ethILMINDTIVZIM wimssanALTlrr _ . . ,'!:11)1 i H::o. otacx, , tii okico. H.' Et, .5*4'11,. 1 •• • .: t 3 . 31 74/ 11 ,4/ 1 ,t, ;• ,• • LI: TERMS-Two Dollara per annilyailayable in all cases in advance. TEL Larroarrilie DAILY INTWALIGESOVI la itt43,l3l:l=grne:alvlggLSTUld:,! excepted; at • . .• J . 01••••••; ~%' .';' OFFICE- Sotrrnwairr Osman or iNtrridil ectrens,; „ ,•,, , Love and ' ,` ; t t :• , IIY AMY BANDOIRIL , , "Yes," said Mrs. Western, solemnly; " it will be a very nice thing to have Beatrice settled in life." ' " Very nice," said Miss Victoria West-, ern, with agrave nod. Poor little Beatrice MoortS! • tter since she could remember, she hiAteen bandied and buffeted about from 'one home to anothor--from the unwilling charge of one distant relation' to the, loveless care of another. She had no' abiding place; nobody scenied to. want her. The chief object in life og 'those around her appeared to be to get rkl of her as quickly as possible. It was a bitter consciousness to darken the life of a girl of eighteen; but such it was. Beatrice looked slyly across at the glass, with a mental marvel Whether Major Cheisey really could like her well enough , to marry her, and what did she see there? A round rosy face, touched with fresh pink on either side, and framed ir! ; by shining rolls of nut-brown halr—eyesof deep violet gray, almond shaped and full of wistful softness, and a small, ox• pressive mouth, crimson in color, and beautifully shaped. It was not Buchan unsatisfactory survey, after all. " You had better change that rusty wrapper fora more decent-looking dress, Beatrice,', said Victoria Western. " should not bo surprishd it' Major Chel sey were to call to-day." " Yes, Victoria," said Beatrice, very meekly, " when I have washed the breakfast chinaand dusted the drawing rooms." "Let Betty do those this morning.— It's almost twelve now," said Victoria, pettishly. " Don't, for pity's sake, ho the one. to overturn all our plans for getting you married." Beatrice sighed softly as she went up stairs. "It would be so very nice to be loved I" thought our poor little hero ine, with the instinctive longing for affection that forme part of every wo man's nhture, "I think Hugh Chelsey loves me, and yet I scarcely date to hope." io Beatrice Moore put on her one silk dress—a deep crimson, that Victoria Western had worn for three winters he- • - - - - _ fore it descended to the dependant cousin and pinned on the little lace collar that had been darned and mended until there was a very small portion of the original fabric left, and brushed the brown rolls of hair until they shown with satiny gloss. And then Beatrice took the family basket of stockings and good-slzed darning needle, and eat down in the recess of the back parlor window to darn her aunt Western's stockings, and think. Of what? Well, of what do girls generally think when the shadow of a groat, all-absorbing love is creeping over their whole nature? Of wh - 1 do they think when they cannot buL feel how surely their own individuality is being merged into that of another?— Beatrice Moore, at the hour's end, could herself scarcely have told just what she had been thinking of; and yet, the thoughts had been very sweet, and the time had slipped away with almost im perceptible lapse. And what was Hugh Chelsey about, that ho did not make the expected visit? "I'll go and see Beatrice Moore this morning," Hugh Cholsey had said within himself, us he sallied out into the brilliant sunshine. Major Chelsey was a tall, flue-looking man, of some seven,or eight and twenty, with , bright black - eyes and curling black hair, brushed away from an olive brow—a man whose life had nearly all j i been passed under the burning glow of an East Indian sun, and whose man ners were a curious compound of easy frankness and a total defiance of con ventionality. " I don't know what to make of Major Chelsey," Mrs. Milton had said, to whose house the eccentric East Indian had brought letters of introduction. " Sometimes ho acts like a prince of the blood, and then again you d take him for a brigand. They say he's very rich, and yet there is not a particle of as sumption about him. I declare he's quite an enigma." Hugh, blessedly unconscious of all the speculations he inspired in 'various female minds, walked along, swinging his cane, and whistling the sad, strong ly-marked refrain of. some old oriental air, as he wondered within himself whether Beatrice Moore would consent to go back to the palm-shaded valleys of the golden East with him. " Hallo !" ejaculated Major Chelsey, suddenly cut short in his meditations by the unexpected apparition of a man in solid garments and paper cap, sitting on Mrs. Western's door-steps, and an other somewhat better dressed, berating him most soundly. "Why; Tom! it isn't you!" cried the major, recognizing aman who had come over from India in the same ship with himself—a light-hearted, merry young Englishman, whose constant flow of spirits had rendered him a general favorite. " What's the matter? Aro you sick?" " Sick—no I" retorted the other, in terposing before the man addressed could reply. "It's all a make believe game. " I've paid him beforehand for his time, and now ho needn't - think I'm goin' to be gammoned by this sort o• thing. Come, Meredith, up the ladder with you, man I This house has got to be painted by noon to-morrow, or my contract falls through !" "I could not climb up that ladder again, Mr. Field, if you were to give me a thousand dollars. My head swims, and—" "Nonsense! it'll be steady enough when you once get there. "But if the man is really ill?" inter rupted Major Chelsey, rather sternly. " Can't help that," said the master painter. "The job has got to be done, ill or not ill." "Go and get another hand," said Chelsey, in an under tone, glancing at the haggard face of poor Tom Meredith. "Dont you see the fellow ought to be in bed." "It's easy to say get another hand," said the painter, apparently driven to the very verge of frenzy, " but 'taint so easy to do. There aint a band to be bad. They're paintin' St. Bartholo mew's and the Defevre Hotel besides, and you can't get a fellow to work for you, for love nor money." "At all events, Meredith is very Ill." "He's always coniplainin', Tom Meredith is—and the job must go' ahead." "It's no use, Major; I'm obliged to you, all the same, but I'll try it once more. It aint for myself I care, but the wife and little ones. ' Ho took the paint pail in one hand and a stack of brushes in the other, and ip- put one foot on the lowest round of the • ladder. But even that slight eidbrt seemed too much for the over-tasked frame—the brushes fell to the ground, and Meredith staggered back against a tree. - "Oh, come—go ahead 1" urged the master, brutally ; "I'm tired of all this play-acting." "Stop!' said Chelsey, resolutely. "Tom Meredith, go home to your wife, and tell her to take care of you. And you, Mr. Painter, if you must have a hand to take his place, I'm your man." "You, sir 1" echoed the man, inored uously. "Yes, L Hand over your pall and, brushes ; I painted our bungalow once in India, and it's strange if I can't handle brushes now. What are you staring at?" "But, Major, pleaded Tom feebly. -"Go home say,". waved the Major. "Hold;on, give us your canvass .over ails first. TherenoW fora day's work that- shall make old skinflint down there open his eyes." . . ' i "Old skinflint," as 'CickBIPPY krrelier ently termed him, stalled rather doubt fully. And Major Hugh Cheleey defiantly ascended the ladder, brandishing the brushes over his; head, a signal of defi-. ance. • ), "Well, if this aint the otteerest go!', was the master-painter's putiled !com ment, as he watched the scientiflOman ner in which his n'eWjourneyinateham;' died the brushes. "Re does go about It like a , fellow.. who . understands , what he's a doin', end yet-rwell, no matter. I shan't loaej anything by the change of hands.!': • ; •-•- , s; "Not a' bad 'day' , ,work hey; you;,in -'*„ the broWn papert l3 ap,.2" said the - Major; • .-Aut4 . stood ej , *i 10 performance Whifil e"pthera :,w,n1 4 0 ',p 4 uttipg.,..olo i 1 1 4040 Welt ..14. 6 Yer:10P.alli'. ; ~. . , Oh. 1 - ' - ''' ACi r l ' W " 5•11. - VV7rt r)T T -r• "a '- ''.tt.l.A - ..-, --.-- ..----------- -------- ... r .,.,.......„_,,....._„-...........,.....--__.„....:-....... , .:.„.....„_.........-.-.3.- „ .-. , -_-.. „, „: „ .„--..7--.... - .. „ ................ - .-..• ..,...:-. , ...,.•5 t ... ...„... , ...,.:. , ..•.:,,-,-,...;,...7...• ,-.,...,•,7.-,..-_,-..2„-...,. - ~....-4 . . - - : ,-. 1 .,;.... : L- ; - z •:--- : -----,.._ . ' .._ . . • E .;, , ,c , cf- ... , ilO e>.iii - : r'. . . ....1 ' ' :14 - ' l ill'f 11 4 1`Ve ; . .°I I , 31%ren91)Ii.t:4T , 7-4 , ,Lt.,i: ',.,;A11 11•:,: ,, !::,:: ~ i :-.•': . . Ital.. 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S . lEli 'imp : , iii go t o el c.i'v .111;_csla r it) rroltr.r, Tax tt4. . '.I. ,i 'i , :an 'i' . '' 1 vi 2 ~„ ~. .. ..., ..- -ti .1 C.) 4 ...I ' 0 . , ~ ' o .). VO, a 1 • n-,i...,1; aoal•-•,•, - )1:12: , ..) f. , :• - , • -,•:‘, , . •,• • ' • •'!l' , ••,, ..,,;": ..,...,. ~ „, ~. •• .•:.•,,...,,I . •, ,I , -,. ~, ~ , ~,,ii ', -rt ,•. , ,,i, -,' • ••,- ~•-• ..., . ),r -- 7/ . ....., Iv?, ~,;; ~ •:,,,, - ' Vo rti ngt4it AP. t ,, .. 1....-ru,n; ;II ••:.i (t 1 S ,tL': ',Mod , i • - Vi N du b al l 41 andr : # i t P rbTl e , i 'd ' ri . 'I work that way' teldt, , ` • . , ':ha . .I , ' " Very , prObably Ml"' '", It dbell'tlre'ontiO 4 alto 4 A top;'Llftle Bi mo at A% joaolio' ded, ti InteroollY; l , 4 i i :. ' Ali A ') ; 29 'or, twb. • A ma* 41 O 4o4sep diiy. ' and be ILI PrOPORI Jilin , for 3ove•makizig in the eillsning, , ;. , lialghol: how stiff my nts feel. I wonder , how poor Tom joints is." Early next morning Major ChelspY, appeared on the field,'ready' t i o*rtitter his work, but there , was, fortun ately ,' no, further necessity for hie Seridces. Tom .Moredith AM ,thee ,. OVOAfillitY . touching,his bait° Lis subititute:. :' ...7 If The • dayleresthas set ;me all tighti Malor,!' .he said. • "I'm able to , work now, but I don't, know how , to 'thank, you for—" t '" Forjust nothing .at alit ."'said. the Major,,tartly.. " Hold ,yoUr' your" tongue, Tom Meredith, toadgive this pmto yOur youngest ' torment •to buy candy With." And the major - rushed back to his hotel to dress with special reference to quite a diflbrent dais work. Major Chelsey,biad scarcely climbed the ladder the - day - before, , when Miss Victoria Western; going into the• front guest•chambiir ‘:for her furs, caught a glimpse of Ale honest face, just on a level with the topmost panes of the window, and , hls hands manipulating a huge brush. " My goodness gracious!" ejaculated Miss Victoria, "It's Major Cheisey I No It Isn't t it's a horrid painter man. It's She stood a moment in puzzled won derment. Then something definite seamed to come out of the chaos of her mind. " I've beard of adventurers before," she murmured, clasping her hands nervously together, "but I never met one before. Why, it's as plain as the noonday I Major Chelsey Is no Indian officer ; he's a wretch of a common housspainter, who thinks to marry our Beatrice ; but he'll not succeed ! no— not ho!" She flow down stairs to impart the astonishing tidings to her mother and Beatrice. " Well—l—ne-ver!" ejaculated Mrs. Western, in blank dismay. " The impudence of the man !" screamed Victoria. " But of course, Beatrice, you'll nester opealt to the man again." Beatrice turned white and red, and red and white again, before she spoke, and finally the words creptout, low and hesitating " But, Mrs. Western, what difference does it make whether he is a major or a housepainter, when—when —." Mrs. Western and Victoria waited in awful silence for the last four words. " When I love him?" And then burst the storm of objur gation over Beatrice's shrinking head, until the little thing crept away In tears, to hide her doubts and terrors in the welcome solitude of her own apart ment. " A cousin of mine degrade herself by presuming to be In love with a mechan ic!" shriekedlirs. Western. " And a man, too, who has never de clared himself:" added Victoria. .77ris was the unkindest otit of all, and Beatrice believed herself to be not only low-minded and hnreflned, but un maidenly also. But for all that she was certain of one thing—she loved the major, or the painter, or whatever he was, and she could not help herself. All that day, and all the next, the domestic storm raged with uueoftened vehemence, and about noon just as Beatrice was beginning seriously to contemplate the possibility of packing her few dresses into a bundle, and run fling away to service somewhere, the drawing-room door opened, and ." Ma jor Chelsey, to see Miss Moore," was announced. Beatrice rose with varying color, and held out one trembling little hand.— Mrs. Western glared on the new corner and Victoria kept her eyes steadily on the pattern of the carpet. "How dare you come here?" de manded the matron, fiercely. The Major's belligerent blood fired up. " To 800 Miss Moore," ho said, with cool audacity, that made Mrs. West ern's cap frills stand straight out. " And what business can you have with Miss Moore ?" The major glanced at Beatrice's face; something in the violet eyes gave him courage. "To ask her to marry me, ma'am." " You—a treacherous adventurer, a common house-painter, dressed up to deceive society in a major's uniform! Your impertinence is beyond my com prehension ! Beatrice, why do you not order him out of your presence at once ?" "Beatrice!" said the major—lt was the first time the musical Italian name had ever crossed his lips in addressing her—" is it yes or no?' " No !" emphatically interposed Mrs. Western. Major Chelsey half turned away, but a light hand fell on his arm. Beatrice had glided to his side. " Yea, Hugh." " What ? you are willing to marry a house-painter ?" "I am willing to marry you." And then the major, still holding tight to the little hand that had fallen on his arm, quietly explained the cir cumstances that had placed him tem porarily in so peculiar a light. Mrs. Western flushed andpaled alternately. "I am sure, Major, I never intended any offence. I —." "No apologies,Madam," said the major, with a ght inflection of sar casm in his voice. "As long as I am sure of Beatrice's disinterested love, the opinion of others is of very little conse quence to me." And Beatrice, in the romance of her little heart, almost wished that Hugh Chelsey wasa "common house painter," in order that she might prove still more satisfactorily how very, very dearly she loved him. A Good Marriage Ceremony. The following curious custom of the Nestorian Christians is commended to the serious attention of the young gen tlemen and young ladies of our country, who propose to commit matrimony. After the marriage ceremony has been performed the wedding party is taken in wagons from the church to the house of the bridegroom's father. When the second wagon, in whicn the bride is seated alone, reaches the gate opening into the yard in which the house is sit uated it is halted, and the bridegroom's mother comes to meet it, with a baby and three suits of baby clothes in her arms.' She throws the child and the clothes into the arms of the bride, who is required to dress and undress the baby three times lathe presence of her moth er-in-law, who watches every move ment as only mother-in-law can Watch a daughter-in-km. if the neW ly.made bride does not.perform the op. eration to the satisfaction of her severe judge, she is considered unfit for her new position, the wagon is turned around; and she is taken back home for further instruction; while the poor bridegroom is compelled to live in single blessedness until his wife is edg , catod up to the proper standard. The Japaneseldint. All work of money-making in the Mint of Japan—which issues a coinage of $70,000 a day—is dope by hand. The cutting; the punching, the milling, the stamping are ell by processes of the sim plest manual labor. Few foreigners have ever been allowed to enter the mint. An English diplomat who had this privilege writes one of its curious regidations : • While every operation is performed in this primitive manner, perfect order prevails In the establishment; every man goes through MS portion of the Work in silence,'and with the regularity of clock-work and rhadySvinoe consid erable skill. • There are about three hun• rdxed hands employed in the building. .When the men enter in the morning 'they are made to divest theniselVeS of their own clothes and put oh others be longing to the' mitit.• At'the end of the day's .work a • gong souhde, when the, somewhat curious opeolaelois presented of three hundred men ,springing - from the' ground on which they had been seated, throwing of their` olothee, and rushing s a naked throng, to one end of a yard. Here they pass through the following ordeal: Their back hal; Is pulled down and examined • ; they wash their hands and hold them up to view they drink water and - then halloo; and lastly, they run to the other end of the. Ercl, clearing two, or three hurdles on eir way," slier "which: performance ey are allowed to put on their own clothe and depart. • )11: , : • ~ rod) 10 • 9Birl`!1•11J' LA !T . d'9.4lerr ...I:tt 'IV • 00 0 ' ...1 Th 41 12. P:i111,.l. / ' 'f Mite' hittiellendiAlthietitelt to bii ' ' ablePeattattheelleitt• M U ei V 40.0 d and trustelidende..MheretstVia : i trat'444mPlielt cottfelnimlkatul atom erli t tpiiMPa .9 8 01 Z 1 1r..• thy, 1 II e a . teller tab° OnatetlitiatietWitlibtit any tisk' if Mitifito nrehensictod; 'Whereas; with 'attittiMliar.€ !ttrVe,o4 l )64 AttAttia Jetta Ott; noMpally !InAgltp, i r tete ? 1 , 3 r 0 *IP:" i #OO o cr ~, 1 tiff'. Nitti, all 'Ane'dlitittre toe ' might'. ". verybody Rtho hairtriefidet bust' Mtge. - felt this; andtkielighri-,, bileaUsethe feeling's: a; 01 3 =A pAe t , ,be Interesting to, shoWblexaM le4 how, It, beenex tressearsclitetatate:'. ' Horatio Waltokitielle .a story of two old cronies,- wiio, - sitting together one evening All It was quite , dark, wit!** speaking, one called - to the other ; "lota, Tom."" VFell;" said hltittlfind,:"Vliet ,do yeti say?" " Obr ` tilt id, the' other;. 1 " are you there?" "Ay,"Rald olti TOM. 1 "Why, then, don't you EV:htimphit" , demanded the first. , So that mita there but a•felt presence the-eiience i was en. joyablebetween these hwain.-The mute compardthithip':WatCscarcely 'less coin. pan foliate for being mute. Old friends,' remarks 'WalpittleAti ' another lettei, are theaTeat blessing of one'slater years, ' nalf a word cenveYsone's Meaning. He makes this rennet in, reference to the loss of hie Intimate friend . Mr, Chute, whom he used to see oftener than any one, and to whom ho had recourse In every difficulty. "And him I loved to have here, as our friendship was en tite, and we know one another so en tirely, that he alone was never the least constraint to me. We passed many hours together without saying a sylla ble to each other; for we were both above ceremony." It is the coneluding.coupiet in the fol lowing lines that best attests the con fiding friendship that existed between Sir Walter Scott and Mr. Slone: To thee, perchance, this rambling strain Recalls our summer walks again ; When, dnlng naught—and, speak true, Not anxious to find aught t odo,— The wild unbounded hills wo ranged, While oft our talk its topic changed, And desultory, as our way, Ranged unconfined from grave to gay i E'en when It flanked, as oft Will 0111/11CJ, No effort made to break its trance, We could right pleasantly pursue Our sports in social silence too, Wisely and well La Gruyere says that, merely to be with those we, love is enough. To indulge in reverie the while; to talk to them; not to talk to them ; to think about them; to talk on matters Indifferent and irrelevant to them,—but with themselves beside us, —all goes well on that single condition : tout eat egal. The Abbe Barthelemy speaks happily of those happy moments between like-minded friends, when the very silence is a proof of the en joyment each feels in the mere presence of the other ; for it is a silence produc tive of neither weakness nor disgust. They say nothing, but they are together. On ne flit rten, mats on cat ensemble.— Rousseau is even rapturous in his Milo. glee of sympathetic silence; he dilates with enthusiasm on the quantity and quality of good things that are said without ever opening the month—on the ardent sentiments that are commu nicated without the frigid medium of speech. Fenelon expatiates on the charm of free communion, sans core monie, with a dear friend who don't tire; you see one another; at times one talks; at others, listens; at others, both keep silence ; for both are satisfied with be ing together, even with nothing to say. " On no 8C die Hen, on eat content d'etre ensemble sans ac rien dire." For those who have managed that things shall run smoothly over the do mestic rug, says the author of Orley Farm, there is no happier time of life than the long candle-light hours of home and silence. "No spoken content or uttered satisfaction Is necessary. The fact that is felt is enough for peace." This fact is touchingly exemplified fn the American story of The Gayworlliya, in the instance ofstolid Jaaz aniah Hoogs and his leal-hearted wife Wealthy.— We see Jaazanlah in his chair, the three-legged chair tilted up, and the man whittling a stick an d whistling. Wealthy is busy chop ping, following her own solitary thoughts, but feeling a certain habitual comfort in having him at her elbow. Standing up for the poorsoul, ottoman tains in one place that his thoughts come out in his whistling; he could never make such music as that out of nothing. , "You never heard it, nor nobody else, as I have. Why we we're sitting here,all alone . . . . he'll go on so [whistling], that I hold my breath for fear o' stop ping him. It's like all the Psalms and Revelations to listen to it. There's something between us then that's more than talk."—Presently it is beside his death-bed that she sits, in the same expressive silence "She sat by him for hours ; sometimes lay ing her hand softly down upon the coverlet, and letting his seek it, as it al ways would; and the spring breath and music in the air spoke gently for them both, and there was something between hem that was more than talk." One thinks of Dr. Johnson in his last illness, visited by Malone, and proving so unusually silent that the visitor rose to leave, believing him to be in pain, or incommoded by company. "Pray, sir, be seated," Johnson said. "I cannot talk, but .T. like to see you there." In deed, great talker in every sense as the doctor had been in his prime, he was never insensible to the value of sympa thetic silence. During his tour to the Hebrides, his companion, Boswell took the liberty one evening of remarking to Johnson, that he very often sat quite silent for a long time, even when in company with a single friend. "It is true, sir," replied Johnson. "Tom Tyere describes me the best. He once said to me, Sir, you are like a ghost ; you never speak till you are spoken to. " Boswell was apparently incapa ble of seeing anything enjoyable in social silence. Not so his everyway bigger friend. A delightful essayist of the present time, discussing the companionship of books, accounts it no forced paradox to say that a man may sometimes be far more profitably employed in surveying his book-shelves in meditative mood, than if he were to pull this or that vol ume down and take to reading it; "just as two friends may hold s weeter con verse in perfect silence together, than if they were talking all the time." Henry Meokenzie's Montauban con gratulates himself on the footing upon which already he stands with his new acquaintance, Monsieur de Roubigne "He does' not think himself un der the necessity of eternally talking to entertain me; and we sometimes spend a morning together pleased with each other's society, though we do not utter a dozen sentences." It is of Julia de Roubigne, in the same epistolary novel, that another letter-writer de clares, atteradverting to the sprightli ness of a Mademoiselle Dorville,—"Oh, Beauvarls ! I have laid out more soul in sitting five minutes with Julia de Roubigne in silence, than I should in a year's conversation with this little Dor- Ella accounts that to be but an imper fect solitude which a man enjoys by himself, and cipgauds the sense of the first hermits :when they retired into Egyptian solitudes, not singly, but in shoals, "to enjoy one another's want of conversation, The Car thuslati is bound to his brethren by this agreeing spirit, of incomniunioative ness." In secrular occasions, Ella adds what is so pleasant' as to be reading a book through 'a, long winter evening, with a friend sitting by—say a wife—he; or she, to (ifthat be probable), read ing another, without interruption, or oral communication. "Can there be no sympathy without the gabble of words? * * * Giveme,Master Zhu mermann, a sympathetic solitude." Lamb's reference to the agreeing spirit of, incommunicativeness cultivated in monastic retreats, may remind us of what is' told on celelirated n2eeting be tween St; Louis ling Of France, in dis guise and .86441110 cf Assisi,.a rich citi zen, famous for, many graces," , writes Sir James Stephen, "and for not alew miracles." At Perugia the two saints met, and long knelt together in silent I embrace. On the departure of the king, Egidius was ,rebulc,ecl by. his brethren for his rcideneSs - in not having uttered a' word to se great a sovereign. "Marvel not," he answered, "that'we did not speak ; a divine llght . hild bare to each of us the heart of the other. No words could have intelligi h ly expressed that language of the soul, or have imparted the same'Sacred 'consolation." , . One of the most popular of French 'authors comments , ln n- his autobiogreA phy, on the analogy he professes to have. LANOAVEIiqq: *.EDNESDAit MOR eheetvedietween the tWo raced of. Wail i o , and forest rangers , an& tells, for Irv. e ce,' how the mariner-or , the.srood.l Vilit o nalq,.by-Af'Afdinif his best 4 a i ,k4. vafp-cfula.9,llAleano 1 A :the Idllier eeP ,Ills e, fo ",, ItbOut, I eichebßOß a •sinee.W•tot 44 UN , two eiltertldlEthe same ra in tit Mull? ' at theirs Ueinee,bas , been,no more than' 'fi , long.:tacit. communion; with natal% , I "Yen will be 'astonlibed:totadthatc et the'proper.intiM2fisek hayebtittd and a .wordj Itg' . dire; or t t itAiSsf,' and they wiltbave Munleit ' intire to each other bylidsirerdithisgestlite, 1 or glance ofothe eyir, than ! othereccadd I •hteve.dona , in ; a, tiring disooursed' - .tio Spott end filkene s lyith . their ,sports, so . Can tbeee" : "rl Alight lilessientlk paths" " ' - Their craft, insoetaianenoe {so. t t , ;Mx. IXelpS' three Friends lit, Coen(4l :recurichoing, after qne of their' otitOor eolloqUies; or perlpittetio 'Phllteophie; ings, ".not sorry to,be mostly silehres! they go, along, and, glad ,ithatotheir ,friendship is , so assured that they calf be silent wlthdut the slightest danger, of offence. . Uncle Boland Mr:Toots, fa DembOill' Son, wait patiently in the churchyard,. eitting on the copingstone of theredirge, until. Captain - Cuttle and Susan Come back. Neither being at all desirous to speak, or to be spoken to, they. are eX presaly described as excellent company, and quite satisfied.' Glance again at the same author's picture of Mr. Willet and his companions, Mr. Cobb and long Phil Parkes , enjoying one anther s society at the Maypole; and how enjoy ing it? "For two mortal hours and a half, none of the company had pro nounced one word." Yet were they all firmly of opinion that they were very jolly companions—every one—rather cholcespirits than otherwise; and their look at each other every now and then , is geld to have been as if there 'ere a perpetual interchange of ideas gorng on —no man among them considering him- self or his neighbour by any means silent ; and each of them nodding °dee atonally when ho caught the eye of an other, as if to say, "You have expressed yourself extremely well, sir, in relation to that sentiment, and I quite agree with you." Mr. Shirley Brooks, in his last and best novel, says : "It is a happy time when a man and a woman can be long silent together, and love one another the better that neither speaks of love. A. few years later, and silence is per haps thought to mean either sorrow or sulks." And if this reflection relate to fiction, hero is a sketch from fact, which may go with it—a reminiscence by Mary Anne Schimmelpenninok of her early childhood, and of happy hours spent alone with her mother, for whom s ent quiet was indispensable during many hours of the day :—" She was generally seated at her table with her books, her plans of landscape garden ing, or ornamental needlework, whilst I was allowed to sit in the room, but to be in perfect silence, unless when my mother called me to fetch anything, or addressed to me some little kind word, which seemed not so much to break the silence as to make it more complete and happy by an united flow of hearts." The lovers, in a modern poem on love, are taken to be a deal more eloquent in their i silence than in their converse : -our silence or our Which was most full— speech ? Ab, sure our silence! Though we talked high things 01 life and death, and of the sours great %logs, And knowledge pure, which only Loyd can teach; And we have eat beside the lake's calm beach, Wordless and still, a long and summer day, As if we only wateri'd the insect play, Or rippling wave. The young lover in Mr. Disraeli's Love Story, expressly so called, apolo gizes to Henrietta Temple for a - long term of significant silence with the candid avowal that he's afraid he's very stupid. "Because you are silent? " she asks. "Is not that a sufficient rea son ? " he submits. "Nay, I think not," replies Miss Temple ; "Ithink I am rather fond of silent people myself ; cannot bear to live with a person who fells compelled to talk because he is my companion. The whole day passes sometimes without papa and myself exchanging fifty words; yet I am very happy ; I do not feel that we are dull." So when the tenant of Wildfell Hall is being courted by Markman, the latter plumes himself on possessing the faculty of enjoying the company of those he loves, as well in silence as in conversa tion. One feels sure that this faculty was possessed in a marked degree by all the Brontd family, to the youngest of whom we owe the rather grim and very characteristic story last named. There is a fragment in print of an un published play of Leigh. Hunt's, pic turing an ideal home—a heaven this side the stars, (as happy husband tells his happy. wife) : By mon call'd home, when some blest pair are met As we are now; sometimes in happy talk, Sometimes In silence (also a sort of talk, Where friends are match'd) each at Its gentle task Of book, or household need, or meditation. To like effect, in all intents and pur purposes, writes the poet of the Angel in the Souse, a sufficiently cognate theme; where Frederick sends his mother this suggestive sketch of his wedded life : For hours the clock upon the shelf Has all the talking to itself; But to and fro her needle runs Twice, while the clock Is ticking once; And, where a wife is well in reach, Not silence separates, but speech ; And I, contented. read or smoke, And Idly think, or Idly stroke) The winking cat, or watch the tire, In social peace that does not tire. Romeo and the Countryman. An acquaintance relates the following comical scene which he witnessed one night out west at a village theatre : The piece had passed off' without in• terruption until the last scene. The character of Romeo was excellently en acted and loudly applauded. The very model of the lover was before the tomb of the Capuleta, gazing upon the mo tionless form of her who had so attract-• ed his soul, and meditating upon com mitting an act which would send his spirit to that undiscovered country where he supposed Juliet had gone.— Just as he exclaimed. "Here's to my love !" and at the same time raised the vial which contained the poison to his lips, a stalwart countryman rushed upon the stage, seized him, dashed the vial from his hand, crushing it to atoms and yelling: "You darned fool! she alu't dead! Only been taking' a little sleepin' medi cine. Didn't you get the parson's let ter?" " Sirrah I" growled out the enraged tragedian, while the house fairly shook with laughter. " Why yer gal ain't dead, I tell yer. The way it was, they wanted to make Julia marry thlit chap thar," pointing at Paris "whose business you have just settled, 'but I tell you Julia war spunk —she got her .backl up, and vowed she wouldn't do it, even if while she were lying In the vault, the ghod of the other t ir fellow whom 3 , u kilt should dash her brains out with he bones of some of her dead cousins. al, ,her spunk war up, and she took the stuff the parson fixed, so she could play the possumtill you get hum. That's the way It War," replied the countryman giving the desperate lover a tremendous poke in the ribs with his elbow, and at the same time loosing his hold. "Curses on the fellow," muttered the dying tragedian, as he stalked behind the scenes. "Wal, now," said the countryman, fronting the audience, "if that ain't a leetle the dad darned meanest cuss I ever did see, I hope to be swowed. , That's all the thanks I get for • stopping him pizenin' himself.. Hope to be .tarnally smashed if ever "I go to interfere agln when' aleller'wante to murderhimselt" he continued, as he clambered back to his seat, just in time to prevent his up per story from descendedn pontaet with the curtain twit. The Crops. Telegrams from a number of localities in the States of Illinois, Wisconsin, lowa and Minnesota, with two or three exceptions,. announce the crops dn:dell grains titre cedented, both in quality and quantity, and the corn never looked better, It is asserted that unless some blight should borne, UAL . the small grain crop and the corn crop will be the largest over.gathered in the north west. , The kiontherst Planters, it is stated ,are fast learning how to make as much profit out of. the blaoka as free laborers as they made out of them when alayea. A letter from Louisiana says the freedmen .realize their obligations. They have ceased to hope for the donation of land and mules. They have ceased to apprehend any attempt to reduce them again to bonder). Theylabor with more regularity, and although the product of their labor is not so great as for. merly, it can be relied on as a tlxvi'quan. M=IIMI ,11111 , 1881315 MIRE CANDIDATES. . . 1 ,. , , • / t i• ii , 11 77',. i i ii bz.4: lit , , • i 37gateldu t:sia IT ibe indwids"'"' ',Mr. f • :lifivtElt.'3ffliviwalibble ifit• . '..i.: li irJ•iriendrhineollkOrreleillitrUittent my fia Vt. 1 44 111 ,4i, tiblsaliffilPenne ;either naod most sto the, Senate upon the p 9 eirimMtintts 'nee muffing public 1 attfi Ifon'y but the condition rif any health todaiiw l 4l l 7.6 l l l l 4 o W a War trafaraa9Slt9 ' tn. Ilinv 0 erved for someday* past iStjurPil• te'on the pirt Of Senators who . rep. resSior. thelmidority to_ avoid the'meth, ii. of the defeeelve, , and •,0., ultimo. if.' possible, that Of tliatifferiefve fn thlspolitient eonteid. In myYtiti ent4 that is nenhee p rue' las hie Ater Poen it on Weir part.; it is :not to the nature o the , oese. For, night years, the en Federai EiSeintiont and moat - of thp State' :Govertiinenta of the Night haVo beettcon trolled)by.the party , now lathe. majority in. Conitress, and it la n o t potisible, that, that party can avoid a response to 't he pobple' upon thbqtestions:lhat attract:publie at -4.13,11011:i Waiving an inquiry into the eon utetl °filet 'party g; ar andhch lay chitin Win s ot justto ma k e , non illtigtlidlnquirytice the - three yearssince • the iteeef the war end thereturn of peace ; there , ere certain importan t . questions that •Ittuitt -, bb • answered. .Atid, first, ' the people ' will ~ desire in , know vary , distinctly and emphatically , . what . has. . • been done With the 11,200,000,000 that hate' ;bleu whetted under the Internal revenue' • law and the tariff eyatem since the Ist, day ofJuly;los. T know that 11400,000,000 may be itooonnWd fbr tit twist in pert in the pay ment ef interest upon the pultliodebt.ahen the people will want to know bow it is, in dependently of,the interest , u •• n the public debt, that it hat taken POO, i i IMO to carry this Government through a period of three years, when in a time of peace it usedlto : require but from sixty to seventy or eighty million dollars annuallyy. ' The people will wish to know during 'this contest whether the enormous sum of money,, which has put the Citizen everywhere over the land ,upon the observance of the strictest econo-• my, to respond to the deraands !of the Government, has been expended in the promotion of the . public welfare, or whether it ' has been expend ed in the promotion of the interests of a party ; whether it has been expended to extend the enterprises of the country, or to maintain In the Southern States that eye teni of government which has' graddelly proceeded from step to step in arraying one race against another; whetherit has - been expended-in genuine add of benevolence anti kindness, or in maintaining a political system by which the colored people have been organized throughout the South into a political party ; in other words, whether this enormous sum that has been wrttog from the people has been expended for their benefit, for the promotion of their in tines* and for their good, or for other pur poses; and no arts of the orators or inge nuity of the sophist can avoid an answer to that grave, direct, and importsnt Inquiry. Why is it, sir, that in a time of protbund pears) it has cost $100,000,000 a year to support an army of 50,000? Tho people especially will want an answer to that question when you propose to elect to the Presidency the head of that army, who for a portion of that period was not only the General of the Army, but the Secretary of War. They want to know how it was that during the administration of the Depart ment by him it coat at the rate of 11120,000,- 000 to, support the War' Department and Army, when it used to cost butsl,ooo,ooo to the regiment. The people will want to know why it is that in a time of profound peace, when we have no war, except incon siderable strifes on our borders with the Indians, $05,000,000 were expended, in the fecal year before the last, to maintain the army, independent of bounties, and that for the quarter when the candidate for the Presidency was the Secretary of War, it coat about $30,000,000, or at the rate of t1.:0,- 000,000 per annum ; $2,000,000 to the regi ment; $2,000 to the man. • The peo• pie will want the majority in Con gress, when they demand the continuance of power beyond this period of eight years, to answer why it Is that so much money is drawn from them by the extraordinary power of taxation, that it may thus go to support the moat expensive military aye tem that has ever been known in too world ; I might speak of some of these es pead I- tures. I might speak of that favort ism in a small way which has shown it:elf iu the publication in the newspapers that are fa vored by special legislation in the District of Columbia, of notices for inc,nsiderable army supplies upon the itio anted°, and at the distant forts, when it was Impossible from the date of the publication that any man could receive information by such publication which would enable him to compete in the bidding. I might speak of other expenditures of like sort, Indicating a favoritism not worthy of any political par ty that claims the confidence of the country,. but I will not occupy so much of the time of the Senate. The people will wish to know during this contest why it is that the Su preme Court has been denied the right to in quire into the constitutionality of the legis lation of this Congress. Tho people know that the Supreme Court was established as one of the securities to their liberty, as one of the props and pillar underneath their in stitutions. They want to know why this prop and pillars has been stricken down, and for what political and party purpose it sae been done. If your legislation be con stitutional, valid, and right, then the people will wish to know why Congress should shield itself in its enactments from that in quiry that the Constitution intended should be had in regard to all legislation. The people during this contest will wish to know why it is that the executive depart ment has been stripped of that power which has been conferred upon it by the Consti tution; why it is that Congress has assumed to itself all those powers which, for nearly eighty years, were exercised under the Constitution by the executive department ; and for what purpose of good tothe people this was intended. Why is it that from the Executive has been taken the responsi bility for the execution of the laws? Why , is it that to the Senate has been assumed that responsibility? Why is it that Con gress has said that the power to remove irom office shall be taken from the Execu tive, when the power has been exercised, and as I believe according to the spirit of the Constitution and as I know, according to the construction of the fathers, by the Executive all the time; and that in the Senate, a many-headed body,' where re sponsibility is divided so that alights upon no particular individual, a responsibility should be assumed which Is worth nothing to the people and guarantee nothing to the fidelity and security of the public service. The people will, want to know why for three years a party with a majority of two thirds in Congress have not restored the Southern States to their practical relations to:the Federal Government; wby.it is that such a period has elapsed anti no genuine, peaceful, and permanent results have been attained? They know what is the condition of affairs. They know what temporary enterprises have been set on foot in the Southern States. They understand all that quite well; but they want to know, and they demand to know, in my judgment, with a very earnest demand, why it is that these States have not been restored in the spirit of the Con stitution and with that harmony which will promote the permanenof the 'Union, the stability of our institut.thns, and the prosperity of every, section of the country, The people will want 16 know in this'con test why it is that Congress stepped in be-• tween the Executive .and. au immediate peaceful, practical, and permanent restora tion Oldie States to - their tiradtical relation - 8 to the Federal Government; Why it was that when we were solar advanced in that work under the policy inaugurated by the Executive, when States Were accepting the propositions, adopting constitutions that were accoptable everywhere, ag seing to everything demanded by the North, aequi cisingin the results of the war in every re spect whatever, Congress cameln and, ex eating a strife with the Executive, stopped, and to some extent defeated, tint rssora don policy which was bringing again per manent union and permanent prosperity. That question will be asked by ii sensible, thinking people, and it is flir ;the majority 113 Congress, and for their partisans over the country, to give a direct, plain, and unequivocal answer.— The people will want to know in this con nection why it Is that by this political con troversythat Congress has gotten up with the Executive, striking down the policy that was then almost a success; the return of trade, production, and of prosperity have been indefinitely delayed. They know as Senators know, that , from the time when this controversy was gotten upbyCongress to break - down the policy of restoration. wheAaLtooat completed, the prodnotions of a large pbrtion of the country have ' front year tO y ear fallen off, and that the exports whisk I these • productions Punished, en- ,abling,ns to keep tipthe balance; of trade somewhat in our favor, 'have 'fallen off so muolithat in a large - 11408e that balance has been made np in gold and the Government securities. The people want to know why it le that trade cannot be"allowed to'return to its ancient channels; that the indtustiles of the - country- are not . encouraged, . but that, on the contrary, they are kept in, that, disturbed condition that investments dare not be made by capital, and that labor is" afraid to. make an effort even .it capital should .be invested. The people , will ask one farther question, what has been gained 'by this contreveray, like the question that in former times was asked by the grand child of the,grandfather in , relation „to the great battle,: " What ha all this' been about?" .S enators know .very well that when .the Thirty-ninth Congress met, the work of restoration, according to the of Mr.' Johnson, was been completed Constitutions Inul been. adopted. in the Southern States abolishing slavery, or de claring it abolished forever reputhatkig the Southern debt, and maki ng_ very Pledge to the Federal IfnionwhichNortherneenU meat demanded; but Coniireashttervened against that policy and interposed its own, and now the peo_ple, after 'two or three years of delay, of - distraction; of the die- G JULY 29 1868 MEM= .t oriental of int& and Otiiittheroil ilk la'. 11 !Rovr• led* ball beats pitted Ity tt; Whfm Soth tome • to ,atteente ,itteeptond the people you' eanttot Obb them hlngt Sciun emostitutiomethieh 'hey IReptibl i-• Can mind. elln asy. ht 'nib/otter etMetitution, than had"beiin edopted under. .the ,Johnson potter, unless yettsayitts it:Otter 00bill tution because:this negnoesereekdrenahltiel and a pert ef the whites disfeenchisedOnd the power le a great eeetton of the country, taken from the men andthem terthe eolor: ed • menu aloe: people wane to -knew by it is that after. the class of thews,. eft. r there Watt. no longer a rebel soldier :,volt *gun In Ms hand; after the South had' amended Ito nonatltutiows and . changed' its laws, acoonling„ to the demands :of the North' to every partiqtAar, after. they • had deduced slaveey ' abolished,' secession , strd the /rebel debt not to begolleeted, why,,then r in one-third of this country llld the party in power break down State governments and estlb lish in their stead military governmentsl why was it In that work you madethe civil . law subordinate to the 'military law; the Judge . upon. the bench sittoordlnate to the .contmendingefficer; and gave tea military officer, the, power. to, drive . the. legislators from the halls of leghtlatton ' 'and to substi tute men of hie own'aelection i i theirplace, and subverted Blithe principles of free goV!. 'ernment, recognized, honored, and revered in thin country, and estabhsbed in their stead a system of government that finds no parallel in stub( the countries of the world since the days of the.proccmsule. To that question, it seems to me; it will be difficult to And a suitable answer. It is not enough to, say that in neighborhoods there were broils and murders: Why,%ir, some time ago I read to the Senate, from one of the papers published in this city, a telegram coming from the central portion of Ala hemp that the fifth white mat had been murdered in. the same neighborhood, and no notice, whatever had been taken of it ; and that, too, under the government, mili tary, powerful and despotic, vhich you had established there. Mr. President, when the people of the country persistently de mand to know of their legislators why civil law is subordinate to military law, why the judge upon th e bench is stripped of his robes of office, and in his stead there is substituted a military' commander to de cide upon the rights of the people; when they demand to know why in secret com missionand military court the citizen is tried for a criminal offence, or touching a civil rlght,why these things are done in this coon try in time of profound peace,some grave and weighty answer must be given them. They will want to know why It is that you pre tend for the time to repudiate on the part of Congress the right to establish negro suf frage in the Northern States, and yet estab lish it in the Southern States; why it is that you rally upon a platform attempting to avoid the responsibility of this issue at home, and yet would seek to establish such a system of suffrage in ten of the States of the South; and whatanswerwill you give? Do you tell the people of the North that they aro not interested in the question of suffrage in the Southern States? You cannot make that answer, for this fall It may occur that the negro votes for the South will decide the Presidential election. It may occur that a majority of the electoral votes ;of the North will bo overcome by the negro votes of the South. It may not so occur; but if it does so occur, and if the colored people of the Southern States, holding the balance of political power in this country, shall decide who is to be the President and the Vice President of the United States, is not that coming home, as• a practical ' and direct question, to every Northern man ; his vote being overcome by the vote of the colored man of the South, and that, too, by an act of Congress? So that the people of the North will want to understand how it is that you pretend not to force upon them negro suffrage at home, and yet establish it in ton of the States of the South. The people will want to know why, in a time of peace, the rights of the citizen have been trampled under foot, and the ancient writs of the law which protect and Bemire them in their property and their personal liberty have been abrogated ; why it is that instead the courts of law where men are heard fano to face, the witneasesealled facet° lace, the jury from the neighborhood hearing all the evidence, deciding the case, why that mode of trial , in court has been abolished, and in its stead has been established the military court, where there are none of the een rds and securities for justice that a .eunsand years of experience have shown te lie essential. Mr. President, the two parties into which the people of this country are now divided have declared their plat form of principles; they have put their tickets in nomination ; and it is for the peo ple now to decide which set of principles they will adopt, and which set of candidates they will elect, Upon this AubJect I have but few remarks to submit. In my opposition to tho ticket that was nominated atChicage I never expect to place it upon personal grounds. I - recognize the gentleman at the head of that ticket as an eminent military man and his associate as a distinguished civilian. Against them, personally, I ex pect never to express a sentiment. I oppose their election because they have become, by acquiescing in their nomination, the repre sentatives of the sentiments that have con trolled Congress for the last throe years ; because they stand upon a platform which is objectionable in part and equivocal in part. The Convention at New York has expressed its views in a platform which in no section can be misunderstood. The man that runs may read and un derstand. The plainest as well as the most learned will interpret It alike. It declares our *views and our purposes so distinctly and emphatically that the people are not and cannot be misled. The contrast between the two platforms struck me with great force as I listened to the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. Frelinghttysan) some minutes since, as he read one of the sections of the Chicago platform declaring that the publiodebt must be paid in accordance with the letter and spirit of the law. What does that mean? My colleague would say, I have no doubt, that it means one thing, and the Senator from New Jersey would claim that it means another, a very different thing. Many Senators claim that the spirit of law is that the bonds shall be paid in gold ; while other Senators, eminent and clear-headed, say that it means they shall be paid in greenbacks, if Congress chooses to so pay them. The resolution of the Democratic Convention is as follows: Payment of the publlo debt of the Uni ted States as rapidly as practicable; all moneys drawn from the people by taxa tion, except so much as is requisite for the necessities of the Government, economical ly administered, being honestly applied to such payment; and where the obligations of the Government do not expressly state upon their face, or the law under which they were leaned does not provide that they shall be paid in coin, they ought in riltht, and in justice, to be paid in the lawful money of the United States. The resolution declares that, unless the obligation issued by the Government, or the law authorizing its issue, expressly provides that it is to be paid in gold, it may be paid in :awful money. The law author izing the issue of the flve•twenties provided for a lawful money, and declares Treasury notes, with the legal tender clause, to be lawful money; and neither the law nor the obligation provides that these bonds shall be paid in gold. Governor Seymour stands upon this platform, and I claim that the platform explains itself, and standing upon the platform his position is not and cannot be misunderstood. I had thought of read ing one or two other of the resolutions adopted at New York, in contrast with the resolutions adopted. at: Chicago, to show teat at NeW York yositions were assumed - plainly, distinctly, directly, so that the peo ple could not be misled by anything that was there said. But sir, as it would likely take more time than I am able to occupy this morning, I will not go further in that direction. With a platform explicit and direct upon all the great questions that now attract public attention, it only re mains to inquire who are the men that stand upon it. I need not, in addressing either the Senate or the country, occupy much time in speaking of Gov. Seymour. tb:, has been long known to the country as one of the first of her statesmen. A ripe scholar and profound thinker, in times and in positions of great difficulty he has done the State much service. He has filled post. tions the highest in the country except that to which he has been nominated, and to which, in my judgment, he will be elected. A. statesman cool in thought and efficient in soften he will command the oonfidende of the country. I know that criticisms have been made upon his conduct during the war. lam glad that it requires but a sen tence to answer all criticisms. So efficient was he as the Executive of the great State of New York, in the aiming of troops, and especially in the aid he gave to the:Govern ment about the time of the battle or Gettys burg, that Mr. Linooln returned him, in the most earnest and emphatiomanner, his thanks. He is an Eastern nine . bat he is acceptable, to the Northwest. We know from the. sentiments that he has always expresabd that he is not a sectional man. He is a man who at the head of this Gov ernment, will recognize all sections, and respect and labor to promote the interests of each. While the Chief Executive of the State of New York, be favored, pub. Holy and privately, that policy which - would encourage the-producers of the great. Northwest; • Hs favored in the State of New York the adoption of a policy that' would allow our-hea reight to pass ov er the State 'canal almost without charge; and if his policy had been. carried out to the extent, that he desired the Northwest' would have been benefited to the extent of millions of dollars. A.."nallonal man fair to , all sections he may well receive the support, not only of hie own but of that section from which I come ; and support, wh e b t e hleie ve u ffihc the t w o nt e ro i l v the' votes in the South or not I will not any, but a cordial support in that section of the Union. Whether he can obtain the electoral votes in the Southern States will depend, in my judgment, upon the question whether the military are kept organised in those Pietid'utenrs Bureau, ' wit) itepartY mattllneiy, to control the elections Of General Blair, the candidate /or the 'Tlce-Prati_dency, Zneeditaybukllttletothe• Senate. — lie Wu ci enetrine a Member of the other,brandh , ofJeCrigrbik. and neeg• nlzetlNalt aa possessing nth Web:manta and n itiee. , lknfieth r Fol!lod brave, h will tin .an slip. port. Conned( * t he re; and pallid gks la SOT PAlhesordmotementsthat five mado., ts heroes mmOttal, hla name 'arid fatne`'Wllrlie - charished'itrid guarded bhlitlatenstundatee in atini , llThli Wok OPP and nitenititikthgt , hAVe been made upon . the v i ews' which be may have expensed upOn the Oendition 'end tights of We , Peja 4 "orme sublaigated Staten will not b bY the People .:vdterk s they :reflect at you bave shut thedoer at tunnapreme Cant' againif alt. inem.y ip , regard to the legislation Which helm denounced. Ton have dealarectlhatwouplciladon shall not undergo , that review a nd ,examination Which the Constitution lbw contemplated. You have declared shat the Juilidaty shall not decide whether your acts of reoonstrua eon are constitutional and valid. You have therefore left it to the' Executive to decide for Itself. Att. Preildent, I believe that the highest interests of this country demand slip election of this ticket, and that it will be elected, and that `the country' will again be restored to. 'permanent peace—peace that rests not upon subj Wiento despotic, power, but upon the restored supremacy of the Constitution' and the rightful authority of all the departments of the Government, and to a prosperity as enduring as that peace. •No ME PRESIDENT% VETO MESSAGE Vito of the 'Unit stesolotion RxematnE from tt►e ineetorol college the Votes of • Certain States lonely in Rebellion. WAIIILINOTON, July 20, 1868. The President this afternoon sent the tol -1 owing Message to the Senate: 7b the Senate of the United States : I have given to the joint resolution ettli. tied "A resolution excluding from s the Electoral College the votes of States lately in rebellion which shall not have been re cognized" as careful examination as I have been able to bestow upon the subject dur ing the few days that have intervened since the measure was submitted for my approv al. Feeling constrained to withhold my consent, I herewith return the resolution to the Senate, in which house it originated, with a brief statement of the reasons which have induced my action. The joint reso lution is based upon the assumption that some of the States whose inhabi. tants were lately in rebellion ' are not now entitled to representation in Congress, and to participate In the election of a Presi dent and Vice President of the United States, I have heretofore had occasion to give In detail try reasons for dissenting from this view. It Is not necessary at this time to repeat them ; it is sullialent to state, that I continue strong in my conviction that the acts of secession, by which a number of the States sought to dissolve their connection with the other States and to subvert the Union being unauthorized by the constitu tion and in direct violation thereof, were from the beginning absolutely null an d void. It follows, necessarily, that when the rebel lion terminated the several States which had attempted to secede continued to be States in the Union, and all that was re quired to enable them to resume their re lations to the Union was that they should adopt the measures necessary to their prac tical restoration. as States. Such measures were adopted, and the legltimateresult was those States having conformed to all the re quirementa of the constitution resumed their former relations and became entitled to the exercises of all the rights guaranteed to them by its provisions. The joint reso lution under consideration, however, seems to assume that by the insurrectionary acts of their respective inhabitants those States forfeited their rights as such and can never again exercise them except upon readmis sion into the Uni9n on the terms prescribed by Congress. If this position be correct it follows that they were taken out of the Union by virtue of their acts of secession, and hence that the war waged upon them was illegal and unconstitutional, We would thus be placed in this inconsistent attitude: That while the war was commenced and carried on upon the distinct ground that the Southern States being component parts of the Union, were in rebellion against the lawful authority of the United States, upon its termination we resort to a policy of re construction which assumes that it was not, In fact, a rebellion, but that the war was waged for the conquest of territories assumed to be outside of the constitutional union. The mode and manner of receiv- fog and counting the electoral votes for President and Vice President of the United states is, in plain and simple terms, pre scribed by the constitution. That instru ment imperatively requires that the Presi dent of the Senate "shall in the presence. of the Senate and House of Representatives open all the certificates and the votes shall then be counted." Congress hasthereforeno power under the constitution to receive the electoral votes or to reject them. The whole power is exhausted when In the presence of the two houses the votes are counted and the result declared. In this respect the power and duty of the President of the President of the Senate are under the con stitutionpurely ministerial; when, there fore, the joint resolution declares that no electoral votes shall be received or counted from States that since the 4th of March, 1887, have not adopted a constitution of State government under which a State government shall have been organized, a power is assumed which is nowhere delegated to Congress unless, upon the assumption that the State governments organized prior to the 4th of March, 1887, were illegal and void. The joint resolution, by implication at least, concedes that these Stales wore States by virtue of their organ ization prior to the 4th of March, 1867, but denies to them the right to vote in the elec tion of President and Vice President of the United States. It follows either that this assumption of power is wholly unauthor ized by the constitution or that the States so excluded from voting were outof the Union by reason of the rebellion and have never been legitimately restored. Being fully satis fied that they were never out of the Union and that their-relations thereto have been legally and constitutionally restored, I am forced to the conclusion that the joint resolu tion, which deprives them of the right to h ave their votes for President and Vice President received and counted, is in conflict with the constitution, and that Congress has no more power to reject their votes than those of the States which have been uniformly loyal to the federal 'Union. It is worthy of remark that if the States whose inhabitants wore recently in rebellion were legally and constitutionally organized and restored to their rights prior to the 9th of March, 1867, as I am satisfied they were, the only legit mato authority under which the election for President and Vice President can be held therein must be derived from the gov erntrients instituted before that period. It clearly follows that all the State govern ments organized In . those States under the acts of Congress for' that purpose, and un der military control are illegitimate and of no validity whatever, and in that view the votes cast In those States for President and Vice President, in pursuance of the acts passed since the'4U3 of March, 1867, and In obedience to the so-called reconstruction acts of Congress, cannot be legally received and counted while the only votes in those States that can be legally cast and counted will be those cast in pursuance of the laws in force in the several States prior to the legisla tion:by Congress upon the subject of recon struction. I cannot refrain from -directing your special attention to the declaration con tained in the Joint resolution that "none of the States whose inhabitants were lately in rebellion shall be entitled to representation in the Electoral College," ezc. If it is meant by this declaration that no State is to be al lowed to vote for President and Vtoe Presi dent all of whose inhabitants were engaged In the late rebellion, it is apparent that no one of the States will be excluded from voting, since It is well known that in every Southern State there were many inhabi 'tante who not only did not participate In the rebellion, but who actually took part In Its suppression or refrained from giving it any'aid or oonntenace. I therefore, con ch:lde that the true meaning of the joint resolution. is that no State a portion of whose Inhabitants were engaged in the re bellion shall be p3rmitted to participate in the Presidential election except upon the terms: and conditions therein prescribed. Assuming this to be the true construction of the resolution, the inquiry becomes per- 1 1 tinent,may those Northern States a portion of whose inhabitants were actually in the re- bellion,bepreventedat the discretion of Con gross froth havingftheir electoral vote count ed. It is well sown that a portion of the , 1 inhabitants of New York and a portion of the inhabitants of Virginia were alike en gaged in the rebellion • "yet it was equally well known that Virginia as well as New York was at all times during the war re cognized by the federal government as a State in the Union so clearly that upon the termination of hostilities it was not even deemed necessary tor her restoration that , a provisional governor should be appointed. • Yet according to this joint resolution, • the people of Virginia, unless they comply with the terms it prescribes, are denied the right of voting for President and Tice President, while the people of New York, a portion of the inhab itants of which State were also in rebellion, are permitted to have their electoral vote counted without undergoing the process of reconstructionprescribed for Virginia. New York is no more a State than-Virginia—the one is as much entitled to be represented in the Electoral College as the other. If Con gress has the power to deprive Virginia of this right,ltcan exercise the same authority with respect to New York or any of the States. Thus the result of the Presidential election may be controlled and determined by Congress and the people be deprived of their rights under the constitution to 'choose a Preeldent and Vice President of. the the United' Stites. It Conp;rees were to provide by law that the votes of none of 1 NUMBBR X3O , 'the States ;should be moved and counted if cut for et candidate Who differs in pond oskientlmenV with tr Majority of the two House" guch .leglidatlon would at once be Condemned by thlfoontitry di ati; unconsti tutional and' ievOlutlonary usurpation of power. It would, however, be exceedingly. =cult to And in the oonstlent Lon any more authority fin; the 'passage of the boint reso lution under' consideration 'than for an, enactment avokins dlrootly,the rejection of all votei not in accOrdanoe with the preference of a mejority of ' Congress. No power exists in the constitution authoriz ing tho joint resolution, or the proposed Jew; the only Moreno° being that one would be more palpably unconstitutional and revolutionary than the other; both would'relit upon the radical error' that Con. gress hats the power to prescribe terms and conditions to the right of the people of the States to cast their votes for President and Vice President. For the reasons thins in dicated I.am constrained to return the Joint resolution to the Senate for such further action' thereon as Congress may deem nee. emery. ANDFEW JOHNSON. WASHINGTON, July 20, 1868. THE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMEN !roeDuna - Doe bylleorotarr Newaid—The Yourteclath.Alnendillent le the renal. Dillon Declared /dental. and now n part of our Fundamental Law. William H. &ward, Secretor° of State of the United 6tates-2b cat W ttl,hom these Presenta may come, Greeting: Whereas the Congress of the United States, on or about the sixteenth day of June, in the year one thousand eight bun deed and sixty-eight, passed a resolution which is in the words and figures following, to wit: Joint Resolution Proposing an Amendment to the Conatradian of the Untied eitatee: Be it ,resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled two thirds of both Houses concurring—That the following article be proposed to the Le gislatures of the several States as an amendment to the ConsUtUtlon of the Uni ted States, which, when ratilitpd by three fourths of said Legislatures, all be valid as part of the Constitution, namely : Art. 14—See. 1• All persons born or nat uralized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty or property without due pro cess of law. nor deny to any person within Its jurisdictian the equal protection of the laws. See. 2. Representatives shall be appor tioned among the several States according to their respective numbers, counting the whole number of persona in each State, ex cluding Indians not taxed; but when the right to vote at any election for the choice of electors for President and Vico President of the United States, Representatives in Congress, the executive and judicial officers of a State or the members of the Legislature thereof la denied to any of the male inhabi tants of such Slats (being twenty-ono years of age and citizens of the United States], or in any way abridged except for participa tion in rebellion or other crime, the basis of representation therein shall bo reduced in the proportion which the number of such male citizens shall bear to the whole num ber of male citizens twenty-one years of ago in said State. SEC. 8. No person shall bo a Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector, or President or Vice President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States or under any State, who having pre viously taken an oath as a member of Con gress or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any State Legislature, ores an executive or j udicial officer of any State, to support the constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insur rection or rebellion against the same or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof; but Congress may, by a vote of two-thirds of each House, remove such disabilities. SEc. 4. The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law, in cluding debts incurred for payment of pen. Mons and bounties for services in suppress ing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be questioned ; but neither the United States nor any State shall assume or pay any debt or obligation incurred in aid of insurrection or rebellion against the United States or any claim for the loss or emancipation of any slave; but all such debts, obligations and claims shall be held illegal and void. SEc. 5. The Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriate leglelntlon, the provisions of this article. And whereas by the second section of the act of Congress, approved the 20th of April, 1818, entitled " An act to provide for the publication of the laws of the United States and for other purposes," it is made the duty of the Secretary of State forthwith to cause any amendment to the constitution of the United States which has been adopted ac cording to the provisions of the said consti tution to be published in the newspapers authorized to promulgate the laws, with his certificate specifying the States by which the same may have been adopted, and that the same has become valid to all intents and purposes as a part of 'the constitution of the United States ; And whereas neither the act Just quoted from nor any other law expressly or by con clusive implication authorizes the Secretary of State to determine and decide doubtful questions as to the authenticity of the or• ganization of State Legislatures or as to the power of any State Legislature to recall a previous:act of resolution or ratification or any amendments proposed to the constitu tion ; And whereas it appears from official doc uments on file in this department that the amendment to the constitution of the 'United States proposed as aforesaid has been rati fied by the Legislatures of the States of Connecticut, Now Hampshire, Tennessee, New Jersey, Oregon, Vermont, New York, Ohio, Illinois, West Virginia, Kansas, Maine, Nevada, Missouri, Indiana, Minne sota Rhode Island, Wisconsin,Pennsyl vania, Michigan, Massachusetts, and lowa ; And whereas it further appears from do .6uments on file in this department that the amendment to the constitution of the Uni ted States, proposed as aforesaid, has also been ratified by the newly constituted and newly established bodies, avowing them selves to be and acting as the Legislatures respectively of the States of Arkansas, Flor , ids, North Carolina, Louisiana, south Car ' olina and Alabama ; And whereas it further appears from of ficial documents on file in this department, that the Legislatures of two of the States first above enumerated, to wit, Ohio and Now Jersey, have since passed resolutions respectively withdrawing the consent of each of said States to the aforesaid amend- meat ; And whereas it is deemed a matter of doubt and uncertainty whether such reso lutions are not irregular and invalid, and therefore ineffectual for withdrawing the consent of the said two States, or either of them, to the aforesaid amendment ; And whereas the whole number of States in the United States is thirty-seven, to wit: —Now Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, Now Jer sey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Vermont, Kentucky, Tennessee, Ohio, Louisiana, Indiana, Mississippi, Illi nois. Alabama, Maine, Missouri, Arkansas, Michigan, Florida, Texas, lowa, Wisconsin, Minnesota, California, Oregon, Kansas, West Virginia, Nevada and Nebraska; And whereas the twenty , three States first hereinbefore named whose Legisla tures have ratified the said proposed amendment and the six States next there after named as having ratified the said pro. posed amendment by newly constituted and established legislative bodies together constitute three-fourths of the whole num ' ber of States in the United States; Now, therefore, be it known, that I, Wil liam H. Seward, Secretary of State of the United States, by virtue and in pursuance of the second section of the act of Congress approved the twentieth day of April, eigh teen hundred and eighteen, hereinbefore cited,do hereby certify that if the resolutions of the Legislatures of Ohio and New Jersey, ratifying,the aforesaid amendment, aro to be deemed as remelt:login full force and effect, notwithstanding the subsequent resolutions of the Legislatures of these States which purport to withdraw the consent of said States from such ratification, then the afore said amendment has been ratified in the manner hereinbefore mentioned and so has become valid to all intents and purposes as a part.: of the constitution of the United States. - . In testimony whereof I have hereunto ae my hand and caused the seal of the Depart meat of the State to be affixed. one at the city of Washington, this twen tieth day of .Tuly, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty eight and of the independence of the United States of America the ninety. third. WILLIAM H. SEWARD, secretary of State. What Grant :861d ha 1861. "I am a Democrat; EVERY MAN IN MT REGIMENT IS A DEMOCRAT; and when I shall be convinced that this war has for its object any other than what I have men tioned, or the Government designs using its soldiers to execute the purposes of the Abolitionists I pledge you my honor as a soldier that Twill carry my sword on the other side and cast my lot with the people." A Change came over the spirit of General Grant's dream when he became ambitions for the Presidency, and he was willing to sacrifice peace, order, good will and Con stitutional liberty for the" honor of the Presidency. Wm. Cullen Bryantis spending the sum mer at Cummingum—hale, cheerful, and vigorous; clearing fences at a bound and three stairs at a time, only a slight muscu lar contraction of the shoulder and bla mlllc *bite hair revealing what age has 'done for -him. NM - fn , Sternale • LABlllatrunerizre, ""lll • team:mg ee par -year ler • ,r• • "LIA MAL Itit l iiik;looelatkirliiiiii twangs, and4loants fps each rubsegnhe NW= , .ie sizerszADAzeisterstroo 7 tents a Mot for the • ant, and 4 Mtn tar eaol aubsegoeot loser. uon. annum Ntyndoil inserted in '1•5•341 , oefitian, ' 1.5 °eats per Ude. ..r SPICOSAL _g kl6linligag nsu ati t 46. centa par II; am 1 :i419/. 6 cents Du every subsequent, Insertion. ZAN:4 Lan oorn zit OF rforr • g Craton' L6O AYltfleea' notice s »»» Sa o • ' AnditOrs' ;Other "Notloes,?,ten Unto, or 1.7, ulna Head ' Oeintrccltephena glvlneraigllah °aeons In Park. A Minnesota eourisbli) and marriage was begun and consuininnted In twenty tutnrites. Dr. Breaklnridgo disapproves of the use of organs in churches. The real name of Frank. Leslie, the pub lisher, is Henry Carter. Hop raising has been condemned by the Ft eo Will Baptista of Wisconsin. Asphaltum pavements nro being laid, in Charleston, South Carolina. Gen. Mende has Issued an order anuouno log the restoration of olyll rule In Georgia. Thorn are forty-throe stores empty and to rent on the main business street of Mem phis, Tenn. Henry B. Stanton, the husband of Elise both Cady, is ono of the editors of the New York Sun. The Hancock (Illinois) County Court has sent a horse thief to the State prison for seventeen years. Blehop Qulntaxd, of Tennessee, collect ed .£B,OOO In England for tho Southern EplacopalUniversity. Golzot has declined a nomination to the French Corps Legislatif. Ho says his polit ical career , has torminatod. The Prince of Wales has given $250 totho widow of William Dargan, the Dublin arch itect, who died bankrupt. Congressman Brooks drives the hand somest pair of cream-colored horses lu Washington. A reverend gentleman of Montreal has been fined $lOO and damages for marrying a youth of sixteen to a widow of forty-nine. Two little girls, aged respeativelyleight and nine years, were drowned whit - 0130,th- Mg at Atlantis City yesterday. The President has signed the Tax bill, under protest, on account of its provisions relating to supervisors. The Ways and Moans Committee have postponed until September the bill abolish ing public warehouses. Geo. Willard Warner ha.' been °looted 11. S. Senator by the Georgia Legislature, for the term ending In 1871. Mrs. Leslie, the wife of tho celebrated publisher, is employed by Madame Detno rest, and obtains her living byembroldory, eta. Mutno Is the Luke State of tbooast—lt has moro than 1,500 lakes, elevated so high ns to glvo ample water power for three or four millions of people. A number of the Influential negreea In Nashville are circulating a petition asking the Tennesaeo Legislature to enfranchlee the excluded whites In that State. It is stated that planting tomatoes around apple trees will hinder thoir being troubled by the borer. Tho remedy Is cheap, and may bo mado profitable, too, Unless sotno blight should come, both the small grain crop and the corn crop will be the largest over gathorod in tho North west. Gun. Grant draws $22,000 per y rln gold and pays no tax, and it elootrroposos to hold on to his present posit n and pay, and play President beside. Tho steamer China Ballad for Europe, on Wednesday last, with $505,000 in gold and silver for the payment of interest on United States bonds hold on tho other side of the Atlantic. It is estimated ten thousand Italians will emigrato to South America this year. Ills supposed that not loss than forty thousand have made that country their home within six or Bayou years. A white Senator at Atlanta was Raked, while at table, whether the representatives from his county had arrived, " Walt un til I am through my breakfast," Ito replied, "and I will send to the kitchen and in quire," There Is two papers issued from the print ing establishment of James Gordon Ben nett. The Herald in the morning and the Telegram in the evening. The former o poses the Democratic nominations and the latter supports them. gaga', gown. ESTATE OF ROBERT TAUERT, LATE of Paradise township, deceased. Letters testamentary on said estate having boon granted to the undersigned, all persons In debted thereto aro requested to make Immedi ate payment, and those having claims or do. monde against tho same will present them tar settlement to tho undersigned, residing In said township. MARY A. TAGERT, Executrix, o 23 taw. 24 AENIONEED ENTATE OF DANIEL W. Barr and Wife, of Edon township, Lan caster, county, Pa.—Tho undersigned Auditor, appointed to distribute the balance remaining in the hands of John J. Galbraith, Assignee or Daniel W. Earr and Wife, to and among those legally entitled to the name, will sit for that purpose on FRIDAY, AUUUsT 7Ln, 180, at 2 o'clock, P. Id., In the Library Boom of the Court House, in the City of Lancaster where all persons intereatei mad distribution may attend. J. W. F. SWIFT, MEM PSTATE OF CATHARINE LAPP, LATE of Carnarvon township, Lancaster county, ic'd.—Tho undersigned Auditor, appointed to distribute the balance remaining In the bands of John Hensler, Executor of the last Will of Bald decd, to and among those legally entitled to the same, will attend for that purpose on FRIDAY, the 7th day of AUGUST, 1108, at 10 o'clock, A.. M., In one of the Jury Rooms of the Court liouse. in the City of Lahcaater, where all persons Interested in said distribution may attend. E. D. WE.LTE. =:=l ASSIGNED ESTATE OF JOHN FRANTZ and Wife, of Manor twp.—The undersigned Auditor, appointed to distribute the balance remelt:ill:iglu the hands of John Miller, Assig nee of John Frantz and Wife, to and among those legally entitled to the same, will sit for that purpose on TUESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1863, at 2 o'clock, P. M., in the Library Boom of the Court House, in the City of Lancaster, where all portions interested In said distribution may attend. ' B. C. KRNADY,. Jy13.4tw27 • Auditor. ESTATE OF Elf AND ELIIOIILE lIILATE of Ephrata tap.. Lancaster co., deo'd.—The undersigned Auditor, appointed to distribn to the balance remaining In the hands or Susan Mohler, Administratrix, to and among those legally entitled to the same, will sit for that purpose on WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12th, INS, at WA o'clock, A. M., in the Library Room of the Court Hamm, In the City or Lancaster, Where all persons interested In said distribu tion may attend. WM. 18. AXWEG, jyr fl.ttw27 Auditor, MIXECEITOB4I NOTICE......ESTA'IIe UP .0 James Buchanan, late of Lancaster twp„ ueold.—Letters Testamentary on laid estate having been granted to the undersigned, all person Indebted thereto are requested to make Immediate settlement,:and those having claims or demands against the same will present them for settlement to IL B. liwarr, residing Mg In the City or Lancaster. ICD WARD Y. BUCHANAN, IL B. SWAIM, je2o.otortwdatto Executors. THE UNDERSIGNED AUDITOR AP. pointed to diatribute the balance of money la the hands of Bernhard Mann, (farmer,) Ad ministrator of Henry Greenawalt, dec'd, to and among those legally entitled thereto, will sit for that purpose on MONDAY, AMIDST 3d, 1888, at MA o'clock, A. M., In the Court House, In the City of Lancaster when and when all persons interested In said distribu- Us aro notified to attend It they gee proper. AND. M. FHA N't Z, Auditor. JyB.4tw27 XTOTICE TO THE HEINS AND LIFAIAL 1.1 Representatives of Ceti/urine Henderson, late of East Earl twp., Lancaster county, Pa., deo'd.—You are hereby notified that by virtue of an Order of the Orphans' Court of Lancaster county to me directed, I will hold an Inquest to divide, part or value, the Real Estate of Catharine 'Henderson, deo'd, on WEDNES DAY, the 12th day of AUGUST, 1888, at 1 o'clock P, M., at the premises in East Earl twp., Lan caster county, Pa., when and where you may attend If you think proper. Jyl.Btw2B J. F. FREY, Sheriff. Sherif:Fs Office, Lancaster, ra., June :V, 1888. ptsainuarfr NoTicE. in the District Court of the United States for the Eastiln Bankruptcy. ern District of Penna. At LIIIICALBtOr, JULY 2n, 1885. TO WROM IT MAY CONCERN: The under. signed hereby gives notice of bin appointment as Assignee of MICHAEL R. VI/TWEE, of the City of Lancaster. in the County of Lancaster and state of Pennsylvania, within said die. trial, who hen been adjudged a Bank.rupt.upon his own petition, by the Dintrict Court of Said district. D. W. PATTERSON, Assignee, 19 East Ring street, Lancaster. JyB.lCw'a STAVE OF JOHN X. WHITEHILL. mi late of Marietta borough, Lanaaster 00., uee'd.—The undersigned Auditors, appointed to dletrlbute the balance remaining in the halide of Abraham M. Cassel, Executor. to and among those legally onUtled to the same, will elt for that purpose on TUESDAY, AUGUST 11th, at 10 o'clock, A. M., In the Library Room or too Court Rouse, In the City of Lancaster, where all persons Interested In salddistribution may attend. WM. A. WILSON, WM. AUG. ATLEE, Auditors. Jyl6-4 twal SSIGIBED ESTATE OF JACOBEVOU• er and WIP, of East Oneslice townshlp.— e Auditor, appointed to dlatalb• me the balance remaining in the hangs of Cyrus Ream, Aulance of Jacob Bother and Wife, to and among those legally entitled to the same, will sit for that purpose on THUDS. DAY, AUGUST 19th , /884 at.,lOA o'clock, A. M., in the CourkHouse, In the City of Lancaster, where all persons interested In said dlstribn. thin may attend. REDDEN H. LONU, Jy115.4tw28 Auditor. Lancaster, Penn'a, July 8,1808. MOSTATE OF JAIME DUNLAP. LATE X.l of Leacock township, Lancaster county, deo'd.—The undersigned auditor, appointed to distribute the balance remaining In the hands of John Dunlap, Administrator of said dee'd, to and among those. legally entitled to the same, will sit for that purpose on UATURDAY, the BM day of AUGUIsT, IEBB at 10% o cloak, A. M., in the Library Room of the Court House,ln the City sa i dancaster, where all persona inter ested In distribution may attepd. • WIT.Lta If WEIDMAN, Auditor.. JylEktw2B STATE OF SUSANNA HENDEE, LATE E of Mechanicsburg, URper Lamont town. ship, Lancaster countr,deo 4.—The unduslipi• ed Auditor. appointed to d istributo the balanoe remaining in thnhandi of Peter Hello, Elem. tor, to and among those legally entitled to the same, will at for that purpose on WEDNES. DAY, AUGUST 12th, at 2 o'cloear. P.M.., in the Library Room of the Court House. in tan City of Lancaster, where all pigeons interested 111 said distribution may Muria. W, WUJSON; ,115.1tw28 • Auditor.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers