ADVERTISING RATES.. St 1 Imo. S mom. e mop 17, 1.50 1.75 3.50. 6.44) MO) 3.01 3.50 • 6.50 9.40 20.00 4.00 5.23 9.00 17.03 2410 11310 17.00 23.03 45416 19.50 22.011 40.00 60.50 20.0) 40.00 01.00 110.50 30.00 60.00 110 CV 200.00 One Satire Two Sonars' Thrce Square alz Squares, Quarto, Column Half Column . Oas Calamn ProresslOnal Oards 11.00 per line per year, t Administrator's and Auditor's Notices, 59.00 014 Notices, 20 cents per line lstlnnertlot 15 omits per in• swill subsequent Insertion. • Ten lines arateconstittits a square. ROBERT IREDELL, JR., PunuettErt, ALLENTOWN, PA LACE CURTAINS, WINDOW SHADES, COLN CE DECORATIONS, LAMBREQUINS, LACE DRAPERIES, PIANO COVERS, FURNITURE COVERINGS, TASSELS AND LOOPS, - NOTTINGHAM CURTAINS, CRETONES, SUMMER CURTAINS, BROCATELLE, Special Interior Decorations. TO ORDER, AT MODERATE PRICES. WALRAITEN'S MASONIC HALL, NO. 719 CHESTNUT S TREE] PHILADELPHIA. fabß• claw CARPETS, . OIL CLOTHS. WINDOW SHADES,. MATTINGS,. &C, Closing out balance of Spring Stuck at - reduced peen to make room for new goods (or Fall Trade. Every Article Marked Dawn. FIXED PRICES. FIXED PAICES AT G. KERRS' CARPET WAREHOUSE , _ 632 HAMILTON STREET. DRS. JORDAN ac DAVIESON, Proprietors of tle Gallery of Anatomy and Museum of Seienu 807 CHESTNUT ST., PHILA. Have Just published a now edition of their leetaree,con• tabling moat valuable Intern:intloa on the canoe,, cons. nuances and treatment of diseases of the prodaetly system. with Itald•REß oc PURI/Mit and the varlou wpm; of the LOaa oP MAIIIInOp, with full luetructloos fo It. complete restoration; also a chapter on YIP IIRII•L 111 pectin, and the tra•se or one, being the moat cog ruguniftiva wont on t h e subject over yet published— @apprising 2:0 pages. Mailed free to any &thirties fo Twentyfve cents. Address Drs. JORDAN & DAYIESON CONSULTING OFiiqs. 1625 Filbert Street, Philadelphia. ..p 9A-1y d& CAUTION. To families who nso•the Kerosene or Combination 01ls Kerosene 01111 not safe unless It's from 110 tone cleaner which you can always earl stilts well known China Store of WiVI. REIMER 611 HAMILTON STREET, =1 Alen, anything lo the CHINA, GLASS or QUEENS WARE lino at the you. there'd ratoe. and alwayathp Yen but _ ENGLISH WARE, Warranted not to graze. N.B.—ln regard to the Combination 011, which agent. tell you Is coo-explosive, I have th ,, rorighlY It and 1 ay It plusive awl Dangerous. 1 can laser to dye explosions In one week In this City where the Combine lion 011 well In use 0ct.26- d LUMBER 1 LUMBER 11 WHOLESALE AND RETAIL! HOFFMAN'S STEAM SAW MILL AND LUMBER YARD! KINDLING! BILLS CUT TO ORDER OFFICE AT THE MILL, FRONT AND LINDEN STS. WHITE AND BLACK OAK SAW LOOB wanted. for Whisk the highs.' market price will be geld al m deba rk'. d-w July 12-ly GREAT ATTRACTION I NEW FI:RAf I NEW GOODS! CLOTHING ! CLOTHING GRAND SPRING AND SUMMER OPENING. GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICES! T. OSMUN & CO., Successor. to Metsgar dlOomun. • BARGAINS AT TIM GREAT CLOTHING EMPORIUM IN REIMER'S BUILDING. NO. 005 HAMILTON STREET, ALLENTOWN, PA. • We would inform the cititengot Allititown and the cur rounding country that we AM wowed with • large stock - J of good. for FALL AND WINTER WEAR, and offer them to thepublic at reiumtiablepricee. To those who buy their Clothing ready-made, they are prepared to offer BA ROAINS. WHOLE SUITS MADE TO PINDER! COATS, PANTS AND VESTS Cat and made in the latent etyle, and by the beet workmen• OUR STOCK OP CLOTHING, CLOTHE AND CABBIMERES I. larger than It haa been before, and we intend to sell at very SMALL PROFITS, and gi•e our customers the bene• Al of our low purchases. • Great quantities and varieties of NECKTIES, CUFFS, COLLARS, And eyerything in the line of GENT'S FURNISHING GOODS, MEN'S, YOUTHS.. BOYS' and CHILDREN S READY-MADE CLOTHING, OONATANTIA ON HAND. Don't forget the place, No. OM Ilauditou street, third door above Sloth street. T. 011111111. JACOB SCHOLL MAIM LUX • mar 24 t MILITARY CLOTHING GEO. EVANS & CO. (Late EVANS & LEECH.) NO. 915 MARKET STREET, PHILAD-CLPIIIA Fire Companies and Brass Bands UNIFORMED With RELIABLE GOODP, at low prices &Implea of pond, and . •ntngraph of twat free on a,v/Ication. A quautity of BROOND-HANI., &WAVE UNIFORMS In lova toadltloo, for Ws THY obooP, VOL. XXVT. LADIES' HAIR BRAIDS, 1 yard long. very/01 611 00 93 inches long. very full 7 00 Diadem Braid, across the head, very . thick. without roll, 4 00. Long Side Carle. Notqral 2 00 Very Long Side Carle. Natural..... 30Q Prise!tea OUARANFEE FOR REAL NATURAL HAIR LOLIS BALZER, mayl.3mdem) 1230 CHESTNUT ST., PIMA JEWETT'S PALACE li.vr TGFRATOR ! The Coolest and Moat Perfect RuFRIGER ATOR ever Constructed. A LRO, SA VER S PATENT COMBINED Dining Room Water Uooler AND REFRIGERATOR - jLE lI' J For sale at ISAAC S. WILLIAMS & CO'S. HOUSE FURNISHING STORE, No. 72S Market St., Philadelphia Descriptive Circulate sent on applicadon. Established' 1804 = I II =1 K. W ITTMAN, A. NOTARY PUBLIC AND CIVIL ENOI!?LEB T. B. LEISENRING I:(I3URANC F. AGENT, FIRE, LIFE, AND LIVE &FOCA WE MAN k LEISENRING Real Eldate Agents and Scriveners 708 lIAMILTON 'STREET, (Up-Stairs.) Ra•o np ,t) their books oanla very deldrablo prapertla which will ha sold at taw pricua and on envy tom among which aro tho follu‘valg • 112 N. 4 1eventli Street. 1 210 N. Meta Street. 321 s Fonntalu Street. 1 438 N. Seventh Street. 8.1 Hamilton 81 out. 1208. N luta atraet. 543 I Vnatut Leto In all parte of 101 North Tenth Street. I the cap. 448. Stith Street. • GAS FIXTURES. TRACKARA, DUCK & CO., llavajnet opened 14 Choir wholeealo aid retail ealeeroom 718 CHESTNUT STREET, GAS FIXTURES, TO WHICH THEY INVITE THE ATTENTION 01 PURCHASERS. Their new styles. color and flolab aro unsurpassed They also Invite the attention of the public to their tine mortmeol of Bronze, Sic. tapr'lG-9md&se .. • . Lanes are not destroyed by mineral poison or other means, and the vital organs wasted beyond the point of repair. Dyspepsia. or I 1111 l ;tenths.. Headache, Pain in the Shoulders. Corighs Tightness of 'the Chest. D is c i. mess, SOU! Eructations riethe Sunned', Bad 'lane in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpitation of the Heart, In flammation of the Lungs, P.llll in the regimes of the Kid neys, and a lifindred other painful spinner., are the off. springsof Dyspepsia. lo these conisrlaints it has no equal, arid one bottle will prove a Letter guarantee of its men its then a lengthy advertisement. For Female Complaints, in young or old, TIM, died or single, at the dawn of womanhood, or the turn of life, these 'round Bitters display so decided an influence that a marked improvement is soon perceptible. For Inflammatory and Chrottle Ohm.. Inathito and Gout, 'Mums. Remittent arid Intermits' tent Fevers, Dise a ses of the Blood, Liver s. Kidneys and Bladder, these linters have rio equal. Such Diseases are caused be Vitiated Blood, Which is generally produced by derangement of the Digestive Organs. They are is Gentle Purgative as *veil as a 'route, possessing also the peculiar rinds of acting as a powerful sigma in relieving Congestion or Inflammation • of the Liver 'arid Visceral Organs. and in Ildions Disease. For Skin Diseases, FellittiMlS, Toter, Salt Rheum, notches. Spots, Pimples, Prottries, Boils, Car buncles, Iting•wornis, Scald-14 earl, Sore Eyes, k:rysipelas, Itch, Sind's, Discoltirations of the Skirl, Humors and Dis eases of the Skin, of whatever name nir nature, are lit erally dug up and carried ont.of the systern in a short time by the use of these Bitters. The properties of Din. \VALICIIII'S Birettas are Aperient, Diaphoretic and Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, Sedative, Counter...lrri tant, Sudorific, Alterative, and Anti•Bilurris. Grateful Thousands psi claim VINI , CArt BIT• Toes tile Masi Invigurnit that cone bllftaillB,l the sinking system. J. WALKER, Prop r. R. 11. IteDONALD & Druggists and Gen. Agt., San Francisco, Cal., and corner of IVashingion and Charlton Sta., New York SOLD ItY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS, smareh 21.3 m daw , tGAMUF.I, A ! )111.ITZ, ATTORNEY Al 21,thivri.4 11:2 11tott street. overilafret III•SMW PATENT EI =OE PHILADELPHIA I= LOW PRICES bOti +r o . + r r rot k + i'l4' A A iftebteinal. NO OHRE, NO PAY. DR. H. 1). LONGAKER, Gradual° of the Ilnivarsity.of Pennaylvanla, at Philadel phia Imo been in ouccessful practice for a number of year. In votiotte parts of the United States; will promptly at tend to all branches of blot profession et his rooms, East shit of Sixth sired, bet. ilamf/tors 'and Walnut, ALLENTOWN, PA No Patent Medicines are need or recommended; the rem edies atimini.tered are those which will not break down the constitution. but 'tutorage the system from nil injuries it ham sustained front mineral medicines, and leave It In a healthy and perfectly cured condition. CONSWAPTION, BRONCHITIS, DYSPEPSIA, and nil diseases of the Lungs, Throat, Stomach, and Liv er, which yearly carry thoundode to untimely graves, can undoubt..dly be cured. MELANCHOLY ABERRATION, that attic of alienation and aberration of mind whir! ren der- permute incapable of enjoying the pleasures of per forming the dolles of lifo. REIEUMATISAI AND PARALYSIS, to soy Mtn or condition, chronic or acnte, warranted car. able. Epilep.y. or falling sickness, and chronic or stub born cases of F BMA LE DISEASES speedily and redlrally removed; Solt 11111111 M, skin Diseases (of yearn standing) every description of Ulcerations, Piles uud Scrofulous dm. lases, w n rift, II led Cored. Alltirrorticitlar attention given to private diseases of tmer. description of both none, Ladles entlerleg front any complaint incidental to their lee, can coneolt the doctor with amiturance of relief. Cancor cured, and Tumore of all kinds removed without the knife or drawing blood. Di X.llO/1 of tho EYE AND EAR soccessfully nod effectually riimovnii. Lougnker will make visits any distance If de• s it ired ; coo lin addressed by tenor feonfidentinlty) nod tord• k, soul with proper direction.; to any nano!' tho county. OFFICE: East aide of Sixth street, between Hoodlum and Walnut Allentown, Pa. may 37-ly VOLES OR HEMORRHOIDS. PILEC OP ALL KINDS perfectly And pArmAneutly COILED, without pain, dAtte, r, cauKttcx or Inatrurnout., by WM. A. McCANDLESS, M. D., 'NCI ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA, PA Who can refer you lo over MO Corer cured In PllllOllOl - a l one . We deelre to ray to thorn afflicted, there it positively no deception to the cure of thew DIBBAIIOII, It mariner not how long or how severely you aye beet. afflicted, we con rare yon. We alma cure Fistula, Flexure rtricturea and I) Iceratiou of the lower bowel. Clime your that are Angering, we will not deceive you, we hove patients from almost every State In the tfuloo and from Eirrope. !lave treated these dhowoe for twenty Yearn without a failure. air 26-iy 10,1111.050P1111 OF NIAILItIAGE.—A A. Ngw COURSE OP GRCTllefle, 1. deliver,' at the Peelle Polytechnic and Anatomical Museum, Part Chestnut Pt., three doors above Twelfth, Philadelphia, embracing the subjects: Flow to Live and What to Live for; Youth, tia tartly and Old Age; Manhood Winerally Reviewed, The Casino at loilligestiou; Flatulence Red nervous Disease. , . . . . acconoted for; Marriage Philosophically considered. These lectures will he forwarded on receipt of 2.i cents by addres wen: Secretary of the Penn, POLITISCHNIO AND ANATOII.•I. MS Chestnut St., Philadelphia. P none . • one 22-1, NVILTItEIiGEIVS FLAVORING EXTRACTS Am warranted eque I to tiny made. They are prepared from thefruife. nod' trill be fon t,d much better than many of the Extra, s tint are .old 11 — ii.A.k your Grout,. or Druggist for ll'Ufbergrer's Kara clx . BARLOW'S INDIGO BLUE • tß.without oubt the beat orttele do the market, for blueing chi t,,.. It sill color nor u at, th o Prier UM.? the atom. weight of Indigo, • or' .11111Cli 111 , 1 , then any oth • r wroth blue iu the marart. Tin only genuine In that put up at ' ALFRED WI LTHEROER'S DRHO STORE, No. 233 NORTH SECOND STREET, PHILAD'A., PA L.4.1111,1.111111,.110111 WILTII•POHN..B Rod BARLOW'S names or, hem. ail other, ore counter/Ma. Fur sale by moat rimer', and Drugytois. WILTBERGEIt'S INDELIBLE INK Will be/ound on trial to be a Atty.-tor article. Always on Baud for saleat noble ericon. l'u o Oround B MEd, (leonine MEDIC reI. I SE, Clomoia !Drina, Sponges, Tapioca, Fem.!. lingo d all artlnlea In the drug line, at ALFRED WILTHERDER'I3 DRUO STORE, juno 29.1 r No 2t9 N..rlit Second •t. Phila.. Pa. Ayer's Cathartic Pills, For the relief and cure of all derange ments in the atom. ach, liver, and bow els. They are a mild ''.. •i'l. „fr*., aperient, and an excellent purgative. ' , ,,tr , A _ Being purely vege • .5....' ' , '„e' --, ,-, table, they eimtain ,to c.': -, •''' ' ' .,..., 'no mercury or mine- V.,‘.' ~ ral whatever. Much (7, , , serious sickness and ' suffering is prevent. ed by their timely use; and every family should have them on hand for their protection and relief, when required. Long experience has proved them to be the safe est, surest, and best of all the Pills with which the market abounds. lay their occasional use, the blood ispurified, the corruptions of the sys tem expelled, obstructions 'removed and the whole machinery of life restored to its healthy activity. Internal organs which become clogged and sluggish are cleansed by Ayer's Pills, and eti minted into action. Thus incipient disease is changed into health, the value of which change, when reckoned on the vast multitudes who en jo y ft, can hardly be computed. Their augur entitling makes them pleasant to take, and preserves their virtues unimpaired for any length of time, so that they are ever fresh, and perfectly reliable. Although searching, they are mild. and operate without disturbance to the constitution, or diet, or occupation. Foil directions are given on the wrapper to each box, how to use them as a Family Physic, and for the following complaints, which these Pills rapidly cure:— For Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Listless. nes*, Languor and Loss of Appetite, they should be taken moderately to stimulate the atom ash, anti restore its healthy tone and action. For Liver Complaint and its various symp.. toms, Bilious Headache, Sick Dead. .ache, Jaundice or Green Sickness, nil. lons Colic anti Bilious Fevers, they should be Judiciously taken for each case, to correct the diseased action or remove the obstructions which cause it. For Dysentery or Diarrhoea [ but ono Mid dose is generally required. For Itheumatism Gout, Gravel, Pal. ',Station of the Aeart, Pain in the siide, Back and Loins, they should he contin uously taken, as required, to change the diseased thou of the system. With such change those tunplaints disappear. For Dropsy and Dropsical Swellings, they should be taken in large and doquent doses to produce the effect of a drastic purge. For Suppression ' a large tiese should be taken, as it produces the desired effect by sym pthy.' As a Dinner Pill, take one or two Pills to promote digestion and relieve the stomach. An occasional dose stimulates the stomerli end bowels, restores the appetite, and invigorates the system. Hence it is often advantageous where no serious derangement exists. One wino feels tolerably well, oilen fi nds that a dose of these Pills makes Min feel decidedly better, from their cleansing anti renovating effect on the digestive apparatus. PREPARED•IIY .DP. J. C. A rniz .0 CO, Practical Chontits, LOWELL, MASS., U. S. A. BALE BY ALL DRUOGISTS EVERYWHERE. SOLD Iry ALLbrvTuVIN BY W. E. BARNES & BON ' Ayer's Ch6rry Pectoral, For Disoases of the Throat and Lungs, such as Coughs, Colds, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis, Asthma, and Consumption. •Among the great ltr.,, ,±..., discoveries of modern .:..,› '.'..,5 ; ,•(• , , , , science, low are of .......,!;„ 4 ~ 1 , 1, mankind than this et •sefi, . ' W.tIW ' lectuar remedy hir all 'lpt . , "' diseases of the Throat • • :4, 9 and Lungs. A ca-t iii trial of its virtues. I'Vk ... ..11kk:'. throughout this and other countries, has t.. shown (hot it does • . surely and clicetuallr control them. Tho testimony 'of our best citi zens, of all' classes, establishes the fact, that CHERRY PECTORAL will and does relieve earl cure the afflicting disorders of the Throat and Lung; beyond any other medicine. The most dangerous affections of the Pulmonary Organs yield to its power; and cases of Consump tion, cured by this preparation, are public ly known, so rentorkat•le as hardly le he be lieved, were they not proven beyond dispute Ai a remedy it is adequate, on which the public may rely for full protection. Ity curing Coughs., tire forerunners of more serious discus°, it saves unnumbered lives and an amount of suffering pot to be computed.. It challenges trial, and con vinces the Inuit sceptical. Every family should keep it on hand as a protection against the early mud unperceived attack of Pulmonaiy Affections, which tiro easily :net et first, but which become incurable, :Ind too often fetal, if neglected. Ten der lungs used this defenco; and it is unwise to be without it. As a safeguard to children, maid the distressing diseases which beset the 'throat and Chest of childhood, CIII:IlitY l'imunao is invaluable; for, by Its timely use, multi tudes me rescued from premature graves, and saved to the love nod nlrection centred on them. It acts speedilyand surely against ordinary colds, securing sound' nod licelth-rdstoring sleep. No one will suffer troublesome Influenza end pain ful Bronchitis, when they know how easily they elm be cured. 'Originally the product of long, laborious, and successful Chemical investigation, no cost or toil is spared iu milking every bottle in the utmost possible perfection. It may be confidently re lied upon as possessing all the virtues it has ever exhibited, and capable of producing cures as memorable as the greatest It has over effroted. IMEGTICE3 Dr. J. C. AYER & CO., Lowell, Mass. Practical and Analytical Chemista. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS EVERT-WEIR= BOLD IN ALLENTOWN BY W. E. BARNES & iON N OTICE. CITY TAX for 1872. Dye copptem•ot to the City Charter of Allentown. al. Were' the 22.1 dayof March, WO, the City Treasurer in made he receiver o f all city taxes All of said oily tax remaltileg unpaid a the find day of August next. Eye Der tout. .hall n o added; ti ..f mod lAA re•.4.lning unpaid on the drat day of October next ten percent. etiall be added. Notice le hereby given that the city tax for IfflX will be received •t my older. No. 630 Hamilton atreet, Allentown. 1011-trulaw] JONATHAN REICHARD. Treas. ALLENTOWN, PA., WEDNESDAY MORN INC,. JULY 31. 1872 A SAD STORY now it Saratoga Belle Came to Her Death low A in r g ec : ent letter from Boston contains the fol. "A funeral procession passed by yesterday. A. young man told me a story that I think has a peculiar sadness about it. At Saratoga last spring, at one of the largest balls, was a young lady with most charming and fasci sating manners and graces. Her toilet we: equally as pleasing. She was the belle of the ball—an honer accorded her without dissent Her attendent during the evening was a youne man dressed almost gaudily, and bearing him self with all the distasteful self conceit of 'rainless millionaire. He was the sou of s Boston leather dealer. He met the lady at Saratoga for the first time last'season, and she. by direction of her parents, who were ale. wealthy, and insisted on the arrangement. became his affianced. Previous to this sit, had met a young genlemamalso front Boston of the uttermost respectability, of %Inmateh honor and Integrity, but without fortune. Ti. din she had been something mitre than a friend, in tact almost betrothed. Ile was young, hail risen by his own stern efforts.au• was,it Is said, possessed of sterling. aid prom ising abillth-s, wnich In time must have witn wealth and perhaps •distinction. Ou the re. turn of the lady from Saratoga last season her engazement prevented her from any fertile, intercourse with her first suitor, and he sees dismissed. His grief was pitiful. He strove not to reverse it by word of action, but tilt very efforts be so laboriously made expo+ d the puignam yof his wounds. 'I he lady ties d with her husuand in the suburbs of the city a a large and costly residence for one month after their marriage. By that time the alt4l of the husband compelled an immediate spa ration. He was incontinently shipped to En rope, where he still remains, and the • young wile was left to gradually decline in health until death ensued ; but not until she had re preached her parents for driving her to-nu sill auce which wr ntht such early ruin, and masted such bright hopes and expectations As the funeral procession passed up t public street the first lover, while watching with blanched cheeks and moist eyes the sad col-. tege.fell to the ground while suffering from me attack of hemorrhage of the liings. Ile was carried into a physician's office, near whet, he died before the body of one lie so tenderlt and truly loved was laid in its • last resting place. QUEER RHYMES The Indianapolis News says : We heliev, there is no rhyme for the word month. N. is there a fair rhyme to the word "chimney." Horace Smith, one of the authors of the dc• light ful " Itrii.eted Address," onee attempted to make one, on a bet, and he did it in this way: "Standing' on roof and by chimney Arc muster and 'prentlee with ellni knee." That was a dodge but it won the bet. As neat a thing of this kind as weever remember to have seen was an impromptu rhyme to " Timbuctoo." • "If I were a eateowary Ou the plains of Thubuctoo, I woulJ eat a mls,lonary, Blood and bones and hymn-book, too." Of these fantastic rhymes, Richard Harris Barham has given nettle finest example in the language, in the celebrated " logoldsby Le• geode." In the legend "Look at the Clock," we have this, (we quote from memory and may miss n word) : " 'loving once gained the summit, and managed to cross It, he Rolled down the elde with rincotnmon velocity." This from The Ghost:" "Would now and then seize upon small occasion A stick or stool, or nuythinc that , ound did Ile, And b ste her lord and master most confounded In the " Tragedy" we have one even more whitabical and comical : The poor little Page, too, himself got uo quarter but Was served the Rani° way, And was found the next day, Vith bls heels is the air, and his head in the NV!, terbutt." Byron has more than matched any of then in completeness of rhyme and extent, if we may call it so, of rhyming surface,and matched even himself in acidity of cynicism, in his couplet : "-Ye lords of ladles tote Deans I, Come tell me, have they not hen-peeked you all." The most " bizarre" and difficult piece of rhymimr we can now recall is one of Hood's. in which the last three or lour words of each line have all the same sound "The Clark strikes nine, prime time To go and see the Drury Lane Dine sialu." Punch has some very funny samples of ec centric rhymes, of which the best is one Ono spells out the lost word 01 a couplet and last letter or two, mokinc: so many syllable, rhyme with the ending word of the preceding line. Thus : " Mc drunk ! the cobbler cried, the devil trouble you, You a.mt to kick up a blest r-o-vv, I've Illst, returned from n teetotal party. Twelve on us jammed lo a f pring c-a-r-t, The man as lectured now, was druult ; why bles, ye. Tic's sent home In a c-h-a-l-s-e." Cunning's amusing little ex travnganzuovith which everybody is familinr, beg : " Vhene'er with haggard eyns I vim The thinner.) that !'nl rotting' In, I think of the est:window, Elm Who studied wits me itt the LT 'tiliversity of t•oitincen. 'Niversity of Gottingen. AIR been parodied it hundred times, but it is Such a parody of Pindar, wimeo fashion of dividing words in his odes all students of thr classics have abundant occasion to remember. FRIEII CROW. From tho St. Loots Democrat. The Democratic ladies of Illinois play crow qua. Governor Palmer eats crow and wood-peck er on alternate days. Mr. Groesbeck takes the crow from the tip of a gold folk. Charles Francis Adams can't eat crow. lie roosts to blab. A ueust Belmont "kin eat crow," though he bankers atter snipe. The crow don't built its nest in the Tall Sycamores of Wabash. 'I ho colored citiTen hankers after baked coon, but crow is too rank for him. Alter the election the campaign will be designated as the fight for the Lost Kaws. Renate, the capital mover, lives entirely on crow, eating It in season and out of a, a. son. Vick Woodhull takes a crow now and then. unmindful of the proverb about crowing hens. Democratic epicures take their crow cooked after the fashion of woodcock—with the tail In. Frank Blair Is ornithologically omnivorous, and eats crow or wood-pecker with impartial relish. l roll Preetorious eats crow while'Schurz and cleans up the feathers before Curl gels back. ' Grostenor takes his crow blood rare, and is opposed to game laws. He doubts if " Pro tection protects.;;, L. V. Bogy. as Indian Commiesioner, had a great deal to do :with the Crows and acquired his taste naturally. Governor Koerner d—d the crow at Cincin• nail, but is ctiltiVattng a dainty appetite since his nomination for Governor. Carl Schurz would rather be excused from eating crow in any sivape, but can " rastle" it if pickled like Hollandische herring. Judge Stalin's prejudice against crow goes to extreme lengths. He would not let Carl Sclanz play "Jump Jim Crow" on a is piano. Fred Hecker has given °Hersh) shu.ot every crow that appears on his farm. He will Inn even allow his hogs to eat the obscene bird. Hon. James A. Dawson,of the Louisville Ledger, is temporizing with blackbird, pre paratory to encountering his first mess of crow. col. Blanton Duncan's stomach revolts at the thought of crow. The crowing of n roos ter sets him to puking, and even Old Craw cocktails go " ogle" him. ' ; Hon. Thomas A. Hentirielts began eating crow on the sly several months ego,and grail nail:, acquired a depraved appetite for it before the necessity came upon him. Hutchins,of the Times, is a victim to hie ex traurdinary gas ronomic enthusiasm. He ate tune hearty meal of crow, and It so sickened him that he threw up his d loner and his edl torial position at the same lime. Storey, of the Chicago Times, now 'dying up with a broken leg,recently smashed a water pitcher over the bend of an attendant who brought him a dish of crow In the disguise of fried chicken. TILE CAM.PARIN. From, tha miaow Jourost. The entire dependence of the motley corn Inflation now opposed tit the Republican part is upon deception. In Pennsylvania thesol , claim that the adherents o f Buckalew can teak. in his behalf, is, that he is an honest man, fill they know that he was not patriotic. But thin leception we have scattered to the winds, it +flowing that as chairman of McClure Gray investigation committee he connived at mos outrageous and hare• faced robbery of the Stat. Preasury In connection with the expenses of hat committee which sat only five days alto gether. Our exposure has awakened the wrath of the Buckalew papers front the Plarrisburr Patriot down to the local organ here. They may rave, twist and squirm tinder the expo ;me, but the fact cannot be put aside that n. honest man having the interests of the Stat. ia view, would consent to such charges were made by the committee of which he wet• chairman. Ile had the power to prevent it. but did not. Deprive Buckalew ()Rite charac ter for honesty which his adherents have man ufactured for Mtn, and so lint is left to com mend hint to the suffrages of the citizens of Pennsylvania for the Governorship ? Abso lutely-noticing. The tnan who acts dishonestly as a committee-man tvoctld'prover. comp , Governor. The people could have no conli 11ence in hint. Nationally, the coalition is depending upon deception to elect Horace Greeley to the Presi dency and place the Democratic party again in power. They start nut crying "reform, re arm," with the moat noted thieves in the country sympathizing with and aiding the movement. Tweed, Hoffman, Hall, Andrew Johnson, with till the men who have been re moved from office for dishonesty, or who have faded to get office in consequence of their un fitness or bad character, are in the movement to elect Greeley. Are such men attracted by a desire for reform? It were fatly to think It. The whole movement is a blind, a snare, a de• la•ion, to entrap ❑awary voters, and while assisting the vain, we tk old nice of Chappa• quo to reach the summit of his aspirations, the t'residvney, to place the worst classes iu the nation in power to undo the progressive work of the past decade. Labor and productive capital are interested in the maintenance of Republican policy and r nc'ples In the State and nation. The work which has been done has produced fruits which are seen in the relocziou.of the debt and 01 taxation, and in the establishment of •.conomy and retrenchment. Honesty in officials is the rule, not the exception. There is no decep tion in either the principles or candidates 01 the Republican party. They are fair, square and honest. No promises are made which will not be fulfilled to the letter. The position B well stated in Hurler's Weekly, when it says The whole contest resolves itself into one simple inuniry Did the action t)f the Bahl mire, Convention represent the real desk , ' and chance for re6trin in this conntry, or the letermLation of the Democratic party to re ever pr o ver it it can ? In the present shun lion !dr. Greeley, although the most comical, is the most insignificant. Hit most symbol 1. catty holds his tongue. Neither hie words, ais wishes, nor his opinions really atT'ct the position now, nor will they hereafter. The contest is the final struggle of the old forces. 'quill the organization under which the crimes trainst liberty, civilization, and human nnter• itself have been committed in this country I) , destroyed, or shall it survive 1 Whether that organization be represented by Horatio Sey moor, or Wade Hampton, or Horace Greeley Is of no Importance whatever. In 1816 and '6l) it appealed for support upon "national" zrounds, and Jeff. Davis spoke in Portland deprecating "sectionalism." In '64 it asked support as the friend of "peace." In I 6Y it signed for" fraternity and conciliation " And now, in '72, it presents itself, Tammany in trent, as the apostle of reform and purity. W M) not believe that 'he change of mask will ,trait more in this election than in the last lire,. Honest and loy:,1 citizens everywhere will heartily agree that if there have been .hives which they condemn in the present :tdministration, they see no remedy for the cons , quences of a return to power of those whom their candidate himself describes as comprising the most dangerous classes of the population. Let not only the Republicans of Pemisylva• nia„ but every citizen in the State interested In correct government and enhanced prosper ity, labor asibluom‘ly for a signal victory in October in Pennsylvania, which will be fol iced in November by such n majority for Grant and Wilson as the State has never given any candidates. Every material interest of ,iur people is interested in such a result. And no section more so than this Anthracite Coal region, which must depend for its prosperity on the maintenance of Protection, a policy which would he destroyed by the elevatiOn at the Free Trade Democracy to power. 11=1 It Is announced that a number of young rebel soldiers in Baltimore propose to eatah'ish a campabm club, for the,purpose of traveling hrituglT the North In the interest of Greeley. They are to wear a grey uniform, and are to he called the " Ida Greeley Greys." This happy thought having been communi caked to Mr. Greeley's Sancho Panes, Tilton. has been by him transnilited to the ancient of chappaqua, who was much pleased thereat. Mh.s Ida is also pleased. We are told that " she was frightened at first, end demurred, hut on thinking the [natter over a moment, modestly acknowledged the great honor the chivalric Sou limns proposed to do her as the daughter of their stondard hearer and gave her willing consent." So there is every prospect that the " Ida Greeley Greys" will become an actuality. On a former occasion,encouraged by Horace Grey ley, these same young men, clad in a uniform of grey, undertook a tour through the North. It Was about nine years ago, and the design was.stimewhat similar to the present one. The trip wits not very successful: Our recollection is that at that time the •' Greeley Greys" only got as far as Gettysburg, when, finding the weather warmer than they had anticipated, they returned in disgust. Their grey uniforms did not prove suitable for our Northern climate [hen, anti there is some reason to think that ,•ven now it is not the best summer wear.— 11,4 Gralz Drown n Drtmknrd ? The following, from the Hartford Courant, confirms reports which have reached us from a hundred different sources. It is idle to call the exp usurp of such an offence "scandalous." The truth seems to be that it the Democrats have put one temperance man on their ticket, they have amply made up for It by ehoosine the other front the cluing whom Mr. Greeley denounces as . "sots, runiomakers, drunkards," &c. "The Meriden Republican, having given a report that G , atz Brown was Intoxicated while in New Haven, Rev. Abraham Norwood writes to the editor for..eViliCtlCll, declaring that if it is produced he will neither vote tin Brown nor Greeley. Ile says he'wfit not drink a pint of vile rum even If it he associ .ted with and mixed with a•quart of pure water."lrtie editor of the Republican replies that he has the proof, but he has not permission in 'm1)11811111 , names 01 his WI messes. But he offers to give Mr. Norw.m.l the evidence and Chet names It lie Will call at the Republican office. • Upon this evidence the editor repeats the charges, with still more particularity and posltlvenu es. The editor adds thou two of the persons who saw Mr. Brown Intoxicated are very promi • nent 'Democrats and both have occupied high positions in this State, elected by the Demo• eratic party. The Register denies the state. ments and contradictions. • The Republc Ill'e seeping charges are made by Mr. CharbaP. Ives and Mr. E. B. Everett, of Meriden." A wager of two thousand 'dollars has Jusi been made between a Boatonian and a New Yorker that a fresh salmon is cooked better at n certain hotel in Vermont than at nine of the best hotels In the United Statcs and Cana. da. The umpires are to visit the whole 11,1 oh tables and decide concerning their merits, reporting on the first of "October. Of course, t he whole thing is a grand adverdeing dodge. TILE CAMPAIGN. Roscoe Conkling addressed a large meeting at Cooper Institute, New York, on Tuesday night, which was presided over by Jackson S. Scaultz, his text being "The Presidential Battle of 1872. Grant and his defamers. Deeds not words." The speech was very long. Ho commenced by saying : For twenty years it has been my privilege io address my neighbors upon political issues, and too much ardor has, perhaps, ben amone iny faults Yet no canvass has ever stirred ,ne so deeply as this. No election has ever appealed to my sense of duty so strongly, or to my sense of fair play. No canvass within my memory has been so full of foul piny, in. Justice and malice ; has ever more strongly tested the common sense Sand generosity of the American people. liteven years' service in Congress has made. me a close observer of four Presidents and of many public men, and if anuir g them all 'here is one living or dead who never know ingly failed in Ills duty that one is Ulysses S Grant. If there has been a high official ever ready to admit /OW correct and error, if there nos been one who did wisely, firmly and well .be things given him In charge, that one is die soldier in war and the quiet ;undid in peace. Yet Ms man. hones., brave and modest, and proved b) his transcendent deeds to be endowed with genius, contemn sense, and moral qualities adequate to the greatest affairs ; this man who saved his country, un der w 11091.; administration our country has flourished as 110 one dared predict, to whim: a nation's gratitude.and benediction are due, is made the mark for ribald jibes and odious, groundless slanders, simply because he stands in the way of the greed and ambition of poli• ticians and schemers. Many honest men jOlll 4n the 'cry, or hear it without indignetion ; ti,ey are deceived by the cloud of calumny which darkens the sky; but the inventors are teen distembered with grief, Or else the sordid and the vile who follow politics as the shark follows the ship. The President,' his family and all nearly associated with him have been bespattered, and truth and decency have beta driven tar away. Ills chief competitor, managing behind the curtain a newspaper from which he pretends to have retired, is free to defend and puff him self, and feels tree to till his paper with hume and scurrilous falsehoods in the hope o n ng a 11/1111C which is one of the treasures 01 .ue nation, and which will be the pride of poariity All this pollution will, in the end, oisArace only its authors ; it will not disgrace General Grant or the nation, because the na tion will sdurn and resent it. Mr. Conkling, alter stating that the opposi tion had blundered in arraigning the Presi• dent for i . l4norance, dishonesty and vice, spoke of the self constituted crowd at Cincinnati, that motly group, made up of a few respecta Me men, who have since repudiated it, arid of the most piebald, disreputable collection to be s Taped from the glitters and servers of poll. t CO. These poi t est lazzoront, pretending to represent States, laid down the platform on watch Mr. Greeley thinks lie is running. Quotations were here madc from the Uncut uwi platform and John Cochrane's address arraigning the President fur personal crimes. Mr. Goulding then characterized the tariff resoluthnis at Cincinnati as a mere jumble, and shallow evasion, the amnesty resolution as needless, because the General Amnesty bill had passed weeks ago, and civil service reform is not au issue, for the President re commended and inaugurated it, and toe Phlla delpida Convention specially declared for it. Mr. CCM ithug proceeded to demonstrate that Grant is not, as some Greeley orators say, illiterate, quoting letters written to his mother and fattier when at West Point, and then spoke of his bravery, modesty, and well. acted part lu the Mexican war. His career nit the rebellion is a thrice•told tale. While senators wan note hawk at him were lulling tor the fourth term on cushions and eviscer ating encyclopedias, books of quotations and classical dictionaries, the tanner of Galena swept the rebellion from the valley of the Mississippi, and the Father of Waters went unvexed to tile sea. Ile was caded to the de partment of the Potomac, that Golgotha where army after army had melted away, where lie measured no track step until he set his foot upon the shattered fragments of the greatest military power an invading army ever overthrew. Ile solved the problem which had battled all others, and preserved the nationality alter the world thought it had gone down. The Ektnoerata sought his con• sent to no.ninate him for the Presidency with out a pho firm or pledge, but he declined. He did not become unlit for President until three rears e perieuce had rimmed and enlarged “is knowledge; be did not become unlit while the patronage held out and while unclean flingers were allow..d to fumblait. 11 . Conkling next alluded to the k ing and accepting. It was nut 'mime' lot Grain, as General, to accept munificent offer tugs trout the affluent, whose nineties he had saved, and in giving which they but billowed the custmns of ancient and modern times. Wellington, Cromwell, Fairfax, Cobden, Bright, McClellan, Sherman, snerldan and Farragut were similar recipients. 'l'l u • charge that it was. w.iing is an insult to the nation who witnessed and applauded the proceed Inge. The charge that Grant accepted any gilt after lie b. came President or idler lie was nominated fs totally false. He muds• tut exhibit of the moderate prop el ty now held by tile President, shoWing that the little he had came to. him from the grab tittle or the nation at the termination of the war, before lie entered office. Every dollar be owned came from services as open as the day, and every mouth a his Presidency made idol a poorer man. As Grant was no nomey. mak. , r,neither was he an office seeker. Though charged with Insisting on being a candidate ior toe Presidency', never to the speaker bud lie expressed a wish to be re elected. A year ago his friervls were uneasy lest be might with hold his name. lie did not consent to stand a second time until assured that the party ue• mended him as the only man, who could not be beaten. Had no aspersions been cast upon him he would, personally, gladly be mustered out. Ile had expressed to the speaker his earned wish to be released from public toil ; but since, the amaults made upon him aroused him to resistance. Grantnever seams well at all, and is never driven when courage can make a stand, and the two debts the Republican party owes to the deserters, who have attempted to betray it, are Mat, that they have Cleat Bed and reformed the party by leaving it, and second that they have insured it a candidate who, in the words of Horace Greeley, " Never has been defeated, and never will be." Mr. Conk ling proceeded to review the San Domingo treaty affair, claiming that the part acted by President was that of au honest, modest man, walking In the paths of the tritinatitutiou, and of b is predecessors. Mr. Conkling next came to the charge of appointing relations to Mike say log the rue fin reformers themselves will not bear exam ination on this point. The smoker then, •re• terring to his relations with Governor Morgan, said they had been of the best accord until the advent iii Morgau'a successor. Mr. Coupling Lien spoke of his and his colleague's early at titude toward the President, abd said it bad been intimated that a Senator addressed the President a letter alluding to his own aspira• •i,in for the Presidency, anti offering to w ith• draw and give the Saute of New York t him, provided an agreeable.understanding could be had concert I IL; the patronage. Referring to the charge that the President was surrounded by a military ring, Mr. Conk— • hug said : " This ring consists of three persons who write for the President without any ex— pense to the treasury. As to the President's seaside lotteringa, they Ism. only eight hours from Washington, and nothing can occur do. [minding Ills immediate attention without his tieing within immediate call. 1. was the prac. rice of the rulers of 1,11 countries to tarry at a 'distance from the °Biwa! residence during a portion of the year." , Mr. Cor-kling ten referred to the foreign policy of the administration, and applauded the success of the Washington Treaty. Be ben took up the subject to the finances, and showed them to be in a satisfactory condition Gi civil service reform he said the present was the beet administration of the civil service the country ever tral. Mr. Conkling next came to Greeley's re cord, saying all his deeds are to b e found In words. Extracts from the Tribune, after the first election and prior to the inauguration''of Lincoln, were real to show that, he incited secession by expressing a willingness to let the south leave the Cobol peace folly, as were also extracts from speeches by General Blair in the Senate In 1871.,makiug Meteoric charge. floe "On to Richmond" articles of the Tri bums were also quoted as the • incarnation of folly and conceit, which drove the. army head• long to Bull Run. Before the battle,said Mr. ~onkllnF , Greeley Imputed treason to General Scott, and after defea the codd od up to Scott, whom he had tried to dishonor less than tour weeks before. Greeley early in Lincoln's ad- ministration became his enemy. This Lin— coln knew, and was over on his guard ; and this is noticeable 'in the Niagara Falls peace affair. The details of his negotiations at Niagara are given, showing, said Mr. Coaling, undo niably that at first Greeley was gulled by a shallow swindle, and second, that he not only bit at the bait, but pressed the matter on Lin. coin in a manner, showing an intention to carp at him unless he yielded to his views. bird, that Lincoln punctured the fraud at n glance, and yet Greeley did not see it. Fourth, that Greeley bungled the whole af. lair at Niagara, or else purposely violated the repeated instructions of the President. Fifth ly, that he tamely submitted to the most un blushing effrontery and Imposition strum rebels. Sixth, that he expressly admitted and stated mat Lincoln had been fickle or untruthful, when he knew he had not, a,pd finally, that Lincoln sought to vindicate himself by mak. lug the truth public. Greeley stilled the truth by threatet lag If It was told to publish matters having no neartog on the case, out which would deeply wound the public interest. Who, sa.d Mr. Goulding can wonder that r•tanton proposed the arrest, of Greeley, for holding unauthorized and In jurious intercourse with the enemy." Gree iey's financ.al policy, first opposing the legal lender act and then lavoring it ; now oppos it.g and then advocating the resumption of specie payments; next arguing for taxation to pay tile debt in ten years; first favoring and Men denouncing the income tax—were al luded to, and the conclusion was drawn that ouc who changed his mind so of ten could not be trusted to run a cider mill and financier tor it. Eccentricity and fickleness are his traits. lie has bolted, and advised bolting. He has opposed the nomination or election of ever) President who has been chosen for thin) years. He s ught by intrigue the defeat of Lincoln alter being nominated the second time. He strove t poison President GruLt against capable and hottest Republicans, and adinsed him to exclude from his councils men trained in public affairs. He has recommenthd unlit men for office, and insisted upon their appoihtmerit. Mr. Conkling concluded : The issue stands before you. On one side is a safe, tried HMI stable goyernment ; peace with all natic Db and prosperity at hone, with business thriv tug and debt and taxes melting away. On the other side is a hybrid conglomeration, made up of crotchets, distempers and persona. aims—restless nod disappointed men—what ills might come of committing to them the tat lrs of the nation, no Judgment can fathom and no prophecy can toretell. The meeting was large and enthusiastic. THE New Yorker Democrat which, for More than a year, opposed President Grant.',. Administration, and at one time supported th. Liberal movement, has changed Its course a• appears from the following extract from Ds leading editorial on Saturday: " We place to day the Presidential ticket of the Republican party at the head of our editorial columns, ane hereby, declare that we shall support that tick et at the impending Presidential election. This declaration .will not surprise' those wine have watched the attitude of the New Yorker Dethocrat during' the past few weeks. Th. reasons which induce us to advocate the el. c Lion of the Republican candidates are simpl , and easily undostood by everybody that does not want to misunderstand them. We be- lieve, in so doing, we fulfill our duty to th, party, or, to speak more correctly, to the min ciples which the New. Yorker Democrat ha, consistently supported since it passed Into !h. hands of its present proprietor—the principle, of Republican ISM ~s they have b. on laid down since the foundation of the great National Re• publican party iu its various plait - .rms." --- IVILLIA3I 111,111ULLIN Some Account of a moat Remarkable Nan As we write these lines, William McMullin hes dying from a wound received at the hands of an assassin whom he had befriended, an. with whom he was on the kindliest terms. McMullin is one of the famous men of thl. country, notorious as a politician, and remark. able as a representative of that ruder life the is, developed of American institutions and in American cities. He is a character. great and bold, and string fn mental and physical strength ; and crud! .d under different anspi . ces, and trained among better associations, might have done his country good service. Wm. McMullin was a native of Philadol phin, born In the old district of Southwark, about 18:ffi, ii is parrots were of the respect able middle class, but the boy lived in an at mosphere in which brute strength was thi greitteit honor. In those days the Volunte e r 'Fire Department of Philadelphia was in who one of its aged members, looking back on the past, and contrasting the few companies sparse equipment, and excellent discipline o the present force, would call "Its Goldet. Age." It was well appointed, and include. all the adventurous and daring spirits of th, city. It furnished excitement, honor, anti cx ercise, and, in fact, was a species of modern knight errantry, which occasionally won th• highest plaudits for heroism, and sometime'. the s verest censure Mr ruffianism. The several companies composing it wen generally rivals, whether us regarded Shot. effic'ency, their politics, or their religion with t itter feuds between each, which well kept alive by constant battles. McMullin. joining one of these companies e s a boy, grew up to manhood imbued with the lawlessnes" that was their active spirit, and something 01 the chivalry that also entered Into it. Strong. er physically than any Olds fellow members. more intelligent, and with a natural capacit fir command, we find him, when not mud', more than twenty•one years of ago, president and presiding genius of the Moyamensiro those Company, one of the most powerful it all the old organizations. Ho has continued at its head for many Years. He became the chief of the members of his company, shared all their dangers with them, and won theft confidence and admiration as no other man could have done. • Me:311111in served in the Mexican war with honorable distinction, leaving Phil •delphiet when but eighteen years of a 6 e as first ser genet of a company of volunteers,commanded by Captain Hill. In a few months it woe satisfactorily demonstrated that none of the officers save McMullin could command the re• fraciory elements that composed the company, and Captain Hill returned home, leaving bin in virtual command. In this position he let numerous assauls upon the Mexican forts,and always a ith the extremest bravery. On hie return he engaged for a time in the boot and shoe business, but soon after quitted it fin politics ' his presidency of the fire company giving him a strong influence. In politics he was very successful, wield ing, in a few years, as much influence as Mike Walsh and David C. Broderick ever exerted. nod securing the confidence of his party, it whose conventions and counsels he always participated. In 1837 it elected him Aldermt of the Fourth ward, a position ho holds at the present time. During the War he raised company but returned home from the field at ter part.cipating in a low engagements. De was charitable end generous to a degree, al ways willing to serve a friend or relieve the unlortunate. He had many good qualities,loi which, should his wound prove fatal, he will ong be remembered.—Press. ANOTHER BOLTER The Kittanning (Armstrong county) Free Press publishes the following card from a die t ego sited end Influential Democrat, deolarim. his Intention to support General Grant foi President anti the t ntire State and Count) Republican tickets: ."To the Democrats of Armstrong County GENTLIiSIEN : having been informed, not will c ally nor through the columns of the Demo trifle Sentinel, bult. by Win. Furlone, of Free port, and John Lenfesty, of Brady's Bend that at a meeting of the Demon alio Countl Convention, held in Kittanning. July 3,187 2 I was nominated for Cougress,subJeet to den stun of the conferees, I most respecifally de cline that honor. "As I am under no obligations to the Dee °untie party, I do not regret to'say that I will support General Grant for President. and the entire State and County Republican tickets. Respectfully yours. "WiT.LIAM SI IiVIELL. "KtrrANNING, July 17, 1872" General Sirwell was a good soldier, and fo girt gallantly during the rebellion, against u. very 13111110 Influence which now alma to get control of the government through the. egency of Horace Greeley. Two years air. he 'AIM the Democratic candidate for Con grcsffil He is a man of influence In his district end his bold and manly dt c'aig•ion in favor of General Grant and the Republican Ste,. and County tickets will have a favorable Miro upon hundreds of diseatistied Democrats no. only In Armstrong - county, but throughout the State. ROBERT IREDELL, JR . plain antr JYancil 3otr - thintcr, No. 698 HAMILTON BTRHP,T, 1 , ALL.ENTOWN, P 4, . ELEGANT PRINTING 1 NEW DESIGNS • • • LATEST STYLES Sitomd . , 7101 8 ce. Cirde, pitettlare..D i Fer . Bo r r i lft. i fix d lt. lidweloges. 7 1:s i genienrh% Of. R:dlng. Way •. Bills. TIMM Arl aoy etre, etc., etc.. Printed at Shortt Notice NO. 31 GLEANINGS AND GOSSIP. A poor Michigan laborer was recently plunged Into the deepest affliction by the death of his wife. On arraying her for the grave he wee greatly consoled, however, by discovering that certain suspicious looking lumps on her legs proved to be packages containing several hundred dollars in currency concealed in her stockings. A peculiar leg,-Lees. There are eighteen young men In camp on a St. Lawrence Island. Not one of them has ever cast a presidential vote ; but they will all (except one) he voters next November. The Watertown Times says they will vote thus : Greeley, 1; Grant, 16. A ripe experience foi sensible youths. A six year•oid urchin recently appealed to his sire for information in reference to th, depth of the ocean. On being told that it we , supposed to be as many as five or six mile, deep in places, he replied, that he should to know "how in funder the men that dug ii got out." A week or two since a distinguished clergy man discussed the question of card-piaylms. summing up in favor of the practice, on argument being that It conduced to Though , and quietness. The editor of a religion• newspaper, looking back over his godles. days, doesn't agree with him, and thus sum , up li le reasons : " W lint experience we tom told of cards is opposed to his. Seven up we have generally found to be prol Coe of furiou.. discussions as to who played 'the and we never saw a silent game of whist. On the contrary, as soon as the last trick is taken. one of the defeated players is sure to call 0111 to hie partner, ' What in thunder did you 'play that diamond furl" Whether the preacher le right or not, the editor certainly makes a strong case, and the majority of the experienced can hardly help seeing it in the Game light. Senator Sherman on the Stand Entloa min Republlowg 21.10cting at Moyasjield—DlNlo»ie.3y Urcelcy Exposed—The .1 4 .45treatese CualralLwr Dead or Afire, Except Hamilton. MANSFIELD, July 24.—Hon. John Sherman addressed a large Reim liens meeting in this city last evening. In reviewing the Baltimore platform, he claimed that the Democratic party had abandoned its former position and adopted an esst utially Republican platform, thus approving and acquiescing In all 'he great changes and reforms adopted by the Republi can party. In reaard to the seventh plank, denouncing repudiation, the Senator said this Is a voluntary renunciation of all resolves anti threats made by the Democratic leaders, that in some form or under sointi device the plighted faith of the nation would be violated. ('he shadow of repudiation which clung to us Like the shirt of Nessus, front the example of some of the States, has increased the rate of interest on all our public securities, and, no compalt d by open threats of the Democratic leaders, has cost the people of the Untied States et ough to build hail a dozen Pacific Ratiroa s. These sentiments In a Democratic plattorrn *read like the penitential sign of a dying suicide. If all these gloriot s resolves are so g od now, why were they not made one, two, ten years ago ? What merit Is there in glorying over accomplished facts,, unless you contributed to their accomplishment? ,Vhat virtue Is there in mouruin2 opportuni ties lost ? What reward does the Democratic Party deserve for forcing these measures, all now on the highway of accomplished success, when they so bitterly opposed them at their inception ? Senator Sherman then sprikeof the political I-wings of the present campaign, and, after a lodine to thetsu ie. as u it alagement of the itepubllcan Party in the past,ue said: It prom tees to complete and perfect civil service re form, to abolish the franking privllege,to con tinue a reduction of taxes and the National tebt, and, as far as it is possible for the Na— tional Government to do so, to secure to capi tal elicit latitit ta , , and to lab r such rewards as to fairly divide use profits ot prouuotion, and littlest the Interests of these two great ser vants of civilization. It approves of the lib :rat amnesty already grouted to the rebels, mud promises to make it universal as soon as Albitc safety will allow.. Every promise made in the past bad been fulfilled, and those made for the future would also be fulfilled. the Liberal Republican defence, he thought, was caused by minxr differehees,or petty dis appointments, but the masses would stand by the old party. Ile spoke of the results at— tained by Grant's Administration, and corn• pared them With the petty personal charges against the President. He asked if it would ie better to bring in such a hungry imirde to •Ifeet retorm in appellate), me to office. Toough eager now, how many would be Lib ra] Democrats when they fail iu their iambi ,um ? Should Greeley take the oath of office, he would swear to veto any act of Congress that lace not meet his approval. Ile cannot tip. move of a tree-trade tariff it he is an honest nun and yet lie contrived. and penned by his ONa bunt, a plank 01 a platf.rm by which tie trees that, in no event, will lie perform the Any of a President on any bill that nincts the axes imposed upon the people. Is this hon. ;et 1' The Senator (Sherman) referred to the Democratic srgumenis of centralization and itates rights. The latter had been surrender ed by that party, end their leader (Greeley) sent further for extending the powers of the National Government than any man dead or living except Alexander Hamilton. Senator iherman then entered into a tummy of Grant's Administration, alluding to the differences with Sumner, Trumbull and Schurz, the charges in regard to San Domingo, the side of wins to France, military rings, &c., sneaking orougly in defence of the Preshient,and with an earnest appeal to all hot to risk ill ihe results of a Republican Administration 0 follow the wild vagaries of a party headed 13 , Greeley and supported by an unnatural coaliiion ci all the hungry elements of disor ganized parties. The Gyrator' Vote of Now York Tbe New York Evening Poet says No element of our population as yet die lays more activity In the Presidential cam paign than the Germans. The German Tam nany leaders, who, alter the disnstrous over brow of the ring in November last, disap peared from public view, are making extra irdmary efforts to reorganize the old German raminany clubs, hut have hitherto taut with but very Indifferent success. having been challenged by their Republican opponents to produce the original 01 the address which Gm Hoffman presented at Baltimore, and ...Welt he said was signed by 15,000 German voters of New York, they have hitherto ob served a suspicious silence and even the po mint voice of the Staats•Zeitung, and the lamaging charges which it preferred against the Governor in regard to the address, have bus far not elicited any reply trom him. It is , now believed that no. such address as the n presented at Baltimore was circulated among the Germans at all, but that the signa tures were UlOBO which the Germans several cp ors ago appended to a protest against the excise law, and that th. y were pasted on a peeturation In favor of Greeley and Brown. it any rate, nothing can be more certain than that a mujority of the German vote of New York city will not be cast for the Gin iinnatiThiltimore ticket. The German press if the city is now unanimously against Gree ey and Brown,•witit the exception of the New Yorker Journal, which In 1871 defended tweed sad the ring to the end, mid which iris not recovered the circulation and the in tluence which it lost at that time. The Steals- Zeitung, the organ of tne great mass of the Getman populie ion, is as strenuous in Its de nunchltion 01 the Greeley ticket as ever. The Gemokrat, tire new Republican Gestliche Post, the widely circulated Criminal-Zeitung, and the Abend Zeitung are allearuestly advo eating the election of Grant and Wilson. Never before in the political history of this city, had a Democratic Presidential ticket so many formidable adversaries in the German dress of New York as the one nominated at Cincinnati and Baltimore. The consequen ces of this state of affairs have already become quite apparent. The German ward and die. riotclubs have never been in a more flourish ng condition, never had more accessions ruin the Democratic ranks, and never held urger and more enthusiastic meetings than LI the present time; while the German "Ltb -rul" Republican clubs show but little ac ivity and vitality. The riot excitement at Williamsport is atom. over. The soldiers will female there or a few days longer, to protect the 'mills is ease of necessity. Some of tho tnilitr expect io continence running today, and the balance is soon as they can get suftlelentmcn, The men on the strike are all peaceable, arid say hey will'not go to work uttiesi the'mill.own ors adopt the ten hours. The arrested ring leaders are yet in jail.. The reports of per sons being killed and of others dying through the injuries they received were not true. OHIO.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers