(gegisttr. OBT.I.REDBLL. ht.. ALLENTOWN, PA., JUNE 5, 1879 REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET. ronoo.vatirtop, DI(Aloe General ZOIEN F. lIAIRTRANIPT, '$ or womraomenr COUNTY. NOR EItIPPLEMB JVDON, Hon. VLYEISEM 11[IHIC1113, or MiI:WORD COUNTY. TOR AUDITOR GENERAL, Brigadier General HAmusoar ALLEN, OP WARREN COUNIT TOR OONCIREOSME ► LARGE, Hon. Lemuel C. Todd, of Cumberland Hon. Harry White, of Indiana. TOR DELEGATED TO CroNEITITIITIONALCONTIMION Wm. IM. Meredith, Philadelphia. J. Gillingham Fell, Philadelphia. Gen. Harry White, Indiana. Gen. William Lilly, Carbon. Lin Bartholomew, Schuylkill. H. N. McAllister, Centro. William Davis, Monroe. James S. Reynolds, Lancaster. Samuel E. Gimmick, Wayne. George V. Lawrence, Washington. William H. Armstrong, Lycoming. David N. White, Allegheny. William H. Ainey, Lehigh. John H. AV alker, Erie. WE met a prominent gentleman, last week, who was inclined to be a Greeley man at first, but has since bad his convictions in laver of Grant strengthened by reflection. He bee traveled recently through tho West and re ports that, notwithstanding newspaper blow ing, Greeley Republicans are as scarce as white crows. Even in New York State, he says, the Republicans speak of him only with loath. ing and disgust. They say he is the vilest traitor to Republican principles that ever lived, totally eclipsing Andy Johnson's apostacy. DEAD. James Gordon Bennett, the greatest Amer ican journalist and the father of the newepa per enterprise of the present day, died iq New York on Saturday last. He was first a poor seholl teacher in Halifax, then a proof-render in Boston, a reporter on the Charleston Cour ier, a reporter in New York, proprietor of the New York Sunday Courier, a Washington correspondent of the Courier and Enquirer, a part proprietor of the Philadelphia Pennsyl vanian, end in 1835 he issued the first number of the New Yo•k Herald. He struggled at first with the Herald, but it soon grew and kept on growing • until it became ono of the greatest newspapers in the world. THE VICE PRESIDENT. After the re-nomination of President Grant, we hope the Philadelphia Convention will see the necessity of renominating Vice President Colfax for his old Position. He is a gentle man aleanst without enemies and one whom even tile political opponents regard with the highest admiration, lie is honest, able and dignified, and reflects honor upon the position ho occupies. Some Pennsylvanians would like to sees citizen of our own State on the ticket, but we must confess that we lack that State pride which would make us wish to throw overboard so true a Republican and faithful a public servatt as Schuyler Colfax. In our own District we know the mass of the people desire to see him renominated, and so great Is his popularity and the high es teem in which he Is held that ho is the second' choice of most of our Republicans for the of lice of President. We hope our delegates to the Philadelphia Convention will remember that the people do not want another Hamlin and Johnson trade. sun NER'S SPEECH. Senator Sumner made a powerful speech In the United States Senate, on Friday, which, a a personal attack, has probably never been equalled. It was a rehearsal of the charges made by the enemies of the Administration during the past three years, but it was so ad mirably arra tged and couched In such power ful, dignillel language, that those who read it will find it difficult not to be somewhat in fluenced by its prejudices. If Senator Sum• tier's relations with the Administration had not been well understocd, and had all the charges not been served up previously In vari ous styles, the country could not have failed to have been startled upon the reception of the speech, but we have heard the story over and over again, magnified to the extent of the speaker's powers, and, upon investigation, the country has found how much of a scare. crow all this talk of usurpation is, that Sum nor's speech will have no permanent effect upon the minds of the people. It will be read with feelings of pride that America has pro duced so great a man as Sumner, and also with regret that, besides attaining his present great ness, he has not risen above petty personal feeling. THE EIGHT HOUR MOVEMENT. The eight hour movement has gained a tem porary° success in New York. The advocates of the system contend that a man, can do as much, working hard during eight hours, as he could were his time stretched out to ten hours. Be might not be able to accomplish this the first day, but Millis energies and strength were gradually recuperated by the two hours daily extra leisure, his capabilities for more work would be gradually strengthened. It this is so a man ought to be able to do much more work on Monday than on any otherday In the week. But we think the position of the cight•hour ad vocates will not be sustained by experience. It Is not so material a question whether the men con do as much in eight as in ten hours, but trill they do it? We think not. There lore every article into which their labor enters will be Increased in cost. They will receive ten hours pay for eight hours work. This amount of compensation for a day's work just enables many of them to liye ; how will their condition he bettered when they will have to pay nearly one-fifth more for their boots,cloth log and other wearing apparel, and for the articles necessary to their comfort In furnish ing a home. They will have two hours more time of Idleness. Will they devote that to gar dening in their 7x9 back yards or on their flat roots, or will they spend It as they generally do their evenings, adding two hours more in which to make useless expenditures ? One point the workingmen always overlook, and that is that wages are ultimately paid for by the Consumers, and the workingmen are the heaviest consumers, because there are so many more living from manual labor than from any other pursuit, and it Is therefore patent that •any movement that increases the cost of pro• ductlou without increasing wages is injurious to the class which hi supposed to be most ben • However,the eight-hour movement has been inaugurated and the country WIII undoubtedly have a chance to see how It operates in New York. If it Is not adopted throughout the country, those localities which do not adopt it will be able to undersell them. This advantage will, in time, shut up many manufactories in the eight-hour districts and then their work men nc ed not labor at all. Again, we have Just been treated to a reduc tion in the Tariff. This reduction, II the theory of Me Free Traders Is correct, will compel our manufacturers to sell their goods at lower prices to compete with foreign goods. Our manufacturers WINO hardly beeh able to do that with the ten hour system. How can they possibly do It with the total cost of labor the ~a me arid their capacity for production de .Teased tWenty per cent? Andlf they cannot •lo this, what follows but the Stoppage of the suilis and throwing out of employment of the Men ? Jars. DAVIS, grateful man, has declared In favor of Horace 'Greeley. This Is ,another reason why Greeley Is not the 1111. n for Re- publicans to vote for. Ma. GREELEY, In an article persuading the Democrats to support him, calls to their !Atten tion the fact that he has three times supported political antagonists. Ho "supported Daniel F. Tiemano for Mayor of New York, ho sup ported John Hecker and ho supported Thomas A. Ledwith." What moro convincing proof do the Democrats want that they should sup— port Greeley. We hope after such a coaxing the Democracy cannot resist and will take him to their arms and keep him. We hope we shall never see him sneaking back again to the old party. Tna Democrats and the Liberal Republi• cans make the charge that the Republican Na Hanel Convention is a Convention of office holders. If we take this Congressional Die trict, for example, we find that the Republi cans have not sent a single office-holder to the Convention, while the Democrats have se• lected Hon. E. L. Acker, Member of Con gress, and Edwin Albright, State Senator, to represent them at Baltimore, while on the Electoral Ticket they have placed Isaiah B Houpt, an old office holder and a member of the Montgomery county " Ring." Is this the class of men who are to be entrusted with the great work of reformation ? Has Ephraim L. Acker, especially, fully repented of his ex - treme and disloyal course during the war ? Is this the kind of man that we are to look to t secure to the country in the future the resit is that were gained through the sacrifice of hun dreds of thousands of lives and the expend I ture of millions of money ? Has the leopard changed his spots? Let the Liberal Republi• cans consider well the consequences before they lend their aid in placing Horace Greeley at the head of the Government and the old Democratic party In povier. THE DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATES Hon. Charles R. Buckalew was nominuted for Governor by the Democrats, Thursday, at Reading. Mr. Buchalew has always been a firm and consistent Democrat, is a gentleman of polish and, so far as we know, an Sonora ble man. In the early part of 1803 he was elected to the United States Senate, where he showed considerable ability and advocated in olnchingly the extreme views of his party. Aa it has become fashionable to bow down with admiration to the acts and deeds done by rebels during the war, we, of course, can not refrain from praising Mr. Buckaleiv for his heroic advocacy of measures which, if etre cessful, would have imperilled the life of the nation. He fought stubbornly against the sot diers then, and it is but fitting that he should be chosen to fight General Hartranft in the present campaign. Mr. Buckalew was a prominent member of the last Legislature and we believe left an honorable record. The Lo cal Option Law owes its passage, In a great measure, to his earnest defence of it, and this has won him great respect from the temper ance men. It it is just a little significant that Buckalew was recommended by Horace Gree ley and that the. Convention adopted the re• commendation. Little can consistently be said by the Democrats, hereafter, about Con ventions controlled by " Rings" and by single individuals. It is an ev 'donee of the,progress of the times when Horace Greeley names the candidate for a Democratic Convention to nominate. 'The following sketch of Judge Thompson we copy from the Press :—James Thompson, nominated for Judge of the Supreme Court, was born in Middlesex, Butler county, Penn sylvania, on October 1,1800. After receiVing a good education he began life as a printer, but shortly forsook that business and studied law, being admitted to the bar in 1828. In 1892, '33, and 'B4 he was elected to the State Legis lature, and during his last term he was Speaker of that body. He was, in 18913, a Presidential elector, and waa also for six years a presiding judge of the District Court. From 1845 to 1851 he represented his district in Congress. and in 1857 was elected a Judge of the Su preme Court of Pennsylvania for fifteen years, which office lapses by Imitation this year. Throughout his entire public career Mr. Thompson has ever been known as a Strictly honorable man and thorough gentleman, and has ever been a firm and consistent supporter of the principles of Democracy. The State Campaign—Organization 01 toe Republican State Cc niral Committer—Appointment of 01 11• cern and Sub Committers. Hon. Russell Erret, Chairman of the State Central Committee, has fixed the headquar ters of the committee at No. 716 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, and announces the following appointments: Secretaries—E. 0. Goodrich, Bradford ; D. H. Lane, Philadelphia; Ezra Luken, Phila delphia ; Captain A.. Wilson Norris, Philadel phia ; and J. W. M. Newlin, Philadelphia. Executive Committee—John H. Stewart, Allegheny ; Thomas S. Bigelow, Allegheny ; W. C. Shurlock, Beaver ; Joseph L. Alla bough, Montgomery ,• E. H. Chase, Luzerne ; E. 0. Goodrich, Bradford ; George Bergner, Dauphin ; and the following from Philadel phia—Henry H. Bingham, Ifob.rt C. Titter. mary, David F. Houston, William Calhoun, James N. Marks, John E. Addicke, James M'Manes and William H. Kern. This committee is divided into the follow ing sub committees: On Meetings and Speakers—Bingham, Good rich, Tittermary, Houston, Chase and Stew art. . . On Documents—linupton, Allabough, Cal houn, Marks and Bigelow. On Transportation—Kern. M'Manes, Ad. dicks, Bergner and Sehurinek. On Naturallzation—Addicks, Tittermary and Calhoun. Wendell Philips on the Tnunnnny Can dldnle. Extract of o Letter from Mr. Wendell Phtttpdia Mr S. Y. Cansminpr ] You know I am neither t. Republican nor a Grant man. W hom I shall vote tor, or wheth• I shall vote at all, I•d° not know. But cer• tainly as against Greeley lam for Grant. We have bad one Andy Johnson; I w ill not run the risk of getting another in Horace Greeley. I want a man with some decided principles. Greeley never had any. Besides, I consider Greeley a secession candidate. I believe the plot to nominate hint was hatched by ern white rebels more than a year ago,and has been mainly nursed by them. I advise any one who means to vote for him to find ont that what agreements have been made by Mr. Greeley% friends with Jeff. Davis and his staff as to taco and patronage. lam perfect ly certain that there is a distinct mutual un• derstanding, if not a positive contract, be tween them. If Horace Greeley enters the IVhlte House, Jeff Davis will be as truly part of the Administration as Seward was In Lin coln's days.. No negro can vote for Greeley who values ds life or property or cares tor his race. If by a frown of Providence, lie .is elected, I shall advise every Southern loyal ist to load the revolvers that Grant's arrest ot North Carolina Kuklux has allowed to be laid aside. if he Is elected, let the negroes .of fifty, whom no coward - will ,Ot down, and show no property et. Lonely men w lir he shot and no own a mule forty-elght hours Is knows the fact. dams, I do not tear him—an aria. drth and a Democrat from perver ove of money makes such a un• le.' Ile is a Democrat. but afraid to Is creed or wear Its unitbrm. If any. .. . live In arcuit dare to sir atter sun black will any rebe As for. tocrat by sion—the ton post party allows him to lead it, he will lead it to its grave as all the Adamsesbave always done. Old John Adams' van% y, bigotry, and hate of Hamilton put the Federal party Into its tomb. John Quincy Adams' Administration was the death blow of the Whig Party, then called the Republicans. The light which gilds the Adamees la that of sunset. They Insure defeat. Chatham said Sir William Young's voice was the death knell of his country. The breath of an Adams' fame has the chill of the charnei.house In it. Let them nurse their money bags like timid misers eta allow bolder and more unselfish men, vi hose .fore. heads are lit by the rising sun, to help the world forward, undisturbed by their greedy ambition or their querulous crotchets. For a loyal - Administration to protect the negro. awe the rebel and give the working man a chance, Grant's little finger is worth a baker's dozen ofWE Gree' ND ey'a. Yours, ELL PHILLIPS. THE- LF,IIIGH REGISTER, ALLENTOWN. WEDNESDAY. JUNE 5, 1872. THE TREATY A Defetsco of Neeretary Fish. apeciaito:iht Nino York 'Jerald. • WSSIIINGTON, ➢iay 80.—The excitement re sulting from the perplexed condition of the to sty .business continues to absorb public at tention, and the prospects pro and con form the stable of general conversation. The belief that we have again GOT JOON BULL BY Tin 111 P, and that the President, with the advice of the Senate, will persist in holding our pr.' senend vantage, is quite prevalent, and is sustained by the cautious utterances of officials who are known to be fully informed 'regarding the present situation. THE PRESIDENT HAS AT LAST PUT HIS FOOT DOW N," said an administration Senator to-day. whole supposed to have voted against ratification. "and he will not take it up until England either comes to nut terms or assumes the re sponsibility of breaking the treaty by with drawing from Geneva." Other Senators hay- ' log made similar remarks, and a feeling of un qualified satisfaction being apparent in admin istration circles, public confidence is in t. great measure restored. The result is what might be expected from a sudden conviction that. in stead of national humiliation the government will eventually assert its dignity. Both in political and private circles there is great un upimity In the declaration that the adminis tration must be sustained at all hazards. From an administration standpoint the circumstances of which VIE PIIIISENT COMPLICATIONS are the consequence may be summed up ns follows :—The duff rotes in opit lot regarding the construction of the treaty alines from the well-known lad that Great Britain denies the urisdlctlon of the Geneva Tribunal over the e;lass of claims Included In the American case which are now known as indirect claims or consi quential damages. The United States maintain that the following clause in the Washington Treaty is sufficiently etphcit on that point to authorize the submission of liose claims to the arbitrators : All claims growing out of acts committed by the aforesald vessels, and gem rally known as the Alabama claims, shall be referred to a tribunal of arbitration. The English Cabinet put forth the state ment that the British members of the Joint High Commission were led to believe that the United States HAD WAIVED THESE CLAIMS Secretary Fish shows that from the time when Minister Adams, Nov. 20. 1862, called the attention of Lord Russell to the existence of this class of claims up to the present date they have been persistently urged. Minister Ad ams' communication to Lord Russell embraced the assertion that he had been instructed by his government to solicit redress for national and private injuries already sustained, and suggested the liability of Great Biitain losses other than those of individual sefferers The policy thus asserted as a principle of American diplomacy has never been deserted, and was especially confitmed by the action of the Senate in REJECTING THE JOHNBON•CLARENDON TREATY When the supplementary correspondence commenced last February, which bust suited in the present muddle, the United States was for the first time informed of the alleged Brit. lab beliel that the national claims, or indirect claims and consequential damages, as they are more commonly called, were NOT TO Bt SUBMITTED TO Tim GENEVA BOARD. They were included in our case, as prepared r the consideration of that tritnin;tl administration ststains Itself for ineluding them in the case by the truthful assertion that they•are identically the stone ns si•t forth in the discussion of We Joist FUJI Commislou of March 8, 1871, the minutes or protocol of which discussion stands approved in the pro-. ceedings of the Commission, under date of May 4, 1871. Each successive step of the correspondence, as prepared by Secretary Fish, was submitted to the President and ap. proved by him, as well ris a majority of his Cabinet. THE BRITISH THREAT OP WITHDRAWAL mom the arbitration was received in due time and was the occasion of gravt opprehension. After mature consideration it was agreed to atti mpt a conciliation or the British Cabinet by an offeeto waive any demand for a money award from the consequentild damages. This offer did not meet the P quirements of Great Britain, and the compromise was rejected. At this juncture the loss or the tri n y was almosi a certainty. At Mr. Fish's suggestion the President met his patty friends of i he Foreign Committees of Congress at the State Depart ment. The whole subject was explattwd to them-In detail. The probability the , a further proposition would he made hylord Granville was not then apparent, although Mr. Fish had invited the British government to submit a new article. The assertions repeated so fm. quently of late that Mr. F eh bucked down at this point from the position he had previously assumed and persestently held arc not sustain •d by the construction paced upon this invi tation by the itnmediate friends 01 the admin• Istration. They admit that his Invitation for the submission of a new article OPENED THE pnort FOR AN ARROGANT DEMAND for further concession to Great Britain, but insist that a fair construction of his despatch of May 7 will not justify the assertion that he wilfully abandoned any principle Maior now at stake. The concluding sentence of that despatch, referring to the President, says:— He will, therefore, be willing to consider, and, if possible, wII present lor the considera. lion of the Senate, any new article which may be proposed by the Br tish government which, while it settles the principles involved In the presentation of what are called indirectclaims. will remove the differences which have arisen between the two governments In their con. struction of the treaty. The members of the Foreign Committees were in tornwd of the conk nls of the foregoing despatch, and told that n favorable response was almost an improbability. They agreed that THE CONCESSIONS MADE Ur TO THIS ma: were within the province of the Prl sident and Seeridary iu their respective capacities of iiip 'mantic agents of the government, and, white they perhaps were not altogether satisfied wit It the extent to which those concessions were carried, no serious fault was found' With the negotiations up to that stage. Pending this consultation the British Cabinet had agreed to submit what is now known as - = As soon as the President became aware of the remarkable concessions embraced in its demands he determined to submit It, with the correspondence of which it was a legitimate consequence, to the Senate. The result of this step is fresh in the public mind. It should he explained that the toregoing statement is virtually A DEFENCE OF TEE VIBE SIDE of the negotiations ; it is, in fact, a brief com prod of the arguments of a prominent mem ber of the administration party to show that, after all, there has been no backing down on the part of the United States, except In the one particular of the co agreement not to press for a money award for consequential (Imbues. General Schenck telegraphed to Secretary Fish to day asking when the .Senate will ad journ, and the Secretary replied that there was little probability that it would remain in sea siod after next Monday. This does nr t seem to indicate an absolute failure of the treaty, but the President has put ills foot down, and it is not likely that the supplemental article will save it. Maxwell Woodhull, Assistant Secretary of the Legation at London. arrived here today, with despatches from General tichencic. THE NATIONAL CONYEN HON. Tile following programme is published by the Philadelphia papers: Wednesday morning the delegates assemble In the Academy and Horticultural Hall and proceed to business. In the evening there will be no session, and both Horticultural Hall and the Academy will be thrown open to gen• tlemen accmnPanied by their ladies, in orth r to give the public as tar as possible an oppm - tunity to view the floral decorations, paini. ings, statuary, &c. Announcement w ill her. - after be made of the places where tickets can be obtained. . _ Thursday morning the convention will re: assemble and most likely conclude its busi ness. In the evening a grand ratification meeting takes place at the Union League,-and the front of the beautiful building will be elaborately decorated. There will he the fin est display of fireworks ever seen in this city, Prof. Jackson having received a earls blanche to prepare them. Among the designs will he that of temagnificent Templu•of Liberty, In order to make the display throughout the city more hOposing, the general committee of arrangements requests all public buildings, hotels and private residences to display flags and such other decorations as they, think prop er during the three days' session of the Con• vention. J. Lacy Darlington, of West Chester recent ly act nut ten thousand cabbage plants, every one of which dled on ficcount of the want of rain. Grculcy Self•isairrored Lot Horace Greeley come to the front and see himself mirrored In a speech made by him• self In 1868, when on a visit to our Canadian neighbOrs. Here it Is, copied from the lade. pendent of that date : • Mr. Greeley went to Montreal to lecture the other day, and while there was the recipient of honors very tarely bestowed upon an Amer ican citizen who never held a public office. The Canadians, however, in honoring the great American editor, honored themselves and their nation. At t he banquet given to him by the city authorities Mr. Greeley made a speech. in which he said : Mr. Webster was not only a gentleman, but he had the elements of moral greatness; and he had faults as well. Ile tailed only In ono respect, and is this respect I differ from him —he wanted to be President, and I don't. [Cheers and laughter.] But for that one mis• torlune lie wool I have been the greatest man America ever produced. We have seen our greatest man, Mt. Chase, making the rame blunder. I have seen men who had the disease early and died of it at a very old age (Laugh ter.] General Lewis Cass died at about eighty two, and up to the day of his death he wanted to be President. No one ever escapes who once catches the disease ; lie lives en .t dies the delusion. Being a reinier and an otiserver at an early age, I saw how it poisoned and paralyzed the v ry best ot our public men, and have carefully Avoided It. It was easy then to speak for truth and justice, when they needed an advocate, when those who threat ened could execute no vengeance when you dreaded. So, then, I think you are happy in that respect, it in no other, h.r none of you in Canada expect to become the sovereign of your country. (Cheers ~nd Laughter.) That enables you to have a purer press and more fearless public men than perhaps you would otherwise have. We a. haat, in our day, have a President-elect who did not try to be President ; he was electe.l mainly on that ac count. (Laum,hter.) We have others who tried to get in by declining ; but that wouldn't do. (itenewed !tighter.) Let the public man honestly go forward, saying what he believes to be just, doing what he thinks is right, and, though he may not probably be President, he can enjoy a very large measure of freedom of action [ hear, hear] —though freedom of opin ion is the very last thing that a free people is disposed to concede to its public men:" Sbccial Natircz. GETTING MARRIED.—ESSAYS FOR Young Men, on great SOCIAL EVILS and A llifeEff which Interfere with MARIO/WE—with eurotnn tit relief for the Erring and U n ntortunate, di and 'debit itnted. Addre.a, 110 W tin) ASSOCIATION, No. South Ninth Mr. et, PhiladelPhin. Pg A VSEASOIO 4 sgEricE. COSISII S SIONERE . OPPICE. ott. FITOWeI, May 131 h, 1572. I Notice Is herby gives to the AP.11.1101, at the revere] wards, b roanbe and lON ash ps of the • Imoy f Lehigh, tom. tin lts C. rrautsttlourre' titfle-„on FOl Pelf br Blet day of 51 tS act 10 o'rlus ra. to.. to take chalet, ~f the booke and othernecessary papets and resolve Is atructlaue In Were re to the Podletratant of volure. By order of the Board. STr.I.IIEN KERN, JOBS -TRACtlee Comrolaslorters. HIRAM Et LI lET, Attest—L. M. ENGELMAN Clerk. 1113-2tO 'PILES OR IIEMORRIIOIDS! INTER NA4. FS TEHN BLI NH. BLEEDING AND ITCHING. Per 1.41 and Permanent/II Dl,y A - so WIITIO N. tSa 101- ofion front Ruttiness.) without Danger CatiSiloB or hid?' 11 111. f by WM. A. McCAN MASS, M. D., NO. 2001 ARCO STREET, PRILADA., Who can corer yen to our AYSt eines cured, Ws &lire to esy4.• those .111 cosl tire Isoic vely uodereptiete lu the eare . Ito, a rlisrA4r.fl It •ootiara not how haw or hw eerier-17 you have bent °Stifled. we can cure you. We also cur Pistol, Pinotre Proinitsite. Brieturi, anu pleoretion of ho towar bowel. II •ve troAto.l than- die. 90091 as es Nut -equity for twenty ueure. Cfell2l limes LEOTUItE TO YOUNG MEN.—Just U-rEf ru a S•aleel In .elope Prig Sole. Lecturo ao the No.n e, l'retioneet. and Patbeel Cure , variant. rridu otr •eutinal Weakness. luvolantsry ETA rodons. S. xuai Debility. and leinetients to Carriage cenenille ; Norvousoes•. Constoopt on, Sipliensy toil Pitt ; Mental affi Physical I ecspse ty; resoltluir trout sto.tsAlittso. etc. By Boil FACT .I.•CULV BIM ELL, M. It., an hot -•f the • ()c.f... Book." sec. World•r nowned author, In this adtairai le Lec• ci , dr p proves from hit awn expo I , eco thnt ths ron•tsibettess of Self Stoic. Inky bo • tre-111APT to trohout med , cl a, and without dem; •rous sorsa rid operanous. bent:lot, in•trune tile, rinds, or rootlets, dot IR •to weds of cure at ono , . roolnin al d offsc ual, by which evert sufferer. on watt, wlidt his condition be, :buy rote SiteseOcit , nply, t.ritl aII cilia. Tots RE tV ILI. PROVE A BOON TO TllOll5 NBA AN II 1110118 AN off. Sent, und• r seal to toy whites, In a plain sreilsd nu the receipt of six rents.. r Iko , lArO..t.rni. Alestt, . Br. I tile the erw Publish ersod'a ••51orrlogA 0 aide, prICO 22 ore Atkin+. , COM:. Jr. C. KLINE .4 CO . 121 BoWery, New York, Pont 1111100 Box 43S I. ME • ~; } .t . TrT IC WATER FROM DAVID'S The great It U ItTITIC, WIN IC and ALTERATIVE rem edy or ho how, le filiation the Protruble of Ir on and other 'ablo and lieltor Proved 1 .9 the imerrinf . to, of repo,ted triel9. an on Of the 110.4 REMEDIRA for FiPlliFy , emprpiiiit, .Vertioris ne..v. Liver C•mtplainf., Catarrhal ItT cllona. Con gumption, to R. early Cairn, Diabetes, Intestinal /qv girders, and General D•bllify. It purifies lied enrich Cho Moo increa..e. the itapetite primpiten dineetion. ntlamlotee the 4ecretiono and vitalize. the nor':pee f y f . It In hig/111/ /Wilt/amended by Phi/victims. and the deftlinoulatl. of Invalids veal Itf gecret petrel,. It In 'pad et the 1 .wprice of V.llO coo box of non dozen Quail b•ittlef, delivered at Bristol, I'a., to he oxprofsed to any oint, Tr4 l- The HEALING INSTITUTE at DAVID'S WELT, IN designed to accolorambite pollendurien 11l /0.0.011,4 the re..., Will, prefer drinking the AITSTIC WATER from the WELT,. D. S. CADWALLADER, loin Roca St . Philada. Jon 18•11 m IMPORTANT TESTIMONY. 4 The f-•llowlnv letter. era nnhoott the many we are nn• ethhtly raceiving from persona who have been cured by SCHENCK'S PULMONIC SYRUP, SCHENCK'S SEA•WEEI) 'TONIC, AND SCHENCK'S MANDRAKE PILLS I'ENEGROVR. SALEM CoUNTY lEJERNE E t FF11111 . •111 . 1572. Dr. J.II. S'IIENCK, N. E. corner Sixth and A Ica e3ri Philatlclphla. Ecsictrottil Str -I lake pleaanre in ad linl ray tettlmanY t • tha of the many others who Ilan. been a gi at cy Pultnoule Syrup. Sea Weld lonic. and arako io .ry Slime f tmlly. MAO or havl g died or t atoll rly ages 31y moth., 'and three lir thera died at the ago of 31, out brother at 27. and Illy vl.t r 11l 13 I Ve.e. 31 yaart.,selcod with liver coos plaint. which rapwily voloped Ito Polnittaary Con. n.. palm. 1 wit c onattl ed to lolinqulth toy employ nitat (that of a bl otkainolt 1 con-otte at iiirtli d Vininetlt altralelann. attd tried pat., I goal , Mlle. bill wit haul mil er. 14. • i •hat my 111 . 0.1 s were .are th Ot, Wile o ref toy ro every. for 1 0n:,.. ranee , ' from 11:1 n mob , to IM. and waa not ab e to .I , noy , lda e g a ithont talstanc... By what now look alto wt. Erovidentlal Intornoth lion. I an An kid .0.1 to try your ri11...1t0, ti lit Intl , molar yogi neat 11.111.11.1.'11PM Knit tail/n.lll. manew Inv renory 11,11 t it Katona , ' . 11111. porh u paver Wes el W•iek. lo d 1 111,1 ;in tint. du ink lay lit'. 1 Set. g 122 laninda. year. el 1, a nd f ,, ',gee titan ii.ve n regularly ititotallug to toy lacono., bia,ln,g for to Itre to a gO.lll oid ae Oa thin , to you b•vond expresalon fa la !clay pl it ad not la o Wiieegie I nc n benetl hate d of .1 lot lioll tO Foy Ovally. Year Shp drako aro the only inetltrine 1 ever mot now. I think they are the lent In the wot Id. v' o r yoil lo iil 1111 1.411 Orli 110 NVII oty all that I hay° written. and ant tor trtnallon any °Noy lellow cStlzens any detire will he (''illy a. d gladlY gigeo, upuu rucespl of nt anP. JOHN C. HEWITT., --0-- KEY WEST. Ft 1., Flu?. 19, 1572 Dr. .l II aril EYCK, N. E. cor. Sixth dud Arch StreeD. Philadelphia Deer r.o—• Irene forward, ror Bret ete•rmer. sly bottle, weed To I.• curt twelve bottle,. ••ohnottle `yrop. Y nr Ine.llc , n , Ft tire or ...itch calm. titl outrun to with out them In my houeehold, and In feet no family should w‘ bout them rev • siren them it fair tent, and openly declare them to be eveu butte - thauxon claire Very reepte.fmly your,. Ste , . A. WIIIPEIIIIRST. I=l Dr. J. 11. SCIIENrK, lie•p•piett [lke nro in awarding to you this certificate Of the wouclerful Corannr Pultimnic spun and fio., 'Weed Ton e prmliteml 31, throat and branehlal lotion worn no bight, 1 It •tn• d that It won almost impo,- niblo for ton to own low my food. 1 min on a rlmlt to my 00010 Mr. Churl Jtdinion No. 512 Federal street, tgloi ys y••or to •illelnem MIIO.IIIIIII Noon ..1111..11111 , nth atter all .dt•er loran. 4 ad failml he ho• Inn, •horefore fn - I cot Ibleurn In the vie tueof l• or romidles, mtronaly ierminin••nde•l inn to try thorn I did ,hamml lu om• week from the time I commenced inking Icy •liront underwent n great change r tl.e hotter, no that I mould eat u y tomtia with. in , my .11111rul y or pain I eon mear..ely word?. hi ext.. em 111 , 11 , 1141[114P lor the early r Ilmf t our Invaluable tnedirl ,, .o llr Aimed own me as II I deem It lint no act of g..ttltude to giVI. y.. 0 the n. k omlmil.immot of my uppreeiatwo. tfuliy, • RA. 1161. M J Ao. i. 3 Went hirty.thlrd etront, Mew York City, SCHENCK'S PULNIONiC SYRUP, SEA- W EEIITONI,!, and MANDRAKE PILLS Thone nro the only mediciuos that will cure PolinonnrY Coitaluption. Pr. el lionek too. Popo in roti•tititpr.icticc wirer tlil ty ' , oars couthlually exatni log Polito no k won.. hie otoilloucii. Itiroporly taken. will cure ton-toulitioo MIA M wilroko PPP , elution° the liner and obi.; 4cl; ; lon O PII Wr.d 1'..111C al.oiV• II I ill, food. otlionlotoe ill coal. log of the mutton. tookii• it algal knee ay up tipon • the 'slither, awl nature thrown 11 tar without any OXIMMIOII. I'ra', of tho I'om le Syrnp and Sea Word Took, la per Pottle, or $.7 Oa per hair Jura, blautlrako 23 realm latx I'IL.P4I”'DO.I.T AND POD /ULF Di .1. 11. SCIIENCIi 4.• SON, N. R. CorDA, 8 , Xllltinfl A NCH SirertN, PHILADELPHIA,' •ND fit DIICOOI,I . 4 . AND D/S•LY.l.llranill•LLT JORNSTori, fIoi.I,4IWAY & CoWDEN, 602. Amur . HTIIEET, 0pr572.w , 117.1exule A (Mita. AssiGwErs• Noriec. • In rr -Jilt° it A. M Bankrupt. heliCc it. It. iliveu that o thirl general Inertiaw of the cwilitore of exiii benkrulit WWI Ts bvl.l al the • uteri• to Hotel. Allentown, r a un the ISM day of Jour, A li . 1572 at 1t ulciock, a. m•, at the Waco of lien. Con .pno of the Itcgl.tory o Honk roptey In vat.l tit lr ce. for 11,5 pui settee !neat toned lu the 27th mid 2Sth avcil • n of the itankrapt Act of March 1,1. wy29-2wllist). 0511. Avelgnee. A GittuuLlrtium. lI6ETING. A militia./ tho F.. e.utive llotomitt e of the Le. high relict) , Altrieullurel Nn lovy will he held nu SAT URDAT. the Bh of JUNE next. Kt 1 o'clock , p tn., at the Secretary'. Mica. to the cit y of Allentow . for till Napo. of recelvluw the report of the Cotouoitee wt,W . alil utpoa lilute/ for cent fair. at he 1,4 Executive tiog-to..L . 7pare repro D. tutt miler of 0. L.TICIIREIBIL Attett :—Joentl• STSJILIM. &ley, WM. ROSS' I STEAM DYEING ESTABLISHM N 0.345 N. Soma's 1 4 t., Allentnirm, Pa Tha proprietor Ilan bnd loon axpor'ance lb. butane,. and will prompt', attend to all ordom LADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S CLOTHE)? cletood Ana dyed lo the be.t manner. Alßo, RIBBONS. FBA PLIBIId. KID (now.% dye , ' laOmPtlY ..d IoW mac • ALL FANCY COLORS DYED TO ORDER. yor M 411040 d. dyed without 1011/ctibe guy tiltuwlro 'P 72.1 yd Ncb gbbrrtisentrnts. AGENTS WANTED FOR LIFE AND TI3IEY OP JAS. FISK. JR, Coo , tin. blovraphl a of Pow, Yawl...AIM. ' , nal& Twood. &c., with o financial Mon, f.h enr.ntr7 fnr th. L.t 'bran Yenl/1. anti What ORANT 11211 M Annt "BLACK FRIDAY." Over COO p,yee. Price 46 Ad drain NEW YORK BOOK CO.. 115 Nan-an pt., N. Y. Sold Only by A genlm. A BOOK FOR EVERYBODY! • 10,000 Per Month. The Inntantannen• ..... of th'e 110 le In not 'Orange. slthongh It In having unprece , lented eaten. TILE LIFE of JESUS, TH E CHRIST, BY HENRY WARD BEECHER. Tea wo , k which the coding onhil • have been wolllns .or with an dity t .II nor , . nn'l conditions of Isms sol emn," I , henrtily, 414 rt book re, fo. rend S , IIIOI,ARN.TIIE 11,111 , 1 Y. l'lttiSs nod the E, road it eager ly enj •y it thornu.thl• pent.' t sinc e rely. The point T L to."V`th;.7 SL S Mot. Agenrs tonne , l n , m..n m: d women ms• ,usratiyo empleyn,.. by taklny avelloY• Pull donerloit•r• Ircular , en Ird fr , e. Very threat terms to CLL11•21.10, ny ly only •o J B. FOP]) . i 7 Varh Place, N Y, ; 11 firemen.. 11 't., Boston. Mass. ; 71 W. Washington at, ell IC oiltl, in. Cheap Farms. Free Homes UNION PACIFIC LAILROAD 1 LAN,. tiIIAPIT OP 12.000,000 ACRES BEST FARMINO AND MIsERAL LANES IN AMERICA 3,000,000 Acres in Nebraska. IN TIIR GREAT PLATTE VALLEY, OARDRN OF THE WEST NOW FOR SALE! Thew Mode non In the central portion of the United inITPA. On lilo 4lot decree of North loaltude, the central hoe of the great temperate Zion of he Anierlcoo Conti. next, and kir groin growlas and mom. raking unourp n eed by any to the blotted Stat x CFI EA PETS IN tome taco hfile tenni, Frlvenomil more convonlnut hr m u tate, than ran bo• Mond elsewhere. FREE HOMESTEADS FOR ACTUAL SETTLERS. THS REST LOCATIONS FOR SETTLERS, nnLninna ENTraLnn Ti) A 11031PATN•1. OP 110 ACRE.. Free Passeat to Po:Wmen. of DIM/. Sand for ' he new Do.crlptlvil Pamphlet. with new mope. Publlolied In Enelleh, (ilettnim, trivedloh tad wailed Irmo everywhere. diodrenii 0. F.n &VI , . Laud Cortuninnionar. U. P. R. ". Cn., On nhn. Neb. (Incorportated 1560.) Columbia Fire Insurance Co. OFFICERS AND DI , 'ECTORs R. DETWILRR, c'res't; ; 11,101'T TfloblAki. Trot.. • J F. Favaarry, sec'y S S 11,rwiLan, I. I- Mineon, lit BY Ca Aga, WM PAITIIN. JOHN U. 1in4,111.14 A, 31. M. , Tittl:Kl.K, JACOB i, t•TetINN. JAMF.B 1;90. 8.0., W. (..; Casa. ANo. F. EVER, 30119 ,11911,1010, H. D. Leacm. Fur lu.u.r.,ace ur /tater. aim address J. P. FRUEAUFF, Soc'y, Columbia, Pa. lOWA AND NEBRASKA LANDS FOR BALE Ii? TEE Burlington & Mo, River R. R. Co. MILLIONS OF ACRES On Ten Years' Credit, at 6 per cl. Inferest. No part of prlorlpil duo for Iwo yearn, nod thence only one ninth yvarl • till d in 1011. 'NW/Urn+ ,t in ye joy For innd improv , tnenu , wlthln 01 thno•oun CIO Pro Aric.ltatter,er, flavor will cr. uever offored, are not now, and b.,10v 1,0 111.0 linglvltur fall rart'eulare ate nap• Ural str•tle; nay valeulog to tattoo , olig 81,11111. W WIIII no., or to n , reo a colony, aro Invited to oak for all they want to cheyllato, Apply to OFO. It. HARJU., Lond Coo mbodonor. For town I. Ad, at IlurPout •r, loon. And for NAbrAmku La d,, nt Lln-oln, bob. PORTABLE SODA FOUNTAINS $lO, 1150, $75 and $lOO. GOOD, DURABLE AND CHEAP. shipped Ready for Uee MANCF,TARED BY J. W. CHAPMAN & C 1., Madison, Ind Rrt3EN D FOR CIRCULA LIGHTNING RODS. Monenk'n Copper Tultn'ar Vithtn'ng Rod, with kl toe F10t.,1. the to me OM Weir prot aotb , m I,lalOne eve. - lover, J. En , trg bt tt o I, , en Ike world, ko.d by Whetdeon r• r on, Maine to o. °nth, tt0..1 , Ireolar to I.OCE HART O. 234 .Prot, ht. Noe lurk!, Pa ,or N Y. POPPER 11111 Yri IRO ROD CO. 33 Rohm :quip° (Nortli) New York. 4(r'Fir ENT HAIR DRESSING AND RESTORER Millions Say "BURNETT'S COCO A INE." Your Druggist has it. A rratriir or Tr 41.papain.1 1,1 , 1 Isnarn, bowel ..0 ap altos rind v rrioirs uud Manor' dip, the ..a , tior rat 1111 1. , 0 vie• tor , . a ,te.l troll {ha artal.photo I.y TARR ner's Frpl:hr arr., SE 1.14. 0 11 , 1 , 1,1lIENT; .11 tak ing all rho xhlllrul. n d prodritilarg all tau of Wu Great Gorman npr IGC $l,OOO REWARD For nor case or Blind, Mead. ,„, tat ricororo.l that lin 1 . 11. H Ity..Yor rail. to cu.,•. It ia de • Mo.]) to coro Pilo, tool oottung eh,: Sold by oil proaglata. Prtro, 41 (kl. EARN MIONEV 11%11) GV.T WELL R1111 ,, u Ut V14.IIIU: toy Cl' Rrllr(,.r px'llr'iln~.~ M====as AGENTS IN ANT I. D.—A vents m..ke more aeee money at& wark for us thou at onythlng oh, Ilgut out! portndtodt t. Particular. (re,. ti. SPIN so di Co.. Moe Art Pun/101cm Portland, Simla, • • UB. PIANO CO., N. Y. PRICE 99C1 • Agenis. Circulars free., RARE CHANCE FOR EN TS. AONMTA, weW II psy you V , p, week 13 C.Ol If pm will ougagif with us hit •oxvii. I.yerythlog fur Itihrtl, stoi ex pAlch. t sox putt'. Ai.drens F A. M. 1.5 a: CU., Churiono, fliunici,e, MIDI{ of useful k_X kootelotlgo to ull Soul (re. fur IWO Ad. dyers Ha. 13(.•PAtirE SI CO.. C.., natl. Ohl, AN ORDINANCE Oir.I.,VICING TO THE MICA MIZINO 11p IT 11):1 sTREK rAN II GH A VINO I , F Ito.N AT , : LET AND CUE I.IT I LE LI: 11 11.1 11 A. ay I Ito It ...chat by the ar 1,1 a .1 0.11111 0 ..(toured. of the city of A lout .w u aeat It In her by o Jame,' by so• thonity of the $ Chet en •troet between aetel shrets , b.. fast-ollin 1,1, the around t •Iten thereirioll 111 he eft .ItVe.l to Tiled bow flea Uutuu buret mud the I.lttle Lehtith Itriego. sae 2 That 1110 Is /I uthorized to receive eale.twop•als for held WO until the 1011, .speettl catlous to be fivo , mhed Ilf the City Elie lboor • Le That Ithls fir it,,, teak lw reee vet a. w ow , I I, per lentil r ut rr .ttr”. to ;gnu r fur exe ten IL. the street foorteett lut hex b •low the rottulttr ado nod rotative ho earth tu eh plate., on Third strew, Itotweett thttatlio.. street tad the Lull,' Lehigh o, tiny Ito Mr. etett It) the It, Engineer, swath., snow nnnn to s tratle 1•,,tr0 nt eel; 24, p•• 1 [Plea foot ,pr i n ,h,• bottom biyor non t. • atl, por Ittwal loot tor ctrl ug t•tt nun , sie plthe t i t .e cru•bett MIMI.. or top littPll, Inte l'n II p 31 Ler', stout, quarrY et. A buth Wtate• hxll street, the lu.attan at crusher. HAYE, COULTER & CO., Suereasore do IV. 4. Arnold =I Heaters, Ranges, Low Grates, t. (.9.2w AND RBLEMED SLATE MANTELS, No. 13,16 Chestnut St., I'D I LADELTIIIA. 1121—Sond for caletonao lANKItIIPT N °TICE. Jn the pi.t r i.t con,: of the !MUNI Slat,. for the Rnetrrn [Warta cif rennet/Bumf/1 In Hu. kru Wm. In the mot er 01 JOAA Ili • ,••vnic.z a. mutt. The utler•ilaiwil hereby ilia poll. !lint Ow onemid and third matting.of the credliore or the said bank upt will be held at the Amerirau lintel. Abe. Itwn, I a . Warae N, Bore nt. oisristor In tlaolimpter to a• 1.1 dis trict, on Tit it •lIAT. JUNE lath .at IG &O.; k,c. , Pit lb • porpo.ne nato lei the 77. h nn _Alp tw ain. of the Bankrupt Act orklatch 2d, A. D.. Itrit. UN.' rIIDMAN, JACOB JAtlon Assignees to Bankruptcy. rn 759 2or I THE LIVE HOUSE , K ,4 • ,j • AMER'S omer Store Great Attractions ! CUSTOMERS ARE ASTONISHED ! LOW PRICES --In spite of the great advance of all kinds of goods HIS STOCK of SHAWLS! SHAWLS!! SHAWLS! OUR DEPARTAIENT FOR MEN'S AND BOYS' WEA Parasols ! Parasols! Parasols !! What has created the excitement among the Ladies 4—Every Lady wants one of those HALF THE BARGAINS CANNOT BE •ENUMERATED iCk and ft.o.blo w.r.ou•, ma) 1.5.1f5v, LADIES' SPRING & SUMMER SUITS AND COSTUMES 1 EVERY DAY. • • nr.kox. COLDER') AND FANCY SILK SUITS. HEENAN!. TAMISE AND CASHEEER • HITS: PIQUE LINEN. LAWN AND DRO.iNDY RUITR; AND -UITP IN EVERY)" RIETY mix MATERIAL FOR SPIII NO AND PURIM WEAR ALSO A FULL LINE OF BACQUES. TALMAS AND LA• DIES lINDERWEIH. WE JACKETS. POINTS. dm, Are. THE LAILES C STOCK EASE SILO AN IN TIIIS CITA @MEM= LIGNEW ENGLISH NO. 839 CITESTNUT ST., 29 SOUTH NINTH STREET, opell•wtfl ~ ~ OF ALLENTOWN. NEW GOODS, STORE CROWDED DAILY ! To see how complete his Stock is, and at such Dress Goods for Ladies Contains all the Latest and Choicest Novelties. ALL THE NEWEST PATTERNS DRESS I NENS for Ladies' Suitings. ALL THE POPULAR SHADES I IS COMPLETE, NEVER BETTER. Hare also a large and complete Stock of BEAUTIFUL PARASOLS ! V$ 'All aro Invited to call and get posted on the change in prices Very Respectfully, OPENING Opp°sllB CONTIXIINTAL UOTEIL AND CHEAP GOODS, M. J. FRAMER. HARTMAN .WASTE PA' Thelghe.t Ca. Old Newspapers deeerlption. Waste Paper, That are all written over. ' oral Mean. 0 d Pamphlets, &o. Rana, HOPP, BAOOIIIO Ann C•IIIIAS BOUGHT. • CooMenmeate from Country thAlers nolleßed. amr I.lr J. H A RTM AR. 611 Java r St., Phtlan 'VALUABLE IRON WORKS . FOR SALE. " The nottersigoed b•reby offore fnr Pain the following !NOV WORK.' end luta of ground ID tho Bo oosh of Pottsville. late the property °Jinni. Wren. to wit : A Larg S tc rt Maohin Shop &Foundry BRICK PATTERN SHOP, STONE BLACKSMITH SHOP, ERECTING SHOP, BRICK OFFICE And Int ur piece of ground, eltnated on the as. tw,rdly side of Coat siroot. lo the. llorough of Pott.ori In, bounded by lends of Lieniatnto F Pomeroy Jmbes Sp•rke. he ja. min Means. N• a Itich•rd lineal. contain no in fro ton Coot etreat 10.3 feet. 3 Inches, and In depth 21.03 feet, or tito•eatt Ula Also. Lot or piece of ground oo the weetwardly ride of rm.!, street. cont•lnlog in front oh. Coal sterott det 1 Inch. and on tho tear, on the Railroad, 1.9 feet 7 Incite, lied In d rib bet on West and the Italic ad, abont 190 fa with a Itall.oed crowd g said lot to the Machine hboti. he • leo. a lot or piece of con id on the eaetwardly aide of Coal street, bonunoti by Coal S treet and lot. of .I,,hre liparke, tie. joint,. Pennon and Co rite tllibel, containing In from on Coal street to feet, and In depth shout 112 feet, with a LARGE FRAME PATTERN SHOP, STA ELM AND WAGON BUM). Thera will be sold w lb Abe MhoMoe Shop, Foundry dr., A Large and Valuable Collection of Patterns Heavy Crane Flasks, and Heavy Core Spindles f r making Henry Ca. ins, and Pipes of all sites. A lot of finished at 1 undeshed CANTING.. Turning and Planing Tools, and other tools told inschluery. to such good order and condition a. to etti.ble Ido , ohasors to oicoce bo•lness Immediate T• The al.. proprr ',will be sold together or Repeate r. lo so t purrh toe,. and If not sold b fore the 16th day of Jobe ppm, al l be le .erd For informotion and le, noi. "apply to J. 4 kir !MRRY. Treece., Or LEWIS C. THOMPSON, JAIIEd bPoltlCit, Pottsville, Pa. Itnayls 4w "CIE4IIIITOR•RNOTICE.—ROTICS IS HEREBY GIVEN that letters testamentary hairier nlilliini n tr. d dtVirs r u e. d t r kie " ol d 1 1 4 blgb county. tin rotor. all persen• who know inem seinet to be Indebted to cold estate are requested to inak• within i l l w.k. from the slate better, and those her no elalin• will unseat them duly alitbanlkeated for sett Invent within the sbnvit specified time, may I.0w) IL 11,51oeutor. FURNITURE I FURNITURE HUTTON MoCONNELL, 809 MARKET ST., PHILADELPHIA. ♦ LAMB STOCK OP PINE Parlor, Chamber and Dining Room FURNITURE All Goode warrauted. An old customers will be dealt With ae forne.r.y, and the patrowage of the public, Is earuestly solicited. - - H. L. McCONNELL, Manufacturer mad Dealer in FOBMUDD, mar 27 3raw7 &O Market !trees. Philadelphia. GREAT BARGAINS FURNITURE. 111 AVERILL BARLOW, NO. 45 S. SECOND STREET, tine Ms Immense warerooms Ills stories) filled with a aaaaa variety of Lret•eleu Passau:ire. and is offering it at Prices Lower than any other Dealer in Philadelphia.. selling the same ghee of goods. Be has also a great variety of low-priced work. which he is netting at reduced pigeon, either at wholesale or re tail, ineledlog all. Wes of Cottage Furniture. Also, Agent for the Beckwith Sewing Machine. Price la. Cepr3-3now LARGEST STOCK GREAT INDUCEMENTS To boy all your furniture at theownof largest furniture store to t GEORGE W. HEIMBACH 782 HAMILTON BT., ALLENTOWN.. The Ire have reeently put Ina MAY. ROTH ALL PLATR.OLASS PRONT. and hare otherwise enlarged their facilities for •1 keeping on hand the largest stock In thu city. I Their ELEGANT FURNITURE I • • is manufactured In their own satablfsAmenf, under their own supervision, and a warrant. , ed h. be the bent in the market An Inspection of their stook will con•inco hams of the ad. • j ee • vantage of buying from them floor W. listmbach, manufacture KITTLE'S PATENT SPRINO UM and are sole agents for that superior bed Call and see it. Remember The Mammoth Gass Front. AN ORDINANCE RELATING TO WATER TAX OS. Sao 1 Be It ordained by be Beleet and Common Conn ela of the City of a Ileutown. and It Is hereby enacted by ail homily of the same, That a frontage lax of ~,,, ty fiVe cents per foot rebate be levied upon all property tool:Mug upon any of the poi nelpal streets of thin city ore , to en y feet In mid b. nd thirty . ..even led one hslf .37)4) cents per foot up a on all property fronting own tweedy feet muerte or alley. where water means are here after laid. sac 2 It Phan be the duty of the City Water Commie. .loner len medeately after be ham finished to log water mains .In any of the •treeta or part of Street. to furnish the City Treasurer with en ae curate account of the rieleSS. Meet g,act eso prep.! ty holder along snob Street or Part •f etre... where PIPe me, have been bud. lOC 3 That it shall be the duty of the City Vietnam Immediately upon the mcolot 14 snob aesesement to notify lee parties Inter aced of the amount no as eased upon each and every person and that psi meta be mon red within thirty days from the t to. of each notice. ant in CM. payment Is not toads within said lime to Ole In the office of the ro bonotary of the comity a statement and claim egainet the lot or lots elms which. such water mains have been told and preened It collect the same for the use of the CIM Bac 4 That Behan be leveed for property owners stoat which we Cr melon are already Wei to ply the Imitate tax as provided lu the first • ectlou of this ordinance. pan A That the asee sed rate for waler permits too the Ipear 1873 shell remain unaltered. excepting where the trout c« tax upon the main is paid when It shell be bat half .12 lt .0. • Sac fl That the protection tax of flee dollars now as. sensed tepee all iropetly owners w ;ere water mains are held and not topped shall hereafter be I:evled only noon i the property cee which the frontage tax remain, unpaid. CAMPAIGN OF 1872. THE LEIHGH REGISTER will be mailed to any address PROM THIS DATE TILL THE NOVEMBER ELECTION FOR SEVENTY—FIVE CENTS. We make this Important reduction for CAMPAIGN SUBSCRIBERS fur the purpose of furthering the dieeeml pation of sound Republican doctrines and we hope every Republican la thin "ellen will assist our p elect by need les in the name. of their friend., accompanied with th Price of sub.crlptloo. NO. 902 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA, ♦ few doors west of the Continental Hotel. Jewelers, Silversmiths, FINE BRONZES, FANCY GOODS, Have. vow la store. and are constantly receiving. an exteuelve variety of flue Goods aggertatnlng to theLr business. Yospeottolly Invite persons visiting thi ear to rove them with a ♦4lt Inquiries and orders by mail promptly attended to feor.ly ER DEPOT. NOB. 021 dc 023 NORTH SECOND STREET, h Price Paid For Old Blank Books And Ledgers ESTABLISHED OVER QU•RTER OE ♦ CENTURY THE oldest end roost reliable house en North Reroad Street H toga prartfrel mechanic sod baying lone expo. rteurelts the basino•cit , l goodse trio tiodo• my Itopovtion. ma lug tt safe to hoyora a uo 1,1111.10 ml or micron.. oontegion pertio , tted In this establishment I Write all to, old patrous and Meade throoshout sty natty. county to “Iland get mulled. a. 1 bete reduced goy prier. to suit •11. Noe. 621 and 623 North Second Street, nI FINANCIAL STATEMENT OF The Lehigh County Agricul ural Society. The following le the acentiet of A. 0 Reninger, Eon. treasurer. in account with toe Lehigh County Agricul (oral SocielY 0 wit • • P. bruary 7. 1 4 71. Cash balance on band from last 7111 r Ma eh 0, Cash fur hay land to M. Loots 0.001,d 24 M •crll IL do do do do It 20 lisp 0. do do d • Mr. Fry la 00 do do d • do 11. Bachman' 0 6,p , 23, Cash admittance dor lan Pair 7351 :17 re , s. Cash for wood sold to J. Wolf I 03 Oct 7, do Haut from 8. tlrl 1k et ......... ...... 30 01 D ot .0.. do Hay sold., 11. Lents 75 a) eo 11, 1... blob Coda annual stmr.nrotti.ot 0.00 do Cash for two Member ticketa cold 10 0, —.• OB February 17. 1871. By cash paid Newberd & Mame for birds 445 25 Anti 70. Br raab pal, W.l.' VO t 5 00 Jun 28. do do 8. Brinker I. rat .klog bay 55 02 Aug 3, do do liairerlig &3t roar for carp n n nnnn wo^k 5912 Aug •6. do do Mona & Whittier. Prieti g 7076 n e m it. do do 8 Brisker iur making tic, od c , • CO 05 gept 22. do dd 'UP DI. feed.rter for paint. 1011 90 81 . Oct 2. d W o do R Iredell. Jr for . printing 04 26 .10 .10 do Ilmrlaeber & e ear d 0.... 01 0) 0013, do do Pro ng . Welealletmer &Co f 111 ~ 115 08 Oct 4. do do Lelsourleg. Trout er &Co , dop 120100 bill 270 70 do :I: . do o t i tta . o. / . .b a l i e f foliu r rli e li rt"i'l g l i 12 Oct I o.,.Caah ) Wald Thies Rey der. carpenter bill 31 :5 Oct 21+ d o 0 T Young & Co. rooting bi 11.... 2ii 00 Pro 2: do 2 regl.q. &eV . lumber bill.. 375 *3 do do for Prenilume 1773 50 do do , for aued - y•XProPoe 1373 84 Ifeb 1, 1812, cash paid Jo.bna ei abler. •ecretarl ahoyCO f 0 do do A. 0 . . Iteulotfrr, Treaunrer's d 0.... 00 PO Ceati on band 1305 01 --- .0301 14 "We the aedereleeed CoMmiltAll tn . fieiAlt the jecoont•or A. 0 it.ol,leer,Tteuo•er of the Leh lief •Itrielli • int Al tiorteiy.hs•iog exerolued , the f,rettott g aen.uat for A. D. :071. Aoee dt, .Mme COM Cl as .toted so . ove. 4 Sod • belittle. is .he hao s of the Trrsourid. WA 01. Witnees oar hoods sod seal this 11th day of Y. hider/. A. D•. Din. Rtigit♦ ronue4T. ' • Ile ND% STINIt. auditore. EA MO JOlllO 11.L101111174WAL/112. H. L. HoCONNELL, SUOMI/TOR TO Has on hand. at the old stand. MI Greatly .Redueed Prices J,EgAtowata = WATCHES, DIAMONDS, EUROPEAN NOVELTIES BEST FURNITURE HERE! GEO. D. SMITH, =EZEI GEO. D. SMITH, (136TWEIX 011110 , £$D COATRB &METZ) PHILADELPHIA SS3:I 14
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers