Centre Democrat. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1848-1989, August 12, 1880, Image 2

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    ®he Ctntte fmoctat.
BELLEPONTE, PA.
Tk Largest, Cheapest and Bast Paper
PUBLISHED IN CENTRE COUNTY.
ENGLISH'S ACCEPTANCE.
WHY TLLK REPUBLICAN PARTY SHOULD OIVK
WAY TO THE DEMOCRATS.
INDIANAPOLIS, July 30. —Hon. William
°H. English transmitted the following
letter of acceptance of his nomination
as candidate for Vioe President, to the
committee of notification to day :
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., July 30, 1880.
To HON. JOHN W. STEVENSON, President
of the Convention ; HON. JOHN P.
STOCKTON, Chairman, and other mem
bers of the Committee of Notifica
tion :
GENTLEMEN : I hare now the honor to
reply to your letter of the 13th in
stant, informing me that I was unani
mously nominated for the office of Vice
President of the United States by the
late Democratic National Convention
which assembled at Cincinnati. As
foreshadowed in the verbal remarks
made by me at the time of the delivery
of your letter, I have now *o say that I
accept the high trust with a realizing
sense of its responsibility, and am pro
foundly grateful for the honor confer
red. I accept the nomination upon the
platform of principles adopted by the
convention, which I cordially approve,
and I accept it quite as much because of
my faith in the wisdom and patriotism
of the great statesman and soldier nom
inated on the same ticket for President
of the United States. His eminent ser
vices to his country ; his fidelity to the
Constitution, the Union and the laws ;
his clear preception of the correct prin
ciples of government as taught by Jef
ferson ; his scrupulous care to keep the
military in strict subordination to the
civil authorities; his high regard for
civil liberty, personal rights and the
right of property; his acknowledged
ability in civil as well as military affairs
and his pure and blameless life all point
to him as a man worthy of the confi
dence of the people. Not only a brave
soldier, a great commander, a wise
statesman and a pure patriot, but a pru
dent, painstaking, practical man of un
questioned honesty, trusted often with
important public duties, faithful to
every trust and in the full meridian of
ripe and vigorous manhood, he is, in my
judgment, eminently fitted for the high
est office on earth—the Presidency of
the United States.
A CHANUB DEMANDED.
Not only is he the right man for the
place, but the time has come when the
best interests of the country require
that the party which has monopolized
the executive department of the Gener
al Government for the last twenty years
should be retired. The continuance of
that party in power four years longer
would not be beneficial to the public
nor in accordance with the spirit of our
republican institutions. Laws of entail
have not been favored in our system of
government. Tbe perpetuation of prop
erty or plaoe in one family or set of men
has never been encouraged in this
country, and the great and good men
who formed our republican government
and its traditions wisely limited the
tenure of office and in many ways show
ed their disapproval of long leases of
power. Twenty years of continuous
Kwer is long enough, and has already
1 to irregularities and corruptions
which are not likely to be property ex
posed under the same party that perpe
trated them.
FRAUD MUST N6T IIE CONDONED.
Besides it should not be forgotten
that the four last years of power held
by that party were procured by discred
itable means and held in defiance of
the wishes of a majority of the people.
It was a grievous wrong to every voter
and to our system of self-government
which should never be forgotten or for
given. Many of tbe men now in office
were put there because of corrupt parti
san services in thus defeating the fairly
and legally-expressed will of the major
ity, and the hypocrisy of the professions
of that party in favor of civil service
reform was shown by placing such men
in office and turning the whole brood of
Federal office-holders loose to influence
the elections. The money of the peo
ple taken out of the public Treasury by
these men for services often poorly per
formed or not performed at all is being
used in vast sums, with the knowledge
and presumed sanction of the adminis
tration, to control tbe elections, and
even tho members of the cabinet are
strolling about the country making par
tisan speeches instead of being in their
departments at Washington discharging
the public duties for which they are
paid by the people. But with all their
cleverness and ability, a discriminating
fiublic will no doubt read between tbe
ines of their speeches that their para
mount hope and aim is to keep them
selves or their satellites four years long
er in office. That perpetuating the
power of chronic Federal office-holders
four years longer will not benefit the
millions of men and women who hold
no office, but earn their daily bread by
honest industry, is wbst the same dis
cerning public will no doubt fully under
stand, as they will, also, that it is be
cause of their own industry and econo
my and God's bountiful harvests that
the country is comparatively prosperous,
and not because of anything done by
these Federal office-holders. The coun
try is comparatively prosperous, not
because of them, but in spite of them.
TBE PEOPLE ABO THE OFFICE-HOLDERS.
The contest is, in fact, between the
people, endeavoring to regain tbe po
litical power which rightfully belongs
to them, and to restore the pure, sim
ple, economical, constitutional govern
ment of our fathers, on the one side,
and a hundred thousand Federal office
holders and their backers, pampered
with place and power and determined
to retain them at all hazards, on tbe
other. Henoe the constant assumption
of new and dangerous powers by the
General Government under the rule
of tbe Republican party. The effort to
build up what they oall a strong govern
ment ; the interference with home rule
and with the adnftnistration of jus
tice in the courts of tbe several States j
tbe interference with the elections
through the medium of paid partisan
Federal officeholders interested in
keeping their party in power and car
ing more for that than fairness in the
elootions; in fact, the constant en
croachments which have been made by
that parly upon tho clearly reserved
rights of the people and the States will,
if not checked, subvert the liberties of
the people and the government of lim
ited powers created by the fathers and
end in a great consolidated central gov
ernment, strong indeed for evil and the
overthrow of Republican institutions.
The wise mon who framed our Consti
tution knew the evils of a strong gov
ernment and the long continuance of
political power in tne same hands.
They knew there was a tendency in this
direction in all governments and con
sequent danger to Republican institu
tions from that cause, and took pains
to guard against it. The machinery of
a strong centralized general govern
ment can be used to perpetuate the
same set of men in power from term to
term until it ceases to be a Republic or
is such only in name, and the tenden
cy of the party now in power in that
direction, as shown in various ways be
sides the willingness recently manifest
ed by a large number of that pArty to
elect a President an unlimited number
of terms, is quite apparent and must
satisfy thinking people that the time
has come when it will be safest and best
for that party to be retired.
IN FAVOR OF THE CONSTITUTION.
But in resisting the encroachments
of the general Government upon the
reserved rights of tbe people and the
States, I wish to be distinctly understood
BB favoring the proper exercise by the
general Government of the powers
rightfully belonging to it and under the
Constitution. Encroachments upon the
constitutional rights of the general
Government, or interference with the
proper exercise of its powers, must be
earefully avoided. The union of the
States under the Constitution must be
maintained, and it is well known that
this has always been the position of
both the candidates on the Democratic
Presidential ticket. It is acquiesced in
everywhere now, and finally and forever
settled as one of the lesults of the war.
It is certain beyond all question that
the legitimate results of the war tor the
Union will not be overthrown or im
paired should the Democratic ticket be
elected.
WHAT THE DEMOCRATS WLL.L. DO.
In that event proper protection will
be given in every legitimate way to
every citizen, native or adopted, in
every section of the Republic, in the
enjoyment of all the rights guaranteed
by the Constitution and its amend
ments. A sound currency of honest
money, of a value and purchasing pow
er corresponding substantially with the
standard recognized by the commercial
world and consisting of gold and silver
and paper, convertible into coin, will be
maintained. The labor and manufac
turing, commercial and business inter
ests of the country will be favored and
encouraged in every legitimate way.
The toiling millions of our own people
will be protected from the destructive
competition of the Chinese, and to that
end their immigration to our shores
will be properly restricted.
The publio credit will be scrupulously
maintained and strengthened by rigid
economy in public expenditures and the
liberties of the people and the proper
ty of the people will be protected by a
government of law and order, adminis
tered strictly in the interests of all the
people, and not of corporations and
privileged classes.
I do not doubt the discriminating
justice of the people and their capacity
for intelligent self-government, and
therefore do not doubt the success of
the Democratic ticket. Its success
would bury, beyond resurrection, the
sectional jealousies and hatreds which
have so long been the chief stock in
trade of pestiferous demagogues, and
in no other way can this be so effectu
ally accomplished. It would restore
harmony and good feeling between all
tbe sections and make us in fact, as well
as in name, one people.
The only rivalry then would be in the
race for the development of material
prosperity, the elevation of labor, the
enlargement of human rights, the pro
motion of education, morality, religion,
liberty, order and ail that would tend
to make us the foremost nation of the
earth in the grand march of human
progress.
1 am, with great respect, very truly
yours, WILLIAM 11. ENULISH.
♦
SIMON TAI.KH! The Hon. Simon
Cameron, interviewed by a corresjiond
ent of the Herald in S'cw York the
other day, indulged in some very
plain talk and made quite an interest
ing contribution to the political litera
ture of the day. The picture which
the venerable retired statesman draws
of the White House fraud and his
advisors is decidedly refreshing:
" Hayes' advisors are queer lot. I
can't see much in them. Evart's for
eign policy T Tbe feature of it has
been to protect -Seward, that Consul in
China, although the most conclusive
proof of his crookedness is alleged to
exist; now he is trying to ruin Colonel
Moeby because Mosby finds the office
rotten. I have no doubt personally of
tbe bad flavor of that Shanghai, but
Evarts has held up one side of the
coop while -Seward crawled ont. Hayes
surrounded himself with the men who
went over to Greeley. I always pitied
Greeley. He was a baby out of the
editorial room. A man of intolerable
egotism.
I am glad to see iny son's letter. His
health is quite poorly. He would have
been very fooliah to have taken the
chairmanship of the national commit
tee. Had he done so I should have
been sorely vexed. His health, which
is some value to him, will not permit
him to manage a campaign. Then, too,
why should he t It's not only e tire
some, but an expensive business.
Moner is wanted et all sorts of times,
and I tell yon the chairman of that
oommittee has to go down into his own
pocket and his friends' very often.
The campaign of '76 coat my son a pile
of money. Nearly every dollar Chand
ler got credit for spending, personally,
came from Donald. Chandler was a
close man—a very close man. Of course
I presume he gave something. But
that is not all, for after the legitimate
campaign expenses were provided
against my son handsd Hayes 95,000 in
cash for his personal fond. Hayes came to
him, was ahsolutc/y impecunious, and my son
gave it him out of his own wallet. There
wasn't a dollar in the campaign fund,
and llaye\ was whining for pocket money.
I know that Hayes got this money. If
I didn't I wouldn't mention it.
Reforming the Indian bureau? Who
says Hayes is reforming anything? My
advice to every body is to let the Indian
business alone—severely alone. That's
one hope I have if Hancock should get
in. I believe he would recorganize that
system and put it under the war de
partment where it belongs. But, I
repeat, anybody who touches it as it is
now will get smeared. Honest or dis
honest it's all one.
An Old Soldier Replies to an Inter
meddling Onlee-holder.
From the Diiylofttown Dunn* rat.
This correspondence speaks for itself:
RECORDER'S Or KICK, BUCKS CO., DO YI.ES
TOWN, Pa., July 15, 1880— das. W. Bart
lett, Recorder —MAJOR J. B. ROBERTS, New
town, Pa.: What do you think in regard
to organizing in the lower end of the
county a permanent veteran's club of the
soldiers of the war (who saved the
Union ot the states) that the principles
of the republican party may be sustain
ed, that those who saved the Union by
their acta and deeds may still control
the destiuies of our government ? The
republican party were our friends dur
ing the war, have since maintained
their loyalty to us, and so long as they
continue to reward us, I trust we shall
ever be found acting in concert with
them. Should the democratic party be
successful with a Union soldier at the
head of their ticket, I fear it will be
placing in j>ower and rewarding the
boi/s in gray vice the boys in blue / there
fore I think it behooves us to organize
in the protection of our gallant volun
teers and the supremacy of the loyal
hearts of our nation. Let me hear from
you at an early day in regard to the
movement. lam truly,
T. CADWAI.LADER.
To the above, Major Roberts replies as
follows :
NEWTOWN. Pa., July 22, 1880— Captain
T. Cadwallader, Doylcstoum, Pa. —MY DEAR
SIR : Yours of the 15th inst.. asking my
opinion about forming a veteran club
in the lowerend of Bucks county, "that
the principles of the republican party
maybe sustained," is at hand. Captain,
my opinion is that you have left this mat
ter too late. You will find, I think, this
fall, thousands of old veterans in the repub
lican party giving their hurrahs and
voles to Gen. Hancock. You say should
the democratic parly be successful with
their candidate, a Union soldier, you fear
it will be placing the boys ingray instead
of the boys in Uue in power. Captain
were you ever in the Army of the Poto
mac? Who was the most dreaded con
federate officer, noted for lying in am
bush and shoot ihg down in cold blood the
boy in blue f Was it not Colonel Mosby ?
Yes; and to-day he is being rewarded
by the republican chief magistrate as
American consul at Hong Kdng. in
China. Gen. lx>ngstreet. another rebel
officer, is the filling the mission of min
ister to Turkey, and hosts of others I
could mention. But the war isover and
has been for fifteen long years, and I
propose to drop the matter and fall in
with enough more ol the boys in blue
to place at the bead of our government
that superb and fearless I. nion soldurr,
General Winfield Scott Hancock, born
a Pennsylvania* and the pride of the
State. And, captain, in sO doing I sin
cerely believe we will bring about a per
manent and good feeling among all,
which never can be so long as sectional
strife continues. Truly yours.
J. B. ROBERTS, late Major, etc.
ENGLISH OK ARTHUR, Willi 111
A Plain Statement for Thinking People.
From th lmlUhipolli Jul j £t, l**o
The political profession* and prom
isee of candidates for office amount to
little, and it in far better to judge
them by their conduct when they have
been intrusted with political power.
Were they honest and faithful to the
trust confided to them? Let us for a
moment apply this test to Arthur and
English, the candidates for the Vice
Presidency. Mr. Arthur was intrust
ed with the collection of the United
Statin revenue at the City of New
York. Was he faithful to that trust?
This question has been answered in
the negative by the highest Republi
can testimony in the land, and it is
too clear and emphatic to lie called in
question or explained away.
Here is what Hayes and John Sher
man i-aid of this man Arthur not long
since. It is Republican testimony and
should not he questioned by Republi
cans :
"With a deep sense of my obligations
under the Constitution, I regard it as
my plain duty to suspend you in order
that the office, may be. honestly administered."
—R. B. Hayes to Collector Arthur, Jan
uary 31, 1879.
"Gross abuses of admistration have
continued and increased during your
incumbency." Sherman to Collector
Arthur, January 31, 1879.
"Persons have been regularly paid by
you who have rendered Tittle or no ser
vice ; the expenses of your office have
increased, while its receipts have dimin
ished. Bribes, or gratuities in the shape of
bribes, have been received by your subordi
nates in several branches gf the Custom
House, and you have in no ease supported the
effort to. correct these abuses."— Secretary
Sherman to Collector Arthur, January
31, 1879.
Now we have vyhat Secretary Sher
man and President Hayes said of Mr.
Arthur, let us see what was said of
Mr. English when he was intrusted
with political power.
President Buchanan wrote to Mr.
English as follows : "It was your fate
to end a dangerous agitation, to con
fer lasting benefits upon your country,
and make your character historical.
I shall remain alway your friend. If
f
I had a thousand votes you should
have thetn all with a hearty good
will."
And now let us see what his constit
uents said when he retired from office.
The Convention which nominated his
successor, adopted unanimously the
following resolution :
Resolved , That in electing a candidate
to represent this District in the Thirty
seventh Congress, we deem it a proper
occasion to express the respect and es
teem we entertain for our present mem
ber, Hon. W. 11. Knglish, and our con
fidence in him as a public officer. In
his retirement, in accordance with his
well known wishes, from the position
of Representative, which he has so long
filled with credit to himself and benefit
to the country, we heartily greet him
with the plaudit, "Well done, thou
good and faithful servant."
Again : Mr. English was for fiftecu
years intrusted with the management
of one of the most important financial
institutions in the West, from which
he voluntarily retired with the thanks
of the Directors and stockholders,
"For the very great financial ability,
constant watchfulness and perfect fidel
ity with which he has managed it from
its organization to the present time."
And this resolution was offered by
Colonel John C. New, now the Chair
man of the Indiuua Republiuan Cen
tral Committee.
Here then is the whole case in a
nut-shell: English was faithful to the
public trusts committed to him, and
voluntarily retired with the praise of
his administration uud the unanimous
plaudits of his constituents, "well
done, thou good uud faithful servant,"
whereas Arthur proved recreant to
his trust, and was kicked out of his
offiee in disgrace, "in order," as Presi
dent Hayes and Secretary Sherman
said, "that the office might be honestly
administered."
These are not partisan statements,
but plain unvarnished facts which
honest thinking people will not fail to
consider iu making up a judgment as
to which of these two men it would lie
safest to intrust with puhlic offiee.
WITHOUT AN ISSUE.
lUi s k Campaign Hulletii,
It is not necessary to read more
than one Republican pa|>er to become
convinced that the Republican jmrty
is sadly at sea for an issue on which to
conduct th-ir campaign. The nomi
nation of Hancock has deprived therp
of anv comfort they may have ex
pected to gain from a campaign of
bloody shirts, which now flaunt feebly
for the want of gore with which to
straighten out their folds. The ster
ling integrity and popular character
of the Democratic candidates take
away from (hem the material fur a
personal campaign, even if the doubt
ful character ol their own nominee did
not effectually silence anything they
would like to say antagonistic to the
Democratic standard bearer.
The fact that the greater portion of
their party manifested a warm prefer
ence for a soldier like (rant, and was
compelled to compromise on a soldier
like Garfield, deprives the press and
the party K|x.-akers of the prestige that
might accrue to them from a campaign
against a military ruler.
The haphazard character of the
criticisms that have thus far been
made against Hancock shows that
the party policy of the Radicals is
still far from being defined, and the
most they have been able to say
against the Democratic leader is that
he hung Mrs. Hurratt, who was tried
during a Republican administration,
arraigued by a Republican tribunal
and condemned bv Republican judges.
Again, an argument fully as weak,
is that Hancock, being by profession
a soldier, knows little or nothing of
the essentials of good government,
and is devoid of a record on auy
question of public moment
Admitting, for the sake of argument,
that this is true, and what a contrast
it affords to the position of Garfield,
who was found with the paid lobby
ists in the Credit-Mobilier legislation,
and whose services, as the chairman
of the committee on appropriations,
were considered worth $5,000 to the
De Oolyer pavement contractors. It
is better to have no record than to be
burdened with a dishonest one, as
the friends of the Chicago nominee
have discovered to their sorrow. It
is better to have a " simple military
commander," honest and fearless in
the discharge of his duty, than a
much-courted legislator, sought out
for his influence, and cajoled for bis
vote. Hancock's record has been
open to the light of day ever since hia
name was enrolled as a soldier of the
Republic. His name is found on the
records of many a hard-fought battle
during the rebellion. At Gettysburg
be saved the day, and virtually ended
the war. On that day, out of confu
sion aud disorder he brought order
aud victory. His honor as a soldier
has always been above question. That
be will develop any traits unworthy
of his reputation as the candidate of
true Democracy, or as the executive
of the cation, is a piece of campaign
malice, unjust and untrue. The Rad
icals can make no war on Hancock's
record. The North takes him at his
true worth, and the Houth accepts him
ss the man whose election will forever
stifle the long, worn-out cry of rebel
lion. The Republicans can make no
war upon him. His record is unas
sailable. They must find a more sub
stantial issue for the campaign. We
Democrats have thus early given them
a bard nut to crack in the character
and rawed of Garfield. Let them de
feud it if they can.
AN AIHHtKSK TO THE UNION HOL
IHKKM OP THE WAR.
The Hero of Gettysburg the Man for
the Time.
NEW YORK., July 30. —The Execu
tive Committee of the National Asso
ciation of Hancock Veterans met in
their headquarters, in the Westminster
Hotel, yesterday, and adopted the fol
lowing address to the Union veterans
of the late war of the rebellion :
V KTKKANH OF THE UNIOI* —Near-
ly twenty years have passed sinee a
bloody civil war began in which you
took part in order to preserve the
integrity of the Union and main
tain the supremacy of the Federal
laws. After four years of alternate
defeat and victory, actual fighting
ceased; hut j>eace nevertheless, did
not follow. The dominant jKilitical
party, assuming the merit of success
acbieved by your toils and you r cou rage,
by keeping alive the sectional bitter
ness between the victors ami the van
quished, attempted to make your deeds
the foundation of their own permanent
power. In the South this was done
by the harassing course of the carpet
baggers, by the inquisitions of provost
marshuls, and by means of United
States soldiers who were used to in
timidate citizens at the polls and to
to lock the doors of legislatures
against legally elected representatives
of the people. In the North it was
done by jKjrsistent misrepresentations
of the acts and attitude of the South
ern people, bv the surveillance of su
jiervisors of elections, by the arbitrary
authority of murshals who dragged
orderly and innocent men from the
polls to prisons to prevent their free
exercise of. the elective franchise, and
by blatant charges of disloyalty against
the one-legged and one-armed soldiers
who had dared to assert that in the
war for the Uuion thev had not fought
for four years to strike the scbackles
from the slaves and weld tbem into
manacles for freemen. A reaction
from this condition of things was in
evitable among a people who inherited
liberty, and the eyes of the North and
South have at length been opened.
The North has proposed to settle the
sectional feeling which the dominant
political party has wantonly and self
ishly kept alive, by takin'g as a candi
date for President one of our own Gen
erals—a man whose loyalty to the
Union has been shown in four years of
march and battle, and in shedding his
blood amid the clash of crossing bayo
nets ; whose capacity as u ruler has
beeu shown in his orders and in the
administration of complicated civil du
ties. When invested with vast and
arbitrary power he refused to be the
tool of tyranny and to use it against
the people who were crushed ; a man,
in short, whose "moderation is known
unto all men." The Houth likewise,
to show that it accepts all the legitimate
results of the war and desires that true
fraternal feeling be re-established, has
asked us with a single voice to give
them for President the sturdiest lighter
amoug our Union Generals ; a man
on whose justice they can rely and
w ho places the rights of freemen above
the exercise of despotic military pow
er. In this crisis of the nationJProvi
deuce has given us the man who com
bines in himself all these requirements.
General Winlield Scott Haucock, our
candidate for the Presidency, is the
man for the hour. Under his lead let
all Uniou veterans again "touch el
bows," and, the bloodless battle won,
true liberty and true peace will be
ours one* more. lx-t those boast of
patriotism who have reveled in power
and the spoils of office for twenty
vears. yet never heard the sound of
hostile bullets on the battle field ; but
do you, whose toils and wounds best
prove your love of the republic, put
the seal to your labors by placing your
gallant and skillful leader in the Ex
ecutive chair of the nation, so that the
bones of your comrades, who died for
liberty, unity and peace, may not in
vain whiten the hatiic fields of the
country. To do this, ignore the lines
of party, and let the blue and the gray
forever fade from our sight as colors
of oppor-iug forces. Our own loved
banner gives us all the colors we need,
and over us hereafter may the
Flm of frrodom u> Vatog nn.
Sour, ftnd order nd damn
Round no pytntmlf of ltlii and law,
And *er lb# fttara above look doarn
On the .tar. below In oar baaaar'a rrowa.
And we shall then know that the
stars which represent the States of the
Union, like the stars of the heavenly
coustellations. will be forever and in
separably united, although each shines
with its own light. Comrades, let our
music be "of the Union," and our step
"the charge," and with us shall rest at
last the enduring victory.
A CLKKUYMAN in Pittsburg lately
ronrried a lady with whom he received j
the substantial dowry of 110,000 and
a fair prospect for more. Soon after
wards, while occupying the pulpit, he
gave out a hymn, read the first four
stanzas and was reading the fifth,
" Zurrrrr M mj gratrftal heart
Hit botmdlftaa gmtw artnrr,"
when he hesitated and exclaimed,
"Amen! The choir will omit the fifth
verse, and sat down. The congrega
tion, attracted by his appareut con
fusion, read the remaining lines:
hEVKK Leavenworth doctors gather
ed around a man who had fallen on
the aide walk. Four of them called
it a case of sunstrokr, and the other
three said it was a fit. Along came a
small boy and proved that it was a
banana peel.
CEITTRAL
STATE NORMAL SCHOOL
(Eighth Norrruil Scho'4 limtriet,)
LOCK HAVEN, CLINTON CO., PA.
A. N. ItAUB, A. M., Principal.
r pHIS SCHOOL,an at present con-
A Btltu'ed, olb-ra tba ry b*al tactlitioa I; pro
faa-lorntl and daaai-al l-aralog.
Building* |*M lou*. Inviting nod comrnodkMja; cm.
pl-tely banted by •l-.ili, w-ll v-ntiUk-l, and fumkb
••I with * bountiful eupply of pure w a Ur, ft l|inil ,
water.
I juration B-.ltliful AND MAY of MM.
Bur rounding e.-n*ry ua*urpaaa*d.
T-arbere -xp-n-u. ad, -Brian t, and alio tu llurtr
work.
Id*, iplina. firm ami kind, uniform and thorough.
K*p-he—• tnod-rata
Fifty o*at* a w—k deduction to Uioaa ft charing to
taarh.
Btudanta admitted at any tlnir.
Conrae* of atudy pr-wcrlbed by Uje Cut.: I. M -1-1
Heboid. If. I'raf.ratory. 111. Kl-tii-nUry. IV. IV .
an tide.
APJIUCT r<iiun
I. Academic. 11. Commercial 111. Muek. IV. Art.
The Kl-m-ntar and fl-l-ritlfli cur*— ar- f,.„
l-awlunal, and etud-nU graduating therein rac*la
Htata I'lfloma., conferring tb- following and 'ori
ponding d-gr— Mvl-r of tb- Kl-m-nu, and M*(-r
• f tlia Bdaocaa. Cinduat-w In th- otb-r come-* r<- -l-
Xutrnal t'-rtlßrat-e of th-lr atUlnm-nta, algn-d b
lb- Faculty.
Tb- I'ruf-mlunal 'our*— ar- llbaral, and ara in
tborougbu-aa not Inf-rior to tbuaa of our b-at 'oll-g. •
Tba flat* require* a lilgbar ordar of rttlr-n.lup
Tli- tim- datuanJ It. It la on- of tba |irlrna ob;->ia
ol tbia school to help to aerur- It by furnishing Inta|.
llgaut and eftk iant taai b-ra for bar wboula. To tbla
and It aolirlta young p-reori* of good abllltlaa and
good purpua*n—tbun- aim d-airo to Improee tbalr
tuna and tb-ir tal-nta, aa atudrnta To all ami, It
promt—a aid In d-v-loping tb-ir j-.were and abundant
opportunities for w-11-paid lnlit aftar leasing a>hu..l
For catalogue and t-rina aildr-aa tbr Principal
feoaan or tn niu:
Block bolilrre' Tru-t-aa— J If Marlon, M V., AH.
Brat. Jacob Brown. B. M Bkkford, famual Christ, A
N Haul.. B d. Cook, T. C Hij.pl-, Kaq . 0. Klr.tring
t I'. McCormlck, kaq , W W lunklu. Jobn A Hot.l,
But-Trust*——lbm. A (i. Cutim, Hon If. I. Ih-f
--r-nl*ch. (i-n J—a- M-rrill, Hon William Bigl-r, J C
C. Whnley, K. Mlll-r MH otuilck. Kwp
omcru.
Hon. W 11.1.f AM Bl'il.KK, I'r-akl-nl, f'l-arfl-Id Fa
tl-n. JKBip. MKK It I 1.1. \ Pr-ald-nl, Lurfc Ifarrn I'a
B MILL Alt McCOKMICK, JV~ r-tar>
TIHrMAB YABDI.KY, Tr-aour-r, "
ffOODVAgD SEMINARY.
2o&rdisg and Cay School for Young Laliu
acd Little Children
j SECOND AND LOCUST STREETS,
HAKRIBRURG, PA.
I B-rular t-im rrlll l~gin BRITKMHKK let, I*7*
Course of at ml j—f'laaan and Bci-ntiflr, with Mnur
and Art.
Ibwid and tuition from f JVi to |.V<U a j-r and no
extras.
For circulars and all d-alrabl- informallon addraer
21 -kn IKINCIPAI.
New York Weekly Herald.
ONE DOLLAR A YEAR.
Tlip rirfnUtl'iii fi Oiii |Mi|niUr iiFi*{#r lum trior*
tOAII tf>M*4 during lit* |m*t >*-r 11. nibUitu Ail
t imunH in h*n'l) <iep*rttu. nu. Tin*
FOREIGN NRWH
dip*tch from all of tb*
glob*. I'i#4*r Uo iifS of
AMERICAN NEWS
ar- fit-a tb- T-l-grwplik lx*|*t. h— of tb* w—k da
*ll !(tl(/f flip I'nkKi. Tim f**tur<- kJoiie iu*k<
THE WEEKLY HERALD
tb- moat raluald- chronicler In tl>- world, aa It U tba
rb-ap—L Kr-ry w—k la glrm a laitbful flfrml .<
POLITICAL NEWS
*tnbrrit)f rrnplft# and ti]*|/hN
from H Mdifngtoo. tr liulm*. full rvptrla of tb*
*• poilUcUiatoci tb* aju**u< of tb*
boor.
THE FARM DEPARTMENT
of tb- Wn*i.ir If twain gls— tb- Ut.wt aa wall aa tba
■mat practical ragg—Hon. and dianoreal-a ratalinc to
tba dull— of lb- farwi-r. hlnu for nu.lng Carnr
Pofiaar. Gaaica, Taaca. Vuntaua. Ar., Ac witb
k—ping building* and ul-natb la ra
l**ir. Tbla la aupplani-nt-d by a w-11-dll-d daparl
j mant, wldrly cuptad. undar tha h-ad of
THE HOME,
gl ring rwrlj-w for practical diateaa, hint- f..r making
rlotblng and ur k—ping up wttb tba l.l—t taabmn* at
tba lowaat prtca. Ka-ry Hani of cooking or a—i.m.ma
•uggaalad In tbia dapartm-tit la pra. taraUla l-.t.-l
axiwrta liafor- puUicatbm la-tt-ra ftuaTour Pail",
and l-mdon mrr-apoodanU on tha aary latawt tal.
kana Tba ll.an- l>a,nrt<narit of tba Waaait lira.in
will aara tba houaawif- mora than oua bundrad tin,.,
tba prtca of tb- papar. Tb- ial-raata of
SKILLED LABOR
j ara lonknd aftrr. and aaarytblng partaiuing k. m-
I ( banica arid utir aarlng i carafulla taro-d-d Tb-i-
Hi a paga darutad to all tba Uta.l pha. o| tba Ina.
I "T" m,rk * u M-IThkndiaa. Ar g-. A r .,, u .
tda faaturato found in Iba .part.tl, r-pIM K ,—
and 'oudltaona of
THE PRODUCE MARKET.
Broartx.l Ntwgat b .m and abroad. tngatb-r with
a Broarreary waak. a l>n.i by -luir.-ni do
rlti-. Lirraaar. MraaoaL. In.ain., Pcaa aaL and
Baa >oTt Thar- t. no pa|i-r In tb- ootid that n
taina ao much nawa mat tar atari u—i, aa tb- VI 111
It llnau. which la aant. poataga |wM fnr Onr lt d
lar lon ran aularrlha at any itma
TUB ) r nttr
"mm a?t K t" In • M-aklt F.wm, . DOLLAR
HKRAI.D J } A TKAR
NEW YORK HERALD.
l-f Rroadwat and Ann Htraa, Krw Ycak
PATENTB.
| I>ATENTS procured u|x>n Inven-
I a tlcna. Ko Atroawcr'a Faca ■ Anraara Our
llouaa waa a-ut-liab-d In lMtu. W- fit- CAVFAT*
and obtain TkAlia MARKB. DBBIUK PATRXTB. A
I V 35 N T O lis
T?'',"' ' / y* T liiaantko., with your ..wu
v,! J. ." 1 .V. * "PffHm aa to pal-atatdliti
w" a * " V KL *" Tatcirt Ptcigtn ftur
B* of Inatrurtkm. Ar.. -H.w TO Paora. Parcara. '
tine Ki. okD.th* InY*iur .l.tiirniii
latent Attomrv*,
* F St, naar Pal-wl (tm-a Waahlugkm. D C
MONEY ,iOaH t fi p*r ctr
Atrk 'V> tr lI,KI I,K "ITfAt LIFR IKBlk-
K ** rrt Bmrtrag-. cm
iTn •• Icm than
**" ona third of l*. pra—nt ralu- cf
Uu prupmtj. Any portkm of tb* prtnrt,l can ha
and It baa bom tha ,.f th.
the fmr l" > fl?L. Hi rawala w kmg aa
Oil A HI. Re P. etIKRAf AX. Attcrnarwt.law,
a auatgrCtt—•"'
" Ball-f wil-, Pa*
\f ILLIIKIM HOTEL,
1 * MII.LUBIM. CKNTRK CWXTT, PKXVA.
W. S. MUBSKR, Propria tor.
almnt H •* la Pma'a Yalky.
r'"'" "a* trnm IVbum Btatlm.... tb- L-->•
" ,,k ,mr
PLEASANT SUMMER RESORT.
S£r39ss'£^s- fl s
m* ' ami Mm modac
Jan* B, IfTU-lj*
( ' AIIMAN'S HOTEL,
( *H>oWt*Oonrt ROM*. BkLLRroRTB. PA
a—a r. ***** •*-* *R A*.
A a*d Lfwary attnebwd.
TJROCKERHOFP HOUBK,
X * BBLLKPONTB. PA.
W. R. TELLER, Proprietor.
Oood SompU Room Skond Floor.
uttZZZ rw^ fh "" 1,1
HOUSE,
V * <**" CIIKBTNI T AND JTTIMI ATKBIT*.
PT^^'*"* L 'rtt'y taOMKI fcr mam*-
fcrknM* b*t*ta, I. bpt la aaary nprt aqnnl t aay
ural riaaa hotaU In tb* country. Owing t lb* Mria-
WrffcUMAlb*prt*.,dUnl bJl-aw ra>lwrd
m MKIJUMB.