N 8 E 111 NEWS PROM ALL NATIONS. Maggie Mitchell __will pass the summer at Long Brad. —Mr. (Darwin will spend the stir= mer in the south of Foam.:. ' . —MI. Hurd, a . Boston merchant, _ovine the Hotel Chatham, - —Lawrence - Barrett, the actor, will quit the stage for the pnlptk G —Jane MA; of dervera;ille,Bucks scanty, died recently, aged 101 years. . wonuin has set; ont thirteen thowarid forest trees le Greeley, Colorado. —lt is said Brigham_. Young has a yon at West Point. 4 '1- I 1 _—• -- Te„Nes I. is t alkie of -a! $l,OOO testimonialm to Gener al' Mackcinzio. . . I .t . . . 1 -Michigan hail' been the Lake_ State.• f • .• c - - , • —Rome's first, l'retetttaub Church 11A in pracess of erection. - I ' —The ;Anti-Collie League of . San -Prancisco hastbecome very powerfuL 1 —Thomas Hughes is the phampion of religons equality in Engiandl', —The New - York insurance 'offices . lost-1.291 ; 000 by the -man Begitiin fire. —A rich vein of maxble- has been .4truck in Doyeiltren, Bev !county. . —Poitsvilie is. complaining of the 1 a leti , liaiy other public sohool•lreuses. I ---Caseneral Napoleon Bonapart, Fart PiHew Forest, of Nap oleon is in New - York. • ,H. .Surratt is writin history of his life and his Connection with the assaminalion plot. • • I —TI report that Mme. Lyson, wife of Father Hyacinthe, has a son and heir is • contradicted. --,Es; . -Senator Nye was among the. tessengcrs for. Europe on Saturday from New ork. . In'efJustiee Thos; B. Batleri of Connecticut, died at Norwalk enSaturday eve t I• ictorta Woodhull • ivery . in at, heiresidence in New York, and is not er peeted ta recover. ' - ' stated that: $10,000,000 oj the siio,ooo,ooo celled !Xmas have been received at the "I'reasury Department. • I •-• —Lord Nigel }Kennedy has became a bankriint with no aisetir, His are ; the pia. "Fortmiiitei —Tillers 'thinks Republics are . pngratefq 4 . Old Pomeroy- who ts running for the Senate again, doesnl'agree with him. - -'-lltlontrealis organizing a Flower Mission, tnSupply flowers to the sick in hos pitals, bails, and almishouses. —ArnOrmg the elegant attractions promised atHaratoga, is a series of contasta amotuaggennitie English ball-dogs. j" , --HeriAfter the legislators of lowa - willl have aD Penknives or other perqusites. Five dollars:4'day must satisfy them. , • . —A SCdalitt, Missottri, physician, in — bie adreibiaement fora wife, says he has !`money enough to burn up a wet mule." Charleston father gage a 'young man Who had salved-his daughter from drowning, a: two-year . old steer and a shot-inn. lientneky wants one more per trait of Daniel Boone.. The last artist put a paper collar Ori Daniel, which wasn't tight: —Gov.Hartranft.visited the grave }. of Got , . Geary, on Decoration day, and placed !.a magnificent bognet thereon. Lancaster is to haiv anew hotel which will coat $75,000 to erect.. The plan Is said to be very handsome. '; _ , . A youth in a Han4pton, Conn., ' school Las beCn,working on the alphabet eight years - and hasn't mastered it yet. —A woman at East Jaffrey, N. H., .has had an. exact, picture of a juniper tree prin ted on her leg by ski - lash of lightrang.• JAt.ge at Raleigh, was guilty .offfiorrowilig a chew of tobacco of a prisoner and Mut seuffing him up for three years. • —Dayton, ghio, .eliarges so. high • •fotsircus liCencenses that the tents are pitched th corporation and all tax avoided. Aboat thirteen' ; thousand ezni grani3 arrived al New York daring the past week. .. • -,--.A.- Convention Of School Directors will be held in the Clearfield County Court' •.Hounejune:2. ' Indiana, Pa., a grand military display will take place on the "Fourth," and • General Harry White "reviews." —A new railroad between New, and Cleveland, passing thronsOns pine' land mineral regions of . Clearfield, is talked of -- . AnArab horse, in India; was ridden by' its oncer 400 miles -in five ays, without, it Is said, showing any signs of diStress. —Mr. Jessie Grant - , fathei- - of the A.reSlauLtt; ix ri - lov'ei In be rapidey failing in health. _ • r-:-:Professor. = Sjialcii of. Hiul'ard ljniCersity, has been appointed State georligiA 'of Kent acky. " • . , 4 . ',=Bass, the English brewer, - paj.s Scarlyii.oomo to the railroads for fraitsporta • tion.'' ‘,... . , Lew-Wallace has written • 'a' hisioriejd novel with Cortez as its hero and Mexico asits , scene. —Dr. - Hilgood, a- graduate ". of Heidelberg, has been appointed 't6 a chair! in the Michigan University. ' -Th e , N ew fork Tribune. editor 'sat down and wept when he heard of a hod-car . riei whose brain weighed`siity-seven ounces. -• 7 .-Qol. Thomas Seat - has been • made a defendant - in the-case of the ',Credit blobilitr bill in equity. in Hartford , Coup.,with otherr. ' - 2 7 .1 lady writer has a novel in ipress called "A Study of a Girl's Heart." She will.,probably write a companion volume tied ',A Library of _a' Bey's Lifrer." • .. —Advices from Guatamala of May 430th sttato ' that" the President has issued a - 'decree 'granting religions liberty is the State: A..numb:T of Protestant churches will be erect. 4 ed. —Caleraft is needed iii Marion, Sbuth Carolina:- • When - Levi Souls was hung there, recently, tte :shored ler Fix:minutes' attar the.drop D4triot Blander: "Since the stringent teroterenk:Te laT in `Massachusetts barbers me more av rum Shay ev'er, It filters • throngirthe dcalp i r Tlie . on] gives the faintest kind °fan idea of the :number of ,the illanburrman's'imitators, who himself Is an imitator ofThiesticks." ' —A considerate wife writes to the New Orleans geraZd , firopositig that every bar room be requiied to have an ambtdanco attach ed. to tbe establianent. • , -:—The Gnlveston- Standard says it in not true that Damocratie Congressman 1). C. Giddings, of Texas, has turned over' his part of the salary gl•ab to nn orphan asylum. - - - The hmOnd Whig complain% :that the negriat the,Seuttro . earries his politid cal prigniple trd.prefudiees into everything." /Tow is it wit the white Southerner? couple of teherinen r near Dubuque, on Friday,' hauled np ; an alligator, foul-feet' long. while , drawirig in their seine. It is the firsl 9,ne ever. found in those waters. John-P. Hawkins ;lirothfs-in4aw of the lat 4; General Canby, is collecting materials .f or a Hograph y of, that - '- - • . =The. territory occupied by coke burning_in Westmoreland mune). is five miles Wide and pfteen long. 'AO number or ovens akgremtlite 3 l 552, 1 ~ --4 t is rumored thatlhe Insh and , Itokingtiese cole heat : era on the Ede and Mlle :, Ittligh docks, at Erie, are to be supplanted by I colitny of HeathenChinee. • ifon: R. B. Roosevelt, of New toik, hie been secured to deliver an address . :-befere the Indians County Agricultural Society, aegis neat fair. • Attorney Qeneral.Williams, on Saturday, rendered an opiniorithat the ifodoe prisoners can be tried by a military commission, and the War Department 'will at once instruct Gen. Davis to that effect.. • —The Washington Chronicle SW nonnees that Senator Buckingham has not arum bis back pay. The . Chronicle doei not my, however, ,that 'he has returned it toThe Treasury, whom alone it belonga. —Congress - W. S. Holman, •of Indians, anaiers the repeated calls fir the prelim thi State for an explanation -ter his *poeition o n the saw grab by announcing that General SPinuer-19a the receipt for his share of, the phinder. • - tailfaiftpodtt Towanda, Thursby, Juno 12, ,1873, ZDITORS B. O. 000niucn. S. W. Amman ILLINOIS - JUDICIAL lIIJICTION. The result of the judicial - election in Illinois on the 2d inst. was) gener ally favorable - to the candidates se lected by The farmers' organizations, without regard to their politics. Two.:judgets of the Supreme Court the .8411 e and twenty-siF. Circuit Judges Were chosen, and only three or four party nomiztatioi- were made, The election Fond cal significance esi- trsttYnen the Re publican and Detiocratic parties, but it showed a formidable element has entered the politicl' field in the shape of the agricultural oTganiza tions. Many persons and newspa pers prominent in this movement oPposei4 making any issue in. the Ju dicial election ; and we therefore, judge that even successful as they have been, the farmers did not poll the ' fall; strength of their organize time. That they will enter the p - Regal field proper, at the elections in the fall, for legislators and State of& oers in the Western States, we pre sume there can be no- queitson, but whether as a controlling element in the old parties' as an independent movement, rimaine,to be seen. The natural course would seem to be a bid for their support, or 'a coalition "with them, by the minority party ; but the Republican party is so thor oughly. identified with the best in terest of the people everywhere, that every practical result desired may be secured within that organization. Every great and .etilistantial reform accomplisheil in this country has had the support and co-operation of the republican party, and the farm ere, as well as all other intelligent 'glasses so understand the matter. The republican organization can nev er be crippled by tiny movement hav ing in view the welfare of people. CAPITAL AND LABOR'. There is so little honesty and inde pendence-manifesto in the discus sion of the 'capital and labor question nowadays, that it is really refreshing to find a paragraph like the follow ing which - we take from that able and fearless journal, the Lebanon Courier. There IS no controversy between cap- Rid and labor, and if demagogues would cease their meddling "strikes" With all their attendant evilt‘ would ,die out. It is as much to •t inter -est of the employer as the -employe that labor should be well remuner ated. Capital and labor are both necessary to the development of the country; without the.nouriahment of the fo'rmer the latter could nut long subsist—without the aid of the la.- boring :now- capitalLwould soon go 1 - begging: ' DEMAGOGISX —A member of the C,onititu. tional Convention made a speech, the' other day, in which haled much , to say about the oppression ot labor and the privileges granted to capital. We yield to no one in respect for labor, and are siTry to see.-it: shunned by so many who would be better off Individually and more benefit to society employed in useful la bor than in lazing away life as they do. But still it is transparent that there is an immense ainount - 61 tlemagogism in the talk of, politt dine about labor.: It cannot be denied that la bor is better paid today than it ever was be fore—the wages of labor having doubled within the past fifteen years, and the demand for it seeming to be greater than the simply. This increase of the pay for labor is rght and just, :for the cost of living has advanced with the in-' crease of the wages of labor, as there are logi cal reasons' why it should. Bnt 'what about capital? The legal rates of Interest hare had no Increase; the six per Cent._ that money al wayabrought; being still the fixed legal rate. But six per cent: twenty years agp would buy asintich ak twelve per cent now, showing that while the price of labor, and the price.of al most everything else, have advanced a hundred per cent, the legal rate of interest has remain. ; ed - stationary.• And still notwithstanding this;. demagogues persist in abuse of capitalists, and industriously indulge in vulgar efforts to excite public hostility loviards them. Now, tree. statesmanship is to makq capital and laborCo laborers in- the adianeement of the public and private interests, and harmonize them in the work and progresi to be achieved, instead of having them like &pair of stubborn oxen which work in the yoke to little purpose by.palling different ;ways.l We need more honest com mon sense in the treatment of .public questions, and less of that deinago=4„ sm that is now so rife , among those seeking public favor. If capital and labor are to be arrayed against each' other, they will re- enact Th e drama of, the Kilkenney cats, and the general interests will suffer thro' senseless strikes, capital will be titinsleired to safer localities, and general stagnation of bnei ness will followi So let the. demagogue "dry up," and all interested in the progress of in dustry Unite to iamb on the ball of prosperity, yin:fishingrasodity wherever found, in high kfe or low, stopping conspire:les, whether o f capi tal or labor, Vd accepting: in business, as should be accepted through all the depart— ments of life, the golden rule of doing to others as we would have others doloas.- THE cumulative voting system,now the hobby of - unfledged and' c,enten narian political, economists, is the best scheipoo that can possibly be de vised for taking political power out of tbe lands of the people ni -the polls and 'giving it l to, nominating conventions. It is remarkable how some men 'profess to have great re, iarelforthe ;intelligent() of the peo ple, and all that 'sort of thing, and yet . give the labor of their lives to curtailing the power of the people. England, with her aristocratic insti tutions, favOrs life offices, cumulative voting, Szc.,land we have ".reformers" in the Vidted Stites who world gladly refoini us back 'to the follow ing of English raredents. Tan ";irrepressible " GEORGE Faor ,cis Taw: has beat ant the New York Courts, anil has gone on a pleasure or business' ; trip to Europe. 'He - has been in priSon in New York for , some time4-a kind of white elephant on the judicial hands—awaiting trial for eircalating! obscene' matter through the mails,and was finally pronounced insane an ordered to an asylum. ButGaison " never surrenders," and he, took .the proceedings before a jury to deCide on his insanity,- and has triumphed! He will now be' heard of Ventilating New York jus tice in volimble speeches in Europe, Asia, Africk and America. Peitsox ./isowsr.ow has no ' ea of dying yet. In a late letter he p . - ices unreconstructed Confederates That as soon as his term in the tr. S. Senate expires, he will revive the Knoxville 11 7 419, in which he will give then! r` a'bit of his mind." The old Parson will never say die. t Tun snow xeseasoss rourarsow The Bineuunton Republican prig s the followineletter from P. E. 4u Of .Monroston. - civil. Ammar, in - - armee to the proposed - mina Irtiiri Binghsmbin to eonneot with the railway n t . • _p e t: --tip= iystrig an article At " and g that there see= to be a lack aria to distanem grades and general of this section of the coun try, I take the rty to communicate a few of the regatta of extended- surveys, and observe tons, made by myself it various times,. along the proposed route. - In regard to distances and grades: From Binghamton to the State,Line, near Nichols, is twenty-four mile., of very light grades; probs. bly at no point wilt the grade aimed ten feet per mile. P o om the Stale Line, up thetaap Mud exeeks,eix mile, the Cl i rtr i keadow 5enU3111.,.. The liss4o on this six mhos hilt atertga tomfee t. _with a maxi mum of fifty feet to the mlie. Then follows," down grade along the valley of the Wysox creek, of twentyiiiight feet to the mile, with a maxi mum of forty feet, for ten miles, to Wysanking. a station on the Pa. &-N. L B. R. Thence from Wysankhig. crossing the Susquehanna river at or near Towanda, six miles, with little or no vide to overcome, to XonroetcaL which is at the junction the Dashers or Sullivan and Erie Railroad . with the Barclay Ballroad. Thence, from Itonroeton. in westerly direc tion, up the valley of the Towinda creek. twen ty-two miles, with a moan grade of forty feet, and a maximum of fcrty-five feet to the mile, to Canton, a station on the N. C. 8.8. . „From Clanton, there Is'direct oomtnenication with Pittsburg, as Mows: Prom -Canton to by the N. C. R. B. fork, miles ; from W' t to Leek Haven,by the, Phil adelphla and 'e Railroad, twenty-live miles; from I. fur a share of p;41: • IV. ..$... PECE, .-. , . ' Andith: 4 . “l GE. -!-H. 8:, O. • No: 174, May Tyrn„., .' Von Pleas 0f.11:3..ifc.r . .' O 1 ' - ,•en appointed Arilit., oney arising freer eal Cbtate will :111,, . ent. on 9.111:Itli.kil 1 .. tn., at the. Olire "•1 a Borough; at 1.,c1 1. asing claims cn . imiti rent the pane btfx from coining iti er-ii.l . I LEY W. LIITI:Y, . ' . Audit -. , a tr.r appointed by in. rising froth sher 4 I 614, will ri.4.Pra'r tJ, office 0: osrands:an 'clock,l a. zni, , s - Itrli sa-R1 funds .are, ebarred from c0u.1 , 74 , F. 'IC M. M. \. ME—ln : the eomti ~ jouniy.—No. 87, :41 p 1 . .1 Inr, appc,Anted by fa: the Sheriff's i1r.:..., , endnat's rear , est.t.4.. smih' appoititHilit • ugh; or. TGESDAt A., -a. m., where :.r. aid far,d3 must i•rl soming in npen t' JNO. W. MA..: " - Auditor. ' l c i: NOTICE -T I t all. peracinelnd , 1. ti.. lien, late of Albatit, o make Ithaledizh, vin„ clalnas ag:4t 4 t .- du',:y antlienb.al i IiATID CULLEN, JOEN 11UP.111Y. 1 ET.,".ento:'7.l ,NOTICE.JL ; tit all nenyjna pas,. late of lit. niaku :s claims spina: 44 authenticated for tt: TGENE REELER,. Administratc.4. S NOTIC. 1 71 i at all persone late of CAUtOll' :e inmroediate papner:a .is agJrst eakt el ? tt: the titleateg. ; fo! r ttt:•• Tilif.MAS 1j .1 • E.aceu'... T 0; by g}v • ohn `II e.ledt• avirg c duly MEM ~~~ 10E9 I J 0 S MIN EOM EliMlll2=l ME .To;',,VAN ME FE L ME 'hand I NT 01' MEG A 01 NI. V , ich WLI 117 F'AIL'TO;23 • wl., :41.ty !avorui ' —• • 1 = 11•11 Wixatavcr 0 • ..1 1•' is th liarmt;i OriCC3 before pare : May 21. IMi Ta,9174 1 • E 0 : 1-." A PHOTO:CT I l it 1 Ns.. 7 . .. ' ' 0 I P & C () • • . 1,A1 • .' ~ . HERS,r •• . 1 DiiiPA, . , i, ,"-. II •ro . f. patronagc of , he t I wanting liet* , to i?ztt establisllael , t • t, ME EiEl • . - • . . 1 All now patterus an( ntsltthent at a sniill 313y,14....1:373. ..~: ;y: ~~; `~~~~,;. 'tu;a6 11 Il II FEME nil India otiiraqford Ccnt. OM ICE =1 ofqce persons itidet ; te , l Ite of Standing Stifi immediate payini-4 against : said c:lati •enticated for 14e1t1- S'ID'S. VANNTS,I Execiiirf. E .-STOSiE: El I NkES =old -lI:NrEp EMI II =