Lancaster, gintelligenctr. WEDNESDAY, - AIJGVST 30,' 1871 DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET. FOR AITDITOR GENERAL . _ EN. WILLIAM MCCANDLESS, OF PITILLDELRIELIA.. FOR RURVEYOR GENERAL, CAPTAIN JAMES H. COOPER, OP LAWRENCE COUNTY A FULL POLL OF THE DEMOCRATIC VOTE W I 1.1. SECURE TI I E ELECTION OF OUR STATE T I Kr BY A LAME MAJORITY. 1.1.:1' EVERY DEMOCRAT REMEMBER THAT, A N IMPRE.S T E TRUTH OF IT UPON THE I N 0F.111.5 Circulate The Intelllgencer. The WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER will be mailed to eubecribere 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 live times that amount paid for brass bands and forget ring up big meetings. MIS Rendered We have cent out bills to all subserib eni to the WF.F.Jux INTETmcnxcmt, whose subscriptions are more than one year in arrears. The price cf the paper is per annum, if paid within the year, and 11..50 iC not paid until the year has expired. We hope our sub scribers will bear that in mind, and al- ways pay in advance, or within the year. They can all see how their ac counts stand by looking at the ligores opposite to their names, which show the date to which subscription has been paid. We shall be pleased to !war promptly from ILI! to Wlllllll bilk have 'wen sent, and from :111 who hay( not paid in :ttivanve. ISloney can ht ,viit through the mails A New Volume tin loildaytlie D.O t.r I x . rEt.i.mENcri: entered upon the eighth year of its exist el it, With :L larger subscription list, a better advertising patronage, and :1 firmer hold upon the public conlidence than it ever had before. I,il:e nearly :ill enterprises of the hind it had to struggle with ath•crse circumstances for a year or two, hot it has been a recog nized newspaper success fur live years past, and promises to advance with the march of time. Nitwit of the success wltirh has attended it is no doubt due to its independent character. It has never been the organ of any faction or elbow. While boldly advocating the doctrines of the Democratic party it has denounced corruption wherever it might be found to exist. In the future, as In the past, its course will be fearless and unfettered by anything except proper considerations of public volley and a due regard fur the interests of ilio peo ple. At the beginning of anew volume the proprietors would return thatilts Io 111(.1r ninny patrons for the substantial support given to the I)A tbY I N'rt:l,l.l - in the past, and would assure tho public that neither pains nor ex pense will be spared to maintain the po- It now occupies as ono a thr ,adin g .l,wspii,n, Penusylvittiht. 61zWeehg from Yon• Six weeks from this time the ppoi.h. of Pennsylvania will he called upon to Vole al a very important election. They . will have to determine, by their ballots, whether theCanteroulan Treasury Ring, shall continue to mismanage the fi nances or the Mate, or whether they will put i °Mee that gallant soldier, Molest man, and honorable gentlimitui, tleneral \V illiam 111eCandless. he eye of the right kind of.an Auditor ( ;eneral, Evans would never have uL Pimpled to commit, the gigantic frauds whhdt Inc has successftilly perpetraltal,in tlou sight and will the k lOW it'llge of Ihose wh., now havi , the management of the :dlltirs of the Commonwealth. I ieneral liartratill had been vigilant in the discharge of his duties, (Mvernor I;e:try's agent would have been ar raigned for his thefts hung ago. Let ( fetter:Ll McCandless he elected, and no embezzlers will be allowed to run a career of years without being brought to justice. Any attempt to defraud the State will be exposed at once. I Mt there is a national importance at taching to the coining election. If Si mon Cameron's candidates for Auditor Surveyor-t ieneral are elected, his power in Pennsylvania will he so eon firmed and strengthened, that lie will be :tide to dictate who shall represent the State in the next IZepublican National convention. The delegation will be composed of his creaturesond they will vote for the re-nomination of Grant, and for whomsoever he may prefer as a candidate for Vice-President. ltepuh licans who desire to see their party itch Ity beller men cannot vote for Shantou and Beath. liut the Democrats of Pennsylvania have the strongest incentives to work vigorously, during the few weeks which intervene between this mid the sternal Tuesday of October. If the Radicals l`arry this State at the coining election, lite choices of electing a Democratic President next year will be greatt \\'e may lose this election Will nest year, but the odds will be greatly against us. There never %Vali a lime ill the history of the country, NVilell the Democracy of Penn sylvania had a greater weightof respon sibility resting upon 111(.111 than they have at present. If they win a victory next (Ictober, they will thereby make the election of a Democratic President an easy matter. The Radicals can not Wrest this State from our hands next year, if McCandless and Cooper are elected. Lid that fact be kept steadily in view, and let every Democratic vote in the 1-'late be polled. It that is dime we shall win a great victory, and deter mine Ile result of the next Presidential election in advance. No Mall who Is a true, Democrat will fail to vole when so much depends upon his 6allut. Let or ganization lull perfected everywhere throughout the State during the six weeks which 4 renmin, :mil there need be no doubt about the result.— Whitt is needed, is such organization ill each district as will brim; every Demo cratic voter to the polls. 'Pile time left is short, but it Is sufficient. Let the re midning six weeks be well employed and victory Is ours--a victory which will make glad the heart of every true patriot in the nation. T \ vas rumored that (hunt would run over to Washington the other day to do up the routine buminess whmch had ae cumulated greatly, and the consequence was a rush of people to the National Capital. All who went were seriously disappointed, for some rich man, who keeps a cellar full of good liquors, in vited the President to dine at Brook lyn. That wan a temptation he could not resist, and routine huminesm and poi !clans will have to wait until all Urant'm invitations to eat and drink are attended to. TIII)sE were very funny articles that the Edprom published last fall about " soreheads." Will It not favor its nu merous readers with a republication of them, or give us something new on the same subject. There are few themes so suggestive of humor as "soreheads," and few writers so well able to discuss it as the _Etpress men. They know all about it, you know. A'IIORNEV , GENERAL AKERMAN has decided that the suspension of Commis sioner Pleasonton, under the Tenure-of follies act, is only temporary. Conse fluently, -Douglass is , performing thq duties of Commissioner without vacat ing his position as first -DeputysCom missioner. THE L A WCASTER WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER,, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30. 1871. A Political Pool. The different aspirants for places on the Radical county ticket, all struggled eagerly for months to make a combina- Lion which would nominate them.— There were very dew of them, from the working candidates for the Judgeship, down to those who were content to audit the yearly account of the Com missioners, who would have refused the support of any ring. Even Mr. Wilson, who placarded dead walls with posters denunciatory of all rings, would have listened to overtures from Sensenig, the man whom Commodore Hiestand styles " the Napoleon of the party." Butcom binations seemed hard to make. The little Napoleon worked vigorously to retain control of the prison. He was bound to re-nominate his man Mentzer, and to secure that result was ready to make any combination that promised success. On the Monday preceding the primary election', it was rumored that lie had entered into a compact with cer tain influential contracting parties, the terms of the agreement being that l'at terson should be supported for Judge, Clay Brubaker for District-Attorney, Hunsecker, Burkholder and Olathell for Legislature, and, of course, Ment zer for Prison-Keeper. Immediately after the announcement of this rumor, there were plenty of people to be found who were willing to bet that Clay Brubaker would be nominated, and Patterson stock rose rapidly in the market. There is good reason to be- lieve that the bargain alluded to was seriously discussed ainong the contract ing parties, and that it was regarded having been concluded and duly rati fied by some of them, I ;eorge Itrubaker among others. Toward the end of the week " the Napoleon of the party" bit upon another plan. With that fertility of invention by whieli he has managed to mal:e SO 11111(.11 money owl of politics, lie tool: a hint froin the pool-selling which lie witiicsiq.ll at the l'ark during Lhe rave bet 1Ve4.11 :mil Big _Dave. He delermined to make up a political 101,1, :Wit he pnn•eeded h, invite the dlr ...renl e:titilidates h, Lid. Swile had ME=I nllueuliul baeliers and very little really For the latter elttss the report is that " the \ultnle•au of the party" ad vanced Elie cash, taking °Nig:akin, which proutisod to prove eminently sat isfactiiry tlll, whtwe naut•s were in the pool were 11.116o:fled. The stun of nioncy which is said to hack heel' thus raised xv:Ls large. \\•e are :LS- stolid that it amounted loth ° snug little sum of ten thousand dollars. We do not Vouch for the exact truth of all this, but we have the story from members of the Iteptililican party who hail the opporttinily of knowing, and whose words we would not hesitate to take in reference to ally transaction. l'ert.•ain it is,that men who had formerly stood staunchly by (leorge Brubaker, abandoned his son in :1.11 that ulhi r vandidalus found theinselven almost without support where they expt.t.tol to poll a large vole. ral( log tip a political pool is an iIIN'CII nOII uew to the Itudiral polilirn ofLau canter youlity, but it in u tlevitp woriliy ,f the man wh,) has the crk.dil of up plying it 111 an elevtion thy l'raw l',11•11 (*.linty Systvni 11)r the first tine Here:tiler We limy ~.xpe,l to see the thing regularly practised so long as the l'row ford County Hystem eontintws to es.ist. Instead a . riding the county and ‘vasting their money in buying whiskey l'or those NOM loaf about the taverns, shrewd candidates will put their cash in the Inuids name political 1.1111-Selien, vbnwillperlmpnunnunlelhelligllruund ing title of :•:,yittlicate. The money thus deposited can he placed in the right hands :1 day Or itvo b1.r.11, the primary election, awl every petty township pol itician :old every Wll.lll-I,llllllller can he. paid such wages as liu,niay earn at the very link when work gill count. \Ve should not he surprised to see a monu ment erected by grateful ollice-holders to the memory of llw man who first conceived the idea of political lug in Lane:L.4er county. We base no doubt. it will yet be done, unless the Crawford County r.:yrdent should be abandoned. The Express on the Evans f,rands Ily continually pegging away at the Erprf is, for a week lir 1110 re, we have fi nally forced it to take sonic notice of die frillidS. IL dues not, tell what these frauds are; it. does not rat le. their character or amount ; it does not inform its readers who Evans is, or how lie eatue to get, immense MIMS of money belonging to the State in his hands; it has nothing to say in reference to the law under which Governor littary's"sat isfactory agent" was appointed; and it is quite as non-continittal in reference to the whole matter as it sometimes is in reference to a choice of candidates before a primary election under the Crawford County System. With the develop ments of rascality at larrisburg staring it in the face, and with a full knowl edge of the f a ct that Republican state officers aro seriously involved by the transaction, it has carefully excluded from its columns any statement which might give its readers a clear concept ion of these gross :old inexcusable frauds.— Professing to be an independent news paper, and making loud pretensions to peculiar honesty it has been silent, in reference to this mailer, while the Er ain incl. and the hopiiittr have both spoken out. And when we force it to take some notice of the matter its only reply is :tit :illusion to Tammany,and au apology for the slowness of the I:attic:Ll Slate officials i n bringing the defaulter Evans to an artsount for his For an honest, and independent news paper commend Its to the I,:weaster press. The Radical County Tichet Again has the l'rawfordEy Sy , ' been tested by the Republicans or Lancaster county, and again ham iL been proven a most fruitful parent of corral,- ion and fr:u The names of the ean- Llidates who were returned as highest on the list will be found elsewhere. The men who came out ahead In lilt' (/1111i Will constitute the Radical tieltet, though there are very grave doubts 110 to whetlor n uuutltn• of them ever re ceived a majority of the votes actually cast. The air is tilled with rumors ()I' fraud and rascality, and very many honest Itepublicans are completely dis gusted at Hie result. 'l'Me lii bel., taken throughout, is the worst and the weak est ever olli•rcd to the voters of the coun ty. \Nu shall not, enter mum an ex tended criticism of it to-day, but shall talcs occasion hereafter to tell the truth the manner lit which it was nom inated, and to give pen portraits of some of lire creatures who have Lieu sot up by a combination of corrupt Rings. " THAT was the 11104 11111(111,104 cut of all," remarked He:Lynne Johnson, when the Fourth \Van' box was count ed, and he ascertained that the I Wintry (feast candidate had beaten Lint twit to IMO. That he, who according to Sem- Honig, had been so successful in stuffing the ballot-box for the benefit of others should be beaten at his own game, in his own Ward, by his own party, almost pusses belief. How is the mighty fallen ! No weirder the little boys are singing on the streets these touching lines: I Caine to town on Saturday night 'l•u tire the Radical nand 'datum fight; 'l'ie people all were running 11.1,1111' Buying Picayune Johnson's done up 111'0W I'icapillo4lolllBol.l . +l tlOlll3 up, dol. Picayune Jobulionli done up brown, Picayune Johnmon's done up, done up, Picayune Johnnou's done up brown. TII E following is a new version of :1,1 old nursery rhyme: There is a man In Lancludor, Is name Is Captain Wcise, The Prison-Ring pitched into him, And scratched out both his eyes; Now, since he sees his eyes are out, He should, with might and main, Pitch right into the Prison-Ring, And scratch them In again. Grant the Chief Actor In the New or• leans Conspiracy It seems to be perfectly proven that Grant is responsible for the employment of troops to control the action of the Re publican State Convention which as sembled in the U. S. Custom House at New Orleans. It is admitted by the President's brother-in-law, Collector Casey, that the troops, by whose aid those who were supposed to be unfavor able to the re-nomination of Grant were excluded from the convention, were pro cured for the purpose from General Rey nolds upon the requisition of the U. S. Marshal. It is not probably generally known to the public, but it Is a fact that such an order from a marshal Is never complied with by a commanding officer without specific orders from the admin istration. The fact that Grant was di rectly concerned In the outrage is further confirmed by a semi-official de spatch published in a recent issue of the PhiladelphM :Prtas, and by a lengthy editorial in the same journal .defending ihe action which had been taken. A reporter of the New York Ht 'raid had au interview with the President at his Long Branch collage the other day, in which the following expressions oc curred : "Correspondent—Mr. Prosi'tient, I son he Louisiana Republicans are demoral zed. IVllat is your vow of 'natters there? " President.— Well, I can hardly say. The :noddle down there is almost beyond toy fathoming. The statements in the ruse vary. Some 11110 has sent the a (Imminent —I don't know who it is from or why it is sent me. I'll let you have it. [Hero he stepped over to a 111/0ke11..1 and rummaged in the drawers for a while, but without success . 1 lion. Porter has put it away somewhere, I suppose. 1111W12VUr, I haven ' t seamed it very closely, but I believe it agrees substantially with the card of !Or. Packard in the papers thisliniiro Mg." Such is the llippant wanner in which Gen. tirant. spoke of the outrage a week after it occurred. lle knew that sol diers had been flollt Of the building where a political convention was being held with loaded muskets and llatlin guns; he klless' that men who were supposed to be opposed to his renomination, had been forcibly ex cluded by armed soldiery from seats in that tonvention,which they were legal ly elected to fill ; he knew that this out rage had provoked a storm of indignant protest front all the independent news pallers of the country ; and yet he seems to regard it as a slight matter not worth any serious attention. In his own language " the muddle down there is almost beyond his fathoming."— Is that such language as ought to be ex pected front a President of the United States after the gravest charges have been made against hi I» ? the peo pie of the United States approve ruck »0111111a7 Will they submit to see the bayonet and the cannon used to coerce ulitiral con von t ions without resealing can be but one answer to such questions its these. Nu ,urely as General ii.ant is so surely will he be opposed by all mien who have a proper appreciation or our government, and it deQire to see the re public perpetuated. '!'here are many lie outragt thoumands of honest 11.111 i $lll . ll a Willi in pwer. Why Evans 111 Not Ile Prosecuted Considerable light is thrown upon the Evans frauds by a letter from ILu•ris burl; to the Philadelphia Iv yrui,ll, Wide') we publish elsewhere. It can nut, lie denied that Auditor-lletieral Ilartratill has been criminally negligent in the diseharge of the phtinest. duties of his olliro. For several years past E \•ans has been °pouting under• the very improper act of Assembly which NVILS passed ILL the recommend:lo,in of (iovernor I Wary. The Anditor-lieneral has been vogniv,ittit of the faet that large SUMS it looney due the Stale lvere re ceived and improperly retained by Evans. That is made very clear by the conversation between hint :toil the At torney-t ;eller:it, which the correspon dent of the Ti le fillip!, i.verlictiril. IL is also evident, that there is n griatt indis position on the part of 1 1 w Radical Stale officials to bring a erituimil prosecution :ig:tinst, Evans. Front 1 Wverniir I;e:try flown they dread the revelatiffie4 which tv.)111,1 be wade in a I•nt n •t of Quarter i4essiiitis. 'l•he cross-examination on a criminal trial would expose all who have hail a hand in this big steal. That is what, (ivertior (Teary and li e u rest of the Radical ollicials dread. If a civil action is instituted by the Itailicitt At torney-1 ium•r:ll, it will no doubt be so civilly conducted as to cover up the contwction with the Evans frauds of all who are high in authority. A civil action can be procritAin4teil for months ur years, and a final decision delayed until all excitement in regard to the matter has died out. It is nut strange, therefore, that a civil action should be loreG•rred to :1.1.11111in:11 prosecution. IVar Among the f(adirals of :Sew York. The Republi,nn Fttatr l'entrnl Com mitt.. of New York is largely nituii-up of wen who hold fat Mikes under Grant, and, in spite of some of their most in fluential members, they have endorsed the bogus Central Committee of New York city, and have thrown Horace Greeley, Governor Fenton, iNtarshall 0. Roberts, General Ciadirane, and other prominent Republicans overboard. 'l'he purpose is to park the coming Itepuidi can State Convention, and to pass resm Intents approving of Grant, with all the follies and crimes vehicle he has co it id nit probable that the convention will be held iii a Custom House, surrounded by Federal troops and Gatlin guns to keep (nit regular del egates, Messrs Greeley, Fenton & Co. will be apt to be heard from. 'rho game which was Flayed iI I Louisiana can hardly be carried ,on in New York. Grant may have the will to order troops out to control Republican conventions in Northern States, lint he will shrink from the direct which such outrages would have upon popular sentiment. He will therefore be compelled to rely upon the trickery of tie: Olive-holders who are likely to prove more idiwerful than an unorganized opposition, even when led by Greeley. or York county have passed :1 resolution lauding tlovernor (teary as "a man of the people and for the people, one whose energies hate been employed for the best interests." They further declare that the (lover nor's administration "has been WISP, prudent, ccuunmlCal and dignified, and that lie is entillod to the thanks of the people of the Commonwealth." Con sidering the fact that a number' of lewd leg Iteptiblican newspapers in the Stale boldly charge that Governor (teary 11)114 been closely conneeted with the frauds of ,Evans, and that, there Is a general suspicion that he has shared with Evans In the provetsiaof his gigan tic thefts, this resolution of the York litulicals mounds very queer. Still It is only of a piece with the conduct, of a party, which does not hesitate to utter falseliooiN when any paiiy necessity demands in concealment of the truth. Ilood•H'lnked We don't wish to be understood :is saying that the illustrious name-Hake of Alexander Hamilton, winked at the frauds perpetrated by the Rads ut the primary election on Saturday! what we mean is, that Hood was hood-winked in to the belief that he had a good chance for the Judgeship. Since the returns have been made public, he has careful ly scrutinized them, and is astonished to find that his total vote Is but GO, whether he looks at it right side up or upside down. TAT E Democrats of Montgomery coun ty have declared ,ceneral Hancock to be their choice for the 'residency. The feeling seems to be running yery'styong ly in that direction, and the probabla ties are that the Pennsylvania delega tion will be a unit for him. Who Were in the Evans Ring! The big steal involved in the settle ment of the Pennsylvania war claims, continues to occupy the attention of the public. Plain people can not under stand why Evans is permitted to defy the State officials, and to boast impu dently that ho intends to hold on to his illy gotten booty. The fact that Evans was permitted to continue his game without molestation for years, when the Governor, the Auditor-6eneral and the State Treasurer must have been per fectly cognizant of the facts, excites wonder and amazement in the minds of honest men. As accounting olllcers they must have known all ;Aland the vouchers which Evans held, and must have been fully aware of the fact that he had retained large sums of money be longing to the State. It was their duty to call him to account, but they made no move until the whole matter was blazened abroad through the columns of the newspaper press. They ought to have reported to the Legislature the ex act condition of Evans' accounts, and the annual reports of the Auditor-Gen eral ought to have shown exactly how those accounts stood. lu failing to do this they have most signally failed to do their duty, and they will be held to a strict accountaldlity by the people of Pennsylvania for their negligence. The Philadelphia Erasing .ThiPetin, at Republican paper, which has manifest ed considerable hostility to Governor Geary, but which makes no assertions in regard to this matter which it is not prepared to back up with figures and -facts, says t h at the largesums of money retained by Evans. are no - longer in his possession. It declares that the motley has been distributed among a ring, of receivers who were partners with hint in this nefarious transaction. IL alleges that stiti,oun of the money stolen from the Slate has gone into the pocket of one person, that slo,Oon has been gob' bled by another, i,uuu by another, :tint I that $.5,000 more was given lo a It:Lineal newspaper, now defunct. These are smalliitent , in the grand tot.•al, but they show the existence of . a ring composed of Republican politicians, among the members of which the stealings were divided. The Mairtin calls upon Gov ernor Geary to induce his agent to tell what he has done with lite moneys. If the Governor has not had a hand in the swindle himself he may lie expected to make the clThrt at least.-- We :man further developments \vitt' impatience. 111 the meantime the Re publican Stateoltieiala must he aWart` of the fact that they rest tinder a dark cloud of suspicion. The Econom) of the Loin: Branch td mhibtrallon If there be a single voter in the Na tion no simple-minded ns to believe the professions of economy with which Radical newspapers are tilled, we wouhl advise him to make the following table 11 daily study. It furnishes a tabular statement of the receipts and ealendi tures or (ArolicH administration for the year ending on the 30th of June last, umth shows the sources from which the money was derived and the specific (.1, jeets to which it was applied : Nil n. 1,1111,11,115 . • NO I pc, pi n.ll Ili I t•lzitt I rt.,,ltic. I i.; ` 4 ltlcs 1.111.1 , . 1 . 1 1 , 1 ,1111 1 .all , BII.IILIIII I 111 1111 1 1'11 1 11,11 \ ..111111' . NKr I, PI,: Fur rl I'll oud . 51;9, i.... 7111 ‘l'nr 111 Navy 0.1.11111,H Indian!.wia 1..•11•11 , 11S... 1,111J114 . lit• 101 ordlitinry vxpt•tiqes. 177,15 s Purchast• ol 1,,11 IH ttlr 1111111, .Vt• 1:1ti,7 7 - 0 17 Is Tc , 1:11 t•xp,ll4lllut ,, LI I; I:ill/1111, 111 I:uurp..h.lo. 1%;1 From the above figures, the correct ness of which no one will undertake to deny, It appears that the bong 11ranch tahninistralion cost the tax-payer, hr the unitt,i shoes nearly lour hundred and twenly-livendllion kloll:trrda,l year. Deducting the interest paid 1111 the Na tional debt we find that the iillinary expenditures of the present administra tion atnunnled to Mfr,/! qf t ?Ulla /4. When Lincoln was a candidate for President, the Itepuldicans made a loud outcry against theextravaganeeof Dem ocratic rule. .\ n examination of the figures, shown - that the expenses of the general govermnent under Democratic rule, during the fiscal years of 1, - o --ho, was, exclusive of interest on the small public debt then existing, only si;ity millions of dollars. floes any to be lieve that the ordinary expenditures of the general government ought to be nearly live times greater und (Irant than they were under Buchanan That is a question for each lax-payer 1e ask himself—a question which Ile would till Well i 0 Nit to his neighbors. We would advise every tax-payer to look over the above account at least as often as once a week. IL will help him to ap preciate the blessings of an cuhuiuistra timt chief lounges all Suunuer the sett, seeming to be intent only upon securing:a re-notnination, in order that lie may still further enrich himself and the army of relations who have been given fat °dices without respect to the interests of the public, and without re gard to the fitness or unfitness of the recipient., of Presidential favor. Gen. A. 11. Rouinfort The Democracy of Dauphin connly have put up a strung ticket, mid nuule (teller:II A. Routnfort, Chairman of the County Committee. General flown fort is unit of the most intelligent and energetic Democrats in the State, and his increasing year, have mitt untitled him for wort:. Ile is a very ,tit'itcti writer, and an occasional corre,pontleni of tht, INTELI.TuEN,Eu. Whatever he writes is u n til heti with vigor. The Denmeracy of Dauphin put tlw right man in the right place wlwn they made ;client! Ititumfort Chairman of the County Committee, I . l' is said that on Saturday night the venerable king of the Thugs carefully tallied the returns of the primary elec tion ttil faSi as 111t , y cattle in, having 111 I/1)10111Z Cut!ld+qu•u in OW surreys"l " m y nun (Any." against hope for a long Onto, but when PlO :Jar of Itospy row• higher and Higher, and It nomination W 1144 eotteeded by every body, the old Thug rose up dottperately, and tore his tally paper into ribbons, saying to 11—I With WWII a, primary election and the Crawford I ' , tinily Sys tem too. SAT4'4UN...y wan a busy day with the Radical politielanca Lancaster county. Some of those who reside in this city were tip in time to meet the market wagonn its they came from the country, and early as any the Old 'fling Chief tain WAN seen on the streets before the day had fairly dawned. The pressure of tie ward I , UIIIAI/1.D3 nn such Candi dates us they could cateli lion lunch terri ble all day. The ring which wss led by Urubaker and Senmenig, were eon ildent or completp :4!if.cesm. HrrunNs front the West Virginia election come in slowly, but, as we pre dicted, the Convention seems to have curried. The Radicals crowed before they were out of the woods. Oun young and vigorous Mayor con soles himself with the reflection that, though Livingston beat him for Judge five or six thousand, Alec): Hood can't hold a candle to him ! THE word "Syndicate" means "pool" or "ring." The regular Radical ticket iu this county may, therefore, be said to have been made by a regular "Syndi cate." That is morenobby than "ring." DID the twenty-seven thousand dol lars, which John Covode boasted as hav ing used in Luzerne county to carry Geary's election, come out of the Evans commission business? Grunt's Defeat Conceded. Gradually a very strong opposition to the renomination of General Grant is being developed in the Republican party. .Numbers of the more indepen dent and influential newspapers of the party are speaking out freely and bold ly. Sagacious Radicals begin to see very clearly that a disastrous defeat must inevitably follow, if the office holders should succeed In controling the next Republican National Conven tion. The New York Evoling Post has, in Its last Issue, two editorial articles op posing the renomination of General limit. In one of these, after review ing the prospects for Republican suc cess at the coming election in the State of New York, the Post declares that the Democrats fully calculate upon carry ing the State. Itsays: The Democratic calculation is one which promises only too well. Every day that passes without bringing before the people in ill Its simplicity and power the one real issue of the year, is a day worse than lost, not only to the Republican party, but to the cause of honest government. This State can never be brought to approve every act of General Grant's administration, and ought not to be asked to do so. It cannot be brought to demand his re-nomination ; fir, if lie be re-nominated, at last the most earnest Republicans in the State will ac cept hi in not as their choice, hut only as the last resort to prevent the defeat of Re publican principles; and then With little hope of carrying this State for him, unless against a very bad candidate and a very bad platform. ano:her able article it reviews a re . cent editorial in the Philadelphia which is evidently front the pen of the Collector of Lhe Port of Philadelphia.— Forney is now one of Simon Cameron's bosom companions, and Cameron is a bosom friend of n I,. Forney's l'raqs may therefore be regarded as the official organ of the Republican party in Penn syl van ht. In Ille article alluded to, the recent outrage in New Orleans is justi fied by Forney, and it is very clearly intimated, that the military interfer ence with the Republican State Convention was in pursuance of orders from the President. Speaking in refer ence to this all( gallon of the Prrss, the Pus( says : To desire a nomination for President from the National Ititublivan limity, is ail honorable ambition, and the Man who will he truly the oboive Of the party .31 be elected in 1572. lint no Mall who shall be Ileleillated by delegates elected in " pack ed " conventions ran be elected. 1r the President is not ill-advised he knows this. Titus day by day does apposition to (lratit's re-nomination develop itself. - 13y y the time the Republican National Convention meets the hostile elements in the party may be so completely eft rys tallied as to insure the selection of some other candidate. In any event it seems perfectly safe to predict that Grant's terms of office will end with the -It h of March, 1S7:l. Foiled States Senatorial Vacancies to be Besides the fact that each of the state Legislatures is to be charged with re districting under the new apportion ment, the following Senatorial yacan cies have to he provided for: ich, rao A1:11111111a NOW C1111111:1.0 11% nil. A hilmitia Mar,ll .1, 1 , 73. Spvilevr. Marvl. I, 1,73 11 1'31111,131kt.. Nla.rvlL 1,73.. 1'.,1t.. •Inroll I. 1 , 713 I , el•ry. 1.1.13.1.1 NI;LII•11 I, 1,7:1...11Kh0r5t , ... licon.:l3. Nlstivil 1,1,3 11111. 11.•.prOn Itlcllgt.ll,clailit'l 111,14,1.. ~thr,.l, .4, 1,331 l'rutill..ll, 111.11 min 1111treli I, 157.1..11m11u1. I. , wa• Mut,lt I, 1 , 73...11.”1.1. 1:3[5,..., \11.3•11 1,1,17 i„ 11..Inuroy. ... 16,11 itol,y ' \I a roll I, 1 , 7:1 . 1 , 1,1 s I,llt,in 1 in . \ lart•lL 4, 1;:1...).;..•11e.w.,, AI ttr) 1:111.i• NI ti 1 , 11 I, 1,7:1 . . V 11•14., s N,•,:1.11L \ larch 1, 1,7:1 . N ye. New 11:iiitp‘liire .M 1113.11 I, 1 , 7:I .Pal ler•mn Nl's,. 1 . 4111: . MIIIIIIII I, 1 , 73 ..Conlillitg, Nei Ili l'arollim...:Slarcli .1, 1N73...1'0e1. t /1,1.,• N 131 1 .1.11 4,1,7:L."411,111/W, Nl.trcli .1, 1 , 7:1 ..l'orl lel L. in• ..,Nlarctli .1, I,l7ll...ralliettm root 11 1'a1'.,1111“...M0rt . 11 1, 1873...4.wyer Sllll'l'll , This makes twenty-four in all. Nine States elect Legislatures this fall, which kill have to clith,se the successors of the incumbents. They :ire marked with an asterisk.' New York elects a Senate which holds over. Only lowa cud Ken tucky will elect at their first session, as they only meet biennially. In Alaba ma, asuuccssur I. till. l;Oldtlnvuilo, is to be elected. A Demo crat is likely to he chosen. Blodgett is not admitted, ( leorgia will have only 1011, Senator next \Winter. Roans Still at Larne. lovernor Cleary's "satisfactory agent'' is still at large, no attempt having been made to arrest him. The law is plain, anti the Attorney-fitment! oughts not to hesitate about enforcing it. The Phila delphia L'albibi, a ktaunoli Republican nev.spaper says, Attorney--(leneral Prewster, since he was first called to the har, never had a clearer )rimula , i( •ase presented to him than this. The facts cannot be disputed, nor can the amenability of the offender to the law lw doubted. Mr. Itrey:Hter is officially notilied that an agent of the State is in default, at least to the amount of $:210,- 000, although the full amounts is in creased, by interest to July lot, to $00 3 ,- laS Ile ordered the arrest of Evans Ilas he commenced any pro ceedings against Lint'. Ilas he ever promised to do so': Does he ever in tend to do so • The public will wait im patiently to learn what has been done. Those who are concerned in these frauds need not suppose the matter will be al lowed to blow over. The hue and cry will be 1, - -ept up until the offiniders are all brought to juslive. The Wisconsin lienioeco.el We publish elsewhere a full report of the proce•Alings. of the Denn State Convention of 'Wisconsin. (If all the Northwestern States this one has been Most evenly divided for some years. In the Congressional election last year the Itadicat majority in the six districts was less than six thousand. The platform adopted is liberal and progressive a nd the candidates put forward by the De nou•racy in the present contest are all Ltrong, p o pular men. Don. James It. Doolittle is one Of Ole :40p11de , 4 thinkers ,tic of the ablest speakers in the country. As the Democratir candidate for (;overnor he will make an wstive canvass or the Slate, and wehopc• to fact of his election. buudrt d ex•('uufedetalt' met together at Huntsville, :11isseurl, the other day and declared in foyer or I Urn hug their backs upon a dead past and look Mg to a living political future. is the tone of the southern peopi, to great extent if we are to believe what we see in newspapers of that section. Not only ore they ready and willing to do all that in them lies I support and maintain the I . Mon, hut they are wil ling to abandon any peculiar views which are likely to prevent the success of the Democratic. candidate In the next Presidential contest. What they want Is relief front the rule of the harpies who have been preying upon them and a restoration of the rights of local self governmen I, without which there can be pp good government and no real prosperity. 'file. Springfield Eipub/icuo calk/ family in Ohio which has eighteen chil dren " the champion family." This is a in 'stake ; the real champion family is tie t; rap. I, faintly. The number of its children is not large, but its offshoots and relations are almost countless, and they are all successfully quartered upon the Treasury. No other faintly in the world can approach the (Inuit family in the talent its chief exhibits fur pension ing his worthless relations upon the public crib. TIG.: New York Sun makes the fol lowing prediction with regard to the Presidency : If the Republicans are so weak and un patriotic as to nominate Grant, the . Lathe crate will nominate Hancock, and he will be elected, lie will beat Grant in i?enn- Hylvania by .50,0/10 majority. if grant is not run, the Democrats will nominate a civilian—say William S. Groesbeck of Ohio —and there will be no military candidate. IT is galling to the Radical papers to say that their candidate for Auditor- General is only " a paper Colonel," but it is true, nevertheless, and - the truth must be told though the Heavens fall. The Bemocracy of Old Northampton. The Democracy of Old Northampton assembled iu mass meeting on Monday last. An immense crowd was present, and they were addressed by General. McCandless and other .able speakers.— General Hancock was declared to be the choice of the people of that county for. President. and the following resolu tion, among others, was adopted: Resolved, That obedience to the Consti tution of the United States, anti to amend ments thereto, ratified according to the forms of law, means obedience to the whole of it, and not to such of its provisions only as we happen to like—that we are not and never have been "higher law" people, and despise utterly the arrogant and godless crew who boasted of that name until they got the making and tinkering of the lower law Into their own hands—and that a dec laration of our submission to the Constitu tion as It stands, from the first article to the last amendment, is not, therefore, as it has been preposterously termed a" new depart ure," but it is simply n consistent step in the path of patriotism and duty that we have always trodden. THE law regulating railroad fares, passed by the last Illinois Legislature, under the authority of the new Consti tution of the State, is to be tested in the Courts, by a case made up for the occa sion. The railroad companies have paid uo attention to the law, defying the power of the State, and trusting to their charters to protect them in their exor bitant charges. 'the test ease is brought by an attorney, who offered to pay his fare on the. Illinois Central Railroad at the rate allowed by law—two and a half cents per mile—but was emnpelled, tin der threat of expulsion, to pay the four and a half cents. This he did under protest, and immediately brought su i I. to recover the excess of charge. lie ob tained judgment for the amount in the Justice's Court, (flan which the Compa ny has appealed to the Circuit Court. Thence the case will be taken to the Supreme Court, in whose lin:tl derision the whole country is interested. hy EVlllll4 ' N Piot A I•r1,11.11 =EMI= 111. /Int) l'mler Ihe 11,1%1 How Ile Fell Short of 21 _:I.--The t;eary- Evans unadjusted claim of s:too,taii) iv still the eider topic Of business as teeh political circles. The apparent earnestness with which the Autlitir-l)en eral anti State 'Treasurer startasi out lied week tvith a view of having the whole aniount refunded to Lilo State, had the el'- feet to mislead the litiblie into the belief that the Republican ;tarty, through its rep resentatives, 1 lartranfl and Mackey—An ditor and 'Treasurer—would punish the peculatiens of its defaulting ollicials with out regard to station in lite or standing in the party. 'rho bravado argon oldie slayer ofStonewall.lackson anti thecapttirer of the cannon at Sitickersville ()tip, in directing his Attorney-lleiteritt to give his earnest and immediate attention to the:matter, en couraged those who have yet to male a fa miliar acquaintance tvith the manlier in which liadicitl robbery nil' the State and National exchroquer is coverisi tip, to be lieve that an IV' pee' Of the Whet,' tillt , thei would take place. 'Chat this great awlmlle upon the people Will he hushed tip Until alter the Octelser electitut there tau be no knit lit; that 'tart ranft, 11Iackey, quay, Citineron, Errett, Porney and t'onipany,are alarmed in attest ed hy the ninnernits telegraphic despatches sent to leading editors throughout the State to visit t'anteron at his Immo in I larrivlitirg, and the alacrity with wlnnh illOy respond to the call ()run, Lucitioi eider; hunit, Evans received but it very swat! amount of the steal is evidenced by his poverty for a year or more; that he 1011, if prosecuted fin' embezz.loment, "blow on all cent•crued is presuni,til from the fact that the Auditor General and .Mersey-I;oneral have taken no steps towitnts such IL prosecution; that tillirers high in authority at Washington trill be inipilcated ,Is sur mised Train the alacrity, with which the claims were passed in the departments, and that. it Is the intention of the Itepublieitn press to liopp silent 11111 , 11 1110 5111 , .11 , 01, is inferred trout the munimr rely c;nllril iust, weuk. upon (;eu,u.al came- - nu. 'l'll is immense robt airy of public funds is tine to the filet that since t lit the entire political management ;if the State has been by Rad icals. lit ISO:: the Deinovratic party elected Mr. Sienker Auditor tieneritl, and it was 11111111 V his torn Of 01111'0 LIME, the ittetiptlon of this thing took piney. flow to manage Sion tier wins the ); tiestion. They knew he cetilil net be bribed, and wetild 11111, titter, his eyes while .ouch a gigantic relsbory wire being committed. A plan was 11i1 111,1111 whereby the I,l'l'lll l SO ur the Democratic Auditor-general runld net watch the thiev ing operations of Radical robbers. A bill was enacted by the Republican Legislated creating a I,lllllliSSillll iti is , 111,1•I , 1.111/ 11110 010 Sll5lll tram dill Federal tioverit mint. 'The ceunnivxiun colinisted of the A ttorney-tieneral, Secpetitry of the cum monwealtl.l anti Slate Treasurer. The ind creating the tvoinnissien directed the An ditor-I;citeral to hand over to the l'oninlis ',jolters :ill papers MI lido in his eine° that had reference to tiny claim linen the (ten or:lA tlevernment by the State of Pennsyl vania. At that time Eemble was State Treasurer, and hia ittiontion wits directed ' altogether to a sale or tile ;State lean till insulting alien° it' August lielniont, and through him all the Jews in the country, to the neglect of the collection of these chants duo the State. 'Then it teas that tiectry conceited the idea of the Evans agency. And 110 W While columns of abuse have been heaped upon ;;;;;try and Evans little has been naiti ;last n.it A utlitor-tietiorill lartrittift, whose dereliction of duty makes him morally part ieeps et• 1,. The Oath Of tall! that he tool:J.1i perliirlit the duties of his lace with fidelity, made it olilig:t• tory upon him to ameedt), examine, audit, itditist and settle all ',untie ;tot-omits et persons entrusted with the receipt tr pits session of public money, to report anun :dly to the :State Treasurer Bilis!. of all pub lie 111 1 1 1 01111i.S NVIIiSII I,lllllill unsettle. 11.1111 the retesins therefore, aled to the un faithfulness of Auditor-General Ilartratift. the embryo Governor, and pliant tool of Alackey, t/tiay and Cameron, is due in a great measure this dentleatien that is non,' agitating the tile grave of 'Radicalism. for sensible man l'or a morpenl beliures thatstleli Strin tiling votild have taken 1,111,0 Idyl the Stall, beet' blesstid with a Democratic A tuliter- Greneral instead of the puny bantling, that now by dereliction tif duty, disgraces; the ;dike, disorgoadaes his party and deter 1111i110,1 1.110 1,11. 1 11,i 11 11 which event will sound the deatit-Itnell et line piratical buzzards that for a detlatiO have been wallowing in corruptien and feasting elf of publie plunder. It the public, would put a snip to such frauds—and Evans is but a tithe of the Sr hole—a Wlloletiniiie cheek lipell liatlieal Treastirer, Attorney-tien A irni, a),) the election of ieneral I\l'l'andless would adinini4er, is required, and the people iu this seetien of the State, seeing It m that light, aro pre paring In givoll,l- tr . villslll merits and hisability red s int egrity iltinerr 0. A special enrrottpothlent of the Phi ilol phut P:rcnidy Jim !Wel ! oh willru to iL mi 1.,11 Few believe, sr he are at all conversant with the :natter, Mat any mho , Man a '• civil" suit will ho itn-titided agaMst Mr. Evans, 14, is t.rinuilla 1,1.4.5.1.t11.11,11 is 111/0/11ly likely to implicate a number of high till, chits and prominent in the State in tire transaction, Intl IA 11l entirely destroy the chiniceti of at 10104 one candidate for the gubernatorial eines. Your correspondent refers to t teneral I lartratill, whose action in the nuttier ha+ tints far escaped critietion 1.1.0111040 is glaring falsehood given to the public through tho [try or flirt prE•MS, that " until the 21st day ill July, lig', lien era' llartrault 11.1 ii.111.1111.11g11 1110 apponktmcot of lii.t.rgo C. I{sans as agent oil the part. of the State for the collection ‘,l the claims due l'ente+ylvitilla." I propose 110 W for the first time to give through the columns or your paper, it rt.!, trlldic•tioll to OW Sta 01111•111, of Ignorlsll.ll, on the pArt'gl'Audllu•-Ic enerulllurlranft air to Evans' appointment; and to convict him in the eves of the public, if not Morally as guilty VIS1)14, at least the most incapable officer the Cenitoomvsaltli ever elected. At the eon rename held in th city by the At torney-General, Treasurer, and 4 oditor iioncral, the two littler 111111111 a 1.41.11110118 effort to convititie A ttornoyA /emeriti Brew titer that it W 11.14 Illy duty to Irate long Psilll.l , ..01111111011C011 natiuu 14411111 A Evans. Al r. Brewster retorted that he ,•ealil not ome n:once a prosecution until he had official Information Minnal. Your correspondent, who torts quietly enjoinig hie Partagit close by the open window witerellie t i erce ktte officers were sealed, on 'marlin; lurid mint vehement language, directed tn. talleutinu 1.0 titer Wllllll/W W 111.1114.0 111S1110 the 14011115114, and heard the following: Mr. Browster—When did you, Mr. Hart rand, nrst place in the hands of Dl r. Evann the vouchers on file iii your office that re lated to claims upon the tiemiral Govern ment? • Auditor-General Ilartranft—Some time in May, 1667, I handed hint vouelicrB Jar nialym amounting to about one million dot /ant. lirowetor—When you, v.lth your own right hand, gave Giese voti6hors to Mr. Evans, why • did you not ask him where were the two-million dollarelaims that had been filed for collection, and whether any thingliad been collected thereon? Hartranft—l thought it was the duty of the Governor to receive that inlbrination. Brewster—After banding over to gr. gvans, in 1807, vouchers for one million dollars claims due the State, wily did you not, iu 1668, ascertain what amount of them he collected, and his reasons for not being able to collect the balance? Ilartranft—l thought that information also should have been furnishild the Gov ernor, and not to me. • Brewster—l will now read you what your duties as Auditor-General are. The ;Attorney-General then read from the Statutes as follows :—" An act provid ing for the election of an Auditor-General, and defining his dutioS and powers." "The Auditor .General Ault annually, and oftener if necessary, examine, audit, adjust, and settle all public accounts be tween the Commonwealth and the officers of the revenue, and an other persons en trusted with the receipt or posse.ssion of pub lic money, and the accounts of all persons having claims against the Commonwealth. except such as may be by law excepted from his jurisdiction." "He shall annually, in the month of le lernber, digest, prepare, and report to the Treasurer a list of all public accounts which remain unsettled, and the reason therefor and of all accounts on which balances re main duo the Commonwealth, which are not in course of recovery by law, and the reasons therefor." He shall take all such legal and equitable proceedings as may be necessary tier the prompt and efficient recovery of money or property which may be due the Common wealth, and for this purpose he may em ploy any attorney he may deem proper, who may be allowed curia compensation as may be reasonable and Just for his ser vices." The questions now requiring an answer from A ud itonGeneral tlartrati ft are:-1 lax he annually, since the tt me in Ise7 he plac ed in the hands of Mr. Evans vouchers on which the latter collected a million of dol lars, examined the accounts or that person or agent " entrusted with the receipt " of so much public money? Has ho annually, in the month of Decem ber, submitted to the State Treasurer a list of all public accounts which remain unset tled and the reasons therefor? Why 11114 he not mace the time, four years ago, he gave to an agent vouchers for claims amounting to over a million dollars, insti tuted legal and equitable proceedings to recover from that agent the money duo the U0111111011wealth? Up till within a few days ago General Hartran It apparently led all competitors in the race for the Hubernatorial nomination. As a candidate ror further promotion in the party of which he is a member, he owes it to his supporters to clear himself of this dereliction of duty. Will he do it is what just now concerns his Harrisburg friends and iolvocates. What the Esprer. Says A 11111 l t the It, ptabiteatt County Ticket. The gives its upiuiuu of the Re publican county tie•ket in the: following article which appears its a leading Oditerial. It reiterates gravo Made and AVM'S up the work W . the ring in a proper light: the Comity Committee, following the lead of that mitoriously eerrupt pulitt eiil demagogue, lir, e fatchell, refused to ac cept the new primary; election law, xvhich hail been lianied solely with a view to se wire an Molest election, we declared 1.1 lily ill that "it is now' ovident to those cif the dullest comprehension that the centreling spirits of the Republican County Commit tee do net desire and do not intend, if they can prevent it, to have a lair :end honest primary election." And in the same arti cle WO declared that matters now stain!, it is it serious question liir every honest take any part in an election which is to by engineered by :Mill spirits as showed their hands in the County t'imemittee OH 'Mon day last. Nominations effected by fraud are not binding upon the censcienve of any honest man, and the sooner nor bullet-box sniffers and return-tinkers are made to re alize this fact, the sooner will the Republi can party be re - stored to a healthy condi tion. If what Dr. I Wteduillso unblushingly declared he true, that 'if there are, town ships Where cheating lots heretohire been done, it rift be Ja.ur oiptia, though yon should pile up oaths as high Its the Court blouse,' it In about time that the party lie purified, even though it have to piles through an ordeal as of lire." In a subsequent article, {July lin in dis cussing the probable Logics of the Ring masters, we hold that there " sere thousands of good Republirans who bcliryo that the atmosphere our local polities needs a thorough purillying, as it did ten years ago, when Thuggery' ruled the party with a red or iron; and they farther believe that now is about as good a time as any hi apply the unpleasant but wily elfectinel remedy.— With a fair vote, and a fair count, and a Just or tine nniniionn or the nog mono artier or the Comity Committee ounld be StleVeSitrilily carried out; hut we hdc.; ell, rriwclrti ionN iii allythollg /he Tho ntwit they will do in this direction, will till tio /n ;veil the nomination, or rather the counting-in, of one or two pawl 111011, such its Ellgie, for Assembly, and Melialfey tar Commission er, by way of a sop thrown out lei appease the anger of the honest masses ;et the gen eral result; but Wl3 are greatly mistaken if thin lino ul strategy will longer satisfy the independent Itepublivan /11111480,1 of the county. They constitute the honest think ing power of the party, and they ;ire ou guged in reasoning out relatiens tialliieS and rlfucLs, and will be prepared to act intelligently awl ocro,L - Icoly In whatever direetion the I'olll , old events may render necessary." Again, It Weeit later, in reply to a deela ration of ono or the Ring organs, that the Exprc......, bad determined not to Sailialla the I Idiot nnminaled unless wore to "oar taste," we us dis linetly declared that "alLweask is that the Republieatt voters he pet Milled I, 111 . 111 , 41 - strato their capabili y lit selecting proper candidates. hive LI . air (dome, ;oat they are fully competent h.. mash any rept ring that the nest oriserupidous wire pullers may attempt to form ; but 11/Meet/It lit/111,t teai ealtabitl, iu a lair upon mutest, they late lint 1.0111 Ilentla to lit/ this Wall Iho pulls in the et/lanti Of a elites of unscrupu lous na n o, Wilt/ prepare 'allot.- boxes w ith hidden ballots, vote names of men who near were not Cho polls, and ecru lifteente a watcher," by giving him lilt the votes he claims for his candidate, lint at the 5/11111 , time stuffing in enough to put their candi date ahead ! That these things have been done in the past weassert upon the autheri ty of gentlemen whose credibility the edi tor of the Jugnirrr teill Ilit question, and 1,4111• o ',prof thcxe .11 . 11,(1,1011.8 I.(11,lop WC l(„' I Ire bt . ,l crt.vms . lllo le tiering. it Wane, out tt/ us whether teen 'to stilt our tasty' are Ilted in ter lint. If Mr?, ant ore( ferirly norm wricel lw thr people lho y might tu,l to b' though they were sworn friends of the /(.Ir pre...o, and under stud( circumstances they' will not receive our support; and no threat of 'readingotit of the party,' from whatever source, will drive us front this position." That the programme (.1' the Ringmasters, foreshadowed in t h e foregoing, has been pretty generally carried out, is already ap parent. If we su listito to the name of Liv ingston for that of Engle we have almost a literal fulfillment predietion. No one of ordinary intellieence will pretend that the men NI ho eorticAnell to force upon the party a man with I ft. liateliell's record in place of Henry M. Engle, in whosu in tegrity every hilliest man in the county possesses the l'ullest run lidence, desired the nomination of Air. Livingston for Judge; but they felt that they either could not overcome his great personal popularity, or that it would not be safe for the rest of the ticket to venture too far in that direc tion. The substitution of l/r. Gate/telt for Mr. Engle, is /111 insult to every honest man and a (111(gritoo us the party ill Will/S0 saute the outrage has been purpetranal. 'l'll say that it has been done honestly—that it is a fair expression of the sentiments of the Iteptiblican party iu Lancaster county —would be simply a gros's ltbel upon that party. We have not time to-day to rto into details of the frauds perpetrated. (Mc instance, that of the Second Ward of Collo/thin, is given elsewhere, and it is but a fair sam ple of /natty others of like character which are reported. The party cannot afford to allow :welt 4,lltr4gen to he (sivered up. We 1110311 to give the 14,:t) as thug are pret.'llt- Itti to Ile, and it Will I.lloi it Wain 1, tilt. people to act upon them. 'rho Tmlur".or-4.1i1i,a Law 1 , 4 a frnillul 1,111, 1 1/1 1 1,111iCtItifill 510 W, HA it %MY during A nay .Inlinson ' s administratinir. IL liirl tiny deprives thg eleJesin,g trio 1,1.11 eurnisellorm, kit Cabinet in determine triton a vaeaney 1 1 XINIO. \l'llllll cielwral / 1 1(.1joii1)11111 %FILO reninvotl Iran the Internal Iteventin Iturean, rlr. 1 4 11 1 •1 , 1 , 1111111. Sir. D.aig lasSl nuts 1111111.1 11111,1 1 11 in quittiiittry ho the, nnt kuuty the exact. pesalen he eeell• to in fart 1 1 ,111111401i1111 1 r ,r I its-ruin Ilevr ow , or is merely an en/ f Lho Innuer, thou vsekoiey neesirs in his old positnal As to in lenlnt u nit Milli NI lar —r. .. 11 euglas+ nor any leuly in the Treasury I /1 1 1illrIII10111 11/Is l l. Meru title to 410101111i:ill. lin this enlergeney he has rolorrel. the iluestinn le AIL,a - ti,,y-11 , 114.1,1 Al(1.1111:1.11, 111 1 1 It to 111,111111 Shunt Inuellnnary will be able terLIM iulrnt and meaning of theTenurn obi )111en late, a Olili .lllllt wltirh brio inizr.led both I:engross atel Cabinets Irian the clay or its pass:ere is, the present, time.--.V. y. ilerattl. Enertirtnretl. They mny Unit C. 136%v0n, tllo notoriiiiim higatimt,whimoill or pure alk..lion,Prosi ilent /rapt pliel,y pardoned, to likely Li/ uuelCu I} tiotith Carolina isor tin) zwinhialow if Ow Ituptil,l knit party for tioverwir. Thump nugrons who practis ed blowy imloro they became viderm aro all zealous dor Howell lima matter °ref/tiro° ; the LLlck-turd-thin tlrant inuti go for 10111 bllelltlSo they believe that whatever (tram duos In right, HMI that bigamy, intiletioned by tutu Premidmit'm approval, PI montetliing that onyjit to be encouraged; while the liemocratm art, .131.1;:,ns or Bowen's nomination, liecatom be Is Lite nu:di:mt. 1111111 lur them to beat. . • - It would be a curious moral phenome non If, with such varied support, the Presi dent's favored bigamist should mmeeed in beconduts liovernor of South Carolina..— .W. EiSSI A largo portion or the elm's surface is again covered by spots. Yesterday there was a nearly circular spot not far from the centre, and four other clusters distributed around it, in trar4zium forin, each being not far from midway between the centre and the circumference. 'Three of these clusters were composed of several spots each, one containing more than a dozen of them, and resembling a huge cake of honey comb. A very small telescope, fitted with colored glass, shoWs all these spots di.tinet ly.—Chicugo Tribune, FPI. • The body of James Slinery was found on the Harlem ktailroad track, near Millerton, N. J., on yridsy, with the head cut oir. As one hundred dollars, which Kittery had in his possession, were missing, it is thought that he was foully dealt with. RAILROAD HORRORS Horrible Railroad ••Aerldent"near lior lon---Tnentyaiile Killed and Filters. Wounded. ERIE, Pa., Aug. 27.—The Erie mall train. bound west, collided with the Expre s freight train going cast between 7 and S A. M. yesterday, afoot ono anti a half tulles west of NVestport Station, Middle Division of the Philadelphia and Erie Railroad. The following persons were killed and injured: Killed—lt. C. Drown, of Locithavett, anti H. Winslow, passengers; and W. Wy man, of Willittinsport, conductor; mid James elannon, of Dunkirk, fireman of the mail train ; James \V. W'artl, of Bellefonte, l'a., conduetor ; and A. H. K illlnger, of Altoona, l'a., engineer of the freight train. Wounded—A. H. Atwater of Lockhaven; It. Holler, of Williamsport Jr., 01 . Limo, itenth.yivatitait P. McCor mick, of Ilaitimore, engineer of the pas songer train ;'Thomas AleNanny,of I'ennsylvatiht; A. It. Stool, ol"l'ionesta, ; .1. 11. Corinwall, of Bing harnpton, New York; :‘l. It. Fisher, of Lock haven ; A. Lacey, of Philadelphia; .ledge J. A. rho°, of Thmetotta ; IL A. 'Thom peon, of Williamsport; Ellen Ititer, ot Llano ; Frank 'tootle, tti Altoona, hag gage-master of mail train, anti Atom.. Lyon, of Renovo, Pennsylvania, fireman of the Freight train. l'hepaSsonger train was about an hour late in leaving NV liftinsp,)rt, and tuns running thirty-five miles tier hour. 'rho freight train was running ten miles an hour. The trains meeting on a sharp curve were not visible to each enter ill they were only a fete yards apart, and then speed wits not checked. 'rho baggage and smoking cars of the mail train wen, telescoped till but a few feet. passengers in the rear cars were uninjured. .\ n otliciar investi gation shows, that the ace ident wits caused by the neglect of the conductor and engi neer of the mail train to obey orders, given to them not to pass \Vest port until Om freight train had arrived tilt re. A copy tot this order was found lit the pocket of the engineer, who was believed to be fatally injured, but later intelligent.° reports hint improving, though still unable to speak. ItosToa, Aug. 27.—A frightt tit accident occurred on the , Eastern I{lol road last night. The fifteen-minutes past-seven pa.ssenger aceoinniodatien train for Iteret ly, mulct hargo of contittt•tttr Ntt , tttt, was delayed half an hem beyond the time of its depart tiro by its non-arrival of inward trams. Not deeming, it expedient to remain longer Nilson started his train, with one bag gage and four passenger ears, at Seven n ' eleck, and tilaile the 11,11.1 .stop pages until he cane, to lie, me, a station sm.eti miles from Boston. There leis trail, teas brought. to a halt, lid nn, and then, fin - scum , re.," on not set tiliderstee(t, it was halted again. Little did the t miductor tot that tram dream cif the enfant meat of his .ietion in this instance, :Is lie tots gond. hunierodly chatting with 10 , 411,10,011f:ewes on the road. Suddenly he 'maid it cry 01 danger, and 100 king kill( lie beheld bright light coining around Hie eliret , scarce hat! a 111110 from the station. Il e saw the danger at CJIII•1, and va‘f , the signal to start. BM it was 100 late. That light %vas the I ieath.- At the time lot' the collision the acetoniit.- dat‘con train, for Iteyerly, hail its red signal light behind, and the rod signal was hoed ed at the tria.st•inoall tor the signal post fior the express to hold 11r, old ell it dui at Eeerett, but subsequently loroceetted, and was tin der full head, and when near Itevero tits tien, the eitginetr, erich ;lily not latim, aware of the pro x Unity of the Itevelly tram mall, perhaps, witlon six's rods of it, that& wht.i.ed "down bralies," but not sotott tgiough no avert the calamity. Sollip of his passengers in the rear part of the aeconitnotlatton train Scud the ominous tvhistle, but too lam to escape, lin y a m, the express train at great velocity and the engine struck the rear-most ear lull in tilt, ventre and toreeti Its way, in II tido,ll.ol.lc• 111101111'r, two-thirds of the lengilittf the ear. The silloke-staelt. %tits Instantly 1:110e1.11 ill, and the boiler penetrated till of Lim dm tame named into the rear ear. 'Fitt, rear pail of the latter being mashed halo n thousand of spillings anti throwing the drhris on( (01 either side 01 the elignie and tender and rear hall of the car, not a fragmeti I Its large.s a house w Muntl. The lore pat t iii the engin° teas utterly demolished, its piston lielit and rods Itrolien. The ear tots crowded teal. people, every seat 1J1.111140c.4.11p10tt 1111,1 Malty 114; in the aisle. It& tuuong these the lira (jillel: as a Ilitsh, its Ile 'let rely to nil Mid started, luau ay,lin„ noel the most frightltil manner. Inn this was not the ()illy and, perhaps, lint thy storst visitor (he illifortiliello haul. 1(11.111.011.ly 11104.01- lisloll,l ha. bend r.y, of the boiler was lortolicit, mid in all hasinut the wretched stillertg • wore shrouded In it 4.1011c1 of steam, and cIIIIIIKI.II w tilt bniiill4 tcntrr, which hrolighl ilislalit death 10 Ill:Illy of tilt, 55011 titled, sail %Vitt prove fatal to ethers tt ho had pro belly not liven ta her,. isn sorinnsly injure,'. J‘lllioligh the IteVerly train was just twot•ing is hen the 1•0111si01, 1”•4•111 . 1 - 1 , 41. its 1110lic1 dill 110( 14,51,1 injury in Ilan ears in Trent tti . tot, ittt.t. The coupling trtteren 'lin het, rear t..trs seas Irndif.ll; the plat forms of all of them were jamitosi tip to gether, with the sintolcilig ear oVerlityping Lilt, baggage car. 'llito lamps were and ill an instant the Cal' terra 111 names, whirl (rat fled nl. greatspeett front ono t•al ;until. I" unlit Hirt, tot 1110n1 war, 011V1.1- o[l,-11 in Il.tlllos. 'Chi wttrh tot rtost•ttittr, Ile otirecontineneed assistance being soosae furnished 17ntn Chelsea, l'ltarlestots II find lit a htler Lour froth I:esnat. The Frost Hose Company. jest retiiiiit•il froth an eXell rsloll In I'rnv:- denro, seers preinplly till the grown', haying seen the lire burning,. .A doz en ref pwor creatures were jalllllloll bet W 1.1.11 tVOIICI ate' iron i ark, and could tot get toot. 'flit. axe WitA 11 pllOl slgrirotisly, and ~.0011 .1 Dope was applied to the side. of the ear, all the I oin:tilting frame-Need; was pulled asunder. The dean' and mangled bodies were 1.111.1 t taken out and plated on the depot platform. Smite score pinned with splinters, smile had arms and logs broken, while at hers were mangled beyond rectignition. Alost of the tivad teens appar ently free from bruises, tut the peeling skin anti deathly pallor whieli covet spread the Mush, told pia My that the ...team and scalding tvitter had caked death. ('ot,licr's jury was sanulu.ouod te•dae lay Dr. .1. B. Forsyth of l'lnelseit, whielt alter viewing the bodies, adjourned until to-marrow :Uteri...on. The total number of lt,llllllHl is heave,' Ihtrty and fOrly, 111011 tot . SVIIOIII urn likely to recover. dead were reilloNed fruun the scone of the lievident this afternomi. ill, (lilt net ,vats recegiliZetl to-day at hilt, 11. Lilted by his chest being (T10..11041. Ile tens the teen-kite, 0 ipastoir of Arlington Street Chureh, and formerly colleague of the late lir. Ili:inning, ant it Wall whose loss still he save rely felt lay the coin:tinnily, lir. n.it,ll, 4,1 Cant' oridgeport, was also - a man of Inge, and greatly lot toyed by his emigre gaticm. l'ublic sentiment throws fearful resputlsilility oil thecondurtor anti engin err of the express train. The engineer es capt ti with a fete 111,11 , e , ,by jumping from the train, 'Fits accommodation train was forty-li ye miuutrs late, which turf, it Is 55 . 118 kIIOSV to to the managers of the express train. About two o'cltoek, I }Hie a young man, a resident of l'ileist;a, eras standing 011 the pia...Orin of a ear, viewing the ruins at Revere, the car started and tint,* hits 4,1 t, striking his head tat a rail and, it is stipposfsl. latally injuring hum I=l Exploxion of It Holler on n Sonalay Ex Boad—Ox er Pormon%lllll and IV Oil ndelli. I.E. Ala., August. '2 , --The flirllishe. the steale hi , at yevter,lay " fft 1.11 Rave, n lifift; pn•.+ , u re Ili fat lilt 111 IS City fnl Smoky nrmrnitrg with !OHM!, t.WO hundred pers , •ll4 lint an ax,ureieu it/ Vl4ll flyer, 3.1/01It twenty will, Irmo the city. I 1,, /Mr rel urn Mlle r,l4lpped at Point Clear, mulling, there ;11.ta o'clock M. Th., h.,:a was T 11.1,) r.tal to the batik ;u.l a part a 1',”•41,14,rr,%vent...1im0. Allrr temailling there 11,111 an-hiair (he v.'he+tle fuel I 11. at had lauded were going nl,,pai .1, st 11011 tiff. hnilere.v Ili" , ifff I Willi great tire j'rect.ll4 , l by a runt Llin~; I'raginotiL4 .if I miibor and Inr•Lal How in ovt.ry votiffit, the I.ir,,ard pert, ut th,, luring Parrio,l Puutplutrly away. Thli 1•I11111111%Y101/ 01114,W11.1,1 , 11,11,1,01 1.1111 roar ,pf tho L,mt, ort,liing the upper and Ow boat ittlmodlatoly stink with her I.loll,lllllterg,l. A limit xly i.r moven ty ,1 1 1 . 1 1 flr lojilrod by tho• 1 . 111 . t h e 110i111 1 , e'r 1111040011 110'1101111g 1 1 1g111. 1111111 1 K, 1111t111,01/11 l'svonly•olgla W/.llllllotl 1111t0 10'011 111 1 1110.1111, 10 1.1111 1 . 11)% 01111 1/1111 01 1.110 11111111101% II 11111111,111, 111,11 14111,11 110 1 1. 'l l lio 01 1 111111 1 ILS ON/1111111g, Lori itin and heart julg. Wilder m 1 .1.11,1 of grief WON , H1'1.1 , 1111 Wit -111,0.11. Till. frantic' CHIN Of the •-tirvi% ems, the latitetiteLitte for lest wives, A 111,11,11, pumas, sisters, tied were ;igen iz big to all who Joel human sympaildos. - \I any of the passengers were I dd. eau Id rim, and little hats and bonnets Vain(' ashore 1.4) 11 , 11 OW rulna l ir thin natio victims beneath the waves. The eaptiiiii, %Villein' Eaton, 10X11.111 ,101111.1 01110 wll.ll both legs broken, and these tatelitittittg tic sits, hen 11111 l til illtett readied him when lie %iced, tlewn.— The twit In has Were kilfe;l. The engineer 111111 wire were seveiely Injured, and all the firemen were killed. It In 11111.1.,iiiple ut correctly rnliuuuo 010 Icon. Ily ~ , ,1110 it Is supposed that et least thirty or forty per sona are still buried in the debris of the wreck or at the bottom or thin bay. A diver has gone te the scene , If thin disaster. The accident has cast a gloom over the whole city, and universal sadness prevails. The streets are crowded, and the feeling of ex citement is intense. Tito Ocean Wave has been for come time considered unsafe, and the boat has al'„vit . .„i boon an unlucky one. A criminal responsibility rests somewhere and it should be visited upon those to whose recklessness and incapacity it is at tributable. The system .f inspection everywhere is loose, careless and reckless. The boiler was not so much exploded as it was torn at it seam, ; It was Si) rotten as to literally tear open. find it bee;i stronger co as to have exploded with greater violence, the destruction would have been great er. The force of tio explosion was upward and forward. Charles ideelon, a convict in the Au burn (N. Y.) Penitentiaty, committed suicide, on 6aturday morning, by cut ting his throat. 'T-leeton was only 1.'1) years of age, and had served 7 yearti out of a life sentence of Imprisonment - for murder in the second degree. WISCONSIN DEMOCRATIC STATE CONVENTION. The Sittintlon Accepted Norniontlon of Ex.Senntor Doo 1111 l e for 1303232 MAntso:", NA'is., August 23.—The Demo cratic 0 , 11\331(t0n tort, to-day, 154 delegate" being present. 11. L. Palmer, of presided, and the following' ru,oiutionv Were adopted : 'rho representati vas .1 . the Dotnoeratic party of Wisconsin, lu State Convention assembled. hereby ullinn : Final, That wo p o int with pride to the economical tifillitlitstration and limited amount of taxat h.it that prevailed iu the State under Democratic rifle, as 14,11111110 rd With 010 rllOl - 111011+ truly or MX:U . IOIi itiol profligate expenditures till' `.111 . 1 . 14011114 ItOrtlillielln State 1111110111 Si 111L11 , 11 ; unit 'hot the Demon ratio party if restl,l,4l t , l porter will observe rootiffilly loot n 1,11,11114.111 and resirin in every State Government. .I',oo//4, That 1110 wile reS,olllil , llsetutt • ted In tho h•uth ittitondliketit, to 1110 Islitti.mal tltlistittltion, reserving to the States rr• ~prrtit•ely and to th, people all powers Ina delegattai to Cho I • nite States, is ono nut the strongest s:ttet,,itairds or I.l,,thir list the arts of l'ongress and int th.• Federal administration, usurping lsnt et. not delegated by Iho Constitution, and Ihr doam nr lhn distinetions het,v, ro the i,oivers nut the tibdo (10501tititt•nt .11,ki those cal the General tioverninettl, aro d.• 'trun•tiVt‘ to I . lollstit 110011111 liberty and threaten tie overthrow of sir i“ritt cal I,w:a awl 1.',,1t•r,t1 Unv 0r111111.111,1111 , 1 111 4 I. the 1,4)11 , 11s/11111 . 111. 14 it permit:km.l,E .aattralize4l despotism in l'ongruss and lhr Nttli"tutl Exi,uttyy: and that. WV 111.11411m0.. As a ViCiolis onsllllL nl ;110 cl.lll rltli,Alll4 40111 . ies 0101;1111,1d G1V1,111111•111 liit• u.•. 1111111 :Weill Ids 1.1 lilt• agi.lllS cal Ilte 4 . 1 . 41 ., 34111i111-41,1110p1i ft , 1111,11.10111 lur;tl l,' AlrAIrS. 'Vital we aro in l'avi.r of a lariliho reel nee: that, under the pita,. \ thi• rai,ing id' n corentio waina tit„ la-t hal year-, din National t'ializre..slh,- , e.tahlt.ll - and etaitialica that. enorninits ',Whet) .11 . the 11111,,VS fill' tills our il.111111•111..i thv few, k times 10+1110 pr,a,.,•tivt., o hilt has ssveld unr etannieree trunl 1i..• on. and lettered until oppre,oal every an: ticultural l,ur.ult - s3,..hait of which the , ttsetithais , ir the Itepulah•an part .:Llly :mil haltingly then. Hai hornis, hilt inhieli that Imlay perrotiate, t%igia,—.. anti Inani ohith 114•1.0 10r 00 1 - 01101 . 10111..\ 110. 0.110.11100 I/0010,011c rule. • POO/ fh, TOM 1..V001r01,11011:itill pr,illl.4a . • y .1111131,11 all.lll ha% SIIII.II, 1i1.1 . 1.11 lan44 , th, Nat," o rn . :1 , 11•v; that it 1.111,311.4,‘Cr1. , 111i.v 1,111 that liwy 113, , 'mllll,lllll, National ,h•I,l. If a 44 Ise and Is, 11,1;1,11Iii t rry4,411..s ISi; h nn Iwinsssslcht4,l has :;Icl•n 1i.1.l 111:1,h., a much the J,•ht w.. 11141 har,• lu•rn actslllll,llsh4,il I.la. Ihr 1 , 4`1114.4 . 11110 panty sive I n.lliun 1 . 4.1; HI.. nn•rr ',al.(' ..f n sp., .1% payillcht 4,1 ;Ito ‘1,14 ; 1.,•111, tu;.;, - that ,%14 sylsilmit ;Intl tistiis , iit a.lpistni. 1.151`4, atl4l iss,mony tin oxis•holiihril, lhr Nan,' .1 J. 1,1 may la. slllu'u•I I aphllty a 11;:.lit hlstry nil res.wrt.s 1.1 the .11,1 .11 ,111114. (11110, Natit.lllll 1,11111111111,1,1.1111, ul the .1,1.1 pnin.dnns and halal., a wuhll,•l 1 .. 0) fh, Thatu+lhr 111111 a111,11[1111 . 111 , 1111 1 cll,lllllalutt lucre Ilel.ll 111 , C1.114,1 pr,,erly rtkllslllllll,l 1111t11. 3 1 II y I. I 010 11111d.l111011110 1,,,v 111 1,11.1, tut , \ .11,1 100.11145, upon Oro 1/001 , 10 ; 11110 1110 lwratic i.rty 10,v 11. 111 1110 pua, k tios% 10k r 1:114 1111111 1110 COll,lllllll O O ; 11110 111110 1110110,11 1,111011110 .II strict 0011.1111, lien, appliril Iw 11.. 11'101110., 111111 110001., lit' 1110 W 0.0.1 •1011 , 111011 111111 .1111,1 s oil 1110 ,11.,uhl bit all 114., 1 -LI 11101 by l'..llgre.s4 relati‘ll 1',1.11111 Linn 1,3t1 Ils lin11cifilt111.1114; that 1111 1 1 1011 p. 01,110 party 111'0 11151,0,0.111 1110 NVII 1011.k0 II .dricil lind 1.011,111 lighl+ fnnu :111 por,illti 11111 that 1st.411•1t1:111.1 1110 1 1111,,11 Ifllll liollllolll 1111.1111111110•111101, That Lilo 111 • 11111 . 1111,1, 1 . 1111.1,1 , 1111 , 10,, ml,l at.‘l 1,, htli.•ll 1,, Ow ..I 1111.0 . 1'111 , 111,1• 14.11ilykt.1 1111.1 11:11,11.ul •. ,Jul nn.l .1.11 •41•11,114 itl (111 . 1.111.11 t• I •till, ;111.1 ,111,111.1,1,1(41,tillaw• 111,, lit, ~..ttlrlty. n. •• ii I!,, 'll.ll •••• 1.1,4,111010,, •.I • nitiutul: , m-I~n nib; mitt Lttr n 1.1411.: 1, iti% s‘c deprvcalo vs uiitc .Ii iiL thii ; att,l 111111,1, ‘v1114.11 1111 . 11 t. Id . 11 Ntainlihug P PS u , gat 11.,.11 p1act.4,111,4•1.14.L•111.11 , ....r. I. hi 1d,1.. /.?1,11 1111111, 111 Which 1.11111 , 0%f, MO Onii.lll,l 111'1.11111.11 .0111111111 , 1 ralic s ll In 11114 4 1 141.4 , 4 , 111111L11 I 11.1 rr tor 1111. 1.119.54 , 111 41,4.1.“1 1111. 10.t1i11..,1 1 . 4411Vr1111411,4 id 44111.1 ortlllll.lll owl a 1,1 I h'111:1! 1111 1 11 - u 141 1,1111111 . 111.1 1 11Y4 4 / 4 , 1 . 11;it 14,1141. , 1111.. 4 ,011101 V 111.1111 LIM 11111. 4 11.1. y may 1,1,141 11111 140+ , 1,4 , .1 . 1.1111 1,1 11,,, , loill1114•41l, Lhu 1,1144114 1-1111 4 41 Lr 11141 n. 11111111411, 11./11 ill 1411 1 , 11“114, 1 , ,4111114, Killk. I 1 4 , 111111:1 4 ", 11:14 4111 111..111 4 4,111 . 144 1 / 1 4. ilsll 11.310/11, .1141 .1 :L114 , 1111.1. l" lay 11111.1 .11' 11111 Lnul 1.1 Muir ILIOI Jll,lull, 1.1 4441 , 1 4. 1111 ..rlity 1.01 , ..1,1 4,1111. Viit Th 11t %01111• it i 4 1111. to 1, o,i I•r /11 I proper rlser4 korile•I'S,111.11.1111•cit :whir el' pi,. till "i S lii 1,1 N1'1,1 . 1,1,111 I helm, the Le IN, tieriVivi tliitt IL iv Illittler nl Nut aull C./11,111, .1111'11 ,11.11111 i theillteilLiell lit' Litt. I ielLt•fiti 1..1V1 . 111111. nl, EM== II Ll.ll I.:II 1,111. allil ill 1..11 lmrcr IL 11111 HI 1,1.4 .4:1 frcel CiOlittrY 1 . (1 - 4.perMiltv, ILr Ihl , 111 • 1 . 1• . 4 • 1 rlf Ilmt am twev..,..ar3' Jr•t the 1,11.1,t•S:11 . 1•1 vital In OW 1 . .111-0 p..%1 . 1'11/111 ul : thert•liwo, 111,0 ,0 Cc/111110'11d ILu 111 ph, lII,CIII U 111111111 1 ,14 I UP 111 , 111111 o.llti run gild j uJKun , ul 1.1 till, retipitl 1/1 thf!: • ,lt.l.l ; :11111 \VII in til.l" :11.1 tort 010 C:11111111.1,, 1111111111 AI, I 1111011 I I• HIV ',pp. ;11111 NI1111 . 4 , 1 • 4.1 Jam!, It. wav nl~uiillall4l 1, , . I;l,vet nor by 11:3 wit of 1:p1 VIIII . S. 111 11, eeptect the iionlinatien In a 1,14,11111 y lee pared speech, hoping, he !night 41,, thing to sae,. l'enstitiatienal 14 herty and 11, hlil'aii LW( 1. 1 110 0.4 111 1101110. 111 , hrielly rev 1,,,e41 the In. tery of the country sine,. the repeal 4,1 Ilie during, the ',at, ilie Ennuivitottion Preelannitien, the '1 lel tcenth Amendment, abolishing' slnccrl, tvhirh lie I . Illy inder , 44 , ,l. Ile ,lainied Cleo I.ineeln and Johnsen fought ler the ',c01,. striletien and the preservatien 111 1111• el the States, bill the spirit>, el el, 11 we.• 1/1-11d0S.011; 11,1111, disregarding eat Its, pledge, and Ccuistitiltion, the gitdivals let eed plan of reette.ts ttettoe Itat,ele el the I'lm statitiem by military th,tattietil :lett gr.., usurp then. The greatest, work 4,1 the day is, the resteratien of the ilovernineill le the or the Gdhrrs, ag:111141. the 1:11.11001 illll4lllo I.llllt. have 11.1 rights the Fed eral authority is lunind 1,1 lhoolittlo 1•11.01•11 Willi 101 11p1 , ..:11 1111 1./VOril,rf cottiary to 111+1111 , 4 11111 1..11 ISSLIOS, 0101 rally 111 the ,1.1 V. 1114•11 111 11.1/1. 111!0.11 111,11.11.111.11A1, Jubu A. imininaled fur Lioutenalit , (;,verimr; 21111 luu \lnl:tguuu•ry, liar :svcreLary 10. Stali , ; null F I¢n H,'l'rr•utvnfl•r ; S. 111.tv.:t Attm - ney.-(i..tioral ; 1,. E. .1..1111,4011, til:a•• 1't,IIIIIIiSivit , 111.1"; N. Ir. Parlive, porinlnndunL ''l Invtillaiont, .1a...11) HuJi•n, C.1111111issii)11., n( Immil;rn Lion. Atig. '2l. AL NIX o'olock terday morning, Llion , ,tild, of p 1 111, lin, I Lllll al ictrth 1.1 LI. 1 / 4 1, 1 11 1 .. 1 1 conlinanilvil 1t pll.l 111 the 14,11 I'4o 111 11, lava., Al twenlv-lito 11111111(1 , 11:1-1 ...von o • t•Ioek , I Ile 11-1 1111141, , 111 11141.1 t 4,1 rn. I 1,,1 II (Tom, rotvoll rapidly -1 , 1, with long.. and l i l y!. with .4111111 e l. 41 rokt•-• Llian la.a. l o l llr. The lalLor obi:Li/Iyd IL 11 1 11 1 1 of 11:111 .1 and lo•p1 IL fora citiarl4., of It 111 111 , . .11 Iliat potllL T . , 111 , 0 141,14.1: avcratval 1;1ay , Iwo 111111111 , 8, 111 , 1 W 1411,1•11 1 , 11, 111,11 NI, John's la , ty l'urt.oll iLL moo ,',•1,1, 1: la ontrlit 111.. .1,11111 nl Ili, 4[r boat in lion with tun 1111 tr nl (lib Tyne. Th,,, It., 111114.1, lo n hoal4 11.01, 'l'lll bun droll yard 4 lorllivr 1111 Ilenfi , rlll 11 roppvd lily our. Itoth via., 1.114141 n 111 1 1111 1. 111, all,l hell Ille '1) 1 110 111 1,141 1,1111 111111111 11 /1 . .411,,11, 'rho IL. ,1 1, 1111 ' n 1•1 . 111 1 :, trl 1,1 loy 1.1.1 411011.1. from I/11111 and witivr,intataaltal 1,, LI. 1,1.3'4,1Hr:iv , ' and 11001,1 lor Lllll :11111‘r boat. ILL a !art rale, rowing 111 ill ;', 1 ,1 111111., ..„11 A,. I':14 ,4il, eel 141 I, Om lintel. A 1101" tvam put Lo 1,11,1 ill. nil 1 1111 II few i„ fely wordy. Vlllll l lll 141111 4 , 1111%L . 1. 1 1 , 1 . , 1 , 11411141,WILIIIIi 1, 1 1 1111r1,:144 1,111101,11 IL/111 111111 4004 11 1 1 . 17,111 too 111011111, till oeynru lairpitiLt. 110 4,11111..1 to grow wore. 1111111 r•;:lo, when 110 dlod in Tin• ityniplonis lionrortl64 diolllwu 1111111 wrongly Lo 1.11, lipmal ion of a drag, 1.1 no ralNpition Laolliat LO Lll4l : 4 1L, .1“1111 • Front Ilse linll.r Itt llu• Grit, e--11)1. tr•odnix Suicide 1,1 n II ~,,, µ I. 1111) 111 Norilt Mboaro.lppl. broil a voallemaa wha arrived in tiny city lust evening, we have learned Om pm • liculars of the felithill Ili hi ISM Iy, daughter of( 'ol. Fred, I hily,orforren ;Lim bon Ina The young lauly wen toil suvuuleen years old , and haul just grail eat - e,l from the iirenada lligh Nchool. Ugly a few evenings Millie a ball wan gluon 111 tier parents in holler of her debut illiO so ciety. It was remarked by all that she was the gayei.t. Mille gay, soul seemed to enter thoroughly into the enjoyment or the sion. Night before last she retired at het usual hour, seemingly In the best of spir its. The next morning, when, out lippeltr elf; ILL breakfast, her mother went up to her bedchamber, she WWI horrified upon discovering that her daughter had commit ted suicide by taking a quantity or iatida• num. A short note addressed to her iiiiithdr was round upon the bureau, Huffing Mai, tired of life, clip had chosen this way to end her existence. No valise' beyond this was assigned for the rash act, and none is known. 'rite affair has cast a drip gloom over the entire cumin unity,iu w hich she was well known and highly respected, —..lfeinphbi A rn/anche, Aug, 23. ' At Flushing, Long Island, on Satur day, a Jury composed entirely of eitior'ed men, was einpaneled to try an Irishinun charged \ylth T.tte accused' roc tested so earnestly agauust: Lietug tided " by aegroes• wholly," that the Court dleeharged the jury, and ordered a new panel. •
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