(EIjc ilcffcvsontan, THURSDAY, MAY 28, 18C8. for president, ULYSSES S. GRANT, OF ILLINOIS. -- ' FOlt TICK-PRESIDENT;' SCHUYLER COLFAX, OF INDIANA. REPUBLICAN" STATE TICKET. FOR, AUDITOR-GENERAL, ' G ls J O II N F. II A R T II A X F T. FOR SURVEYOR GENERAL, (1 en. JACOB 31. C A M r B E L L. J&STMr. Peter S. Williams is just opening a splendid stock of A atches, Jewelry and Fancy Goods, at his estab lishment in C. S. Detrick & Co.'a Drng Store. Call and see him. Work upon the foundation of the new Lutheran Church was commenced yesterday. The encouragement received from old subscribers, and from the public generally, we understand, is such as to warrant the congregation in calculating upon the speedy completion of the church. Farmers and others will, of course, make a note of the announcement of the 3Ies3rs. Dosters, of the re-opening of the Stroudsburg Woolen Mills. This opens a good market at which to purchase cloths and woolen goods generally, and a tcady market for the sale of wool. . Sacramental Meeting. The sacrament of the Lord's Supper will be administered on Sunday next, in Vhe Court-House, at half-past ten o'clock, a.m. The Rev. Mr. Geissenhainer, ol Bethlehem, is expected to be present. All person?, and especially all the mem bcrs of the Lutheran Church in town and Ticinity, are earnestly requested to be present. Pastor. Impeariunent The Senate, sitting as a high court of Impeachment, for the trial of President Johnson, adjourned without day, on Tues day, after voting on the second and third articles of Impeachment, with similar re sult to that obtained in a vote on the 11th article. A judgment of acquittal, on these articles, was ordered to be entered Lefore the adjournment. 3 We would call attention to the tidvcrtisement of Benjamin Dungan & Sons, who are the agents of the " Auto matic Clothes Washer," a really mereto tious affair. It needs but a single trial .to convince the most skeptical that the "labors and vexations of washing-day are readily changed into a pleasure by the .Use of this washer. It is encumbered with no cogwheels, no rollers, no rubbers; indeed, with nothing that can wear or car clothes. ryThe circus which exhibited athis plce, on Tuesday last, partook somewhat of the character of a singed cat. The outside performance was a very slimsy af Jair, Lut the inside performance was, by all odds, the best ever witnessed in our borough. We never saw better manage ment, or more gentlemanly conduct, on Jhe part of those connected with affairs of Che kind. The animals connected with jt were all splendid specimens of the brute creation, and their training was a wonder to the spectators. The Ticket "We, this week, place at the head of our paper, the very excellent ticket , placed in nomination b' the National Ile- . publican Convention at Chicago. We have not room for an extended notice of ' its merits, at thi3 time, but in our next will give extended sketches of Grant and Colfax, both as men among men, and as faithful servitors of the public in the sev eral positions which they have filled. The nominations, a3 we judge from our exchanges, and proceedings of ratifica tion meetings already held, give' ihe greatest satisfaction to the masses; and we feel that we but indulge a fixed truth, ' when we say that the triumphant election of the nominees is but a question of time, as fixed by the laws of the laud. Of course, the Democracy are not in love with the ticket ; but the fact that it meets their sneers, and jeers, and vituperation . is an evidence that the work of the Con tention was well done. The platform, and other matters connected with the proceedings of the Convention, will be found in to-dsy's paper. The Fenians were apparently, at work with increased energy of late. They are holding state conventions in the different castera states and talking loudly of war. Forty circles were represented io the 3'ennsylvania convention which met at llarrisburg, last" Wednesday a week. - - The only counties in Pennsylvania through wnich no railroad passes, and . the limits of which are not likely to be . ioou touched by a railroad, arc Fulton, Jfcjrest, Potter, aud (jrceue. The Democratic Meeting. The Democracy of.the County of Mon roe, held its annual talk at the Court House, on Monday evening last. The Hon. John Merwiue presided, assisted by several very good-looking and soundly orthodox Vice-Presidents. Thomas 31. j 31cllhaney, also, a very good-looking man very modest, but having no maw kish sensibilities as to what he swallows with his official fodder, so that it is caught in the Democratic net, did the Secretary business. Our amiable neighbor of the " Democrat" sat beside Thomas, and it was pleasant to look at the fatherly care which he exercised over him. The two, combined, added greatly to the largeness of the meetiog, while a number of good Republicans, our humble self among the number, added much to its respectability. After the meeting was thus organized, and its respectability secured, the usual committee on resolutions was appointed, of which our whilom friend Judge De Young was made the Chairman ordinary, and our other whilom friend, the Hon. ScnatorBurnctt, Chairman extraordinary. The committee having retired, our other friend J. B. (not the old Public Function ary, but a younger one of the same ilk), we mean J. B. Storm, Esq., in response to a call, proceeded to address the assem blage. J. B. looked palo and scared, and his speech sounded as though it was in any thing rather than in the enjoyment of good health. There was in it neither the flippancy of the brass-faced school boy, nor the pomposity of a Senatorial effort, nothing much but sound, and very dull sound at that, and, at its conclusion, J. B. sat down as though he was, to use a homely phrase, "devilish glad the say was said." He attempted several hits at the Republican party; but if his mind prompted thoughts that breathed and words that burned, his lips cer tainly refused to give them .utter ance. The action of the Chicago Con vention and its platform was merely touched upon; and was used only as a means to elevate him to such a position as he thought would enable him to throw the " stiuk pots" of Democratic warfare at its candidate for the Presidency, Gen. Grant, who, J. B. thought, or, at least, said he thought so, was a very ordinary soldier not 33 good as a dozen other? he could have named and no states man at all. Grant's swamping out of the rebels entire, and closing the rebellion, was nothing, in J. B.'s estimation, in comparison with McClellan's dress pa rades, and pulling heel for the gunboats, or with Burnside's winter march on the Rapidan, or Hooker's march to Chancel lorsville and then back again, or the two Bull Buns all of which, in their day, because of the comfort which they afforded the enemy, painted smiles on the faces of J. B. and his co partizans, and caused inward chuckling to the Democracy of the country generally. But J. B. con fessed that Gen. Grant was once a great man in Democratic estimation that, then the party loved him, and thought him a good man, whpther viewed as a soldier or statesman. That was when they thought him a Democrat, and, doubt less, hoped to have him as the-Democratic candidate for President and that love for hiiu continued, until, in the Johnson Stanton imbroglio, he refused to support the treasonable, law-bieaking machinations of the former, and felt impelled to openly stand, where his cause always showed he stood, on the side of the country, its pros penty and its perpetuity. Then J. B. and the Democracy deserted him, and he lost, in their estimation, all zest either as a soldier, a statesman or a man. J. B had not heard of the nomination of Schuy ler Colfax for the Vice-Presidency, or we should probably have his opinion of him. On the subject of full delegate nominations J. B. was either for or against the innovation as occasion might require. lie was afraid that, if adopted, the system would breed supinencss in the party, by doing away with local Etrife; while if it was not adopted the cause of Temperance would be promoted, and men 4 ot ins peculiar stripe of virtue niiht stand a chance of getting office without "treating," a something which he favored heartily; and better men, in every re spect, would thu3 be secured for the of fices than we have heretofore had. This, we thought, reflected somewhat on our friend the Prothonotary, who was present, and who was elected under the " treating" system; but as he blushingly submitted to the insinuation in silence, we presume he thought there was virtue in the pro position. J. B. choked off at this, and set down, amid the almost breathless si lence which reigned until interrupted by a feat of ground and lofty tumbling at tempted by one of the hard fisted yeo manry, in his effort to gat out of the Court-House.. , , After-a few moments reflection, over' the wonderful effort of J. B., the com- mittee on resolutions returned, and thro' their Chairman ordinary, Judge De Voung,. reported, a series of resolves, which looked to nothing, if they did not look to repudiation. They were particu larly down on taxation and expenditures, and made doleful laiacntatious jvcr the hardness of the times, when the committee j and the meetiog very well knew that the country never enjoyed greater pros perity than now. The resolutions, of course, were swallowed with a will. The resolutions adopted, the Chairman extra ordinary, General Burnett, promulgated his plan the for reconstruction and future government of the Democracy. But the meeting did not seem prepared to swal low new fangled ideas, and, after much head-shaking and considerable "amend ing, notwithstanding 'the smiling com mendations of President Merwiue, very reluctantly voted for the adoption of the plan. On the whole, we think the Sena tor was roughly handled, for whatever in his programme he seemed to set his heart upon, was sure to be voted down. The whole plan is to be submitted to the vote of the Democracy this fall. We cannot avoid, before concluding,' again entering our solemn protest against the manner in which our amiable neigh bor of the "Democrat" is snubbed at these meetings of the party for which be does all the dirty work. If he gets up to make a motion, or do a big thing of any kind, nothing but ominous fingers, shaken in his face, or suggestions to sit down, meet his advances just as though it was his province to dance only to the piping of others, act when he is told to act, and do what he is told to do. This is the second time he has been thus treated and this is the second time we have protested. Look out for breakers if it occur the third time. If he is mod est, we arc determined he shall not be without friends to right his wrongs; and, if he is qualified to do the editing of the organ of the party, we do not see why he should not havo tho right, untrammeled, to speak out in the party meetings. Stick to it, neighbor, we'll back you. You have a3 good a right to be somebody, as some body e'se has. Taking it -altogether, the meeting was without spirit, and we hardly think that even the Democracy will venture to call it an " immense gathering." D 3 S&" The meetings of the County Tern pcrancc Convention, on Tuesday, were very interesting affairs to those who fal in with that way of thinking. The llev. Pcnnel Combe, had been busily engaged for several days in perfecting the work of organization, and the result is said, to have been a complete success. The pro ceedings of the Convention will probably be laid before our readers next week. One of the results of the movement has been to stop the license of all the sa loons in the borough, and of many of the hotels and saloons throughout the county Hereafter lager becomes a tabood article with us, so far as open dealing is concerned, though we should not be much surprised if a contraband trade would spring up which will make John Barleycorn stand at a premium. The experience of all past intemperate temperance movements has been, that if we put a legal end to the trafic in the article, we but open the door to an illegal one. It is not in the knowledge of any one that such move mcnts have ever affected a permanent re form. The Rev. Dr. George Junkin died at his sou s residence, in Philadelphia, on the 20 inst. The Doctor had been iden tified with the Presbyterian Church a full half century. He took a prominent part in tue great controversy which ultimately resulted in the division of the Church in to the old and new school branches. It was Dr. Junkin also who instituted the original charges of unsoundness in doc trine against the llev. Albert Barnes of Philadelphia. On the organization of Lafayette College at Kaston, he became its first President. In 1841 be resigned the Presidency of Lafayette College to ao cept the Presidency of the 3Iiami Uni versity at Oxford, Ohio. In 1844 he re turned to Lafayette College as President. retaining the office until 1848, when he accepted the Presidency of Washington College at Lexington, Virginia, the posi tion now held by Gen. Robert E. Lee. W hue connected with this institution. bis daughter married a plain Virginia gentleman, who afterward became the fa mous Rebel chieftain Stonewall Jackson. Dr. Juukin was still at Lexington when the war broke out, but was soon forced by his loyalty to withdraw from the State. Soon after returning North, he airain be- canio connected with Lafayette College as a professor, retaining the position until the time of his death. "That Good Old Man." According to the New York Sun, Sen ator Grimes is " a censorious, tough-hearted, heavy-heeled sort of fellow, with brains enough for three ordinary mortals. aud love of fight and laziness in cnucal proportions. JJut with all his tough beadedness, 'Old Grimes is dead.'" John 3Iorrisey, M. C, has become del icate in health since becoming a Congress man. He has been spending some time at the Hot Springs of Arkansas, but we see by the papers, is back agaiu in New lork.' He expresses po opinion about impeachment, Lut reports the South and est united on Pendleton. Erratic Tom Florence, for vears a Democratic representative of the first Pennsylvania District, and now the edi tor of the Constitutional Union, an ex treme Democratic paper in Washington City, has created some surprise by an nouncing himself in favor of confcrrinr the elective franchise upon all races aud sexes. CHICAGO CONVENTION. The Republican National Convention convened in Chicago on Wednesday, the 20th inst. The delegates commenced arriving on Saturday, and continued to arrive in large numbers on Monday and Tuesday. By Wednesday noon all had made their appearance in the city. The city was more densely crowded than ever before known, the Soldiers' and Sailors' Convention being held at the same time. The Convention was called to order by Gen ard, of N. J., and Gen. Schurz appointed temporary chairman. PERMANENT ORGANIZATION. President Joseph R. Ilawley, of Connecticut. Vice-President i Alabama, General Warner; Arkansas, A. 3IcDonald; Cali fornia, James Coey; Colorado, J. B. Chaffee; Connecticut, N. F. Pierson; Delaware, Lewis Thompson; Florida, II. K. 3Ioody; Georgia, Foster Blodgett; Il linois, Jessie K. Dubois; Indiana, Walter J. Gcrsham: Iowa, G. 31. Hendrick; Kansas, S. S. Proutz; Kentucky, Joshua J. Speed; Louisiana, W. P. Kellogg; Maine, A. D. Fessenden; Henry Stock bridge; 3Iassachusetts, D. W. Gooch; Michigan, Henry Waldron ; 31innesota, Horation P. Van Cleve; 31issippi, Thos. L. White ; Missouri, A.J. Harlan; Ne braska, B. Saunders; Nevada, 31. Wallar; New Hamshire, E. Gould; New Jersey, John J. Iriek; New York, Chaunccy 31. Dcpew; North Carolina, Albert Dockery; Ohio, N. C. 3Icrarland; Oregon, Joseph Failing: Pennsylvania, J. K. Moorhead; Rhode Island, G. Green; South Carolina, Carlos J. Stolbrand; Tennessee, T. N Hamilton; Virginia, John Burch; West irgioia, S. D. Karns; isconsin, hd ward Solomon. Secretaries Thomas D. Foster, V. Dell, C. B. Higby, F. Solomon, B. Beale, Joshua T. Heald, J. Rhombeur, G. G. Wilber, James P. Root.C R. Hogate, J. K. Easton, Lewis Veil, W. C. Goodie, Col. C. W. Lowell, Stephen D. Lmdsley, E. F. Waters, George W. Briggs, W. W. Scott, A. Warley Patterson, J. C. S Colby, S. 3Iaxwell, G. N. Collins, Francis B. Ayer, Robert C. Bcllville, Luther Caldwell, J. W. Holden, Coate Kinney, 3Iax Ramsey, A. C. llarmer, 31. Pahter, W. E. Rose, J. 31. Kinley, W. W. Home, Col. S. D. Riogan, Ldgar Allen, Joseph T. Hoke, Charles Seymour, J. II. Long- neckcr. On Thursday, on motion to proceed to ballot for President of the United States, General Logan said: " In the name of the loyal people and soldiers of the Republican party, 1 nom inate Ulysses S. Grant for President of the United States." The whole Convention rose to their feet, amid great applause and waving of hats and handkerchiefs. The applause was prolonged, and ended in three cheers for General Grant, the band playin " Hail to the Chief." The States were then called, and each voted for Grant. The Chair announced that C50 votes had been cast, and all for Gen. Grant. The ballotings for Vice-President were as follows: in 132 149 no 1H S3 30 6 10 14 1 12 S.I HO 170 113 HJ 4S 30 3-1 139 ITS 101 164 40 23 4th 144 204 S7 1J 5?h 137 19fi (.1 Cth Fenton, Wade. Wilson, Coll. ix, Curlin. 224 522 H.trnlin. 30 30 23 25 19 Kelley, II i r la n. Crestwell, Ponifrojr, Spaed. Scfiuyler Colfax was then declared the r r. - t nominee lor icc-x resiucui. THE PLATFORM. The platform, as adopted by the Con' vention, is as follows: The National Republican party of the Lnitcd States, assembled in National Convention, in the city of Chicago, on the ZUtn uay ot May, lStiS, make the following declaration of principles: First. We congratulate the country on the assured success of the Rcconstruc tion. projects of Congress, as evinced by the adoption, in a majority of the States lately in rebellion, of Constitutions secur ing equal, civil and political rights to all, aud regard it as the duty of the govern ment.to sustain these institutions, and to prevent the people of such States from being remitted to a state of anarchy. Second. The guarantee by Con gress of equal suffrage to all loyal men in the South, was demanded by every con sideration of public safety, of gratitude and of justice, and must be maintained, while the question ot suffrage in all the loyal States properly belongs to tho peo ple of these States. .Third. We denounce all forms of re pudiation as a .national crime and a na tional dishonor. Honor requires the pay ment of the public indebtedness in the utmost good faith to all creditors, home and abroad, not only according to the let ter, but tho spirit of the laws under which it was contracted. Fourth. It is duo to the labor of the nation that taxation should be equalixed and. reduced as rapidly as the national faith will permit. rifth. 1 ho national debt, contracted as it has been for the preservation of tho Lnion for all time to come, should be ex tended over a fair period for redemption, and it is the duty of Congress to reduce the rate of interest thereon whenever it can honestly be done. Sixth. That the best policy to diminish our burden of debt is to so improve our credit that capitalists will seek to loan us money at lower rates of interest than we now pay and must continue to pay so lonz as repudiation, partial or total, open or covert, is threatened or suspected. Seventh. Ihe Government of tho Uni ted States should be administered with the strictest economy, and the corrup tions which have been so shamefullv nursed and fostered by Andrew Johnson call loudly for Radical reform. Eighth. We profoundly deDiore the untimely and tragic death of Abraham Lincoln, and regret tho accessiou of An. drew Johnson to the Presidency, who nas aciea treacherously to the people who elected him and the cause he was nledir- ed to support ; has usurped his legislative uuu judicial lunctiou ; na? rctu.scJ to execute the laws ; has used his high of fice to induce others to ignore and violate the laws; has employed his executive power to render insecure the prosperity, peace and liberty of life of the citizens ; has abused the pardoning power; has de nounced the national legislature as un constitutional ; has persistently and cor ruptly resisted by every measure in his Dower, every proper attempt at the recon struction of the States lately in Rebellion ; has perverted the public patronage into an engine of wholesale corruption ; and has been justly impeached for high crimes and misdemeanors, and properly denounc ed guilty by the vote of thirty-five Sena tors. Ninth. The doctrine of Great Britain and other European powers that, because a man is once a subject, he must always be so, must be resisted at every hazard by the United States, as a relic of the feudal times, not authorized by the law of nations, and at war with our nationa honor and independence. Naturalized citizens are entitled to be protcc.eu in all their rights of citizenship, as though they were native-born ; and do citizen of the Uuited States, native or naturalized, must be liable to arrest and imprisonment by any foreign power, for acts done or words spoken 10 this coun try ; and if so arrested and imprisoned, it is the duty of the government to inter fere in his behalf. Tenth. Of all who were faithful in the trial of the late war, there were none enti tied to more especial honor than the brav soldiers and seamen who endured the hardships of campaign and cruise, and imperiled their lives in the service of the country. The bounties and pensions pro vided by law for these brave defenders 01 the nation are obligations never to be for gotten. The widows and orphans of the gallant dead are the wards of the people a sacred legacy bequeathed to the nation's protecting care. Eleventh. Foreign emigration, which in the past has added so much to the wealth and development of the resources and the increase of power to this nation, tho asylum of the oppressed of all nations, should be fostered and encouraged by a liberal and just policy. Twelfth. This Convention declares its sympathy with all the oppressed peoples which are struggling for their rights. Hembold's Medicines. There arc none among all tho proprie tary medicines that stand higher than those prepared by H. T. Hclmbold, 591 Broadway, N. Y. They have been before the public for a number of years, and for the diseases for which they arc intended as a specific they stand unrivaled, and rank as standard wherever known. At the Cape of Good Hope, the Hottentots have long used Buchu for a variety of diseases ; it was borrowed from those rude practitioners by the English and Dutch physicians, on whose recommendation it was employed in Europe, and has now come into general use. Dr. Helmbold has scientifically combiued the curative properties of Buchu, and with upwards of thirty thousand unsolicited certifi cates and hundreds of thousands of liv ing witnesses of its curative proper ties, accumulated within eighteen years, has not been in the habit of resorting to their publication. He does not do this, Irom the tact that his remedies rank, as standard ; they do not need to be propped up by certihcates. Ihe science of medi cine, like the Doric column, stands sim ple, pure and majestic, having fact for its pillar, and truth alone for its capital. IT 1 11 - ins urug ana cnetiiic.il warcnouse, in the city of New York, is not to be excelled, if equaled, by any in this country, and we would advise our readers when visit ing that city to give him a call and judge lor tnemseines. While they were picking up the vie tims of the Erie Railroad catastrophe irom the rocks and the wrecks, a child four or five months old was found amon them uuhurtand wrapped up in blankets Among the passengers none were found to whom tho infant belonged. It was taken to Port Jervis, where Charles Drew, formerly of Ncwburg, and uow of the aforesaid place, and an engineer on the hastcrn Division of the road, saw it and took it home. Mr. Drew's wile had but a few days before lost her babe which was of about the same age as was the little stranger, aud her grief-touched heart took the lost one into its affections, and she and her husband resolved to make it a child of adoption. A Mild Democrat. "Brick" Pomeroy savs editorially that the Southerners who were killed in at tempting to destroy tho government of tbe United States, arc God s noblest people who fell iu defense of the eternal tuinci- ples of liberty and justice." lie aho predicts a " rcactiou which will restore tho Democratic party to power, when there is to bo " a general assassination of the radicals." Tho scoundrel elegantly says: " When the reaction comes there will be such a fleeing of mongrel spirits fnm their earthly lencmcuts; such a gushiug of impure blood from scrofulous carcasses; such a cuttinz on bronchitis wiLdm- such a shrieking of nasal " down-east," terror stricken to:c b: such a rjnid toIa. nization of hell's spare tenitorics, as was never recorded sines tho Great Archi tect rested from his labors on the seventh day and said " let there be light." Gen. James Walker, the Democratic candidate for Lieutenant Governor in Virginia, is familiarly kuown as " Stouo wallJiiu." "Ho is," says the Valley Virffinianl " tho only Coulederate Geue ral who inherited the name of the immor tal and God-inspired T. J. Jackson." An immense Republican mass meeting was held in Pittsburg, Saturday nicht, to ratify the nominations of Grant and Col fax. Allegheny county was pledged to give 10,000 majority for. the ticket. - . j lutcrnal R-cvenus receipts last week, A Waif. Out from us all our dear one has departed Into that' world of which we only dream. While here we weep sad and broken hearted Breaks on his soul the blessedness eupreme. Into that higher life above our shadows, Into that undimmed daylight of the truth, That unknown glory, 'flooding life's fair meadow 8 He has passed to an immortal youth. We fee) it, yet, by death's turbid river i'arted Irom mm awhiJe we neU our place ; Dut soon shall pasa then, once more and lor eer - - - ' - We know we slnll Ve with him "face to face." Curious Phenomena it the Pwniftfv ma uu itegtocs, The Erie Observer says : Much excite ment is prevailing at Westfield. owidk to some singular phenomena which have' been apparent for a week past. la mauy' of the houses situated on the west side of the creek au almost constant jar and rat tling of doors aud windows is manifested, and the eutire buildings tremble. This remarkable feature has exhibited itself for about a week. At first it was sup posed that it might be the result of pass ing trains, and uo notice was taken of it ; but tho same tremble is manifest when trains are not passing. There is no ap parent cause for it, aud it has been the occasion of much speculation. Our reporter has visited tho locality and several of the houses, and talked with the residents. The excitement is on the increase, owing to the mystery of the manifestatious. The trembling ;is not violent, but at times is :reater than at others, and occasionally disappears en tirely. Clothes huiiin ou a line in tho the houses are, during the mmifestation, in a constant tremor, an J even shake when there is no apparent shake in the house. The jar is so great at times as to make dishes rattle iu the cupboard. Petroleum oil exuded from the ground in the neighborhood some time ago, but attracted little attention at the time. The ground in the viciuity res uyon a shale that is not fur from the surface, and has been rendered somewhat uneven by abra sion. The superstitions have all sorts of conjectures, and seem to be struck with awe and wonder. Important to Eolders of Seven-Thirty Eonds. Parties having these securities on hand, and who have not yet availed them selves of the converting privilege, should, make a note of the fact, that by exchang ing them the present month they effect a saving of about cue per cent. On and after the first day of June next, the Five Twenties will have the July coupon cut off. About Right Gen. Ilalpine, of the New York CVj zent Irish Democrat as he is, can't endure the copperheads. He says: "There is such a thing as being too infernally Dem ocratic to be wholesome, as old Gen. Cass once said." We guess that's so. Gov. Holden of North Carolina has tendered to Robert Douglas, the eldest son of Stephen A. Douglas, the position of Private Secretary on his staff, in the new State Government to be organized in that State. The Boston l'ust, which recently de clared in favor of Gen. Hancock as the Democratic candidate for the Presidency, uow urges the Hon. Charles Francis Ad ams for the Vice-Presidency. The prospect of an abundant yield of fruit all over the country never was more promising. The Moravian Church at Bethlehem has 050 communicants, aud 114 non-communicants, aud 470 children. One million' five hundred aud sixty thousand pairs of shoes wero shipped from Lynn during April. National bank circulation, S207.804, 0S0. MORE .ECONOMICAL, R E.MARK A ble certainty of prompt action, in fict, every gooj quality is guarantied for Mrs. S. A. Allen's Improved (new siyle) IIair Re- stcrer or Dressing, (in one bottle ) Every Druggist Brlis it. I r ce Due Dollar. The Last Success. Mir dressim will quickly restore Grav Hair to its natural color and beauty, Und produce luxuriant growth. It u . perfectly harmless, and is preferred over every other preparation by . . those who have a fine head of, hair, as well as those who wish to restore ; it. The beautiful gloss and perfume imparted to the Hair make it desirable ' ' for old and young. '. ' For ml bjr 11 Dmgjlt. DEPOT, 10S GREENWICH ST., 5. T mi- H Q If rvi.. Nov. 21, 1S07.-1 yr
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