The Jeffersonian. (Stroudsburg, Pa.) 1853-1911, August 01, 1872, Image 2

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    l)c 3cffcrsonian.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1872.
LUTHER AH CHURCH.
Liturgical Service next Sunday.
Morxiko, 10J, --- Etdhko, 7J
. Mokmnq Siemok: The many Mansions.
Evening Sebmok :
Episcopal service at 3 p. m.
G. V. MARRIOTT. D. D, Pastor.
tgg-Tnz Democrat has no ideas to ex
press this week on Monroe rights in the
OoneresMonal muddle. Its mighty, effort of
week before last has, evidently exhausted the
hubject, ot least so far as it is concerned.
5tT Some folks have an idea that a word
of praise in the Jtffertonian is certain death
to the hopes of any Democrat who is the
reccipient of it, and, contrarywise that con
demnation by the Jeff, results in genuine
Democratic glorification and deration. But
they don't believe a word of it, you bet, and
they know they dont
STRAITS &-C.
A vote was taken on the President! ques
tion, on the 5:20 P. M., express train, D. I.
& W. It. It., on Monday last, with the fol
lowing result:
For Grant, 35 votes.
" Grecly. 13 "
A fair augury of what the grand result in
November will be.
E?- 'The Herald of New York city u an
independent journal, and to-day is one of the
ablest papers in the country. Monroe
Democrat.
But what, in the estimation ot Democrat
will the Herald be after a while, when, see
ing that the great majority of the people are
tiiroig that way, it turns around and bellows
most lustily for Grant Who can telL The
Jfrrald notoriously never begins and ends a
campaign on the same side.
o Tnr. Bourbon Democracy, appear
tL termiued not to agree to the unconditional
wile of the party and its principles to the
Greelcytics. They are at work paving the
way fur a thorough organization of their for
( es ; ar.d we are assured by the leaders that
the ''bolt" will be one of no small magni
t u!e. The Louisville Convention, it is aier
ted will positively be held, and nominations
of eminent Democrats will be made and sup
ported in good faith. Brick Pomroy think
that after the November election the sales
men of Baltimore will think a thunder bolt
has struck them.
Til c influx of the denixens of the larger
cities into this borough and vicinity, rather
increases than diminishes, and it is estimated
that no less than 3,000 pleasure seekers are
now inhaling the health-giving and invigora
ting air for which this county is noted.
TIi ore is nothing more disgraceful or
unfiled for than to have persons lounging
about your stoops and side walks, especially
mi Sunday nights, in different parts of the
town, when you will find them insulting pas-t-ers-by.
Boys be careful, or there will be
.-oiue names mentioned next time.
Episcopal services, by Divine permis-f-iua,
will be held at the Lutheran Church
iu this borogh, on Sabbath afternoon next
The Rev. E. DcPuy, of Madison, N. J., will
officiate on the occasion. Services will com
mence at 3 o'clock, P. X. The public are
cordially invited to attend.
Tiie Camp Meeting near Dutotsburg,
will commence August 5th, and continue at
k-a.-t eight days. The public are cordially
invited to attend these services. For tents
correspond with
JL C. Wood, Pastor.
I. S. There will be services on the ground
on Sabbeth August 4th, at 10 a. m. and
three p. m.
t amp Meetings All persons desiring
to aid us in fixing up the ground and selec
ting places for tents will please meet on Aug.
Cah, if stormy the next fair day at 9 A.X.
Prepare to spend the day.
By order of the Committee.
J. PASTORFIELD,
F. M. BRADY,
August 1, '72-lt Pastors.
Removed. Mr. Darius Dreher, has
temporarily removed his stock of goods to the
room, first door above M. M. Burnett's Tailor
Shop, where he will be pleased to meet his
many customers and friends, during thepro
gruM of the improvements making in his
wn store room. Darius' stock will be
found complete in every particular, and will
be sold at cost and below cost for want of
room to store his goods. July 18 -2m
We see it mentioned in a large number
of our exchanges, that "Dolly yardeD' is no
more, and that 'Polly Ticks" was her euc
cucssor. Now, while we are willing to admit
that "Polly" is rapidly gaining ground, ttiH,
we are f the opinion that "Dolly" is just as
popular as ever, if not more so. The gaudy
display made on our streets each pleasant
evening, fully verifies this statement
Tlie American Working People, the Au
gust number of which is now before us, is
among the most welcome of oar exchanges.
This, as well as aU preceding numbers, is
replete with historical, biographical, argu
Eientativey statistical and literary matter.
It is certainly a paper for the people, and
should be m every household. The Ameri
ran Working People is published by the
Iron World Publishing Co., Pittsburgh, Pa.
Frice $1.50 per year.
Deantlfbl Sunset. We would ad
vise that the Commissioners extend the pro
portions of Pocono bridge, in order that car
riages and vehicles of every description may
have an opportunity to pass over m safety.
That spot may safely be termed a 'lovers
retreat," and, judging from the numbers
that congregate there almost every evening
to watch as they say the "beautiful sun
set," we should consider it an appropriate
name. But why linger so long after the glo
rious sun has sunk to rest behind the western
horizon. Surely, there must be some far
greater attraction, which we, of older heads
do not understand. However, you "know
how it is yourself," and so we will stop.
Improvements. Mr. Wrn. Flory'
new frame building, at the corner of Main
and Centre streets, is rapidly approachm
completion. The size of the structure is 24
by 60 feet, and three stories in height The
first and second floors will be occupied by
Mr. Flory as a tin shop, while the third
floor, which is to be fitted up in an elaborate
manner, will be known as Masonic IlalL
The building, when completed, will prove an
ornament to our borough.
The cellar walls for the new frame dwell
ing being erected by Mr. Wni. Wallace, at
the lower end of the borough, are looming
up. inus we progress, raiuer aiow, uui
mi . . a. 1 . 1 1. ... a
sure.
A rare opportunity for Agents.
We have received from the publishers of
Wood's Household Magazine, two beautiful
ly tinted Crayon pictures representing the
heads cf a little boy and girl, and "Our
Ilope" aud"OurJoy" are just the names for
the dear, bright, happy little faces. L.
Prang Sc Co., originally published them at
$4, but they are now offered with Wood's
Magazine for one year at only $1.50. They
are to be introduced by agents, who are al
lowed a handsome commission on this price,
which makes a most desirable business for
canvassers. While the Magazine alone is
richly worth the money, the pictures are
charming, and must be seen to be apprccia
ted. For full particulars address S. &
Wood k Co., Newburgh, N. Y.
Wo Pill in the world ever had anything
like the circulation of Aycrs Pills. - Through
out three States, Mexico, and the Centra!
American republic, down the dopes of the
Andes, and across the pampas of Soutl
America, in negro villages, amid the fervid
wilds of Africa, throughout the jungles o
India, and the steppes of interior Asia, over
the continent of Australia, and the islands o:
the Pacific, these Pills are known and every
where used as family remedies for diseases,
With distant nations their wonderful cures
attract more attention than they do at home
for the sentiment of wonder takes a far deepe:
hold on their minds than the results of a
high scientific skill with us. The amount
consumed requires seventy-five thousand
doses a day to supply it An inspection of
the munufactory showed us how this enor
mous demand is made and sustained. ' Ad
ded to the consummate skill of their compo
sition, is an extreme care in their manufac
ture, which at once secures the most perfect
material and their most accurrate combina
tion. The consequence is a power and cer
tainty in controlling disease which other
remedies never attained. Bait Courier.
Stroudgburgr Preachers meet
ing. Pursuant to a call for that purpose, a
number of the Traveling and Local Preach
ers of the M. E. Church, assembled iu
Stroudsburg M. E. Church, on Monday July
29th, at 2 r. M., and organized a Preachers
meeting for this part of the State. Rev.
Jeremiah Pastorfield was called to the Chair,
and Rev. G. W. F. Graff led the meeting in
prayer. On montion the meeting proceeded
at once to elect permanent officers, with the
following result after a spirted ballot
President J. Pastorfiked,
Vice President F. M. Bradt,
Secretary G. W. F. Gbait,
Treasurer J. L. Staples.
On montion a standing Committee of three
on Questions for Discussions, Essays &c,
was ordered and appointed as follows: G. W.
F. Graff, F. M. Brady, R. C. Wood. On
motion it was ordered that the membership
should be composed of the Traveling and
Local Preachers Exhorters of the M. E.
Church who may desire to join. On motion
the standing Committee was appointed on
Constitution and By-Laws. On motion it
was ordered that the meeting assemble in
Stroudsburg M. E. Church, every Monday
afternoon at 2 o'clock. On motion Rev.
Daniel Young, was appointed to deliver an
Essay before tho meeting next Monday after
aeon. On motion adjourned. Benedie.
tion by Rev. E. L. Martin.
Had Id Doga. At this particular sea
son of the year, too much care cannot be
taken to prevent the numerous worthless
curs running at large in the streets, from bit
ing, either persons or animals. On Wednes
day last our usually quiet borough was
thrown into a state of the wildest excitement,
over the fact that a slut, owned by the Pal
mer Bro's., and showing unmistakable signs
of hoydrophobia, was rushing madly through
the streets, biting and snapping at every
thing animate and inanimate. Master Owen
Rhodes, son of Jacob Rhodes, residiug on
McDowel street, was bitten in the hand by
the rabid animal, as was also Ed. Dreher,
another lad of this borough. The services
of a celebrated physician of Bethlehem
were brought into requisition, and we are
happy to state that at this writting the two
young lads are in a fair way for recovery. A
large number of dogs were also bitten by this
rabid beast, and, on Friday and Saturday
last, the number of worthless curs running
at large on our streets was very materially
lessoned, some twelve or fifteen having been
killed. This is a etep in the right direction.
We would advise that a close watch be kept
upon all the dogs, and, as a sure preventa
tion from hydrophobia, whenever they show
the first symptoms of becoming mad, vaccin
ate them thoroughly with powder and shot J
All parties, Churches a hd Sunday schools
in want of good Organs, are invited to call
at J. G. Keller's store, or send for descriptive
catalogue. Address
J. Y. SIGAFUS, ,
May 9, 1872-tf.l Stroudsburg, I'a.
1VAKTED. About the middle of July
a good general servant Must be a good
cook, washer and ironer. Plenty of work
urnished, for the satisfactory, willing, and
cheerful doing of which good treatment,
good fare, and good pay will be given.
Address MRS. PAKKT,
June 27, 1872-tfJ fetroundburg.
. - . .
Co to Simon Fricd's for hats and caps.
Tlie undersigned begs leave to inform the
Citizens of Monroe county and vicinity, that
he has disposed of his entire interest in the
Real Estate business, to his late partner,
Wilson Pcirson, for whom he solicits a con
ti nuance of the patronage so liberally bestow
ed on him heretofore.
dec. 14, 171-tf.l. GEO. L. WALKER.
The undersigned beg leave to inform the
citizens of Monroe county and vicinity, that
tliey have enterad into co-partnership, tor
the purpose ot buying and selling -
HEAL ESTATE,
as successors to the late firm of Geo. L.
Walker &, Co., and respectfully folict the
continuance of the patronage extended to the
former farm.
WILSON PEIRSON,
dec 14, '71-tf.l TIIOS. STILLMAN,
Rustcr has the finest display of Goods
ever brought to Stroudsburg. - .-:
General Sherman expects to return
from Europe in September.
.
Go to Simon Fricd's for shirts and Uiu
brellas.
There will be plenty of prairie chickens
this year.
Prices at Rustcrs are in accordance witl
the times, low, low down.
New Orleans has had its first death by
sunstroke.
Go to Simon Fried's for neck tics am:
collars.
A wire heated by a galvanic curren
will cut woo J like a saw.
Go to Ruster's if you wish to purchase
a new style Hat His stock is complete.
Several of the county agricultural as
xocintions are to abolish horse racing at
their fairs.
Go to Simon" Fried's for trunks and
valiccs.
General Sherman in expected to return
to Washington about the 5th of Septem
ber.
I Tall who design purchasing goods call on
Ruster they will make money both in
quality and price of goods purchased.
The manufacture of carpets in Phil
adelphia is said to be annually greater
than any other city in the world.
m
If you want to. see the latest style of
spring goods, go to Simon Fried's.
.
Eighty thousand dollars have been ex
pended in Chester county for public
schools within the past three years.
m
Xotions, Dress trimings and fashionable
Dress goods are specialities with Ruster and
prices rule low.
The apple crop in Montana will be
very large this year in proportion to the
number and age of the trees.
I i mm - - .
Go to Simon Fried's for a nice fitting
suit
Currant worms may be entirely de
stroyed, or driven from the bushes, by a
liberal application of buckwheat flour.
i m i-... - i
In collars, neck tics, cuffs, &c, for lady's
or gents wear Rustcr has all the novclitics.
Call and sec them.
There is an orchard in Chico, Cal., in
which some of the cherry trees yielded
fruit this season at the rate of $200 to
the tree.
Go to Simon Fried's for boots and shoes.
It is estimcated that soothing syrups
kill 150,000 chidrcn annually, which
mast be anyting but a soothing statement
to the mothers who put their children
to sleep by its use.
IttisterdoVt boast of numberless trunks,
and big and little boxes, but his counters and
shelves do what is far better, they exhibit an
array of first class goods, worth looking at
and worth buying.
The "last of the Mohicans" may soon
glory in the rights of citizenship. The
Connecticut Senate has passed a bill giv
ing the Monican Indians in that State
the political rights which other citizens
of the State enjoy.
In novelties Ruster is ahead of all com
petitors, beating even Barnum himself, be
cause there is no humbugging in what he of
fers to the public.
A bald eagle at Wabash. Ind , hnd
captured about sixty pigs in four weeks,
when he was finally ushered out of the
pork business by burying his talons in too
big a lift for him and being held until
taken prisoner.
There is no charge for showing goods at
Rustcrs, neither are there cross looks if you
do not buy.
At Albany reeently a woman met her
once husband at a wedding party. They
had been divorced ten years, and had not
met in all that time. A short talk at
supper reconciled their estrangement, aud
they were married next day.
In ready made clothing, ' whether in city
or country, Ruster's stock cannot be beaten.
.Incladinjr Sundays : Russia has 163
holidays, leaving only 202 working days
in the year. The average compensation
of workingmen is 65 cents for the work-
ng days. .
The average cost to the State of every
person arrested, convicted and sent to
the penitentiary is $1200, vrhile. every
boy educated at the expense of the state
s only $400.
Ever j' thing at Rustcrs is warranted to
be as recommended or no sale. ' ' '
The Supreme Court has just -decided
that the students attending AUentown
College have no right to vote at municipal
electious in that borough.
A set of paper car wheels on one of the
Pullman cars runniug to Jersey City have
run over 160,000 miles of track, and worn
out entirely one set of steel tires, which
have been replaced. The ordinary wheels,
it is said, will run only 60,000 miles.
The Farmers' Philadelphia hay and
' - - -
straw market gave the following result up
to July 20 : Hay we'uhed, 295 loads ;
straw do, 37 loads; prime Timothy, old,
$2.00 to $2 10 : new do. $1.50 to $2.00
mixed, $150 to $200: straw $1.40 to
$152.
A meeting of prominent Deomcrats of
New York was held at Niagara Falls, on
Friday, and it was agreed that Hon. San
ford E. Church should be the Democra
tie and Liberal Republican candidate for
uovernor.
i- ... i
San Francisco is quietly depriving
England of her tea laurels, without even
saying by your leave. Twenty-three
million dollars worth of the tea we draok
last year came to us through the Golden
Gate, and tea traders say the amount wil
be doubled within two years.
It seems the Mormon missionaries have
not a verv hannv time in Denmark. The
m atw
Government has ordered all teachers o
that faith to be tied up and flogged, and
one of the apostles has actually been so
welcomed.
By Ihe great fire at the Erie Railway
shops in Jersey City. Wednesday even
ing, the loss was about 8400,000, fully
covered by msarance. Over 500 work
men are thrown out of employment by
the disaster. Two men were burned to
death.
A returned letter was received at Fitch
bursr. iUassachusett. a few uavs azo
through the dead letter office at Wah
insrton which was sent from there in July
1861, to a sailor at Calcutta, East Indies
After nearly eleven years' sojourning in
foreign lands it at has last been returned
to the writer. .
The project for a silk factory in Scran
ton, Pa., is a success, sixty lots have been
purchased for the erection of the works
and it is intended ' to make it one of th
largest establishments of the kind in th
country. From three to five thousand
hands will probably be employed.
According to a recent census the tota
population of the Russian Empire through
out its whole territory is 81,500,000
souls. Of these 61,420,000 souls
are embraced in European Russia.
5,319,363 in the Kingdom of Poland,
and 1,704,911 in Finland. The increase
duriog the last four years has been at the
average rate of four per cent., but this
varies largely in different provinces.
A novel case was tried in New York
the other day. It involved the right of
a man to mortgage a cemetery plot, and
the presiding Judge held that such a
transaction could not be considered legal,
for the reason that when cemetery pro
perty has once been occupied by graves
it ceases to be regarded as a portion of
the assets of the owner.
An iron ship building firm at Chester,
on the Delaware river the Clyde of
America have just received a contract
from the Pacific Mail Steamship Com
pany for two iron ships, each to be four
hundred feet long and five thousand tons
burden. These will be among the very
largest vessels ever built in this country.
There is every prospect of an immense
crop of peaches this season. Our New
Jersey, Delaware, and Maryland ex
changes all tell the same story, with the
addition that the crop will be finer than
in any preceding year. The Delaware
crop is just ripening, though no good
specimens of the fruit have as yet got in
to market. In a fortnight more we shall
begin to experience the annual delight
of peach eating. '
Two convicts reeently attempted to es
cape from the prison at Sing Sing, New
York, by secreting themselves in swill
barrets, and succeed in being transported
a mile and a half beyond the prison walls,
when the unconscious driver left his team
for a moment, and one of the passengers
seized the rains. Beiog ignorant of the
neighborhood, he drove at a break neck
speed directly back to tho village, where
they were recognized and recaptured.
The Republican State E xecntive Com
mittee met at Harriaburg on Thursday
last and accepted the declination of Geo.
Harry White for the nomination to the
office of Congressman at large. Glcni
W. Shofield, a gentleman of large ability,
was substituted in his placed on the tick
et. For the additional office recently
created by Congress, Gen. Charles Al
bright, of Carbon county, was nominated.
For additional elector at large, W. D.
Wharton, Esq., one of the ablest colored
men of Philadelphia, was placed in
nomination.
ATATM FROM DTTLIVINGSTONi:
Gratitude of the Great Explorer,
US SAD PLIGHT WHEN FOUND.
' From Dr. Livingstone.
New York, July 25 The Jcrcrid
urnishes to the press of the country toe
following letters to its editor from Dr.
Livingstone:
Ujiji. Tanganyika, East Africa,
Nov., 18K James G. Bennett, Jr.
My 'i'r oir 11 is in general Borne
what difficult to write to one we have
never seen. It feels somewhat like ad
dressing as abstract idea, bat the presence
of 'your representative, Mr. Stanley, in
this distant region, takes away the strange
ness 'I should otherwise have felt, and,
in writing to thank you for the extreme
kindness that prompted you to scud him.
I feel quite at home.
If I explain the forlorn condition in
which he found me you will easily per
ceive that I have good reason to use very
strong expressions of gratitude. : I came
to Ujijt off a tramp of between four hun
dred and five hundred miles, beneath. a
bUzing, vertical sun, having been baflied,
worried, deteated and forced to return
when almost in sight of the end of the
geographical "part" of my ' mission, by a
numbcr'of half caste Moslem slaves, sent
to me from Zanzibar, instead of men.
The sore, heart made still sorer by the
woful sights 1 bad seen of man s mhu
mauity to man, reached and told on the
bodily frame, and depressed me beyond
measure. I tnougnt that 1 was dying
on my feet. It is not too much to say tha
almost every step of the weary, sultry way
I was in pain; and I reached Ujiji a mere
"ruckle of bones. There I found that
some five hundred sterling worth of goods
which I had ordered from Zanzibar, had
unaccountably been intrusted to a drunk
en half caste Moslem tailor, who, aftc
squandering them for sixteen months on
tlie way to Ujiji, finished up by selling
off all that reui4ioed for slaves and ivory
fur himself. He had "divined" on the
Koran, aud found that I was dead. II
had' alio written to the Governor ot
(Jnyaoyanyembc that he had sent slave
after me to Manyema, who retured and
reported my death, and begsed permia
sion to sclb off the few goods that hi
drunken appetite had spared.
He, however, knew perfectly well, from
men who had seen me, that I was alive
and waiting for the goods and men ; but
as for morality, he is evidently an idiot
and, there being no law here except tha
of the dagger or musket, I had to sit down
in great weakness, destitute of every thin
ave a few barter cloths and beads whic
had taken the precaution to leave here
in case of extreme need. The near pros
pect of begsring amoug the Ujijians made
me miserable.
I could not despair, because I laughed
so much at a friend who, on reachin
the mouth of the Zambezi, and that h
was tempted to despair on breaking th
photograph of his wife. He could hav
no success after that. After that the ide
of despair had to me such a strong smack
of the ludicrous that it was out of ti
question. . When I had got to about the
lowest verge vague Tumors of an English
visitor reached me.
I thought of myself as the man who
went down from Jerusalem to Jericho,
but neither priest, Levite nor Samaritan
could possibly pa.s my way, yet the good
Samaritan was close at hand, and one of
my people rushed up at the top of bis
speed, and, in great excitement, grasped
out, "An Englishman coming : I see him!"
and off he darted to meet him.
An American fbig, the first ever seen
in these parts, at the head of a caravan,;
told me the nationality of the stranger.
am as cold and non demonstrative as we
islanders are usually reported to be, but
your kindness made my frame thrill. It
was, indeed, overwhelming, and I said,
iu my soul, "Let the richest blessings de
sccud from the Highest on you and yours.'
The news Stanley had to tell was thrill
ing. Mighty political changes on 'the
Continent, the success of the Atlantic
cables, the election of Gen. Grant, aud
many other topics, riveted my attention
for days together, and had an immediate
and beneficial effect on my health.
I had been without news from home
for years,' save what I could gleau from
a few Saturday Reviact and Punch for
18GS. , My appetite revived, and in a
week I began to feel strong agin Mr.
Stanley brought a mo5t kind and en
couraging dvpitlch from Lord Clarendon,
whone loss I sincerely deplore the firt
I have received from the Foreigu Oi&oe
since 186(1, and the information that the
British 'Government had' kindly scut
1000 to my aid. . .
Up to tbia arrival I wa not aware of
any pecuniary aid. I came unsalaried;
but this., want is now happily repaired,
and L am anxious that you and all my
frieuds should know that though un
cheered by letter, I have stuck to the task
which my friead, Sir Roderick Murcht-
eon set me, with John Bullish tenacity,
bel ieving that all would come rijrht at
last.
Tho water shed ofSouth Central Africa
is over seven hundred miles in length
The fountains thereon are almot innumer
able. From the watershed they converge
into four large rivers, and these again in
to two mighty streams in the great Nill
Valley, which begin in 10 to 1J degrees
south latitude.
ii wai long ere iiiMii aawnea on tne
ancieut problem and gave me a clear, idea
of the drainage. I had to feel my way,
and every step of the way, and was cen
erally groping iu the dark, for who cared
where tho rivors ran ? We drank our fill
and let tho rost ruu by. Tho Portugue-
who visited Caxembe aked for sluvcs and
ivory and asked for nothing Ue.
I asked about the waters : questioned
and cross questioned till I w;n almost
afraid ot bemir set d wn a afflicted with
hydrocephalus My last work, iu which
I was greatly hindered for want of suit
able attendants, was I ha following of the
central line of drainaa through a couu
try ol oaunibals, call a J "Manyueiua," or,
shortly, ".Manyema- This hue of drain
aQ has four largo lakes in it. The
fourth I was near when obliged to turn
:It is from one to threa wiles broad,
and never can be reached at any point. i
The Lupira or Bartlcferes river flows in.
to it at Lake" Kamolondo ; then ihe great
river Jbomaioe nows tnrougn jj3ke Lin.
colu into it too, and seems to form tho
western arm of the Nile.
Now, I know about six hundred nika
of the water shed, and, unfortunately the
seven i ii iiunurcu is ine mosi lotere8tinr
of the whole, for, if I am not mistaken
four fuontaios rise from an earthern mouml
and the last of the four becomes at no
great distance off a large river.
Two of these run north to KavDt if.
Lupcra and Loruaines, and two run sooth
nto inner Ethiopia, the Lambi, or th
Upper Zambezi and the Kafneare. They
are not the sources of the Nile mentioned
by the Secretary of Minerva in the city
of Sars to Herodotus.
I have heard. of them so often, and
such'a great distance off, that I cannot
Joubt their existence, and in spite of the
sore Ionxin lor home that seizes mo
every time I think of my family I isy
to finish up by their re disscovery.
rive hundred pounds sterling worth of'
goods have agaiu unaccountably been in-
trusted to slaves, and hare been over a
ycaron the way, instead of four months,
I must go where they lie at your expense
ere I can. put tho catuial completion to
my work, aud if my ui.cloures regarding
the terrible. Ujijian'slavery should lead
to the suppression of the east coast slate
trside 1 shall regard that as a greater mat.
ter by; far than - the discovery of all the
Nile sources together. Now, that joa
hae dne with domestic slavery forever,
leud uyour powerful aid toward this
great object.
,This fine country is blighted as with a
curse, in order that the slavery privileges
of the petty Sultan of Zanzibar tuaj not
be infringed, and the rights of the crown
of Portugal, which are mythical, should
be kept in' abeyance till some futuie tiu e,
when Africa will become another India
to the 1'ortuuese, slave traders.
I conclude by iigaFo th inkiug you most
cordially for your great generosity, and
am gratefully yours.
Pavid Livingstone.
In the recent murderous attack upon
Aldermau' liill McMullen by the pardon
ed assassin Hugh Mara we have aonther
example of the fatal facility with which
Governor Geary is manipulated by
political adventurers. Mara, it will be
remembered, was convicted two or three
year? ago of an attempt to murder Defective
Crooks, of the Internal Revenue service,
who was at that tiao unearthing the
frauds of the whiskey rt. It was then
proved that Mara and his accomplices
were the hired tools of other p-irties to
take the life of Urooks. The original
plotters of the assassination were not dis
covered, Brooks did not die, and Mara
and Dougherty were sent to the peniten
tiary. A lew months ago, through the
active efforts of McMullen, Josephs, and
ome other city politicians, a pardon for
Mara was obtained from Governor Geary.
Mara has now requited ihe friendly act of
McMullen by shooting him at sight, and
inflicting what may yet be a fatal wound.
He has friends enough to hide him, aud
it seems quite probable that he will escape
punishment for his last attempt at murder.
Ihe responsibility of this bloody act falls
back upon the Governor with, fearful
force. In the face of notorious facta he
persists in pardouing the worst of criiui
nals, while other cases which seem really
deserving receive not the least attention.
The covict who can obtain th favor of
the "Fourth-ward crowd" of Philadelphia
may count with reasonable certainty upon
rrrup" nt 1 1st rr is n I rr
o a-
August and September State Elections.
Previous to the great Presidential con
test in November, elections will be hell
in the following if t ate. : North Carolina,
August 1 ; Kentucky, Montana and Utah,
August 5 ; New Mexico, Sept. 1 ; Cali
fornia, Sept 2 Vermont, Sept. 3 ; Maine,
Scptmbcr 9 ; Colorado Territory, Sept.
10 ; Dakota, Indiana, Iowa, Nebraska.
Ohio, Pennsylvania and District tf
Columbia. Oetober 8 ; South ('aroliiu,
Oct. 16; West Virginia, Oct. '2. All
the States vote for Presidential Electors
on the '.hh of November, and on the sius
dy the following choose State cSccrs;
Arkansas, Delaware. Florida, Gcurii,
Illinois. K-insas,. Louisiana, Maryland,
Massachusetts, Michigan, .-. Minnesota,
Mississippi, Missouri, Nevada,
Jersey, New York. Tennessee, .Virginia
and Wisconsin. Arizona holds her lcr
ritorial election on the 8th of November.
The elections in August and September
will be watched with solicitude by tl
politicians as affording u clue to the result
in November.
The report circulated rcceutlr that
Governor Curtin is comioc home from
Ilussia to take the stamp for (Ireclej is
now positively denied. The 15!lefo'
lirjyuidi'can says that his frieads have re
ceived letters expressing opposite views,
and the Scranton Republican has iuform-.
tion to the same effect. Governor Curtra
now holds an honorable and responsible
position under the Government, aud it is
not at all likely that he will forsake it to
fight against the party and principles that
he has always advocated.
Horn's is tho best cockroach extermina
tor yet discovered This troublesome ioseek
has a great aversion to it, and will oWe
returu where it has once been scattered
As the salt is perfectly harmless to hu
man boiugs, it is much to be preferred
for this purpose to the poisonous sob
stances commouly ued. Uorox is a"
valuable for laundry use instead of soda.
Add a handful of it powdered to about
ten gallons of boiling water, and you need
use ouly half the ordinary allowauce ot
soap. For laces, cambrics, etc , pse aa
an extra quantity of powder. It will D0
injure the texture of the cloth in tbe le
For cleansing the hair nothing ia better
than a solution of borax water. WasJ
afterward with pure water if it leaves the
hair too stiff. Borax dissolved in water
is alsa an excellent deatifrica or tcsJth
wash.