson, I , ane Frazer, F.eo. Andrews, Henry Lloyd, .101 w .1. (lillesple, Lames Patterson, \\ * ll 1:1las. C. lloyd. It may now be taken for granted, we suppose, that. Cameron will be re elected U. S. Senator, and Mackey State Treasurer. By all means, let us have Quay for Secretary of the Com monwealth. The people will not see the inside of the Treasury vaults for two years af least ; when they do, per lw,os there will be nothing to see. The longer we look at the matter, the Letter we are satisfied t h at we were right -and that is bettor than to he sta—essful. =AI NVitile it is hot c•laiult•dl th.tt tltt • rt•- atlt the SUlith C':a • ulin:l 411`Ci art• ttt t,t• It' ti•tii Olt the &burial (Inc:tion, for the reason that both of the guberic torial candidates were in favor of Grant, yet the fact that tin' bolt ticket was overwhelm ingly defeated, notwithstanding the strong reniforcement which the (lista ft.ett,ll I;Alothlicans received from the c:nnb:.l‘.cti Liberal and llevnncratic fence s who preferrsd to vote tnr Tom linson and his associates instead of tiontinatino candid:lb.:4 of their own --shows' the utter absurdity of the claims which had been plit, fOrlil in sonic Confi derate quarters that G rye toy would curry South Carolina in No vember. In nil the elections in States in %Odell the Presidential question en tered as an issnc , G reeley ism has been found to he MO Of the principal causes of the unbroken series of defeats with which the opposition have wet. The ballast way 100 heavy for the ship. If liorace Greeley wilts in the degree in which the vanity is taken out of him, he will be the limpest man in creation on the sixth of next November. OFFICI MEM. II ail Icy 4',.1.319 313, , ,;1; 11,1,443 \ . .{6.7,17 South l'artolina Thanksgiv hag. Behold how lovely upon "Confede• rate" soil are the feet of the beautiful spirit of "reconciliation!" A move ment is now on foot in some parts of the South to induce fireeley's friends to abstain from observing Thanks giving day, 011 the ground that the President's proclamation "was issued under the ex hiliarating effect of the October elections," :111(1 it was intended merely as a campaign document, and for the purpose of still further lacerat ing the wounded sensibilities of the Democracy. It is true there are sonie reasons why it could have been post poned until after the November elec tion. Had it been delayed until then, t he u tter defeat of G reeleyism through out the country would certainly have afforded strong additional cause for national rejoicing. Custom and pre cedent, however, prevented this. Still there is no doubt that, among the nu merous mercies and blessings of the year, the American people will not fail to include the total destruction of the Confederate conspiracy as one of the choicest and best. But we are sorry that anybody should feel had about it. CHEA P PAPER: Our campaign sub scribers will observe that listher Abra ham. is offered at the low rate of $1.50 a year with discount to those \vim get us clubs. This makes the cheapest p:►per ii► Pennsylvania. We give more for the money than any of our eotemporaries, besides baying the oidy original Pen nsyl )A kb depart ment now in existence. Send in your clubs. 'PriLune and Worbl ►nuke pecu liar figures by way of keeping up their courage as they Mass the grave yard where all their hopes HIV huru 1. According to their 'attics, Greeley will he elected, provided he carries New York, Indiana, all the Southern States, and enough Northern ones togive him more than half of the electoral votes. Quite so! ( wit welfel brenner letter read Wl] 11.4 too iaiti 10 be placed in its usual position on the fourth page. We were unwilliug to issue at number of the paper without this original feature. and it therefore appears at the head erf the the third page this week. "Pit , ' will get back to his old quarters next time: LOCAL CuItRESPoNDENCE k soli cited from our readers in all parts of the county. A tier Cirant b elected, we expect to give special attention to our local department, and to make our work effective we need the assistance of our friends. THE Greeley Panner is extinct. "Straws show which way the wind blows." The Liberal headquarters has been absorbed by the Democrats in Philadelphia. Where is the "new party?" We can't see it. BIIIIICI i u lit' The ;;pringtl:+l 1;+1,4 s an , ollwr "look :ti t;ic flgiircs'• -;• ht, =I that 1,(1 (; utterly without iaq.c, ilSkitiding that the chr.nees are C.espeu.tely against him. But tho most etrions portion of its article is that referring to its own tours during the' canvass, it t- . )tys that it regarded truthfuluteB3 119 the highest and Ines; lustrousof journalistic virtues, :Ind has honestly tried to square its ',tactic)) with its theory. By way of proviug its devotion to this high, self-erected standard, the same paper eharg,es that if President Grant is re-elected it will simply be owing to "the 'mind efforts ; of the clergymen, toll) merchant princes, thieves, and houl ) der-hitters ;" a class-Mc:Oh which, 11 !s to he observed, carefully omits Re great body of the industrial and pro ' (ieing classes of the country, who constitute the bulk of the members of the Republican party. if the neini.,- ' /icon MP21119 toiniply that the "efforts" of the first class promise to seduce the latter from their convictions and prin ciples, it grossly insults them ; while, I if it means to convey the impression that the success of the Republican party is in anywise dependent on, or that it has any sympathy with, the misdeeds of that "lewd" element, which, neconli”?. to the Tribune, con stitutes the bulk of the Democracy, it equally violates the known truth of things. Its captious sneer at the emi nent moralists and business WOO of the country will every Where be re ceived at it* true value. The same paper also speaks of "the Maine pur chase of votes''--by way, it is to be iiresumed, of further illustrating its appreciation of the quality of journal istic veracity. Still it cannot in, I denied that the Springfield Rept/id/can is perhaps the fairest and most itt ; g,enuous Greeley journal in the roan try. What the rest are may therefore be inferred. EMEIMMI The enrd recently ituttlish , Al in the New York intiters by the lemling, iat4- !less lawn of Hutt city, On the sulject of the natinnai finances and the lt lnublican policy of administering them, imonitsus to exert an admirable influence on the campaign, not only in New Yttrk but. 11 - trot:ghoul tlw country gf neraily. 'Flip signers of the , card in ettc!-ti'M `.l'OlV mV ,: who ire far more in the haliit of looking at public questions front tt business Ginn a po litical standpoint. In the policy of the Republican party they see stabili ty, safety and economy; while Rios Took upon the election of Greeley as a calamity which would entail the most disastrous financial and commercial results. The facts stated were so Flair) and simple, and yet so cc gent and convincing, that the card haA been copied info nearly all the leading Re publican papers of the Union, with, it is said, excellent effects upon Ilw minds of workingmen, as well as busi ness Merl, everywhere; since the former know that they have exactly the same interest in the results of the election which the monied dassi.s have. What the recent meetings of the business men of Phihultlphia Pittsburgh were to the campaign in this State, the address in question bids fair to be to that of the country at large FORNEY is "getting it hot" front all the papers which supported I hurl ratirt. So he ought. He was not exactly - the man to make the charges even against t'a►reron, so long as he stood convicted upon his own testimony, as being the only man to whom could be traced any portion of the Evans steali tugs. With that $2,000 in his pocket, he at least ought to have been silent, and ieft the protest against Ring rule to those whose hands were clean. Charges of dishonesty, however true, come with a bad grace from such a source. Oun neighbors of the Litelligeneee Fay they are going to form a "V" at the next election. We don't doubt if It is the favorite mode of flight of one species of bird. This bird saved home; we hardly require its assist ance to save Attie) kn. EDWIN D. MANAFIELD, the well known political writer alai statistician of Cincinnati says that if the Repub licans poll a full vote in November they will carry every State but live or six. Subseribe for FaTher Abraham, the eheapeet weekly published in Pennsyl vania. Advertise in Father Abr«hant, the most popular paper in the• State. COUSI if 111 i011:11 Con V(' Ili ion Clovernor Geary will prolialoy his proclamation of the HOMO.: delegates to the Constitutiiiiiiii irention, some time duriwz; !he t ir e -0 1 A, week; tlw law requiring Mill t i do se within fifteen daYs after the iileetion. l'be Convention itself will assemble in the Illonse of Representatives:it lho Capitol in Harrisburg on tie• tliiiil Tuesday of November, wide!) falls on the 19111 of that month. 1 t will he (Idled to order by the se e rei n ry of th e Commonwealth, awl it is gelierl Ike un derstood that after its organization has been duly effected, and thll proper of chosen, the C o nvention will adjourn to re-assemble Philadelphia, the Aet providing for the Conventhai itivestiug it with v,ebersti powers of adjournment as to Little and place. The total number of delegates is one hundred and thirty-three, who are each to receive a compensation of one thousand tiollnrs, with fifty dollars al lowance for stationery and postage, and mileage at ten cents per wile eir cular ; not, however, to he allowed at more than two sessions. Praelkal Men for Cray% 't of the 44:1‘11! 4;00 , 1 4 f 101".! • ni i"t:d LEE The Great stud (loon ttrneley Iwich to -acne hez levelooekt into a Keller I t.:ll,ierat than I sposot ("It "P° ll g Olll to the West :•t•roellow. Like the irnm ..loittison, Ittrri, ht z tt.: nneon- oe !iv his pOWCI* N 1 Oil tile nta e bleeve.; there is n toti;:thetis— n rrtotnett that sways the people, whether or no. I hey bin unforehunit in Kevin to take charge nv two men tiv this heloof, anti it bez bin the mutt twin period ov toy lilt'. Me and Schell and Fernando Wood, tit whom the matter ny goin wuz re ferred, wiz Opposed to the matter al together. We lied bin in two sick, and Are knowed all about CM. WC 1101 bill hauled all over the country with Joliie and v'( lied expel hawed the pleerdonis follereti, anti we WeZ Sily UV it. nit: llorris WU% bouuel 10 go, and swore et' nothin tI-e oone he wood go alone by hisself, and tiv eon r-4 , yeelded. NVe stipulated, however, that from find to 11'4 he shood make no allusion; to - that the trip S1100(1 he for tilt. purpose vkitin the exposkhun at Louis itl Cincinnati, and that skit re marks ez he Fihood make shoml ho purely agrikilltnral and mokanikal. Thi- Iforris objected to. lie wuz sure that the mere showin uv hisseif to hi' popolis wool do good, hut he knowtal that to speak 0 em t 7, only he cool speak to em', w etch em. For in Pennsylvania "Gooti Ileaveiusl" I shwa t in affony. ",lu'ak in Pennsylvania! tio, your Ex l eelleney Why l't'llusYlvaifin I choekt to self jist in limo, for again to remark that !lift WIIZ ;11;i1 t.) k there. wtrz 'Pio ' . .iont,..tco iii charge retired Co: - c-risnitasin.ll, WWI. in :1 IT. 1 . 7 N'oo Etwlail(i Ii i r i )\%1. 1 fl‘lW (1011- gel'OtlS hiS ; , 1)(",C. , ;II wf. wil7; cortain that it mo plow do. Fernando his it. "i'ort::-;ylv,sni: L. . 7 ..:(41 lip , "will ht. pass thin wich w- fopl concern.,. ahont. Ohio the .Ipoli , hottistA carry. an: , how, anti his ..yeakin thro that tititto may ^l O us a Con gressman ''r tai otti . ct will 1.0. butt. tic will ilik . v.ast. their majority. hit. 4 speakin Nill rct10...-4. r. ur nrt;ority, lot' 110 can't !t. 1 , ,..4. ti. 4 t.. I+llr,vlit.ro, iv ) 01)01 , WA hold in !ot Rini .rush ov, long anti is I:11. I --, wapt.-: to, the triornont -4 ()tilt. :Ind wher.. lit ( .., n't !Hirt it math." xvttz 1 - I;7,rovil to, mol co: 1 1- pronlist4l on it. Fornindo trtrtvl p"rtiklorly two pint.:. nanwly con , iii:ite the solg‘q• vie:m.o in Pit k hurg, which he cowl do tiy t;'r n ro to:trk-,, Ilio ni!"l:er element in 1 - t•tittivky. Berri: pronti,(ll to d o it, nnd wr :-,ftirtt.d. Coy. t iv Non ..ier-vy, (Joy, W a iL t .i., ii v vi rg i ny , :Ind into WliZapp,bilite(l >t guard With hint, I:nd see that he didn't hiio °NW. The recopshuns met. with ‘vnz ill the heart cood dsire. Ez llf 101: t t 11p011 UK! ItlaSSe.s and gay.ed onto their red noses, I forgot, that I wuz a Lihral Ilopuhlikin and for a moment fancivil Mint I ‘vii*lt 1 , -)l44ocrat. At Trenton, N. J., our beloved chief spoke first. Tie remarked ttmt 110 tied no idee (Iv speakin, that he will, a private citizon on his way In visit the Indnetrial EXpOSMOn a t Cineinnati. But he wood say that mishen wuz to make the people one in !wart, one in sympathy, and yointitot under one flag in peace awl harmony. lie de sired the North and South together, and clasp hat ols fraternally aeros4 the bloody chasm slob hid bin made hy misunderstandin:4 and sigh. At, \t;u►tna, that pure ln►trinl, Alex. Ate•('lure, and at Ihm•ningtnwn, (tut•. jined tts, both anxi o usly heggitt ttv us ntd, to let Horris speak in Penn sylvania. They loved liorris, but ez they wanted to heat liartranft, M o rris must he si At Parksburg the Atnerikan CM cinnatus spoke with great warmth and erasion). Ile remarkt that he heel no idee tiv twin called on to speak . , belt) merity'a - OR4ette eit izen on his private way to the Industrial Exposition at Cincinnati. But he wood say that his mishen wuz to make the people otte in heart,onein sympathy and yooni led under one Hag in peace and harmony. lie desired the North and South to stand tip together and clasp hands fra ternally across the bloody-- At this pint the train started, much to our releve On the train, however, a ter we left, we found twenty-one men, each of wich took me aside, and wanted to know whether, in case the great and good Horris wuz, elected, the offises wood be distributed among his supporters in proporshen to the work they did? I tishoorod em that shood be the cats , and in a fit nv en thoosism promised each one uv ern the offis he wuz after. There is only three offises in the town, :!!tit there is twenty-one claimants, :mil each one is promised one. They went away re mirriarrshw Ftipposiql it would he all rite, but they don't. know hut that Horris mite be in earliest about that d—d Civil Service Beforin. They got ofl at the next stashen feel in much better. LANcA:;TEtt.--This is the eitriner home nv Thad. StPVI'!H. The sinlidt` old patriot spoke ?wire telisitonsly here that at any oilier pint. When the train inovcd it:to th t • o f ,p o t h,, pert on his while le:t ear •10. sly, :tail with ciev nv the York 7;•ihw, sti,l;ht oot ov his coat pock;•1 his re t that 1,, ` WliA simply a private enizen, izoio in a pri val.. way to the Indus-trial Exposition ;it Citwitinati. Ile lied bin the stiljo,•l !iv inueli aboose. ile heel a SP -14.8:4011i•-t, a rebel, it Know-'"thin, tiogro trader, Ind he hod never denied ‘vooll blurtly that , Iris li is rnisvo wiz. to make the people one in heart, one in synipabby, and yootiihql tinder 11111' flag tiv peace and larttion_,.,;' , lie desired the North and , Solith Ili stand up togillier and c,asp hands fraternally across the 1,11, 1 04 chasm ‘vich- Ex:(tov. Bigler willed the hell-cord at this pint, and we rushed nn. Th“ great and good Greeley way mad at bein interrupted in his speech. He sed hti'd in d-11 of they'd ever let hian it over that bloody chasm nohow; and he sot indignant all the rest uv the Vay to IL, nu ISBUR.G.—Here the room! 114ris come out with more perspi enmity than ever. He to the peo ple that skasehy lied the last gun uv 5110 It t rov,111( MIIMMEI (1),1611.L C:.O, iii ) • 'lc desin4t .t1q1:-„,;111 -t1; tilt toiether, and (.1.A.41) h:lnds across the I,lt ()ily chaciti \\ Tiw nain start( ;1 speech wuz unfinished. LEW IsMW N SN'Ond father IIV his cimitry lied a splendid rivepslitin, and, oratorically speal.in. cAnie out strotw:. lle remarked that In' wuz a private citizen on his private way 10 the great Industrial Exposition at Cin cinnati. Bat 10' wood say that he wuz not a repot, and that leis mistier' wuz to make the people one in heart, one in sympathy, nod yoonited under one tlag . in peace and harmony. Ire desired t south to stand up tozether, awl (lasi) hands across the bloody rhasne whit wuz Ale': Mc•('lnre pulled tho bell-rope here, and w•e glade un. ;:los:•ly heti the train started, when I not ist thirty or n un •e hien aboard Wiell I had seen hurrah) at the devot. One at a time these hungry en4ses button-holed me, and every female jackasses son uv ent wanted to know about the otlise : 4 in the event 'lv I lOrrke, , , elee;llun. great hate their troubles. We stopped at every stashen on the road, and I bark motile sole•n u tvin sptpclies to the people at each place wieh wuz cheered vosifi.roms. After leavin each place likewise wuz I eom pelted to give aujience to front ten to fifty patriots who wuz enlisted under the banner tiv harmony and censilia ahen with all their souls, but who nevertheless wanted to know what wood be done with the otilacs in the event uv llorrises elecshun. At Altoona we were joined by re presentatives front the South, in kloodin Kernel Alcl'elter, tiv the t'ross-Itoalls. There witz nine or ten Confedrit oillsors, nil uv wk.!' bed bin hazed up and down the country for Indiilgin in Kukluxin, %vie)] is the only amoozoment the tyranikle gov ernment her, left for high-toned gentle men. They kept aloof front the party till after his speech at Pittsburg. This one speech ttv the great Peace Maker wit:: rot akkordin to 'migrant me, hut 1 liked it. \Vi t en he warmed up and spoke nv the solgers Nl'ich tied resent iv gailtered there to ran MO liann.:4, an l sit h, lIV in Ills , interest uv Grant, and aboosed th ew , I wep t . Troo, it will lose us all the solgers vote, but it bez fastened to us all the secession vote V ,1 4 h h e?: heretofore doubted the sincerity itv hi-: :.ofiversloff. Kemal lloziard, uv ‘va , ...fl his hat in unkolt tronalde enthorHifisto \Alien the greot comnoli , l al000:•:in the solgers bed jilt met at Pittsburg, and hefore lw got flirt), the whole nine uv TO vlicia•ln s'z 111 Ally tZ they dies at Vora Pillow. And when he e.inte to (he patlefti:. ftcrotnit tie how grandly S!tfith hell totiectle.i everything at tht eiose tiv the war—everything for the .-zake uv pet e r, Kernel iNlt•Peller fell on the great philosopher's neck and \‘..,‘pt. "How troo," sed Kernel Ale Pelter, tot\ ion his sp,isitti and tears. "1 nevi r realized afore Low consilitttory I \vitz. lint now I see it all. I low \cell do I remember the mornitt that I made tip my mind to concession. It NVIIZ in 1565. Lek' heti bin mashed, Davis wnz in prison, my niggcrs lied all gene, and there \n?: a company v Fedral solgers in toy front yard. I then niade up my that 1 wood t uggle tnore, but wood concede everything. A !ter the solgers woz ‘vithdraw . d 1 did hang, a few tiv cur in spite !iv the muskets tiv the freedmen's bum, ale: possibly, 1 'nay hey helped to burn out a buttdred or so settee, but I wiz ahrtiz cote-Hi:dory- -alwuz, alwuz." nd the Kernel wit% 4 agitated that he shook from his huzzoin Inost he:HUH:II pin, wade uv the teeth uv o iytkrr:+ and carpet-hag,gers falien by his good rite hand. At Pittsburg; 1 left in advance tiv the party to go on to LiftlisViik , to tix for his condi). Ez llorris is to preach peace, I want all niggers, Northerners, and other objectionable people to be kept out UV the way uv our procession, that the killin uv a dozen uv ern way not spite the effect uv the speeclws uv the great pacifica tor, 1 shell jive him, however, ez soon ez possible iI.EUNt V. N ASItY. witz Postmaster mat lwpt•a to be agin.) Official Vote for Governor. The following figures show the u hernatorial vote of Pennsylvania, by counties, for 1869 and 187•': EMEMI 1'01111111.4 ■ MEI Aile Ingo, 4131 11211011 HEE IMMO MU ES 1.,a1111,11 MEI MEE 4 UM oI id. i'lllilt 1',,l MEM! MEM =MC ( 101 l 4 ;cap lit MEM KEE= =BM li.tligi nt 1:1k ..... it' trvcll,• i' . ol l;. • 11 20.+0 2::64 2525 114.1,a144 4 21.111 23711 404):4 .1 tll .2 1. • 2247 2039 . 19417 1 •,:;ti 14142' 12f,4 ~r 1:;7 9m14 tl; 1'0,04 ... ::424; 1744:, 1492 3 . .417 1,4,3711441 42 , 1 i 2 , 14 2194 i, 44127 1,4.14,v11 649 P, 61331 4N55 .. 'u:rm.& K r al' l443:: :o(Hit; , Maki 1,3 coining. .i.;;:u 511:N1 4:e47 .111:1:1 .Nlcisi.m. - .- .. 1 11 _9 9911 696 SSli Mi•l'4,l' sta . ," 4t , 9 , 31 . mr, 4:429 Mon' ... .. 17,6 1765 1702. 16-111 Mo iTIO• 69, .2 , 3t0 211112 61.9 Multrgoli.t.ry ... F.-Ir, t ~ ..te. . ' v•t•ti , 7:163 Mont.''' . 121,, "11;?3 1599. 704 i ..‘111111:11111.!1•11 4 ,, 0 ~l 'it 74.19 492:1 %ort Itut...et land.. ... 4';1.1 4:',i;:t 40110 3497 1'; , ,•,') 2T9. , k.r.', I 241.15 24:11 l'liilllll4ll,lliit c,..1..±7... 4.,11 46492 1512.2 hi... .... 2.1.; 11 .4 l4.'M 317 1'44111' 14 2; 1 1 92 ' ilis, 13:4 4,.111131k,11 ~... .. , .,1..,0 9375 59111 79112 5it1.1..1" 1'. 1 f , 1; 1.17.'1319 1519 == Su:lit au ~11Nf1111'I1:11111 t 1 3:413 ' 2952 44144 'Nowt tzd 14 ;v. I `+'it , Union 2149 1:17•1 12117 174 MEE DEMI WitAhingtol, Wayne ..... :Asl ii. 175 4.4:41 Wyulning ... 1:41I 1791 1772'• 1.1:,2 ME ME BM Mill lluntil. ( ~v. 111. \ I ;t V. were a mow 11 ;lg.) If • , h'i•i!! , / ,,, ( . 1404e. .Just about -• v. - t•n• ) ()it n Mth!! EKE The Den,o. racy el 'Mary lami, under standin; 11, hind writiol: tin the ‘vall, are allowin:4 t:tvir reeley clubs to go to the how-wow.-% Many of their members openly 111.; 1 ror :rant. It is sH I Horace I irc(ley has here (1)1111)(110,1 l sell smno m' his Teibttm. titoek in iwder to ni<Ano crals—a li!..publican majority of ten. These States have elected to the Forty third Congress fifty-one Ifepublicans and and twenty-six Democrats—Republican majority twenty-live, a gain of fifteen. Our majority in the present House is thirty-three ; in the next it will be over sixty. The Richmond (Va.) Enquirer, a staunch Greeley organ, says : "Virginia ought not to be doubtful, but the truth must be faced, and we have no hesitation in expressing ou^ fears. The truth is, a large number of Virginia Democrats will vote for Grant in preference to Gree ley, and thousands of others will stay at home." Our advices from the Old Do minion satisfy us that the Enquirer's fears are well founded. The Harrisburg Patriot is still whist ling in the graveyard of its hopes. It says: "The twenty thousand Liberals who voted for Charles R. Buckalew on the Sth of October will be reinforced by thou sands of Republicans who voted for Hartranft. It is, therefore, in the power of the Democrats to wrest the State from Grant, Shall that power be exerted ? Shall it be said that when our Republi allies await our help we refuse to give it ?" The Cincinnati Commercial discourses about as follows : "There is no doubt that if the Democrats polled their party strength in conjunction with the Libe rals, the State could be carried for Gree ley. But we have no assurance that such will he the case. The appeals of the Democratic State Executive Committee may stir some Nluggimb souls to duty, but the vice of t,lis:tteeistra will prevail so whltly in Novemher as to make the case of Ohio hopeless. A corn spomicat writes to Lice. Boston POs!, Domocratie, protesting against the waste of nn atey, t nee and powder in firing salutes over LI le "great Liberal viebories" in Georgia and Connecticut, and asks, ''Why exult over the deluded followers of a fillet' dynasty?" No, indeed, She Liberals don't kv at , 4 Le their powder in that way. They scud it to their friendi down South, who use it in killing on' colored Itepublieall voters, thus Mem asing the JAheral majority. By the by, speaking , of Litnil, says the Chicago Times, the organs of the duck bill Democracy seem not to have heard that a notorious New York rough, known as "Reddy the blacksmith," was arrested in Philadelphia after voting three times on the (lucky side, and was found to be provided with the documents necessary to enable bite to vote some thirteen times more. Probably the organs of the eat and-rat fraternity are raising their out cry of fraud to divert attention from a filet so little to their credit. 1) ill(J,ral:A \\ll,l sport 4vhile t• 1 n ,I;.1t. • -.1 tii‘ , ;.:ir '111. , , I wile to tlic .!1•11; 11:1t ; liar:t( =EI =IS t . i!) h• o; of (41 , 1 , 'y 1111(1 thi' :!Itt'l* the No v..mber York loiter : • :.N1 r. ley If OA I . ...tted, he slia]l retire to ("!:ipp:ipia, and spend the bal ance Of ll' days in retirement from pub lic nifaii lie is tholi.4lit to be, too par tisan in his constitutional make up to he a success:rut editor of an independent newspaper, and it seems not unlikely that the 'Peibune may 'Ass undcr entirely new management.', The town elections in Connecticut last (vet k were lint sight of among the more contests 0t otlwr Statis, but the return:; show (I:( id. d repuldienn gains. The Hartr.ra says the gains in the two cities of Hartford and New Haven will more titan offset any Republican diri-alitction in (Ala r parts of the Stott). Connecticut were considered doubtful heron., there is no Longer any rt.win for (I.ouht that la r elec toral vote will be given to Grant and NV ikon. Political events in Missouri are begin ning to look mighty inter( sting. At the present rate of prod (thug, Missouri will before two weeks be admittedly a Ilepub limn state, and have a permanent place in the Grant column. The secrt tof all the trouble is that a large party of the Democracy there are determined com pletely and etnctually to stita ich Frank Blair and his Senatorial aspirations. That's exactly where the tnnible lies, and while the Blairites and anti-Illairites are ehawing each other lik.! Kilkenny eats, all through the State the cans are doing good, liou(st One by one the Greeley !mitt' rs art sub merged by the "tidal was e" of defeat, awl haul down their colors or die Fronk inanition. The La cap tte, Indiana, Dis patch is the last victim. It conf e s s es the defeat of its party in November, and no longer keeps the names of Greeley and Brown at the head of its columns. The present Gres Icy ite estimates, by which they propose to stiecced, remind us of the boy who was hunting lats. On being asked how many Le had caught, lie replied, " \\lien I get the one I and after 1111 d five more,, I shall have six." So I hl . se arithmeticians Mid no dillicnlty in showing that when they gi• t all the States they expect to, and enough more, they'll oh CA, VeV tOy . Quite likely. The Tribune's campaign of slander and vituperation will bear fruit after the election. Immediately after the Presi dential contest five !Owl sui s will be corn th:tt journal by well known NV;111 Strcpt titutociprA Ivho viol e ntly 41 and maligned throu.4h its columns by Mr. (ireele‘ 's young I11;111. l)lw or the pros( culors has co ! •ag e d llis counsel, drawn up I h.! mos rs, and if he do; s not. make tie 7'4%.;')/f t nt Whitelaw »:;ri for their scurriloms of it. lack deterinipa i.,l4 and r . ,2y his case. One of Mr. ( ii'', Irfc is NN Hitt , a letter' to the Hticc, a re f,. h •tio n s against 311'. Gews, and That the het ter he printed. No notice has !wen l:.1:yn 4;f it. The "elost eon' uiolis c trwe betz2, tr in the latel•• kis another ei. c- I ii 111( I ring 11%11 hedel•lal eil that there ar• twemy th.msand disfran chised eltizem , in .That sas. 'When the veracious sata• st, took 111 c shunt, for himself, lie li n t fl-wn the nimilwr of dia. franchised in A al two thou...awl. In the c..ars.. id' 1 tvi) wpcloi he increased , tote eat to live thousand. Now he has wit, up to twenty thotistiod ! l o t . IT keeps (In gabblin!! 1 have a ('OlllllO or unhappy disfranchised pcop!e in Ailomsas by November. Ti t o 'Mint truth is, 1 there are probably not twenty mutt in Arkamias who are dis franchised the l'ont_Tessional disabili ty net, and not two thousand by State action, with which the. Federal govern ment. has no rii ht to meddle. Dan Voorhees, "The Tail Sycamore of the Wabash," who was down 4 the Greeley hatch,t, on the 4:11 inst., has written a !tau r iu regard to the [ion, in which he uses these words "The only mistake our friends made wits in supposing that the prejudices of the masses of the Democrat is party, of thirty - five years standing, against Mr. Greeley, could be entirely overcome in a brief can vass of sixty days. lE. takes more time than this to work such a change in the minds of honest. slow-thinking people. I thought so when I tried to prevent the nomination of Mr. Greeley, and now I know it was right. I have entire respect for this element in cue party, and in time it will harmoniza with the cause in which we are engaged ; but it takes mor e time than was given in this moment." The Democrats of Maryland arc seri ously alarmed, respecting the election of the Congressmen in at least two of the districts of their State. At present the delegation is entirely Democratic, and the Baltimore Gazelle admits that its party can only keep it intact by active exertion. It says : "The Fifth and Sixth Congressional districts are in danger of being wrested from us, and they can only be saved by strenuous exertion. It is not too late. even now, to carry both of them for Ritchie and 'Merrick ; but neither is secure without work, and that of the most vigorous kind—work such as Ritchie did; work such as Merrick did ; work such as all the men of their party aided themiu doing at the last election in their respective districts. It is only by work—incessant work-- from this time until the sth of November, that they can count with any degree of confidence on being returned to Congress for another term." The Boston Evening Journal has evi dently been there behire. It says : Now we will listen to wild and passionate out cries about Republican fraud and money, indicting wholesale wrong upon innocont Liberals and unsuspecting l)entoerals, and carrying great States by majorities upward of twenty thousand. Next we will see the mathematical reserves of the coalition forces called to the front to batter down all these Republican majori ties with perfect case, and to stoov that, at the best, they were only Democratic victorif.s in disguise. Thin will appear the more ingenious theorists still, who will invent, all sorts of reasons to prove that every advantage in the Siatem that have voted thus far has been ou the hide of the Republicans, while evert thing (in cluding the imestige of the same elec tions, of coutse), tann now till Novem ber will be overwhelmitiOy in favor of the coalitionists. What (fits , . we shalt see got tlp to break the litre° of these mighty demonstrations of public senti ment, we do not know ; but we do know, and everybody knows that the coalition ist cause has Mr. Greeley stands as good a chance of being struck by lightning, now that the season of thunder showers is over, as of his being elected President of the United States. I= !ilsi El E 13 U