Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, August 01, 1872, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    11
II
adfailtpda
- • xto ft on si .
6000111C11. " S. Wo./12.VOSID.
Towania,lThursday, Avast'l; lB72.
National itepublicatt iteket;•
iszerozwr,
GettArLT&SN3 8. GRANT.
rott - rwit r arammr, •
Lica!, TIMMY_ WILSON.'
Itlviiiiitcati state_ riabee. •
• t - ion oanfttnes,,
GEN. JOHN F. HARTRANFT
- si - rarius =KM, -
•
110 N. ' ULYSgES IttERCUR.
vou AVI:411:41 ISENErtu..,
G. 1 /ARAISON ALLEN.
1-011 CONGIIREIFEM AT LARGE.
GEli. HARRY WHITE,
GEN. LEMUEL -TODD.
Republican Mass
MEETINGS!
hehubliant'ldiies Itectinge will be held in Brad
ford County as I,3llcrws
"xOWAts - DA TUESDAY, AIIoUST 13. 1872,
Afternoon and ETCning.
DEM AV:VILLE; WEDNESDAY, , AUGUST, 14. 1872
MUhloon, 9 tfelock
N HIEN% THURSDAY, AUGUST 15..1572,
ETening
CANToIi. FIIIDAT, AUOtST 11,
.152
Afternoon, I o'clock
These yacetings will certainly be addressed by
BEIANES POLLOCK
rs.flovernOr of reentrylrani', and by such °Mir
.peabers as will be anncsistee4 hereafter.. It lade.
t , •nOined that there shall be no dLeappointment, but
such speakers as see. or .may be announced, shill
proltively address the people,
It is llopeid there will be a full attendance upon
thrremectings,Adiere . tho truth will be faithfully
and dearlyi stated relating to th• political questions
turowed in the present canvass.
\ •
SWALLOW THE LEEK
We have it from one who has been;
there, that the Democratic Iside Of
_ _
Gitr this
the zt.cv and BnoWs Club of ,
place insist that all GREELEY Repui
(
beaus must vote for Beett,ti,cw anti
tie whole Democratic State ticket i 1
October; in order to cariy Penns3d
Vania - fer GREELEY and Bnows in No
vetuber, Will the eyes of Reinibli
cans ever get opened to the real pur l
pose, of these -Liberal Republican
DernoCrats, and - Democratic Liberat
Republicans'? Gr'nEritv Republiea4
will lit urged--by the nice brace 'pi
Reformerl; McCi.uia: and LANne.N I
who spbak for GREELEY here . to-day[
that theymust 'vole for Bu'em.. - at
We once had a canal here, but Brdii
li
ALLw's bill—urged by l'iou:sr—pasS
ed the Legislathre for Living it With
binds and every other right of 6+
-ori!sinal owners overto a corpratiln,
and 'now we have notip. Republicards
had-better draw out of that crowd.'
el-Z- Discussion of the merits of tilii
several candidates for the various Of
fieu?to be . filled this fall, is-becomiti
somewhat ennimated, aud we are glad to see such an evidence that the
py=pf e arc fully awakened to the irr
portanee of nominating l a strong
_ticket. We shall, before the meeting
of the caucuses, publish the names
of all persons mentioned in connec
tion; with the nominations, so tllat
every Republican can act understol-
;
ly when ho comes to vote at the ea -
ens; and the expressed will of the ei •
jorityshOuld, and we have no doubt
will, govern the action of the conven
tion in the selection of candidats'
While we deem it out of place for, the
lteroursu to take partin the campaign
vi
before the nominations are made,? 1 13
may - be - allowed to express the he e
--u
that noue,but pronounced and n •
(luivocal Republicans will be selects .
INSULT TO CATOOLICS.7•At t. 0
GREELEY and .13nowti Club meeting
' the other evening; one of the 'speak
ers prefuced his remarks by repl4-
int; an anecdote ridiculing the Oath.
olio belief, and whhi,,an intelligent
lrishinan arose to regneSt that 4e
,peaker desi4, he was hooted ddlu
with the cry, He's a GIIANT MO T --
Olt him out," whereupon several
flrishmen loft tho room. It L
was n
vain that some of the more discree
f the party told the insulted, it
that the speaker was' a dn to I
and unworthy of notice. His
marks savored too Much of the
um: style.
CironT.—An extensively
call fora G IMELEY and Mows' ra-;
ing in Elmira was published on Tit
day in the Gazflte. Fifty-four voters
~[
whose names appeared in the ',llst.,
published a card in the •.,Idver(irer
;
:i
ye aerday :sating that their nit es
were used without their=conseut;'s d
repudiated the wholei thing. ,ey
ilso..state that thirteen other 'naeles
in the Northern Central . Railviay
shops arc niiii6i. The largest per
tion of the men signing the 'prat 3st
arelxishrien.: The Gm:rLEV fever is
certainly subsiding.' ~- ....
_ ,
The Argo last week publiShed
two notieei :to the effect . that Gen.
Lad come. out for
The editor knew the statement to be
false,' as Gen. llANs'g had-pnblicli de
nied the report, and joined in ealing
a convention of soldiers at .Pittshin
to advance the 'interests of the Re
publican. party.
The Lion and the Lamb litug
down together. C 7 1.1 LANP"N
Mid COL MOLLF are al l uipa t ieedi to
: , peak in this place . to day. If bey
t7 s li all they know about each other,
it will ho :t rich tin , .
•
Cr Lr:4 his rqi , ..) 4ei'dmo
the very bighest, credit—Grep/py .
POLITICAL lIIIITORT REPHATINO
1111111L1r.
The Scranton Republican has it
C'OprOf a Democratic paptt &tea
August 24, 1864 $ the hitt page . of
Which . is more thah half filled with a
Pranttnciamento, headed as folloWsi
"Protest of the leading Republicans
against Lincoln's usurpations; the mis
deeds of a bad executive Meld zip I fe -the
Scorn of the freemen •of the rnited
'States !"_ , - This document is_ signed
0; 4 BENdAMM - WADY, and H..mtur
par= DAVIE, (the latter a relative of
ailge Dine DAVIS, of Missouri.) A
glance - at the hittei,utfair, and malig
nant sentences in this production,is all
hat is n rosary to convince one that,
in the present opptisit ion to President
41tiorrz the history of Anusnax Lrs
, Cores elperie.nde is only being' re
eated. the paper before us, Lm-
F,oru is charged :with being a tyran..,
and "law defyingPresidentnnworthy
any longer to, be confided in, by the
Republican party or the country.
Ho i 8 charged with having usurped
the poWers. belonging to Congress,
and of vesting in himself the law
making functions - in. addition to ii}ib:
dictatorial powers of a Preisident.
We find In it even the base charge
that he refused to sign a certain
,!measure of Congress in order that
"ho might bold the electoral Votes
of certain States at the dictation of
his inordinate personal ambition!"
And in this, wise, prominent Repub-•
licanti like Messrs. WADE and DAMS
—Dee arlader . in the Senate and the
other in the' House of Depresenta
tives—inlB64, arraigned the then
President, ABRAHAM Li:coo : Lir. ev
ery possible way,. regardless alike of
truth and patriotism, a daring 'and
unscrupulous attempt - was made to
break down the prestige, character
and influence of LINCOLN, and that
too, at a . " time when an additional
hundred thousand voluntears were
called for to re-inforce.thestruggling
armies in the. field. Had he not been
a candidate for re-election, the Re
publicans Who, led by Messrs. WADE
and Davis, then .made such an as
-sault upon- him, would • never have
dreamed of such a shameful attempt
L
to undermine him before the
people, by charging him with being
an usurper and ambitious tyrant.
Before the war closed and LiNeoLN
was laid in,his grave, Senator 3VADE.
confessed, in hame and penitence,
that }never had a great and good Juan
been wronged as Liseot.x had' been
by him;
To-day, wo set) a tepttition of such
foul political work. The Republican
enemies and revilers of., Gcu. GRANT
.are neither more respectable nor in
fluential than were those of LINCOLN,
in 1864.. Nor are they .more unscru
pulous. The ,followerz of , Siessrs.
IVAnr. and DAVIN, in 1861, , did not
hesitate to reflect upon the private
character of Liscoi.s. 'He was called
a low jester, a buffoon, an uncouth
flatboatman, and a vulgar boor. His
wife nor his children were not spar
ed any more than are those of :Pres
ident GRANT to-day. The whole Dern.
ocratic press of the country was then,
0 as now,supplied 1.3..1 RepubliCat's with
all the materials fOr their cowardly
and brutal assaults upon the -Presi
dent of 'the United State's. 'Even af
ter_ he-had become the regular candi
date of the Republican party .for re
election,the opposition did not cease,
(for the document of liessrs.,W , Anz
and Davis was issued qfter the re-nom
ination ). The Democratic 'preSs ea
.,.
gerly seized it as an electioneering
document, and presented it to the
public as an evidence that the Repub
lican party was going to pieces—that
the people were deserting LixeoLN
and the Republican party. We turn
to the editorial columns of the Dein
ocratic paper before us, and read as
follows:
"We have never known an administration
from whose cauao its supporters are so anxions
to withdraw their adhesion, as that of i Lincoln.
Never did rats desert a sinking ship faster. On
all sides, in every ( - martyr, they are leaving him'
by scores—so rapidly, indeed, that it is even
now regarded as extremely doubtful whether
he will continne"to be a candidate many weeks.
Read the manifesto of those old political sinners,
Winter Davis, of Mar land, and Wade, of Ohio
—both infected abolittomsts—arraigning . Old
Abe for his mironstilettfrmal ads."'
Disaffected 'Republicans and Dem
ocrats alike discounted ithe prbspects
of LINCOLN'; they represented for
months, t l bat the army and the peo
ple had iost confidence in (the party
and its President, and thatLixcotz;
was a bad, corrupt tyrant and usur
per. What was the result? When
the electoral college assembled, every_
'State was for LINCOLN, except Dela
ware, Kentucky and New JerSey I So
in all probability, the States which
voted for GRANT in 1868, will do the
same thing again. The confidence
of ' the masses of the people
is not :impaired in the
'present
adMinistration, any more than it was
in that of LINCOLN ill ISt 1.
The 1'441/owing which we accidental
ly , find hi a Copperhead paper of
1863; reads ;4) flinch like :the same
papers in 1.7•2, that we copy to see
ow - " history repeat; itself." The
rticle enumerates among those who
should vote against the Ilepnblican
ticket:
..r.“-ry hnnev.l mail ClllO 1:nows• ail /7,e ~ ~..
/*options pnr tier d by Curtin and his friends,
which were so gr,,ss awl liirm....row that his
Attorney General, Pprviance, was forced to re
sign his oilie4A, .-
"Every witurafizel eiti.-.; , , 14 Pennsylvania
who reccollects that Andrew G. Carlin was the
High Priest of Know Nothiugism in 1e.7.1 .5,
when he was Ferrefary of St".te 'VS Governor
Pollock.
"Every man-who had a son.brether or frieud
drafted, or whg was drafted himself,wheu Gov
ernor Curtin permitted Pennsylvania to ho
compelled to furnish by draft a ,urplus over
her quota, -uhen other States which had
famished their full Number were exempted
from conscription. -
"Every man who believes in ikysortal liberty,
free speech, and a free press, that' great trial of
rights, which Governor Curtin has suffered the
General Government to trample tinder foot in
Pennsylvania, in defiance of the Constitution of
the Commonwealth and of the United ,States.
• "Every man who believes that this • Govern
meat ig• a Governinent of WRITE rnen,and is op
posed to negro suffrage and negro equality,
:' the great end and aim of Curtin and the Ab
,
olitionists.
„ , • ,
-- NevertuFici.f., tioveruur ,Cuhrui
With re-elected and Judge WOODWARD
waa defeated.
tgx,. Complimentary to Hinny and
Roeinvr:l,n—Pmi.Lrr tell" the nnterri
fied in the lon - er conntios ihftt
no oppositiOn in this eotintv.-
=s=M!!=
bOV. CVIITIIii.
'''..
I
l i ter
For Bomb tititif ports have
Oeetilti etreoltstiiai to
Cloy. dams would' arrivi in
thiiiiotuitrir. and take stump: for
Grontriv. The fOtoming &Orr
that *up to - Juni 18, 'the Goiernor
had not taken sides with the sore
heads : •
WAssuscrrom, D. C., ! July XI, 11172.
S. W. duos% Esq.—Dear Sir view of
the fact that the reports put in ,cireulation pri
or to the meeting of the "sorehead" conven
tion at Cincinnati, to the eff.Aliat . Hon. e.
Curtin, our - able and honored minister to Bur
de, and Eon. Leary D. Moore, ex-collector of
customs, at Philadelphia, now to St. Peters
burge engaged in private• business—were both
in sympathy with the so-called Liberal Reform
movement, and would'support the nominees of
the Cincinnati Oonvention--even going so far
as to assert that Gov.-Curtin would most likely
receive the nomination for Vice President on
that ticket,—are still kept before the paid* by
being constantly reiterated by the Denrowatio
press or the country; althignr,k the sesention,
nothas Inot been authoritatively
develop
been sustained by a single ' fact
by the recent extraordinary evolutions an d i
litico-gymnasticums of the Democratic y.
I desire Ito call your attention, and that o your
readers, to Abe following e xtr act of .a letter
written by Mr. Moore in reply to a blend in
this city, who had asked him if ;there was any
truth in the reports above mentioned. His let;
tor edam 13,1872, is now before me, in which
he says : "You are quite right in believing that
I was not in any way, connected with the -.sore
head' fvnteniion at and:mai,' and neither was
or. Curtin, and thous who used his name and
mine in any way in Mat Matter, did ft without
the leosi atuhmity whatever." ,
No one who knows Mr. Moore, and he is well
known throughout the State, will (era moment
doubt the enure truthfulness of his statement,
which shows.that the assertions were, from the
first, mere fabrications; and yet, the Patriot of
this city, a few days since, asserted that Gov.
Curtin was to return in a few weeks and "would
stump the State tor Greeley, and the New York
li.itnine has repeatedly given utterance to the
statement that Mr. Moore was in sympathy
with the Liberals. •
Thesis statements go to the people, and many;
who read them never see them denied, and
therefore take it for granted that they are true.
Hence I necessity, I think, for giving the widest
circulation possible toit dental-so positive and
reliable as that given, above.
The extent to which this method of misrep
resenting facts madmen is being used by the
GreeleYites, now, show's very • Conclusively that
they realize to some extent at 'least, the strait
into N%hich they have brought themselves.
• Yours ,truly,
3.1 i. P. GLEESON.
*dr The most conspicuous in
stance of the malady ate present may
be seen in HORICE r LEY, the sage,
philoSopher and .woodcutter of
Chappaqua. Before he became a
victitia - to the madness that now pos
sesses him he had defihite notions of
the Presidential diseaSe, was well
acquainted with its sruptoms, and
has a clear perception of its intract
able and contaminatig character.
At ajbanquet given Montreal, in
18G8' Mr. GREELEYi ie speaking of
DA:4EL WEBSTER, made l use of the foi
-1
lowieg language: •
"Mr."Wea.sver. was.nut only a gen
tleman, but he hatMhe elements of
moral greatness; and he had faults as
welt! He failed, only ie one respect,
and lin this respect I differ from him
—he wanted to be President, and I
don't (Cheers and 14ughtm) But
foktiat one inisfortnee he. would
C been the greatest , an America
produced. We base seen our
test man, lAr: Cann, making the
e blander. I bavelseen men who
the disease early, died at a
,1 old age. -(Laughter.] general
is Cass died at abciut eighty-two,
up to the day of I his death he
ted to - be President No one
i:escapes who once catches the
ase, and he lives - and dies in the
sion. • Being a reader and an ob
er at an early age,}l saw how it
. i oned and , _ paral*d the very best
,ur public nien, and I have care
y avoided it."
-4.4. 1
tTho Sullivan County Free Pres:4 .
an 1 .1
ndependent paper i of rauchinflu
encil in Sullivan county, refers to
Judge 3lnnera in the following corn
pliMentary manner: 1
I"
1,,r
AuLoN
ULYSSLS MERCUIt. The
I ' '
name of Hon. tLYP-964 MERCUR has
beCome a househpld! word in our
State, and since his nomination for
Judge of the Supreme court, he, has
rec Aired the highe4 ene,omituns from
th Republican preis n the ono side
an , with a few excePtions, the tacit
sn port of the Dem4ratic press on
th
other. His name and fame are
na ional. Possessed Of all the attrib
nt -
f..
a of a statesman; eminently qual
ified and widely known as an able
jurist, it will be imPossible for his
enemies to assail iw in a weak
point. Ho is . too strongly fort
iked in the hearts o the people of
.i
tims Commonwealth toil receive any
harm from the few shafts of envy and
malice that will be thuiled • against
hir i u; and when, in October, the vote
shall be counted, it will be found
that Judge Xi
--ERCUR bas 'received the
largest vote of any candidate that
ever run for the ()Mee of .SnPreme
Judge in this State. 1 " Weighed and
not found wantingoVill be the verdict
of the people."
THE Pnosratr -IN PENNSYLVA:SIA.—
1
The Philadelphia North Antillean
anfi Gazette, one of the most cantions
and intelligent ne,spapers in the
country, in a thoughtful article con
c4ning the political prospects in
what are termed the doubtful_States, -
sPealm thus of our own State: So far
as' Penmylvania is 4oncerned, we be
linve she will bo able to give a good
a4ount of herself or usual.- We hare
jut cast in Philadelphia forty thous
and votes at a merei Republican pri
mary election, nnil at the regular
e‘tion in „November we fully expect
tihie able jo. poll seventy thousand.
'Nye shall i'll Oetoler speak - out in
stich a inaauer Until New York, New
Jersey, and Connerlicut will be in- :
sp . ireil,to c6mpete iritli us in Novem
ber. Tlini , defections in our ranks
are sp few...and feeble as to attract
bat little 4tention.l
1
The Cincinnati 777)1r.i inquires
w!hat ." soldiers and sailors " were
Meant by ;the crolvd at Cincinnati
and Balthnore, which united - in this
declaration: "NN' remember with
gratitude the heroism and_sacrifice
of the soldiers and sailors! of the id
pnblic, au dno act f ours shall de .•
tract from:lyheirjusily earned faan/or
the full re nrd of their patriot"
ambiguous enough to4nstify
Mr. CrnEELx, in the event -of his be
ing elected-President, to mivoeSe in
op—a ,, e, the' pa;4,lige of a law
to pay pensions to rebel soldier's, as
a remembrance of iheir heroism and
sacrifices.
4 *411; 1 111-----------
igfr Will the In 4 re-publish its
reasons f , r L.‘ppoTag 1.„..2,Du.N ten
years ago.
E=:=l
itithr
u=iIINW I
In a boding WlAtiiiis week's
Nat 'FILSDIGUCK
DOUGLASS agie*icif Ids personal re
gard for./lingir,'Glasurr a . and then
ProaDedii to evpikit why .he cannot
aid and enpourage
.him in hie eager
puriluit of the Pris' 'Money. He says t
He has milted his fortunes with a
party based upon persona! grierinc
es, and mit tipdh broad grounds of
national good: \ Personal disappoint
ments, personal envy, personal re
sentments,, personal ambitions, hive
united in personal opposition to .
GUIST and in personal favor to Hon-
ACE Ggentr. Now, we are utterly
opposed to this sort of personal poll- .
tics. A man who abandons a p.srty
because his party has nit the same
sense-of his personal merits that ho
has himself, and who joins another,
hoping for better luck with the new
than with the old,may be courageous
as well as cunning, but it is impossi
ble to coin mend such a one for politi
ical wisdom and virtue. Ho acts up
on the principle that what is- good
for him must -bo - good for the coun
try, and makes himself greater than
the nation, and affirms that a part, is
more-than the whole. He puts him
self first and the country , last. He
may not always do this onseionsly,
but, whether intentionally or not,the
thing is done, and the whole Cincin
nati movement has its foundation, its
starting- point, and main-spring in
this sort of, personal politics. They
accuse General Gassr of- personal
government, while every department
of it is as independent today
_of the
Executive as under any administra
tion since Washington."
HENRY 3VAIID BEECHER, in a late is
sue of his popular and very widely
circulated weekly, furnishes a brief
statement of the political situation.
With all his attachment to Gamus,
that has been so freely expressed
through the changes of yew's, he
hesitates not a moment to abandon
his old . friend, now \ that he finds that
friend shaking hands with
long enemies,in a mad hope of teach
ing7the presidency by such treachery
to principles.
Writing after the
,meeting 'of the
Free,-Traders, and the designation of
GII4EBDECK as their candidate, Mr.
BEncitEtt says, (anti we eomniend his
words to considerate 'lien 6f all sec
tions and names 1)1
. "Now, then, people can take their choice of
the three 4's—Grant_Greeley, Groesbeck ; the
brave soldier;the skillful editor, the acute law.
,yer ; The old Republican, the new Repalfican.
Democrat, the old Democrat. As for ourselves,
we stand by our colors—Grant and Wilson, and
the old Republican party, which has been tried
and proved to stormy days, when the whole
nation leaned upon it and foundit a sure sup
mrt. It went through the fire and the pool
to our country. We do not believe that
the eommon people oh America arc ready to
throw away an old servant and pmt in its place
a party whose whole strength lies in the adlies
sion to it of the very men whom the Republi
can party has fought before, at Shiloi at
Vicksburg, at Gettysburg, and.around Rich
mond. They tried to take Waihington several
times before. They could not do it by bullets,
and we do not intend that they shall Uy balloks.
This country is not prepared' to pus the gdy
ernmetit into the hands of that party which has
for fifteen years done nothing but fight the. ,
laws arid that policy which they hope soon to
construe and administer, It is not even pre
tended that the rank and file of the Democrat
ic party have been converted to those ideas for
which the war was waged. They . have changed
their policy, but not their convictions.' They
will go to Waahington as Liberal Repnblicans,
but once there they will throw off the odious
- name, and stand forth oat-and-out Democrats.
The old questions are mot settled. It is not
likely that any party will attempt to overthrow
the constitutional amendments. Bet a law
may be made nugatory without abolishing it.
The spirit of in administration may tterttralize
a constitutional prt)vision withont attacking its
letter.
"If the Republican party is defeated it will
be mainly by the concentration of Democratic
votes, North and South. The Democratic ele
ment will preponderate to such an extent that
it will be impossible to carry on the (Torero
meet except by its p - ilitical and moral influ
ence. In six months there will not bo the
shadow Of a doubt that the Democratic party
has swallowed and digested all the erratic Re
publicans that helped it, and it will stand forth,
no new creation, born out of past struggles,
with regenerated genius to lead en a new era,
bat from inevitable inward necessity it will be
the old Democratic party. The voice may lie
Jacob's, but the hand will be Esau's. Now is
the time to consider the
"116 w far from possibility is it that in a year
or two, should this noir movement strzteed:will
the new administration think it best to pension
the Southern wounded veterans for their ser
vice and suffering? If they are taxed to pay
the national debt, why, they will say, should
we not be paid for some of our own losses 7
There is a prodigious property . interest in the
South, now in silence.and obscurity, that may,
if fair oecasion be Oven, bring an irresistible
power to bear on the.Goverrunen4 and double
the national debt,"
r1:11
THE: NEW TOR* Puwr !PEAKS.
We are glad to find that the New
York Evening Pusl means to take no
dfibions position in this contest. This
old anti-slavery organ has a host - of
friends throughout the country, who
will rally with it against, the Balti
more nominee. Mr. • BRYANT thus
spurns the bargain and sale, Mr.
GREELEY and the , Democraey :
"Having nominated Mr. Greeley for the
Presidency, and received his acceptance of the
nomination, the men- who managed the Balti
more Convention expect to hold proprietary
interest in him. It should be remembered at
the Cincinnati Convention of Liberal Republi
cans it was found impossible to obtain a vote
making the nomination of Mr. Greeley unani
mous. There was a sullen silence on the part
of many, and an -indignant ' no' from others.
At the Baltimore Convention no such difficulty
was experienced.' He was received into full fel
lowship with the party against which he had
launched his fiercest invectives—received with
out a dissenting voice. He is to bo re'vearde.
for his apostasy with the post he most covets,
and then he is to -be owned by his new allfes.
The World, from which we have just - guided,
says ;
With the Democratic Cabinet wh: is Mr.
Greeley will be constrained to appoint and the
Democratic Congress which will be elected with
him, there will be an opportunity fiir reform of
administrative and legislative &brides.'
" Here is a declaration of what the men who
nominated Mr. Greeley at Baltimore expect of
him. Ile is to be •constrainciP to appoint a
Cabinet of their selectionforced to administer
the Government throngh /their agents--com
polled to place in office men of their choosing.
When a Fruit, becomes& IdassuLman in Tnr
key, the rite of cirennifision is first administer
ed, and then the new/convert is led to worship
in one of the mosques of the false prophet:
Mr. Greeley has pmbmitted to the ceirninny
which marks- therennnciation of his old
faith, and ha's now only to conform—either
willingly, or, irnot willingly, then by compul
sion -to the/Practices of political association
into whichlie has been solemnly received.'
*ln July . 1871, the Hartford
Ti ,s contained the following left
, handed compliment to HonAcz GUEE
/LEY. At Baltimore, the editor of the
Tinie,q seconded the nomination:
"Greeley is a clumsy and impoli
tic manager, and utterly without the
means of bringing his own party to
his support. • He is what the- first
Napoleon called an idealogist—a man
bub j , teeming brain, but with
*ru infirm, erratic aria itavanhable
judgment! With all his experience
it. is safe to say that he is the.poorest
judge of eharapter of any prominent
!pail in.this country. He is foil-Aver
being, gulled and imposed upon, as
Le . has repeatedly shown by Os
Quixotic support of public; . and
worthless characters gf his min party."
=
KUM Or TEEIMW(LUI . .f.
sun OMUTA 00=1115111
li ta ingudiro
iti- p i mP 743- 4 -11 .0,! 1 M 010111
000101 We ;•i% "
•
met on Thursday in the hq of ,the
House of Representatives, Harris-
burg.
-Thb bttontithite Ittis largo—sB of
the 96 members answering •to their'
:tames, and Frirry part of the State
was fatly .repreiented. • .
The chairman called the, commit
tee to 'order shortly after 2 o'clock - p.
m., and presented a letter , from 13.
Fumanti of the Fifteenth pongres
sionat districts, 'declining : the Jill:imi
tation of elector for that diatrict,
tendered him' by the State conven
tion.
He also presented the 1 - following
letter from Hon. Ham WnrrE, de
clining the nomination for CfiktlgToßS.
man-at-large. • ,
HAantsuuuo, July, 2:1, 1872.
Hot. flttsgt Drit, Cha trulan /:epuVican Nate
lE2=
Without any previous knowledge ur solicita
tion, the last Republican. State convention
nominated me as one of the candidates for
Congress at large. I value highly this volunta
ry and generous compliment. I should esteem
it a distinguished honor and privilege to be
one of the advocates of the manifold interests
of our. State at large,in the great popular court
of the nation. The same convention, however,
with egruil generosity, nominated me as one
of the delegates at . largo to the • proposed con
vention to reform' oar State Constitution.
While the duties of these positions do not con
diet—those of the one ending in all probability,
before those of the other begin, yet I prefer
to decline one of these nominations so cheer
fully. given, and allow the selection, in my
stead, of one of tho many suitable and compe
tent Republicana in our giett Commonwealth.
It is quite proper then for me to remark here.
that for some years past, as a - member of our
Senate, I have advocated the calling of a con
vention, and having, at the last session of the
Legislature, bad the honor to bo chairman of
the State committee on coustitutional reform,
gave special interest to the passage of the act
authorizing the proposed convention. In view
of these facts, I feel I could possibly render
more eftleient_publie servize to my native and
much loved Commonwealth as a member of
the constitutional convention than as a Con
gressman-at-large. Allow rue, then, through
you, to tender to our State Committee my de
clination of-the nomination as Congressman-at
large.
Let me here assure you of my earnrst blue
fur the success of our State and national tickets,
and if any efforts of mine can aid their tri
umpli,.they are at youf command (luring the
campaign.
He also informed the. committee
that the act of Congress giving to
Pennsylvania an additional member
of Cong Tess; necessitated the nomi
nation of ;mother Congressman-at
large and an additional .Electoral-at
large.
On motion of Hon. Lucious Rog
er?, of 31'Kean, S. S. Colegrove, of
M'Kean, was nominated as Elr-ctor
in place of Mr. - Frecilian,.dectned.
Hon. WM. Elliott, of I'hil:4lo,M,
after paying a high tribute to the
loyalty and devotion of 15,000
colored voters of the State, and after
referring tod. the expediency of giving
a friendly recognition to them,,mov=
ed that Wiu. D..Forten, of Philadel
phia, be nominated for Elector-at
largo.
Mr. Miller, of Venango, nominat
ed A. S. Anderson, of Mercer.
The chairman presented a long
letter from the Pennsylvania Equal
Rights League, iu favor of Mr. For
,
ten.-
Messrs. Mann and Bingham, of
Philadelphia, spoke very highly of
Mr. Forten:; and, after au informal
expression of 'news and preferences,
Forten was nominated unani
mously.
The committee then proceeded to
nominate two Congressmen at large.
The.chairmau presented a resolu
tion of the Bucks County Republi
can committee in favor of Hon. Gco,
Lear. Also, a dispatch from Mahlon'
Yardley to the sameeffect.
"31r. Long, pf ARTgliany, ,nominat
ed Hon. A. 0-; Shannon, of' that
county.
Mr. Hoyt, of Luzerne; 'nominated
Hon. Chas. Albright, of Carbon, and
read a despatch from Hon. W. W.
Ketcham, declining a nomination for
himself, and urging the selection of
Mr. Albright.
Mr. Benson, of Erie, named lfon
G. W. Scofield, of Warren.
• Mr. Mann, of Philadelphia, pre
sented thi n name of Charlemagne
Tower, ofSelinylkill.
Mr. Mattern, of Ifuntingdoii,nom
'hotted Morrell, of Cambria.
Mr. Jenkins, of Berks, presented
the game of H. L. Eckert., of that
county.
After several speeches froze vari
ous members, urging
_the, claims of
their Candidates, a vote' was taken as
follows :
Hon. G. W. Scofield, Warrrn...
Hon. C. Albright, Carbon
Hon. P. C. Shannon, Allegheny
Capt. C. Totter, Schuylkill
Bon: H. L. Eckert, Berk.
Hon. Geo. Lear, Bucks
Mr./MOrrell had two votes, but be
fore Tho ballot was announced they
were changed to Scofield.
The chair announced that Messrs.
Scofield and Albright having receiv
ed a majority of all the votes, were
dilly nominated:
On motion of Djlr. Passinuro, of
Schuylkill, the •nominatious were
made unanimous.
After a little routine business- and
an interchange of views by the mem
bers from'the different comities, giv-,
big the state of the canvass in their
respective neighbOrhoods, the corn
mittee adjonrned to meet at the call
of the chairman.
The intelligence from the various
comities was of the most cheering
kind ; the best of feeling prevailed,
so Om one was in good spirits, and
the j committee separated in every
way satisfied with the, result of their
day's work.
Lur rs HAVE PEACE.—Two Union
officers sent to arrest. a man by the
name of MAnoxer, in Shelby county,
Alabama, upon an indictment for
Ku-klux erimeo, were shot dead by
the brigand. "Let us hays • p e a., "
soil " clasp bands over tho bloody
charm'," by all means:
=OM
. re- Goy. SALsialty, of Delaware,
says tlivre are two thew; Intl Demo
crats in that State who wilt not
f)c o rt, the no-principle ticket.
'rus Norru OAROLIBOXiiiiMOI I
PUNIX . SI ? ' 3-
Andi*g pi :400V -- test
hi; **lvo• oriufZitanliOrk
land *02t13 - barolins,
b 7 t at « led,
prying member of ConiresS, - Bsoc, of
Kentucky, the astomiding ,-diseoVery
has been proclaimed in all the Dora
ocratielanl. Liberal - papers - In the
Union, 'accompanied with comments
severely reflecting upon the rascality
and rottenness of Gen. GRANT and all
his"administrative surroundings. But
the storry is spoiled and the vituper
ations of the opposition press shorn
of their intended effect by the simple
fact that there is no such fund at all
and never has been—and that BECK
either wilfully or , ignorantly has
grossly misrepresented both facts
and figures. A 'Washington corres
pondent of the N. Y. Times gives the
facts of the case as follows :
The Greeleyites: are still hard at
work manufacturing outrageous lies
about the alleged expenditure of
$200,000 from the public funds to af
fect the election in North Carolina.
They are simply Preparing. the way
to explain their forthconluig defeat.
Your correspondent has investigated
this matter `thoroughly, and no one,
not even the. malignant Mr. Beck,for
he is a member of Congress and was
partly responsible for it, that owing
to the failure of Congress to pass the
deficiency .until'ilate in 'the 'ses
sion, the month of May, I believe,
tho operations of the courts in every
section of the country wore greatly
embarrassed, and in some cures en
tirely suspended. Many Of the mar
shal, hired money at liberal rates of
interests, in order not to impede the
course of justice, and reimbursed
themselves when the deficiency bill
had passed.
This accounts for the fact that the
refinisitions of the Marshals, both
for the last half of the last fiscal year
r.; well as for the cnrrent qtlarter,are
so close together. They are all
thrown into the last sixty days, in
stead of being distributed according
to the terms. of the courts as usual,
and this is not alone in regard to
North Carolina,
but in- regard to the
Marshals of all the districts. The
expeuditurea of the courts for North
and South Carolina, as everybody
knows, for the p•ist year have been
abont.donble, their usual amount in•
consequence of the Ku-Kinx.
anti who will say that the suppres
sion of these infamous outrages by
the strong arin - of civil authority has
not been cheaply as well as-thorough
ly achieved? Now at no time within
the past year has the Marshal for
North Carolina drawn -more than
iu any one requisition.
l_lefore he can get that money his
reiluisition must be approved by the
Attorney General. Then it must
pass the Secretary of the Treasury,
which it only can do after an inves
tigation of the. state of his account.
After he gcts it ho is required by
law to dephit it in a designated na
tional depesitory, which reports.evc
ry two weeks the state of his balance
to the United - States Treasurer.
When he checks' it out, he must
state in his' check the precise. pur
pose to .which the money is applied.
Ile is required to present regular
vouchers for every expenditure,. and
these vouchers ninst have the :Troy
al of the Judge of the court. They
thew pass the Auditor and Control
ler, so that it is impossible that any
money should be imprOperly-applie d
to the first instance, without the di
rect collusion of the Attorney Gen
eral and Secretary of the Treasury,
or properly expended in the second
intance, without the collusion be
tween the Marshal: the Judge, the
Auditor and the Controller.
A Marshal may draw money and
fail to render his accounts and thus
become a. defaulter, but this is .not
yet char p * ,, e(l, even in NOrtli Carolina,
though ft is true of one or'inore;ex
marshals who are now loud month
ed for Greeley. The statement that
heretofore not more than $5,000 has
been checked from the Treasury at
one time for the purposes for which
marshals draw is a,transparent
hood,for which there is not even Mr.
Rock's warrant.. -Mr. Deck put it,
" nutil within a few years," and an
examination shows that for many
years past the requisitions of mar=
shall have reached $25,000 Or $3O,
000, according to the necessities o
the courts:
Very truly,
Ilkuny Wurrr.
AITLAE TO TILE WOMEN Ol' THE UNITED
sTATr.s TO (4 )-OI'LItATE ; AND LA
ISOR TOR SreCEK.s OF THE IZEPITLI
PAUTI -
ROCTILSTER, N. Y., July D. —The
EP-mount Chroniele contains an
appeal, of which the following is a
synopsis:
TO the Womon of Ow Unifed s! ate,
The hour for political action has come. For
the first time in the history of the • eountry wo
man is recognized - in the platform of a large
and dominant party. Philadelphia has spoken,
and woman is no longer Ignored. This is the
thin edge of the entering wedge which shall
break woman's slavery in to pieces, and make
us at last a nation in which caste of sex shall
fall with caste of color, and humanity alone
shall he the criterion of human rights.
The womeneof the country have long looked
to the Republican party in hope, not in vain,tor
to-day wo are launched into the political sea.
It must hereafter fight our battles. This great
party, this progressive party, having 'taken the
initiative step, will never go back on its record.
Many Republican leaders and Republican cant
didates extend their sympathy . i while the other
party gives no proiniee either in its platform or
letters of_ it, le unmet s. ilorace tireeley has
for many y, ars Levi' our moat, bitter opponent.
Roth by tongue and pen he has heape,l
ridicule; and niisrepreilentstion upon our lead
ing women, while the whole power of the 1/T)-
, ole has Lien ii-ed to crush out our, great re
form, and now lic.continnea his hostilt. c9ntse.
Women and *onicti speakers are earnestly
needed t eu-operate therefup.; with the Ili•pub-
lican party.
The apptiatis signed on behalf of the Nation
ral Woman'i , tiutTrage Association by
Lam' The democrats of Jhe connty
are imitating the tactics adopted by
the leathers in the State, in reporting
that certain prominent men in the
Republican_ party have. come out for
GnEsi.Er. Among the number men
tioned, are the names of Jonsi.'
Conorsu, N. C EI.';DREE, E. T. Eos
.11 other influential busiaoss men._
Pl e-need hardly say there is. not a bit
of truth in these reports. Brag ap
pears to be the game of the demo
cratic Grecle)ites.
rktlk... Col Wilk k‘m Sim% ELL, 3 life
long ficknocrat of hokum
in(ignuntly , refuses to *niTtipt, tlio
.<l)clinwratie noininntion for Congress,
in t li.tt 1)i. , lie is ret.olv
i ki tk. t,itiport I . 4iZA l akkilftels it his
11111 f 4 1 , „ t . luaci:_r3
the Democratic party out of power.
=1::::E=IIMMIII
THE 110 Ult ILtS
SUSAN L'. Ayrnency,
President,
• divrtt.nA .Jostr.s. GActr,
Chairman PA( cntivc Committer...
IZZCI
.1 in , • \
iirtEoll OP Wan .1 I • orq
Tho ven law? us, ...
I t
eria4B 4 27 ..4.. ''.
...... ...7.3., ~ .-r.
_.
_... , ~.,
of tho old ::: i' ,. , - , lultaage
of freedom's .- . ebilitions',4[olivit'
ered a Tiny: . . iiiiimas: AZ
lilliaiiGitht. reterl
( big
friends and -i,
N Y., on the 22th ultimo: .- liel - sitid
many things worthy - of serious
thought. We quote two or 'three
isiriiiiipiiiti; show the spirit of the
effort: : .: • '... • •
"The Deniocratic party is my
dread. The Reptiblican party is my .
hope. 'WWII is this party of which I
am so much. afraid 2- -I need not say
that it is not the original Democratic
party—the party= ofmy childhood
and youth. - Mg was a' worthy , party
--La.party for iiiiinan . - :rights - and hilt.;
man equality. .It was the reform
party of its day. - It favored univer
sal suffrage and the abolition of im
prisonment for debts, and many other
- beneficent changes. But this modern
party—thiX degenerate Democratic
.party. It fs utterly unwerthy of the
name it 'hail . so falsely, not to say so
knavishly,aasnmed. It bad,for many
years before our, accursed. rebellion, -
sympathized with - and served thb
slave power of our land: Hence,when,
a dozen years ngo, that might power:
became so infatuated as to fall upon':
our nation with the purpose, of break'.
ing it .up entirely and forever, it
found the Democratic party ready to
help carry , this malignant purpose
into effect. Indeed, but for the well
known pro-slavery. spirit of that par
ty, the rebellion' would not have been.
It was the slave power's reliance on
that spirit and ; on the impliedly, if
not in feet expressly, promised aid
of tens of thousands of Northern
D.nnocratic troops. which supplied
'what that power lacked of 'encourage
ment and boldness to plunge into the
rebellion. - * * *- *
"Another Presidential elecetion
at hand. Whoin shall -we vote for?
In the light of ',what we have
we can not vote for candidates of the
Democratic party, however worthy
they may be. GRANT and Witses are
my own choice—firse because they
arc the candidates of the Republican
party and the upholders of its - right
eou s principles;land,- secondly, be
cause they arc wise arid honest men,
and have especial claims to our votes.
WrzsoN is eminently the friend of the
laboring men land the blaoli, man..
Ably and faithfully, and for many
years, has he: fought their battles;
anti they will rejoice in this oppor
tunity to (A! ' for him. Admirably
quAlitlod is Mr. WILFiON to take Pres
ident Cinv.sr's place 9.liould it In•ill:Uff_t
vaca7it by rt.,:,iguati6ll.- or death.
* x. , k , F •
"Is there a black man, ~either
at
the North or the South, who is in
vote the .Democratie ticket'?
He had better die than do it.' lie
had better die than so wrong his
race, and so wroin ns, whose lives.
have beep lives of suffering and sacri
fice for the redemption and welfare
of his race. Will not WILLIASI LOYD
GrAtuusas and his fellow-laborers ha:-:e
lived in vain if now, atthe last, the
black man, for whom they have lived,
shall turn against them ; and o over
to their ;Ind the Hack . man's ene-
mitß?"
=I
That among OnEKLUYs strong- .
cst friends are the 1110u-ben; of the
late Tammany Ring, there is no
longer any doubt. Win n the news
of his 4 ,, n•i':;.tion was received -in
New York the Tammany thieves lift
ni) 1-trgo 1) )01),r, 11): , crO, it - TAM-
NAV,'
CONNTNTICIN AT 6.
Ilpon Tammany zt,! large flag
Was raised. pater indie4tions were,
'iv, , n of the I Hight, of tl i. worst set
of thit!ve , that 'ter .disgracA a city,
over the nomination of " lienest - old
Hoe t, T.. If ibt.sc 011 a iic Mr. G la"-
flAends 'now they will be ;tfter
h , is elected, f, he La, s , t - Li) . l he
tteat all his 4 supporters alike in the .
distrilmtion'of otiee§. There is ni)
that thi:y are
more than there is that he will give
tht ni a chance to deplete WIT: Nation
al Trcasfiry, if tiro people arc foolish
enough to P.ut hiin in a position
-Where he will be able. to Au so. With
in the Presidential Chair,
and. Ilort , mAN in the Senajc, crushed
Tammany would ri);() and t‘e
mighty. L.tt its hopo 4 ,11:. country
may be spared.
" A Graal.ty Pica
is rapidly changing his
comvicxnin t i nit taste of the
white-hatted, man of ( I ,happaqua.
Who next Tire cry is :till th,y
when TrAciii k Pkugl.t4.3 shall. ehange Ids
\ ion, raildlv or oth. rise. to suit the
tact- of the WI de-liatb d Man Chapp.tiva.or
the taste of any ,other man, the
have duo notiee'ef a fact so important to sci
ence if not tei pat 11:hall ceraainly
.not be required to depend upon (Ire( ley rumor
for information: There i., about as much dan
ger of a change in the complexion of the editor
the Ciwunicte as. in that of Frederick DoughtAs.,
thou, ~h , unlike the. Chr , ,,,M,! I hay , f It
calle neon to warn the public of the latter
danger. Ent laYing aside by-play, please allow
me to say that this Greeley rumor to whin' you
have given currency in your columns, like most
of the Greeley rumor?, is groundless, and its
eirenlatiou can not in any way help thu Repub
lican cause. •
Truly your fur the election of flyer
()rant and henry Wilson.'
Frol , l:n hi: 1
W.tbutswro. , s, D. C., Thilre,lay, 18th of July
-ter►.
• -unpopular tit
home, among . his own people. Ile_
has none of those • kindly virtues,
which have eiidcarcil cli. ‘Nrr
il,c 11•.Thle of l'enmiylvania,hqt a
I..toul,unsympathizing politicianovhoso
personal qualities are none of this n .
calculated to win the love of the
people. His friends are the leaders
of the partyin. Pennsylvania, whose
principles have been notoriously un
sound and unsafe to follow On all
public questions. He is no friend"
of the laliorer,ana,from them should
reecive no support.
I=Cl=2:l
Dn.,' In es-Confederate officer
- traveling in Maine recently frankly
told a felluw-pas2enger that lie•should
cote for PUEELLY, confidently antiei- :
'ating w in the case of his election, a.
restoration of the ante-hellnm con
dition of affairs in the South :As far
as possible, and a payment from the
national treasury fur their slaves and
all other property destroyed by 'the
w;ix,rt.lyitt upon sbe - !”agual:;trity "
of their eandiditte, and upon the
Trilmne's'advocaey during the w.tr of
melt pnyment !IS a tneanq of 14ettle 7
no‘nt.
0c.141
terday ut 11.1 k.
ZEMIi
MUM • IILEZTEV69.
Go PozzocK is to addrem seven.).
,r . ;5 In this cnithty next week-,
kronor is a very poliShed
speak , r, and one of the most candid'
men n the . State: We hope the
ecti
She
rueeti igs will lie - largely ntteniled.
0
Finvinnpunceniblit, in anothet cobinin
WiTALIAM LLOYD ILIATtUISON says
in a r cent letter: "I have always
regartd Gamaxx as a man without
any fi .ed principles; but ho is daily
revealing himielf, both in what he
does and
. through the . columps of the
Trilne ze (which is his special organ,
and f r the spirit of which:he is to
be he d responsible, make what dis
cla' rs or dodges he may in regard
to its management), as -a first-elass
political.demagogne, unless it may
be charitably '
suspected that he is
smittena with imbecility."
• •.:.: The Arytul, Ina weeli.,..c.opied
from that vile sheet, Abe l N.Y.,Sun, a
list /cif proruinent.Repuilienms in Lu
zcrn county, claimed for Gamer.
d l
Jude llSurallo is the only one nain,,,
ed vho supports the -Donioeratle
, and there are . res of Dem,
s who refus'e-t • support GIM
.
• .
.. •
tick i
uer a
ED
New. -
SlG~ti EE .5 NOTICE.—Tho . ne
oont, of Goo. L. Keeler, have been placed ni
Tell of Nathan Tidd, Eeq. for collection, and
paid hr th'e .15th of Anoist,- costa will be
kill KEELER, Assignee.
the h
if not
made.
An
Ft 1. 2e7t6v:
.•
Y 011.16 SEMINARY.
XINGSTO.Is', FA.
- :;C:_1001, FOIC.BOTEL SEXES. •
,n in succ , rsful operatind for t
Its location in U.. ela..sic valley of Wyomin.
healthful nun case of access.
ADVANTAGES VSSIMPASSED:
C3lll
IS I,C
full corps of efficient professors and h. sellers
-.fats .511 LOW An AT ANT Tllts - r-CLISgINSTITCTION
THE cosomucim., COLLE4;E,
L. L. Sprague, M. A., Principal, ranks with the very
best In the country, in thoroughness and complete
nessd The course winprises two departments,
. . THEORETICAL ANA) ACTUAL DITSECESS.
The-liarmer includes five seta of books, with all the
forms in single and double entry, It also includes
all the mime forms of btaincsa papers, and the
laws concerning them: In the actual-business de
portment are-used the books of theory by double
entry', the journal,' cloy-book, complete account
book, forwarding and commission, 'brokerage and
exchange, insurance, railroad *nil wholesale books;
also two sets of bounty:, tlicoreaal and actual busi
nessiand a .
COMPLETE SET OF COAL ROOKS.
T
bet
are four new. telegraph instruments, two
sou rs and two registers , for the use of students
ea ing telegraphy. Instrderion given thrJughout
• the arise in spelling: penmanship, commercial law,
conaMercial arithmetic, cerrespondence, and in the
art o' detecting counterfeit money.
- : TEEMS :
with
Ell's
Conitnetvtal Course.....
With; Telegraphy ........ .........
Tele#aphy alone -
13oaad, Washlttg'aud Iloozu, Per week
Fall Tenn °kens Tuesday, Sapteauber 3,
Po tatalognee.and further haurmatiuu apply to
thlndereigned., .
33 order of the Trustees.
. 0.11. HAUL Seey.
Si gstun, Pa;, July 1.-., 157•2....--lw.
YER, .
A I'S SARSAPARILLA, . .
FOR 113BIFitiO THE BROOD
that , :Ir,, a real public blessing
..i St.c.,ar.i.rau.a nick, , po,itivc eine ,d a se
of complatts, 'which arc alcmys alllicting alitl
iten fatal. It purify , the Idofl, purges out
taking humors in the Systim, which under Mine
Ith and settle j u te troublesome disorders. , Enid.
- of the skiu :ice the appearance_dn the swirfalre
nmors - that shottlii be_ expelled from the blood.
rnal derangements, arc the determination of
e same humora• to"leeme interncl_ organ or Or
d', whoSe action they derange and whOse pub
-Icc they disease and destroy. AVEIt'S SAr.SArA-
A-C51X . 1.9 these humors from the blood. Who:.
are:genc. tie ,Borders they produce dolappear
, as 131.•me.11:5 of the Liver, Stomach, KidneYs
ug,s, Eruptions and Eruptive lii,eases of the Skin
mfnthony's Fire, Itf.i.e. or Erysipelas,..lllmples . .
3 ides, Blotches, ~Exile, Tumors, 'letter and Salt
u. Scald Dead.. ltitigicormi Ulcers and Sorer,
/
nMatisra, Neuralgia, rain in the Bones, Side,
Head. Female V'eakikss, Sterility - , Lencorrlera
rdig from Internal ulceration and uterine. disease,
IPsy, Dyspepsia, Emaciation, and General Deldh
With their depirtrtre, health returns.. i
t, , ,,
the
Ilea'
to
tfiel,
st.E
star
/T.L.PAIIED lA'
• Dn. .1. C. AYER It C 0.,. Lownt
ra&encti...txrt ANAL-rxlcm.
And sold by Dragglsts all round Ape world. l•
•r. 11. C, PORTER, Ah• SOS,tßaaAl agents
°Wands, and I.w 1.::
county. -
• • tsep.7,'72-
B. CAMP. A.J. :COBLE.
LAMP & NOBLE'S
GENERAL
Insurance Agency.
FFICE ON MAIN %41:LT,
Opposite the 'Court House;
Isnrance against
FIRE AND LIGHTNING!
unc:
t6S
issued and
TEM
DIUSTED AND AT THIS
(A , TICE!
11 kintls of
'LIFE INSMININCE POLICIES
Product", and
1U( WEN 1 Nst-CANcE
Affected for
FIVE TO FIFTY '',DOLL_ ES
et:fay:lndemnity in case of injury,
11"
Ol:• $5OO TO $lO,OOO
able in • case of Death. Having
1 Nu oTIIL1111:1:76INI.:SS tol:t; HANDS
.t.
' ll lliVille l , ili' .allerlikin; we are able t i o giNe ~triet -mid.. cartittkattuntiOu to
Insurance . -
DO IT!
'dl perscns (lcsiring Insurance of
are respectfully. invited to
ry
CANT & NOME
3111,7 , _22, 107'2
5 , WQl)tini) .
.DT.o
TIII
'NEW YOItK BOOT AND SHOE
- • - STOBE,-.
No. PATS ON fit:ll'l , o.ns r,Lociz,mtmo ESt
Ts receiving one of the largest and
best 6toel: of TOOTS &. SHOES ever
broo ! ;14.1 iu Towanda, which he is
offerii,- ; ;.a,t the very lowest prices for
Cash, .consistinf,T of C ',NTS CAI V, - .11!v
1 • It •, 1..
zuld .C1111,01;EN'S Shoes of all
kinds, .411 l'onght direct from the
liannfac , tnrc!rr , ,, and hand made, all
Arrant , ql: - Fl i.r. WI: ~ t
•
Thankful for
_ r ast solicit
continuance of,the.s;fme.
To\valuta, May, 1. 17.:
=
TOWANDA MARKET s_
srIIOLEBALEDIBMIL
Iru. JDOrnieted star: Sieonesosp, bp (I. IL PATCH
bRd to &saws dilly.
What. s blob
Bye, 11 bush •
Buckwheat, * brat;
Corn: 'lift& -
Oats, * brute,
Buns. ill
( bulb.. •••• .. .- ------ •• • • -,, ~, ri ri
Buttes *lb . te. 1,.,
.
do (dr&pal* a saw . • Ia n P.O 21
NZ/
. dos :ii. ... . .... , P. ,
111 b0duneir...........; .-... ' Vi
Moor. boned ,
Onions. * bulk ' 7.3.
Watteau or Gasts.—Wbeat 60 lb. ; Corn 46 1b e. •
Rye 66 lbs.; lists u 2 lbs.: Ellrlerl6 lbs. ; Beekiriali
48 lbs.; Beans 62 lbs.; Bran 20 be.; Clover Seed 60;
lbs. ; Timothy Seed it lbs. Dried Readies as Ibe.;-
Dried Apples 22 lbs., Mils S eed 50 lbs.
pILICELIST---CASCALIE MILLS.
flour, Nut Winter wheat, pr. sack . ........... 12 59
o hundred lbs ...... . .... In
fi• • barrel ........:........ In Gif
rend, ein 1/5
*Worn grinding usually dens at (Uwe, is the ca
parity of the mill Is auftldent fora Large amount
frQrk. H. 1 . 1 .1.7.10 , 1411_
"Camplawrri May 22. 1!1'14.
EVXNS ay,IIILDRE'rII
Are offertn:; great barr - ,a(4n .
D.R Y 0 0 1).8 !
Lot;ltat Um tul:;.,w::8;•
JAPANESE • SILKS,
JAPANESE CLOTID, ;i5 to :;7.1,e
liLIAcK SILKS,
in ilium:llse stuck of
1) 11 g * :Sl:3 _G-0 0 s
crtltz tap,var.ls
Strip: and Figur( d=Grenadines,
1; lit ck u Ltd
G ttAb's GIIaUTJIS
DRESS II NLNS, A LI.
a:l.f ctl
WHITE DRESS ddo D-s
utwli iart
• $25.C43
. *3lOO
25.00
.00
S - 11 AV L
rr••w ,k1.1,11upp.11.04.,
WHITE GRENAIIINE EARI.;(
AND ENIT
PAISLEY AND
.;11.;:•.ttsalo.t
1' A A (1 L.
At pri
XOTIN(iIIAM dUIZTAiN LAcl
nd
Counterio.lie•s,
Table Liu Piss. -
Fowcls anti 0:3-,b,
Ha.nakereb , it•fs,
Fatey
4`.1111 nyal V .•thf
t . •
EVANi.; & -itiLmirrit
.1:1,2 12, 1,72
youNG 'WARRIOR
M 0 -- ViT .I;Z ' t
Th Lightest Draft. Must Durable and Easi,4 I•
troard Machine in the World! 11.3.,t rre , ..e 1.1
the First Premium wherever eilnbit•-d a!
!wrieultural Town and 0, 111 ,ty
Manufactured -by
clag. PERItIGO
Groton, Tompkins county. Y.
TIIE YOUNG' WAIIIIIOII
Ras two Driving. Wheels, Iron Frame; Ste.el Cut liar
Stool-Plated Gtxrds, Planetary Gearing, has no Sida
Draft is a Close Guarded &Lachine. It will mow the
finest grass iimpur cLocioni - G. Can beat
world mowing on 'Rough - or Stony ground. 7
geAring is protected from 'dirt and grass.
Wheel on the Outer Shoe runs inside of thti Swather•
. Bensons why_ It should be pnrclinsed in prefer,
ence to any other Mower : 1. Being Wider Track.
holds its position on aide-hill; the wheels running
on the s ground instead of on• the..ent grass; for
same reasommows wet or swab:, land, leavin7. B'
cut - grass lying loose and light. 2. Being ck , s ,
guarded.. the knives are protected'from stmies,
The rolling motion Of Um Cut tar allo
pass over stones and obstructions : pa , sier In a , ..
Out of dead furrows without Stopping or Goggin-:.
The chief beauty of this Machine is : It oan m
tbe.heaviest lodged or flno wet Grass. uithout btop.
ping or worrying the team, and no team can-Var-i
blow enough to clog it. Farmers should try th.•
Machine before they buy.
THE AIKENS PLOW
ataimfactured by Chas. Perrigo Groton._
`THE AISENB PArrzr/ SLOE FULL PLOW
'Was invented and patented as a Side Bill r,o*. lut
experience has demonstrated that it is as well 31 1 1.
teal to Level Land Plowing as the beat Fiat
Plows. We claim for it superiority over any 6tt.'. 7
Plow in use, for the reason that it weris weir l tti
on side Bill and Level Land. It j no ..%1"-
it has been manufactured, for the 1.1-t el4,ht
aust of the hundreds sold In for_
tirxot'or
been returned. 'Every Plow IVarl .110' •I. .I.•tn
price $15,00: 9rdcrs pro,Juptly ant 11.1 , i t ••
For rnrther information in regard '
Warrior Mower or AikenF rl'ov, call on !"
May Ut-tcr. 8ra,1,,0'l •,
T OAVA NDA AC.‘ 1 F3ll'
• •
=I
SVSQLTHANS.\ COLIA:OW*1:
rtipilß will bn reN•ivrl:it any limn al
rdt,..•3 :
Piano Forte pupil'', per quarter,
Inoinding Harmony and Voeal rhea. per
STUICTLY rtALF F.
' llecitations twice a week. dedUction
Made TIP." except in sacs of iltnrr e OS.
our week's duration.
This atnstL School is into Co
mentA, viz: Preliminary, l'rititaiy and
There will be a certificate given at the compl ,
each course with the musical stanliMg.of th..
l'upils froni a distanco wilt find accenini , det' r,
for board and piano practice in the in-lditn , n
very moderate prices,
NOTICE. — Mr. Sherwood has a
comprising the best modern method,,.,
prominent features and appliance , : of the
ularl,yonslinsical Academy, of which ! , r , %Ler,
'Bev, L. H. Sherwood ,, was formerly prioci ' arka.
proprietor.
Mr. Edgar. 11. Sherwood has:derided tn!.r . . - .
musicalacztairmente and extenalvo expert , t;
tesching.—Rditor Rochester .ity.ficaZ
Towanda. May 9, 1872. .
Fol.i THE CAMPAIGN OF 1512.:
The Bradford Reports r
.1 IT Li( 1 Urn TO 1)E1201141J { !sr
YOR 40 cEs'r,::
1.• .1,1%-7.1,c
1 .111.1, 1p Vint; , .I,ltl ai.P ur• ti,r• toe
1 WILSO -;• wi!! 1.11,41
July 12 to 'Mc& lat.:), at the low price of nt
$ I - 6il 0 1 K.
30 to 1.77
del ; , N• cc
rurii 25 to 50 valt.
l2Laz .Yid umard,
■
1,51 .1.1
/
11.(;,,p s'; in
et ti Yof
MEI
Lace,
'licking:
Denims,
Cuttou ;We:.
Prints;
Gingh:tms,
Strip f
littdi •
IMPIZOVED
TOWANDA:
Blilli
jint”r..tv t),,;