Naps fronvall'Naticms -.Edward M. Stanton declines the incitation tlf the New 'York Union Leiiine CM, to - 111411e timer. great camp Bitchier : , of - Spirit ingifts *sin progress *r_ wich, Mass. —The next Western New York Convention oT tailors and Pnblialera will tx, 'held at Ithaca. Incendiaries are at work in Sen• *eca Falls, N. Y. They hare burned four - buildings, including a dour mill, aithiri short time. —Hon. Hamilton Ward has been nominated for Congress by the Itepublieins or Chemanng, Stenben and Allegheny conn iicq, N. Y. —At the recent iron , Moulder's Convention, in Terentn, the owners of Ma sonic Hall rettrmd to allow the American flag to lbe 419.45 ed over the building. James and ararles _E. :tames are to be hung ha Worcester, ISlos., on the 25th Of ,Septetaber for the mr4er iasti robbery oft3i)seph K. 'Clark . Your and Gen. J. C. Abbott, 'have been chosen U. S. +Senators by : the -Legislature of North Carelißa. —Thomas J. Robertson has been electc3 U. S. Senator from South Carolina. The Senate has elected F. a. Sawyer for :the long tcrM —The Prince Karagoergewick, suspected of complicity in the zrittrder of rrin , e Michael, has been cited to answer the charge. —The son of the late King' Theo dorons, of Abyssinia, has arrived in Eng lend-aud has gone to Osborne on a visit to tLe Queen , —The little steamer Ben' Porter sank on Skaneateles Lake on the 4th. She was crowded with passengers, but they all reached shore" by wading in four feet of , v:-..ter —Georgia has a central Grant and Colfax club, the headqnarters at Atlanta.— Ex-Goveruct Brown is President of the Exeentice Committee. which is scattered tlano.gL—Jutthe State. —The Erie Railroad Company have dtter4ed to make some elegant saloon cars tcr their road, to be used by families or private parties, while journeying over it. -11 , m. Wm. Pinckney Whyte has been appointed U. S. Senator by the Gcer c-rnor.:4 3larylana, to fill the vacancy cre ated 1;:y the resignation of Reverdy John - - son. «'L•yte is pro-rebel. latef-t advices friom China svi that the ribels bare finally rsired from the vicinity of Tientsin, having aban doned all hopes of taking the place. —Four young ladies gut into deep and were likely to drown, in the East Elver, (New• York) on the 14th inst.— Three we+o rescued by . a boy ten years old, but the fourth was drowned. L—StLphun Wyant, a wea Lilian • f Itnerly postmaster at Venice. Ca) . vga county, N. Y., is in jail charged with stealing a buggy and harness. „Ile bad twice forfeited bail bonds, and was finally cummitted for trial. 1 —Udore the war Wm. S. Bally, or Newport, lily..,had his printing press thrown ,into the river by a pro-slavery mob. Hi, bas just recovered $3,180 damages of the leaders of the' mob, and the money has Leen paid over. Supreme Court of Massa thusetts has decided that a men was liable for druuoges, where lA , raid a child, eight yo,rh old, gunpowder, by which he . (the child i was severely burned. The merchant Lad -to Pas• $2,000. A fire in Camden, N. J., on Sat milsy night destroyed fourteen buildings. The presence of steam fire-engines from li,iladelphia alone 'accented, it is thought, tlx entire destruction of the place. Brownlow's afice in Nash- Tema:, was filled with negroes on Saturday, 'who had fled from Maury County Tenn., through fear of the liu-Klux-Klan. A raga.. confined on a charge of rape, was taken from the jail in Franklin, Tenn., on .Frid.ty night by a mob and shot. —Hon. John Bell,-of Tennessee, is partly paralyzed, but Otherwise is in fair 11,-I.lth. tle indulges in the extravagant Lnpr that he may live to see Seymour in aug,iratid. —Telegrams from a number of la eoliths in the States of Illinois, Wisconsin, lowa and Minnesota, with two or three ex ceptions, announce the crops of small. gt=ains unprecedented, both in quality and quantity, and the corn never looked better. lei-s sonic blight should come, both the small grain crop and the corn crop will be the largest ever gathered in the Northwest. —Pr. A. S. Might: of Omaha,re ports a case-of trichina in that city. Mrs. Lamb ate some fresh killed pork, and was - very soon taken ill. The - pork was after ward examined and found to be filled with 'parasites. • WILLIAM GABNUL, fOrITICIy a member of the Ohio Legislature and a prom laint politicidn of Union County, has be cothe insane, and has been taken to the Columbus Asylum. The cause is said to be the unsettled condition of political affairs, and particularly, anxiety in regard to the lade impeachment. —A fatal distemper, or dry mar ! rain.is prevailiug,among the cattle through_ out Georgia. Quite a number of fine milch cows in that State have died of it within the last week or two: The disease is on the increase, and in almost every :instance prove , fatal. —An Omaha dispatch says that Baionsm Youso's agent is in SL Louis mak ing preparations for the reception and trans portation of several thousand emigrants to the end of the Union Pacific Railway, where all able-bodied .men can be employed in grading and track-laying. About 2,000 were evp*.k.ted this week. A fire occurred in the-Trenton (N. .1. ;State Prison, Saturday night. The prison was damaged to the extent of about ;10,000, and three of the prisoners escaped. —By his fall from a stairway in Montreal, the other:„day, JrrrEr.sor: DASDS w.,s much injured, three of his ribs being br.ker. He was doing well however,at last ISE= --Four cars of a passenger train on the Pennszlvania Central Railroad were thrown from the track and upset on Sunday last mar Newton, Pennsylvania. Several passengers were injured, but no one was killed. . —Capt.-McClure and the missing boat's crew of the ship Living Age, which teas recently burned at sea,have been heard from. Tbey first landed at the Maldive Islands, where they were kindly treated by the natives, and subsequently succeeded in _ reaching Point de Gallo. --Mt. S. A. Ft.rrturn has just hat - - roiled on his farm near Indianapolis, Ind., a - wLeat crop aggregating over 1(1,000 bush . ids. —Hon. WILLIAM BlGLi.n,of I'enns) - 1- vault, is serions i ly ill at his residence in Clearfield. ; —Jefferson Davis cooterniijates making a trip to Europe as soon as he re covers sufficiently from the effects of his I recent fall fradford *wain Towanda, Thursday, July 23,1868, National- Republican Nomination*. FOR PRIES \'T GEN. ULYSSES S. MANT. rolifAtct VsasrDENT HON, SCHUYLER COLtAk Republitiin Slate tibket. sok amblitivonnouz, 'Ott. :that. kaitrafit, of Montgomery Co. FOB IRTIVIX . IOR oion;BALI, Col. Jacob M. Cathpbell, of tombola Co Union Republican Convention. A Convention of the Unionßepublic= party of Bradford County, to be composed of two delegates from each election district in said county, Will atembTh at the Court House in Towands ItOtough, on MONDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 7, 1888, 7/1 o'- cloCk, to place in nomination candidates to be supported at the ensuing election. The following persons have been Selected as Committees of Vigilance for their reSpec. tive districts, and they are directed to call meetings for the election of b ; :em )el 3 egates to the Convention, at the usual p of hold ing caucuses, between the hours oft and p. m., on Saturday the 6th day of Septem ber. By order of the Union Republican County Committee. C. K. LADD, (hairman. June 1 1 3, 1868. cxnnenxims o 2 tun: wren. - 'Armenia-,Nathan Sherman, Simeon Wil liams, Darwin Alexander. Asylum—B Laporte, N P Moody, Smith Stevens. Alba—A J - Merritt, Charles Sterling, C. Williams, Jr. Athens twp—Sala Ovetu3hire, D L F Clark, A 0 Ellsbree. Athens boro—N C Harris, Dana Park, J P Blood. Albany--Russel Miller, Daniel Kellogg, Alexander English. Barclay—J 0 Blight, Thomas Muir, L Howe& Burlington twp—Robert Prime, Josephus Campbell, C F Nichols. Darlington boro—Dr. Everett, B. Morley, S H Rill. Burlington west,--Johti Blackwell, Jesse B McKean, Ed Loomis. Canton twp.-:LJarnes L Bothwell, I A Rodg ers, Charles Landon. Canton bom—A J Conklin, J W Griffin, John Mix. Columbia—B F Knapp, Alvah Cornell, John Morgan. Franklin—F r Fairchild, J C Ridgway,'Ma thew MarshalL Granville—Ward Warren, DaVid Bayles, William Vroman. Herrick—D C Barnes, Ezekiel Carr, Pem broke Squires. Leßoy—Andrew Boyse, Robert McKee, Reuben Stone, Litchfield—DavidMcKinney,Wm Bostwick, S B Career. Leßaysville bore—R Davies, P H Buck, Stephen Gorluim. Monroe twp—Charles Hollon, Freeman • Sweet, Hiram Northrup. Monroe boro—S S Hinman, M M Coolbangh H C Tracy. Orwell—Cyrus Cook, E M Farrar, J H Cowles. Overton—Reuben Rhinebolt, John Mathews B H Richards. Pike—E S Skeel, G N DeWolf, M H Cod- Ri d Ridgbuing. ry—Sturges Squires, James Mitchell G K Meade. Rome twp—Wm McCabe, Levi Towner, W D Parks. Rome boro—L L Moody, 0 B Young, John Whittaker. Smithfield—C E Wood, John Bird, Jr., E G Durfey. Springfield—S D Harkness, James E Yerkea, Joel Adams. - South Creek—P J Dean, Ira Crane, ‘'ltilo Fassett, Jr. Sylvania bow—Peter' Monroe, Orrin Fur man, - Eli Bturitt. Sheshequin—H Clay Kinney, Fred Gore, Fayette Culver. StandingStone—Geo A Woods, Geo A Ste vens, Atm Brown. Terry—Col J H Horton, John F Dodge, ,H L Terry. Towanda born—H A Frink, Frank Voorhies, Charles Tracy. Towanda twp—A G Maion, George Fox, Geo W Scoville. Towanda Northtlf DeLong, Fred Foster, Hiram Rutty. 'Troy tatiro—G D Long, C F Sayles, John H Grant. sr - Troy twp—Ezra Loomis, W Scott Manly, John McKean. Tuscarora—D D Black, A B Culver, Hiram Shumway. Ulster—Geo W Nichols, Simeon Hovey, C G Rockwell. Warren- r B B Howell, N Young, Jr., John D Kinney. Windham—Asa McKee, B Knykendall, Jae Johnson. Wyalusing—Andrew Fee, John Thompson, W S Vaughan. Welles-Newell Leonard, W S Bowman, A C Brink. Wysox—A H Hine:s, Dr T F Madill, Geo T Granger. Wilmot—Capt John Brown, J W Ingham, John S Quick. ORGANIZE The time is approaching when it is imperatively necessary that the Re publican party should proceed to organize their forces and make every necessary preparation for the coming conflict. It will not do to stand idly by the wayside trusting to the justice l of our cause, and the acknowledged strength and popularity of_ our nominees: Many a good and noble cause has been lost by the apathy and carelessness of its advocates ; and it becomes the Republicans, at this critical period in our nation's and the world's history, to. be careful that the cause of human freedom and civiliza tion in not imperilled by tbeir over confidence or want of energy. In this county the harvest will soon be over, and, it is to be hoped, the intense heat will have abated its vigor, and our friends most go to work and organize their fqrces in every district. They should form a Republican club and have weekly meetings, and there consult on the best possible means of swelling the Republican majority. Bradford county should give Grant at least 5,000 ma jority, and we khow it can be done if the proper means be used. It is not enough that our nominees shbuld be elected. They should be elected by such a majority as will send terror into the hearth of the enemies of free governments exeryivhere, and settle for all coming time the question of the ~ ality of all men before the la*. To must get out every Repu an voter.. We must use every honorable inenns to induce fairminded Democrat:B to support Grant and Colfax. And above every , thing else, we must take • effectual means to . prevent the polling of fraud ulent vofes. These things can only be done by organization. Fellow. Republicans, organize at once I Let no stone be left unturned to secure the grand result. Now is the accept ed time. Work while it is day. Let us have a majority. in this county that will thrill the hearts of all true lovers of Liberty with jcix. Tnz appointntent of W. M. &vats as Attorney General of the United States hat] been confirmed by the Senate by a vote of 20 to 5. ' FAIR Plaatlrioulhilf. i 1 The Montrose Republica of the 7th inst., copies,our article hi TOW to Fair Play," and makes ft OM tekt for extendd coinnwztaiito, 444 it'iP) 'an M W ane i tot -0041 4 41 . OS Os* Pgraph tiiim. the State Gmo 41 th e ttiblirgh Gaz . ette:' The Ift4ublietut I = lays its grounds of indictment hgainit Mr. LANDON in a series of' Charges, or 4 rather intimations , some which we will 'notios, though they, are lin such an intangible form that W I is impossi ble to meet them squarelZ. Great ettessis laid ripen the fact that the two papers mentioned , have made these covert attack!) upon Mr. LANDON. Now we consitr this 'fao't as complimentary, rather iihan other wise. 11; merely signifieh : that Mr. Liao); has not been used td 'further the scheines of the rings land cliques that surround those papers.r As to the State Guard , partialerly, we should look with great suspicion -up on any measure or any mai), it praised. If we Mistake hot, Mr. .iiiribt; had occasion to administer a elimerited. i ! rebuke, to the conducters iof that journal, during the late session of the Legislature. 1 .i That Mr: LANDON voted for Gnleral CAMERON for United States Senitor is an unfortunate charge to hririg against him, at this time. -Is there a Repub lican in this Senatorial district who has not congratulated himeelf as to the result of that electimp If so, then his perceptions arelper i verted by prejudice, or he is wofttlly ignorant of the coarse of our tf. Si Senator. If the Republican desires tb take is sue with Mr. Lext)o); on that - vote, we have no desire to evade! th 4 question.: Gen. CAMERON'S Senatorial course has met the approbation of !every Repub lican paper in the State ] , F•ven those journals which had hereferebitterly opposed him, have hat the - fairness and magnanimity to come out and give him the praise he lhae so richly earned. It is a feeble 1 ' accinsation to bring against any mart that he was instrumental in electing SIMoN CAME RON United States Senator Or if the Republican objects to the manner of the support given to Gen. V., then we say, that under the ciranistances,"•in our judgment, it was proper and timely. The Republicari probably thinks ,he should haver Oted for,Mr. GROW, without regard Ito ansequen ces. To this we do not agree. Such was not our judgmentiatithe time= and the result and its .ttending eon sequences have fully 'confirmed our belief. W 9 will not yield to the 1 Republican, even, in admiration foci Mr. GROW, nor in a de ire to see him occupy positions fort which he is I eminently fitted—butlthe Senatorial contest which ended in G6neral CAME RON'S election, was a pechliar one, in which the people were greatly inter ested. The success bf Gen . ,C. was the avoidance of a re sult which look ed like a public calamity j and as such it bad our hearty and zealous support. We are proud to-day,iof Ithe result of the election—a pride 'Which is held in common with nine-tenths of the Re publicans of the State. ,• Mr. Lama was ne s t, , is the Repub • limn intimates, " let off from all important committeetr df the Senate, except at his own request. That he was not placed at the I head of the Committee on Railroa4, was a dis courtesy on the part of I the Speaker, certainly, but the reason for which was well known at iHarrisburg; and which was no discreeit to Mr. LANDON —though it may account for the fling in ,the Pittsburg Gazette. The Reporter has made no threats —the insinuation in thetßepublican to that effect is entirely gratuitous and uncalled for. We leave all threaten -ing and preparations for bolting to others. We shall support the nomi nee for Senator in gad faith, and promise him the anal majority in Bradford, whether it be Mr: LANDON or some Republicanfrotn Susquehan na or Wyoming. Our i word _of cau tion was to our Montrose cotemporary who seemed to - be lying the gronud for a possible bolt. is the Republican 1 ready togive its pledge to support the nominee of the Conference, or are the aspirants for the o.enatership in Susquehanna determined en enforce their desires at the eXpense of the harmony and integrity' of the , party? We have but little interest in the nomination for Seater in this Dis trict. We are content to leave-it . to the people, having full) faith that the nominee will be w orthy of our sup port, and of the confidence and votes of the Republican of the District. 1 Any of the gentlenten named, will make good Senators, and we shall support them cheerfully, if nominated, Our judgment is, that Idr. 'fusee); should be returned, Ifor ; reasons which we have already gieen. We have a right as a publit *real, to say this much, so long as we do not derogate from the wants oft others. We be lieve that there` ie a man in the district—tare mignt, truthfully say in the State)—who can lie as useful to the party and the Cana; in the Sen ate, as Greece Lssasi So believing we shall be glad to eeeihim re-eletted. If the people think etherwiee, we shall bow in cheerful! submisNion to their verdict. Bat the question . as to who shall be Senator is not all that is involved in the nomination; The attempt is made to blacken the eputation, and destroy the character of Mr. LANDON. Men are not content a i . .obinit to the decrees of the peoplei but they_ge endeavoring by insinuations and in nendoes to create the ;repression that Mr. LANDON has ban guilty of some terrible offence, or has become so utterly unprincipled and corrupt, that he has " forfeited fair renown," and is only worthy of tbC appellation of rogue or scoundrel. jlf this is true, then he deserves th 4 rehuke of his constituents, and is i entitled to the contempt of all honedt men, if it is - • - not true, then hlatfiltstallentashould stand by hliny tOtegat iii} ibom attach *IAA ptspriug of ZaPpeilleakii4iiti. Mr: LANDON hes done too IntrOisztvice'ln the Re- , publican rinks' 04e — executed with out a triali l and wiihtittt a shadow of evidence. I:he itePublican party has not a superiluiti of such advocates that it can arta thdisgrace'and ex pel them because their , zeal and'abil ity brings down upon their heads the ill-will of the Cepperheads. What would be the inevitable ef fect of the tactics , adopted. by, the Republican if carried . out to ktn legit= taate.resnit. iirtiV• if the vile befit • nation of that paper were fairly put, and believed, then Mr. LANDON would be not only a disgrace to the party but socially and imorally unworthy of respect His Usefulness as a par tizan certainly, would be destroyed. The pally ehoeld hasten to denounce and repudiate hint\ Does the &Pub lican advise auch course ? We opine not. We observe that Mr. LANnoN is announced as one of the speakers who ale expected to can vass the state during the summer to advocate the elebtion of Gun and CoLrex. Is it positible that the Chair man of the State,' Central Committee would allowsuch an announcement to be made, withput previous inquiry into the " .charges " which the Repub lican thinks se dieadful and serious? We have protested against this way of striking down any man, as being unjust, :and injurious to the welfare of the party. We have ev ery confidence in the honesty, sense of justice and fair-dealing of the Re publicans of tlui District, and we do not believe thatthey will permit any man to be disgiaced because he is apparently in the way of aspirants for office. liiirON his way home to North Carolina from the New York conven- tion, Governor Vance took occasion to ventilate his t ideas in Richmond, in the course of which exercise he said that what the confederacy fought for during,the war would be won by the election' of ~,eyntour and Blair.— "Is it there ye bre,me hearty ?" We did not know; the conspiracy had gone to that extent, ; although the platform and Blair's letter both mean war, we did not _understand them to have meant separation. Jeff. Davis insisted, in his official papers, that slavery was not the cause of seces sion, but that there were inherent causes of separation " between the North and South Which would make it finally successful. _We never un derstood them,and since slavery was abolished indulged the hope that the Union was secure. •Governoi — Vance says no. The election of Seymour and Blair will establish the confed racy. Of the* purposes he is better authority thad we profess to be. We therefoie believe him. Stir Gen. (runt, in his letter ac ; cepting the'nbmination for the Preei• dency, emphatically says that the COUNTRY MUSTI HAVE PEACE, and the sentiment is accepted and applauded by the whole Republican party.— Frank Blair, in his letter bidding for the Vice Piesidential nomination from theDemocracy,says that as soon as that party gets into their power it muse overturn by revolution and vio lence the lawslof the country, and this sentiment wt.s so true a reflection of Democratic intention's, that he was promptly nominated. Now, we beg all good citizens, whether Republi- Cans or Deinbcrats,to calmly consider these respective positions of the two parties. Thb Republican party is fOr peace, justie,e and prosperity ; the Democratic party is pledged to vio- lence, oppression and consequent un• settled condition of the country.— Which will you have ? DissATlsFran.—The National Corn mittee appointed by the Democratic Soldiers' and Sailors' Convention at New York, which adjourned before the nominations were made, were empowered to meet and take action upon - them. This commitee, compos ed of the leading men of the Conven tion, ,we learn assembled last Friday afternoon, find had a very stormy session, their dissatisfaction with Seymonr and Blair being almost uni versal. A resolution to ratify the nominations was strongly opposed, and on being brought to a vote was only - adopted by one majority. Those who voted against the resolution declared their determination not to support the! ticket. STRIKE.-4here has been a pretty, general strike, for several days, among the miners of Schuylkill coun ty. They demand that eight hours shall constitute a day's work, and that their wages shall be increased= Some violence has taken place. At operations where the workmen were willing t 4 continue their labor, they were forced to suspend and join the striker. There is but little coal on hand, and some of 4 the furnaces, it is feared, have to be blown out. TIIE tiESIDENT I B MEBESAGE.—The President,oh Saturday, sent a special message \ tp Congress, wherein he recommetids an amendment of the . Constitution, 50 that the people may vote direptly for President and Vice- President, instead' of, as is now done, through the cumbersome machinery of NlectOrai Colleges ; and that they hold offi c e for six years instead of four. ; and that if both become inca• pacitated, the Secretary of State and so on in prder through the members of tha Cabinet, shall . fill the office of Presidenttilt another;election be had. .Ho' also alleises that United States Senators be chosen directly by the people,tastead of "by the Legislatures; and that the Judge of supreme Court be appOinted for teems of twelve years instead - of foi life. BLLIWI3 1111170LIIITIONARY WITTER. Gen. hint P. Blair, a abort , time before the isseMbling of the Now York Demerit* t lobAtidithip, wrote a lettet 0 bet Broidheitd, ihfcb,,MaY be set dOWn for i the Presl• dency. , 'the s inoist infainous one, revolutionary in its spirit, land must be condemned by all right thinking men. Even prominent Dem ocrats repudiate the 'sentiments ex pressed, .amnng them Senator Bucks. lew of this State, who in a speech a few days ago emphatically refused to endorse theta. gut glair failed tti procure the Presidential , nomination, and secured the second Once on the ticket. Of course he will be repiadi itt4 by the people at the Novembei election. This exttaortlinaq let r of ...the Democratic candidate for the Vice Presidency, we print on o F outside, that -every reader of the Rirosamt may see what he proposes to do in the event of the success of the De mocracy. It should be read by every voter, and the legitimate result of the policy therein proposed well consid ered. This letter, and the outrageous Inc of conduct it marks out, is not to ' be taken as the foolish vaporing of an erratic and •impulsive man. The Democratic Convention, in the face of this letter, „unanimously nominated the writer for the Vice Presidency.— The rebel Generals composing the -leadern of the Southern Democracy are loud in their approval and praise of this letter, and enthusiastic in support-of the author, because they see in his success the hope of regain ing for the " lout cause" all that rebellion had so cruelly deprived them them of. The intelligent voters of the north will repudiate the infamous propositio6 made in this letter, and overwhelm with defeat the party that endorses the writer, Who Made the Democratic Platform. The Convention Committee appoint ed to dridt a platform and resolutions, embrace the-following : Wade Hamp ton, ex-rebel General of South Caroli na, who was an original secessionist, raised one of the first Palmetto regi men ts, devoted his large fortune to the "sacred cause," fired the Southern heart on numerons occasions by publicly declaring • that the Yankees were simply endeavoring to make slaves of the chivalry, and whO,after fighting through the war, refused to submit, after Joe .tobnson,his superi or, had surrendered, but ran away with a troop of horse to South Caro lina ; William Preston,rebel General of Kentucky,who had not so much of an excuse_ for treason as State seces sion : E. Barksdale; rebel General of Mississippi ; Charles C. Langdon, who through the colums of the Mobile Advertiser, did very much to precipi tate the - revOlution in Alabama, and T. A. Bocock,Speaker of the Virginia rebel House of representatives. The Committee, likewise, includes such notorious copperheads _ as Jas. A. Bayard, of Delaware ; Stephen Archer, of Maryland, and J. E. Mc- Donaldf Indiana. Loyal men of the country, how do you enjoy the spectacle ? Those of you who are now disposed to act.with the Democracy,how do you relish the prospect of having such charaders as the above draw up a platform and declaration of principles for you ? ,War Democrata, who abandoned the peace organization during the rebel lion, - can you now believe that the organization sympathizes any less with the rebellion than it did four years ago?— N. Y. Commercial Adver tiser. sir James L. Orr, in his recent valedictory message as Governor of South Carolina, takes strong grounds . 'against the folly of attempting to reverse the prevailing policy of re construction, and shows the futility of all efforts to deprive the freedmen of the right of suffrage. Ho! counsels • submission to the existing order of things, and advises the &kith to make the best of it. For twenty years Gov. Orr was a leading Demo cratic statesman in his section of the Union. For a long period he was one of the most distinguished mem bers of the House of Representatives, and ultimately Speaker of that body. He went into the rebellion with a good deal of reluctance ; but once in he stood among its conspicuous champions, was a Senatoi from South Carolina in the Confederate Congress, and remained 'faithful to its cause till the final catastrophe, He was always esteemed a skillful politician and a wise icounaellor, and ere the rebellion broke — but had great influence with the northern Democracy. The opin ions •of such a man in the present crisis are entitled to far more weight than those of such hotspurs as Henry A. Wise, Wade Hairipton and Robert Toombs. EEMI 38... Tuns was a negro delegate from Tennessee in the New York Democratic convention, and his odor did not seem to be at all offensive to the Democracy there assembled.-- Neither was • the projection of his heel at all in their way. - And the wool on his head did not call out an objurgation. Happy Democracy lr thus reconciled to the colored indi- Vidual who is ready to cast hiallot with the "Lion: hearted" I.llarmoni , OTIS." • - LAFAYETTE COLLEGE.—The • Thirty. third Annual Commencement of this Insti tution will be held on Wednesday, July 29. Besides the orations of the graduating class, the candidates foi the Master's Degree will be represented by two Orators, Rev, James Roberts and W. S. M'Clean, Esq. the for mer from the Franklin and the litter from the Washington Literary Society. Ex-Gov. Pollock will preside tit the Com mencement Dinner, given• by the ladies of Easton to the Alumni and-other friends of the College. Tuesday morning Only 28th) the Board of 'Trustees and the !Board of Examiners from the Pardee Sciendfic Course hold their meetings and the 10... Unions of the Franklin and Washington Literary So.' oldies take place in their regrow:live Halls. The Society of the Alumni meets in 'the afternoon, and the Hon. Galusha A. Grow, Ex• Speaker of Congress delivers the Annual Oration in the evening. war THE Freedmen'al Bureau bill re cently Passed and noir before the President, provides for a discontinu ance of the Bureau on the first of January, 1869. It is suiposed John son will sign it. - —SeYinour tho "great &ate' by the Oineluaati ; Brooklyn ,Union, snail up by saying that the Deinoeratio platforoiooosists mainly 4 mitoses at the past. Itamptort,: Parretti Barks &if% Frei rabari, Pofiytb, Yager and Other rebel Demos:ate are to take the stump spinet, Grant la the free States. —Beytnones ,physieisais say be is likely to become crazy within a year. If he has any hops of defeating Grant, he is '. 8 04 Ikea?' 42The New tort. Otot sari no ea.: planation can relieve 'Elias letter of the odium which belongs to its spirit and its ideas.- —Daniel S. Dickinson used always to. say that the knew When Horatio Beymoui Most des 'd to be a candidate for office by the pe itY with which he declined it. —Not ithstandiog the Democracy have been studyMg the map of the United ttatea for some thin, they have failed to soover anything there but "Salt river." -L-The wont thing the Coppeihead papers are saying of General Grant is that - he lis no speech-maker. The Democracy delight, in bluster. —The Democratic thermometer in dicated a startling degree of temperature. Sol and Seymour combined is• more than they can endure. —Denunciations of Grant an d =Has and cheers for Wade Hampton and Fort:ist were the alternating courtesies of the Democratic National Convention. —Prcihinent Democra l ts in.St.Louis threaten to bolt the ticket as they can't stand Blair. Where the Blake are 'best known they are leatit liked. —The Cleveland Leader" says : " If you want to make an Ohio Demoond mad, say Blair to him. It is worse thlcri a red rag to a turkey rooster. —With Seymour's friende burning orphan asylums, and Blair's friends dispers ing the " State Governments" of the South, we are promised lively times in the event of the election of the democratic, candidates. —This more polite Democrats would withdrair Blair, but they dare not Po affront their Southern friends. Forrest, Wade Hampton, Wise and Vance want Blair right where he is, and they will keep him there. --It took the Democratic National Convention, three days to nominate a candi date, but only three minutes to pass a reso lution.requesting President Johnson to par don Jeff Davis! —The Democrats re evidently alarmed at the inevitable consequences of the outspoken letter of General Blair, and the World is laboring with all its might to explain the way. --A Western paper says that the D'emociata in Indiana are so enraged at the defeat of Pendleton that they actually show symptoms of apoplexy if a greenback is exhibited to them. --When people are drowned can non are sometimes fired for tho purpose of raising their corpses. The Democrats have been firing cannon over Seymour and Blair, but there is no hopes of gat* their heads above svats;. —An old soldier who has lost , an arm says "I am waiting to see if the un ple of thiii country are going to elect Hora tio Seymour, and if. they do I will swear that I lost; my arm in a threshing machine, not In defense of my country." . —Blair is in favor of overthrowing tke Governments formed in every Southern State. He is for Nullification first and Rev olution afterwards. His:, election means another war, to bring back things as they stood in 1860. —Seymour is the.embodiment of De mocratic hatesand prejudices ,He represents fully the sentiment that opposed and ob structed the war throughout ; and has done everything possible to prevent reconstruc tion since. —Frank Blair said to the crowd which he welt addaessing in New York on Friday,' " I wish I could groan as well as you , do." He will have a chance to develop. his groaning powers on the night of the November election. —A New York paper says that Blair takes whisky for medicinal purposes. The Hartford Post says': "We are inclined to think it was " for medicinal purposes"— to wit, for corns. He was dreadfully corned all the time he was here." —Hendricks gave Seymour a first rate character in his recent speech in the Senate ; but "didn't think it necessary to go into Blair," and "hadn't time to explain what the platform meant." Not altogether satisfactory, but prudent. —ln 1861 Mr. Seymour declared that "successful coercion would be as rev olutionary as secessioc." His conduct throughout the great struggle was in accor dance with that opinion. The men whO saved the Union want no such man to ad ministei the government. _ —The Boston Transcript says that; the New York platform calls to mind a* remark made by President Felton in the Fremont campaign : " Stand on the Demo cratic platform! Why, I should as soon think of standing on the platform of Jack Ketch! ' —The Norwich Bulletin, having read Mr. Belmont's speech, in which. he charged the expe i nses ,of the war upon the Republicans, says that Gen. Forrest ought to have followed in a ,speech charging the Fort Pillow massacre upon the - "niggers" who were butchered. ' —The nomination, of Seymour is an affront to every Unionsoldier, an insult to the friends and memory of every dead hero, and an offence to every loyal man. If the Copperheads can bear the burden they have just shouldered, no one but themselves can find fault after the election. —How will the Democrats, who did not like to support Chase- because he was an old abolitionst, relish Frank Blair, who up to-the time his. brother was turned out of Mr. Lincoln's cabinet was one of the most ultra abolitionists in the country. He is ready to be an abolitionist again as soon as his personal interests point in that way. —The Chicago Times—good Dem ocratic authority—publishes a despatch from St. Louis, which says that Gen. Sherman,• on Friday evening, was asked what he thought of the Seymour and Blair ticket. The General promptly replied : "It is a bad nomination, and will be beaten all to pieces, " Grant will be elected." —Poor Chase since his fall before Seyniour's Convention, and his inglorious rejection by that body, must feel very much as the dilapidated loafer did when he gave utterance to the following soliloquy : "Yen I thinks of what I am And what I used to was, I thinks I've thrown myself away Without sufficient cos." . —The nomination of Seymour, says a Democratic paper, will give general satis faction to the ,Soulitera wing of the party.-- , . Why should it not? That "wing" has no warmer friend than Seymour. It is but just that one whose sympathies were so entirely with the rebels, during their struggle .to break up the government, should now re ceive his reward. M==l • . , Republicans everywhere, sari Press,- should understand that; bright as the prospeot is;'thei must work to win. There is no pokier' ae fatal to a party as over confident*. ; , Tow is the time for RepubliCaris to 'appeal to their Democratic friends and neigh; bore. These truths new adinitted by all honest men of the other party should not be allowed to be forgot ten ; :end every Democrat should be asked to contrast his candidates and platform with those of the Republi cane. But more than this. The Nepali• cans owe much to themselves. They 'should perfect i and eitrentl their or ganization, by 'forming clubs and committes,and by getting ready their lists uf voters, including the Demo crats ind.doubtful. The inquiries of their .tale com mittee should be promPtly answered This Grant campaign must not be conducted by large meetings, but by neighborhood gatherings, where the beat orators should be.invited to speak. Immense sums of money are wasted in these grand mass assem blies, and nobody is conirerted. The best doduments to circulate are the Republican newspapers. Long speeches and• heavy essays are only read by the few, while the able Re publican paper, fresh, newsy,and full of point instructs and enlivens at the same time. Remember, Republicans, you must work to win. The rebel Democracy will Boon recover from theii despair; and, like the legions of Lee, after Meade defeated them at Getysbnrg, in 1863, will 'reorganize for one last onset of revenge. SCENE AT THE DEHOCRATIC CONVEN• TioN.—The Sun report of the proceed ings of the Democratic Convention, contains the following scene : Pennsylvania, ere this ballot was finished, went out to consult. She was gone an un conscionably long time—at least so it seem ed to the sweltering throng who sat and stood gasping for breath during her absende. At length, with staid step and stolid visage,• she threaded her way back to her seat, and amid a painfully oppressive silence announ ced that she cast her 26 votes for the inevi table Asa Packer. The whole assembly screamed with laughter. We .don't exactly see where the funny part of this joke comes in, but perhaps the delegates from Pennsyl vania appreciated it. Ase PACKER as a candidate, would have been a vast improvement upon HORATIO .SEYMOTJR, for though the latter may be a man of greater abilities and more cunning as •a politician, PACKER would have come much nearer carrying Pennsyl vania. It is said that PACKER might have received•the nomination had the • / delegation been earnestly for him.— Bnt unfortunately, the frigid Wool). WARD thought himself the only proper compromise candidate for - the Presi-, dency, and had no doubt but that in due time his transcendent abilities would make him the prominent man before the Convention. Then there was the "weak kneed" Bigler, who had no idea that a ° ticket 'could be framed without his name being upon it for Vice President , ; and the rail. road man Cass, whose Vice Presiden tial ambition was known to all. In this hungry crowd of 'demagogues ' PACKER stood no chance, and be was slaughtered in the house of his friends. P*NBYLVANIA STATE TEACHERS' As socienox.—The. annual meeting of this body will be held at Allentown, Lehigh county, on Tues4y,Wednes day, and Thursday, Aug. 4, 5, and 6. The State Superintendent has called a meeting of the County Superinten dents.of the State, to be held at tar= risburg, on Tuesday, Friday, and Saturday proceeding : and it is prob able that nearty all the County Sw perintendents of the State will be present at the :Allentown meeting. The Chairman of the Executive Com mittee, It S. Jopes of Erie, is labor ing earnestly to make the meeting one of the most interesting and prof itable ever held in the State. UP, BOYS, AND AT THESS 4 .- --Now 18 the time to go to work, friends. The is sue is joined ; the battle is drawing on. Close up the ranks, and get ready for the conflict. Guest is at the head, and will unfailingly lead us on to victory ; but victory requires work, and now is the time to begin.. Sar THE new tax bill has finally passed both houses of Congress and is before the President for his signa ture. This bill reduces • the tax on whiskey to 50 cents per gallon. —The Pittsburg Gazette says _that, Chase by giving -his influence in faior of Johnson's acquittal, got half a vote for President in the Democratic National Con vention ; Blair, by writing a letter in faVor of Nullification and Revolution, got the nomination for Tice President from the same Convention. The Chief Justice, it seems, was only half a renegade, while Blair went the whole figure. QUARTERLY REPORT of the condition of the First National Bank of Towanda, on the morning of the first Monday of July, 1868: RESOURCES . . Loans and. Discounts $170,784 19 U. S. Securities deposited with the Treasurer United States. 175,600 00 Do . .on hand 1,550 00 Banking House; Furniture and - - Fixtures - 8,000 00 Expenses and Premiums. 917 61 Cash items ' - 1,659 36 Due from National Banks - 62,848 44 Due from other Banks and Bank- . .a era 322 81 Legal Tender Notes on hand... 31,262 00 National and State Bank Notei. 6,746 00 Specie 1,964 71 11•actional currency 1,100 76 Overdraft 268 04 $462,422 62 LIABILITIES. Capital Surplus Fund Circulation.. Individual Dep05it5..:,161,573 72 Due Treasurer United States.. 29,240 67 Dne National Banks . 2.061 55 Profit and lOU 2,721 . 68 Dividends unpaid . , 220\00 I, N. N. Bwrrs, JR., Cashier of.te First National Bank , Towanda, do so h lerianly swear that' the above statement is true to the best of. my knowledge and ballet. N. Nt Barra, Jr., Cashier. Sworn and subscribed before me this 7th day of July, l 86& H. J. ILS.DiLL, &corder, it IS i4rtiam, foR cots - ifsiltittErA TIM StaiND GREAT NATIONAL FIELD 'nun Iteid at Auburn, N. T, r in June, 1868,. waa . the most Tuoaomin and ErrEN set ever held in this noun* for the. trial of Mowing Machines op to thjK time, July 10th, 1868. And being the iirdt National Trial that ban been held slime the 'great United States Tilal of 1857, it attracted the attention of all intereste,d in the Welfare slid progress of the AgrieultOral conituti atty. The State legislature of the State of New York appropriated For the purpose of this trial, and': intrusted its management to STATE AGIiIdULTUBAL SOCIETY ! The judges- Were chosen from different States, and were T'HE MOST PEDIMENT SCIENTIFIC AND AGRICULTCRAL MEN FIFTYININE DIFFERENT MACHINES WERE ENTERED For competition, and over Two Wsmts occupied in the numerous severe tests to which they weie subjected. • The First Premium, Grand,Gold Medal, in, the First Class BUCKEYE for Superiority over all other Competitors, In perfection of work in all kinds of Grass, and on every variety of Bur- face, Lightness of Mechanical Construction, Simplicity, Strength and Durability. The above Machines are on hand and for laic by At Me new Hardware. Store, 129 Main Street, Towanda, Pa July 16, 1868.- BRADLEY'S DUPLEX ELLIPTIC HOdP SKIRT! POWELL & CO., Dadra to call especial attention to a LARGE INVOICE OF TUE IPSOVE NAMED CELEBRATED SKIRTS JUST RECEIVED, Which they now over at LESS THAN ONE HALF FORMER PRICE! 1 July 14, 1868.-U li o t X P:1 NEW GROCERY AND PROV McCA.EIE & MIX, Respectfully announce that they have com mensed the GROCERY AND PROVIKON BUSINESS In the North Store of Hermes New Block And have now In store a full assortment o Goods in their line, puroluused in New York which they have 'selected with =canal care and will sell at the lowest possible rates. - Their stock Is complete In every particular, and In. quill,. sod pries cannot fail to give aatiisfeetion They mat the patronage of the public, with the assurance that first rate goods and fair 43callng may always tie espec,ted. They have now in store, ind for sale by the ease or single jar, a large stock of MOORE'S SELFSEALING AIR TIGHT FRUIT JARS; .$125,000 00 30,000 00 . 111,605 00 Which theyrecomm end as the very beet l e:Wed s to the patgle. They- ask for this jar, an pee: tion and trial, u its merits are apparent to ,ev my one.. U. North store .la Nene. New Block Nidn Areal, Towanda, Ps. • ; rrir . CIAEIR paid tor PRODUCE,. and tor BUTTER, at the highest market rates. JAMES IlleCaliE, HARRY MIX. Jane 25, 1868. $462,422 62 STAGE PROPERTY FOR SALE.—, ma, 1 demount wagon, 2- sleighs, hones, and lumen, for wile cheap. Enquire of or 'Woe W,- H. DARLING; Oman. Pe • June ioses,—te Netb lbeirtistinatts. FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS 114 • ,COUNTRY.. Was'awarda to the S. N. ASPLVIVALL; REMOVAL! = 1133 CA oxi tq 4 .0) Co . - i 3 j •... EMI : 1 1 • 02 ciD 11 SION STORE' ! . MAIN STREET, ALVORD & BARBER Have removed their BOOK STORE AND NEWS ROOM To the magnificent new etore\in MERCUR'S BLOCK, Nearly opposite the " Ward House,'' where they are prepared to offee-to their- old customers, and the public generally, a new and carefully se lected assortment of BOOKS! Comprising Standard Works, ls;ovels Text Books, &c. Their assortment of BIBLES, TESTAMENTS, ' HYMN BOOKS, PRAYER BOOKS, etc , will be found to be complete. A large assortment of Sunday School Books, Cards &c., always on hand.. Writing Papers& Stationerg As cheap as ever sold in this or any other 'market Our arrangements with School Book publishers are such that we are prepared to offer the se ries of Books now in useligt the Com mon Schools of this county to retail dealers, at as low fietres as they can • buy- them in New York. Orders sent for an book publish e , We ked / r) donstantly on hand all he Daily and Weekly Papers, Mag azines, Periodicals, &c. Give us a call AINOAD & BARBER Towanda, July 13; 1868. SUSQUEHANNA 'COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE, TOWANDA: BRADFORD Cors• TY, PA. coin ow INSTReCTION Itiv. , SAIIIIFJ. F. COLT, D. D., PeaNor', CHARLES L. SnAw, A. M.. A. F. Bsceaks4.. A. IL, MISS MART J. COLT, Moils! SeboGl. Mrs. N.C. ELerox. Mies JEAN K RITCIIIg. Miss H. H.. WILLS, Registrar. CALENDAR. FOR POURTZINTII The School Year ieldivided into fourses , i - n , of eleven weeks each—securing forty.four term time. There will be a- Recess from Pe cember 24th to January 4th, and another fro= the 9th to the 19th of April. The hummer V. cation is of six weeks. The first session opens on Monday. Auet-: 11, and closes October 30. The second opens on Monday , Nevember 2,.closes Ja ses7 22. Third . sestion opens Monday, January closes April 9. Fourth session opens April l• closes July 2. TiB3S OF TUITION Zir Terms are payable in advance. Pr.pr , will be received at any time. , and charged from. the date of their entrance ; but no deductk: will be made for after-absence daring the Se •lon. MODEL scam'. Primary C!asa Intermediate. EZZEIMEO English Departmetit-Ist yi•ar Chwes... 2 ... 9 0 '3d k 4th " ... 10 0.:? DEEM 311, 4th te 56 " Normal.... Commercial • urea ISITDII3. French and Germari, each Music on the Piano Use of Instrument for Practice Drawing, Modeling, Crayon and Water Coloring, each ' Painting In Oils ' • • - Pupils on Scholarships nay for fuel and contingents • And if boarding in the Institute, fol,use of room and furniture VERXB OF BOARD. For Table fare. room, washing. (8 pieces . Per we'k) fire and light In ordinary, '*4 25 per week 's4 4 75 Booms are tarnished with Bedsteads, liar tresses, Washstands arid Desks. Pupils briag their own bed cicthes, towels, napkins ,acd rings, and toilette apparatus and room lamp!. except by a special arrangement with the Pria elßal. Fire and light for private study will bc &separate charge. Breakages and wilful waste will be cla.trged to the perpetrators when they can be•discovcr edi otherwise.iipon the students in equal pro Portion. IL. Pupils Sill be received and farni,hed with full Boardiutd Tuition, in either Depart. ment, Music and Painting excepted, for the yr at $250, strictry payable semi•ennualiy s %%nee. July 16, 186 s. DR. BAKER, Master Millwright. a isprepared to attend to all business la hialine. He warrants all work done in a work manlike manner. All orders by mill, or other wise, addressed to me at Towanda, will to promptly attended to. June 4, 1864.-3 e TOWANDA, Pa., Jaue 26. Is t , To a:I whom it may concern: I certify that 1 havet.this day appoin ed D. R. BAKER, of To Wanda, Bradford county, Pa.. art agent for the sale of Baines Jamul Turbine iVater Whir for the counties f Bradford. Wyoming, Lygoci ing, Clinton, Clearfield, Tioga and Pourr, in the State of Pennsylvania. Parties vaatiag these wheels can obtain them through him and he Will give his personal attention to putting them in when desired. Partiesty calling aPJ , Mr. Baker, at Towanda, be shorn the wheel, and on application to him he will wa le!' _illustrated pamphlets containing wortin; tables, testimonials, &c., &O. - JAS. A. IiscPIIERSON. -General Agent for Pennsylvania, for'l3o - Jonval Turbine Water Wbeel. PRICE LIST.—CASCADE NE11.1,:4 Beat quality Winter Wheat Moor per to hundred r 0 ,60 pp e t; Beat quality Rye Flour per hundred...... 4 C 4) Corn Meal and Bye and Cora Feed ..... . 75 A flatinargln allowed to den era. We matt for grain. Wheat 12 50, Rye, good. $1 Corn $11.5( Custom grinding usually done at once, as thc capacity of the mill is ancient for a large amount-of work. H. B. INHAM. 'Oamptown, May 7,1889. , 1 rer Sey.t. , ......f a a) 10 t,, 11 4.,, EE I!= E I II