Yetiglj (I,egister. 1011T.11111: 0 1LL. 31 ALLENTOWN, PA., NOV. I, 1871 OUR NEXT GOVERNOR. We have already expressed our sentiment strongly in favor of the Hon. G. Dawson Coleman, of Lebanon county, as the most suitable man to fill the gubernatorial office at the next ensuing election. Our object in tak ing ground thus early was to prepare the pub lic for a candidacy which we intend to press more earnestly hereafter. And we are the more moved to do this because we perceive that the wire workers have been busy for some time past In preparing the way for success of other candidates. Mr. Coleman has now been identified with the public affairs of the com monwealth so long that his name must be familiar to all who are in any degree conver sant with our State politics. He has been re peatedly a member of both houses of the Leg islature, where ho has made for himself hosts of warm friends, without in the slightest de gree defiling himself with the corrupt schemes and the low chicanery for which Harrisburg has earned so unenviable c reputation. Raised by birth and fortune far above all temptations to mix in mere corrupt money getting, Mr. Coleman has been in the Legisla ture of this commonwealth a high and hono rable specimen of that better class of publicists for which popular sentiment yearns, and of which it sees so few. While others have been wholly absorbed in special legisla tion for base purposes, and while almost ull about him have had axes to grind, Dawson Coleman has been a manly and noble specimen of a real Pennsylvania gentlew al, never a'.oop frig to personalities, never countenancing any measures for the sake of gain, never turning away from public interests to serve private ones. The dignity of the statesman has, in his case, been admirably blended with the easy and pleasant manner that banishes dis tinctions of rank and wealth, and treats every man according to bismerits. We do not mention Mr. Coleman's princely estate to include any idea that wealth should he a passport to power and high position, or to inclte the cupidity of the partizans who are always on the lookout for a tich candidate for peculiar reasons of their own. But we advocate his nomination because we know him well, and have learned to honor him for his strict integrity and Isis utter freedom from pretention of any kind. He has served in the ranks with other men, patiently and labor iously, and has gradually won his high place in public confidence by sheer merit, and with out in any way buying position or purchas ing his preferment. Mr. Coleman is a very extensive owner of iron mines and furnaces, and his business qualities are such as to entitle him to take rank with the most successful business-men in Philadelphia, where he is well-known, and with whose interests he is as much identified as . he is with those of Lebanon county. Place him in the gubernatorial office, and we should then have an executive familiar with the interests of all parts of the State from his long service in the Legisleture, and whose signiture for any measuse could not be bought. We do not urge him as a man above the cons men politics of the State, for that sort of non sense deceives no one. In our judgment the man who is above politics is too ignorant of public affairs to be entrusted with high posi tion. But we do urge Mr. Coleman ass man, who, while lie is thoroughly versed in politics, will stoop to no low tricitery, and will be con cerned in no base bargains. We place our choice on record, and call upon our contem poraries of the Republican faith to help on the cause by aiding to nominate for Governor an honest man—one who is, like Bayard of old, above suspicion and above reproach.-Germ a 11- &non Telegraph. THE effort among some of the leaders and organs of the Democratic party to surrender 'themselves beleire the opening of the next cam paign has more supporters than one would suppose. Frank Blair denounces the new dr. parture on the XlVtli and XV th amendments to the Constitution, but at the same time is in favor of the Democratic party taking up some 'Republican for President who will take enough votes away from Grant to defeat the latter. Or, if this is not deemed prudent, to make no nomination and vote for the man who shall be nominated by those Republicans who are opposed to Grant. Ile would support 11.0 race Greeley or any other man who favors univer sal-amnesty. With such a man, the General thinks, the entire German vote could be con trolled. He has no hopes for the success of a Democrat for the Presidency in 1871, but a renegade Republican, if elected, would be bet. 'ter than Grant, as the Democrats would then stand a chance of getting the offices, theirsole ambition. Even the St. Louis Republican favors this " no nomination" plan. It reminds us of the surrender and disbandment of the Rebel army in the Spring of 1865, and the guerrilla warfare that it was proposed to carry on to sustain the Confederacy, but we think the Democracy will find that this guerrilla warfare in politics will fade away - before the solid columns of the Republican organization as it did in 1805 before the organized army' of "Boys in Blue." We should regret, indeed, to have all the spirit of the next, campaign taken out of it by the Republicans not having their old adversary to battle against, but the Democrats made the last campaign the decisive battle, and we sup pose It is no more than right for them to abide by that declSion, surrender the field and dis band their organizations. Here and there the result is not felt so keenly, as in such counties as our own, and in Lehigh the Democrats may have some shoW of getting out a large portion of their vote next,year, but it will be impossi ble for them to poll as large a majority as in the last campaign. IN view of the recent alarming. conflagra tions at Chicago and elsewhere there is the greatest necessity for eilleient 'preparation for checking fires at the outset. The New York Tribune gives some timely and sensible ad. , vice upon this point as follows : "The steam• fire engine is a grand invention ; but we want also a cheap $lO engine in every house, or every neighborhood to attack fire even at the beginning,whlle It is controllable. A garden. pump, delivering water through a hue, will with three gallons of water, put out a very large and formidable fire. With the great fire-engines there is also a desire to throw the water high. Everybody has seen many hogs. beads full of water thrown completely over a burning building, so that it fell upon the ground on the opposite side, and many more pouring upon the roof of the building merely to run off as the rain does, when one barrel full, delivered into the lower story through the window, would have eitinguished the fire. She great secrets of a good and successful fire- Wan 'are: play low, on the lowest part of the fire; throw the water in a spray, if possible: and don't neglect to throw a pailful this instant, on the r mere hope of being able to throw a barrel full five minutes hence. That five minutes' start may put thefiro beyond the control oven of a steam-ftre engine. LIFE Insurance comptuiles and policy hold. ars can take notice that the vexed question of whether a suicide vitiates a policy has received adjudication that should be final. The case of Weed vs the Mutual Benefit Life, of New Jer sey, has Just been decided by the Superior Court of New York, after a long and severe fight, and the plaintiff awarded the full amount of the policy, with interest 412,502.680 on the ground that suicide is an evidence of In sanity. THE RAILROAD LEASE. Although the lease of the railroad and canal lines of "Tire United Company" by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company Is every where recognized as a very important event In the railroad history of the times, compare,. tively few persons appreciate the magnitude and scope of the transaction. The common idea is that the Pennsylvania Railroad has ob tained control of the two lines of railroad be tween Philadelphia and Jersey City and be tween Camden and Atnboy, and of the Dela ware and Raritan Canal, and that that is the extent of the acquisition. But the truth is that these roads constitudo less than one-third of the whole amount of roads which passes into the hands of the lessees. These roads com prise one hundred and fifty-four miles of track while the whole amount of road transferred is four hundred and ninety-eight mites, besides sixty five miles of canal, two ferry companies and one bridge company. The following is a list of the separate charters that pass under the lease to the Pennsylvania Railroad Company: Camden and Amboy R R... 94 miles Philadelphia and Trentou Rli 08 rr New Jerecy It R and Transportation C0..32 " New Jereey Rli 87 " Salem It It a 17 " Mhlville and Glassboro' It R .12 44 = . . . . . . Cape May and Mein(' RR 41 " Swedesboro' It 11 ' 11 " Belvidere Delaware It It 69 " Flemington It It 12 " Camden and Burlington 11 It ........ .. ..... ....25 " Pemberton and Illglitstown It II or, w Mount Holly und Medford R R 0 Burlington and Mount Holly R. 1t.... 7 Vlncentow•n Branch It 11 3 id Freehold and Jamesburg R R... ... 15 " Squankurit and Freehold It 1t... 4 " Rocky Hill It It 7 " Perth Amboy and Woodbridge R Ft. ..... .... .7 " New Brunswick and Millstone R R.......... 7 " Somer,et and Mercer R R...... .............. ...18 " Frankrord and liointemburg R R Connecting Railroad .. Total • 499 mlles Delaware and Raritan Canal and feeder, 65 " Jersey City Ferry Co. Camden and Philadelphia Ferry Co. Delaware Bridge Co. This table serves to convey some idea of the addition that has been made to the details of the tremendous business controlled by the Pennsylvania Railroad. Each of the above charters involves a separate organization,each requiring constant oNtersimflit and constant de velopment to enable the lessee to fulfil the ob ligations of the lease, and at the same time, to keep up with the steadily increasing necessity for larger and better accommodations for freight and travel. And yet this addition of five liundred miles more of railroad will not be felt as an influence disturbing, in the slightest degree the wonderfully smooth and quiet work ing of the ponderous but delicate machinery of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. The acquisition of some of these lines amid carries with it the imperative necessity for still further extensions; while upon others there will un• doubtedly be a vigorous carrying forward of the improvements that have been progressing for several years past, under the old manage inent. So long as the Pennsylvania Railroad Company adheres to its only proper policy of directing tie energies mainly to the advantage of the city and State that gave it birth, it will be felt that the important addition which it has just made to its connections will have none but good results. —Philadelphia Bulletin. THE MAGAZINEk The Atlantic for November contains addi tional installmentS of Col. De Forest's " Kate Beaumont" and Henry Jame ' " Watch and Ward." Mr. Howell gives the fifth part of his charming " Wedding Journey," and we recommend to young muffed couplesacarc ful perusal of the first wedded quarrel between Basil and Isabel. Mr. Fields continues hes ”einmiscences of Dickens in "Our Whispering Gallery," and we hope that he will long con tinue his interesting monthly chats about the prominent literary men of his acquaintance. Edmund C. Stedman has a scholarly paper upon " Tennyson and Theocritus," Clarence K ng has an interesting description of " Way hide Pikes," and Stephen Powers writes upon " California Sieved." The poetry of the number is furnished by Cilia Thaxter, M. E. N. Hathaway and Carl Spencer. Sctilmor's commences a new volume with the November number, and the announce ments which are made as to the coming year render it certain that the magazine will be better than ever. A111.,13g the special attrac aons for the new volume are a series of pa pers by Mr. Gladstone, the English Premier, and contributhms in prose and verse by Joe. gum Miller, the " Poet of the Sierras." The illustrntad papers in the present number are: "Thirty-seven Days of. Peril," by Truman C. Everts, a member of the. Yellowstone Explor ing Expedition ; " The Unbarring of Hell Gate," by James Richardson; and " Low Life in Nature," by Prof. Scheid de Vero. In the story line there isa continuation of George Macdonald's " Wilfried Cumbermede," the first half of "The Two Mrs. Schudamnres," by Mrs. Oliphant, "Not o Pleasant Story,"by Miss Phelps, end " by Edward Eggleston. " The Right not to Vote" is the subject of a paper by W. C. Conant, and there are several other interesting and reada ble articles. Tic chief poetic feature of the number is " Front Sea to. Sea," by Joaquin deseqtive of it ride from the Atlantic to the Pacific coast. 01(1 and New for November has the second installment of George Macdonald's new serial, and the tenth chapter of Mr. Flails " Ups and Downs." Rev. Dr. Henry W. Bellows writes upon "The Modern English Novel," and Rev. Charles H. Brigham diaaaaira ',For giveness of Sins," " What was in Hilda Hyde's Bundle" is the title °fa well told story by a nameless writer, and there are numerous other readable articles in prose and verse. "Tie Examiner" and "The Record of pro gress" are unusually interesting. The De cember number will contain the commence ment of a serial entitled " Six of One by Half a Dozen of the Other," to be written jointly by Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe, Fred. W. Loring, Lucretia Hale, F. B. Perkins, Mrs. Whitney, and 'Rev. E. E Hale. This is a novel experiment in story writing, and there will-be no little curiosity to see bow it suc ceeds. There will be a " Christmas Locket" this year as lashwhich will be full of good things, for the publishers of " Old and' New" are always generous with their readers. DEATH OF SENATOR CONNELI Hon. George Connell, elected to the State Senate, at the last election, from the Fourth Senatorial District, died at his residence In West Philadelphia, yesterday morning, aged fifty-six years. Senator Council had been very ill for sonic time, and his friends had very little hopes of his recovery. In fact, the day after the elec tion, his death was announced in the Miners' Journal. lie had served four terms in the Senate, was a hard and uncompromising Re publican and an invaluable legislator, always on the watch for the interests of his constitu ents. Ilis death, presuming Mr., Weakley will gldn his scat, causes a tie In the Senate and as no election Mr hie successor can be held Ipfore the Speaker of the Senate, Coffee-pot Wallace, issues the writ of election, it is prob able we shall have a dead-lock in the Senate. Even should the writ be issued before the meeting of the Legislature the district will be in dancer from the mind causes that enabled the Democrats to count Goebert In last. year. IT ' is proposed to,iteat the entire city of Chi cago whoa it is rebuilt, with steam. The New York Times says it may be doubted whether the time is ripe for so extensive an improve ment ; but when we remember that steam may be forced lino agh these pipes to an im mense distance, with a very slight diminution of beat and at the rate of seven miles per min ute, it does indeed seem as If the day could not be far distant when a practical application shall be made of what has long been theoreti cally admitted. LET-HUH REGISTER, ALLENTOWN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1,1871. THE Post IA entirely confident that "the bare mention of Col. Soott's name for the Presidency has struck a chord in the popular heart which will not =solo vibrate until the destinies of the country are placed fully in his keeping." Our neighbor is behind the age and don't understand Col. Scott, who has quite another way of doing things. Seeing that the Railroads are going to have "the des. tinies of the country fully in their keeping," ho "goes for" the Railroads. lie is too prac tical for the Post's plan and csn't wait for "the destinies," or think of any such devious method as it proposes to place them "fully in his keeping."—Pittsburgh Commercial. THE Rev. Robert Colyer discoursed in Bt. Louis on Sunday evening last. Referring to the Chicago conflagration, he said : You have no idea of the sadness and the horror, and let me say the glory and beauty of that scene, for while the flames were sweeping along, and leaping like mad beasts, as It with Inform instinct, there was something about us more beautiful and noble than anything I ever saw In this world before. For this splendid Ameri can character then came out in a beauty such as I never witnessed. I did not see a man moaning or a woman crying of your stock. lam nn Englishman. But these men that were born in New England clung to their children, and their faces were very white, but there was no moaning from the thing they had to do then and there. I did not see a single man or woman that was not trying to do something for somebody else more helpless than they were themselves. I think this American type is the noblest God ever made, and I don't know but that it is the noblest that lie ever will make. ER TIM November number of Harper's Maga zine gives the details of an improved method of vaccination, which may perhaps deserve the attention of our own medical practitioners. The new plan was first practiced by. a Mr. Ellis, an English physician. Ordinary vacci nation is performed by scraping off the epider mis, and thrusting the vaccine virus into a puncture made by the lancet. A greatly im proved method, however, consists in first raising a small blister by a drop of cantharides applied to the skin. This is to be pricked, and the drop of fluid let out, and then a fine vaccine point put into- this place, and with drawn after a moment of delay; the epi dermis falls back and quite excludes the air, shutting out any germs that may be floating in the atmosphere. This method has been practiced by Mr. Ellis for twenty years ; and out of hundreds of cases of vaccination which he has performed, he has never bad an instance of blood poisoningor abcess, while by the ordinary method of occurrence of secondary abcess is by no means uncommon, and that of pyremia is often observed. The comparative safety of this method is believed to be due, first, to the exclusion of the air ; and second, to the lesser size of the' aperture for 'the intro duction of mischief than when the punctures are made by the lancet. IN view of the fact that the Republicans in twenty•six counties of this :hate polled aiore votes this year than they did two years qen under the stimulus of the gubernatorial ...I. paign It is evident that the party has nut 1 , - come so " hopelessly disorganized" as sonr of the Democratic editors and orators though, before the late election. The Republican party In Pennsylvania was never In better fighting trim than it is now, and the results of the recent election Will go a great way toward assuring the party in this State of its inherent strength and ability to defeat its Democratic opponents whenever a fair fight is made. The last election was a noble Republican triumph, but the majorities given then must be material ly enlarged next year., And that they will be no one who understands the temper of the voters of this State has the slightest doubt. LOUIS NAPOLEON still professes to believe that he Is the rightful sovereign of France and that the only thing necessary to restore him to his former position is to have a vote taken in France. He must have read the signs of the times for the last twelve months to very little purpose to entertain such an opinion as' that, for if there is any one thing that the French people are united upon it is opposition to the former Emperor. They have no desire or disposition to have Napoleon reinstated and the sooner the late Emperor makes up his mind that his days of imperial reign are over the' better it will be for him. TIIIIOUGLI their Secretary, J. NV. Iredefl, Jr., the policy-holders of the Home Mutual Life, of Cincinnati, have been re-insured in the Union Central of that city. This gives the Union Central more than 5,000 policies and $10,000,• 000 insurance, while the total assets are over $550,000, making it one of the strongest of Western Companies. Mr. Iredell will remain with the Union Central in charge of the affairs of the Home. TWEED'S CRIMES. Startling and Unanswerable Proof, of him Enor anon. Thefts. From the Tribune of Thursday At last the evidence against William M. Tweed has been completed to the satisfaction of Mr. Charles O'Conor. It Is given to the public this morning in advance of its sub mission in a court of justice to-day. Mr. Tweed's arrest in criminal and civil suits, to punish his crime and recover thu amounts which he has stolen, will probably follow to day. Inquiry was made as to whether the suit would be begun In this county or some other. We are authorized to state by one of the coun sel associated with the Acting Attorney-Gene. ral who begins this action, that the application for arrest will be made to some court outside of New York. Albany County will probably be selected. The fraudulent transaction, which is the subject of the contemplated suit, began in the passage of Section 4 of the County Tax Levy of 1870, which reads as follows: County Tax-Levy, 1870—SECTION 4. All liabilities against the County of New York, incurred previous to the passage of this act, shall be audited by the Mayor, Controller, and present President of the Board of Super visors, and the amounts which are found lobe due shall be provided for by the issue of rev enue bonds of the County of New York, pay able during the year 1871, and the Board of Supervisors sball include, in the ordinance levying the taxes for the year 1871, an amount sufficient to pay said bonds and the Interest thereon. Such claims shall. be paid by the Controller to the party or parties entitled to receive the same upon the certificate of the officers named herein. That section was an innocent-looking but deceptive provision for the payment of such claims and-liabilities against the county by the Special Board of Audit created by that act. That Board of Audit consisted of Mayor Hall; Controller Connolly, and Wm. M. Tweed,,President of the then Board of Super visors. That Board of Audit never had but one me ing, and that did not last fifteen min utes. At that meeting the record was made up of a minute and resolution, which resolution was drawn and read by Mayor Hall, and is said to be in his handwriting. Instead of auditing the claims or liabilities against the county that resolution, in plaip violation of the law, provided that the Auditor, in the Controller's office (then James Watson), should collect together all the claims, and that the certificates of Wm. M. Tweed, President' of the Board of Supervisors, or Joseph B. Young, Secretary of the same Board, should be the evidence required to enable the claim to be paid. It Is now held by the Acting Attorney. General that Mayor Hall must have advised his colleagues in that Boanl that this was an execution of their trust, whereas the duty im poSed upon them was to investigate these ac counts and find out what amount, if any, was due upon them. The Board of Audit, conse quently, had no right whatever to take the certification proposed by the resolution as conclusive. It was bound to look iuto these claims, and to exerelsonjudgment upon them. that duty was not ministerial, but judicial. The next step was the colleption ofthe war rants. Of the total amount of these warrants 0,312,541 87, three dependents and tools of Mr. Wm. M. Tweed deposited $5.710,913 98, and the New York Printing Company depos Red $384,395 10, making $8,093,319 17. Fur ther, $103,648 68 is believed to have been de posited by Ingersoll In a different bank, so that the whole amount of the audit, except $113,583 62, was really collected by persons in connection with min collusion with Tweed. Ingersoll collected $8,501,584 50 of the war rants, and he received trom Garvey, out of his collection, $47,744 68. Of that aggregate ho paid over to We (Alward $1,817,40749, or a little more than hall of his whole receipts. Garvey deposited warrants amounting to $1,177,413 72. Ile, Garvey, paid to Wood ward $731,871 01, or over two-thirds of tee whole amount of his receipts. Woodward deposited $1,032,715 76, and he received In checks from Ingersoll and Garvey enough of these collections to oink° a total of $3,582,- 05426. Of this amount he paid over $923,- 858 50 to Tweed. Woodward was then and is now a deputy clerk to Young of the Board of Supervisors, on whose certification, according to Mayor Hall's resolution, as well as on that of Mr. Tweed, the bills were to be paid. It is un known to whom Woodward made other pay ments, but those lie made to Tweed are estab lished beyond doubt. The tickets accom panying the deposits are in the handwriting of Woodward, and the teller of the (roadway Bank swore that they were generally made by Woodward In person. Including $104,883 04, Tweed received a handsome aggregate of $1,037,102 14. The manner in which the City warrants were identified is explained in the affidavit of Mr. Tilben appended. The first table ap pended is headed " County Liabllitik s." That Is made up from the records in the Controller's office and The warrants. The last contains all there is on the back of the warrants. Nearly the vouchers of these bills were among those stolen on Sunday, Sept. 10, but the warrants were kept in a different place, and are now in the Controllor's Office. The next table head ed "Identification of Parties who Received Proceeds of the Warrants,' ;from the books in Controller's Office, and from the warrants themselves, and the Identification of the per sons who deposited the warrants is made out from accounts of the entries in the National Broadway Bai.k. The asterisks against the amount of the warrants in the fifth column indicate those of the Keyser warrants on which John H. Keyser alleges the indorse meats were forged. All those warrants which fell within the period of this account were collected by Wood ward, except one, and that one by Ingersoll. Undoubtedly the transactions, taken to- gelber, were, in the opinion of the Acting Attorney-General, a conspiracy to defraud the county by means of bills exaggbraled many tiie work or services received, or for work and services already paid for, or for accounts that were fictitious. The result throws great light both on the stealing and burning of the vouchers by Hag erty, the janitor of the building, appointed by the Chamberlain, and also upon the Keyser forgeries. NASBY AT ROC H EsTER, If hat the Canjedrit X Roads Ex-Posta. Wee sa at the Zwainnify State Conventl,,a. Prom yhe Toledo Blade. CONFEDRIT X Pr‘ADS. WILD IB IN TILE STATE ON KENT' CRY),) October 14, Ib7l. I am in the sere and yeller leaf, and hey seen much of politics, but never in my life did I ever see a convenshun so beautifully managed ez the late Democratic Convenshun at II ichester, Noo York. I waz there by speshel invitation uv my old friend D. anis O'Shauglinessy, uv the Sixth Ward, Noo York, who, since I left tile Harp uv Erin Saloon has improved won. derfully in a wordly pint uv view. Ile was then a hod-carrier by profession and a repeat er by practice. He attracted the attention uv Mr. Tweed by his zeal in votin and his bra very in knockin downopposisshen v..ters,and was uv course rewarded. He Is no .v Assis tant Inspector uv Musket Triggers uv the Ninth Regimental Armory, at a salary of $3OO per month, Skool Inspector in the Sixth ward, at a salary of $4OO per month, and Thirty-sec ond Assistant Law Adviser to the commission for condemning private property, for streets and sick, at a salary uv three thousand dollars per year, besides which lie hcz a tenth interest in the contract for keepip the ghiss in repair of the two back winders uv two Armeries,out uv which he made $lO,OOO in the first six months. He was to hey lied the contrack for the two front winders in addition, but the raid the people made on the Ring busted that. De hez, however, Invested largely in city lots,and wears kid gloves and a diamond ez big ez a peachstone. 'Dennis said that ef the infernal Amerikens and Germans kin 'oe beat down and the control of Noo York left with the Irish, where it belongs, he w 11l be tolerably well off in a year or two. Dennis, being uv consequence ill the party wuz, uv course, in the private counsels uv the managers uv the State Convenshun. He and Tweed, Sweeny, Mayor Hall,Keyser,Garwin, and the entire convocasben was' at Rochester though nobody knowed it. They went iu a speshel private car, and hed private rooms at the Osborne House, with a private wire run nits directly to the hall into Melt the Conven shun was held. It wuz the most impressive scene I ever witnesst ; one wick these old eyes will probably never look onto agin. Ther in an city chair sot one man directing the delib erashens uv a convenehun uv the great State uv Noo York—one brain thinkin for a thou sand—one hand guidiu a thousand. He di rected the Convenshun to cheer when Sey mour's name wuz announst ez a delegate. and they cheered—he directed em to reject the Tammany delegashun from the city, and they wuz rejected—he directed em to do every thing that wuz done and they did it. "My great sir," sed I, in astonishment at the power he wielded, "why don't ,you go 'over to the hall and direct the Convene tun ?" "My gentle Sir," retorted he, with bland smile, ez he dictated a message directiu uv the Corivenshun to cheer when the rejecoion of the Tammany delegates was announced, "my dear Sir, lAK THERE I There's a hundred I.IV my throats a ehoutiu this minit—there's two hundred uv my hands a clappin vocifer ou at this minit. There's a great many of me in that hall." After the adjournment of the Conv..nshun for dinner, the Chairman uv of the Coromittee on Resolooshens came into the room to sub mit the resolooshens they had pill:stet', that they mite be spoor they wood meet 31r. Tweed's ideas.- The great man read t. al at. tentively and banded uv em back. "They won't do," sed he sententiously. "In what reepeck ate they faulty V" asked the Chairman, obsequiously., " Woodent It be well enough," sed Tweed, with a smile still more bland than the first, " woodent It be well enougb to put In u reso, looshen denouncin corrupshen, in - gvneral terms, uv coorse, epecifyin partikerlerb,how ever; the especial corrupshon of the Neshnel Government, and that uv States which is un der Radikal control I" The sublimity uv filch a selection ccmia from Tweed grads the Chairman ral uv heap. "Certainly I will, of yoo wish it," sed he, 'hut I sposed—that.isony idee wuz—in a gene• tel way, yoo know, that the least sod about corrupshen, In view uv—well, I am jist now holding a place wich pays somethin like ten thou—but never mind, it steel be done." "Then agin," said Tweed, smilin still blan der and with the faintest sejestion ov a wink In his lefteye, " I would sejest that you pledge theMemocratic party to a honest and !•cnno micail expeuditoor uv the public funds !" The Chairman turned pale with surprise, but lie coincided. Everybody coinchb s Tweed. "And while yoo are at it," continued the great chieftain with a snipe, the blandnis uv wich can't be described, "you bed better put in,a resolooshen denouncin the profligacy uv the management uv matters In Non York City, I but makin it, mind yoo, cc the legitimate re sult of 'Radical legislashen four yeers ago. Draw up this resoloeshen so as to tnalte it plain that it's me your drivin at, without exactly namin toe." " Why, what shell we—" " Don't go on, my friend," sed Tweed, smilin a smile which for blandnis excelled the most delishus .1 non morning, "it's much bet ter to hey the corrupshen dennunst by us than by the enemy, partikelerly t z we know more definitely about it. And I would tit jest that yoo hey a resolooshen, boldly ehalleogin a comparison between the Ifepublikin and Dem ocratic administrations tie the State and City Governments, and (here he £ailed with blandnis with wits heavenly, un he fingered a most gigantic diamond On the little finger of his left hand,and sipped a glass of champagne) any little thing wtch yoo kin throw in en to the necessity u• a return to the simplicity uv our Puritan fathers wood be well." The Chairanan min too affected to say a word, but he made the necessary notes, and cantin one look tie nston;shment at the great ness of ids cheef, who sat there smilin blandly, retired from the presence. But the great man's work wnz not yet done. He promptly telegraffi every prominent Dem ocratic editor and politishtyn the State to denounce him in the bitterest tennis, and tnfn thllin the Convention who to nominate and wat else to do, went home. There Is a greatness and a grandeur in this man wich I can't sufficiently admire. Some .men wood he so pulled up with the pc,56V, , ,i1111 UV the twent yffive millions wich he hen. made en to insist upon an indorsement by the party through which he made it, but not sit with Tweed. There aint no vanity about him. Si) long en he hen the control uv the party, be don't care tt cent whether he is publicly re cognized or not. Er. he remarkt to me of the way to my contintmshen in power is in de nunciashen uv me, very good, denounce me. I kin stand it. I ain't the first man who, to get on, hez trampled over the dead body of his reputashen. I'd jilt ez soon pull the Aires behind the curtain ez to manipulate the pupils in front uv it. I ain't again to let per. social vanity stand in the way uv the grand success. I'm hoping for next year. I'm a rather heavy load for the party to carry just now, and I'm going to releevc 'em—till after the Presblenshel elecshen." Then I saw •wat motive W : tiz actooatin the Amerlkin Napoleon, and I wuz agin lost, in wonder. Whoever the Democratic nominee is, he will simply be a shadder, uv wich Tweed will be the substance. Tweed will be the power behind the throne, wich is greater than . the throne itself. And What a glorious pros pek opens to usl Think uv a Democratic President in 1873, with Tweed behiml him ! Think ttv Tweed makln collectors, and as sessors, and postmasters, and all uv em twin responsible solely to him ! if he hez mode uv himself the revenues uv one city, wat w ill he do when he hez the nasheri to bleed ! I she! to wunst cultivate pleasant relashens with Tweed. PETROLEUM V. 15.1511 Y, I'. ( W 'eh wuz POSi m nst r. ) 11 , :ssra has ordered over a million and a half of men under arms to protec! her hordets. This warlike attitude means sane thing which will LP more fully developed in a few days. 011SEItIEN, ATTENTION !. HEAD TILE FOLLOWING ! Tao•ony, 11',Iroi. JAMErI u+•"1 Dr. Felix 11. Alatiiehkein Prussian Liniment on a Jill,' of mine, si liieb hail a bad nplint, canting Irinene,n. I nod bottle With entire maroon., caring tier completely. AprilB 1559. JONA. P. lI:EWELL Thin invaluable Liniment In MOM by Orngiti+M and Storekeepere. Wieiltwain by JA 31E, U. SVEL La, N. E. nor. of Sib and Spring Warden Sin.. For nalo in Allentown by L. SCII3II DIE St 1 , 1.. E.,t Ilion Won Street, Ur. W. E. BARNES SUN, .I.AWA I.li & )IA 11. Ti N and JOHN H. 31(15511. spCtia: Notices fiErrING MARRIED.—EssArs roi Yonne Men. on erect SOCIAL E.1:11.S d 1 A 111',E which Interfere with MARRlAtir—tvtllt nu re no , tte... relief for iho Errlnn illlll (inforoin to , .1 , 1 , 0 Rated. %In/ ASSiiCIATION, No. Ninth ntr..nt, li.t 1a .. 7 3 ERRORS OF YOUTH -A gent leman %Oa tlnfiered for yearn from Nen you.. I%..lanty, 'Wan% turn Decay and all the. effectx of youthful Indkerollon. wilt, forthe coke of oitlfering froo to all who need It. the reel pound illreetion for youl, tug the •Itn ple remedy by wlityll wa , Sofler.o.. Avi•llln t t rofit by the utlyertki•r•t• expellent , ran do 4. by :Id preening luperfeet coulblettee, N II Ott IiEN, No. 42 Cedar St. NOW York. rioNsirorTios, rrs (THE .iND PREVENTITIVE. HY J. It. SCIIENCE. yl. Ii Many elisions being ben passed limay,for death there we, uo other riowou thou the neglect of known an ludispuOtily proven weeux of core. Those near awl deer to frailly and friends are sleeping dreamless sluniber into whch, heel they enlnily adoptiol DR. JOSEPH 11. NCH EN (.K'S :AMPLE. TREATMENT, g.devAlleil the:lowly, of his wonderful efficacious med icines they would not have fallen. i Dr. icheuck has in his own cit.e proveibthat ivlliovver sufficient vitality ensuing. thAt vitality by his medicines ens his directions fur their use, iv qUinken•A Into health ful vigor. in tits elatement there to nothing Presumptuous. Tu the faith of the Invall l le 111:1110 no r ;1rk...441E1mi that lo Out s thousand Uwe eubetatilleted by liying•,,,,d visible works. The theory of the core by Dr. Si.benek's medi cines is as simple RN It is nn forting. Its plifi.e.ophy re gales no argument. It is self-ns..aring, The Seaweed Tonic end Mandrake Pills are OM first two weep°aa with which the cit Wei f malady is d. Tnio•thirds at the rase- of cononteption originate b i pepsla suit a fnuellimaliy disordered liver With this COlldltion the bronchial mime " eynipaildre" with Die !domicil. They ruspond to the morbifie lotion of the Hero then comes the culminating result, and the setting In, with all its dietressi-st ',Auctions of CONSUMPTION: The Mandrake Pills' are compoeed of one of :Vetere', nobleet gifts—the Podophlllura Peltatum. 114 y posse', all the blood-aearehing, alterative properties of calomel, hut unlike calomet. they LEAVE NO STING BEHIND," • • Thu work of cute In now beginning. Tlit•.vltlate,l and mucous deposit. In the bowels and in the alimentary enroll are ejected. The liver, like a clock, In wound up. It arouses (nom its torpidity. The stomach am, repo...only, ly, and the patient begins to feel that he is oohing, at A SUPPLY OF 000 D BLOOD. Tho Seaweed Tonle, in coujunction with the Pills, per• :neaten nod assimilates with the food. Chy lineation I, now progressing without Its previous tortures. Dige , olon becomes painless. and the cure is seen to be at hand There is no more flatulence, no exacerbation of the rho. mach. An appellteeete In. Now comes the greaten) Blood PuriLerover yet given by an indulgent father to suffering roan. Schnuck ';• Pulmen lo Syrup cornea In to perform Ito functions and to hasten and complete the core. It enter,. at once upon it, work. Nature cannot be cheated. It collects nod rip o- the Int• Paired and diseased portions of the lungs Ie the form of gathering,, It prepares them fur expscloration. aud to I la a vary short time the malady Is vanquished, the rotten throne that it occupied is renovated and made new, and the patient, In all the dignity of regained Vigor, step.' frlbal o oujoy the manhood or too womanhood that Wan GIVEN UP AS LOST. The oecond thing in, the pationtn must stay in a Warm room until they get ; it Is almost impossible to pre• vent taking cold when the lungs aro disease& but it 11,0,1 be prevented or a cure cannot he effected. Fresh alr awl riding out, especially in this section of the country in the all and winter setteon, are all wrong. Phyalchom who . recommend that course lose their pationts, If tie, lungs are badly diseased. and Yet, because they art' In thelion. , o they must not nit down quiet; they must walk tripoli the room an much and an fast an the strength will hear, to get up a good circulation of blood. Tho pullout.; must k, en In good spirits—be determined to got well. This has ti great dent to do with the unveil)°, and Is the great point 1 to gain. To de•pair of cure after such evidence of its poesibUity in the WOW Cases, and moral certainty in nil other, i. sinful. Dr. Schenck n personal statement to the Faculty of his own care was lo lid,. modest words .• bl au , years ago I was In the last stug••/ , ..f conntlmP• Bon ; confined to my hod and at one {IMO my physieno. thought that I could not live a week ; then, liken drown ' log man catobinga• *trews, I heard of and obtained the prolutrations which I note offer to the public. they_ made a perfect cure of me. It mooned to tune that I could feel them penetrate my whole nyoWin. They t.ooo rie ed the matter in my lunge, and I would epit :nor,. t h ou plot of enmity° yellow matter every morning for nag Mute.' As 0000 all that began to subside my Congh, fever, pain and night sweats all began to leave no., and my aPtoolte brealllo nu great that II Wan with difficulty I con d keep from eating 100 WM b. I so keep ray strength' and kayo grown in ilehlt ever oince. I was Welshed shol after toy roenyrry. , ' the DOCRT. than 10 , 11[111U II 0 a Imo, s'eeletoo ; weight war only olnety•seveu muds • thy pro,etit it tx two hundred and twouty•five t c ponutle, and tor yearn have enjoyed uninterrupted health ." Dr. Schnuck has discoUttlined loin profensioual viable to New York and Boston. floor his eon, 0r...T. It . Schenck, Jr., still continua to soa pullout.. at their office, .No. North distil street, Philadelphia, every Saturday from A A. M.lO JP. Res Thee ter s ou l a thorough examloa lion with the Itespirelneter he charged fl. Thelunge, lies. pirometer declares the exact coodition of the lungs. and patiento can readily learn whether they or,, eurabh.. , r not . The directions fur taking the medicines ere lulu; red to the 'menisci.. noon of a chill. Following those darer. lions,., and kind Nature will do the rest, excepting that in and t r u " e k til o u r :e t :l ' l l g o t il k .,! . r n „ i o n c. i . n o c Z. ' n ' t: moots than l i t e ;y:2o o . l4 Z)Ve r il i gfillat t e " .fBl " l:NOVAMJ mod Welcome syniptotti. Whim ff. come, as it wil come. let the despairing at aura be of good cheer. flood I tood at once follow., the cough loosens. the night sweat abated. In aawa, short time both of these morbid symp toms aro gene forever. Dr. Schuck's medicine.; aro constantly. kept In tens of thousands of families. As a lanoline I r on pug. the Mandrake are a standard preparti • while the PUIIIIOI2IO Syrup, Re curer Of coughs and col . da, way be regarded as a prophylacterlc against consumption In any of Its forms. • • •• Price of the Pulsnon le Syrup and Fen woe.' T,, lc, $1 (0 brittle. or $7 (.0 dosuu . Mandrake Pills, 03 acute box. Fur s•lo b.) ell draggi.,ts sod dealers. JOHNSON, HOLLOWAY k COWDEN, =Arch street, PhlldolDhlaa Wholesale Amts. Cesy:27l-ly or Zbrriat Noticts ir rv -- , " TO CONSUMPTIVES.—Tho advartined tfv-Y having been restored to health In a few weeks, by it very simple remedy, after having eofered nelleellt yeara with a revere lung a tfertiou, and that dread direarejton au:option, Imanxiour to makeknown to his fellow sufferer', the means ammo. Toon whoderire It, he will send aeon,' of the proscription toted (free of charge), with the direc tions for priplleitig and using the eartle, which they will nod a core core for Courutoption, Asthma, Bronchitis, &c. The only object of the ad vertitter In heeding the Prescrip tion Is to benefit the stalicted, and spread Information Rhirh her...m.lv., to he lovalnahle ; and lin hopes every sufferer will try his remedy, as It will cost them nothing and may prove a blessing. • Parties w lug the pr,,eriptinn wlll Meese x ddr Ram EDWARD A. WILE ON; Wllliatuxburg Klima Co. o. MYSTIC WATER FROM DAVID'S WELL. .The - groat VIIETIC, TONIC end A LTF.HAT IVP rem edy of ILI. AOH, i1.1:0•1 in ' , elution the Profaitle of iron anti other eallable eentpeuntle, and in being Proved h/ the unerring Clint,, repented trhaw, ax one or the be.t NEMEI.I. for Kidney lageeniee, DyNnerala, Nervani• neat. hirer Complatnte, Catarrhal Affecetanx. (?on• r lspfion, In its early . D tagee, Dialatee, hdcolintli Dis orders, and Genera l tbility. It panic. and enrich-a the hypo, 1,1,0,04 the appetite, Promotes disteotion. .tittalates the .errelletto and vitalize. the nerveas ego, loin. It I. highly recommended by Physicians. end the tootietonials of illVAliii. reVolli it, Roartit paver, It Is ttold thtt low print of (APO i.or box of oar dozen att. t b tieltvena at Unica, Pa., to be expretmed to any point, -rho !I E.ll.l:in INSTITUTE at DAVID'S WELL le thetignotl to , 1 ,,,, 11111 - nniate all reolt.o. of the year Who prefer drinking the 3IYnTIU WATER from the WELL. D. Y. CAD WALLADER, Inal Race Phlloda. Jan 18.t1in I'o. DEAFNESS, BLINDNESS AND CA TABBB treated with the utmost 1/11CCOPA. by J. ISAACS, M. D. and ProfeY/lor or Dfeeyeee of the F:ye and Eor, epocialty) in the Jholfrol College of Penn nei va "Ira, rillenenexpertence.(formerly of Loyd Hol land: I No. bal Arch Strect, Phila. Tentimoninle can be soon at Ids ellice. The Medical (scatty are Invited to ac company their patients, ne he has no accrete In hie pros.. lice, Artificial eyes Inserted without pain No charge (or examination. nprlO-ly WALES tVEGETABLE SICILIAN HAI • RENEWER. IT POSITIVELY RESTORE ORA HAIR = It keen. the hair from NIIIna ont. It I. tho bext dren -4., In the word to klng star. Iwtolby billr,. ho.tlthy, molt nd glosAy. . roe q4lO tiro:mkt, R. I'. & CO., Nashua, N. 11., Proprietors itiisrcilancottz MORI: Popular th n any Other ALWAYS ON THE LEAD, The Glory of the Morning and Any Other Time. Tho hrattot Mt. n.og (nor,' Stove. tt.ro nttutUftt.Wrt.tl t!u~,•.trio ttr otter to o.titteh thao nor betufe, to [Heel lii , gr , it otottob byn 11,t•chtott otttY, They ore Hold by W:NI. G. RFFTER, DEALER IN STOVES & TI N \V.\ It 831 Hamilton St., Allentown. T. etre hundred dr these Stoves have been bold In this rennlY llarthll the Pest nre year., every one of which I as elven n.1.111.ed safisfirthou, which Is the best recom- Inend aloe they need Always on Lund all hindsof Slovel,lts ogee, Furnaces, Grates. Tit, and sheet-Iron Ware. M=M=M=l TI11:111 , ;VI.ATOR,1 . 11 Rovo!vow T,.p, • 110 r lII,AhT tr XCELSIOIL COoK, SPEAR'S ANTI.DITST COOK. ALL RIGHT COOK, UOLD 31e.DAL, ETC. Also, a larze varisly of lbe most approved floating Stoves. ocai-cr LADIES' SUFI'S ! SJLKS, LACES, DRESS GOODS ! HOSIERY, GLOVES, LINENS! AND ALL AKTICLES FOR Ladies' Dress or Wear J. M. lIAFLEIGH, HA VINO HE3IOV ED , TO 1 1 0% - ) CHESTNUT STREET, ELPII Is now prepared to sell the above Goods at lower prices than the same qualities can be famished by any other House. NOTE. ihttleiyh Lop to state, Mal he has organized his butkintss 1111051 a Most economical basis, and trill to purchasers out of the city at extremely low prin. A DMNIISTILATOIt'S NOTICE. li saricE I 5 lIEREBY (JIVE!!! that the undereigned hos tonen out letters of ailinintritration in the estate of a1! . ..14 r.:![1" [Wit, elerriowd, low of Catananqua, [w ind!! matt' ; therefore an Itersiiiia who aro Indebted to 1:-tate, are requested lot,, n the payment within six eek, frola the !late hereof, and those having dial.. wilt pre.•nt them duly authenticated fir soillenient wunig [hp !niece !In:rifled limo. . El= .% N'V E 1).-1111.:Itl'111.% NTS, ME , cliANics. Joni mii, to WI 11111 .Poly Woo nthi linhhiir WEATHER STRIPS an I WINDOW il'l.lolNiiri. needed in every house. Ti ey their e•IsI in fuel. lirollinble 1., Ii inier nu) lilretilio free. rei I. fir liftl ell 11,1,EN ucRNIIAaI & CO. 117 and IP.f South 'rent& Str,et.Plilladm 1 -,-.La•li.rstr‘ NO/TIC :.—NOTI C E IS I iirilEnv GIVEN to iho ropmhen, b I tho Niut.l Fit.o Co/111,111V Lchigh hint an ele t 4, in ho 11 , 111 fof 31ofelay.Noroinloot tall noxf, bet4ve 1, 1 .fool 4 o'clock, P. nt the Hon to %% .c. v 1110, Ihotel er Allllllldan 31nrke,) n.r , lorp-eo ef olectlng If Dlrceto,, to cerce I'or one Tenn.( tAt.l f luny, . . .I,iN T. GLL, ProAldeut. WI lAA Full c T. ucE2.4.ti uad I ' lll 4 l , Ellr II /11rE N lE= STEAM-HEATING APPARATUS long bo'pn In silcectiArEll orwralloa lur,ng the pant SIX TEEN)tiare and eyperlence lixs proven that the method ndptwl tTI thIS trot I tor heattott store, dwellings, public toblilitign MI .1 °Oren le tho MOST EFFICACIOUS, AND ECONOMICAL Those who have used It urn rtnnollllollll In their testy m oue mere t r ooplite less sitentleu, produces thanu , 011... s o m ud s he Ito more thoroughly suy ether hinting acCorsts, and suet, ituprovernents have boon made in their rudiators that they are groat additions to the oruntneutstlon of flue dwellings, and ere beautiful substitutes for mantels. We refer to a (ow of tho many who now IntrO thin a pa ratua to an. • :—John Wood, Lewin A. Lithe., Dr. J. F Reid, Con-Lthorken ; Nathan tirhoneld, Charted Noble Phliddolphin ; lioorao Steinmetz, lion. (Marina 1,. Min on. Wm. Mohler, (ivorgo Wrlghl, Dr. V. B. Polo, Noy A. T. C OLT, 191 BROLDWAT, NSW Toni JAMES (:PENCE, Supt,Norrinfown, Pa., or atichtlll Mr. 1.1,1 Cd At Etigl« Ilutel, Allouluvrc mugl7.d aust23-Ir CCM To Wont. who ode the Kero,llo or Conibinntion Oil. lieroneno MI Id too dare oultoo to from lio to LIO degree which you c•tt LIWN), kid ditt, well kLIOWLI CIA. clot: of • WM. REIMER, (HI RAMILTON STREET, ALLENTOWN. I'A Al•n Anythltiti In the CHINA, CLASS or QUEENS• WARE Hue at the vety to treat rates. Bud always the vary best ENGLTSII WARP, I=l N. mum! to thn Combination OIL which erects tea you f. nen...in...0.Ni,, I have thoroughly tented It Lnd 1 ay It in lArplomtve and Daniprotta. I ran rotor to dye In o e week In thin illy when+ the Cointilna• tin oil Iran 'Ulm. A 31 r: • • NOTARY PUBLIC A.yv CIVIL F:ll'6 1.% ALI T. B.'LEISENRING INSURANCE AGENT, VIRE, LIVE, AND LIVE &VOCE IVITTRAN & LEISENRING R3al Estate Agents and Scriveners. 704 HAM' LTON STREET, (Up-Stairs.) nave 011,n their bootie gorse very d•airable properlos which tolli he sol following ces and on easy terms among hirh 010 t h u TM N. Multi Street. 1.. N. Seventh Street, I,OS. Muth Street. Vaeaut Lute lo ell psrls he CLtV. 142 N. Fleventh Street. 9.1 N P.moutto titteet. 8.1 litaulltmt titreot. 843 101 North Tooth Street. 141 S. lilth Street.. STRAWBRIDGE & CLOTHIER, sept 19.6 m w 707 CHOICE AND RARE NOVELTIES OF EXQUISITE STYLE AND TASTE, DINNER, TEA, DESSERT AND TOILET SERVICE, BRONZE, PARIAN. PISQ UE, LAVA, MAJOLICA, JASPER, AORA. CR YB TAL JAPANESE AND CHI NESE GOODS. AI% IMMENSE ASSORTMENT OF HOUSE FURNISHING WARES! FIRST-CLASS GOODS. LOWEST CASH PRICES. TYN DALE, MITCH ELL & CO., 707 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. O• 7 7 BM All INISTIt ATOR'N NOTICE. Netleo is hereby given that letters testamentary having been grouted to the undersigned in the °elate of .rge Frederick, det eased, late of the Borough of Cate samle, Lehigh county, therefore all persons who know thenthelves to ho indebted to said estate, aro requested to make payment within sir weeks from the date hereof, suit such Who have any legal claims against said estate will present them well authenticated fur settlement within the above specified titan. HENRIETTA FREDERICK. ant 6.6tw Atlialulntracrlr. AIinITOICS NOTICE. Jo the Court of Common Pieria of Lehigh CourtiV• lo the :natter of the aaatantuent of Abraham F. Koons and wife to Ai. H. Horn for the benefit of creditor... Jour 7th, 11.71. Account Bled. Now, October 2, 1871, the Court appoint P. A. R. Bald win, Ertl.. Auditor, to audit account, reaettle and radiate it necrrotry, and matte diatribution. S Porn the Itecorde. S Ailed i—J. 8. DILLINOIIR. PrOth . y. 'rho 0, ileralgned will attend tot he untied of the shore appointment at Ills odic°, No. 5:10 Hamilton etrent, In the City of Allentown. on SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4th, IS7I, at ltlieelock w., when and whore all perilous In rerouted mny attend P. A. It. BALDWIN, Auditor, ALLENTOWN, BrioLor 16,1871. A DMINISTRATORS' NOTICE. A Notice Is hereby gl•en that letters of administration bare been granted to the undersigned In the estate of Chnxtlea Derhsumer, 11.'11 , late of Hanover townallip, Lehigh county ; there f ore, ell persons knowing themselve• to be Indebted tosaid estate are requested to make pa , moot within slx weeks from thedste hereof, and such who have any legal claims againat the said estate will present them well authenticated fur nettletnypt Abexe_speci. fled time, =I EX ECUTOR'S NOTICE.—NOTICE IN HEREBY • GIVEN that letters testamentary having been granted to the undersigned in the estate of HENRY (1.1,0NG NECK Ett,deceatied. late of the City of Allentown, Lehigh county ; therefore all persons who knew to to be indebted to the said estate are requested to ;nuke payment within six weeks from the date hereof, and those having claims will present them duly authenticated (or settlement within the above apecilled time. oct b nor D LLIN lift, Executor. V.XECUTOIt'S NOTICE. ALA Notice Is hereby given that letters testamentary having been granted to the undersigned In the estate of hIiSA NB. STINE, deceased, late of Upper Mace.,la township,County of Lehig, Pennsylvania ; therefore nil persons who know themselves to ho indebted to said estate nee requested to make payment within six weeks from date hereof, and $OOll who have any legal claims against said estate will present them well authenticated for settlement within the above specified time. OLIVER 11. MOSSER, HANNAH E. IdObSElt, Executors., MEE UST fiECENgb '''' IMPORTATION FROM ENGLAND 33 CRATES NEW STYLE CHINA & GLASSWARE NOW FOR SALE WHOLESALE AND RETAIL AT ENGEM AN'S CHINA STORE EMI 700 HAMILTON STREET, Ls°, TEN CAR LOA DS OP TIIE CELEBRATED OHIO STONE WARE! CROCKS, JUGS, POTS, &C., , Sir Special bargain. to Country Storekeepers. 4i - CALL AND SEE.-ij:* $1,000.000$ Ily the authority or the act of the Legislature of Ken lucky, of Nieto!, 13, 1871. the Trustees of the Public LI !my of Keetucky will give GRAND GIFT CONCERT. AT LOUISVILLE, KT., On TUEDAY, Octo'n: 31, 1371, 100, °TICKETS OF ADMISSION. 110 EACH CURREN CY ; HALF TIL,KEIS. ; QUARTER TICKETS, V. 50. Manta will be tient b vgistered letter ; the money for !bent may be emit by P. 0. money order, greenbacks, or draft. Each ticket consists of four quarters, value .160 each. The holder le entitled to admleslon to the Concert, and to the value alba gift awarded to It or Ite (motion. • 4150,1,1) IN WIRENKACKB will he dlettitinted to hold up; of tickets; In gine of from 6100,0(.0, the highest, to 4•lltk tho lowent, for'•ng rn gin of all, The Concert le the benefitthe PUBLIC LIBRARY OE' KENTUCKY. THE CITIZENS DANK OP KY. :6 TREASURER, And the Corporators cod Sopervleors are the lion. Thorne S. Drandotte, late Oovernor of Kentucky, and twenty...iv en of the Most Alstlngulebed and respectable citizens of the State . . The undersigned. late principal !butane. m maser or the very aoccesefol Olft Concert for the Inmate( the Mer- Acantile Library at Ban Francl.co, halt hone a pp ointed Agent and Manager of thin Orand 010 Concert. tho drawing and dietribution witl take piece in public, and everything will he done to 'allay the buyers of Beg ets that their ,ntorto.ts will be se wall protected as If they were p.sonally preheat to enperintend the entire affair. For ticket. and Information apply to C. it. PURRS. 12.• Main Bt , Louisville, Ky. Fl No. 8 Astor uitee, New t ort 11. N. !Tempel.), No.llo Broadway, Milwaukee, Wis. . M. A. French, 1, Irginia city. havarle. N 11. A. Wol ff , o. 3IQ Cheetaul Simi. St Lents. Tickets also fur sale In every prominent placesk the Ceep2l.4t w ALLTENOWN tOLLING MILL CO., THAYER, ERD3IAN, WILSON & CO., wy. ReimEß STEAM ENUINES AND BOMBS, BRIDGE CASTINGS, t AILROAD TURN TABLES, MILL ()BARING, BIIAFTINQ, Furnace, Rolling Mal and Mining Work, N. work guaranteed and delivery prompt. L. H. (MOSS, Sup't nova! 9-3 m w MUSLINS ! At Wholesale Prices N. W, Corner Eighth and Market Streets. I HILADELPH IA A MUSEUM OF CERAMIC ART, OUR OWN SELECTION AND IMPORTATION: Legal Natims. M . . li . . MARY ElillAUidEß, 6131108 DERHAUMEK, Administrators ~UordJaneouo. EEIMEM ALLENTOWN, PA =1 31souf•ctorere of &c., &a., acc IFor Sale anti Co Let. TO LET.—A REASONABLE LEASE will be given on the Radon Slate Quarry, sheeted In Plainfield township, Northampton county, Pa.,near Stackertown. It consists of number one Ilat , rein blue never•fading elate, fully equal to the well-known Chap man Slate, with a good water power and • full rimer." of pumping and hotelier machines. Persons desire. of at opportunity of this kind will please examine for them- selves and apply to Reuben Koch. Sinekertown P. 0. mord 'B9 0. L. SCHREIBER, President punLic SA LE Or A GOOD FARM. Wlll be geld at nubile sale on SATURDAY .the 4th day of NOVEMBER, WI, at one o'clock. D. m., the follow• lug valuable real wattle, to wit : A farm containing 49 ACRES of land, (formerly the property of George Knecht,l silo ate about one mile from the Egypt Church, In Whitehall township, Lehigh county. The land in of the bent q•ull. ty and le to a high state of cultivation. The Improve-, manta thereon cr mast eta good and substantial BRICK DWELLING HOUSE, a gliod barn, wagon house, and other necessary out buildings ; an orchard, a never falling well of goo wa ter a good garden, good fences, Au all Is the best con dition. A limo-atone quarry and two good kilos are on the premises. There lea good market for the lime. Terse and conditions on day of sale and due attend ance given by . . . . DENJ. J. EIAGENBIICH WILLIAM lIITTLIL Auctioneer. 0ct113.3., punLic HALE EairMEICM TIMBER LAND. On Friday, the 10th day of Novem ber, 1871, will be cold at Public Sale,at the Public fleece of EillifOlc MOYER, nest the premises, the following described Real Estate of PETER K9IILER, deceased. late of Whitehall township, Lehigh county, eittiate in South Whitehall township, county aforesaid, to wit Six Contiguous Tracts of Land. No. 1 . Adjong land. of Peter Blaok.klanaamea Charlet, Bola, Noe. 2, S. 6 and ; containing 10 acre+ and 43 perches, cofered with heavy white oak and black oak timber. onded by lands of Daniel Deily. Asa Mallet. by Noe. l a n d S ; containing 5 acres and 7/ Perches, co•- ered with heavy white cal. and black oak timber. This tract contains in all p•obability • large body of iron Ore, a mine having been profitably worked on the nine. No. 3. Adjoining lands of Calvin Guth, NOP. 4 6 and I t containing 7 acre. and 74 perches, covered with heavy White Oak timber. No. 1. Adjoining lands of Calvin Oath. Seq., Noe. 5 and 3 ; containing 13 acres and 34 perches, being covered with good Whim Oak and other timber. No. if. Adjoining landx of Calvin Oath, Esq . Hiram Balllet, Nos. 4,0, 1 and ; containing 12 acres and 145 erchee, covered with Chestnut and other valuable tim ber. • . No.o. Adjoining land. of Micas, Outset; Peter Rinser, Peter Blank, Nos. I and 5 t containing 10 acres and 113 perches, mostly covered with Chestnut and other heavy timber. It is believed that all the above mentioned tracts con tain exteealve bodies o( the best of Iron Ore. If dealred by purchaser. all the tracts will be sold in the whole. Persons dealt°. to view the premises before the day of sale. see Roiled to call on CALVIN 013TH. Esq.. close by. who will give all desired Information, or on the cin• demisted executors. Bale to commence at lo clock, p. m., when torms and conditions will be made known by Executors W AA I R L N IA K I4I O O H E EIt O , E, f ? WM. lIITTLII. Auctioneer. EXECUTOR'S SALE. VALUABLE REAL ESTATE. Will be mold at potato male. on TUESDAY the 14th day of NOVEMBER neat, at I o'clock In the afternoon, upon the premises, In South Whitehall township, Lehigh county, about one mile from the city of Allentown, and two miles from the borough of Catimanona, the following doecribed valuable real mutate, to wit : No. L—A certain tract of forming land, bounded by lands of Jonathan Marx, Henry Newhard, a public road leading front Allentown to Catneanqua, and by the priblic road leading to Shorn'. tavern, containing *bent 50 ACRES slatyimprovements thereou collide' of a bugs two. BRICK DWELLING HOUSE, 7iist7fer falling well at the door, a large stone swine Wm wagon shed, corn crib, pig stables, and other neoestary outbuilding.. The buildings are all in good repair, and the land Is of the beat Limestone, In • high state nif culti vation and under good fencing, No. 2.—A certain tract of laud adjacent to tract No. 1, bounded by the public road leather to Sherer's tavern. by . the public road leading from Allentown to Catusanqua, by lands of Reuben and Tilsit .n lielfrich,and Jonathan Marx, containing SIX ACRES. more or len., The im provemente thereon aro a substantial well built I" STONE GRIST MILL, 0, known as Grim'. or Dodder'. Mill. It • ' ter throe pair• of burr atones In running . order, The buildings and gearing. are In good condition, with a good water power. Also, a large N and commodious two story BRICK DWELLING OM, with a kitchen attached, amble, Wll4Oll house. pig sty, brick smoke house, and all other none 44444 outbuilding., A large variety of fruit and ornamental trees on the prom ises It has all that would make it a fine and dealrablo home. N. 9.—A certain tract of WOODLAND. militate ine the townehip and county aforeesid,bounded by lands late of Da•id Eberhard, late of Peter Roth, and oth ers. the Ailentote a and Catamiqua road cutting the tract in two pane. containing 20 ACRES, more or lees. The limber thereon Is White and Black o.lr. The nature of the laud la such a• would make It the beat of farming land. being also lime•tone. Noe. I. 2 and Scan be sold together, or each singly, as may best null porch . Being the real estate of Elizabeth Deshler, deceased, late of the townabip and county aforesaid Term. can be made very easy If desirable. The conditions will be made known on the day at the Place of awe and due attendance given by J. 0. DESHLER, / Exert:dom. D. J. P. DESHLER, COMM EfITABL PIT ED IN WILL FANCY DYEING ESTABLISHMENT. J. & W. JONES • 50. 432 North //Tot Sere,t. Phficufelphfa, Ps. MUNCIE 071/ICN, Co.. DIU •ND Dye Silks, Wohlen and Fancy Oooda °revery descrip tion. Their toperlority of Dyeing Ladles' sod °eagle nion's Garments is widely known. Crape arid Aferin• newts dyed the moat brilliant and plain color.. Crape and Aferiao Shawls cleansed to look like new. Also, Oentlornen . a Apparel, and Curtains, closeted or re-dyed. Rid 0 lovesclesnsed or dyed to look Ilk., and look at our work before going elsewhere. sag 31-2 mo w STAIR GLASS WORKS, NORRIBTOWN, PA Those Works are manufacturing A SUPERIOR QUALITY 0 WINDOW GLASS: BINDLE AND DOUBLEIMINNOTO PHOTOGRAPH, COAOR, URE G PICTURE. CORRUGATE) •ND OBSCLASS, • ROUND, SQUARE, AND OVAL SHADES. ie. (Equal to European make.) from the beet material. need, ranking whtter, tine .r emoothar and toneher slaw. than any other made in the Vatted States. WAIIRANTED NOT TO eTeirr. J. M. ALBERTSON =CI WOOL. 60 cents per pound paid for good quality of AN'ool ii exchange for goods. Always on . hand full line of home-made Flannels, Cassimeres and Linseys at KRAMER'S CORNER STOIC. 1= fl 707
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers