El RI II Pradbrd prom ll= P. KABSU, EDITOR. Towanda, Pa.,' May zB, :882. MEPCRLICA3 STATE TICMEI. FOS GOVUNCER, JAMES A. BEAVER, of Centre county. FOR LIECTRICANT GOVERROR WM. T. D&VLEI3, of Bradford county. FOR SRCRETATIT OF niTERNAL AFFAIRS : iIJOHN M. GRUB, of Butler. _ FOR, JUDGE OF THE IKUPIREME COURT : WM. H. RAWLE; of Philadelphia. TOR COICORINSMAN-AT-LARGE : VIM. M. MARKIAL4 of Pittsburg JURY trial is suspended in Ireland by. the new bill. THE National Banking bill is tin der discussion in the House. : Tim oldest inhabitant will please come forward and state when Penn 831vania had a better ticket than this year. 'AFTER June :10 Guite4u will cease • froM troubling. ; an''' his unutterable vanity will be giieOts last nutriment by a bit of .hemp. OEN. BEAVER'S _ townsmen 'turned oat two thousanti strong to give him a weleoine the other day. 'The gal lant General is strong at home. WE have a first-class ticket, com posed'of men against whose personal honesty or ability - no-=word .can be add; let us work for its election• BRA DFOR D county has no politicians who wish ior an Independent nation: They ►nay want-to die OM they have scruples abotitco . *:kii4ing suicide.. . Ot . e neighbor, ledge Jes was • highly eotriplitnen tedthe-arid-en( gray in whiph, he discharged his 4 — lifies as eh - ail - illan " - of the Cotntnittee,'On Resolutions. • GENERAL_ . IIt'AV ER and Senator 1 vies were Itoth in the army, and. t both entered be service as First Lieutenant. Just now only one is to -be it lieutenant.- - PourtctANs not farther away than Oregon are spending much of their time now in observing the transit of an independent. PennaYlvania Con vention across the political dise/ . SENATOR not . has prksented a petition' to Congress asking tiat something be done to preserve the ancient cities of ArizonyiVi-and--sew -Mexico from ruin. The value 'of theie antiquities has not be - 61 .- geher, ally-apprecisted,Rnd it is to be ticped that Congress will give some consid- Cration to the petition. . ; ;. • Senator M itchell has the unenttiar bledistinction of being the leader in an attack --on the best State ticket the Republican party has nominated in many. years; and the head-centre of s faction that has for its object the defeat of the party, when that defeat would be . dangerous to /the lArty in the State and in the Nation. -Ws have read in story boo : of :persons who sought to destroi a whole family because of enmity to t tome unimportant. domestic i it. Senator Mitchell has evident'y read similar books, for he is practicing this same morality in attempting to injure the p.trty he represents-be cause Don Cameron does not, fairly divide the .Se u atorial patronage with him. , WE print Senator Mitchell's latest war bulletin, which says in effect : ally yourselves witli Democrats and Greenbackers ; defeat , the Republi can party in Pennsylvania . ; give the - Democrats a chance to girrymander the State in 15Iir interest; and in flict permanent djury upon the party at - large, because the convention nom inated men whom Don Cameron did not opppse, and some of whom are . not identified With the- Independent movement. lr the object of Indefiendents is to attack Don Cameron there is a utter time to do that than thi'present, it will a injure th • • piny with whiCh they : ,..have acted,: To retire Cameron iris not neces. sary to attack the whote party and co-operate with the Democrats. Re-' .. form within the party is not only_ possible, but easy ; make Cameron an issue, if necessary, at the-election- when the L( gistattire is selected hich elects his successor, and choose men only who pi omise to kork and vote against him. By " bossism " Senator Mitchell and the Independ cnts mean Cameronistu, and by the '• boss," Don Cameron. Divested of generalities, he is the "Cole head and front of the offending; and it is his methods, influenee and supremacy which they .seek to overthrow. This the Independents propose to do, not by an attack upon him, but by war up - on_ the , whole Republican ticket composod of men, at leait two of whom are outspoken foes of Cam eron. • Because the suicidal policy - dictated by, Wharton, Barker, which would have adjourned the con vention and have made the party a laughing stock was not followed ; and because General Beaver was not withdrain and some nameless indi ildual put in his place; they now pro to do what they can to injure Ciamp by a wholesale destruetipn of the Whole part. It reminds one of tb policy of-an , olden king who ordered all male eiiildiee - of li - de - MO:I tie killed 'wan* he wanted to get' sid 4 4ire t Wi3 ftst *tor fires prevail. TR 1111SPEBILICADI TICKET'. The ticket placed in nomination by the Republican) Convention is one which will attract the enthusiastic support 'of every true Republican who believes the old party that saved the nation's life and honor is not less worthy of support than the degenerate one that has had no man since Jackson, of lorhom_it is proud. For years there has not been so strong a ticket, and everywhere the voters of the • party are pointing to it with pride, as one composed of represent ative Republicans. The Independent element, led by Count Joannes Bark er, which hoped for nominations ob- jectionable to anti-Cameron Repub licans, has- been disappointed, and tbey'read victory for the ticket led by Beaver, in theAaoest .-z-- suinort, given it by the PhilaApiiihia Press and other outspoken JO open dent „journals. No one wtio4a earnest believer in the!princiiiles of the Republican partyi4rhohas faith in its promises or pride in its achiev inents can withold from this ticket an unconditional support. It is tho roughly good, composed of men of honesty, ability and independence, and it deserves, as it will receive, election. beneral-Beaver, thesstandard bear& er, was , one of our bravest, most chivalrous' soldiers, one who risked his life in defence of the country; and theparty that gives the govern ment,of one of the States to him, will givepOwer to one of the ablest, bravest, truest men the Common wealth, owns as a Ron. .He was no fair weather patriot in the storm of 1860,j and since he has never been a Seiko ing politician 'nor a trader on n his well-earned recognition from the party, i but has quietly- pursued his business, earning , gob* opinions frOm all. No man as strong could be named for the`pOsition, and the count of rota next fall will shim his popu larity • Senator W. T. Davies, Bradford county's candidate, and the nominee for Lieutenant Governor, is a man of. abilit• t 0 .4 inteiiiiity a thorough Repub. lican, and an .honest man. lie was •defeated in the convention last year by his inderindent principles; and will now bring to the ticket - the . sup- port of the' men with whocklke work ed to 'defeat Oliver for the Senate. Another element' of strength is his , Welsh. decent. Heis the first man of that nation; whO-• has received a plaCe. on — the Pennsylvania State ticket; and hii:countrYmen, prover bial for Republicanism, Will -vote for . him to a man. The Welsh, for their devotion to the party. have deserved recognition,, and in' the able candi date whbm they present they add an other claim to_the good opinion of the party at large. Bradford county Re publicans to a min ought to work for the election of their home candidate, and we. believe - that even from the Democratic ranks many men will be found who will give our candidate the complimentary vote which an honest,competent neighbor and friend , can command. - William Henry Rawle is a man who will fill the office4f Supreme Court Judge as worthily as any one who could be named. Of greatlegal learning, and of a name recognized, for years as belonging to accomplislii ed jur i sts , be brings - as well an inde: pendenee, a hatred of corruption and a reputation as a reformer Unit' will insure him respect from those un qualified to judge of his other recom mendations for the place. The Phil adelphia Times says the Independ - ents must stultify themselves or nominate Ravile at their convention. John M. Greer, is the , nominee for Secretary of Internal Affairs, the least important of ihe offices on the ticket, and hie popularity at home is evi dencedilby the fact that he polled more Motes in hiedistrict than Ga rfield d : id at the same election. Ttiomaa M. Maishall, "lion-heart ed, honest Tom - Marshall," as he has been called, the nominee for Con gressman -at-Large, is a' man who re ceives sufficient recommendation from his singular nomination - and the entbusiasKii provoked. Every old politician-140*s Tom Marshall, and speaks of liim with the enthusi '-astic praise or, a school boy. His - courage, his independence, his bril liant orateky, his refusal to have his name go before the Convention, a AVousand magnetic elements of strength are spoken of, and many Democrats are - ready to hurrah for