Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, July 27, 1876, Image 2

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xxwo nox *v. WHIM.
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:•. ' Es- ISABELLA has left France
. . .
l' : l'or Spain. : -s'
.--.--• PrrTsncrnou is threatened with an ice
1- - fan*ine. - y ,
. . .
. i PULLMAN cars on English railways don't
- pay expenses.
THE new third elasa,postage law lias
gcitie into effect.
Dom PEDRO and his wife have arrived .
safely in England. .
•
Tun Phihtdelphia Ledgei prints nearly
• • two column of deaths daily.
TILDEN has returned to Albany to en
gineer the Associated Press dispatches.
BRICK POMEROY goes for Hendricks but
not for Tilden. - How is that for high?
SLIrPERY ELat would be far moreAr•
propriate than hickory for Tilden poles.
_ -
GEOROK w. cURTIS Senator Clink
ling are both talked "'of for Governor of
New York:
Richmond Democrat says he will
vote for Tilden, because he thinks Beech
, et treated him badly. -
_THE subseriptiofis to the City of Paris
loan amount to -tifty-four times the re
quired sum. •
TUE greter,-Ipart of the ice used in Gal
t'reston manufactured by an artificial
process in that city.
- THE - Republicans of the first Congres,
sional District talk of running Carl Schurz
for Congress thi. fall.
SAILINGMASTI:Ii RAWLINS of the yacht
Mohawk is blamed for the terrible casu
ality of Thursday.' ile is under arrest.
GENERAL BUTLER contradicts the state
' molt that lie has ;withdrawn from the
Congressional eanva.ss in his old district.
A stage Friday night brought into
Cheyenne, Wyoming 'Territory,- $lO,OOO
' in dust from the DeatllVotxl.
GEN. SHERMAN says there are'twenty
warriors as conipetent to command as
Sitting Aiill, in case the latter is dead.
Sixrr, ritorsAso biiitels of oil were
burned Thursday eveninliat Delk' g Station
on the Pennsylvania
did it.
' TUE house of William Wilson, at Ayer
.I'unctiott, N. IL, was struck by lightning
and his daughter, aged 17, was"killed in
GENERA 'BOISRAND CANAL has beeb
elected Tresiileiit of Hayti. All. quiet
throntront _the country, excepting - a, moue
taryq!risis.
Tim German gOvermpent has sent a
'commissioner. to the oil region to investi
gate the manner of . producing and relin
ing peiraiegm.
• • f
Tivrox has got Mrs. Tilton'sson Ralph
away froin her and she is nearly distracted
about it. Mr. 'Tilton appears to be a per
son of variable mind. -
SPORTSMEN are having splendid luck off
the coast of 'Maine. At York harbor a
hundred mackerel are frequently caught
by au amateur in a day.
Tnk: fasidonable bathing,dress for lades
is bright bide in color; is trimmed with
white bMid, and has a broad belt with
ever so many buttons. •
Tit E,G reek a'o yernment is preparing ti
protcst'should the Porte fulfill its inten
ti-,n of establiShing a colony of 70,(M)
Circassians near the Greek frontier. -
W. L. q .lEwErr, fOr many years
Sketch artist for Frank Leslie's illustrated
papers, committed suicide by shouting at
his residence in Jersey City.
-TUE Norwich Ihtlletin has. found a say
to-keep 'Cool. The editor bought a suit
bC perforated buckskin and then cut the.
buckskin out - '
'ih-En 300,000 Texas catttle have been
sent to market from the southwestern
part: of that State (luring the s'priurr and
+5
summer of the present year.
THE San - Francisco Chronicle notes that
a 3liirMon Bishop, who has just come
home_from the Sandwich Islands, brings
,With him live' Hawaiian wives. •
THE harbor of Havana, Cilba, is milled
thep"breeding pond of the world for yel
-lo* fever, and all the other pestilential
:scourges which devastate humanity."'
A 'fRAIN on thei Central Pacific., on Fri
day, ran -over and killed - -a man near
Truckee. who was, found td" have been
Lashed to the track by parties unknown::
EU'GEN E and Ulysses Si. Stoddard, aged
' tWenty-two and twelve years, were killed
;hy_earth falling - on them while digging a
- Well in Ledyard, Ct., on Saturday.
'TnE tirserefrigerator for whitha patent
was taken out" was invented by Thomas
;hone, a member of the Society of Friedds,
living in Mort4vomery county, Maryland,
in lso3.
THE boarding;-house keepers at, Sarato
. ga Springs are making money this season,
•;- if the hotels are not. Goixt, board and a
comfortable room can be had for $lO a
week.
Tilt: number of visitors at Looluiut
Mountain is unprecedently large. An ir-
rc ular nomad which was once an earth
. - work is ithwost the only reminder of the
,battle-lield.
ME oil field in the neighborhood of
IVari•en has attrrcted a large number of
experienced persons Soho have made leaSes
or bought land and will soon demonstrate
its capacity' for oil production.
THE Grangers Selcted Miss Emma
• Steek,to read the Declaration of Indepen
• deneelat their Fourth of July picnic near
Nancy - 'She performed her' part to the .
. satisfaction of her audience.
THE laf,gest sponge ever found in the
Floridas is exhibited at , a store in New
York. Whf.n wet it is eight feet in cir
cumference. and when dry twelve feet,
and weighs n Meet'
. pounds.
:AT the-4th of July celetiMtien at Roek
Ill.,''the oratimi was delivered by
Bev. Jackson Blackburn, formerly a slaVe,
and one of bis-bearers was P. L. Mitchell,
who had once owned him.
A 'Cono'NE . P.'s inquest was held in New
York, on Thursday, on the body of -a boy
%who died of paralysis, paused by injuries
inflicted on his spinal ein-d by boys jump
ing on his back in playing lelp frog.
. ' Mn. BIAI!4: has left Aup4a, -Mel, for
Rye Beach, Portsmouth, to try and re
cuperate. Ills health is not much iin
„LProvedo.but he is physically a little strong
.
PROF. 31AutucE E. PERNINS, of the
(:allege, has bee - u- chosen Preii
dent ;of the Hayes anti Wheeler club.
Among the membership ,
of the club are
eight or ten professors sf. the college.
Tut: family , of Isaac B. Dcides of New
Bedford, Mass.. seven in number, were
poisoned by eating cantall corned beef
Thursday. One child has died, but the
others are but_ of danger:
LING is almost the only. popu
lar Summer resort that is not complain
ing of lad: of business. It has never had"
so matty visitors v, Carly iu the season.
Consequently it enjoy s great expectatibus.
e. FROST . THORNE who is supposed to
ha' e been drowned by the' capsizing of
the_Moban•k, was engaged in business in
-and was the husband of
3liss Lilly; daughter of E. L. lleavenport.
..:011TIIIVNIPTON. Mass., is proud of the
discovery that she was the first town in
tha(state to ijay .taxes in support of the
pivernment, as the treas.
• urer's recoups. dated December 10, 1774;
THE rein:tins Of David' Williams, one
cif the captors of Major Andre, were re-
Moved last week from Rcnsselaerville to
Scholiarie and deposited in a xault, where
they will remain until September, when
the monument 'erected to his Memory will
be dedicated. ' •
cm.i. has been issued for a national
mass convention of the United States pen
siouers. to be held at Philadelphia on the
2lst - of September. The call states that
the convention - is for the
.purpose of en
deavoring to bring 'about beneficial
lation in their special interests: '
TitE - Battle monument :in. Baltimore,
erected in .commemoration of the born
' hardment of Fort McHenry. September la,
:I>' 4 l-1, and
_the battle - ,.0f North Point ob
tqc follmting day, has been recently re
paired. his proposed' to celebrate the
afiniversary.of-tha battle this year.
I SURROGATE CALVIS, of New-York, has
decided a slave's 'marriage to be valid in
the case of the property of Anthony Jones,
accumulated in "New York. after his es
cape from slavery. His slave wife and
son contei.ted the State's claim to t 15,000
kit by :lone - 4. who died intestate., They
weieldechled legal heirs. •,
l•ii.Nict the middle of June there has
been hot work at the Philadelphia Mint.
le the ineltkirs' detartment the heat Las
raw2ed from 1041.7 ,- fo 1'25 1 ', with an °ma:-
t sional ...spurt " up to In the rolling
inn the average has been 10.5 0 ,-aud ia
the ffhitening room from 110:' to 1311 1, .
• AlStfors.: who aro - :tendons, ton keep cool - 0
f - P:e Eithtbittou wi23 thz w 41.1 t. 9 speed
.
• night 4 2r:two - at th i rnint4 -
MEEN
===
NEMO
Xlqdfoia . g,titoo
EDITORS;
E. 0. GOODRICH. f. W. ALYOIRD.
Towanda, Pi, Thursday, ,Tnly 27, 1876.
NATIONAL REPUBLICAN TICKET.
FOR PRESIDENT,
RUTHERFORD B. HAYES,
OF ODIO.
FOR VICE PRESIDENT,
WILLIAM, A. WHEELER,
OF' NEW YORK.
- 7.- - -
REPUBLICAN COUNTY CONVENTION
Pursuant to resolutions passed by the Republican
County Committee in session June 20th, 3576, a
Nowdniting Convention of the Republican pasty
said convene at the Court House, lo Towanda, on
TUESDAY, AUGUST 2nd, 1/111, at 1 o'elbck, P.
x.. for the purpose of expressing the choice•of the
delegates for a candidate for Congress and also Inc
a candidate for State Senator, and appointing Cow
gressional and Senatorial Confereei; also, for the
purpose of nominating three candidates for the
House of Representatives Of the State Legislature.
By the same authority; the CommitteesOf Vigi
lance of the several election districts are beteby.
directed to rail a primary or delegate election for
their irspectlee Merles, to be holden on SATIIII
DAY,_the 'nth day * of August next, for the purpose
of electing, by ballot, two delegates to represent
each of _mid districts In County Convention,. The
delegate elections In the townshliis shall be organ
ized at 3 o'clock, r. M., and kept open continuously
to the close, which shall be at 5 o'clock, P. Y. For
the boroughs the said delegate elections shall be
organized at 2 o'clock, r. at., and kept open ;coniln
uously Mitt! the Flose, which shalt be at 8 O'clock,
r. is. The votes shall then be counted up, and the
result certified by the oflicers to the chairivan of
the _County Coni'ention, and a copy delivered at
once to the delegates elect. In case of Instructions
—which it ireOrnmended shall be given., In every
instance, by writing the pCfsonal choice of Voters
for each candidate td be nominated upon their
lots.—the instructions shall also be certified to the
Convention.
J. 11051.COMIT, Chairman
ATTCST:—E. B. CtX)LI3:4A7GII, E. .1. ANGLI,
Secretaries •
COMMITTEES OF VIGILANCE
• Armtnin—Wm. Young, Andrew Leonard, 91-
-mon Sh•lnian. ,
A /6any—S D Sterigere, I F.' Patch. Jot Ilestell.
/7") Boro--C S Vikon. P S Hier, E "Andrews.
Asylum—E. J. Ayn".N. P. Moody. Geo. Kerick.
.4thens ter.-4. L. Elhbree, G,6). 1). 31111.er, J.
A. Woodworth.
"Men, Boro-1.. W. Tripp, Arunah 1.14 d, Chas
E. Drake..
Burlington P rIIS, R C Haight, Jo
seph Morley.
`• Boro—S II I[3ll, Dr R Murylough,
J
11Ve.st—.1. B. McKean, Geo. Bourne,
Leroy Stanton.
Canton Ttrp—Warren Landon, Leonard_ Lewis,
Daniel Turnlc
Gunton Boro-0, B. Westgate, John 8. 311 x, .1.
W. stone. ,
Colll , m , dri. F. Warden, B.l3esley, 11. F.
K napp.
Franklin William Robert, .1 C Ridgway, Stern
Cranrille—Percival Balley,Oscar Saaton,Wal ter.
Clark.
reick—Austin Wetmore, Jos. P. Lee; James
•
Leßoy—L.W. Wooster,S. B. Morse,_ .1„ : R. Gran
leer.
Litelofeld—.ll. Merrill, Frank' Rogers, Daniel
1 - anbme., I
Le Raysrall—S.ll. Davies, J. G. Hensley, Stew
art Cantlel4l. — ;..
Monroe Boro—
Ttcp.—
Orwell—Jas. I'. Coburn, Isaac Marsh, C, G. Van
'Winkle.
rJrrrt..n—
Pito A. Ross, Wallace Abbott, Frank Chaf
fee.
Ridg/444ry—G. Owens, .1. May, R. W. Mead. „
Horn- nrp.—Charle's Dougherty, John V 4 tight,
itlctihrd McCabe.
R IME Bore—B. R. Adams, S. E. Seeley, E. M.
Frost,
Sm ithfie4;-0.„ K. Blrd.ll. Gerould.RufuS Child.
Springtel. A. Adams, W..Wlgsten,Stuldon
Phillips.
Soon Creek—lra Crane; Fred Chancy, Fred
Moore.
Surrania-4. D. Smith, J. R. Alexander, L. L.
Gregory, -
ShexherLiA—Oscai F. Ayer, Horace • Morton.
Elias B. Hall:
St , tn , ling Stone—W Whitaker, G N Taylor, Chas
Jennings. -
Terry—W. T.Mortoit, E. S. Thompmm, S. Bo'iv
-11155.
ntin
Boro—lst Ward. I. IL Humphrey, S.
F. Boyle. It. T. Stevens.
Towanda Boro-2nd Ward—H M Pars4Ms, C F
Taylor. F Sanderson',
Towanda Born-3d Ward. C. L. Tracy, S. W.
.41,41-41, L. Eisbree.-7
Towanda .Vorth-W. McMoran, W. A. Sluyter.
Ezra Rutty,
Troy Twp—ll. N. • Fl.sh, John html,n- Nelson
Wool.
Tioy Born—A. S. Newman, Liston 'Bliss, 0.
Adams.
Tugearora—S. B. Overt;n, John Clapper, Geo.
J. Johnson. -
L'lster—J C Burnside, Chas McMurian, James
1t arras=
trim/hem—Elmer Neal, James Ellsworth, it
V' It Ro , lkers. •
t.sio , j— •
Wygoz—George Poole, Norman Parke, James
a rd.
wilh,--4. It Brasted, G It Knapp, :W Itclyea.
Wand—J S. quick, C A - Stowell, II 11 Meeks.
; '
EXECUTIVE COMIII*TEE.
The following inembers of the Repuhll can County
Committee are appointed an Executive Committee,
foi the purpose of conferring with the Chair Man,
!ac cireumstances may ireqtire, In relation to details
!of organization In the conduct of the pending pollt-
Ical campaign :
Theodore Fleece. Canton 1.1. F. Satteriee, Mon
roe Boro: W. Kinney. Sheshequin ; George
Fox, Towanda Twp.; John If. Grant, Truii W. 11.
•Rockwell, Ulster.
J. 110LCOMB,.thairnian
TIIE DIFFERENCE.
While TILDES and ,HENDRICK:3 are
hesitating, halting and diseusSing
over what they, Shall say in their let
ter's, Hires and WHEELER have been
prompt in' giving the public their
declarations. The letter - of the for
mer was given to_ our readers some
time since, and bore upon its face
the Oidenee of candor,. honesty, and
statesmanship. In this paper will be
fOund Mr. WHEELER'S. It needs no
recommendation to secure for it a
careful . perusal and unqualified en
dorsement of every Republican.
Tui: Republican party. in Pennsyl
vania hasAieen•in the ascendency for
many years, and it is a source of
pride: to • every sincere Republican
that .the organization is `to-clay in
beteCr di4cipline than any other State
in the Union. The affairs of the
Commonwealth have been prudently
and honestly managed; and the lead
ers of the party are men of the high-.
est character. What more could be
asked ? The condition of affairs. re-'
fleets the highest credit upon- thoSe
who have for the past fifteen - years I
guided the party and. brought It to I
its present prosperous condition.
Neither envy nor jealousy can rob
the Republican leaders in thisrState
of the laurels they have sp justly
earned.
THE claird that the present, Pemo
eratie RouSe of Representatives has
reduced' the expenses of the goVern
i
ment:s3s,ooo 4 Poo, simply because it
has cut down 4 the appropriation bills
to this citent, is the merest sham.
You can only tell how much his been
saved to the country in any fiscal
year'after . you have added the amount'
of thedetleiency, bills to . the appro.
-
priations ,of that particular year. No
one, the `least acquainted with our
cumbersom system of government,
will believe that the apprcipriations
can he reduced $35,000,060 in ene
year, and the busineSs of the country
transacted as it should be. After
the election is passed, and the next
session has closed its doors the Amer
jam people will discover that the
present Mouse perpetrated a gross
fraud Upon thecu l lu the , ualms olf
.412e2tMOS:"
=l,Mlft
Tits ritsiesostiLasOcC
WW fear, says: the .Tribune, that
flou r Tumor and thw. Hsunmercs
arestrainingthernielvelt unnecessarily
and unprofitably. 'They are laboring,
it is said,:to effect some nreement
on' the currency question. We need
not -place unreasonable confidence in
the rumors which Come from Saratoga
direletly or by way of Long Branch
or Washington, but there is probably
good ground for the belief that long
and earnest conferences have _been
held on the subject, in the hope that
some form of dechiration might be
devised upon which differing elements
could unite. Perhaps the, experiment
may succed. Whether itsucceeds or
not is of not the least consequence to
the country, the party, or its candid
ates.
The gentlemen who are engaged in
this business mistake the.situation.
The day when voters could be de
cieved by juggling phrages has de
parted. It vanished when men pene
tratedr, the wilderness and pierced
mountains with railroads, and thread
ed villages on telegraph wires;' as
children' string beads. Once It was
possibleL to bide the fact that a great
party, professing to believe in one
thing in New : York, was demanding
the contrary in, Indiana. When Penn
sylvania: Was' carried for " FOLK,
DALLAS, and , " the of the
Democratic party wen its last great
victory.' No party whose deliberate
aim is to cheat Voters will ever - win
another.
Mr. TILDEN and Mr. ,livinaicKs
May as well say nothing. They can
inform nobody, deceive nobody. The
country knows that the Demeeratic
party is divided into two factions on
this question. It knows
.that the
stronger faction, both numerically
and in tenacity of purpose, demands
unconditional and unqualified repudi
ation of a • solemn pledge of the
public faith. It knows that the nu
merically weaker fadiOn has been
trying, ever since Congress assem
bled, to sell itself at
,some price a
little better than unconditdnal surren
der ;that It haS yielded, step by step,
daf after day, until there are scarcely
a dozen Demoy4ic members in -Con
gress who havelthe pluck to . vote
against any outrageous demand which
the,repudiators may make. It knows
that at St. Louis,.despite the maffnif
peent organization and overwhelming
force of Mr. TH.DEN's iiersonal adhe
rents, they were compelled to surren—
der what they justly deemed a vital
point in the platform. They did not
dare to 'imake a 'Manly fight for TIL
DEN and the public. honor ; and hence,
while Mr. DOItSHEIMER and others
signed a private protest against the,
platform as adopted, they voted for
it to save their favorite candidate
- Finally, when he had been nominated,
not one of them had the courage to
oppose the utterly inconsistent nom-
ination of IlEsinticKs. On the plat
form as framed, Mr. TILDEN allowed
himself to be nominated, and there be
is compelled to stand, with HEN
DRICKS by his side. to • show the full
meaning of his surrender.
Tricks of phrase are thrown away.
Whatever Mr.,•Tmt,EN may want, the
country knows that - he anal his mana
gers found that he could not 'be nom
inated in a Democratic convention,
- unless he cOnsented to the demand
for unconditional repudiation of the
pledge of resumption. Ile nulY pile
up wordsuntil they dwarf the nioun
taiiis, but that fact will still stick in
the clear understanding of intelligent
voters. lie will gain by it in,l ndiana
that was what, his party intended.
- Ile will lose by somewhere else.
And he will lose the more for every
new effort that he may Blake to hide
or befog-the issue, or to conceal the
antagoism between the opposing ele
ments in - the Democratic party.
. THE mortality in the large cities,
and throughout the country, 'during
the late heatkd term"*s fearfully
-
large. In New Yoe: thOre were I3OU
deaths last week, the greatest number,
during the same length of time, since
1872. In that year, with about tlu;
same average temperature (84C) ate
highest-amber was'ls69. The high
est, temprature in the city this year,_
thus far, as here, was of i Sunday, July
9th, when it reached 9.Y. Last week,
in New York, the mortality of chil
dren and 'tenement houses furnish the
great eseesS' of deaths,, the number..
of Children under one year toeing. 649,
under two years SO5, and under five
years S6 i , -1 6 f: which 596 were from
diarrlneal diseases. Sunstroke caused
103 deaths. •
" rum. DOWN 'Vona TEsT."•LAVhen
we see the p9int to
j the little article j
in the last ..-Irgus, signed "Observer,",
Wtkare going to "take a day ofr" and
have a good laugh. In the meantime. •
we would warn the gentleman of
"immense: magnitude and huge pre
ponderosity," that it is dangerous in j
such warm weather to carelessly ex
pose his . iyaine, and therefore advise j
him to tpull down his vest," when he I
is expose to the rays of the sun. "An ,1
ounce of prevention" &c.
Br the. capsizing of the yacht
Mohawk, in New York ,bay, Friday
afternoon, Wit4talst T. GARNER the
well 7 known manufacturer and yacht
man, his wife, his "mother-in-raw,
FROST TIIORNE, ;nd Miss A nELE 'BUN
TER, a young lady well - known in New
York society, and a i cahin-boy lost
their lives. There were :several other
liersons on. the yacht in addition to
the crew at the time of the disaster,
but they were rescued.
TILE . prospects now t i tre that the
ludian troubles will be prolonged,
at. 4 the result doubtles i)e that
the government
,will be ill!OUIpellell to
resott to severe means to'subdne the
iavages. Troops Are bell:1,1f .pul4hed
forward with as tonotr rapidity: as
possible. • '•
Mai
IMI
TIM lIILIN,II9OIIIIMiIk,
. The Philadelphia Tiiwik: ridi
culed‘
. the "bloody shitif'r, b. : hiess
-i . 1
so Much that the following , in regard
to the recent outrages ili.N. Carolina,
will be read with surprise by its
readerS. The appearance of suc h an
article in the Times is Corroborative
evidence of , what Republicans ) have
claimed, 1. e., that the animus of the •
rebellion still exists - in: the §outh,
and that there: is no s:afety'fJr the
blacks of the South under Demilocrat
ic rule. When. all that iS char g ed by
- -
Republicans on this question is ad
mitted by such opponents as ALEX.
1 i
McCLunE, what need is there of fur
ther proof: 1
" Score one State for Hayes, South
Carolina by name, and MissiSsippi,
Florida and Louisiana; as leaning
strongly in the same direction
,All
the Southern States could hav been
booked as certainfor Tilden, with the
single exception of Sotith Carolina,
and that really doubtful, hail not
both whites and black's celebrated
the Centennial Fourth of July after
their own ways at Hamburg, in the
Palmetto Comnionwealth. Who were
wron g in the origin of the .difficulty
is of little moment. Granted that
the sable malitiamen were on their
high horses; thatthey were insolent;
that they wantonly obstructed the
highways of hamburg and proVoked
the resentment of the whites.. .lr rant;
ed, too,, that the first bloodlspilled
was that of a white man by a black
man, and that the negro summer sol
diery were even lawleSs in their ef
forts-to maintain . their lawful ri ghts.
Assuming all these charges , O be
fohnded in truth, there can ie no
pOSsible excuse offered for the atro
cious butchery of half a dozerqielp
lesS black captives . atter ther-had
been driven from their retreat by
grape and canister and ',were utterly
defenseless. It was simply fikindish
murder, and the . victims were mur
dered because they were blac k men
and their murderers white men'This
fact must be
: looked squarely n the
i
face. It is demanded :not of ly by.
the truth, but it is dethandet alike
by every consideration• of po l itical
expediency, of patriotism and of
peace. . . .
* * * * * * Nor was
it, done in the frenzy of passioi
there was deliberation and met
the butchery, and 4 1 4' now h
that a white South Carolina in
written in blood that the blue
of that State has no right the
man is bound to respect."
ONLY a few years since tit
HoiticE G REELEY wrote and p
the following open letter to S.l
J. TILDEN. The old niilosopli i
mealy did not think the DemOi
candidate much of a I reformer :
To .1. TILDEx, CfOlirmaniDemo
rnitir .clate
I can imagine how a man may sh
eyes to many things :which lie de
convenient not to know ; but I :'l4
what you must know, hoWever yoc
wish or seek to be ignorant of it. I
You . hold a most responsible posit
the councils of a great par'ty.
make that party content itself with
ing legal votes if you only! would.
late constitutional convenient I tri
erect some fresh barriers against et
frauds. Did pot' The Very little!
Able to effect in this direction I slt:i
to have milk(' by the pe.!ple at tl
suing election. Will you Mr. Ti
you can not escape re)iponsibility tj
ing with the guilty MaCtieth :
.Thou . carat not ,ay I 111.1 It: ta. vr R!4
,Thou gr ry iock , at till , —
foy you were at least a passive accol
in the giant frauds of Novi;!
Your name was used, withoiit
!est on, your part, in the circulars
broadcast over the Mat o , where
manifest inti-nt.was ti t ) make asst
doubly sine '' that the frands here p
Crated should mit bd
.overborne It
honest vote lif the rural districts.l
you, nut merely by hil'enei Amt by 14
assumPtion, have cavcrttil these 4
with' the mantle of ymibrespeet
on ie 'principle that " the receive
bad as the thief," you arc as deeii
plicated in them to-day as t111)11;4
name were Twecd, (Tilden, or
I foliar I.: GREE
te, York., Ori.
T❑ E Liberal llepublieans 0
York have istie(l the
, ,
for a Convention to endorse t 4 nomt
ination of IlAyt t and-WitEELFat;
'We, Liberal Ittpubl Ica ns. I nde i pen&
ent Republkans .and] independent
voters, in sympaticy'• with the pi;Ufcs: , {,
ions of the Republican party and
with its-nominations made in (iliricirrr
nati, having received with satisfaction
and conlidin! , in, the Plain arid un
equivocal adoPtion:byillun. I:lther
for B. Ilayes arif,l Hon. IS•tn. A.
IV]heeqr in their lettiWs of aCcept.
:ince of our cherished' princi 'Aes—
Pie resumption of specie pay] rents.
the payment of the
] pnitlie (104 in
coin, the extension of the sacred
right of local self-government to the
whole 'country, a reforMed 1.111(1; faith
-1111 civil service„ and a single' 'resi
(lential term-do invite our fellow-
Liberal Republicans, ! IndepeHent
Republicans, and independent - oters
of the State of New YOk to n eet in
State ConventiOn,
.411,1 StilatTra
Springs, on the '2,L2(1 day of August
next, at 11 o'clock A. M. fOr •the pur
pose of. endorsing the noinination of
lion. Rutherford ',B. Hayes ftir i the
Presidency-, and Hon.] William A.
Wheeler lire the Vic'e-Presidency,
and of nr! , ing the Reptiblicai !State
Convention then and there to.,lmake
State nominations in thOrough - a'...cord
with the national nominations :uul
with the true interests' of the most
advanced political reform.' Three
delegates to I he :Omitted front each
AssemblyDistrict]; butkilli4:e,lic9ders
to be excluded in inWsuance Of tiM
] resolution of the Liberal StateiCon- !
ventiOd of ISTii. : •
FOR THE INDIAN WAR.
Four Companies of ArtiPery Orderfd
s •
PROVIDEN(E, .1 Tith.—Ordefg
have been received at Fort Adatns,
hvadquitr . ters of the first artilleri:, to
despa : tol four companies West furtit
with. It is thought two compitnies
will be taken froth Fort Adams'. one
from 'Tort Warrin', and one from
FOrt Trumbull.
ANOTHERM OVENIET OF TROOPS
1 Cnic.wo, .Inly ro , 2.:ali:in en. Me
._
Kenzie, with six mpks of 7 . S.
troops, has been ordered from the
Indian territory to Red Cloud agency
and vicinity, via Cheyenne and I.ara
'inie, to take the' place of Merritt,
,who goes`with the tin tavalry, to
join Ciitok: li .
1 .
THE lli,r}sEnt:NcE.--Wbilc the Dem
ocratic nominees are unable to Iliar
monize views and present then? •to
the public is letfcrs ori :weept'inii_.t.,
HAYEs and Wm:v.lA se't, forthit kir
views and declare their kineiviv., . in
clear t _taietiaivacal 14.1/ittsige.,, ,Coin
unuestart --;-:;., ii..---.:,
WA
10011. WA • AT 1110nE.
Gov:.tins' I visit to Fremont,
Ohio, that plat 'beltig his bomeite• -
cently was a metioribleevent'in its
history. , It *as :mile the eeeeehm,
for a greeting 'to the Cloven* by
people from the entire northern part .
of the state. It Was a brilliant'affair
and' *holly non+artiSan. The ar
rival of the traia at the depot found
at least 5,000 peOple waiting for the
next President. Eight o'clock brought
together in the pilblic sqare a crowd
variously estimated" at. from ten_ to
fifteen thousand !people, with bands
of music and banners,, while salutes
were fired from cannon in the square.
The depot, public buildings, and
streets along . which the procession,
from the depot'marched were illumin
ated, and floral arches were thrown
across various paCts of the route. At
the public square Mayor DIC'KEN§ON
made a brief address of welcome to
the Governor, who 'responded as fol
f
lows t
MR. MAYOR; FELLOW-CITIZENS.
FRIENDS, NEIGHBORS, AND ALL:
need not attempt 'to express the
emotions I feel at the reception which
the people of Fremont and, of this
country' have given me
. 1
Under any circumstances al
blage of this• sort• at my I
welcome inc would touch m
excite the warmest emotions
tude.; but what gives to th
tinctive character is the f.
those Who arc ,prominent in ,
ing me at home P i know very
the past have not voted with
for me, and they ; do not i
the future to vote with me o
It is simply that comirg to n
they rejoice that Ohio, that S,
county, that' the town of 1
~
has received at that Convent
honor, and I 'thank you Deli
"!fellow-citizens, Indepemlentsl
; publicans, for thiv spontane
! warm and enthusiastic re i ,
[Cheers.] I trust! that in tl i u
~ of events tlic tinie Will nevi(
I that you will hive cause i
1 what you have . done to-night
1 It is a 'very great respo
that the, party has sought I
upon me, to 4)e the represen
-10,000,000 of peOple—a reso
I ty which I knoW very ,weil I
hie to perform. I , tmdersta
well t4at it was !not beeaus,
ability, or talentS, (4 positim;
was chosen; th(fre,' were ai
and contingeneies4hat ean.
result, lint that whichi doesi
me is, that here, where I has
in my childhood, there ar
who come-and rejoice at th(
I trust, my frieiuls that m],
along in this desilltorY,way-H
well know that since I learne
was to he here to-night the tI
letters and visit Ors and teleg
answer have giyen me no,
prepare for a reception ilk(
you must put up with haStily
sentences, vyry ;unfitly refn
the sentiments appropriate tc
casion.
; fur
Od in
Stol
L hay
- man
white
MEI
MEI
NI EL
12133 E
MEE
iut his
ems it
eak of
u may
* *
101 l in
could
II poll-
In our
led to
icetion
I was
411 try
Ile en
y -
Let me, if I nqiy do it wit'
much egotism, recur to the
.of my connection with the' 1
party.. Many years ago mf, , , - uncle .
Sardis Birchard,, came to this place,
and Lyejoie, my 'friends, at tie good
taste which has' placed his ortrait
here to-night, (alaree,:portrait of Mr.
Birehard ' decorated the stand,) lie,
havilg adopted; me as hid child,
brought me to Preinont. I recollect
Well the appearance of lioWer San
dusky, consisting' of a few (wooden
buildings;seattereil along the river,
with very little ;paint on .11i l em, and
these trees none !of them gloWn ; the
old 'Fort Stephens still havitig some
of its earthworks, -remaining I so that
-it counid he easily traced. A pleas
ant village this. -was for a boy to en
joy himself in. There was the fish
ing onithe river, the hunting; -water
fowl at the dam, the island land the
lake, and perhalfs no boy ever enjoy
ed his departure from home more
than I did when I first came to Fre
mont. But now ,see what'remont
is.flow it has
,grown. It has not
:.
increased to a fir St-class col nnercial
city, but it has ,bec6e a iileasant
home ; so pleasant, so thriving, that
I rejoice to think that whatever may
be the result next fall, it will be pleas
ant to return to it When it isall over.
If defeated I ,Shall return to you
oftener than if 11 go to the White
Moose, and if I :go there I shall re
joice at the timel when I shall be per
mitted to return" 'to you, and be a
neighbor again.
1 .have been touched scarcely by
anything that has occurred since the
nomination as much as by tie letter
from a friend at ;Norwalk, who wrote
that if Sardis Itirchard .could have
lived to know this; but this is the
order. Of Providence. ..Evenis follow
one upon the other as wavi t follows
.wave upon the oCean. It isifbr each
'man to do what he can to take oth
ers happy. That- is the pray e r and
that is the duty ; of life. Ldt us. my
friends; in every position undertake
to perform this. ; For me, 11 have no
reliance except that which Abraham
Lincoln had when he went from his
friends at Sprin'glield, wheil lie said
to his friends " 1 7 go to Wri.,him . , ton
to assume a responsibility) greater
than any one that has devokfed upon
any one since the first Presh ent,aml
I beg yon, my frieinis and m ighliors,
to pray that I may have Divine as
sistance. without which I ea not Sue
,ebed, and with whiCh I cant ot; fail,"
[Cheers.] In that spirit I as - you to
dal with me. [(Leers.] If i shall be
the will pf,the people that tl is nomi- l
station shall' be 'ratified, all will be
Well : if on the 'other hand), it shall
be the will the of people that another
shall assume these great resronsibili
ties,, let us see to it that we, who op
pose him, give him a fair trial, and
and also our prayers.
1111 ice
tuber.
le pro-
H t exed
) the
larthee
Portw
ey the
And
frauds
r is as
I , •
I* 1M-
3A)I
lakley
.1:1".
Ncw
l l g call
- ,'My friends liithank yo
interest you 'base taken ii
spect, and . , that you have 1,
partisan feeling. "There has
much bitterness on such occ
thiti country. 14 , t us see
abilse or Virtupation of the c
that shall be nanidd at St.
not proceed from Our lips;
this Centennial occasion, th
century of existere, set an
of what a free andintelli in , re
I
can do.
. Gov. ILlyes then referred to the
Centennial at some length, and then
said : " Let us show in clecAng the
Chief Magistrate of, the nation, the
oilice that is to lie.the first of f 45,000,-
ifoo of people. let' us show those who
visit ii.i how tlai Americas ! people
can conduct, them Selves through a
canvass of this sort. If it s all he in
the spirit in which we have net here
to-night. ; Wit shall lie that
.justice
1i
1,11141 raiIIICSS Sli:iii, Ire in Mi.! discus- Fourt of the " m (41
1,
zn .
gions, it will eozionend free iustitti-i_ h _ ,:__ ;bc_ii ._ y Manuires,"
on trial . at Pottsville
iions to the . woild ,io a w 4.57 which ""' ' 1 !. 1 ` 1 . -`-- - --,12 . • - • •
the3i- have -never" lion- - co , c o e d for.seme , IMe-P. 11 , 8 t, havcl.ilbee..n ; 'tort
liCeitfull,•• Letlielirle \ J)." - .•- , ....-:'::":' : , '" 1- ': .- 7 ,:. ' 411;iteCtd 4Lituttiiiit-tht . ilitt ileittit,'
~ , i
,sfAtt•%od
o-night.
1 asseni
ome to
, would
f grati
s a tifg
ct t4at
• elcom
well in
I me or
`tend in
for me.
iy home
, ndusky
'remont
='
on that
L ocratic
l and He
ous and
l eeption.
e course
er come
i o regret
Itsibility
to place
alive of
,Onribili
am tma
nd very
. of my
1 . that 1
Tidents
-(41 this
rejoice
ye been
those
e result.
L I 1.1111
for you
1 that I
.roan of
.ains to
time to
c this—
I'
.for the
I this re
aid aside
been too
'qsions in
1
o it that
I ndidate
ouis do
et us on
s second
example
It nation
. . .
- TM* ': 111 A 111 0 1 1 16 1 111 11104 8 - ; ;;'
Goy.CILUIBERLAIN givek the follow.
mgeffleial :statemenV in re
.• .
thelecent cold blooded: murder - of
eelOred mien at Hamburgh, S. , C It
will tie-.obifervedlhis is ito sasation•
al newspaper story, bu the °Weld
repdrt of the Gorenor cif the State:
STATE OF SOUTH 'AiAEOLINA,
'EXECUTIVE 04413111 ER-
COLUMUIA, Juiy .13. )
The Hon. T. J. RobeidsOn, United
States Senator, Washington, .1X C.
Dzna Your request for a
statement from me ofj the recent
bloOdy affair at. llambtirgh, • in this
State, was duly receiVed.• ,1 have
waited before replying until official
reports, and statements sheud be iie4,
ceived. ,There "are .nenio .before
the official reports . of the Attorney
General and the Adjuiant and In-
Spector Generals, the testimony taken
'at the coroner's inquOt, arid the
written, statements of several persons
who were present, and witnessed
the whole or 'parts of: the affair, I
will present to you as briefly as pos
sible, the leading factS; as they ap
pear from the evidence, to) which I
•
have referred. , T
On the 4th of Julyi inStant, a Com
pany of the State ;militia (colored)
were marching aldng icono e of the
streets of Hamburg. The street. was
over 100 feet witfe, and the company
was, marching . ill columns of fours.
While so marching, it was Met by
tic° young White men 'in a buggy,
who insisted in keeping their course
in the street, without regard to the
movements of th:e militia, and drove
against the head'of the COlumn, which
thereupon halted.. Some parlying
took place, which resulted in the
company, yielding, • opening .their
ranks, and allowing the young men
to proceed on their course. On the
folloWing day,the:yiaung Men. referred
to took out warrants of arrest against
some of the °fillers at the militia
coliipany, who were brolight 'before a
trialdustice for trial. the trial was
afterward postpotied till 4 p. m. on
Saturday, the Bth instant. Before
that hour arrived on SatUrday, many
white citizens from the country
around Hamburg began' to gather in
Aown,,armed ' with gunS; and pistols.,
)the militia company, in the mean
wl4le hail assembled at their armory
inrithe village, and at the hour set for
trial the defendants did; not appear.
At this point it has been statO in
dispatches and newspapers that the
militia Officers having defied the au
thority of the trial justice., the citi
zens were' called on to assist the trial
justice. by acting as leis POsse. :Noth
ing of the kind, in filet, occurred.
.The militia failed to appear because
of their fear of injury at the hands of
the armed white men, hnd the trial
justice, after formally 'Calling them,
took no further steps to cause their
presence in his court,-,Oa account of
the excitement, and tlw evidence of .
an impending conflict. .!
While affairs were in this condi
tion, there being, according to all ac
counts, from .flOO to ~ 300,itrmed white
men from' the surrounding country
in town, ja demand was, Made by the
whites fdr the starender to then? of
the.arms!of the militia. 3An hour or
two passed in negotiati6ns concern
ing the demand, the whites informing
the militia company that if the arms
were not given up .in a short time
.(most of the witnessed; say a half
hour) the whites would:•tpen tire on
the militia. The militia 'refused to
deliver up their arms, saying that
the demand was wholly 'unwarranted
and illegal, and that they had reason
to fear for their lives if they gave up
their arms. A' brisk tiie was then
opened by the whites upon( the building
in which the militia were assembled,
and soon after one of the attacking
party was!killed by a shot from the
militia the lutilding A piece of
artillery was , thereupon brought
aceross the bridge front Augusta,
loaded with canister, and fired sevar
al times at the building. This had
the effect:to cause' the militia to en
deavor to make their escape from the
rear of the building. The town mar
shal of Hamburg, a colored man,
who was leaving the building, was
iystantly shot by the attaeking party.
While thus endeavoring to escape
fttom the building, twenty or twenty
live of the miliiia were Captured by
the attacking party, and; kept under
guard for several !mitts. Finally,
alrout tWo O'clock on the morning of
the 9th.of July, (Sundvi) after eon
tiltation among their' Captors, and
with 'complete cipparenyielilteration,
five of the captured militia-men were;
Marched out, one by one, and shot
to death in the presence'. of a large
body of their captors. :The rest of
.the 'captured party wereteither turn
ed, loose or broke look and ran.
They were fired upon its- they ran,
.and three of them severely wounded
—one of them probably Mortally. .!
Attorney General . StOne thus suc
cinctly reports this part 'Of the - affair:
'Six men took A. 'l'. Attaway out of
the rin , r.' Ile and his,Mother beg
ged forjhis life, but in vain. Ile was
told to turn around, an(l was shot to
death by the crowd. David Phillips
was !mkt taken out, and ilvas
similar
ly killed. Pompey Cur 'v was next
called onb, lie recognYnd among
the by-standers 'Henry ,(..letz.en and
Dr. Pierce' Butler, and called - on them"
to keep the other menifrom killing
him. Ile ran and. was shot as'he ran,
one bullet striking him in the leg be
low the knee. Afterward Albert
Mynlart, MoseS Parks, and Hampton
Stevens were killed. Stevens did
riot belong to the company." .
Attorney General, who: has
personally visited 'llarriburg, thus
concludes his official report to me :
"Making due allowance for errors in.
minor details, tti'e facts sliow that the
demand on the :militia to give up
their arms was made by persons with
out lawful authority to enforce such
a demand, or to receive the arms had
they been surrendere4 that the at
tack on the militia to ebMpel a com
pliance with this demantk was with
out justification' or exclete ; and that
after there had been sonic twenty or
twenty-five prisoners ' captured and
completely in the power Of their cap
tors, and without means' of making
further resistance, five oC them were
deliberately shot to death; and three
more severely wounded.'N
formed
senting
the oe-
out too
history
remont
Very respeetrulty, your olyedlentiierTant,
D.. 11. CHASM
Governor of South ij.larolind.
Re= -ear
FROM every- quarter A7e-----Ilear the
most encouraging reports : in regard
to the prospects Of sneers in. the
!wilding campaign. Theltepublican
party. in the County•anit State Was
naf'tic more firmly unitedj •
ganqa
-
118-710X-0171.131cUl!EMD.
'WIBEINOTON LETfillt. is
Democratic Rit/orst—Th4 ihnoPLock on th4 l ;4p.
propritition tharokes .gx,Seeriiary
lielknapi Impeachment Ntat—Rumor* of
Important Changes is the Departmeats,:j
WABLIINGTOI , 4 .1 . 1317 14, Ts.
Reform, Retrenchment and ReforM—
this, during the coming campaign, its to
be the grand rallying cry of the Democ
racy. (heat it reform Great is Tilden,
and we axe his prophets! This is to. be
shouted from the mouth of every Defeo
crat ; it will be posted in flaming charac
ters on every wall, and will both° subject
of every Democratic stump orator's ',ha
rangue. At the St. Louis Convention,
through the agency of the little bliFmst
Sammy Cox, the keynote was sounded to
the faithful, who now, with the aid oft he
Confederate House of RepresentaHies,
are busily preparing to take up the Ery..
A'reduction of forty millions in the ?'ex
penditures of the Government is what - tlfe
leading DemoCratic spirits of the HOuse
would have the public believe they:aro
seeking to accomplish; and consequezxtly, •
every Democrat in the land, as in duty
bound, has learfied his lesson, and is4'ull
to the neck with the subject of econority,
retrenchment and reform.
..,
If there were any evidence of sincerity
in this recent conversion to principles that
have ever been a foreign element to that
party, or if the condition of the country
were such as to demand a change lifithe
administration of its affairs, ,the mares
of the people might be intineed: to turn
an attentive. ear to this pretended tcry
about reform ; but the fact is,. ,11 o w i;. , v e r
much the Democracy may seek tO deny it, •
that at - the close of the fiscal year a sating
Of thirty millions has been made in the
expenses of the Government. Any lono
who will take the trouble to examine pito
the receipts and expenditures of the Past
twelve months, will find that this hi no
exagge#lted statement; yet, in the. face of
all this; the Democracy have the hardi
hood to tell us that the -financial poliq of
the Administration hami ben extravagant
and ruinous ; that reform is-demanded ;
that they are the embodiment of all Oat
is pure and good ; • and they propo* to
make themselves a party of economy *tid
retrenchment,, with the expectation that
the masses of the people will accept *Sp
-1 assertions without doubt or , question,
they are consequently slashing Moto :;the
Appropriation bills, entirely regardleSS of
what may be the consequences.' By i-j.lis
banding the army, closing the-navy yffids,
and stopping all public improvements,
they are claiming that they will - inalig a
saving of forty millions; but in:their eik,er.
desire to manufacture political capital,
they do not hesitate at a bounty bill which,
if agreed upon by the , Senate andAhe
President, would take from liftYto a bun
dled millions of dollars frdm the Trims
' ury. They have already given the fS'en
tennial Commission $1,500 - ,000 of the lsio-
Ple's money ; they have appropriated
large sums of money to provide for tit'em
selves stationery and mileage ; they Rave
granted immense fe'es toiawyers for at gu
melds of fifteen minutes duration ; Piey
steadily refuse to :Close up ceilain
-navy yards declared unnecessary amtex
-1 pensive by their own committee on Naval
Affairs where millions might be saved'—
while they niggle over the savings in i ; ‘'imie
departments where the salvage doei:not,
amount to respectable thousands ; 'and,
while they impose a reduction on clerks
and others: of front twenty -live to forty
per cent., they allow their.own salariiis to
remain with 'only a meagre reductiOn of
ten percent.. If they are exp'ectin, , il the
people to believe them honest, they sauld
at least be a little more consistent. .! '
Through a feeling of peace and secririty
the llouse of Representatives was allciwed
to fall into the hands of the Demoetacy,
and unfortunate as it has been fot the
country, it has not been without its leSSon.
The past six months of Demobratie?.rule
is quite as much - of a dose of that nostrum
as the people will twain care for. With
their acknowledged readers, with br-',lins
wild and maddened with the eonstanf use
of potions &errand strong, we have:been
time witnesses to a kind ofgislationthat
finds no precedent. in the history or our
Govesnment._From men who )tat( and
who fought the Government, and aref, yet
full of the old bitterness of the rebetlion,
it is perhaps, ender the circumstance, no
more disgraceful that. could be expe4ed ;
but when they'seek With the aid of .their
Northern friends to block the wheels of
Government by refusing to coneuwitli
time Senate in passing wise and just appro
priations, and attempt to make the people
! believe that this is reform and'ecoOmy,
it is certainly about as cool and untibish
ing a piece of impudence as any one Could
well conceive. Verily : “Ilumbug;l . thy
name is Democratic Reform."
Day- after day and week after week the
Conference - Connnittees, appointed [ pomit
the two (louses to act upon the appropri
ation bills, meet, disagree, and adjtittrit.-
! Uisin the part of the Senate therOf has
I been steadily evidenced a t dispoSitiiin to
enure down to the lowest figtfre ix4ible,
and to make a just and fair comprondse.
A t.all times they have stood ready tolcon
cede everything but their constitutional
right as a co-ordinate branch ! of the law
makingrower of the Government ij but
the Home, with the desperation oh time
I damned, persistently refuse to emilsiaer
any proposition whatever that doei.f not
concur in their disastrous policy w nth
they are seeking to inaugurate and : . avitit
which thep are seeking to luxxlwinhl and
deceive .the people. (laving fixed iupon
a basis of whatithey are pleased MI call
I retrenchment, which would not onlYi em
barrass but ruin every branch of thalmb
lie service, a tumultuous horde of quack
!i reformers and Union revilerS assemble
daily at the Capitol and demand o the
Senate that they shall surrender their en
tire rights,. and accede, withoilt prOtest,
to every measure of their unwise, obnox
ious legislation. ._.
-
It will be a rad day for this Republic
when the ex-rebels, respited traitor - the
hungry plunderers of a party that; has
long sighed for a return to the tiesh!pots
of political emoluments, and all Jutlene
mies of the 'Union and the Constitattion
arc made welcome to the departmeftts of
the government and the avennos of spoils.
The lessons taught by their fathers in
this line wmild be improved upon nntil,
1 at the emt of four years, this country
woild have-no more army, no more navy;
and no more treasure than when the Dem
ocratic party .last left the Goveinfnent
under Buchanan.
There is a. growing opionion thatlllet ,
t
I knap was not so guilty as the !louse (um
-1 mittee, with the laelmptiose Clytney 'at
its bead, asinneil hint to be. His ;trial
before the Senate Impeachment Corr( has
taken a turn in his favor, the evidence
failing to show that any corrupt bargain
existed between hint and the post-tbuler
Marsh. It is becoming evident that, if
Belknap's case had been properly hatidled
at the beginning, the country woul&bave
been spareitthe disgrace inflicted by the'
pending trial. The upshot of the Whole
matter will be that, after a long, eipen
sive and needless examination into; the
facts of the ease, there will,rtot be found
sufficient evidence to convict by eVen a
majority vote. [''
Hum Ors of imp r‘t changes that are
to take place in th Treasury Department,
have, during the jut feiv days, bOotne
numerous. From NV 'at has already-trans
pired, there is - gO4 reason to believtiAliat
the Heads of iy of the Bureaus: i will
be invited torstep -down and out i] for -
what purposetne- public aye not informed,
but the prediling impression is that Some
of these superanuated fossils must make
. way for those who at least-manifest Some
little interest in the success' of the Marty
to which they professedly belong., '
The clerks in the Departments are; imx
iously awaiting the passage of the Appro
priation bills. As there will doubtless be
a compromise effected, in which Bier will
bear a conspicuous - part, there . iS; of,
course, just now no small amount of un
easiness manifested among them. !Until
the storm is over and everything again
'settled and quiet, the granting or the
usual leaves of absence has been diSeon
tinned. With the thermometer staadiug
at 100) in the shade, and the prospeet of
a speedy decapitation when the dead=lock
in Congress is broken, so far as th&lDe-,
partments are concerned, it may besaid
that the atmosphere is slightly warm.
M.
ONT.: Dom.Ait ExeENDEn Now iniptir
chasing a bottle of Jayne's k:xpeetokant,
I.y th..se t totalled with a slight. Cough ur
I 1 oarscsess, ore Throat, may -.2.411:13
the expense of a doutk i ir's bill. A neglect
e" Cough often ends in Consumption; A
Slight intlamation of the lining ot the
wind-tubes. the usual symptoms of w hich
.
ate Soar 'Throat hrmit and a a,du in tl.c Beast,
frtimently . leads to Bronchitis. A day's
debt! . may entail a Month of unfrekiug.
Better try at .encxtdatiz'a.Exiiectorant, - a
Atantlattl emattraprr.
:11.0100iipis pigodbirthounchi :
. I
.
it
_' - ':::':iiiiii'i(iciflmters:
- - I.;;;.,. i •
;• ' `Z.' , - HALM, N. Y 441 y 1,1876.
1
.....:' • . ..,..1
WM r zOn:•EDwAßDliret'unttscos and oth
' of the Committee of MO I,lepifbliean
;--' abonal Convention:
OINPLEMEN : 'I receive d . on the 6th.
' ' tour communication' , 'advising mo
t I j had .been unanimously nominated
, y the iNatioxial Convention Of the Repub
.
Mean porky, bed at Cincinnati on the 14th
pit., for the office of ViciPresident of
the United'States, and requesting my me;
beptance of the same, and. ttidring my at
tention; to the summary of RepUblican
doctrines contained in the platform adopt
ed by the Contention. A nomination
Made with•such unanimity Implies & con
fidence' on the part of • the Convention
Which' :inspires my profound gratitude.
It is accepted with a sense of the respon
iiibility which . may f0110w.',.; If. elected, I
shall endeavor to perform the duties of
the oillee iu the Jear, of I tho Supreme
Outer, i and in the interest of the whole
eountry.- i' ! • • 1
To the summa ry of doctrine& enunciat
ed. by the Convention I bite my cordial
assent. The Republican party has in
trenched in the organic law, of our, land
the doctrine. that_ liberty ii.thii. supreme,'
'Unchangeable law . for every foot of Amer
ican soil. 'lt is the mission of that' party
to give full effect to to this Principle "by
Security , to every Americaticitizen com
pletelXerty and exact equality in the ex
ercise ,of all civil; political 'and public„
iights;!' This will be accomplished only
'when the Arnerieaneitizen,i without re
',Ord to color, shall wear this panoply of
citizenship as fully and as securely in the
!cane-breakes of Louisiana as on the banks
of the St. Lawrence. Upon the question
!of •our Southern relations,. my views were
'recently expressed' as a member of the;
'Committee of the United. States House of
ll.cipresentativer upon Southern Affairs.
Those views remain unelianged, and
-were thus expressed :
We of the North. o urselv es delude s in
expecting" that the masses of 'the South,
;o far behind in, many Of the attributes of
enlightened improvement and civilization,
are, . in the brief period oil ten or fifteen
years, to be transformed itito our model
Northern communities. .'That can only
*inn) through a long course of patient
waiting, to which-no ono Can now set cer;
ljtain hounds. There will; be a good deal
Of unavoidable friction, ;which will call
!for forbearance, and which Will have to be
.relieved by the temperate, fostering care
!!of the Government. One of the most po
tent if not indispensable agencies in this
:direction, - will be the devising of sonic
systeni to aid in the education of the mas
:SCH.
_.Tie' fact that there, are whole coun
ties in Louisiana in which there is not a
'4ol i tary ichaol-hou se,. i s full q suggestion.
We compelled these people to remain in
the Union, and now duty and interest de-.
inland that we leave no just Means untried
,M make thein good, loyal Citizens. , How
to diminish the friction, bow to , stimulate
the . elcv,ation of this portion of our coun
try, ar e addressing themselves
;to 'our, best and wisest Statesmanship.
iThe fOundation for these efforts must be
)aid in satisfying the ' Sontliern ,Peoply
;that they. are to have equal;; exact justice
accorded to them. Give them to the full
est extent every blessing Which the Gov,
iernment confers upon the roost favored—
give them no just cause for com Plaint,
iand - then hold them, by every necessary
'means,. to .an exact, rigid observance of
all "their duties and obligations undr the
Constitution and its amOidnients 'to se
'cure to all within their :borders manhood
;and citizenship, with every right thereto
IbPlonging..- 'l'
1 The just obligations to piddle creditors,
created when the Government was in the
, throes . lof threatened dissolution, and as
ian indispensable condition Of its. salvation
—g,uariinteed by the IliveS and blood of
thousands of its brave cicfieriders--nre to
be kept with religioustfaith: as are' ll the
:pledges subsidiary thereto conforma-:
itory thereof. 'ln my judgment the pledges
lof Congress of .Jan: i l4,- 1875, for the rc,
Idempt on of the notes of tlwUnited States
din coinis the plighted faith of the nation
!and na zonal honor; - simple!honestY, and
1
i ijustice to the, people whose permanent
welfar and prosperity; are; lependent up
ii on true money as the basisi)f their peen-
I'niary transactions, all dennind the; scrup
lnous Observance of this pledge ; and it is
;the di ty of -Congress to supplement it
l;with such legislation as shad be'neeesmry
'fun., its Strict fulfillment. l'! . •
i •In our system of gove6rnent intelli
!
;gence 'trust give safety and, value to the
nal lot. I Hence the cum mon •!schools, of the
:land sl ould be pr'eServed inalltheirvigor,
Iwhile M accordance With the spirituf the
Constitution. they and
.4-their endow
ments Should be secured bY:every possible
and proper guaranty ag,ainst every form
of sectarian influence or cUntrol. There
should:the the strictest economy in the &x
I , endittires of the Governpnnit conSi.Stent,
lwith its effective administratiOn, and all
lunneects.sary offices shouldle. abolished.
pflicestshould be conferred only onion the
basis of high character and:particular li t
t• •
ness, and should be aihniniStered only as
)tiblie trusts, and nut for private adVant
'Age•-1
The foregoing are chief aniong the car
dinal Principles of the ; Ilepnblican, party,
in!,to 'carry them. nto full ;
p practical cf
et is the N% Ork it now hati:in hand. Ti,
the cot mletion of its great mission we M-
I dress ourselves in hope anil confidence,
cheered and stimulated by the recollection
of itspast: achievements ;i-yemembering
that, nder God, it is to that party that
1
We arc ffialebted in thili CeLtenniaL year of
Our osistence for a preserNiqd, unbroken
[Union t for the fact that there is no mas
ter or slave throughout otir broad domains,
hind that emancipated millions look upon
the enSign of. the liepublicias the symbol
Airethe fulfilled declaration' (that all men
are created free and.equal, !and the guar
ttnty o r their Own equality, under the
laiv, wfth the most highly f:t.vored citizen
Uf the land. To the intelligence and con
t•cienc of all, who desirergood govern
,icht,
1 ,
n , good money, and itniVer
nod will,
FM prosperity, the Itepubliban party, not
Unmindful of the imperfficOon and short
'otilings of human organizations, y,etv with
the honest purPose of its misses promptly
to retrieve all errors .and to summarily
punish all offenders against , :the laws of
he country, confidently submits its claims
for the' continued support ofi.the American
peopleJ, Respectfully. 1,,i - 1
I . W ILLIA 31 . Ij2Wn EEL En.
t
NA
iscollaneous Advertliements.
W FLOURING MILL
IS SIIESIIEQUIN, I'A.
•
sulyscr . ll,,,,r gives notice that his new
, T 1
CZ
iNI , FLOIJIttN4 )111,L,
~..
' , t
sltre.44lll opvrat lon. awl teat l, Is pre.
1 o'tlo all work in- his line (!ii short' nottce.
is now
1 pared
MEE
I GRINDING DONO filE SAME
LAY TILT IT IS RECEIVED
Wheat,
Fe
mei:wheat; and Rye' Flrinr, Corn Meal,
d. Bran, Sc„ always or! hand and
and for sale at 'invest rates.
PAItT
he weAt
tnlll. wit
they brh
CUL AR Seri' leE.—Persons living on
doslrintf to patyloilze me
,Itavo,their ferry:lgo pall troth.ways, when
1 > gnats of ten bushels and norarils.
MCI
I ..1
( Aug'
800
141
tp4 tteerd
thirtlfstor
. ,
a day at home. 41, r ents wanted.
Outfit afid terms five True &
'
Isla, maim!: ~,cinemB:7n-I y.
Ii BINDEIIY.—the public is
-
a ri
beetfully haoneq that „,-
the Rook lttndery
renihved to the I:Ertjhrkat Hui'Mpg ,
'y, irbere will be done
I various branches, on terms as reasonable
nl antes" will allow, The Itintlery will
the charge of
Itt all th;
Rt. the 4-11'
Ue under
H
C. : WHITA!KER,
lenced Binder, and ail Work will be
Idono Ina style and maniler which canhot
1 ,• I. Musk, Magazines, Newspaperx, 41111
tAtati4 ill'every style. 'Particular anent
. ej.ald to thu Ruling mot Itl ndh of
An expe l
preniltyl
he ex ell
nook. . 1
don 11, 11 1
to any d
i Id) vil
,
Inn, pattern., which In quality at and dune
be vv.-at - anted.
. , .
crnrk Kin MN ready 'far delivery Aiken
•
•s4re of i t i le i glo Ls pAtols4is4Cl *IV
• - !fi.j
1 irir M
prusalsed
j The pa
titCh
.~a
F..S. AYERS
Mai
BOOK-BINDING
BLANK LOOKS,
StSiItrEHANIIA
PQLLEGIATS
I
INSTITUTE;
. .
Thera!! Term bfAhlsllnstltutd wilt - be gtn'4o:i.,.
DAY.. AUGUST 21sT., with oven ;experienced
teachers, Superior advantages to-young men wish.
fog to prepare for qollege or business, and to young
ladles wishing to complete a graduating coarse, Of
study general culture.
A TZACHERS' f 7, ASS will be formed at
.the
commeneement of ithe terns, and every effort will
be, seade i to thoroughly prepare young men and we.
men to teach.
A thorough course In COMiIERCIAL nff:A.NCIE.
ES and kindred stsidles preparing pima; men for
luisluess, has been Instituted. Those ronipleting a
course of study satisfactorily In;, thisi de,partmenti
will be awarded a diploma for the same. - •
Terms very reasonable. Superior faecommoda .
thins feria Ilusited number of students' In the foaisi.
ly I r tlf theirrinelpal;; For catalogues, or farther In.
(urination, address or rail on
. .
i i ! E. FL QUINLAN, Principal. -,
MILLER FOX. ;Fres!. Trustees.' ~ (J 2711-
REMEMBER;
I . 1
TIIAT TILE
I.
R I EI'OItTEIL
I '
';,;. DOES
THE BEST JOB: - PRIPITINCr
I I
OF AN ESTAILISILMENT
In
=EI
MI
NORTIIEILN'; PENNE I YLVANIA.
1 .1
EMI
•
1
IF VW: pON'T.ELIF:VE
• 1. - 1 .
I 1-
COME AND SEES
• : ,1 •
'ar li. ,-..
Oflice pn lst., near Court Ifemsc , i,
~ 1
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Pr. :- 0,-
19 .-- ~- 't . .
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11;.) I
AITLET I O:Ns4
CTCLOiP_EDIS
J NEW,IriENtr..LEI) 1:1)1Tie..."
.
. .
Entirely. rewriiten by the ab est writers
On pvery subject. Printed from neW
type, and ill(ristrated with Se feral Thou-,
sand Enmravibrrs and Maps.
• '
a " '',
1 I
FJ.:o3ritv:v. t)lt. STR G
ON. Editor uf McCllntonir,
land tti'trong's - t'Sclop:editt of It thltral Li terain re,
1 '• Tlii, preparation pf our own tlyrlolundialiasteo;:
and, Indeed. requie:ed toe to It(lop an )bser%ant eve'
tipoll 311 The getter:Ll 1ty4.101.:141;a5, ttspecially 1 . 1”..: :
resw orii!s. I find °trolly return fnna allroaii:that Me,
new rstlElon of A ppletons• American fycjorertlla',
lias' midie rapid „rl•e It :v.1'1,1 now reached Md.
thigh yolina,N, twinging down. the alphabet to ,r.i:
am a highly pleast4l with its charact •r. The, firrti
ed I r ion ,was A Very 5•1/1(11411eilt wort:, IliAll mon:. cont- .
}dote for Amer', atilrea , l,•rlt had any tither: but this.'
greatly , surpasses IC. The art lets 11.3 , 4.7 , all been re:
written, Mel tlion'..milifected to the antrt•t rigors %i
olikkin, It, 044,1 or which d,':,Aliown in tindr .
ClearneSs, compreft,tedun. and -condensation !!ot!
stmeroo r ...Q. ;: • !
••Ttic!,!wahtilaryi.: part lettlarly rich in A inert.ljul
.tiiography. popular'slience. and an !h., ,nhjelt,
that are most iiiterts Mg to the orals of readere.
The style. is slimpitl. frattsparent..ano chaste, and
'ttic,lnfertnat lon is an of ttfe wris t ht eltaritn;.
ler.. The iiisclissl6.ll of ili•puted-Isiluts Is widely
avoided. and the spree 1.11114 5:1\41 IS (1..101E41 to
sterling militers of .f net. The maps are admit:dile;
mid the woodcuts aril ens eeitinglyapfiropriate,:.lts
well as,. ii I t i . %% tit form for years to come:4
emoidete family liliti:ry 0n..111 . I tand.iril unites. and
I.ll,“.erver, a, it will gli , lll,:if,S 1:3v, 1 .1.iti Cxlensiiil
kirrulatiou. - = • . .1'.% MESISTRIING.Th •
ifWe „J •
- Oilly concur ..Itt, Dr. Str,•ng's ewnwendainln
of ApplettnislAmeriean Cyclufsedia . .
•
f:IIIWA 11 . 1) 141:11:11T,- 1).111., '1 ' 1
i Eripor !IT Ih. ..Ye ir nn..l: E.vriii hi' r. ,
I.iNIKI, r1"111117., 1): 11., : . ' i • .
Editor of ltd.: rhrixli,rn .I•trocdfe .f.• Joirr,j,,i;
h. 1. I'II'INIEL 11. 11„, 1 - 74, 1
Editor of VI, .y, m lorle tP ., ,serr4.
ilt:NItY M. 1 , 11 -- .0).'1 1 . IL , , ,
Edit o r or th,. .V. to York /-:c,rny•lfita. :.
Yno3t urx. DIL - STEEVES, of N'ew Casty',
new edition Arpericlui Crclop...ill4
!.4 the Lest svgyk ..rthe Izthd 'it IS belt
scritt.o4, y f 4114 i 1 regard it ag
the statiaant .4 atiitte.rity. This wink
selthlik the reach ut ev..rsh+.l:r I -
44 bit N
i iptl* Scict 'a bfi •
;
F 1 )1l DI:. E Pa
i ii.
,
" VITTSItt Milt. 1%1 • eel.. 3, - 1 , 1"...;
.. ": ' , :
priiy: Stii.: You ask lite to give In.)" Celelliii-et.witk.
refeleelee to I to article in thci ,. .AnieriCan tlyreeele:e
tila which relates , :to the Itouian Catholic Chili, It
and itli history. ',: 1
These articles aril written, so tar ;* I have evit3:.
' incil theist: by Ro]naa Catholles. from a Ronian.
iCathoile standpulni L .: 'though at. [no :aline time tiny.
itrive to be itnitrital.
"It ;keen's to me rhat !Ms.'s a f.;ature to he e..ri.
, ntencleit. ,We u alit to know what; that Chur,ll;
14111irks i vt . its iloetriiies ati;l histoty. 1 , ,
l•regaril Ir, lett
a a ii‘liar exci . ,ll . enee,of it,. .kw
iri.::
l'''
i,.,,, cs l ,l„ lo „ti a , I i iB t, ii,,,t, ~ t oy stititrkrerctiee t,, r..,` 1
pintait I . :anon,. Church; true 4 r,,,
,ifst r,.;,,,,,, , ,. 1.. ;
311 other sah3ects, .the article's' are IN rltten 1, k i .r•
suns n to, arc sp. cialty fats War with r tics,' sat.!cq•...,
1 . ..
I ant, yours, et C..
WII.I.IAM .1. nEED, I). I).. ,
mi,u'ist, rof E;riT, 1%-!1:. I. 'h ,•r , , :' .
1.1:411% EATIIN.,•;
'lilt:Kt:TV 'llO., bee I. I•i" i. '..
I re.iiiiee every day over this Cryelel,edia..Tegai';
tng it i! , fh , I 'yelophilia j ,, ,r ~1- 1 ....11. lie,. i voligiti - .
tir"te Ii Yseir eotititattilly.ns I rotii•taidly re,ta I lel'.
171 10.1.11 ii; ill I.t.,,es.siOn of thin inVithialile ,li , l.
.1, It: i•lA'rq tN i
I ,
.• ; Proler.;oii Natitroi Sch.ly'r, ll'. J. ~ .
. •
_. ; •
nisuor,rANtn4,.
“N,EW Tuna, nue. 1%71, ..:
Thee A rne r lean (iy elor.e.l la . whi'n
Vlloted,' It will be `an 16i -book
itier—ait epitome of •
.11dh0 , 11,1 Ejoi.cop , tl 'll
•
. ..
.
KRONE I'IZOFESSORS I\ I,:(!',...`IIESTEI: TIJE. ) -:
LC/UIt . :AL Si:MENAI:I' ill.ki•ll: , T , . ,• !
lOCIIE , T
- — tElt n Etit...:ll' AI. Sk.3IINARY I . : I
,:. , ern
23, 1.m71. i ii '
, ,---,-. . • .
The articles girtie%hiCii've of iti ..- 0 , ,t ear,•flil 0 . 5 ,, •
aratiou, snit uft, , u , pre f kult, i 4 Contlly(lorni. it,
markably . ,eiunpletejlifttrumtiori, and the 1.1t. , L ! L e-
sults or diileal. lavrstlgatiou.
AUGUSTUS:II. '...iTIIIING. f. ,
i'rotirblii a nil!Profeoror ,tc T1r.,.1 ,, ,y;
It. J. W ..I:I.ICKL.VNiIj
. '. l'roP.N.rui• of o.'4rtrrl4 Ilim6 , ry. j
WILLIAM Q. WILIIISSON,
Projeteui• .n.wildi,'s. ' ~
I. ,
L -
F ItO .N TIII: lIISIIOP OF I.ONNECTICUT
M11,111;t:TONN' 'S; 't;tin.,, th_Lt... 11. .
I do; ot think excellimt wonk Appleti , as!
A nieti'!(!an ryclopaqita can need any wordn of coin ,
Itiendation from inn;'
I aM.„ however. the , more reatly'niow to,say that: I
considCr it as far Sin,yond any similar , Aork iu ils;
character and nsefiiiness ; and, I luon.re any per ,o le 4 ;
Who may purchaso It: that th 4 twill have Ne , ured:
an unfailing and trnstwurthy help
merits of knowledge. I !ipeak from h borough ac
quaint-alive ,with Work.
311 depart‘.
Fiti)at riIEsIDENT
MI ['Du:Tow:4', Conn.. M
I regard the utioleatt C_yelorettil
Ital work. It la 'reeottunended• afli
many of the ablest abd 1116.2
the fountry. It tit worthy of, l the
W ho tirsire a ri`liabirj.
arranged rpiloilie •
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