Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, July 29, 1875, Image 2

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

    lir rim tat,
TENDEBIAIC steaks bring only tive
cents la pound in Texas.
Fustrwo is retied as quite poor this
season at th e A 'ondacks.
Nonew i " cases of yellow fever have oc
curred at Key West for several days. .
CHO„ldnie_,_ a Chinese youth, is a bright
freshnan at Yale.
A Magnificent Synagogue is being am
structedby the Israelites of Kansas City,
Mo. I • •
Hot:snit ' Texas , hair Out stock coin
panies the total value of whose stock is
*16,3t . 3,000. .
EitillTT car loads of cattle cazne into
the diatoir at Jersey City on Wednesday
last. , • ,
Trip time of th e golden harvest has
comciand the voice of the reaper. is heard
inl the and. • 1
A desperate attempt was made , to blow
pp the.gas office in Louisville, on the iiith
,!inst. t
1., TILE Clouds pelted Davis Co., N. C.,
last tVeek, with hailstones aboutlhe size
' tar ostricliegrrs,
IL NrriiNo, of Indianapolis, stave
man facturer, has failed. 'Liabilities,
_sl9s'ooo.
TEE Nebraska Republican State Con -1
yealion - has been called to meet at Kearny
Junction on September 16.
• Iviis said that a three company post is
to be established in the Black Hills. The
location has not been decided upon.
Tux streets of Beaton - may hare been
aA "qiiiet a year s ago A this time, but not
unichmore so.
CliEi * ELIND'!k new direetOry contains
-46.8-19 'names. She claims a population
of 160,000. . .
Ttt.i' University of California - has 231
studenti; not including the ttiedkal stn
dent, and a corp 4 of thirty. instructori.
SEVERAL. cottages at Newport have re
-eently been rented for nearly one-third
'less,than was asked, in the early part of
the Season. •
Major Waa.ll. Forties, an old citizen
'of Si. Paul and Indian Agent in Dakota,
diedl-at Jamestown, Dakota, on Tuesday,
..July s 13.
A:s prualia: hotel, which George Fran
' cis Train built to spite a landlord, is in
the Lands Of the Sheriff, and can be had
cheap for cash.
•
P. McGrath has brought suit against
George Wilkes for dettiages in the-sum. of
$2:3,600 for an article in last Week's..gpfrit
of the Times.
-Chas A. 3lacY, of, thebanking firth of
lloWes and 3lacy, which failed in the late
panic, died on Wednesday anis residence
in . ..N i tew York.
ADVTCEN ~ ..- r eceivelf•at the Medical Bu
reauof the 'Navy Department 'from. the
South Atlantic fleet, report that our ves
sels dhere are now free front yellow fever.
IT is said That fully two-thirds or the
'fetters which reach the dead letter office
getibere because women have an insane
desire to write a beautiful line hand.
- !Tnr.: 19th Maine Regiment will hold its
' annual reunion in Belfast, August 9-.5, the
anniversary of its muster-in 'fin 1562, It
, was Gen. Selden . Conner's regiment.
G.:01i61.1 HAS - ' 218,733 white's and 175,-
23-1 negroes between the ages of 6 and 16,
and lits present annual edncational appro
priation is $lBO,OOO. Not quits 46 cents
- each child This is truly munificent.
• A tire at Geddes,- near Syracuse, N. Y.,
last ,Thursday, destroyed two blocks, the
prilierty of the American Dairy Salt Co., andlanother the property of the Cape Co
Salt! Co:, Loss, MOOO.
3lAvon . :-.Jon:cso:4,. of. Cincinnati; ix
charged with controlling the police in his
faVor at the last, election When he was
(lanclidate. for re-election, .and with other
ipiproprieties.
...1 1 2 man in . Cario, 111., failed withlabili
ties! one cent - more than : assets, and a
Charlesten Merchant who failed the oth•
day; owing - $:38,845, had assets amounting
to 17 cents,
tANIWILY, Colin., has just Welconied
.the return, through Execntire i 'clemeney,
of One lof its oldest inhabitants,lwho "has
pasSed over forty years of his life in kis-
un for horse-stealing."
(JNE . of the curious institutions of
Sq , iire, Mass., is a "Three Score-and-ten
Society." composed of eighty-seven mem
-1,-eiS over seventy years old. One of the
meMber~ a lady, is 100, one 93 and-an
other 91.-
Prince Edward Island is said to have a
lawsuit in which three hundred witnesses
have,been summoned. For a little plaCe;
with hardly - 100„000 inhabitants, that is
encOuraging the Lawyers at a great rate.
Ai - Canadian just returned from a trip
to Cialifornia and Oregon, draws a gloomy
pict lire of the condition of business there.
Thel, labor market is overstocked, and
man poor people cannot get enough ; to
keep body - and soul together. .;
xry miles to the north of Duluth,
"the zenith city of the unsalted seas," an
iron mountain has been discovered,which
riN'alS its namesake in Missouri. It is 8
miles long, one and a half miles wide, and
,
1:200 feet' above the level of Lake Supe
rior,
Ai, freight train bourit south and a cattle
train =going. north collided on the Iron,
in Mismiri, Wednes-;,
day night, killing. eighty head of cattlel
and wrecking several cars. E.Passenger
trains were delayed twelve hours. 3
..N.writer in a Presbyterian paper calls
every-honorable man to hang his I
head in shame, because America pays $2,-
20(000 forAbitior, $10,000,000 for dogs, 1
'midi 'barely squeezes out $6,000,000 for
. _
preachers of the Gospel.
I wnE* a_Duluth woman wants to know,
Why in the blazes her husband didn't Or- !
derithe . wood, he looks at her in.a chilling
dignified way and replies: "I do not-wish
to do to the Black Hills, but do not press!
ine-,'--(1.6 not arouse the tiger !
THE, wife of a colored man in Southi
CarOlina Was • much troubled with fleas,l
•
and'attempted to burn under the bousei
with straw in' order to destroy thermi
Whether the pile of ashes, which' is' now;
where the - house was, is infested with
lirqy insects or not is not lakiwn.
'St set; the eight teachers in the Akron,!
= 0., schools - bave resigned ro get married,
tilel.bcard of .education has had to employ,
three clerks to acknowledge the receipt of
.ipPlications for- situations in the schools!,
and answer questions respecting the mar-!
i iag' cable young Akrimians. • I
..AT'a recent meeting of the Antiquariart
Society in London, Mr. Mayhew exhibited
a tine silver spoon with a knife inserted
in the handle. This relic, lately found ire
a-London excavation, is of the third cen-i
turY. of Roman work, and quite unique,!
no ether similar - `specimen of Roman silt
ver being on - recotil. -
E
. i
TH standard of municipal culture is
as high in 'Dubluras it is in Philadelphia;
Atia dimier given lately by the Dubliii
. Corporation to Alderman Cole, of New
York, a-Mr. Wm. Lane Joint - spoke of
"James" Cullen Bryard, and told hii
andieneethat Whittier wa s author of
4lic "Heathen Chine:" 1
' A curious instance of the cheapness of
wbeat and the dearness of provender
the same time is g iven by an English far.
user in the Mark Lane E' r un, as havir4
. come under - his own n . A farmer
-sold the wheat grown on onefield for: £ss
but for the straw which produced
this wheat be obtained 00.
Dias, Cor.r.rxs, a Springfield Spirituat 7
flst(mediitm, has retired from public busi%
rc In a published card sbe says : t
have long thought, and I no* know th at
itit impossible for a medium to be abscl•
bitchy and strictly honest and get an adel
ildate remuneration for the . time- and
trouble
etperuled.” I
Wrritt the past 60 days 16 men and 0
females have been murdered in the Cher*.
bee Nation. Thts has been done in a
pcipulation of les's than 20,000 sofas; and
most of_ these murders have beencommit
ted by reason of the quarrels growing out
.41 feuds existing between the Ross and
Dicsiiing parties. /
1 .1. New Hampshire man has been amnii
ing himselfwith a dictionary which he
- won at a spelling match, and finds that
the syllable " con " is the beginning of 1;-
:.t. 1 3 words, all of which have 1,699 differ
'lft sig,nifications. No other three lette4s
can be found that begin so-many words as
- the syllable "con." I „ . I - 1
• ' 'Tiritask of restoring the statue
pyleon for the Column Vendome, and abio
reproducing the statuette of Victor!,
which Napoleon held in his hand, aryl
which cannot be found, has been entrust
-4,1 to N. Pennell,- who holds the post bf
restorer" of antiquities to the Museum Of
the Souvrt, - In. aix months the wcirk is
-
to he - coMpleted. I.
~~, ..~ . ,
.~
sorrow
li•sinunt„ os: w. Aims&
Towanda, Pa., Thwesasy, J 40 ► UM-
- MR GOVERNOR.
4iEN. JOHN F. HARTRANFT,
Of.liontgomery. .
FOR near. TBZWEIR I
'HENRY RAWLE,
„ ,Ot Erie.Coimty.
E PVIILITAN 00011117 COJMIJUMNIN
•,
The Republican County Costa'Roe tad at the
* an/ linaseon Thi tre d ay,July lit, and appointed
the vigthatti Eva Mitten tortlto several toltilittild
and baronets in the comity. It was saabboonsly
Rewired. That the Coati Castesties this yaw
lie bekl TngisDAT. AUGUST els; at 2 o'clock
e. sc., at the Cowl Rouse. ?strands.
Smelted, That we ction di to tsk recommend tin Repattleens
of the several elestrict' s e sseh adios
is they shag deed be at the prima sustisys
regani to the adoption of the " Comity
ystens to the oestiontion et essdidatessmd to.
musing the amber of straillas eawatittes
Resolved, That menage ter the deed= at
gates be held ou Wartuday, Ansa gto the tans
ships between the hours of and I &deck 1 1 . at.,
and In boroughs betties% the halts of t eadlletdoek
r. NE- and that delegates be elected by ballot. The
polls shall be An* Open eontinvouly Ma the drat
ranted hour until alter the entireties at the time
awned.
Candidates tot: the totkrertar offices are to be Dome.
butted ! -
i . One person fur Prothonotary. ,
;' One perl.ou ftw Sherif.
'F . One prrion One Register and Recorder. -
t One person for Treasurer.
i Two p•r.++oa toe County Comuduelonets.
i Two permits fur County Amino's. . .
i One perrein fur County Cozener. ,
It Is carnestiy wermennenderl that the utmost care
and caution be observed In roodnctlng the primary
'meeting., so that there need be no , just cause for
complaint on the part of any. •
- VIGILANCE COIVEITTEES. ,
I ' Athens Township—Frank Weller, J. F. Oren.
;abler, J. D. KcAer. •
Athena Row;—C. T. C. Ipnton. A.H. Spade
I
• •
Armenia ?wt.—C. Webler, D. Sherman, limey&
Rogers.
Albany—J. !tested, A. nervily, C. Corbin.
Asylum—P. K;Arnot, E. Pelbnah,Pred.Retrkk.
Atha Boro—brad Wilson, Geo. Webb, Dr:Booker:
Barday—John Dltehham, Dr. HIM& W—Tidd.
Burlington Top—C. Dellnap, Alex. Lane; Bobt.
Knapp.
t Burlington hobo—W. H. D. Green, John like, 0.
P. Tracy.
Burlington West—John Blaekwell, Stiles,
J. B. McKean.
Canton Tiep—Wrn. Lawrence; C. B. Taylor, L
Selby!.
' I
Canton Bon—John Spalding, E. H. Mamas, 0.
W. Grime.
.
Celtnebia—A. M. CoiVelt, E D. IlL,LCartl, Devitt
'Won.
Friaklln—Jamesldway, F. Pare-Mid,
!Sterne MrKer., • .
Gratmille—V. Saxton, L. D. Taylok, R. Raley.
Herrick—Wm. Nesbitt, Joan Woodbar a, James
;Newell. -
Litehfirld—W. 11. Canner, .1 , , T. Strut!le, C.
Leßoy—R. McKee, R. N. Holcomb, L. Bowman.
teßaymillo—J. J. Gorham, J. P. Carl, James H.
Johns n.
Monroe Twp—J. W. Inine, W. IL USWes. J. L.
Mortara.
Monroe litoro-15. J. Sweet, B. B. Ilene', .11 6.
illnmet.
Orwell—ll. L. case, Geo. Cortda, 4oseph Tuttle
Osertno—inbn Mottheing, CM.% 1110yneax, 0
'Chase.
Pike—C. VC. Reynold.% S. P. Tapper, C. 11.
CrabdaL
litillemry—E. A. Cooper, G. M. Owen, E. R
Beckwith.
Rome Twp—W. W. Moody, - 11. McCabe. I. .1.
Seeley.
Rome Btwo—A. "P.. Young.,lsaae Allen, Mont
gomery Browning.
Springfield—lames F.. Terkes, I. Burger W. A.
Brown.
9E21916141—A.0. Tiag, E.G. Dnrfey, B. B. Ger
,ronklA:
South Creek—S. C. Thompson, Ira Crane, G. 0
Tnrk.
Sylvania—E. G. Tracy, Leroy. Seoutan, T. If
Arnold.
. .
Shesbequi. L. Young, F.. Watkins, li. Horton.
Standing Stone—).. Taylor,' M. E. Reed, Nelson
Coe.
Terry—W. T. Horton, Charles Thompson, J. M.
Battles.
Towanda Baro, lid Ward-3. Holcomb, J. Stone
man. Geo. McCabe.
Towanda Barg VI Ward—T. MuDock, C. P. Tay
lor. C. ][.Manville.
Towanda Bonk 3d Ward—W. A.
Chamberlain. E. U. Haverty.
Towanda Twp—T. Ackley, .1. d. Sccerine..D. D.
Mare..
Towanda Nortb--Ja... Poster, G. B. MB* W. A.
Sharer.
Troy Tarp—C. Manley, L. Ballard, Wm. Sims.
Troy Bore—A. S. Newman, John Grant, E. Pom
eroy.'
Tuscarora—M. S Cutrer, Wm. Christian, S
Ronight.
tlster—S. S. Lockwood, John Dixon, S. Itorey
Wlltoot—J. W. Ingham, M. T. Slottery, C. S
Stowell.
Warren-41. Howell. Wm. Manchester, J. II
Cary.
Windham—Wm. H. Clark, Jamb Mier, GeOrga
Lawrencr...„
Wyalnstni—Dr. Hornet, J. R. Taylor. 8.. T.
Shrunk.
Wysox—R. E. C. Myer, Mlle Shorea, Geo. Wood.
Welb—Wade Brardden A. Judson, Thor. Baker.
Cossisraicv.—The Argus , sent up
a terrible howl last year when is was
rumored that the County. Treasurer
had withdrawn the deposits from cer
tain banks in the county. It claimed
that the funds should be distributed,
and not confined to one institution.
This same journal now complains be
cause State Treasurer MACKEY does
just what it complained of the Coun
ty Treasurer for not doing: The peo
ple Understand that Mr. Mactix has
given bonds which render the State
entirely safe, and that he has the un
doubted right to deposit the funds
just where he pleases. In regard to
the Sinking Fund, the commissioners
advertise every three months the ex
act Condition of the funds, and call
upon holders of * State bonds to pre
sent the same. If they do not choose
to do so,' the Treasurer cannot com
pel then'. to take the money. Demo
cratic Auditor General TamrLE is a
member of the Sinking Fund Board,
and has certified under oath that the
furids are intact. So the Democrats
will have to invent some other false
hood.
SENATOR SARGENT made a neat lit
tle computation in hiti recent speech
at San Francisco. " Hare you," said
he, " thought, fellow-citizens, that the
reduction of the National debt has
been $l2O a minute since you sat
here and I commenced talking ? Tak
ing the average of the whole time,
the reduction of the debt has gone
on at that rate. Why take your
watch and look at it: See the second
hand as it flies ; at each tick of the
second hand $2 during the whole
time since Ga.txr's inauguration, by
day and by night, npon Weekday
and upon Sunday—s 2 per second in
gold has gone off . the ':National
debt.' "
Tut recently appointed U.S. Treai
urer, Nzw, entered upon the discharge
of his duties on the Ist inst., but,
previous to that time, a count was
Made of the bullion in the treasury.
Upon the completion of the count it
was found that the vaults contained
two dollars and a half over the
amount claimed. For years the De
mocracy have been 'claiming that the
monthly treasury reports have been
" watered," and that the representa
tions were not correct. An: • 'vanilla
tion proves everything more - than
correct, and so it usually is with Re
publican officials.
HON. HENRY Suzawoon; of Cor
ning, died at his home at 4 o'clock
Friday morning Last. Mr. Suaitwoon
was a democrat orconsiderable prom
inence in New York before the war.
In 1862 and 1863 he was the repre
sentative for Steuben County in the
Legislature. Ile was an Erie Director
when GOULD and Bestow - Were en
engaged in their contest. , Among
his acquaintances and friends, gild
through the section Where he liYyd,
he was tenth respected;
The B . : I!! of declares
F i t= •t''Ux..ll -
:
gon.Jkoc- - oc
, • -
cation ~n be iliscovered fort t. i•
of reason : it does not exist. He
says that as a member of the Senate
Finance Committee for the last three
years he had every , opportunity of
learning the time condition' of the
Treasury*
The Ron. Junes F. TruPt.Y., Dem
ocratic Auditor General of the State;
has-nnuie 'oath that - the State TAMA*
vier's 'mum - nits of the Sinking Fund
are correct.
And now comes along the last with
peas in the MprioeritieConnnitteie of
last winter's fronse:. These' &ap
pointed seekers after political bun,
combe report that "if, as is alleged
frauds were perpetrated, no monu
ments have been erected to mark
their existence, or aid in. their -dis
covery." Lacking the manhood to
simply declare that they had failed
to find any evinenoes of fraud, they
are L compelled, in order to carry out
the programme and design of their
appointment and make a decent. ap
pearance before their party, to make
this admission,' a c companied with a
mean insinuation that they are unit
ble to support with evidence. This
was wrung from them alter four
months of investigation, during two
.nths of which time they lad corn
, idetnand undisputed contrill of the
auditing department of the State,
And yet, the Argue and ► few oth
er Bourbon papres contin ue to floun
der around in a sea of uncertain and
indefinite charges about defalcations,
robberies and losses. Their senseless
and ignorant clamor about a • matter
which they, are either too ignorant to
understand, or too dishonest to ex
plain in a candid. manner to their
readers, instead of assisting their
cause, is , disgusting the fair-minded
and intelligeht voter, and "
,raising a
false issue which they know well
enough must recoil upon the Democ=
racy of the . State." Give facts or
cease your raiings. Your surmiele
have their foundation in partisan
zeal; and desire for party victory and
the spoils of office has destroyed your
sense of duty, and every element of
decency. !
IF THE premises assumed in the
following paragraph which we copy
from the Waverly Enteprise are cor
rect, the conclusions are certainly
sound and Weal. Every man who
holds a poSition under the govern
ment is specially bound to be earnest
and active in advocating and advanc
ing the interests of the party:
" But few of the Republican office,
holders manifest any desire for the
success of the party, or the triumph
of its principlestheyond that which
will contribute to their own personal
aggrandizement. The administratien
elected by the Republican party fur
nished them the bread they eat—and
yet, they will do nothing, absolutely
nothing for the success of the party.
If the Republican party is to, ever
again achieve success, its representa
tive men,,the men who now live on
its bounty and fatten on its spoils
must manifest more enterprise, more
zeal, more determination, They must
learn that the offices were not given
them for their own good, but for the
good of the party. The high offices
and fat salaries were not created for
their enjoyment, 'but for the party,
and if they do not promote that suc
cess—if they do not use their places
for the benefit of the party,_they will
be asked to step down and , out, and
the request will have- to be_ obeyed.
They had best take warning in time."
THE A rgus paraded before its read
ers. last week figures purporting to
show how much more efficient the
Democratic Auditor General is in
Collecting taxes due the State than
was Gen. ALLEN, hid Republican
predecessor ; brit the following facts
taken from. the records of the office
prove the dishonesty and deception
of the Democratic press : .
The - sum of $898,852.6 was col
lected by the Auditor General's de
partment of this State during the
months of May and June, of which
amount $411,213.08 were collected
by Auditor General Allen before
Temple came into office, leaving
$372,542.10 the amount collected by
this original Democratic book-keeper,
beingless than half the entire amount
collectedfand on the strength of this
the Democratic press crows abut,
" stirring up the delinquents." What
a very loud cackle over a very small
egg !
THE' reckless and irresponsible
scribbler who instigated the compar
ison between the Republican- House
of 1874 and the Democratic House
of 1875, presumed too much ,upon
the ignorance of the people. lk.t, us
see how hisclaim that the Demo
crats
have been more economical than
Republicans will . bear the light of
troth. If our readers will turn to the
pamphlet laws of 1874, pages 129,,
30, 31, they will find a statute passed
by the Republican Legislature of
that year, prescribing exactly the
numbers and the duties, al4 well as
the compensation of each of the offi
cers and employes of both I branches
of the Legislature. In view of the
operations of the new constitution,
'then adopted, prohibiting loCal legis
iation, and thus reducing the volume
of business to a very small compass,
it was appatent that a large reduc
tion in the clitical force could be ef=
fected. This statute made a reduce
tion in the number of the employes
of all grades, and the Democratic
House filled every position that it
was possible for them to fill, under
the act of assembly governing the
matter. And yet this result, which
they had no control over whatever,
is paraded as an. instance orbemo
crate reform.
Tin Banking house of Duiscas,
Biltaxitx & Xew Yollic' have
'dosed their doors.
A , Chiago . g m "' t recently
( .4 / • dent LlN
••*i •
• • ng facts :
1,- !2- Lincoln gave
• 4 ~ rested well,
/ • hersur.
A 'earth* L alWays at
• disposal, andshatiktiently drives
oat, always with the doctor and Mrs.
Patterson or her own attendant, •a
rather- attractive Yottng w
longing to the retreat. r ln It 6
her riding 311W.A f incoln , , very
capebildba,' Whin • • 4. `. her
iiaaottidisig befOredinner, then
- tpone the:ride until niternoon and
•in until evening. or th e next day.
• trough t. with - her to the retreat.
• large trtmks' ? which have not been;
.mandned, but are •;, to con
in park of the wince Collect
of purchases, Made during her stay
t the Ikea racing
aorta • L atter her arrival here Hrs.
.orderrin morning dress, of
- • French cambric, qttitttehtbor
ately made whitibastin pocketa,
a black and white ; spe d lawn,
remarking 'that "every lady needed
'1 She has never . worn
• m or educed . any disposition to
even try them on, but as soon as they
were. completed Ordered. samples of
k alpaca from which to select a
Her mind was diverted from
&al it Was only s form of her
malady to accumulate material. •
I was anxious to pay myl respects
Mrs. liincoln in person; but as she
positively remelt to see any visi
tors, even declining to leave- her;
..in when they nrClin the house or
, , •Isp I antitipated nothing ',less
, a .ref u sal when I sent up my
card: To the doctor's surprise and
y own'Mrs: Lincoln Sent dOwn word
t she would be very hapPyfo see
e in her room, and I a t,once
mpanied the doctor. thither. She
was perfectly lady-like • in. manner,
t ramblingwd &Mtge in her con
- thin. • alluded rationally;
however to the - ,past ; spoke tenderly
f Mr. Lincoln, once as" my husband,"
, I again as the- ptesident ;" recall
• memories of NOah Brooks, then
,et. hUshand's assistant secretary,
with whom I had an cildtime 'acquaint
ance, and remarked that be had been
for ten years , engaged on Itlie New
York Tribune; a s ked me With' much
earnestness if the - murderer) of Hon.
Sharon Tyndale; of '4ringilehl, had
ever been discovered and then.allud
ed very .' feelingly - to her attatebment
Judge Bradwell'i family. As I
• to leave she took a handsome
net from a :crystal vase on her
b e and asked' me to accept it. As
• e shook hands with me at-parting
I thought I could petceive in the di
' Omatic bow . and smile a Ireturn of
e old society manner, and my heart
as full , for the Woman whoa sat down
-ilent and alone - in her soli •ry room
.keep imaginary company with sen
' tots and ambassedOrs in t e light of
t gracious kinSlly,jßmile, ong since,
Tuz 'Louisville fourie -Journal,
says : " If the south his a few years of
peace, a few years of fre4om from
military rule and a few years of such
crops as those of this year, that sec
tion will show the world there is life
in the old land still." 'he south
might have hail alretuly ten years of
successive peack if her people bad so
willed, and at lest sik years of abund
ant
crops if her people had applied
themselves to industry, instead of
" fighting negroes and . , ea rpe ti l bagge rs. "
If the southern states have not at- ,
tained a proper degree of prosperity
since the close of the war, the people
of that section are more at fault than
the national government. Besides,
what has there been 'to interfere with
the utmost prOsperity of Kentucky,
the state in which the r Couri/ir-Journal
is published? That conmnonwealth
ha's been completely under the con
trol of white Democrats Il e there has
been no military interfe .l nce with
her local affair*. negroes and carpet-
I aggers have,Uot been permitted to
ofli
hold any ceS of consequence'; she
has for' years had a solid white dele
gation in congress ;, what, hen, does
the Courier-Journal demand for Ken
tucky that she fias not enjoyed politi
cally ? The same may be said of a
be L
number cif other southern states—in
.fact,. all but two. In tli few local
ities where troops have necessa
ryl
to keep the pc:lmi and protect life
and rights and p rope rty,r the southern
people themselves Wive been to blame
for the necessity of armed protection.
The whole north rejoice t i lt the south
rill have large crops t year, and
that kaee prevails throughout all the
sections. , Ti
Tut Tunklianneck Republic:au,
which has alivays advocated prohibi
tion, prefe reti r ee to Republican prin
ciples,. does not think temperance
men have anything to gain by voting
against HARTRANFT, and therefore
recommends a hearty support of the
Republican ticket. its last issue
"we find the following:
" The Prohibition, candidates, tho'
they are admitted to be good and
worthy. men, their nomination does
not meet anywhere With cordial pub
lic endorsement. Looking at it from
a Democratic Standoint, lit seems a
side issue, and its e ect is designed
to defeat the !Republican candidate.
For deny it as they may, Prohibi
tionists do not expect much help from
Democrats as_ a patty. That party
is evidently pleasedi with this view,
for everywhere ,do they give the Pro
hibitionfpaitY men anencouraging
pat on the hack, but they must not
be looked to for any further support.
" There is 'a possibility of the de
feat of Gov. Ilartranft through the
defection of Republican Votes to the
Prohibition standard, and if the Pro
hibition candidati could take the
prize. Republicans might not com
plain of the defeat of their principles,
for Brown arid Pennypicker are in
fall accord with Republicanmeasures.
But the possible effect will be the
election of al. Deniocrat whose tem
perance opinions will be nothing,
juili;ing from the past, so that both
temperance and Republicanism is
swamped. We adAnit that there are
20,000 prohibitioniiits in, the State,
but cannot help believing that but a
I very small proportion of them think
prohibition can be brought about by
the election ofa Democratic Governor.-
With the exception of Hartranft's
approval of the new license bill, no
' objections can be raised against him.
He has governed! wise l` and well,
and the people have a deposition to
let well enough alone; arid - labor for
tit": t#i *Odd is
less pretentious
J ' not on ... .. °. .1 i
~,.
I
• .. , •
! I, f l • • I }S . '
II
if ' ,:: M •
i 5! ( 4'.
:-. i l ;"
.'.
.
TII .RA
.:
I. ' . lik. - ,ics ' ,4 4,40- .
..., , '
.. .
brow'ot' . ...--. . t3cott. -'. •- k ,
letter was written, a bill in . ...
been.tlled against the. restuolvanis ' 1
road Company by .14.,Wm. Howard. f.
VI:OMM the stun 1.! . • to bare • ....
Arden, from tlat ilide) , . and Erie R.
It by the Pmmiylisuda . ....piny di ~
the nine yenta that C 01.:.. . 's oompan
ti=lerdat iPhi tiai t a il= •
4xaintanta-la this oe..anpe&nt-ceemtrYt
.atvd is one of the moat men lir,
' Eng,' and having withal a good elihn, •
equity. ease may paned,. be the i . . .
proceeding that will muae a aciithuiag, of
the 'Ciii_r_ttiiptnitagemerit
• lof the l!erwiry
Tanta Railrad. . CompenyJ
• :*3 : l's nerrn.
1 Have said.- nothing,hs these letters
about Kiely's meter, td the leeept.that
the motive power will not be air tot
'
sit months to come • and; t Mean
ie*, if his object is= to ket- np a stook
company, or sell out s to Mine vezdantgm:.o.
demon with more ash than brains, I am
not aiding him. in his little game. Mr.
Neely may put harness tin electrWty and
cause his muter to work troll, either sin
gle or double,' but just now allbe can
do is to warrant it ." to stand all.
hitching" When the thing begins to
move—six months from now—l will in
form you of it. ,
EX,-GOVETMOR -1111GLXII.
One et the stockholders of McClure's
Timtst recently received a • letter (rem
Gov. Bigler explanatory of what the Gov
erner had a few days previously explained
to Mr. Thompson, of t lridkrna eonnty.
The telegram to Mr. Them the Gov
ernor said, "Was simply to 's
atire hini that I would pot dissent from
those prooOedinp, and Oubllubod without
any ezp_lanestion. I realized at once that
it would be misunderstood as a public
declaration of my desire and purpore to
be a candidate for ar*erttof. I had no
such intention then, and have no such in
tention now,''
The explanation explaining just what
the Governor meant in; the telegram is
thus given to the Tinses'i man by Mr. Big
kr:
"I hold; holieveri that in the presext
condition of public affairs, Ito Mari can be
justified in' declining responsible 'trust,
and especially one uponl whom so many
fionora have been conferred in mx more
ambitions years.;' • -
I -
The Governor thengoes onto tell how
ardently he' is devoted to the ',Centennial;
but here let me observe, that if the liberal
compensation the es-Governor receives
for that devotion was ,divided into ten
equal arta l 'it wonld secure the eertkes of
at least ten men who *Ould.jast as ear
-1 neatly devote themselves to the Centermi
al, and who would not Ire their positions
for political purposes.
As this is an era of suspicion, it occurs
to me that the Rerstil term party of the
State will, somehow oriother, cothe to re
gard the Center:tidal as a sort of patriotic
propagating house.- especially designed to
force their' most peculiarly favored serv
ant into' a full blown Governor. Ind if
the friends of the score Or more of Demo.
erotic candidates should look upon this
matter from a similar standpoint, it seems
to me that the Centennial Commission, to
say the knit, is doing ap unwise thing in
putting forward a candidate for executive
of the State. .
A orlon tryrt r y. not.
He ryas a. real Wee little boy, Mal his
name was John Henry 'Thomas. Par sup
per he ate heartily. of eticrumbere, and had
he been !satisfied therewiA, he might now
be flying his little kite ;I but the green ap
ples at the Corner storcitempted him, and
like his first paternal ancestor, he fell.
This goodlitths boy borrowed a ten-cent
note limn his mother's wprk-box, and bad
he Used until the following Saturday, he
would probably have replaced it with the
ten cents Mrs. LeGrand always gave him
for carrying home her marketing. .
Had, Johnny spent Sill that borrowed
dime hi green apples, he might have re
covered, even if they had disagreed with
him, but it was the fivt cents he spent for
his first cigar that played havoc with his
internal machinery. As Johnny was reti
cent Asyut his investnient until he was
too sick to tell the doctor of it, the good
old doctor said be diedlof "green vomit."
His Sunday-school tlass attended his
funeral, and appeared deeply touched as
their teacher read these pathetic lines
from the Ledger:
"We hail a little Joh my once ;
We was his parents' ptiile /
We loved him, perhaps, all too much.
Toe he took sick and died.
Gone to meet h s brother.**
There has been but case of murder
during the' week while ender the influence
of liquor which, according to the th eory
of our District Attomcy,As not murder
at all. This time it was Patrick P. Bro-'
derick who got drunk, intending `to com
plete the job of killing his wife, which he
had only partially accomplished on sever
al previous occasions. His wife, however,
escaped from the room t taking 'her boy,
aged about six years, into the yard with
her, leaving an • infant, nine , months old
lying on the bed. As the husband, drunk
or sober, had always a 1 warm affection for
his infant daughter, the mother, in escap
ing from the room, thOught only of the
boy for whom the father, when. drunk,
entertained ugly feeling: The motl‘r
and son had scarcely reached the yard. ber.,
fore the drunken brut hurled his infant
to the, ground from the second-story win
dow, from the effects Of which she died
in a bout two hours. And thus, because
our prosecuting officeriholds that it was
not murder for two drunken men to rid
dle the body of a Irian with bullets for
whom they had harbored ,a bitter enmity
for a dozen years, we are having an amid
ant harvest of just spell drunken man . - ,
slaughter cases.
It is not a pleasant subject to write
about, but, pour readers will remember
that I recently mentioned that Mr. Alfred
Bamber left his wife and children safe at
hom6 a nice summer afternoon, two or
threi - weeks ago, and went down the river
to the almehester gardens, and that a
female cajole!. accompanied Lim, who gut
a $BO diamond ring from " Al's "
on to her own ; and that, rather than re
turn it, , she swallowed it. The lady was
lodged in prison, charged with the theft;
an emetic and stomach-pump was applied,
but the diamond was not dislodged. The
next day the syren's next friend put in
an appearance, and Went the old gal's
bail to the extent of $4,000. Premonitions
of trOublepresentingi themselves in the
region of the digestive itpparatus of the
ring-swallower she called in the services
of one of our beat physicians, who: gave
that female the biggest dose of castor oil
ever sent down the wu, zzen of a human
being. Mr. 13amber has his diamond, and
what I wished to remark, simply as.. a
matter of handy advice, is, that when a
finger ring is swallowed, by accident or
design, use freely of castor oil until—tile
patient recovers ; or, Which is about the
KWIC thing, the ohstritction is removed.
PE. I ICiII:Q
The Delaware peacl-growers have made
arrangements to ship about 33,000 baskets
of peaches a week tq Liverpool, via the
American Steamship Company's line.
The forward steerage-ct, bin will be fitted
up as an immense refrigerator, capable
of holding nearly 40,1100 baskets. As the
average temperature of that part of the
vessel is : lso degrees, t , h o expense - for ice
will not be very area and the cost per
basket being only seven cents between
Philadelphia and Livexpool, it is believed,
the shipment of peaches to Europe wilt
:prove successful. It the peach-growers
will oni bear. in mind that next year_ is
rould
,Centennial year, and' not forget to
can all the peaches they easy they will
make an investment hat will find a profi
t table market.
• , I
. IMPORTANT.
We have had Senator Wallace with us,
looking after the Governorship. Ite ap
peared to about evenly divide his atten
tion between the magnates of the party
and the managersf the Pennsylvania
Railroad Company. I cannot tell what :
effect the Senator's visit produced, but
this I do know, tha Sim Joseplis and
•[
" Bill " McMullin are for Bigler, and the
Pennsylvania Company is not indifferent
to his ndlnination. 1 One other thing I
might million, which is, that now Bigler
is on the Gubernatorial slate, there is a
disposition to concede the State Treasurer
to a Liberal Republican, and Col. John
W. Forney is the conservatiVe whom the
engineers of the Erie Conveglicsi are en
:tifelY...wqrg to Wlt ' " . the tieket.
1 J. NV. 0.. '
MIME=
•
• i
. 2•11111111112011 . . ~ e -
• 4 1 .1 t , IID i, , • , 1.. , , ,
. V i '. 1. ' • l 0 I 6 V
.•
Vii • ' , 4,.
1 X/8 a ~,..„,,,•ti f .... ~.,
-
..,:i ~..
. •.,.... • m. r. t.,
tlt • l "11 idk r ..r
. ,
who, • having ' diseortred a •de ,
anything. 'instead" ct--munisirrering
to remedy the defect,
,r ic : iiet ‘ed to
*sow it aside and -try' new ;
but mankind in general are morelikely to
- Wpm,* mid repair the institutions they
have-' to suffer while Oils are sufferable,
• Wishing the
entirsitick the rM4become acetm
.theiltome:L
ti l.t iv i na4 .4,43' w i te i ni.
t or e .m .
their, situation dotal MI ; be remedied,
without a revol_ Ohm, thatthes resorted t 6
arm* and established a new government.
We believe in the sovereignty of the
people, that they are the • source of all
rightful political authmity—that all have
an equal right to rote, .and to bold office
if they can fairly obtain elites enough.
• We believe in a representative govern,
Arent, such m our forefathers established.
and under which wp . .have lived and pros- ,
wed, and we , would tklt Iffie to • see it 1
plumed for a pure democracy, or a gor'
eminent in which the per a i s z directly
or themselves without - Tr:presets
• tives. Athena, a city in learning
, , the arts wera•cultivated to the hi&••
point of excellence, became a pure de ,
•• omacy, in which the people assembled
, a great mass meeting - said passed the
, - • - for their government, and
v ir ri ty
ancient Greece was worse go
t rest orators swayed the minds of the
, • pie with their eloquence and ruled for
time as absolute as kings, until they
re thrust aside by new favorites of the
. , i pie.. Banishment by the ostracism, or
vote of the people, was *common °c
urrency. 'Aristides the Just, and others
. f the best men in the city, were banished
min their homes for ten years, for slight
. . aloes or for no offenses at all, only Ins
, • i offenses. Pericles, a great orator,
, ed Athens for a period of forty years,
•nd Aspasia, his Mistress; ruled him. •
If the Capitol at Harrisburg were .LSM - ge
• 'tough to hold all the voters in the *ate,
• rid was ed tenstructed that all could hear.
, , make themselves heard when assem-
I led in it, and if they all had time to spare
, , • shouldgo, there and legislate - for
hemselves, . it is very doubtful whether
, •• public welfare would be promoted
1 ereby or the laws they pissed (should,
.ey suereed hi passing any) be an im,
movement chi did debt di' Mir , present leg-,
..1 .•
If the Court House in Towanda were
large enough to hold all the Republican
voters in the county, and'they all had an
abundance of leisure and the inclination
to attend a great mass convention to make
nominations, it would probably take a
week to nominate a ticket, and when
nominated, would not be likely to give
gwniter satisfaction ,than the one to. be
nominated by their delegates on the last
day of August next.
But you say you don't propose to have
the voters assomble at the eountiseat,
that they are to meet in their own distfcts
and quietly deposit their votes for the
candidates of their choice. Then so much
the worse for the party and its candidates:
Men who have work to do in the field Can
not do it very effectfully sitting, in the
house if they have bnainess which ought
to be done by conferring '.irith others, at
the county seat, then it is their duty to
go there, or send some competent person
to do for them. The business of nomi
nating a candidate that Will command the
full party vote can only be done by a per
sonal conference of the various candidates
or their friends with the people or their
representatives. Compromises must be
made j perwinal pJndices removed, see.;
tional jealottsies sso tenedi and the ticket
fairly distributed over the oottnty, so that
there may be no just grounds for dissatis
faction. _Voting for candidates in the dis
tricts, without the knowledge gained by a
convention, would roster and intensify
sectional animosities. There would soon
be the eastern, the western and the cen
tral factions, and this feeling would he
likely to increase until the party Was rent
assunder.
A very pleasant correspondent of the
Minim ,lady Adrertiser thinks the 'adop
tion of the Crawford County system would
increase the nominating power of the
rural districts. The reverse of this. 'in
our opinion, would be 'true. 'Owing to the
great distance most of them have to tray- I
el to the place of holding the caucus, the
hills to be passed over,.the poorness of the
roads or the urgency of farm work,' - the
rural districts never have and never will '
be able to present their full strength at
the caucus, like the towns do. It is not
because they feel indifferent as to who is
nominated, not beeausin they are less pat •
riotie than their brethren in the boroughs
but because the personal sacrifices they
are obliged to make are so much greater, I
and they, are willing to trust to those who
live nearer the place of holding the can: ;
ens to send good men as delegates to the
county convention. You think this long I
argument wasted,' as the-Ittperiment has
been tried in Crawford Carroty and gives,
entire satisfaction., We never heard that. ,
We have heard that it did not give entire
satisfaction, that there were strong suspi
mons ofballot,box stuffing, and were it
not a matter of county pride to maintain
a child of their own begetting, they would
have cast the brat aside long ago and re
turned to the delegate system.
We know that in the great cities, in de
fiance of the most stringent laws, there
have been =my' cases of stupenduous
cheating at the polls. In the 'absence of
any law to 'punish frauds at a party cau
cus, what would hinder unscrupulous
persons from tampering with the ballot
boxes? Would they not ' sometimes al
most think it was their duty to cheat?
Here is a district that usually polls 250
Republican votes, but on counting out the
ballots at - the caucus it is found that
Jones, their candidate for (we will say)
Corner, has received 121, or all the votes
east ; would not some of Jones' friends
think it was right to cast a few
proxies and send in the returns as 2:10
for Jones—the number they considered
1 he was entitled to? No one will deny
that the temptation to cheat under- the
Crawford County system is greater than
under the delegate system, or that the
disposition to support the candidates of
our own section would be Strengthened;
even when it was known that the offices
did not rightfully belong in our locality.
ft is not easy to refuse votes to neigh
bors and acquaintances when they ask for
them.
If the system were now in operation in
this county, the five Towanda districts
would be likely to give Manville,
for. Sher
iff; Peck, for ' Prothonotary, Snell, for
Commissioner, Hall, for Treasurer, and
Chubbuck or Black, for Register and Re
corder, about five hundred votes, which,
added to those they would probably re
ceive in eth6r districts, would nominate
the whole orthem. It is true they are
Food men, and their residence in , Towan
'da does not lessen their honesty or ability,
but no party can be kept together long ;
after it ceases to distribute the offices
fairly between the different sivtions of
the county..
The delegate system is strict ly in ac
cordance with the principles of represen
tative government. It is as nearly perfect
as human' nstithtions can be. Its evils are
the result, not of the system, but of hu
man nature itself, and until human nature
is changed it is in vain to expect themil
lenium. When mankind have lost all con
fidence in each other's honesty and.patri
otism ; when they can no longer trust
their representatives to make laws for the
State or the Nation, then they will abol
ish the delegate system—hut not till then.
CARTELAII.
LETTER, PlOl OOLORADO.
Col,,,July le, 1875.
ED. RzeouTEn—Dear. Sir : Please find
your subscription in .P. 0: order ($2.10).
Can't get along without the pver away
out hero among the Rocky Mountains.
Our Territory (about to become a sover
eign Bmte) has had many difficulties with
in the.last year to contend with. Grass
hoppers last fall cut off many valuable
crops and the 'Twig fellows have done
immense mischief - this spring and sum
mer, bat our farmers keep plowing, and
now the prospect is fair for good crops,
corn being the principle one. Our rainy
season set in about two weeks since, and
the grass and mpg are both wonderfully:
improved. Have just returned from a
fifteen days trip to the Mountains, where
everything is in a prosperous condition.
The mines prove very rich, and vast dis
coveries are continually being made, some
realizing fortunes iu an ineredibly,lshort
time. 4 =cement is on fook.to start
#01 1 .V14? Paiat - #4 5 is to be of a
general cnaracto—to =mamma iron,
re-roll old rails, make
needed improvement.
Mason; of .Towanda,
„
ed in such 4
not tart be •
' 1
Are in great 4 - '
•• 7 1
Aktin a flaa • ' ,
the mountains
an equal with' - JO ";
• _
road facilities, :111 • •
most indisperusible. Thousands of., Wa
ll& arrive at our city and take to her Nev-.
eral watering places, wherethey generally
/114-juit *sr health:-
Heart disease and the_ ndiniticed cues of
consumption would be better off atjhome,
as the former is not removed, and lat
ter is hastened in its_ fatal effects* ac
count of the rarity of the atutospheiv; be
inngg the lungs must expend, 4nal if
the paifeicisiia able the .
Lion neeetuiaty to this egpenskon, dliasohs
tion t alms piece. Our city is building uP
rapidly, nottithstanding bard times.'?
Truly Yours, .10bnint O. !COM..
. .. , Imo qt 1:11B SITUATION , r :
En. Itzpowrzn : For some time past I
have been asking ot n4self, What is the
real situation of the „Wptiblican party:Of
Bradford County? and,.l , eon' up to
the present time, I am trnahiclo eye my
self' a satisfattorr answer... Hai' there
been any corisiddraltle change of the po
litical opinions of the citizestsof this coup
ty, or hive our defeats been ondetiount of
personal b icinga, together with beat
differences While our majority his been
for some years growing less„ even i'to de
feat, I do not hear of any one who wain
Republican who admits that bets riot still
"a - Republican." It :is frequently raid
that all that is wanted at the present time
to place our noble old county a
,Wi in the
front with her old-fashioned rnaties is
the nomination of a good ticket. !W h at I
now desire, Mr. Editor, is that yen and
the Republicans generally shall inform us
how this is to be done. There slam to
be very little talk about candidates for of
Hoe, except that of , Sheriff. Whols to be
the nominee for that office Is a 4inesticm
we now begin to bear daily, and is a ques
tion worthy of serious consideration. TI
hear it frequettrky remarked that " the
East as a loadity" claims that, wider the
'principle of fairness, that' secticsi;‘of the
county is entitled to and must receive the
nomination for that office. Well,i, who is
to be the aindidate, and who shalt decide
that., question ? Our Eastern friends have
many candidates, but no Rings; and some
of our friends, I bear, are much excited
lest the Towanda Ring will adoPt some
one of their Eastern candidates,' and the
West, under its lead will make a nomina
tion and force upon their one notief their
choice. ,
,
Your correspondent is a Westenr man
(and not seriously opposed to Rings—at
least when fortunate enough to be on the
inside), but is opposed to any man for any
office in the eastern part of Bradford coun
ty the present year, who does not receive
a majority of the delegates of UK} several
townships and boroughs that side of, the
river. If the Republicans east of the river
desire to repeat their action of three years
ago upon Sheriff, to wit : refuse Ito give
any Eastern man for that office a majority
of its votes; let the.respotesibilitYibe with
them. It is not to be supposed that all
Republicans East will prefer anyone man,
but if they are (and the writer, has . no
doubt they are) sincere in claiming that
office' for one of their citizens,•they can
agree at their primary meetings ito elect
delegates who shall first vote for their
choice and second for some Eastern man.
Unless they do that to , the extent of giv
ingl
some one of their men a m. ority of
all their votes, they will have nol ust rea
son to complain if their brother tepubli
cans of the county shall locate the candi
date elsewhere. If they do that and
another is placed in nomination, then they
may justly complain of unfair treatment
l in a local point of view. With 4 proper
man as the candidate for: Sheriff east of
the river, It is hardly possible ter fare Con-
I vent lan to make a weak ticket fpm !Inch
1 men as are now spoken of for the differ
ent offices to be elected this fall.
What say you, Republicans of the East.
! Have you any man you want for Sheriff?
; If so, name him and demand hiknomina
i tion, and take the responsibility and
• credit to yourselves and not to the Ring.
I: O.
STATE NEWS.
IN the Lehigh Valley 19 fuena4sles are hi
blast. •.
Tut: Lehigh Valley railroad rr:hops, at
Soilth Easton, have cotiimeneedli working
full time.
THE Keystone - Iron ~W orks ,restuned
operations in Pittsburg on
.31ottday, hav
ing been stopped three weeks for repairs.
LENTZ & Co.'s shoe factory 4t Allen
toicw, has had new machinery pot.in, and
is now running •full-handed and on full
time.
KAI'FFMAN & Co.'s bank, at •3liners
vile, Schuylkill county, suspeilided' last
week. They promise to pay ( dollar for
dollar; if given a little time. •
TIN plate is now made by Mes.srs. Rog
ers it Burchfield, Leechburg, Armstrong
county, as good as any made In Wales,
whence this country has been mainly sup
" Tim Sunbury car-wheel foundry is now
run steadily, with prospects of 'large and
continuous btiiiness in the future. They
are now casting wheels for BO Empire
Transportation-Company.
-
• THE Easton Dispatch says*"We
derstand that the iron liumaccil of Peter
Uhler will soon be put in blast.i A -num
ber of the old handt4 have been reengned
and a supply of coal and ore received
daily." - .1:
Tim Bellefonte car works havle received
a contract to furnish the work himber for
'a Centennial hotel at 'Philadelphia. The
Rept/Wean says the building will - contain
fifteen hundred doors, and regifire eleven
miles of wash-boards, and thfkisatals of
windows.
Tin: engineers of the Lehigh and East
ern Railroad. are now busily engaged in
locating the route. This. work began at
Portiervis and is extending hitherward
toward Hazleton.' Gen. Burnettis inde
fatigable in his attention to i.the work,
and will leave nothing undonO.' to secure
the speedy building of the roal,
IN the pocket of Eugene Wright, who
shot himself at Corry, was finind•a slip
of paper on which was written i "Eugene
Wright is no more. The 'revolver is my
own. My friends—l do not' deserve any.
I am a drunkard and a defaulter; am
broken down in health and spirits. My
poor wife and children are thoroughly
poverty stricken. Help them all who can
or may, E. WituollT."
A writer in the York Gazett'says: The
failure of the • water in SOMO I instances
throughout the country, for dig i'sist few
years, has been referred to and stiangely
spoken of by the press, but it is becom
ing apprehensive that the water will not
return. The water has neveridisappear
ed to the :4[ine extent , since this country
has been- settled. • Our riPeings and
branches are nearly, dried up and millers
and nianufactuTer& are obliged to resort
to steam power. - "The most of our wells
are dry, and many will have Ips be sunk
deeper.
Fnou the Chester Noes WO glean the
following ship-building notes: f ,'k shipment
of iron plating, turned out at the new
rolling-millin South Chester,llvas made
to Roach's shipyanl a dayor so;lago.
plates are to be used in the censtruction
of the monitor 31kintmoma, in 'course of
construction at that yard. The hand
some steam launch being built for the
Government at Roache s will soon be
ready for launching. It is the intention
to rig her out complete on
of
ways and
to have steam upat the time of the launch,
so. that she will be ready for service when
she gets into the water. •1
THE report for the Month of June
shows that the shipments of limber from
Williamsport reached a totalPof
516 feet. The Gazette and B4fletin says :
The trade still continues ilepre#sed. Near
ly all the mills are shut down;; on account
of being unable to get a sufficiency of
stock to keep running durinethe season.
This is occasioned by the fiihm3 of the
usual floods in the river. The great bulk
of the logs cut last winter are scattered
along the.river above Look Haven, and in
the tributary streams, where they will re
-1 main until there is a sufficient rise in the
water to float them down the boom. which
is entirely,' empty.. It is estimated that
the stock rafted out of it during the sum
mer will not exceed 60,000,000, Thia has
been entirely exhausted—heriee the. sus
pension of manufacturing. If It • a rise
should, occur and bring the hgs down it
b . ,probable that many of the lab% will re
sume. • ,
' AS:olloo.itiftlefit of 1,1417$
Mho: lreittestiO; while Mr. WII&
•• , Collins, tfiti •ogfiittik ill, 4, " einkcil
the Allentown and Codroeist 7 . , ..
quarrying stone onll r. . c al l"!__
• , In Balbsloiry,', be struck, or MISI ef
• ; workmen did, it vein: , of 'fine sine ore
`:' 1 , . . Viola feet . thick. At least Mr.' Col.
pretends to know what fine 'zinc ore
is, and he says that this bit of the best, and
he believes that it exists :in great ,quantb.
ties there. If thlo be the case Mr. Gross
has met with good fortune, portico.
laxly if this four feet vein is neat'
the surface, its developnsent will not
Ode iiiipaillitCWlNM.ASigt 'AI Gilt of
veins lying deeper. Thbs discovery is lo
mist Just - on the This
*skle, of the Mt.
Pleasantbuildlinglotoiltuif if the'sine ore
is as allemxt, dosaitlem the lot owners will
Isidelgeitt ionic ,MOoPed•*; Zinc=oris' is
izz r xta it
per giad '
e f n a n rm ill '
el s
cne .
.able quantity, in veXy,:'
tthere—well Gm' ' y le millions is
or a less asnotu* - ' : ", , ;
Porto time' .ago a fanner living ,' near
iftlieratem purchased seec hundredgrains
of a Readier brand of , wheat, which had
been grown in the valley - of the Nile; and
for which he paid one dolMr•—at the'rate
of one cent per grain.; This year be
planted the geisha six inches n‘ and'
ot
-the yield has been even more p
than ,was expected. From these one tut.
deed grains of wheat he as harvested
eleven hundred ears, for which be rerun)
kind a market at 'one ; dollar Per ear.
Thuo from an investment of one 1 1
,he of makes a profit eleven hundred'do 1
ars in a. single season, t and this,we ant
sure, exceeds anything in the way of re
mnnerative huibandry evernecom , •
in Lehigh county beforti. This • , •
Nile wheat is in color of a blueish .••
and when ground produies a:flour of nil
equaled fineness and excellence, and '
erdtivation in Lehigh county having:. •-• ,
found to be possible and profitaide 1
probably become - quite general in time.'
IThus far it is a little - to expensive to .-
ground into flour for the !,market.—Alk
town Chronicle. - i '
. ,
THE following information concern ' 1
the drops in -the, tote, _ m obtainedf ; ,
reliable' source's:, Wheat has been *al'
all cut and removed front the fields. Th
yield. is nearly one third less thanAhe a '
erage. In some of the richest . agrieultn
ral counties, such as Linatster and G
ter, the crop is unusually light, and hi th •
western and 'rnorthern counties many s r
the. fields are not worth cuffing. The em
tremely coki weather and scarcity of .1
are the causes, In the Comberiatut
banon and Jitniata. valliks, where a' r,
snow covered the ground for months,, th,
cropis heavy—oonsideribly in excess #i
the average =- and 'in the eastern, cent
and southern counties generally fine., I,
Dauphin and surroun ding countietsisit,l
one or two exceptions, the wheit crop h
not been better for several years.
Oats arc nearly in a condition to be ha -
vested. ' The crop will be the heaviest th
State has had for lite years and is alit
, double that of last year. weath r
in all parts of the, .. , ..,.State has been fay 1 -
ble to its growth.'
• Corn, although paeltviard p -
ces because of the spring drouth, prom : • s
more than an.average, yield. In this an
adjoining counties it has grown lnsurian •
the
-past two months under the JOU •
ef-imineroms rains, and is now tasseling .
The springl. dry spell reruleredthe'•hal:
crop generally very short, especially ci
ver.
. The potato crop, notwithstanding tI
ravages of the Colorado beetle, will I
inkrnense all over the State.
THE intinnammusnansTs— P
TON WINS THE Ammo out
, -
THE AMERICAN CUD SIIOOT PIM'PONN .
• '
LONDON, ,July.heavy ; n
prevails at Vimbleden this mornin ,
and the camp is flooded. The ma ih
for the kinerieui 'Cup, :which: W a
fixeil to take place at 2:30 i , . a
beers . postponed until 3:30, andlmly
poslobly be put off Until to-moiro: .
LATER--,SDOOTINO BEGINS.
Lospos; July 21.-L--The [America' is
are shooting at WiMbledon
range]ooo'yards. Each Man has 0
shots, and the highest possible* i
vidual score is 150. 'Bodine, t wholis
still ill, and, Yale, do' not take rt
in to-day's contest. • The-, scoring I f
the Americans is remarkably Hi t e,
and excited general admiration. .1-
though the. weathei :is unfavoVatie,
the attendance dflspeetators is
goad.
WINS.
LONDoN, 'duly Fult;mi
won the American cup, shooting
, ir
which was: resumed late this a r
noon. He made 13310ut of a Posi i
ble score of ISO.. 1 S
• 1
PARTICULARS -Till: TRIAL,
LONDON, July 21.-Thc rain ce l a- . 4.1
at Wimbledon at -2:30 P. t, e
shooting far the challenge cup, whi
was to bel coMpeted. for
.by Am
. ri
cans alone;! began_ at .3:30. The s y
was lowering and the wind li e t
Fulton made eight consecutiveti,E
eyes, and Canfield six. The fll w
inn. is the, score: Fulton 133,1 C. n
field 126, ,Coleman 119, Bruce -1 1
Ballard 103, Gildersleeve 105. I
Nics*l*Jolo:ce:to4l l :l:4:42 - 11
There are heavy dealers' in horses
in New York. They are gen 4 fly
located on 24th street. Some of t i m
are men of heavy captial, and! k .ep
two or three hundred, head of stOc in
their stalls. A New York p )er
says of their operations : I
, .
The' heavy drain upon the s (tr
ees of the market here, is balance( by
the arrival of animals, which I re
: daily received from the hands of b y
ers. All I the qinciiml dealer:i h• ve
agents who scour the States of men
tacky, Illinois, lowa, Wiscon.in,
Michigan, Pennsylvania, and } er
-1 wont, going even as far West as K n
sas, purchasing in lots of one, tl vo,
ten , or twenty, from the farmers, u itil
la sufficient number is accumula.led.
I Then the horses 'are shiplied for ~i e w
i York. The animals, dnrino , the .. il
road journey, receive good!,` c- re.
Each car cOntains 1$ horses, and the
shipper sends, in the accompan ing
rita
caboose or saloon car, an assist' nt,
generally 'a boy, to look to the e i m
fort of the stock during transpe, • -
tion, and; to assure safe delive to I
the &consignee. 'The lengths of he
'routes vary, occupying, as a gen ral
I thing, in the neighborhood of ive
days. There are regularly appoii ed
stopping places,' with suitable ace tm-
imxlations, wheie stock /ays, o 'er
from 15 to 24 hours for food and (;st 1
Iso that the horses sutler little'or no
inconvenience or ill effects from the
journey. : The stock thus see re is
from five to eight years old, am' in
tended tr sip-Pply the wants of, clery
branch otrade. The street rail ay
if
'and stag. corporations, the exp SS
and cart-Men, the city departem nts,
the sober head of the family - iwse rch
of a quiet Pair,. or
.the man w ii is
ambition: to-own'a horse which will
" go inside_ Of forty,'! all are Rupp ied,
at prices bilging from $2O to $l,lOO.
The best horses for working pu s scs
come from-Ohio and • lisle
those fro r rn Kentucky and Vcr ont
are most ivaluable fdr driving. :Ls wer
Canada and Michigan furnish ood
horses CO both work and pfea,ure.
Among the dealera in Bull's'. ead
Market Who do the heaviest bu -int*
arc J. II:. :Dahlman, •J. Merin .
Oakley Smith, C. fic' 11. Hay sap,
J. H. Whitson and J: Dahlman. Be
twet.n tWb_and threeAhousamt h . rues
pass an ual!y thrOugh , the himi, sof
these dekers. i
A 311 X .15 train of twenty-two cars
on the 'l.."orthern Pacitfe Rail oad
went through abridge on the'3l • -is
sippi at IBrainard, ontuesdaY eve
ning, fire persons.
4 4 CF: pito 111*T 80 N 8
FuirterDitt.
ITOWANDA• 1N.N14-MM
We are now offering* lade stock of
PARLOR SUITS,
TETE-A-TETES, EASY
HALL RAM
loon TUP TABLES,
At very tow peters. We are detetadoed to dee Ana c,
uwr emelt lo Ude thee before the tall traele v ioad In t.
order to do SO we me Belau; at . • •
VERY riiicEsl,l
Vre would call attention tT, Our , new
CENTENNIA.I2,
BLACK WALNUT! MABYGni:
TOP, PRESSING CASE •
CHAMBER SUITS, AT 00 M.,
• '
Being the heirt. hist fa the market fur the yrke_
alit' all other peals at very km pricey;
UNOIRTARIIII2.
Done In the beat manner. and on the time:4 dom.
Iron will And netter end* And fur 1e.% nurses - hes.
than at any other place. Callan.' are as
• •
0. FROST , 1 / 4 ,SONS
•
Manufac torrr, of and Wholc,ale -"lnd linty
1/ealeirs In Furniture and nadertattng; 'Main
Tow AN DA. PENN A.
UA. BLACK,
,
OYYEL4
CROCKERY_ OF VARIKS
PATTERNS,
1
AND As LOW AS THE LOW ElsT
GLASSWARE;
TABLE CUTLERY,
SILVER PLATED 5 A 10,;.
, i • v:l.l'
noon wAitE, 1
iFONP.,W.iIIy,
13IRD cBGE,s,
BASKETS
I Would say to the public that on any good , lept in
stock I wilt nfq be under:oi t.
Febl9-74.
•
9111 E PANIC, ,1
: ;with all It.
I -
I►I4A6REARLE: CONOEQUIENCE:,
pa.t. Th• Mnintiy Is,agaln re.tored to c?m
' ! 1
•
=
READY MADE CLOTHING,
Of the latest styles and tnade:up In the best 01J ,
11er, will be pleased to learn that
MILMi.
An experlenerplealler, nab np•ned in Inunrn ,
stock of • I
SPRING AND SLIMMER GOGP,
I!3lta f or L
MEN AND nalre` WWAR,
MY SToCE
SHIRTS, -
TIES,
GLOVES. ' .
•CUFFS, TRUNKS, TRAVELING
BAGg, H
Audio tact everything In the furnishing lir.. '
Unsurpassed by any'store In the cOntry. I '
•
tt'
you don't believe 1 can offer you betirrbir
gains than have beenigirett you hen.totor• 1"t ell'
g sture In - I •
•
OR! f' FITIIS a PATTON'S dip(' K. DR 1 Uli r.
• •
and I will •
CERTAINLY Wirt'
That I am prepared to Mal all 1 adYertoe..3Th'
DON'T FORGET TUE PLACE,
Store recently ficcuptedby Mn.s J. D. IIw•
3. E. BU6A•
aprb-75
MARBLE ANI►
GLASS 50.A1P...14;
U. A. gi,i();.