Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, June 12, 1874, Image 2

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    SIWS ?BOX ALL NAZIONL
II
I
II
II
eloeed in New York Top-. -
day at lir
—The New York Poti denounces
tike old fogy casFacres. •
--Nevada has a compulsory edu
casks latratal arrests those Ida violate it.
--Once, in his more sunny days,
Bochefort was a bad der&
—No. 2 life of Charles Sumner is
oat arid the rest are rapidly oceezing?
- -People out West - don't life ham
- 'cur tl.e Iris:Wise too spt to zest
,to it.
L-Misa-Coastraction --- Whalebone
sz-d ;gist, powder Ind Taildalg-
—England spends tr.A,000,000
stir fir Ut'Jeof). -
—New York city wee one million
pmts., earde per !truth.
—Basis his but one physician tic)
ttutyitatte. •
—Brazil raises annually -100,000,-
(5.4 or.d! of
1
—The bricklayers and laborers in
York have joined in a, gentril strike.
—We have it at last. General
n64.;cet theAst la "oral collo,' •
: 1
--George Francis Rochefort Train
itha.t no: ItJactqa Tutu, calls Lim.
—"Ginz's Baby" Jenkins made, an
naavirabit imprernan by WA first apex&
l'sdivqrazt. 1
-Ohio editors do better. The''
Can fall &nun a At'ailizag and it only costs
ti.tra kccnt.
--A double-headed baby has been
tywn at ltiobliit.on, Iridium, which evAtes the
quidet ri:6r. of the village.
-r-Anotherlittle girl, a daughter of
Dennis Malone;, vißoraf, has jamPedAtie
_rrept.= times and then died.
The President has signed th i s
rnmem:-..zion - of-Judge P-iebardivm as Lesocisie
Jr - 17,e of the Court of Chains:
i
-4. titan named Murphey killed a
W`Anan mar-Sigisillt; Tenn., and was ARIL
ward killed by the enraged eituen!,
—Mrs. Woodhull and her ..sis s tei•
Mies Cialisn hare gone to California, and inten
operimg a - broker's shop.
- - - ='The inhabitants -- of Jerusalem
-Are threatened with famine,, and the Jews of
Eng!gni Are taking measur7 for their relief.
1
—The Bowdoin Sophs have takett
a second sober thong ht and 'will return to the
college.• = .
—The “Transit of Venus" is the
next tensatir,nal play, to appear on the Ne i
York boards..
—Grand Puke Nicholas' affinity 111
in I'arig. \She exhibits halls million worth df
diamonds. -
Harte's new stin-y will 14
"Baby Sylvcattr," a bear story, bat it don'
cnncerri Will street. •
—The-Foresf divorce snit seems to
have ended it last.. ItraZForest accepts
000, an a final settlement,,.!... • '
—The western , - chnrche4 have
adopttd new method to , draw young men.'
They hare introduced young lady sextons.
Edwin Booth refuses to Bite hil l !
.ersicf. a to ebarity 4-petite, for he !aye he in a
Lar.Lmpt, and charity mint begin at home.
. —Massachumetts has two hundred
tnoneand old maids.—Er. HOW many young
ones?. , _ ; 1- ; ,.
r -
11. . I
~
..,-ondon, England,prOtests vainly
!„t;-; rnPutinge sgainet the: high price of
gas.
—The police of Reading, Pa., keep
ladma 3cho flirt in public. It moat be
v.orth •
_prisoner, Whew asked wh.at
trade he ViGuld lily td learn,. raid: "If there
6, no f,bk:ettr.n, I would ltlce to Le a eailor.
A'tall tenor by the name of . Liiik;
in 13. thri, has been elaracteriatically:dt bbd
p•se , -tnes 4 Long drawn out." --
And the A acient EgyPtiaps werq
of ronvaner l ° for anotber love story
dug np wrung rapyti at Turin.
Barna - in has st:' cured gate keeper
t c!, v end Isis': black horse. And Collit4
burnioning up his milk in a to-follow
putt.
--Juba G: Whittier is to be heard
Ida fieniter Sunnier, when Geo. W.
C a - tiA delivere bid oration on the sank tn/b4
jtct. •
• •
- •
-Jeff Davis still lives arid is ra
turniDoe, the land of liberty which be pougitti
Ct'dt ptfr.y. : Foot elands ready to welcome him
t 5 :to • gr hotable.:grave. - ,• •
—lt may be conlienet4 for refer-1
epee. "Married at twenty-three 'minutes put'
one o'clock yesterday morning' is She graphic!
announcement in a Goldsboro, N. C. paper.
—A. Missouri paper has tinder
-takcn a noble - work—that of discouraging
deaths. It publishes marriage notices free, but
charges heavily for obituaries.
' -At the meeting of the Society' of
tisinral Science of Aargau, Switzerland, a
watchmaker presented a watch of his inven
tion, the motive force compressed air,
.—The_datik on imports received
at the Philadelphia Custom - Bongo last week
amounted to $22 633 40—indicating a pros
per.ma trade.
t —The Court in session at Harris-
burr, on Monday,. refused license i to the State
Capitol Hotel, and rejected (pate a number of
other applicatilna for license from that city.
—Thirteen •connterfeiters,were ar
relited in Cincinnati, on Friday. Some of them
were diatinguigheil personages in that branch
a the !'prof...ti , rfais."
•
• —Two New Orleans ereoles fought
a drif-I. near 'that city, on Friday, with pistol',
at ten paces.. ()Vt.: wa shot through the aid",
near the hen t
' L-the young men of Philadelphia
'iit-placa-s. amnseinebt annoy the respect/L.4 ,
portion of the andieixe by going ont frrinent=
ly to "smile." . 1
-
A Kansas - girl wouldn't, be mar-'
rigid without yeThow'ribbon around hir waist,
and a boy rode eight miles to get it while the
guests waited. • - .
' rottskille, according •. to a
priza ecgreifiinde6t, the ritualistic war bet
ween high and low. church - occupies the tiara
and attty..itiost of a fashionable congregation.
Morgan Dix hai just mares
tied, altbonifilte once wrote .a took advocat
tng celibacy, Lat bit enmity came along and
he conld not retie. • ' ,
—The Preebyterian General As
sembly refaced the Invitation to meet next year
to Talinage's,Brooklytt Tatermv-ht. It proba
bly had a fear that Nits,Smalley would be
smuggled - in to preach to them.. I
- - - - News from Washington gives no
!antics hope of the passage of the civil rights
bill this session; and the chances! for the pas
rageot the moiety bill aro about a stand off.
boasts that while Penn
ryi% stais,„Writh over three millions of people,
has 'only 271,600, oxen and stock cattle, the
"Lone bias" State, with but eight hundred
thousand inhabitants his 3,800,000 cattle.
—And now a member of 'the New
Sort• police has teen identified as a diamond
robber. 'Mail more could bo expected? In
additionlo murderers apt! minute they add
the lightPr secomplishMent of diamond LW,-
•
—Th'e San Francisco ladies ap.
predate the losses and suffering by floods bet.
ter than the men of the Pacific coast. The
latter raised three thousand dollars for
the'Loandana sufferers, while the former.have
resolved to make the sum thirty thousand.
. —W. H. Bunn, a noted- PhiWel
phis politician, is going to Europe for his
health. His furniture, which wu imported
and which wu costly, was sold at public sale,
recently, and the sale brought together a large
number of persons. _
Northlirestern' Slates . com
, •
plain of a g r uahopper pliCe. The "grasshop
per 0 ,, 01ity," ut. is called Minnesota, Is
supplied at this season with immense flocks of
pigeon*, blackbirde—and so on, which teed
almost entirely on grasshoppers.
—Th - o first criminal trial for vio
la! ..n - of tho railioad law of Wisconsin took
pllce. at Milwaukee on Friday. The station
agent of tho Chicago and Northwestern
road war conFicted of charging more than the
legal rale for tickets, and fined $l.
—Typographical .errors, as yon
grow older, cease to be incentives to your tom
mittirg murder with malice prepense. But
'what Must Professor Seeley bare thought when
a newspaper , announced-that Le hid discovered
a new method of "ilirtatior, ' which would soon
lnuec by all druggists and chemists? •
7 2 :
.Charles Yedder pointed a pistol
at a Templaii, last weeit„-Ltr-Philadclphia
;n fun , and pulling the trig
not
ger, theryormg lad;
Was shot in the face, an diusonsir it
Wally injured. Tedder is leo a fool to be
'
and should either be to an insane
ATMs or the penitentiary. .
padforiftpain
Towanda, Thursday, one 187 t
EDITORS.
X. 0. 0000 RICH.
•
REPUBLICAN t ITE airPESTION;
_
The Regal:Xs:ins of Peannyitania - mill bold a
State Convention at lisrristUng, at noon, on
Wednesday. Angantl3, INC for the purpy,
.of nominating eandicdates for Lkitenant
enxu, Auditor °mural. Secretasiot Internal
Affairs, and /ridge of the Bnpreme amt.'
The representation of the setcral counties in
this Corrrention will be based on the 41:Im
hof:meat of Senators and 'Representatives made
by the present Legislature. each Sinatonial and
Representative district being entitled to dele-
gates equal in number to its representation in
the Legislature nude: said apportionment:
El
Byiszcz. Exam, Osiris:ma.
EZRA .1.X133114 1 secretariei.
Joss IrcELLOCOLE,
JASVE-FACED.
The real editor of the ArguA, CoL
Peourr, proNses to be the especial
champion of the farmer I_, and in
Grange meetings and private circu
lars warns the tillers of the soillo be
ware of corporations. At 'the same
time, be is engaged through
,his or
gan, the Argue, in denouneing every
eftoA to 'compel these corporations
to pay their just, proportion of :taxa
tion. In the last issue of that sheet
he displays either . his ignorance or
demagoguism in a lengthy, article in
opposition to the - bill passed by the
legislature imposing a tax upon coal.
For his information we state
that, under the provisions of the new
constitution a committee on appro.
priation was created, to Whom all
bills making appripriationo Were re
ferred- How well and faithfully that
committee performed its dulies may
be inferred-fropi the fact that appro,
priations for the present !yeir are
considerably lss than for this year
1873. The' COonel, true to his nat
ural instinct, - finds fault with the tax
of three cents per ton impoised upon
coal Mined 14, corpor ations
/ chartered
by the State,' although previous to
the passage . of the law anthracite
coal was taxed four eenls per ton.
The Argue article says this tax will
produce "one million dollars reve
nue." As it was necessary to raise
the revenue in'some way, we sup
pose it would have suited the. janus
faced Colonel much better Ito have
million dollars taxed upon the
real estate of the Commonwealth,
and let the corporations in which he
is a stockholder go "scot free." To
our mind the legislaturA acted - wisely
in so framing the revenue la as as 'to
raise sufficient money to Meet the;
ordinary expenses of the State gov
ernment without reinstating the tax
upon real estate, and-thus adding to
the barthens of 111 farming cOmman
ity.
The Argy...: and Col. PIOLLZT to the
contrary notwithstanding, the people
of this county and the State at large
will endorse Mr. Mitn's course .as
Chairman of the Ways and Means
committr e. His legislative ' career
justly entitles him to the confidence
of our peoPle. Would that we could
say as much of Col, Prourr.
Oct attention has been called to a
circular issued by the executive com
mittee of Bradford council, P. of H.,
which indicates that oar fears and
warnings that the organixatiou would
be prostituted to. the political ad
vancement of certain notorious po- .
litical hacks were not without good
cause. In the document referred to,
which haii the names of all the mem
bers of the committee,attachedut wai
written by Col. PIOLErr, while it cOn
tains - ranch godd adtice, asserts what
he and every otter intelligent farmer
in the county knows to be false, in
saying that the taxes imposed upon
the farmers of this county are oner
ous and altogether too high'for the
needs of an economical government.
The truth is the farmers in Bradford
have but ° little tax to pay. The levy
for county and State purposes is only
lour mill's, while the , valuation upon
' 1 which it is, levied will not average
•
over twenty-five per cent. of the - real
value of property taxed. 'Take the
case of the PuiLrrrs, *hose propertY
ireal and personal will not fall far
short of a quarter t,f aand
-
yet their valuation is only ; Omit
42,5,00. Stich base attempts to
!prostitute a noble organization
!should meet with a severe 'rebuke
!from .grangers and cause the other
members of the committee to keep
lan aye on their perfidious cliairman.
TILE A rgue Still continues to be ex
ercised over the fact that the editors
Hof this paper happen to hold official
positions. =lf office holding is such
Fa heinous offense in the eyes of the
immaculate (2) ' men who. control
;that. cbaste sheet, we,Treitune they
have given up their longings for
email agencies, post offices and' seats
lin the legislature and congress.
Bafieetivy withers at another& joy, ---
And balsa that excellence it cannot reach.:
THE Wilmington (DeL) COnmer
'cial publishes a statement slowing
that over 220 ' iron ships, Mostly
steam ve s sels, have been built in the
•
yards of that city, and states that
this is a far greater number thin have
been constructed in all the; , other
yards of the United States put to
gether. It estimates that the . total
number-of iron sh4ps built elsewhere
will probably not exceed fifty.:
J. EDGill Tuomrsort, late President
of the Pennsylvania Central Railroad,
later pro4iding for his family )eaves
the balance of his princely fortune to
be used fur the education and sup
port. of orphan children of railroad
employes. _ ,
.4 lir•-•---
FIVE active members of the yolan-
Iteer fire: : department of IVilliares
port, arrested on snspicion 'a be
ing incendiaries, have confe.iised to
burning nearly all the Property,
amountipgtouversl,ooo,ooo,datroy
ed their since the great fire of 1871.
The - annruil diocesanOnrentio' n of
the liroteateut.Epiecopal Church of
the diocese of Out!and Pamaylvamis,
met in Wilkes-Bade last week.
Abim t .fiftielerical and . seventy-five
lay deputies were is attendani . m.
The convention lain= was doily
ered by Dr. Kzemo, of Thuvisbtirg,
and was an able, bold and timely
protest against the tendeucies of a
portion of the church to "go toward
Borne." The Bishop in his address
referred to the same subject in lan
guage which leaves no doubt as to
his sentiments. He said:
S. W 4 111.1.VOISD
" I do earnestly enjoin. upon paro
chial clergy of this diocese to refrain
from every novelty in attire, or in
the manner of ministration, for which
express sanction has . not been given
by: the ordinary: -is a period of
great sensitiveness. Some in 'every
congregation are disturbed if the of
minister omits anything in
the service of the sanctuary to which
they are accustomed, and others are
filled with suspicion and alarm if
anything new in dress or demeanor
suggests a. thought
. of Bomanistic
tendencies. While, as a Chuich, we
claim to be catholic, there must he
left great scope for differences of
opinion upon matters not essential.
There must be limitation to the free
dom of expressing these differences
by speech, or ritual in the churches
of Zion will become' a babel of con.;
fazed tongues rather thin a city at
unity within itself. Our " churches
are not stages for the - performances
of spectacular rites, according to ev
ery man's fancy, but sanctuaries for
the solemn and orderly conduct of
Divine worship. Oar pulpits are not
rostrums for the promulgation of
every man's opinion who, in holy or
ders, wishes •to make known his , con
ceits of things more or less remotely
related to Christianity, bat they are
mountains of God's holiness, from
which nothing is to be spoken but
His Word, and , the honest, earnest,
exposition and application of it."
While we do not profess to under
stand the financial situation, what
little knowledge we do possess leads
us to believe that more currency is
demanded by the business wants of
the country. The volume of curren
cy is no larger now than ten years
ago, and yet the business of the
country has increased largely. Pres
ident GRAN-r seems to differ from a
majority of the Republican party on
this question, and time alone will
disclose who is correct.
We copy the following comments
on his recent " Memorandum " :
The Tribune says that in the six
years of his presidency there. has
been nothing so worthy of the author
of the Vicksburg campaign as the
memorandum to Senator Jones. ;co
bolder, more comprehensive, more
practical or more effective plan of re
sumption has yet seen the light in
this country.
The Herald says: " It is alike re«
markable whether we consider the
combined soundness and boldness of
its monetary doctrine, the public or
the political consequences with which
they may be fraught. In our judg-,
meat' not only was the monetary
views of the President admirably
sound, but. their publication in this
peculiar way is justifiable, or at least
excusable, and their political effect
will be salutary even for the Repub
lican party - , - unless the inflation lead-,
ers are mad enough to break with
him and disrupt the 'organization."
Thurlow Weed, in a letter to the
Tribune, says: ", If Congresi ad
journs letivutg the country in the
wretched financial: condition they
found it, the places which now know
them will be hereafter unknown to
most of them forever. He thinks the
presidential manifesto reflects credit
upon Grant's wisdom and courage,
but says he makes a mistake in rec
ommending the issue only l of bills of
not less than ten dollars, as the ex
perience of New York State proved
'Such a system wrong years ago when
small bills were found a positive con
venience and a necessity."
COLONEL BEATH AND SCHUYLKILL
Corxrvi„-- - -=The delegation from this
County.: to - the Republican State
1-r-^
Convention will be' solid for Col.
ROE/MY B. 'BELT]; for Secretary of
Internal Affairs. Yesterday at the
meeting of the Republican County
Committee, the four 'delegates ap :
pointed Were instructed to vote for
him, while the four already appoint
ed were requested to do the , same.
In all the positions which Col. BEATH
has occupied 'from the time. -he
resided in our midst up to the time
of his merited election to the Survey
or Generalship, and daring hit oc
cupancy of that office, his coarse
has been that of an honest, Irma
worthy man. As good - an office in
civil as he was in military affairs; •as
firm and courageous in, the right now
as when :the country needed true,
brave men to crash a causeless re
bellion,' we believe that his fellow
citizens here and everywhere
threughout Pennsylvania will take
pleasure in recognizing and reward
inglis services by placing him in
the position for which he is named.—
,Minerg Journal.
PRINCELY . DONATIONB.-JAMVI LICK,
a millionaire of San Francisco, has
caused no little excitement in that
city by.deeding a large share of his
immense wealth - to the public. He
donates $700,000 for the construction
of the largest and best tidescope
the world for an observatory at Lake
Tahoe; $420,000 for public monu
ments; $150,000 for public baths in
that city; $lOO,OOO for an Old Ladies'
Home; $lO,OOO to the . Society for
the Protection-of Animals; $25,000
to the Ladies' Protection Relief So
ciety. He 'also gives -$lO,OOO to the
Library of the Protestant Orphan
Asylum, $25,000 to the city of San
Jose, $l,OOO for the Orphans', Asy
lum, $150,000 for the erection of a
;monument to the author of , the Star
Spangled Banner in thi3 Golden Gate
Park, $300,000 for the endowment, of
a School of Mechanical Arts in Cali
fornia. The residue in excess of $l,-
780,000 goes to the PiOneers' Society.
He makes ample provision for his
relatives, and reserves the homestead
and $25,000 for lama. • ']
r, • Iry )11011%
TILE FINANCIAL OUTLOOK.
num summurro.
271 e Marriage ei the Yr klit e—The Orr
reacy bill—lb Oleg litigkis 106+And the M
0 -
t *evil Cbsgress. '
111kowireos. ;um 4.1816.
The week of the month
wwaswadi* 'of 3 ~ias ;Nellie
Grant, our which a great ainOunt Of
journalistic ink has been "pilled. In
accordance with the mimics, of, the
President and Km Grant; the affair
was anununniat,l u iptietk and
with as little display as possible, al
though a great number of persons
were present.
1,4i. 1 •1 I'' , •WI 4.071'4717
To the niter dismay; and disap
pointment of newspaper. men end
jeurnalista generally,: orders were
grim that no purism without a ticket
should be allowed to pass the gates
of the manaicm;conseqnently, the
scene was not graced with the pres
ence, of any of the inquisitivegentle
men of the press. The 'glowing de
scriptions of the beauty, wealth and
fashion assembled, of its scenes and
incidents, gorgeous decorations and
roseate surroundings with which the
die hive beenlavored, intuit have
drawn almost exclusively from
the imagination of some reckless re
porter, who possthly, under the in
fluence of a pipeful or so of hasheesh,
or some other mysterious power, had
imagined himself; roaming the fabled
gardens of the #ods. A curbstone
iew of the tide of carriages, with
their fair and richly-dressed occu
pants, as they rolled in through the
well guarded' gates, was all that was
permitted.
That the floral decoratiens of the
East Boom, where the ceremony was
performed, were very beautiful and
tastefully arranged, there can be no
doubt; and that the bridal presents
were elegant and approprie, there
is, also, as little doubt -; but aside
from this, it is well understood that
there was a decided plainness and
absence of anything like tentation
in -every thing connected with. the
arrangements. Anything 4e giving
it official significanc4 was also as
c.a.refully avoided: !-
The quiet manner in : B ich the
whole affairiwas conducted was cer
tainly a very happy con t with
some. of the recent noisy wedding
scenes - of the fashiOnable wtst end of
the city=made notorious for their
reckless waste, extravagance and fol
ly, broken decanters and glasses,
spilled wine and tipsy gar This
part of the performance, however,
very seldom gets into p t. 'The
reporter selected to do the. !occasion,
out of respect to himself ail well as
to others, never makes a note of that
part. of the programme. I
A great many „comments, fore
bodings and misgivings are expressed
with regard to Miss liellie'Schoice of
what must be regarded as her future
home. We have, however, but little
faith in their sincerity; and! imagine
that, when she ceases toI be the
‘‘ daughter of the nation," as she is
now not infrequently call4d, these
pretensions of regard and! anxious
solitiittffie will be as easily , forgotten
as they ;were made.
MB. SALTOBIS,
the young gentleman with whom
she has chosen to join her happi
ness and fortnnes for the future, did
not make himself particularly " nu
merous" during his few mouths' stay
in Washington: He rarely appeared
in public, and very little appears to
be known' about him. liners drag
nothing remarkable in his !make-up
and general appearance beyond that
of any young gentleman who culti
vates an early mustache and wears
his hair parted in the. middle. He
looked to be a good-natured sort of
hail fellow well met, with little or no
evidence of being possessed of that
characteristic egotism belonging to
certain classes of his ,countrymen.
That he is rich, amiable', of good dis
position, " rawther " agreeable com
pany, and " all that sort of thing, you
know," is very generally admitted.
Doubtless such are the facts—at
least, for Miss Nellie's sake, we are
gait° willing to believe so;_ and hope
that he may continue in the convic
tion that it is the better part of life
to "fight it oat on that line." The
latest rumor in connexion with - this
" 'alf and 'alf ", affair, or perhaps we
should say what may be an " 'alf and
'alf "
,affair, is, that the Queen, as a
compliment to the American people,
is about to confer upon the young
gentleman the honor of a' title.
=There has, daring the past month,
but little of importance transpired in
the proceedings of Monvess. The
passage of the Legislative, Executive
and Judicial Appropriation bills may
be said to be alfopt all the legislation
of interest that has been enacted.
With regard to the
CUBItEtiCT (4 CEETIO'N,
it begins to look -as if Congress
would leave it precisely where they
found it in December last. The Sen
ate substitute for what is generally
known as the Maynard free banking
bill, was reported to the House on
Thursday last with several amend
ments. The bill without dqabt will
pass substantially as reported froni
the committee; and like its prede
cessor, will be vetoed tiffAhe Presi7
dent, after which the Idibrf f nesa of
the time will prevent the p9ssibility
of perfecting any bill that 711 meet
the Executive approval.
It is - generally admitted that the
effect of the present bill, if itlbecame
a law, would be a very large inflation
of the currency, with a constant de
crease of values. One of the princi
pal features of the bill is the, provis
ion for the redemption of greenbacks,
to commence four years hence; but
this, it is argued, would not Save the
bank notes from depreciation, since
the bill. entirely relieves the, banks
from the necessity of redeeming their
notes, even in our present legal-ten
ders.
Evidently our national legislators
are at sea on the subject of ifinance,
without chart, sail or compass. There
is but little hope that they will agree
upon any satisfactory currency bill
this session; and consequently, the
industries and commerce of the
country, will have to make the best of
it as it is. Reform and Retrench
ment—sounds that are always pleas
ant to the public ear- - have been the
constant cry, and Beata to have over
shadowed everything else. The rea
son is obvions:7-Congressmen who
stood in an atmosphere that savored
very strongly of too much Credit
Mobilier, and too much Salary grab,
are expecting to return in full favor
and in their original lustre and splen
dor of app6aranco to an admiring
constituency, on their great record of
Reform. The discharge from the
Departments of the government of a
few hundred
CLERK.,
one a the piincipal features of re
trenchment, will doubtless save •the
nation from financial destruction,
and a great people from ruin. The
legislators that , have crowned them
selves with such legislative laurels as
these, will now doubtless feel secure
of a re-election, although s few hun
dred clerk i had to be kicked oat of
employmeat, aad their faaaWee made
to oaths oiler to accomplish' &
The Rotisa, with the Siszate cow
canting, it widd leak his come to
the coacluebai that the :mattes of
leiPS' Litton before them may be folly
disposed of by the tweatrfirst, aad
consequently ! have fixed upea that
time for
The time agreed upon is somewhat
earlier than was generally antici-
Fated, and 'iloribta are entertained by
some of the members as to whether
the work will be sufficiently disposed
of to permit, it; but with night ses
sions, and a little lees speech-making,
the adjeurnment at that time may be
looked upon is certain. A ,few days
of hot weather, with the arrival
among us of the skirmishers, • neers,
and 'the iiilvane, guard s -m the
great army CI mosquitoes, with which
we are soon to be surrounded,-will
give a greater impetus to legtslation
than anything else that can be done.
The panne of
, THS CIVIL itIGUTB BILL,
which is just now under Considera
tion, Will - icarcely :be effected this 1
session; an the average democrat
who has been quaking with abject
terror over the prospect ofiits
coming a law, may for the present
possess hinimPlf in peace- The social
catastrophe„ predicted as certain to
follow upon the enactment of the
bill, will
_be averted for a time at
least. Theie will be nothing done
this. session I that will , compel our
democratic') friends to invite the col
ored man hoine to dinner, or compel
them to take colored women for
wives. In the meantime, we suppose
the constitutional amendments to a
certain. extent will be accepted, and
no objctions raised to counting the
colored,zuen's vote, if cast for demo
cratic candidates, the same as if they
were white Men's. M.
114)13:f:V/Fiti:OM:4*18:1'/$11
r=i=l
,
BEL.uxOs - ru, June 4. Bellefonte
was full of people to-day to witness
the ninth annual reunion of the
Pennsylvania ):teserves. It proved a
grand success, surpassing any former
meetings of the association. A de
tailed detachment of cadets from the
Agricultural College fired a morning
gun at =rise '
and a national salute
at noon. !
When the eleven o'clock train ar
ri'red, with ten cars, the L'ndine and
Logan fire companies, headed by the
State School 'Cadets, with bands of
music, escorted the visitors to the
Diamond, lifter which a procession,
nearly a mile long, consisting of Re
serves and other soldiers, the county
cadets, military and fire companies,
soldiers of 1812, and citizenion foot,
marched • through the principal
streets and then to the court house
yard, where they partookt of a boun
tiful repast prepared by the ladies of
Bellefonte.
General W..H. Blair acted as chief
marshaL assisted by Colonels Weav
er, Stewart, Robert AlTarland and
Bayard, Majors John Wolfe ,and P.
13. Wilson, and Captains Curtin and
Quiggle. AmOng, the , distinguished
visitors noticeabld in the court house,
when the business meeting of' the
association was called to order, were
Colonel John' W. Forney, Colonel
William B.Alarm, General 11'Coy, of
Harrisburg; Hon. Eli Slifer, Gen
eral IL G. Sickles, Hon. William
Al'Clelland, of Pittsburg; Hon. L W.
Mackey and General Jess Merrill.
President Curtin occupied the chair.
The address' of welcome delivered
by . Gen. Jameei A. Beaver and a song
composed for the occasion by J. W.
Furey were 'vOciferously applauded.
The oration of Col. H. A. M'Coyiras
a moat creditable jeffort. He stated
one fact not generally known, to wit:
That while the Pennsylvania Reserves
fired the first shot of the Army of the
Potomac, the pa g of truce received
from Lee at Appomattox was through
the pickets of the Reserves.
Speeches were made by CoL Mann,
of Philadelphia, and Goy. Curtin.
While they were speaking, Col. For
ney, of the Phihtpelphia Press,
entertained the thousands who could
not get inside pith in able and elo•
quent speech. Gov. Curtin was re
elected president of the association,
and the foll Owing additional officers
were re-elected: Vice presidents,
Col. W. B. Mann, 'Captain W. M'-
Clelland and Colonel J. Wm. Taylor;
secretary, Clus. Devine; recording
secretary, CoL C. H. Hazard; treas
urer, J. H. Rillingsworth.
The committee adjourned to meet
at Williams Port on the 'first Thurs
day of June next. General AL D.
Harding, of Chicago, was elected
orator, with General Jesse Mernl• l as
alterate. Stibsequently the proees
sion reformed and halted in front o
Governor Ch'in's house, where
speeches were delivered by Governor
Curtin, Colonel Forney and Hon. L
W. Mackey.
TORNADO IN ILLINOIS.
A Whole Town Blown to Atom,.
TAMPICO, Illinois, Jane 7.—A ter
rible tornodo passed over this-tillage
last night, making a 3 complete wreck
of it. No lives were lost, although a
number of persons were injured,
several seriously.
Twenty-one dwellings were totally
destroyed, and every one is more or
less damaged,. ,„
Two elevators, one containing
about 1,200 bushels of grain, the
other SQO bUshels, were demol ished .
The depot of the Chicago, Bur
lingtori &
,Quinq Railroad was
badly damaged. .
The amount of damage done can
not be estimated yet.
The' people are buiily engaged
gathering up the • remnants. The
tornado struck the village at ten min
utes past , eleven, and was accom
panied,by rain, thunder and light
ning and laSted but a few minutes.
A special train furnished by the
Railroad authorities to - night,
brought physicians frog' Mondota to
assist in caring for the wounded.
There are no reports as , yet of
damage being done to the surround.
ing cotintry.l
TERRIBLE MINE EXPLOSION.
Severallle.n Instantly Killed.
WiLses-Rtiax, Pa., June B.—Last
night an explosion occurred in No.
1, Shaft, Nanticoke, burning three
mines and setting fire to a breaker
which was soon destroyed. While
fighting thou flames some burning
timbers fell upon William Vivian,
killing him' instantly.. Alexander
Ale, CharleaKeller, Hawley Walsh,
Tom Lowell, l -Tom McManus, Henry
Reimensnider, and . Lorenzo Krebs
of the gang, lwho Were also engaged
in fighting the tire, were overcome
by gas and had to be carried from
the mine. The first two were insen
sible when brought 'to the fresh air,
and have since died. The others are
doing well.
=2
The - following .1
law is subsbagislly
it foT reference, le
II is unlawful to catch , . in the'
Susgoshannu or As thliatanes be-
Wean dune 16th and August 10th,
e 4r
oviderleoiatifor $5 oro* one so
caugh I I i
It is t.
lawfu t fish, below any
dam which has no me or lad
dens, the half-mile claim not apply-
mg to stud' dams. I
It is unlawful to flak at any time
with fish baakets, ki ,1 : 1 014, eel! whirs,
or rack; in any ft,m in this' State.
It is unlawful to fish with seine,
set net, tyke net or e d: of' "4 other
description the' m of which are
less than three in betty ~0 June
15th and August lOtli m in any . eam.
It is unlawful to flab for ' . . .t, ex
cept for propagating purposes or sci
entific ;investigation, , 'in an other
manner than with hook and ' , e.. .
It is ; unlawful to fish for - .. on
and 'trout except between . prin.'
and August 14; speckled tro . t . onlyl l
to be caught with hook and •.e. • 1
It is unlawful to catch, kill. sell or
have in possession salmon int or
lake trout, between October at and
March L • • I
It is unlawful to place a ..t net
across any canal or rivulet o creek
in this State. '-
IC is unlawful to 'fish fo black
bass, pike or pickerel in an other
manner than with hook and, :. e or
a i
scroll, and only with hook d lin
or scroll, between June 1 and March
1, e,zeapt • when taking them * l
ye for
stocking other miters.' '
It is unlawful to fi sh at y time
in any inland water (f l inch as (meek
rivulet, or other strewn)
_inth.* State
inhabited by black bass, or Oeckled
trout with a net of I any • d the
meshes of which are' ess th three
inches.
It is unlawful to fish with Nines
or nets in any place where th water
has been partly or wh lly . drami off,
or to fish in any way y untying off
any water. l'
It is unlawful to nip set lines in
any stream inhabited by speckled
trout. I '
' There is nothing in the E
acts of 1873 to prevent( the seti
out-lines in any strearu not in
by speckled trout ; subject '
foregoing restrictions .s to th
of fishing and
..-a• the sfecies
caught.
M-eli
NATIONAL. Mil.
The Fresldeat•t Views o
He :Favors n Return -
ments -How It can be I
in Free Banking.
WASHINGTON, June
Grant, in rly to a
of Senator Jones, of
sent to that gentleman
dam ,of his views on
question, 'which he re
and'read to several me
press.
XEMOBANDIIII OF VIEWSIFITEST ON
THE SUBJECT OF DESTEIBLE L GISL.k
'TION ON . TUE FLNLECES.
I believe it a high and Pis' •duty
to return to a specie basis at t e ear
liest practicable day, n't on
com
pliance with legishsti n and party
ty • i
pledges, but as a step indiSpe sable
'to lasting national prozenty.
1 4 32
J believe farther tha the • e has
come when this can be d6ne, or at
least began, with less emb ent
to every branch of industryfir at
any future time after a resor has
been had to unstableand temporary
expedients to stimulate' nn eal pros
perity and speculation. o a basis
other than coin of the ' e me
dium of exchange t ou4ho t the
commercial world. , . ..
The particular mod sele ct d to
bring about a restorern of a pecie
standard is not of so raudh (pose
quince, as that some eqciate I plan
I ;
be devised, the time fixed when cur
rency shall be exchangeable foi. coils
at par, and the plan adOpted- 'lily
adhered to. It is not probabl that
ligl
any legislation suggested' b me
would prove acceptable 'to both
branches of Congress, and ind ed a
fall, discussion might shake ray own
faith in the details of any liin I
might propose. I, however, v nture
to state the general features cif the
action which seems to me adviiiable.
The fi nancial ' platform on! which I
stand, any ' departure from which
would be in the spirit r:f a c noes
sion • and harmony in defers. ce to
conflicting opinions.
First—l would li ke tc! Bee th legal
tender clause, sorcalled, repeal d, the
repeal to take effect itt . is futiur time,
say July Ist, 1875. Ttus wou l d cause
all contracts , made a ft er tha ' to for
wages, sales, &c., to be ad ' coin.
would correct our no ion f dues.
(1 1
The specie dollar weal be the only
c t
dollar knoWn as a mess e cif equiv
alents. • When debts afto•rwiirdtcort-,
tracted were paid -in eu.rriincy, in
stead of calling the paper d liar a
dollar and quoting at rune pre
mium, we should think and; alc of
paper as at so much discount. This
alone would aid greatlyin't. • g
the two currencies ne toget er at
Par.
(
Second—l would like to see pro-
Vision that on a fixed y, 'sky July
Ist, 1876, the-currency i sued hy the
United •States should be redee;d in
coin, on presentation to any is • tant
treasurer,, and that all the 6ncy
so redeemed should be eancill and
never re-issued. To e ect I t "it
would be necessary to tithe • the
n 'e
issue of bonds, payable in g?ld, to
t if
be put out by the Tre my in
such sums as should i orn tie to
time be needed for the p se of
redemption. I
Such legislation would insur a re
turn to sound financial princi les in
two years, and would, in . 03 judg
ment, work less hardship; the
debtor interest than is likely; come
from lutting off the day I o final ,
reckoning. It must be bone in mind,
too, that the creditor interest ad its
'day of disadvantage also wh n our
present financial system was b ought
in by the supreme needs; of e na
tion at the time. Ii
- I would further provi e t. 1.11 from
and after the dates fi xed for re emp
ii
lit
tion no bills, whether of ' tional
bank or. United States notes,' ! . re
turned to the Treasury to' . e ex
changed for new bills shouldi I e re
placed •by hills of a lesti deromins
tion than 00, - arid that in On: year
after resumption all liless than
$5 should be withdrawn from circu
lation, and in two years all bil : less
than $lO should be with awn. The
11:
advantage of this would . . the
strength given to the cor.ntry • :ainst
a time of depression, resulting from
war, failure of crops, or any other
cause, by keeping al • ays . the
hands of the people a la ge sup Sly of
the precious metals. .
With all the smaller .. -- .as-
in coin, many millions o
kept in constant use,
prevented from kilning the - .
Undoubtedly a poorer ccrreney .
always drive the better out of -
With paper a legal- .
and at a discount, grdd as 4 er
become articles of merchandise as
much as whist or -cotkm. The -
plus will find the best market it
With small bills in circulation .• - -
is no use for coin except to keep it in
vaults of banks to redeem
tion. During, periods of great ,
elation and apparent prosperity 7 r , •
is little demand for coin, and
will flow out to a market where ? it
can be made to earn semi g,
which it cannot do while lying,
Gold, like anything else, when of
needed• becomes a surplus, and • e
every other surplus it seeks a mar et
where it can fu2d one. •
By giving active employment o
coin, however, its
_presence, it - .•
to me will be secured and the pa - '
and depresiiione which haie oc
periodically in times of nominal
cie payments, if they cannot be lb .1-
ly prevented, can at least be grea y
mitigated. Indeed, I question w
er it would have been found mass -
ry to depart from the standard
specie in the trying days which ga e
birth to the first legal-tender act;
the country taken the ground of .43
small bills as early as 1850.
Again, I would provide an .exce
of revenue over current exPenditur -:
I would do this by rigid eeon3m, ,
and by taxation where taxation
be best borne. Increased seven .S
would work a constant•reduction
debt and interest and provide co .
to meet the demands on the
for the redemption of its notes, the
by diminic.hing the amount of bon'.
needed for that purpo se. All tams
after redemption beg ins should
paid in, coin or United States no
EMI
fush
serve
This would force redemption in „N
tional banks. •
With measures like these, whi,
would work out- such results, I,
no danger in authorizing free ban
ing without limit. '
THE FEW POST OFTIOE BILL.
WASHINGTON', Jane s.—The Ito , :e
.Post Office Committee have agredd,
to report the bill providing that On
all newspapers and periodical publi
cations, mailed from, known office of
publication Or news agency, and ad
dressed to regular subscribers or
news agents, postage shall be char -
ed at the following rates: Newspa
and' periodical publications issu
char
weekly andZlitpre frequently t,h
once a week, Cu cent and a half; o
those issued less frequently than on e
a week, three cents for each pound
or fraction thereof. On , the receipt
of sneh newspapers and periodical
publications at the office ,of mailing
they are to be weighed in bulk, and,
the postage paid thereon by special
adhesive newspaper stamps.
One copy to each actual subscrib r
residing within the county, where t e
same are printedin whole or in p t
and published go free through t e
mails, but the same shall not be d -
livered at letter carrier's offices r .
distributed by carriers, unless the
postage is paid thereon, as by lakv
provided.
Newspapers and magazines red -
rically interchanged between publish
ers, not exceeding sixteen ounces m
weight, to be confined to a single
copy of each publication, go free
through the mails. Q . ,
All mailable matter ' of the third
class may weigh not exceeding lb&
pounds for each package thereof, sa i d
postage shall be charged thereon t t
the rate of one -cent fel' each two
ounces or fraction thereof, but noth:
ing herein contained shall be held tb
change section 134 of said act.
everal
ig of
bited
the
time
,f fish
NOES
the 15
Jett—
Pay
nger
3EE
.—'Pre .ident
'tten reqaest
Nevada, hal
a immoral:L.
thel financial
ntlyl prepared
bers o Con-
Affidavits are to be made , by pn -
lishers or news agents, to seen e
their adherence- to these provisio
for the violation'' ; of which penalti s
are prescribed.
Wan:mow:4 - , Jane s.—The amen -
,ments proposed by the Senate a.-
propriation committee to the Pot
Office appropriation bill, prbvid7
that postage on all mailable matte
shall hereafter be paid at the time cf
mailing, and to restrict the delivery
system to cities having a population
of not less than 30,000 -instead qf
20,000, as fired by the House, and
strike out the House provision that
the Department of Agriculture' ret
porta shall pass free through thb
Mails.
-BIG INDIAN SOM.
Comanches and Cheyennes Alrin
Themselves. ,
Jane Tn f
WASHINGTON,
has been received from the army
headquarters of the movement of thii
Camanche and Cheyenne Indians
against the w hites
. in general, an d
the people of Texas particalarlyi
They evince a determination tq
move against Fort Sill .reservatio4
and the agency and thence; on a raja
into Texas. The information comes
from George W. Fox, interpreter
from the Kiowas, and is forwarde.
by. the - commanding officer, at For
Sill. Fox says there will not be
Kiowa on the war path this summer
WILEES-PAARE, Pa., Jane 9.--Taes
day afternoon at the Stanton shaft o
the Lehigh and Wilkes-Barre Coa
Company, James Williams, 'a watch
man, was clesceniiing a shaft whe
an explosion' of gas occa„red.
was thrown•to the bottom a distanc:
of 600 feet. There is twenty-fiv:
feet of water in the shaft and hi:
body has not yet been recovered.
THERE was a rumor in Wall stree
on Saturday that JAY Goan had
again obtained a controlling interest
in Erie, and that the candidates fo:
directors favored by him wer certain
of success at the ensuing election in
July. The rumors to this effect wer
based on an alleged arrinigemcni
between GOULD and AlcHininy, said
to have been entered into sust pre
vious to the departure of the. latter
for England, and by whiCh Gori
engaged to buy up the stock owne
by Main= in Erie and 'Atianti
and Great Western, and licHEcur
on his part pledged himself to ob
tain proxies sufficient to give Gou
and his friends cont or of the roa..
To affair was the ,subject 'of cun.
siderable comment in financial cii r
eles Saturdayand'was generally re.
fared to us' the J"sale of Erin tole.
GOULD." Inquires made at the Eri
Railway office, and at the office f
Mr; S. L. M. Rum , NT - failed to affor fi
any confirm& !. to the truth of
the allegpl :,( u'e t-- M r. R.tm.o,w s
chief ulcrk bee med to regard the
tumor as utterly destitute of founda
tion, and in fact, as altogether
Minibus.
it in
il Of
Ei
~M3EE SENATE AIM:DM:E.:NITS.
H • -
,I • -
Tar ; phis Evening Builefirt
says the train s of the Penn= ,
sylvani& Rai I I are known to l be
among the ran im this country,'
but there a prospect that +en
their prawn 'alma will be 6ceeded.
It is re that two fastdity trains
wdl soon be pnt on the road between'
Philadelphhi and Pittebtrr#, ,
will atop only at Harrisburg and,
Altoona, and run at the rate of foity.
five codes: an hour. Even, allowing
for anusiderable detention's at the
two Stopping points, these trains
run the whole~ distance'of three hian
dred and asy-four miles in about'
nine hotu& There hate been many
occasions when trains that h ave
started behind time kola littsbu l igh
hive 'run from Altoona to HarrisbUrg,
a distance of l mites, i withont stop.
ping once, and the lost time has tus
bee.n made l ap. On :m-tain Tel
, I
stretches of road troughs fa of _wa
ter are to be placed on the trsick,
kom which the engine tanks be
filled as the- train goes along. By
the - feat t
the
York
to af
• Ruse sari 40.-
stroyed by an incenthar ,
fire on "ri
day. '!3N'eningl; last. L oss $40,000 ;
huntrance 414,0100:
. No* o at s. l Admthseitt
IP""
tweeri Wijecix Station,
on the Etat 4 Zee B. p.', as Torandi. on
Wednesday. June oth. 1874. • heather podtat•book
with the =as of sBlslturt Lee muted on the fides
Said poeket.book noolained about throe dollars in
numey.'s $2 and $1 !AIL a note tor $35 against Urtah
Zee and Mark LeMand other papers. Thefind: will
be rewarded by leaving maid pocket - hook pi th the
Underkgnea, age mc ergreen. P&L Payment: the
note has been 134LLY LIM
Jane 10. 1874.4 r ' ' I
WEST S7BEET HeYT"'"-
HOTEL,
1 • i 1 - -
m;),- 4 1 , 42, 3 kil 'griniP.z. trey 'roan.
• TEMPEIt•cn norsz. ON THE WILOPI
' cents per Dai. CHANG= I
beat matte and vegetables in
TIS in the City.l
B. T. BILISISEET. preoptteto
soma so Ana 7
HODES►TE. • -
mated. szer
Jane 11. .7-
INDEPENDENCE B.
, are
~,1 _ ,
The public invited to atte nd
i , Bill 4 at
3100DY'13 703.1 E, P.
k imx
0:
FRIDAY VLNI.SG. nu 3, 1,374.
I 1 I 1
GOOD 11177.,C IN4TTEN'DANC
, 1 1
' A. A. TAYLOR, Prop'l
BELL $2 50
LIST OF
the Postotheel
Barr Charles
Brown John
Bilks George •
Brewer Mary
Benjamin David
Blachei Jane
Campbell Abram -
Coleman P B
Cams Anthony -
Cobur
Daughn F 6
erty C -
Donley Harriet '
Deans' Nary ,
Davis Henry . ;
linszonna
Frltzgeraldi vid
Harris Enos H
Hogan nos
'Horton k Marren
Dua: remaining
Tairanda, June 1% Hu
Keen Azinett
Loon X
Lee Junes
Levis Kanto
iterrt Peter
Italia= James
Killer Andress
Mctrphiff, Derails
libraos Albert
. Nilson Winning
'Terrell Frank
,erne 1 4
.1
Prank
_Oliver
13trope Isaac ,
Fmk Anna
Wood Charles
. Wood Aaron. •
Williams I/ 17
Perrone calling
tised; givir:cg data
or Mar
f
II!
:
IXT
A. C
v r •
AMR
D I A
!Hi
Mi
WATCH
rin
II
Jnee Z. 1871
A YER'S dATHARTIC P 1 ',
. .
TOE ALL THE OF A IJANOLI . 3*
Curing Costl FL Jaundice, ET'lisps* .di
gestion,
j 'Dysenter Foul Stomach and Ereath, Fry
iipelia, • Headache i Piles, llheurnatiam, Eruptions
and Skin , Disease; Moulmein, River Compla i n:it,
DroPay,', Titters, more and Salt Rheum, Worms.
Gout, 'Neuralgia, a Dinner Pill: and Purifying the
BlOod,are the mos purgative yet perfected.
Their efeets abun tly skowl4r much they cue
all other Pills. They are-safe pleasent to take,
but powerhal in cure. They purge out the font hu
mors of the blood t they stimulate the 'sluggish or
disordered organ iito action; and they Impart health
and tone to the whole being. They cure not only
the every day c 01 14 42 1 -its of eeearyaite:d7,,
ui
but formid
able and dimmer= diseases . oet skilful "aq
clans:Most emlneit clergymen, d our best id
hyaLg
rens, send certifirtes of cures rimmed and of
great benefits the have derived from these Fills
They are i tie rafes and beat p c for children be
cause mild as we ll effectuaL . sugar coated,
they are easy to tab; and being pure) , vegetable
they are entirely harroleas. l
`rasaimua na
Ds,. F. 0. ATE & &Co t ', LOWELL, *ASS.,
' I ' Practical and Analytical Chemist!.
Sold by all • •••• • and Dealers In Medicine
• 4. I : . I 1
THE P.LA J, C?E TOlitrY,
I ,
HARMS AND HORSE I
FIXINGS GE
, r +
I. at C. F: DAYTO N
N'S, in the store lateltoccuileti
by Julius Wolff ale a clothing Store. Having re.
moved my estabeat to more I commodious and
convenient parte I respectfully Invite my old
cristomers e and all In want of anything in tbe hue of
•I,- 1 I 1
HABNESs. IiMID
1i ,
NETS, BLANKETS. WIEIDE,
--
Ili s a
kc., ke., to give m a call, feeling satisfied that from
the fec.Wties Ipo a for , purchasing stock,' can
do abetter job, at lower price, than any 'other I el
tabllalanumt In the ',county.,
ix) NV ronort THE PLACE -ONE DOOR
LOW THE FOX A 7ROUR STORE.
I
May 24.
ADBEENISTAATOR'SINOTIO4--
Notice to lime& given that all perms Indebted
to the estate of drew Fraley, late Of Ilidgthisy,
twp. &Ceased, are; rapmated to m ake : Immediate'
payment, and all I persons baring chinas against
said estate must present them duly autbentiaited
• for sztillment. ,HIRAIi W. CASPIESTEIL
done 1-* Administrator.
A DIIIINISIc`RA. TORtNOTIC4—
.L.1.-Notice ls hereby given that tpersons indelded
to the estate of Zoespens
_Campbell. late of -
ton, deed. meat ma Immediate payment, and
persons hawing claims against said estate mast re.
sent them duty an outlasted for eettlement,
i C11323:128 ICI CAMMUITA,
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