Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, September 24, 1874, Image 2

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    II
NEWS MX ALL mums.
•
--Altoona's complaint now is. nn
raly, boys. ' ,*.
—Chester has a three" pound five
Guam patio. '
Montgorael has silty-one jail
budt st greselat -
2—There are many- cases of Typhoid
fever in :fohneTown.
— . -The number of rerpons assessed
pa Hs:rig:Am is 6,M, ' •
.-- , Blsiness in Danville is duller
-Toe Sword of Banker
• LPott.sville 'llechauicsville
'cr...k et
—Tile first - negro ever hang by a
I,...zti , coiltay,2cry will b• swung off to day.
—A. serious scarcity of
. witier is
1.1,....-;Expericaced in Philsdeighis
e hugest Joke of 'the bisison: ,
iLe ‘,l the fßiz...eratic prim for l e
. thousand Itepnblican
La-- whit the ciacago i lutrrhal
'l•+ .
prczt:t• - • - 5.
exandet H. Inllock, ez•Gdrer=
. U 2•Lasercharrt•tFi- I..se decline-3 to b:eccale
f . -2r • __ -•
131123
—Gen. Sheridan thinks •that the
tmtL•:cs Ir., re So t•.. will $OO3 bo
is building -
:Lie 5;:h7.4.1 houses st.i,s
c,..-
I.( ,
—ate yield of hay in Indiana the
wts f✓),Jfii tons.
- 7 -E7erything now is wide open
'Di the psliticiaile
--Statistics - recently published
thF. railway - 111)Tel In England, has
,t dclble3 itLee.
—Michigan has renominated all
F. , .-publican Congressmen, and, what is
w:11 re-elect them.
—Four thousand boles of cheese
wire vzrchlued at Utica, one day lad !reek for
Scotlancimarket
—lt is e..4timated that England will
..rit Vat illO r iPOtt,firiO worth of irbeat ibis year
t175,00,0C.0 hut year.
• time end place of holsling
S ..dthe,rn Bepublican Convention!' hill
zl.aoged to Chattanooga, October 13. '
• —ThEt Lord Mayor of Dublin'
and Liz wife were among the-arrivals at New
Y(Tk, t)i-the Scotia, on Wednesday._
—The Allentown Daily. News, has
.1-rfepenled publication on account of the hard
:'times. A
. . I
—A Citve half a mile in extent has
I beep il.scorered in Somerset county. Now for
I 1. - .nem. .
'-4.py petson who desires space in
t4va bOildlngs may iaow m..e
•
coal train of 219_ loaded care
r , cont. ? ! ',used down Uio Mine Hill railroad at
I'.•,asri°ie. •
-J, C. Benson, of Pennsylvania,
Lite bet eappointed acting chief of the treasury
eezret,r-crur.,e. -
,
ounty stone
was cold et l Sherifre Bile the other day
for $12,0 1 .f , i. It war! worth tlOO,OOO.
—S . :D. Ward, Esq. fortherly cash
11. r of tie Bank of Einr.4l.lale,.dieti suddenly a
that r:sco,pr. Monday Danrniti.
-I,tlr) Jerry K. Shanner, of Potts
trAvn, has a cherty trio bending .town with the
ecotal growth ofirnit
•
—Philadelphia expended • nearly
hill a million of dollars for the support of pan
ptis duting•the last year.!
• .-L-Harry Hickwn, the prizb fightet; .
i% in jail of Harrisburg, foi brutally beating the
ivomal; with whom he lives. t
—Rev. Dr. E. 0. Haven, Chancel
1.. r ilcct ottlie Syraeruiw University, will be for
malty .uaiigurated on Thursday, Sept -tuber 15
,--fitev:' Alexander . Clark,. 'editoi
t2o - 4.i.q ItPcorder, has gone to the Illinois
o.iftd.incii to represent the :general interests
• •
-41ek. A. Rittenhonse, elected to
it l'ra4or's Chair' in Dickinson College, pas
for of , the Tabernacle Church, Philadelplia,
Las ' .
=The. temperance Men of Chester
tonntp wiii have nothing to do with thO
r!•parhto state organization. They. have
eLtirely too much good acnae.
- —The Schuyaill County- Poultry
A,Eoeation Lave determined upon holding a
bur at Tamaqua, in December, to last !oar
•
,• —Philip, Mocket was • seriously
itiibbe.i in an altercation at Sunbury.'bn Friday
nigh, by H..B4Lington, who was 'locked up to
await :he resultOr llocket's injuries.
- •
•I
--A. Justices' office in Danville
was recently robbed of dockets, laity, eto.,. and
h Bible.. Thieves. do not generally trouble
.rtlc!ep of this kind; especially the litter.
•
'—John Harper, the senior of the
arm or Harper Brothers t publishers, is lying
very at New ,York, and is not likely tit To
• I
—There. are now one htuadr,ed and
tnenty-twoinmat+ . at the house for the in&
gvnt or Washingti i m county, nearly all of whom
arc infirm in built•
. . -
—Stepht..) Ti*gart who burgled
'rill Timagna was sentenced on,
bix colts fine, cast. and six months
i:olits.ty confinement.. -
The. Conshohocken titer
pany,are in a had 'way. They have loat she
' b(itttuit onto[ their reserimir. It was a $75.000
, rdccptc cle, but ia_not worth eevetity-hrtidoUart
Iv; thrm' , a bottom.
—Tlie Democratic "tidal wave"
:iweep r.ver Siiine to any great extent on
Monday. But it , appears to have achieved
ar , nieti .tig Or a victory in_ New Orleans yester
,
lie Gazelle eripake of
G.)vcr Legs- Moghs. of fionth Carolina, 1/8 the
N,,rth American thief." This is a per
mr-cy Domocratii! erpudiation
-4,4";
—ln the ulangalar dael between
the ficitlnia, Temperance ; and Republican par
.tiee of Kansas, the Fort Scott Ifon.;:or pre di cts
the ruccesi of the Republican ticket by '2OPQ
ajeri 4 y. `
• —Gen. Langhorne Winter, of
Perry county, ie the ; -Repiablicitn nominee for
Congr , = froth the Eighteenth district, com
p recd f Perry; Franklin, Friltrm, linntingdon,
rnyd : and Juniata conntieS.
•
lieu. J. Ambler Sault, the pre-
Went mrtatax,ut" the only Republican who
con amble orcr the course in the Third Virginia
C , ngroknonal district and defeat the cham
-I,ion. Democratic pedestrian, Gilbert C. Wal
ker
• •
r—
exehange heads an article:
"':1511,y should the,. Democratic party ?"
This IR about' on par with the• conundrum
cmitained in the title of Mr. Gerald Maesey's
rec?crit lecture, "Why don't God kill Ahe devil?
ralr
—lt is a .terrible thing . . to send
rcaeral troops into the - Sonth to "oppress" a
ft , -e reoVie. So thinks the Westville (Miss.)
Which itaya: "If we can't Tote the negro
down I , ' - e can-knock him down, And the result
wdl be the sante.",
• —A grape vine on the farm of
yrank:,a emit!), in Salisbury, Lehigh county,
1.4 s gr , twn thC present season forty-two feet.
!'hag , .zrown .041 the Same property, are .from
totienty-four inches in length.
Harrisburg .youth, who wears
hu : ;, of the Most approved style, buttoned
hack, when retiring, u he jumped into
r‘lne manner, was caught by the• bed
-;. 1 ./(1 hurig 'surpended.by the shirt band
. FLnrt time, and narrowly escaped stran
.
;.;ptirgeon; in referring to the
ILply"- of people, as they prosper and f get np
'
, world, to week after the hushionabre
I' ,- i f worship, alid: "They give up their
(-* religion and their noble heritage for
1 . , k , o of being. patted on the back by no-
I e
I.
ME
F-Tbe statistics of the Presbyterian
Smith, for 1873, are jut publiahed.
fl. I, l rb 12 Synods,' 64 Presbytenes, 1,056
is it niQ - 2,76-1 churches--an increase or nearly
101,056 communicants. _The total (v1)-
1 , 106118 for 1873 amount 11,111,461. The
rear , in the number of members is 12,000,
elAnn.b,ooo have been adde4 by the union of
010 'School Hyped of Missouri with the
luck.
ii4l!
Xiddiordgepotitt
TaigaUda, Thursday, Sept. 24, 1874.
YD Iwo ft I's
GOODRICH.
E. 0
itepnbgcan State Srlcket,
!YOE LIELTES,A.ST CrONIERTOII.,
t iIITHITR 9LMSTED
POE Jammu
HARRISON SLLEN.
ssFurrriuP OP ISTRENLI: *priors,
ROBERT IL BEATH.
3CDGII 07 SUM= COLTS;
EDWARD M. PAXSON'.
COVNTT CONVENTION.
Pursuant to call the members o
he, Republican County Committee o
iscounty of Bradford, met at. the
tirar.d Jury Boom, -in the Born' o
Toancla, at 2 o'clock, P. M., on
Tuesday the 18th day of. Aug., 187-1-5-
the following being present, viz:
.1
FL Scow, GEO. W. BUCK, A. C.
E -- "aply., B. S. DAhrr, D. L. STAATES,
JNCI W. Mu, R. HowEnt., Barcesa'
TOI - NG, L W. Tow%en, Mounts Suze. !
ARD, W. P. LesE, J. C. Rot:lssas, and
Jot MirniNve:. Upon being caned
to order by the Chairman, npob.mi ts7
tic& it was ordered that the Republi
cal County Convention 'be held at,
thd . Court House, in the Bow' di To
wanda, on the afternoon of Tuesday
the 29th day' of Sept. next, to be
caned to order at 2 o'clock, and that
the delegate elections in the town
:
shtps be called by the respective
cohamittees of vigilance on . Saturday
the 26th day of Sept. next, IS be
opened at 3 o'clock, P. M. and kept
open ,continuously until 5 o'clock, r.
M.,; and that the delegate elections'
in the Boroughs be called as above
and held, commencing at 6 o'clock
P. 31., and kept open continuously
until' 8 o'clock, P. M., of the same
day aforesaid. *Upon motion it was
also ordered that the delegate elec
tions be conducted by ballot. It:is
nigently requested by the committee
that : the Republican electors of the
several :districts, take an interest in
el l e primary elections and be in , at
tendance thereat, where a fair 'oppkr
trinity will be given for an expression
ot; their preference among the several
ctindidates whose names will be pre
sented to the County Convention for
nomination, in the choice of such
delegates as best represent their
views. _ ,
[Thf; officers to be nominated and
e le i cted are
I One member of Congress.
lOne Senator.
[Three Representatives.
One County Commissioner 1 year.
One District Attorney.
One Auditor.
IThe following named gentlemen
here selected and_ requested to act
Committees of Vigilance in the
several election districts of the county
- H. L. Scow, Chairman.
GEO. W. Eves, Secretary,'
- VIGILANCE COM=TREB.
Athena Twp—Baraucl Orenahire, Wm. Walker,
Wright Dunham.
Athena Boro—Geo Kinney, B Y McKinney, Henry
Coriel:.
leaMenla Tirp—Lester Ripley, Lin F4lCon, 0 D
Field.
Albany—Joseph Rested, Richard Richards, J
Wilcox.
;Asylum- r Joseph A Hornet, Ono W Kilmer, Myron
tenon.
!Alba Bore—Chu Manley, Miller, Col Irad
Wilson,
;Barel&Y—Peroirel Bailey, Lumen Putman, Jr. Wm
Er Brown.
Burlington Twp-4I 1' O:Mstin, Chas Lampbell, R
Burlin g ton Boro—W A Lane, John MIL Dr 0 P
1.
lingtonWest—Joseph Pohlke,Dan vela Bonrnei ,
Orlando Rockwell.
',oelitanaw - p—Wm Channel; James Spalding, Law
ilince Manley. •
;Canton Boro—Leltoy, , Gleason. Perry Lewis. 8
VFn Derah.
It ;ColumblaDaniel Bradford, deo L Gates, Oliver
eale
(Franklin -James 0 Ridgway, David Smiley, Nil.
101 Gilbert. I - ,
Granville Chas -Rinyon, Henry Jennings, Vol
Easton.
[Herrick—James Horst. TA Lee, John Anderson.
• ILitchrield—W II Canner, II El Munn. 8 DBarmazo.
(Leßoy—Wm I' Robinson, Sidney Morse, Hiram
Mote.-
iLeitarrville---D Codling, Stephen Gorham, 0
Canfield. z
!Monroe Twp—A. C !doormen, J S Blackman, Jere
ratah S Hollon.
[Monroe Boro—Henry C Tracy,. E C Sweet, John
hummers.
Orwell—A 0 Mathew?. Sabin Allen; John W Mtu,
P Overton—Alfred 7.
erton—Alfred Strevy., Dau;cl Heverly, Jr, Jae
Irl4o 11. N
beWoir, Z S Steel, C WlRtimolds.
Ridgbury—E K Beckwith. H 8 Owen, D J May.
4 Rome Twp—S N Earner, G L Forbes, Orville Tay.
tor.-
Rome„ Boro—C J Eastabroot, 11 . .iontz, G I.
ought.
t Smithfield—John Bird, Jr, P Phelps. Jr, Bob..
Serould.
I Springfield. -- S D Philips, JIM. H Terkes,ltobt Allen.
.IZath Creek—S ITl l i n
ey omron:G 0
rman, Lark, y lra Orr on s :
later Monroe. ' ,
Sheshequin—Moses Watkins, D L Fuller, Hyman ,
anduser.
grtidr i g g e s t y ne—Victiard Jennings,: Wm' Stevens,
n
1 Terry—Ebinezer Terry, W.T Horton, Moser T
Shatery. ,-- -
1 Towanda Twp—Geo H Fox, Silas A Shiner, James
ikv Piatt. • .
L Towanda Boro—lst Ward—Daniel Suliltan, James
Stoneman. I E Pitcher.
~, Towanda Boro-2nd Ward-3 P Van Fleet, James
I Codding, Henry Lanaerrax.
,i Towanda Boro-3d Ward—E T Fox,Parsons,
If W
Joseph Kingsbury.
Towanda North—David Rutty, John J Webb, Silas
11111 s.
Trc7 Twp—John Haut, John Lewis, H ai HI.
Dowell.' '
Sam.
- Troy Rerivo--Scott 21wman , John H Grant,
uel Pomeroy.
1 Tuscaroras - Wm Shumway, A B Sumntr,. 'A A
-teensy. •,,
1 Ulster—Jima 3tather, James Howie, Z Hi:lnter.
1 ;Warren—J A Newman, J It Cooper. Wm F Corbin
'. t ; Windham—lt W Darling, Lott Shoemaker, Avery
D Babcock.
1 Wyalusing—James Donohoe, Beniandla Ackley, II
Bingham. -
SWYgox—Elliott Whitney; Z J Clawson, Ebinezer
locum. '
Bowman, Chles Bo
1 7Vllmo el Wm il ße Q i nick. NC .Teta PP Ely, Hor ar
ton Birae c y.
r -- ---- -- ----
hlxesmcren as Col. Ovurroli will not
ave any opportunity of replying to
Ir. larawrig, we deem it but, justice
o say, in regard to the charge of
bv.pro's & EMI= in the :WARD
.-
ease, that the fee paid .them was not
*early so great as the fees - paid Mr.
iWis.en's attorneys. Mr. LITTLE, of
IWyoming county, received the same
amount that o.' & E. did, although
ilia greater part of the work was
ilerfonned by them., In view of the
6arges made by the other counsel in
the case, we do not think the $5OO
said OWEIPION & ELEIHREE. exorbitant.
THE New York Tribune, despite its
.ympathy, for the Democracy two
ears ago, has this to say of their
I hio platform: "Almost every Mis
hievons doctrine in the whole
ango of American politics wee for
,. nlated into the Bourbon datla r ration
if principle drawn up at Columbus
in tho 26th of last month."
, Arrlnuatte Delegate Election on
Baturday
Is the day appointed for holding
the Republican delegito elections in
this county, and we again most
earnestly urge upon the people the
importance of, attending &bead meet
ings, and selecting for delegates mien
who will honestly represent die wishes
of their constituents in the conven
tion. Let no trickery be resorted to,
bat let all strive to have a fair ex
pression of the voters in the several
districts, and thus send men to the
,convention who will, as_ near ail pos
Bible, reflect the wishes of the "town
ships in the selection of candidates.
It cannot be expected that a ticket
.can be formed which will, be person
ally acceptable to all, bat the conven
tion can be, and we doubt not will
be, so conducted that no true Re
bublican will have just cause to be dis
satisfied. The gentlemen presented
for the various, offices are men who
have been true to the cause of Re
publicanism, and whoever among
them receives the honest and unbiased
Support of a majority of the delegates
should be heartily supported by every
sincere Republican. If fraud or un
fairness is practiced either in the se
lection of delegates or the nomina
tion of candidates, the people will be
responsible. If there is a full at
tendance at the delegate, elections
and free discussion of the matter, no
dissatisfaction will be manifest, atter
the convention.
fit,. w.. AI.VORD
The Annual Fair of the Bradford
County Agricultural Society will com
mence at Rutty Park; in North To
wanda, on the 7th of October, and
continue three days. It has been so
long since the. Society was abandoned
that 'we fear our farmers and citizens
have lost interest in it, but , we sin
cerely , hope they may 'attend the
fair and by their presence and influ
ence give such a tone to it an will
tilake the Society and its exhibitions
Worthy tiro county.
Complaint is made in some quarters
that too much prominence and too
great premiums are given for trials
of speed, and we,think the charge is
well founded. The way to correct such
an error is, for the farmers and those
who believe the I fairs should be con
ducted in such a manner as to en
courage the---real interests of_ . ; sgri
culttiral and the mechanical axis, to
connect themselves with the society
and prevent such blunders in the fu
ture.
The great advantages to be derived
froni these, annual gatherings, if
;properly conducted; cannot be over
estimated. The benefits of the fairs
held in this county during the few
years just prior to the war are still
manifest in our improved breeds' of
cattle and horses, and in the disposi
tion shown among farmers to procure
the best varieties of seeds. The fairs
serve to stimulate effort, by showing
what has been done; to afford an ex
change of information ; to facilitate
sales of stock, farming implements
and household utensils, and thus to
promote the advantage of all con
cerned.' That ;they have served to
stimulate enterprise in agriculture
throughout the country is very evi
dent, and to them much of the credit
of the great advances recently made
is due. We hope the time will not
soon come when agricultural fairs
will be abandoned. Their advantages
are so many and their coat so trivial,
that considered merely as an enter
tainment, they are worthy of contin
uance. The increasing interest man
ifested in them shows that the people
clearly realize their value.
IfirM :7IX/AT Y.
THE FAIR.
thrroirrumvis.—lt is unfortunate
for the Democratic party that it can
not control the ruffians'which belong
to it long enough to get into power.
Just when it needs public confidence
it loses it. Just when the people are
beginning to feel that the party has
reformed and means well, ind that
the devil has been cast out of it, the
cloven foot shows itself, and the old
time rascality crops out in full bloom.
Democracy has a terrible load to
stagger under, and to add to its bur
dCns by increasing its power would
be little short of cruelty. When it
succeeds in civilli7ing Georgia and
Texas it may turn its attention to
the nation. If the rifle and knife
prove. effective civilizing agencies in
those States it may pay to introduce
th9se novel instruments of political
reform a little furthre North. But
we fear . the experiment will fall.
Conversion through fear is not very
lastliFig and the power thus gained is,
only for a day. Democracy should '
issue a proclamation to th o e faithful,
urge them to appear honest and
law-abiding citizens until' the party
is enthroned at the National Cdpltal.
It will be hard work for the faithful
to affect t hedisguise, but it may pay if
kept up for a score of years.
THE firmness of the President has
brought the Nyhite League ' rebels to
a stand in New Orleans. : The con
ceit has teen taken out of them, and
Prst's inflated usurpation has col
lapsed without awaiting the prick of
the boyonet. The Government for
ces, however, yvill go forward; and a
lesson has hcen learnt • which will
doubtless preyent the withdraw' of
"military proti3ction" from Louisiana
again for a good while to come. A
fair - trial of the "let-alone policy" has
been_made, with an honest desire to
see the peopleof the Southern States
take full control of their own affairs,
maintaining an orderly goiernment
in the spirit of justice and homanity.
Experience htiti proved that this hope
was groundless. The experiment
has resulted in failure. The Federal
forces sent to the South, this time,
should stay there so long as the
White Leagues and the Mexican
style of politics remain to curse the
infatuated liemooraoy of 'the South.
limy want:.
Fifteen years ago the ; loyal people
of this country renmnieed the Demo
cratic party, and every year since, by
large majorities ; the voterahave pro
maimed it unworthy -C onfidence.
But of latuWe - bOoti!**alty hear -a
min who bas beet, faithful
and dtvoted in his adherence to the
principles of the party organized to
wrcaL the govcrumeat from the wasp
of a slave-holding and disloyal. or
ganization, *hick had brought us to
the very serge of .rain, Fay, " The
mission of the Republican party ib
ended, and-there arn no great price,
pies to contend for now.y To awl:
we respectfully point to the sts'e 0
affairs in the Smith, and the platforhi
of principles pat forth wherevei Hit ,
advocates of a wt to Mares govern
meat' are to the ascendency.
Our able, and intelligent cotem
porery of the Lebanon Courier hits
the nail sqaare on the iiewl
following article on this subii-ct:
" There are fed* petSohs who rf,flec.
sttffiezently on the matter to give the
Republican party just credit , for what
it has done for the country. It. not,
only has preserved the Union, but it
restored it. When the Republiein
party assumed the r eins of gotel (1 7
ment in 1861 from t e hands of 'Lim
noted Democrat,. James Bechaime,
the Union was prat really dissolved ;
States had seceded and prepared , to
maintain their independence,
_and
the` Buchanan administration' had
confessed that therS was no power in',
the national government to defend
its own existence. ft is not necessary
to refer ti) the lalrs and success of
the Republican pi 7 in restoring the
Union and givingits again a united
country ; but the preservation of the -
Union is a matter that now, and will
for all time, be a vital consideration
forthe American people. Wise meal
hive regarded the preservation of
this.wide-extended country under a,
single government as an impossibili
ty. The interests of a continent aro
so conflicting that theie are always
differences of such wide divergence
that ambitious and selfish men who
pant for power maY take • advantage
of them to foment a discord that may
lead to dismtegration. Few thinkers
believed in 1861 that the far-off Pa
cific country eouldl for any length of
time be kept in the old Union.. It
was said that a in.
might be pre
served for a short!Mier, but the gen;
erailon would see t least four
ate iovernments of th then Un
ion-2-,New Bnel ndd and probably the
Middle States forming one ; the
Southern. States another; the Missis
sippi Valley the third, and the Pacific
coast the fourth. The broad, sound,
just political views, of the Republican
party, has at leaSt postponed any
danger of this kind for an indefinite
period, and has laid the, foimdation
Dr an enduring mid prosperous
ion.
"When the war was gditg on, tlnd
we were spending mosey at the rate
of from ont to two millions a day,
the wisest political economists re
garded, the country as financially
ruined,, and prophec.ed that the ter
mination of the 7ar would find as
so utterly prostrated financially that
general bankruptcy and ruin would
cover the land. The Republican party
met these dillicalties—little less than
putting down thel rebellion—and by
wise and patriotic legislation engi
neered the 'Country out of its troubles
and placed the industries of the land
on a good footing, and gave prower
ons times to the neople.
"Cana palty with such a record be
lightly dismissed from power ? There
is no other political organftation to
take its place. IThe restoration of
the Democtatio party to power, means
simply and surely a re-opening of the
schemes and strn:ggles of the men
who rebelled against the government
for a new life for their lost cause.'
That certainly is something that no
good citizen desires to see. To over
throw the party,. with no
political organization' to supplant it,
means political anarchy, and in that
word'are as many things to be dread
ed as there are evils to flow from the
opening of l'andora's box. 'ye ask
any reasonable ram to give the mat
ter a moment's thought, and then
ask himself if such a state of politi
cal anarchy as 7,0u1d flow from the
overthrow of the Republican party,
with no well established political or
ganization to take its place, would
-not probably prOduce such a discord
and .such a wide. spread conflict of
factions as would almost certainly
rend the Union. and make the proph
ecies of those who believed we should
dissolve into four governments at
least, a reality.
"These dangers may not strike
the minds of in who give the sub
ject, little thong t, with much force,
and yet they are real and startling.
It is but few ears since W 3 exix)•
rienced how nearly' our Union was
overthrown. The, men that planned
and fought for the overthrow still
live, and give there the field of polit
ical anarchy to Operate in and. they
will turn their failure of ton years
ago into a success.".
IT would
t appear' that the law reg.'.
ulating the freight and passenger
tarifs of the railroads, passed by 'the
WisconsinLegialature, -is not r having
the disastrous effect at first predicted.
It was asserted that it would reduce
thIS dividends on some roads one-half
and render oth rs worthless. But
this is not bo • e out by the facts.
The law has b,
and thus far di ,
angers have beer
teen per cent,
freights about
possible under ti
be such an ine
will more than
duction in charg
Tug Cincinn4i Gazette publishes
the result of interviews with members
of several of thi) leading housekin
various branches , of business, and the
report is- encour aging. "On all sides
trade is reportel to be good,' and
better times stiL are generally look
ed for. The revival in trade • may
not have coma with the suddeness
that some were expecting, but 13si
itness is on a good basis; and the is
every reason toelieve that a season
activity is ne rat hand." 1
E !)
• • 14111.i•-•------ .
IT will 'surprise 'a good many to
bear that. there is talk of nominating
Hrsur -A. WISE for Congress.' in -Vir
ginia. If WisE l i s sent to Conitipss
at, least two able-bodied men ought
to be sent with him to hold him.
~.
aattsesi
, The following following extract from an ad
dress by Hon. 1i
I.'i . Dirmen to his
constitsants in el heater. Mass, on
the 12tb of Septe ferprbEseit hdt
ter
only hit tilt* ktews; Ibtiftilii BelpUbli
can sentiment thrimghont the txdon:
" The King of a barberotes . tribe in
Africa took Ate Etiglishnien peski
er!' wbo were peagefully trading in
his country, marched them to his
capital, and there held them ati such,
with maltreatment, b ut when "asked
to release them r used. What is
the protection which Englandl gives
to her citizens? The Whole bight&
nation was aroused,; , War was declared,an army transported half wazacross
the globe. The arr4y ot the Sing of
AbyOsinit *tit ovtrpowered in battle,
his lapitol Atm assaulted and demol
ished, - and his treasure bionght
away by thelEnglieh soldiers as booty
and their conntrynien freed from im-,
prisonrnent. And i !than it be said
that Union men 7 geoll,haast, t; ace
fat men; purs'alng l the ordinary avo
catierib of life upon an American soil,
protected by our flag, and our Consti
tution and oar laws, where they
should be unmolested—can not have
that protection and safety and 're
dress fpr their wrongs which Ene, - 4land
can git.e to her eitisehs even wheat
sriblect4d °lily to itnprisonment amid
the wild , jungles gi Africa? Is the
red cross of St. George so poiverfca
to protect and save its subjeCts and
Or) Stars and Stripes so powerless in
nut land, upon otir country's soil, in
ins of the richest and what ought to
be the tilo6t peaceful 'State, of -
.the
Union Let me Ibe just to the men
of the South and give the excuse
they put forward ' in justification of
this outrage. They say the govern
ment of the State of Louisiana has
been seized from the old white, resi
dents by the vote of the negroes, and
a State government set up of whites
and blacks, which is cerrupt and eat
ing tip their substance. We nned.not
stop, to argue o' deny the truth of
this justification, and that, too, not
be - cattsk:: the cern tion of -the govern
ment is no jristifl. tion of the ',murder
of the citizen by armed violence, be
cause other and umberless nihrders
too well authenti, ated to bel denied
have been committed in thetates of
Tennessee and. Eentuckya in both of
ir4
' which the negas no pbwe in the
government, nor any power Of self
priitection, bat which are wholly un
-der Democratic ride. , So that it is
clear, _ white Ten's leagues have
sprung up,all o'er the f.',` oath as lavi
' less - and murderous in the States
where the negroes arc powerless as
l where they have power in the State,
government, and as thesa wrongs are
I done openly and continually in these
States, it clearly appears that they
are parts of the plan to renew the
war, crush out the negro and deprive
him of his political rights.. Indeed,
1 1 - read in a Southern paper a notice
served upon the negroes,; that they
I must either lie depriVed.of all political
rightt or the Stat© shall be a military
territory. This ' then, is war, and
the men of Essex, as on the 17th of
April, if.need be, will again march to
save the country from traitor hands.
When I, heard of the alarming condi
tion of things in the South, and es
pecially when I heard of this most
terrible wrong; crying for redress, I
said to myself" My mission in the
service of my !country is not ended;
the war waged to establish the just
right of the .citizen is not yet over;,,
Whatever I 1 have of remaining
health and strength must be devoted
to putting this matter right;"and
therefore, laying aside ell consider
ations of ease Or personal advantage
to myself, I am,' here asking again for
your su ff rages that I may be in a
positio to carry your declared will
that ev4 ry
foot Of American soil shall
be tro dden by an American citizen
undisturbed and unmolested, with
entire safety to his life and property
under oar flag, and protected by our
laws. 1 And I here take leave to say
to you what Ton know and believe
that I have done and can do as much
in that direction, if in no other way,
as any man who will present himself
for your votes, be he whom he may,"
:en rigidly enforced,
receipts from pass
• reduced about thir
d the receipts from
:yen Per . cent, It is
.ese rates there may
ease of bnsineati as
make np for the re-
.. ;lON
OUTRAGES.
AN aCTSPOEF.N PUBLIC SEN. MIENt
CALLED FOIL—The following remarks
by the editor of the Louisville, Ky.,
Commercial, together with the quota
tion from the charge of Judge Mc-
MANAMA, (Democrat,) !are timely and
truthful, and if acted upon would do
much to prevent the outrages now so
prevalent in the South:
Let not all the blame of violated
law and insulted justice be laid wholly
at the doors of judges, jurori, and
sheriffs. i The people themselves are
much td blame. They have not
shown that abhorrence of crime and
that determination to support honest
officers in arresting and .punishing
criininals which are essential to the
preservation of law and order.
Judge litcllArthri says in his charge
to the grand jUry of Owen:
"Proud as the people of America
are, it is a burning shame that you
are afraid to express your condemn
ation of the out rages perpetrated in
your county diming the past twelve
months. Human life has been taken
in streets of OWenton and in other
parts of your county, and the people
are too- apprehensive of danger to.
condemn or applaud it."
If the people Want, crime suppress
ed and justice I to prevail, let them
cultivate a Wholesome, outspoken
public sentiment against all classes of
offenders, whether Avy k9lay the
murdeier in open dayligh4or skulk
tinder a mask 11 night
I t -
WE give the Pittsburg Commercial
credit for openly avowing its partisan
ship in these plain terms: "Here
and there, in the Sate and. out of it,
we find a paper that doesn't like oar
'strong partisrship.' Very well; let
them dislike then. Your no-party
men and yo, no papers, are
and-wafer concerns
ennuchs T at the best.
tal is a partisan Repub
and its partisanship is
outspoken and uncom
isting on principles
i enduring as the ever.
always milk
mere politi
The'Commere
lican journal;
bold, manly
promising; r i
which are
lasting hills."
LAB= REF0: 1 ? 6EBS of 3 1 Jassachneetts
threaten to n 0 mina,tela,ticket-of their
own, ,
and as preliminary step have
appointed a Committee of one from
each Congre43ional district to call a
State Convention at an early day.
THE Prohibltiorusts of the Eleventh
Ohio district i ave nominated for Con
gress Delmo t Lock, l a farmer of
Scioto :connt. It is hoped that be
will succeed in putting a l lock on every
whisky mill i 4 the district. ]
•
THE tisooav lIITAXEILD Or THE
Puszorrixsists. DEISOCIRA I *.
The Democratic Oonventien at
Pittsburgh, after the manner : Of the
old fashioned leaders of the Democ
racy, fell bichon the litne-ifind"
p*eiples and record bf Ip4rty.
We ithenlaffive testi h,trpt 6 tar tight
open field on finiaediata
bit, ate thankful for any offer, of bat
tle that promises an Opportuirty . for ,
the conflicting lines to clinch] ,
We propose now in this cTppaign
to meet the Democracy on their
chosen field, and to show whet this
record is to - frhich they iefer i no con.
Silently, the more confident, perhaps,
!manse the merciful shadowi l of his
tOry are closing around It.
Tho DeMocraey, prefer in l et yon
put on Irbil-this fall not hei r
but their faitt.—hOt their' present
atii, but their past record. IFe accept
the issue, and with this number begin
the systeinatic presentation of certain
salient facts of that " record 1' which
have never yet been withdrri i re
canted or apologiited 14r, acil which
Consequently the late convention at
Pittsburgh reaffirmed. -
On the 16th of Jannary, IS6I, when
the red sunrise of war was breaking,
the Democracy , of Philadelphia as
stitebleil in National Hall to! give-ex
pression to the views cyf the ) . t(t.tY , on
the impending crisis. The, ?ld lead
ers of the Democracy wear c thexe—
names which, in mercy living
and the dead, we suppress,zfow. The
general tone of the speakers was for
peace at any pries: One of ithe reso
lutiona distintaly approved; and in
dorsed the President's unfortunate
stand, taken on 'Attorneyl Genet 4 ll
remailatle ()pilliont that the
government could not enforce its
own authority against a defiant State.
Tho twelfth resolution, however, is so
pregnant with deliberate treason that
we reproduce it in full:
Resolved, 'Putt in the, 'deliberate
judgment of the Democracy of Phila
delphia, and, so far as wq know, of
Pennsylvania, the dissolatfon of the
Union by the separation °lithe South
—a result we . shall. most: deeply de=
p . lore—inay release this Commanwealih
'row the bonds which, now connect zt
with the Confederacy, and ;would au
thorize and require its citiz4n, through
a Convention, to be assembled for that
ptirpose, td determine with whom their
kit shalt be cast—whether the North
aid East, whose fanaticisFn has pre
cipitated this misery upon us, or
,with our brethren of the South,
whose wrongs we feel as ';Our own. or
Whether Pennsylvania Shall stand by
herself, ready, when occasion offers,
tO bind together the broken Union
and resume her place of loyalty and
devotion. i
On thii date only Soli Carolina,
Florida and Mississippi had yet
passed ordinances of secession,; and
yet here were the Philadelphia De-
Mocracy in hot haste troailzonably,ac
knowledging the right of secession
and proclaiming the Union about to
be destroyed,and gravely deliberating
where Pennsylvania shozild go, with
a most significant intimation that she
was bound to join the " brethren of
the South." At this early`stage of
the rebellion no greater ',4llilid or Com
fOrt to the enemy " could be given,
d
a' n it was , most promptly 'and cor
dially rendered. . 1
'The resolution stands yet ! as part
of the record of the Democr tic party.
It has never been expung d, erased
Or retracted by any I:4cia action.
The men who passed it still sit and
Bead in the councils of the party.
Some of thine., present) it' is true,
ffnding themselves over wered and
outvoted, withdrew horn the party
and made good personall,War records
for themselves—notably, one; dams
C. VANDYKE, then and / there aban
doned the sinking ship arid put on
record his -protest against the trea
sonable and pnsillanirrilus spirit of
the resolutions:
These resolutions, however,yet
Stand with the main pozition of the
Men - who passed it as art of the
body corporate of the I emocratic
party, and in casting a emocratic
vote in November the Pensylvanian
who does it reaffirms the,
reasonable
i:
intent and word of this
t e secession
Ordinance of Pennsylva ia, passed
I;
'only in a Democratic convention it is
true, but which, sure as fate, would
have been passed in a Democratic
Legislature, if God in wr t ath had or
dained that Pennsylvania in 1861
/should have been burdened with one.
Mn. EDITOR; In your P;per of date
Aug. 27th, appeared a 1 ommunica-
a ir
Lion signed "E. P. Rock ell, Empo
rid, Kansas," which was, he first in
timation I had of the s state of at
,fairs in Lyon County. I too, have
" friends _ in Bradford 9 unty" who
will be misled by his Statement, and
I feel it my duty to shed some light
upon it.
I F
He says, " spring o pe ned very
promising for fruit andbr ain of all
kinds." He should hav said with
one exception.—that of ii ring wheat,
which was injured morel by the cold
dry weather early in thej spring thin
the chinch bugs, which he says
" literally fi lled the air, ate up all the
spring wheat and part 0 the corn."
In nky opinion, Mr. Editor, those
bugs he speaks of never existed out
side of his imagination. Living as I
do in an adjoining county, in 'which
I have resided for six Years, I have
not seen a chinch bug op the wing i
abcrie six' or eight fe4 from the
ground • they , : generally prefer to
'walk, and when disturd, fall to the
ground and creep awa y; their man
ner of traveling is not ntilike that of
a flea. In this vicinity i they did,very
little damage to the corn, 'though
they didinjure spring Iheat, millet,
broom corn and cane.
ea
He says that " the 1 ) nn scorched
and withered the leaves n the trees."
How absurd! I neveri dof such
an instance before. FT m the gen
tleman's (?) statemen t he experi
enced much warmer westher,than we
did, though living in te same lati
tude, and our forests 1 ok as fresh
and green as ever. Again, that " the
air' seems like the hot breath fiom a
furnaee—so intensely h.t that it will
barn your hoe and eye:."—The only
instance of the kind ori . ecord in ,tho
history of the State. Speaking of
grasshoppers, he says " they haie
eaten up ern:ything : In," meaning,
siipp6se, that 'illicit was not b
urned
d p. They were not so bad here, tlao'
they strapped 'the .blades from 4te
corn, stud the leaves from the fruit
and part of the forest trees; let 111310
they left the tries, are putting forth
new felPeti. The tgrellolll.. have Aot
ceased to flow a_thy: Ow to iforir
during
_the &rest part of the gam:in.
He says " the corn crop will not"), a
thud of a yield; oats about the sane,
and potatoes a have." He is -near
filo truth as , regards corn, but loath
with us were good. Early potatoes
were good, though late ones nearly
proved a failure' Wintc; wheat l'als
good- yieldfrom SO to 25 bush - 618J°
the acre. In some of the frontier
counties there will be some suffering
unless they have relief, but Kalman,
able .to take care of,her own poor.
From present indicaions there will
be no laek of feed for stirk tiffs win . -
tek, • •
fir: B. has evidently lived but a
short time in this State. ' Re says
nothing of the mild Winters, balm
springs, cool summer nights, or th e
delightful fellweather that, are that
acterittin of Kansas, In climate
Ransas will compare favorably with
any State in the tinien. • Mr. ff.'s
statement 3s in 'every respect one
sided. Ho perhaps never dreamed
of having his statements contradict
ed,a or of the REPORT= having a üb
ecriber other than himself in this
State. i There are, many caeea like
his of people being "busted" in all
the Western ,States, but thine who
stick to it and fight it thrbugh rand
coal:tier iti The end. I wall end by
saying I think Mr. B.'s statement is
quite incomplete Withouthis affidavit
• D. Rome, 4 . n.
Curia Co. , Kansas, Sept. 10. ! ,
LAPORTE OE ItEROHAIITS.I
hin tnrron: I find a misrefa l
ation abroad as to my public Ent
sions in-rgard to Herchants, a
all I have said upon that subj.
our public Grange meetings
writing, I copy from the man.
a few lines that contain the
and substance of my views in
ence to that matter.
" We hate a swarm of middh men
in business rffairs, inatiy of them
hard - working, honest and useful,
worth all they get for their serVices.
Skillful in buying, reasonable in sell
ing, ing, they area body of men eeded
to carry on the business of th e coun
try. We must-have such men, either
working on their own account or as
ag,ents ..of_ Grange organization; and
I for one'appreciate the work of this
class of honest, intelligent, working
middle men who handle products of
various kinds, raw and manufactured.
for moderate commissions. *1 * *
My own view has been thus 'far to
direct our efforts first to the moval
of these great and manifest evils con
nected with the riale atr, icultural
machinery and implements which our
progressive agriculture eslls fOr, and
to endeavor to get rid only Of those
middle men who cost us now sd much
More than their services are worth."
Here you have in a nutshell my
view of the proper attitudel of the
producer and consumer towards the
merchant, and I am sure it was not
intended to be unjust or offensive. I
have never in any , plac3 said; that I
desired to get rid of the professional
man and the merchant, or anything
like that. I have called the attention
of the public to the fact that the:pro
ducing classes are almost without:i
representation in the halls of the
National Congress, so far as , repre
sentative: men of their own calling
aie concerned, and in doing so have
stirred up the wrath of the hithertO ,
privileged, who are now busy in at
tempting to array against me the
business men of our county with
whom Lhave, dealt for thirty years,
and with, I hope, 'sotnething like
mutual satisfaction.
Yours, truly,
B. LAPORTE.
TOWANI)A, Sept. 22, '74.
LETTERi PROM B. LAPORTE.
Enrron Iturontna—Dear • Sir: Will you please
allowtne spice in your paper, riot fors controversy
with W imic C. ELIBILEZ. u that, perhaps, would
nothe entirely proper at this time or interesting to
the public, bht for the purpose of haying something
about two or three.matters that have been brought
before the people for the purpose of injuring me po
litically''
IET.-111E MILEAGE cirifirloic
While a large nnuaber'of our public men who have
been in the legis ature from the snorthenapart of
our State have the same record as I upon this ques
tion, I am first held up to the ; public as being
" ahead of any man on record," by N. C. EISIIILEE,
in a note addressed to-the editor of the Towanda- I
Journal of Sept. 12. In-last week's!Jonrnat he again
comes out in 4 letter, having, as be says, ;in the
meantime sent to Harrisburg for the Record, and
knowing full welt that I could no reach the people
generally through this . week's Joi,rnal before the
primary meetings are to beheld. he makes a more
extended attack. After sending for the Record he
should have discovered that twelve or fifteen Mem
bers and Senators were on it the same as myself in
the year 1855, and if, he had looked industriously he
would have found more than one hundred cases be
tween the years ISM and 1660 I ThPae cases included
men of both political parties: some of them men of
eminence and high character, swho have been repeat.
edly before the people as candidates for Judicial and
legislative station, and have been Ivoted for by the
virtuous individual who arraigns me 1 I was first
in the legislature in the year 185 b: J ! The law at that
time was that each member shouti receive the nut
of fi ft een cents .. for each mile h shall travel in
coming, to, and returning from, the legislator."
The members representing the northern tier of coun
ties, and in some cases those from the second tier,
had been for some years traveling by the Erie rail
toad, through New York and Philadelphia to Harris
burg, and that was the ord#Pkry traveled route until
the Northern Central was built eking the Susque
hanna river. That route made the actual distance
traveled to and fro or circular froM9oo to 1200 miles.
I found the practico - had beeraor years to travel and
compute "mileage by that route, and the records
show that under the lead of good ia/ l eyers; that had
become the settled construction of titelavw, and the
universal practice. It had been 'nctioned yearly
by the committees on accounts, an conformed to
at the treasury department. The l i e Chief JUstice.
Tnoarelsost, and the Hon: Grozost J Bata ., formerly .
State Treasurer, were the members ore Erie county
that year, and I find they each chk ged 1075 i mlles.
Could a young legiator suspect those men as un
safe leaders, or una nsinted witlOhe meaning and
"contraction of . thel law? I confesil was weak
enough to go along th the , but I have seen
enough since to . iffy me that punt those men,
whose example Ifo owed, are the most unsafe lead
en on all questions of pay that 4n be fottud. Old
mfoffice -holders gro gray in the plate service never
think they can receive too much f r their services!
This mileage by wa of New York could only be jus
tided by a doubtful struetion of the law, and 1
ought to have co aed the law for myself and made
up mileage accor gly, regardiea of the custom. I
simply did that w ch my predecessors, my cpl
leagues, and my successors did; nothing more, and
nothing less, and I am free to say that I am ashamed
that I did not do better. 1 ' ,
During the last legislative days of the session of
1855, after the Mileage of members was made up,
,the law was changed in roferenaa to pay, mileage
and stationery, by an amendment made in commit-•
tee of conference,. and adopted by both Houses:
The allowance for stationery was fired by law in
both cases, which Attorney ETAIIII# probably knew
when he made lais comments, although he leaves it
to be Inferred that I charged what I ,pleased--(es
some folks nand- to do in the Bogiater's office). The
provision in reference to mileage was changed to the
„ ordinary Mail rents,' and wee spudded as the
route by which mileage was to be computed. • The
ordinary mall fOnto freni Towanda to Harrisburg
was by way of averly, Elmira, VOliwmaPort, Cali*:
wins and Philadelphia, and that was the legal route
that governed the mileage ; that accounts for the
change in my mileage , in 185 G. 1 conformed to the
change in tie law, and since I am attacked, 1 Bar
poi?, I may sag what is true: that tho two members
Evian Bradford were the only members from the
northern tier , who did so—the others continuing the
Old eystan r ,
.The Northein*ard , Iliarciat from
Elmira to gsniiburl was not ¶ v44 July 4. 1854.
and J never traveled over that
, ronteas a member of
the legtelaure until ISO, titietti / •harp ed mileage
accwdluely. Theta gentlemen who are striving' to
Inßire Me by taktitte up the Br, *ork ual'eage, are
inariplyping the mild= of j eoefder exploded. by
tin Arras tri leaf, without cEeeti. I say without
Atka, beceasemy respected itri l mid littnatzuLlLizr
gad myself, Were at that time candidate! for the •
legislature on the same ticket.) and this =Meager vol. l
ley was firejoff in the Ames at Ms in the last Lazio
H o ye the election, end on 00Untirig the votes Iliad
just one vote in Bradford cotutty more 1 than he re.•
calved i I amp done wittl i trolleage question.
wr =an C
This, kEr. ELME)! Says, Wall I4ote fAte9 Pit On
With day of April. 1835, lthe llith#2 0 / 1 1i0i ,621 . 00
pe the Won bll1; end th!i allege.tpll th at It was m 7 Ilit
. . , .
drat public act is tad ridlcurate for consitieratiou. t:
On the 2nd day of January I voted for Bpeaker, and
from that time until the dor 4f the session my
nameelan be fraud recorded on -almost every °ces
sion of a yea •, r nay veto ;, endt yet this accurate
reeckd htuttetr chilWetatilie4o AI, Int May Public
at of mine, and *-;viriontly th!okil:that in triundering
his loose street talk to the he has i made a
great point I did vote,to than '.. the pay of mem
bers from 43 per day to $5( per ,session, Wchht I
tit
honestly thonglit wart be an iroProvarient. We
were in seasionl2B days that year, and i change
of the •law increased th e pay of Member that sea.
don only $ll6 each. The tor ot:i 14 per iii* was
62 consumed by hotel id* and had really become
a lo*coripenation. in vteridf the abuses of power
i i
that We Biro taken placif,; l l 54 1 110 W POesd. in
key rdhlic eA 4 reer acting "upon tut gas on of hie j
own compensation, whether it be Ina &tire or,
representative capacity, by changing the iop on
the subject ;". or in a ministerial capacity liy raps.
elonaly taking illegal fess, as -I- am info reel sine
sten have done. • ! 1 1 1 1 1
I may have erred In -Toting far- the 25°0 salary
biii. !m! I find tbei OTRBling 6 ....4 J obsiged,
end remitted, $5OO from Bradford county, for aiding
in the prottecntion of lizarar i Wai l ai t' And by cord-
Or/at; 011nkwiett a farniar might earn is like sum
In 221 tisrli . ;:f faithful aitendanc.:: to hie duties at
Harriaburg u a law roam!. sway from 'his home'
and brudneaft., •.l s I , 1 1
', 30,1rr iroTE roe v. B. =AVM
That vote I shall not no dianse, further than Ici.
7
say that I cast no vote (Or 9. U. /3c4
I responsible for his election. Ile owed ijs election
to the fact fiat 'his party had * 2333j0 4' on joint
ballot of one vote, was so well organizell that noth
ing could divert it singe than. ind - he reed vol tha t
entire vote, which elected him. If ldr. I &palm
thinks he can still reach that offlee at Waii . limprfon by
landing Senator Clarmotv', i hive no ,- 1...' Vlon. I
wanld ft dost in ... Lthl!an si,ency 1'..• some rilte that
it would be desirable to exiernlnale. I
I have no* noticed all the points. inrli r C. Eis.
mum's ccrmmunleation. and as be has the advantage
in not now being before the people as a cuididatA for
ofilce, I forbear any examination of his conduct as a
' publicl officer. Fortunately, that record 1s too well
known by our people to need- much examination" or
ventilation; arid I leave the people I to -decide
wbether his pblitical strategy is to control the action
of our county convention and the nominations of
the itepub li can party. 1
Tours, truly, 1 • IL LATorrE
igen
pres-
id tis
at at
in
cript
spirit
refer-
Trim eAnuf!LOAT.r s
The fallowing are the names of the
candidates who will be brought- be
fore the Republica:a). convention:
,Congress-1.. N. Evans, [ (Judson
Holcomb; B. Laporte, Col.-E.loverton.
Senators-W. H. Carnochen, M. C.
!demur, C. M. Manville, Gen. H.
-Williston, H. L. Scott, H. it'. 'Will
iams. . •
liegresentatites -1-, EL B. Aculey,a" j.
0. Dawes, E. W. Colwell, T. H. Calk
ins, D. Ltiley, J. F. Gillett, Jas. Fost- -
er, 0. D. 'Kinney, Gteo. Mosrip,
He
man Morse, John Passmore, E. R.
Myer, C. F. Nichols, R. RI Phelps
and Dr. E. G. Tracy.i -
,Commissioner. ---S. S. Hinman, Da
vid Rutty, Morris Shepard and 0.
Taylor.
District Attorncy.--J. N. Calif f.
REVERDY JOHNSON 01E10
AFFAIRS.
He Thin Val the President Did his duty,
The Usurpation a inistalte and Wrong
NEW YOUR. Sept. 22.—The Herald
publishes a lengthy reply of Reverdy
Johnson to inquires from. Janes
Gordon Bennett asking for . his
views on -the Louisiana difficulty.
Bin Johnson thinks the President
erred in recognizing the Kellogg
government originally, being misled
by the judgment or decree of the
United States District court of that
State. . • I
"Tlie question whether' , a State;
government is legitimately establish-II
ed," he says, "hi not a judicial but a
political one, as was • decided in the
case of the Dorr Rebellion 13. Rhode
Island; but haVing, recogpized the
Kellogg government, whether right
or wrong, the President's decision
was final, and Caere was no legality
or justification for resort] to force
or revolution to-upset it. The PreSi
dent was bound. 'to put Om such
an attempt, and to restore the Kell
logg gover.q.ent. But if any of the
minor officers nnder the, Kellogg
government r refuse o neglect to re
sume their offices the President has
no power to compel them to do so,
nor has he the power to appoint
others to fill ,their places." Mr.
Johnson, therefore thinks , the best
solution of the i difficulty would be
for both Kellogg and McEnery, and
the Lieutenant Governors under
them-,-to anal submit to a new
election: •
AZTLCIT, Sept. 21. 1874.
THE result of the Contee for the
Judicial nomination in Sellivan coun
ty was a unanimous instruction of
the conferees . for Col. SMITH. Inas
much as the contest in Wyoming
county was very close the Colonel's
friends think the conference should
nominate hini. And there seems to
bo justice in the demand.
,9pRusTE.E.s NOTICE. Notice. iz
Ji. hereby given that all Persons I debted to the
estate of Hiram Horton, of Wilmo twO•,
ere rei•
quested to make imMedinte raymen , and all per
...lioni having claims against sail estaite will present
them ) duly authenticated for settlement '
Bept. 15. •W; T, HORTON. Trusted,'
• _ ITOW Advirtisoments.
L
•
OF LETTERS remaining
the Postofflice, To4anda, Pa., 84t. 23, 1874.
,
Allen Miss Emma, Allen 13, Ault' James,Buek
ley, John, Cox Michael, Camp Mrs Amanda
Davis Mrs 31 J, Hibber James %V, Edßala Jame:
Moore Rockey, Scandlin Martin,' Shaw W
Stafford S D, Shultz Jacob. t-
• HELD FOE. PORTAGE.
John Davie Elmira N. Y. E. J. Hoover Heave
Meadow Pa. Martin Lynch Barclay. Pa. Mist
Holler Bierck & CO.; New York N. "V" --
Persons calling for above letters s 11l say elver
teed, giving date of
8. ALVOIID P.M.
TO THE PllpLlO,—Hp,vin,g hag
nearlyafteen years experience in boring round
pump loge, I offer my services to the public. Wor
attended to in any part of the county in abort met
and satisfaction guaranteed. CALVIN ALLEN. '
New Albany, lilarch' 2.54 f. .
. .
.
..1! p totore existing betie'en tci
under the firm name 51YerA; bun ,
,411.s , ilviid by mutual coneent. 1
Towanda, July 2.1874.. 1 E.
• .
COPARTNERSHLP.—The uncle
signed. having formed a 6parteership,
the Arm name of .Rurdell & Myer,' will hereafte
conduct the Market' business at the old stand o
Myer. d: Rundell. where theyinvite 1;10 customers u
the late firm•and the public generally to call.
E. 11. 11UNIDELL,
Towanda, July 10. 1 1874. . CUAS. MTEIt.
AErDITOR'S, Fo
ter vs. Jay Claaapel., In the COurt of Common
Pleas of Bradford County. No. 130 dc. Term, 1872.
Also J. P. Kirby vs. day Chaspel. In the Court 01
Coiamon Pleas. of Bradford County.' No. 627, Fe?
Term. •
The undersigned, an Auditor alipolntod by the
Court to distribute money in the hands of the Sher
iff, arising from sale of defendant's' real estate, will
attend to the duties of tits appointrnt Friday,
the 23,1 day of October, A. I). 1574 at • OTIO
bffice of Peet Davies ,In the Bore' of
Towands, at which time and place MI persona con
cerned are requested to be present, and they shell
bit heir& • ' - It. A. IdEltelll‘Auditor:l
&Vt. 214874. I
KIM
_ .
BHOPTHORPE„ en ineo
. lid -Meth School far .Cliffs. ; • • •
The row term commas:cots cni WEDNESDAY.
16,•lfiftl.. , The"camber of scholars Um:OWL
dreg& FANNY 1. WALIW, P... ps
R E. SP
ATP SCEPEPOrt OP IMAM/OBD 001
• , • [ I
tier and rareorturs offioo-;T ends,
iy be fvervierbeet riot pro y
Leg 27,
Otefxi at liegi
Pa..10 4 / 1 1 he "
eagsliqed:
• 444; 4'2 0
. uriv.—itt,in . yJcinglni on nil
bees preinbee in OTIMI I twit., 013 PrKsi
I. 611 a kotent.krer.l,Bllvw-ttatle Wateh.
~1, r . --- r-- -4 L'Tnlteri. , The owner can li
XI Dy ..* twilbeg at the lynx of E. W. Ferrer,
d twit., Prig prorrty end ming
on th!o ewe. I
Often twit., Sert 15. Mi. , ,
.
WOE SALE AT. A BUM-
A farm of /75 acres in Mega. Co., Vs,
lands and improvements, well waters& feu.
timhered; 110 acres cleared . Price $l5 ' •
withiSCOO worth of crops thereon to. rite n
riot more than, half tho real ralus Of the •
.V7tre.:4l e.znist,plor saistt !arid or vilisee pr
For bartieulars inquire of It B. Elilvarn •
Sear, 244 West s,nkliS, Ps., or address
Ellhours. Tscj.ett's Hilts, Stafford Co., 'Va.
tie 4 3,- 3 V •• : , ff. ,II:LBe
' • --
llff. kutsuAris ()kid D I
A. A. OF P.EVAYLVANt.A. 1
i. : ' ~I Pirtsbrrr,b. fteP. t., 1 4 ",
T . is io Oro notice that on the `Jib Lday
ten' r. 1874; Warrant in Bankruptcy was l
against the e ta of boom &Y. Johnson, . I
vale township, in the Connto of Bradfoil. 1
of it i ntisitrania. Who has &lett a jadged
rt op his own petition ; that' the payment
do and delivery of any plop.- y beto.j
scich Bankrupt to Mm or for Ns nee, and th
fer lef any property by him are forbidden j
that a ineetin; of the Creditors of the said •
to prot e *heir, debts. at 4 to choose ona or ..;
a 1 ees a his estate, ,will be held at* 1
E.
Ba ptcy, to be holden at the office ,f gf kru
4;. in the Borough of Towanda. Pa., ~
07#:,ETCPN, Jr.', E4q„ neither, matte fith dal
TO • ER, A. B. t 4 7 4, it 4J o'cloct„.A. 11.
i . JOHN' El i
. - , U. S. Marshal, sa. 3fes
.t... - 11 '74-2wr I
I •
ONFF,SSIONS OF A IEEN:
I
1.7-1.C2.1 rimir TIM DUET OF 1"
REV. JOSEPHES LEONHARDT,
"He that is Without M a mnag you, let hi=
stone."
This work shows how a man gifted wi •
intellect ands high Moral charaoter f • - •
erxfated as a quistian min.L•fter, m
exposure to is great temptation. I,.nally an
. i amine relatude of purpose thr
reasonings, the sophistries to which h:
yi Ms, his struggles with temptation. his
h• agony under suspicion and accusation
S. al deronement, all make up a story, we
in enee interest
'Tae ir.stifutionfof Marriage, se at pres
in , is also incidentallY but ably discussed
tt:. that in this respect alone, the read!
• k will ad grey fi good. As the editor
• efatie, the story bears indirectly; Ivo.
B ooklyn drama - which is now attractin.,
a ntior.. bit he (adds, !Oral Ok. , ECT rs
r .d.vr; roa r i.f.r.s.,•ri rat l ams• - ,: -
'grans:Ls.' "I
tn.. Per sale by Bo)ksellers, rIC mo.
past-paid oh. receipt of price. 1 .51.01 by 1
Ushers. • j 11. PETERSON
1 920 Walnut Street, Phila.
(VCOTA.TIONS OF IVH I
,)"ELL 4 CO.. BAstressi Asp Eno. .
1 4..natn. Third Etrect, Pln.andelphis, Sept. le ..
U. S. IA4I, C I 11 7
" 5-20, C: '62, Bf. anll.l 11'
.84,, ..1 .4 11.
1, 11 I g, •65. .. , II
.-11
.. i " .65, T. And ! T 11
~ 1 " '67, " '''' . ..... r ' - . .....11
T i e , .. 1 fd .
U.
" 1040. c0np0n,.1... .... .11,
1 , Pacine 6's, e—
`few s's, I.eg. TAii lBYl,; • ' - 1 !
1.. .. i' 1 8 81 . ,' i
1 '.
Cool . i l 2 .
silvcir l ~ lf
Pennsylvania,
11*inn,... ' ... .
Pliaelpt.ia ~..: Erie„
taelii;h Siivinatlon 1
11 .., VAPey 1
United R. lE. of'. ,T,
Oil Creek ,1 ' 1
Northern Central '
Central Trareportation . ,s
emnelioning
I
,
. C. 4 A. 31.t. , rtigaite' Va, 'il .
itusTErs., SALE of • oal tend J, 13afiroad property in the Counties .f Sullivan
audßradford. State of Pennsylvania.
By virtue of *certain Mortgage or De. of Trnsi,
eXemtad and delivered by the Sullivan Erie COelit ,
and Railroad Company, of the State of PcnnsylVa
nia, to the undersigned as Trnstee. da ed the net
day, of Nlveraber. ISP.I, and recorded n the once
for, recording deeds, 4kc., in and for t.. county, of $
Bradford; in raid State, In Mortgrage I ock No. 1 1 9
pages 31).131 and e 2, on the 221 day o November!
A. D., 1•416. and in the ofnce for the esoriung 0,
deeds, Ail., in and for'Sullivan county, . said State,
in Mortgage Book No. 2, pages 52 to 88 nchasiver r cn
the sth day of December, A. D.. 18&3.
I, the undersigned. as Trnstes SR afor said. hersby
glee notice that Lulli. on WEDNES AY. the 14th
day of OCTOBER, 1574, at, twelve o' lock at neon
of th3it day, at the Exchange Sales B. a. 13. NuMbet
111 Broadway, in the City. County and :tato of New
York, sell at suction to the highest bid en, the prop
erty, rights. privileges and franchises conveyed or
intended to be conveyed to me by said llartgag,c or
Deed of Trust •, default having been ...Ida by" ithe
se d Company In the terms and condi 'one o. asld
M rtgage. and snch default having c.ntinned 'for
th space of sixty days, and I being rev . ired in writ-'
in 3 to make such sale by holders of at least pno
tc th in amount 0' the bonds secured y said Mort
gage or Deed of T—nst, which were . the time of
Waking such request due and ontstan ing.
Theproperty afotesaid includes so ',3 five thou
sand acres. et land situated in Che and Ccdley
townships, In Sullivan County, in the, tate of P nn•
4
sylvtnis, being thel following named is and
parts of warrants, o rit i John Bake and An rew
Epple. and parts of - Philip Stein, Ge rge_Ro rts,
b i.
Joseph P. Norris, William Stein. Leo srd Jacc , by.
Philip Wager, Tfenry Epple, Pcter El inter. David
{Thri,
Zeigler,,Samrai Carpentcr, Heber C :tam, Dudley .
Chase. Etiphalet Gillet, Thomas Od on, Richard
Tomlinson, Jacob Rarer, Joseph 'Ta m, Collin eon
Reed. Getting Gover and Christian Ge mg, and be
ing all the coal lands of the said Com any; and the
railroad of said Company, and all the lands of , the
said Company now occupied for the c on of de
pots, construeng sidings, ,tc., and the road l bed
-nty of
13ISIANA
or said railroad froln their - mines in
Sullivan, to the present northern te:
at or near the 'Borough of Monroe, in
Bradford. State'of Pennsylvania: and '
ate - iianchises of said Company. as se
Charter. Together with all and. ai
Lugs and improvements. rights, liberti
bereditaments and appurtenances to I
pertaining, with reversions and Omsk
issues and/31.01:Ra thereof.
For &more Bill and complete des.
property to be. sold, with its bound
reference may bo had to the sal
Record as aforesaid.
• Terms of Sale.- r ' Ten per cent: of he purchase
money Is to be paid . cash•in hand on e day of sale,
and the balance is to be paid thirty days
thereafter. at Room Number 4. in Nu ber 48 Wall
Street, in the City pr 156.- York, State f New York;
and npon-TsyVen of the said bitiancp in full,, the
purchaser will receliv6 a (Iced to ihe said property,
conveying such title as is vetted in sue as Trrisico
as aforesaid. D o ted . March Rith, 1 5 74.
JOIN A. STEWART.
Trustee far thelhimd-holders of tie Sullivan h
Erie Coat and Railroad Company.
W. A. W: STEWART, Attorney for Trustee, 48,Via11
Street. New York City.
March 25.'74-Cm ,
The above advertisement appears in the following
newspapers published in the city of New York. to
wit : ..The Evening Post Weekly." The New York: .
Weekly Mail," "New York Speeta toir and Weekly
Commercial Advertiser." - 1 I
HALL'S
LLiN
This standlia
greatest care.
Its effects era
WM
It restorrs. grai
It remocce.all c
&rat the scalp by iti
Itg its tonic pr
glands to their no
and making the 11
As a dressing n
or deslrable, •
Dr. A. A. HATES,
says of it: •• I corif
ittendedintrposel
IMO
this elegant p
change tlao color
nudesir4ble shad
I I
It is o3sily appli
quickly and eir . ixt
which will neithe
1313
; Sold by all d:
,
iA FARM
scriber's bei
sell hid farm, sits
is One hundred aq
balance bevy tiq
maple,l some ash,'
trees 4t good gni
trees, a good Mill
farm,. 'another a;
house 26132; Trio'
house ba
floor, the Whole
Whole.la wagon
wetor, an old ore
ke rneadows .;
"fences under a
be eratained to
easy.
. ,
•
.artnersl4
titqlersigne
dell, is this da •
141YER.
RUNDELL
t
0 hereby give l n thati the
Eureka Mower Com ny inteinkto
err of incorporation nder the above
ifrr.sq of carrying o the manntac•
amj..-}kaping Machin 8, and dying a
ng/bnsineas in macl ino shop and
oda, including all busi cos connected
6:saary for the proiltab 0 prosedution
id application will be made in purEn
auce of.tfic Act ._f Assembly of rennaylvanis; - entit•
led °An Act to provide for the incorporation' and
regulation of cel
aiu corporations." apirrov r the
TALI day of Apri , A. D.,1g14. ,
SAMUEL D. MADDES.
rrtnt. 13eard of Dlrec tinn.
NOTICE
Towthda 1
apply for a charh
par e, for the pt
tore of sowing
keneral Jobbine,
foundsy produdi
therewith ne6:Bl
therecVaiii aj
Aug 27 3
.
•
vOR SATJE.—The sub -cribelj, of
tors his farm for sale, situated in North (}bent,
Shcebectain to ship, containing ID acres, Rd acres
riandcr, a good ettdo Of ca'.l.lotion, g.od water.; good
orchard , the ba good for 1 few y are, now rhode
Viandd a now dwelling hon,c, 3 I ti a go a school house
stands on the p see. Terms reason Me. For Mr-.
Aber information write or apply to ' 31. JOHNSON,
133rdelY. Bradt° .1 Co , P. , (Sept 3,-oce
. .
.• • ,
. ,
. . _.
"Wl
,;,,,
!tr,i3
i
mm
fa
' gept.
Ewen
eile
P.
gas
flood
• and
••
• • :mil.
John
if.
Eil
f Sep.
I
Gran
d
t
Bank•
lot say
to
WWI ,
" i . 7 taw
1: • rapt
• Ore 3.11.
/Art*, at
r -•
-fore •E.
3, of CG••
LL,
nver
!STER
IrL
1. D.
Exit. csost
brilliant
'eying an,
7. utierl
tunb tol
, ngbra.,
at times,
reninra , .,
ant th. l ,
think, c.ll
.W exis t . ,
; and we
• g of tho
;iee in hie l
the IR 34
so =eh
Prl
OF 01:a.,
.o. Sett
the pilb. l
CO.,
II
a coon
I. .us thereof,
I he Con* of
the corpor•
l uredl by their
lar the build.
s. privileges,
the same ap
inderst rents,
ption of the
'ea and• loca;
Mortgage, of
VEGE TABLF, SI (
RENEWER.
Lrticie is componnided with
1 1
r,:
i wondorfor and tisfacto
pr faded hair to itt I
rdlifni c(
inptiens, itching dinh
I ; r.so becomes whit d it' and cleat
ipertes it restores the cap]
Imal vigor, preven n c r; baidl:
i l ls grow thick ands org.
, tbing has been fon d so effecl
I
E , I
, State Assayer of dfassacians
l ider it thei.ert Tr/oration IT
KOCATAII'S , DYE
, n THE WIII•iEEIIC
EME
fek.arailon may be
the beard from gr;
to brown, or blac
Id, being in one pr
tally produces are
T.Mrub nor wash off.
..anufactured by
( 1 1.9 & CO., Naahna
ruggists and dealer i
y Or
at disci' Lion.
Pareei•in and
Ina:lent !color
Y. H
medic' !:1
r , 'OR SALE.-
lath having failed,
ittated is Orwell
i to
(ire's, sixty or more
re '.
bod with hemloc
,t black cherry, abo
tfray, is. sugarbush
itg saw rodl_wih
out half a mile o
an L ltix',so. with
ti with wagon house
ti3tlxid, with baser
oval carpenter sh
ard, a - young ore i
tade smooths' for -
ood - state of cultivt
know conveniences
L. 31.
• South Hill. Bra
The.ill)-
, he wishOs to
nahip. Thero
improT ,
et ,
tho
. beech, arch
t a doze pine
of 140 r 1'.:4
.40 rode the
good rramo
kitchen, woed
and thri althig,
ent under the
.p, kc.; L . iving
rd. grape lue°,
. o%lllg, good
lion, waste to
Terme milk
STEVENS:,
(ord (Jo.. Pa.
II
II
El
127 , ,
•„
44 i
54
Ivi
iary
EMI
ettc,
r tta
U to
)ther