r - ' "V - W--' STJtjje $ mtfaj til Volume XVI-Ne. 234. LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 2, 1880: Price Twe Cents. "iCJ- f CLOTHISl. 1880. 1880. RATHV0N& FISHER, PRACTICAL FASHIONABLE TAILORS. SPRING AND SUMMER CLOTHS, CASSIMEltES. COATINGS, SUITINGS, VKSTINGS. PANTING'-. TJtOUSEItlNCS, OVEUCOATINGS, Made In eiilcr for M:n ami ISeyti in llie prevail ing Style, iiml satisfaction guaranteed. A-e, Rejidy-Maclc Clothing ! AND ALL KINDS OK FURNISHING- GOODS At the Oltl Price beleie tile Advance, RATHVON & FISHER'S Practical Tailoring Est;iiIis1mi(-nt, 101 NORTH QUEEN STREET. mt-lmd f SII OPEIII H. GERHART'S Tailoring Exhiblislimuiit, MONDAY, APRIL 5. Having iusl returned Irem tin; X:v Yerk Woolen Maikct. 1 am new prepared te exhibit one of the Bc-l Selected Stocks of WOOLENS -Fin: 1111: iwi ifl Ever brought te tin-, city. Nene lint the very llC-i (ll ENGLISH, FRENCH AMERICAS FABRICS, in all the Leading Styles. Prices as low as the lowest, anil all goods warranted as rcprescnt eil, at H. GERHART'S, Ne. 51 North Queen' Street. Spring Opening 24 CENTRE SQUARE. U'c have fei sale for the coming seasons an Immense block of e four own manufacture, which comprises tl.O I.att:st anil Most STYLISH DESIGIS. Come ami sec our NEW GOODS lUlU, which is larger and composed of the best styles te be leunil in the city." 24 CENTRE SQUARE. 2-lyd LANCASTER. PA " rOVKHMillS ASlt JIAV1IIXISTS. L ANCASTKI T?01 TPT? A "VI TV A fTA! A' SHOP ON PLUM STREET, OrresiTUiuz Locomotive Wekus. The subscriber continues te manufacturu BOILERS AND STEAM ENGINES, Fer Tannins anil ether purieses ; Furnace Twiers, Bellows l'ipes. Sheet-iron Werk, ami Bhicksmlthing general! j 69 .fobbing piemptly attcmlcil te. rnijjlS-lyd .lOUS liEST. VAltPETS. H. S. SHIRK'S CARPET HALL, 202 "WEST KING STREET, lias the Largest anil Chcapc.-t Stock et all kinds of CARPETS In Lancaster. Over 100 Pieces of Brussels en hand, as low as S1.00 ami upwards. Carpets made te order at short notice. Will also pay 10 cents Jer Extra Carpet Rags. 63G i vc tis a trial. 202 WEST KINO STREET. uUIIIIIUjI Hulle, Reaiy-Me Cletnmg, B. B. Metier Sen, MEDICAZ. CUTICURA Miracles of Healing Unparalleled in Medical History. ' 1 have been afllictcd for twenty year.s with an obstinate skin disease, called by some M. !.' psoriasis and ethers, leprosy.ceinmcncing en mv scalp, and in spite of all I could de, with "the help et the most skilful doctors, it slowly but surely extended, until a year age this winter it covered my entire person in form of dry scales. Fer the last three years I have been unable te de any labor, and suffer ing intensely all the time. Every morning there could be nearly a dustpanlul of scales taken Irem the sheet of my bed, some of them halt as large as the envelope containing this letter. In the latter part et winter my skin commenced crackingepen. 1 tried everything, almost, that could be thought of. without any relief. The 12lh of June 1 btarted West in hope.-) I could reach the Het Springs. I reached Detroit and was se low I thought I should have te go te the hospital, but finally get as far as Lansing, Mich., where 1 had a sister liv ing. One Dr. treated meabouttwe weeks, but did me no geed. All thought 1 had but a short time live. 1 earnestly prayed te die. Cracked through the skin all ever my back, across my ribs arms, hands, limbs, feet badly swollen.tee nails came eH',1ingcrnails dead and hard its bone, hair ilea.!, dry and lifeless us old straw. O, my Ged ! hew I did sutler. '.Mv si.-ter, Mrs. E. II. Davis, had a small part of a box et Cutieui-.i in the house. She wouldn't give up ; said, ' We will try Culicura.' home was applied en one hand and arm. Eureka! there' was relict; stepped the terrible burning sensation trein the word go.. They immediately get the Cuticuka Rkselvext. Cu ticliia and Cuticuka Soai 1 commenced by taking one tablespoonful of Reselvent three times a day. after meals: had a bath once a day, water about bleed heat: used Cutieura Seap lively; applied Cutieura morning and evening. Kcsull, returned te my home in ju-.t six weeks Irem time 1 left, and my skin us smooth as this sheet of paper. "HIRAM K. CARPENTER, " Jlemler.ton.Jfffcn.en County, -V". Y. "Sworn te belere me this nineteenth day of January, lsse. "A. M. Lkkkinhwkll. Justice of the I'ctice. We hereby certil'v that we are acquainted with the aforesaid .Hiram E. Carpenter and knew his condition te have been as stated. We believe his statement te be true in every par ticular. L. it. Simmons, Sen, Mereh'ts,Hi'nilcrsen,X.Y. G. A. Thompson, Merchant, " ' A. A. Davis, .Millard E. Joiner, Jehn Carpenter, " " A. M. I.ellingwell. Attorney and Counseller-at-I.aw, " " riiTirnn Ur.MEDii:saie nrenared by WEEKS & POTTER, Chemists and Di uggi-ts, :;(!() Wash ington street. Husten, and are ter sale by all Druggists, l'riee et Cutut'Ka, a Medical Jelly, small boxes, 50 cents; large boxes, $1. Cuti cl'ua Kielvj:nt, a Xew Weed I'urilier, $1 per bottle. Ci'Tii;un.v Mudicinal Teilkt Seav, 25 cents. CUTicritA Meiucinal Shavike Soai-, l." cent-: in bars ler liarbers and large customers, no cents. MALT BITTERS, MALT BITTERS, x MALT BITTERS, MALT BITTERS. A Feed and a Medicine. Tlie Purest, Safest ami Most Powerful lie lie steratlvc iu Medicine, ler Feeble and Exhausted Constitutions, Nervous and General Debility, Con sumption and Wast ing Diseases. inuv22 lindW&S&w C'LOTJIIXO. J. K. SMALING THE ARTIST TAILOR. Opening te-day of a large and select line of English. Novelties ren SUMMER WEAK. Trepicals, Serges and Rep Worsteds, I5ANNOCKBURN CELTIC CHEVIOTS. GAMBROON PARAMATA AXD BATISTE CLOTHS. SEERSUCKERS, VALEXCIAS. l'Al!OLE AXD MOHAIR COATIXGS. Linens in Great Variety. Wilterd's 1'addcd Ducks in 1'laln and Fancy Styles. A Large Assortment of Fancy I. All the latest novelties of the season. The public are cordially invited te examine our stock, which we claim te be the handsomest and most recherche ever etlered for the het weather. J. K. SMALING, ARTIST TAILOR, 121 NORTH QUEEN STREET. WALL r A 1' JilSS, Jic. WK ARE ritEl'AKED TO MAKE ALL K1XDS OF WIRE SCREENS for doers and windows. Plain Wires In Green, Drab and iJlack. Alse Beautiful Landscapes for Parler Screens. Sold by the feet in any quan tity, or made up in Screens te lit windows and put up in suen a manner that you need net take out when you wish te close them. PAPER HANGINGS in an emlle-s line te select from in the leading styles. A let of ends in order te close out will be sold out very cheap. WINDOW SHADES of every description, in Plain and Figured Goods. Cardinal, Green and White Hollands. PATENT EXTENSION Window Cornices, the Ciicapcst and I'est Cornice made. Fit any window up te live feet in width. Cornice Poles in Walnut and Ebony. Orders taken for TIER AND MANTEL MIRRORS, AT LOW KATES. PHARES W. FRY, Ne. 57 NORTH QUEEN ST. leblO-lvd&w 2Lam aster I-ntrllt ttrncrr. WEDNESDAY EVENING, JUNE 2, 1880. JUDGEIBm SOUND IN DOCTRINE, BRAVE IN DEED. Au Ardent View of His Fitness for the Democratic Candidacy. Fer the LSTELLIGEN'CEIU Four years age Mr. Tilden was pre-umi-nctitly the man of the hour. Probably no ether Democrat could have been elected at that time. But living as rapidly as we de, in these year.s of our Lord, the period be tween 187G and 18.0, is a vast tract. Much has happened. -Jen and issues have changed. "We lest the fruits of that vic tory, and the responsibility for the less is still undetermined. Mr. Tilden did net become president, but he ceased te be gov ernor of Xew Yerk; and last autumn the party itself under his leadership was driven from power in the state. The questions upon which he acquit cd the confidence and wen the support of his own people are set tled. -Mr. Tilden is an elder and a feebler man than he was then, an.l he may net really desire the nomination, lie has net said that he does, and his nearest friends have entered into intrigues for the succession which imply that he does net. Seme of them are put forward in a way that can mean only the conviction in their own minds or that of their menus mat .ur. 1 uuen is net a candidate in the sense that he desires te make the battle a second time in his own name, or feels equal te the duties of the eiliee if he should be elected. We may fairly assume then that Mr. Tilden is net ' m the held until he tells us plainly that he is, and until he puts a quietus upon these friends of his who aie candidates, en the sole ground that they are severally his candidates Xe man having a vote at Cincinnati will strive mere earnestly thaiuthu writer hereof te fecure justice te the great man who reorganized the paily in 1870, sup plied it with the relenn issue raised by his own ellieial conduct in Xew Yerk, and led it te the iirst victory it had wen in twenty years. JJut the DeiiKieratie party will net suffer its leadership te be trans ferred like :i mere chattel, or te be made the subject of any testamentary arrange ment. If Mr. Tilden wants the nomina tion let him say se, and the convention will canvass the grounds of his claim with a favor no ether will receive. If, en the ether hand, he manfully retires and expresses candidly his preference for another, his advice will weigh heavily. But the party is net particularly charmed by the reports of the intrigues, and inanejuvrcseenteringinGramcrcy l'ark,and while Mr. Tilden mayexeita gieat though perhaps net a controlling inllueuce at Cin cinnati by a bold and honorable course, the nomination cannot be disposed of by testament te any of the hungry expectants who hangareuud his house like eager legacy-hunters about the sick-chamber of an opulent Reman. "When he pitches upon tut heir he must bring him out-and show him te the people ; since their consent will probably be of mere importance than that of the eunuch and women of thchouscheld. The people and their delegates sit Cincin nati may develop a preference which could net be set aside by an edict, round, vigor ous, imperial in every word, and still less by the snisill uncertain whisper that comes, or seems te come, from Craincrey Park. Wc may, therefore, 1 think, consider Mr. Tilden as out of the race until he cheeses te come into it ; and we need net concern ourselvessibeuthis wishes concern ing a candidate until he shall see lit te de signate his choice. In the meantime, while the anxious expectants assure us he is moribund, and busily drafting the last will and testament which is te transfer our property, perhaps we may, without se rious offence, deliberate upon the matter ourselves, and determine what wc would de with the cstsite, if only Mr. Tilden and his heirs would allow us. AVe must carry the country new or never. A failuie against Grant means the end of free elections, the practical subver sion of the present constitution, the heart of the Democratic party broken, and its disbandment, or its future existence as a mere conspiracy against the personal gov ernment at Washington. This is the thought in the popular mind. It is the thought upon which the election -will turn. It is the issue upon which every Democrat will cast his ballet and upon which thou sands of Hepublicans will cast theirs. The man therefore who embodies most clearly this opposition te centralization and per sonal government is the man of the hour te-day, as Mr. Tilden was the mati of the hour in 1876. Then the issues were matters of administrative reform, economy, retrench ment, and the restoration of ellieial integ rity and decency. They are new super seded by a greater. The constitution it self is in danger ; the republic quivers in every nerve with apprehension of a death blew. Mr. Tilden ran against si weak man, an obscure governor of si Western state, who, being defeated by him, was lifted ever his head "by force and fraud. The candidate of te-day must run against the unscrupulous soldier who swept Mr. Tilden aside in '77, who is the type jmd symbol of all that is threatening te the liberties of men and states, and who comes, seizing power a third time, with a -rasp as rigid as fixed iron. Who is the man te meet him at the polls, and, equally impor tant, te meet him when the votes shall have been counted ? lie must be ene who can command the full vote of the Democratic party, and ene who, when elected, will defend the right of the people te have the -'resident of their choice, and will net cover his eyes before a drawn sword. lie must have been loyal te the Union, but he must have been always a consistent and faithful Democrat. He must be one who had no let or part in the shameful surrender of 187C-77 ; and he will be all the better if it appears that he net only resisted the adoption of the electoral bill, but fought the false count at every step, and followed his last blew at the consummated frsiud, with a heart-felt judicial anathema. Such is the man the people want. And if in addition te these qualifications he has proved himself the foremost defender of the rights of states and of people against federal centralization the champion of the republic against the empire he would be elected as certainly as the sun should rise en the 2d of November, and he would be found in the White Heuse as certainly as it should set en the 1th' of March. I invite jour leaders te examine fairly and fully the history and character of Stephen J. Field, of California, and. see if they de net lind in him the man with every quality and every qualification required te cair.v the country, and te execute its judg ment. Te one great Democratic citizen in particular te that Samuel J. Tilden, whose confidence is hourly abused by men who dodge in the shadows of his house by men who report him te-day as in favor of Payne, who eagerly clutched the electoral bill as it was handed out from the secrecy of the Senate committee-room aud gave no sleep te his eyelids or rest te the sole of his feet until he had succeeded in forcing it unamended down the threat of the re luctant Heuse, and thrown away the last chance of Mr. Tilden gaining his office ; by men who will te-morrow report him as in favor of some one else, aud dishonor him with the imputation of making a sham canvass, intending te betray his followers into the support of a ticket they would otherwise oppose te this Samuel J. Tilden Judge Field's nomination ought te be especially acceptable. Of all men in Con gress, at the bar, or en the bench, Judge k leld made the most gallant and streiyuus battle against the Great Fraud. He fi jrht it inch by inch in all its forms and phases the Seuth Carolina ease, the Flerida case, the Louisiana case each separate fraud which combined te make the Great Fraud. Dees Mr. Tilden, in common with the American people, who were cheated when he was cheated, ewe this man no -debt of gratitude for the splendid stru jgle he made in the electoral commission in defence of their rights? Would he or smo other geed Democrat be willing te see him pushed aside te make room for any of the facile congressmen who voted te abdicate thecenstitu .ial powers of the two houses, and te create a juggling commission, whereby te cast dice for the destinies of forty million of freemen ? Xe ! If Mr. Tilden has a choice beyond himself that choice is necessarily Judge Field. If he wishes only that honorable discharge from the service, of which we have heard, he would naturally desire that his place should be occupied by one, who iu the crisis of 7G-77 had steed inflexibly true te him and te the country. Indeed, Mr. Tilden has said, at least once, and it is the only authenticated speech of the kind that ever fell from his lips, that, himself aside, Judge Field would draw mere votes than any eaudidsite the Democrats could name. The people little realize the extent te which the centralizing process has gene. Our government te-day is no mere like the irevcrnmcnt of the fathers thau it is like that of the patriarchs. The constitution under which we live resembles that of 1781), about as much as the present British con stitution resembles th it of the septarchy. The federal has gr.idually given plsice te the imperial, until state lines are merely geographical distinctions. Power has .stolen or is stealing toward the centre, and we are liable te awake from our dream of leesil self-government in the chilling shadow of the empire. It is near ; one mere defeat of the states rights party, one mere stamp of the iron heel en the states rights idea, and it is here. All this has been accom plished, net by open violence, but by con struction. The old constitution has been buried under the liberal interpretations of Federalist-Republican 'Congresses and ad ministrations, grasping doubtful powers and making each step toward centraliza tion the sure precedent of another. This revolution was possible only with the con currence of the judiciary, and for mere than twenty years the current of decisions litis run steadily in the one direction re versing the old rules of strict constitutional construction and adopting the new cast ing aside the doctrines of these who made the government, and enforcing these of Hamilton and the monarchists whose views were rejected by the fathers. In ether words, iu that great case of the re public vs. the empire, which is pcrpetu silly at the bar in some one of its count less forms, the court has steadily leaned and with crushing weight te the side of the empire. But dining all that period there w:is one justice whose voice never faltered. His opinions run sparkling through the books like a silver stream through the desert. Did the case involve the riht of the citizen or 1he right of the state, he stretched out in every instance the strong arm of legal defence, and every " blew aimed at our liberties he caught upon the bresid shield of our blessed constitution and our equal laws." But for the pretest which he voiced, and which we may al most say he was, during a long scries of dark and eventful ycarf, there is ue telling te what further extreme the court would have swung, or what worse transforma tion of our republican system might have taken place under its decisions. It sounds strangely enough new, but it is nevertheless true, that in 1805 the adminis tration claimed the right te seize citizens at its pleasure, te try thorn by military courts, and te sheet or hang them under the judgments of these tribunals iu stsites where an enemy had never trod and the civil courts were wide open. And mere strangely still, there were judges of the su preme court who upheld the power. Milli gan was saved from the clutches of such tribunals by a bare majority of one. MeCardle, a citizen of Mississippi, was arrested under the se-called reconstruction laws, tried and sentenced by a military court. His case, like that of Milligan, was brought te the supreme court. It in volved the validity of the whole system of legislation, which Mr. Stevens said was 'outside the constitution." It was heard and I prcsume determined in consultation, for there was bmt ene way it could be de termined. Thereupon a bill was intro duced into the Heuse of Representatives te take away the jurisdiction, and the court was dismayed and paralyzed. There sat the timid justices withholding their judgment upon a case heard, and upon which hung the liberties, net of one citizen only, but of many millions, until this iniquitous bill devised iu party councils, could be run through the two houses smd the case stricken from the docket by a caucus de cree. Twe only had the courage te de nounce the outrage, and record their sol emn pretest. That paper is in style and tenor the noblest that ever found its way te the musty files of any court, English or American. One of the signers was Mr. Justice Grier, who died full of years and in the odor of judicial sanctity. The ether was Mr. Justice Field. In 18C6 came en the tst-eath cases from Missouri and Arkansas, and again Mr. Justice Field came te the front as the de fender of the citizen, this time carrying the court with him and wiping out that whole system of most odious prescriptions. These cases, as determined, the case of Cummings, the priest, fined and impris oned for exercising his sacred functions, without the previous ceremony of an infa mous and shameful oath, and the case of Garland, the lawyer, debarred from prac tice for the same reason, settle in favor of the citizen the principles involved as firm ly as it could have been done by constitu tional amendment. These cases were but the beginning of the ceaseless contest waged by Judge Field for constitutional liberty against tin granted and centralized power. On the confiscation cases, en the cases concerning the indestructibility of states either by military force or congressional enactment, en the sanctity of the mails and the right of the citizen te be secure in his papers as well as his person and property, en arbi trary and military arrests, and en the power of the states generally te regulate their domestic alfsiirs without federal in terference, his course was the same. Never man sat upon any bench mere vigilant, mere fearless, mere consistent. Perhaps none of the opinions of Judge Field except these in the leading so se called political cases would effect him as a candidate before the people mere than these concerning the right of the states te control corporations doing business within their limits. These touch questions which are of the utmost moment in nearly every state of the Union, and would move large classes of voters. His doctrines are these of the Democratic party, and his remedy for corporate abuses of every description, including apparently local freight discrimi nations, is net the intention of Congress under the vague and uncertain power te regulate commerce, but the conceded power of the states te regulate their own creations. Monopoly finds no mere favor at his hands than the absurd centralizing pretension that the right of supervision resides in the federal government. He leaves it where it belongs with the states and the oil producer and the granger, the fanner and the lumberman, can secure for himself under his own home govern ment the redress and protection lie needs, without inviting in the Saxons or the Danes. The following extract expresses the principle with that clearness aud simplicity which mark a great mind, and lead us te wonder why wc had net said it that way eursjlves : "The late war wsis carried en sit an enor mous cost of life and property that the Union might be preserved ; but unless the independence of the states within their proper spheres Iks also preserved the Union is valueless. In our form of gov ernment the one is as essential as the ether ; and a blew at one strikes both. The general government was formed for na tienal purposes, principally that we might have within ourselves uniformity of com mercial regulations, a common currency, one postal system, aud that the citizens of the several states might have iiicaehequa' ity of right and privilege ; and that in our foreign relations we might present oui eui sclvcs as one nation. But the protection and enforcement" of privsite rights of both persons and property, and the regulation of domestic affairs, were left chielly with the states, and unless they are allowed te remain there it will be impossible for a country of such vast dimensions as ours, with every variety of soil and climate, cre ating different pursuits and conflicting in terests in different sections, te be kept to gether in peace. As long as the general government eeiifincs itself te its great but limited sphere, and the states are left te control their domestic affairs smd business, there csm be no ground for public unrest and disturbance. Disquiet can only arise from the exercise of ungrsinted powers. " Jver no subject is it mere important for the interests and welfare of a state that it should have control, than ever corporations doing business within its limits. By the decision new rendered, congressional legis lation can take this control from the stsitc, and even thrust within its borders corpora tions of ether states in no way responsible te it. It seems te me that, in this instance, the court hits departed from long estab lished doctrines, the enforcement of which is of vital importance te the efficient and harmonious working of our national and state governments." At the October term, 1879, Mr. Justice Field filed his new famous dissenting opinions in the Virginia case, involving the right of Congress te punish a state officer for the manner in which he dis charges a duty imposed by state law, and in the Maryland and Ohie cases involving the constitutionality of the infamous elec tion laws of Congress. The reasoning iu the two cases were the same, and the opinions hsive been widely read. They have largely drawn public attention te their author, especially in the Seuth, as the proper candidate of the party whose life-giving principle is that of local self government. In the election case he said : ''The views expressed derive further sup port from the fact that the constitutional prevision sipplies equally te the election of senators, except as te the place of choos chees ing them, as it docs te the election of re presentatives. It will net be pretended that Congress could authorize the appoint ment of supervisors te examine the roll of members of state legislatures and pass upon the validity of their titles, or te sent tinize the balloting for senators ; or could delegate te special deputy marshals the power te arrest any member resisting and rcpclling'the interference of the supci vi sors. But if Congress can authorize such officers te interfere with the judges of elec tion appointed under state laws in the dis charge of their duties when represcntsv tives arc voted for, it can autherize such officers te interfere with members of the state legislatures when senators arc voted for. The Isinguage of the constitution conferring power upon Congicsste alter the regulations of the states, or te make new regulations en the subject, is as ap plicable in the one case as in the ether. The objection te such legislation in both cases is that state officers are net respon sible te the federal government for the manner in which they perform their du ties, nor subject te its control. Penal sanctions and coercive measures by federal law cannot be enforced against thorn. Whenever, as in some instances is the case, a state officer is required by the constitu tion te perform a duty, the manner of which may be prescribed by Congress, as in the election of senators by members of state legislatures, these officers are respon sible te their states for their official con duct. The federal government cannot touch them. There arc remedies for their disregard of its regulations, which can be applied without interfering with their official character as state officers. Thus, if its regulations for the election of scnsiters should net be followed, the election had in disregard of them might be invalidated ; but no one, however extreme in his views, would contend that in such a case the members of the Legislature could be sub jected te criminal prosecution for their ac tion. With respect te the election of rep resentatives, se long as Congress docs net adept regulations of its own and enforce them through federal officers, but permits the regulations of the stsites te remain, it must depend for a compliance with them upon the fidelity of the state officers and their responsibility te their own govern ment. All the previsions of the law, there fore, authorizing supervisors and marshals te interfere with these officers in the dis charge of their duties, and pro viding for criminal prosecutions against them in the federal courts, are, iu my judgment, clearly in conflict with the con stitution. The law was adopted, no doubt, with the object of preventing frauds at elections for members of Con gress, but it docs net seem te have occur red te its authors that the states are as much interested as the gcvcral government in guardiug against frauds at these elec tions and in maintaining their purity, and, f possible, mere se, as their principal offi effi C3rs are elected at the same time. If fraud be successfully perpetrated in any case, they will be the first and greatest sufferers. They are invested with the sole power te regulate domestic affairs of the highest moment te the prosperity and happiness of their people, allecting the acquisition, enjoyment, transfer and de scent of property ; the marriage relation, aud the education of' children ; and if such momentous and vital concerns may be wisely and safely entrusted te them, I de net think that any apprehension need be felt if the supervision of all elections in their respective states should also be left te them. " Much his been said in argument of the power of the general government te en force its own laws, and in se doing te pre pre serve the peace, though it is net very ap- Gibbens vs. Ogden,9 Wheaten, 191-5 parent what pertinency the observations have te the questions involved in the cases before us. Ne one will deny that in the powers granted te it the general govern ment is supreme, and that upon all sub jects within their scope, it can make its authority respected and obeyed through out the limits of the republic; and that it can repress all disorders and disturbances which interfere with the en forcement of its laws. But I am unable te perceive in this fact, which all sensible men acknowledge, any canse for the ex ercise of ungrantcd power. The greater its lawful power, the greater the reason ler net usurping mere. I nrest, disquiet and disturbance will always arise among a people, jealous of their rights, from the exercise by the general government of powers which they have reserved te them selves or te the states." Judge Field's name is stainless, smd held In honor by every msm that respects integrity and admires courage His public life has been as pure sis running water and as bright in every prominent feature as a star. As a candidate he weuid be at every point above assault. Bcfeic his name in scribed upon the banner te be lifted at Cincinnati, all differences in the Democratic party would melt away like mist before the rising sun. He is identified with no faction ; and has no enemies te punish or friends te reward. He has no long political record te explain or defend nothing but the bread, csilm, consistent flew of judicial logic, wherein there is no break, no varisiblencss nor shadow of turning, He should be ac ceptable te sill factions in New Yerk. He is the most Western of AYcstern men and should excite the unbounded enthusiasm of that great section which j clamors for recognition and has the power te enforce its demands. He is from the Geld Cesist, where specie payments were never suspended, and would attract, mere ' perhaps than aiiy ether Democrat, the sup port of the interests requiring a stable cur rency. His opinions en the legal tender question arc well known, but his seciet service te the country at that momentous crisis is a chapter that may net new be written, lie would bring the electoral votes of the Pacific states and of Colerado. He would be elected and when elected in augurated. Of this last no man who knows him or the story of his life can en tertain a doubt. He isalike above fear and above lepreach. Ne personal peril and he has passed many ever did or ever will deter him from the performance of si public duty. Madisen. JEW1SLL.IIS. TOUIS 'VEKKR, j WATCHMAKKIi. Xe. l.-!) NOI'TII OUKEX STKKIiT.ncar 1 ll. It. Depot, Lancaster, Pa. Geld, Silver and Xickel-cased Watches, Chains, Clocks, Ac. Agent ler the celebrated Pantaseepic Specta cles anil Eye-GIasscs. Uepairing a specialty, siprl-lyd THERMOMETERS STORM BUSSES, VHOLESALE AND RETAIL. E. P. BOWMAN, km; east king street, I.ANOASTKi:. PA. Ne. 20. Ne. 20 Sterling Silverware rers WEDDING GIFTS. Silver-Plated Ware FOR WEDDING GIFTS. French Clocks. IJrenzc Card Tables, .tarda niers, Candle-tiek and Services at AUGUSTUS RHOADS'S. Jeweler, 20 East King Street, LANCASTER, PA J. E. CALDWELL & CO., Ne. 902 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, imsertBrs of Ceramics : WOKCESTKi:, COPELAXDS, HA VI LANDS, M1XTOXS. The Productions el nil the Ct lebr.it e:l Potteries. CLOCKS : MANTLE SETS, CAI'IXETSETS, CHIMING CLOCKS. CAUKIAGE CLOCKS, Artistic Unitizes, Groups, Sta t uH t es. LEATHER GOODS, EMISKOIDEUIES, FANS. One price, always the lowest, marked in plain figures. Orders and inquiries by mail re ceive prompt attention. SlAliliLH WOICKS. WE P. FRALIiBY'S MONUMENTAL MARBLE WORKS 758 Nerm yueen Street, Lancaster, Fa. MONUMENTS, HEAD AND KOOT STONES, GAUDEN STATUAItY, CEMETEItr LOTS ENCLOSED, &c. All work guaranteed and satisfaction git en n every particular. S. B. Remember, works at the extreme end f North Queen street. in30 T UT LOCHER'S KEMimXED COUGH SYKUP JJtT GOODS. A Tumble in Linens. Net many linens will be sold else where till we have reduced our stock ; for why should you pay a dollar when ninety cents will answer? "We have been below the market all the year ; smd new are lower still. We point te si few samples : TABLE-LINEN. Hali-bleaehcd damask, $0.S0, .fits, .Ci .70, .SO, .!W, 1.110; each one isasgoed aliucu as you can Unit elsewhere at the next higher pritv. Bleached damask, $0.30. .65, .73, .83. loe, 1.10, 1.23, 1.35, 1.50, 1.73, 2 00, 2.23 ; each one of these also is as geed ius you can linil anywhere else at the next higher price ; the last one, ut $2,25. is new sold at wholesale, by one of the heaviest merchants iu tue country, ut the same price. German damask, $0.73 Napkins te match, 2.00 Belgian damask, l.Ot these last three are net te be fomul.clse femul.clse where at any price. NAPKINS. Z inches square, 11.30 : these cannot be matched nnvwhen: el.-e for a whit less than $2.teI 21 inches square, $1:75 ; these are German goods, and ure put up iu ball dozens. We could net buy Ihem te-day te sell below $2.00 at the very least. 21 inches square, $2.23; these are German also; they have no dressing; i.e.. they leek and feel the same as alter washing. We Uhth been selling them at $2.50; and they are worth it. We have been ettered our price for the whole let, but have kepi Ihem ler you. TOWELS. Damask, at 15 cents; Dent thciu at 20 cents it you can. Damask, all white, 23 cents; have been selling at SI cents; and wc cannot buy Ihem new te sell ut 31 ; but you shall have them at 25. German Damask, 31 -cuts; have been selling at :J3 cents; we ought te put them up instead of dewsi; but, re uiember, we are reducing stock. Blenched diaper towel, -10 cents, the current price is (i. cents. Huck, knotted fringe, 23 cents. Turkish, from 13 cent?. SHEETING. 1'rench, 72inches'$0.'JO. French, 02 inches, $0.00, 1.10, 1.50; these ought te be compared with Irish linens at $2.00 te $2.50. Tliny are equal in weight and strength, but net et quite se geed u bleach. Tlu-y are mere like the Barnaley bleaeh, but better than that. PILLOW LINEN. French, 15 inches, $0.30, .02, .70, .SO: French, 51 inches, $3.K, 1.00; these are the same as the French sheetings above. UXDEUVEAB-LINEN old-tashiened Irish linen, yard wide, $0.23. .2s, .:!, .:; .. .te. . .-,, .se, .02, .70, .75, .S11, ,S5; they were begun en ourerder a year and it-half age. The old pro pre ees of bleaching is a slew one. The goods aie te our liking every way. FLOOIS-LIXEXS. Five yards wide, a. single pattern only, $I.j5 ; we ask you te notice it. 27 inches, ler ststirs, 12 cents: it will puzzle you te get it elsewhere at 25 cents. These arc few out of many. Our stock was never nearly se large ; and we were never mere fortunate iu buying, either sis te choice or price. The rise in linens has carried every body above us ; we alone are anchor ed at low tide. Linens arc in the outer and ncxt-eittcr-circle west from the Chestnut street entrance. JOHN WANAMAKER. Che-tniit, Thirteenth, Market and Juniper, PHILADELPHIA, COAL. T It. MAKT1.N, Wholesale and Ketail Dealer in all kinds of LUMBEIt AND COAL. tfS-Yard: Ne. 420 North Water and Prince streets, above Lemen, Lancaster. ii3-IyU COAL! COAL! COAL! COAL Ceal of the Itest iiality put up expressly for family use, and at the low est market prices. THY A SAMPLE TON. Ifi- YAKD ISO SOUTH WATER ST. e20-lyil PHILIP SCHUM.SON A CO. T VST KKCKIVKI) A FINK LOTOK HALKD '' HAY ANDSTKAW.at M. F. STEIGERWALT & SON'S, DKALZI13 IN FLOUR, GRAIN AND COAL, 231 NORTH WATER STREET, fa Western Fleur a Specialty. fs27-Iyil COHO & WILEY, SGO XOJlTll WATllll ST., Lancaster, Mtt., Wholesale ami Retail Dealers in LUMBER AND COAL. Alse, Contractors and Uulldem. Estimates made and contracts undertaken en all kinds of buildings. Branch Office : Ne. 3 NORTH DUKE ST. feb28-lyd COAL! - - - COAL!! GORREOHT & CO., Fer Geed and Cheap Ceal. Yard Han laburg Pike. Office 20 East Chestnut Street. P. W. GORRECHT, Act. .1. IS. IU LEY. 9-1 W. A. KELLER. WSUJtAXCJS. ri"-iK OLD GIRARD FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA. ASSETS : One Millien One Hundred and Thirty-one Thousand Eight Hundred and Thirty-ehjht Dollars. $1,131,838. All invested In thi best securities. Losset promptly paid. Fer pelMes call en RIFE & KAUFMAN, Ne.i9E King St.. Lancaster, Pa. MTVTASSma-