U U II :.11E73' 730 X ALL ITATIONB. THERE is yelkiw fever in Charleston but not epidemic. Betz fights aro all the rage at Corpus Christi, Texas. A new Parisan hotel will have a mantel piece worth $50,000. "ElkiHODIPIABI.E11E:I38" Is one of George Eliot's new words. EIGHT steamers sailed from New York for Europe on Saturday. • • As many as 30,000 persons a day visit the Chicago Exposition. „ BrAcsmaniararequently sold in New York marketabr reed birds. • TUE exports from Philadelphia during last week amounted to $4,739,011. liussia is • sending laige contribu ' tions of men and money into Servia. TIME U. S. Steamer Franklin - brto take Tweed, aboard some time this week. TUE New York ,fund for the. relief of the Savaptiah suffers now reach $15,000 VNDERTAKERS now provide an extra carriage for flowers at first-class funerals. A ttironze bust of. Horace Greeley is soon to be placed iu Greenwod Cemetery. itonitixo churches now seems to be the f.ivei ite occupation of New York thieves. SEVERAL lives were lost by floods last NVvek in Borks, McKean and Tioga Pa.i. WilEti traveling "Dory" Tilton had hotter give sleeping cars a wide berth hereafter: Don Pr.nno attended the congress of t ►rientalists held recently in St Petersburg, Russia. iF.Dr.mAxx, the celelirated Noriegian painter, (led stiddenly,!4t Christiania, on the '2sth ult. ‘r, Stiw YORE house;owiters are more in tetostee. now in getting paying tenants than high rents. '.l man jumped off a train near Summit, Miss., to get his hat and didn't get it be cause he broke his neck. Tiir foreign rifle teams will be in Wash ington this week, to take part in the matches to.be.held there. . I).9crmourn College has received in donations in thirteen years $9110,500, one half of which is now available. • THERE were forty-six interments at ga r vannali on-Saturday. Thirty of the num ; her were yellow fever cases. Fr.nin.NANnlirrr, confectioner'of Park Avenue, St. Louis, committed suicide by f-hooting on Saturday, after twice trying. THE Hell Gate e k plosion was a complete btuseess,. No one was injured and no dam zq.,;e to . surrountling property is reported. • Fur: cause octhe Pan llandla accident a mystery: ' Twenty-six persons in n'l were Wounded, besides those who were killed. ; THE foreign rifle teams visited the Cen tennial on Satnrday and were introduced to President Grant, who was on the '_Putt: fire and life insurance companies of ilitrtford, Connecticut, have contribut vil'S,l,loo to - the yellow fever sufferers of „ox Saturday morning a heavy fire oc 'ciirred in BaltimO r e on Frederick and Bal timore. streets. The losses will foot up - over •":1011,000. ” hundred butchers, employed in the Jersey City abattoir; are on a strike • . :IgaitiNt a reduction from 15 to 12 cents per buiioek • ;!:\,,(rwurits : rANDlNo the inclement wea til..-r or Saturday, there were al out eighty thousand payhtg visitors at the Centen nial Tim manufacturers or Fall River sold hail 'a million pieces of prints during the wi;el; ending September 10, and the de ifficffif is increasing. Vt, has four lawyers who do 170:. use profane language, lobacco or s..rong drink :in any. form. And Barre hasn't niauyllawyers, either. THE grand Lodge I. 0. 0. F., 1 1n session at Philadelphia last week, closed its ses :.iim on Saturday, after formally installing the officers - recently erected, • ON F6day - the bosses of the Wilkes harre Coal andiron Company M the Sum mit. 11111 valley,! received orders to suspend the;,- employees until further notice. wo Magnires, John.J. Slattery awl Michael - Doolin, charged with con -I,ii.acy to murder William and Jesse Ma :or, were convicted at Pottsville Saturday. THE forest of Pountainbleau grows 'more and more' in favor with the French art ists a nd . the number of painters in the nei,;:;liborhood has largely increased oflatk;. A munificent - Cincinnati drummer lost book. containing $3,000 in Har ro,lsbterz, IZy., last week, and zeW - ardcid tlu iindt , r with $lOO and a suit of clothe:.l nAeE GnEExWoon says that Miss Brathlon is not at all like the ideal writer of mysterious 'romances, but a rosy, Plump. gentle manered lady of middle age. THE Public Latin School of Boston opus this year with, nearly four hundred pupils; more than has ever been connected s it h the ;:ehool-aCapy period of its his t..rv. Pnic,F. and Fulton, of the 'Paris" boat clew of St. Johns, N. hare . been ex -11,111 from the cre w, having charged each other with selling the, race with the Ilalifax crew. f.Ault.::: are wearing tiny bows of rib.: h•ms for ear -rings now, and we. are told th.tt it is the very latest- Paris fashion:: Lc clic& is odd, and, of course, the ion will rage. • t N Tuesday, Thursday an Saturday of this week the foreign and American rifle -.-tc.this that recently contended for superi rit yat CreednuTr, N.Y., will shoot for In izes at Washington. .'N'tn Es' dresseS at the present time are ' rercrt-ed' to-as azi example of delirium t initigs.l No wonder They're always ' tifi.l,t, and never satisflegY unless there's a fresh glass before c... them. 'Fur. VictorianS have resolved that if the I)ominlo'n will not recognize their railway obligatiohs to British Columbia, their representatives will vote for a sepa ration of the later from the former. TnnuE is further trouble in reference to the .peace propositions between Turkey and Scrria. The Porte insists on opin i,ms.of - its terms from the great- powers before acceding to an extension of the ( AyI.F.STON acknowledges four spo radic cases of yellow fe% er traced to per -smis that had communication. With quai l:aline and refugees 'from Savannah. Thu • far the pestilence shows no signs of spread in;; iu l'harleston. TnERE is no longer ant doubt, but.that "li - inium M. Tweed is to be sent to the Uffited States on board the United States '`Stea liter Franklin, and . immediately ,on re:“ hing` his native shores will !Ind him s;:lf hi- the hands of the la*•. CREAT Britain has sent an accredited I , l4imatic representative tonic Transvaal 14: authorizedlo inform the Trans eaalialts that if they deiire to be annexed to Great Britain as a &deny, the British authorities, like Barkis, are "Willin." A young woman naniea Amelia Parker, tvas walking on the tow bath near Jersey 'it y Thursday night, when she wasseized by two men and placid on a canal boat. fix. was picked .rip insensible on the tow path near Little Falls Friday night in a dying condition. Tni: 'population of France in 18'2 was n 1007,1121, and is now estimated at about :1ti,00.000. In the year 1700 it -was 19,- . 0;i1.:120. It has not, therefore, doubled in 17(1 \'ears.• The annexation of Alsace and Lorraine to Germany in 1871 caused aloss of 1.597;228. 116.r0N Daily Adrertiser:," "The Old .S,,uth is preserved. It was in'a pickle for a longtime, hut; thanks to the ladies w! lo managed' to raise the 'sugar,' it is now preSerivd in the regurli'may. May it last a thous !nd years before it has to 1 1 / 4 • - •done over."' obituary writer of the New,Orleans Time , the following tribute to a dead sohNer , "Gen Jeff Thompson is dead. At St Josep2' Mo., at 5 o'clock last even -I..whole souli d, devil-may ing, that genii>, ire perso: ificab _m of eccentricity climb ed the golden stair. No wonder that th,e Episcopalians of St. Luke's Church, Isle .".`r Wight county, Virginia. want anew church. The old one in Which they have been worshiping was tweeted In iti3'2, and is tradiy dilapi dated. It is - ssi I to be the oldest church building:hi th e ' psited States. )lAustiseliftw:iv, in a speech at Che rnintz. Saxony, zw :inty, said that Ger "tuly had engaged i n a struggle of intelli gence on the pacific gm:ad of National ricvOripment with the same veci/la who, years ago, she (=gored krench.pap?rs-applauded this sea-4'lllmill' padfotta Nepotter. , • EDITORS t E. 0. GOODRICH. R. W. AZTORD. Towanda, r Timrs3sty, Sept 28, 1376. PV . TI77:UWr7.I' roa PRESIDENT, RUTHERFORD B. HAYES, OF 01110. FOIL VICE PRESIDENT, WILLIAM . A. WHEELER, OF NEW YORK. BEPI7I3LIOAN 001INTY TICKET. FOR CoNOREsS, Cok. EDWARD OVERTON, OF RRARFoRb COUNTY. FOR STATE SENATOR,. WILLIAM T. DA.VIES, OF BRADFORD COUNTY. FOR REPRESENTATIVES, lION. E. REED MYER, OF WYSOX ; CArr. JAMES FOSTER, OF NORTH TOWANDA ; JOHN F. GILLETT, OF SOUTH CRF.F.R. FOR JITRY COM3iISSIONER, TIIOMAS A. LEE, OF HEIIIIICK. OCR CANDIDATES. The nomination of Congressman, which was accomplished last week, completes our ticket,_ and the cam paign will now be opened vigorously. A better ticket has never been sub mitted to the people of this county, and we greatly mistake the signs of the times if Bradford does not re-' deem her lost reputation and roll up a majority in favor of HAYES, WHEEL ER, OVERTON, DAVIES and the coun ty ticket, which will put a quietus on the aspirations of the sham Democ racy. ANANIMi TILDEN. • Alit is only a step from the sub lime to the ridiculous, so_also is the decent frequently rapid from a sup posititious virtue 'toinfamy. The ac tor may play the role of high morality upon the stage, but as soon as h 0 has left the footlights, and with his dress laid aside all he possessed of chatac ter, he may be known to his fellows as an unprincipled villian. Pecksuiff was the same designing scoundrel all the time,,although up to the moment of his being unmasked, he carried his eyes and his nose elevated far above the gross things of this _sublunary sphere. . • yor some years past . SAMUEL .J. TILDEN has been acting the part of reformer. He appropriated that title to himself. alone in this wicked age, and his friends have echoed it con tinually. As long as the :theater of his performances-was confined to the State of New York, the world at large cared little for the .truth or fal sity of his claims; but - when, upon the , strength of his career as a re form Governor, he assumes to be able to, administer the affairs -per taining to the high office of Presi dent, with an integrity unknown in these.degenerate days, then the whole nation is interested in having the light of histOry turned full upon him, in order that it.may be sees whether his record will justify confidence in his pretersithts. THE REASON WHY. There are two reasons why the Democratic ifouse of Representives refuse appropriations for the examina- . tioir of the rebel archives. First, they are afraid Of the docu ments theinselvs, which have already yielded up a letter of Pop,e.Plus IX., dated Dec. 3, 18G2, recognizing JEr EERSON DAvis as a ruler and the Con federaey as a government. There is no telling - what other DemoOatic secrets would be- un earthed if the search should go on. In the I.second place the cutting off of the appropriation for examining and arranging the Rebel archives would assist their southern friends in their claims Against the Government. The discoveries already made in the archives have saved the Govefnment millions of dollars by disclosing proof of the disloyalty of claimants. Adjutant-General. , TowNSEND- report ed one claim of $700,000 defeated by .the records and ,another of $550,- 000, and the Southern Claims Com mission reported one of over $lO,OOO, ,000. Proof of disloyalty constitutes a complete bar to a claim, and the Democrats in Congress have cut off the chief means of 'obtai`ning this proof; ; They - have saved the Govern ment.s6,ooo, and have put it in dan ger of being robbed of millions. Mn: BLAINE again mills the lie that lie wrote to MUNN, of Chicago,, I have no influence with the present Administration. No' Mall has who is not a thief by instinct." BLAINE writes " Allow me to say that I never wrote a lettecof any kind to Mr. Mr NN my life, and never received a letter from him. I bare no acquaintance whatever with Mr. Muss. Allow me further to say, that I never used the language referred to, nor anything resembling it, to any other person, either orally or in writing,•and never entertained such a thought. The . whole thing is simply a very silly and very stupid falsehood. Its periistent repetition induces me to notice it in this way." BOYS IN BLIIE. The convention of the Boys in Blue atlndianapolis, last week, was attended on Wednesday by about ten thousand veteran soldiers. Great meetings were held which were ad dressed by Senators MORTON and Lo d, AN, General BURNSIDE, Governor 11ARTRANIT, es-Governor NOTES and others.- , In the evening there was a grand torchlight pro ce ssion,- Iv I f , i) C , J,Ut 36:1.)-1 4:4 4. to' Al The conferees of the 15th Congres sional District, composed of the counties of Bradford, Susquehanna, Wayne and Wyoming, met _in To- Wanda on Tuesday, Sept. 12. The Ilowinglentlemen were present: - Bradford—N. C. Elsbree, N.' Gilbert, J. M. Smith, J. M. Grant, N. N. Betts, ' I. McPherson. S./nacho:mi t :N. J. I urn.% Harvey Tyler, W. A. Crossman, Billings Stroud. Wayne---H. Wilson, $. B. Haley, ;11. J. Tarblc, C. L. Gardner. Wyomini:-.1. M. Brungess, • D. Beidleman. W. S. Tenant, was chosen President; and .tacos BRUNGESS and C. L. GARDNER Secretaries. Bradford county presented Col. E. OVERTON as a candidate for nomina tion. Susquehanna presented Hon. G. A. Gaow; Wayne, C. C. JADwIN; Wyoming, Him. F. C. BUNNELL. After balloting and consulting for several days without effecting a now. ination, the Conference, adjourned on Friday the 15th, to meet in Montrose on Tuesday the 20th. Tuesday, Sept. 20th, Conference met persuant to 'adjournment. No ballots were had. On Wedneiday they Met and proceeded to ballot, each ,county adhering to its own nominee for a number of ballots. .0n the 97th ballot the vote stood: Overton...,'.. Orow Jadwin Bunnell On motion, the nomination of Col. OVERtON waa.made unanimous. J. TURRELL, Pres't. J. BRUNGESS, Secretaries. C. L. GARDNER,, ANOTHER FALNEHOOD NAILED. The Argus and other reckless Dem ocratic papers have charged that Gov. HAVES was a Know-Nothing, and is now a member of the Ameri can Alliance. As proof of the latter they have published a letter purport ing to have been written by him ap proving the principles iind pnrposes of that organization. But this letter is a forgery. Its publication is dis gfaceful but not surprising. It is only what might have been expected. The organdpf a party which is run ning a perjurer for President might be expected to resort to forgery to assist him. A correspondent of the lsiew-York Herald sends the following to that journal: COLUMBUS, Ohio, Sept. 14, 18713. The_lastcharge made against Governor Hayes is to the effect that he wrote a let ter on the sth of July last to Saninel J. Tyler, Secretary of the American Alli ance, in which he accepted membership in a secret political society, and offered the sentiment that suffra e and the right to hold office should be limited to persons born in this country. Your correspondent lannonnces by a it tho.rity : First, that Hayes never wrote any such letter; second, that he never. be longed to a political society. and woudl not under any circumstances join one.; and, third, that the sentiment imputed to him as well as the act is totally repugnant to every act and belief of his life. This explicit denial; "by authority," should place a quietus upon this slap : der, but it pfobably will not; for the Democratic press arc as tardy in cor recting a misrepresentation as TILDEN is with his promised explanation of his income return. • =I BETTER TIBIESs THE New York Eceniug Post thus sums up the business outlook : . " Among the . most significant signs of better times is the remarkable activity 'in 'the inn-keeping business which we noted yesterday. The large influx of guests can be explained upon no theory which does not in clude either an actual revival of pros perity or a popular belief in the approach of such a revival. It may be said that these guests are visitors at the Philadelphia Exhibition, who stop in the city for a few days, going or returning. Not long ago these very persons were hesitating whether they should go to the Exhibition at all.: Even if they had the money to spend for that purpose they did not care to spend it in the clicumstancts Of depression then existing. If they bad resolved to go, they would have been reluctant to stop, on the way in New York for a time at a consider able increase of expenses. That they now both go to Philadelphia and tarry awhile in this city proves that, they have not necessarily 'more' money, but certainly more confidence _and better spirits. If; on the other hand, is said that the lodgers in the _inns -are tradesmen from the country who have come to New York to •replenish the stock of their shops, the unusual numbers in which they come show that business in provin cial cities, in smaller towns and in remote villages, feels the impulse of the new life which is stirring in the commercial channels of the metropolis itself. The "end : of the panic," has been announced so often that the public was naturally slow to accept the latest announcement of the wel come event; but there are signs now ottlie turning of the tide which have not been seen before since 1873. The innkeepers find the first relief from the.pressure of the hard times. Their prosperity is not merely a good thing for themselves.. It is also a measure, of the prosperity which we hope will be shared presently .by all classes ,of society. A STRAW. I A vote taken on one of the 1. V. trains on Firday last, resulted as follows: HAYES, 136; _TILDEN, 32; CoorEn, 6. TUDEN was the counsel of OAKE.4 AHD's and the other Credit Mobilier frauds; it was by his advice they acted, and TILDEN was the real source of that stupendous fraud. Tut business men of New York city are more hopeful at present of a business revival, • than for months before. The secret of it is a settled conviction of the eleeticin of HATER and WHEELER, and a consequent confidence in the government's stabil ity. , • .OE2 No nomination made in many years has been hailed with so much real satisfaction as that of Col. E. Ovza- TON. He was presented to the Con ference without a particle of opposi. Lion on the part. of Republicans in this county, and his endorsement by the Conference, is f' highly creditable not only to Col. o.,but the judgment of the party in this county. Col. 0. is just in the prime of vig orous, manhood ; a man of more than ordinary . ability, excellent culture, and unusual legal attainments. Since the close of the war he has been largely engaged in the 'Practice of his profession, but has found time to keep himself well posted in the polit ical 'history of the country, and has rendered valuable aid to the cause of Republicanism by personal effort. The lesson which the past session of Congress has taught the Republicans of, this district needs no further ex emplication to prevent them from falling into the error which they com mitted in 1874, when one of the best men in the party was defeated thro' negligence on the part of Republi cans. Col. OVERT . ON . has all the ele ments necessary to maintain the high reputation the old Wilmot District has always held in the nation's coun sels, and will certainly make his mark:in the halls of legislation, as he has always done in the legal pro fession. Two years ago the nomination was conceded to I3radfdrd, and we threw away the opportunity. Through the magnaniniiti of the other counties we are again honored. Let us see to it, Republicans, that we do our whole duty this time, and prove that We appreciate the honor. The candidate is entirely worthy our grandest ef forts, and the cause certainly never needed active work more than now. A STRoNo*TATENENT. - '- In his speech at Johnstown the other eveniag, GEORGE WH.i.fim Cuaris gwic utterance to the follow ing forcible pnd eloquent words:, " I cannot go further into detail. 'But from one learn all. '-'But let me say.that I can see no reason why the the past should not illume the future. Here is a man who, in 1856, said that the Republican party was a blunder or a crime ; who, in 1860, declared the utmost doctrine of State rights -,..that the right of secession was sealed up in the constitution ; who, in 1861, declined to sign a call for a ' meeting of those in favor of main taitting the integritY - of,the Union. Consider 'this last circumstance for one moment. How strange in this Centennial . year—ai I remarked the Other day at Saratoga:—seenis such conduct How strange, when corn -pared with the spirit of patriotism Which inspired our fathers 100 years ago. Israel Putnam, hearing of Con. Cord and Lexington while at work upon his farm in Old Connecticut, left his flow in the furrow and has tened to tube--defense of his country. .fOne hundred years pass, by, the red hand of slavery . tears down the flag, ;and Mr. Tilden is asked to sign a call fora meeting of those who would - avenge the insult and maintain the national honor, but, being engaged in court in a suit—an Alton and Terre Haute railroad suit very likely—he answers that he is too busy to sign. the call, just then, and that he will wait until he cansee if it'is proper In 1863, Mr. Tilden and other lead ing copperheads unite to publish cer tain documents:for circulation into the loyal States and elsewhere. I have those publications, every one of them and know just what they mean. One of them is a speech Mr. Pugh, of Ohio, made after the arrest of Val- . landigham.' In the course of it he says that the war was; needlessly brought on, and then he asks if in case he is in danger of being arrest ed for uttering such sentiments his friends will stand witlif, him. Anoth er of these documents is a speech of Richard O'Gorman, made in' 1.863, just before thc . lveurren . cel of the ri ots. In it lie , -tSays that the Union may go,.but the State of New York will remain sovereign, and in it he claims that the citizen sold:cry should be paraded solely for the defense of the State. Boys - in blue, if any Of you listen to me, while your -com rades were falling, while the hearts of all loyal men and women were bleeding because, of the'rnighty tem pest that was rocking the very foun dation of the Union, Mr. Tilden was engaged in, the dissemination of such doctrines as these. Mr. Tilden, who a year later, 1864, was promi nent.in the convention which pro. nounced the war a failure. And when a man has taken suckpositions as those I have indicated, exhibiting no sympathy for the flag in the both. Of supreme peril, giving all his in fluence for Jefferson Davis and the rebellion, - I fail, to see why, ten years later, when in 'the meantime he has co-oper t ated with: Tweed, he should be elected to rule'over forty millions of people, simply because he.- calls himself a reformer." Tur. Cincinnati Enquirer, started the $4OO lie that-T-Governos HAYES had pocketed ' the lion* belonging to a dead deserter, now squarely takes it back, as will be seen from the following confession: Some three weeks ago . we receiv ed from- Cleveland, Ohio, a letter signed 'John Somerton, in which some charges were made against Governor Ila . ies in, connection with the bounty money of a lot of desert erS from his brigade. The writer claimed to have been a member of Hayes' regiment. We published the letter in good faith. Since that time the Cleveland papers have called upon John Somerton to come forward and substantiate his charges.. They _say that no such man lives in Cleve land. Xs John has failed to make bimself knOwn we conclude that we were imposed' ..on. We have no desire to unjustly assail any candid-. ate, and in making statements en deavor to ,guard ourselves. In this instance we feel that we owe Govern - - orsilayes an apology. John Somer ton has been loudly called for, and has failed to respond." 'THERE is less fault-finding with our county ticket this fall than for many years, which is the best omen that there will be nnfaltering'anong Republicans in November. _ HAYES AND WHEELER ! ENTNUSIABTIC ISEETING. The nATES and Witzme Club of this place met on Friday evening last for_ the first' time in several mortths. The Grand Jury Room was crowded , to overflowing, and many were compelled to go away because unable to secure standing room. Ringing speeches were made by Mr. DAVIES, COI. OVERTON, W. H. CAB-1 NOINIAN,' Mr. STivvis, of Indiana,' Mr. Turrsy, of Luzerne county, N. C. ELSDREE and J 4 'IWO Mt The ad dresses were loudly applauded, and the spirit evinced by all gave evi dence of a determination on the part of the l ßepublicans of Towanda Bor. 'ough to make' the campaign from now untirelection day an aggressive one OLD ISATUES. What is the usi., Say the Democrats, of continually holding up before the country the pld, dead issues, such as the war and its causes ? The follow ing utterances of representative southerners, do not indicate that the animus of rebellion is yet eradicated from the southern heart, and af f ord the strongest argument against per mitting such men to again come into power, through the election of Tier DEN. Yesterday one of our morning pa pers printed as "a verbatim account" of a speech, made at Aiken, South Carolina, by M. W. GRAY, one of the TILDEN leaders, the following: "MY FRIENDS-I tell You there arc Certain men you must put out of the way; men you must kill. These men are Chamberlain. Elliott, Lee, SParmic and others They must be killed, for they are the leaders of the negroes, and if you get rid of them we can carry things as we want them. United States troops haire been sent down hereto . carry . the election for the. Radicals, but we don't fear them, do we ? (Cries of 'no, no.') We mot them on the field once and we arc ready to meet them again. (Cries—',Yes, we are,' and applause.) And now let me tel you what to!do on election day. Go in masses, armed, and try and force the negroes to vote biir ticket. If they don't do it, shook them down and cut off their ears, and I „warrant you this will teach them a lesson ; and even if we arc not elected, we will go ;to ColuMbia. in force, and if not al ,lowed-to take our seats, we will su.r irOund the State House and tear it drown, and show them we will rule. What say you, men., can't we do it? P (Loud cries of "Yes, d—n it, yes.") The speech is so . utterly infamous in its character that it seemed-hard ly possible that it could be true ; but it stands undenied, and we have oth ers at hand, the authority for which is unquestionable, that are fully as bad. A ftw days -ago we published a letter from south Carolina, from a source whose accuracy we can Vouch foi., concerning the interruption:.of meeting by armed Regulators—the same gang of White-liners that man aged the .Hambug massacre. The matter is of_such importance that we repeat it here : " On Friday; the 18th inst., Gover nor Chamberlain ,and Hon. L. Cass Carpenter, spoke in this city, and on Thursday . oth spoke in Midway, in one of idle strongest Republican countiei, in the State, outside of Charleston: , and Richland. At all their meetings, though called under Republican auspices, the White-lin ers were present in force, - mounted.„• and armed to the teeth. At Abbe ville they presented themselves, arm ed and mounted, to the number of 2,000, • and at Midway there- were from 800 to 1,000 present. At Ab beville they took possession of the meeting, insulted every Republican speaker, and conducted themselves in a brutal, degrading manner. "At Midway,' the last meeting held, Governor Chamberlain was the e first speaker. He was frequently-in suited and often interrupted with im pertinent questions by the horde of rebels- there present, and finally sat down without haVing made' much headway. "The son or the poet Gilinore Simms followed him in a bitter and abusive tirade against Republicans and 'carpel4baggers," calling Gover nor Chamberlain a 'carrion crow,' a 'buzzard,' a 'seedy adventurer,' who had 'dune down here to rob our peo ple and steal their substance.' " Hon: Cass . Carpenter "followed, and all possible means were employ ed to thydw him off his guard by asking him insulting and yrelevaut questionS, that• a conflict '4l:iight be precipit4ed, but all their efforts failed. • " After Mr. Carpenter came one George D. Tillman, from Edgefield, one of the most violent and abusive men I ever listened to. "At this meeting you must re ,inember that at least COO armed and mounted' White-liners were present, while there were not half that num ber of Republicins'present, and they we're neither armed nor mounted, for the very, good' reason that must of them haVe neither animals nor arms. " Tillniian turned to his rebel fol lowers; aH, in a tone wrought up al most to the pitch of frenzy, asked : "'Why don't you hang these men'-? pointing Ito Governor Chamberlain. and Mr. Ca rpe n ter.. 'Why (limit you begin lier l e and now? If you people of Barnwell are too coward/ y,to do it, send a Oegram to Edgejield, anck trill guenlantee enough trusty man to come orer,and do it for you.' " But no movement was • made to ward- the gentlemen, although the white erawd yelled like so many de mon-s." In Louisiana, it will be remember ed, Mr. PACKARD is the Republican nominee for Governor. The follow ing are verbatim t extracts from a speech of the famous MT:ma on •i,, the political situation : "I would kill him (Packard) if I 'had the power, and it is lucky for 'him, and prob ably for me, that I have no such power But he ought, to he killed, lad' if some one could put a bullet into' him (pointing with his right hand to his temple) it would ,he a blessing to this State. * * *.lf it were noti for the infamous General Government under which we live, it would's64 be done. How long do you think the cowardly scoundrels would remain after receiving their notice. toleave ? They would know what to e pect if they slid not obey." The voice of rebellion which the Baltimore Gazelle lifted a few days ago, and which bore spiedy fruit in the mobbing of-a Republican meet ing, cannot be placed too often be fore our readers. Here are some ex tracts from the artitlc with which it greeted the Attorney General's order relative to the purity of the elec tions: ," The time bas come when we must meet force with force. To the bayc net we must oppose the bayonet. * * " The time has come for all good men who love their country and love the Union to organize and show the men who would overturn the Union, that they can only do it by the sacri fice of hundreds of thousands of lives. Let us begin the work in Bat tiinore at once and organize immedi ately. Let us have the Minute Men of '76. * * * If Baltimore shall send out the voice, the echo cif .the voice that Paid Revere sent outfroin the Old South Church of Boston a hundred years ago, we shall have the continent in a whirlwind of patriot ism within thirty days, and the des perate men who are seeking the over throw of American liberties will have been defeated. Let us have the min ute men, of 1 76 organized, drilled, equipped and led by the best men .who can be found to lead them. This is the great duty' of the hour. To your tents! 0, Israel!" These utterances—and these are only samples from the • many—can not be mistakem They mean violeuce, murder, open rebellion against t4e Government and the Nation. They mean the armed rule of the old seces sion element, nd i the destruction of all in the South who oppose their treasonous purposes. The North, and the Old Union .element • everY 7 ' where arc waking up to a full sense of this perilous situation. They see that they. must again crush trepson at the ballot bog, as they crush&l it , n the war. It-is the same old tight, and we must end it now and foreVer. DEMOCRATIC PROFESSIONS. The Democratic party, attempting to take advantage of the temper of the people, has unfurled a banner be spangled all over with the word "re form." But earnest and sincere re formers will nOtThe deceived into the belief that that party has either pur pose or ability ; to carry forward sub stantial reform. They do not forget that the very 'system and practices which we seekto abolish were intro duced by the Democratic party more than forty years ago, and were con tinued so long as that party retained power. The Democratic partrepuld no more be trusted to reform the civ il service than a lank .and hungry wolf 'to guard a sheepfold. There is something grotesquely absurd in the appearance of the Democratic party with a reform banner, and under the leadership of one who was gradua ted in the . political school of Tam- Many Hall.. The traditions and practices of that party forbid belief in the sincerity of. its new preten tious in favor ,of reform. , What it now wants is to reform the republi can party. out of power and itself in. he Democratic cry for reform would Be silenced by its party leaders the moment' it came into power.—Bris tow. FOR SENATOR, WM. T. DAMES. In urging the people of this county to vote or Wm. T. Davies for Sena tor, it is' with the conviction that he fairly and ably represent them in the Legislature. Mr. Davies is one of the most prominent and re spected citizens of Towanda.. He has resided there for a long time, in the enjoyment of an active and lucra tixe • practice in the legal profession. He occuPies a leading position in,the Bradford County bar, and is generally employed in one may or another in the most important actions in the courts. Alf a soldier he distinguished himself for bravery, and served his country faithfully until his health gave way, and he was discharged on a 'surgeon's certificate. 11tr. Da - oes is a man-of more than ordinary intelligence, of firm convic tions and unimpeachable integr4. When convinced of his duty to his, constituents he could not be influ enced.by lobbyists, nor purchased by corporations and-monopolies. He is a staunch Republican, and if elected Would be governed in his legislative action by the yrinciples upon which the party was founded. - - T nkha n uock Republican. , HON. EDWARD OViRTON; of To wanda. has been nominated for Con gress from, the Fifteenth (Pa.) Dis trict. A dispatch 'states that on the first day of the reassembling of the conference at Montrose, there was no ballot taken.. But the, next morning (Wednesday last) four ballots were cast, with no better prospect of an adjournment than before. In the af ternoon, aftet further balloting; Over ton's chances •improved. Eighteen ballots were taken,,,Overton Occasion ally falling !ofT,' mid Grow, towards the close, holding steadily to 'five votes. Finally, on the ninety-seventh ballot, Overton received nine votes, which gave him the nomination. The contest is believed to have been fairly' won, and the entire district will en dorse the nomination heartily. The nominee, Col: Overton, js a most es-. teemed gentleman, and one of the! most distinguished members of thel bar in Northern Pennsylvania. • He resides . at Towanda. We do not imagine there - can be a shadow of doubt about his election with an old fashioned majority, such as the old Wilmot district used - to ra Advertiser. Tun last Democratic sensation is a story that the Molly Maguires were bought up for Governor Hartranft in 4875. The Mollies flourished in Car bon, Luzerne, Northumberland and Schuykill counties, and while Gov. Hartranft gained 61 out of 51,000 votes in their region, the majority against 4ini was about 3,90 Q I In the other counties of the State, he gaind 16,648 votes. The story does not "wash" with the figures, for his gains. there.were far below the aver age gains; and all the Mollies known so far are Democrats 1 , The pardon of one of the Mollies was the act of a Board of which the Governor is only one. Like Five Points and other infamous localities, Molliedom -is mostly aDemocratic institution, and will vote for "Tilden , and Reform." Tweed, Su Klux, Mollie, Lecompton .Andersonville—what sources to look - for "RefOrm t"—=Harrisburg Telegraph. ow :0 . r. sores IlititlEVP cows a 'ming, There are some who' erroneously sup- , •Oose that, id the south, the CteCtiQU is simply a contest of the white against the colored voters. Wore it so, should it not be a free race? Is that any reason why any crime (murder not excepted) should be overlooked or even applauded? Who does not regret that in America or any where else, jealousy arising from the ad eldent of birth shield be harbored or en couraged to influence elections? The glory of our country should be to protect the legal right of every man to the enjoy- Aleut of his natural and constitutional privileges.' Our interests as .a people, are one, and in this year, 1876, we should bo a united, friendly people. • lint we are not engaged in a contest of races or of colori. It is the old issue— Equality of Right. It is, Democracy or Republicanism against Arristocracy or Despotism—that divides the south. There is nothing in hunian nature that inclines a man to t prefer Ids foes to his friends. The freedmen would be unwor thy their name should they, as such, sus tain those who• inaugurated rebellion to strengthen the accursed system of slavery and who fought emancipation and equal suffrage to the last. Freedmen are in feeling a gentle • race, and could readily overlook the past, provided they were now treated honorably; but they don't prefer their late mastersto their liberators either as individuala' . or as partiek. While therefore it is true that the freed men generally tiro Republicans, and the late rebels generally ark: Democrats; throughout the 'Mien it iti nowhere the rule. ' Take North Carolina • for an example. That State.had 678,000 whites to 391,00 colored inhabitants of various shades=a very large white majority in 1870. It has nearly. 50,0.00 majority of white voters. Yet, North Carolina, since returning to the Union, lias chosen Republicans for Governor, and at the last election for President gave" nearly 25,000 Republican majority. i If color had been the point, its majority Would have been double that the other way, • . . For more minute illustration. we copy a few figures from the last U. S, Census and from The World (Democratic) Almanac for 1676,49 follows: • , Counties' 1970 .2 --Pop. . 1874—Votes Whites Blacks ' Dem. Rep Buncombe.... 13,109 2,303 ' . 1,165 1,280 4'hoian 4,081 3,369 597 761 Clan ' , 2,319 142 328 73 JDai'1t150n......13;96.9 3,546 .1.413 , 1,210 11aywwt1 7,406 515 . ' 771 . 129 Ilendergon .... 9;499 1.208 416 328 Jackson 5,698 279 919 168 Mattison ..... ...17,858 3.36 Polk 3,361 978 - 214 236 Rut be r f0rt1....10,479 2,642 724 794 Stokes.... 7,600 2,608 - 655 9l Surrey 9,692 1,560 '. 1,603 725 Nake .19.426 , 16,181 ' i 3,640 3,610 Yadkin_9,233 1,441 725 716 Yancey 5,601 308 635 152 126,159 37,415 7 13,669 10,56 37,415 i . 10,583 Majorities 88,744 Br, _ it seems Buncombe county, with six white people to one black, gives a Repub lican majority. With about .8,000 white majority Rutherford goes against the De mocracy. And every county demonstrates the fact that "the color-line" • is not the test of elections in that State. Counting ono voter to six population. those 126,000 whites would:. have 21,000 votes, tut they gave only 13,000 in round numbets.. Those 37,000 colored people should yield only 6,200 voters, but there were 13,000 Republican votes. By the same rule—were "the coley-line" the test —the whole State should yield113;000 Democratic votes,but it gave Greeley only 67,000. Grant should have had only 65,- 000 votes, but he had. 91,000. Here were .16,000 white votes, not for Greeley, and 26,000 who were, for Grant.- 1 But some :colored men were coerced or cajoled into voting for Greeley—some of both "colors" did not vote—but doubtless 40,000 to 50,- 000 whites voted for Grant, A similar scrutiny elsewhere would abundantly demonstrate the fact that.the "color line" much as the ex-Rebels might desire it fur a false issue—is not the contest: The honest, cool majority de sire no suck, fictitious and most injurious, issue to cover the real aim, which is semi slavery. When we remember that the masses ht the South were coerced in,i(i'llebellion by fire-eaters—when we remember how much they suffered by their self-inflected war, which could not commend itself to their judgment nor to their sonscience—it is -easy to see how much thoshoneseand more intelligent white 'people, though poor, at heart hate the instigators 6f the rebellion. There is n 3 lack of well-informed per sons—respectable, I.7nioti-lovi,g white Men—who believe in. the rights of our common humanity, and who are in accord at. heart w ith the Republiwin party. They ask no office Or reward, but they are cramped because the means of influence are in the bands of the authOrs of .their troubles. And there, as elsewhere in all parties, are men with whoM self-interest is the governing principle, and who, con vinced that the RepubliEan party will re main in power, range themselves on that side from prudential mote than high moral considerations. But glee thoSe classes together, and add to them the freedmen, and it is evident that fair elections would 'destroy the power of the traitors andla natios, who, from Calhoun's,time to this, have been the agitators and worst foes of the South. Under the United States Crinstitrition and Laws, and also•-under those of the several States, every voter, white or black, has a right to complete freedom in the ex erzise of the high duty of the franchise. They must have it. Men chosen to Con gress by trampling upon voters rights,' as has been done,, must not be allowed to take further advantage of those outrages. Any one who comes to Washington by a denial of the freeman's rights; must and should be refused admission.. Lecompton must again be oiiS lawed. • The East, Nort i and West can best aid the Unionists of the South by continuing in power those; uho have proved faithful and true in the past. and by keeping out those who have been wrong in the- past. The. Union linen everywhere should sus tain Hayes. The unrepentant Rebels, al most to a man, will vote fur Tilden. NOT A PARTY QUESTION One Democratic campaign document is devoted to an enumeration of railway land grants under Republiban administrations. Let us look at the Matter fairly, and not in a narrow, partizan way. Under General Washington's adminis tration, all the Ohio - Western Reserve was given to the State of Connecticut, and seven million acres. in Western New York - were given LI Massachusetts. Prob ably every succeeding administration vot ed public hind to some objects esteemed worthy, to Democratic States as well as others. Their benefits have been shared by all, although t ithe incidental advantages were granted to : sections Where the favor WWI bestowed, and to the members of the party of the adMinistration in fx.iwer at the time of • the respective gifts. Multi* Andes of persons have been ihua settled or .benetittcd, and.' whole counties; if not States, have been built up by them. Railway grants had been commenced before the Republicans came into power. The Homestead law, which has . given so many homes to men and families, free, was a Republican or Northern measure, long baffled by their Democratic, and Southern . antagonists, and which Mr. Grow specially championed. The importance of a highway from the Atlantic to the I'aeitie had lorg been , dis cussed, and in 18.10 both the Democratic' and Republican patties in Natiothtl, Con- Ventions took ground in favor of a railway by government aid, of which lands were a part. , In 18:3 both parties expressed themselves in opposition to frontier grants of land to companies, and I do not know that any more his been disposed of :in teat manner. Thus it will be seen that, both and all parties have acted together ' in land gifts, so that no ono can blame another with beginning or claim the credit of closing the system, whether good or bad. The greatest abuse under the •system was. the Credit 3lobilier—A monopoly within a company, whiCh absorbed its profits. In that, also, members of both parties shared, dividing the spoils person l ally, irrespective of party,—except that the Rebcls had previously "minuted themselves•out.'.' As far as I have traced the votes upon all these questions, they were in fair pro portion from both parties. James Broo s, one ..of the national Democratic leaders, from New York; anti a Government Di rector- in the Pacific Railroad Company. Perhaps the leading counsel of the Com pany, most relied upon in all important niovements, is now the Democratic clutch _date for President.. These navies. are' in troduced simply•to show its non-partizan asptcct. 'While the. R' publicans had the large Majority:when the polleiwas at its height, during the time of general extrav &puce, the Demecrats were generally re sponsible in proportion to their numbers. Tho individuals cemented, and not the parties they adhered 'to,. must 'each for himself answer for his acts in tlie premlies. If, after the gross favoritism of the Credit Mobilier, the Republicans had taken ,up Oakes Ames for ['resident; the fact that he was 'prominent • in it 'would, haVe been ground of complaint that the party thought too littler of his complicity in that gigantic fraud, if it did not there by endorse lc. It would - haire certainly been reason for opposing him, if not his. party,- which the Democrats would' travel inspired to the end. . .• • An alleged but not admitted participa-, tion in the scheme by Colfax, caused his retirement from a high position in the Republican ranks. The voter has seen no- denial of t he , statement that Samuel J. Tilden • counsel for the Company, Credit Mobilier• and all, giving his learning and his indus try, to its ends, and was largely -rewarded , —525,000, if I remember, at one for its success. This fact was pine property when -he was nominated: Ac-• cording to estimates of the hone Sty, of -that scheme will be the amount-of oppo sition it may workagaiust the mart and against the party. - a It is hoped the land grant policy, old as it is; and heretofore endorsed by.every party, is' dead by general consent!. The vast capital of, our country and the won, derful energy f our people, arc grounds for, the opinion that, hereafter, every real ly useful public Undertaking will depend wholly upon its own means. No more :"grants"or "endorsemefits" or "subsi dies," or helps in any shape to anything of t he kind, hoirever plausible, important or necessary they may appear ;—that is probably the Safest way for us as a people. Morally and financially, it were better to stop material aid to any new "enterprise," letting all stand or fall by•their own mer its and their own resour c es. ' 0. N. W. ACKNOWLEDGED MURDER In the old-settled, free States, as all know, there is. a tendency to publish all murders known, and very few escape ex tended notice. In the sparsely-settled Smthern States there is less activity in publishing ,such events, and' many of the deaths in family - quarrels and in what are called. " political " contests, are never known. And yet, what are known and pub lished Present a vivid contrast as to the state of society and.the security ofllife in the North andiSouth. • The United States census of 1870 gath ered, as near as practicable, the number of violent deaths = not suicides or 'acci dcnts—in the States for 1869. The follow ing:are summaries New;Vork 2,834 h New Jersey ..... . Perinsylvabla One murder to seventy thousand peo ple, and those mostly in the cities and by aliens. • . COMM MU= =EI North Carolina 49 1.016.61 , 1 South Citrollirt 37' - 705.600 Florida 41 . 189,995 Georgia ..... 116 1,101.109 Mississippi 89, . 827,422 . . . F, ~ _ .395 7,686,476 One murder to thirteen thousand peo ple, and but a fraction reported at that In the strongest Republican State— Vermont—not . one murder was' reported among 330,000 people. In Florida, -1-1, murders among.lBB,ooo people In Texas, with less than a million of people, there Were more murders than in all New England, New York, NeW Jersey and Pennsylvania, 4-ith over twelve mill ions of people With such facts ' .from such source s, let us hear no more of "life being as safe in the South as in the North." And let us have as little infusion as_ possible of •the spirit df the old slave-holding aristocracy, which, as so well described by Jefferson, makes tyrants and violent,, unreasonable, vindictive men. ' READER. THE CAUSE AND THE CITIIE. ' Carl Schurz is keeping the finan cial question where it belongs, in the front of the ,canvass. . "The times are hard and the people want a Change." This is the burden of the Democratic - canvass, stripped of its personalities and the slang atd Cant :of platform arraignments. Certainly the times have beeti hard, though there arc happily signs of improve ment. The people indeed do desire a-change, but it is not a Mere change of parties, least of all such a change as the restoration of the Democratic party would involve. They are rather inclined to inquire into.the cause of their financial troubles, and to apply to them a remedy which is practical and philosophical. The'position of the Democrats on this foremost question is tersely de fined by Mr. Schurz. Their candi dates are "a bard-money man for president, and a soft-money man for vice-president:" TheirTlattbrm de clares "for bard money in one sen tence," and adopts "the battle-cries of the inflationists and soft-money Men in another." There is design in this diversity; there is methOd in this madness of contradiction. The seem ing inconsistency conforms to a con sistent purpose. The hard-money features of candidates and platform 'were intended to carry hard-money States ; the soft-nioney feature soft money State* The contrivance was believed to be. shrewd, but,it really was N . -cry shallow. The - Democrats are fought in all the States as infla tionists and reptidiationists; and as such it is to be hoPed that they will - be.defeated. Mr. Schurz's exposure Of the soft money fallacy is a demonstration. , Mr.llendrickS and his followers say that contraction is the cause of the distress which dates. from the panic of 1873. In that year, there was an amount of currency, counting even in former years compound interest notes, nine millions of dollars greater than in 1872, twenty-nine millions greater than in 1871, fifty-one millions greater than in 18;0, fifty-six millions greater than in 1869, and fifty-two s millions greater in 1868; and these latter y 4 ears "`have .generally been called years dr great, of unexampled pros erity." So; contraction did not work the miSehief, because the distress be gan when the volume of the currency was :the greatest. Mr. Hendriclia and his followers demand the repeal of the Resumption Act op the ground that i lit has brought about theruinous contfaCtion which has caused, all the trouble. The perfect answer is that the trouble began in 1873, and the Resumption Act was not passed un til 18 . ;5. That there is no scarcity of currency is proved by the well known fact that currency in millions is lyino.idle.- The first cause of the 'hard times as Mr 7 Schur; shows, is over-produc tion, awaste of capital in speculation; and ifi this respect the evil is work ing its own cure. What the people need of .artificial relief, by means of governmental measures, is above i all, other things the restoration of honest money. The change 'Which 'the peo-' ple, depland* in legislation that shall remove the obstructions, which exist by lavi, in the way of commercial re eovery; and such legislation the DeM ocratic party shows no dispositionor ability to sedure.---New York Befri` ing,Pr.W. WORKMEN are engaged in the work of rebuilding- Castl, Garden, N. 1. eity:il destroyed some time ago by fire. A fiumessfai,Engkeedng Peat-TatTorzoldab' ts Ob strut:Um Removed Without Accidat; • NI:W.: I I'ORK, September 24:—The 'great engineering feat •of removing the rock !which obstructed :,the navi gation at Hell Gate - bas been success fully ,accomplished the precise time and manner intended, without .neeklent." An immense number ° of people ..assembled in the neighbor biped toWritriess the expected nobeaval of rocki'. etc.- Great alarm prevailed among. many residents orlfirst'AVe- , Ave nue and the cross streets from Eighty-' second to Ninety-sixth streets, and some houses were .entirely deserted by the residents through fear of rocks being hurled across the river. Every house in that 'vicinity had the doors, and windows open as a matter of pre caution, but the great mass of•peOple had no rears whatever, and:spectators swarmed i on the piers and low ground' directly in• a line'with the rock. At. precisely nine minutes to 3 o'clock the explosion took place.•ln a straight and seemingly narrow line, running- . north and south for about three hun dred yards; the water whitened and' arose nearly',.three or four feet high, a dull "thud" Was heard, rocks tum bled" beneath the feet of the multi tude as if from two quick, short put sat-kits of an earthquake. ,The wa ter, Which appeared to remain sta tionary for an instant, broke and spurted i* in irregUlar dark yellow ish 'masses ahont twelve feet high; mixed With dark smoke from the dynamite; then it fell back, and in- a moment the river resumed its usual - peaceful aspect. ,Then a cheer arose from all. the northeast side of the city and from the steam ers and ;boats, and steam whistles -were blown, and bells were rung, and all was over. The-report was scarce-, ly noticeable. NOt, the smallest frag ment of rock was hurled up and not so much as a-ripple was caused upon the water, saVe just over the spa where the explosion took place.' There-was no concussion in the air • and not a pane of glass was broken in the city or on Ward's Island.: Im mediately after the explosion lin dreds of row boats set out at their best speed for Hell Gate, each anxious to have thefhonor of first passing over the scene of the explosion. That the work was effectually done is the gen 7 eral feeling, and this also appears from the fact that the police boat. -passed o\er the spot safely. , • Murders. Population .13 30,7.730 . 70 -04'2,770, 5 746,095 . 3,521,791 EREISMI NOTABLE FACT. ' It is 0. significant, l fact that no American who ever opposed the pro secution :of a'-war in Which his,coun try was involved, with a solitary ex ceptionovas ever elected. to the Pres idency. f Murders. Population . 71 1,211.442 73 1.:12?,011 EaiIIIMM Take the Revolutionary War of 4776. Many men of high social po sition, talent, and iutegitty. and esti mable citizens in every other respect, joined the anti-War or Tory party. The name Tory was n9t at that tittle one of reproach, but sign-itied one who waslin:tavor .of the established order of things ; .but long before the war closed the word Tory was an epithet of ,reproach as much as the . modern term ". scalawag " is. to-day, and the gentlemanly and 'cultivated Tories Of the Revolution in N'cw York, Pennsylvanla. Virginia. and the Carolinas sank intn'political in- Significance. After the war, to.prove : the chat:ft of Torryism on a eandi (late,. was to ruin him. ,- . A still' larger, more influential, cul tivated, and wealtiby class of 'politi4' cians dpposed the war of ISI2. Thep' were soon dulibi." Blue-Light 'Fed- . eralists,'7; and were swept out of exis tence. Several of theta aspired to the Presideacy.afterwards, 'but were in cd9rionslY defeated, with the one-es - ception alluded to, Buchanan, Who; although a Federalist wt enyoung map, quickly'saw his blonde -, and went over to the Democraey. T ten came the Mexican war. ; Thc I P . 4r.5, - , led. by Mr. Clay, believed 'that the war wasiwrongfidly begun, lint their patriptic!instineLs prompted...them to throw themselves in the froPt 'of the contest; they got most of the laurels' and the gidry . of the war, and' 01;ected Gen. Taylor President. ' , -, Oppositiod to the war for the Union not only sounded the political death knell of the brightest intellects:of the Democratic party, as Breckinridge.• Davis, andßenjamin;lft oVerwhel in ingly defeatedGen.Mc Melia n add Gov Seymour - for the Presidency. 3 Even Ir. Greeley's integrity, talents,-..and Wide fame as a union . editor did not „save him.from defeat, simply- because. he was tbe candidate of the party=:. which opposed the war for the Union. As a leader of the anti-war rally of I Stt 1 , Gov. Tilden may read his own doom in the . fate of the Tories:of '7l; the Bhie-/Lights of 1 Sl2. and the' Cep perheav. ISGI.--Loiti - srille CUM tieg illerCi . " i After - the Revolution, Benedict Arnold asked an American, whom he met in England, what the Whigs would'do if they' cbuld catch him in thetnited states . ? The American replied, '"l'hey would take that wood-. en leg, which yol gainedin fighting their battles, and bury: it with the honors of war. The remainder g!I you Would they,hang on a gibbet." The Democracy are tryili!* to find somthing that Tilden did, durinr• the Rebellion, to whip those wlkise unit ed vote ~he now . expects lik'onll - hopc,oran . . election. When they find his voluntary'Union tribute, wwill have it engraved and honorably pet:- petuated in our autids. "The renriti.l - of him will be per!; - yrfard ,filter millions „ Union balk's ! Lerri ?ncrl,&:hronrl•l~ GoxEnson Ttt.nts may, indeed, have liePt . himself within the letter or the law, but it is plain that he evaded its spirit. lie could not be sent 'to the penitentiary, as he Ls • trying to send Jarvis Lord, for defrauding the Government; but, he' contrived to keep the GOvernment faim, getting out of him the money to Ivhich it was entitled, lie did not tell the horse-car,conductor he liad paid his fare, but , he 'kept his hands in his po6kets and looked unconcernOly the conductor, as if lie had ; 'and the elfect was the same. Tien the con- Auctor detects such a passenger, he generally wants-.to put him o'ti the car. When the American -people fled him running as' a. reform Candidate forsthe Presidency, they arc going to vote for the other mau.—New. lurk! Tribune, . THE laidianaj►olis AO- nal says the "democracy are o►i the himne stretcl► and twenty lengths ahead?' 'That is a , delicdte Saying that they are already nearly 'back to tlieir holes; on Salt River, the only borne tli have kno7n fur the last twenty years.. 'ILL GATE - EXPLOSION. I ALLOW THE CLAIM. 11111 11:Z3 11