II ,OX VATZONSI ' ales Sourish in spite (lit bard• Ea ower Englanil than, s ate 6,000 horses ti 800, California has lqied a nt-of ten rwr emt. .YsrP,.. of Tweed ring notori -ent to an insane asylnnt. o'f Ai - ales anti suit live f.tr on their return from India. t*i . N ,: are being made open y c:lnals forthe seaso... the p. et, has chatv4, , (l . his ,i ..tmesbnry to Peaiboily, • ,I 1 tobacco crop in the I?cme nba, with , rare exceoion,s, C'nor cleelini.s thc• ontination for G6verrior of' • _ _ EEO F., of T farvara Cone . •; 9 "1 .. ..!‘v ' a--o. triiile f itl • ri S'tato Lottc‘r:v ofti rai,l:-.1 gil,Satarcla ,;.11,(• tivl;l2ts e, at 7 by F TALIGIt Ai IT: the G 'arnst wit" in' Wnrtem irman tmr., '.a. ..• w neatly fg yc.arß 'has tnrnr , il - the iihiprri over to the D irit-::arnits him to bajl ttlet of Syrainl, Theicit .' - F , st year. :.'in r.f 111 7 s sum MEI Cr.TVI.F.tt I: rc ice. of the Nms- () Defrozult of ill be:tlth. nit's! Stn.te Central. Cc). tf. SC , !I or tln or • drefl of 'his own AT of T'tli Inftrii , !- 1•i1 thl ti is n lrlivj•r;:ity t na , •Ti ..`41r111..1 (:en,^rai Tcrm • znv r for A1r4.(1(*,mp1 , •.,• 7. I,a sr,o-trat 8ri.:17.*. the piaTliSt. AMlel'i(73 that he citizen and ending hiss wom^n•iu Ch 1 - - , •;itl wo arrl she i; e ni4rl . ;;lg'e nonce ends their ft NEE . . • Errl Craton and N . 7;;4 - ilen loirried S ttur -The mill 7. 4 111 vet. l+ ft: Lo =IS :•1 (-• , :nr•rtn-:- D. e, fur 11 5117117- ~.~ti i-~t:~ cl \il 2.E wly) attacked a in irni.k. Irv.; I..!en foun o .;:liil' l Y of • lia Fnn t ysr l d thr , '•11 V ,, z.k. to (.61,.cat14) I,,lti!s in lion f“.l t'!,. nII I;nc IPft au•l will dt:l, ,• , ',ll'-.'d 11:1-• iwiciCan a , 'ITT -1,.! I,t f”i• athirrl inil ?rnm .1(- W:ivel . l.V. nt , .l will lius I.Lie.s over the entire Litrel roi , i . t of the state ling ii.:x l i(ll-t1 ini Von .l.riliiii for :I . e:e. ,,t :a ~n I ,c- a I,l,Emin:u 'ni 1, .71 ,141 ti t rrlt . nc , zr•. 14,9.010 r 1) !Icut ill tile r up OREM ;T: fair: 1(r inle Ihtt l lTn a:,l Niri7,ll;ns ilor i+l) the it' nirn.ln r r n. new e:tbinelt. be Inore lihe is i•l I fr:1 , 1 , 1 , f) 411 the arvio.al N an will lain::: Lint bef , ,ro for ill 10,11 7, • , yvt, Ltl;ri hat t three cent,bnf-r n dilcs ~ Int to t.l4‘ 1(1 ‘.l - 1111 will (-fists, tql Tot. , :!:: at I)(.tri.it. fr„:n the (—art , . the ChTl - • 11;1 , , iu ;tlTalv,T,Cd - . . - 1. , . of Ilelittr,tp. lowa. till]: f 110 112711 e of th.-ir t - cettn. 1 , .. - a L'. , .d iCtea for the iri,r_ ' - nazzie of _Fort 1.1...;1- BEM *ht. jail in E , =cis: erg= rer, r .tl 2 ,- a pair of pan , '"li"vc Prisoner. for which s , )n -as his present te a TII tinn has br,, tate are ;t the plkon Work, lolls, :ire ailowol the priv y iii^t t a ylunt , cr ,(1111111.: dcolie.l j. , il, attenlttul but . ...ti:=c as a rin'ellgC to t,f 1 ,. .c.r.r01 ,, rs 11r the Nortt3.- N- '1 , .: 1 3; , 1 , yr , n,•,(4red !i, Fri,,nors cm!- ; . r , l tiir : '•. utih , r of the seert; irj r ( . ;11:p1:11:1, \{'c re :Irrestf 1 1 t . •toll a. ch:tr;;e c,11.!.. will he fix ---, r .pf , ”pit , 1" tilt. 1n.14 tr?...1,i1u-02.!). iu Linotlii l'arki A pril 11. ;- _new way of heating A .i.ed-I.ot. poiind t.bor i. uncle*' the car with regis 11. e bcnt. Vivi-, of thei.e wil !y for , fourhours. the in 1-7 a I.i.)neer the free ;1i 1:11;.,,1,111,1 told for ':c tritzu- I•!; Nl.tv P:b1:11, , 1 1 ;02, died at Sat -morning MEE throughout thy , !.”111.1 of 11.04 =I =II t~y'llit ail; ~.~ T4-Tc;z4 li erf f lt4:aNe 4!c Or. lin T he of 4 ‘,l` and t v&1 ye =I tit!c. , in :11 .1 .—ix .ny Whit r noi.h.inan in the ,ry • the tittlivrestcrn i!, ~,,, it wti , r:tr: of ; 4;;,!;.;1) I t ;I:c ISible. Of I'2.- .• frit; iNt w :I.:Tel of ;Ito tzerip- y Fran;; Men's Cliris4- tute.publisheil by henry v, a, work of consider- ' \\::< (*NU 1/t1 forty cr liZty t;e;,. etc. The Rev.-". C. . are editing elmricrs will be !, p.,n,i0(10-'oinilbertz padfora gtgoittr. EDITORS: E. 0: GOODRICH. S. W. ALIVORD. 747.*aa, Pa., Th=saay, liarth 4 . 2478, MEETING OF T I E ntproLOE3l -i STATE COSFENTION. - Awrims• RETurt.rcxxlt,T.a.TE rksaisrrr. - Tr.r.. tunr.arrtr:. Feb. 1...1971.—1; purgtiln .e4kot reso livit,idteare Criartrattee' adopt4sl at a meeting held.th flarrliburg thin day, a Elribiica..lStatc•_Courer.tion. to be coudiesed of ihilegu i tel from Path Se natorial and Itepresatitatlve ,11:.tricit to the number to which such distr6l.lsett !Pied in the Legl‘lainre. Is hereby calledtr meet to the; rite of - Tfarristurrg at 'l2 0 7cInck- rtis oll : 0 73 W,d4.l.ay, March 2tb.. 1.9"41. for the purirse, of Noutl4atlng an Etertoral Ticket and of ihitting 'zenalcirlal and Iterire , mtailre delegates threpre 7ent the t.iate In the Ilepubtlean Natioaall*Ten +lna to he bold at rinrintrati, Aldo, on ilia torn , te tmth day of Jana; I'{7n, T.r order of tho':fiom. )L lIOTT, Chaiipan. A. 11 - .11.5•)N NORRIS. secretary. ME nribrimicAN NATIONAL CON'yEN. The next Union Republic.l:l 1N...nth:m..0 Contention for the nomination of eandidata,for Prestliint and V - I,e rn•-i , lent of the States, will I,elle'd In •tr , ^fir ofrineinnat I. on "Wedneday. the 11t12.1ay f IS t. at 1 . 2. n'elork noon, and eilitsist of •le' , :gate% front nark State equal to twice t'tni !num her of iti.Senators and Itepresentati , te. , In Crtngresa. -n 3 of t'r Deleg-ites from each organizedl.Teirl t.ey and ;h.. Dictri et of Co:mob s a. irjeaillog , tho i•onvention for the eleetion , n2 dele gaten. 91 , eonv i nittoo. of the several 9tatee lee tyr o:ow •oiled to invite all Rettildican eleettrm:snd all o:ht r 1 - ot:rs. withoat regard to trtAprlittrni differ prw. L , ns pally di Ti^ulties. whoareiyweotd . rtlelt:ft s- , ttonal eln-let. to It - ivmote frin•tiy 'fooling and pormanent harznony 11:rough ont th , conotty br tnalntaltilkig and enftitrittff an oon , •itational rights of every eitlzen.lnolluding tit • rt , i ant fro: e•terrlse of the right of snfrntg,e I m idaUnn nod without f:-and: ar, EMI a hi< mit Statt ;7. far , : . of Mt , eon:lam-a pro , rrutlnn and iipni,h -nIF•nT of all oTTirial d!,honcA:y• and fr,onond ,a! ad:ni!,l , tration of tItC Goveramont by tonect • raithful and ,•arrll.lr wbo are in fBFor of EE EMI mrprins in griv , rorn.n! an expi,'Fif'nnn ZEE fri+:n tirrle.l,lo titn , •,-I)zrv'st : who of ipposed rmr•ilrinr; thn nation by dlii•crlat ln•-_, ,ny or It. ohligrtt-4ong, and to taynr tit styithininz 1,":17 ralth and A.nanciathonor, tit tho common school systczn:fls the wirstry or Arnririean 11Iwrty. and- ;hould 11Pre ‘t in 7C itllks dare; a!: , .. - Autely free from se , lartan contrt!;li wbn thit for the pr.miot fon of these endslhe di ref-ti.-, nt the Covernmf•nt Fbrynl4.l contlnitil to eon:lied to thaw who to the prlncfples nt 1774, sntpott th..tn as Ineorporated In the eonstitn ti,a azd and who are In favor or reeoglltzlnk and st!..;lgthenhlz the fundamental prinehile of na , :cnal In thls ec , ntennlal Anulverary of the 11. public. eatro (1:of a with 1(3 ed tare • . • EDWIN D. MORri.VN. chalrmaz Ecptil)llean Natlonalpimmittee Witt...TAM E. cit.% S-er. , tary. • lUT ONT SENTMENT.-"Iil at tempt to saddle Belknap's crime upon the Republican party is:as senseless as the attempt to saddle the crimeof a defrauding. employe on the min he has robbed. and whose confiden4e be has abused. If the Republican party should justify the wrong doni, or attempt to shield the fallen Secretary from the punishment he deserve, then his crime would in.a Measure beeorne the crime of the party. But neither will be done. - Throughdut Re publicans are united in denouni!ing the trans7ressipn, and the loud 'de mand;; for justice 'which come :from all quarters. show - that the honi)r of the 'party. and the purity of its inten tions arc as assured as ever. Democracy has screened' its cr'imi nals, but the Republican party, never. „ #rral l - e Wier s'i ill tile - N.oti• ;r to Tut: Grand Division of the :konE• 'of Temperance of l'enniylv:inia, have undertaken a work. - which if sucf)ess fully acomplished,- will be the rni-an‘ i c k f conferring good upon thouswls :tt the Centennial. This work' nothing more nor less than suppling water-free of charge. on the ren tennial ;rounds. during, the- c'ontinn aliCe of the exhibition. They4wo p • ose to erect a fountain at the nter seetion of Belmont and Foiniptin avenues, which will he ready h . V;the ftr . st of May. The fountain Will be eneloserl by a wooden paN:illion}ep re-zenting,r a Greek, Temple, :15 fed in diameter and 3 `..4 feet high, and f*ill have 20, self-acting.sPigots. UT: THE bill fixing fees of eountyiufri cers. which we, published last w:ek. is so faulty that, it should either be materially amended or defeated alto gether. We do 'not object to amount of salary if:verb but w do h . protest a;ainst any law cOIP- pets the debtor class to pay, in rilie shape of costs, money into the chin-. a- 1 ty treasury to aid the- crediton• in r, his taxes. If • the fee:s;' , of • ' county ()takers amount to moreahan - a fair salary, reduce them, and thus relieve the unfortunate of some:: of their burthens. 1 : Qt - Env.—We see that a Cabibet n officer named ItsNoot.ru (hiring WAsiffNeixoN's sr tindei• JAcKsoN, and some under iirHIANAN% were far more guilt3ilof corruption than BELKNAP is. 13ilt, one.cf them tried and conVictO ? . Is the maxim. ", - . l.ct no guilty man escape." to 1)0 first put into execution under a Republican Administratio'n ? It " and pOsonal Cons sidcratignis may have heretofore shielded Cabiuet officers in this,'as they do in the Old World. ar•nifist punishment for wrung-doing. it be so'nolongcr—at least in :America. THE DI ITER rsen.—The New York Wit„ e s s well says: " After the-X -posur- of TWEED'S rascalities 1/3 . the New York 7 /wee, he was renomina ted by the Democratic party foi State Senator. and, be it said to the MI:I'W of its adherents, elected by an Oer whelininfr majority, When DELkN.-o , ts dishonesty was brought to light eve:Ty Ilepub!iean newspaper denounced hi;3 • and his pnrty refuse to nomivate him for the olive of ponnd-keePer."•- mitLer especial attention itoki the able. poitited and logical artiOe rat the common sclio?1 question, another column, from our respected correspoinlyit " Castelar.7 We hei lieVe 'with the writer that the suhjeet. one which should receive cantiid and thoughtful attention at this tithe, IS NOT bdierell that tliq ifPw county bill, a.y i nop,:is of which 4p ilpears in anothqr column, will passi TJIE House Committee ou/IVikys . about finiilied the kNivitaisoN taritt brlJ, F+hich was te erred to it. • TIOV. THE NEW COUNTY BILL. ' The new county - bill which . passe d -*On& : On, "/!**45' . 1 14) 410 1 Pi! tiotA:of fift.OtTh *dyed lilialtOd • -2) • tore'Tet}id,Og intnlttigeous,':Ontitiet( of the State( theV bvernoir, Lieutinian4 Governor and Secretary of Internal Affairs are to appoint five Commis.! Sioners to - n - Tike - lici aceiirate" sui'i e 3• of the territory proposed for the es tablishment of a new county, which , must contain not less than four hun, .dred square tidies of territory and not less than twenty thousand:inhab itants, and whielt,:mThst not reduce the area of population of the counties partitioned or divided below the'min imum necessary for the new county. The Commissioners are required to make their report in forty days, to the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, an" 4 Secretary of Internal: Affitirs.• with mapS of the new county pro poSed to be erected, whereupon, after Olive weeks advertisement' in the counties affected and ; within forty dayS after the filing of the report of the Commissioners, an election is to be held to decide by ballot the ques tion of diviSion. Two-thirds of the electors voting for the new county it •is established, provided that s major ity vote is ; ohtained in each of the separate parcels of territory taken from other counties. If "a majority. of such electors prefer remaining in the old county and the territory is not thus reduced below the constitu tional limit, the new county is estab lished without the incorporation of the disagreeing section. The pro rata of. county indebtedness due from the population of the hew county at ztbe time of division must be liquidated as if no division had taken place. The location of the county seat is set forth in the original petition for the new county. The remaining provisions of the bill are matters of detail relating to the organization of the courts and official: regulation of the county af fairs preceding the regular election of county officers, COLORED MEN. Mr. FREDERICK DOUGLASS is again on the war path, in the right direc tion. At a meeting held in Wash, ington by the colored Republiearis of the District' of'Colurnbia," in hon or of Senator Mormrsr and ex-Gover nor. Prlcunicx.. of Louisana, Mr. Dom m.Ass expressed his confidence, in Mr. PricuuAcK and the justness of his elaiMs. He thoUght the mar vel was not so much that seven Ike: publicans could not. rise above caste and prejudice as that twenty-nine Senators could set these 'at defiance. He then proceeded to eulogize the Republican party. condemning , the action of colored men in voting with the Democracy. " The Republican party is still the party of justice and freedom. It is. relatively, the blackman;s: party • Compare them in this wise;' the • one is heaven and the other hell. For one, I shall stand by the .party '; . of Sumner and Lincoln. If jtstice-and protection are not obtained 'here. 1 do not look for them elswhere. The logic which would make us quite roof with seveir small holes in , it, in exchange for the open field and. the pitiless storm, is not the locric for me. Some talk about dividing our votes between the two parties has come to my - notice of late. It has not made much impression upon ate. If we do this we-May expect to fall. It is :Trued that such a course would deprive the Democratic party of all motive for keeping, up its crusade again‘t us.. Granting, that such would be the ease, it equally follows that it would deprive the IRepuhli c•an party of all motive fir a vigilant and determined effort. to protect us in our rights. I make these remarks because the Democratic press seems willing enough to seise every occa sion to destroy the colored man's confidence ih the Republican party, at the same time that its party is doing its utmost to -reduce us again to. something akin to the hate ful condition of bondage- from which we have been so recently delivered:". THE " Prohibitionists" of Ohio have met in Columbus, nominated a full ticket for State officers and 'ad journed.- From now until the day before the nest election, the leaders of this movement will he in the mar ket for cash as the price of the votes of their honest adherents of the rank and file. We sincerely trust the Re publicans Will not buy these leaders. There is more strength in exposing. their ava melons treachery. And this we hope will be done; and without mercy. WE find the following pleasant paragraph' coneernin7 our teleran and 4 ljsiinpished Senator, In - the New , York Tribu.ne Washington dispatches: Senator Cameron's 77th birth day was passed to-day. He was Warmly; congratulated by brother Senators, and was given a compli mentary dinner This evening. Ile is as stipng and vigorons as he has bcen,•av - parentlV for the past fifteen Years. Every faculty is perfect, and he is In excellent spirits." INVESTIGATIONS don't always turn out just as ori!rinators anticipate. The inquiry in regaLd to BELKNAP . S ease, while it resulted in proving him a' corrupt- official, is likely to ; show that PENDLETON, one of the lli ;h Priests of Democracy, and . perhaps CLYMER. have profited somewhat by the inissmana!Tement of the war Office . When the facts are all made public we shall give teem. AT the time of going to press we nothing definite from the Demo ,eratie State Convention. I:nt judg ,,iner from the dispatches to the Phila -Iphia Tintcs, ;they are having a 1 stormy time. • Tia Senate Committee vn Foreign Relations have reported adversely on the nomination of Hon. R.ll. NASA Ps Minister to Englaro. STILL ITSSATISPIED I Col. ?deem*, thottOt le saw : an "Opri - or;aity '1872 poi depose from power*nnki fineiceishl rivals of the Republican 'party, by embark ing in tttooo,litair:mOrernent. ;Fail :lag that-'attempt.. hel has exerted ail his powerftil influenee.as one of the ablest editors and shrewdest pol ' iticiang - in PennwylVania to-compass the success of the Democracy, by.faly. means or foul.- JudgiUg from 'the tonepf the Timcs,for settle time p.lttft, we judge Ite . has given up the task as hopeless.., The result bf, the New-: ;Hampshire election has completely' ;`disheartened the .Colonel, and he. I .throws up the sponge this graceful manner : 1 .1 The little Granite Stitt° is Cliatb ilng. up on .its RepubliCan. majotjty until it scores 'some thijee thousand. land both branches of . .the Legislature. !.have. been thrown in to secure, the seat of Cragin in the 1 Senate. It. was accepted as a foregone conclu sion . a 'month ago, that between Rnii dall's imbecility and Hill's and er's madness as CongreSsional lead-. [ers, New llarnpshire would vote Re "-publican by from three to four thouS-, ; _ and. Had they gone into Blaine's camp to barter for the betrayal of their cause they couldn't have made his'. triumph more complete, nor more inecilessly exposed their ,own ( forces to the, enemy. When the ad 7 ministration was crushing Republl 7 t_tanism to the earth, there was Iscareely.a ray'of hope tasible for It in New Hampshire, 'Connecticut and Rhode Island, Randall! opened the Or Blaine's horse of Troy, and !Hill cut off the last prOspeet of re treat for their routed lines.. ,And they rave justilie,.wenpons '';most d' .. estructive against the Demoe- Lracy Of New Iltimpshire. The keen est Damascus' blade never cut so ielean to the vitals as 'did" the Jeff Davis skull awl bones which - Blaine flung up from the fatid ,tomb 'of the Confederacy, ..as he slew the Penn sylvania LilioCand the impetuous Georgian . who mistook Washingt6n for the Davis Congress of Richmond. They settled New Hampshire, for 'that State is certain Co settle only one way in a political storm, and they.did their level , best toward. set tling Connecticut. * * * 1 * : * * , Hnisconnting - from the resnit in New 'Hampshire? all that can be 'charged to the notorious debauchery 'of . power, and conceding much for the deep-seated sectional i Which abound among its people, the verdict remaingime of pointed Polit. feat signifidancel Tt. is' an admoni 'lion', plain as tke light of noon-dUy• that the Democrtiey of Washington, With its Bourbon imbecility, is the 'last political commodity the natinn Will accept, even as against- delemeh -0 Republican ride. ^lt is a notice ;time he who runs maY real, to the I flandalls, the Hills and the Tucker... whoi have assumed the - Democratic leadership, that if they `l-present Deinneracy there isn't a debatable glat - that won't unqualifiedly con demn it. It.is'n declaration in ad v"nee that the mingled stupidity and infidelity Which make the popular braneli of Congress poWerlegs- and apparently purposehlss in practical statesmanship. will be exererated by the-people just as often as-the oppor tunity-is presented. It is a finger ' board for 11Rif; pointing unznista'k ilblv to the success of even a Orant Republican candidate in preferener to any man whose record does noti illace him beyond the suspicion of `Hotirbon folly, or whose support of the goVernment in- the dark days of peril [didn't fill the .full measures of atrintism. It is, in - short. a procla mation that no apologies for the 1 Confedy;l eracare wanted ; that no 1 4yrprfatizer with its efforts will. bp 1 willin the range of 1 411=ailnloility, and that fools and' restorationists must tro to the rear, or the whole train suffer hopeless destruction. That jth'ere was the open auction of votes mid the vigorous use of all fire ap pliances of corrupt power to swell the , Republican majority -, in NON' Hampshire can't be doubto ; but over and shove the whole torrent of fraud is the plainly visible lesson. that the battle of l siG must be on the broad platform of unquestioned Patriotism. and that Democracy, as pictured by Democratic leadership in Washington, couldn't carry a State north of the. Maryland, Virgin ia and Kentucky lines and east of the Father of Waters. WIITTE Lf.AGUES STILL ACTIVE.- The attempt of the White Liners in Louisiana to impeach Governor KEI: Liam, after a silemn pledge had been made by the leading 'Democrats of that Statg that no effort to impeach the Governor would.be made, shows the deep seated animosity of the old . rebel element toward a • RePubliean administration. Though defeated in this attempt, it is clearly evident that the White Liners of Louisiana. 'an South Carolina are deter . mined : to control those States for the Presidential election. As the fate of o,e nation mad- possibly'turn on the efectoral vote of the States named. hOw important becomes the f fuestion of keeping tiz`e - m in the :hand's of 'l°6l men? There will be desperate attempts made by• the Democratic rutrians of the South to crush out il4Publicanism''in those States Where it non'. holds power. These attempts mint be firmly met and resisted. Our friends must ' , organize for personal and political protection, and the' GOvernMent must stand by them tht maintainatice of their coastal'. tiOnal rights. There must be no cowardly surrender, but a stern, resio resistance which will teaeltthe White, .T.Pa-rue cut-throats, that He . publiakiism, once e,tablished, cannot be destroyed by threats or violence. WHILE bewailing official corrup twit, and piAisuring ti fur the Short-Cvntings of his appoint N-4, the Derni;i•ratic per:f hereabouts • are very gnict :11)11t a 111 A 01'1;a1S Inetnbcr of)that 'party in thi-; section. , FIANK 1 EA:4l:qt, the' Mist it.Cnc•n tisi Democrat in Ltizerne county and Sergeant-at-arms of the Bowie of Representatives, is now under indict -ment for einbezzlement of School ' funds, and only escaped conviction on a 'recent trial, by tampering with one of the jurymen. BEAM! ii has just been elected a delegate to the democratic State Convention. BELKNArS riiiirrion RECORD. ----t : _. T6'6iicago Tintesiays: ' - ',.. :: " Of ecturse.llin :,Tribune dOsiol expect; site,,rea r dOei ' to belibi,e .:i ! his : stuff:,:flelkt4 alw a ys itita a Deft,:;' oerat4,4vretst into the :Waz' m .kinei cae:out - etie,':. - 11,4 ) .ptidnioted *link one, arid Was one when he fell. .. : :slat= we feel as bitterly over the dlsg,ince of that . fall ,‘ as if he • had been bOrn . and lived allepublican.'i".._ !: . .... The ,Teibuiie expects readets to believe rust Precisely this "stuff!' because itlis the truth. I'n charac terizing BelknaP's.bribery. as . (I ii, tional 'disgrace;; the Tribune hilt gave expreWon to the profound pub lie sense of the shame it brought up-,' on the whole conntry. Thereat up start the journalistic spokesmen and defenders Of the Denim:ratio party, and in their chop-logie fashion, as suming that Belknap was a bribe-tak er beccivele.wati,. a Repnblicon, de duce that the great Republican party is a sharer in his 'guilt, and that it is the season for Repnblicant to hide theiefaceS • for lery shame's sake. - The - Tribilne ha 'not been in t e habit of assuming that 'because . a man was a DemoCrat he was -tieees sarily a ;thief a d a black-mailer: and notwithatam ing the record pf i -the Tweeds, Sweeneys, Conollys, .In- u,ersolls, ..Cardozas. Barnards, Schn- I makers, 'Lloyds, and Thompson's, the 1 honest and decent men of that party. I can hardly be considered as sharers I in their infamy. ! , ' i Since however,L that style of argil- Ment is being:apPlied by the Demo-1 eratie press in the Belknap case, it 1 .is, perhaps, well that the Democracy ; should enjoy thel full benefit of all that can, be made out of it. That I they can only do, ; . when it is kepi in mind, as is the fact, that Belknap entered publie life. a Democrat, and i continued a Democrat up to, and 'luring the time '!re was tilling his pockets with offiend bribe About twenty years two he made his advent in lowa, as his fellow-townsmen at , Keokuk bear withess, as' an attire, local Democratic bolitician, and as 1 such was elected rtO the legislature. During his term or office as a Demo cratic Member of_the lowa Legisla ture, it was thel first insight into the true inwardness.of the man *li afforded by his embezzlement of funds of clients, intrusted -to him as a lawyer; :and which his law' partner in praetice•had to Snake good. Sholt .l. ly after the close iof his legislati -e term the, lemocratie rebellion pro to out and he entered the army: whe e he distingnished lainesif by his g. 1- 1 lantry and bravery, which seem' d his rapid promotion and enlisted t le friendship and d r steem of General Grant. His hrilliant personal dar imr, one Of the Mold notable illustra tions of Which was' his jiimping into the trenches laid r ids the Confeder 'lles, during the fight at Atlanta, col laring a rebel °nicer.. and. , under fire. dra..o.r.in!r him itac - into -the Union line;: a prisoner, g: ve him additional 1 prestige.. j . A fter the war he remained a Dem on:it and. as , 4mi!h. by Andy John ,on waS apppoinrcil. Revenue Collec tor forthe KeukukHktriet, in which (millet.. onp, of consuleratilm for his light:llT sr hell WAS cont ipned by l'residenV (:rant,. rven then rumors. %I-IA(411(4 well or ll founded. were rife as to his coniuction with whisky rinus. but none )f these reached Washington. When, by the death of the lamented Secretary Rawlins, the . President. 10.4 one of the most_ s97:te iouq of his Cabinet! advisers and the nation the servieesiof sa n est a;est and .. unrest= of men, Glnn. Belkltap 'was Ippointed his snecessor. withontony f • onsull at ion With ileadimr Reprthli c-ing of lowa or elswhere The -se lection 01(4e:tend Belknap. n Demo crat causyl a "nod deal of ifhfeeling in Pep:Wien)) circles at the time, and was :net with no frinedlv cont inent. But the anc;.‘r of the Repub licans wore off in tiine, and they be cline reeonciled to the appointment by the report of the brilliant record , 10 had made - in the ‘y:11- and the con -iderable hekvas said to po-4- .4ess,' Up to that time 'Belknap had continued :1 Demoerat, though a War-Democrat. and; there is no evi df-mee that at any timeil sj nee lie has voted the Republican t i'eket or chan:r - - ed his political pii; , Ciples. As it now appear-4, he bep-an by betraying;the eefidOce of the Re publican 'resident.:and active chiefly ; as i a, bribe-faker epntinuin!Y as suet! m}tit expOseure f0 .4 1-1/)wed and he resigned in dise . raee, am' through quppreion of the real filets, procur ed acceptance of his resioamtion. Snell, in brief, is hisipolithavl record. A Democrat and embezzler before the war; then the one redeeming feature of it all, a W:ir-Demoarat and a 1 wave Soldier next.'a Johnson Dem ocrat and 'otliee holder vaguely :Ins pected of ; being a member of the Whisky Ring, and from thence trans ferred to i the Cabinet, thronell freak of El i xecutive admiration of his - rallantry,to becomel a bribe;"-taker. OLD BI L I ALLEN IN TROUBLE, CINCINATI, \larch li.—Proceed ings were) commenced in the United States Court here tO-day by Allen Campbell !MuArthuri and the: other oTandeltildren of InMean MeArttinr, formerly Governor of Ohio, (c) eject 1 e.,-(lovernOr Williant Allen from his farm near chillic.(the, known as Fruit Mill. and ,eompel hun to acemmt to I.lle (twat heirs of 1(101c:11i 'McArthur I9r 'Ol tlui. rents awl, profits of.t he estate alleged to be illegally witieeld 'from theni. It appears that , Gov. McArthur who died' in 1)339, was the meter of] immense landed wealth, :ma' lid : will bequeathing - all his property tb his wife and William Key Bond, as trustees. to hotel until his yquir-est giltmlehild became of age, With the annual dividends of profits cif the cstate. Whet! the, youngest Oil minhild became of :i.ge the prOp ,i•rty was to be divided amotg all the heirs. The ,will was • Qct aside, and the, larger portion of the property came into the possession of .At Fs. Coons, a daughter (,i . McArthur, who afterwards married Governor Allen. The principal contest:ult . became of :1”-e ab'out a year :ent. - and having le.trnol the stogy of the will and its disposition in eourt; bits commenced snit with the :otherst to recover. Silo:11(11 he ca.! s e lie decided against (;overnor Align It will leave him a pOor man. Ihe estate: involved em braces about s,o01) agree in Ito,:s eounty, ikeluding a pin - lion ()I' the city of Chillicothe. 1 IN 1 t lit' : I (pit 1,1 lean rila jot; ty iII N ew. I I :On I Hit ie' Iv:ts 1,1119. In November following the majtaity fj r President W t;5,7•11. Iu Mitroli, I>-;-it s the Re iniblicannni,jority in NtAv-llanip,,liire i s 3.2 o. It, way be 10,000 'next Novembilr. No further doubts abfnit, 1)•w-11;tuishire, LETTERS 111021 THIVIEOPLE. wound 1 was at Men at that dime. Tho rebel officers came into camp,' and :I • heard them sayit Was the orders freini:eff Davis to take out the men that hid *en •' A Igniter in; , tlto Sd ue 4i nun i, D e i xtrt .. backs; so they Commenced,: first, ittook tent of the ItM , oaTnii, *bp has probably $5O to buy one out;' then tp a z a beilitti to drop in price as the 'money k defended the common litheels for so many yeara ., ooThat an their evom io n, foreign $5 would buy one Ont, and 40 on u ntilf and &hustle, and has in the dais, of a they got all the greenbacks there woe . in E - thrashed no An 4 foes of mtr tamp) but all this tints refusing their own schools in the ha Spe of unruly bops that Money. Bath was the case with us. The he •has at length become accustomed to oldest prisoners that' were out of Money consider the care of the Schnols as liis own could not get out, and the new oneathat particular province, and_ VO\. f-appointed rt look . upon happened to have a little were all 0 C. I him if an their great se l f-appointed was oulytemcmttts in prison, and f Tier. eharnpionabd defend se _ 'i er. IstatitrallyCllOUgh, er saw so little homesickness in life; he regards the " Presidenttltd. the ind ti • Hill says it was' homesickness that caused cianii . " as 'intruders aini liresspassers on so many to die. It was rotten meat,soup his private domain, Rad gives them public mixed with sand and dirt and vermin, raw food without fuel to cook it,and the cursed &nice that the schools are no kind - of treatment generally of Our boys that killed danger so long as he remahiS their guar dian, and that he 'is abmidantly able to them. ' 'sours, respectfully, 13. K. LeTuO. 'take care of them Without anyof their as., • sistanee. He declares that ' "-our free Cherokee, /Mat March 1 , ' 76 . schools are not , in danger:;" that "this great cry of' politicians tliat'our schools most be preserved is a fah.* issue spline , upon the country to Make Pllitieal and must be considered mra &01. d'-act of dentagognes." tvideutly the writer of that article is a Democrat, as he has 'a right to be ; he is vrob.o4 the friend of the schools which 1 , 4 prof....S?es to be, and firmly believes his assertion that they are in no danger. We Wouht remind him;. however, that tOo tench *ntildence has Caused the destrnetion eT . individuals, ` conitounities and nations 'that it is safer too siTr on the Side of too Much zeal and watchfulness, and that "eternal vigilance' is the price of liberty." • The faithful sentinel ‘l . lll sound the alarnCwhen an enemy . appeat* be that enemy ever so weak or mOrificant. The guardian bees who fail to drive from the vicinity of the hive the little harmless ap pealing.nintlis, will in time he driven from their ho . mes by worms. The man full of .strength amid self-reliance Who does not fear to -" look upon the Wine when it is red, when it giveth its cohir in the cup," will fled after a while that it " biteth like a serpent and sting,eth lilFe an. adder." I?abylon, the strongest city described in ancient history, was sutia r tsed and taken by Cyrnr-; because its pat t rusting in the st rength or their Svallsiirtd underrat ing the power of their qitrti)iy, 'foiled to watch his movements and ifropetly guard their river gates. It is better to tight a wind mill in the night, like ttp:anclio Pauxa, than to allow an enemy 1 , );...ta1k into tinr camp withotit drawing a swlvd or firing a gun. • The writer of the article ;alluded to is too well informed not to know that there are a large numbiir of 'we:LOY people iu till; country wlig r having' nn _children of their own to educate, or Iniving already educated them, 7eannot seeithe justice of being', taxed to educate thit children of other people. They have said but little because they were in a small minority and did not wish to be called penurious and unpatriotic,. butt once show them a reason able prospect of success and we would be surprised at their number and (heir eager ness to join in the movement for the de struction. of the public selawils. We have no uncharitabhi; feelings to wards our lloman Cathollc izens. They. are rhristians, sineeri, 'zealous and active in:the propogation of ithe religious doctrines in which they belhive, and have an undoubted right to oppoi4 our common school system, and to seek Its overthrow if they sec tit. That a largii majority of the priests, bi‘hops and editors of the Catholic Church, and antoog these. the ablest and most inlitientist4li-are opposed to coMmon salmi system and, are labot lug to OV , rthrow it, Ille're is no iities tion. We will only prrscnt 4 few extracts from the, multitude that -might be gi‘.en. Archbi.:hop Puma, of 0140, says: "If the, school laws. mod iticd ai.as to scot: e eilticati.infor„all, si ill cheerfully pay i?rtiva of the school Toed: if amendinimt cannot be made., taxation for `sehoel pUrposes most cease." And " «'e look forward to, that glorious day when] under the Ithiws of min alit y and justi , :e, the sch9ol syst.m s!::11 i.e shivk red to pieces," 4=o - rastm.“ : ''These sehools are soehtl c.mePrs, and eineers wq kTyw must I' e taken o u t by the roots. ; Th sAtoolis I he grealestcnemyof4he anreh." Iter, F;ltht:r Sell:liter, of fitill'.llo. said : " The'rubtie schools have pliyine,ll hat a (;, , (I'...ss gen,rati!•mt „r thieves I ev Father Walker, of Yo r k : !'Woe, woe be to the parents who send their child-r 1 to these public Woo be to triose who sceretl4 favor thew in their hear'' , Itinhop:Mcguade is an a Wei outspoken, bitter enemy 4:,f the and neglecDs nu opportlenitS . tolititounce tlivm as nurseries of infidelity and, dosti :lel ive to religiOn. If these and a lit of others who have spoken MI lie SaMC );1)11 - it, do not fairly' represent the Winlitn CAtholie ri.ureh of the United Fzt,iti 4 then wl:y h ave t h ey neir been disowne:b , Judsilenced, or their sentiments disclaiincd? If they do fairly represent it, thew thi: fat:est:olds out broad and prominent': thai one 'of the strongest I:Alt:ions bodies in. Aids o,:tint ry is determined to ov4..rthrot, our school SyYttlil or obtain a portion of the priblie .fund for the in.:intenance of thitir parochial or religions school , . This welt-di:A:it:lined religions hotly, hy the unity iii* its voters, controls the lb mocratio part,On the City and State of New:Volk to-il Iy. since the vicar IH6tI. the Roman J'athost sehools of New York have received timil tho Sicate school fund $:;;;"1900. In the city they have obtained i,j - i0 'perpetual iCase of read estate worth mitre than s3,filto,fifith 'at a Tent of three dollars per year.; allfl.nre re 'eciving in addition to that is;*Sl),(tOo p e r an mon l'or the si.pport of their church schools. In nea C .I% every ;riot city, and i in olorado and I laho, they 14tve succeed ed in obtaining a part, of the public funds for the support of their own t f • schools. I this thing should go on there? would soon be a division of the school fill(( among the ditlitrent- religious denominations for the support of. denominatiMial schools, and the public schools, whielidend to Ila -1 ii,milize different nationalitick to remove clanish pride and the spirit ,f caste, to make republican !omen:me:A secure by securing a spirit of friendship Slid equality among the people and,their .11ildren Iwy education in the same Sehool4 would soon be left:without scholars'and Without sup port.l , . o In view of the facts stated itlis apparent that our common schools haVe powerful enemies. that their enemies an' increasing in. number and assurance, thrit they have already met vVith com•ideiable success in diverting a part (0 the school]fund to the support of their sectarian schools, and that it is the height of folly Jo say there is: no danger ,and that the politicians are making inlich ado :Wont null Our Rothan Catholic fellow-citizeps, and all Others who do not like 00 common schools, h3ve i l right to seek tllleir destruc tion ; and it is the duty of all tlfiPte who do like: them, and believe thi.fir malinten ance is necessary fir the pre:iervattou of our free institutions, tis dcfaßt thglia to the extent of their ability. 1 if they are preserVed, it will be because their friends arc more nunlerous and act ivp than their enemies, and are les:Aye:l to remove floin them every stumbling ',hock ;O l d cause o f aliens', and then maintain Illem against all adversaries, on all occasims down to the end of time. Optr.l.An. Eorron liEvolvriat : As I ;ant a reader of your paper, I whalt to stateia : few facts in regard to Mr. [till's speech ito Congress a few weeks ago. In the first Tilace,, I was a soldier in eo. P. ud Reg Pa. Vols.; enlisted from Burlington in your county ; Eel ved'nearly four years in 04f:thorn reg iment- and in prison ; was airl inmate of five dilferent prisons—A nders4nville,. !M -ien, Savannah, Thomasville 4nd Selma, Ala. Mr. Hill says it Was homesickness that,caused so many to die. 1 will tell you what caused so many to die a A oderson villc. 'What little Meat we gotlwas almost iiivariably spoiled ; it was Inought into prison in a wagon, and I haiie seen the one-halfijneh deep bottom of the wagon. got enoltedfations ono day and raw the next. Iluti Ileitaqms u hat rat ions when cooked! They 'would hod the meat. and put in the nik , ger beitns, :IS our b .ws would call , thetti, without cleaning them at all; and thin; stuff 'tali n. rat us---I cans, ina?.. - f.zots,pods, sand, and as llitek as mush ! The 1ea..., ~inm inky mt. a load of our ;dead boys llituy,n ilitot lie wagon as you slould thriav ;:,4) : when the wre r „on came in it would I.ring in a toad of our 'lnitsli." When the 'rations wire raw we iou)1.1 get a gill id niggeehealis, one gill of coin meal wound cud) and #111; all of this we had to ,t.:at raw, as aveicould not get wi)oti to cook them, altheiugh there was abundance of it thy? stockade. I have heard Weitz gaY that he "was killing more' - *mks than Johnson ‘Vai, at the flout." • now about that special exchange of 1.0,01.10 that was Wade in the fall of 1664 of sick mitt TOE largest workshop of the body is liver, whose office it is to .withdraW the bile from the blood; when this impoitant organ does nut azt, the skin assumes a yellow appearance, and generally *sick headablie sets in, with chilly sensations, and cold hands and' feet. accompanied with loss of appetite. The system' be comes clogged, the machinery (loci not. work well, and both mind and body are disordered, the afflicted becoming Cross and fretful, finding fault with everything around them. To any person in thisleon dition Dr. I). Jayne'S Sensitive PillS are recommended; ,by their stimulat ng action the Liver recovers _its healthy tone;', and is enabled to perform its proper caw . ..o9ns. Costiveness is cured, and all the aggravat ing symtems of biliousness removed..': Now Advertiseaetts. 1776.18,6, 1816 Centennial Year—centennial Goods ! KENT & BLISS Italia attention to their New and Well-Selected Stock of AND DONIESI'IC FOREIGN DRY GOODS, Consisting of BLACK GOODS, BLACK SILKS, And a fall ilne of COLORED DRESS GOODS; 1 1 . Which tlwy orr..r at extremelylow priesi! , KENT &SUSS OFTER. THIS WEEK ONE CASE CENTEN NIA', DRESS GOOI3S, In all the new Shades and Styles, Al.), a full lino of LADIES' TIES, NOTIONS, GLOVES. r ITOSIERY, FANCY GOODS, KENT & BLISS Towanda. Pa. March 23. ISM SONIETIIING NEW BRIDGE STREET A BOSTON BOOT AND - SIT9E STORE ! J. &. M. SHEFTEL, the' leading Boot and Shoc meiThants of lloruells vitle. N. Y., will open 3, A BOSTON BOOT AND SHOE STORE AT 'No. '2, BRIDGE STREET - NvALL PAPER P BY THE IST. OF APRIL, WC. 4 SIGN OF THE RED, BOOT Bridge Street, 13eidleman's Blok Respectfully Yours, J. tt M. STIEFTEL .Towanda. April 15, .71% R . FLESCIIIII7I"S CELEIMATED STOMACH BITTERS! A certain cure for Dyspepsia, Coativeues, era3tbrbue, I y m.. 11 4.ty, Fever, &v. Is purt;ly vegetable. It purities the 104. Ht. allays inthunroa eures ole , yration, regelat es the teiwol-c af,t posses s a (*.fitment g lamer of er Ow nervous tip tem. Forsicknesv pe,u.lar to fenirdes—alisensea,ot the jiver and general debility—it seldom falls:-U> effect a fornutitent cure. Small salrerlng front sour or inflamed stienache, or cramps, are tin menlately relieved by light th a .es of the fluor, (mixed with a little warm water). Full 'directlcitis are with every bottle. Prepared by F.? Du. F. FLESCIIIIUT Sr CO.. TOWANDA, i301.D CARPETS! We have now received our Large Stock of SPRING CAEP'ETS BODY BRUSSELS, THREE I'LY, 'ENGLISH TAPESTBY, TAPESTRY INGRAIN, STPERFINE, HEMP, COTTAGE AND RAG CANTON .MATTING -t=l, WHITE AND COL•ORED FLOOR &c., &c, &c. RUGS,- MATS, &c, All of which will be sold at unusually Irg . Dace also opened our Large Stock of March 22, 18U. Powell & Cs. INGRAIN, EXTRA .SUPERFINE; - DOUBLE COTTON CHAIN VENETIANS Also, :Full Stock of OIL CLOTIIS,i Low Prices /SE WINDOW SHADES! POWELL CO. - pain k Ell4eth. - ~__.,..~_~ _ z= • / 4 cAIuT.T§ IMO CARPETS E. 4 i 6 N S&11 L E I'l have opene4 aw • entire New a large Stoel 3 / 4 : of I! CARPETS; OIL CLOTIIS, MATTINGS, _MATTS~ BUGGS, &c., &C., 4:0 To ishieh they invite the site tion .of Cdstomers at• .their N ,t,r)re, MAIN STREET, 1 1 / 4 111 March 16. 1876 Floet d Scr.z. J. O. FROST & SON resrpertruNy is Li:l - .7,2 aZ rUn." FIRST CLASS FURNITTP,F = L A•RGER TITAN EVE And that our pricqs are the LOWEST. and IMEAEMMOM or any In the Niiinti IST. , Our prices hale no T TIE :BO T ( . Anif now Is the TIME TO Bry. Jas: Cent:nal it mit the city, Wel EMI ATTRACTI'VE LOT OF (iOOl HOLIDAY SEASON: COME AND SEE THEM. Everything In the'llne . of D E K -I N AT BOTTOM PRICES AT DiT: 9, 1873, II II MI i I r ? Tows SIO. MI reac'te4 DIM I= MEI= FROST'S & SONS