4, II Ett Wastut itraittts PUBLISHED BY PENNIMAN,REIRD 4SCCO.,Proprietors. Jr. B. PENNIMAN, - JostAH XING, T. P. HOUSTON, N. P. BEI/D. Editori Proprietors. • 011110 E: GAZETTE BUILDING, sa AND 86 FIFTH AT. OFFIC!A)11. PAPER Of Pitt barah, Allegheny. and Allir! gheny County. " ithist-wietty. W•thif I 50 One year.s2.so Single copy . 451.50 th 751811.1m5. L5O 5 coxileshetob 1.25 ;Three ads 75 10 • 7.t5 es.ll sad mks to/went. router Otte rear ORO 26 , , IWtirothji c /DAY, AUGUST 20, 1809. LIMO REPUBLICAN TICKET. STATE. FOE aowancon: JOIIN W: GEARY. ;ITD9E OF Sr ?RENE coma: HENRY W. WILLIAMS. COUNTY. ASSOCIATE JUDGE DISTRICT COURT. * JOHN H. KIRKPATRICK, ABaurrAirr LAW ;RIDGE., COMMON PLEAS, TEED'S. H. COLLIER. SATs BaNArz--THOHAS HOWARD. ASSERIIIA—MLLESAA WI NT . r i fEBEYS, ALToN. JA.MEi TAY Loft, - I). N. W n ITE, JOHN 11. KERR SIIERITI—aIIGH B. FLEHING. TaxAstrusa—JOS. F. DENNI9TON. Cu= or Cotrars—JOSEPH•BROWNE. RECORDER--CHOILAS H. HUNTER. Comassiorma -- GIAIINCEY B. BOSTWICR. Srmaran—JOSEPH H. GRAY. • CLERK ORMANB 9 CoosT--ILLRX.. HILANDS. Dzascron or POOR--ABDIEL •McOLIJIHI. WS "Pram on the Second page of this morning's GAZETTE-7POetty, Penn sevania and Ohio News and Niueliana ous Mailer Third and Bizth pages: linaneica and Oommireial, PetTol6l7l Market, Produce toad Provision Marker, Markets by Telegraph, Imports by Rail road and River News. Seventh page: Book Notices. • U. B. BONDS at Franktort, PNEBOLEIIIii at Antwerp, 531 f. CIOLD closed in New Torlv yesterday at 132-1@133. i'Avene.BLE reports came from the cop pei-reelon of Lake Superior. The mines are yielding handsome results, which would be profitable at somewhat better prices. Tim amended election returns in Ten nessee increase• the vote for Stokes so rapidly as to make it probably equal to that given to GRANT. This shows that his rival, Seater, had but a limited Re publican support. VALUABLE elate-quarries have been foand in:York county, near the Hanover junction. The same county aleo boasts large deposits of an iron ore _so highly carbonized as to make it especially desir able for rails. The product is said to' be very nearly equal to'steel. Ax orpoarrrou PRIRT at Philadelphia reiterates daily its slanderous imputa tions upon Judge Wrm.rems. The jour nalist who persists in fe falsehood, after it has beenplainly exposed as this has been, clearly unites In his own pirson. the manners of a "Dead Rabbit" and the morals of Moyamensing. We can have no controversy with such a representa tive of the subterranean. Democracy. _ A-MONTH AGO, the rebel press of miss issippi were quite confident that General -tharer would "preserve an attitude of neutrality" in their local politics, and de claret that nothing more was to be desir ed. The "undoubted authority," upon which they relied, since proies to be al together worthless, and they have resolv ed to throw the Dent ring overboard. 'Not even that gentleman's abusive epistle to Mr. BourwELL. will save hie bacon with the Mississippi Democracy. IT Is NOT only Mississippi' tuid Tew,l in which the Republican ascendancy has been imperilled by the same Conserva tive tactics which our frisads have found so fatally mischievous in Virginia and Tennessee. Bat Missouri and West Vir ginia were also in danger. We may re— joice that the Conservative trick has been at last effectually 'e xpl ode d , so that it can do us no more harm. Our friends is the two latter States forewarned are fore armed. They will accept the wise pglicy which iooks to the abrogation of existing restrictions'upon the 'ex•rebel suffrage, but they will take gob& care to administer that 'policy themselves. They ,do not propose to commit it to such politicians as Carlisle in' the one State, or Henderson in the other. It only needs that our friends there shall heed the consequences widch have followed an unhappy edam, with the defeat of the Republican cause and aiebel triumph at Nashville and Rich. mond, - and they, will take good care to unite upon the most discreetand effective measntes; in sapportof the true policy Of a liberal and provident statesmanship. . Bresagurovr deyelopmenta are held to warrant_ the belief that (;Met Jostles egos, ,entertaining the application for a lobos dr:pits Ynaena'a case, propo med ' , to" xelease • ther:.vp*Oner, 'pro. Xollgigh4 111 ginent irtfalli 4, 4 I:= for the express purpose of overthrowing the military - contiOl of tini l inareconstruet - . ed states. This purpose was only foiltia by the shrewdtacties of Attorney Gen eral Him% whO" contrit , ed to inyOlve that excellent magistrate in such an etkiV barrassment that he no longer bad the audacity to complete his plan. These dna 4reiopments are reported in detail by.. close observer of the proceedings taken under the writ, and it seems difficult to dispute their real signification. It is clearly understood that, since the retire ment of the late President, the man of his malignant hatred to the Republican party has descended to the shoulders of the Chief ' Justice, there to dis place, on every convenient occasion, his official ermine. • He will not fall to im prove every possible opportunity for de livering his deadliest blows at the funds. mental Olicy of the only political organ ization which stands in the way of his ambitious hopes. Here comes another case in Alabama, in which he is sure , to figure before it is finally disposed of. One I Collins, who killed Dr. Haughey, the Republican candidate for Congress in one of the districts Of North Alabama some time since, haying securely defied the civil law, has been at last arreattd by the military and will be held for trial. The Chief Justice may be expected to in tervene, mending his hold in the Yerger case and gratifying, if he can, his so-far baffled purpose to draw the .teeth out of the Congressional policy, by eliminating its military authority. ,. `He is in the field for the. Democratic nomination for the next Presidency, and will play every card to win Southern support. Let him be known as the last enemy of the public repose who still retains high office. A MELANCHOLY MISTAKE. Mrs. H. B. STowir. has -lent a name until now illustrious in letters, to the propagation of a shameful scandal which can never, by any possibility, be either substantiated or disproved; If her mo tive was chivalrous, her achievement is eminently Quixotic. Whatever of gen erous sympathy she may have , felt with a' suffering and wholly_ blameless woman, five minutes of careful'reflection, or an half hour of discussion with some careful and judicious friend, would have saved her from a mistake which bids fair to be fatal to her professional repute, and which must always be deplored by a very con siderable proportion of that cultivated world whim in reading her books has learned to admire the womaxi. What unfortunate afflatus could have inspired her thus to associate her own honor of name with the recital of a nar rative so shocking in particulars as en tirely to forbid its discussion or even its perusal in the presence or hearing of any woman whom we respect? What an un profitable Q4ixotism, when we con sider that every fact essential to a proper judg ment upon her story is buried forever in an impenetrable oblivion! How utterly superfluous the attempt to darken with additional, odium—even a. crime so vile as that upon which she now asks the judgment of the world—the memory of a man whose entire life was already known as a flagrant defiance of Divine Commandments, whose perverted genius has made his own immoral worthlesSness forvever memorable, and whose name deserves perpetual execration, as that of a seductive and shameless apolpgist for almost every social vice and individual iniquity! Mrs. Stowe need not have besmirched her towti spotleas pen in this business of painting any blacker that incarnation of immorality. Whether her story be true or false, it was not enough that she herself believed it, as certainly she did. She should have considered the Judgment, of the world upon the merits of her - narration, ripen its meagre facts, iPon the hopelesness of any profitable investigation wifh a view to any , cleat' result, ' ,aud upe k t. the indis cretion which couldu j guiliy , ofthis fatal literary mistake,: ' •-• Since ; Mis. STOWE' has written as a women, perhaps it, would be cruel to hold her to the criticim Which, if she_ were a man, would crucify 'her in'auy literary court in'christendom. Perhaps that is all that need be said.„ TliE COAL TRADE -TARIFFS AMID RAILWAY FREIGHTS. . The existing ,tariff on We Practically affects but one variety .of foreign prO; ducts, that of the Nova Scotia mines. The duty is $1.25 , Der, ton, gold. That coal now sells afloat in; the Eastern.porta at $9 per ton. Add the ditty, say $1,75 per ton, currency, to $8 pert ton for freight. and the coal realizes but $425 to the Picten miner. Remove the 'duty and his coal would , stand him ati least $5, coat of mining and . freight, afloat at New York. Onr own coals, from the Cumberland (Md.) district are far superior to the Pictort coal, in quality, especially for steam purposes; these are sold at $1.60 per ton free on board at Baltimore. yreight to New YOrk would make this, ea 9 , 146,00, or $l l OO more than the lowest figure at which the Nova Scotia mines can ship to a profit. The Cum berland coal is an article so much better, indeed so lunch more, economical for steam 'consumption, that even at that higbei cost it would drive `the foreign coats out of the. marke4. English aoals are imported, e xcept lit a limited way and for, special uses. If thelariff is taken off,lhe coal trade' must come demi; 'under , the rivalries of business, to the lowest OriCiiciable Whatever the effect may be upon the aa- ) . 1 7 ,:?.o•ogrAnkfir". A --- TITTSBR. zETTE'IIIII3 moth thracite - and Nova Scotia coals, we inky frodirecent publications in the Cumber jand'interests. that the latter are not -ap• prehensive of any serious ill eonse quences. On the contrary, it is possible i thatthe effect might tend powerfally to stimulate the production in the Maryland coal.field. The Baltimore and Ohio railway pol- icy, in the matter of coal freights from the mines to tide-water, has always pre sented a notable contrast to that of the Pennsylvania coal-carrieis. Since the spring of 1866, the former has charged a uniform rate of 11 cents per ton per mile, being less than half the tariff on the Reading Road. The Baltimore corpora tion Witt been repeatedly urged by the Pennsylvania interest to advance its lutes, but declined, and will still decline to do so. The effect of its ton ,tariff was to build up a largely increased traffic, the improvement in the ten months, end ing July Ist, being nearly seventy per cent. in tonnage. All of this coal has ruled at a uniform price delivered at Baltimore. The effect has been seen in an almost complete exclusion of the spec ulative element from the mining opera tions of the Cumberland region, the busi ness going forward with a healthy pro gress and upon legitimate principles, and yielding the largest extent of solid bene fits not only to the carrier, but to the coal owners and to the numerous oper ative population in their employment. Hence that district of Maryland presents, in almost every social and business aspect, the most agreeable contrast to the condi. tion of affairs at present in our anthracite counties. Tan ANNEXED ARTICLE, from the Nashville Prea, gives one a fair idea of the sort of bed-fellows whom the Berner Republicans of Tennessee have just taken tip with: - We learn, on high Conservative author ity, that some emissaries of the Ohio De mocracy, of the regular State Rights-Re pudiation White - Man's- Government school, were in the city last week to con fer with the old Democratic leaders of this State. It is said that the Buck eye missionaries urged .upon their brethren here 'to make the Leg islature vote down the Fifteenth Amendment, elect Johnson to the Senate, and pitch overboard every Republican State officer, from Supreme Judges down to the lowest position, by holding a revomtianary convention to make a new Constitution. Republican ism. by this programme, is- to be cut up root and branch, and be superseded by that political Canada thistle, known as State Rights Democracy. Johnson is urged for the Senatorship, not only as a representative politican, but in a spirit of defiance to the treat national Union sav ing emancipating party, the Republican organization. If the victory for free suf frage is to be prostituted to the service of the Democracy, the attempt cannot be made aday too soon. There are thousands ready to take up the gauntlet, and they will not lay it down tintil States Rights Democracy receives as sound a drubbing as it has received in time past. The national Union men of Tennessee have no inclination to alt down to a banquet of Dead sea apples, fair without and ashes.of bitterness within. A SOUTHERN Democratic journal, the Savannah News, pronounces the follow ing eulogium upon its Northern friends. Its principal merit is in its truth: ."It is a rare thing for the Northern Democrats to make a judicious nomina. Lion. Indeed, since the South has Amen left out of their councils, the party appears to have .lost its brains., .There seems to be a fatality that drives them away from every road that can possibly lead to vic tory. Thekappear incapable of learning anything from the past. It is their blun ders alone that have kept alive the radical party, which' has long since been con. demned by the American people._,ln the late Presidential campaign, they not only brought out a ticket that was obliged to be beaten, but took special pains to se cure its defeat by putting the party orkihe defensive in a long and silly string of ir relevant resolutions. In the States they have been guilty of equal folly. With the exception of Hoffman, in New York, and Roseanne, in Ohio, they have blundered in almost every nomination made since the close of the war. The Pennsylvania nomination. on Tuesday, affords a strik ing example. Thoy could bave had the services of Hancock by anything like a .unanimous nomination, and his name would have put a Democratic nomination beyond a peradventure; but no,.they must go of on a wild goose chase after a 'copper. head' nominee, a well.known partisan who will keep hie minority party together, and the opposition quite sa firmly unitid." Toms is a deep and powerftd agita. tion among the Salt Lake Mormons, growing ont of the schismatic proceed. Ingo of the anti.polygamic branch of the church. A letter says: The interest awakened by this late movement here is wonderful; the mass of the Mormons are fully impressed with the idea that , they are on the eve of 4 great ehange; and many of them begin to have visions and dreamdreams presagthg some thing grandly mysterious, thodgh they hardly know as yet what IV's. - Ithas been a settled point in the Mormon creed for years, that there most be a great split in the church before the final gatheting, and the impression is general here that this is the "big split." ; • GENERAL CANBY has just issued a tab ular statement of the registry list of each county in Virginia, and the vote on the , Constitution . at the late election. The number of white men registered was 149,- 781, and the number of colored men, 120,103, Of the former 125,144 voted, and of the latter 97,k05., The attendance of both classes at the polls was large, and the absentees were in nearly equal proportions, as 24,637 white, men and . 22,898 ,celurek men did not vote., The sextet) , of all .parties to "get back into the Union " is - indicated by the fact that 910,50i.vpjes,-pero cot tqr , thes Contact: skin, and 0i1y,811141 The pro 8471Ptiv.i; _clauses -.which were separately `idbmitted'Were defeated by about forty . thousand majority. tHE UST WATER , r WEB OF NUM [Correspondence of the itttsbugh Gazette.) WATERVILLE, ME:, Aug. 10, 1869. Pennsylvania has her exhaustless coal beds; Maine her vast water power. : Were her 3,000 mill privileges already found occupied to their full extent, it would give her nearly as many more compact villages and large cities, and would in crease her population to millions and would change her name from Pine Tree State to Spindle State. 'Extensive, profit a'sle manufactures would take the place of her decreasing , and profitless com merce. s She would demand Protection for her manufecturers instead of Free Trade for her ships. The war was a se vere blow to -the prosperity of Maine. Before that time she was the second State of the Union in tonnage; now her ship yards are idle. In this state of things her excellent Governor most wisely secured the ap propriation of a sufficient sum to make a survey of the waterpower of the State and' appointed the best person, Walter Wells, to be found in this country for the purpose. One interesting octavo volume of the results has already appeared and a second will soon be issued. From this report it will be seen that Maine with her 226 miles in an air line, of sea coast and her 3,000 miles of shore on which the tide rises land falls, her pine forests fast disappearing and .her ocean alive with fish has other. resources. From her loca tion in the rain draft from the Gulf of Mexico arid from her being swept by rain condensing winds from off the cold ocean current, the rain fall is 42 inches, 10} inch es each quarter of the year—while other „sates enjoying a -lower latitude have a "less' . quantity. Ohio has but 41 inches. This gives Maine three trillion pubic feet in mass of. water, 35 per cent of which is poured back into the ocean by her riv ers coursing her own territory for a few miles, from lakes and ponds, in Some cases 1600 feet above the level of the, sea. The low temperature of the State, is at. tended with far less wastekif the streams than is experienced at the — hot season of the year in other parts of the country. The low run of the rivers of Maine is not usually large. The cool fogareduce the evaporation elsewhere conducted, most vigorously during August, almost to nothing. , This same cause—low temper ature—retards the melting of snow in spring, preventing the - destructive fresh ets which are experienced in our own State and in Ohio. For the same reason, workers in mills and factories can accom plish ten per cent. more than in - more southern and interior districts. From the 1,658 lakes within the bona .daries of her river-basins and 2,400 square miles of clacuatrine surface,—not includ ing hundreds of minor ponds,—which 'serve as fountains and feeders of the rivers, upheld at an astonishing altitude. when we consider their proximity to the sea, these waters rush to the sea - falling sometimes great distances almost perpen dicularly. The Androscoggin falls 1,250 feet in 150 miles, and at Rumford 163 feet in one mile.. Her water-power is 2,52.5,- 000 horse power "a power that operates day and night without cessation from one century's end to the other, a power equal to the working force of well nigh 5,000,000 ordinary horses laboring for the whole twenty-four hours, or the force of :30,000,. 000 able-bodied men, likewise working without intermission." Of this vast power 1,000,000 horsepower is available. "It burns up no fuel, eats no hay or oats, or flour or meat." In large esitablishments, where the coat of manufacturing is less than fn smaller ones, with coal at $6 per ton, manufac turing cannot be produced by steam short of $7O per 'annum for each horse power of work done. Mechanical force, it is said, can be realized on ordinary or large water privileges at an outlay of $8 per annum of each horse power of work done. With coal then at $6 per ton the cost of producing by steam an amount of power equivalent to that at Waterville would coat, it is estimated, at $500,000 per annum; by water, including attendance supplies and repairs in both cases, $5B,- 500. The total difference in the cost of operating machinery by steam and by water to the total amount of 34,000 horse power in our medium tnlarge water priv ileges is $2,097,000 per year. .300,000 of this 1,000,000 horse power is already accessible by rail or by steamer or coast er. Here is a power almost beyond com putation in all itsbearinas. How much of it will ever be used remains to be seen by coming generations. Lewistown, Biddeford, Saco sand Augusta are exam -3 plea of the results where this power is employed in propelling machinery. S. How the Yo Semite Valley was Formed How was this curious freak of nature formed? is a question that every visitor qt least will ask.. It is a puzzte for the imagination. andbaffles even the scientific student. Prof. Whitney; of the State Survey, discusses the question elaborately in his admirable volume on the Yo Se mite, the big trees, and the high Sierras, which, with its maps, should, be the com panion of every one who visits those p l regions. He rejects the idea of water having. worn it out, or that it w the work of a glacier, but concludes, the - only practicable *imposition, that t ti bot tom dropped, out! There is no oth r way of accounting for what is gone b t that it is sunk below. It is.not carried down stream; it does not remain in the ley— theie would be no valley if it di there are bat comparatively small de sits of rock in the valley under the w s, no more than the waste by frost and ce and wa t er of a few generations at th ' most; and, indeed, there seems no other suPPO - 'that meets the mystery t n that the missing rocks are swallowed p' be low. It would appear, too, as if Abe chasm had not long been tilled pto its present point, and that originaily, and until within a cOmparatively recent pe riod, the whole valley was e; great, deep lake.. This is a peculiar theory—it tip• plies but rarely to the strange forms of nature scattered over the earth's surface —but the Yo Semite is a peculiar phe nomenon; it justifies indeed demands a peculiar explanation, and no other fits it so reasonably as this. Tun question of the consolidation of the Michigan Southern and Wabash roads is ..diroussed by officials of- these roads and of Erie, on condition that tne Erie will not build anew line from Akron to Toledo. Several other consolidation movements are talked of, and it is under. stood that parties interested in both the Bile and Central roads are endeavoring, ;td obtain , . control of the NOtthWeStall. Tr...101111W *Ada' a laro:_amonnti o Forth stock; and the Erie party has been buying heavily, recently. =EI GREESSBURth Arrival of Governor Geary- —His Address. [Correspondence of the Pittabareh Gazette.) GREEI3I3BMIG, August 18, 1889. DEAR Gazurra: At a late hour Mon day evening Hon. John W. Geary, G9v ernor of Pennsylvania, arrived at this place. He came on private business, and his arrival was entirely unexpected. At the depot he was recognized by a Demo cratic citizen and &inducted to the resi dence of his brother-in-law, Mr. Logan. His presence becoming generally known he was called upon during Tuesday by a large number of citizens, greeting all ' with his accubtomed warmth and cordi ality, and talking freely of the issues per taining to the present political canvass. He was in prime health, and looking , every inch the gallant soldier and die tinguistied civilian. REPUBLICAN MEETING. The Republican County Committee be ing in session at McQuaid's, it was deter mined to bold a public meeting at the Court House in the evening, at which the Governor was. invited to deliver .an address. At the appointed hour the Court Loom was filled wlth an audience of leading citizens, including quite a number of the Democrat. Jacob F. Kreps, Esq., candidate for\ Assembly, was called to the chair, and\ Governor Geary making his appearance was introduced to the assembli\ and received with warm applause. I will not attempt more than the merest outline, of his speech of an , hour and a half. He spoke of having spent his youth on a far m\ In old Westmoreland, and remembering associations of by-gone days, felt keenly the abuse which had been eaped upon him by the "Democratic clique" of Greensburg. Notwithstanding this, how ever, he had pursued his course undis mayed, as he would to the end, acting - in accordance with his convictions of right. Turning his attention to the 'national finances, he said that during the last year of Andrew Johnson's administration the public debt had been increaseff.s4o,ooo,- 000, while during the first five months of Grant's official career the debt had been reduced $43,000,000. He then re ferred to the State finances and showed that under Republican administration, since 1860, the State debt, left as a legacy of Democracy, had been reduced largely, and would continue to be larger inpropor tion if the same administration was con tinued. The Democracy talked of the extravagant expenditure of money, and their leaders appealed to the farmers and laboring class to throw off the yoke of oppression, in the way of taxes, which was weighing them down and robbing them of hard•tarned money. The Gov ernor inquired of any Democratic firmer, laborer or tenant present, how much tax he paid to the State, and an swered for them, that they did not pay a dollar and bad not, since the Republican BdtBiRIBUSIIOR took off the tax on real estate. transferring to railroads, banks, and other corporations granted special privileges. This unquestionably was news to the Westmoreland Democracy, but doubtless at their next meeting the Governor's truthful statement will be characterized as a "Republican lie," and be so regarded by the "faithful" but ig norant, dyed in the wool Democracy. It is to be hoped that the coming genera tion will be more enlightened, since all hope of converting the present race of Westmoreland Democrats. Those who have grown gray in voting that ticket, must be given up as a hopeless task. The Governor went over the whole ground, rather hurriedly, refuting the misrepresentations of the opposition in regard to his administration, proving most conclusively that he had done more than any of his predecessors to check special legislation, and also that he had been infinitely more considerate in the exercise of the pardoning power. This portion of his speech, particularly as to the pardoning power, could have been pe culiarly appropriate bad it been addressed to a Pittsburgh audience, and on this I have a word or two to say, suggested by a con versation with an attache of the Execu tive Department. GEARY'S PARDON. Much has been said in Pittsburgh re , cently, concerning one of the Governor's pardons. I will not mention names, ash is unnecessary. That pardon, I venture to say, was as strongly recommended or urged as any ever granted to an- Alle gheny county offender, and were the public there advised of the nature of the recommendations made. and by whom, both by petition and in person, by county officers, Senators and representatives pleading at the Executive desk, in the Executive chamber, I feel quite sure some mouths would be most effectuallystopped, and the innocent, uninformed people be amazed at the Governor's firmness in hesitating for a moment to refuse the pardon. Even the individual who welcomed the noto riety acheived by the circumstance of a bullet grazing his leg, and who now, to the outward seeming, in subserviency to the opposition,. - feels outraged that the desperado who assailed him should es cape. wrote repeatedly beseeching clem ency in his behalf. After what .I have been made aware of in connection -with this matter. I have no patience to write further about it, and out of regard for some political friends as well as enemies; your correspondent will •"dry up," on the pardon question. mortoot SPEAKS. After the Governor came Hos. Thos. J. Bighorn, who came hero in response to a telegram from Hon. John Covode. Mr. B. said h - believed that, should the De. ,t 1 mocracy successful in Pennsylvania in October, and-pandemonium- opened for an hour, a hundred thousand dead rebels would come north and shout glad tidings. He did not believe any such calamity was held in store by the Almighty, and as serted most confidently , that , a "copper head" could not be elected Governor while he (Thomas J.) was alive. He went for Asa's "record," and related among other things the tact that at the 6barleston Convention Asa threatened to "whale" Bill Linn, a Douglass man, for saying that the other set of Democrats were traitors: He spoke tenderly of the Westmoreland • Democracy, they were princely good fellows, and incorruptible. He omitted the word"copperhead" out of regard for them, the more so as he first Saw the light in their midst, and went to school, la.theloy, to John W. Geary's father, at the time one of the best common school teachers in the, State...ln the course of Mr. Bigham's remarks it became very apparent that ,during his recent visit east ho - 1 hadt Wail Way, • ,oliiiklitt. l otitlt facts wkigh establish concltudv" o ely thit Mr, linter mai a "Ceipperhesdf the deepest - dye, although now a "bloated bondholder," trafficking in the securities of a government which, during the war, . 1 he did not contribute one dollar to sus- - tain t although the possessor of millions. The meeting adjourned about half past ten, the Republicans well pleased with the demonstration. Fearing I have already written too much, I will call a halt. Yours, A Negro Colony in Diletilgan. The Detroit Tribune has a letter from Casson°lie, Michigan, dated August 6th, which contains the following.f "Yesterday was a great day for Cass county. More than ten thousand citizens of this and the neighboring counties as sembled upon the shores of Birch Lake to commemorate the abolition of slavery in the West Indian Islands. John M. Langston, of Ohio, the colored lawyer, was the centre of attraction to the large company that listened to his oration for more than an hour and shall. But to the stranger who came with something of doubt as to the success of the negro, and intent upon criticism, this meeting was an nnlooked for success; and the order of things in the surrounding country, the satisfactory solution of a question that to many has been somewhat problematical. "A. full third of this multitude were the owners of many thousands of acres of the fairest land in Cass county. In the township of Calvin they are pos sessed of nearly one•half of the real es tate, and pay little less than half the taxes. They have established a number of excel lent schools, conducted by colored teach ers. The building of two fine churches \r-Methodist and Baptist—is the best Roof that they have not neglected moral and religious culture. They have good instructors in instrumental and vocal must& and support a fine brass ban& We found here several men of liberal culture from Oberlin and Hillsdale Colleges, and one from \ our own State University. These young men are engaged in the practice of medicine, the mechanic arts and in the dry`geods trade. They own and run steam sawmills and steam thrash ing machines; they are manufacturing E, grain cradles and rakes, growing superior live stock, cultivating\fruits and produc ing hundreds of acres of the finest ,grain. They are not merely air imitative peo ple, but ingenious, Belt-reliant, positive and progressive, and will. bear favorable comparison with their white neighbors in ail the legitimate relations of life. Mer chants and mechanics through all this region bear the highest testimony to their worth and promptness in business affairs. Daring a three weeks' visit in this part of the country, your correspondent has failed to detect the first instance of idle-, ness •• or loaferism among them. They \ purchase lands, clear away dense forests, build homes and highways and churches. subscribe for newspapers, magazines and \ railroads; educate their ildren, sing the sweet songs of labor. love and home, and worship God with an evident conscious , ness that these are as much the aims and purposes of their life, as of their fair haired Saxon neighbors, and not a sub :ect of wonder and sur prise . to th e many who have doubted their ability for self sustenance. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE Cures Diarrhea. DE. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE Cures Dysentery. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CUBE Cures Bloody Flux. DE. 'KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE Cures Chronic Diarrhea. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE Cure's Bilious Colic. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE - Cures Cholera Immure. Di. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE Cures the worst clue of Bowel Disease. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE Cures Cholera Siorhus, KEYSER'S BOW.Et. CUBE Will cure in one or two doses.' DR. KEYSEP."3 BOWEL CURE Ought to be in every family. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE Is a sure cure for Griping. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE. Will not fail in one case. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE • " Cures Elce.ration. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CORE Cores Summer Comp:aint. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE Will Cure Watery Dsicharges. DR. ICEYBEE'S BOWEL CURE Never Pais. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE a valuable medicine. Dr. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURB Is a protection against Cholera. DR. KEYSER'S BOWEL CURE Wlll PINC hllDdredll Or valuable lives If earl, resort is had to lt.l DR. KEYSER4i BOWEL CUBE is one of the most valuable remedies ever discovered fee all diseases ineldent to this senson of the year. Hundreds of sullerers could be relieved in tem than a day by a speedy resort to this most vales hde medicine, particularly valuable, when the system is apt to become disordered by the two free use of unripe and crude vreetables. • • Price 50 Cents. Sold at DR. KEYSER'S GREAT MEDICINE STORE, 187 LibertV St, and by all drugaists. LET US DISCUSS THE GRE QUESTION. What is the most Important of all earthly ides• slugs, in the estimation of every intelligent tie man being ? Clearly, it is Htax.ru; for soundness of body and mind is essential to the enjoyment of all the ether good gifts of Providence✓ - How, then, shall those who poSsess this !nests enable treasure endeavor to preserve it, and how shall those who have lost it seek to relieve it' These questions have been asked in all ages, but never have they been as sattsfseterity responded to as at the present day, and the answers wbebh common sense, enlightened bvscienee andexpe deuce, gives to them in the Nineteenth Century May be briefly stated thus: - To protect the system against all Ind oences that tend to generate disease, TUBER IS Nornme • LIKE INTIGOILATION. To re•establish the nealth on a arm bute.when it has been lost by imprudence or any otter cause. the system must be sue CLTANSO eLYSTRIN , OTII, WED. lIIGULATILD .AND PUIIIFIED. Tnese ends can only be sttamed through the. sgebor of a preparation which combines Inc *i tem:ties of a TosIC, a connzOrtYß. a BLOOD LESIIIIINT, and au AN/SIAINT.. All these ei sentials are effectuslly blended in HOsTILTTEIVB BT,J1i1A(111 *UT L` title, They . Cantata nottang orabtla,. Irritating or 101 l ulnae& tory. The Mows and txtrszta of satiative tierbs. roots and harks are their sole medicinal Mare, bins ion with se arc tendere ess enc e mby cora bins ion with the spinteons ol saa purest of all alcoholic atimumata. - Tint tweak ood iconic. and eaP,triallenae aut._ l ariat from antoosoors,lndlaca..oe a nervous, Isar, ausolutaly require this ?di/OVUM/1i *AO th nowerint astarauva daring the heated tana au4 cannot prudently pottpons Its uc fora slams day. A word to the Ww.la 1n21444111. 11 HARTZ D