Ely ytm ROBT.IREDEtL, JR ALLENTOWN, PA., AUGUST 16, 1871 REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET. FOR AUDITOR GENERAL: COL. DAVID STANTON, of Beaver County. FOR SURVEYOR OENERAL: COL. ROBERT 13. BEATE, Of Schuylkill County. REPUBLICANS, ATTENTION. The members of the Lehigh County Republican Executive Committee are requested to bold elec tions in their respective districts, on FRIDAY EVENING, TILE IST OF SEPTEMBER, for the purpose of selecting delegates to represent the wards, boroughs and townships of said county in the REPUBLICAN COUNTY CONVENTION, to be held In the Court House, In the City of town, on SATURBA 3', THE 2D OF SEPTEMBER, at 10 o'clock In the forenoon, to nominate a coon ty ticket to be voted for the at next ensuing rice tion. The following aro the number of delegates to be elected In the different wards, boroughs and town- shlps.: Allentown, First Ward, four delegates. Second " four " • Third " four " • Fourth • " seven igl Fifth " five " Sixth " two Catasauqua Borough seven " Coplay one Emaus one " .. MillerstoWn one " Slatington three " • 'Whitehall six South Whitehall twp four " North Whitehall four .' Washington six " Heidelberg live Lynn four " Lowhill two " ' Welsenburg three Upper Macungie three " Lower Macungie five " Upper Milford 'two " Saucon seven Salisbury four " Hanover three " Ily order of WILLIAM J. ROMIG, President THE second resolution 01 the Democratic platform adopted nt Catasauqun says " that it Is no 'new departure' for the Democracy to obey the fundamental laws of the land or the enactments made in pursuance of them." We are glad the Democracy has made this an nouncement, for we thought obedience to the fundamental laws of the land upon their part was .a very " new departure." It shows how easy It is to be mistaken. The Democracy have such a neat way of explaining things that it confuses our recollections of the events of the past ten years. It was our impression that about ten years ago Dr. Acker, Jefferson Davis, Howell Cobb, Alexander H. Stevens, Dan. Voorhees and other prominent Demo crats advocated armed resistance to the Con stitution and the Laws. It pleases us to be cor rected and we hope we shall soon be assured that there was no rebellion at all and that they will prove it by returning us those loved ones that were taken from the family circle and placed in Southern graves by DeMocratic hands. TIM County Meeting of the Democracy, held at Catasauqua, endorsed General Han cock. During the war the General would have considered it an insult to be endorsed by any . Convention that wns in sympathy with Dr. Acker. But we have progressed and Acker, though he has not changed his sympa thies or opinions, goes into a Convention and figures honorably in the same resolutions that endorse a loyal General. After the defeat of Tammany in 1072 We believe ti lieneval will regret that his name will be banded down to posterity In such company. DEMOCRATIC FAIRNESS The Democratic papers are making them selves very merry over alleged heavy defalca flocs on the part of Internal Revenue Collect ors in this State. They print the names ofthe alleged defaulters,in their largest type, and dwell with the greatest possible pleasure upon what they claim to be a striking example of Republican dishonesty. We have no dispo sition to shield any man who has defrauded the United States, and whether the amount of such fraud should prove to be one dollar or a million of dollars we would have him punished to the fullest extent of the law. We will go as far as any of our Democratic friends in ex posing and denouncing dishonesty in any and every shape and form, but we havemo patience with that sentiment of quasi honesty which is always holding up' its hands at the:alleged dis honesty of members of the other political par ty. These alleged revenue defalcations are paraded in the Democratic papers and com mented on by Democratic editors for no other reason than because they hope in this way to make political capital for themselves and against the Republican party. The Tammany ring at New York can steal millions of money from the tax payers of that city and we look in vain in the Democratic papers for any de nunciation of this wholesale thieving. , But let the accounts of a Republican Revenue Col lector be short, no matter for what reason, and the English language is hardly rich enough in invective for the adequate expres sion of the virtuous Democratic indignation. According to the Democratic statements the, Revenue Collectors in this State have proved defaulters to the amount of millions of dollars, but a letter written by Secretary Boutwell to Senator Scott in answer to inquiries made by the latter tells an entirely different story. The Secretary gives an official statement of the whole matter, taken from the books in the Internal Revenue office at Wrishington, and his statements certainly deserve more credence than the reckless assertions of bitter Demo cratic partizans. Secretary Boutwell's figures show•that there are about $225,000 of Internal Revenue tax money not yet satisfactorily ac counted for by ex•collectors, but the list pub lished in the Democratic papers makes the amount ten times as much. Much of this unaccounted for money consists in unpaid taxes, and taxes which have been in dispute and litigation, and considering the large amount of these taxes annually due In this State it is not at all surprising that there should be some money unaccounted for. But the absolute and intentional defalcations in the Internal *Venue service either. in I'eun• sylvania or anywhere else, have been very small, and the accounts of Republican ollice holders during the last ten years will compare very favorably with those of Democratic office holders during the Pierce and Buchanan Ad ministrations. There have been some dis honest men appointed to office, but the wonder rather is that among so tnany appointments there should have been so few who have proved wolves in sheep's clothing. There has been n great deal of true patriotism and unflinching honesty displayed in the United States since Abraham Lincoln was first elected President, and there is nothing to be made by the Democratic party in attempting to deny and belittle that fact. •It does not follow that a men Is a thief because he holes office under a Republican administration, and it would be well if our Democratic friends could compre hend that fact. There always has been, and always will be, dishonesty enough in this world, but we think that the press ought to have n higher and better mission than to make reckless charges of dishonesty against honest men. And now that these Democratic charges of defalcations against ex-Revenue Collectors In this State have been so promptly and effectually disproved by official statements and figures we shall watch with considerable interest to see whether the Secretary's state ments are as prominently made public in Dem ocratic journals as these charges Lave been. COL. Joan M. CONNELL, of Lancaster,Ohio, having been invited by the Democratic State Executive Committee to enter the pending can vass as a speaker, responds by a letter address ed to Senator Thurman, Chairman, which falls in the Democratic ranks like a bombshell. Col. Connell declines to enter the canvass, on the ground that the party is conducting it under false pretenses, and with a leader, Cul. Mc- Cook, who did not receive the nomination. Ile says: EEO I had hoped that such wise counsel would I have prevailed at our State Convention as to have almost insured our success ; in which event I would have given allot labor, Influence and strength I have to a noble cause for which I have heretofore labored. But "In the house of its friends," nt that Convention, were dealt the deadliest blows to the Democracy it has yet received. * * * The voters of our party are not uninformed of the false position the party Is placed in. They know we are going before the people this Fall with at least two untruths glar ingly conspicuous on our front. First, they know that Col. McCook was not nominated Governor, and that hisyrincipal competitor led him, on the first ballot, when the unaccountable mistake or fraud occurred in the announcement of the vote w ;itch scores of delegates knew to be false; and they will soon learn how shocked were the friends of our de facto candidate for Governor, who believed him to be too high ton ed and sensitive to stand in his present disagree able position, when they discovered that he per-• milted his immediate partisans to simply say in regard to the fraud or mistake in the nomination that they could only "hope that It .would not get out." This, however, is a small matter compared to the falsehoods expressed in the party platform. When the Convention took upon itself to de clare that the Democracy of this State recog nized as accomplished facts the two latest (so called) amendments' to the Constitution, and regarded them as no longer political issues be. fore the country, It stated au untruth. Noth ing in the politics, then or now, has more af fected the hearts and minds of Democratic vo ters than these, their der ominated dead issues. And when, In the Second resolution, the Con vention undertook to say that the "Democrat , party pledges Itself to the full, faithful and ab solute execution and enforcement of the Con stitution as it is now so as to secure equal rights to all persons under it, witho:t distinction of race, color or condition," it exceeded its au thority and simply asserted what was known to ben falsehood. if the Democratic party is Inoribund, then its political priests may be a lowed to dictate to it confessions of sins of their defining. But they have certainly made the pait.y to nppcarlike the dying African, who when asked by his preacher if he was ready to die, and whether he had forgiven his enemies, and especially his colored neighbor, between whom and himself there hail been a feud, an swered : "If Pas gwine to die, I forgive him ; but If I gets well, dat darkey had better look out for hisself." Tak "Free Trade League" of New York city, says the State Journal, is all ablaze. Its officers are working with a zeal worthy of a better cause. They issue and are circulating gratuitously over the country, a large, finely tinted folio sheet, with a cartoon upon the in side, representing Horace Greely nursing an infant, thus burlesquing not only the editor of the New York Tribune, but the adminis tratiowand Congress for their fostering care over our home industries. This centre en graving is surrounded by an array of wood cuts, represecking clothing, agricultural im plements, hardware, railway trains, &c. ; and each article is labeled with large figures indi cating the amount of duty claimed to be paid on the exportive articles named. Another device is acoflin marked "shipping," in which our ships and commerce arc laid out in state, ready for burial. This is done in the face of the fact that the American shipping afloat on the 30th of June, 1870, amounted to 4,240,507 tons, while that of England was 5,780,530 tons, n difference of only 1,539,023 tons. The League also publishes a monthly paper of twenty pages, which is liberally patronized with advertisements from manufacturing hous es and insurance companies in England, who are soliciting patronage and policies from this tilde er the it.tlimtle. TM. yeller lit prelim -ea Willi the expre, view of lentllng the waffle mind astray in reference to the adaptation of our present tariff to the peculiar requirements of the country. It is full of abuse of the party through whose labors in Congress the tariff was framed and adopted, and the administra tion by whom its provisions are carried out They profess to have branches of the League organized through the country—particularly where dupes can be found ready to cooperate with its officers in circulating Free Trade pub lications. The Pennsylvania Democrats ant the Tariff. We have from time to time alluded to the fact that, as parties, the Republicans are in favor of the Protective system while the Dem ocrats arc in tiwor of Free Trade. We are glad to see that some Democrats, at least, are honest enough to admit their sympathy, with Free Trade, and in process of time we expect to see the entire party openly and earnestly arrayed upon the Free Trade side. Mr. B. F. Meyers, editor of the Harrisburg Patriot, and Member of Congress from the Bedford Dis trict, has lately written a letter to the Secre tary of the Free Trade League at New York in which he makes some interesting statements. He says that there is but one Democratic paper in Pennsylvania which is a Protectionist journal, and that there is but one Republican paper in the State which favors Free Trade. The Democratic exception Is the Columbia Herald, and the Republican paper which ar rays itself In opposition to' the general and ruling sentiment of the party to which it be longs is the Lancaster Express. Mr. Meyers says : "The Democratic press of the State is, I believe, unitedly in favor of a revision of the present tariff," acid the simple meaning of this is that the Democratic papers in Pennsylvania favor Free Trade in opposition to Protection. Mr. Meyers says that the Democratic press has not been as outspoken in favor of Free Trade as he could wish, from motives of party policy, but he regards the ice as Lroken and be predicts that the day is not far distant when the voice of Free Trade men will boheard from the Delaware to the Ohio. This may be very encouraging to Mr. Meyers and his fellow Free Traders, but it certainly is not very em couraging to those who have at heart the in dustrial interests of • this State. Free Trade will blow out our Furnaces and stop our Roll ing Mills, and if the voters of Penbsylvania wish to avert front their State sure and cer tain industrial ruin they have the remedy in their own hands. Mr. Meyers Is not the man to misrepresent the position of the Pennsylva nia Democrats upon the Tariff question, and when he says, as he does in this letter, that the Pennsylvania Democrats favor Free Trade and do just as much in support of it as they dare to lie knows what he is talking about. Voters of Lehigh county i Do you believe in Protection or Free Trade? Show your faith by your works and your votes, and let the Democratic leaders in this State understand once for all that they cannot have your as sistance in bringing ruin and destruction upon the beautiful Lehigh Valley. It is in vain for Dr. Acker and men of that stamP to talk Tariff upon the American House steps, and then go to Congress and when any question , concerning the Tariff collets up either dodge the issue or vote fir Free Trade. That is not the kind of Tariff men we Want. The Demo cratic party in this State, as a party, is in fermi. of Free Trade at the expense of our own industries, and we want the people of this county and of this State to understand that fact. We have told them so again and again, and now Mr. Meyers, the editor of the leading Democratic paper In the State, freely and frankly admits It. SECRETARY BOUTWELL has received Lon don advicea of the absorption of the remainder of the two hundred million five per cent new loan, by Jay Cooke, McCulloch & Co., in con. nection pith other London capitalists. The amount will be over one hundred and thirty millions. THE LEHIGH REGISTER, ALLEN WE publish below the Democratic resolu lons in full. They contain all the arguments ho Democratic party has to offer in Its behalf. These resolutions have been, and will be, adopted in various forms in every part of the State and they will be turned and twisted and made Into political speeches to be delivered by John D. t , tiles or Oen. McCandless, or any other stump orator or the Democratic persua sion. It is the same story over again, nppeal• ing to prejudice and burying truth out of sight. We consider them n good electioneer- ing document against the Democracy : Resolved, That the Democracy of Lehigh county again renew and announce their solemn pledges of devotion to the Union as our fathers made it, and to the welfare of the State and nation, of faithful obedience to the constitution and the laws of both, and of our firm determi nation to rescue both State and nation from the power of those who for the last ten years have sacrificed the highest public interests to their own selfish purposes, and trampled on all laws and all constitutions that stood between them and their personal and partisan aggrand izement. • Resolved, That it Is no " new departure" for the Democracy to obey the fundamental law of the land or the enactments made in pursuance of them ; that unlike our political opponents, we never measure our obedience to existing laws by our private views of their propriety or the milliner in which they were forced into ex istence. and that whilst we recognize and in sist on the right of the people at any time to alternr abolish any of themove know no higher or other law, in civil life, until this has been legally and peacefully accomplished. Resolved, That our claim to success in the coming political campaign does not rest on the preservation and perpetuation of one or two paltry amendments to the National Constitu tion, but on our warm devotion to the glorious spirit which pervades and sanctifies the whole of that instrument as it came from the hands of the fathers of the republic. Resolved, That in our opinion the only vital issues now before us are, whether we are to be as we were for nearly a century, a strong peo ple or as Republican rule would make us—the mere subjects of n "strong central govern ment ;" whether men in (dike are to he our masters, or our servants, and whether the power t hatl for the last ten years has been steal ing from the many to the benefit of the few shall remain permanently with those who are using it for the destruction of our American system, or be restored at the earliest po:;sible day to its true and original owners. Resolved, That the powers placed by the last Congress in the hands of their military leader, General Grant, are too absolute and unlimited to be entrusted to the best and wisest man on . . earth, and that every member who voted for the bill by which thesepowers were conferred, is a traitor to both State and nation, and de- serves the penalty which freemen never fail to inflict on all who venture to betray them. Resolved, That we regard the administration of General Grant with mingled feelings of con tempt and indignation ; contempt for the know nothing do nothing, aimless course that began, has been continued, and will most probably end in "smoke," and Indignation at the cold and calculating meanness which bartets away the highest offices of the nation for valuable personal donations for the aggrandizement of his own and his wife's relations. • Resolved, That the claim of having reduced the public debt and preserved the credit of the nation on which the party in power now rely for a continuance In office is worse than ridiculous when It is remembered that the money by which all this has been accomplished was wrung from the hard earnings of a 1.1 opl - taxed and plundered beyond endurance ny host of overpaid, useless revenue officers, who are kept In power rolely for the servicewhieh they are expected render for their mast. rii the coming election, Resolved, That we are in favor of such moth fication of the tariff laws as will afford equal protection to nll classes of American industry, and that we condemn the action of the last Republican Congress in reducing the tariff on iron, and by such reduction rot t riling the pros perity of ourCmintt y. Resolved, That we cordially endorse and ratify the nominees of our State Convention, General William McCandless for Auditor Gen eral, and Captain James 11. Cm-per for Sur veyor General ; that in them we recognize men eminently qualified for the position to which the convention has called them, not only by their acknowledged ability and integrity as civilians, but also by their faithful services on the field of battle in defence of their country staring the late war, and we here pledge to AAttt the, vt,to th,• I,enmcracy of this County. Resolved, That the thanks of the Democracy are due anti hereby tendered to our late trim her of Congress, lion. John D. Stiles, for the able and smisfitetory discharge of his official duties, and we point with pride to his record during his official term as alike honorable to himself and the party he represented, and an example his successors may wet! emulate. Resolved, Tina the long services of our pres ent member of Congress,. Hon. E. L. Acker, in the Democratic party, and his adherence to its principles, is a sure guarantee that he will faithfully represent the interests of his consti tuents. Resolved, That the course of the Senator from our district, the Hn. Edwin Albright, and of our Representative it, the Hon. Adroit Woolever and lion. Herman M. Fetter, meets our entire approbation ; that their fearless op. position to all corrupt measures, whether at tempts upon the public treasury or endeavors to transfer the rights of the people to over grownmoled monopolies,their devotion to (lie true interests of the people of our County and State, entitles them to the appellation of " well done good and faithful servants ;" that for their services in this regard and for the heroic efforts in behalf of the interests and principles of the Democracy, especially in wringing from the opposition a fair apportionme -it, they de serve at our hands the most- hearty endorse ment, and we indulge the hope that the stern example of incorruptibility and fidelity to duty set by them will be followed out and carried into prac:ice by all futme representatives. Resolved, That whilst we would not regard military achievements as nn evidence of quall• fication for the Presidential chair, we would point to the record of one whose ability as a civilian is only equalled by his bravery and success as a soldier, and that while the mild tary career of Malor Gemini W. S. Hancock will compare favorably with that of any other officer now or heretofore in the service, his crowning glory is shown in the record of civil government of Louisiana and Texas, and that his general order proclaiming and advocating the right of trial by jury, the liberty of speech and of the press, the right of habeas corpus, were efforts in behalf of the rights of the peo ple, and can only serve to endear him more and more to the heartaof ffilliberly-loviug and law-abiding citizens. Resolved, That Major General Hancock is the . choice of the Democracy of Lehigh county for the Presidency, and that our delegates to the Slate Convention be instructed to give hint an unwavering support. Resolved, flint rut the next delegate elections, and annually thereafter, tlw Democratic voters of each ward, borough nud township shall elect by ballot one person ns member of the Democratic Standing Committee,the names of the persons so elected to be certified to the County Convention and announced in the 'pro, ceediugs of the same, and that any rule or rules of the party Inconsistent herewith be and the Caine is hereby rescinded. TIIE nineteenth annual fair of the Pennsyl vania Agricultural Society is to be held nt Scranton, beginning on the 19th and ending on the 22d of September. The premium list has been published, and copies can probably be obtained from the officers at S ranton, which is the residence of the President; John C. Morris. Furl instructions to exhibitors and judges are given. One of these provides that no premium shall be awarded to an unworthy object, even when there is no competition. Tide rule should be adopted everywhere. Premiums of $5O each arc offered for the best herds, of five each, of Durham, Hereford, Holstein, Devon, Ayrshire, or other pure bred cattle, by a singlii eihibitor. Jersey cat tle are provided for Inn special class, in which the highest premium is $3O. .The best team of working oxen, not less than 20 yoke, gets $lOO. Horses are graded in several classes, at fair rates. The highest prize for racing is $34 The list appears to have been carefully pre• pared, and If the awards are fairly made the public ought to be satisfied. The Society offers $25 for the beat newspaper report of the fair, and several of $25 for the best essays upon specified branches of agricultural science. There Is every indication that an effort will be made to bold a useful and profitable exhibi tion, and in this the Society will certainly have the good wishes of every intelligent far mer. TIM public debt statement for July exhibits a decrease of $8,701;070.02 for the past month. THE Democrats, while acknowledging the legality of the last three amendments to the Constitution, den? that they were adopted in a legal manner. If they were adopted illegally, why are they binding upon the Democracy ? Tun Temperance Convention at ITarrisburg very unwisely nominated candidates for And. nor and Surveyor General, to be voted for at the October election. General J. T. Owen, and E. 11. Coates and P. Coombe, Esqs., del- egates to the convention, publish a card, which will be found elsewhere, protesting against the action of The convention, and denouncing it no Irregular and calculated to injure dlie temper [MCC cause. IN New York Tammany goes into the funds heavy and nobody ever sulTors for it except the taxpayers. What wouldn't they do if they had control of the United States Treasury. Tam many has put a debt upon the City of New York which alone amounts to more than the debt of the whole United States bcfore the war. If the Republican party gave the same evidence of extravagance our National Debt wouhl now be $0,000,000,000 instead of $2,• 000,000,000: THE Sunday Republic announca that it is ready to prove that $lOO,OOO are to be raised by the Democracy as a corruption fund in the present canvass. $60,000 have already been subscribed, and $25,000 have been assessed upon the policemen. The object is to male: the Legislature Democratic, and to elect Mr. Wallace ns the successor of Mr. Cameron in the United States Senate. A SPLIT in the Catholic church iii riuttened on the rjuestion of papal supremacy. A meet ing has already been held at Heidelberg to lake measures for the formation of a German Cath. olie church, with the same general 'principles as the Connell of Constance in 1314. The main points arc to Lc the suhoroination of the n.pc to a council, the separation of Church and State, participation of laymen in the manage ment of the church, free election of bishops, communal election of pastors, and modifica catkin of the confessional. This is the most important movement ever attempted in the Catholic church for six centuries. A STRIKING CONTR,ABI TWO DECADES Showing the Difference in the Von dition of the State of Pemanylvat nin for 'fen Years under Democrit tic Rule and Ten under Depubli ean Management. The Harrisburg Telegrnph hits the follot The Democrats had an almost unbroken rule in Pennsylvania from 1850 to 1800, and the Republicans have been in power most of the time from 1800 tolB7l. The record made by these parties, within those periods, in the menagement of the finances of the State, is a fair lest by which to try them. The State debt on the Ist of Dcceinher, 1850, and on the same dide of the ten years following is given in lbe f il l awing table, compiled front the an nual 1, 'mils of the : 81:ttd• ,1,40 Dov. 1, 1.9.50. . 1851. ic " 1852. • " 1852. " 1854. " 1855. it " 1856. 1557 cs " 1858 " 1850, ti "• 1860 It will be seen from this table that the State eeht remained above forty millions—some years increasing and in others decreasing nkovly—nntil 1856, when the notnnenni, , nseendnney began to be shakn. The public works were sold in 18 - 7, in 1858 the Republi cans carried the notice; in 1859 they carried both House and Senate, and in 180 they elected the Govern , r and a majority in both Houses. • During these ten years the ruling party had the benefit of the revenue from the State tax on real and personal estate, find the tax on Inn mw e nn the Pennsylvania Railroad. The reve nue from these two sources, during the decade referred tn, was as follows: Tonnage. Tr. 'tab Tar. $9,514 71............51,372,170 37 .. 21.270 66............ 1,359,620 20 07.227 22...... ....... 1.301.550 59 .. 118,200 11 1.510,403 39 .. 101.125 °0 1,721,114 79 250.917 24 1,00`,.0130 21 204,064 11 1.054.607 24 224,525 62...... ....... 1,610,229 10 .. 47,582 60 1,380.502 18 .. 31,425 15 1,444,674 05 $1,120,3'07 75 $15,024,984 19 1,110,307 75 TOlni revenue from these sources In ten years And yet, with all this revenue, and $300,- 000 additional paid in three instalments, 1858, 1859 and 1830 by the 'Pennsylvania Railroad In redemption of its bonds, given in purchase of the public works, the public debt remained almost unchanged flir six years, and was final ly reduced in the following four years, but a trifle, as these figures show : State debt December 1, 157,0 State debt December 1, 1860. Total reduction in ten rears :2,805,587 02 (Jr nn averag, of ntatut $280,000 tt year Shortly after the Republicans came fully into possession of the State government in 1861, they were confronted with the necessity of arming the troops of the State called 001 to suppress the rebellion, and to put the State into a condition of defense. Hence the ne. gotiations of the war loan of 1861. They therefore commenced their decade with a debt of over forty millions, as follows : State debt Deep mber 1, 1500...........8.",7,00!1,6+7 War loan of 10111 13,500,000 00 Total ..$41,469M7 50 The tonnage tax was repealed in 18G1 and subserviently, in February, 1800, the three mill tax on real estate was repealed, so that these large sources of revenue enjoyed by the Dom_ ocrats were cut off from their successors, the annual payment into the Sinking 'Fund by the Pennsylvania Railroad being Increased, by the repeal of the tonnage tax, from $lOO,OOO to $400,000 annually. With the tonnage tax repealed since 1961, and the three mill tax abolished since 1807, the Republican admini4tration of the State tins still managed to reduce the public debt more than one.fourth. A statement published officially, by the Commissioners of the Sinking Fund, shows the public debt ? July 1, 1871, to be as follows; Recapitulation Publie Debt. • Debt beating colt, Interest.. ........ 4,5.77,:t0000$ Debt bearing Interest In P. N. cur• reney Debt on which Interest has been stopped Debt bearing no Interest Total debt, July 1, 1871... .......... ...829,546,587 71 • We cull thus fairly conipure the result of the two decades State debt, Dee. 1, 1850. .............. ....... State debt, Dee. 1, 1860 57,1160,047 50 Reduction In ten years, under the 440,775,495 42 Democrats State debt, Dec. 1, 1850 $37,1169,847 53 War debt since added 3,500,000 00 $41460,547 50 Debt July 1, 1571 V:11,541,587 71 Reduction In ten yenta under the . Republicans Difference hi favor of the Republi cans $9,117,C 87 Annual average reduction under' Democratic rule Annual average reduction under Republican rule 'Annual difference to the people of the Btate And thin, be It remembered, has been no. complished with not merely a reduction of taxation, but under a total repeal of all direct taxation upon the property of the people. OWN. WEDNES THE industrial interests of Pittsburg are shoWing marked signs of progress, and there is very little doubt that in the course of anoth er fourth of n century its manufactures of iron, gins., agricultural implements and machinery will far exceed those or any other city on the continent. As Philadelphia now stands, and is likely'to stand, prominent among Ammican cities for the manufacture of domestic cloths, carpets, flannels, locomotives, and other ma chinery, oar good old Cmumonwealth will boost, nt iis eastern and western extremities, a city, the manufacturing interests of which will stand unsurpassed in extent,'as they are now in quality. Pots prospects of the Republican party were' never brighter at the opening of a campaign. The territory of Montana, which has always Imrctoloro been Denmcratic, awl elected Democrat lathe last election by 1,860 majority, hos bet n completely revolutionized ands •.nds a Republican dele:ate to Congress with 1,000 majority. Republicans liar' reason for con gratulation upon their suCCPS , in Montana, as upon their victory in North Cat Winn awl their great gains in Kentucky When! the. Demo. erotic majority has liven cat down from 88.- •000 to 00,000. 'l•he prospects m.nwe racy are growing: darker every day. Angust. 11 —l)e Ilucen .l' -1(1 Third Street, •ive th, iittottittomi IT to :3 o'clock MEI itityin. NeIV U. S. 5'4 of 11 , 1 ........ ..... 11111 11! U. S. 6 1 , ......... .... 11•1! 1 ;.; 65, 11 1 2 1 ; 67 ........ 11 ' 1 !4 s's, 10-10', • 118 ; , ; 111 tear 6 per vent. ...... 111 3 ; 115 11!21%; 112;1; Silver • ...................... It 9 Union l'ac'tic Ist M. hood , 117 1 , 1 . 8411 Central It. 1t... ... , . ...... U 3 11S 1 , Union 1,. (;rant II 631 1 ; Ali; ,ittentono, Sq.erket. U.,. ego/ 11.1 i e I i :V. vim). 1 I:e3t twlr. \ hout, ht.liol •.•(:114 I :II I;)••• Corn Oat . F Ilix••••••••11 I , r•lteitliy 5+.„1.•1 • ver ••, ..... I, NYhetil. FloAe. ow, 4`i4 Rye •• ” li•ro " r. pee Penal ,044,4 Lira, " .. •lezdtii retaues, per i Dried Applee. I•m•le to •I w 2 " uned !It, • • IV B 1 - S1 NESti l' I ( NS 11.111's 1",11,1 ,ble. !lair I.'onacee prevents the hair from ill Cray. and roTan.. y hair lo Its natural r dor. PaLilifg mai Emaciation both result from the loch "lability to convert into notritnent Iluw reicessary. thou, for litre suffering front these ttlarmint, fl immediately resort too remedy that will -bent:then the stomach au I digo•tive ormtus. For, as soon tts this deslroble object ha. been acmtnPlisheil the health Improves, and the putisnt 1,•11111,4 his usual per. „oat appearance. Hostel er's Stool tell Bitters hove at• tallied 0 world- wtde popularity is such and hove been proven the best and safest means of removing con. stipatlon, toning the stomach. gl slog energy to the liv r, cud rol eying every symptom of nervousness and depres sion of spirits. Its cheering and ellicts are highly spoken of by thousands, ',rho owe ti It their roil t Mitten to health. flu restorative iu the atotals Ineill• gine has att tined the smile Popularity - In the s h , gt "'Puce of time It has been before the pal Ile, or has won the high endorsement. accorded to this excellent tonic. Mani other preparations, put pot tine to be corrective; anti re •torntives, hove I Coin intritli,eed,• and have p yished one by one soldie the popnlarlty of Bysteltor's Stomach 'fit ters continues to Increase, and la now r cognised stondard household medicine. The success which at t n is the use of the Bitters evibcos it once its virtues In all case, "(debility nod disoase of th • stool telt. (liquid. rate., :111110-I Willorill number. have been published, at testing Its tinily mita •ultiu , powor in C. moving those and 10.111111 diseases. And at this time it si inns Ill'e to rho lin°, thou rail Mien lion to the great iiiiineily of Ilia este. In ...it it - to awoken public a bullion to it, ex, el - [totem It is the °air Prep:is:Won of the kind tit., Is le in ell esses, It their - f•-ire W Ill° 'gallon of the end $40,775,40:, 49 . 40,114,25 G :10 . 41,524.075 :17 . 40.500,279 54 . 40,01:1,100 07 . 40.100,004 22 . 40.117,055 25 :19,081,758 22 . 20,400,24:3 07 . 50.1130,061 . 87,009,047 50 1)r. 11. li. Longab,• oilers lire service.. t,, 110, i),lllictisl, mote enpooially 10 'hope nutfotlau from Chronic Dinranon• will be clad to Vl3e and talk loth theta. It in bin 'practice to pi:Linty dot:lull` IL Incurablo if he laillevos It to Is. n In those. ca.e• whichwhichhe atolortakio. he outrantoes to di. . 011 that eau Ito dotal by iIIIIIoOOIOII at. tonlio.. and the application of eX1 . 111 . 1”,11 galtied by twiny yearn id practice In trentina fit to it- sart• 011,1.11..1 11 111110 1: Mt form. That Ida lion not boon eXort l il In sail., nottnirous certtlicato, that Inop 110 neon at his 11fline, will tontify. A few natio.. are no I. obal for Tiobliontion, which are It sown 1,, rill/ . IIN Or title op,,,ty. No fe,li.g egotk ~ in Prii , hh, their I , hhhc , ti..., hitt th , p are ptthii-ho•i rather an nu vn hien., that many who havodoenioil them...lv, hopolcsnly allfieted hay, propor application of the toodical o scions., he, ronlorod to health nod tlio of all it.. blen. • • Elins Wegg,tut, Johnson Corners I. O. Comeer of the Ilrvost. 113111==ialiMill 1..1. Johatt.°, Alltottovvn. Skin 1/1.a.,e. Tilton 5.1.4:1111Ill, Hanover. Citronlo Henry Gabriel, Allentown. Dettintoot. 31, I . )Itotger, Coln...qua. Tumors or the Heat'. Nathan Eltorhartl, llothlelortn. Caucor. Mr. Hoch, 'frttslorttwrit. Cane,. W J 41110 1 ,1111. Bothlehttnt. I. l nlttionary CAtaril, Joont , t Moan. 11ethloltotn. Chronic Rheum:Ht.., Mr, J Dirtier, Sttllnlotry. Scroluht. E. A. Ilarlaelter. 1 1 111 ,. .1-111ffitt. Evttrt , Ton. , Mr, W. S. 1111nuich, Salthbury. Fenn COlll. lid Eri I T. Y iVltttnno, lointtrk. Timm, of the 11,1.1. ler, New 'fripell. Tun., the Neel, Mrs. E. 11. Serfit-s, shitiottion. Fein. Coln. Mn. H. Weloilout, Cancer ill the Catherine Amoy, Centreville. Cancer Side of the Fare John Pult pits of the Nie t o Mr, Faulrmim. Alletitetru. Came, of the Meant. TllOlll/t. Mar, Il,akrndangnn. Tomer Mr , D. Krebs. 3litliitoey City. Canter of the Fuse. SlDient.tker. Seipstiityn. l'ttliniltei 1111,1111111. W. t ilthelry. ea...r or the No•o. Th.. above per-att. may nil In referred to. ar eertiticatet. ttaty be oeen at Dr. I. , tat.tkat'. oak, sixth .t ret .t. ,t 1 t Ilainitten .d NValant, Allonte,va, l'a.. $1.6,161,3 , 4 (.1 l'l'S ANI) •-) ITS IMZETFINTITIVII. 111* .1. IT M. 11. . ,• , . 111.t,y a luttuau living has noted :ffirdY• f•tr v . ...deth till re NV/I% 110 ~tll., tett+on than the tiontlect of Itautvn art Judi-Put lily Proven mewls of cure. These neat Ii .t 1 dear to family mut frittud-1 art. •leeputit the dre.dulons slunt , .er Innl which, hall they enintly dtlopt• II lilt. .ICISKI . II 11. SiIIIENCIC'S TttI'.ATMENI', And thsturelves or his wonderful 1111ra-huts tuetl irne tvoti:tl Lot have tattoo. r lir. liar In lid. own ra.ut tirove I that where, r sufficient VII lily r. dos, that vitality. by hit ti.ffil:elnes directns for their tire, it littielidued lulu health ful vluor. i.'10,7754C5 . 07,969,817 r. 4) In thla elatentent tiara iu Z1.1111:ng Pr. , ..1111‘.11.. To the faith of 1111• Invalid In Imola tetr Ple•tmt. , tion that 1-• 1101 n thou-and timea unbent talated by living. and 11,1 Me wart, a. The theory of MO by Dr. schottek's tatalt clods It. KY .1110 •e.it I. 1111f11111111, It • 101 I lo4ophy 10. oat te. 1,1411 11,013 Ili- mt. •elf,lll,llVillg. The Settwoott ronle met Nlandralte I'd I- tiro the Illat two mite,. a l lth which the di .11 et the 1111113 .y iu ;team]. d. l'teo•thli of the meet of coast/111Mb. act gnat. In dp lati,da and a Collation dly di-orderod liver With [hi, r,edition the brottehld I Inlet. ...Lytnpatltlrd" richN nl,lllllll. TILOy N.. 110111161111, toorbitlt• action of tho live tlt maim. tie , cnlntittating remilt. and the ,ffillg Witil 1111 Its dd-trea-.1 - 11 et ntittot. of (1)\S(1)1 I"PION The Mandrdko are romp etmt of one of Nature's not 1...4 utft.—tio• Podophilinta Ileltatunt. They potee.H. I all the rlotalateart illy, alteratlve propertici et t Anted, but oulllce calomel. tltey •• LEAVE NO S'I'ING The work or Cale 10 now beginning. The 1111100 e dOpilsit- in the howolsond In tin allinontory canal aro ejected. rho liver, like a clock, 14 %vomit! on. It aronso• fr , lux torpidity. Ti 11,11.111 1 ,11 Oslo. 1...M.1,100. ly, nod the pi , tix r liqAtr , c b l i , f , e l o l l ,l tt i l;i: 4 l. o % . llitig, at boo, The Snowed Toole ( In nonjunetien with tho ' per. e 0... and asaintlates wait the food. (It) itheatiret I. 110 AV progressing without it. Trowint. tortures. Digestion becomes painless, and the Core Is lees in be at 'Miele in o.• mere 11.11tileure, exacerivaton of tine lunch. An afiPetitei.ets in. Note VOlllik% the greatest 111.).11thritioroyer yet given by on Indulgent father to sniforing inau. Sr) earl( lc sty run tonnes in to tierthirm its function.. and te hasten co d r,impleto thr mire. It enters at onco up0n ,., . , work. Nature 0.11101 COljo.Ctr. nod 11, tw. paired and it .rttotv. of the longs. la the west of g „ ( T ev ing, it prevareh them for ex Teeter/then. ud In I in VI, Nliart thin) the nulled(' is r the ream, th e Ilt a a orrnpied Is m renovated :oil ed id.. new, and the pationt, in till tint dinity of regain voter, stun. birth to (gib.) . the thr the womanhood that 0 I VHS L'l. AS ISIST. . . . tinting lk, the most ...toy ha warm mote twill they get well ; is altnoat inutoaalble to pre• ven t ;aging ndld when the hoofs are dIOP teed. hut It must be pteveuted or a curt cannot no ellceled.Suer n le r idi n g o ut, e.peri Illy In this xertion it the country In the (Aland tee:m.ll.nd lb it course lone their pationts. if the, lung. bddly diagaaod, and yet, he f in are In the hon., thoy nub, not sit do] quiet ,• they haunt walk Mount the r.east aa inuch and totaot al theatiength will bear. to get op a good circulation of blood. Th., pot leuto toast ki op i o goo d apitit diitsonined g, Thn e h n great deal to do with One upnetite, ha I In the great point to ;min. , To despair of rare after much evidence of Its p b.:sited!): in the tvorst case, and inoral certainty in all other, In sinful. Dr. Scholick's porsooot Furuity of his own cunt was In them modest words M a ny pearl aaa I Intl ill line nntag, of c ; continua to toy d, foul at olio:lane lily thought tali I could notlive week ;then, then, s ilsowe• Mg man catching at straw., I heard of and obtained the Preparatiaus which I now olf, to the puldle, and they made a perfect Cann of toe. It Aeorned to too that I could !eel thou, ponetrain uty Whole kynntoini. They ,o on Elpen• ~1 the matter in lily limas, aryl I wool,' Kph lip a plot of °Homo,: yellow motet ever) inerultill for a long time. As mato na that befall to I.ll.lnalann toy conch, fever, pain dud night ;;treata all taigan ledvo• ate, and my appetite begone. sit great that It Wal trill, difficulty that I rou d g ee , from eating tonucl, I soon ant:nod:ay strength• and hay. grown In lent, ever since." , •• I wan vvoialoal ahortly after my recovery," added the Ildc!or, then looking .t town, skeletal: : toy ‘veng:il wax only; nine:y.l4,on mintillo • my tin-soot weight in two hundred mad twouty-dve I=l ' l tenoids, and for ) ears 1 It ore enjoyed 1111laterrnlyted ." Dr. SUlleun k lots hi. professional visits to Nett York and Donlon. floor hin son, Dr..) . II . Schmuck, . Jr., still continue to so , tin tionts at thi.ir 'Dice. No. 1.1 North Sixth , Ort. Philati,dpltia, every hatordn, (ton, in A. 31. to 31 1 31. 'rhea° who w tali it thorough gantlett• Don with the Itoapiromater will In. charged 4,7, 'll,O lb,. plronteter declarefi Out exert c;oulitlou of the Dolga. and ran tenitlllY In Urn Wlinalinnrllley are curable or not. The directional', taking 1t,., Inienlielnem art' o de led 10 nt the lelligeoro even of u gall,',three nlll , O. :loot, aunt kind Nature will do the rent, Pau. tiling that In 01110 S 111.• 31 audralto Dalt aro to he taken In Incroal , • ed duaea ; the three medlrluea need uo other accompaul• Innal/ta dna:lllW ample lll•trautlans :In it niCOJllll,lllly theta Find ere ate appetite. Of returning knelt It hunger In the moot We 1.... When it Collink. Vs It wll online. let the despoirlog ours be ;agouti cheer. amid blood at tome 10110110.1111 e cough Nowa., the Utah: &Went II abated. lon 61101 t tuall ill Choke morbid symp toms are ,(1 , 00 forever. Pr. iaellenek 'a tnedicluea are conatantly kepi lu icon of theugande of AK laxallvo nnr plargatlve, the 3loteltuke P.lls are a atandard preuarat,,,,, ; trite th e punnen‘c 0) rule. lin n °aro! Of entil..lin runt moY 1, 0 reg.iriled as it prophyldt feria again. consumption In any calla forma. }ince of the Pultnoule Syrup and Seaweed Tonic, 131 ft) a beide, or ;37 rtt u dor.. 31andrako Philo, 113 cella it bog. 'For tittle by nil drnitglill and dealers. JOHNSON. tit)) t,O WAYS COWDEN, OE: Arch ntreet, P 1111,1011411. Wholenale Agent:, 141)2271.1y '24,78'2,445 ..1:0 1°5,0 6 rf 100,1360 05 $1,805,0:17 94 .. $11,923,259 79 260,363 70 1,192,325 97 011,763 18 speria: XOtiffo AY, AUGUST 16, 1871. Harrison Safety NUCII"I'4II 7 .ti" NI)TICE.-1;07'1('E j ,;;VEN I.,l.nwilla.yl”tv :ill hoes grills,' 1. , Ille Ile.let•littieil hi tie esl.ite l'e. tl• evil, Ali ...I, Sr.. of I•Sury Lehigh rietilly, lliereSire I' .else. Si be tii ~tale.-tsiy a l to iteao y,e'ent.Nvllbiii six iv. el, (rem the dill hereof. null /inch Irivele..3l el du, 0/141114 oal.l e-Sile t 111 toe .tit thetn l troll fer I rllliln the sli Vrll...Ir4i:DERIl'K HEX Jr .lily 11,0 A 1)7111N Iti'l'lL %TORS' !":01'I1'E. I' Norio. L h^robY Ovf.it Iltot Itwtor. ::.ItilillistrAti.lll III" , 6,11 graut , ll o, Ow Alll u+ i10v0a,..1. WOlOlll li• r.qw:tv p.n.,. I:flowing t l i:Ati...lvvr , 1110., pa , 1111• Ill Wi./1111."1% We , k+ (111111 ti1. , 1•14 ,, e1 Oa, 1111.1 40 , 11 It Int li, vr ntly 1...1 ognin.t 11::. will 11wwn rll prrl 111.11 I:EI:FA:CA S. I . :Mil:I:NIA: I I : .1 I: 111. w Adonit:ktrairix. FItIFIT i"ItESIEICVING P()IVI)Elt. NOIL 'S TASTELESS 1•43W133:1; pr.n.nt rr. 111 kind , of I'Ann...l ult, Frill Iluttrr. l'innrynn and T.nn aft 11111r0 rl,•unni In bonnty 111111 LiFie •kily TM. l'ow.lnr In, in pnldir nnn for ibr.r y , an. and In now tinnl ..3ery Iln. It In built and n 11.11.10, it 111 fin - o , h 3tlesyntl awl pre-.43...1 frnlin ior lob!, 3.110.1.. r thun .3' prne..,., on.. tr., put „r .0 poviu .1. of Inn n.l froi'. 1 , 1111 dl n 1 . 1.t.11. 1 , 0 111111i 14,'W Ir prey... all nnoll.l wi On. box. 1,3 wail ..nl.l lip 1. rocnts and tiro.n.tn. Tho nolln n0,p1i...1 11.111.vay rowdy .. ounli, 11.1. , 1.1,1!nol..1p11,n, Nt/ICSY .1111) . .1•111 W „ •e , lti St.. T° REASONA 111,E LEASE 1011 be given on the Ea.ton Slate Quarry, situated In Plainfield iffwilf.hip, Zlffrthalapiffn county, In., near Slarkertff‘vr. It effn4iNiff ot nonlife,. one flat-rein, blue never-railing -bate, rally efinal to the Nvell-known Chap• Mall 51ute, tcith 11, I water poser mul u rigging of P.M". fiff.ironf. ff I an lof fill , kind Will qelvfpf and apply it, llffulfon Koch, mar: 'pi O. 1,. SelrltElLlEli, Pre,ifieut per.ol.4)si. A m ENDmENrcro THE coNsTI- Tu 11l)\ OF PEN N:7iY LVAN lA. IMIZIM=IZI Peopoo,il!I un uurndua nl (t) f . 011,001.1 rg' !>n;>>!l i ;1 If , it the ret.st n- I•11(1 . 1N , tf the CW11111 , 111" , I ilh rOt 1.1'01,1 10 1. Th.,t ii r01h,‘,1114 the of 11, rontutoutyea'lll be yropte-etl:n the p+..p'v for th-tie adopti in ode, par,,lnt In the pro of the tenth ttritele thereof, to-tv It !AIENDI ENT. s.r;t... allot I Arltele el' the l'ett--1 tt ion. Hutt th-ert in ',tau thert.of the f.. 11 .trim 1-Inte 'rt.-n..1,, --hall let chot.on I.y 111 , 1.1,11111nd elector: er the State, at , Idle atol for -It'll o'llll of eery ire %hall he pre--ertl la ty. JAMES H. ‘VEI36, :11.• 11 ,, u+,. of 1:11,, , ,eutativ..... \VI [AAA M. A. WA LI,:10E, Spoaker Fenato. AN , v0v ,, ,1 we ,lay of Som., Ann, D0i,,,A1 on, thous tu , l riyLt huuditl xud stventy 011, JOHN W. E I Pror..tr.,l any rertilled for public:Wen put. suunt to the Teo th Article of 11.. Constitution. 6,crclary of the C 011111,11,, 14 it Ohite ~ , :,cretury of the Conlin wm. , 111, Ilatrli•htug. July 1071 fiy19.310 117'1(0111SG SI.:IIINALItY AN!) COM: V M En , I A It 1,01,1,1..; F. School for both sexe , , plett+unry lorahttl In the W.Ol, %nit volley. heure Icton : , owtYtak Plitletlolpin. Ilnilfiux..l , nch , n.. , l ettniphett It pp tratter thittonhont. Thirteen en porioneed Prefet.ttotn 3.1.1 low a• nt any .t hold ....•ski/11 Stptenilmr 1 , 4. For enutiotet. nthir,e lit,. R. Nelnon, D. 1/.. Ring, ro, Itil U. It. II hilt, Sec'r. A littic•t imuicA 1, 11 CETINti. A 11 Ineollne of the Exttrutico Cottonittoo of the lothigh County Agroolltar t I ' , deftly o I Int hold on Ft kitty, he Pill tiny of Anal,' next, at I o'clock, I' M , at the olllrn of the Seer. t ,Intl e of AI Ittutotwot, for tho of r. col, tnn report of th"tointxil h.e tr I.ll'il 11,1'11,0.1 Itt a tornrr wee litia to r Tort a It l of a wardiatt v.IEIIIOIEO,, and to: w,, 11, , isor next fat, liy der f it. I. re tZEI 111,II! I. Joetir.‘ `I A...E. Svc y. ttiv,2-n• SSl44:lll:l::*S ... N(l'i'll'E. Notice is tow bill. hi , \.r ,, 1.y of ~..1.1..t,Lry 011 1 ,1, 111./ 1 11,1111 1111 tlll l 1 1 ..111 n•. 1 1,11 1./ 1...1 . ...1L1, 4,11.1 A ir..11 VI, 111 OW i iillll/1 . One, 111 111 of Ow 'qui' All pet...l 1 . .n1111 XV ~. II 1.1 ~ I.• the ..t 1,1 „ill Ito 00 1111 1 'llllll l W 11011 t 11011. lit die rt,l.lenc.. FO l l l llllll, V Al.. 111 AI.IIIIIN'I A- H. (IA Nii W ERu e E, A.‘l,ltl =I WALL'S ITABLE SICILIAN 1-IAI RENEWER . PHYSICIANS AND CLERGYMEN T..dtfy t • es rtardna GRAY II AI It In Its min -1,1 en and prontellna It- II nukes the h sir -of and gin -se. The •nds....ppoardne , are made yam., airatn. It is the bent H.\ 1 11 DIZESSINO ever It r.ttove.. 11.11.1valf .e.l It.etrvV lins. It d 0 . ,. M alit the ..ktet. Ottr Tr. atl•eou the II .i. sent Cr,, I, r mall. M111114..11. rr.ltrati et. tv11:1.1. are ...Id epee out t..jettallott. It. I'. 11.11.1. & Co., I.y :01 druttge, ::aslta, N. 11., Prop'. for OME=MERM The grt , t VIIIIIII7II', ToN lc 0,1 I.TIIItA I'IVF. In. etly or lire 11.111. ht ....1111 i.lll ..f ..thor tultltt r ttr you nil.. i.. Drttyrtl Opt tinerrlt..t tit' rrpt•tt..ltt: lirt•l 111,11:1/TE+ inn Kid.., toi,trisr.v. f ~p. N ' 17171 .. pi 1.i n i 1 i t i " /. 7 ; ,/ ' ; /, ' ,...4 . l;. ' • ' f ' ; ' „ ' anti .1 , 11 Dhi tiff,. It ttartll... anti ratelt.. it„• tt ..— tint , t nitt.tittt, tll2r.titto. .thattlate. tint t.t.l I•nt..tn.l ‘,ll/..- the 1,,q,•.11..1 *)..- "'i• high'M -I by atiii the (0-H1110141A1 ,, Itty.tlitl. r. y• - t 1 It. rtn't ittttrt.r.. It IK at 111.. ‘,l , v 1 awn it .If 0. It Mir, at l'it to i.e ttt any point. 41 . 1)-Tfitt 111.1./1.11/Ni INSTITI' at AVI D'S WF.1,1, i. tle.tunott ttrettonottt.l tit. tts•tt ant I, all ee.t.tlit , ..r pref., tlrinltlntt v ATER front tho W I/. S. CAI/IVA I.LA DES. 1. , t/ Corr St • Pitilatla. j.11115-'i:11 • (W.:l"n NG I:1:1 El). —ESSA VS FOR 67 ymn. ginil.% 1, EVII.S ARISES which InterE re suro 11101111 M ot relief for tho Erring ninl and HOWARD As.oirlATloN, No. 2 South Ninth strict, Phillidelphin. P.t. EliltOßS OF YOUTIL—A v.entleunin Nylio pondered for year. fi oto Nervous Debility, Proom taro Decay and all the curet, of youthful taillarretion, will, for the flake of stilfprloo humanity, mold free t 0 011 who nerd It, tlO. reellll. il./ 111rertiou mr making the aim. phi remedy by which hp WlO4 clued. Suirorersitvishlnd to profit by thp ad verthipria oxperlonerran do po by ad. drotoshig .1011 N 11 titi DUN, No. 42 Cedar St. Nov York. DE.IFNESS, BLINDNESS AND' CA ‘l,-Y TARIM treated with Lilo mire..., by J. ISAACS. M. It.otiol Probouoir Mx, the Ey. rtnel E. On. onerkiiy / ft. .11 rolivrtl Cirllcrie l'elm nylretnio,l3yronv tit LoYAtiii. NO. 8 , ./ MO/ I'llllll. TO4ll/11111,1,1 Call 1,.. 1 , 1,11/1111 //Nook, Th, Medical !acuity are invited Itt ar• company their mitiont., hull", no secrets In Ills prac• lieu. Artitivial ..yo, lutteried without pain. No charge fur examination. apt. itbly To coNtsntrriVES.Tike r . adveffisv: hovinia been rentoriel to Imalth In a few weeks, byII very simple remedy, oft, having +littered , everal years with o severe long affection, owl that 11rvall ell erase, Con n tutVtluu, Ix uualuu+t „ now n to his fellow sn iron, the 1110.1nn of mire. To all who diedre It, ho will send o copy• of the ure.cription need Ifreo of charge), with the direc tion, for preparing and ...lug the -ohm, which tiny will nuil imre core for Bensuniu, A,thont, Bronchitis. Sic. The only object of the at) vems, in ' , ending the Preeerlp. twit is to (milord the afflicted, and ,p rood information which he conceives to he lova:1.11de; and he Impeo every sufferer will try hie remedy, an it will cu.t thaw m 41111114 onil may prove widoodoti. Bora t e, wishing rho pre,crlptiou will please n ddre , ,, Ithv. EDWARD O. WI LiitlN, Willi ei onbui if King, Co. N. Y. C'hulera.-1101c to Cure 11.— AL the crenteeece, niout of she Ih.trrlisoss, ultveyos prom less attack sof tiles Cholera, take tosa•poosessul et the Piths In souks, 111111 %vitt,. Met. If sionveitlent h nod then loathe freely tloos •tootiottio LOW , In Ole Pain Killer choir. :01.1114 the i t s ors hoe o eri crosses. os,ii repeat ths Joke n every lea or iillnullllllllllt.'S 1,11 ;mile. rOIiPVI , II. In ex toot,. C.ts, 110 , , 11,10 tososs.posoufulso may lee given of os doses. The Pah, inter :al none Iy lm, uo.soissul. iu essoseist. of (ilosolera, mums. loyneuts ry, Aeolis/its, it CIITV, w .1011101% lu. tertsuily,and lososl.h.g ,rata, It In ely. It, actsu, to, hke B.Y:tern:slip applied 1. , osi Ss:aisle, and Sprott", Fer E nob lie.solits he stool eoetlisorloo, chou't I'll to try It. le shsist, ase is PAIN .Palle u. Mho Lou. steesousis ony rads h He. Pam Iso fold dealer, su Aleolsetiose. cent-, nilli 41 her bsot tie. . _ I_TOIiSEN I EN, Al"l'El.1. I'l4)N !. READ THE FOLLOWING I Tatony, 241 11'.4rfi, 1'1.11;1. JAW, (7, WE1.14.-11RAIl Sill: I here uss,l Or. Felix 11. )Istscliko's Prussian Liniment on u were of 1,1111, . u high 1111111411.1 d `PURI. .1.1,11 C hi it to n I 11,13,1 one bottle with malt . ° sti•coss. caring her cotoliliitclY , Artill.ll 16 , 19. JDNA. lIIEDELL. Thin luvnlnublr Moline:At 15.1.1 by Druggists end Storekeepers. Wholesale lip JANES 11. WELLS, N. E. cor. of nth null Spring torte rhiliohilDhle. For .1, , In Allentown lip 1,. Still3lll/T & Cu., East ihunlltou Street, Dr. W. E. BARNES & soN, LA WA LI, & 31AIt• TIN and .101I\ B. MOSER. CIWrI'AGir:SEMINARY FORYOUNG LA DI ES. PO T TS7'OII.V, MONTI:O.IIER GO., PA. The Twenty-third Fear of litl• trill-open un SEPTENIBER 71h. For Circular.. nthlrean int) . 5.3 in Rae—JOHN AlOultE. Principal. Boiler. lAs BEEN IN PRAcTIC AI, FOR MORE THAN FEN FEARS. V. 7,1100 Ibir.er-polrer, In rxr. I orslon. A.reticlu I ushtsio SI.sStI, IS 0,11. FOIL TO [Lk RRTS()N 11011. ER WORKS, vENToN'S PATEN I* FERENTIAL PULLEY IMOCKS. 1111!1!0=M=1111!1 ARRISON 110ILER WORKS. Phil.. JoHN A. COL E. 11.4 N, Agra, 110 1110,111 W AV. NEW Sawn nJ I'OFEEESAI, St., 11..T0N, 31.1 4 4. j,•2lr7•lyw (j F. woLFERTz, NO. 006 lIANIILTON ST.. ALLENTOWN, Manuflicurer Culle. T, 11,t1, r In Sporoouvu'e Artlete, Uhl. be lo %Pill. nl Gulured prle .... Sinule and d.ulPle burro: Ilnnuuu Gun, Revolvers .101 I( lull, l'iGvtler. lihot, Caps. Fklilng Turklo, Pte. july27-‘v DISSI)I,UTION OF FA tur A; ER- The conartner-hip herebinite exiation between Samuel Thom., 1110 the licira .4 Oliver 1111100. under the ht yle or orkthiloae, Theinaa ler the tiiithanctithe and v , i ii i.e ellite Brick, have th a day been ninthally tibiae], inl by the withdrawal of Seining Mcßee, The l•w•Ine, In Ihn future trill b • carried on by the Iwo nth r parte., nn.ler the belle. ne KI) "The Lehlell Fire Ilrlek Co." pEACII ES ! PEACHES! FRESH 1)AIL1 From the State of Delaware Direct. The iindersil aril will ship &rect front their Peach On h.q . & ul Middletown, Delaware, Clir Or fresh and •upetler peaelin , each morning vin the Wilmington At Reading. R. IL, to Levi F , nsternutcher dealer In Foreign rid Domestic Fruits. Drocerlen. Provision.. Floor. 4c., et the curlier of /1111111 H. and Tenth street., Allentow a, Pa. 'the. no , to be choicest fruity coining to thin or any othor niarget. The chipper pronox• en pot to .hip until they Ire perfectly ripe and lii for pre. .ery log. The Cent car of thin floe fruit will 1110,fore or rice at the L. V. R. depot Monday, July 310, where they can be I; uielit Den!, each morning an early hour. Onlere front a ilktauce Will be tilled by the Orel train+ on any of tho railroad+. During oily thee of the day they son be proeurol et the Howe. corn, of Hamilton and Tenth eireetx, throngh the perch 111,00111, A frodt car will Doltively arrive h morning. Then? yearn.; will lie nhippolhuh ihtekete and rran. fear hen plebe! “1111 10:1111.11 In the car one day will ar rive at Allentown 1110 same night not toast Collll.lplolltly he sopa - tor hi any other fruit- breach! to this market: en It arrives early in the morning It gives ample time to be renhipped wolf, or 00 nny 4,1111 e rellroad+ to all Ii 111111011 W. INO DAM 4 1,0., jy2.3-it I Allililletotra. Delaware. AT 7 . ) 9 AT72:2 AT 7„ IS THE IS THE IS TIIE City Drllg Store City Drug' Store City Drug Store OF OF OF Lawall&Martih, La,wall&Martin. Lawall&MArtin \V. CORNER OF W ropy vp OF 8.. W. CORNER OF 14 A M 1111()N k . H ALL STS 1 1 A MILTON & HALL STS 11.\M uroN & HALL STS If VOU want 1 3 1.11'0 Drugs go there. If you want Cattle Powder . go there. I f you want Pure Medicines go there. [I you want Pure Spices go *pre. If you want Lubricating „Oil" go there. If von want Physicians' Preserip Lions put up right go there. If you want anything at all go there If VOU don't want any thing go there If you \N . -ant to be satisfied go then SURE. SURE. SURE. Remember the plaeo,,No. 722 Botii of the proprietors aro road to wait on you, They arc both practical chem ists ; you will find that to be the case after giving them a trial. DON'T FORGET, DON'T FORGET, DON'T FORGET, No. 722 HAMILTON STREET, No. 722 HAMILTON STREET, N 0.722 HAMILTON STREET, S. W. Corner of Hall St City Drug Store. A LLENTOWN FEO LE COLLEGE ALLENTOWN. PA. 7'llE FOERTII ANNUA I SESSION u 111 100110 on MONDAY, tho FIY fII of SF:MR.3IIIEI. 6,11140. f Int.trocti.nothorougla, nod tornun tood.trote. ritto.,oot, or Furth, Infortodttoo, nddrentt ..01.1.th0l Hey p. it. itoyroito, A. 31., Dryttldout. A LLENTONVN ROLLING MILL CO., =I THAYER, ERDMAN, WILSON CO., 31:t.tectoioro of sTium. ENCIINES AND BOILERS, BRIDGE CASTINGS, RAILROAD TURN TABLES, MILL GEARING, SIIAP fING, Furn«re, Rolling Mill anti liking Work, &0., 10., .Cc N. 11.--All work guaranteed and deliver)* PrnmPl. L. 11. (MOSS, Sup't =I DISSOLUTION OF PARTNER HIIIP. The copartnership herelordre existing between Robert W. and Jollies Litton for the purred. , of ewrYdtg on too fo:101 manurdcluriug bilainese, has this Silt day of Aug led, 1 , 71, been mutually dissolved by the ulthdrawal of J5m...4 Levan. TIIE BUSINESS • •• In the futnre will he carrloti on b Robert W. Levan ,lone. 111111 he would beg 1011 1 / 1 1, he y rewith, to return thanks to their patrons for favors shown in the pant, and wou ld re-11 0 ,1NR). and cordially solicit their patronage lu the future tot well as that of the public iu general nue- HOBERT W, LEVAN. Dru tsoobs SHOT AND SHELL =I Our Last Price ist I=l III(41I PRICED STORES ! They cant ace how It Is that we call Make Money and Sell Goods so Cheap OEM "MAMMOTH STORES." WE WILL TELL THEM First. linvletr two shores, so are able to boy Goods In age tote from le 111 141 per cent_ Olan, lli.tu 110 F do. Secsol, one Lime 14 11., vostblo ns to mak. , inns oT, ev.in bough we sake but little on any 0011 article. IMMENSE ARRIVAL OF SPRING AND SUMMER DRY GOODS. DRESS GOODS DEPARTMENT Iren.nnlly complete In nII the ['text nobby and novel. tleg of the xea+oll. White Goods Department. tin Ina and Cambric /tlttAllos. Plata and Chock Naln sook4, Phineg,•.Lick"uoi4, etc. DOMESTIC DEPARTMENT ! Shootings, Ticking•, Check+, Table Dau:i•k, NApklne and Ddl:en, etc. Men's Furnishing Department! IS= Carpet and Oil Cloth 'Department 1'1;sot pa.,etlont.ltle of Solv Yolk :nil Curtain Laces and Window Shades OUR STOCK Is entirely too ostensive to nnurnerato articles aud prices. We have In .trock a general assortineut of Roods usual ly kept In a first-class and well redolabal store. Call alai be copyist:ad that Ivo provo Words by actions. Respectfully. E. S. SHIMER & CO. , .705 and 707 Hamilton St.. Alieutown. Pa H A R T 31 A N .• ER DEPOT h Price Pahl For WASTE PA' The Illghest C.+ Old Newspapers Old Blank Books Of every th.scriplion. And Ledgers, Waste Paper, Tlkut are all written over. ora kin le. 0 d Pamphlets, &o. O CANVAS flavour. y Denim, .11cItod. AN,ulLiAyneet., BAIIOINII AN. Cunriunuwutx from Conntr tn.trl.ly J. II It'rbl 11DABASOLS AN D SUN UMBRELLAS A- all the nowent xtulet, Lama nod real Lace covet,. ant Parasols eapecially for taco covert., our asnortment of Plain and 1. ancy Uonds la unequalled, and tho prices an low as the lowest.. Pnritaola 75 eta to il — sl.l l— llued. .7.1, .112 in—s2.6o—up to .115 00; Silk Umbrellas. id..2A,*l.fsi $2,00; (Lain Umbrellas . from in en. and upwardx. You will alive both time mid motley by Ric ht./ us call. All good. guaranteed or a superior quality and to he as represented. H. DIXON, 21 South Eighth Street, Betweeu Market cud Clan+tout Streetm, Eaqt 81,10, Avel A EDITOR'S NOTICE. In the 00 lat of Common Plena Lthigh . 1111lp. In the matter of the account of WI L 1.01.10 0 A IiLE, Executor of John Dlllinger, Into of Lower Milford Irown ship. Lehigh County, deceaned. •••••4 J•••• 10,, MO coo. appoints C. Id, Runk, Esq.. Auditor, to examine, resettle and restate said account, and to make dl.trthutien. . . . . • From the Records, Attest 8. DILLI SO P.ll. Froth. Per JAM. LORRY, Deputy, The Auditor above named tvill attend with, duties orbit, apnolatment.on TIIUIIAIi, the 17th of Allol/ST. 1871. at 10 o'clock A. iu his office. N. 7 31 Hamilton street. In the city of Allentown, when and whore all persons in tereAed may attend. auti. dsv ) C. AI. RUNE. Auditor. TICEENIOUNT SEMINARY, NORRISTOWN, PA., Fnr young men and boy, ClasaloAL Maths=Ocal and Cononorclal. Twouty•seventli year. Thu Fall and NVin. for Session will C0111(.1100 TUESDAY, Sopletaber 6th. F.r circulars, address july 2011 d WI • JOIIN W. LOCH, Principal. CI K. WITTMAN, NOTARY PUBLIC AND CIVIL ENOLNIaR T. B. LEISENRING INSURANCE AGENT, FIRE, LIFE, AND LIVE STOIIN WITTMAN tt, LEISENRING Real Estate Agents and Scriveners. TON HAMILTON STREET, (llp.Stalri.) AN . 1100D: 110 W LosT! now 111. RESTORED Just published f.e a sealed envelope. Price. sir , eUts A LECTURE ON TIER NATURAL TREATMENT, and Radical Cure of Sperinatorrbea or Seminal Woakueon, Involuntary Einkeloos, Seannl Uebllily, and Impedf- En•nt, to Marriage generally; Nervniodieva. coumunption, nliopay and Fan, Mend and Phynlcal InottpuciM molting from Self Abusii, , by Ron, J. CULVKIIWKLL. M. D., author of the •. • 0 men Rook," " A 1100 N TO THOUSANDS ('F SUFFERERS." •Sent under seal, in a plain envelope, to any addrena, postpaid, on receipt of nix emits or two p 412.11101 thmpx. by AS. J. C. KLINE & CO., flowery. Rose York, Pont Office box 4HO. June follindaw T im ERIN SAVINGS BANK WM. L. YOHN, NORTH SEVEN7.I3 Sr., ABOVE LINDE,Y, ALLENTOWN. PA. lug o n w hagnkneaas bean n e k a tiagb li t a o l p led n efoara t h a e n Pu o ey e o r f ca rtrha community a SECURE IN for *holt. mono; at Loin°, at the stone rate Of Internal Ihalll would command In New York or Now Jersey. MONEY LOANED OUT (IN GOOD SECURITY Or Gold, Silvnr and Government Donde bought wad Amid. Drr.fta drawn on the principal cities of the Dulled Slate, lu aunts to suit rural.... Collection. made on sll acceitando Point.. sad Mgt.& promptly rie M e rc h a n tsornt Woo. Partnere. lAborers and all who have matey to put out on interiP.l fora long or short parted will Sad this Institution an Agreeable and advantage.. on. to which to do lUxineen• Intermit allowed on deposits at Wa following rat., to wit: SEVEN PER CENT. for one year. 141 X PER CENT. if lea for thirty days and under 040 TO/I.r. Wii-Rovenuo stamps sold at a discount, (lan 31 dhw Ll l rt niii r iii REMEMBER, ABOVE ARCH. ' Children ' s Carriages, 1,17,f1 r ROCKING AND CHAIN lI4IESER, Ati 1e.% I{NSS VAI:TS,GOAT WAN ONA, WIIREI,II.4NGOIVS, TOYS, AO' eit. 4 1,1111. Av. , he. Carriages Made to Order and Repaired. • large amiortmout of tho Fut.loot. Most Deoopilve mut Nowext MAGIC TRICKS. We hay° lu connection with Coo aLore,a flue alisortinent nt REFRIGERATORS, Walnut BrucketA, House-Burnishiag Goods, t s , c Which wo over nt the lovreAt Wes. TitOS. W. YosT, Nn. 121 N. Ninth Ht., above Aral. Philo apt 21-3 m d may 3.3 m w J. EvEuricrs NEW ,PATENT SCAPULAR SHOULDER BRACE AND ' STRAP SUPPORTER. No etrape ender the arms. Perfectly comfortable, Aria ololotily made, and hurllly beneficial. r 0 North 7th Ht., °low Arch, Phihnielphia. Nopportere, Eleatic torkinge, Crutc Atc.. lowest PriCol. In the city. Lady attendent. eerlr MILN. 4ULUIN•N Ladies' Trimming Store, ' ALLENTOWN. PA. The trade et thin old nod well knowq , entabll.hmeot In constantly Increasing, owing to the Ynci.,,hat NEW GOODS are being eountuotly Yecelyed or the LATEhI eTYLES end al wnya 0.1.0110 to the wants or her mmiernu. conk). Intern. People ehouldalwayn go where they are sure to be oiled at low Agoras. 'an 18 ' PENNSYLVANIi FEMALE COL LEOS. Fall tie;•eu trill c +most:tee AUGUST 28, 1871. I do nut hroltato to say—ofter sewing the rapid im provement or toy own daughter, end 01.0 having (sited many female s, hook la the Emile., Middle amid Western States—that Itsaotnl!lae d advietitages are superior to th ose elau . o v i e lr ot r , , r i poul that has come under toy notice. , '—J. For cataloguea, address J. P. SHERMAN, A. M.. • Collegeville, Montgomery lune :B-St w