Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, September 05, 1872, Image 1

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

    '
,
TER*6 OP PSIBLICATION.
Tax Ibuluxure s l alls Is published meg
Thurwia hiungsEPl& . Axavaaa at Two Dcdlars
per smarm is advasseo.
sir Llverttslngto all cues exclusive of subscrip
tics to the paper.
SPECIAL =CU inserted at strrsetS sauna Per
line for first insertion. and FITE csirrs per line for
eubeequeatfnsertloris
LOCAL NOTICE& same style as_readieg matter,
iexacrr clucrs a ltnb.,
ADVEIPMEMENTI3 will be asserted according to
the following table of rates :
1 Inch (u:6O I ! 8.00 I .8.
E inches I 2.60 1 7.00 1 10.00 1 2.09 1 20.00 1 50.00
liches I 3.90 I 18.501 14.00 18.115 156.00 156.00
column 5 . .90 12.00118A0 22.00 , 130.00
L; column _ llO.OO I 10.00 I 30.00140.001 15.00 r 75.0 0
column I 20.901 40.001 aOAOI so.oo 1 $lOOl $l6O
. -
'Modell:tutor's avd Exemstar's $2; Audi
tees Notices. $2 60' Business Cards, dye lines, (per
Par) $B, edditiOnal lines $1 each.
yearly advat teem Ore entitiedto quarterly changes.
Transient advertlawMants musthe paid for la advance.
(di Absolutions of imectiltlana Dommmdcatlona
limited or Indisidnal Intend, and notices of mar
riages and Deaths, emosediag Beelines. 'recharged
rem caws per line.l
Totronium hating a larger chntinatan than an
thm papers in the county combined, makes it the best
Mvertleing medlnui In ICorthern Pennitritatda.
JOB pItth'TINO of every kind, In Plain and Fancy
r ()lore. done with :witness and dispatch.
memo. cards. ramputets.l3lllllm44 Statements, &a.
of even. rariety andtetjle, printed at the shortest
notire. The RErcirr= Office is well 'applied with
Power Present., a good assortment of new type. and
~,rything in tie Printing line can be executed In
ii moat Artistio manner and at the lowest rates.
.1. rings nivAntAtspr CASH.
•
BUSINESS CARDS.
- 4
19V NVAILTAACE REELER,
Y y • 1
HOUSE. SIGN 4ND FRESCO PAINTER.
`Towanda. Sept 15087071 T
W. DIMMOCK, Dealer jn all
Linda of floating Slates. Towanda. Pa. All
mrdera for Roofing promptly att ended to. PiTUMULT
Ittentinn given to Cottage and 'French Rooting.
inlylGll
FOWLER, REAL ESTATE
•• DEALER, go. 278 Synth Water Street, Chi.
mil , . Illinois, neat F,State purchased and sold. In
vestments madeind iloney Loaned.
May 10,'70.
AYLORD 'ftbs.,eferieral Fire
and Lif• Asureince Agency. Policies covering
less and damage rinsed by lightning. in Wyoming,
Itlla other reliable companies, without additional
31.71.8. 71. P. GAYLORD,
Wyalnstng, May 23p '7l. R. C. GAThoun.•
TOITN DIINFEE, BLACKSMITH,
masnorrox. pA.. pays particular attention to
romnw, Buggies; Wagons, Sleighs. kc. Tire sot and
malting done on short notice. Work and charges
ruaranter,l aatisticto • 12,13.69.
A MQS P
• ACKER, HAS
rl. senin cstaliliebed bhnself ha the TAILORING
^psi:CT-SS. ShOp over Rockwell's Stare. Work of
, I ry deacriptlon (lode In the latest styles.
Towanda; Amp 21, dBTll.—tf
i tRAYSVIIiLEWOOLEN . MILL
I A • k
Tice undersigtiod ivpuld respectfully announco to
the intblir that hi, krerf' c^ngtnntly on hand Woolen
I ,, ths, Cassimervs:Flannels, Tarns. and all kinds at
~ hateole and retail. TOUGH A: BROADLET.
Aw. , ...1t1.'11i. Proprietor.
CLINToN HOUSE,
N.Y
THONtPSON, Pro
nI nt thr fkpot free for the Mune
%I.trell C. lA7:2lAni
S. RUSSELL'S
k.'.
GENEII.4L
N S C.lll Al ,p-;
may23'l4 tt
:UNDERSIGNED ARCHI
TECT BUILDER. wi=liem .I.n inform the
caizens of Towandaani 'vicinity. that give
particular attention tb drawing plans. designs and
sprifications for 11111 manner of buildinga, private
and public. Stinerintendence given for reasonable
conipenaationi (MINS at residence N. E. corner of
:4,, , q1.1 and Eliztibetti streets
'E i'LEATNI G
E. ' G.
Bo x 511. Towanda. Pa.
VE, W PARLOR OF FASHION.
saivisa.#Ain; crlrr.“7.,
,and lIATII DYEING
EMI
1) n;.. iii the Latest !Style. Alrn`ttartienlar pins
tal...n in rutting and Children's Hair. Sham.
r., , ,,n:f..enrling, and Frizzing.
GAUS.4WA* k LINCIICOME. ,over the
`1•1,..nal Hotel, )fain Street, Towanda. Pa,
l'l2.
.
IA7 W. IiINGSBURY,
•
RVAI, 0',111:. :V. 'hC(.II)I,,ST
INSURANiCE AGENCY
i
t-en!er ‘a Main and State Strekte.
. - •
SASH, 1 ! ) O,OIIS, AND BLINDS.
I ani prepared to furnish Kiln-dried lloOrs, Sash
of any sty;. ~size, or thickness, on short
n•q - 1e ,, . Hand in your orders ten days before yon
i t , the articles, and be sure that, you will
.! , .ors that will not shrink or mei!. Terms cash
,I.•it , ery•
'l , waiela. 311009. 1871. I CiEO. P.
`}.ITTON R BROTHER,
Dealers In
.‘ •
%VoOL, HIDES, • PELTS, , CALF
, !MINS, Funs.
•
1%4. A , 111 , 11 tho rani) price la lai,l at all time&
ki, tI K. Ruseuti,.l,l's Stare,
Ir. A. I,VTON. t
S. 1. DAYTON. u0v.14.'70 ' TOWANI3A , PA-
NEW 1IRM!
NEW GOODS, LOW PRICES!
er;yusaJETON% rt
TItM3Yg HOLLON
1L ia•l !.eaters iii Orcx•vrten and Pr,)vlsioras, Drugs
In.! M.•,l! , ines, Krrosene Oil. Lamps, Cridmnrya,
5h41 , ',.. StulTh, faints, Oils. 'Varnish, Yankee No
t'i.fars and Snuff. Pure Wines and
“t th,•l4st quality, for mrdieinal rirl,oßes
} , l/1 , 1 at the very lowest prtees. Fre
,arefully.,-olopoundett at all hours of the
11, al.f i,i.ht ()lye lag a call.
TRACY k lIUId.OX
t”: 1. Pa.f Juno 24, ISO-Iy.
CITARLE!S F. DAYTON,
Slll . l . t•R ' l3or to Thinapbrey Itrt,*
II A II "S4'. A K E R,
dyer Moidy's Store
-;o. on ktnil 3,fult aitrortment of DOIIIII.F. and
Hllttit'SS, and all other hoods in his lino
and inanitfactitring done to order.
an.la. Aitgltst
1, iss urt,lFyiN's
1_
11ILLINEItY iESTABLISILIIENT
STILL 1N OPE ILk tION
• !Mr to the ladies of
.i• 1•1 11'1,1110 ' tiv lib-ral patr.uav,o
lo •r 4 t4.'...• NAr•Tp l ,l,4 tv her, WILL lea%e to call
att..i,thm to Ilt•r
NEW (IF MILLINEIII coots!
ollorin_t at tl.c lowest
'rowmida, April 1.. 1t72.
ES. 1 0 J. 3rI..NGrOS ( formerly
I ; y. now on I,.trot
mtI,i.INF!:Y AND FANCY (iAY)DS
f- a. r...t1 al,l Itultatv , il ha. cs.
1; C•4l.tr4 and 'Neck
• Sh. has ak'
14i...; :1)1 , , r.,AI .211.1
37111 Stntw
lu>LLY YARDS .N JEWELRY,.
•
Ae. She special
t', aril Dre caps,altio
1,1111, C:JIM, Itnj,heg. ,
I•Ir,s1 tho s , r.lt'.l`9 of 3 ti
` eL R
M sh!',l give go, Aatisfaction In all
. t straw', work. !team{` at the .111 Ptand.
• • W Mrothe!ro
P, 11 ; S . 13:A xK,
w NIA, PA
L'Aukrtgl)
1- • •:••‘.,• Dc•p•git...Lcan..c , Lcy. Makc‘z Colter
; • a; a•,;,
1:N P., : i;ALL PAN KINGICUSINESS,
Mall= ME
T .I...,ths.a,airing to send tuotf , ry to ANT Y.
th• U!tf f.11114(14 ox Er.rope, this Bank
1,,t faiilitins and the 104. est terms.
MMMM
4n , 1 from Nora Scotia, England, Ireland, Scot
t 01.1, or any part of ErrropeAnd the Orient, or the
C ELEP,RATED INALIN LINE
Of 24,...urd.ra iLlwa)a b i 1L411,1
I
AIM aells'liol.l,lwo, [initial Kates .113umda
, ;:l.Arkat ratra.
•
.Lt for tI otrIlr• ritatbt.ru 4 , a-.lllc 7 3-10
4: kr
C. 111.1CCUIR.
miq".15;71
;CM. 4. viNcENT. Caahinr
pARNI FOR SALE.-7h4
hcrilx , r oflcri for pale his farm altnated abOnt 3
mil , a from the Bbrough of Towanda, on the road
• to 7ifolirrton. at a baiyalti. 7111, farm
1,1 , , • 1-0 ar.re. , • all irilprnv , .l ev^o,
r• hti well linilipred. 'rho lam] is limier'
. .tali, elf ,I!,-iiitivntion, Imilainga. well
• • l a. Lit ~r wate.r. ' t will also all inc
1 vroprit, wusiatiug 01 hams, crArP, birm
izTl,2mc-uts,l4c. TES EASY.
.11:4..r0 , :t2n. lute 6.Ailr COLE
1 . 00 IPA ) $ /1
S. W. A.L.V011.13, Publisher.
OLUME XXXIIL
AXES IyCK)Di known AND:
0X7141132.011 AT Lair. TOvands,Pa.-
T rENRY PEET, ATTORNEY AT
LAW. ZAMA& PS. June rt. •K
MITH & =MANTA 1, I 'I
MO AT LAW. 01206--WWWW of Kan NW
Streets, opposite raid. Drag Eltars.
DR. H. WESTON, DENTIST.-
Office tn Patton's Block. ant Goss's Drag end
Chantal litton. Janl.
DIV1))W. SMITH, ATWRICET-AT-
Law, Towanda, Ps. Offen on 2d floor under
GeorGe 11.1 1 ford's Photograph Gallery. f0y30,13
DR B. JOHNSON', PmrEacus ARD
craosos,Offies over Dr. if. O. Porter Sat
41: Co.'s Drug Store.
nit. C. S. LADD, PHYSICIAN.
and Surgeon, Towanda, Pa. Moe one door
north ot Day, Tladdall & Sandaracs's coal adios.
fanlBl2
TFG. MORROW, Patsfaux Arm
Bososos. offers his professional services to
the citizens or Warren and .deiltitr. Beside=
first house north of J. 1. Cooper's Store, Warren
Centre, Pa. ap11172.11
D - - -
R. S.M. WOODBURN, Physician
and Swoon, Ofilos northwest oorner Mahe
and Pine Eititets, up stairs.
Towanda, May 1,1972.47 • •
LP. WILLISTON
* AT AT LAW, TOWANDA.
Booth side of Neroar's New Block, up stars.
April 21,
TT sTRKETER, 2 •
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
may3o,'72. - TOWANDA, PA.',
A B. MoRE A. N, ATTORNEY
• AND Connesnwe Lee. Totrandi. Pa. Par
Mullr attention paid to blueness In the Orphans'
Court. • , July 30.
EtTil Ar. STANLEY, Dzrzurs.
Office over Wkithrm & Black's Store, 'rowan.
da. Pa. Gsr for extracitna teeth.
W. B. Erma. [mar4ol2l
WH. CARNOOHAN, ATTOR
-• IZT AT Lmr (rristrlot attorney for Brad
ford Countj),Troy. Pa Wlocldow snide and
ly remittal - . • fati 15.1 M
DR.. L. U. BEACH, Passict.uc AND
Suriesos, Permanently located at Towartna.
Pa. Particular attention paid to all Chronic Diens.
en. Cancers and Tumors removed without pain and
without use of the knife. Office at his residence on
State street, two dOors east of Dr. PAWN. Attend
ance in office Mondays and Saturdaya. May 1e,'72.
J OHN I%T. - CA.LIFF, A.TTORNEY
AT Law. Towanda, Pi • Particular attention gtv.
en to Orphans' Court business. Conveyancing and
Collections; sir Mice in Wood's new block, south
of the First N'ational Bank, up stairs.
Teb. I. 1871.
A(3 E N Y,
. .
OVERTON & ELStilin t ATTort
wrs's AT LAW, Towanda, PA. baying . entered
into copartnership, offer their pr ofessional 'services
to the public-. Special -attention given to business
in the Orpluues and Register's Courts. . spll4'7o
z. OPEIZTOX..TII. S. C. 11 -sum.
TOWAIiDA, PA
MERCITR & DAVIES, ATTOR
IC'ErtAT LAW, Towanda. Pa. The undersigned
having associated themselves together in the practice
of Law. offer their profecaloual cervices to the public-
ULYSSES MERCUR. W. T. DAVIE&
March 9, 1870.
iorr-- A. it B. 'M. PECK'S LAW
V • OFFICE.
Main ' , tree opposite tbo Court House, Towanda, Pa.
Oct. 27,•70
A. KEENEY, COUNTY. SU
PEIZINTENDENT. Towanda, Pa. Office with
B. 11. Peek, second door below the Ward ifonso.
Will he at the °face the last Saturday of each month
awl at all other times when not called away on bust,
nrr.c connected with tlMStmeritendency. All letteri
hereafter be addressed as above. dec.1.70
•
1 )It. J. W. -LY3IAN,
PIITFIC/AN AND 81.71nEON.
Office one . &rr ease of Reporter bullOing Res
corner Pine and 2nd fttreet.
Towanda, June 22. 1871.
TOWANDA. P•
JOHN W. MIX, ATTORNEY AT
LAW, Towanda. Bradford Co., Pa.. •
GMTEBAL INSURANCE AGMT.
Particular attention paid to Collections and Orphan' .
Court business. OfficeL-Mortar's New Block, north
aide Albite Square.. ppr.
DOCTOR 'LEWIS, A GRADII
ate of tbaCollege of •'Phystrilms and asrftsons."
New York city, Class 1x43-4. givee exclusive attention
to the practice of his profession. Mice and residence
on the Sisters slope of Green Hill. *Mani= Henry
H 011 0 .91. pall.. In.
TIR. D. D. SMITH, Dentist, has
purehase2t fi. IT. Wood's property, between
Ntercur's Bleck and the Etwell Ittnuw. where ho has
located his offlee. Teeth extracted without pain by
use of pas. Tcrwand.t. Oct 2n;1870.--yr.
DINING ROOMS
IN CONNECTION Nvint THE IIItEF.HY,
Near the Conti Hobos.
We are prepared to teed the hungry- at all times Of
the day and evening. Oysters and Ire Cream to
their seasons.
' lfarch 30. Ivo.
ELWELL HOUSE, TOWANDA,
JOHN C. WILSON
Hiving leased this BOUM, is now ready to accomino.
date the travelling public. No pains :lore:pease will
he spared to give satisfartien to these who may give
him a call.
ire North side of the public Neve. east of Mer
cer's new• block.
- pp lIMIKRFIELD CREEK HO
TEL.
_ , I
PETER LAND: TERSER,
naving purieliared and thoroughly refitted thin old
and well-known stand. formerly kept by Sheriff OW
fis,- at the mouth of. Iluminertield Creek, la ready to
give good accommodations and aatialaetory treatment
to all who may favor Lim with - a call. ''
Dee. 2:1, atilt
I iNIFANS HOUSE, T9WANDA,
Tlie horses, harness. &r. of all guests of this
house, insured against loss by Fire, withont •ny oz.
tra charge.
A superior quality of Old 1:11010.1 Bass Ale. Just
reeeive.L • T. It. .101t1)AN, •
Towanda. Jan.: t.'7l. Proprietor.
WA,RD MOUSE,
Tins I.:molar noose, recently leased by Messrs.
Koos Muss's, and having been completely related,
remodeled, and refurnished, afford to the public
all the comforts and modern cOnvenienees of a iiret•
Hass 11..te1. I.4tuate oppostit,4 the rack on. Main
Strret, It is eminently convenient for prrsmas
ing Towanda, either for Pleasure or business. •
sepC'7l BOON Al MEANS, Proprietors.
1 1 1111CSION HOUSE,
LERA'n'SVIiILE, I'A
W . W.ALIROWNING,
This Elena!, is conducted In strictly Temper/knot
Principles. Every effort will be made to make
nests comfortable.,tleod rooms' and the table will
always be supplic, xitli the bent the market •af.
fords. Nor. I, 1871.
MI
TEMPLE OF: 'FASHION
To No 2 A l.'2l.n);;F; Lioa. Matti street, reerstd. door
HEN'S AND BOYS' CLOTHING
CllA.lll.l>Ett SETS, cheaper than
Nei', at . FROST tc SONS.
1?110ST N SONS make the
.14es
Ext. oAtnTal,l.• ut•rld.
(RESTItEDUCTE)N IN FUR
151TURE lirFt ramie. at FOR ST k. SONS.
LAXE somo very tine
onea, at a ery o w price, by
Jnne It. 1871. FOS & MEE.CIJR
CIoFFEE, TEA, sUdAR, PISA,
k 1.1.1
• .only I. XIcCARF. k
'FISH I'ORK, HAMS A bDLidtD
COWELL &
C. If. 92Ast.z r
Hotels.
D. W. SCOTT a co
=I
TOWANDA.,
BRADFORD COUNTY. PENN'A
,T A C 0 B S,
Hag r , rum FEB 3
above Urhig'e Ftreet,
Where can always be found a complete stock ed.
HATS AND CAPS.
All roods warranted. and sold at the lowest rates.
tool pc:l
rf. - z .7'47 r. :
FROST & SONS,
IttANUF§TAS
• 07 .
'q:}:ijil{ n'
Of all alybe and plow .: . wieldable elth !the Slob
Ind Me pit. the MIMI Prior. WWI& tar ell.
and eo Weep that any can adord to here theta. MP
the finest hod wad
rmamatmeat macs wmarrr puma up
„USURY 113112=1;
Of new and otigistal dss Oa and at tbs pat ea
pert style and !Wish. Alai) a eboice assoTturst of
TABLES, WARDROBES; DRESS
rpm clam smamoixos. =WIT
LIM BOOLOASEL,
Alio a comply% Wu at IMb►lbt».tb[ea,itlamfgea
Rocking. Day and Pastor Matra, in tb. plaint
variety of ogles and pekes. Abet= mak, ie•
ty of • ,
BEDSTEADS, BUREAUS, MOBS
MILES, mraßoßs, - I . -
FEATHER PILLOWS,
MATBESSES, dr, SPRING REDS,
Of every deseription. and In bet yetrythipe to be
found Ina lint (law Plunitaro Store.
CHEAPER THAN Tux, CHEAPEST I
We pq Cue for Lumber. or tale Limber to
111 rub/Loge for Furniture. Also I largo Stock of
COFFINS
•
Of every description trout the most °mune, et to the
finest liosewood, always on hand. We are sole
agents for -
1181C8 ILt7ALIO lIVICAL CAW&
Which are runt eoneeeded hymn parties to hely the
best Metallc Case In use. We have the
FINEST HEARS.E
In this section at country. and will: tend& any
in the mmenTmtnto line Ad'lbOW' *a the
same quality at good, can be got at AM; IMAGE.
either In Towanda or elsewhere, matron eta large
ELPICRIEISCE and thorough anuaipasnee with the
badman, wsatn are persons many annoyances to
which they are always subject when &Wing with
Incompetent parties.
811)11E , 107 MAIN 1311113rr
air Do not forget the place
Towanda, April 2,1872
* * * * * * * *******!***
*VHOTOGRAPHY]I *
The anderrigued would Infiniti the p4DUc *
that they have purchased the
GALLERY OF - ART
, ,*
*
* lIABDING k 611811:N.
* on Main street. And door south Mthe rest
_
National Bank, and, ean. by staid attention *
* to business. and by the ad d ition of wrap ino , *
* =nt the Art of Pkotogiapby. to snake „
oe worthy of patronage. 'Yr. Gtorrnr *
* is to remain with us. and giro his whole time *
and retention to the making of
IVORYTYPES„
MI
* PAIMKGS IN Ott ANDIWATXR °mots. *
* Ae well es MCI:LINO In DIDIA
* , *
Particular attention given to the enlareolov•
* of *Wife, and to the finishing of alriern — li *
of work, on as to eccnro the beat results. and ..,
* as midi time as possible given to making
* negatives of mall children. *
* Those wanting pictures will please eve us _
a trial, and we thud: that thei will be *Ala- •
* Bed
* jaull"l2yl *
* ** * * * * * *:********
A/ E. ROSENFIELD'S
CLOTHING
otTosITE TILE HUES HOVEL
♦Furmcrly ooeunled by 11. Jambs.)
The rapid growth of Toirtuktirrogatree Ltmi aspen.
don of bnain4a, and the underalgoed, realtrlngthits
want of the cotnnzipity In lho
READY MAYE CLOTHING LINE
Has opetu.4 a mar store In Deidleman'a Block.
(formerly occupied by H. Janobs,) and la now pre.
partl to offer to hilt old customers and the public
generally, a better stock.of
MENS' AND BOYS' CLOTHING
Than can bo found In iuir other establishment-out
side the cities.
- -
My stock ham all been purchased from the mams
racturera thin mason, so that I have no old stock to
get rid of. bought at high prices. I have • full line
His truly original, statesmanlike
and Christian policy towards the In
diana ' , is admirable, and, standing
alone,: is enough to mark him a
stal,efinian. His patience amid innu
merable difficulties in our foreign re
lations is wonderful in ono bred a
soldier. The aid the Administration
has given the industrial and financial
prosperity of the country is a great
luerit. Gen. Grant's prompt inter
fereneedfor justice to workingmen in
defiance of those about him, relative'
to the. execution of the eight hour
law, I shall always remember. The
crime of the Republican party in tol
erating. the Ku-Klux is flagrant.
Bid the President and his immediate
friends deserve our gratitude for
their efforts and' success in that mat.
ter. His services to the Fifteenth
Amendment I shall never forget.
When some, even of the foremost
Abolitionists, doubted and were lake
/warm, I wrote to Senator Wilson
asking him to urge thin. Grant to
put three lines into his message
commending that measure to Con
gress and the country. The anima.
came back, "Yon are too late. Gem
Grant's - message Was finished before I
your note arrived, , and the recoil'.
mendatiou you wish is in it." It
still remains lamentably true that
the colored man has no full recogni
tion at the North, and no adequate
protection in the South—shame to
the Administration and to the Re
publican party !' But, their friends
may fairly claim that during the' last
three years the negro has steadily
gained in the safe tijcereise and quiet
enjoyment of his nghts.
I know the defects of Gen. Grant's
administration as well as any man.
_ I think, distrustful 'as I was of him, I
am able to see the good service he
has unexpectedly rendered the nu-
SAIL EN LILY WEXNESDAY AND BATUUDAY.
tion.
GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS
et tn. Attest qnality and latest styles. ntleb I am
Offering &Clow figures.
have z connection with the old stand. aid when
..on want attythinr in the clothing Una, for youtiell
Ir buys. call uu we in Beidleman'a Mock.
Tmvnii,l3, Yfnhil 28.1R72
I MESSRS LA ARIIS & MORRIS;
OPTICIVig k FOCUWSra,
Itare with a view to Sileet,tho Inertaithig detitatid for
their
CELELLUTLD 6kIXJTED SPECTAMEB
rnl+rintctl
W. A. CHAMBERLIN,
Watch Many and downier, dealer . It,ltis anil
Arnrrimn W.lttebeg,
TOWANDA, PA.,
•
Sole Agent in this Locality. They have tam care
to tics all needful instructions, and bare confidence
is the ability of their agent to anent the irequtre.
:limbs of all erodomers. An apportnnity'lw, ill be
trine afforded to procure et all thews. Elpectatlee Ura.
equalled by any for their Strengthening' and PITO.
creation Qualitlea. Too lunch cannot ,he aidd se to
their Superiority over the ordinary nlasses worn.
There is no glimmering, wavering of the sight, diz
ziness, or other nhplesuaint aerisation, but on the
contrary. trout the perfect construction at the Lou
gee, they are soothing and pleasant, cans a feel
ing of relief to the wearer, and prod ndU a dear
and distinct vision. as to the natant, healthy sight.
Th. y ore the only spectacle that preserve as well as
assist the sight, and are tbe cheapest honenes the
best, always lasting •nta.ny years without change he
ing neeeseary.
CATITION. •
Paoruiszon.
w. A. c
8010 Agent la Torawis, Pa.
sir We employ 120 pottllas. I
. March. 1111; 1872.
ANCHOR LINE STEAMERS
l'aswtwertifw , 4o 4l to and from ant , lialliway 1314
tr•u or apw lin (Neal Britain, Ireland. •limrts7.
8%1,41.41, pmmiark.(iermany. Frame , . Hollaint, Bel
guim awl Hie Unitod States.
Cabin fare (min New York to LONDON. f WM&
POOL (11,1044101 V, and. DEUBY by Wir ll
:cram-r5, $6O. Satiardara B teXtharkS=s
EXCUBmION 11011118, 11120.
naKnvEtnaTr. $ 73 . RIVIR 40 E. StR 14 1 1 Par
ablo .n Cola. MI.
Parties eroding for thrtr triads to the Old Cone
try ran pun tau. tickets at teill(ftl rates. ,For tot-
I her partirulara apply to LIESEPFILSON ItatiptatlL
7 Bolding 'Green, ti. Y. or to NEM ieentral
Eipms., °moo, Toward'', Po, or N. N. SUM AL.
Fire Nation Bank of Towanda.
PURNITURZI
-at al times motets
ar'ClWl:lG:ltilletil
J. o. ntosT i ;F o xe
GEO. B. WOOD & CO.
REMEMBER !
M. E. BOSENFIELD.
Itnrranm, PA.
-1
TOW: NDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA. ? SEPTEMBER
. 'EMU P/UttlPfr LETTEI. •
• miripa g eartill Pleeestair ran et
.tie• BOSIMILSM__ • Preetteat t
MieraM b. Ite.elete4-1114 Plows Mr.
limair~o Daludim sad Item* area.
key .
The following is theciplete tett
of Mr. Wendel Philips ' Um. to the
leading colored citizens of 'Boston, in
response to their invitatinn to ad
dress them on the political issues of
the day :
BwAusscarr, August 9,18 M.
Gomm= : You ask to ad
dress you on the questione involved
in the canvass between President
Grant and Mr. Greeley: . I thank
you for the confidence „Implied in
your request. Among you I . see
many who have been workers with
me in the anti-slavery cause for7ears.
My residence here mates it incon
venient for me to attend' a public
mains in Boston; and, indeed, I'
think I can state my views more sat
isfactorffy in a letter than in a public
address. If yon please, tlOrefore, I
will communicate with you in this
way, rather than in the one you siag
gest.
Of course, the first theUght that
occurs to you and ins just now is
that one of your best, ablest, and
most watchful friends, Mr. Senator
Sumner, advises you to vote for for.
ace Greeley, and believes: that your
lights will be safe only, in his keep
mg. I touch with reverSnt hand
everything from 'Mr. Sumner. I can
never forget his measureless services
to the anti-slavery cause and to your
race. Whenever I read his words
read them overshadowed by the mem
ory of his early and entire consecra
tion to the service of impartial liberty;
of that zeal which hasnever
flagged;
that watchfulness which has seldom
been deceived; of that devotion which
has so rarely shrunk from any sacri
fice; which no opposition could tire
and no danger appal. From such a
counselor I venture to differ with
great reluctance, and only after ma
ture deliberation. I should hesitate
to publish my dissent if I were not
sure that I was right and he - was
wrong; that the occasion was very
important, and his mistake one which
leads to fatal results.
My judgment is the exact apposite
of Mr. Sumner's. I think every loy
al man, and especially every colored
man, should vote for Gen. Grant, and
that the nation and your race are
safe only in the hands of the old,
regular' Republican party.
Some may ask how I come to think
thus, when 1 was one of the few loy-
al men- who protested, in 1868,
ugainst Grant's nomination, and see
ing that I have so often affirmed that
the Republican party had outlived
its usefulness.
Gentlemen, the reasons which lead
me to my .present opinion, in spite of
my former views, ought to give my
judgment more weight with you. I
am forced by late developments to
my present position.
You remember that in 1868 I em
phatically denied Gen. Grant's fitness
for the Presidency. Derided by the
Republicen press, I went from city to
city, protesting against his election.
In private, with Mr. Sumner and
others, I argued long and earnestly
against the risk of putting such a
man Into such an office. At that•
time they saw only his great merits
and supported him heartily. The de
fects of his administration are 'no
surprise to me. I may say, without
boasting, that I prophesied those de
fects. Ido not wish to hide them
to-day ; I entirely agree with Mr.
Sumner as to the grave fault and in
tolerable insolence of the Administra
tion in the San Domingo matter. I
think the frequent putting •of 'rela
tives into office highly objectionable,
and the sad career of Webster is
warning enough against any man in
public life venturing to accept gifts
from living men. These and other
defects are no surprise to me. The
eminent merits of Gen. Grant's ad
mini titration are, I confess, a surprise
to me.
But nu matter for those defects.
At the most they are not fatal ; and
events have lifted President .Grant
into bang to-day the symbol and
representative of loyalty, The con
spiracy between Southern secession
ists and Northern copperheads, of
which, very naturally, Mr. Greeley is
the tool, Rua, unfortunately, Mr.
Sumner ie,the iiidomer and, I think,
the dupe—leaves room but fur tivgdo
parties—those who are for the nation
es azimustox noir
and dime who Are spina it. I abate
no jot of my brotherly ro ward, and
gnome esteem for M. Baraneß •in
thmehdthngildm derohnol. Th en
tire faith I have in his honest'. of
purpose obfiges me think him Anted.
The only wonder is, how this is. poll . ,
Bible when the South is so insolent
and shameless in proclaiming her in.
tentions.. The South has long seen
her mistake and often confessed it.
The 71-27 rune itself makes this state.
ment as late as dune, 1871. That
mistake was to contend for her ideas
with muskets and outside the Union
—leaving ins the 4;:krvemment, and
taking to herself the past eta rebeL
She has ofteniumonnoed—in the last
instance by the lips of Jefferson Da
vis—that the canoe was not lost, and
must be won by getting possession
of the Government and leaving us in
the opposition. Saab is the plot.
That Mr. Greeley sees it'would never
prevent his aiding it; thit W- Sum
ner does not see it is to me matter of
profound astonishment. At such a
moment the regnlar Pepnblican par
ty becomes" again the accepted and
only instrruneat' of resistance, and
Grant represents loyalty as Lincoln
did in 1861. Ido not care for his
defects, were they ten times greater.
Chatham and Junius rigbtfnlly . for
got even the infamy of Mites when
be stood the remeentative and sym
bol of the rights of a British subject.
Even if I accepted Mr. Bnmner's por
trait of President Grant—which in
some sense is true, but in no sense is
the whole truth - -I should still vote
for him against a rebellion at the
ballot-box, to which disloyalty gives
all the strength, and childish -credu
lity all the character.
To stop now for criticism of such
faults as those of Gen. Grant, is like
blaming a man's awkwardness when
he is defending you against an assas
sin.
In proof that the conspiracy I
charge is real and no fiction, I need
not cite Jefferson Davis' late speech,
or the confession of Mr. Greeley's
adherents, - Every impartial man
who comes to us from the South,
bears witness that the mask of the
Southern whites 'are wholly anchang-
ed in opinion and ready for another
revolt whenever the way opens. The
widespread' rganization ot the Bit-
Klux shows. the same thing. That
organization existed only because
public opinion there cheered it on,
and in suppressing it our Govern
ment had no tittle of help from the
former rebels. All this was to be ex
pected. It would be contrary to his
tory and experience were it other
wise. To put the slightest faith in
the protestations of copperheads and
secessionists, made only to get office,
is building on real quicksand. With
the exception of Mr. Sumner, no
leading Liberal Republican does put
any faith in those protestations.
Theirs is not a case of delusion.
They are hypocrites, not dupes.
They know well the plot, and for the
sake.of office are willing to help it
and risk the consequences. They
know that. Mr. Greeley's election
means the negro surrendered to the
hate of the Southern States, with no
Interference from the nation in his
behalf; that. it means the Constitu
tional Aniendments neutralized by a
copperhead Congress; our debt tam
pered with, and our bonds falling
twenty per cent. in every market.
The Democratic millionaire who is
willing to risk this has already
"hedged." He holds millions of Con
federate bonds, and is plotting to
make on them more than enough to
pay four times over all he loses on
the national securities, and then
safely laugh at the small bondhold
ers he has duped.
Observe that I count aa9ilr. Circe
ley's allies only the copperheads of
the Democratic party. It is loose
talk to say he has joined the Demo-
crate. Such a statement is an instill
to the Democracy. The exact truth
is, he has joined the copperhead
wing of the Democracy—its worst
element. They are his reliance.
I know some' honest war Demo
crats wish to change their base and
accept heartily the result of the war..
All honor to them. But their place
is not with Greeley, but with Grant.
They fought at his side ; there they
should. stand to-day. I know it is
hard to confess mistakes; but I prac
tice wLat I preach.
If Gen. Grant-is set aside, who is
offered us in his place? Horace Gree
ley. I need not tell you, my friends;
what Horace Greeley is. We Aboli
tionists knew him only too well in
the weary. dears .of our struggle.
He had ehongh of clear moral vision
to see the justice of our - cause, but
he never had courage enongh to con
fess his faith. If events had over
given him the courage, he never
would have had principle enough to .
risk anything for an idea. A' trim
mer by nature and purpose, he has
abused even an American
privilfge of trading ,principles fur
success. But for lack of ability he
would ha'vo been the chief time-server of his age. I never knew till
now any of his eulowsts so - heedless
and undiscriminating as even to
claim that be was a sincere man. AS
for hifi honesty, for twenty years it
has been a by-word wit!' us that it
:.yould be- safe to,. leave your open
4 5urse in the same room with hin.t,
'int as for any other honesty, no one.
was ever witless enough to connect
the idea with his name.
Mr. Sumner trnsts him as a. lif+
time Abolitionist. ThiS is certainly .
news to you - and' ion. Yon and I
know well, when Abolitionist was a
term of reproach, how timidly he
held up tit; skirts abort him, careful
to put - a wide distance between him
self and us. Yon will find few work
ing Abolitionists .who stood in the
trenches from 18411"tO 1860, willing
to trust, the negro race to Horace
Greeley. I can remember- the (lay
when he and his fellow Republicans
quoted Our criticisms upon them as
certificates that they were not Aboli
tionists. We can give him ju,L such
a certificate now with a clear con
science. Judged by the files of the .
Tribune itself, there never was an
hour when Horace Greeley could
have been trusted with the care - a
the black man's rights. -
NirUtan has known better than he
how - to manufacture political and pe
cuniary success out of the convictions
e
MI
aivtirer spuni• - -For hieiseit he newer
hied• a coairiction.: - Mee amtrast isis
formerinlise of esnotiont with his
faultlischoragnr, , Neither his pnOile
nor his blamo-are of any scootint
Neither_onneirilatini the hiss#. :Bath
11116 ineastored andlweighadvlllat With
shrewd calculation for effect. Exam
ine the fileaof the. Traure sad you
will *gist whenever men's convic-
tions on any subject got sheen edge,
Mr. Greeley was , always ready to
blunt them with a compromise. He
is only acting the pestle bas always
Flayed. Men 'sigh when some stir
ring and loyal sentence is quoted
from the tune of 1862 or 1864,
and Horace Greeley immediately
proves that he did not write it. But
you and I always knew that three'
quarters of the loyalty 'of the nibune
was smuggled into it in, his absence,
or in spite of him. If his letters and
communications .to Lilicoln, during
the dark years of 1862 and 1863, are
ever ',published, 'the world will' see
what
,you and I have always known,
that he could hardly hire aided the
Confederacy more unless he -had en-
listed in its ranks or taken a seat in
its Cabin&
If, as Mr. Snmder Baia, Mr.;Gree
ley is a life-long Abolitionist, how
comes it that; till within three years,
Mr. Sumner hardly ever got a kind
word and never had any hearty sap.
port from the Tribune ? How often
have Mr. Sumner's friends heard him
expatiate at length on this point?
On the floor othongress he has stood
for many a
_year the incarnation of
the anti-slavery movement. .But
has again. and again complained that
instead of giving him any_ support,
the Tribune has constantly belittled
his efforts and put obstacles in his
way cheering his opponents and
carping at his measures, or at_ best
damning them with faint praise., My
recollection of those well grounded
complaints is so fresh that I look at
Mr. Sistnner's picture of Mr. Greeley
with unfeigned astonishment. Even
the supposed conversion oft he South-
trim rebels is not so wonderful as tha
of the Tribune into a supporter of
Charles Sumner.
Doubtless we could find - a man
who would, even if elected by rebels,
still use them for his own purposes.
And it 18 possible that, in rare mo
menta of exceptional and rare virtue
or courage, Mr. Greeley may dream
of doing so. But in cool and sane
moments he knows he is their tool,
and is contented to be so, Eveiy
man of common , sense sees that, of
coarse, if copperheads and secession-
bits lift Mr. Greeley into the White
House, they will claim-and it is
now understood they shall h ave--
their full share in shaping the-policy
and filling the offices of the_ Admin
istration., They are no bunglers, but
shrewd at a bargain, and sure to get
good security for a - promise. - The
cower stone of their policy is, to re
pudiate our debt; or assume their
own. We shall surely hear that ad
vocated. We shall probably see Jef-
°mon Davis in the Senate, and car
tainly have his agents in the Cabinet.
No doubt he will be consulted in the
construction of the Cabinet. This is
to put in peril all the war has'gained.
I am not ready for such an experi-'
ment. Ai old friend ; now residing
in Georgia, who stood, rifle iu hand,
In Kansas all through the tight, told
me, just after the Cincinnati Conien
tion
- " Sir, before Grant arrested those
twenty Ha-Klux in North Citrwlius,
I never slept without a loaded. mus
ket at my bed-head, and never ven
tured into the village unless fully
armed. Since that stern interference
in North Carolina, I, eveh afar off in
Georgia, sleep and walk about as
safe, carelea and free as you do here:"
" If Greeley is elected, I suppose,"
said I, " you'll load those revolvers
again." •
" Never--I know by Southern boast
what that election means. I'll never
risk living in Georgia under Greeley
—l'll sell but and come Noith."
Such is the testimony of a loyal
man in the South ! That is how it
looki in Georgia-.
Gentleman, I 'have another inter
est in Grant's election. The anti-sla:
very cause was only a portion of the
great stntgle between capital and la:
bor. Capital undertook to own the lilt
dored. We havnbroken that up. If
Grant is eketed that dispute and all
questions connected with it sink out
of sight. AU the lamina of the war are
put beyond debate, and a clear field
is left for the discussion of the labor
movement. 165 not count much on
the recognition of that agreement by
the Republican Convention,- though I
gratefully appreciate it. But I see in
the bare success itself of General
Grant the retiring of old issues and
the securing of it place for new ones.
If Greeley is elected we shall spend
the next four years in fighting over
the war. quarrels, ..constitutional
atrietolments, negro . s' rights, State
rights; re - and southern
ebts. And we shall „have besides a
contemptuous ignoring of the' hibor
question. Its
. .friends were at Cin
cinnati. The convention .scorned
their appeals, and Mr. Schuh him
self affirmed that "labOr was not a
live issue." • President Grant means
peace and opportunity to agitate the
great industrial questions of the day.
President (ireeley means the sezuldal
and wrangle of Andy Johnson's
years over again, w?th secession en
camped in Washington.
The saddest line' to me of Mr.
Sumner ti later was - where he warns
you colored men not "to band- to
gether-in' a hostile camp, and keep
alive the separation -of the races "
The negro robbed. tortured, mur
dered, trodden under foot, defense
!swig unresisting submission—who
has the hoitt, to charge him with an
iota of the guilt of " keeping alive
the separation of raceS?' Surely
this lainh ha.; never shown ~any lisle
or undue prejudice itgarie:. 1.110 w 4,11..
Thu Senator used t o thine- all the
fault was on the other
We lan. :e.tde the §cla it it
the insult iu q in preaching to as
forgiveness and cancellation. An
dersonvillo and Libby Prison are
still living horrors. Besides the
thousands who were etat-Ved there,
hundreds still drag vat, weary lives
in our streets, poisoned all through
by that i dread .cruelty. The waves
of seven White native Georgia 'loyal
UM
, -
ti k \ _ •
1
I r .
L
men, "ruthlessly: shot. down in - the
streets, andhardliyet +swami. The .
fitstoborn of 100,000 households are
still fresl2l7 MOnTund, .Zll
year, throughout half the &nth, the
. was robbed, torttried and 'mini
. with impunity,' the Southern
Press glorying in the - atroeitien.
Meanwhile—'thanks to the unparal
leled mercy, the unutterable gener
osity of the nation- 7 ninety-nate out
of every • hundred Oonfederatt-.sol
diens enjoy today ,all the rights they
had before the war.' Jefferson Davis
and his fellow-assassin--.the real
jailers of Andersonville and Libby--
"Shame on those cruel Gyps
That bore to took on torture
And dated not look on war"— '
still live----xmharmed, in peaceful pOB
- of every right the law . can
give, erceyt- that -o f lifting their
hands against . the Government that
has spared them. I dare not affix
the epithet I thinkfitting 'to that
mood of mind which deems it neces
sary and becoming to preach to such
a community- the duty of forgiieness!
We do forgive. We have forgiven.
But duty-to the dead and to the ne<
gro forbids us to trust power lo any
hands without undoubted certainty_
that such hands are tnnitworthi.
=we fail in this „caution We shall only
have decoyed the negro into / danger
and left him doubly defep;3eleas.
wish my - voice could be heard by ev
ery colored man dowi,tO the Gulf ;
not because they need my adijee.
No ; they um' and see .the
danger. But like to rally .
'them to bell second time to
save the teal ;hould say to
them, " Vote, te - you, few
Grant, as YOU valieprop!ity, life,
wife or child. If Greeley is, elected,
arm, etmeentrate, conceal your prop
erty7—but crganite for defense. You
will need it soon and sadly. '
Working men, rally now, to save
youru great question from being
crowded out and postponed another
furls yearS. • -
Soldiers; at the, roll call in No
vember, let no loyal man fail to.
ewer to his name. We decorate our
loyal graves with worse than empty
ceremonies if over them,, we clasp
hands with still revengeful enemies.
When parties and politicians betray
us, do you rally, as you did before,
and under the same great Captain,
to save the State. If Grant is de
feated. lam not sure we shall see
traitors in the Capitol parting the
nation's raiment, and casting lots for
its flag. Bat we are sure to see
Congress full of traitors, and in the
White House their tot& Let every
man who would avert that . danger
vote for Gras.
• WENDELL PHILLIP&
A BLAST FROM BUOMALEW.
PoMinns proverbially make queer
records, "and their explanation' and
defence of . their records are queerer
than the records themselves. Let
us take, fur instance, the-vse of
Charles B. Buckalew, the Democrat-
Candidate . , for Governor, - . and re
view his career in:the - light of histo
ry ~ a nd in friW view of his rece . nt
speech at.Laneaster. In that speech
Mr. Buckalew defends his " war rec
ord," and, strange as it may . appear
in • a Buchanan :_Democrat, - makes.
told to Claim that he was ."trooly
loll.". As an introduction .to his an
thence, Mr: Buckalew remarks that.
though " I have known many of feat"
people 1111111 y years, it has never hap
pened that I was with you in your
popular suisemblages," which, consid
ering the speaker's selfish and aris
tocratic tastes i , we can readily be
lieve; it not being his fashion to min
gle in " popular assemblages" or
among the masses except when beg
ging for their . votes. - But let that
pass. Mr. Bnckalew , starts
. out by
saying that " there is odium; . suspi
cion and some measure of disgrace
in public affairs in this State," which
is quite true as we shall show, and
he argues- 'hence that his elec
tion to the Governorship is necessa
ry as a matter of ce - arse - .. The reme
dy, we fear, is worse than the Com
plaint... Mr. Buckalew, before'he was
appointed Minister to Ecuador, tierv-,
ed six yearsin the State . Senate; and
afterwards six years in the Senate of
the United States. He is now•jn the
third year of his present/. term as
State Senator. In all this-legislative
experience, extending over - a period.
of fifteen years, we - challenge -him to
point to a single act of vital-Moment
or of lasting benefit to the human
family that originated and found its
place upon the statute book as a
monutuentef his wisdom, foresight
or statesmanship. The echo •of po
litical abstractionists, 'his career as a
State or - national legislator has t been
fitted to the grooves prepared by
abler hands, and his - status-rests
simply upon the pigmy utterances of
the thoughts of giants. • Thus we
find _him, as a legislater,.in fuliery
in favor of the repeal of the Missouri
Compromise,. championing the -Bor
der Ruffianism in Kansas, and in
open antagonism with the
s r. De
mocracy of . the land who tight- to
avert the 'bitter war which Pierce,
Buchanan and their purblind
ers brought about. The . " recSril "
I Which ho made in all that 'fearful
time, we shall see in time.;,
.tut Mr. Buckalew informs ns,that
"there is odium, suspicion and - Soin - e
measures of disg race in public - affairi
in this . State." Taking,it for grant
ed that he knoWs whereof he speaks,
wherefore is - it that he; a 'sworn Sen
ator of Pennsylvania, does not-detail
the origin, cause and underlying and
tlagraut 'facts, with names, dates - and
circumstances? In -all his term in
then Legislature when the Democrat:-
ic party had a majority or when the
Republican party had' a-majerity,has
he titteuipted to lay hare any single
one Of the at he
hint:., but : has not. tile niante , od to
'spurt( ) In 111, %%holt. of h i , Tang
ger% hat:: t !; I:in kal , te r
pith I albt.! y end e, .truption gut ng
d.aentreell tie vely nose tu the legis•
lative halls ever risen 41 place as.
a tienator and -dared to denounce
what he \- -declares to '1)0 I Went, and
full of "odinni, suspicion and -some
glis!frave? ".. I ti,L ti, ems a.,1:.
mid challenge a rept), wlust,
measure (.11kOtight noteri-,
mealy by ••'• •ads ly banking mo
nopo • and rporations -of eve-
011% pear Annan" in Advance.
ry grado—ngsunst what measure' of
bought legislation did this political
Usish Heap lift his honest mew op. /
PIO bi hOnel4 vote, or lay bare
by !As honest .exposure Innobth
for' whatone of all these infamous
acts did - not Charles Bucktdew
cast his legislative vote; and/crowi
with ..the splendor of his/collosal
statesmanship? Why; - chiming to
be a Democrat, he has befin foremost
of all men in advocacy/ of " special
legislation" for the favored-few ; and
to-day, speaking, of "Itings " there is
not poltiician izaennpylvania who
stands higher witli tho-Railroad Rings
led by Alexander R". McKlure one
the ;Boom Ring headed by "Horse
Herdic, and , all the rest of the
" Rings " that prosper by corrupt
legislation,than this Charles R. Buck
slew, who/ is traveling in tears over
the Commonwealth. And this is the
reason/ that, knowing, as he claims to
know, of all the venality and rank
ravddity abounding in Harrisburg,
ho has not dared and does not dare,
to-day or at, any luture day, to speak
'as A, Senator in denunciation of the
foull7 bite:nous transactions,in name
tuutiu detail, of the corporations and
their agent/ who, ye!w after year,
pollute the Capitol of the Common
wealth. =ls not the receiver as bad
as the thief? -Is not he who conceals
a crime the equal of the scoundrel
who commits it? Is not the corn-
pounder of a felony-4nd what fel
ony_ is more infamous than that o
corrupting the legislative of the peo
ple?—as guilty as the felon, who con
'summates it? If , yea, on wha
ground --Melee; R • Bnokalew,
sworn to faithfully serve the people
of Pennsylvanikelgra their sniTragba
in the face of the falct that, while
venality and shame were stalking all
about him, he had '.not the courage,
he had not the manhoCd, he had not
the decent honesty to brand it from
his. Senate seat with till ,the warmth
and vigor of a truthful and a faithful
man ? He is not blind. He is not
,
deaf. •He is not .dumb. He is sim.
ply silent while the honor t of his.na
tive State is being, violated, her leg.
islative halls polluted.:Snd the rights
: 1 111
of her citizens -being trafficked away
for cash: All that he ouclisafes her
outraged people-is aat• g of glitter
ing generalities, * with either names,
dates or circumstance and a miser
able mouthing about " odium, suspi
cion and some rneaSur of:disgrace in
public.affaira ' which 'mild not exist
if Charles R- Buckale had discharg
ed his duty with the . earlessness of
an honest man and i utter :disre.
gard tof the opinions r interests.of
the- "Railroa.d 'Ring, ' -and .all - ,the
" Rings ".that have e the Penn
sylvania. Legislature tlie synenyui of
sordid - shame. Acrd Yet he , asks to
be niade a Governor !
- Mr. Bnckalew, - " troely -ail," us lie
clui ins to be, k averse totlie cry of
the' people - 7 - "loyalty - as. in -war
tinier." Ho thinks that that- ought
to be stopped, although he ventures
upon a vindication of his 'particular
" war record." Let us see what this
" war record " -was. 'ln\** the fall of
1860 the practical -work: -of es_
sion was begun. That it would be'
attempted.was known ito Buchanan,
his Cabinet, and the publie menof the
period long before. Cue by one the
resolutions of the Southern 'Legisla
tures were passed. One by / One the
Southern. Senators and Representa
tives want, out. One by. one, - the
Members, of Buchanan's Cainet
~,.
withdrew. :The Stet of the- West
had been fired upon ; line . going to
the relief of a nationalgarrison. The
President of the nation was• inaugu
rated at -the point of the bayonet.
PennsylVaniansiDetnuerlits and Re
publians, • had. been' shot down in
the streets of / Baltimore While going . :
to the protection- -of
: t ) ,he National
Capital.
~*.Atlast the ld .Flag was
fired upon, and, as if by holyinspi
' ration, 'the whole North rallied .to
the standard of their country. ! " The
Federal ' Union must be preserved,"
was sworn by every patriot lip. Dem ,
oerats, Republicans, true men every.?
r where lent every energy' of heart, and
mind to the nation's cause. Troops
poured - npon the President, and
words of cheer went Out. from Union
-home& Pennsylvania burned with
the fervor of an ; earnest patriotisth,
Patterson; McClellan, , Heintzleman,
Coulter, Eat, Nagle, Kane; Hartntuft;
Campbell, Wistar, Sam. Randall,
Hambright, ' Baffler, Davis, Rene,.
Mulholland ; . 'Negloy, Humphreys,
Reynolds,_ Bohlen, Stone,, Allen,
Meade, cCall, Doubleday, ,Craw
ford, leminer, Lewis,-Gregg, Frank
lin,' 'Cullum,. Ricketts,' , Meredith,
Hoffman, . Butler; Price, -Richter,
Jones, Averill, ' RipPey, Murphy;
' McCandless, Pat. McDonough, and a
hundred thousand men trod proudly
the path ,of patriotisin '?and duty.'
Two years and more? went' by, and in
victory or defeat,. the', national im
pulse never tlaggedtWo . years and
more Of slaughter and „ sacrifice and
sorrow. In all that time where was .
Charles IV - Buckalow ; and what werd
of cheer was given by him in the
hour of the nation's .fate? No one
can answer this better than himself,
and i as„ like. Col. Forney, We like
e fair play,"' ; we proooed to give
BuCkalew's own recOrd: " Shortly
after my election (to the United
States Senate), in duly, 1803, I pre
pared au essay upon the existing po,
litical situation in Ulla country, and
especially with reference to the war
that -was then pentling."N Bearing hi'
mind the date, the reader will ob
serve, that, while Pennsylvania had
raised and put in the, held , one- hun
dred and eighty•three regiments, and
while tens of thousands . of• her sons
had been maimed or killed in battle,'
and while •every tine heart was
throbbing with prayerful auxiety,
and every manly' voice was raised „,in*
the. Union tame; Mr. •Chaylesi!R.
Ilnekalew ie! slelid and indrlferent for
ht••,,t y , Nerri , I,l „ Htltz , , and only dcelar•
(A himself in "an essay ',' after he
w : t .., eleelvd-n‘ iheSetiste. The tem
-Ott Was fired,- the incendiary was
stilt plying his - bitch, the edifice
threa‘eutal
,to ciumble away, and its .
' loyal sentinel, in view of all, sat •titiV
etly down, like a statesman; to dis
/Criss in "an--essay " the danger of_fire
.and the boldness of the incendiary,
without. any attempt to arrest either.
But eivnn this waft an enfote e d d u ty ;
It will be reintaub'Ofed' that the Dein
°erotic party; in 1862, art its woe rel.-.
NUMBER 14:
MEM
enkeirept- the etlsitry along/ with
Pietipeilvenfit, Y'it thee - **wed the
Le
of
gislature a majority/of one.
The battles Gettysburg,and Vicks
burg had been won, anikthe end was
supposed to be near at / hand. It was
-safethen rto diScuss-Astract guns--
tions r ind especiallY,io as M. Back
' alew could not .be disturbed in his
place for six.long years. He could
parade kilatittidss for patriiitfsm, but
in so doing ,linecnild.&=,.7ve nobody
as to the ` tuid_ fact that from the
outlet of the inuilor' tuv years and
three months, and at a time too, when
his coimtry needed everything to
save it 'from destruction, Charles R.
Bart e r never uttered one loyal word
nor,
nor, one sign of fidelity to the
Union. For what - he voted and how
he voted, we shall discuss again.
,His feeling is typified in his ' silence
as stated 13y himself. It is -further
illustrated by the singular circum
stance-that-both he and Judge Black
ace l identally met at Niagara ails af
terwards, and held intercourse with_.
Holcombe, the traitor, whose mis
sion was , to " disrupt „the Eastern
and Western States, and to " carry
the war," in tlie words of Jeff -Davih,
-" where food for the sword and torch
await our armies in the densely pop
nlated_ * * * which • took
years of industry and millions ; -df
money to build." 'To verify this pre
diction., and to fulfill the proniise of
President Pierce, that "the ,fighting
will not be along Mason and Dixon's
line merely * " but "it will be within
our own borders, in our own streets,"
—was Holcombe's work, and, with
such a scoundrel, Buckalew, in his
"loyalty,"' folio fitting companion
ship. ' It will take more _than his
statesmanship, or the testimony of
his co-consprator r to satisfy the pee- .
plc, of Penns,ylvania - that this \ hob
nobbing was not purposed and pre
meditated.
The rest of this most remarkable
efforts is of the usual material—a
clamor for "reform" Witliontany plan
of reaching it except the poor re
coritse of Buckalewrs election.. Ho
suggests no, measures of immediate
relie, much less does he pledge him
self to any direct policy. of, action.
His ledgesare not worth the breath
reluired to uttei them; and the "re
form" that would he brought ;about
may be guessedat reviewing his
faithlessness as a S ator. Piyested
of its froth, this Lancaster PrOnanc
iamento is the lamest and- tamest
appeal that this campaign -;his yet
evoked. As a defence it falls) of its
own weight—while, , as a campaign
document it a thOnsand times
worse than a wet i blanket. If Mr.
Backale* proposes a canvass of Ole
State on that lino he will discover
long before October that what he
knows about 'campaigning is !infin
itesimally little.--Sunday 7rameript.
. .
. 11 - Es wno was WasiEs7-- - - I God has so
made the" sexes that. women, like .
Children, cling to the men—lean uu-
on them as ,lhough they -e-eresiipe
tior in mind and body. They, make=,
them the suns of, their system, and
they make their 'children. revolve a
tokncrthein: ' 111 - extoe , gods, if they
but knew it, and - women burn in
,cense at their '-shrines.: WOmen,
therefore, who have good winds and
(
purelicarts want men. to lean upon.
' Think of their reverencing a - milk-,
ard, a liar
. or libertine.. -It t man.
would. have a woman do him
age, he tuust-be- manly in
sense; a true 1 gentleman, not
the . Chesterfield , school, but i
because his heart is= fullof kindO
one who treath her with respect
deference, beCanse she is a 'ls.
who never \condescends to 'sal
things to. hers who brings herd
his level, if MS mind is above;
who is never - Over anxious to i
butt always anxious to, do right!
lii§ - no time ' to - be . frivolous!,
her. ` , ,..A.lways dignified•in spee4 and •
act; who never spends too much up
on her; never yields to temptation,
even if she puts it in his, way; Who is
ambitious to make his mark in the
world, whether she encourages him
or not; who is never familliar with
her to the - extent Of an .adopted_
brother or cousin;- who is not over
careful about dress; always pleasant
and :considerate,. ,but. always . - keep
ing his - place , of the , man, - 'the head,
and never losing it. ',Such' deport
ment, -with noble , principles, a t gothl
mind, energy and industry,
wip any woman in the •:world
who is worth winning. . •
A SuNsrr Tarholton
(Ga.).Slandarti " slings language at
a sunset scene after this niann6r.
"The most pigeon - if amid folds
were piled broken gold riffs . alcM i g a
sea of amber and amethyst, while a. .
few bold heaplands, -- surcharged -
constantly revolting radiance, cani
ed The - scene to shift every moment;
creating fairy - mstles with glitterin g •
Spires and living - landscapes, from
which arose rugged mountaineragS•
with lowerS bathed in. the rain , : of a
crolden storm. Islands of coral-vc ,, - .
etating.4sunlieams - floating on sea
of crystal light,- would. pass alOng
the horizon to die into nothingness
and iris-shrouded gloom. The txtck,
ground of the scene was a constantly
changing sea of - anything ether, With-.
depths so clear and grouping head:
Jands,so distinct, the mind was -in
tensified and; over • poWered at the
immaculate -picture. Now . see, far •
to the right- in the puerst - ether are
floatingyhantom ships With: sails
iut
pelle by •the- softest of airs, -b&ne l ,
lust beyond- :at the golden -,, ates:
Dark- hrowed and luminous on their
western verge, a company of head- •
Lauds move lazily tintil.lamiclikatinto
golden meadoix
Paer~utu~: To PLAT.—Oliver
dell Holmes says thisis .the
women prepare to play on the piano:
"It was a young woman with as many _
white -flounces round . her as the
planet Saturn .haS. rings, that did
it. She gave the music-stool a
whirl or two, and Miffed dowri on it
like a twirl of soap •in a Band-basic.
Then she Worked, her wrists and
hands to limber 'em ; I supposed, and
spread out her fingers till they looked
as though they would cover the key
board, frdm the growling end: down_
to the. little squeaky one. Then
those two hands of hers made a jump
at the keys as if they, were a couple -
of - tigers Cimino. down :upon a flock
of black and white sheep, andAhe
piano gave a great . ihowl as ifits tail
been trod ou. Dead . - stop-So still
you could hear your .liairygr;:bwitig.
Then another howl as , piano
had got two tails and ytt tr e d
on botlr dot 'etii at onei.;. and tht-n
gi and chit ter and Ger : Amble:mil kt tg
of jumps, up, and,' down, back and
forward, one band over the . other,
like• a stauipe / de, of rats, and wit!,
more than like any thing I call .
• .
TnE,Zuly thing that • will revive a
Tenteeisee girl when she faints, is t' dimly&
dip "I ice, with the . "•cbawol." end well ivActC3
V 41311 snut into her eft - •
I
lioui
every ,
after
ess to
naafi; -
silly
lap to
hie,;
please
;_who
with