d:i)cv2cffcvsouian, TllUDAYUNE13Vi8C8. FOR PRESIDENT, ULYSSES S. GRANT, OF ILLINOIS. FOR VICE-PRESIDENT, SCHUYLER COLFAX, OF INDIANA. REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET. FOR. AUDITOR-CENTRAL, ! e.v. JOHN F. II A 11 T 11 A X F T TOR SURVEYOR GENERAL, C. en. J A C O It M. C A M P 1) K L L UALDNESS, GRAVNKSS, and ether imperfections of the Hair will be regarded ns inexcusable atlcr a trial ot iYirs. r. a Allen's Improved (hcio style) Hair Re KTimm or Da ess I no. fin oe bottle.) Ev cry Druggist tells it. Price One Dollar. Lumber Wanted. Sec advertisement " Manhattan Veneer Box Co.," of New York, they wish Hard Wool Lumber in the log. E53 During a visit to New York last week, wc casually dropped into No. 101, Eroadway, to sec our old friend Gust. 'outhcimcr, whom wc found at home and looking as hearty and good naturcd as ever. After a social chat wc took a look nrouu l his establishment, and must con less to having felt eomc surprise at find ing n, uatil late, Stroudsburg merchant ;rown into a full wholesale city dealer, with as large, varied and complete an nssortnrcut of notions and fancy goods as a. country merchant would care to select from. Every line in his way of business i. full aud complete, and when to th"i3 wc .old his kuown liberality in dealing, and hia uniform habit of doing full as well Ly his customer as ho does by himself, we think wc have said enough to convince our dealers that if they must go to the city to buy notions, they cannot do better lhan by making their purchases of, or at least calling on, Sonthcimcr & Herrmann, 10 J, liroadway, N. Y. Gust, will al ways be found ou hand. !C e Strawberry Festival There will be a Strawberry Festival in tliC upper room of the New Prcsbytcriau Church beginning this evening and con tinuing the rcmciuiar: evening of the week. As the hdics have it in charge, mid t!;:it for tho laudable purpose of se miing fundi for the furnishing of their ew room, the public may expect the best things of the season. Ice Cream, Strawberries, &c, arc promised, and these will, no doubt, Lc furnished in the best possible quality aud manner. Admis tion 10 cents. Tho 4th of July. Two weeks from next Saturday will be the -1th of July, and, as yet, wc hear of no public step being taken, looking to its proper observance. There arc rumors of : Firemen's Parade and a time gene rally, but nothing that gives a tangible took to the thing nothing that war rants U3 to extend an invitation to friends abroad, -to come and join U3 iu a celebra tion such as will show that wc yet hold in grrlcful remembrance the great and loriou3 deeds of the men who lived and acted in the days and amid the times that tried men's soula. It is true that wc have bad heavy times in our own day aul generation days and times worthy of our warmest recollection and regard; but there is nothing con nected with these latter which should be permitted to eclipse, in our estimation, the greater triab and sufferings of the day3 when, as poor colonics, wc hurled back and destroyed the might of -Eng land's proud lioctc. Wc should remem ber the 4th of July as the birth-day of the nation, and on its each annual return noitc in its rational observance. The time is full fchort; but even yet, with en ergetic action, the comiDg 1th in Stroutb turg may be made memorable by one of the bcot and most soul etiring celebra tions ever bcld in tub scction-of country. Jel us go to work. CT Wc observed our fricud Sbunian Wagucr unpacking a large assortment of hardware r.Dd seasonable coodd durin" the hit few days. The gooda were se lected by Ehuman ia person, and, of course, will be sold chcao. Bargains! o arc on his shelves fur somebody. 1 r t S7 Mr. Wm. Hollinshcad sold, a day or two ago, five acres of his meadow, on the hill back of the Academy, to John If. Conner, for 8175 per acre. Zgj There was a general jollification through our streets, iu squads, on Satur day night last, owing to the fact that being driven from the retail trade by the clringcucy ofJhV-law, Ijvcrs of l.igcr wcnt somewhat into a wholesale iudul- gcccc. iy tf.: Jcz, iivAcid of I tic glas-1, appcare. to Lave Iccomc oricr c-f the iy, rt c.vca!- , i! fii.,,, M.,f The movement looking to the nomina- ... ... I i linn of Chief-Justice Chase, bv tli c Con -1 scrvativc Republicans and Democrats, is f large magnitude, , . . tjlC Lr: Uu iM assuming proportions of and his nomination wi grand result ol the Convention to be ucia in New York City on the 4th of July. . . . ill Vi ri tr B because the no- minMmnnfil,. Plnrf-Jasticc. more fairly wwm -w V V - - I . .. r than the nomination oi ncy umw -:n ri .h. nrinrinlesi hich "in i- iui n. - t 1 i rovern the disagrecnicnt between the President and Congress, for the decision -ovems Conservatism and Dcmocracv. 0 - , - - hall prevail. Whoever is nomiuatcd by i v , ,. t ii . he Ncw-ork Convcotion, wc have that the great, unswerving confidence masses, to bolicvo that the proceedings I head of the conglomerated opposition, the whole matter will be simmered down to a contest between the impracticable policy of President Johnson and the practicable one established bv Concrrcss, and for this reason wc rejoice at the prospect of Do mocracy suffering itself to be led by Con scrvatism. By the nomination Chase the nc?rro oucstion will be r-racti- cally out of the campaign. Strenuously as the j;cmacracy nave contended against for their suffrages. IJut they will hardly balk at this, as their leaders havo for some months been endeavoring to infuse a partiality for the measure in the ranks of the party. They arc particularly anx- tous for success: and Conservatism bav- ing succeeded in making them believe that their only horc of success lav3 in the direction of an abandonment of their prin- " ciplcs, and the nomination of a man whom they have abused and reviled for more thau a quarter of a century, because of the obnoxiousncss of his political prcdi- lections, it will not be looking fur ttoo much, in case the Chief-Justice is nomin- atcd, to look for them to contend that they have all along been the advocates of just what he has advocated and the lifetimc opponents of the dogma which ., .. ., , . . . . " T. , tbey attributed to Stephen A. Dour:la3. viz.: that this "is a white man's Govern ment, gotten up by white men for the exclusive government of white men," and with other nonsense of like character. It is true that the Democracy has not yet become a unit on Chase; and there is considerable kicking against the arrange ment. But wc think tho times clearly indicate that it will come to that, and that the contest this fall will be between Radicalism backed up by the people, tri umphant in the persons of Grant and Colfax, and ultra, carpct-bag Radicalism backed up by Democracy, and those purely disinterested Conservative Rcpub lican3, who several years ago found their true interest to lie with the " Bread and Butter Brigade," defeated in the person of Chase, and possibly English of Con nccticut. When tho Democratic leader; set their fect firmly, Democratic followers have nothing left them but to obey. 3 The Democracy aud Conscrva tivc3 arc working lustily to strengthen the Chase movement, and, though they pretend to believe that the day for sol dicr Presidents has gone by, do not hesi tatc to stick the name of a soldier of known repute, whether with his consent or not, among the names of committee men appointed to strengthen the cause Last week, for this purpose, they placed the name of Major-General S. W. Craw ford on a committee appointed in Phila delphia. The General, who is stationed at Louisville, Kentucky, immediately on hearing of it, telegraphed that he did not know why it was douc, or by whose au thority, but that he was and expected to be until the end of the campaign a warm and ardent supporter of Grant and Col fax, lie has no sympathy with the Chase movement, nor with any other that failed to help the country when the country needed help. The Tlotr Tlinnnl.Ilna TIrilifr preached an eloquent and iutcrcstiug sermon to tho Lutheran congregation on Sunday morning last, and was listened to, with marked attention, by many of his old time friends. Mr. II. is etill lo cated at Ricglcsvillc, where he labors with profit to Boub in hi3 Divine Master's service. In the evening JIct. Mr. Hen kcl preached with more than usual imprcsiivcucss. tsr Tho lVtmater-Geucral has Mil: tA' 1 1 r.r.:i r. (Titxr . thau.Ttd the Fcuncrsyille, to ouola. Cone.-poo'lcnb wi!l j lc.uc remember. of the people. It will open up, without pic. '1 he result was a greater lauu in Jioorc is a gentleman ol line ta cm am possibility of mistake, the question the paying properties of our judgment, eultare, and "ooU?i will bo ior whethcrin the final rcace growing out and he has been following us pretty -S of the war, permanency to the doctrines closely ever since. Last week wc had a fol,owio,cllcr from Mr. Colfax, which covcrncd President Lincoln iu business occasion to go to New York and tQ llcy A y. Mooro will explain itself: his conquest of the Rebellion, or whether bad hardly got started ere some wag put the loose, disjointed plan, which may at it into his head that wc had gone to New anv time a'ain result in runtnre. which York to buy a Power Press, and who f Plnr,. mU nr.r,;! n,1 fbnt fjrant WC City, but it wiu u ciu many uwus ... T l,nVC no f,ar that vour work will and Colfax will be the next .President wane. In the meanwhile wc hope be be a lawful one . and Vice-President of these United States, will not fail to give us credit for the uvyuek Colfax, Yet wc believe that with Chase at the Wca. His spirit of "enterprise would be "Kcv. A. Y. Moore, South Ucnd, Indiana." mannooa sunragc, incy win not aarc to , represent our Government at the SDS up wum uicy ea a - uim.ui continue tint onnoifion with tho vrrv r o t -.t v i .1 4 escort, to attend the Democratic Con continue that opposition, with the cry Court of St. James, with credit both to vcntio' b , M at Ncw York on th father of the measure as the candidate Limsclf and us. Fourth of Jnlv. Our readers must no - - . - . . 1 I. i i 1 m I rn 1 1 1 : 1 1 1 1 . .11 i.iii'i. 1:11:11 1. l ui i ' . , " , c x 1 f u uu. Mt of this month. c arc pleased to hear of this evidence of his prosperity, and can assure him that if bo but keeps his eve upon- and follows our movements r t- n it nn j i . llo more close y wo shall yet hope to u,a,ki; a luau V4 "1U' "" " .w-jv- at that. About a year ago wc took the Mril in wpiir n" one ol Uordon s last Jou s 1 9 t .Til . . , . . Presses, and wc kept jogging and jogging - . . . ., a i .f i,.r.- i .nr. it tnnt in liiu ninn moniua w nfi.'hlnr ot the " Democrat ere wc could get him to follow our exam-Ljon3 should wc meet, at Hampton Junction, on our way home, but our nciguuor, br,t,n.l rll tnel for New York as he SUP- bound pcll-mci lor cw xort, as nc sup U thcPoscu 10 iOllOW our cxauipiu aijaiu iu un, press line That was not our business in worth nothing without U3 on Land to jog it occasionally. I EG?" The President, ou Friday act, r Johnson, of Baltimore, Md., as Minister to England, vice Hon. Charles F. Adams, resigned. The Senate immediately confirmed the nnmi.iit;. n U Aiisinmarv when late or of Chicf-JusticcLrn. R.Mtnr3 ninst hom there is 1 , .,.:.7. oGcc Mr. Johnson is an able, honora- m. ,i i,;,.!,,,,;,,,,! mnn nn.l will, ilonht Philadelphia, The Republicans of the city of Phila- phia, iu their nominating conventions last week, placed before the people an excel- lent ticket for election this fall. In the occond, inird ana i-ourtu xnsiricts, O'Ncil, Myers, and Kelly were nomina- I . . ted, and will, of . course, be re-elected, For Mayor, Gen. Hector Tyndale was sc- lectcd. On the question - of a Suitable person to fill the office of District-Attor- ncy thero w;i3 a difference of opinion and a split has been the result, ono mrtv no- , WUU "V minalingWm. B. Mann, and the other J Isaac Ilajlchurst. It is to be hoped that the difference will bo healed before clec- lion day and that Philadelphia llcpubli- cans will redeem themselves by electing , , .. , . ,,r i t? i i the whole ticket. c cannot afford to give away victories this fall. rGU An attempt was made by burglars to enter the cellar connected with Mr. Barnct 3Iansficld's store, in this borough, nn Snfnr.lnxr nin l:,s T1,a rllnr , ... . , , .,D . a- . ., ' burglars were scared away. Grant and Colfax. Wc have received from II. II. Lloyd & Co., 21 John Street, New York, thc well known Map1 Publishers, a Colored Pictorial and Statistical Chart containing very good likenesses of our Candidates Sketches of their Lives, Tho Platform Letters of Acceptance, Portraits of al thc Presidents, and very interesting sta tislic3 relating to former Prcsidcntia elections. This chart is designed for thc masses, and sold so cheaply that all can have it. Sec advertisement in another column. 0Cl At Napcrvillc, 111., on the evening o the 7th inst., an entire congregation of Dun kard, while celebrating a love feast, were poisoned by eating meat which had been pre pared in a coppe'r keltic and allowed to re main there until the metal had become oxy dized. About one hundred and thirty were more or lcs3 oflectcd, twenty of whom be came dangerously ill. All, however, at la lest accounts were recovering, Tho meat had been cooked thc day before, and had becj left in the vessels because there was no otli cr place to keep it. Thc excitement in Na pcrville was intense, as there was hardly a family but had one or more of its member, ickcued at the feast. Thieving Revenue Officers get their Do- certs. Richmond, Juno 15. Tho jury to day found a verdict of guilty against John II. Anderson. Collector of the Dis Irict : Bobt. W.'ELsoui, Inspector : Alfred J. uouldman, Assistant Inspector: and J. II. Patterson, Assistant Inspector: cuargca wim conspiracy to uciraud the (jiovcrumcut of whiskey tax. The iudiro then prouounccd sentence as follows : .1 . ..- An Jcrsou was lined 10.000 nnd sen- lenced to two years imprisonment in thc penitentiary. JJooni, $5,000, and two years in the penitentiary. Gouldmau, 52,000, and one year in thc penitentiary. Patterson, 5,000, and two years in the jcnitcntiary. Iu the Supremo Court at Cambridge. Mass.. a woman was divorced from her lusband a day or two ago because ho had oincu a sect who believe tho marriage re align VOld. tcgulurs and volunteers arc preparing the Icaiaac m Canada . . 1 -t U - lUOUluss uuu ui nun.jwiujw T It lVtrrsnn A I.rothcrS. 1NO. oUU, PTirstnut Street. Philadelphia, hare in a. ' -v ' - wni publish in a few days, f, U?Q of Ilon Schujlcr Colfax'' writtCn by llcv. A. Y. Moore, of South Ucnd, Indiana, who was for twclvcycars, as pastor and friend, in the entire conG- d f M Colfax, and had access to aence fcy Mr (Wax lor twenty years, ana to me v,ou- Lrcssi0nal Clobc; knows all his past his- torv ana an wno nave huuwu mm nuui If 1 I. I. . ... I h i i ir i,.,,, l.u i,inrin1iv two boyhood, lie began h bo rap l.j two inrl lirrft VOnrs ano. BU liiafc li la uui vmv of the hurried aud ephemeral publica . - w . . i g(J common in clcctiou years. Mr " Wasiiixgtox, D. C, May GO, 1SC3 " 3fy Dear Mr. Mooke, " Aa vour prediction of a year ago has been realized, I have no further objection to youi jiublu'lyn.q any fkctcli, more or KfH lull, 01 my nr,,, In:1y have pivpami. a you were ioi a dozen vears :i fellow-townsman of mine, aim , x-fr;cnd r mviH)i,c vo know as mud IMIU...J - ..,, . - -- ---- ;liK,ut niv Justorv as me iuuiie wouiu uut . . .t ..i i . ii about knowing; and alihough my ensro.ir duties here leave me no lime 10 revise me man no Jt wiU he published in a large duodec imo volume of live hundred pages, priutei a . 1 il . ? irom large type, ana on inc uncsi am best of white paper, with a portrait, oi stccl, ot Mr. Colfax, executed by one o I.I.-. 4 . ... -1 n . t i.-fn . IliA inn n tfAm M 11 A L r . tnlpn nf Mr. Colfax within th, jat wcct; th0 whole bound in cloth ii the most substantial manner. Price a copy. Canvassers wanted everywhere LarSc discounts given, topics will b. scuc 10 any one, ppst-paiu, uu rcee.pt u ' ' t 1 I'cndleton's lricnds in the W est ar- .Tnlv. infer that this body of retainers will sc cort their chicftaiu to Gotham. By m j - means. It 13 not at all likely that In will leave the wooded shores ol the Uhi or the saline breeze of New 1 ork liar f . .cscorr wh:ch toi)C comDOscdT 0f wealthy, influential and ttmoa pure Democrats none of your weak-kneed I . i . r i oicn, wuo arc reauy to make Dargams T3Xr will cxcrc;sc a powerful infiuence in the Con vention in behalf of Mr. Pendleton. Its members will como from all parts of the est, ana tncy will urge tnc claims oi I . . . . e , .. , , iiicir lavoruu wilu u lorcu iu.it ii ia uouuu to create confucssion in tho unharmon hous hody which i3 to assemble in New York. Ono thing is pretty certain, the cstcrn delegates will not "bend the pre- n,?nt oftllc knc:f that thrift may follow fawning, so readily as will their r e .? . tf. . confreres of the East. Having stamina in them, they will hold out to the last. The 0"ht will be an interesting one, though fierce, and Republicans arc expected to enjoy it hugely. c t ,u mister iuningamc ana ins uusky as sociatcs in the Chinese Embassy have been the focus of attraction at Washing toa thc past wcct. qjic ambassadors aud their suite wcro first formally introduced to the President and Secretary of Stato at thc White House, aud officially wel comed to thc hospitality of thc country. Since that lime thero has been a formal reception by Congress, and any number of social entertainment?. The Embassy consist of Mr. Uurlinganic, as chief envoy, two mandarins of high rank, and quite a rctmuo of interpreters and other subordinates, lhcy with a roving mission to a number of civilized nations, with thc object of pro motinir commcrical intercourse aud friend ly relations. Thc Chinese members have conducted thcmsclvc3 with great dignity and intelligence, and in their general attain mcnts arc found to be quite up to thc American standard. The funuicst thing thathas happened in connection with their visit is thc assiduous attcution that has been paid them by 6uch prominent Democrats as James Brooks and General Hancock, who seem to have quito forgot ten the fact that these Chinamen arc not Caucasians, but belong to auothcr and al- together inferior race of beings. Thero is one very significant feature in tho proceedings of thc Democratic meetings and conventions now being held in different parts of tho country. That ij thc delicate aud careful manner iu which thc question of negro, suffrage is dealt with. .Last year no language was strong enough to express the uudyin hostility of tho Democratic parly to the llepublican policy of conferring the right to vote upon thc loyal ncgroc3 6f the South. They proclaimed themselves in favor ofa ''white inan'3 government" and nothing cbc. But now they ore scuttling off from this plank as rata leave sinking ship, and arc coming over to tho llepublican doctrine, as expressed by the recent Chicago Convention., lhcy say nothing about negro suffrage in their speeches or resolutions, or treat it as an established fact that must necessarily be accepted. Thus they aro getting ready to "hop over into tho arms of Chase. the original Abolitionist and supporter of negro equality. JJucc to. lutclltycnccr. Two hundred and eighty six farms arc reported to Iho General Land Office nj having been sold, during tho mouth of May, to Killers in Arkauad. A bill to enlarge and improve the Fed eral Navy, lias passed tho North German l'aruamcut. Egypt is about to establish courts of aw for the protection of tha li-hfs r.f foreign resident?. T ' J Z I' W.- L'nhllYT IDF I .1 1 1 '.1 T I ..i! 1. . ll II iil H-i. Thn VnTiTT" Mpn'f? Candidal p A .rror nrKrlrnvWCnlfar nTS the! Dajton " Journal," signally illustrates the manner in which men riso to cmi - nence under a llepublican form of gov-J crnmcnt liko oura. Hon. John D. De-J frees, of Indiana, now bupenntendent olJThc school had been dismissed and the Public Printing at Washington, related scholars were standing about the doorway the following to-us on the way to Chicago waiting for the storm to subside, when a Mr. Dcfrccs was practicing law in St. bolt of fire struck the gable eud of the Joseph's County, Imliana, and saw Schuy- church, stcaring ofl the siding about ten ler Colfax, a bright, honest, promising feet in width, reaching the lower sill boy of fifteen, clerking in his step-father's and removing a largo quantity of plaster store The family were poor, aud Schuy- ing on the inside, while the door casing ler assisted in its support. Jir. icirccsi toiq TM-in'tlrm" law. and becoming inlc-1 .op , Cio, uun un iin.jf neicii w 1.... . into Pennsylvania and other Northern States T Will they not then be ready to help us amend our State Constitutions so that there can be no distinction of color in thc exercise of tho right of suffrage 7 We shall welcome thc day wheu thc par ty of reaction shall throw overboard thc intolerant and pro slavery traditions ol thc past, and como forward with us upon the platform of freedom and equality for all. What the Democratic organs arc to do without the "nigger," wc cannot tell. The only way to free themselves of embarrassment, when the African is re moved from politics, is to come out square ly on thc Republican platform aud give their hearty support to tho nomiuatious of Grant and Colfax. Tho United States Senate on Wednes day evening . passed tho bill admitting North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Louisiana and Aalbama to representation in Congress. Thc fiual vote wa3 31 yeas to 5 nays none but Democrats voting iu the negative. An amendment wa3 adopt ed directing that the duly elected and qualified officers of each Stato shall be inaugurated without delay. A clause similar to that iuserlcd in thc Alabama bill, providing that there shall hereafter bo no abridgment of the right .of suffrage in any of thc Statc3 named, was added without a division. Thc bill had previ ously passed thc House, and it will be come a law thi3 week by thc expiration or thc ten days allowed by the Constitu tion for the adverse action of tho Presi dent. Mr. Johnsou is pursuing a policy of non-interference in regard to these bills for the rc admisson of tho Rebel States neither objecting to them which is as much 33 could be expected of him nu dcr thc circumstances. Tho Riverside Swindle. Within thc last few days quite a num bers our citizins h ic jcived printed no ticc from "Read & Co., Bankers, No. 0, Cliuton Hall, Asio'r Place, N, Y. ' that they had drawn prizes valued at 200 in Wuohiugtou Library, Riverside lottery, which would be forwarded on tho receipt often dollars. Of course this informa tion was false, and the intention to swin die the pcrsous to whom thc circulars were addressed, and wc hope no one has been silly enough to remit tho ten dollars required If any should contemplate such a foolish act wc would inform them that ou Friday Mr. Ernest Gross, of Car born county, entered suit beforo Judge Mansfield, of New York, for thc recovery of la's $200. After thc usual stylo he was notified by letter by N. G. Read, of iNo. O, City Hall place, that ho had drawn a 200 prize, aud politely requesting him to remit 810, tho amount of commissions due oji the same. Mr. Gross llioughtsuch a prize was worth going after individually, and so went on to .New Yoyk. From headquarters he was sent to Philadelphia. ana kept lur several days on quite au animated traveling tour at hi own cx pencc. Tho money did not come, aud so ho went beforo Judgo Mansfield ns stated, who ordered tho arrest and com mitment of Read on the complaint made against him. Tho cost of the original Capitol at YashingtoQ city waa 81.400.00U. The additions, now nearly completed, will cost 812,000,000 more. It is only fair to state that these cosily additions wcro commenc ed and Cubbed under Democratic rule. Pennsylvania manufactures more stoves than any Stato in or out of tho Uuiuu. i Over tho (Jity Hall, in New York Monday, the national banner wr.s floating in honor cf its adoption by thc Continen tal Congress, June 12f 1777. - 1 1 Tt 1 I f1 1 1 OA 1 " by Lightning. Uo the Dubuqve Timet, Vh. 1 While the storm was at its height, the Methodist church at bavana, III., used as a school house, was struck by lightning. was suivcrca into iragtnents ana luc noor covered with ruins. At the time of tho accident, as wc have before started, tho scholar?, about sixty in number, wcro huddled together in the doorway, and every one was more or less injured. Oho small boy had his boot taken off, hI wa thrown down by the shock, but soon re covered, picked up bis boots and started for home. Miss Emily Sincliar had both shoes torn from her feet, the lightning in its course going near the instep down to the sole, leaving a zig zag tear around the heel. The eyelets in the shoes wcro melted, while the feet of the girl were- badly blistered, but, strange to fay, tho shock made her insensible but for a few nomcnts. A. Saxtou was seriously hurt. his body being badly blistered, but hopes arc entertained of his recovery. One of the citizens, sittiug iu a doorway fifty feet from tho church, was knocked down for a moment, but as soon as he could re cover himself he ruched over and found four . children apparently lifeless. They were carried home, and remained in that state for hours, but wcro finally resusci tated. The affair, as may be imagined caused great excitement, and fathers and mothers, whose little ones chanced to bo in the church, were almost bereft of rea son. Thc Easton Free l'rcss says that on the evening of the 2d instant a mrre be longing to Andrew Shillingcr, ofWhil liams township, was stolen from thc field. c leaving a spring colt behind. Alarm was r given thc next day to thc horse company, c when thirty riders started in pursuit iwo ot them got on the right track and I and followed thc animal to ljti3villc. IV. P where sho was found in the possession of o Henry aud Sarah Johnson, -both colored t persons, and plying the trade of bono m pickers. They claim not to have stolcu tiic horse, but that they came in posses sion by trade. On thc otk.r baud, they arc charged with the theft, a3 some neigh bors saw thc parties about Shillingcr'g a few days before missing thc animal. From thc field both rode the marc to Hellcr town, where a spring wagon and harness were taken, and away to Pottsville they drove, giving neither food or water to tho animal. During thc interval between thc theft and the recovery tho colt died for want"bf nurture, all of which is blam ed on thc thieves. Warrants were issu ed in Pottsvilo and the parties arrested. Saturday they were brought to Easton, and scn,t to jail by Esq. Arndt, iu default of $000 bail. Thc Dayton (Ohio) LcJjcr, edited by Yallandigham, says : 44 Wc arc no admir er of Ulysses Simpson Grant as a military gcniu3. But about the weakest and most foolish thing the Democratic press or Demcratifi orators could do, would be to depreciate his capacity, or assail him for incompetency, unless in defence of other Generals whose laurels his friends may seek to steal amay." Tho new Pension bill, now before Con gress, provides that where a pension is granted to thc relatives ofa deceased per son, it shall be paid first, to thc mother; second, to thc father; and and thirdly, to the orphan brothers aud sisters, who shall be pensioned jointly, ir there bo more than one. In thc case of brothers and sisters, thc pension is to cease upon tho youngest one's becoming sixteen years of age. In thc case of thc remarriage of a widow or dependent mother, tho pension b to bo paid lrom the death, of tho hus band or sou up to the time of the remar riage. w : . Au Irishman who had lain sick a long time, -was ouo day met by the parish priest, when the following conversation took place : " Well, Patrick, I am glad you have recovered but were you not afraid to meet your God 7 " " Och, no, your rivcrcncc, it was Iho mcctiu' of the other chap I was afcarcd uv," replied Pat. . , ' It is said to bo a fact that the : Post-master-General has received letters ask ing why Petroleum V. Nasby is allowed to remain in his department whilo bring ing odium on tho administration. A Fino Summer. It is staled as a proved proverb that I'whtn thc oak is in leaf before tho ash, it is suro to betoken a dry summer." This spring being an Illustration of tho fact indicates that onr present summer will bo a fine one; which will bo consol ing, as having been so near drowning out, it will bo a variety to cudurc a dry up. Pennsylvania makes two thirds of all thc glass manufactured in tho United States. In Pittsbnrg there are sixty eight glass works, devoted in equal proportion, to bottle, wiudow glass, and flint gl.fW. woik. Their products comprise 7Q,0OVi 000 bottle, C0O.000 boxes of window clas.. aud 3000 tons of glass ware -wotthV ou. an average nearly 87,000,000, Thc Vhilailth.ltia Ap throws coW wa ter on tho proprcd noini&ation of Mr. Chase by the Democrats by saying that "to find a fit candidate it is not necessary to. look beyond tho ranks of the Demo cratic party." It proposes Judge Asa Packer, of Carbon county. Just before tho vote on Impeachment was taken, the brother of Senator Rosa received 70,000 from tho Treasury pirtincnt for imaginary services in Flori da, which abudantly accounts for. tho milk in that cocoinut. . - scnooi uouse r mi oi jcnoiars JstruCK
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers