NEWS !30M az, NATIONS. i)F.AN, Mass.. hung pp...4f there Fridny morning. cloimiN4ioNlAt Pratt took charge *DITI4B2 141 . 41:1"IteVew4e office on Satnardy, IF. 0. 4.4011R1C1i. S. W. AILIVOID. SiXTY thou.:4o ontmces of „Rea . in the mint at San Francisca one TFWanaa, Pa., 7 1 11112e7t.X117 • 50,1875. MEMMMIIMEI d Friday -ordained six Chinamen as .;• ' : I . , - - '.•;44. , ..ri5, - ' 'pie Repiiblican State Convqution Trrd Great Westtrn Railway Company ; winch ,assembles at Lancaster next f canada Mate that the loss for the pasti . i week. has an important Wont: to per :ill year on the roads is S.'l.l t oos. - , , : -- . i,a rt i,, a „ s , o t ' forni. tit fortunately public senti l'nk>ii npriSings of the e aerai Cabrera against Dun Carlos ar44 . inent has already made their task an T olled in Valencia and Catalonia:.. I early one. Gov. RanTnANll9s re .\ :. (moire:11: occurred in Port--a u - i• ~ , `i Moe. liavti. on Sunday. . General Brice . ItotutuatlOU: will be inviniunimsand a'l forty foreigners were killed. .. . . f o r „state Treasurer, the Convention - - ,• • i Pliii.t.tr lister Arademy -has Pili stu.- , wi i i l i ti _ e before it an array or, good ( 7 1i t ''. on its rolls-40 Senior. tit Middiei •. , tt .Initior.. - ittisi:t3 Preparatory. ' mines that it will make 'it almost 1 , ..i i • I to ' • TnE. '1 l'11:-.ICVS Of CjillCll College lnu ' impossible go amiss. We may a5,1•.0‘..,(1 ,1•.0‘..,(1 ii resolution making military iii= " swine it as a settled fact, that, the f - :11I.ii , ;11 - “i i ii , l-al.with the student..., I . : ..5.11N.,17..44'ZJ1.1S Wnithi MOM, SCIIOOI house.- ' ticket 'will be unextbeptionable,!and . iitt`l,' :111.' . 2.4:12 children on the roll, and entitled to the support of every Re lie average yearly increase is :510. . 1 i Imillican, both on account Of the Tut: Trustees of Andover 1 heolOgical • !-- , 1 , eminary have voted to proceed at once ; the Mali character. of the men them villl the erection . of the new e1m14. 1 4 all'l-! selves, and of the unanimity with 14;111: 1 . .1.01.i1l more is needed.. ' • . which Ithey were selected. Nothing 1.:1- . 4 .01.1;TIONS Steve adopted at the State - I I N. i il:ll,tist Convention recently held at Mill- will then, remain tbr• the Convention •,! ; •,..viitv. Ga.; looking to the establish- ...i dot t but adopt a sound Republican 0.. at of a Baptist female college. I . It!' -- , . i „ i w a ._ platforin ,l , and the ' members- - ,t go ~ Tii,E Baldwin prize for .oratory usli;•College. was recently awarded to'. home and, labor for- ,the success of r.,ivvard Daniels and J. P. Roth. their per ; _r y . ortnante being of equal merit. • : • the -ticket until November. . _ - -- pi: ir: WILLIANI It. 'CREEPS, Stlfielin- , ;W? are surprised and, pain to ,•-.:,lent of Public Instruction in Ilillci- 'see, ini some quarters, a demand that 11 , 1•(• City, died on the Ist inst.. afieri a'i' " Can I . 1 ' the vention shall pass a .reso/u -fi,:t.' tun's. ~ .i• \mum'. W lIIT E. a prominent eitizien Of • tiers T, enotmcmg a "Third - 7 term.' , .tallow. Mass.. was bitten in the thigh by : We wilLnot stop to. inquire as tt the 1,i, , ,,,.. s.ainniay . 4 ' 1 , 114100n and bled t 0 - - i•TI . ' • I I l i .. l' motives that that prompt this etra . .1 • : -. 1 1 ,-- ..- A Ims,illg of the case , If (7ount Von As- - r , unary. and preposterous - request. ;10 ail - .,11 appeal from the decision aids' whie it proceeds, from hosiility iri•,l . hots - hi.c,ll fixed for the I:ith ;of lethr , • 1 ..,- ' - to c theiNntional Administration or a l wie--i..onflowiin.Cotto r .ill at Panama . weak-kneed— tiMorous . truckling to i,:•. , t1yp......s tin. death at +..-111:iya q uil, 'or,the , lin:lnds_ Of the independent, .., iip,t.. fit' Hon. Tliiana's` Iliddlts. l'iliti•il , the —. I. 1:-.. Minister i ' . 7 j , I:eulobtr. ; bitsh- - lineking journals whichlhave • 1 In-': En-l - Pe 6 • l- 171- ailcisl".4.l"h- wi"' Its been inventinn , 'and - circulating the ;.: ..i, making a tom r.fhi, Austrian dentin- ; .. -, has rtilltin'a to Vienna all.l wa s 01_, stbry Ithat the__ President was intent x , i . 1--i,,st i4-ally r-e,...i% ed , 14,y the portilace. - Ipon seizing the Presidency ;for the .;.-lii..-1.3i : , 'lt.rictoi - ;•-ilarri 4 ge to tie , tiiirdl time. But we reiteia the •i..a.,:hter of (; enera I rontlier,''ehief tpUtr- ;.- • - .. 0,, . I 'lll a,tt . :. 11! Si It . . 1 . i(lii 11 . N Starr. i S now fixed •optutt• n which we nave atread - ex •-' June ne - . -- :.:t. - ; 1 • pressiA that the Conventiou could Fry. :,.,.•,, i•t;:r , . of the Navy has direet;e4l . ; , 1 . - --, ._ , , er r not :4 to a moie unwise and aan,erous . : • miine, ilo:11.,1 t‘r 1 .1.0,!( - .1.11 to 130stonito 1' ••-., pia in tii, ' Blinker hill . evioltratiiot tiling- than to say anything,- 'about a ,::..i . 0.• I - .tit of little. ! . • • . ' third h rm. And we Say it in no • - --- ~._e lected-',' 1.1 \ been iv-elected or t h e Ea -ton ;mil Amboy Itailnlad I ,(II;;;Fle - ,, liarts11(111:4. Seercbtry anti I • r I • 1)1 , 1 - 1.1.1Sft has de ofti,u itd f,i•foi - i• the Court ..•1 —•- " . I ;i I;;•7 lic\% AltoOt.y lilt' ottiet , on S'at -I.y. aa t ,Ctlaiinus t,lie oft orpoon was t)ic Partt hi% Pt" oiol it tine and . 7 ,, ;11,. j!,11 ‘,l; CI -% ; .klaylitsl;l. ;lit' i;; head. N1i0,2- - cot t-:1!ly :I in.. 104.1. ifie i• • (1.11 o• 1-;1-1.1 .•ct. 2.: Colillk.q nt Baitiltloll2 1:01! • :I'.il',i : 1 ;. 1 ". 1 ' I*. 1“. llerra V.XIiFII• !.1 =i'iflil Mitv. ,. l:llol IZegilnont, p;••oo.,•••• I:k .1.1111 . '1 the 1 . 1411•1' . .;11i01' :It 11,1`4,13. 11 liiii•-•!•lti*gio, Ct-ltre Comity. 310es fo:111,1iy. ;:„riNt .0.% Hill by 10...1.1.11 (;o J 4_li. o‘ou4l- - - N., ( 3- •••• ti \\ js ttl) :1 polite leffe i rto I I! FaTlty College. - ,tqlirit of ILe comoo reeeitly Prio,r•ton .!...,Tottnil,; by - 1- ;•1,:til- of -I;',:ittgel,.. 1 oV, t i n'. the engineer of !the st ,. .:nher which AV:IS 1411W11 111! at (Ire.ol. 17eeently. has . been i'::a lank!' bonds to answer a ..liarge of , 1 1;111 , 1,N. kominineni citizen N. V.. HOii. Jas. 1;1 t•salt.lll. wAs-found th;:td Siiturtlity. It is ,1111110 MA death "..1 I 1 V heart disease. . 1 .. 1 • - CI; F: ,tvain,thil, City of Brusy•elc of the h:;llan Lim% for Ni.NII,VOIk, went a,•l2!ore ..,111i• F.- - ,-.1, -,,,,t ..ii Friday Inoiming. but •:,, •7t . NNIIII..RII irOliry akw hours later .o.•I vc" . 4., 0.1.. hti lwr ‘,,yrge. 1 , td' Svhuylkill k'oal and of !the 3ii , n..rs and Laborers ut'volvnt-AN,J.fia Lion MO in conferetwe Vriday, hit accomplished 1110 liayof a compromise. ,the stock of Darbyl!or , o 4 liailway_Company to; an ''.t . titt I.f , cv..ral hundred thousand dollars, $. Gross Fry. presidell! of ' to be involved. ut. of -o et - al t f the.AVe.trrn • ...it•••• 11n• united fni• the purpose of t4tst ing t'on,tit mionalit y of the internal tote act. Tile government his orderd ;1•• • ‘.1:1 Intkobur or,eNt.ibliAllnehts in Inrhin i ,- - ot au organ it lcr &link and " - :1V(` 111111 un icc cream ezer. The old fellow turned the ekink . - by the roadsith' till lie went to' )1. , 7 - 1 -- people are doing, : :,11-4 a f0.,1i,1; . . i. \ wc.l:4lSo• l'llgilltl.l I (..,hling in thelsu- 2 , til, , , of lierlin has been arrested Nvbile wling nt..lmil the mansion of Print-6 sinarek. ..\ loaded pistol was found ih ,i , pocket. -lle is 'temporarily lodged in 1 tina t ie ass lum. I . IMII , EDWA n U. M.% (.f -Chi e f , fire 'TO }cars of age. Irk in tiic pen , itql 6fliet• at $1.'200 salary. city.of Alex alairia. lost, all his O.,werty (luring the :>te in bi - -Mil% and resernbler; failivr, I'k - holing_ Republican lawyer of. ;the to a correspondent of a Citicagi) I have lived in the utli for quai ter of a century. but I stillau.irpet-bagger. Were I a Den • Li., I should 714 1W be con , idercd one of the • TilE - Department .InNike of Ottaivai intarids•liaL been informed that r•everal unertlersintve been recently rommitte4 in Territories by--white Men . , have Mkt a refuge in Montana, 1.7, S J.ln •Ifin.t will be made to recover the for trial L' means of the extra, treaty. • •4 h:aa;i is the . sniart bosfon Siriee the last reduetion in the National .:ei.t. only .•-i;•.!,1:11.:109. 131 remains to, be (a. — 7 . .; 107X wilrk. isn't thiswil anti aceeptca a _pol Ai.: oat of a eossal debt incurred for the • aippres•-ioi:, eau ' that ca,les.: ilettioeratie pal with the ffreateat morttfiettiou, c,siseilion? - - •,.; • ant the grayest apprehension, and if _Ttir. Itaiian p:ll , i.l', achtally have it that .• -I ti. e United titates)linisfer at Home is ex', : oil warning voice shall have. any . pectunz a letter shortlY from President . Dailt i n averting the threatened datt• 4 ;17 . 111t . eonveyin.* his thanks in the name , • , -,1 of t h e Aiilerie:id4overment. to the Pope, .gmitteb. unwise action would bring for icaViii.m, 'raised Mgr. lr (104,-y :; to the -.tin us we shall be s atisfied. What t t.ttk 01 1 (%trtlinal. i • , ey r may be done, and-whatever may - NE 3icin4iti, _i i ',,tp<ol cans, upon al! ~. !Is- v-otarie. f the '. 1-CfSt (all.( -- to con= lie he consequences,. we shall lave t t ittnie to i a substatiat itionetai-y t4..5•.. , - zi t 11,,tonial t '. D Jettavis. upon the groan i ~ tn satisfaction of feeling that we that lie is• poor. and has "endured_alh . hare-done our, duty to the party - and s-it tfcrett Tall; fur principle." 1•_;o (lid Biel, ithe country. zeittib. but he didn't make any such • • 7v.-hinim..; appt.o. . i • —ln this connection, we .bring to ; ; 1 • t r-.‘-t' ‘l, - th.f. it h a s.h e e t , di s 6, vere( i i t i j tht. members of the Lancaster "Con !Wt.'. New York Tribune building.. Tho veution try following resolution pass. Mtprvo.ed sr-tent for supplying the (....dito: - ~ ~.I/1' V. idi heat leaves' no means of ed by the Ri.• l 1 . . _. epublican Sthte Conven., .Ik-tioying put.tic.al contributions. ThC tio lof Kentucky, which met at Lou-_ it t.- rare editor threatt;tts to'resign uttles , bey put the 01,1 stove back. • -- i isvdle last - week: • I jut: : - .panisit G,,,,,,,111e11t has paid W 1 ,• 1 kAOlred, That the attempt of the Dem (l, !') ,-( : )ii pAlsatic-11 fur the Slaughter of Ile oCrlttic leaders to create the impression 1.. "-• , ; , 4 1 , urisi--.ne , -- lA'e ate shad the itl%; ;- tha our patriotic President desires or ;2:1- i. - ., Iso conclude I, as the sooner the i see a re-election for a thirtl term, is an •••1•0 1 4: irar.iaction, t;oj'ittie creditable W! ab d device to disrupt - the Republican Sr. 'n.- good sense or cli...mity of the Amen - Ipa . and prod uce a, division lictween it . . cal government is for the better: i / a.. the P resident the charger thas vai" ' 1 Tut Pal] Mall Gillette says Rusin, an: f t ,, • , ;. • • .. in fact and-cannot mislead the I 14,yed. at Lr4atiits rstirsistaut reint'al re! oOf the country iota a'. rpstoraWna I '-' ll relPT-tio 'in •tte Vv.-Petersburg eaufer. . to rwuriddrat ',017,11ar rfk. f -;:sm1; at • ev , 04411u:15 tit oilier twaj. •• 141.41 t4i0W , : "'", I 7 ' i • itttudP ~ a via•,, , the font , et Li* :h.- i • e. 11.. ~ r at,r.r,ii dr t!w.- -out I'Vfbi 4411%p Mt Mgt CUASLIS itiiiirlitaß teini .7tililtgmeat ti Ly --i 1 rg . t.wt. ni . VI flit,,l tif2V....1. , , `• . • H f - , .4111. _E :. • - ICI J. . paged:7-i oda -- LANCASTER CONTENTIOi. THE w 1 spiritiof ineibit. - ,e, but- beeausi. e are 1 -, profobndly impressed with the ruth of wii i at we utter. It woulit be . un _ - 1 • i g . - '-‘ MIL - __ wire. 11,ceause uncalled for. It *ouhl Ii dailgero - us because it is a Virtual Aihnilsion ~,on . repu lean rui it failure. It would be imp . .1 ' I F that the ...Xational'Admin has'become so obnoxious t c, that we 'must hasten t4l) binary assurance that th anger of its being perpe t i i - uryears more: It would of guilty to the worst clp ;ht against the party 'inn 4nil Administration. I -Democratic press of the l aisily agitating the questic; I already felicitating them? the apparent ease with wl 'On of our party has - been 1 1 the trap set for thern. i yil e biteitigeticer, edite 1,1'.1.1NT. in its. last issue, mates the Democracy -upOn the i.et_.tive passage of such a resolu -11 The following tis what that pa kees in such action :. 1 ! • nt.en sat•it I ion EMI; ECM port Donl 1 'Cif, MB pros ion per .Democratic party need no ikin with which to belabor thei! hes next campaign than the List such a resolution &Isis cont It will be a clincher. to eier brou'htga r ainst then an adi hemselves that. " RePublicaii a failure.", • , lift we Artitst that - WiSer.ociunsels prevail at Lancaster, and 'that hence anti discretion will overnj !deliberations of the Convention.'l ? , ‘ - e all things,We would'alloid to n -d the'' advice of our enemies, or rptin• •.- g any i_sues . t ironn : st as fire-hrands. Ile campaign inines to be unusually I-arm and Ne. Fortunate,. as we-are a in our . • i Mate four Governor. vet. we shall I • I all our strength. to achieve sue . It will not do cawielessly to aate any portion of otirt party. her isit wisdom to Make :nn issue weal cal of j 1 ted . I men, by ti Leo EME pru the Ab EMI m it ' pro :lea ME CIE MI alie Nei - - with the National Administra gratuitously insulting the I' sident: Tho l se who counsel such twtiol - as the - I. m ea l ns of retaining-and securing* ad - diti4nal votes for. the State ticket , bad a till : W .- wed, give eatilonlv..,-rc caster. What 7. eAer way be the popithir feeling as ' J N. . ! to 4 "Third Ter" there is:afl innate disposition in the public to 'see "fair i „; plat - ,'' and a sentimer.t that fir rres idelt should not he' dragooned into anydeelaration, and that he may he • silent until the proper Owl arrives . . - ..+!silt: i forlhitn to - speak. _' ' 1 4; And the Vejhave nowsaid our say,,a 1 responsibility of its utterances will . rest with the . Convention: We have labored to avert what, in. our judg- iiieti ! 1., will be fraught with irainent 1)071 to the party, at the risk, of hay our niotives impugned and mis 4esented. 'But for this ; 7 l e care In ling, if - we can see the Republi party successinl, and the country sperous wider its rule,' IVe hare a an issue made by our enemies, 'Aed hr - )rtion of our Anew' , Vat ligisuo i " - T l li:l l o 4 '44k most - excited; about :the that Ge*.'"Gaerii'ls f.*!B reAeetlon, niMAL Arline npoa what if; denominited the "leachingi of the fathers of the country," and point t o - the examples of the illustri• ons statesmen who have filled the Presidential chair, as evidence that the President shouJ l nt once issue his official determination not to be again a candidate,. This - reference to history is the best vindication. Gen. GRANT can possibly, have for the silence he has maintained upon the subject. We have had, it is true, remarkable and praisworthy disclaimers of any ambition to-hold a third term—indeed of willingness to do' so, under any circumstances—but they were always accorded to the friends of the President making such disclaimers. President WASHINGTON never digni- fled 'FRENAII with any reply to the scurrilous attacks which were contin ually appearing in the Philadelphia Aurora. Mr. JxvixasoN disdained to notice the many and vile assaults on his personal honor and asserted . corrupt intentions. When these great men signified their inflexible resolu tion not to accept ii third tern', it was in response to l l e overtures of their friends who proposed to re-elect them. So, it was in'l response to his friends in Western Pennsylvania, who were preparing , to move for his re-election fot a third term, which I drew out Gen. JACKSON'S letter de clining to depart from . the precedents set by the early fit / hers of the Re public. Gen. JACKoN would have disdained to say One word which r 1 might, admit of his enemies boasting that they had extor i ted a disclaimer , of unpatriotic inten tions 'from him. To come down to 'a comparatively late day, it was t his friends, sz , to wards the close ofi his single term of oitice, to whom resident BUCHA NAN indicated -his tinwillingness to be •a candidate for .1 second term. 3 There are severallciremnstances in Gen. GRANT'S cas e which intensify his natural disinclination to gratify his enemies by any public utterances on:the subject. In the first place, in the election, camPaign in. which he was first a candida i te, FRANK BL AIR continually and : ostentatiously de dared- that (RANI was at heart a C.ESAR, and that his election would be the death-knell] of the Republic. Ar's FRANK was an old, bosom friend, - and had been on OrtANT's staf f , this violent declaration must have given the President special offence. Then; he was hardly elected for the second term. when'the N. T. Herald, follow ing ikAut's Wad, began to bay at the moon on the Third Term lunacy, with . sickening iteration and loffen siveness. As-. Gen. GRANT has -still two years of 14 second term to serve. his friends mak justly say that any utterance on his part.how would be indelicat4 and uncalled for. It would savor it greqt deid of what 1 HORACE UREELEY so especially, & tested, declining i n office before it was offered. 1 las dcdly istra -4::) the )eve 'ere is uated .Lea parges a the Mg I n,and I selves kit a 'haw!) The ,1 by EMI better Radi •sage empla aru- iSSlol2 ile has Gen t GRANT certainly may be al loived to follow the teachings and examples of the early fathers of the Republic; without danger to our free institutions or injury to the _ great party which has twice elected •him President. Gen. WAsuisorox held under advisement for some time the proposition to lie_ a candidate for a Third Term, and only declined a few months before the time of election, and then in answer to the proclaimed intention . of his • friend!i to again make him a candidate. But it is de -maluled of the President, - that : in ad vance of his 'nomination by any Con vention or assembled body, before he has been invited by. any portion of his frien4 or announced as a candi- I date by 14.4 newspaper, that he shall 1 decline an honor which no One -has any right to say he aspires to., And all because an unscrupulous newspa,L per publishes sensational articles 1 about Cresarisra, and the opposition prints reiterate the 'cry, in the hope of distracting and dividing the Re-!: publican Party.. Gen. GRANT has too much pluck and self-respect. to yield to any such clamoil. But we have no doubt that when the proper occasion. arrives and he is asked by those who have any might to interrogate him; he will be ready to give his views as to a ,Third, Term. the meantime, the tremulous anticipators of imaginary dangers, may take courage from the statement that Senator SARGENTi of California,', , N•Vas recently " interviewed " by the '•correspondent of a California paper. In ' the course of the conversation he repeated the explicit assertion which he made sorae time since at the Cnoox banquet, that, the President had never 1 had the slightest intention of being ' candidate for the Third Term; and . explained the fact that the Third' Term rumors had never been officially ' contradicted by saying that President GRANT had "been arraigned as', a criminal _by irresponsible parties, charged with Cresarism, prostitution ! 4 his office :for ambitious purposes,, ;S;,c., and that the demand made that he should stand convicted or deny," 1- and , that "a President who pleaded to such an arraignMent would belit tle his office." This as every one knOws, is the simple truth. s. For' the President of the United • States to have honored the - Herald by gravely . contradicting its preposterous false; hoods, would not only have lowered the dignity of the office, but would have stimulated the Herald'to invent a 'thousand new follies in regard to him, simply for the purpose of ob. taming .renewed notice at his hands. fib Wald ::. •-..',-;' .-::: I OAR good , inte 111 $ 0 0 6: 10 1 •4 3 -alM I MIMI 11,11‘:91:11; 12,12( DiDBI 2( 1 IfllOstaiitisltteklit'.by i'V-''m .' n; _ . . . , , • - "M E L On 11 0111KMIl IST' ,- Abeitlitii ' On - ~ !, . . to 1 'T.,!'-,,4,t'1!... :,:,41 ,' ,i, --, .. ..r. -.,!.!,,:, -. Zamora of Ostiiii*Cinniter - lifillalifeetio! 'theAireseatttir44e Sslitened from : . -.mu s ky issi l las. : ll s as* . ' , Ossisilakilisse ~s. ~.,_ss! ss -- ss.s. 1 s • - st` •thellatfirstsV., the „, ~. i , ..: of . With Zino#oo4:oo,l9tußiuntOloisr 7-. ss tfs. s s. s s ss --- ; s:ss s ' s,:ssisr s 7,' . The litseskecildii444 - ‘449 . ".': - ' , '-:: - ;:ii, - s 'lYeuideittittc andindipendinitneWs", : , .......z21._., . WAgirixolol Mr& sy s ass- PaPers- °, nave set ' ' I P n tea • iltsW - ; ' !tumors of Cabinet, changes within the against= President GRANO A minis - past few days have again revived, and ap trationt - Are the - false and-slander---1 r k rently—wot- ,without . Warne -foundations current report that Secretaries Fish ow reports eircydated hY these Mai '; an d D e l ano have both s ti o used to the therskites to be regarded an facts by i President Their desire to be relieved at the ; close of the flacallear front their official. intelligent -..Republicansi : Who . -well i datien is iety generally Amiga_ to he ecir-. -blow_ that.. for ..-the-.-lath _ fifteen „An'. i .rects„aed has ). as a matter Of course, ere twenty years the only , stock in trade ItLit " g thni aciir ' ' T eilitatitili e ms to."° • , t h e s ., ~ f Ma)! be seleeted as their stiticess Some possessed :by n, Democratic, party : intimations have heed made that Pethisyl •lis been falsehood. and slander ? We: !-,11`,"? am reecho tide honor, of one of the .. * appintmentss but talc geoessil impression uppfehedd lot; A few; eak, ineon- is'that the Presideut in. making' his selec .. ! sistent Republicans may h ave som e .tions willlook to the Southland the West. . It is entirely idle. however, to speculate, regard. for the assertions or, those ' iu any was:with regaril to What the Pres-' - - Democrats who hive publicly brawled , Ident may pursue. Judging from his au - s i - : Roos in the past localities will scarcely be [ out aguinst every act of the Repnbli . 1 taken into consideration, .and not until can party from the day A BRAHAM i the proper time arrives will the pub li c re- LINCOLN ; LINCOLN was installed ;President of I tatted to fill :these important Istaitions: • • tie United 'Btates until the ':resent i In the absence of anything like political ' but - calm,', reflecting Rie e rTubli- i e4eitement " time;chaoges end fermations of a have~ cans, who yet a vivid meat- I theme. and the present time proves to be s brame6 of the deceptions praeficed in 1 n° exception.' I he resignation of a Cab-, I Met officer at. thin time when there is. an the past by the Democracy, will pay i absolute dirk of hews is a God-send to .no heed to their uttera nc es, ' se full of 1 nOwsgaiherens, and is con4quently being 1 • I magnified jute an iniportimee that; will malice and hatred towards, the Re- , prove to be of nn siguitieences politically publican party; ' -Wheit it s pro-' or Wthersviscs; Bot the Sal* is sufficient' flounced on good anthoritly that I to !pit into circulation a great many re . - ports more or less damaging to the char- President ! President GRANT•is infriguini for a I Miter of the gentlemen about retiring, all I • of which will doubtless probe to be purely Thhd Terra against the Orrtest wishes sensational, and will end at's they began— of the Republican • masses, then . it ' in nothing. ' The result or the • recent election .in will be time to put ! so me confidence ! mem • , wan is pretty good eldenee that the in the assertion .' When it is demon- ! Republican tarty is not , yet dead. and strated by sotrkconvineino eVidence ' ' orderia , ' that there wi ll be no necessity el ~ . s l' 1 w tombstone her it. for some tittle to come. 'that the ° Republican party lias fallen The Republican eaudidate for Supreme helplessly into - the hands a a felt Judge - , it appears,' has bet , 'ln elected over 1 r, • his Democratic opponent by a majority of office-holders, then it will be time for j over twenty-five thouSamh The vote is . Republican newspapers; to einne out i said to be the. largest ever polled at a . 4 spring election in the State. and one of and denounce ' these . office-holders; the largest ever polled in the State at any but they should ivait until they have elecetioll. It is evident front this that the - - 4 tidal-wave so much talked of and which some more reliable source o , infor-apiwani_so,bettutiful in the, imagination of . , nation through which Ito obtain the Democracy has taken a backward Cease and that it will be `the fault of iko their news than that Of the Demo. r Rtical ;eel -cants and moral'cs Within cratic press befre they commence to' the Republican organiza.thin if that party does not renew and co ntinue its victories Miami the Repttbliean'paftv qeeino • ' • • i L ' '-- e, over the -• Opposition: We must say th a t _ r with their own eyes, and hearing-, We are not yet prepared to believe that • intsestrusa, Nay 19. 1,7:n . the masses of thepeople have 'become ' ' '• • El }; IDINc ' . 4) a C O MP v . :l - with their own ears they - may believe. ! ' .• - • - . -'i 11 • '• ( r • -„ -• • . Wining and ready to surrender the- rents . .rhe legislative investigation of the af but they are foolish they, place !of government into. the hands of a class , r ; fairs of the Philadelphia and Residing s. .any confidence in anything Memo-; of men who declared UM ' war a failure, . ' ;Railroad Company and of the Reading . . . 1 . , and whose sympathies have ever been . Coal and Iron Company,now taking place chits may tell them that th y hear. with those who sought the destruction of [ here, . pr „,,,„„ 5t.10„.13„, The retail coal See or smell. -1 the Union. W i We believe as fully - i ' an y I dealers of this city allege that they -are . • • - . one in the restoration iof a fraternal feel- I being forced out of business by this Com ing between the Sections that lately s t ood pany's retailing coal to consumers. One in opposing R attle lines, but evideotly its . , of . ..the largest retail dealers was before day has urn. cone', No fienter how mac h ' the cisonnittee, and his evidence is about . May he said ;just: now about conciliation a fairsample of , all wile are - against the and about- shaking hands rover the bloody • Reading Company. Apr 4 Fisher, the dealer chasm by the stump orators of the Demo- • • in (pestle'', testified• that he was - driven cratic partY s tins Southern, rebel isas murk" out of .business because: of the deficit in of a rebel to s dayas he was in lstil. • ,; weight, of each carsload of coil furnished view ,of these facts—width cannot be cu t:-: him hy the Reading Co!. On cross-exami . cealeil. however much it May be druied—_, nation lie stated that te'the best, of his the rester:anal of . the Democracy to pow- r knodiedge the instances'of short weight Cr, aided by the unrepentant rebels of the amonnted to 'a dozen.; When 'asked to tionth, would he little lesS, than a revolu- detail those instauces, tIM witness was Ron financially and commercially in aegis- ' able' to testify to' bitt one, which was that I latiOn, and in everything: that, bears upon -of ar censignment to him of fi ve car loads , the progress, prosperity and safety of the of coal, for a Mr. Strunk: that the weight nation. The clap-trap that we hear about ' fell Stunt about three hundred pounds to reform is all thaise, nses . The clap-trap that • a ear; that in thin case he merely acted as . we hear about - constitutional government 1 the agent of Mr. Strouis.• havin,g bad the Asa the merest twaddle , Constitutional coal sent to his yard and ' hauled by him to r germ-Anent is safe only in the hands of Mr. I Stronse's cellar. for which he was the men and the parts'. that saved the . ) 'd liberally for his Services : that the Constitution when an ;armed rebellion_ 'e l l l li was eodsioned to him by Finlike. • lifted its baud to, tear it in shreds. Re- hitecar & Co:. and nut by the Reading ;. form -is to be expected only from the men. . - ( ' • . . . ompans, . . . -. and the party whose patriotism saved the The whole thing. oiS the part or the re- Republic. ° Certainly not with the party tail dealers, whose prices are SY2 a ton • thatlsanctioned. iaided and abetted its de- • Moller than the Reading prices' is so. ri- 1 . struetion : that hurned-rorphan asylums, A dieulonly contemptible that I really woa invited. opposatimi to the laws : got up . der Why the thne of legislative members . draft riots, approved therstarvation of our . is taken up with this matter. The ex soldiers in rebel prisons, opposed* all . penAcs--lui insioniticant amount—will have amendments to the Constitution. and ad- to be met by the State, anti the earlier the voatted the repadiationr of the National farce is ended the better for the tax-pay debt. Reform and - Retrenclnuent have :• . i no Icominnnity. i been made the Watchword of the Demo- • The retail dealer ibis instauee tack cratic party with the hope of deceiving led r Mr. Gowan's company with Out just the masses of die people. • Give its. the cause, and now he has them on his hip, power. they cry and we will not only and I think lie will give them the worst wipe out your tax lists but will inaugurate trouble they ever experienced when he is a politiCal mellerniinin and :t new era of ready to let go of them:- national prOsperity. : • The lion. Fernando Wood • having del . S a.. , EXCEPTION TAKEN. - ; dared that nothing can, •• prevent, the re- ..7tlessrllood, Bonbright & Co.. of this turn of the Demecratic party to power." city. take exception to . what I said of Democratic , leaders haVe conseent'utly them in a previous letter. They state that • formed into line I and have placed them- I Was in error regarding the amount of selves on their gisod behavior, each hoping business they do and the extent •of their to he the flag-behrer of that party in 1876. advertising. and that :I Made a mistake in. 1 And as the doctrine of inflation has become suPposing - that they impressed their sales .an epidemic all over the Smith, and is ex- mewith sentiments opposed to liberality eeedingly popnlar in the West, they would in he administration; of business. They it like to make it one of the planks of the clam that their sales exceed $6.000,000 platform over which the leading spirits of per annuni; that their advertising has aw -1 Democracy arc IIOW holding consultation. eraged over si,ooo a year for the last four I But as this would exclude quite a large years, and is on a scale more liberal than number of their Most prominent men, who I I Was led to believe, and that a contracted have expressed :themselves as being op- system of doing business has. never been posed to inflation, the ;only way in Which practiced in their establishment. they can extricate themselves from the It is with a considerable degreeof plea s lunfortunate dilennna will be to adopt at arc that I correct this error I made. for I Janus-faced platform, With inflation upon the reason that so very few of our leading I the one side and cootractioe on the other, wholesale. houses . ..of any bralich of bust } The real patrons), however, and the only f neSs advertise at all,i tIMt I am pleased to 1 one upon Which ;Unit party can agree, will note this exception t, and I will here take ,be the spoils Of office. Upon that platform occasion to observe that I believe I can, • the entire partyl will unite, expecting to wiihout any difficulty whatever, name ten Ifind with them, las they did three years , tiring doing the largest-business in their I ago, a large dumber of ••• independant , branch of trade of any :establishment in voters.'' "'liberals," and:disappointed of- • Philadelphia, whose combined expenses 1 fice-seekers, whese ambition proved to be - for advertising do not aggregate annually greater than their patriotism. Id the be- - all much as' that. of - Hood. llonbright Lk: lief, however, that victory is once more , CO.. It is, I preSume, needless tofsay that I about to Perch! upon their: banners, the I regret tis. but I ;sincerely 'trust, that ! old Bourbon clement, which is now demi- the example of liberality taught by Rood, 1 nant in the party, has been recently giving Beubright & Co. stay be soon followed by the cold shoulder to what they term eVery firstsclassibusiness house in Phil:l - camp followers" , The after-diimer i delphia. speeches of the; Democratic swans who i ' . recently dined and wined the Hon. Carl Schurz in New York. very clearly indicate that nothing but the genuine old "shwa' pure " Democrat is to be recognized in the distribution Of the anticipated spoils; and that all tho4e who refu s ed to subscribe to the oath of allegiance, although train ins- in their ranks with the expectation of being rewarded with office, are to be driv en out of camp to the Complimentary mu sic of the Rogues( March. But the party that saved the et:Minty from .destruction and its followers; are not yet ready to for get,' the , sacrifices called for in the great struggle,. nor. are 'they yet preparedto - quietly surrendet the fruit ,of the victory - into the hands of their enemies. To _ac cept Domocracylwould be to accept a par- Ity without a policy, It would not only be going backwards, but under a Demo-. I cratic administration there is not a sub-. tituitial interest the country but would feel as if it res ted .on a volcano whose ' eruption might ng,ulf it at any moment. I Fully awake tot hese facts the intelligent i 1 voter will not al ow himself to be- lured 1 into the camp of the • Democrocy.by their , specious cry ofl 'Reform and Retrench- Lulea and the Sickly sentimentalism hr I - "shakino haudS over the bloody chasm," 1 Notwithstanding the incessant prating of 1 11, the Opposition c ver the results of some of, ' the elections, in the, election which has just taken place in Michigan there is cer tainly no evidepee that Republicans are in any way disheartened or that the party is in any way demoralized or disorganized. The resignation, or perhaps more strict ly speaking, the removal, of Treasurer Spinner, followed by that of Commission er Douglass and I Assistant Secretary Hart ly, has given rise to numberless -rumors of other departmeotal changes that are soon to follow, and among 'which it - is under- I stood will be the discharge of a Large number of clerks. A the law passed by •the last Congress, which reorganizes the ' Treasury Department on the Ist of July next, does not propose a very heavy re duction of the clerical force, these changes and anticipated removals are exciting a good deal of comment as well as anxiety among those" interested.' That there will be a radi6l change among. the Bureau officers there is but little doubt, -but for what purpose the public •is yet in ignor-• mince. Doubtless there are good and milli dent reasons foil the changes that will be made, as there are for those that have already taken placet : There is an impres sion prevailing rith law that the Third Term qualm. May have something to do with these movements, - a nd that Ms Pres !** and hli friemis me'desdioas of hay illk _-160116 iSI'CUMO Cr env , . noattninittoniqlywMoitttha p t.,.7 lillMitiert b alkliptAlrnft e, ,ftt . o tid* 2 1 41;1; %TV 0 a' is wiffliown ret as a general ri Southern Democracy : - :prese dential silence over certain qi such as the neat°, State soy and secession, now and Abell a more ingenuous and !open t rest, blurts.straight out the ./ tent and purpose held' in eon nearly all. Here is a paragr a leading paper of Geotgta. frank Wain: "In 181'2,. when thei)em. Baltimore adopted a Republik form and started out in the 1 with an acquiesCencU in the the infamies of reconstructio, ing the 13th, 14th and 1.1 ments 'a finality upon tl' tions settled by them;•the = stultified,and the stultificatio disgust in the . Democratic p.' shattered its ' j forces in the of the ericmy.t False lea again entrap us if weido.no THE Selma Directors County have made a "new de At. their Convention to eke , ty Superintendent they mac of Miss SoAil J. tOls co sition, and fixed the Salary The new Superintendent is a• woman of busin44 abilit cellent qualifications, and . I the people of Tioga will . ; ,reason to regret the Choice made, but that Miss LEWIS than fulfil the promiges am. tions of her friend 4. • Hol much prefer • that Tioga should first igive their exp , • 1 J. V. been iith Auditor pro feict durin mice of that officer.:: The could not. haveslone bat have tendered Mk. 31. V. th ment 'on the retiiement MARTIN. He is one or the fill men - in the Treasury 1) trfi..,CiA:Doo46lo:64 THE New York ,To,urna 'acme enlarges its statistical exhibits in regard to foreign trade, so as to show the ,commerce of the United States at all the ports inatead of at New, YOH: alone. This comprises no less than ninety-four port of entry, and ha a reference. to the Year 18'74, ending 4 grith Deceniber, 31i The to tal foreign -imports:lnto . the United States for that time amounted in gold 'itlue f ekelusiire of .freight l and duty; to 4 077,369,711; a falling off of nearly one hundred millions as.compared with 1872, and forty-seven and a half nillions as compared with 1873.. - ThC exports, including specie give' a vorable showing. They amounted last year to $942,5:99,628, *hick is over seventy millions h 1 excess of the exports of 1872,and over Cleven ions in excess of 1873 7 thOugh-nearly ten millions was in,specie. The s. do mestic produce alone showls a consid erable gain.- This is a gam of near, ly' sixty millions in,the tra d e balance, counting the dialling of[ o f - imports. Nearly 15550,000,00 n of big import and export trade *as ith (beat Britain; France came second, CIO , many thinl, Canada fourth, and Bra zil fithf. American bottonis carried About a quartex of the $1,279,899,577 value of exports and imports while in 1858 the proportion about two fifths. It appears from the above figures-that American shipping does not grow in prosperityT oportioned to American trade. FATHER The Shoe Tama out in Have Been on the Wrong root. PRILADFLPHIA, _May r I,o:—During the Gerdeman trial taday the Catho lic priest alleged to have absconded with money of his ehuveh l it was proved on crois-eiamination of flip accountant that the chnich, Waa debted . to the det'enclait $l6 7.65. TUE AIRY cortreer AGREE. Puitatntuzia, May, 17.—tho jui in the Gerdemon cam canie bate mut twolve o' cloth and j etatei they add not iigTge, and . diedhuol. The SW awl taittir ..t— and fo\ convictioto I tlf thli esikg at illt ' le, the N•A. , prtt- MIZE SEM I organ, i han the :Holt in- MEE ph from in that racy at an plat inpaiolf I - esults of „spied g own+ Lty was lexcited Irty, and. j cry face ers watch." I f Tioga I )arture." a Coun-1 ie choice that po t $1,250. r aid to be and ex we hope of have, i l bey have, .111 more expeeta ever, we! Count•! iiment a ppointed _ the ab• resident r than to ' twpoint lof Judge most use- I T STATES. EM I= :,.. .lie IC:Ontspoken against a Third ,T- . 0. . • '• bugbear tkat.seems ttiditidi hi', '!! '''! !!' ti°nJiffsainatri:Thei'itidkuiT" ; ',UankjiWgilowii*,; tom:4/11,,,nainb ; 'Or tb2: l ol l t:,_*bo k$ t tr). been s o W*4l:o.er:ii: 1 Ilttl**ititau ~_ '_will 41(ikli04 1 ** - 'O-. _:tethiialu*orprt - liti teixiiPthdlY• nen'ltheir cake' M t the CeeniPhif °en dl their stillikt*ed greritriess, '-The e hange made in the Alice - ar : cum-, millstone'. of Intefnal ReVenue, although , uneipeetedr was, not -the ;subject of. any. 1 I .great , mount o comment until the rea -sons- f or theper emptory removal were ,o, yesterday made üblie, It . appears that I the dhitiilets of hisky in the cities of St, 1' Loids, , , Chi go IdilWattkcel hi • (Alin- ii i sion with, the .v enue! Officers' at those I- -- ' — rise returns points, have n ilia - king" a of the atutturit of their . manufactures and sales, !#nd con • lucidly have ; been .dd- I frituding the go eniment On a pretty ei.; i tensivit scale. t o amount of fraud ; in 1 St. Louis, it ha been asairtnined, will riot i fall below a million of dollars annually for the last WO yeais ; Oat the amount' I•may be in the other two cities ha; not yet been ascertained. The integrity and up: 1 rightness of Conf. Douglass is in no way I doubted, but the discovery of these colos sal whisky frauds which 4avo existed Per 1 long and - which it is tut:light he might I have detected, was gunk:lent evidende that his perceptions and adreinistratife [abili ties were not coital .to ithe positien in which lie was placed. 1 , - !I The friends of Mr. Raiulall are Confi dent that he will sweep the eoucus in the coming contest for the SpOakership 4f the! Rouse. They beastingly declare that he will het more votes thgti all hie rivals' Combined. But this maybe a mistake; las it is fully understood thrit the Southern aristocracy greatly prefer' the, imperieus Wood with his wealth andbanglity airs; Randall is . a good enough Demoetat, sound on the goose" and all that soil, of thing; but is altogether too plain a petsou for them ; besides, he does not possesb the means to entertain in the right . regal Are Mr. Wood would do if elected. , . lu a few months' time;! . through the in difference and apathy of the Republican arty,.we.sltall see! the ilottse of Repre sentatives pass into' the hands . iof the De- MoatleY, controlled by its most obnoxious and ultra elements. In the Speaker's chaif Me shall donbtlesslutive either -11:1k (tall or Wood; while the Chairmanship of all the -,committees, imiiortant or other wise, together With aIU the rbortlinate ns positio, will be given to rebel Generals and the swormenemies id' the ,American Union. 'pie spectacle. We trust, wil' not be withont its lesson M the 'future. • It fully illustrates the important truth that '• Eternal vigilance " never has and never cease to be the pried Of liberty. • 3I; The case Of the Commonwealth against J. W. Gerdeman. the priest charged with the theft of- a large amount of church fonds, has been on trial for several days. On the sixth day of the trial Judge Ilriggs came into court and iaid: GENTLEMEN OF TIKJURY—I am the recipient of a communication, and I think I ought to - impart it to you, as I expect you to do .the same to me'should you re ceive a Similar document. It is your duty, in view of the. high trust haposed upon you, to let counsel upon either side know anything that is said to you in reference to this case, either ,"by word or by letter, and it is also your duty to inform. ne. /The man who would indite the communi 'cation I have in my hand to h judge 'would not hesitate to send 'a similar one to a jury. in-reading the note to you I will make no einninents—Lwill treat it simply as a piece of waste paper, and throw it in the - basket at my feet.. lly.disclosing to yiju its con tents, I feel that will be encouraging you to do the same by me, should you receive any letters. I was appebensive ere this you had received similar commu nications. , D ll. 11. C. PORTER OLD C.I.SH. DRUG STORE. Mlin 311 in and Pine sts., Powanda„ Pa.' :I.;irtablish ii ut'er n yUgi'le'r of a ('entury,: . I Wholesale and Retail Dealer in ! I.) It ' l_7 li - 8 . 31.EDICINES. C . i ~ - - E.E.M.ICALS, , • 1 ' . • . • arms.. tkrE , ,STILIFFS; GLUE. PEIIII - 31F.11Y. TOILET AND FAN( 1 1: 1 001)5, : SPONGES. 11111 - Sll Es. I. i BRACES, TR Es:. ES. s. 1.1 PS, COMBS, PoNIA I) Es. !LAIR M DYES. :n. I . • A. ) . I :.5. ,• To Ili* Monier, Jtoliii: lleifia),—Sin: You are TEETH. SKIN, AND HAIR FRI.:PARA:IIOM. sitting in judgment in the rasa of Genlemaun, the M SCABOY AN I) sCOTCII SNUFF. ' . apostate. and you are yourself a Protestant, so you Et /REIGN AND 1103 , LESTIt.:.CIG.tIts.t.ABDEN cannot be an Impartial fudge. But understand that I the'writer and twenty.fl) - e others are watching yin! - i -- FIELD t _. on the bench, and if you act in tho matter unjustly .0:1) FLoW Li. :SEEDS. PUItE Nvixf:s AND I your life 14 not safe. The scoundrel Gerdentaun is Ltguoits, - t guilty, tind he must be cbnvicted I So look to your. , self 1 The jury had better look to themselves. Also CFOr medicinal purposes,J. , your charge to the jury we will watch. Clod bless ~ , 17 ! 1111 T A Nit', lEr I. ECTIC AND • lICENI(EP ATI I I c (E-' rocs from. the Minute* of th, Af; t ' ct liagl I. le , and the Holy Virgin protect all good citizens. and - damn all heretics. •. E.rerutire Committee (if peranl ) tran to- j REMEDIES,. , AN I) ALL GEN VINE POPULAILMEIHCIN Es, ', Mr. Mann said that nobody but a lunatic State tirange. . l' 1 SUPPORTERS. would write such aletiter• he had himself morvv. ie OF RF. SECTAItY I.)F RENNSXLVANIA STATE GRANGE, I'. OF , . . . H, SUNPENSORLES, lIREA.ST Pr3lPs, NO'rLEs,t received several similar letters, .and even mccitAsicsncifo. Pa.„%pril 16th, - 1875. )! ' . :tNIPPLE SHELLS, • I. the day of his assassination had been fixed. At a meeting of the Executive Courmittee of the - ' NIPPLE SID EL Lit.., NURSING 1101Cr1. Es. ' 4 ... Judge Briggs—POrhaps . somb such let- Pennsylvania State Grange, held at. 3fechonicsburg TEETHING RINGS, : • I : ter may have been Sent to the jury :.if so. aon the '7sth mid 16th of April, 1875, the following SYRINGES, BED PAN'S, URINAL/. AND ' I would tell them to. disregard stui CON- preamble and resolution were adopted: lIERNIONIETERS, , . . ,:, muuicatkinS as I Aci; . , WIIEIIEAS, The Pennsylvania State - Grange at. ; KEROSENE OR COAL OIL ; • - .31r. lievCrin—Letters of that tlescrip- Its lastannual session. adopted a resolution' reams , „) - NN IC Is.S. Lion have come tO fie as thick as hail. ' mending subscriptions to the Capital Stock of 'To- , wanda hureka Mower Company by Patrons of this C 11131 N. EYS,' 'BATH BUR K. SPERM.,, lilts) h Judge Bri,ggs—These letters are-as fee- s tate , subject to the approval of this Executive ' [ . WHALE, : . quent as the pattering of rain drops ou Committee ; and. ' ' : INEA,Ts_ FC)CIT. TANNER'S. AND M.1'111 . 5 F h the roof. . WIIEEEAS, We have reason to believe that the • , ~o r the ci,' , coil-saltsEureka-Nlower Company is just .what it was - • OIL„ • , : I ; Mr. Maui is coulifsef lluralrepresented to he at the said session of the State ALCOHOL AND SPIRITS TURDEN TIN, F. !' gr - M egation, and r:: Heverin for the ac- Grange; therefore,' SABIL Besotted, That we believe It entitled to the con- ! . . ; • ! cused. ' Silence of Patrons throughout the Commonwealth. PAINT, WAT6NIBII, WIIITEWASI., COUNTER, , • ' and that it can, by Jaelleinusinanngeretent and eareul_ . ~ 1' ; HORSE, H• , • i I he made emphatically a ” Yitrous' " eatablidament;: - , %sr., SLICit hCRULEIN(i; 114.1 R, .TOOT.II, 11 successful :nil prosperous,- and consequently ba :.•''• our approral. daeet: It. Tllo3Lid. . ' anti ! other kinds of brushes. ; . 1 SecietzaT r e nusYlvania Sta t e' o ran g e ' , ' WINDOW' AND PICTURE "OLASS,I i ['Zeal of State Orange.) • . ~ Of ail sires. "C rr- M D I NI2B OP " lin " r4ln 'r' ns ' c. "/ 3.1- PURE Laxsttp Olv. PAlkrs, PE'ri 1",• " 1 .11N1): i EsxGorcra - , Pan May Stn' . ISra. , I VABlintl. Mr. 41, 414.1t5Tfilitrakt Bei= wa y g thtlilinflipll6; rlveyoloble • , 1 ' tito- • ALL ARTI9II4B WARRANT alt, li ,woof ClCittn./ ate tbe Cif cute any eta smut all wtti . ,j -• sow of :newborn borne Mtn Itrititligai .."- a ll 4-ci V clay= • ..-.. Sul orrreSezisd the Bigot tbe MurettalfoWtrrn - .; 1 etk an dbos tt from 0 o a l l , . I i. l . j . .ko 4 . ' ! I V( wen en ..mt varatti , ea n ittore s 1 th i a ... . tit tratit VOW 11110 - ~ ea - i • - : _._ • - 1 . _ His Honor then rend tlw letter. whiy.ll is as follows : ' lio was a farnoui gnatleina.n in his day, was Paul Pry ; but wouldyou believe that we have half adozen rant Prys right hero in Philadelphia ? One is prying into tho affairs of the Reading Railroad CUM jaw,. attathar 14)i:the- llama of Como -1:114 and uuw ti:424hror of c , •.- - that -MUD llppilAsp of t.... „ .**4:41110,090 mai/4'6i - topria ot : asitrast .1, a 6. ...... „ Tina OUR PHILADELPHIA LVTTEIi, ' QUEER SCITNE IN COCIIT PAUL P=. emeratnez, on radicient cat the Mae and mpraet MI iiffinier it V tadmire the e ff ort this cam ilatit is to establish direct dealing with the ra' and their mower Is practicaos it seems . Uri rat4ddlUke to patronize them, . - ':,,1; '::.::Very respectfully, - : . • I. li. e. 111y# lat'a. - Ajearartmeen. • There Is evident advantage lA. os *Maher of -hating the grass by the Eureka Iffateer.*:.-All other mowers With :which I ant AC , qiititialisiis one wfieet over the cut grass, packing j U ciao* to the ground, and one horse tramps upo!' it withthe mine pipet. There are two Injurious resultiattendingthbjpacklug. First, It prevents • quick drying; and second, the bruised grass Is dam! aged in quality,. for the Juices, Instead of drying into Amble food, are subject to chemical changeZ which convert the:imitative properties innreselese 'Matter jest hithat extent in which the green grass la lambed. On hard bottom meadow with a medium ; crop the broad face of the wheel refflog upon every 'swattilerelaes a considerable portion of the whole; I have witnesded the work of the Eureka , - ancOlr .these two impertaut particulars it la better that' the work•all'anY Machine which rung over the swath. .ffesldes, the cut grass Is left In -the loosest man- t, non, .admitting curren't7 . of air to effCct speedy curing, which is essential to secure the iflucnt haY. I J :••-rnesteasi Iforrzta-N, The geoitioes brought to us ha the letter are fair, They deserve' our con sideration. because they affect- cerinterests. W e i have in. this Clula beam very - carefin about recom-1 mending seeds or iniplenients until we have made full tests, add we intend that none May lie misled i used a Eureka Molter in thtriast haying. tilt- ting a leindred acres with - It—some of It extremely I rough, hillside oh which there we r re many large 1 , stones. it bad been moved many tithes before, ban always with a scythe. I went carer It With the Ee-,1 rcka and cut It well, and the machine came out li well from the severe trial. There.is an ImportaPt, advantage in theme of this moweir. In the cutting back and forth, malting a compact piece more easy j to gather than wheel the cut is around the field at a I piece, ashy the sldeteut Machines. And there is a farther advantage iix the -rakieg. The grass will 00101171ACATIONS. gather cleaner fro4the swaths of the Eureka than 11, .4 21 --- front any other machine I have ever used. Running' i . FROM AR 000AE3IONAL OORTR/BUTOTL• In paralle lines across-one side of the fi eld the rake.'; I 1 '.......". comes -tu re constantly against the sides of t!sell The Jesuit oilcan in New Vorkkhe swaths if the grassls of so fine a character as I to Herta—contains the following,. purport- , make the raking ditteult. - ' , i ,J ing to, be a cable despatch - from London : i - resides the rough ground I ,cut on flat, sum/inc.; I..crstooN. May 11, 1875.—A greit secret has t 31 1 , 11 meadow. ffelt snro that the direct draft was eta;; discovered in reference to tho American revivalists, 1 ler than by the sidescut macirlees. Iris true abou'l Moody and Sankey: end then•work here. 'Their; ' movement is nattier the direction of P. T. Dianaute,;l that the curing Is More even and rapid. owing 1 te:l the great American showman. .Sfr. riarnans. It Is ; the conditiO in which the grass is left..., - 1 explained. having achieved so many trbontrlts in . . There was In my machine a mechanical defect—!l the way of having pufilic opinion , has resolved te found a new religion, and helms entrusted the work a lack of metal in t-tro important points. 1 learn ni 314104 Y and t.iallheY• - One of the reasons pr o mpt- that in the: present Manufactine this has been cur-'' log this speculation pion, part of Mr. Barlow; is- reach. i .! his desire to furnish a connterpokse to the too pow- , erful nos elty of Cardinals McCloskey and Manning. I apprehended that in very heavy grass tar ilia ; The speculation hat proved to be an astonnding , chine Would load, lint I ant satisfied after trial that; ISIICOCSS. Ti..l pecuniary results have been very : R not.. stualwof it ate its work as they 1.- , 111 . I - • I ' • . it • 1 great. and the English speak ob Barnum with en- ; It thuSlasto as among the wonders of the wertd. ; geared to me. I ecnifess : to disappointment. I and To this wonderful despatch the /icra-rd : n p [tat expect such ability to meet difficulties as' i: adds nit editorial of its own, in which' it ' found: The hillside uhich I moved was a severe, endorses the statements and philosoPhizes , test, and-there were twenty-five acres Or, it. : in: on titcili after - its own manner. It repro- delving a wagon atong tile slope to gather creps,. I: seats American society as having been have found it necessury to chain a lever to the ans. much excited at the creation of a cardinal per side and weight it to prevent talc -tutting. of , - 1 -3 "real prince " it calls hint,—and,it is course the mower would slide so that I could not: evidently of the opinion that our country get full swath. but ' it only made the Rork sinWer Was much honored by the ad.yOut of , . . . ____:_, "Ma refl yschi," -" a real count who repre- BETER NE T seats the splendor of the oldest edurtin - 1 Europe." Now all this pack of lies and 1 balderdash would not be worth noticing were it not that it is, and is so intended, a deliberate and wanton insult to Protes tant - Cluistianity, here and in En !anti. W 1 biiEs-131iin E. May, 1 i.—l udiea-. As a matter of comparison the two; l'prin-• tions' at the Empire. Mines near . ithis: ees of the church " are not to be meMion- city,,:the largest and most important ed on the same clay with those two real colliery owned by the Lehigh and and earliest emulators of the SpOstles, —, •-,trart ,• ' IV pkese company in this section, Moody and Sankey. While their ‘erlii- 1 favor the im nenees .. are (10in... ever ythib g thtylpossi- pressiowthat work wilt bly can t•.) bring Christianity into outs- be resumed thefe before. many days. leinpt• ' while they, with their utter and :- - most' likely lin the - cOurse of a Week: tlagrant disregard of file tirst principles of • Mr Parish has , 'liven orders to set Christianity, are assuming to thediselvei ; the ft over l i ons flint - ling to-Morrow, and as honors and titles and ."lordin,g , there would eno object in . clearing God'g heritage " in direct disobedience of the injunctions of scripture, these 4 hum- I the mines of foul air unless .the niine- ble evangelists are raising in thousands of ' ers had concluded to resume labor, human hearts the one only , impo : ' tint ' the action f Mr. Parish is deemed qiiestion in the world—" What mnst Ido , • significant f something important to be saved?" Sorely they are the true on the part, of the company and its successors of the Apostles rather than an - , • ostentatious and tyrannical priesthood, employes. - . whose only aim is to drive all sensible '' It •is heti vi. d that the men nave knowledge of Life. of God, and :bf the; consented — lb return . - to their chant= • bring r or hold them into state or sopsuper, hers under protest, as the Hyde Park . Futue, from e min men, and to • [ • • ds a. of stitious slavery. , men are at w l ork, and will wait until' to : the fact is. that the Cleatl4lll Of an a ' more Con ~ venient time to renew ••.Ibierican Cardinal" (born in Ireland) their struggle. Peace can hardly .be ha • d about as Much efl'ect On the Mho -je an • . • -, considered [permanent. • unlesS the I mind as the indction:ceremonies attend- : company Makes some concession leg the. High Cockolorum of the ancient and lofty order of Clorncmckeni. . People John Siney S - arrest is the cause of con will run after a show ; and so McCloskey siderablebitterness aniono•the miners. as the Ha r- They are di4posed to reg ard the act-. got up a grand circus: which, old intimates, may have had some; eileet : ias ion evidence' oppression on in thinning the audiences at• the Ilippe. p...irt of the operators. and look upon di•ome. But as to any impression math:: 'on the public generally, the Popo might , `trey as asol of martyr to their cause, Make every parish priest 'in - the countiy , - Mitchinsbn's mine in Kingston. They are tics- : Which was regarded last week as ; the a cardinal for all we care. they more nor less , thah enemies to all : lxittletield ' f the strike, in the' Wyom- b e •, mg region, seems to have been aban- liberty of thought, to all real progre,ss,•: . • to all true freedom, whether they honed by ti i. e - s trikers. dubbed •.• Holy Fathers in God" or ' On Satu r day situ- ' ply "your riverence." The sneer which - between th rty and forty Men were betrays the animus of the 'Herald's arti- iat work in the eolli - i • collier} . am quite a tie, is in the charge it thakes—that Moo- ; large additionthe ' to n u mber will be dy and Sankey are working ht the Tee- ''' 'Mary. interest of the great showman, I made to,mopw. In tiro courseof a Probably no one will be quicker to reseht ' week the mint will have its full coin this than Mr. Barnum , himself; who, - I pletement of operatives. Payne's whatever may he his faults, is incapable I mine is also • • ' • lime:ism"' its number of of the grovelling instincts of the N. Y. . s.. k 1 • as or men,.am will soon have lark Herald. There is only bile thing to-which I a the He read is true. and that is the Roman force turning Out. That the Kinhfston Catholic Cirarch. To it . it is bound body l.lminers hay I apparrently given up the soul, and in its 'behalf it follows the un- struggle to keeP indpendent Miners broken policy of "The Church ';=tat lie, from oper a ting , • • looked is upon as a when the truth b; , against it. Moody 'and p ' avdrable•indication for a gene ral re- Sankey needbo defence against sheh asper- • . shuns. Christ and his Apostles; Aterere- sumption of -work throughou t` this oiled-by the mouthpieces of old churches valley ,I and pagan creeds, just as the Herald ig now doia , : ' but: this old churches passed Sway and the pagan creeds tottered and fell. and the mouthpieces went with Judas ure trying to smoke out that impecurthiva. Bound men, with little prospect 'OflitiCki ocfs, however. With the znartsms of House Of Correction:Paul: has,ltuuleri fiery hot for them, and it looks Sif a dozen of the managers Olio Walken 'selling ; the inititution goods!,tivin - th eir Own stores, in the name Of their -shoo blips, would have to step doWnvidqu'it, , , if not. into the penitentiary, for their naugh ty' tricks. _ - • DROOKO -James J. Brooks is a revenue detective, not favorably known among whisky Wen: Brooks carries a bullet in his left'lung, and any number of carbuncles spreadiora• miscnously over his body, in: memo tof the illicit distillers' blackjack. N ,ell, Brooks has taken Greeley's advice''and has gone West, and have just learned that he has seized over twenty-two lion; dollars worth of whisky said to bo made in violation of law. • ' giscO.LAztaft • ~; • A young man named Mordefilti Ma e, . in years of age,..ame Into the city about a week ago. from; 3lontgiSmery County, to get funeral notices of his father's death and time of burial prtifted ; he s was'!rtm over by a passenger railway cat and died two 'days thereafter. : On Tuesday a benefit was given at the Academy of Music, to raise a fundf9r the education of ,the, five orphan chip of the late minstrel performer, Dan Bryant. The fact of Dan's Widow having paid , ..a priest $4500 for a grand minima mass for Dan's soul, had a discouraging effect, as many of our people thought' the five*: or phans stood me in need of that sum ,than the priest or Dan's.soul. to their own places, whilti the simple nt teraßees of the men of Galileo brought - life and hope and salvation to nkillioW; of the earth's lowly ones. B. A.• FROM MINNESOTA .M.INNLAroLu4, ~ May ;10 7 'l:i Emma Bit DFOR D EPORTER—Decor Sir young man named Janiti Wat son died at the Cottage Hospital, this" city. last Tuesday. 'Parties in charge could learn nothing in regard. to him or his friends, and asked for information through the papers, hence my knoWledge of the case. I became acquainted with a person of the same name, and answering his description, two Years ago, at Duluth, and from what I can learn, have no'donbt he is the one referred to: Ile came from ulster, Bradford County,. Pa., and_ had relatives residing there. By publishing this perhaps his friends may learn of his fate. Yours &c., TESTIMONIALS IN FAVOR OF THE EIIBEICANOWER: . ;Mt, \ ef . ,, it .1 , _lli (wet cif, of B ,p. of r71; : 1;o111 . r. twit( y Tow.tNna, Pa., Luc• nth, 1674 Ress.lred, By ExeCutive Committee of the Brad ford Council. of -the Patrons of Husbandry, that the permanent union of the Towanda and Poughkeep sie Eureka Mower Companies will greatly facilitate and cheapen implements they propose to make, for members of our order, and we therefore ream mendici Brother Patrons to subscribe to the stock of said Company. belie% leg that it will prove a re munerativeinve.d meld. V. E. PlOl.l-Er, EZ R A '11.06M t!•• C'. E. (41,11/DING. fr.,ht fie , Mut i r+ . 1,1 , tr ' Slate Gm age.) OFFICE nr SF,CTIET AUX HI =M=M FC1173.1, 1875. the late meeting of the State Grange. held lt Williamsport. on the stll, Mb, 7th and Bth of ury. the following re'olutio offbreti Ity Patron V. PIOLLET r of No. st. was adopted : Rcaoired, That the state Grang„t recommend subscriptions to the Capital Stock Of the Wowanda Eureka Mower Cormviny, by Patrons of this State. subject to the approval of the Executive Committee. Atteit:—. It. lErTitomas, Seey. [Seal of State 'Grange.] Tin: Interior Department has secured the services! of'a clergyman who speaks nearly all the Indian dialects, and Who is not connected with the Indian service,to aet as interpter dpring, the visit of Red Cloud and other Sioux chiefs to Washing ton. This has been done by. Secretary Delano in order that he may be certain that Red Clond'S: statement is properly and correctly repOrted.-, TIST OF LETTERS remaining in I it the i•owanda lon[ Oftlre lin' lyeek ending May 19. 187. Braund. Mary A Bing, Emma C Britton. Ed( Chlison, Edward Grans, :Slr'T Chaffee. Frank Carroll, Lizzie Ilatmaway Ann llowlandFrank Hornet, Jno. Keller, taco McConvllle,Jas l'at - Madden, Tim May, If W, Palmer. Chas ltogen, P II Sick, Ilosa,( ;Thompson. Ed Tarbbll. C Waltet.llorace • PersMis calling [or any of:the above letters will please say -advertised," giving date of list. RA)" . E'S GRAVE- GUARDS 'or tile - purpose of prt”;ervilig the Ikpnattent symmetry of -Burial mounds and Lulling lie usual Iltad]and Foot stones more permanentb' and se eurely,ln positioh. , For particulars akltltys:. ' JERVE L. TiDwi-z P. ur' 11 S FROM THE COAL RE GIONS. Resumption of Work. Probable Nevr, Advertisements. ALVORD, P. 31 LI. S. 1111 . K EN,ON, Agt:. MEM 11111:41. pring ftq l :& 11 . 1r E A I N ti & It I LDIt E Invite everyone whO out, irtst., to rtrelow, kind of R• Y. 0, 0 01) S COI El El . . , , . . ~ i. LOW }I.'S T POSSIBLE! Pit I C E ~ , 1 To call awl exauihie thOtr • r NEW -STOcii. - - , 1 I • . . SPRINti ANI) $1 7 11.311M GOQDri. Which I.lwy' are 11km O L I'ENING FOR INS I'EL7TiON •I r PiN cry. I)rix.irtitient f, rvu . _ NEW AND 1.-I I • it< I I= T A I' I • WinC 11 W DA. DE SOLD DECI.DEI IMMO ';r:LANB j .kiHiLbRETH, ; f Bridge Street. April 11,75. / Taylor IMMEI Nspßl I 1 ' I 1 1 TAYLOR 1 ARE i OPENING ICO3IPLETE : - NEII 7 SPRI WHIM AT LOWEST KISS lIMI CALL AND 34'AMA N I= spr#Lig Isls, MI =I lail i, • qpkte iLli aJI t NOVEL. o t} .•. In.._ CO ' 0 Cif ' I & CO., AyEE,K MI 5501:1731.1S L 1 . 1 0 0 D 1 I N G G L BE ;SOLI) MI IM=EI =I 1131. Y I PRICE I SEE THEM. • IMI 'LOB L' CO El
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers