iLantastrr .slltelligencer. WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1871 DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET FOR AUDITOR GENERAL, GEN. WILLIAM MCCANDLESS, OF FIIILADELPHIA.. FOR SURVEYOR GENERAL, CAPTAIN JAMES H. COOPER, OF LAWRENCE , COUNTY A FULL POLL OF THE DEMOCRATIC VOTE WILL SE. UILE TD E ELEMION OF OUR STATE TICKET EY A LARGE MAJORITY. LET EVERY DEMOCRAT REMEMBER THAT, AND IM OF R HIS NEIGHBPESSTPUORS.TII OF IT UPON TILE MINDS Circulate The lutelligencer The WEEKLY INTELLI 0 ENCER will be mailed to subscribers until after the October election for FORTY CENTS. Let it be put into the hands of every man who will read it. Every dollar thus spent will be worth five times that amount paid for brass ba . nds and forget ting up big meetings. The Temperance butte Convenilon The honest Temperance men of Penn sylvania have at last become tired of figuring as a mere bob to the political kite of the Republican party. They have determined to take a new depart ure, and, on the Oth day of August, they will assemble in State Convention, at Harrisburg, to nominate candidates for Auditor and Surveyor.t lenerals. Their call has been issued, and their free flag hasbeen boldly flung to the breeze. The true leaders among them, the men who care more for temperance than they do forpolitical parties, seem to Le in serious. solemn earnest. The Er;/shoe Good Templar, the organ of the Temperance men, is fully committed to their new departure. In an editorial referring to the action taken by the members of the tate Temperance Committee, at their recent meeting in Philadelphia, it says: un the question of organizing antler the re:winnow. atlopmd by the late 1:011 cntion, the committee WU, 1111M11111 , 11S, the plan of 1,0 found in the rel.rt of the proceed km the res,,luwin reemninending iicI:011, the meniher, 0 , committee Ll:nered in opinion, and tic being: Wien. a .rlty were in lavOr i resclntimi. 'a • t "t•v„w, nnamity, I..tra tt.k.iv yielded, a ei, tlouLt. the utile "., vot,„ ~1 . tty at the 1,1 ...t Tce n cm st e p ‘,1:1 I.e ..hug of the an :!.e noun nation ot 110 met reliable •I 1 fur A r.O. n1.,l Surveyor- 'the true nun may ex ,tormy time at their State Con vention, 'Fhe Republican press of the State has severely condemned their proposed independent action, and the light which was so vigorously waged in the State Committee will no doubt be renewed in the State Convention. An attempt will be made by certain Radi cal politicians, who wear the mantle 01 temperance us a loose cloak, to prevent any nominations for Auditor arid Stir veyor-t leneral. A failure to carry out the object of the call will by fatal to the lopes of the true friends of the Tem perance cause, and they might as well abandon the political field if they yield or suffer themselves to be overcome.— [laving taken a stand they must main tain it, If they expect to accomplish anything through the potent agency ot legislative action. Should they suc cumb now there will be no future fur therm and the liquor men will laugh them to scorn. The l boil Templars are numerous in this State,and they embrace within their limits a large number of voters who are pledged in favor of the passage of pro hibitory liquor laws. If they can be got to act in concert the Temperance petty can poll a large vote. We shall watch the proceedings of the lith of August Convention with no little interest. II the leaders allow themselves to be frightened from their declared purpose by the comments of the Radical prese they will sink into deserved contempt. They can not abandon the programme they have laid down far themselve, without being driven from the field of political action forever. They have crossed the Rubicon, and they must ad vance or perish miserably. A failure to push forward will lie as fatal to them as a retreat would have been to Ctesar. Having landed upon the shore of the enemy they must burn their ships be hind them and give the courage of des peration to their folloWers. Suppression Of Tesilmony by the Ku Klux Committee. The Radicals expected great thingt flout the Ru-Klux Committee. They calculated that it would be able to accu• mulate a mass of testimony which would justify the enactment of the law which gives despotic power to the Pres ident. The ellbrts of the committee have resulted in a complete failure. Ont after another the lies of such willing witnesses as the Reverend Lakin have been refuted by the testimony of prom inent citizens who were well known before and during the war as Union men. The Witnesses who have t esti. tied so freely to the peaceable condition of the Southern States and to the readi ness of the people to perform all the duties of good and loyal citizens, have heel men who were summoned by the Radical members of the committee.— Out of the mouths of their own wit nesses have they been condemned. 'the Democratic members of the Coin mittee, Mersrs. Beck, of Kentucky, and Blair, of Missouri, were greatly surprised at the non-appearance of certain prom. inent Southern gentlemen whom they had caused to be summoned us witnesses, and who, it was well-known, were in a position to give a correct and truthful view cif We Southern situation. In view of the unaccountable delay in the arrival of these witnesses a despat ch Was sent to the Southern papers, stating the surprise that was expressed. Not half a day elapsed before telegrams were re ceived from men who had been sum moncd, stating that despatches had been sent to them by J. It. French, the Rad. teal Sergeant-at-Arms of the United States Senate, announcing to them that they were not needed as witnesses, and that they need not appear. Some of tht Radical members of the committee may have been ignorant of this outrageols act pf French, but it is not likely that he acted altogether on his own motive and entirely without authority. A viler trick was never resorted to, and this ought to be sufficient of itself to cast suspicion over any report which may la made by the majority of the Ku-Klux Committee. A similar attempt to suppress testimony and to prevent an opponent from securing the pres ence of important witnesses would ruin any case in„ court mid ren der the perpetrator . of the fraud lia ble to severe penalties. The Radical members of the Ku-Klux Committee can be reNied through the proper chan• net of public opinion, mid they must be promptly arraigned and forced to answer for the infamous trick which was per petrated for the express purpose of sup - pressing truth. THE Radical Governor of Florida ha• a son in the Jacksonville Post-office, and when the father was impeached the son furnished him with seventeen thousand dollars of the public money, to pay the expenses olya trial. The Post master has been called upon to pay up, and the Governor is now in New York trying to make a raise by selling rail road bonds which he stole. Such is the news which comes to us from Wash• iugton by telegraph, and such is the material of which the Republican party in the S,outh is composed. THE Examiner copies as original a paragraph which appeared in the Village Record. The West Chester Jeffersonian of the same date denies that it ever used any such language. Will the Examiner make the proper correction ? Coitalßational Reform In North Caro• The respectable people of North Car olina, the orderly citizens, both white and black, are just now engaged in an at- I tempt to reform some of the gross abuses which sprang up like rank weeds . under the rule of the carpet-baggers and scale wags, who seized upon the government when the reconstruction acts of a Radi cal Congress were in full force. The ex isting Constitution was the work of a set of desperate political adventurers, whose only concern was to provide means for enriching themselves at the. expense of the property-holders of the State. - The Commonwealth was reck lessly plunged in debt, its credit was destroyed and its bonds were huckster ed in the New York nl%rket while Hol den was Governor, in a manner that was both disgraceful and ruinous. The debt of the State, which was only four teen millions when the war closed, was speedily increased to nearly forty mil lions, and the lavish appropriations that made up this enormous amount were squandered and stolen by Radical offi cials, and a set of railroad stock-jobbers, who were given almost unlimited li cense to traffic in the credit of the State. several of these worthies are now untie' indictment—two of them for as large ,inns as seven millions of bonds. The Clip.' uses of the State were increased to fur limes what they had been prior to tin war, by the creation of a multitude of .upi Iluous and sinecure offices. The of State officials were doubled; a borthensome township system was ('rear I: judges were made elective, and it numbers were increased; and the I ;,•lics of the various Courts were tilled %% neon) peten t and corrupt per- US. on l y took $750,000 to defray all e ex p, tows of the state Government fore tho war—it now takes not less an foci millions, all of which must wrung Cron) an impovMshed people Violet - such circumstances it is not strange that the reputable citizens of North Carolina, black as well as white, are ready to unite in an ellbrt to amend the Constitution of the state and to re pair some of the evils which Radical misrule has wrought. The Radicals rely almost exclusively upon the more gnorant portion of the negro vote, and hey expect to influence them by the owest falsehoods. The blacks are told lint the proposed new l'onstitution will take away all their rights and return them to slavery. Multitudes of them will believe the lies of the blackguards who are ready to sleep with them for political effect, but the more intelligent to .k I of the negroes are turning theft backs upon the white adventurers who are en- LTaged in this despicable work. Such Northern newspapers as Forney's l'rcss are to -y misrepresenting the action of the North Carolina Conservatives, but they, will have the sympathy of all de. ent men, without respect to party, in heir desperate struggle with organized tolitical rascality. They deserve to win L great and' crowning victory, and we ire glad to know that there is every respect of their doing so. A Wholesome Reform In Ylrglnla. The correspondent of a Virginia news paper, writing from \Vise county, an noun, es as a fact that the Democrats of that county have determined to throw over all the men who have publicly an nounced themselves as candidates, and says that those who have been riding round and soliciting votes, will all be repudiated. There seems to be a gener al feeling down there that offices ought to seek men, and that men who eagerly ~ e ult offices ought not to be nominated. If that sentiment could be generally in culcated, it would do more to purify our politics than anything else. Let us im agine the existence of such a State of affairs in Lancaster county. Let us suppose that a convention could beheld in which delegates would get together untrammelled by pledges, and nominate the bast men for office, Whitt a glori ous change that would be. Oue lesson ‘if tffitt sort would kill off the whole crop ,f corrupt Radical politicians.— l'here would lie an end of rings and ring-masters. The business of the county would be honestly conducted, the tax•payers would be saved large sums of money, and a delegation would be sent to Harrisburg which would be an honor to their constituents. In \Vise county, away down in South-western Virginia, such a feat may be accomplish ed, but we fear there is no locality in Pennsylvania where it would be possi ble. liere, in Lancaster county, the people are compelled to witness a dis gusting scramble over the Judgeship, an office which ought to be colnpletely removed from politics. Verily we have fallen upon evil and degenerate days. Western View of the Treaty with En The St. Louis Republican predicts that the operation of the Washington treaty w t ill result In banishing our inland com merce from the lakes, as effectually as our foreign commerce has been wiped from the Ocean. By its provisions Brit ish vessels are p muitted to enjoy unre itricted trade with the lake ports, and the cheap-built steamers of Canada and the Clyde may drop alongside of the more costly American craft at Chicago, Bu ffalo, Milwaukee and Erie; and ,o wing to the difference of cost in construction and running, obtain the bulk of the produce transportation of the North west. As there is direct communication between Chicago and the sea by the way of the lakes and the St. Lawrence river, English vessels will draw northward a large portion of the productswhich have hitherto found an millet through the Gulf of Mexico, thus striking a heavy blow at the carrying trade of the Missis sippi and its tributarieS,"aud indirectly at every department of industry through the great valley. The people of the West are given to independent methods of thinking, and are less strictly bound by party ties than those of the Eastern States. If the views, of theeffects of the late treaty expressed, by the St. Louis Er - Tub/jean, should take hold upon the Western mind, Grant would ne greatly weakened in that sec tion by his connection with it. Tlie Democratic Senators from the Western States did not look upon the treaty with much favor, and they were no doubt in fluenced by such views as those express ed in the Republican. The treaty may exercise a decided influence in the West ern States during the coming Presiden tial election. A Tombstone for Thaddeus Stevens A correspondent of the State Journa mourns over the fact that the bones o Maddens Stevens are crumbling to dus without so much as a stone to marl their resting place. He suggests that th children of the Common Schools of the Mate shall be called upon to subscribe mites to pay for a / monument. We would remind the coerespondent of the Stale Journal, and all the rest of man kind, that Mr. Stevens did not die a pauper. He left behind him a hand some fortune, which his executors have had complete control of since his death. Iwo of them have been engaged in building fine residences for themselves in this city since the money of Mr. Ste vens came into their possession ; and, as their costly piles of brick are now completed, it is possible that they may find time to order a monument for their deceased friend and have money enough left to pay for it. There is not the slight est necessity for calling upon the school children of the State for contributions. Our Congressman and the two Radical ex-Congressmen who are Ills co-execu tors would spurn such a suggestion. DEFALCATIONS are the order of the day among Radical officials. Scarcely a day passes without the. record of such an event. The Savannah Custom House is the latest, on the list. The Deputy Collector has pocketed about $B,OOO. AWN - lv , WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1871. Army Reform In England The English Premier, Mr. Gladstone, being unable to carry through Parlia ment an act abolishing the system of purchasing rank in the British army, has succeeded in accomplishing his pur pose by a flank movement. He has in duced the Queen to issue a royal war rant abolishing the purchase of commis sions in the army. The opposition in Parliament came from the aristocratic and tory party, which is powerful in the House of Commons and supreme in the House of Peers. The action of Mr. Gladstone has produced intense excite ment throughout all circles in England. The declaration of the Premier was re ceived with cheers in the House of Com mons ; but Mr. Disraeli! and the tory members generally were unable to re strain their anger. They heartily de nounced what they termed the arbitrary course of the government, but were challenged by Mr. Gladstone to move a vote of want:of confidence. Should such a motion carry, Mr. Gladstone would go to the country on the question, and there is no doubt but that he would be sustained. The measure which he has forced through in a summary manner is a very popular one, and should an appeal be made to the people upon it, and a new Parliament be elected, he would be likely to obtain a much larger majority than he has now. The abolition of the purchase of army commissions is a heavy blow to aristo cratic privileges in England and an im portant stride toward Democracy. The purchase of commissions was one of the oldest privileges of the aristocracy and wealthy classes of Great Britain. The army was an asylum for the younger members of the titled families. The positions of rank in the army were sold to them because the pay would enable them to live in a style that was supposed to be proper to their birth by the invest- vent of their limited means. This eye tern of con missions had nothing to do with merit, and rarely wits merit in the army recognized unless bucked by floiley or powerful family influence.— Ina action of :Mr. (iladatone will tend to improve the efficiency of the army, wlffie it opens the service to merit for all classes. Thus, one by one, the props of aristocratic privilege in England are being thrown down. Vitality of the San Domingo Job. The Lancaster Inquirer Is alarmed at the fact that the Harrisburg Telegraph still continues to advocate the acquisi lion of San Domingo upon the plan per fected by U. S. Grant & Co. The Tele graph is Simon Cainekin's organ. Cam eron is Chairman of the Senate Com mittee on Foreign Affairs, anti the master of the Republican party in Pennsylvania. The Inquirer ought to know that Simon's word is law to the Republican party in this State. He is cheek by jowl with Grant and speaks the sentiments of the President through the columns of the Telegraph,. Grant has not abandoned the idea of annexing San Domingo. The pecuniary profits of that promising job are too great to be given up without a further desperate struggle. Grant and Cameron will make herculean eftbrts to put the ob noxious treaty through at the next ses sion of Congress, and, should they find the opposition too great, they will quiet ly retire again and wait until after the next Presidential election. Should Grant be renominated and re-elected he will calm that the people have endorsed the San, Domingo treaty, and will find some means for securing its ratification. The Inquirer may depend upon it that the San Domingo job is not dead.. It will not be permitted to die so long as Grant has a pecuniary interest in it and power to push it. It can only be effect ually killed by the defeat of its greedy and grasping author. Grant will cling to it with all the stubbornness of his nature so long as he sees a chance of making money out of it. Nothing else could be exljected of a man who has habitually used the cillice of President as a means for enriching himself and his relations. The Democratic Party the Friend of the The Democratic party has always been the friend of the laborer. Its history in this State and throughout the United States proves that. The workingmen of Pennsylvania are indebted to the Dem ocratic party for the abolition of impris onment for debt, for the ten-hour law for the three-hundred-dollar exemption law—all enactments which protect the poor from oppression. The policy of the Democratic party in national politics has always been favorable to the masses. It never favored the protection of mo nopolies to the injury of those, whose only capital is their daily labor, while the opposing party has always in clined to do so. When Mr, Jeffer son became a candidate for the Presidency the Federalists were pro jecting a system of land-grants, similar to those Which have made Republican Congresses infamous in our day, and they would 110 doubt have been suc cessful had not the people repudiated the party which proposed the measure. National banks were never favored by the Democracy, and we might go on, enumerating one instanceafter another, in which the Democratic party took ground in favor of all the rational ideas which are contained in the platform that is put forward by those who are undertaking to lead the laboring men to a new Oeparture. If the working men of the United States are wise, they will concentrate their energies in an attempt to give back power to the Dem ocratic party, instead of frittering away their energies in an attempt to form another political organization. A FENN" days since Dr. Angier, the Radical State Treasurer of Georgia, de clared before the Ku-Klux Committee that Governor Bullock had violated the plain letter of the law in many in- stances in issuing new State bonds, by will i the debt of the State had been great • increased. He further declared that t e Governor was addicted to the gros,/st malpractices in office, and gave it as his deliberate opinion that the fuss made. about the Ku-Klux was only a disguise under which white and black thieves carried on their plunderings, regardless of .the political sympathies of their victims. How many Republican newspapers in Pennsylvania have pub lished the testimony of Dr. Angier? Not a word in relation to it has appear ed in any Radical newspaper of this city. They are ready enough to spread abroad the lies of such creatures as Rev. A. S. Lakin, but they persistently con ceal the truth. By such means they hope to keep their readers in ignorance of the true condition of the South. DISINTEGRATION is taking place in the Radical party. In all parts of the Country, evidences of these facts are ap parent. The Omaha Herald says that Senator Tipton openly declared, when in that city a few days since, that if General Grant was nominated for the Presidency, he would take the stump for Mr. Hendricks, in case the latter should be nominated by the Democratic party. He further declared that, if the State Convention of his party should select a delegate to the National Convention, favorable to the nomination of Grant, he would stump the State against him before he was nominated. THERE are Ku Klux in North Caro lina: An organized band of them have a regular encampment from which they sally forth and kill innocent persons.— Why does not Grant enforce the Ku- Klux bill, as he swore he would ? Is It because the outlaws are negroes who vote the Radical ticket? If they were white desperadoes, United States troops would, no doubt have had orders—for ward, march ! before this—and a howl for vengeance would have gone up from every Radical newspaper in the country. One of the proprietors of the Lancas ter Expres . a is a leader among the tern perancellion of t his county. At every temperance convention he mire his voice in earnest tones, and any one who heard him would suppose that he regard ed temperance reformation as the one great question of the day. It is evident, however, that he holds the cause of tem perance as secondary to the interests of the Republican party. Such being the case we are not surprised to find the Er press denouncing the action of the State Temperance Executive Committee and abusing the Democratic party in the same breath. It opposes the proposed new departure which the Temperance Committee decided to make, and its temperance editor will no doubt attempt to secure the position of a delegate to the Harrisburg Convention, not for the pur pose of furthering the cause of prohibi tion, but, for the express purpose of pre venting the inauguration of any inde pendent movement. James Black and other honest tem perance men in Lancaster county know very well that the Republican party is not to be trusted. They have had oc cular proof of the manner in which the Radical leaders constantly pander to the liquor interests. Under the Craw ford County System, of which the Ex press is the chief champion, drunken ness has been greatly increased in Lan caster county. Each candidate is expected to visit every tavern and to treat all who may be present. It is safe to sny that whiskey has as much to do with the nomination of Republican tickets under the system now in vogue Laboring Man Insincere Temperance Men. a this county, us any of the rings which the EXIWC SR assails periodically. The.Republiean members of the Legis lature of this State made quite a pre ense of being in favor of local prohib tory laws last Winter, but that did not irecent them from voting to license averns in this county by special leg- illative enactments when the bills were presented by a man who is now a prominent candidate for the highly responsible office of President Judge of this district. We mention these things to show the utter Inconsistency of the Republican party. Radical news papers throughout the State are now claiming that the Republican party is the true friend of temperance reform. , The truth is that the Radical politicians of Pennsylvania are a set of despicable tricksters. They run with the fox and cry with the hounds. Like the, editor of the Express they are friends of temper ance when self-interest prompts them to pretend to be so, but they are always for self and for the Radical party when It conies to the test. We repeat what we have said. If the eaders of the temperance movement in Pennsylvania suffer themselves to be driven from the position they have taken, they might as wet abandon the political field forever. It will be made manifest to all that a majority of those who profe:4, to be temperance leaders, hold their principles in subordination to the supposed interests of the Repub lican, party. The organization will be- come a laughing stock, and it will be hooted trom the political arena should it attempt to enter it hereafter. We have no doubt that all earnest temper ance men will agree with us in this view of the matter. They lutist know and feel that they can not draw hack without abandoning alt hope of future success through political action. Young Radicals There are in this city certain youth ful members of the Republican party who are not satisfied with the manner in which they are treated by the older politicians of the party. They have an exalted idea of their own abilities, and imagine that, they ought to be put for ward as, representative men. Some half dozen of them aspire to represent the county in the State Senate, fifteen or twenty of them would be satisfied with seats in the lower House, and the bal ance of them have their hearts set on the county offices. They have at last determined to act in concert. The fol lowing item from a letter to the Colum bia Spy lets us into the secrets of the combinations : "The young men are organizing for a partial control of political patronage nest Fall. They are tired of the tyrann VOl the rings in the division of spoils, anil will combine to force a fairer dispensation of these earthly blessings. Several prelimi nary meetings have been held, and plans lor carrying the object into effect are be• tug projected, and whenever they concen trate, the old " stagers - must stand from under." When this combination of Young Radicals is fairly organized the old political hacks will have to look to their laurels. The youthful bloods may carry off all the political prizes. The i rizona Massacre The massacre of unoffending and peaceably disposed Indians in Arizona, is not only a disgrace to the nation, but a deed which ought to call down con dign punishment upon all who were engaged in it. Punishment in this case is demanded not only by justice, but by public policy. If the criminals are per mitted to escape, how can the Govern ment undertake to execute vengeance upon any Indian tribe, which may fall upon a white settlement and massacre its inhabitants. No tale of savage butch ery ever exceeded in details of barbari ity the massacre in Arizona. It was simply fiendish, and the perpetrators ought to be hunted down and hanged. A Remarkable Fish Story. The editor of the Harrisburg Tdc graph is stopping at Atlantic City, and has been witnessing wonders during his sojourn at the ocean side. He is re sponsible for the following fish story, which will astonish the initiated: Many small fishing or pleasure boats are riding over the waves, ono minute seem ing to go up seine twenty feet mid the next down in the valley. And then the P%motas are dancing before the visitor, 'a ithin thirty or forty feet of the land, jumping sometimes eight or ten feet in the air, re minding those on hull of an exhibition of Arabs in a circus. We copy the item, caps and all, as it appeared. It is evident that Bergner dues not know the difference between porgies and porpoises. The Premature Publication of the Treaty The Grand Jury of Washington City have found indictments against Hiram J. Ramsdell and J. White. newspaper correspondents, and Charles A. Tinker and Joseph A. Rirby, of the Western Union Telegraph office, charged with wilfully and unlawfully refusing to tes tify on certain points before the Special Committee of the Senate of the United States concerning the premature publi cation of the Treaty of Washington.— This refusal is declared to be against the form of the statute in such cases made and provided. The presentment in each case is f, and on the evidence of Senators Carpenter, Conkling, Sumner, Trumbull and Garrett Davis. INDIAN COMMISSIONER PARKER has resigned, because, as he says, he has nothing to do. The duties of the office have been narrowed down to mere me chanical work to which the clerks are able to :attend—so Mr. Parker resigns. Here is an example which a multitude of the useless Radical officials, who are now eating out the substance of the peo ple, might gain renown by following.— But they choose rather to follow the ex ample of the Presifient, who is eager to make all he can out of the office, by fair means or foul, and anxious to continue doing so; Inasmuch as Grant finds nothing to do. at Washington why might he not follow the example of Commissioner Parker—and resign TErEitE have been some dissensions among the Democracy of Ban Francisco, but all these have been healed up and the party is now a unit in California.— That might to instite the re-election of Governor Haight by a large majority. More Chorpennlog Jobs The Washington Patriot of Saturday gives at length the history of a system of gigantic fraud and corruption, which has grown up in the administration of the Post-Office Department by Mr. Cresswell. This is the system of " straw bids" for mail contracts, and has been exposed by a recent decision of the De partment for mail lettings for a number of distant Southern States, where the great routes are located. At the recent lettings nearly all the successful bidders were men of straw, put forward to fall. Over 150 have been reported since the Ist of July, as unable to give bonds for the execution of their contracts. When this happens the local postmaster on the laps ed route enters into a temporary arrange ment for six, nine or twelve months, with the former contractor at the old price. Hence his interest in procuring straw bids. If the Postmaster-General favors the arrangement, the monopoly is secured, and everything is snug This has just happened in regard to the bids in Texas, Arkansas and Louisiana. They were all awarded to men of straw, and therefore the former contractors go on at the old rates, until a new letting shall be made. Between the " straws" and the old contractors there were re sponsible bidders ready and willing to take the routes at half the present price. During a third of a century the prac tice of the Postmaster-G neral has been in case of failure, to take the next low est bidder, and the act of Congress of IS3O makes ample provisions to meet the case. The Patriot continues its ex position of the fraudulent practices in the Post-Office Department: Here is ample authority and the largest discretion to resist corrupt combinations, if the',Postanaster-General was so inclined. But instead of exercising it as his predeces sors have uniformly done, for tho benefit of the public interests, Mr. Creswell has lent the influence of his position to aid a combination, of which, as in the case of Chorpenning, his immediate surroundings form an integral part, and in connection with which ho is subjected to grave sus picion. If ho Intended to act in good faith, there was an easy mode of showing it. lie had only to summon the recent bidders and re quire 010111 to present bonds Within thirty is sixty days, and then to award the eons tract in the spirit of the law. That course was plain and straightforward, and ron .sequeutly did not suit the slaws of Mr. Creswell, who is aiming to accomplish a political object In Texas and oilier States by abuse of the :nail service, and at the same time to favor a ring of speculators. lie has announced his intention to read ' vertise all the lapsed routes, or, in other ! words, to repeat the costly farce, for the profit of those who are in possession of contracts at enormous prices. This is a game of venal deception, and nothing else. An act of the last Congress requires bid ders to deposit five per cent. on all propo sals exceeding $5,000. But:it furnishes no protection. Take the case of any of the large contractfitrs in Texas or the South west.. Ile puts forward his straw-bidder Ibr 55,1011 in ten or a dozen cases, and de posits the five per cent.. or $.255 in each ease. When a bid is formally accepted, the tie posits must be returned to the competing bidders—all probably representing one combination. The "straw " gets the con tract, and he fails, as in the first instance, at a sacrifice of iii2s3, wilds the old contract or—the two being really one and the same person—is employed to continue the ser vice at the highest price, and to laugh it, the face of all candid competition. And so the vicious circle is rounded during the four years, while the country iS robbed in the name of carrying mails. This scheme, if applied to only a few bids in the Southwest,would put more than half 0-111111inn of dollars in the pockets of the Post-office ring, and, if extended to the Pacific Coast and other parts of the country, would swell the toll levied on the treasury to millions. It is in keeping with the out rageous frauds which were disclosed last Winter, in which Mr. Creswell. Mr. Earle, Mr. Cessna and Mr. Chorpenning figured as the principal parties in a deliberate con spiracy to appropriato half a-million of dollars, by means of a legislative trick, for a pretended claim, which bad already been paid three times over, and never had any legal existence whatever. Proposed Mr Isloa or Texas The people of Texas will vote at the Full election upon the question of di viding the State into three sections, to be called Eastern Texas, Middle Texas and Western Texas. Eastern Texas is to comprise all east of Trinity river, with a popnlathin of 3413,01)(1; Middle Texas all between the Trinity and Col orado rivers, with a population of COO,- 000 ; and Western Texas is to embrace all west of the Colorado, with a popula tion of 200,00 M There are 3.53,71 f, whites in the State and :251,427 negroes. It is not certain that the proposition to dl vide the State will carry. A provision for the division of the State was made in the treaty of annexation, and the Radicals are anxious to put the project through, as they hope thereby to make a gain of I - nited States Senators. Leer Sunday a week the gauge on the Louisville branch of the Ohio and Mississippi railroad, a distance of 33 miles, was changed to correspond to that of the Baltimore and Ohio, with the in terruption of but a single train. Both rails were taken up, moved and bolted down again, within a space of seven hours, Last Sunday a similar change was made throughout the entire length of the main line, a distance of NO miles. This change was brought about through the influence of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad, which expects thereby to se cure the shortest route from the Missis sippi Valley to the Atlantic Coast. (:. C. Bow EN, the polygamist pardoned by President Grant, has been recommended to emigrate with his nu merous wives to Utah, where he can lawfully play husband to them all, The Salt Lake I kruld indignantly expresses the hope that he will stay away. It does not want any sneaking fellow like him around there, passing himself off as a single man on unsuspecting spinsters. The Mormons, it says, make their matri monial arrangements openly and above board, and if they are married already, ,say so to the new objects of their affec tions. TI I I: \Vit.+ horrill,d at the irx hibition which took place at the trot ting race m Tuesday, and it stigmatizes those in attendance as gamblers and blacklegs. Will it now be good enough to'give us its opinion of the propriety of President 6rant's habitual attendance upon horse-races. He has left Wash ington several times and gone hundreds of miles to witness such exhibitions as the Erprcss condemns. Will it be good enough to give us its opinion of the ef fect upon the community of the Presi dent's example? Will it help to re elect bins? HENRY WARD BEECHER Las preach ed a sermon in which he ranted and raved about the New York riots much after the style for which he was distin guished during the Kansas troubles.— The conviction that there is no hell, which Mr. Beecher entertains of late years, has not made any perceptible change in hint. die is the same violent bigot and vain sensationalist no matter what may be his creed. TII E Lancaster Inquirer administers the following rebuke to Simon Camer on's home organ : The Harrisburg Telegraph, the organ of Senator Cameron, publishes an editorial advocating the acquisition of San Domingo. If the Telegraph desired the defeat of the Republican ticket in Pennsylvania ti is fall it could take no surer method of bring ing it about. The Republicans of this country, and particularly of this State, do not desire the acquisition of that island under the present circumstances, and he is a dull politician who does not know this fact. THE Lynchburg Virginian thinks Ben. Butler is just the man to be made Governor of Massachusetts. But for the fact that there are many good Democrats in the State we should be disposed to agree with the Virginian. Butler is good enough to rule over Yankee Radi cals, but no Democrat could live in a State which would elect Butler, without blushing whenever the name of " The Beast" was mentioned. Minister IVashburne has written to friends in Illinois that he will npt re turn horde this year. He was ill with the ague, and intended to go to Carls bad for his health. Extending the Ring Simon Cameron & Co. are busily en gaged in extending the influence of their plundering political ring. Gener al Pleasanton declines to resign and in sists that Grant shall dismiss him from office, if he wants to get rld of him. It is expected that this will be done befOre long, as there seems to be no chance of an agreement between Pleasanton and Boutwell. In case the former is thrown overboard it seems to be conceded, that Simon Cameron will succeed in having one of his tools, J. W. D6uglas, of Erie made Commissioner of Internal Rev enue. That will give to the wily Win nebago complete control of the most lucrative appointments in the country, and will enable him to farm out offices at an immense profit. Cameron has obtained great influence over Grant by representing to him that he, and he alone, can insure him the support of Pennsylvania in the next Republican National Convention. Commenting upon this expected ex tension of the corrupt ring which owns and controls the Republican party of Pennsylvania, the Harrisburg Patriot says: "Thus is the dangerous power of the ring steadily progressing. Mackey in the State Treasury Is intriguing day and night for re-election, and setting up nominations for the Legislature in all parts of the State. Con tract Surgeon Stanton, Cameron's man, Quay's man, is nominated for Auditor- Ueneral to settle the accounts of Mackey, the Treasurer ; and, now, Douglas .s to be placed in control of the important office of Commissioner of Internal Revenue. Thus the work of the ring is going steadily on. The people cannot be too frequently or too earnestly warned against this dangerous and corrupt faction. The office of State Treasurer is not enough for them. They must also have a tool in the Auditor-Gen eral's °Mee who will permit them to settle iu their own way their accounts with great railroad corporations for taxes and with the Commonwealth. Now they are reach ing out for control of the internal reven ues of the country, and of the immense patronage and spoils con iected with the collection of the public money. There is one way of giving them a quietus forever; and that Is to elect the gallant Ueneral MeCandle.s to the office of Auditor-Gen eral.- The Postal Money-Order Convention with Great Britain. 'The Postal Money-Order Convention with Oreat Britain has been eitected, and the provisions in which those pro posing to transmit no are Interested are as follows: The maximum of each order in fixed at .ClO when issued In the United Kingdom of treat Britain and Ireland, and when issued in the United States at t 450 In the papercur rency of the the latter country. No moues- rifer shall include a fractional part of a penny ur of a cent. Any person in the United Slates desiring to remit to the United Kingdom a sum of rnoney within the limits prescribed by ar ticle Lmay pay it into any pnst•oflice in the United States designated ior such pur poses from time to time by the Post master-Ueneral of that country—such per son shall, at the same time give the name, and address of the person to whom the amount is to be paid to in the United Kingdom, and his own balite and address. Any person in the United K ingdom desir ing to remit to the United States a sum or money within the same limits may pay it into any money-order office in the United Kingdom, giving, at the same time, the name and exact address of the person to whom the amount is to he paid in the United States, and his own trains and ad dress.. The receiving Yost-master in either country shall. in accordance with the rules established, by tine postal administration, notify every such payment to the despatch ing exchange orrice. The Post-master of New York, upon receipt of every notifica tion of that kind, shall make out and for ward to the payee in the United Kingdom a money-order, payable in sterling at the Post °thee in that country, designated by the remitter of the order, it being under stood that the money orders sc remitted shall be sent, in the lirst instance, to. the controller of the money-order office in London, and shall not be subject to postage. Until the two general Post Offices shall consent to an alteration, it is agreed that, in all matters of at-count relative to money orders, which shall result from the execu tion of the present Convention, the pound sterling of Ureat Britain shall be consider ed as equivalent to ,s4..lsnot the gold coin of lie United States. -7 :All payments for money-orders, whether to or by the public, if not in gold, shall be made to the nearest practicable equivalent. The value in gold coin of the United States of deposits in paper money made in that country for payment in (treat Bri tain shall be determined at the exchange office of Now York, according to the rate of premium on gold on the day of receipt at that office of notification of such depos its. On the other hand, the value in Uni• ted States paper currency of money-orders certified in the lists sent from the exchange office of Loudon to the exchange office of New York, shall be determined also at New 'Volk, in accordance with the pre mium on gold on tile day of receipt of such lists. nriler.s which shall lot have been paid within ta - elve calendar months troll the month of issue shall heroine void, and the sums received shall accrue to and retnain at the disposal the country of origin.— And the motley will lie eventually paid hall( L 9 the sender, lees i.oinniisbions. Rev. Dr. 'Jacobs, for .40 years a profes sor in the Pennsylvania College, died at (tettysburg on Saturday. There were 4117 deaths in Philadel phia last week, a decrease of 32 from the mortality of the previous week. George Tyson was injured so badly on the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad, by being run over by a train of cars, at the Falls of Schuylkill. on Monday last, that he d ed on Tuesday. A camp meeting, under the charge of the Methodist Protestant Church, will be held on the land of John Barton, near Fawn Grove, York county, Pa., commencing on the 10th of August. The pall-bearers at the funeral of the late Dr. Jacob Marshall, of Reading,, on Tuesday afternoon, were all old soldiers of the war of 1812, selected at his re quest. Their names and ages are: Mi chael Reifsnyder, 86; Paul Ammon, 81; James Norton, 80; Joseph Brelsford, 76. At a special meeting of the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania, of the A. P. A. held in Reading on the 17th inst., for the election of a District Deputy Grand Master for the Middle District, Mr. H. 13. Smink, of Reading, Lodge No. 74, was elected on the first ballot. Mrs. Anna Jones. wife of Hon. J. Glaneey Jones, of Kent county, died suddenly on 14th inst. She had been ill but has improved. She had started to walk across the room, when she fell into the arms of her nurse and instantly expired. The immediate rause of her death was heart-disease. On the morning of Monday, the 17th inst., Mr. James Wagoner, son of (jet,. Wagoner, of Tyrone township, Perry county, while making preparations to thresh grain, fell front the mow to the barn floor below, breaking both fore arms, and bruising his head in a fright ful planner. On lust Thursday afternoon as Mr. Henry J. Rice. son of \Vim Rice, of Ty rone township, Perry county, was haul ing a load of sand from Bell's hill, his son, aged about Ii years, was standing on tile slide bar of the lock, when he fell between the hind wheel and the bed of the wagon. The child was crushed between the wheel and bed, and thrown to the ground, after which he jumped up and staggered forward to his father and fell dead as the father caught him in his The father was not aware of the accident until the child came for ward to him. A collision occurred on Friday after noon on the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad, near Morristown, New Jersey, between a freight train go ing west, and a coal train going east. They ran into eaetr other while going at the rate of fifteen miles an hour. Two locomotives, three freight cars, and twenty coal cars were smashed, but no one was injured—the engineers and fire men having had time to jump ott. The cause of the collision is stated to have been " a confusion of orders." There was a white frost at the White Sulphur Springs, Va., on Saturday morning. The wife of Col. Alexander Hamilton died at‘New Brunswick, N. J., on Fri day. She was a niece of President Mon roe ; her husband is a son of the great Hamilton. A water spoutstruck a passenger train on the Central Pacific Railroad, near Granite Point, Nevada, on Friday, caus ing it to run off the track. The track was much damaged. The steamer Olive Branch,' from St. Louis for New Orleans, sank below Grand Tower on Saturday morning, and it is feared will be a total loss. She was valued at $37,000. McGehan, the Ohio murderer, whose counsel Vallandigham was when he shot himself, recently escaped from jail and has not yet been recaptured. He wag one of the seven prisoners who dug themselves out and fled. A Montreal despatch says that an agent of the Cuban Junta has enlisted a number of volunteer officers and about 200 men In that city. Many of them are returned members of the Red River ex pedltion. The party are to sail from New York. Letter from Saratoga. SARATOGA, July 10, 1871 Saratoga is a beautiful town lying an hour and a half's railway ride from Albany, and celebrated for its revolutionary nyun ories, but still more for its life-giving springs of mineral water, unparalleled in their magical effects by any other waters in all the world. The town has a resident population, all the year round, of some 10,000, while in Summer it overflows with pleasure and health-seeking pilgrims from all over the world. Being born °fits springs, whiCh make it the resort of the wealthy and the well-to:do r its—buildings are nearly all of a substantisl or elegan t character. Many of its Summer visitors dwell iu their own cottages, but the vast -majority resort to the hotel and bZiiirding-hrinses. Hotel-life is the feature of the place, and in this respect it contrasts violently with its fashionable rival, Newport. The reason for this differ ence is found in the fact that the majority of the visitors to Saratoga go there for the use of the waters, and achieving the de sired benefit in a few days or weeks, they leave for the lakes, the mountains,.the sea shore, or some other selected abiding place for the Summer. The two largest hotels in Saratoga are "Congress Hall" end the "Grand Union,'4 both built within the past three or four years, and both unsurpassed in sizetd elegance by any hotels iu the wort "Congress Hall" is situated on the ma street, covering the square between the "Congress" and the " Hathorn" springs, and contains 650 rooms ; while the "Grand Union," which faces it on the oppositesideof the street, has over 800 rooms. Both have very wide porticos running along the length of the buildings, facing the street in front and the lawns in the rear; and the massive columns of Congress Hall rising to the second story and the graceful pillars of the Union three stories in height, give to each an architectural beauty of front which it would be hard to surpass. In the eve ning when the verandahs aro brilliantly lighted up, and gay crowds throng them, and pass along the street, and cross it from oue,notel to the other, Broadway, between the two hotels Is a scene of life, animation and beauty which cannot be excelled by any similar scene the wide world over, not even on the gay boulevards of Paris hersel l Each hotel has an immense and elegant parlor,a large ball-room, and a luxurious elevator. ! The table fare at each is excellent and the attendance to your wants upon the part of servants is all that the moat exacting could desire. Congress Hall this season has not been so full as the Union, lint it has a bet ter class of guests. The Clarendon, situa ted a square above these hotels Is much smaller, but is likewise a tirst-class house and enjoys a very select patronage. Be sides these hotels there ere many others, and the boarding houses are innumerable A favorite way of visiting Saratoga is to mako up n congenial party sufficient to till ono of the pleasant cottages whieli are used as boarding-houses; and in this way accommodations equal to those of first class hotels can be secured at a Innen more moderate price; the former charging lire dollars a (lay and making no deduction, though you stay a month. 'there are some thirty mineral springs at Saratoga, each one differing in the analy sis of its solid contents from all the others, yet most of them varying but little in taste ; some have more gas than others; some are more saline, yet they are suffi ciently alike to be known at once as twin sisters of that cool, lively- and glorious beverage, known as Congress Water, which is nature's champagne, better than any made by the art of man, and dear to the palates of all who have once quaffed it at its fountain head. Until of late years the Congress and the Empire Springs were the only ones that were well-known away from Saratoga, their waters only being bot tled to any large extent. Now, however, most of the Springs are bottling and bar reling their waters, and through the ener gy displayed in putting the different writ ers on the market, the use of Saratoga water has been very largely increased. The sales of the Congress and - Empire have been more than tripled in the last live years, while many of the others sell all they can send to market. 'I he owners of the Springs derive no revenue tram the waters that are drank at Saratoga itself; these are free as air to all who choose to use thew, the only tax being sneli gratuity as the visitor electa to give to the "dipper boy" who wait, all day at the Spring side to serve out the water. All the springs are covered with pavilions, and the pro prietors of the Congress throw open to the free use of visitors the beautiful and fine ly shaded Park in the heart of the town, and at the edge of which their Springs, the "Congress" and the "Columbian," are sit uated. Here the most of the visitors take their morning walks, to digest the three or four glasses of water which they take at intervals before breakfasting. And a most marked peculiarity of this water is that, while it is highly cathartic in its effects, it produces a ravenous appetite; and another of its peculiar effects is that it leaves one without any desire, and, indeed,with a pos itive distaste for spirituous liquors. During the week that we sat at the thronged tables in the immense dining room of Congress Hall, we are quite sure that we did not see more than a dozen bottles of wine of any kmnd drank ; and most of this was Claret. The bar-room, too, was very poorly pa tronized. We should recommend Saratoga as a Sutnmer resort to the Honorable James Black and others of our Temperance apos tles. They can dwell there with minds perfectly at ease, undisturbed by sights of drunkenness and wine- tabbing. It is as near an approach to a Temperance tmut's Heaven as he is likely to get on this Earth and our Lancaster Apostles shoulo freely resort to it to restore their mental tone, severely tried as it is by the beer-drinking proclivities of their fellow-citizens. We met the Rev. Mr. Ibebin,son at Saratoga and he was looking vastly improved; thanks to the waters and the temperance atmosphere of the place; though we fear he will not look so well when he reaches home, as he wag intending to return via the bibs lons town of Wilkesbarre, where he hail left his wife and hinter. EM=tll LEwtsnunu, July Me..ctrr. Editors: I left ew Castle nn Wednesday morning, took the train to the head of the Plains. As I went up I passed through the region of country which on last Sunday was s isited by one of the most destructive tornados that ever occurred in this section of the State. It was only about one hundred yards in width. A barn own ed by Mr. Rau pt, which stood in its track, was raised right tip and Carried slim 4 , of it two miles away. The barn was On by !to feet, one of the hart barns in Seim . ) lk ill county, nearly new I t took tip a dog• ken nel, in which there wits a very title speci men of the canine race, and carriad It some few hundred yards, but the dog was a pret ty good teronaut, and he returned in about a hall-how —none the worse of his ride. Trees and 16 nicht s in diameter were twisted oil' like a with,. : grass, core and everything it hint stood in its way was de stroyed. Mr. llaupt's loss is c!stlniated at about $.4,000. This was the t Illy building that stood in its track. At the foot of the Planes I took the cars for Shamokin, a town of about nine thous and inhabitants,situated in thecoal-regions. Thee are some very tine buildings in it.— I was informed by the Rey. Mr. Boyle, that there were fourteen churches in it, which certainly speaks well for a borough of that size. On my way to Shamokin I passed through Ashland, a borough of about seven thousand souls ; Locust Dale and Mt. Car mel; both of the latter are considerable towns. At Shamokin I again took the Northern Central train for Sunbuty; here I changed cars for Lewisburg. Sunbury is a thriving town, the county-seat of North umberland county. The Company have no clock in the depot, and it is the first time I ever saw a depot in a town of that size without a time-piece in it. The depot is rather a dilapidated concern. Lewisburgh is located on the west bank of the West Branch of the Susquehanna; it is a town of about forty-five hundred in habitants; I think it is one of the prettiest towns in the interior of the State. It is the home of Senator Dill. Lewisburgh Uni versity—one of the _finest seminaries of learning in the country—is located here. The citizens of this place say they have one of the finest halls in the State outside of Philadelphia, and I think it is true. The surrounding country is very fine, the soil is good, I think it is equally as good as any in Lancaster county, though the valley is not as large. There are a great many peo ple living in this:county who formerly re sided in Lancaster and Berks counties. Mr. Eligot Ammon, originally of Barks county, owns a -very fine hotel a few miles out of town. Charles L. Cox, who was born and raised in Carnarvon township, Lancaster county, resides In Lewisburgh, and keeps ono of the finest hotels in the borough. A new railroad is being built f nom this place up through Buffalo Valley and on through Centre county to connect with the Central railroad at tyrone. It is something the people in this valley want, and it will enhance the price of land twen ty-five per cent. Land sells in the valley from $l5O to ;5200 per acre. Lewisburgh is the county seat of Union county. The Court-house compares very favorably with that of Lancaster or Schuylkill county.— The private residences of this town are much better than any that I have ever seen in any other town of the size in the State. The Baptist church cost about s3o,ooo,the spire is one hundred andelghty five feet high. There are also very fine Presbyterian, Methodist, Lutheran, Ger man Reformed and other churches in the place. The crops have been very good in this valley. Corn looks well. Fruit is not very plenty. SCHUYLKILL. FOC the Intelligenoer A ehlel's emend ye lalcin' dotes, lalth prent'em." The composition of the Republican Party in this county presents a strange amalgam of easy virtue, miscellaneous morality and slight tincture of stupid honesty. A glance into the pandemonium of sly knavery and the bsbel of confusion which lately assent bled in our Court House, pretending to be a convention of the Republican County Coin tnittee,strikingly revealed the compo site character of the party,and the prospect for the campaign opened by the candidates for nomination at its hands. There sat in the presiding chair—King John, of Penn—the "oily gammon" who is a past, and, Wa and erStalid, u future can didate for Senatorial honors. 11is double team race with the smiling Rudy, having been ummecessful, we suppose he will drop his running mate in the next cam paign, and go It on his individual muscle. Bland and courteous in his alallaCt to each and all, he presented a eontrast to the boisterous heifer on his loft, who with blast ring tone and terrific gesture, indig nantly scorned any insinuations that there were grounds for charges of corruption against his party in this county, In chaste • poech he denounced the attempts to throw arousal the ballot box the least semblaiwe of protection against frauds, and placed confidence in the traditional honor which tis:supposed to exist among thieves. Scatter ud o'er the room, were poi itieians of various grades of respectability, and Vaal] Malta of doubtful reputations. There was the hawk• nosed pugilist of the Second Ward and here sat the CadlIVCl,ll , l candidate fir Dis t rict-Attorney. Hero sat the genial Andy Kauffman, supported Iry the elegant Sulic• dor of the Prison, and galls it cx Sherill hobnobbed with a candidate for Assembly. Store was heard the clamor lif the loud mouthed member from Columbia, arid the honest oracle froni Adamstown shook his head in grave displeasure. Banged round the room were the old stagers and the younger members ,if the party, the more respectable of both classes having either been left out, or too weak to make any considerable Impression. The proceedings, of which lull details 'have appeared, were +if a character in accordance with that ol the campaign now opened, and whose spirit we would attempt to delineate. Ai mind the candidates for Judge cluster, perhaps, the most substantial interests. though by no means the most exciting. Although the slates have not as yet been exactly set up, it in lair to suppose, that We only prominent candidates will be Cot' Patterson and John B. Livingston; and though the former has strong hopes cen tered in the L.:011,11,1 , , ring, it is said he de pends mainly un Ills military re,ord, as leader Of the White !torso Cavalry; the latter, having considerable personal pop clarity, expects, doubtless, to walk over the course without much trouble, though those who manipulate the wires may make startling developments between this and the of August. The announcement that. Thomas E. Franklin's nomination would be urged, created considerable con sternation among these gentleinen ; but, as has been well said, this ticket, with Mr. Kline for District-Attorney, would be too respectable to suit our Republican politi cians. Whatever be the isstie or the con test, we trust the successful candidate will be fettered by no political obligations, our blemish the purity ut the bench by doubt ful means to secure a seat thereon, Fin' no position, however, is so inuoh anxiety manifested as in the rare for Dis trict-Attorney, which is confined mostly to the young and warm-blooded mem bers of the party. Prominent among then, is Picayune Juhnson, the York county carpet-bagger, and late candidate tor As sembly, and still later aspirant for pugilis tic laurek—rerMOMilly unpopular, he is making an energetic canvass, and backed by the shrewd Houston and the smiling reist, he rushes to the carriage with Hope perched on his banner. Ilia old enemy, Ed. Reed, not being a candidate, he trusts, In case of defeat, to be spared the niortiti• cation of the sick lion being kicked'at by an ass. Next on the roll of the noble army of unselfish patriots is Davy ltosenmiller, the pet of the "hurrah Boys," backed heavily by Sensenig, Mohlenbergs, and the "Ex aminer Faction " generally, and with good chances, it is said, of winning, if trots° un ceremoniously counted out, as ho charges to have been last Fall. And now a famil iar tunic presents itself in Pap's Boy Clay, who is being trotted out by the old Ring- Master, to "keep it in the family," to be cure which happy result "My Boy" Is go ing through the old routine of kissing the babies and flattering their influential pa pas, guided in his tours by the careful hand and shrewd eye of Pap himself. Another candidate is Billy the Renegade—a sweet voiced warbler of the blarney schools—at one time deemed no formidable candidate, but now by his.own untiring zeal, looming into importance and staring from all the bridges and fences of the roomy. Repre senting the advanced guard of the morality division of the caul p, wo have Charles Denues, a gentleman of good reputation, but who, in the hands of parties seeking the advancement of their own interests, is wo fear being manipulated in a manner which his own shortsightedness prevents him front d6tecting. Among those promi nent is Capt. B. F. Barr, a candidate so un pretentious in hi, Chihli,: that he sutlers ucilll,r formidable opposition nor abuse at the habits of his competitors. Last and least ne have the late County Solicitor— the immaculate Uriah Ileep—of the bar. The scotching some time since received by him at the hands or Oliver .1. is supposed to have effectually killed the last shadow of a charter) of his election, with which the county was threatened. Of the many candidates for Assembly it is generally conceded that the two cid members, Whitson and Engle, Will go back, while for the remaining position the campaign has brought out several old and new card id tiles. Of these Cock Gatehell is perhaps the most prominent, with Ilun seeker and Ilurkholder at his shoulder, 'meek and neck ;" of those entered for fu ture prospects we mention Shuman, NVliite and Senor ; the latter, if we remember, having been at ate time c s coi•rrariro of. jirial of this district. The glittering prize of County Treasurer has tempted as yet but four, of whom the most promising are Barry Stoner and Dan ny Brown, of West Earl, a standing candi date for twenty years. Considering the trilling emoluments of the office of County Commissioner, great interest is manifested in the result of the election for this position. Royer is the pet of the ring, and, with characteristic stupid ity those professing to desire the election of an honest official, have brought out a sufficient nunber of candidates to divide the vote, so as to secure the success of the "set up." So long as this branch of the party mismanage their interests, so long must they endure the triumph of their Un scrupulous and wily adversaries. Since the manner of the election of Pris on-Keeper has been changed, fewer can didates for Prison Inspectors are Oeveloped, though there are sufficient for Directors of the Poor to make an interesting fight, For the new office of Prison-Keeper, is being made a desperate tight, between the rings represented by Weise and Mentzer, with the chances evenly balanced as yet. On the whole, considering the fact that the present is the "otf year,'' it Is an Inter esting fight, and wo watch the result with curiosity. Though some of the offices seem of little profit, yet It is interesting to the politicians to have each other show th.ir hands, and as the lamiediate forerunner of the great con test neat year, will go far to influence the result of that dubious and uncertain issue. JED. Inoffensive Character of the Camp Grant Indlans.—The Massacre Unprovoked. Lieut. Whitoian, whose official report of the Cnmp Grant massacre was pnblished in yesterday's Tribune, gives the following account of the peaceful habits of tholndians at that po4t, and their progress in civiliza tion : Some time in February a party of live rid women came in under a flag of truce, with a letter from Col. Green, saying they were in search of a boy—the son of one of the number taken prisoner near Salt River, some months before. This boy bad been well cared for, and had become attached to his now mode of life,lind did not wish return, The party were kindly treated, rationed while there, and after two days went away, asking permission to return again. They came in about eight days, 1 think, with a still larger number, with some articles for sale to purchase mantles, as they were nearly naked. Beton, going away they maid a young chief would lake to conic In with a party and have a talk. This I encouraged, and in a tow days he came In with about 2.5 of his band. lie stated, in brief, that ho was chief of a band of about lad of what were originally the Aravapa Apaches, that bo wanted peace, that he and his people had no home, and could make none, as they were at all times apprehensive or the approach of cavalry. told him thallm should go to the White Mountaim9. He said: "That is not our country; neither are they our people We are at peace with them, but never have mixed with them. Our fathers and their fathers before them have lived on those mountains, and have raised corn in this valley. We are taught to make mescal nor principal article or loud, anti in Summer and Wittier hero wo have a never-tailing supply. At the White Mountains there is none, and without it now we get SOlllO of our people have been in at Good win, and for a short time et the White Nloutains, but they are not content ed, and they all say, let us go to the ravipa, and make a tined peace and lever break it." I told tutu I had no au thority to make any treaty with hint, or to promise Min that lie Cl/II IA) ul lOW eil penuaurut 1101110 here, but that he entdit bring in hie 1411111 and I would lead them and report Me wiciles LO the departinent commander. Ho went nut and returned about the kior Mardi with hie whole band. 111 the mean time rtlitnes, bad been in [runt wo small bands, it✓king thu M.lllll. rtrileges, and the nano. re1.t1114.- Math, the illicit, reply to all, and by uL~~ni lie itrell I Itiot over :WO here. I tvroto it detailed itevoutit or tho whole touter, mid svilt it hy expre,, to Sat., ton, to departtto tit Itoltdpiarturs, t•O.- only the general such ca , ••• for lily gilidanco. Alier walling nu re titan six week lily !utter war returned to lIIt. o ILIIOIII C,llllllll'lll, CalllllZ Illy attention to the raer that it. lilts not brier al ltroiteriv. At llrst I Wit (11,11 ill ealllp tllit.- flair 111110 U . . 111 lfit , parr, Anti ruinurd (111.111, 111111 i,rued lhrw riki 11,4 every 1•10,011 ii Old!, . The number mrrcurail until it reiv•lnsl the nwu 1101' ill 510. Knowing, Ili I did, that Ilitt nlll t• id 010 NS 11010 mrr.'mrut 1'1,1141 \\WI me, and that in ('lll.ll of 11113' 1.13.1 111 tlm I (.111111VIII 1 nwIHK i I it I showil IR , the leter, I 11 l II COI I 11 llit 1 I3' 1111111.1 . oh servAtion, 1111111 I lit I,llly ClllllO to k Ili I‘V the or 111 the won, but 111.1 1 , 11111 . 11 and rhllJrml. bay %yelp nearly ttalccd, nud 111 evtirything lu thy %Say of clothing. 1 shiliiinti the wagons front bringing that. 1 might. tiny Iron, thrul. I keLA with which hi pay I hetti and In rurnural:o Ihrm, with lt, they wore properly treaten. I per...llV attjodetl to all thj‘volgliitkg inquiries IS to Ilia kinds of goods mIJ them, and price,. This proved illierlevi 411,4,5 ; ill. nnly 1110 V 6 /1111.11 null ehinlren enraged in tho work, but ninny ni tht , viten. 'I he moonlit In. - m.llnd Iny thimi about Lush) months was nearly 31111,0110 pounds. puling this 1111111 nom). 51111111 parties Innl been out with pa,slls nw la et•r• Lam niiiiiher or clzu s to 111,11 1111•M•111. 111 ,, 1. parties Nvert. nl maps 1/10Sitg limn) :int' I Made trysell•urig 1;y 11.1111 o.; Ilia av lir the party, tint from OM :11111111111 10 . 1111 Ii rini,4lll. in, [hat 11, treachery iv it. 111 tenth., /. From the lilt I svasileteriiiined ktioit 11lit 11111 y all 11Ire 11111, 1111 t. their 111/1/1,1 111111 litilllS. File this purp,,t. I spout hour- 1 1 11111 11,11 , 1,' With 1.111 1 111 in liX pkitting to them the r1•1.1,1hill'il they ,hottlil sustAin to the I ;overilitient, and their prospects lor the lure in case It either oliedienl•ll thence. I gia from them, in return, much nt their hati.ts of thought ;mil ruh, I 11e -01111. 1 11111111 1 it a /,1111111111 tell 111. 1 111 1111 they wished to I, lout, 111111 111 11:1 111;1111,4. :Mil pl , llil 1 1 manlier. They ivt.re reedit lit/14111'111, and rein.trkahly quick of iilllll • 1 1 r1 1 11011Si1/11. They were happy and tented, and took ever)' opportunity tll it. They 111111sentoul runners to feu other bands which were connected with them by intermarriages, and had received pi cni , es from thrul that they St 1,11111 1 . 1/111ti ill:11111 . 111111 1111,1. I /1111 l'i , [llldollt I ' lolll ell 01111 I 11.IVI. hi'l II able tO haarn, that tilt her 111, tiiihmkell Inr blllehPry, by 11)11 (11110 tvu would have 11.1 1,e1(a0 persons, and at Oust .30 ablo-bodu•d men, As their number increased and the weather grew warmer, they asked and oh• Wined permission to move lorther op the Aravapa to higher ground and plemy or water, and opposite the ground they were proposing to plant, and were rationed eve ry third day. Captain Stanwood arrived about the Ist of April, and took commonel of the p.m ; ho had received, while on Ihn way, verbal instructions from itmeral SlOOlOll/01 to recognizeand feed any Indians he might find la 010 punt as Ilrinollol, 01 war. Alter he hail carefully inspected all things pertaining to their conduct and treatment, he concluded to mitlie uo chimges, but hail becotne so well S:01.1 . 0,1 of the integrity of their intentions, that he 101 l on the Slth with his whole troop or II long scout in the lower part of the 'Terri tory. ° I'M, ratichinen in this vicinity were friendly and kind It/ thorn, and felt perfect ly seetire, and had agreed with me Lo ein plOy them at a fair rate of pay to harvest their barley. 'rho todi.w, r..e00l t 0 hits, lost their characteristic anxiety to purcha attlintinillllll, and L.ul m 101tily 11041.10101, sold i..heir best. Lows and arroi-vS. I made trequent visits to their camp, stint if any were 1.11)S0111. 1 . 1 - 0111 1 . 011111. 001110 it. illy IMP 1.0 1-(110,. Why. 1111')1 Nils 010 condition of things tip to the morning, if iho :loth of April. They hail so, 40.111 00 100 000, from my first idea of treating , them Justly 31111 honestly as all officer ill the artily, I had come t 0 1001 as strong personal interest lit helping to show them the way to a higher civilization ; I had 1,01103 to lt,ol respect. hit* Well who, ignorant and naked, ‘1,1,1 stall unhawul t. 1.1 lie Jill,/ St.!, itild 1 . 1.1 r 50111111 tl who would work cheerfully like slaves n. clothe themselves children, but, un taught, held their virtue aliiive price. Aware of the lies and hints industriously . irculated by the puerile press of CAIN Ter ritory, I was content to know I had poet li VO proof that they were SM. 1 had craned to have any leare of their leaving [writ, and only dreaded tor them that they might uL any time be ordered to do so. They fre quently exprehmed trioiety to hear the eneral, that they might have MU thlenet, to build for them...lVO-4 better houses, hot would always hay, "You know what we want, and 1r you can ' t soh him you ism write and do for un what you ran." It is possible that during this tune Individuals Irian hero had visited other bands, but that any number had ever hell out to tie stmt. in any Illatrittldith4 llttpedittim I k now is false. I evuka, Ovalau, of the Fiji group, 1•A • ports nine thousand bales of cotton lif the best sea island quality - better, it is said, than that of South Carolina-per year. It IlitY a newspaper called the /•'•n l'fne s, whose columns are well filled w itli itiker• 1111)1 ti hone 111011 , IM _"illors n. 110 111,4,, if 110 Meet 11111 I. - Among the ail I . rti,oznents IS one headed --" Frllll eke , / and overland to England," Tlib un lives wear for dresses the satimliko bark of a tree, which. It is thought, might be suc cessfully used in the manufactiire fit pruning paper. But isn't this ratite, - " 1.00 thill Levuka is becoming a port of considerable i 11111011.1411 1 .0 ne 11 coaling-station hill' the Oi ;he IMO of steamers between Ails. ralia and San Framaseff. iii tile 1111111 ber of the Time, 1 0,0 to w 0 leitlee COIIIIIIII .1 . 1111,10 nm flews under the hi ail of" limes ~r 1)1p/VlilreNtif 1,11,01 . Vessels," That Illay a " new 11/11110 101" it," when we read that a number of vessels have sailed on a " 6 lahOr cruise "- that is, 10 pick up laborers wherever they eau er them in " Inrtn among the adjacent islands. The laborer is, of course, worthy of his hire, and in the Fiji!, the European,. rope :11 according to the higher law. 'rim principal civilized occupants of the Island consist of about Murteen hundred English men and SOlllO forty Ainericaes, 0110 Of VlllOlll, a New York boy, has just returned home after twenty-three years' absence among the Fijis, flow long will it be be fore smile of our " manifest. destiny " men will want. to 1111110 X the group of Fiji 1:4,..mk, to the great Amerman group of States? Trouble Among; the luul lnnN The last steamer which arrived at St. Joseph, Mo., from Fort. Berthold, Dakota, report., that then e were learn of a general rising of the Indians when she left. Achill, passed the Fort on the 12th inst., tannin, lion was rteeived that the Sioux were at tacking the place, and the Indians of the Agency were lulling back upon the village. It was reported that Spotted Tall, exasper ated by white treachery, had returned the Rocky Mountains and was warring upon the whites. The Indians at the earl nun trading posts are said to be the victims of swindlers whom "the Government has taken into confidence." Agent Talent writes to Superintendent Hoag, trout Fort Sill, that the Kiowas are anxious to learnt the fate of their chiefs, Satanna and Big Tree, and that they have madeunenecrasful efforts to induce the Cheyennes and Sioux to war against the whites. A Youth-Hangs Himself _Accidentally. A little son 01 the Rev. J. C. Smith, Presbyterian Minister at Bland Court House, Virginia, who was living with his relatives in Floyd county, accidentally hung himself a few days since. It appears that the little fellow had a rope or strap around his neck and was showing his play mates how people hang themselves, when be slipped and broke his neck. This Ise dis tressing affair to the parents and friends of this little boy. A train on the Northern Railroad ran Into a buggy near Toronto yeater.4ay, killing,a man named Weleh t .and a boy. =ME