ADVERTISING RATES. 31 1 mo. 3 moo. 0 mob lyr 1.50 1.75 1.60 6.50 12.60 3.00 3.01 6.50 0.03 211.0 4.0 0.21 9.00 17.00 21.10 11.110 17.00 21.60 45. ( 13.01 "1 r 0 40.03 60.60 20.06 74 . 0 , 0 60.00 110. to 30.00 ..61.0) 110 00 200.0 J Ono Bow" Two So oars. Thrift Square. I I c Squar.... • Quarter Column Half 0401116 • Ole Column Professional Oards $l.OO per line par year. Administrator's and Auditor's Notices, 23.20 City Notices, 20 cents per line let insertion 16 cents per 1 ne emelt subsequent insertion. Ten lines spite constitute • squire. ROBERT IREDELL, JR., PUBLISIIEII, ALLENTOWN. PA Dm Gootio E. B. snimEß.]. CA 8 SHINER Increase in Business NECESSITATED INCREASE IN STOCK ! SPRING AND SUMMER ANNOUNCEMENT DAIL Y ARRIVALS, =MD " MAAENIOTII STORES." E. S. SHIMER & CO., 705 AND 707 HAMILTON BT., NM FOREIGN OODS DRY - - OUR STOCK Is entirely too exteneive to enumerate ar. tides. and will only say. that It Ie 101 l end compute In every part.cular, comnrletng all the dtlfe out novelties of the season.and at prices hat cannot be untiersold by any one. We kern everything tuitLilly kept In it well regulated Store. lu DRESS GOODS Such aft BLACK SILKS. FANCY 001.0118 11 FANCY Si JAP.INESR STRIPPD BLACK MOHAIR and ALPACAS BLACK - WOOL GIib:IINRS BLACK 803111.1 K! .V S.( mot CANTON CLOTH, ALEXES CLOTH. nl7 SHA DRS. CR RTO SS. LATEX ISTI'L F.S. LIGHT WEIGHT 1'PP1.155, COLORED .IIoHAIRS. COLOR ED ALPACAS. CH b.VB DRESS GOODS, Ac. DOLLY VARDENS, of every poasibla description and design. • SHAWLS ! SHAWLS! CASHMERE, THIBET, BEOCPE and FANCY and STIHTED SHAWLS • WHITE GOODS ! Plain and Plaid Nainsooks, Victoria rawns, French Nainso , ks and Organdies, Piques and Marsailles, Swiss Gambiics, tYc. IIARSAILLES SPREADS, EMBROIT) EMES, HAMBURG EDGINGS, LACES and IN BERTINGS PARASOLS AND UMBRELLAS, FANS, &C Cloths and Cassimeres, Prints, Shootings, Checks, Tickings, Cottonades, Kentucky Jeans, Denims, Chambray, Flannels, &c. 111 GROCERIES WOOL and nth, Produce taken In px chnono for 0..0d5 • for which NVO pay highest innrk et price. • Ranpeetfully. E. to•IIMER Sz CO.. Nom. 705 and 707 Hamilton Street, MEM TO TIE PUBI IC. REMOVAL. (JUR NEW STORE GUTH & KERN, DEALERS IN DRY GOODS, WOULD most respectfully call the attention of.their friends, customers, and the public geovrally, to the fact that they haveJunt removed to theirnewly and elegantly fitted up STORE BUILDINO,oni,Ioor we'd of their form• er location, and immAintely adjoining the Ftrid National Bank, being the building formerly occupiedcy Schreiber Bros., where they propose to continue DRY GOODS BUSINESS In all Its varied branches. They have the finest, beat and cheapest stock of (MODS ever offered to the main°, embracing everything that the public can wish. They would especiallY Invite the attention of all to their flue amortment of LADIES' DRESS GOODS This department they Satter themeolvoa to be the beet ever offered to the pnblie of Allentown and vicinity, for style, quality and cheapnosa,goods of the moat approved pattern., &c., consisting of Black and Fancy Silks, Black and Fancy Silk NOMA Black and Fancy Mohair. Black and Fancy Alpacas, Black and Colored Striped Saltines. Black Bom bazines, Black Australian Crape, Bieck Pop lin., Bleck Velveteens, Bilk Velvet, Sat in Striped Versailles Cloth. Satin Striped Lorne Rolm. Silk Strip ed Mohair. Stilt Figured Sul tana, Brocade Japaaeee Silk., Brocade Pop lins, Serge Wool Plaids • • Scotch Wool Plaid., Cord nod Colored Velvateem Eng link and French Chinteer. Plaid Popllne,, Plaid Chintsee. Plaid Nainsooka, Brodie, Thibet, He lena, Saratoga. Vigllia. Long Branch, Ni agara and Watervliet Long and Square' SHAWLS. in GREAT VARIETY. LiTCA.LL and SEE. As they are buying strictly for cash. they flatter them selves that they coo offer great Inducenteras to poetic wishing to boy good Goode at restounblo price, They only apsk the pnbilc to give thorn a call and exam- Wm their Mock, and compare Price. and qtl , lltY. Thoy defy competition. Thankful for peat favors, they will endeavor to merit continuance of the patronage of their old customern, a well an of all uow corners HIRAM 011T117 EMBEM N U IC 143 r °EONS' .11A NI/Aft ki INSTITUTE. No I ". North NIN'TII street. above Market. ii. C EVERWTT'S Patent Ormluatlng Pres•oro Trusspositive ly cures ruptures when all others roll. Also, a large vs linty or cheap Trusses, Improved Elastic tivekinks, Dells, Shoulder Braced, abdominal Supporters. Suspon elite, I'tie B nOssee, Spine Instruments. Crutches. he Ladies attended by Bire. Everett. airkemembur, the second Tiuss Enure above Marko Street ATTENTIDN, LADIES REAL W 1411311, JET JEWELRY, FRENCH JET AND VULCANITE JEWELRY PINE PLATED ✓E WEL!? .1, Paris and Vietllll Fairs, Hair Plosirsocy Leather Oa id Easel Ornament.. rnary flout Desks, Dressing Cane Toilet Cloods. U license 1. ollk, Ui.•gham and Alps., All suntan nod aoDrelar In quality and 1110.10,16.111 price N ~ N Eolith Eighth Street'. 1%144.. !MEM MADAME STEEL,_ 1313 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Ilas nicely., from Paris the latest Spring allies POLONAISE BUSTLE AND CORSETS. RUSTLE SKIRTS MaNial VOL. XXVI. I EMPLOY NO PEbDLERS I DO NOT PEDDLE MYSELB f I HAVE NO AGENTS! AMERICAN HOTEL. ,"... .02.--,:.••••%-e-----!-- -..._ _ / • - • ~.---..---..---, ....- I._ - _.... 44 , - AsS%% ' -;------ • - -., --' 4;;S: /•• , ' - . • _ -..,:‘,.., ....:Isro• dr - 1, 4 • ''•, ' •......._ •-f , 0 10-r. ! . 1 .14' '' \ - \ • ‘,i,v ‘ iii, r . :fir...) " I •k.. ..,,,,... *4o33ERAriopp ,gppgentim OF BtIOREREc&-1 FROM Li "riMIC Po i st Ojkce Bob, 5150. NEW YORK CITY. DOMESTIC Offers those who are Miff emng from Weak , . and Defective Bight, his BRAZILIAN PEBBLE TRADE MARK. GLASS SPECTACLES ! Superior to Any Other in Use Hold only by MORRIS BERNHARDT . SPECTACLE AND OPTICAL MANUFACTURER The Aclosntages of Mess Spectacles over all others are 1. THEY CAN BE WOW , : WITH PERFECT come for nay length of time at 0110 milling, giving amtonimiting cleat 110,1 OrViSlllll, by candle or 11113 other artificial I hilt', contairt to the spectacle Wearer hitherto utticIIONVII. • VIONI,"10 SELECT GLASSES.-11 requires professional guidatme, even when a good foliele Is offered. Doctor Bernhardt not only has the best Masses that can he Mond in the market, but carefully PXlllllilll, the eyes,and gives Indis pensable advice as to the proper selection Of them. TESTIMONY OF RECOMMENDATIONS FRO 3f3TEDICAE gENTEENEN, PROFESSORS OF 1110/lESE OPVIIAL.IIIP TALENT ALLES AV, PA..PVTTSI'II,I,E, BEA DISU. hASCAA'E It, EASTON, SEE AN TON. I:A ELMER, (WA .11. BER •BLIRO, PA. AND Fill H J 1 A L L. TE Ph 1 .VVI PA 1. CITIES THE UNITED S TA TES. _ET AFFORDS ME FLLAsUItE TO JT.ITE that I have carefully t,allllll‘,l Doctor Bern hortlt's collection of (flosses tot the eyes, 111111 from Ills explanation nt the outliner in which he adapts to imperfect vision, I am fully sat isfied that he thoroughly comprehends the sci ence of Otics, 1111 d that he Is practically mill mMtly ski llful In the adaptution of instruments for the relief of all forms of imperfect. vision [Rhea the krope of relief wlthool all 01,1,11111011. I lan coullrmvd. la my own opinion of I he Doc tor's merits by tile testimony of t 'utmost reliable and pronflnent medical 111011 In various cities in the Collet! Slates, I lutist vollllllelld 11111110 all With wham illy opinion may have any MmuriN, m.l). ALLENTOWN, l'a., Jan. ?2, 1872. FTER 2'llolf o f I/ EN .L.IE/NATIO N 01 WE princl Plea 111,011 which yoll adapt your 01,tsses to deteetive Or Impaired vision, and a elowr IIIVESIII411110111111113 . 1E11 , 1:111118 to 11111r111411- less 111 11111 nppllvuttuu 111 Ill One principles the eye, It gives us 1111.11,41 re at twar testituuuty to the fact of your premaliimme to the selenceot Optics and the remarkable skill nut laellity with Ivilleli you praet wally llomonstrate yourself In !Ills branch lot neleutllle liive,tigations. II is It matter at the greatest moment to those using glasses for the eye to avail themselves 111 the EIITU 01111111111- llty t 11 . 01,11.010111 by your presence In our city to have UM:cies properly adapted to their particular ,INU.IWAII(i it BONS, =! A I.LENTowN, Pa. Jan. 21,1872. I HAVE EXAMINE!) LARGE VARIETY Masses manufaetured by Ur. M. Horn[molt, of erlin, Prussia, and take much pleasure in re anmending bias to an those who are in need of .oo:ices. From the number 01 testimonials tat 1 hate seen lam cofivinvell that he Will he ne to give satisfact ion to all Who Inay apply to In. Yours, etc., E. 0. MARTIN, M. D. A LIES row, .1 nn. IT GIVES 11F, OIIEAT PLEA.)URE TO Iniorin upY lllt•uds that I bccuun• 111.4'U:tinted with Dr. Morris Bernhardt, In 'tending, Jul., In June, IStAI. a n d there bought of him It Indy 0( Ills excellent thasses which relldered exe..ilent ser vice unto nit• ever i+lucc and I Joyfully reeinn mend him to till who limy stand in need of ids services. \V M. S. M I•:N NIII, Pastor of Evoi. Luther an St. Paul's l'hureli of Allentown, Pa. DR. .71f, BERNHARDT—DE.IB S 111:—I beg to express to you the deep setiseof obligation I feel for the pultesnlonal kilobit., extended to toe by ,vhich wit h eye-sight litipaired be years of application and study. I 110 W ellaLieli to read and Willa! Wit It aelearness of vision equal to the duyn of youth. May your honorable and . . . . useful life liing lie spared that humanity may enjoy the :Wield ills Skin of one so eminently mutinied lit inintl and heart to du good to ills leliONV-Illell. Wit h best w ish. for your wacces4 I rein nin Yours Truly, J. F. Pastor of St. John's Ev. Lutheran Church Dn. M. lIIIIINII.IIIDT, Br liX lIIIIITING Ills 1 11S11111111•1111: null ellll,llllly 11..1AI:1h:whet . Ills (111:11 1/11 1 1e11111 11)11, erlee natistnetory proof of his experlette., and 111(111 as 1111 Oeulint, and t?titleittn. This Judgment Is confirmed by numerous testi monials in his pONSOSSIOII from Sell l lll 111 e, lelelll - 111111 1111111141 1111 111e11 eV:1111111g ill 111111,114 a slates 11111 Territories of our country, I eau, sozmussrammummumsznn flirted with 0 volt eyes or impaired sight an a union NVeil 1/WOIIIOA to alloril roller by' tarnish ig them with a sunahle pair 01 Glasses. N. S. STRAKSIII , ItOIIII., PastOr of Zion's itemised l'ongril;at lon. ALLENTOWN, January . 21, 1b72. DR. MORRIS BERNHARDT HAS FUR— alshed with a pair of Brazilian Pebble Glasses which snit nay eye.. exactly. From personal ex perlence I eon cordially advlseall persons whose natural vision requires the supnlementaid art to liteloSelVOs or the 'Doctor 8 skill. Ile hits txitiollett 10 me eredentlithi from eminent Phy sicians and Ministers, with many of whom I am personally acquainted. Ile lo evidently an Op. (Riau who understands his profession most thoroughly. J. \V. W 001), Pastor Presbyterian Church ALLENTOWN, Pa., January 21. 1871!„ A t.i.aNTow N. Pa., .Tan. 25:1/47 . 2. DR. BERNHARD 2 CRYsTALS ARE. UN doubt . ..Mc very vicar and perfect ,1111,111111 syhtern of adjusting their, to various VlllllllllOllll of the eye seems to fully Just ily the very flattering tes timonials he I,lls received from lending lqived- Hans and others In various. ports of the United Mates. • WM. Rector of Grace Church. Porrsv mix, Sept. 111.15772. HAVI.VO HAI? A R.LESU.V.4 I, INTERVIEW with - Dr. nerffilnrilt, 1111,1 bOing fully convinced of Ids eminent skill ns an Optician and Oculist, I lake ploasure I mcommending him in his pro fessional capacity to all who mily need his ser vices. • JAMES S. CARPENTER, M. D. (THOS. KERN. in031.3m w We cordially endorse the above: 1). W. BLAND. M. It. • GEO. ItitoW N. A. 11. HALBERSTADT. M. D. .1. W. SCHENCK, Pastor first Presbyterlaat Church. JOHN' 1. PEARCE, Pastor M. E. Church, Polito ville. Pa. GE). W.SNIILEY, Pastor second Presbyterial Church, Pottsville, Pa. , Teatimanials similar to line above ninny be seen at M. Bernhardt's Miley from the most relinble and well-known gentlemen of the Culled Steles among whom are: Horatio Srroloor. x•Oovernor of New York R. It. Penton. ..n-410, of new York. A. 0. Curtlu,.ex•Ouv . of Pmtasylvanis. R O. Hay, Oovernor of Ohlu. O.Y. Morton. es-Oss. f Indiana. Alexander oz-0..v. of Minnesota. Floury A Swift. 00.000. Allnoorots Richard Yates. en Oor. of Illloold. 11. M. Patten. rx-Oov. of Alabama. Jo.rph S• Brown. ex.llnr. of Georgia, Jonathan Worth. ox-flor . of North Carotins John 0111 Shorter, ex•Ouv. of Alabama. James L. Orr, ex•Oov, or South CArullua. READING. PA.. Hard. 77. ISM ' MARTIN Mini ER. M. D.' C. F. AIei'AULEY. Pastor. ord., :.1 Reformed Church /..• • JOSE , . II i;OIILENTZ. M.D. NI. MURRAY %V HUMAN, M. D. I.I.I,WELLIN DEAVER, M. D. C. 11. littiSTiiit. D R.J. RICH A RUi. Pastor of Presbyterian Church. DON. tiCIIMUCKER, Pastor of lit Jam.' Lumerso Church, kteadlag, PE ALLENT . OWN, PA OFFICE, NO. 10 (Near Parlor). . 11, MI ISM CRYSTAL MM7II! ME=MI M==EMMES! : v . Continuation of Dr. liernhardem - • ' References. LANCASTER, PA.. May 21, 1808. JrISIN L. &TIM. M D. HENRY CA itPRs TY.R. H D. If. R. NUIILENUERO. N D. E GREENWALD. D D., Pador Church of Holy Trlnl Iv, Liu:muster, Ps. EASTON, Febrtkary 16,.1809. THATT,T.DREEN, M I). 7 C .T ENNI NO , MD. AMPC P.•M . D. 1411 W D QWIFT, BI D. J AI 31111E1N, M I) SAMIIP.I.HANDT, M D. C II EDGAR. Psstor of Deformed (Dotah)Uhurels, EDMUND DELFOUR, Pastor of St John's Latheran Church, Easton, Pa. SCRANTON, Ort. IWO BEN.] 11 TIIRODP, It A AI D. Al D. HORACE LADD, M D CITAMBERSTII:II.G, I'A., June 29, DIM A 11 SENSENY. M D. • J 1, S(7i•hseAtilre M D. 'IM II iio . ll.l{, M D. Jr'RICK A I, 51 I) JOHN MoNTOOMERT, M D. RA LANE. D. H DAVIS. Paster oC the lot Reformed niurch. MITI] Elt A at.TW A T.D. Porter or jot Lutheran Churn J A CRAWFORD punter of thu Failing spring Proob? terlau Church. DA SCHENCK' MD. CARTA:4LE, PA., June 18, BM A J TIFATMAN, M D. WIINVIin D. S e IitiErTEIL M U. REV C P WING, Parlor of the First Pregbyterlau Chord, WM C EVERETT. Rector of lit Joilo . llChnrch. TZI JOEL SWAL . 'as'or of the Lutheran Church CONSULTATION Ogles boors from D o ni p m • N. 15.—Owing to engagements eleetabere. Dr. Dern• hard* will not remain bore but fur a abort time only. juuSi.dt, UPHOLSTERY GOODS INTERIOR DECORATIONS, FOR TILE SPRING, are arriving weekly from the moat celebrated FRENCH AND ENGLISH FABRICANTS. Now end beautiful deeigns. Specially adapted (or city reeld , ncen. WALRAVEN'S MASONIC HALL, NO. 719 CIIEbTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA. feb2. d& w LUMBER I LUMBER II WHOLESALE AND RETAIL! HOFFMAN'S STEAM SAW MILL AND LUMBER YARD I KINDLING! BILLS CUT TO ORDER OFFICE AT THE MILL, FRONT AND LINDEN STS. WHITE AND BLACK OAK SAW LOOS wanted, for which the highent market price will be petit 6POn deil•- d-w into 12-17 $4 O IIeLEAN ,&1100PER $4O IMPROVED ELASTIC Lock Stitch Family Sewing Machine, The Best and Cheapest he market, and excels in the fol owing points: UNEQUALED SIMPLICITY QUIETNESS OF OPERATION, EASEOP MANAGEMENI, RAPIDITY OP EXECUTION. NON-LIABILITY TO DROP D STITCHES OIL BREAK THREA. • SIMPLICITY OF TENSION AND APPLYING ATTACH. MENTS, And Its !ditch lose liable to rip in nee or wear than the "Shuttle" stitch, while it can be more easily taken out tr &mired. . The DicLEAN ✓t IiOOPER will Stitch, Bern, Pell,Tack Quilt, Cord, Iliad, Blo', Braid, Embroider and Gather In a most approved manner. WALL MACHINES WABIt NTED I= 327 NORTH EIGHTH STREET, ALLENTOWN, PA NOTICE. OFFICE 01 , Tile CITY TRIIABVISER., ALLENTOWN, March Za. 1872. Notice le herein) , given that Lino IlapllCale tor the collie. lion of Writer Reuta fur 0 in eneninig S our has been placed in the hands of the undersigned, laaccordance with the P,,,1140011 of the td ricallauo• an ()Mined , o legelaiing the dletributlan of Water Int the City of A Ilentawn..ol • • ar.c. 2. That all rents for the two of the water shall be payable is on cane° le tine lint day of Aprll ur at alter the contra. t, and annually In advance !roan that dsy, to line City Treasurer. at his °lnce or hi- place of lui•lness. and to all tents renialning unpaid nu line:nth day of mold month of Ante there be added 6 per cent., nod to rents re emoting sop 1 nn the lirst day of Jona lollewlng.there eh 11 Le added lo per cola.. and to ail rout. reinteutuif ne void ton the tlr.t day ofJoly thereafter there shall be added V) per coat., which Impanel shall be collected with the sold rents. and all &Pageant, ut that date. 'The 'free., rer is ferthwith to nice toe person owning the premises a written auto of sold de&gutrueles. canting the amount of reel tut:W.llms line initialler 111 per content., ItY 500 pal Meat In full to said dole, end 001110 fa lure of the delinquents to make rt q tpred pa ytantaileillilu ten dayA atter I t thereof. it rdisit in, (helium) ortite l\ AI, Comte Mee forth• with to cause the ferrules of such delinguenta to bede• Pir tr horn the pipe of eedult, nod croon .01. to be in stitubd for the rerocAry of the n'ttP. 1111,1 p. r canteen, eto due, i‘n pro 11 os for lucorred in detaching the ferrtilea.'` Dy red, ret the Committee. • JONATHAN REICHARD', City Treasurer. mar2o•4w4 . aprnl-4IW RIBBONS, FANCY SILK GOODS, KID GLOVES, gA GEL 0 iv 1 361 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, Importer. and Jobbers of Cord Elio and Gros Grain Ribbons. IN ALL COLORS AND WIDTHS, max= AND BONNET BILES, TURQUOISE and VELOURS, English Crapes, Crenadlnes; Tissues, Laces, Edgings, WHITE COTTON TRIMMINGS. NECK TIES. _DRESS .BUTTONS. &C. The Moth-Proof Chest Co . or Philadelphia, Pa. rncorporntea Aug., mi. 113 NON MANUFACTURING AIR-TIGIIT, ruItAII•LINVD Chases and TRUNltel.or •nrions Muir, PAP, It I.X ols for MUM.. II•Td cams. Cr/Fll, oars dud wild's iluitl.of e•ery dese.iptiuo• 'I hese articles are Milt secured by IstierA pdierit at the U. 8 bud ere believed to bethe most desirable oeun,tliln g mite seeking 111.1836 , 1 e favor. Agents sod Domes. w solid to boredom them to every tows iu the U. a—tomtit. a liberal theeouut mill Waives. Address, JNit. W. FAAAGIB. &WY. H. P. C. Co.. 47/ Wahas 111.. Phila., Pi. mar2l•em dim) ALLENTOWN, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING, MAY 1, 1872. of Poo, „ doctored,. spiced, and sweetened to please the taste, called "Tonics," "Appetizers," "Restorers," dr.c., that lead the tippler on to dnmkenness and ruin, but are a true Medicine, made from the native roots and herbs of Cali fornia, free from all Alcoholic Stimulants. They are the Great Blood Purifier and a Life-giving Principle, a Per. feet Renovator and Invigorator of the System, carrying oil all poisonous matter, and restoring the blood to a healthy Fonditinn, enriching it, refreshing and invigorating both mind and body. They are easy of administration, prompt in their action, certain in their results, safe and reliable in all forms of disease. No Person can Italie these Bitters accord , ing to directions, and remain long unwell, provided their bones are not destroyed by mineral poison mother means, and the vital organs wasted beyond the point of repair. Dyspepsia or Indigestion. Headache, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dizzi ness, So. Eructations of the Stomach, had Taste in the Mouth, IliUnns Attacks, Palpitation of the Heart, In flammation of the Lungs, Pain in the regions of the Kid neys, and a hundred other painful symptoms, are the off springs of Dyspepsia. In those complaints it has no equal, and one bottle will prove a better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertisement. For Female Complaints, in young or old, mar ried nr single, at the dawn of womanhood, or the tom of life, these Tonic Bitters display so decided an influence that a marked improvement is soon perceptible. For Inflammatory and Chronic Ithett— matism and Gout, Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Bilious„ Remittent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of the Blood: Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have been most successful. Such Diseases arc caused by Vitiated Blood,. which is generally produced by derangement of the Di 6estive Orns. They so re a Gentle Pttrgativo oat %veil as a Tonle, posng also the peculiar merit of acting as a power. agent insessi relieving Congestion lir Inflammation of the Liver and Visceral Organs, and in Bilious Diseases. For Skin Miens., Eruptions, 'Better Salt-, Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples ' Pustules, ltoits, Cat , hunches, Ring-worms, Scald-Head, Sore Eye., Erysipelas, Itch, Scurfs, Disco'orations of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin, of whatever name or nature, are literally dug up and carried out of the Sy3tetll in a short time by the tv, of these Bitters. One bottle in suck cases will convince the most incredulous of their curative effects. Cleanse, the Vitiated Blood whenever you find its impurities bursting through the skin in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores; cleanse it when you find it Mr striteted and sluggish in the veins; cleanse it when it is foul; your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood pure. and the health of the system will follow. Grateful thousands prod:din Vtuncan Bhr •rans the most wonderful Invigorant that ever sustained the sinking system. Pin, Tape, and other Worms, lurking in the system of so many thousands, are effectually destroyed and removed. Says a distinguished physiologist ; There is scarcely an individual upon the face of the earth whose body is exempt from the presence of worms. It is not upon the healthy elements of the body that WOMB exist, but upon the diseased humors and slimy deposits that breed these living monsters of disease. No system of Medicine, no verinifoges, no anthelminitics, will free the system from worms like these Bitters. Mechanical Diseases. Persons engaged in Paints and Minerals, such as Plumbers, l'ype.setters, Gold.beaters, and Miners, as they advance in life, will be subject to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard against this take a dose of %VALIUM'S VINISGAR BITTURS once or twice a week. as a Preventive. Bilious, Remittent, and Intermittent Fevers, which arc so prevalent in the valleys ofr great rivers throughout the United States, especia ou lly those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Ten •, Cumberland, Arkansas, Red, Colorado, Ilratos, Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile. Savannali,Roanoke, James, and many others, with their vast tributaries, throughout our entire country during the Summer and Autumn, and remarkably so during seasons of unusual heat and dryness, are invariably accompanied by exten sive derangements of the stomach and liver, and other abdominal vra. There are always more or less ob structions of theliver, a weakness and irritable state of tile stomach, and Frcat torpor of the bowels, being clogged up with vitiated accumulations. In their treat ment, a purgative, exerting a powerful influence upon these various organs, is essentially necessary. There Is no cathartic for the purpose equal to Do. J. W/11.10LIt'S VINIMAR liITTURS, as they will speedily remove the dark-colored viscid matter with- which the bowels aro loaded, at the same time stimulating the secretions of the liver, and generally restoring the healthy functions of the digestive organs. Scrofula, or King's Ertl, White Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goiter, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial Af fections, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, etc.. etc In these, as in all other constitutional Diseases, WAirma's VINEGAR BITTHII, have shown their great curative powers in the must obstinate and intractable casts. Dr. Walker% California Vinegar linters act on all these cases in a similar manner. Ily purifying the Blood they remove the cause, and by resolving away the effects of the inflammation (the tubercular deposit") the affected parts receive health, and a permanent cure is effected. The properties . of DR. WALKER'S VINEGAR Iltforuns are Aperient. Diaphoretic and Carminafive, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, Sedative; Counter-Irritant, Sudorific, Alterative, and Anti- The Aperient fuli c .„lnild Laxative properties of DR. WALKER'S .11M BITTERS are the best Age guard in all cases of einptions and malignant fevers, their balsamic, healing, and 'nothing properties protect the humors of the lances. Their Sedative properties allay limn in the nervous system, stomach, arid bowels, either train inflammation, wind, colic, cramps, etc. Their Counter-Irritant influence extends throughout the system. Their Diuretic p roperties act on the Kidneys, correcting and regulating the flow of urine. Their Anti-Bilious properties stimulate the liver, in the secretion of bile, and its discharges through the biliary ducts, and are superior to all remedial agents, fur the cure of Bilious Fever, Fever and Ague, etc. Fortify the body against disenee by puri fying all its fluids with Vivaria If mruns. No epidemic can take hold of a system thus firreamted. The liver, the stomach, the bowels, the kidneys, and the nerves are rendered disease-proof by this_ great invigorant. The Efilettey of Ifs. \VALI:P.I3'S VINEGAR BIT TERS., in Chronic Dyspepsia, FEVETA, Nervous Disorders, Constipation,' deficiency of vital power, and all maladies affecting the stomach, liver, bowelsomlntonaryorgans, or muscular system, has been experienced by hundreds of thousands, and hundreds of thousands inure are ask ing for the same relief. Direellons.—Take of the Bitters on going to bed at night from a half to one and one-half wine-glassful!. Eat gamd nourishilig food, such as beefsteak, mutton chop, venison, roast beef, and vegetables, arid take out door exercise. They are composed cf purely vegetable ingredients, and contain nospirits. J. WALKER, Briiii . r. It. 11.111eDONALD&CO., Druggists and Gen. Agts., San Franetsco, Cal. boo canter of Washington and Charlton Sts., New York. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS tourch '23•:ittl taw CAUTION. To (mullion who rise the Kerosene or Combination 011 e Korona., till Is not safe unleso It's from 110 to 120 degrees which you can always End attho well known China Store of Will. REIMER, 611 HAMILTON STREET, • • ALLENTOWN, PA. Also, anything In the CHINA, CLASS or QUEENS WAKE Meat the vet? lowest rate., and alive,. the vary bent ENGLISH WARE, • • 'warranted not to graze. N. 13.—1 n regent to the Combination Oil, which agenta tell you in non.eanhodre. I have thoroughly It and I say It la Explosive and Dangerous. 1 canceler to five explosions in uuo nook In this City where the Combina tion till was In nee. oct2o- d WIL REIMER. CARPETS, OIL CLOTHS, &C. FOR SPRING TRADE Pnrchmged before tho advance In prlco, Felling at old price, (trent Inducement. to purchaaera. • large stock of the newest stylea BRUSSELS, THREE-PLY, INGRAIN, 4. .4 0 Z DAMASK, Floor, Table and Stair Oil Cloths, MATS, RUGS, WINDOW HOLLANDS AND SHADES, Hassocks, Druggetei Canton, Coooa and Cane Matting, 6o ALLENTOWN CARPET STORE 632 Hamilton Street, (Formerly occoplel by Onth & Karol ALLENTOWN. PA.. SAMUEL U. KERR m 0.5.50.4 apr3•w D ue. JORDAN DASIESON, Fropaiebro of the Gallery of Anatomy and MUSQUI7S of ikianoo, 1907 CHESTNUT ST., PHILA. Efavejust published a new edition of their leatures.llow• tainted most valuable information on the MM.., gone.. queue. and treatment of diseases of the reproductive' system, wtth ZZZZZZZ on mad the carious causes Of the LOW OF MAIIIInOIL with foil luetructiono Tel Its complete restored., t also a chapter on VI AAAAA L It • IFILUTION, sod the or cuts, being the PRIMIIIYI V\ WORN 011 the euNcet ever yet Pnotteoso— curnprislas 2:0 psgee. five to any address for Ter mitt -dye Cents. Address Drs. JORDAN & DAVIESON, COdtIULTINU OFFICE, 162 b Filbert Street, Philadelphia. 2:617 SPEECH OF SENATOR WILSON. Delivered nt the Grant Meeting., Nett 'Work (WY. Aprllll7lls. I thank you fellow citizens of. New York for this kind greeting and I have a favor to ask of you and I trust you will unanimously grant'it. I have a few plain words to say to you tonight. I have but little time to utter them in and I ask you to give me neither ap. please, nor disapprobation, but listen to the few words I have to say. lam a Republican from conviction and by desire. I care more for the Republican partyof the United States titan I do for the interest, the aspirations, or the ambitions ofany thousand men in America. [Applause.] I labored from the year 1q36 to the year 1856, 20 years, to bring into being a great patriotic, libertylovtng organization that should make the Republic of the United Statute free and . [applause and voices "good."] Sixteen years ago the Republican party was brought into being. I religiously believe that it came Into being bq lLeprayers, the labors b and the noblest aspirations ofthe best portion °lour country. (Applause.] I believe it was brought into being to meet the needs of the endangered country, and to carry out in America the pri.v Idence of Almighty God. [Applause, and cries of "Good."] And so believing, front the time It was created to this hour, I have never consdously uttered a word or performed an act to drllot a man out of Its ranks; and here to-night, whoever may leave us, he will leave us against my whites and my protestations, anti I ivou id, on my knees if 1 could do it, ask him to pause, come buck and ,tand with us, fight the battle of this year, and go on with us in the triumphs of the future. (Applause.] lam not here to tell you that tile Republican party lea perfect organization. It has In its ranks 3,600,00 D men. It has the great masses of the noblest and purest and best portion of our countrymen. It has some men, of course, who are not all they should be, and we know it ; hut, gentlemen, I would not disrupt it because it is not perfect. I would light on, work on, toll on, pray on, and make it better, 11'1 couli, and make it worthy of Its great history, and what I think is its great des tination in the years to come. [applause.] And, gentlemen, I would as soon go home and disband the little church in the t':wn where I live, of which my wife was a member and I no unworthy one, because some Chris thm minister proved false to his God, or some poor mortal didn't live up to the professions he had made. Gentlemen, I speak to you to-nicht from the deepest convictions, from the soul, and I ask you who have stood with the Republican party you who voted for that greatest character of our century, Abraham Lincoln, [great ape Watley], you who held up his hands, stood by him, waded through blood for four years to maintain your country and emancipate a race; you who repudiated Andrew Johnson and his treason and could not be bought by the patronage of the. Government [applause] ; I ask you who reelected Abraham Lincoln in '64, wre v ri s wise men wrote letters up as late as the second day of September of that year, wishing to get him out and have a new can didate because he could not be elected ; you who stood by him, I ask you who voted for the great soldier In '6B [applause], I ask you who carried your country, the cause of liberty, justice, humanity, Christian salvation in your hearts. I ask you, one and all, to stand to gether. You who have started for a new de parture, come back. Coins back ; our ranks shall be open to you. We will bid you work, we will win another great victory and we will rejoice together In the triumphs of our cause. [Applause]. THE REFORM MEETING AGAIN. Gentlemen there was a meeting here the other night. I do nrt propose to say anything unkind of the men engaged in it. Ido not come here to imitate their example, to utter reproachful words of old comrades, or utter words of condemnation of a party with which I have acted and whose measures I have sus• tained; but, gentlemen, I want to notice kind• ly a few of those remarks. We were told ns a reason why that Convention Is called nt Cincinnati, that the Republican party is under control of the office-holders. Great God, gentlemen. A party three and one-half mil lion of men—strong men, independent men— controlled by a few thousand beggardly office holders? Why, gentlemen, you nor I never saw a moment since we were born when of. flee...holders were so Impudent in the market as they are now, and why ? Why, gentlemen, to be an office-holder is to be a beggar. The offices of this country hardly pay adecent anti respectable, living to • nineteen-twentieths of the men holding offices. Now look at the great professions. Look at the lawyers, and remember the enormous fees they receive. Look at the great mer chants ; look at the men who build your rail ways and telegraphs, and the men en gaged in all the other great means, nowadays, by which talent and character can find their true action. It is these men—these mer• chants, these mechanics, these builders of railways and telegraphs, and planters of the greardndustries of our time—it is these men, and the great lawyers who build great houses, have fine pictures and rich libraries—lf they ever read them [laughter)—are not these the men who have all the comforts and luxuries of life ? And now, what about thege office.hol dere ? 81,000 of them, out of about 60,000, are poor, petty postmasters, 7,000 postmaster's clerks, and 15,000 of these postmasters receive has than $2OO a year saltily. [Laughter.] Why, gentlemen, they talk about the Con vention at Philadelphia as , a Convention of office holders. Well, suppose we •say the Cincinnati Convention is to be an cffice.seek era' Convention. [Lauzhter.] But I will not say it. [Laughter and cheers.] However, you may think what you like about it. [Laugh ter.] But this much Ido say, that the Na tional Convention that will meet this year at Philadelphia will have fewer ofbeediolders and fewer members of Congress than any that met for 30 years of 111.3 party in power. (Great applause) And now, take this home and re member it. Go to any section of the country where there is little in the shape of Govern. ment patronage,, end you find the Republican party united and supporting the measures of the Administration ' and almost unanimous for President Grant. Go to the other see. tions; look at New York, where you have great patronage, and you have dissensions and divisions. I tell you it is office-holding, office.seeking, petty ambitions that are dis turbing the unity of the Republican party and that threaten disaster. (Applause.) But, gentlemen, the great ideas, the policy and the principles of the party, are wronger than the party itself (applause), and you know it and know it: We were told another thing at the meeting of which I have spoken, and I was sorry that Mr. Trumbull made such declarations. Mr. Trumbull is an old friend of mine; 1 have honored and respected hint and I do not want to say one unkind word about hint; but I must say that hn made a speech here which every man in the country who read it and is a fair•minded man, instantly pronounced a disingenuous speech. [Applause.] Lot's look at it for a moment. Ho tells us we have kept disabilities on men in the South. K ell, gentlemen, I stood up alone in the Senate Ito. publican caucus, and voted against putting those, provisions in the Fourteenth Amend. ment. [Applause.] I did not believe it was politically wise to do it, and I have .been for years In favor of letting everybody off, and any man who behaves himself as a patriotic and respectable man, and asks to have Wadi& abilitlea removed, I will vote for removing them. [Applause.] I will vote for remov- VENITIAN, DOMESTIC, 6.(1. ing the disabilities from John o.)Beckinridge for, ever since the war has closed he behaved himself like a lair-minded American citizen, and I honor him for it. [Applause.] MEM =C! THE AMNEITY QI3III3TION Mr. Trumbull told us that one set of men in the South were kept out of office ' and an other kept in; now, gentlemen they have got nearly twenty Rebel colonels,. and generals, and men who served in the Rebel armies, whose disabilities were removed, by us elect ed to office, and they were elected, and Gen. Grant In his message reeommi ndcd the re moval of their disabilities to the House of Re presentatives. and the House, by an almost unanimous vote decided to remove them. It came to the Senate, and Mr. Sumner proposed to put in the bill a provision of civil rights, so that when we removed disabilities and gave 'amni sty to the old slave masters, we should give protection to the poor freedmen ; and .I voted for it. and othenrcild so, and it was put In the bill, and when it was in it the bill was lost by a votesof 113 to 19, and Mr. Trumbull. and Mr. Tipton, who propose logo to Cincin nati for amnesty, they voted against amnesty, and If they had voted for it It would have passed the Senate of the United States. Now, gentlemen, I, have another word on that point. Mr. Trumbull knew very well that we have been struggling to get through the 'House for several weeks a Civil Rights bill, and we have both civil rights and amnesty before the House and have been working to put both bills through, and I expect we will do It. [Ap plause.] I will advert to one other matter. Mr. Trumbull told tut be la going to Olneln. nail to get Civil Service Retorm. Why, the President of the Unitel States appointed a Commitialon, at the head of which was your eminent follow citizen, George Curtis. [Ap plause.] That Commission has been sitting for months. They riported a partial plan, which did not work practically ; and now they have agreed to a practical plan' to carry out timae ideas of Civil Service Reform, and to-day Gen. Grant has proclaimed them to the country. [Cheers.] These men tell you they will go to Cincin nati for Civil Service Reform. I Bay to you to night, that all through these three years past the Departments nt Washington have been struggling night and day to improve their condition, and they have succeeded In doing so, and never li d.we as good clerks or have our offices in the city of Washington been as well filled as they are tilled now. I.Applause.] =3 But there is another matter about which Mr. Trumbull told us. I want to call your mien. tion to that, too. He told you it was contrary to law for military men to discharge civil do. ties. lam sorry that be told you that, for it is not the tact. We did not pass any such law. We haven law that will mit allow military men to be appointed to civil offices, but we' have no law to prevent men in the army from being de tailed to civil duties. Mr. Trumbull coin. plained that we have an army officer that brought us the President's messages—[laugh ter] —if he looked Into the history of the coun try he would find that it was done before. The first message ever sent to the Senatnof the United States was on the 7th of August, 1789, and it was borne by Major-Gen. Henry Knox. [Cheers.] That officer carried one more mea nie° from Gen. Washington to the Senate. He was the President's companion (luring the war, and perhaps his most intimate personal friend. And when Gen. Jackson came in he appointed Major Donalson'Secnetary. When Abraham Lincoln came in he took John Hay, an army officer, and detailed him for duty in the White House. [ Applause.] But when Andy Johnson came in [laughter] he filled the White house with military men. Gentlemen, Mr. Trumbull should know all this ; and when a Senator of the United States leaves his post at Washington, and goes up and down the country speaking to the people, he ought to understand whereof be speaka,and be acquainted with the facts of history, and know what be is talking about. WHAT ANDY JOEINEION DID In short, gentlemen, I never read a speech so full of errors in the short space of a couple of columns ns Mr. Trumbull's speech. lie says or rather asks the question " If Andrew Johnson filled the White House with office. holders, military men, what would be said about it?" He did. He appointed Col. More, Col. Morrow, Col. Leer, Col. Reeves, Capt. McKeesei, and Col. R. Johnson, his own re lation, and they are officers of the army. They set about posting guards in and around the White House. When President Gr nt came in they paid him a salute, and ho asked what they meant? and the next day he sent the troops away—the four companies of cav alry and the regiment of infantry—and for three years not a soldier has been nearer Washington on duty than Fort Washington. (Applause.) Now, what is President Grant's great of fence? He had three men on his staff during the war, when he was Lieutenant General and General. He was made President, and they went on to Gen. Sherman's staff; and they were detailed to go to the White House and got no pay for it, and helped President Gn nt to do his immense work, and that saves so much to the public treasury. [Laughter.] That is all there is about it. [Applause.] Now toy Republican friends, do you think you ought to retire to Cincinnati, because Presi. dent Grant has got a couple of his aids at Washington. Are the nwn who fought the battles of their country dangerous men? (Ap plause.) I find men nominating tickets and trying to get the boys In gray to work for them; they are not afraid of the men in gray but they have a terrible horror of the men in Dine [laughter], the men who fought for the old flag. God bless the men in blue that fought for the old flag. (Cheers.) Senator Trumbull told you about the en croaching assumptions of those In power. I ant not a lawyer, Mr. Trumbull is. Ho is a supporter of a Civil Rights bill which went further than any other measure we pasted, and he comes here and reproaches us for en croaching and arbitrary power, because we followed the Chairman of the House on Ju diciary. REPUBLICAN STEALING But not content with that, he undertakes to talk about corruption. Well now, I stand here tonight, and say that if there is a man on the face of the globe that despises a thief,T am that man. [A.pplause.] amtlemen, in my conception, the great Bose Thief—the greatest thief of the universe—Bill Tweed [,pplause] Is a cleverer sort of a man than that man that joins the great Republican par , / with its holy work and mission and then steals front the men in the country who trusted him. I want to tidy a word about this stealing : When An• drew Johnson was in power the Republican party told us to check this corruption and what is the result? Gen. Grant'a'Admmis• tration has arrested, has tried, has convicted more thieves than all the Administrations of this Government front 1789 down. [ Applause.] Is there any man here tonight that can point one to any Democratic thief that was over sent to the Penitentiary ? [Applause.] I mean a national Democratic thief. Gentlemen,there have been 35 men tried, convicted and pun ished by tines and imprisonment, and 278 for undertaking to rob the United States Govern ment, not holding offices. There has passed through the Treasury Department, under the care of Gen. Spinner—one of the noblest men and one of the most faithful officers in the country—t.oo,ooo,ooo,ooo, counted by 300 or 400 men and women daily, and what has been lost? Why. from 00,000 to $60,000, that has been stolen by four thieves, and every one of them has'been tried and punished ; they have tried and Bent to prison two of them since you took off the covering of the Tammany thieves in this city. I don't know that any of your city thieves have got into the peniten. tlary though. [Laughter. ] Gentlemen,' say this, there has been a less percentage of the money raised and expended under this Ad-. ministration than underauy other. The per centage Is less than one fifteenth of ono per cent., and less than In any Administration since 1820. [Applause.] EVerywhere, I tell you here to-ntght, every department of this Government has been engaged in that reform atory work. I have done all I could to sits lain them, and I don't. want to go to Cincin nati—especially with some of the men that I see are trying to get a chance to go to Cincin nati or anywhere else In the world. I don't want to go for the purpose of punishing thieves. Then there is another thing, gentle men, I want to say a word about. SECRETARY ROBESON'S CASE Now, gentlemen, I want to say in regard to Secretary Robeson that Mr: Trumbull stated what was not the facts of the case. That is all. Now, I say right here that the facts aro not what Mr. Trumbull stated them to be. He stated them to be these: That a Board of officers bad been appointed under law to ex amine certain accounts, of having reported in favor of paying slls,ooo.anfi then the accounts had been opened, and $93,000, more paid. That is not the fact. I will state now what the fact is. A Board was appointed under the law of 1867 to examine into damages—not into work done, not into material furnished— but into damages, and that board reported,and reported $113,000 in a given case, and that that should be in full fur what that board re ported or. And that was paid, and at the same time there was this claim, with other claims, amounting to more than $93,000, and this claim was examined and was paid, and was passed by Mr. Brodhead of the Treasury Department, and rightfully andiawfully paid: It was never referred to a board at all, and the law of 1867 was not connected with it; it didn't mean this case It meant damages, and not this class of claims. I believe that Mr. Robe son is an honest and an upright man. [Ap plause.] I know that in this case ho acted according to law, both in examining the mat ter and iu paying it. I have a written state ment of the facts, which I have pre pared. ADMINISTRATION ECONOMY Mr. Trumbull tells us that we can reduce the expenses of tbe Government $50,000,000, and the reason why we can't do It is this—that the office-holders are so powerful. Now, Mr. Trumbull has been 17 years In the Senate of the United States. He Is en able man, but I want to say to you here to-night that he has never yet proposed any plan by which even $1,000,000 could he saved. I Bay here fur ther that 01 per cent of all our expenditures are occasioned by the war. Take them out, and the expenses of this Government,reckoned by a gold standard, are lees, uccordiug to the PePUlation of the country, than In toe Ad ministration of James Bucearian ; Ices, large ly leas, according to the population of coon. try, and largely lees, according to the wealth, than they were In 1858. I don't know where we can count out a dollar today. "I tell you here, we have reduced the expenses of the Government nearly $100,000,000 in this Ad ministration less than they were under Andy Johnson's, and wo will reduce all expenses wherever we can, and wo mean to continue doing so, and I actually think wo are growing mean in some eases, and short sighted, for. I think there ought to be several millions of dollars appropriated to furnish proper mater ial for shipbuilding for the future of the coun try. .And we are neglecting many of these things that need aid now. Borne have given an a reason for not going to the Philadelphia Convention that it is to be controlled by of fice•holdJra Now I say there is not a school district In the United States that has not a Republican majority ; I know there is riot one in Massachusetts. [Laughter.] WHAT PRESIDENT OItANT HAS DONE And, gentlemen, I will tell you how these men make mistakes. They forget that Gen. Grant was at the head of a million of men ; that fathers and mothers, and brothers and kindred of these million heroes in the field look to Gen. Grant ns the great leader in the war, and are very grateful to him for It, and they have not forgotten him. They remember that he started without a name—a poor, un known man, and against the competition of two millions of men who went into the army, and canto out at the head of it, and has a great military record behind him. [Applause.] And then they remember another thing. They remember that he paid $315,000,000 of the Na. tional debt In 37 months, and will continue to pay from 10 to 15 per cent. of It a month. [Applause.] They forget that he has made your paper money worth 20 per cent. more than when he mate in. They forget that he has reduced the deb; at the rate of nearly $100,000,000 a year. They ihrget that he has adopted a humatie Indian policy that would Immortalize any administration.. [Applause.] They have forgotten the proud,grand position of the country. They forget th.t we have raised the national credit, so Hilt we can bor row money at 5 per cent. abroad. They for get that see have made a public sentiment by l's firmness, so that a Democratic National Convention dare not go into Tammany Hall, nor into any ball, and proclaim the wicked financial theories they announced here tour years ago. [Applause.] These men forget these things, and tell that the masses of the people are sell.•rmq in this country. It seems to be undeistood now that the gentlemen are running away from popular expression, chiding the people for not sending delegates to the National Cony anon for Gen. Grant. It doesn't appear that there is a man in the State Convention yet opposed to Grant. [Applause.] i hen, has never been such unanimity in the world before. They forget this, and what do they propose? Why, they get together in Washington, and put their little heads together [ laughter), and .chaffer and dicker, and a Denoterat runs into the Senate, and a Republican into tile Howe. So at Washington they are putting the people out of the question, and leaving. them out in the cold. A few self-constituted and wise leaders are fixed to lead them. Hendricks has been to Washington, and Pendleton and Bel— mont have been to Washington. We have got these men all running toward Washington —running away front the people. They don't remember this thing—that the people of this great country number 40,000,000, and that they have been through One of the greatest wars in the history r.t the world, and that when the leaders faltered, and when news— papers squawked [laughter] the people said that they would fight it on that line to the end ; saying, Take our eons, take our money, take our blood ; we will fight, and we will die for our country, but the country shall live. [Applause.] INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPERS There were men who edited what they call "Independent papers," and you know they alw r ays say "we." "We" do E) and so. Now, gentlemen, they have been instructing the whole people, but each one of those people now says "I:" There are men who read thme great independent papers edited by "wes, and are just as independent of tin "wes" as the "wee" are of them. Those "we" politicians have an idea, somehow or other, that these things are to be fixed by them. The way to fix things is to let every thing alone. Let the "things" come right in their natural channel, and keep yi ur hands MT. Now, I say simply to nose gentlemen, give up all this chaffering with Democratic leaders, and come back into our ranks, and go ti Philadelphia, if not as delegates, go as indi. viduals, and give us your opinion. Anybody has a right to'be a candidate to go to Pniladeli phis. Anybody has a right to come if hi pleases. Now, let them gu there. Let them Bay what they please. Let the popular will govern, and bon , to it. Let us carry this country, remembering our great past work. and convict and convert the Democratic par ty of the United States. Let us defeat them ! I want to have full possession of the Democrat is banners before I told up the Itepublican flags. And 80, with all the sincerity of my heart, I say to those gentlemen, it is a painful thing to separate from any of our old friends. I believe In having the grout masses with us. and electing the best man. Come back to us. Let us make up, and bow to the will of this great American people. Take either nominee. and stand upon either platform, and defend what we have published, and if we have got anything more to do for the rights of any Man in thiscountry, let us do it bravely,• as we have in the past. Now, gentlemen, Mr. deb= made a prediction the other night. He cloir.td with the prediction that their ban ners would float over the dome of the Capi. tol. SENATOR WILSON PROPHESIES And now I will make a prediction, and that prediction is this : that if the nominees at Cin cinnati• are not supported by the Democratic party, they will not have an electoral vote in the Union; but if they are supported by the Democratic party, then we will carry from 25 to thirty States of the Union. Glentlemen, I would Bay another thing— though it might not be very modest—l have looked into the faces of as many men in pub lie meetings as any other man, iind 1 think I have some little knowledze or public opinion and public men. In 1860, 1 stated before the election how the States would stand, and I didn't miss one. In 1864 I missed one, and I missed one in 1808, and that was the State . of New York. I didn't calculate; I didn't fully comprehend the .counting power of Tammany Hall. [Laughter.] Now, the Republican party numbers 8,500,000 of voters, and 28 of the 37 States, on a fair,-square, and honest vote, are republican, too. If there is a combination at Cincinnati —and I don't care on whom they make it— we will take more Democratic votes than they will take Republican votes. The nominees of Philadelphia will be elected. [Applause.] I make that prediction here to-night, and I say to every man in America that my voice can reach through the press, " Join hands, and let each one of us do our whole duty. Let untie as firm as the ' eternal hills,' and let its be kind and conciliatory, and treat our erring friends as erring friends,until after they choose to take farewell of us and go away, and then. gentlemen, they will be where the men who have deserted us for the last 12 years have put themselves—out of power, out of the control of affairs, and proved false and recreant to their own selves." [Applause.] DOES 1T PAY TO DESTROYNOLE 't Editor of Bucks County Intelligencer:—l was struck with the absurdity of the So'chary Far mers' Club,of January 27, advertising a mole trap. I have no doubt but what it was a very efficient machine in destroying these animals ; but It should be a serious question for a farmer to consider whether be can afford to buy one oven nt the low price of three dollars that is. capable of killing seven of the species a day. There aro two species of this animal common to this State—the Shrew and the Star mole, the latter found only among small streams, and arc wonderfully rapid in their motions in water. The Shrew mole is the ono some farmers look upon In the light of an enemy, but, as I believe, In ignorance of his true char acter. In reality ho is the farmer's very good little friend, and as such, far from meriting outlawry or death at his hands. Twenty-five years ago I commenced farming for myself, and was much annoyed with moles in my cornfield immediately after it was planted. In spots it was literally undermined. I was told how to construct mole traps that were effectu al in catching them. But an aunt visiting our house during my raid on these underground workers told me I was doing wrong ; that the mole was in no sense a vegetarian ; that she had caught several in her garden and dissect. ed them, and had always found their stomachs filled with insects or their larvae, and rec commended me to experiment in the same way. I did so inn number of cases, and In every instance found their stomachs filled with the larvae of the black ant ; and I was not ions In observing that where the ants were batdest at work on my corn • there the reeks were most troublesome. Since then I have never made s mole trap, and bavo really ' ROBERT lIMDRT,T„ JR." • Plain anb ifancH Sob prints; ND. 603 HAMILTON STIVERT, azzsirroWN. PA. ELEGANT MINTING NEW DESIGN/ • LATEST STYLES Stamped Checks, Cards Circulars. Patter Boot . Coutt. tutlons and tir-LawaLElchool Bill ~leada Envelopes, Lotter Mende Ellis of _ hsa , tulL. W 177 Bill: fali.''Al.",lllll'34llltlAN'arotlec.ak" NO. 1. forgotten'how ; and I am thoroughly convinc ed that it would be better for humanity, as well as the moles, it It was and would forever remain ono of the Lost Arts. The war against insectivorous birds has been so unrelentingly waged that our fields and few remaining for ests are nearly depopulated, and it is most un wise after this annihilation of insect-destroyers above , ground that we should delve into the earth and destroy every animal of the kind there. It is true moles sometimes run under hills of corn nod rows of peas; but every farmer and gardener has had experience that so far from eating these vegetables he has often noticed that they come up in a very scattered manner, showing that they were displaced, not eaten. The question is easily answered why moles thus displace them ; most seeds, and particularly Indian corn and peas, nre supplied with albumin and something similar to the yolk ofan egg ;at the base of each germ, which, when brought into contact with moisture and oxygen, causes these sub stances to be converted into anger to nourish the emhyro plant, and hence ants and other insects deposit° larvae at convenient distances to be fed on these juices, and thus rob the plant ; but just at this interesting period the mole comes forward and with his acute power ocscenting his game and peculiarly constructed proboscis, laps up the ant and others of the insect tribe as on epicure would the viands of a professional cook. It is a crying shame that man should so misunder stand his beneficent mission as to go, with malice prepense, armed with the influence of a farmers' club and a tbreo.dollar mole trap in a raid upon Iris life. It is one of those questions that can be settled without much argument. The dissecting knife, in the bands of any adult of common understanding, re veals facts that are positive enough to convince the most skeptical. I invite all who invent, or use mole traps to find a single specimen of the Shrew mole on or in the earth that has breakfasted, dined, or supped, either wholly or partially on vegetables, and for every such specimen I can promise safely to do almost any impossible thing. The fact is, naturalists, In order to study more closely ie habits of moles, catch them, and in confinement are necessitated to teed them only animal food, arid Godman says "neither species shoW any willingness to eat vegetable matter." When a farm r Minks the moles are doing him more harm than good he can easily stop their mis chief by ploughing moderately deep furrows between his rows of corn, when they will con struct their galleries so low down as to do no harm, or by persistently tramping them down in gardens. They are always more active early in morning, at noon and at night. In fact a gallery not previously abandoned, if trampled down at ten o'clock in the day, is almost sure to be repaired at precisely twelve o'clock, m. 'Phe past winter has been unusually severe on the moles. The seem to delight occasionally in coming from their subterranean abcdea to the outer surface of the earth, not, I fancy, to make observations, as an animal with an eye not half as big as a pin head is preclud ed from picturesque viewsof nature, but most probably for air and sunshine. The frozen ground debars them from reentering it only ,by the way they came out. I have picked up several on my own premises, and no ticed more while riding along the roads— their noses badly lacerated in vain attempts to get througldthe frozen ground. A. M. —Attleboro', _March 25, 1872. A writer in a New York paper suggests the idea of spring and autumn flower shows be ing held in the Central Park on the same scale and conducted in the same way as those in the parks of London and other European cities. The suggestion Is a good one, and might with much pleasure and advantage be carried out in all the principal cities of the country, our own included. THE following original poem by Orpheus C: Kerr (Mr. Newell) appeared in the S'milbus, it neat little paper, published for the benefit of the llommpathic Fair, now being held in New York city: SIMILIBUS CILIRANTUR. It'es Darn Delnino °West Livingston Place— & rose in her bloom and a illy in grace— Foil sick, in an hour, of what none could define, But wiseacre. called going into Decline. It happened thie way en the night of the bell fo linesia'e Grand Duke. young Alexis, the tall, while manic and mirth, fairy twine an they ere. Were paying their court to the eon of the Czar. And lighta eparkling maim, and jewele and flow 'ra Lent luntre and hoe to the wing. of the boone. Bre yet her proud eyes loot the Proof their glance, Our Dora turned faint he a payee of the dance. , The heat, or the crowd, or excitement, 'twee said, rhos mado Ina moment her cheek. like the deed ; AL,' ken. and essence., pungent, and fan. Were proffered an I flatten; and cartons ulna. Wore hinted for gaining more air t but she ;sighed The isloglo word • 'Home !" and would not he denied Papa and mamma, when the carriage was called, More homeward poor Dora, all road etand shawled And not from that night wee she titer the same trig^t spirtt of health ;,butas languid and tamp And dull as a bird that refusen to slog, And droops In his cede with his head le his wise At first It woe thought the affection was slight, Some t eak of a chill. or of lacing tno tight t But when to her face there returned net Its bloom And listless and pole she remained lo her room, the family doctor was summoned to see ,Vbatever the matter could possibly be. o humor her mood—which wag rather 111 bred -4e :me as her friend, not phrairlau, be euld Sod having first talked of the weather and noire, Remarked that he feared Mee Delalue bad "the blues," end hoped for the alike of hereoif and her Mende, She'd take a pre...Whoa of Alachua, which tend. Co fuse with ite Iron the blood, and give toae— "o. pehaer !" exclaimed Dora. "Do leave me alone I hale your old drugs 1" and the Deleted rebuff infenled the doctor, who left Ina huff. Iw., other practitionern, steely and grave, areered In their turns, end their evidence gave : "Dlge..tive inertia," said oast "and for you sulpharlo, dilated, will do." "It's nervous puldtoate,.' the other obeervad; "Take Jlnk'a liyaophos abates and don't be unnerved." "I'm well!'' Dora cried; In hysteria revelse— •'l taunt show my tongue, and you shan't feet - my pulse!" tier father, perplexed, between anger and pals, Bethought him at lac of young Doctor Migraine; Who canto frem the South when the fighting was done To practice in Gotham, where fortunes are wetl— and, calling him In. laid a hand on his knee, and said. ..You will find, air, my daughter to he Convinced ehe is well, spite of nil yen can Ray t rat dwindling and peaking and pining away." • "I've hoard of the ease, and have seen Mies Detains, And went to the ball." answered Dr. Migraine Nor spoke any more till he entered the room Where Dora was drooping la silence and gloom. •'A doctor again I' ' watt her Nigh of deepalr— • "Oh. when will It end I" Ho selected a chair, And, wetting himself with his face to her own. • Replied: "You con tell that yourself. and alone! HT word• shall be few, sod as plain as my art s You're nick. Hiss Dolaine.. with Disease of the Heart." 'Twat! millet the tome than the language that made Mlat Dora breathe patch, no elle cold, halt afraid. "Why; what do you meant" , Re wan mitt to reply "That night at the Ball very near you woe l." She elated and slew white. and the speaker went on •'l can't say I .6w, bat I heard what well done t Ono moment you homed —( 'But Montgomery SW ',Yengaged to 'Bel Yaughn`p , -In the next you were MI" She started to rise, with the tears on her Mee— ',Year words ►re tomtits'," Ile bowed from hie place— " One moment," he begged. "till I've said what I may t then chide. If you choose, sod I'll hasten away.' "The word. I o'erboard with yourself at the Ball, Are not more for me than for you to recall With pride or delight —(lf indeed you are .1111 Inclined to waste thought on Montgomery 811 I) t Fur Isabel Valletta with a friend of my heart Once played each a cruel. perfidious part, That now, even now, when hie eare's at an end,, I feel, and am owned, and betrayed with my f;lend I "A guest from the South at the Spring.. In a limo When fortune we. hie to his own natty clime, lie bowed to her charms, nor realsted the spell that urged him MOW her, the fair Isabel ! lit• milt was accepted t they parted, to meet No more, until war. like a tempest of sleet, lied blighted his fortune., with others, ah me ! trh.m Sherman palmed through on hie march to the sea And then, when he offered release. In hie pride, To her who had promised her hand as his bride She answered the note with this'atab of the pen— " Twits but a dirtaLon—'tie age. YILICII then !' "And now .he la pledged to Moutgomery dill ! The friend of my heart, live. he under It etill? Ife does t end confide. to Miss Dora Delalue • tie eharee her disease. and hie name la Migraine You sea how It was; they were surely a pair, . This douthron and the sorrowful fair; And all that remains for a mortal to awes This hint from a letter may briegy express "Idy Mende in the South" (wrote the doctor one day) ••You know I'm an Allopath, hot in my way, And that, hitherto, I've belonged to the lethal Esteeming a rival, a knave or a fool; Dot, lately, I've hid inch a wonderful ease, That, sooner than lose it, I've dared the dl Of making the point, beyond quationing. cure, That Like is for Like an Infallible cure I My patient, the loveliest queen of,► girl That ever drew kings en the chain of a earl, Was fade with that ezquisita smart I'd Carr ed for years In my own weary heat t And after due visite, by no moan. fur pelf, yor Il fe rye proartibed—wish =Om 15'1 I"Y'Mlt t" Paw Tv's. iroitl,ll7l