g),e Pgister. ROBT.IIIEDELL. Jai LLLENTqWN PA., JULY 24,1872 FOR PRESIDENT, Gen, ULYSSES S. GRANT, OF ILLINOIS. FOR VICE PRESIDENT, Hon, HENRY WILSON, OF MASSACHUSETTS. REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET FOR GOVERNOR, 11114 or 6 1 JOHN F. HARTRANFT, or moiroomror COUNTY IMO SUMMON JIJDON, Hon. TILTIMFAS DIERCIIB, OP BRADYOIID 00111VIT. TOR AUDITOR ORNERAL, Haliadler Genera' HARRISON ALLEN, Ow WARREN COUNTY YOU 00NORE8SUB • LAUGH, Hon. Lemuel Todd, of Cumberland Hon. Harry White, of Indiana. If OR DELEGATES TO CONSTITUTIONAL CONTENTION Wm. M. Meredith, Philadelphia. J. Gillingluyn Fell, Philadelphia. Gen. Barry White, Indiana. Gen. William Lilly, Carbon. Lin Bartholomew,Schuylkill. H. N. McAllistei Centro. William Davis, Monroe. James S. Reynolds, Lancaster. Samuel E. Dimmick, Wayne. George V. Lawrence, Washington. William H. Armstrong, Lycoming. David N. White, Allegheny. William B. Miley, Lehigh. John H. 'Walker, Erie. COUNTY . MEETING THE REPUBLICANS OF LEHIGH VIII aesomble In county meeting, at the public house u Thomas K. Belelove, AT GUTH'S STATION, Louth Whitehall Township, ON SATURDAY, JULY 27th, 1872. AT 10 O'CLOCK, A. M. Let every Republican In the county make It bhp baslnsra to be present and Kaaba In espial:log the society Prof... tory to the assembling of toe Republican County Cony. a• Mom TIM New York Tribune is preparing the way to let Mr. Greeley down easy when he goes back entirely on his old record. It no longer discusses the Tariff question• as one of the most important before the country. It would not surprise ns to see the Tribune a Free Trade organ before the end of the year. Tag Union Army filled the ditches at Gaines' Mills with tents and commissary stores to enable their artillery to pass over. The Democrats will fill their ditches with Liberal Republicans to enable their forces to passover to the White linuse,but General Grant "never was defeated and :never will be." Evan Gen. Banks has been claimed by the Liberals, but the General has removed all doubt as to his position by declaring that he has never contemplated any change in his political sentiments, and has no idea of aban doning the Administration. Gansu.insm is in a poor way In Pittsburgh. The Post of that city, previous to the nomina tion, was worse than the World on old Horace, and the effect is that one-th'rd of the party has either stepped out of politics altogether,nr else will vote for Grant as the "leaser of the two evils." The indications are that Allegha• ny will give from twelve to fifteen thousand' majority for Grant.. ME election In North Carolina, it now ap pears, Is almost certain to result in a victory for the Republicans. If It does, it will have a very dampening effect upon the hopes and prospects of the , Greeley men. The Tribune knows such a result will have a bad effect as showing the confidence of the masses in Grant's administration. The Tribune has al ready seen enough to fear a victory for the Republicans and, therefore, to rob our party of the fruits of the victory and to make Gree ley's followers believe that the election will not be a free expression of opinion, It has charged that corruption has been practiced to carry the elections ; Federal money has been . used and unnecessary officers appointed, etc. The charges have been so direct, that the Federal officers In North Carolina have been brought out. A Washington dispatch says that Marshal Carrow, of North Carolina, after presenting an exhibit from his books to prove the statement of Mr. Beck altogether errone• one, closes a letter on the subject as follows '•I now assert, and challenge all scrutiny that not one dollar has ever been placed in my hands by the Government to be used for pa. Iffiest purposes, nor has any such suggestion ever been made to me by any officer or friend . of the Administration, and I further say that not one dollar of the public money has ever been used by me for political purposes. All charges to the contrary of this statement are slanderous and false, and I believe the authors of the present charge knew it to be slanderous and false when they made It." GENERAL HARTRANFT. The philadelphia North American pays a deserted tribute to the Republican candidate for Governor. "We find," it says, " the Republican ticket headed by a man fully deserving the respect and confidence of the people. During the larger portion of the time which has elapsed since the severance f his official connection with the armies vhich crushed the rebellion, General Hart. unit, our candidate for Governor, has occu ,•led a position of public trust, and in those jeers, even among those who were his posit. cal enemies, appeared no mention of hia name that did not do him honor, until sprung from . causes not yet fully developed, there arose the +•ppositlon which within the past few months has Bought regardless of consistency, to black •m the fame, which, by the same hands, had '.!en described as of imperishable whiteness. the story of our civil war is fast fading into a . .,emciry, but we do not believe that the grate. it recollections of the protected peopleof this Altai, are yet so obscured that they will refuse recognize the loyal service of the gallant • tidier, of whom it has more than once been • by the most eminent military commanders .nd critics that his record during those bloody years of the nation's salvation was equalled y scarcely any, and excelled by that of no • , •an In the service of the country. Within •. few weeks General. Burnside,• of Rhode I :and, a man whose purity and integrity are •••• ithout taint, announced to the assembled .nusands in a mass meeting on Broad street, it during the whole war he bad watched • •+' course of General Hartranft who was . nerally under his command, and when lie . t that a man was needed for any purposere• 1 *ring great gallantry, Ine administrative or. ..icutive powers, admirable dim etion, thor h unassailable honesty, his choice invaria fell upon Hartranft as combining these . Allies, and often as lie was tried he never found wanting. In the face of such tri e as this, freely given, heartfelt am! con •ied by every man who has had opportunity • adge we cannot doubt that the people of insylvapla will, with a united voice, cen t our belief that they are not to be misled I, • he specious pleadings•of 'cavy, malice or BUCKALEW. The little organ has pretended to Leileve that an article it copied from the Miners' Jour nal into its columns, relative to Mr. Bucka lew and the McClure Investigating Committee has lowered that gentleman in the estimation of somebody. For the consideration of the Ring, we - present the following : -The main cherge against Mr. Buckalew is that he accepted five hundred dollars for his services. The fact that ho was compelled to go to Philadelphia and^labor day and night in the service of the public are not token into the slightest consideration by these large minded and liberal economists. When thework peifortned by Mr. Buckalew Is taken into ac count his compensation will be considered small, indeed. A great commonwealth does not require that her honest servants who In bor in her interests shall work for nothing and find themselves. But newspapers, whose editors daily apologize for Ilartranit's nefari• nue speculation with the public money, and have witnessed the systematic plunder of the Treasury by the Ring for years,„are loud in their clamors because the Legislature paid Mr. Buckalew live hundred dollars for his services on the M'Clure Gray Committee. Out on such unmanly parttime injustice! In one word, the Senate ordered Mr. Buckalew and his six colleagues to go to Philadelphia and investi. gate the M'Clure Gray case. When it was concluded the Legislature paid them five hundred dollars. They did nut volunteer in the porforinance of tide work, but they were detailed for it, and they were entitled to pay. —4llentownNewa. The main charge against Buckalew is not that he accepted five hundred (Wars for hie services. If the pay of the Committee were the only Item of expenditure by which the State was robbed, the amount, $3,500, would be too small to talk about, but such was the reckless sanction of exorbitant charges for reporters, printing, board and rum hills, ex traordinary expenses of respondent and con— testant, etc., that the cost of those few days' investigation was run up to $26,605.11, only $9,409.10 less than it cost to pay all the sala rise, expenses, etc., of the State Senators of 1869, the next to the last session in which the Republicans were in a majority. It isnot so important as showing that Mr. Buckalew took $5OO extra pay when he performed no extra work, as it Is to warn the people that Mr. Buckalew has given the strongest proof possible that, if elected Governor, he would sanction any extravagance, or exorbitant charges against the Commonwealth, that might be put through the Legislature. We have before shown how alarmingly more ex pensive it is to run the Senate under a Dem• ocratic majority than under Republican rule, and we hope this hint given the people by the cost of the McClure-Gray Committee will be sufficient to show them how much more it will cost to have a Democratic Governor than it would to have the Executive department presided over by a Republican. We are glad we published the article from the Miners' Journal, exposing Mr. Bucka lew'a sanction of peculation. It has bad one good result and. that is to force the News to show its cloven foot. It should be borne in mind that the News is profelsedly the cham pion of Reform. That plank ill the Cincin nati platform, referring to Civil Service Re— form, is held up by the News as something noble, yet it le one of the few newspapers in Pennsylvania, making any pretension to de— cency, which has had the audacity to defend the payment of extra compensation to legisla— tive committees. The system is one of the most obnoxious that we have, and the first paper in which we have seen it defended is the Reform News. Senator Albright, of this city, hati served on Committees where the la— bor was greater than that of the McClure•Gray Committee, and where his expenses were in— creased, and yet he received no extra pay. I t must be remembered that B uckalew received a thousand dollars from the State for perform ing Lis duties as State Senator (luring the ses sion of the Legislature. When he was acting on the McClure-Gray Committee, he perforn.- ed no extra duty, for, while he was in Phila dolphin, he was doing no work at Harrisburg, for which he was paid. He had no extra ex , penses. He traveled over the railroads free. Ile did not even have a hotel bill to pay—that was paid by the State. If he had not been on the Committee he would probably have been compelled to pay for his own ruin—but even that was settled for by the State and the amount °flit° bill indicates that both the rum and cigars must have been of a very good qual ity. Thus while he incurred no extra ex penses as Chairman of the Committee, and worked only during those hours in which the Legislature was iu session, it cannot be claim ed that lie was entitled to extra pay. But even should we admit that, in addition to the payment of hie board and sundries, the State should pay him extra compensation for labor, we could not agree to give hint $lOOO .for five or six days' work. Ile was getting, as Senator, at the rate of $l5 a day (luring the time he served no the Committee, and if the work was so hard as to require extra labor, which we doubt, he could not justly have claimed more than double pay, which would have made his extra pay amount to something like $1.09, oa3•fitth of the amount he recemv. ed. Cole & Heilman, of this city, send squads of men off to different sections of the State to put up their work. Now, supp se it nas the custom of this firm to allow these squads to make out their own charges for board, wines, Cigars and extra services, ta be approved by the foreman of the gang. These men proba bly earn three dollars a day when home,but Imagine them bringing in a heavy b.ll for board, etc., with a charge of $lB a day extra labor for each man in the gang, the bill duly sanctioned by the foreman. Cole ct Heilman would undoubtedly demur to the bill, but If their estaolished rules compelled them, in honor, to pay the charges, would they be like ly to select that foreman to act In a position where his sanction of all demands upon their establishment would be final ? We think not and wo also think that Mr. Buckalew's sane Hon of the shameless charges paid by the State for that McClure Gray Committee will be sufficient to convince the people that he isnot a safe man for Governor. The Demociatic•Liberal press lies made vague charges against Gen. Hartranft, every one of which hos been disproved, except that he borrowed $7,000 from Evans in a private capaoity. Hartranft knew Evans had been recommended by good men, among whom were Col. John W. Forney, and be had no reason to suppoie that Evans was a dishonest men. The luvestigation uommittee's report shows that, though the Governor knew of Evans' transactions, they were kept front the knowledge of the Auditor General, but as soon as Hartranft was made aware of the res cality of Evans he did not fail to at once ex pose the matter, notwithstanding Evans had done him what appeared to be an act oi' frlend• ship. Hartranft may be blamed fin floating in use honesty of any man recommended by Forney, but it cannot be shown that the loan allies° seven thousand dollars delayed for "a moment Ilartranft's exposure of the Evans swindle. On the other:hand every charge against Buckalew can be proved beyond a doubt by official records. His rebel Koclivi ties, his vote against paying soldiers, his tak ing criminals out of jail to vote in the Interests of the rebellion and his sanction of the rob bery of the State of over $20,000 through the McClure•Gray Committee, the charges being $20,065.11. when the work could have been donefor so,ooo—these have all been 'placed before the people and the most his papers can do is to try, to defend them—not deny them. NIL GREELEY'S paper is moved to raze by the proposed meeting 01 soldiers and sailors In Pittsburgh on the aniversary of the battle of Antietam, and especially toward General Burnside, whom it abuses after the most ap. proved fashion' if the World. Abuse of sol diers and sailors who fought down the rebel— lion is the necessary outcome of 111r.Greeley's position; and It must be confessed that his pa• per has got pretty far alinig in the business, considering the time it has had. ' THE LEHIGH REGISTER, ALLENTOWN. WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1872. BOMB Of our friends of the Democratic wing of the Liberal party think we did Mr. Bucka• lew d great deal - of injury in publishing that exposure of the Miners' Journal. Vie regret, indeed, that these char is m are true. It Is in deed unfortonate that men who have occupied eo high a port lion in the estimation of the people as has Mr. Buckalew, should be guilty of such unwarranted appropriation of the people's money. The Miners' Journal has been one of the foremost and bravest export. ents of the corruption which has entered our State Legislature. It has spared neither Democrats nor Republicans, but has put them on the same footing. This exposure was pub• Drilled at thit time and would not again be brought up If Mr. Buckalew were not held up to us as a model of everything that is hon est, virtuous and good. Ho Is recommended to the people as the cand aa'm in favor of Re form, yet his sanction of the excessive charges of that Committee shows bow weak a safe guard he would be, if Governor, against any legislation intended to fill the pockets of the hungry Liberals from the cdffers of the peo ple. The character of the men who are at the head of the Liberal movement in this State is well known. Look at some of them in this city ; look at Alex. McClure, Ed. Rauch and the numberless professed Demo crate who have sold themselves, body and breeches, to the wire-pullers of Greeley and Brown. Can such men, with Buckalew at their head, he safely entrusted with the gov ernment of the State? We ask every candid man to decide this for himself. If the Demo cratic party was In existence the result would not be so threatening. Then they would have the name of the party at stage. There would be something upon which the people could fas ten the responsibility. But under the Liberal party, a temporary affair gotten up for the one purpose of beating Grant, the Democratic wing would blame the renegade Republicans and the renegade wing would blame their Democratic co laborers. AFTER. Greeley had. delivered bis lecture on Self made Men, at the Court House, a few years ago, he was called upon by a number of Allentonlans, whom he edified with hisviews upon farming. Daring the course of the con versation he remarked "You men don't know how to farm. You ought to put on manure. I would put on two hundred wagon loads of barnyard manure to the acre." But two hundred loads being as much as a good-sized farm will produce, one of his hear ers asked " Where would you get enough for the whole farm." " Gather It everywhere—from the woods and from the fields. Scrape everything up and put It on," was the reply. Some one suggested that much of the land In this county was now to rich too raise wheat, that it grew so rapidly that it fell down and did not head well, but this objection to putting ' on "two-hundred wagon loads to the acre" had no effect whatever upOn the philosopher. This conversation had the effect of impress ing Mr. Greeley's hearers with the belief that he was totally unfit to manage a farm, let alone to write a work on farming. I here is another moral to be deduced. It shows Mr. Greeley's greatest failing, and that is that no matter what he undertakes he always rushes to extremes. He has the worst balanced head of any' public matt in this country. Always impracticable he w.ould destroy a farm while attempting to make it a model of fertility, and in like manner would he ruin the country while attempting to make It, in his own eyes, a model government. Two hundred loads of manure to the acre would destroy vegetation, and two hundred loads of Mr. Greeley's purl• tying office seekers, emptied upon Uncle Sam's farm, would deprive the old gentleman of all his revenue for four years and would in• volve the country in ruin. TEE Norristown Defender, the leading Democratic paper of Montgomery county, re• fuses to put up the Greeley and Brown ticket and expresses its disappointment over the nominations in the following article :-- " It were idle to express disappointment at the prearranged action of the Baltimore Con vention. A unity of purpose existed, between the progenitor of the Liberal Republican movenient c and the National Democratic Ex• ecutive Committee,anterior to the assemblage of the conclave at Cincinnati. The same in fluences that doomed our party to defeat in 1868, are dominant in 1872, the only difference being, that in the former instance, a 'Demo. crat was chosen as the Presidential candidate whereas at the present a lite•long, relentless maligner of Democracy, is foisted upon us. 'Fite National Convention heretofore, was regarded by Mmocrate, as the highest tribe aid of the party. Its promulgations were re• ceived as decisive; to qu.131,1013 or Ignore which, was held as equivalent to a forfeiture of membership of the Democratic party. That such a standard of authority, should be recog• ogniz, d as proper, so long as princ pie re mained inviolate is admitted, but when that tribunal adopts a policy in defiance of usage, history, right—in flue, of every attribute hitherto esteemed as inviolable, the question presents itself, whether Democrats are bound by a course so revolutionary, nod at variance with custom and precept? * * * " Up to the assembling of the Baltimore Convention, we clung to the hope that better counsel would prevail, eventually, and the degradation of our party be averted. Not withstanding the premonitions of the event. Democrats, (other than place hunters,) the earnest, consistent and unselfish portion of the party treated the subject as one impossi ble of accomplshment. * * Toe sit 7 nation it must be confessed is an embarrassing ..ne, confronted as we are on the one hand. by the unparalleled test of party fealty estab fished by the actin : at Baltimore ; and on the other, by a natural repugnance to accept and support a nominee so objectionable as Gree ley." Tuu Tilbune, it appears, cannot in any thing show its old honesty, which made it re spected in both partite. Harper's Weekly published some extracts from tiles of the Tri bune stowing how the paper and Greeley have changed. While Mr. Greeley did not probably write everything that Mr. Curti, quotes he was responsible therefor. On Fr;, day the Tribune retaliated by showing what Mr. Curtis said during the first four months of 18131. It is true the remarks which the Tribune quotes did appear in the editoria' columns of Harper's Weekly, but Mr. Curtis was not the editor at that time. He conduct. ed a "department" under the heading of "The Lounger," in which Mr. Curtis' expressions were strongly Union and were a remarkable contrast to the vile rebeisentiments expressed in the editorial columns. If Mr. Curtis had been the editor or publisher of the paper the responsibility of the sentiments could have been fairly laid at his door, but tho Tribune knows, as well as It knows anything, that he was not. It knows, also, toot when Mr. Cur tis was made editor the paper changed to out of the staunchest Union Journals in the court try, The Tribune does not often have the courage to reply to the able and convincing arguments so gracefully written by Mr. Cur tis, and it is significant that when it does venture to reply it cannot do so without re sorting to lying. It is another evidence of the weakness and hypocracy of • the Merit! Cause. If any one should make such misrepresenta tions of the Tribune, the reply of that paper would be "you Ile, you villain, you lie." A BALTIMORE correspondent of the Chicago Times complains that the Democratic Con veution committed a great blunder "In not doing anything to conciliate the material and financial interest of the country, which inter ests are more than distrustful of Greeley." "In this," it says, "as in other respects, the ma- Jorlty of the delegates appear to be perfectly insane." Mn. 11. A. LYrriat, teacher at Catasauqua, a life loug Republican, has cut loose from Grant and goes for Greeley.—Demarrat. The ruling power In the Catasauqua School Board Is Democratic. CHAPPAQUAVERINGS. R is already pretty clear, says the Philade] ; ph la Bulletin, that the Greeley campaign Is to be run by Greeley, himself, In the same ,va cillating, blundering way that ho stumbled through the war, and by his new owners, the Tammany and Rebel Democracy, without the slightest regard for the little seined of sore. beaded Republicans from whom ho has been purchased. Among the interesting signs of the times, is the late visit of ex rebels to Chappaqua. One of the reports tells us how Mrs. Greeley took a hand tail little electioneering. Here is how she did it: " During the progress of the meal Mrs. Greeley came out of the grounds in a low car risge. She Is still an invalid, but she was de termined to see some of these Southerners who bag returned to the old Union and were actually supporting her husband for the Preal dency. She looks the Invalid, her clear corn plexloo appearing almost transparent, and her la-go eyes dark as night. But she was cheerful and chatty in her carriage, and In slated upon having every ex-rebel on the ground introduced to her. To one r f them she said : ' I hope that I am a good Christian. but /hardtb think that I could forgive as much as you have forgiven,"' "Mrs. Gri eley." responded the other, "it Is the day of jubilee, and we must all forgive, as we hope to be forgiven." This is the true spirit of Chappaqua Chris Dandy. The deer rebels I How much they have had to forgive I Think of all the wrongs they suffered 1 How they were wronged out of their Southern Confederacy I How they were wronged out of their slaves 1 How they were wronged out of their Ku-11 lux clubs I How they were wronged out of Fort Donel son, and Vicksburg, and New Orleans, and Gettysburg, and Petersburg, and Richmond And how wrong it was of the Tribune and Mr. Greeley to say unpleasant things about the rebels I How can the Innocent, saintly creatures forgive us for all our sins? Mrs. Greeley is a woman and an invalid ; and we instinctively deal gently with the quaverings of an invalid woman, not accuse turned to electioneering, with her husband on a rebel ticket. The other old woman of Chap paqua confesses the "embarrassment" of the situation, and it la not remarkable that Mrs. Greeley, in her first attempt, should have got tho relations of her rebel visitors somewhat mixed up. Her penitence toward the offended South is touching ; and, it must be confessed, is far in advance of the general condition of the Northern heal t. In thousands of Northern homes there Is, as yet, none of that repentance which deierves the sweet forgiveness which Mrs. Greeley so humbly envies as it illumines the character of the men who made those homes forever desolate. And in hundreds of thousands of graves, lie brave soldiers of the Union, who died with no time to receive ab solution at the hands which Mrs. Greeley grasped with such admiring emulation. THE Bloomsburg Republican, published in Buckalew's own town, asserts as a fact which no ono there will attempt to deny,that during' the war, while an exciting election was going on, Mr. Buckalew assisted in opening the jail 3f Columbia c - unty and voting the'l4isoners confined there in the interestof the Democratic party and against the government. Mr. Buck• slew, the Democratic candidate for Sheriff, and Lila Commissioners' Clerk, says that paper, "robbed the county jail of some of its priso. ners and took them to Buck Horn,where they voted the ticket of rebellion. The sheriff and the commissioners' clerk were arrested and taken to Harrisburg by the United States Marshal, but Mr. Buckalew, by using his strategy, escaped. The deepest indignation was manifested by the citizens on account of this unheard•of procedure. It is said that the Southern Confederacy robbed. the cradle and the tomb to destroy the Republic, and it is true that Buckalew robbed our county jail to help them. While this pleasing Incident was transpiring, Hartranft was leaving his all to finish the noble work of our fathers, and help ing to save, even though it cost the sacrifice of his own life, the best government the world has ever seen. These facts are so well estab lished that numerous affidavits can be furnish od to substantiate them. This is the mild man that some forgetful Republicans are expected to vote for In opposition to a man that never was false to a trust and never a traitor to his country." Fon the satisfaction of the Greeley mans. gets we wiltstate,upon the authority of a gen tletnan who can be implicitly relied upon, that the number of Democrats in this city alone who will not vote the Liberal tinker has in creased to nearly three hundred. We will no. give the names for twenty floe cents, or any other sum, and we can assure Messrs. Mori. and Haines that they need not try to secure them, as it will be labor lost. Many of them have made up their minds to do their thinking and voting quietly and the Greeley leaders will not be convinced of the truth of our State. merits until after the election. The most 01 them Lre men of strong nerve, and neither the threats of the Allentown Democrat,nor the. whip of the infamous McClure can force them to vote for candidates whom they despise. The good men of both parties will unite against the election of Greeley and Brown, and t h e establishment of a party that would Involve the country in disaster. "You ought to be for Greeley because everybody around here is for Greeley," lath, favorite argument which the Court House Ring uses to Republicans from the country. rho Ring should disabuse Its mind of the idea that everything that comes from the country la green. The Republicans of the rural die tricts know as tnucti about what kind of a ereelderit they want as the Ring does, and they can do their voting without any instruc Hone from that quarter. It used to be a fa vorite expression of the Tribune that " Goo made the country, and man the city," which means that the Republicans of the country are not to be corrupted by immoral influences, and the Ring will therefore save itself consith erable trouble by attending It its own business. NUMBERS of Allentown Liberals say they will not vote for the Electoral Ticket placed in the Ili Id by the Reading Convention. They nay a new one must be formed, pledged to Greeley and Brown. Row is that for liberal ? They demand that Democrats place Implicit confidence in Greeley, but are not willing to return the compliment by voting for an Elec. 'oral Ticket set up by the Democratic Con vent:on. They are afraid that it the Demo• c atic Electoral Ticket should be elected, the Electors may vote for Jeff Davis or some other man than Greeley. There can never be a successful-union between the Democrats and Liberals so long as so much distrust is mr.nl. fested by the latter. Tim indeperident•not•neutral organ has tried its hand at slandering Gen. Hartranft, and dose it With the same "narrowness of view and smallness of soul" that have characterized all the attacks of the Domocratic•Liberal•Re form journals upon our candidate for Gover. nor. Copying here and there an extract from the Investigating Committee, Intentionally omitting following or preceding sentences which explain the meaning of the wore quoted, is not a fair or manly way of tre.tting Gen. Hartranft. We care not how often or how• severelY the News attacks Gen.Hartran ft —lt can do him no harm so long as It gives its readers the truth. MULTIPLYING—BoIIing Democratlcjournala The. Term Haute (Indiana) Journal, and the Seymour Democrat, leading Journala In Indiana, reline to support Greeley. The Savannah (Gent.. itla News, or the Fame party, nays ()emit will beat Greeley 20,000 In that State. THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION AND THE BUSINESS WORLD. Mr. Herman Raster, editor in chief of the BlinoleStaatszeitungOs a recognized author ity on all questions In finance. We therefore feel that.we cannot minister to the edification of a portion of our readers in any way better than by translating the following article by Mr. Raster on "The Presidential Election and the Business World :" There are hundreds of thousands of citizens in town and country, who, no matter wheth er in their political views they belong to the Republican or to the Democratic party, look forward to the Presidential election with aux Imes concern. These, are the solid business men of every kind, traders wholesale and re• tail, manufacturers, workmen, money lenders and money borrowers who have 'he fixed feel. ing, that a change of the National adminiatra• Ron nuet, according to all human calculation, be followed by the most injurious peiturha• Lion of the money market, and consequently of all economical conditions and of the whole industrial lite of the country. This conviction springs from no idle fancy, but rests upon very precise facts and reasons. Among all the people in the land, who pos sess even the slightest knowledge of finance, Greeley himself is in evil repute, on account of his extremely childish and withal danger our Weds and plans regarding financial sub jects. For years he has preached two meas ures, which only utter incompetence could couple together, for they are two horses which tied together by the tails, should run in oppo• site directions. On tile one -band he desires tae sale of the gold stored away in the Na tional Treasury ; on the other hand, he desires the immediate Introduction 01 specie payments through the announcement that the Treasury is ready to redeem every paper dollar with a dollar in gold. That two such propositions could be made at the same ti .8 proves, for every man who has five sou d senses, that Greeley knows even less abu t finances than hi- knows abc ut farming ; that he' is, in fact, not quite right in the upper story. The un derstanding even of a schoolboy suffices to see, that as soon• as the national treasury should have sold its superfluous gold, full play would have been given to the maddest gold speculation, and that lie swindling stock jobbers of New York, with a& for a bail, could push their game to the utter ruin (noel nese life. For years under Grant's adinicis trathn they have been held in bounds by the conviction that' the Secretary of the Treasury by the quick sale of five or ten or twenty mil I one of gold, could always 1), ask down a sud den rise of premium efleeied by fitock•jobbing tricks. The only time when the speculators dared, by a stock jobbing conspiracy, to run up the premium, the secretary was able to make things so unpleasant for them that they b hayed quite decently ever since. But sup. twee that, according to Greeley's plan, all the national gold had teen sold I Nothing would restrain the must c azy speculat on, the gold premium would niake. the wildest springs up and down, time all aohsiantial business in the country would be prostrated, while the rogues and swindlers woulu sold a witch's Sabha-h. Not very different would be the operation of the other measure which Is Mr. Greeley's second hobbyhorse. When a bank has one fourth of the amount of its notes lying in cold, Its paper circulation is safe enough. For It needs only sufficient gold to encounter the first strong run upon it. Sr such a run takes place, the bank has time to make available its other resources, consisting in property and dis counted bills of exchange, to cover its paper. ttu . a government has no such additio.wl re source, lf, as Greeley wishes, the Treasury etioufel announce that it would redeem every one of Its four hundred millions of payer dol ars in gold, while it has only eighty or ninety mllhwna of gold Unhurt , Lactic would be paid out as fast us they could be counted, and when It was done tnere would he over three hun• dred [tuitions of paper dialler. Ic circulation without specie covering I E , erybody can tell the result on hie fingers. Tile greenbacks would sink to the value 01 75, 3U, perhaps 25 cents, In proportion as gold speculators, by their artifices, should enhance the price of gold. It may, however, be objected that Greeley as President would not be In u position to carry out his crazy schemes. To this Oa a 're ply Is that the money market is exceedingly sensative, and is as violently, indeed moo violently,-disturbed by lucre appre:•ousionsol evil than by evil that has actually come to pass. Naked propositions in a President's message might exert upon all financial in terests an influence us disastrous as the pro posed measures themselves. This ti nth attested every day in Europe n's la Ameilca tey perfectly valid proms. In the present case it must be added that the Democratic [way, which will cant niue - tenths of all the cites that Greeley will receive refire 80141 the most peiniciuus doctrines re spo ming the financial politics of the country. Only a shallow foul can believe that the ac ceptance of the Cincinnati programme of phrases signifies a retti change in the opinions and purposes of the Democratic party, or lm piles any essential modification of their con victions. The Pendletoniau plan of paying off the national debt in depreciated pap money and the war against the national busks are indeed put aside ior the moment hut an toy no menus pet =Dent'', abandoned. Shun lo Greeley tic elected, it :a perfectly certain that In the that Congress of his administration a veritable deluge of propositions of the tenor indicated would burst lonia. The national' banks especially would be the object of on• slaught. And though (by reason of a Re. publican majority in tile &now) no one et such propositions should be actually adopted, yet the effect upon tile public credit could no, fail to he disastrous. For just so soon as the possibility of a par Lial repudiation 01 the national debt (through payment of the same In paper murwy), ur the uuuliuun of the national banks and the rein. troduction of the wildcat bank nuisance tit other years, began to be feared, hundreds tot millions of limerwau bonds would stream over from Europe I. r sale at any price, and thus ih • money u arket would be completely bra ken down. A pecuniary and business crisis terrible Luau Mai u 1 .1857 (whe wage in Chicago sank to three shillings, and tensor thousands lost their all) would be inevitable. All this is no ghost seeing, or mere lane) but it is its absolutely certain as any event still 'uteri, can be. 'those who object that in former Preelden tial canvasses similar predictions wero mad and nut fulfilled, fa , l to remember the great fact that the credit and business life of; Amer ica was never before so entirely as now de pendent upon the Oonfidence of Europe. Ex• perienced bankers estimate the aggregate amount of American paper of all kinds held en Europe at from twelve hundred to eighteen uundred millions. If in couse.quence of a ills turhance of our public credit only one-fourth of this amount should be thrown back upon us, no imagination can conceive the extent 01 the disaster which must follow. WHEN TI! E OLD WHITE HAT WAS NEW A. COALITION CAMPAIGN BONG When this Did Hat was new, my boys, The Democrats swore freely, And day and night, with great delight, They damned old llerace Greeley, But now a change bus o'er them come, The like I never saw, They now are wearing Greeley hate, Aud shouting Chappaque. Charles Sumner's now a p-triot, A "statesman tried and true," But Bully Bro ka oroke Sumner's head, When this Old Hat was new, The Demveruta all cried well done, And raid he'd ant his due, And owtre they'd hang old Greeley next, When this Old Hat was now. When this Old Hat was new, my boys, Duo Voorhees was the roan, Whose lull, proud form to victory led The Democratic clan. But now they have ruled Daniel out, They ray ho will not do, Because ho stands right where he Mood when this old Hut was oew, But Daniel will not stood the storm ; He soon will come to "taw," He yet will sing In sweetest strains The song of Chappaqua. When this Old Hat was new, my boys, The very ulr was rent— With shouts from Democratic throats, . - For a •'white man'a guv-er-ment," But now they aro for equal rights, To every race and hue, They turned their. bucks on all they said, , When this Old Hat wan new. But still it does feom strange to me, 'Tis hard to think so really, That Hendricks should be shoved aside, For nigger-loving Greeley, For Hendricks was a Democrat— To his party always true, And Greeley wan Its direst foe When this Old Hat was new. But let us take our diall'ol dirt, And try to put it through, And turn our backs upon the pant, When this Old Hat was now. And when we get old Horace in, Perhaps he'll follow o'er Where Harrison, and Taylor, And Abe Lincota went before. antimifon Commercial BilEnT Music, instruction books, blank books, music paper and cards and all kinds of musical trimmings, a largo supply constantly on and at C. F. Herrman's Music Store, Alb:atom', WHOLESALE SLANDERING, Itlkrepresentntlosintof the Orgratoe of the New Panty. . The N. Y. Times Bays :—For good lying (we thank thee, Horace, for teaching us that word) commend us to the organs of the sore. head parry. The wrath of the leaders of that party, at not being able to supply themselves and their friends with offices, breaks forth privately in blaspheany, but publicly in elan. der. Their tactics are simple. They mean if they can, to lie General Grant out of the elec. lion. Here was the Sun, whose editor was turned iTOU3 an abject flatterer of the Presi. dent to a virulent but impotent hater, because he was refused the Collectorship of the PO, a post for which he begged and schemed or years previously. That paper published some ten days ago a story, with all the particulars, about a bargain foran office, in which it was said that Mr. W. D. Farrand paid $2,500 to the President's brotherin•law to be appointed Consul to Peru, and, again, $l,OOO for another office. This story of the Tribune, the head of whose late editor has been in a state of chronic tore nese any time these fifteen years, and particu larly during the last year, has more than once been repeated. Now It was hardly nec e.sary to say that there is not a word of truth in this story ; but it was said. The tale is a falsehood, a slander ; and its author and re peaters have deliberately borne false witness against their neighbor. This they know, but about it they care nothing. If they have any evidence to prove their assertion, according to all the laws of evidence or of honor, they are obliged to produce that evidence, or they stand convicted slanderers. But they do not produce it; and they go on, in the strength of their brass and the mightiness of their cheek, simply repeating the falsehood ; hoping by bare iteration to drive a sufficient belief of it into the public mind to do General Grant some Injury. He la deharred by his position from noticing such slanders ; and so these backbt• tern have the cowardly satisfaction of know ing that they cannot be called to account. Keep on repeating lies, and somebody will believe them—such lathe Greeley-Dana motto in this canvass. . . . But, perhaps, even if the President's hands • were not so tied, ho might allow these mali cious falsehoods to pass unnoticed,' just as Mr. Bancroft Davis has. He has seen himself de flounced, day after day, In one of these papers as a bribe taker, and with a calm reticence much to be admired he has taken not the slightest public notice of the accusation. And it has done him not the slightest harm. Bele a foolish man ; but the people do not believe that be Is a bribe taker. So It will be found in the end with President Grant. The mud will be thrown, and will look black for a mo ment ; but like that cast at the men In white rement seen by Christian on the Delectable Mountains, it will faliquickly away, and what was spotted for the instant will seem whiter than .before. These sore headed gentlemen plainly believe that a lie well told and stuck to is as good as the truth. That they will stick to theirs, no one can doubt ; but they wilt fled that the effect of their lying tales has been spoiled by the dull and slovenly way in which they have been told, and that they, and nut Gen. Grant, will be the sufferers. The man recovered of the bite ; The dog it was tint: died. TRANSATLANTIC, ENGLAND. LONDON, July 20.—Advlces from ISt. Pe tershurg stale that the cholera epidemic Is g n Wally Making its way from the eastern p ovieces nod gaining a foothold in the cen tral and western portions of the empire. Mon cow Is now suffering from Its ravages and the (Incase there has assumed the most malignant form. The proportion of deaths to,recoverles is placed at eight to one. This terrible fatal. ity bus created a panic among theinhabltants. Thousands of the better classes aro fleeing to Western Europe. At St. Petersburg a fee sporadic cases have appeared, and the author ties have taken the most rigid precautions to cut off communication between the capital and the infected districts. LATE NEWS it EMS. A Niagara Falls despatch states that the re. suit of several days' conference there of the leaders of the Democratic and Greeley party is t mt Sanford E. Church was agreed upon as their candidate for Governor. file New Yorker, Democrat, arid Abend &Rung came out ori Saturday for Grant and iVilson. hey were hitherto Liberal Reim!) , 1 cans, but anti• Greeley. All I , quur dealers having their saloons Opel. hereafter on Sunday, in Brooklyn, are to b. arrested by the police. The district attorney, it is said, Is determined to prosecute all parties arrested for so offending. Amadeus of dpain and his Queen no doubt tel very happy just now. Besides escaping the bullets fired at them a few nights ago by hand of would be assassins, the royal could, ire receiving addresses from all parts of thi Kingdom, expresidng the Joy of their subjects it the failure of the murderous conspiracy. Clement, the leader of the Irish band, which participated in the Boston Jubilee, returns koine with only fifteen of his men. The real iave tome to the conclusion to make a tour oi the United States on their own account. Nearly two hundred thousand dollars' worth or pr„piqty was destroyed and over eight hut. lred men thrown out of employment by Ores in Buffalo on Saturday. Decisions have been rendered by the United Slates Commissioner at Raleigh, N. C., in the ccoes or the colored men who attempted to litimidate a few colored Greelevlti asome time +ince. All of them ere ordered to be tried by tic courts. Another of the Lowery North Cerolina,out• I we is reported dead. This time it is Tom Lowery. Ile is quid to have been killed by a mother of one of the victims. The foolish story set afloat by some one for political effect that President Grant had au thorized a het on his two election is eel at rest by the President's denial of It, printed .his morning. Hereafter all , persons convicted of crimes igainst the United Stales in South Carolina are l be sent to the Albany penitentiary. On Saturday the civil rights law enacted by the Legislature at Washington, went into et feet in that city Various measures are being resorted to by some of the tavern keepers to avoid selling to colored men. By the lute tbiods in Aiabtma, it is said the d amigo will r. act $5 000,000, the waters in central A;abanin are higher thee ever known At this season, end the cotton crop in the State wl,i be $40,000 short. One 01 tat:saddest occurrences of the season took place on Saturday In Massachusetts. A young lady while bathing la a pond got b 1 - you d her depth. Two other ladies went to aer assistance, and all three were drowned. Announcement Is made of Ulu arrival at Brownsville of the commlselon, appointed ua• der act of Congress, to investigate the &pre. dations on the,Texas frontier. Sigrid Notieto. PILES OR REMORIVIOIDS! INTER NAG. EX MON et , IMMO. 41LBEDINO Art) I roll Mi. Perf•etlii and Wmanemity (11110. D by AB• SO I 11 ryo,v. IN.. Det.tion from Burtners.) without Danger Caustics or Instruments, by WM. A. McCA.NDLASS, M. D., NO. 2001 ARCH STREET, PSILADA., Who cam refer you to our 6000 calm cored. We dealre to oar to those •illictod there Is 00.4‘ , SalY oodecuTfloo lo rho core Ul D 11 ISF•111. It nol h ew long or how severely, you have beau afflicted, wo can cure you. We also cot Vistulu. Placate PfuIAP.U.. U~rlcturu. too UlCPratlol3 of ,he lower bow el. , treated tow, MO cases as a specia/tu for twenty yearn. Clab2l.l3mw U. GETTING MARRIED.—ESBAYB FOR Tout.' Mao. otigteat SOCIAL EVILS mod A BUbES which itterferc with -14ARNIAOK—with owe MOPOR of relief for the Erring ad Uotortuunta, dise•Ped And debit- Rated. Address HOWARD ASSOCIATION. No, South Shah street. Philadelphia. PA VXECUTOR'SNOTIVE.—NOTICE Is 1/ IV EN that letter. testamentary having been grained to the under. vied in the estate of ()W 11 KERN. d. ceased. late of the city of Al autumn, Le high county , therefore all person. who know , then, serve. to be - indebted to said estate are rep...tett to make payment within six weeks from the date heteof, and those berm' claims will present them duly authenticated for settlement within the shore specified time. JosEPII WsTlMsh. Executor. T.lmeport P. 0.. Upper tlaucon. Lehigh Uo.. Pa. junel9 Ow• 1 FXECUTOWS NOTICE.—Notlee Is hereby given that letters testamentary upon the tote of NoLoatoN I UNICE. late of •I•florth, I Phial cuuoty, Penns, dec'd, have been granted to the apd.r. signed. All perXo • Indebted, to, or bawler Claim. rani at, the said estate .111 preeeet the eases With.. di la/ to 1.81 , EH AIMEE. Or, VALEN TINE W. WEAVER, 1...u.K.T.• AL-Boars it, Lehigh county, Juoe 27, 1871 (.173.6w WANTED.—A FEW FIRST-CLAM AGENTS, mile std female, far the beet selling books published. HIHLTO Bleeeker StreePublishers. t, .one door wes o f Broadwuy, B 'tu eronbo. e rII.4II4TIKE & ROSS, 212 North Eighth Street, Phila. By condoler tb•rnselveg to a special line of good• and doing • large trade are able to buy sod sell cheaper then those who deal In n more general vr ty• Not a thing de alrable Is wanting to make up the most thorough stock of WHITE GOODS, All sorts of Lugs, And at this tenon a spoalaity Is made of 13=1 lat o gr o r ig i t i Ll , C o .ll , tr c l . :l2 , ll o rar o l u h n e d. yard. The choicest Our TM pieces, representing more than 30 OW garde of HAIIBURG EDGINGS'AND INSERTINGS All select r Warne and buttonhole edged. Hine teen Mg ■od blea tucking combination. made 80107 for their own pa.m. WHOLE/MEE AND RETAIL mvy I•tfw . B. LI. SIEMER.) 0 u 1, (A. S. BIIIMER. Increase in Businses NECESSITATED INCREASL IN STOCK 1 SPRING AND SUMMER ANNOUNCEMENT DAILY ARRIVALS, ITEM " MAMMOTH STORES." E. S. SHIMER & CO., 705 AND 707 HAMILTON ST., ALLENTOWN, PA FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS • OUR STOCK le entirely too extmeive to enumerate el. tleles. end will only nay, that It le tut' and compels In .very Part enter, comprising all the dtge out noveltles'of the ...aeon. mud at price.that cannot. be undeteuld by coy one. We keep everything usually kept In a Well regulted Store. la DRESS GOODS such an BLA^K SILKS. FANCY COLOR t. n SILKS, FANCY S rRIPRD SI KR. JAP SEAR STRIPTD SILKS BLACK WOOL DRLAI Y BLACK RS .OIIAIR and ALPACAS. BLACK HOME A Z , NES and CANTON CLOTH. ALRXRS cLOTB. all SHADES. CIMTONS. I,A %ES I' STY I,RR. LICHT WRIGHT PI,PI,INS. COLOSSI) ANL/AIRS COLOSSI) A bPACAS. CIIHNR DRESS COORS, &o. DOLLY VARDENS, of ever, Poeeible description and design SHAWLS! SHAWLS! CASHMERE, THIBET, BROCHE and • FANCY and STRIPED SHAWLS. WHITE GOODS ! Plain and Plaid Nainaooks, Victoria Lawns French /Vainso , ka and Organdies, Pique* and Marsaates, Swiss Cambrics, 6v. MARSAILLES SPREADS, EMBROIDERIES. EIAMBURG EDGINGS. LACES and IN BERTINGS. PARASOLS AND UMBRELLAS, FANS, &O Cloths and Cassimeres Prints, Sheetirgs, Checks, Tickings Cottomide., Kentucky Jeans, Denims. Chambray, Flannels, &c. ALSO, ALL KINDS OF GRO CERTES WOOL and other Produce taken In ex °haver Cro Goode, for which w pay lb. Itlgnent 111111.01 price. Respectfully, E. S. tciIMER & CO., llos. 705 and 707 fluaddon Parent aprlO—tf ii) ALLENTOWN, PA. 1 1 0 THE PUBI IC REMOVAL. uUR NEW STORE GUT & KERN, DALERS IN DRY GOODS, WOULD meet respectfully call the attention of their rieude, cuetemers, and the public generally, to the fact hat they havejnet removed to their newly and elegantly ltted up STORE BUILDINO,one door west of their form• .r location,and Immediately adjoining the Yirst Nation. dank, being the building formerly occupied by Schreiber Oros , where they propose to continue is DRY GOODS BUSINESS a all its varied branches. They have the finest, beet nd cheapest stock of GOODS ever offered to the public. ,mbracing everything that the palate can wish. The, could eapecially invite the attention of all to their fine .ssortreent of • LADIES' DRESS GOODS Chi. department they flatter themselves to he the best over offered to the public of Allentown and •Iclolt7, for 'tile. quality and chespne...goods of the must approved pattern., Ate., consisting of Black and Fancy Bilk., Black and Fancy Bilk Popyn• Black and Faney Mohair. Black and Fancy Alpaca.. Black'and Colored Striped Salting.. Black Bom bazine., Black Australian Crape, Bleck Pop• line; Blink Velveteen., Silk Velvet, Sat in Striped Vereaille. Cloth, Satin Striped Lorne Robes. Bilk Striv ed MARIS. Silk Figured Sol. lama, Brocade Japanese Silk.. Brocade Pop lin., Serge 'Wool Plaid. Scotch Wool Plaids. Cord sod Colored Velvotaine, Rug ileh and Preach Chinisee, Plald Poplins, Plaid Chintz., Plald N►_lneook a, Broebe, Thibet, Be. lona, Saratoga, Vlellts. Loot Brandt. Ni. and Watervliet Loot and Square SHAWLS, In ()HEAT VARIETY. WC* LL and SEE. As they are buying strictly for cash. they flatter them selves that they can offer peat inducement, to parties irishiag to boy good Goods at reasonable prices. They only ask the public to give them a call and exam• ne their stock, and compare price. and quality. They defy competillon. Thankful for past favor.. they will endeavoito merit a continuance of the patronage of their old customers. as well as of all new comers. HIRAI! 017TH) MGM KERN. Jan 24• d tacit-3m CAMPAIGN OF 1872. • - THE LEHIGH REGISTER will be turned to any address FROM TIIIB DATE TILL TUE NOVEMBER ELECTION FOR FIFTY CENTS. We make title Important reduction for CAMPAION BUBSCRIBERB for the purpose of furthering the tii.seml natlon of eound Republican doctrines and we hope every Republican In Me section will &e.t.a our p Wert by send• tag la the, gams of their friends. accompanied with th Woe of soh4criptlon. (Vothing, G REAT ATTRACTION I NETV FIRM! NEW GOODS! CLOTHING! CLOTHING GRAND SPRING AND SU.VAIRR OPENING GRA:AT REDUCTIQN IN PRIORS! T. OSNIUN & CO., Successors to Nets/par & Ormun BARGAINS dill GREAT CLOTHING EMPORIUM IN REIMEII'B /WILDING. NO, 605 HAMILTON STREET, AI.I.ENTOWN, PA. We would Inform the citizens of Allentovirn and the geMl oending country tly,t we are prepared with a largo sleet t goods for FALL AND WINTER WEAR, wd offer them to the public at reasonahlepricee• To those ho buy their Clothing ready-made, they are prepared to ifor DA ROA INS. WHOLE SUITS JILADS TO COATS, PANTS AND VESTS Cut and znadalo the latonetyle, and by (balm( workman OUli STOCK OF • CLOTHING, CLOTHS AND CASSIMERES Is larger than It ha , been before, and we Intend to poll at •ery SMALL PItttFITS, and give our customer. tho bona tit of our lute purchaser. Great quantities and varlatiee of NECKTIES, CUFFS, COLLARS, • And everything In the line of GENT'S FURNISHING GOODS, !EN'S, YOUTHS', HOTS' awl CHILDREN El READY-MADE CLOTHING, =I Don't forget the place. No. N( Hamilton street, third door above Sixth street. T. 0111117/1. LCOO 11. SCROLL MARTIN LYIN mar 24 t MILITARY CLOTHING. GEO. EVAN & CO•9 (Leta EVANS & LEECH.) NO. 915 MARKET STREET, • • PHIL A DE 1,1'1114. Fire Companies and Brass Bands UN 'FORMED With RELIABLE GOOD!, at low pt Ices. son,pre. of IZZNrtl:4tznilof I ire 4; i ii ; on. A quantit3 of SECOND—HAND ZOUAVE UNIFORMS In good condition, for male very cheep. II y:1-3cow Presidenlini Campaign! CArs,cAPEs,t, TORCJIM Send for ILLUSTRATED eln. ,171,A1t PRICE LIST. CUNNINGHAM & HILL, .11ANUFAC. No. 204 Churoh St.. Phandetphia. June6.4mw t PP 1 , A L. UNITES STATES INTI.UN I, RI•NENIIR NoIlcf• IX hereby given to all pergons temll.llUlt or dole., huslueNs lu the SI, .0 Culleetlue iliKtricl of 10 u..eylvarla n mot. ed u. the collet ev of Lehigh and • oulgultnerY.loAt the I ate of Autlll .1 Tante. for 1677. rower/10d cruder .the Act of Cointill. etilltled • • Au AO provide In royal neve. un. Sc ." approved July 2f, 1808 .n.. 1 July 14 1870. Pc& thin eineudmaute thereto, me. be entatumed ttt toy offen h. m. to 3 p on., fur too done (num the 2.2t0 day of June morn end COURT OF APPEAL. will be hold on VI- nth do, a July. 1872. from A a m. 10 0 V at 8 Ilan/u etteel. In the City of Allentown. Tay office, No. 61 Mtt All appeals most be 'e writing and specify the partica lar ra..e, matt, or thing :expect nit which a deohlott Is • ynesiollo.hd st kite 11 n grutinds or principle,. of la, qua/. ill or error complained WAND ROHE 11. S. Aeressor. 017Iro Nn did itArrilitnn street, Allentown, Pa. ALLenrowx, Juno MM. 1672. POLITICAL CAMPAIGN I OF 1872. GRANT & WILSON, GREELEY & BROWN, • CAMPA IGN CAPS, CAPES AND TORCHES, TRANSPARENCIES & BANNERS, With portraits or aoy device for all portion. Silk, and Muollo Flags of oil ein-e en band or Mole to order. Clll4O. 1.110t0,11 of all Aso. ntal pea Paper Bali one, Edo Work.. am, &o. Catnottign Clubs fitted out at lite Lowest lime. at WM. F. SCR - FABLE'S, CAMPAIGN DEPOT, 49 South 'I hird St., Philadelphia. SEND FOR CIRCULAR. Nom BEST FURNITURE lIERE! GEO. D. smini, NOS. 621 & 623 NORTH SECOND STREET, =IJ ESTABLISHED OVER QUARTER Or A CENTURY TIIE aldeet and MORI reliable berme on NOrth BotOnd Street Li Ivan practical meellaule nod hay lug longasye. fiance In the tondo°, goede c. Inats' der toy la r pection. mirk lug It mate to buYore em off bolme lllo u or ad.r,Ple• nantatlon yertn , tted lu eataldleh moot I toy Ire all my old m, f cone and (Heade throughout toy notice county to call and get surfed, a. 1 hay° reduced my prlcei to malt all. GEO. D. SMITH., Nos. 621 and 623 North Second Str t, (BETWSIII( GIRSItIf •no CoAtta STRUTS, =I MIMES THE 4EPOILT OF HOBERT NTECUEL, Treasurer ul Wouehat I school Board. The said Treasurer charges h looted( with the following accounts as money; DB. ❑y Wm. Nagle, tax collector south W Idtehall School Board T. F. Butz t not e discounted) T. F. llstz State appropriation. County appropriation Conti on liana from lust year Cash received Toteaching t h n tllll4,rent 00110010 02420 00 11,11,11, 1 g Egyi t Heinfol IIoUSO ' .2.115 01 Repairing different xelioni 1101180 H 190 19 Fuel and on I ing,tor dl trorent selo,lo, 202 111 Hotel ex point. for ntated ineetinga 42 93 Ileeth, elation ery, to., 8 IS Flre InnurAncoTax 1 52 Intoning Egypt elehool 'Home 2 82 Inlereseon money loaned 15 On DU:count, due at Allentown National Bank, Collecting lax Secretary's salary Treasurer's Salary Auditor's fees Balance In Wools of the Treasurer, May 23, 1672. 59 43 We,the underslened.have examined the above accounts 01 the Treasurer of Whitehall School Board, and found 11, above true and correct as represented May .2.5. 1072. E. XENOPHON KOHLER, NATHAN EBERHARD, Auditors. MIMI NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT the undereigned have made appllcatt e io the Court: uf Cununun rte. of Lebtx/i County te grant • charter la .roorntlon to the ”CtIEW STllligT NI ETU ISPICCUPAI, CHM/ICH." to Lave Ito plate of worth p toca.ed In the City at Allentown. lu and co•nt. the attlcle• also condi lune of .11th b. ye been gled In the Prothoeutery'• °glee. and unle,e .uNcieut roamu bo enowu to the contrary on or he.. ro the Oth day of Itiepletn• bar, A. D .„ AU. it bo the Court to grant aid charter at the. next term nt tOllll. JAMER B. COLL M. J. KAAMER. Um. VINO, DAVID A, WALKER. Josue el. KEEL MEE e 5179 79 715$ !hi 15 291 i 85 11111 .1s 18. I'l 55 88 2 00 $6615 00 XOO a lti: 52 00 44 WI 400 IMECI