El ii)c 'OO jegista. Editor 'lnd Prop,. Nor jonf:lll.l'.l)ELL. .1 IL A LLENTO N, PA JULY 27, 1870 REPIlinii.MAL7i COUNTY ('ti!.. The fteputilleau Executive Committee of Lehigh County, ore requested to meet at the Eagle Hotel, at 1 P. M., on Saturday, the oth of August, of considering the question of minority representation, and to take measures for the election „r delegates to represent Lehigh count y'in the convention called to meet at Heading, on the illst Of August, next, • It,(MIG, Chairman Jesse Walser, E. Heist, Fred. !tulle, Geo. K. Reeder, Win. J. Reichard. Samuel Miller, R. Clay liatnersly, .0. L.. el, Abel 'Heilman, Franklin Shinier, Geo. Gorr, Joseph Whine:, liarrison Boaz, Joseph Gaunter, Win. T. Brelnig, Abraham Schnioy er, .T. C. Welling, .Tolin Snyder, S. 11. Price, Asher H. Fateinger, Levi Werly, Henry 11. Creltz, Wilson N. Peter, John C. Hanke, W,int, Charles Schoenly. miNonfrir coNvENTIos A convention of delegates from the sever al counties of the State of Pennsylvania of such persons only as are favorable to the move• meat to secure :minority representation, will be held at the city oflleatling, on Wednesday, the tllst day of August, next, at 11 o'Clock„%. The convention will consist of two dell• gates for each representative in the . lower House of the State Legislature, provided that each county shall be represented by at least one delegate. By Order of the Committee. E..T. MouRE, Chairman .1. IV. Wool), Secretary WHY FICAVUE WANTS TO FIGHT A peculiarity of your average political wise acre, Is to read Ids newspaper simply with the Intention of seeing if it agrees with his pre. conceived notions. If it does not, he imme diately pronounces it absurd, ridiculous, &c., &c., and Is dreadfully severe In his denuncia tion. Ito never stops to consider that lie may possibly be WrOlig lIIIIISeIf, but with matchless conceit lie rashes into print to proclaim his in fidlibility. An individual signing himself " Baden-Baden," writes to the Daily News, asserting that our article " Why France wants to Fight," contains a great many misstate ments. With regard to the fortress Maycnce, Mayenoce. Maine or Wilt% (kW it is spelt either way), he prefer, Maine to Mentz. We have no objection. We Intro COIIIIIOO grave error of put ting Austrians amilagst II a asardson of Mentz (for. we'll stick to oar of spelling it.) This leas an error male be literally copying an account of the streu , lth of the fortress (w !deli we could net k.eiw intuitively) and ice witll all oils t •• pardon of moo,- BAN," an •i•ror, so apparent that he saw it at once. Acme perMotly . well aware that at Vienna is IStitt the , h ratanie Confederation was dis olv4.d. We are also aware that a German. Conn deration, built by Prussia on the ruins of the tormer exists to•ilay, and that the fort' ess of AI, M./. garrisoned tians and Ilessian4, (minus the obj«.ti.ni:thh..l.ll-triarn , ) is now in the p0, , ,i0n orthat rourederation. Ntiw. as to the sourco ()I' our information Not being; 1)les,(c(1 tint( the cru.l(llic: .\l. niirable Crichton or a " Fla& n-11;1(1111," w conl'ess that the strL ngth and sitifation of every fortress is included among two or three things, we don't know,and titerehre we some times have to rely on "information" hilind in books. The charge of „ imposing on our readers" made by "Baden•lhtden, is one that he ought not to have made. We have taken pains to be correct, and if we have been wrong, we had no intention to mislead and no motive for doing so. "Iladen-llnden"miv takes fault-finding for criticisin and evidently considers that the mnarthrßN olsuelia remark ns lastest one makes up for its meanness. The fact that he is writing anonymously should cause the newspaper correspondent to be more guarded in his comments, instead of increasing his recklessness. While stiperior knowledge on any subject entitles a Inns to . consideration and respect, arrogance is always objectionable, and since his pretensions pre clude the possibility or n mißtalT, we call af ford to tell "Baden Iladen" that in his attempt at sarcasm he has wandered from the path of trill h. I= In, view of the troubles in Europe, The .Id vacate of Pellet' says: —\ national example or it refusal to bear arms Ire , been e . xliii,iteil only once to the world ; and dint one example has proved all that humanity could desire, and all that skepticism could demand in favor of um. argument. Pennsylvania was colonised .bv men who believed that war is absolutely in , continuable with Christianity, and therefore ' resolved not to practice it. Having del ermin'ed not to tight, they maintained no soldiers, and possessed no arms. They planted themselves in a country surrounded by savages who knew they were unarmed. Plunderers might have robbed then) without retaliation, and armies . might have siatightered them without resist ance. tr they did not give it temptation to outrage, no temptation could be given. Itut these were the people who possessed their country ill security, whilst those around them Were trembling for their existence. 'ri l l s was a laud of peace, whilst every other was a land of war. The eonelnAion is in , vitable,although It t o extraordinary—they were in no need of arms lit cause they wont.; a, 4 use th e m, These Indians were still wiently ready to commit 1 1 11111 1 111.teS 1111011 Other hide=. often Visited 11100 With that sort 01 dk and slaughter which ini,rld peeled from men whom civili/ati .11 had not reclaimed from cruelty, and when, had not awed .nto liubcar ance Pei." " whatever the gin - tyre`, 1.. lid , I I,,'ians were kith ot hors, they unifortnl ,••••,1, and held, as it were, sa cred, the ti of William Penn." "The Pennsylvania,. ~.• ,ays Ithlth: %on, " nev,er lost man, \‘‘,ll,,d , hy tlam. 'which neither the c o ! hly nI 1N,, , ryr , 0,1, nor that of Virginia c , oil.' ay. no lent the great colony of Ncw 1 ''l'i:, entity and quiet td Petn , ylvaniu not a 'transient freethoe roan ;W. :,1101 ns might liappento , •mietied to enjoy it "for more than .1 , enty years,•' says Proud, "land sul,e.tett in the Indian nations without so much a.. a militia fur her defence." " The Penn:ylvaniale," Observes Clarkson, "became safe without the Ordinary means of. strety. The constable's staff was the only intrument of authority amongst them for the greater part of a cen tury ; and never, during the administration of Ile* or that of his moiler successors, was there a quarrel or a war." And when was the security of Pennsylvania molested ? When the men who had directed its counsels, and'Who would not engage in war, were out voted in its legislature ; when They whn Sup posed that there was greater security in the BWordthan in Christianity, became the pre dominating body. Prom Ihut Lour, the Penn. aylVaidans transferred their confidence in Christian principles to tveonlidenett, in their arms ; and from that hour to this, they have been subject to war. Palm's description of a fiddle c4onot be den.' lie says: "It k the shape or a tor mil the size of a goose, the loan turned rn its back, and rubbed its holly add a and °chi St. Patrick ' , ..r, MINORITY COUNTIES A convention of delegates from the several counttcs of the State of Pennsylvania of such persons only as are favor able to the move ment to secure minority representation, will lw held at the city of 'Heading, on WEDNES DAY, Tali 81ST DAY OF AUGUST, NEXT, at 11 o'clock, A. M. The convention will consist of two delegates for each representative in the lower 'louse of the State Legislature, provided that each county shall be represented by at least one delegate. By Order of the Committee. • E. J. 'MORE, Chairman. J. W. WOOD, Secretary. ArwEsTowN, PA., JULY 17, 1870. To the Representativesxf Pennsylvania. In calling the attention of the Republicans of Pennsylvania to the convention to meet at the city of Reading on the 31st of August, next, we desire to present the following consi derations concerning its purposes: Itcpublicans of Pennsylvania who live in counties in which they arc In the minori ty, number one hundred and twenty-five thou sand voters, more thou one-third of the whole rmublican vote. They own and control very large mid varied material interests, requiripg the care and protection afforded by wise and salutary laws. That these people are wholly excluded from participation in the management and control of their respective county governments does tot in the least estrange their devotion to re publican principles or cause them to abate their efforts in behalf of the success of the re- publican party. They have just cause of com phd at, however, in the fact that, while their political brethern are and for many years have been in :the ascendency in the State Legis- ature, they are entirely unrepresented, and )3. nu unjust rule established by a republican flajority, they are continually subjected to mpg and oppressive laws, while they are wrsistently denied such legislation as their material interests require. 'l'hut so large a body of the people should find themselves unrepresented in the law ma king power is evidence of a defective funds mental organization. A republican or demo cratic form of government must of neces sity be representative, and to fulfil the re quirements of a representative government it should be so framed that all the people, as nearly HA practicably can be, should have a voice in the enactment of the laws which go- Vern them. If the government is so shaped that a majority of the people only are to be represented, then it cannot be a free and re publican state, but a mere despotism of ono portion of the people over the other. Such a government is despotic in principle as well as in practice, for It can be of very little con sequence to the minorities whether the laws which govern them are made by a particulat class of men or by a single potentate; the mi norities, who are excluded from all voice or bearing in the law making branch of the gov ernment, bearing about the same relation to the majorities as do subjects to an abSolute monarchy. According to the mode of representation as established by the Constitution and laws of Pennsylvania, more than one.third of her voting and tax-paying citizens are excluded from any voice or power in the law-making department of the State, and the same remar will hold trite us to the general government We most respectfully and earnestly prese this subject to the candid and considerate at tention or the voters of Pennsylvania, confi dently relying on their intelligence, and sense of justice for a reform in a matter so vital to the widthre and prosperity of the whole people and the safety and perpetuity of the govern ment. It is gratifying to observe that this move ment is not without precedent in our own c °miry ; for the people of Illinois have quite recently amended the organic law of that state so t luti minorities will hereafter be fairly rep re,ented not only in the State Legislature but also in all corporations authorized by law. In other states the question has been favorably entertained, and even hi some of the European governments it is discussed by the people and, in One instance, partially adopted, while learned political writers everywhere have com mended it to public attention. In view a this subject, and because the re publican minorities have suffered long and tnuch for want of a proper and equal repre sentation, the ineinbers of the Republican State Central Committee held a meeting in the city or Philadelphia on the 13th inst., when it was resolved that a State Oinveution of delegates from minority counties be held at the City of Reading on Wednesday, the list day of August. nest, with the view of concert-, mug measures to secure representation for mi norities in all matters wherein they are Inter ested and consider Other matters interesting to minority counties. It is firmly believed that if the people of Pennsylvania were more generally and equal ly represented in our State Legighttare, that the character ,if legislation would be vastly imprnved while Ow danger of corruption would he very materially lessened if not alto. _ether argided. The minority districts in Pennsylvania are ' most earnestly enjoined to send able and in fluential representatives to the convention which will meet at the city of Reading, whilc: all the other counties in the State are also re quested to send delegates to assist in the objects of the convention in accordance with the resol, ution passed at the meeting of the Committee. E. J. MORE, Chairman. WHO IS RESPONSIBLE? An old proverb says, "Give a dog a bad name and you may us well hang hint." The truth was never more strikingly exemplified than in the condemnatory tone of every journalist who speaks of Napoleon in relation to the present war. It is assumed that he went into this war, and disturbed the peace of Europe for no cause whatever, and has compelled I'russia to act on the defensive when she desired peace. Another view of the question than this is likely to be a fairer one. Let tts not deceive ourselves. nor attempt to deceive the publjcbt, relation to the responsibility for this .‘y be tween France and Prussia. Bionarck is as ambitious as Napoleon, and is quite tts willing enjoy the pride Stu b valor of his countrymen and to himself still higher in the world's vlett. King William is imperious and impetuous, and inspired by traditional and hereditary animosities. Less liberal than Na poleon, he claims to hold his throne not front ;be people, but "from God alone," and re ,mrds his own will as paramount to that of his subjects: Great military power is his pride, and his hope against freemen at home as well loemen abroad; and Bismarck is his prophet, Paver is their grand purpose. They desire to combine all Germany under their rule, with Prussia as the grand centre and themselves in its capital to control, by means °fa vast army, the great interest of the numerous States they they covet. This war has its purpose in this direction. The power and glory of the king and his ininisternot the liberties and welfare of Germany—form the great object of this bloody enterprise, so far as the Prussian pro• gramme is concerned. Encouraged by the success of '(ill, and somewhat intoxicated with the consequent glory, illiam and ids brains —Bismarck—have resolved upon new martial achievements, to the end that all Germany limy be brought under their banner, Lorraine and Alsace recovered, and a hated foe humil iated. WESTMORELAND COUNTY. Delegates to the Heading Convention have already been appointed by this county. They. are I. C. nankin, George F. Huff, Hon. A. M. Fulton, D. \V. Shryock. WASII/NOTON, duly 125.—The U. S. Stearn . - er .Nartiguusett, of the North Atlantic fleet, has been ordered to proceed to the coast of ' min and visit the ports of Laguira, Pu o and Cabello. THE LEHIGH REGISTER, ALLENTOWN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 27 1870. CONGicr.ss. President Grant asked Messieurs the gentle men "who have the honor to represent the sovereign people," to extend the session dur ing which the nation was benefitted by the ebullitions of their wondrous wisdom. But the weary Lycurgus' refused to give any more of their valuable time to their tiutrering coun try, though it appears by the roll, that a ma jority of them had been absent during the greater part of the session. They cheered when the war news was announced. It is not stated if the Hon- John Morrisey was the fugle•man or with which side the enthusiastic legislators were in sympathy ; but one cannot help thinking that it would have been better to have moderated their transports on the prospect of a " ruction," and considered the wise advice of the President, that their own country might have reamed some benefit from the increase of trade, &c., which the internal disturbances of European Nations invariably brings to the United States. TIME BOUBBONS. When a Bonaparte is in trouble, then t e hopes of the Bourbons revive. In the ye. r 1800 the Count de Montemolin and his broth r Ferdinand renounced all claims to the Spa - ish throne as the representatives of the Span• ish Bourbons. The accession of .Napoleon the 111 to the throne of France, was supposed to be a death blow to the Orleans branch of -the family.. But, a Bourbon succeeded the first Napoleon and it is by no means impossible that Napoleon. the 111 may be succeeded in like manner If the fortunes of war should be adverse to the hero of 11am, and then the throne of Spain would iu all probability be apportioned to one of the family. The result of placing a Bourbon on the throne heretofore however, has not been of such a nature as to make men enthusiastic to BCC the experiment repeated. THE FRENCH PROGRAMME. The French programme for the conduct of the war as published in the Parisian papers is one of thesoolest pieces of nonchalance ever exhibited. According to this programme the army will first enter Ilesso and then occupy the City of Frankfort,from which it will sweep all the Prussian territory left of the Rhine. After completing this little business it will march through Prussia which it will first pro ceed to conquer and then to reconstruct. The scheme is an admirable one, only it does somehow seem that the Prussian army had been overlooked in the calculation. Probably the Army of France will find that the Prussian gentlemen are not so readily overlooked. THE STRENGTII OF FRANCE AND PRUSSIA. France has a fighting army of 404102 men Army of Reserves 400,01:0 National Guards, 535,', 3 The French Nary congests of 238 steam vessels, • 113 sailing " Total war navy 401 Morse power 92,027,guns 3,045 The German Confederation has a war army of 977,262 Inc Armies of Bavaria, Wertemberg and Baden, Reserves, 6ze., about 1,652,262 The Navy of the Confederatiou consist of Total war navy 101, hove power 7,020; guns 510 While the war continues, to avoid misap prehensionof the position of the two contend ing powers, we recommend our renders not to trust the maps that arc published in the New York and Philadelphia papers. One of them. the other day, made such startling alterations in the map of Europe, that an intelligent foreigner who has been in this country for some years was unable to find his country, and.at last found it bounded on the north by Spain and Russia, on the south by Italy, on the east by Abyssinia, and on the west by Vermont. These little geographical errors are perplexing. You can buy a good map of Eu rope for 25 cents. If you are interested in the war it will pay to invest. The pest of all society,' the bane of every community and' he most degraded specimen of human nature extant, is the scandal. monger. This is especially so in comparatively small communities like our ow n,where almost every body knows almost everybody else, and when the recital of this unpleasant truth or that devil ish lie is received with added zest, bzcause you all know Mr.--." 'Tho scandal monger must not be confounded wjth that comparatively harmless individual "the gos sip," who retails the faults and failings, the goodness and the worth of each individual whom you may happen.to know, just as the good and the bad coma uppermost, and takes quite as touch enjoyment In telling you of some.good and generous thing as in informing you of something extremely shocking. Nor must the ordinary comments of common con versation be regarded as scandal, though wherever they allbet the character of any in dividual, man or woman, every high-minded man or woman Will avoid them. But the scandal-monger is a very different individual from any of these. More cowardly than the midnight assassin, the scandal-monger will smile and hold your hand or say a thousand pretty nothings of the pleasure your call has given, and then with deliberate malicious pur pose, from no other perceptible reason than the promptings of a wicked heart, will tell some deer friend, with shrugs and looks, &c., something to injure' you in their estimatlon, and that can be magnified to an unknown. quantity by the manner of its telling. Some men will speak of another as a "good fellow" with a "Bridle and a look" that could never be usefi, Against the cowardly speaker and yet aceoinplish his purpose with the greatest certainty in awakening the distrust and sus picion of the man who listens. Scandal mongers are not confined to one sex,but, as a "woman, when wicked, exceeds the wicked ness of man," so the female scandal-monger is generally the most remorseless and ineor- rigible. Dr. Johnson used to say he liked a "good hater." The man or the woman who hates another for some cause, and openly shows it; letting the object of their hatred plainly know it too, though they are dictated by a feeling unworthy and unchristian, still are incapable of the meanness of the scandal-monger and in the honesty of their hatred are worthy of sonic respect. But it Is the sneaking, under hand, contemptible ways of these social ver min that are their distinctive characteristics and mark them as the propogators of those evil things, and the hurlers of those secret missiles that cause more damage, injure more reputations, blight more lives, send more souls to perdition and drag down more human be ings from the very gates of hcaven,tban aught else under the sun. Here in Allentown the tribe is not without a representation, who pursue their evil work with vigor. Let all honest men and women avoid them. They are more dangerous than a plague spot. They are more to be dreaded than the Shill they profess to discover in oth ers. They are the snakes of the human family, who poison the air with the breath of their mouths and sting their victim unawares. Tim full name of the gentleman who doesn't want to wear the east off head-gear of Mrs. Isa bella, late of Spain," Is Leopold Etlonne Charles An( olne Gustavo Edouard Thasello, of Hohenzol lern Sigmarlugen. And Isle wlfu's name Is Antoine Mario Feruonde Mineola Gabriella Raphael() d'Asslze Gouzague &Moe Julio Augusta do Drag oon Bourbon, Duchess of Saxe. They are tolled Way and Baxoy for abort. 1,34°,U15 175,000 'OO,OOO 42 steam vessels 59 sailing " BUY A 111 AP. SCANDAL. GENERAL SHERIDAN Lieut.—Gen. Sheridan has been summoned to Washington, and is now en route. lie will probably arrive to-morrow. It has been de cided to send him as a Special Commissioner of the United States to the theatre of military operations In Europe, in order that he may observe the manner in which both the French and Prussian Governments conduct a war; and lie is to make a report, after his return, on the cavalry, artillery, and infantry of the two armies, and also on the arms, tactics, dis cipline, and accoutrements of each. His de parture will take place immediately, and he will be the bearer of letters front the President, Secretary of War, the General ot• the Army, and the French and Prussian Ministers, com mending him to foreign GovernmentS, in this capacity. Col. 0. Denvetl, of Gen. Sher man's Staff, today received six month's leave of absence, with the privilege to go to Europe and witness the conflict between Prussia and France. Ile will leave inn few days for Paris. M. Prevost Paradol, the new French Minister. called at the State Department today, and as• vied the Secretary that France would exempt froni seizure on the seas, by her war vessels, all private property, without regard to the flag under which such property might be. Ile did not state that he had the authority from 'his Government for the assurance, but he felt authorized to promise the same protection which Bismarck had accorded to the com merce of the seas. Secretary Fish subsequent ly said that were lie a merchant he would not deem it necessary to pay extra insurance on account of the war risk, on his goods to and from foreign ports, as he regards the assurances of protection ample. • ADVERTISING. There arc sonic things in connection with business pursuits, that arc so palbably neces sary to success, that the only wonder Is " men of business" should fail to see them or having seen them', be so unwise as to neg lect them. One of the most palbable of these is advertising, and we have su many convinc ing proofs of its efficacy right here in our city cotsffig under our notice day after day, that we can only regard the man who attempts to carry on business without it, ns au enemy to is own interests and far behind the age If a man Las a good article for sale, let him state its merits fairly and fully, and do it per. sielently, end he is bound certainly to find a ready sale for it. Our successful men of busi ness are not backward in doing this, as the advertising columns of the Allentown newspapers abundantly proof, and it is to this class, (since advice to the nomadvertisers is completely thrown away, as they are mentally incapacitated from profiting by it,) that we want to give a few hints as to " the Way to Advertise ;" for a great deal of money and space is wasted in •clumsy announcements which nobody reads. To achieve a prosy advertisement once in six months and let it stand till every sub scriber gets heartily sick of seeing it, is one way of advertising. It is the " contract job" way, but it is not the way the successful men of business, who have made large fortunes through the use of printers ink, did their ad vertising. 't'o advertise only in the busy season is one of the most foolish things done by that class of individuals who advertise with so much caution that they seldom, if ever, make anything by it. It is in the dullest seasons that the judicious use of advertisements pays best. Advertisements should be concise, spicy, plain and original. Renewed often, they at tract the general reader, who, discovering that they are the announcements of an old friend under a new aspect, is unconsciously interested in the article advertised. A. frequent error consist in the omission oi a clear statement of price. Persons at a die Mace, who are attracted by the description 01 an article, are prevented buying by their ig norance of the cost. An advertisement must answer these tines lions: What advantages to the purchaser are af forded by the article ? What is its price ? Who sells it ? and upon what terms? The next matter of importance Is, that the advertisement shall be well placed and neatly displayed. This, or course, rests with the printer, who has within his reach, branches of the art which, arc either legitimate or other wise. Auumgst the latter may be included the custom lately in vogue, of drawing over the column and paragraph ft conspicuous, but unsightly and meaningless, cross or scrawl ; turning the letters or words upsidedown, and devices of a similar character. This has never been found to be an attrac tive feature in advertising. On the contrary, much depends upon the skill 01 the printer in the use of clear type and in the tastddisplayed in the use of capitals, &c. Cheap advertise ments are generally of very little value to the advertiser. A. publisher must have litir renun eration for, the use of his columns in order to be able to two good material and employ skill ful workmen. We say then to our readers who hare a good article for sale, Advertise ! Don't do It reck lessly, carelessly, stupidly. Advertising is an srt that it will pay to become practically pro ficient at, and you know that its judicious use has made millionaires of the men who have' been persistent in it. • 'FILE TribU//0 says :—" We arc all debtors to Mr. James T. Field for his memories of Dickens in the August Ai/antic. True, biography lion so long been lc those impossible in English or Ameri can literature, that this bit of work, fragment as It is, startles us 'with Its lifelike Re:Ann:Aß and power. Mr. Fields, with admirable skill and taste, attempts to give no analysis of Dickens's character, even as It impressed himself, but Jots down simply, and with carefully repressed feeling, a few anecdotes and remembrances of walks and talks with his friend. Bat the careless .touches are like the slight lining of one of Raphael's car: Loons; they bring the man Dickens before us, alive, genial, not only The world's friend bat ours —powerfully, as no other sketch of him has done. Mr. Fields would have done well to extend his sketch, and give to his tribute to his friend a more enduring shape. A BRIDAL Dia:H.—For the benefit of our lady readers we publish a description of the Bri dal dress worn by Miss Blanche Bottler now Mrs. Senator Ames. This was one of the most elegant I dresses that could be worn on such an occasion, and was of white velours silo. It was made . with court train, a pulling of tulle passed around the I bottom of the skirt, and on this is placed the flounce of Duchess lace. The overdress of Du chess was worn with It. The long tulle call Is fastened on with the most delicat orange blossoms that formed a sort of coronet In front and fell drooping over the lace In sprays of buds and leaven . The fan Is of pearl and point lace, with the bride 's moucgram beautifully wrought in the lace. I'. fo bride has ever had a more beautiful or comple to trousseau than Miss Butler, and it nos be a viry unreasonable one who would ask for [myth log more lovely. CENSUS REVELATIONS IN NEW YOH' lay Election District. 1870. V etc. Ninth Ward, IVth District. ....... .....3,200 3,098 Ninth Ward, Xth District 2,700 4,028 FifteetAh Ward Vth Di5triet.........1,670 3,270 I Seventh Ward, ld Dlstriest..... ..... 4T.3 6.859 Seventh Ward, IVtit District • 3,800 5,007 Seventeenth Ward, XlVtlf Distriet.3,ooo 5,160 Twenty-first Ward, Vllth District. 700 7,859 Tenth Ward, IXth Distaict 500 4,001 First Ward, Vlth District ......... 957 .3,012 Eighteenth Ward, Vith District..... 2,400 4,941 ME This is the city, the purity of whose local gov ernment, according to Mr. Samuel Cr.)x, causes till other cities to hide their heads lu p Ream dis grace! To FRUIT PREBERVERS.—You gill find at Kramer's Corner Btoro a full line of Glass Fruit Jars, In pints, quarts, and half gallon s,and , of the two best makes in tke market, Rollin g at a small advance. Please examine our Jars. before pur elutslng. No trouble to show them. THE RHINE As " BOUNDAWf.—A gen eration ago Victor lingo wrote :Amok on the Rhine, In which, besides giving the most fascinating and poetic of all descrip tions of that famous stream, he cried out, " France, take back the Rhine," as be stood :it the tomb of Hoehn, who was burled on the shores of that river, and whose grave is to this day pointed out to the curious tourist: Napoleon, the hitter enemy of Hugo, has tried on several occasions to make of this cry a national slogan to call to Ills support all parties In France. The Rhine Is, according to many Frenchmen, the "natural boundary" of France. The forums whom the Emperor would like to make his sub jects, however, do not agree with hits. The peo ple of the German Rhenish provinces ale German in language, tastes and feelings, sod have no ad miration of Napoleon 111. or of his policy. Bel gium, with Its French-speaking population and with but forty years of national existence to over turn, would be is much easier acquisition for France. France already owns the west bank of the Rhine from a few miles north of Basle'ln Switzer land to the frontier of the Palatinate at Lauter msg. The possession of the last named district %Twill add to the list of French cities, Spires whin to old cathedral, and the fortilled places of Lan lan and Fenstadt, beside a lar,:e needier of smaller owns and villages. In Rheui.h Prin,sia—,yeak lug always of the western shore of the Rhine—the first town of Importance is Worms, associated with the name of Luther. Atrer passing over the flat, highly cultivated district through which the Rhine here sluggishly rolls along, the lowers and bridges of Mayence Mont In sight. This Is a city of strategic and hist,oric Important,. Shelly further on Is Bingen ; Mei there begins the mar velous scenery which has given In the Rhine such world-wide celebrity, am! has 'nude familiar the names of such trifling though picturesque hamlets as Oherwcscl, St. Boar, lloppart, Andernach, Baeharach, nemagen and the like. NI id way among these IS Coblente, overlooked by " Ehren breiteites castled height," and still further down the stream is the collegiate town of Bonn. To add all these to the long list of French towns would certainly be a splendid gain to France this Is a•hut 16 meant When Frenchmen cry with Victor lingo, "'rake back the Rhine. 7 however, a large enterprise, and not likely to :die weal.—.V. F. root. TEE ENGLISH NAVY.—As the strength of the English Navy may be a matter of great im portance during the European war and Is not known, we here give a reliable list of the iron clad portion of her fleet with their tonnage, guns and horse power. The guns lathe larger vessels are 650 pounders down to 300 pounders. In the smaller ones they ranges from 200 pounder to 46 pounders. 1. Agincourt 2. Minataur 6601 1350 26 13. Northumberland ..... ......0021 1350 20 4. Achillas 0191 1250 20 5. 'Black Prince 0109 1950 20 0. Warrior 6109 1250 34 7. Hercules .... 5234 1200 14 8. Sultan '1226 1200 12 • 0. Monarch 5102 1100 7 10. Devaetation 4400 800 4 11. Thunderer 4400 00U 4 12. Calitalu 4272 900 (1 13. 13elleerphon 4270 1000 15 14. Colcdonlo 4125 1000 24 15. Hector 4019 800, 18 16. Lard Warden .40W 1000 18 17. Royal Mrred 4068 800 18 18. Lord Clyde 4007 1000 18 19. Valiant. 20. Royal iak 21. Ocean .........................4007 1100 24 92. Prince Consort 4045 1000 24 23. Sn iftsure SUU 14 24. Tritnnpli te542 800 14 25. dudueiuen 20. Invincible 27. Iron Duke 28. Va nguit rd 3774 800 11 29. Royal Sovereign... ....... .3765 500 5 MIZE IMtMI ;12. Zealous 3716 800 20 33. Itcelet.•trlcu 3710 600 16 84. Rupert 3039 700 3 Penelope 36. Glutton.. 37. llotupur. MM:=BEIMMI=II2:I 40. Favorite 41. Wivern.. 4:1. Scorpion 43. Research.. 44. Enterprise. 45. Waterwiteli 778 160 3 46. Vixen ... 704 150 2 47. Viper 787 160 2 English Conversational Usages In England letters there are posted, not mailed r periodicals are taken in, not taken ; a friend on a visit stops, but does not stay ; you order something to be fetched, not brotight ; you rule on horseback only fnever In a carriage ; foremost men are clever not smart; a high wind is a storm, not a fall of rain; meadows are uplands, never bogs or swamps ; cooked meat may be underdone, never rare. Lady day, Midsummer day, Michaelmas and Dlaistinits are the time when all quarterly rents are due, never March 31st, .Tune 301 h, and September 30th, and December 31st ; it is the rental of a house you pay, not the rent; autumn is the late season of the year, not fill ; hedges, shrubs and trees are quick, not alive and you ask that two or more things may be done at once (at one time), and not necessari ly instantly. Cocks and hens, rams and owes, bulls and cows, stallions, mares, and geldings, jacks and jennies, bucks and roes; dogs and sluts, still retain their zzaxon names, and it is at.no time offensive to use them. And wo men of good blood and gentle breeding in common with the other sex, have ankles and calves, knees and legs, and do not blush to speak of them.—L(ppineett's Mlgazine. Alloastttsnn ExPLonEs —At about seven o'clock Wednesday evening a small boy alight have been seen perched on a large hogsherol, lying In front of the building on Front street, between Walnut and Poplar, recently occupied by Kelley Plunkett as an alcohol manufactory. The hogs head bad been used us an alcohol receiver, and was rolled out on the pavement for removal, and supposed to be empty. The bciy peeked away nt the bung-hole until he got the bung out, and then threw a lighted fire cracker in, to sco what kind of a noise It would Make. Ile did not wait long, for in a few minutes an explosion followed, which fairly shook the houses in the Immediate vicinity, and was heard for many squares„ The boy went up several feet In the air, and then returned to earth with the hair scorched off the back of his head, and his face badly cut. He was taken to the !Immo of his father, S. Stirks, a carter, residing on West Front street. and Is rapidly recovering front his injuries. The end was blown out of the hogshead, and It was pretty badly broken up. The exploslott was, of course, owing to limo fact that it was tilled with. fumes of alcohol, and except for the Injuries to the youthful experimenter, might be properly consid er ed ate of the most successful nolseS ever caused b y a single Ore-cracker.—Er. Inox MArrEns. Front the Pittsburgh Review: It Is estimated, that 1,030,000 persons are employed In manufacturing establishments In the United States ; end that the number supported thereby, Is ten millions. Of this number, all hundred and forty thousand arc employed lu the manufacture of Iron, BIM, and In mining ore and coal. A - radius of twenty miles covers the great coal districts of the Motioning, Ohio, and Shen ango, Po., Valleys, along which are located 40 blast furnaces and twelve rolling mills, one in dustry being part of the other, giving employment to fully 4,500 men, with a monthly wages sheet of about $315,000. • A movement is on foot for the development of the coal beds of Illinois, which are said to be comparatively inexhaustible. When the indus tries of Illinois become thoroughly diversified, she will be as strong a protectionist State as . remnsTlvaula. The new stack of the Dunbar Iron Com pany, at Dunbar, Pa., is rapidly nearing comple tion. The iron work was finished on the 3d Inst., since which thou a heavy force of masons have been kept constantly employed night and day "lining up" under the supervision of the able founder Thos. L. Haughton. An extensive lend of mineral ore has been struck Mum the land of D. 11. Williams, In Ben ton county, Mo.; and every stroke of the pick axe turns it out in paying quantities. A mass of ore, most of Ilsolld lead, was turned out last week, and the finder was unable to lift It out of Re bed orsarry it without help. .22,405,- 47,615 iluslNEss NovoEs Busy Season.—lt's always busy B enson at Onk tau. We bay.• b,,•1 at all Maws ,I,p• and all cuanna or t h e patr. bat La , v.a . .aa . it " dal!" there yet. Ita'pia! of Inld ('berry is " n corn .t 1 . 441,4 Ind ..... I" Cro 114,1 Igg and egrigg ay. , a tette tll t, Ines'and elteei. It eon, a 44 44. 111. I)) 1044,44tting and cleansing III: , Intat44, :tad 4tllailna 4 , 1t , - 0011 ; 111111. 11101411,1 the Ito.tolol of drying up the eguttli and leaving the dirlaee. trim only Is needed to convince t h e most skeptical, that Hall's Vegctablo Sicilian flair Iteurwer will accottipl,..ll all ihat Is c131m,..1 for It. AN EXCELLENT REASON \THY T. C. Kerlin hen, of the old Allentown China, Glassware and Lamp Store, can sell cheaper than ()titers, is that he buys and sells exclusively for Cash, thus galli ng all the advantage of cash payments and losing nothing by credit sales. II" lad Dial II 7—Lyon', Kathalron made my hair Noll, luxuriant and thick. and Ilagan's Magnolia Balm changed that tallow tioniplettiou into the marble beauty you tante tte. Till. it. endthativally the language 0 I all who mai the, articles. due head of hair and a relined comploxion lira the gt tiate.t attraction. it wionan ran T i. Magitiilia Balm are lust what m ill glee them to you, and nothlitg edit' trill. The Ilalut IM the Limon of youth. It make. a IntlY of thlt Y nitre. but tit enty. Both article. arc entirely burgle.., and stiry They abould liti in every lady'," tioriotiteliin. Nerttf ol 1 , 1. So It Rho Irtn. Skill rued /I inst.:scan 11', , rrot I, fr.l ea" , t.,t1111..111.11: 5A1.1.111.1, LohMli Co., (lit. It In with it grAtefol boiling that I tail ithle to make the following stationent for the litien, of tile.° w ire suffer- Ilag front Scrofula anti other Chronic Ilbitioses• Ml' wire hut been .offering for stiverill yitrn front tounirs or swelling , on her neck which niter a time woo hl outlier unit ilt,intritii molter, leaning a running sore. She hod he en tr. , itt.,l for Mon , :100 a yvar by neat clot rent phynt. CUM , V illoOlt fot•olViire nay pernotneet loirontlng wor.•. until .he had live of the.• miming .ore twoh. school .polloyml lir. 11. 11. Longolter, under. whole tlelloent he nil, intlite , .. Yiir e. the s on he o r net . to 1.,11, 'loot all her naphia•ant Y tool alls• Agrtivol.h• gradmill)•i to ilt.oppear, mull her h.oilth reib.red, which tv.t. Mont bole month, I to•rteetly ottor honing tried the tleatntent of other roroMMOtoling all 1110 , 4MVImaro , 111rOn .. Me Hoot 01,1111. t NPi . tibrohie to Dr. lion:raker for teibi, I ttoottionit, with pi Ilion belief that they be .1- hell.•11t.,1:k11.1 eon, thereby, tin Illy Nutt . .. lwen. .1.1)1ES ll.\ ILNEIt• Dr. lb I...welter'. 4dt . ..06 , 011 E:17.1 aide ol Sixth strio too wi.ot llontilton ‘Valunt. Allettbitytt. 11,11.11c.:.—"'fhe fresh ettletl. herbs" say- H. Paul, -ii that eiglit.,n handle,' years ago the v.ilin• of in,dirial plant • iv as a...elated. In the Test...int liet,ini.lll•l4l , the • are repeatedly recommend- ed, lint in no pass.igc ef sari,' 111-tory 111:111 re.llll - t.O ~ V.lllilW C:11.11...1, or lila.- Pill, or any other mineral preparation. 'rho .irk were direrleil to eat herbs ....emotion them, to ',tulip 111..111, b. In-al ilit•111. 111 J.... then, In 11 11 .1 da> the al Co' main vegetable ex tracts {V11,1111,1011 , 1. h.' 11, kg Wt . , mere info-ions. It was re•eri v 1 for lige 1. , suite the sanitary of tea e, aperient and antibilians roots, bark, and plants, with an active slliiiabint, and thusl , l•Clll . o their rapid 1,1111 iii thrdagli the debilitated „ r disordered .43.51..1,. 'rho tsoirthus triumph of this ,feet pre 111040 of concentrating and applying the virtues or hostioihsi Veit - ...Ides W.llO IlrilieVi'd In OW Pr...1111:11011 Of Stolllllll,ll Hoorn. S Veer belorell3la a Perfectly Pure hloo lodic st.mulsot 110011C01/111111ed OxPrg•S•ed of t, OW iitl,l 01weili, 01 tho vottothtSo uhdost. Never ye thiinith eighteen roar ., vineoltroo , i ittt ihtro• ascbou, m:W ii., has tins great restorative been vieil. It has taken at all neasons, In all Clilies, as the most 11014-tll maf••• guard against erileinies, ;is a protectlon aglllllSt 1111 so il..lllthy exhalatlons that prod..° debll l lY 01 ' inl4 l 't rase as a madln ctly for intermittent or ether unthLrions fr. , r . ; appetizer: its a soviirelgn care for dynrCpSill; a general boog and lovigeranl as, e gentle, pamless aliei tent as a blood depute.; nervlnt an it care for bilious Alec..., 114 11 11.1.111.50 111104iyui, as op 11.11,11 111141, nil 1., ontblo circuit] •tances, snub as sedenty pitt•ults. online bodily or mental exertion. hardship ar , pi ivatiou and ...nos., Horse No. of Tononge. poa•rr. nos. . 1350 28 N Elti , c.t.t, —lli,, twiny thinu•tinti. thc letiliod of land are Itivcc to ervon.t thtilvin erk lug lit nerve., 1..1,11u:he, outhur.ds tit temper upon trivial hieltuatif de , peratn, tle.pitildent•y far, In any itnltealthy condition of i tt •cvitor hy.tent, Alicvanter hag oh..date cold,' over tlic ere:111114 /L rhlLUge uud Ito-salve cut, Sold liy Itinuttcd•. 1 , 11. .1. ITIl11111:16: Cn., Nuwark, N J. at katt1y,...111 , 1 ,, the agony •11111C i,41 In Ow far, It cannot helped %chile tho troublo re ..ono. .odocing Irolll plit, :ono. 10 1.0 of It very ag grocatcd de.ertylnot. 1..0 tnoond Walk tYlth any c 3•o, cannot r.de 111 pca .e; Plll cannot alt wall ease, and the .ullotiog attonti•og itatorc it 01111.11 , 1 Un bear:ado, and causes mach a uelillg 11.111 itt lUL oil at groat Narrltlce to health nod clniort, in ilially tho .111fickilly 101111 alarming extent. ll,or l'ile Itctactlion according to chi...c11.,. lo cure internal. ogn•cnit 1, gel Ling or 111.,ding job , . '1'11..3 Soan, relllahle, and Warrittlleil tin reprosrated. ld bp Im. J. Botol.o NCo Newillic. N. J. SOU IS SOO 21 l'oux , .—llow they idlng, hoot and nelw, iditart and burn upon ion. Wet In valti Iwg. we threaten, wo eitr 0. we iloo inh the nhiti pw‘t knives flinty.. tiwir we burn, Ire rut. hock, and tell. and y yetimin it thing of nikery. l'eole•s tiro entr:Wei., teurt.nonovo our intr. lint Citrattve, tone riff., for Corns, Banton', Itt wlng Nail,. ndo ol itl 1111.11, Of 1111' 1 . 4.4.1. Sold I.y l,u nll al Martin. JNlSt . idi i•Pryin St:11111111i 4, C0...1. It. Moner., Dr. W. h. Borne. St non In' Allentown. John Mark. I:nl.w:toque, nod try dru gNnttr ginewolly, and eiwt Lp until Int . . , cent+, by Dr. !Slug, SI Co.. N. J. .3774 800 14 3774 800 14 3774 800 14 =={2=lll M=CEMI3 .3006 000 11 .2709 500 '2 .2057 000 5 THE experknee of medical :nee is that the phy- SlCiall who treats special dire:Awn has littler 1,111,era,, than then. , in general practice. It Is a fact worthy of recollec tion that num-tenth. of all new remo.lien dincovered are from men that practice and give their athaltialt hi a pa Ocular branch of Eh.' PI 0r1,,i , .11. The treatment of din yaws or females in a branch of the Medical profernloll that I have given rpecial attenti , n l 0 fir several y-arn, and would nay to lad ion suffering trout weaknen, Calling of the womb. chronic or acute inflammation of that organ, to sitter no longer. My tillice hour, daily from nine in the morning till eight o'clock in the evening. .2302 000 2004 400 10 18011 350 4 .1833 350 4 1253 200 4 093 100 4 TEACIIEILS wivii , .l)—Male and 11=11 FeMille, 1011,1111 I . llbilr SCIIOO/4 n Nchool Ih•trtet. 10.1040 i e..aaly, ler II tcrill months tencillg to (Irbil., next. S.d.trli'• from 410 to 440 per naaltli. Au examination el traellen. I.y the Catialy lab...lent will he held at the lam., of DAVID PETER, near .111:1,1' :Oil, at ilielelark .4. M.. when applicant.. fer the Ne1a...1% ran be ex• ail, mat engaged, ,f aPProvc.l. S cry. A.. F. K. liztour. COPLAT ROBOUG IT, LEHIGH CO., PA CIVIL ENBINLEIZINII In all it. Er:melte, SUIIVEV. Int. LEVELING I 1 1111 1 , 1 n% TOW. 1Z1.1411 1.11 1011. 1 1111 1 111 , 11, 1,1046.111'11. 1 . 1.111, Mll 1,1 II 1111 1 . 1 . 11 11 . • 1 . 00• lilt,' With Pl . l-1111 la 11e...i11111 dlNltatelt• rylln.at• BTEAciiEcts IVANTED. The Selntel Directs,' of Ileidelberallll trfrl. 1.,.1111111 vaunt). Ilt,ire la employ Elli lIT ERS far the next schaol tern,. Tlet exanduat len will Ito held at the pnblte Ina,. or PetermS tile,. rid BAY. .11 . 1. V I•To, conttnettelna talrlack, .1. 11. Alat hn eaeo are dt,ire ta er.,ent I lealetel or+ for ex:twin:Ulan and ent ltlement en that day and Blare. Salary and urinal term iberal. By tad, at the ILtad. tuly 21/.21 Thos. K. 310ttbElt. See. COI23IISSIONEItS' SALE• tIF VALUABLE IRON FURNACE Ily virtue of coked... of the Circuit Court of Shenandoah Cconty, Prollollll,ll 110 the Itt day ~1 In chatprol',suit P.•udmtt therein. in thy 111.111. of .11eVoriths ea. /.,.•,.t.l/ odd/ de the under; ,dgned l'ectincedon..., 01.1,0111dd for that Pnrlu.r, trill II creed uu TIIUItSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1870; nt for barn of EDI NM' Iti;,n:tl,l cintlity, to soli t hat in. 1.1 Av....able owl V tilantile FIJILN PROPER'r V, [tut) nn tho „shoaled 1 . 21110 , A Soulti.va+t of Woodotock, .‘,., i•d-t of Eiliolourg, both of wli3Hl 011 111,. id' 0 100. A ,•.0.1010, • 111 ~11:IUII.•I.It Tho 111114. ell- 11l %%Ult.,. traci, adjoining or metal ) . b.c.aed, itudalpt.ut :101 acre.. of the taint ha, In cultivation. Tin , I, uds yield 10,1 are of .10in ,, ,. lin.' In great ulitualance; he instant• and avood in the utino-.1 Pro lusion. The 1r.... MA& Fannie. , ar,., osral by Messrs. litisli taint Nhintifartarers of flathead Car Wheels at NV daunt:tau, In and was pronounced by the late Cloirle- unsurpa , seil In iliialitY• The 'l' gar Iran Work, at It clinion.l. Virginia, used the Iran teasivel y during the war, ant lartted vary . Past of the rarnace Buildings acore destroyed by Il ia ilartag the war. hat the Stack, Hearthnrrliu serviceable condition. Thete upon the pretalnes 7,7 , • DOCIII.F. DWELLING I and eighteen houses o) for w organ,. be-atter , Its other Imaging , stilt•r..l unto to .11..11 property. Tio. N 11111.01.4., Branch nf tho ti A. .11 >I. Rawl rune within 4'loll mile • and gives anti fag for the amijaent ot iron North :tad South. tinly 'AI notes of Roe Valley Ita , ironal Rom Harrisonburg to Shinutan nevensary to be made to The co coanectiou with the Clie•aii.. the and Ohio It. It. The contemplated Page Valley Railroad will 01111 withla tittles Of llama propel ty II.• 011111. Nlitistoo. Igo,. who has e , led upon thi , Pratte. , Y menage!' tt far titanY Over., h 111 take pleaNare in showing it to iturchi“ers, or tins. - ing regard to it, character. At-. tIF SA Ltii—Tiventy•llve per cent. at the pur chase looney, allday or nowo.l, CO.I that bruit! the !trot day of the 110011 Circuit Court olSheoloah Co_ and tau re.otinit in line. taro awl three yearr Rom the day u Lou tlie 111 m Installment became,. the first pa yutent to be mature,' by going, tyith gaoil pereanal ma-tatty, 1111.1 010.111'r 1110111111/1 , 1:1• 10 Ito , nt.Curvil by abligattons. and a deed el tiat•l oil the Prom Int, sold. :into to continence ai I ba'clock. A. NI MEM C R YSTAL SPRING A L I.ENTO N, PA. ,heated. elegantly furnivlo./1 with new on/1 ro.tly fitrulturo, end t plei,r trills every n/ aleru comfort and convenience / 1// now open for the neusen. • . TILE'. FOUNTAIN ROUSE I. /Monied In the owl , + tho City. at the Crystal jt,,... t . g0 , Th e ,.e gyring., which gush forth from the torso g n o ble !Milted sopl th city of Allentmvu with than the water tor tt p Melt it e Is fanning, are celebrated, ag the Cue.l in dm Lehigh Valley. In front of tho boos° Iwo the tournini toll WM.'. of the Lehigh creek, which tlowg through tho beautifully wooded Valley and ;Worth. an portunity for boating atobllshing TN.' Stilling RPond to supplied with tho illiest trout, and the disclpleo lf Isaac R alton will Itod at thin Rotel an opportunity for udolgence In their lavoritosort. It. no. Imotodinto neighborhood ure to be soon oil those gigantic work; of :inter.- mot nierhunlcol skill for which the Valloy of ti, Lehigh fatuous. The monster works of Rio Iron Com. tom., the tangle. Switch-back Railroad, the Intim-use Coal all Lo Inspected by u ride in corn or nor re.ge, countryunsurkassed for beauty nod grandee, No Fountain House lo 13.1 feet lu length 1,, id In width, and lour stem, In looglit. It ointaluo ft/ chandler, dining room .160:18, lath.s pallor, sitting rooms. bar ber saloons ' bnltaid rooms. buthlng Nene.. ate. For ven tilation Lind all the iteprovona-M• which rbararderl/0 a twat chtss tiimltrn reshlgnee it 10 unonrint•sed. rite oltuution of the house, the purity of (lie air, the objects of Interest lit the Immediate nelaborhood. the lovely scenery which stirrounds at, with ito background of wooded hills mid foreground of smiling valley atol l rippling water. ctiltninating nt tho I.ltto yostits of tho N everoink .In the .111.1/WOnt. render It tam of the moot charming as well no convenient reoglottees for 11141 Id or the pleasure hooker during 11,0 sauna, months Allentown Isd 101..111 bent Philud :A utllea—Nara York, lid wilco—Washington, 160 nots. Twenty train. to and from Allentown daily Carnage,. w 111 ho.Vlll to the depot to tarot guests, and the Fountain !low, C 11.1.1 0 ,1 tneot every train J. L. VENUE, Proprietor. P. W. 11. Daentsa, Superlatendent. Dn. W. A. HASSLER, CIR.lc St., bot..sth and t;tl3. Alletamvu CIVIL ENGINEER, " tAltol.l NE .IJURNACE," - ,Gto .VCRES QUANTITI MARK BIRD MosES WA L'I'ON. JNo. J. S'IoN EIIRR N EU, SUM 31 ER itETIREAT T 1 L E FOUNTA IN IIOUSE AT TILE Zpecira NotLcrZ HOWARD SANITARY AID ASSOCI- U ATIII:I.—For the :teller and Cnre a tIo Erring nod Pnfortinnitte, on Principles of Christian Philanthropy. E.0.,,y0n the Errors of Youth, and the Follies of Age, In relation to MAltittA°H anti SoriAl, Evils. With sanitary alit for the Rillirpvt.S e nt free, in nettled Envelopes. Ad s, RD TtiSOCIATION. IlitY I', Philadelphia P. lett ft-tf•,,• WORDS OF WISDOM FOR YOUNG ME. on the Holing Fanolon In Youth and Earl) . Manhood. with SELF HELP for theerrlna and unfortunate Soot In sealed letter envelopes, free or ehorue. 21,1,1r0xv, HOWARD ASSOCIATION. lion P. PhllodelPhln, l's. Nos W-17 . ` . sls DEAFNESS, BLINDNESS AND CA- I'ARRII treated with tlio otolost .1 . C.11. by J. FeAfls - , M. IL. and Prof - woo, of Ilbertoren of the Eye r, (hex xproloity) In Mretfral College L l'r tan- Pry? 131 ,ors experk ra or. (formerly of Le yden. land.) No. SILI Arch litreet. Teellmottlals can be •eett at him .ttllce. The medical (actin). are Invited to ac company their patlenta, an lie Ita. ne xecreta In lila prac tice. Artlllrlal eye, fueerted without Pain. No charue for examination, aloe:3-1y ERRORS OF YOUTH.—A %entiomon who 11 ~ggered for yearn from Nervous eLinty, Prema Intro Deray and all the effects of ,youthful indincretion, will, for the noire of suffering humanity, vend free to all who need It the recipe uud direction for making tin pie remedy by which lie was cured. Sufferers winking to profit by the wirer/keen o.lUndenre run do no by ad dressing, iunerfect confidence, JOIIN U. 00 DEN, No. 42 Cedar St. New York. ly - 7-,- - -'n TO COIsIBUITPTIVES.—The advertiser ,-,,, having been restored to health inn few works, by a very simple remedy, after having auffered govern' years with It on;vertl lung affection, end that dread dikease, Con etunpaoll.is anxious to make known to his fellow entferere c the turn. of cure. To who desire he will rend a copy of the proteriptiou a 01 Irmo of charge/. with the dire° . Nene for preparing et I using the MIMIC, which they will end 0 eure cure fir Cur nomptlee, Asthma, Itrouchllls. he. Tito °lily object of the elvettlser In sending lire Prescrlp• Lion Is to Iserellt Oro llllcled, soil spread Informottlon which lie conceives to be Invaluable; sod Ile hopes every sutler, will try his retnedy. I. it Will cost them nothing and may prove in blessing. parties wishing the Pre.crlptieu will please address, ItEv. FIONV A ItI) A. WILSON, Williamsburg, KIND , Co.. N. Y. Ila ve elapsed mince the Introduction of the Pain Killer to the public, aud yet at. tho proneut it Ix morn popula and commands a larger nab' thou ever before, Ile popu larity confined 11.10 country alone; all over th world its beneficial effects In curing tho "Ills that flash I heir to," 111 . 0 IlektlOWledged n Id arPreelated, and an I VAIN ICI ibal. ifsfill. Ix 11111iti'd to no country, sect no rare. It n eds only to be known to be prized. ^ • Fut.,' Venue In commit y n long time enough to proy the einem, y of nay medicineand that the litiddia Ix di-ery ing of all Ito priunl'eturn claim for It, Isutpl p,ieed by the unparalled popularity It has attalued. a • a and tivrarrivu remedy. Hold by ail Druggint, Price 'LI Cgs., rpa CIA.. sad MI per bottle. 110 W TO CURE CONSUMPTION THE PHI IAiSOPHY OF DR. SCHENCK'S °SEAT MEDICINES. —Will people never learn to know that o diseased liver and stomach necessarily disease the entire system I The plainest Principles of common sense teach this, and yet thine ire hundreds who ridicule the Idea, and continue the course which almost inevitably brings thn. p rematurely te the grave. Living no tini mai orHY of people do, at cemplete variance With the lawn of nature, it theist he apparent to all that revenge herself. Hence we fad that persons who indulge to excess iu the use of very rich or indigestible food or intoxicating drinks. Invariably pay a heavy penally in the end. The stomach becomes disordered nod refuses to not; the liver falls to perform Its (auctions. dyspepsia and its atteuilaut evils follow, and still the suffering individu als persist in clinging to the thoroughly exploded Ideas of the past. Dr. Sill ENCK'S mediclues aro recommended to all such. They bring sure end certain relief wherever they are used an directed, and all that is necessar womantablish their reputation witn every ailing luau or in the laud Ina fair and Impartial trial of them. Let those elf are skeptieni on this point. dud who have permitted intere•tsil persons to prettitilee tittle Itgallett. these now celebrated reined'. for Consumption, discord thoirprelu ,hm• and he goveriwil by the principles of reason and common sense. If the system is disordered depend upon It, in nine cases out of ten the seat of tie disorder will he thein the stionacb and liver. To cleanse and invigorate the ettetilltith Med to Stillitliele the liver to heathy action, unit SCHENCK'S MANDRAKE PILLS.—The daily locrenes log demand for the. pills In the best evidence of their vela.. Thousands upon thousands of boxes aro sold Why Simply bea nos they act promptly aud efficiently. Invalids who nay not lied it con. elect to call en Dr. Schenck in person are Informed that full and complete directions for urn accompany each package of the • MANDRAKE. PILLS, PIIL3IONIC SYRUP AND SEA WEED TON IC.—These medicines will cure consumption unless the lungs are no fitr gene that the patient in entialY beyond the ankh of medical relief. It may be asked by these who are not familiar with the virttien of these great remedtent "How do CII ENCK'S ,'delves effect their wonderful cures uf coosonantal?" The wino . , Inc nitnole one. They begin their workof restoration by bringing the eao,llllol, liver end ).wets into an active healthy coalition. it fn Ned !hut cures this• for mal:llde disatne. SCHENCK'S BIAS DRAIC PILLS itct on the liver and ntotnecht prionoting healthy necretion, and removing the hile and shine which have resulted num the IeaCLIVO or torpid condition of those organs, .d of tine ynteto generally. Tills niugglith ntate of the body, end the consequent accuinu.attuu of the unhealthy aub• paces named prevent the proper digention of food, and, es a natural consequence creates doted.. which results in prontrtition and finally in death. SCHENCK'S PULMONIC SYRUP mild SEAWEED TON IC, whim inkou regularly, mingle with the food, aid the digestive urge., Make good rich blood, and it natural consequence. give flesh and ntreugth to the patient. Let the acuity nay what ft may, thin in the only true cure for cuppinitiption. Experience has proved it beyond the shadow of a doebt, and thousands ere to•dny alive sod well who iew years since were regardedan hopeless cases, but who were induced to try Dr. SCHENCK'S remedies, and w restored to permanent health by their apt. u er n e e of the Spa nteps the physician should take. with a conniption. patient is to invigorate the system. Now bow in the to bedew , ' Certainly not by giving Medicinal that ex haunt and enervate—medicines that Impair Instead of improve the functions of the digestive organs. Doctor SCIIENCK'S medicines cleanse the stomach and bowels of all slibstaliCes which are calculated to irritate or weaken theta. 'They creme au appetite—promuto health dlgon• tiou—make good blood.end, cousequence, they In v prorate and ntrengthen the e ntire arateal. nail Mete OS• Valaiiy those parts which ere diseased. If t lis cannot be dune, then the Case malt be regarded no a hopeless If the physician finds It Inipommible to make a PAytesr rant, ans.., If the diseased person cum.( partake of good uouraohmg food and properly digest It, It is ImPosal• ble that he toilsca gain In nosh and strength ; and it is i/sally impossible the liver In hurd.opol with diseased bile, mid the stomach lade° with unhealthy slime. Ahmed tine that request made to the physician by a con uniptive patient is that lie will prescribe medicines that will remove or allay the cough, night sweats and chills, which ere the sure attendants uu cousumption. Ilut Ode should not be done. as the cough la .inly nu elfort of nature to relieve itself, and the night sweats and chills are caused by Ilse diseased lungs. Thu remodiem ordinarily pl.cribed do more harm Mau good. 'They impair the functions of the stotilach, Wiped., healthy digestion, and agifiavato rather than care the disease. There is, utter all, noshing like facts with which to sub stantioto n tio.ition, am; it Is upou facts that Dr. SCIIENCK relies. Neal l who have taken his Medicines l aC- cordon, as ith y lain directions have not only been cured of 111310 ton, hut. from the fact that these medicines net with aa...krill' power upon the digcative organs, patients thus cared sPee,llly gain Minh. Cleansing the system of all iniparities, they lay the foundation for a solid, aub• atantial •trostlire. Restoring these organs to health, they Create ail appetite. The fooa is properly assimilated; the quantity of b1e...1 is not only increased, but bi made rich and strong awl in lino face of much a couilitiou of the by.- le ran all II —.lase must be banished. Faint dr Minns accompany earls of the medicines, so that amna absolutely necessary that patients ishould see Dr. SCR parboil unless they desire to have their lungs ea:milled. For this purpose he is ut his prin. opal °Mee, No. 15 Ziortli Sixth St., corner of Commerce, Philadelphia, every Saturday, from It A. M. until l P. M. Advice is given without charge, but for a thorough ex• w ith the Itespiroineter the charge Is Pi ice of the Pulmoutc Syrup, tad Seaweed Tonic each. .41 50 per bottle, or 47 40 a half dome. Mandrake PIIIS 25 c.o. a box. bar mile by all druggist.. • TUMBLE IN PRICES OF • LAINES. Se[hog all Spring and Summer stylus of DR LAINES 11 reel/. her yard, sold before the war at . 22 rents, at KRAIIIER'S CORNER STORE. TN TIIE Cl' IIttIT COURT OF TOIL: CNIT3:I) STATES FOR TIIE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA. 11'1.1 ST 0001: vs. ll' T It 11CII. .1! i bob Iphia, ',Hl Senxion.v, 1870. No. 73 • And oust'. Ilay 3Oth, 1570. On utotilat of L. C, Caloildav and p. Ascher, Senator. for Phi:3WD, a decree pro roof.. haying been enteredla tne ohove CAse a/retest the delendallti 011 December th, Dell, It Im ordered, ad• judged mid decreed that au 11011114.1.111 attainet the d e poplant, thetr agent., ne.l %errant., rentralulng theta frontlooking and veteltug Improved Hilltop extrac• tors ;gentled lay plat tiffs, as en; tifougentent of their Let ter:4 l'atollt, , No. 78,920, lestool and eluted the Itlth of June, 1.. I. ISls, as prayed for In coluplainaute bill. Counted from the record.. ,elti U. 5, Court / • • J011:1 II IIEAVER, L. D. PeililA. I no Clark Cir. Court U. S.' N. ale,• j , hereby canon to tall pereone havlug made or toool 111.11111, ill the above description three the date of the Letters Patent to the underrlgned, to call upon ue and settle lor the same, otherwise they will be proceeded against according to law. Dine 13•3 t WIEAND & 0 OP It, Etnattn, Pe. "lonsEmEs, ATTEvricoN READ TILE FOLLOWING I Quakertown, Bucks Co., Nay 21, ISM Mn. JAMES O. Wind.e—Dear Sir: I have used the bottle gif 31aisclikels Prussian Mood on a case of latneness of long standing which bid defiance to all other treatment I could apply, and cheerfully say that after using your Liniment I could obserire a marked improvement, and am atident that sine more Dinh. will effect a cure, which e please send me at once and Mid money enclosed. D. IL JAMISON. This invalimblo Liniment Issold by Druggists and Storekm•pers. Wholesale by JAMES 0 WELLS, N. E. cur. of rub oat Spring (larden Sts.. Philadelphia. For rale in Alleidown.by L. SCII3III/1' & CO., East Hamilton Street.. Forsiilo by lir. W. E. BARNES ,k SON, LAWALL & mARTIN riot JOHN D. 310SEIL R • II Selliou . BEST UNBLEACBED mrnaN by the pier! EP!, rent+ per yard. BUY ! Cheaper than at auy t It 1.0 ISM. At the CORNER STUILE of Jel3 . M. J. KRAMER 171'EACIIEltNIVANTED. The School !Word or North Whitehall townehiP• teliich Co. hereby giro notice toot 1111.3 . depart. to engage SEVENTEEN TEAI'IIERS for tho enrol ulrtr (school term: School lerin o o' ha. Eatery. for ofecilousi tenrhere, $13.60 per month. for other+ accoril pr log to grade of certificate. Ap• pile:libel moat he made to the Sccrotary• By order of ihu Board. S. A. BROWN, pity Secretary. IRON •IN THE BLOOD. 'U s‘tk or s , VR VI AN 41)1. • • " IR oN . •• • , TONIC " Drib - HU Rur m o O S. Sy The pn , t , r7vt V: SYRUP nlnkes the weak strong, and ex pe14.11 wave by supplying the blood with. NATl'llE'i OWN VITALIZING AGENT—IRON... OGG( fors.-1 1 0 Hum you get Peruvian Syrltp. N ree. he D J. .St. DINSMORE. or. Proprieto. ry P . New York. Sold by Druggists generally. A LLENTOWNFEBIALE COLLEGE The next Scholastic Year will commence on MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 5Tn, with Increpevl eccoTtrio4tl.ons.iir Thorough Instruction lu all .~ branch. or a and higher Engliah ednratioa, Anclaut and Modern Lau. g tirTd apt to RitTrW. it. e tioirtPllD, A. M. Pres._.t Allentoyrn, Pa. July 13.6 w jar Sate anb Co Let. punimic SALE VALUABLE CITY PROPERTY. Will be rod et Public Sale on MON DAY, Alro UST Ist, ln7ti. at. I o'clock •• Mn., o the prelate ti„ thu well•knouru • CROSS KEYS 7' or HAUS:IBM:VS HOTEL, situate en •-•• the corner of RIO Hill and HAMILTON ottreels, In the City of Allentown. Thin Hotel Is a Three-story Brick building, 42 feet front on Hamilton street, by 84 fent lo dPpv, with large yard, stables. shedding, tor. No. 2. A THREF.-STOHY BIIICK STORE 1101186,2 adjoining the Hotel, containing - 1u front on Hamilton street 20 teet by Ili) feet to depth. now occupied by C. A. Dornoy (millinery) • No. 0. Al. It TIIIIEE•STORY BRICK STORE HOUSE, adjoluing N 0.2, containing in fronton Ilam• to. ilton -treet lent by IUI foot in depth, now occopiod by Christman anti Bittern. grocers, Thesed end t. r stories of Ow abort -, stores lire now occupied con by the hotel. ALSO, at thtrsatite tittle and place, four eligiki lonland building lots fronting on Tenth and Gordon latent.. ton talumg each IX) fret in front on Tenth street by ZlO feet In depth. AI.BO, coven RC!. and no hundred perches, morn or less, of ground situate on the wont Aldoof Tenth street, bounded by lauds of Charles Elesgroaren. °nab .4 Hunk. and 11, Schuurman. Being the rout estate of Jacob Ilagoubuch, Into of the City of Allentown deceased. Terms and conditions will ho made known on the day of sale by B. J. lIMIENBUCII, C. 11. lIAOENBUCIL VEORUIS lIAGENBUCH, Exeentors. Persons desirous of viewing the property will please call on B. J. ilagenbuch, at the Hotel. NB-m4 TO LET.—A REASONABLE LEASE will be given on the Easton Slate Quarry, eltuated In Plainfield township. Northampton county, Pa., near Starkertown. It consists of number one Oat-vein,. blue, never-fading slate, fully equal to the well-known Chap• man Slate, with a good water power and a full rigging of pumping and hoisting machines. Pere°. deeirous of - an opportunity of 'thin kind will pleaite examine for thern• enliven and apply to Reuben Koch fOackertown P. 0. mar 3 'OD 0. L. SCHREIBER. President 420 BURIAL LOTS FOR NALE....• The undernigned offer for sale 423 now Ceme tery lobs Immediately adjoining the Union Cemetery, on Tooth parrot. The lots will. he mild by eobseription, and Immediately after the whole number ate 411,4.0.41 of they will be award ed by lot In the name manner an In the organization of the Union Annoelation. Plats or plan. of the Premium... be even et oar office. my 12 00011 dr FOUR HUNDRED FARMS FOR SALE, ranging in price from 'Stow per acre, accord to improvement,. location hc. Good aoll, gonlal climate, and near markets. Theme farm, are altuated In Virginia and aistryinud, Nome in the immediate vicinity of Waah• ingtott and other !! from to to miles distant from the Cap• lot. Addrean or canon J. D. 0 ANO WHIM VI Mamtachu. actin Alcune near Sixth atreet Waxhingten, I). C. T_ToUsig • FOR SALE.—THE SUB-e _L.I scriber offers for sale Ids honer end lot sltunted u SI XVI street. between TURNER mud CHEW. tu o City of Allentown. The house is complete with I o I the modern conveniences and Is handsomelY Parte. nroughout: The gmunde are tastefully had out and am , ell stocked with dwelling -As the furniture would bought soresnly for this tine subscriber would prefer Mlles it synth the house, For further information, tonna stew of the house call on the subscriber on the prow l., between the hours of 9 A. SI. and 3 I'. D. W. HUDSON. North nth street, above Turner. IMEI ILrgal Notices A vi)rroivs NOTICE. xx. In the. Orti/nins' Court of lehigh //minty. In thermttr of the account of JOHN WILLIAMS, Ad tulnistrat of John MeEllintsey. dee'd. And now, lune 10th, 1870, Um Court appoint win. II Ohtee, 1101„ Auditor, to audit mud ro.sottle, a( urc..817 and !mike dixtrlbiltinn. 'roto the Itectirda, A. L. ROIL E, Clerk. Tito Auditor ahoy e named will attend to the duties of Ws ppoint 'tient at theffie, in Mut Boron,/ or at to in 'molts DAY. :Nth day of JUL% next, at lit o'clock n the forenoon, when and where all porno. Intereoted nay ottend it they think proper. iulY 013 t WILLIAM 11. IILACE, Auditor. IRizcalancou,s JUNE, 1870. EVERY ADVANTAGE IN PURCHASING FINE READY-MADE CLOTHING, CAN BE SECURED IN TILE HIGHEST DEGREE THIS MONTH, AITANA.MABER 12, - nnowN , s , ANAMAKER a tX, _DROWN'S' OAK HALL Clothing Bazar, SIXTH & MARKET STREETS PLAIN, COMFORTABLB' FOR MEN OF PLAIN TASTES STYLISH, ELABORATE GARMENTS, FOR THE FASHIONABLY-INCLINED STOUT, WEAR-WELL SUITS, FOR EVERY-DAY SERVICE. GENTEEL BLACK GOODS, FOR SUNDAY SUITS AND DRESS OCCASIONS BOYS' CLOTHING AND GENTS' FURNISHING • GOODS OAK HALL, SIXTH & MARKET STS., WANAMAKER Sr, BROWN WHITE PIQUES: Full assortment of Striped, Figured and Welt !Nunes, suitable for dresses and stuignes,' and at great deal lower prices than last season to be had at jeB.2m KRAMER'S CORNER STORE. I- 011LOSOPIIV OF lOARIIIAGE.—A New Comae or latercites, as delivered at the Penult. Polytechnic and Anatomical Museum. PAO Chestnut St.. three doors above Twelfth, Philadelphia, embracing the subjects: How to Live and What to Live for; Youth, Ma turity and Old Age; Manhood llonerally Reviewed; The cause of Indigestion; Flatulence and nervous Diseases accounted for; Marriage Philosophically considered. These lectures will be forwarded on receipt of 23 cents by addressing: Secretary of the Peon.. POLTTECITIIIe AND ANATOMICAL liaranca, COO Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Poona. ' June 22.1 y FR PRESERVIN.CA•ROVhiER3 Keeps all kinds of fruit and tomatoes without being air tight, (or a penny a Quart. It has no equal for stowed irult and preserves with Milo cooking said sugar, as it retains a floor flavor t an any other process. • Price 60 centsßold by the grocer.. Seat by mail Or at the store, trhero we Invite all to set, our bountiful eullectin• of fruit. ZANE, NORNY I3U North Second St., ('hllad's• • - DEISLIC SALE OF je?)..310 VALUABLE REAL ESTATE. • The undersigned will 01l at Public Sale on TUESDAY. Om SIXTH day of SEPTEMBER, 1070, at thu hon. of David A. Smith, II Upper Macungie township , Lehigh county, at 12 o'clock noun, the following valuable prop. erty, to.wat: to. 1 —A splendid farm lying In Upper Macungie town ship. Lehigh county. adjoining lands of Situ Lactase.- John 11. Fogel, and the pUbile road from Treater town to Fugelsville runs through the name, containing HO acres of the very bent - farmlug land. Thereon is erected a large 111110 K TWO.EfOIIY HOUSE, also largo Brick Kitchen House, H large Brick Darn two story Brick Wagonsbed, og Stable, Smoke House, an all arceacary outbuildings. and all buildings aro as good as new, having been erected about eight years ago, with splendid )Dung orchard and a great variety of all kind. of Wait tree., No. 2—Another splendid farm lying in same township, and county, adjoining Nu. 1 and the estate of the late' Boujamiu Smith, dec'd. John 11. Fogel a-d ulheni, con taining 102 a".. HOUSE on which is erected a large two- A l mory STONE SE and a large stone barn, wagon -bed, lion stable Rad all necomary outhualdings. and " a smolt creek roam through thin forint a Moo apple consideror cha a great variety of fruit trees. These two farms are ed by all who ar e acquainted with them, that they cautiot he surpassed soil and beauty In the State of Penusylvaula. Nu. 3. —A valuable Tract id Land adjoining Imola of No, Isaac Hands and others, containing IS • on which la some very good Timber, also a splendid Ore Bed, which non Mien worked about six P.M and if rightly opened would uudimbledly make one of the heat ore beds lu the county. N 0.4-1. a now Tenant , stable and all neces.a sary adjoining lapda of John H. Vogel: and public road ienninli to Fogelaville. with anon V, acres of laud and plenty of fruit trees. No. A—ls another Tenant Howie. adjoining Naar. and 4. with all necessary outbuilding+, and shunt 3., acre. of good fanning land, with all kinds of train ire., No. ti—ls a tract of WOODLAND, lying in Lower e Macungie township Lohigh county , bounded by lauds Ileury Maier and other., and la about yy MHO from lienaltager'• tavern, containing shoat SEVEN acre. with splendid Cheatbiat, Oak and it, I..embcr.. No. 7.—A octet of Sorout Laud , about two yearn' growth, adjoining lands of Henry Miller and others, containing about FIVE aims. PERSONAL PROPERTY. At the same time sad' are tho following PERSONAL PROPERTY Will ho sold, to-telt: About aplendial dry Chestnut Italic lying on Tract No. 7. Also, Olin two horse carnage, an good as note. I ono-horse wag. et. on, 1 huggy wagon, 1 track wagon, 1 Mouth, I . nett double barn... 2 truck barium, 3 splendid Cow., nod otuer articles too numerous to menthol. TERMS OF SALE. —Ten per cent, to he paid in Enia,l?_gla part of purchase tateneyou the day of ...la. .9_aajn! Eoliths aides, and all Personal Property taunt cash un the day inlaid., or a note wit) , approved _security he given. If required. J Idh.i Whi1,1414. Dal, ZOO Assignee of David A. Smith. it 4 -1114. GU LDI N TAKES PLE:A d 11E . !! ' Ajj‘ ilt ciao E th inTr oralinitiViabfeMO:4lll7ll 0 0 0 DA her merauu n would call particular artellict i lo S irev, 'allotment of YAliliBol.4 BART u D AILTON STREET. Chpl.9r lILMOtI