FAe Nttigij gegisttr. 7t6IIT.IHEDELL. ALLENTOWN ' PA., JULY 81, 1872 FOR PRESIDENT, Gen, ULYSSES S. GRANT, OF ILLINOIS FOR VICE PRESIDENT, Hon. HENRY WILSON, OF MASSACIIIIBETTB. REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET. Eon GOVERNOR, iltajor General JOHN F. HARTHANFT, Or MONTOOMERT COIINIT POR SUPREME JUDGE, lion. lILYNNES MERCUB, 07 SIILDFORD COUNTY. TOR AUDITOR GENZW, Brigadier General HARRISON ALLEN or WARREN COUNT YOR CONGRESS= A. LARGE, Hon. Lemuel Todd, of Cumberland. Hon. Glenn! W. Schofield, of Warren Gen. Charles Albright, of Carbon. lOU DELEGATES TO CONSTITUTIONAL CONTIINTION Wm. M. Meredith, Philadelphia. J. Gillingham Fell, Philadelphia.' Gen. Harry White, Indiana. Gen. William Lilly, Carbon. Lin Bartholomew, lichuylkill. H. N. McAllister, Centre. ;William Davis, Monroe. Janes B. Reynolds, Lancaster. Samuel E. Dimmick, Wayne. George V. Lawrence, Washington. William H. Armstrong, Lycoming. David N. White, Allegheny. William H. A iney, Lehigh. John H. 'Walker, Erie. THE La Crosse Democrat does not armpit Greeley and Brown. The "Liberal Demo crat" Is another concern. NEW lismrsurnu, Connecticut and Oregon have spoken emphatically this year and their verdict was in favor of Grant. THE Scrap Book (Democrat) again gives milts weekly allowance of blackguardism. Ifs lies are so transparent and Its language en babyish as to be Entirely unworthy of notice. FORGET my record, says Horace Greeley. Forget our record, says the DeMocratin party. Thus the two—each ashamed of the other, calling loudly upon the rocks and hills to bury out of sight that alone by which the people am judge them—join hands to obtain control of the Government. WE never saw the Republicans more deter mined than they nre•thls year. The feeling extends through the rank and file, and men who have taken little interest in politics for some years, are anxious to do all they can to elect Grant and Wilson and secure another 'four years of prosperity for our country. Munn are umbers of Liberals who will not vote the Elect Mal Ticket uoroinatO at Reading. Our authority for the assertion is a responsible Liberal who, unlike the News, does not lie. The Liberals who did not go over for office will not trust the mcn nominat ed on that ticket and who aro not pledged to vote for Greeley. THE organ of the more faction of the Liber al• Democratic Republican' party admits the charges against Senator Buckalew, but at. tempts to defend him by saying that somebody else did so, too. We don't care what pallia tion the News may have to offer In defence of its candidate for Governor. It is sulilcient that the fact is well established that the charg es are true. They cannot be defended by any one who honestly favors Reform. Tnc large number of German newspapers which, during the past two weeks, have come out for Grant and Wilson, does not indicate that Carl Schurz carries the German vote in his pocket. We have never yet seen a spring In which somebody, or a collection of some bodies, did not prombie to do big things in the Fall, but the day after the elections the ma jorities always come in for the Republicans. TIIE New York World, a Greeley paper, lays that on the subject of Tariff Greeley is a hornet with his sting extracted, powerless to do any harm to Free Trade ; while Grant is 'a hornet with his sting always ready to battle against Free Trade. If this is so, we think we will vote for Grant. What will our Tariff advocating Democratic friends do In the mat. ter ? Will they leave it to the District P ' GREELEY'S BARGAIN WITH NLY• MOUR. We have delayed the publication of the charges against Greeley first made public ill the Binghamton Republican, hoping thatthey would be satisfactorily explained or utterly refuted by Mr. Greeley's organ. But we have waited In vain, and we now regard more with sorrow, than hatred, the proof of Mr. Gree ley's total abasement. After placing so much confidence in a Man for so many years, it Is indeed painful to have him proven beyond a doubt one of the most infamous characters that ever lived In history. The Tribune has signally failed to offer one word in denial, or a single palliating explanation of the charges. With the usual manner which has character iced its course since it cut loose from its Re publican moorings, It has dodged the issue by attempting a deceptive ridicule ; but the affair Is far too serious to be treated so lightly. We have the affidavits of gentlemen occupying prominent positions in their communities,and their words, subscribed to under oath, will have far more weight than the Tribune's ridi• cute. Prominent and respectable journalists, who have known Mr. Greeley better than we have, did not hesitate to accept the charges as true at the time they were made, as they seemed to them only consistent with Mr. Greeley's character. The leading papers, of the country, with the exception of his Liberal apologists, denounce •the bargain and sale in unmeasured terms. It will be remembered that at about this time Greeley exhibited a sudden opposition to President Grant and the whole bargain .explains the exhortation to ." Clasp hands across the bloody chasm of the war." Even the Philadelphia Transcript, a Democratic paper, says of the disclosures : "They will not fail to awaken universal In.' diguation. There is net a loyal heart In the land that will not revolt at the Wham's de tails of the bargain which has destroyed the Democratic organization, and forced down the throats of the Democratic legions the. 'bitter pill' of Horace Greeley. The leading features of the flagrant traffic is the proposition to tax the loyal people of the North millions on millions to pension the rebels who desolated Northern homes, slaughtered Northern heroes, widowed Northern wives and orphaned Nor thern children. The bloody and brutal work of treason has already Imposed a tax of $34,- 448,894 upon the labor and energies of the people—a debt which is ono of gratitude to the gallant men mid heroic women who did SO much that the nation should live. Now it Is proposed, and by a candidate, too, who is clamoring loudly about our expenditures, to ma k e th is sum Beventy.mllllons, and to put a premium on dishonesty and treason forever, The batting of Jeff. Davie, Instead of his exe- Callon as a traitor, finds a 'fitting climax in 1419 hut ft:Amy of Horace Greeley. Shall it .4e Indorsed', What say the people I," WHAT HORACE WILL LO Horace Greeley lea one.term man on a one. term platform. Appointments and removals under him would he governed by quite other considerations than that of their probable et feet on his "chances" in 1870.—News. The other considerations would be the preb• able effect of the appointments and removals 'upon the chances of a candidate of Mr. Gree ley's own particular views. It makes no dif ference whether Greeley will use the patronage for himself or for another. President Jackson used the patronage of the administration to secure the dominance of his party and the nomination of Van Buren as much as to se cure his own renomination. Harper's Week ly truly says, on this subject, that "reform of the civil service by a single Presidential term is wholly Illusory, unless you reform human nature and party feeling at the same time. A single term would take from the President, indeed, the disposition to appoint with refer ence to his own renomination ; but that is only one of the purposes of a President. It would leave both the disposition and the power to appoint with reference to all his other designs and preferences, and the offices would still be filled from political and personal considerations, and not from thoseof character and fitness." And Mr. Greeley, by his re. commendations while a leader in the Repub lican party, has given the most forcible evi dence that these latter would be the considers Lions which would control hit appointments. All the offices are not filled by the President. Congressmen and Senators control appoint ments in their respective Districts, and as the President appoints upon their recommenda tions, even Mr. Sumner cannot truth full y say the officers in Massachusetts are the Presi• dent's personal henchmen any more than they are Senator Sumner's, especially as ilie rules of the Senate would not have permitted their confirmation had Mr. Sumner objected. The News, In the same article quoted from above, says that even if Mr. Greeley were to attempt any mischief and succeed in securing the sanction and connivance of the House, in any outrageous financial schemes, there would still be.the hostile Senate to block it and bring it to naught. It it requires a Radical Senate to check Mr. Greeley in his wild schemes why not elect an administration which requires no such gyard—whose financial management of the government has been so excellent as to secure universal confidence did uninterrupted prosperity ? Even should Mr. Greeley be powerless to enforce his dangerous fallacies— even should the United States Senate be Rod. ical and the one branch of Government to which the people could look for protection against disaster—the mere knowledge of an attempt to en force Greeley's incomprehensible political economy would be sufficient to d - stroy confidence and bring about a commerclai reVulsion, so sensitive are the finances to every change in governmental policy. THE News thinks it hard we should criticise Mrs. Greeley. How unfortunate 111 r. B. can not sanction everything we do ! We do not approve of entering Into the privacy ()fa man's household and criticising the every-day life of thefamily of a gentleman whois a candidate for the Presidency. We think every gentleman would condemn such a thing, yet the virtuous defenders of Greeley have done this in Presi dent Grant's case. Miss Nellie Grunt, for In stance, Is a young lady, unassuming, but lady• like in her deportment, not one bit elated by reason of her prominent position. Her rettr Rig disposition should protect her from the criticisms of her father's enemies, yet the whole vile Liberal pack has never let .the op• portunity slip to attack and wound the Pres ident through her. How different is Mrs. Greeley's case. in welcoming their Southern visitors and speaking upon the greatest puz zler of all the political questions of the day, she, as the reflex of her husband's vlews,threw herself open to public criticism. Had she merely extended the hospitalities of Chappa qua, not a word of criticism would have been uttered, but when she, the nearest possible representative of Mr. Greeley's feelings, said to the Southern Rebels that she did not think that she could forgive as much as the blood stained traitors had forgiven, in us of the North, it was more than human nature could stand. We hope to see the say when the bitterness between the "North and the South will cease,but if this greatly desired result can only be attained by a restmection of the cow ardly "compromise" feeling that existed be fore the war, when the North in suppliance bent the knee to the arrogance of our South ern masters, then we say let the bitterness remain. If the cause for which our homes have been robbed of their best blood was a fraud and a delusion—if It was wrong to sus- ain the flag, to preserve the Union and debt against armed rebels, then, probably, Mr. Greeley's suppliance, reflected by his wile, might be excusable ; but until this is demon— strated we shall take the liberty of denouncing any bending of knees upon the part of the North, whether it is done by representative men or representative women. Say nothing about the lite unpleasantness, it you please. gentlemen—but for the. sake of those who died to preserve our country kneel to no one but to Gon! TEES Republican State Central Committee met at Diu risburg Thursday. The r. slgna %ion of Gen. White as Congressinan•at•Luige was received and accept° I, and also that o I .1 D. Freeman, of the XVtli District, candidate for Elector. The name ofJ. C. Colgrove was substituted in place of Freeman. Hon. Glen. nt W. Schofield, ot Warren county, and Gen. Charles Albright, of Carbon, were chosen as candidates for Congressmen at Large. The ticket, composed of Todd, Schofield and Al. bright, Is the best that could have been se lected and cannot fail to give universal satin faction and will certainly beat the weak tick. et of the Democracy by au overwhelming majority. Mr. Todd we have spoken ot be fore, and it would be idle to make any com parison betvieen his abilities and thoto of its oppnnenta, with, perhaps, the exception ot Hopkins, who is the only one of his three or. ponente who is worthy of even a nomination. Against the weak, paltry politicians, Dick Vain and Hendrick 13. Wright, we have Schofield and Albright. Mr. Schofield has . a National reputation = pure and brilliant, and his eloquence upon the floor of the House of Representatives always exerted a marked in fluence. Gen. Albright Is too well known here to need any cocoa ium at our hands. Ho is known, as are his coteruporaries, as a thorough, zealous Pioteetinnist,. and he Is an able lawyer, is tbrcible speaker and was one of the bravest soldiers Pennsylvania fur nished to fight against rebellion. With such candidates we ought to roll up 20,000 majors• ty for our Congressmen at Large, ONE of the best cards the Democratic Re• publicans have to play is their demand that the war shall be forgotten ; that the bitterness and hatred growing out of the contest shall be subdued. Now, the best way for Demo crate to show that they are aineare is to vote for General Grant. Let item show that they have forgotten there was a war ; that they no longer hate the man who led our armies to victory and overthrew the rebellion ; that they no longer entertain any bitterness against him because his successful administration made hint so popular that they found it imposSible to elect a Democrat against him. Let them bury the past and accept the issue as between two Republicans—one tried and successfut and the other a philosopher in polities nod an impracticable man In governmeM. When Democrats show that they no ,longer hate Grant because ho annihilated the Confederate' Government and burst up the Democratic party, then we shall believe they are 'timer() In professing a desire for an inauguration of cordial feeling between the people of every section. THE LE - FrIGH REGISTER, ALLENTOWN. WEDNESDAY. JULY 31, 1872. Ton report of Jacob Thompson to the Rebel Secretary of State shows that, during the war, there was an organization in the North do. signed to aid the Rebellion by overthrowing the Federal authority in Ohio, Indiana, MI. nois, etc., and to thus force the United States Government to acknowledge the indepen dence of the South. This was not the worst object of that treasonable organization. It .was proposed to burn the principal cities of the North to make the merchants tired of the war. Several attempts were made, ono of which, undoubtedly, resulted in that horrible coal oil fire in Philadelphia, where the gutters ran full of floating fire and people were burn. ed to death in their houses and in the streets. The same spirit which then would destroy the Government and would inflict the cruelest tortures upon innocent women and children, who were sure to be consumed in the flames, is to.day in the Greeley and Brown party. Its hitter hatred of everything opposed to the success of the Rebellion is still exhibited in Its denunciation and slander of General Grant and General Hartrantt, whose greatest ()rime is that they fought against the Rebellion. A few men who were supposed to be true dur• ing the war, have evidently forgotten the past anti they now join hands with the Sons of Liberty and their defenders, and are ready to piece them at the head of the Government. "the papers which during the war visited cur. sea loud and deep upon the soldiers arc looked upon as the papers fit to represent the princi ples of the administration they hope to elect. The New York World, the Philadelphia Age are no longer copp , rhead to them, but repre sent the patriotism of the Nation. Even the New York Daily News, which was used by Thompson as a means of communication with Jeff Davis, is read by them and believed in preference to the journats which stood by the old flag when treason lurked In every corner and paid a high price for treachery. They aro blind to the effect their desertion of the Be- publican party .would have In case their schemes should prove successful. They ig nore the experience of the past. They for get that these men whom they arc helping to place in power opposed the war, formed asso ciations to aid the Rebellion and resisted the draft, and only disclaimed these principles when they saw the people would not tolerate them. They proposed repudiation, were Lydell by the people, and then they disclaimed this purpose. They opposed the enfranchise ment of the Blacks and voted against the adoption of the XVth Ainendment,where they bad a majority iu any State legislature. Titer, they proposed to disfranchise' the Blacks and wherever they got control of a Legislature which had previously ritifled the amendment. they at once reconsidered the action of the previous legislature and withdrew the ratifi cation of the Amendment by the State. They were beaten again on this issue, they saw it was unpopular, and' they therefore disclaimed, not relinquished, oppusi' ion to negro suffrage In the same way they opposed every principle or the Republican party, until they were beaten in every corner of the land, and rum they come forward chiming to have thorough ly repented. Can any man trust a party thal has conic to advocate principles because they could succeed with none other? Is it safe to trust a party that has been guilty of such) enormities and only fall&I to accomplish Mr ruin of the country because it was defeated al the polls ? Yes, the Democratic party to•day in very siclt, and it Is therefore very peni tent. When the Devil wan nick the Devil a monk would' be, But when the Devil got well the devil a monk EEO So it will be with the Democratic party. Once givii it the reins of power and it will put in practice all the old purposes which it has laid carefully away and keeps hidden now be cause the people would not tolerate them. But give it the power and all that it could not ac emnplish openly will be accomplished by de. .ception. There are few, Indeed, of the Libe rale whom we have conversed with, who do not believe that the restoration of the Demo cratic party to power would be disastrous to the country, and they are only aiding in the accothplishment of this result through the delusion that by electing Greeley they are put ling a power upon the throne that will be om nipotent, that can defy the bullet. of the asses sin, the acts of a Democratic Congress and the pressure of the Democratic politicians. D will be well for the Liberals to ponder the matter carefully, to exarripe into It with open eyes and unbiased by ,prejudice. and to do this it will be necessary for them to lay aside the Tribune, whose sole object is to elect Greeley and which therefore cannot be looked upon as a disinterested witness. NOM ETHING FOR DEMOCRATS TO IR EA 1111, We do not like In appear too much oneeslel ed In this political contest. We believe there is nothing like fairness and while we are ad• vocating the principles of the Republican party, we believe. that Democrats ought to have something on their side, too: Brick Pomeroy, we beliPV(01118 alX:ays been looked upon etre sort of father of Democracy and the refeere is as good a source to get Democrat ic semtimenta from as any. In the lase issue of the New York Democrat, Brick's pap , r,he publishes a number of strong articles, trom which we select the following. They wilt undoubtedly tee relished by Democrats, but we would not advise Greeley men to take too large a dose, or they might get sick : Some years ago a great many week kneed Deolocrats insisted that we could not batch Hoes with vinegar ; that the only way to win votes was by a smooth,and gentle,and slick,and licoricelike way ; that the right way was. to sort of come up to a man on his blind side and soothing syrup him Into submission. For thirty years Horace Greeley has been letting the Democrats have tt redehot, and the proo• pect now is that he has caught more flies than though he had used four hundred barrels 01 molasses a day for the purpose. But then flies don't amount to much only one season, and they are gone. If three million men show themselves to be bound hand and foot, and forced by a combi nation of traltora to elevate to the Chief Mug iseimy the very man whose every word has been an insult tee those three million ' dews It 'follow that individual manhood has died out, and all personal independence is tee he merged in the huge mass of wickedness and insanny ? The farmers, the private men, the mechanics, the merchants, the youth, the very females, full of zeal but endowed with political rights, pre let suffer by this wholesale corruption and Infamy and concocted craze, Twenty.one attic Pennsylvania delegates to the BaltlniormGreeleyeTatnmany Conven tion refused to support Greeley under ally circumstances. Prominent among these pat riots of Pennsylvania was Charles Carrigan, of PhiladelPleia, who remarked to UN as he %enameling out of the Convention, that there were yet honest men in Pennsylvania whose principles were not fOr sale, and that the man woo would vote for Greeley and return to a constituency like his (Carrigan's) would be v ry apt to quit his political life suuden!y and f never. It is for those who were not faithfully rep. r tented by the delegates to the national Con• vention to say whether they will be sold and delivered by the ones who profess to be their musters, or if they w 111 assert their Ind. prod ence, nominate candidates and. work for ' the press rvation of those principles which so lone have kindled patriotic tires in the bosoms of honest, patriotic and lutellsgent men. Is the Democratic party to die out ? If the Baltimore Convention represented the opin ion of the great body of the people, it was not allowed to die a natural death, but it was killed and there is no more of it. The sooner the Baltimore Convention is taught that their orders are uo orders, their foul and unhallowed nomination no nomina tion or the people, the better it will be for the Cu are. Baltimore has established the theory aim misfit' roguery, and by endorsing Greeley, has simply endorsed the most corrupt scounu rots of New York Tammany. Horace Greeley may be a " right smart" of a man, but there is not enough of him to make a platform sufficiently large for three million Democrats to stand upon. Baltimore hue crucified the truth, and cre ated in its mead n monster. . OUR POLITICAL COLUMN. Hon. Charles Atwater, nominated for Lieu• tenant Governor by the Connecticut Demo. crate, bee come out for Grant and Wilson. lion. Tilton B. Doolittle, Ex-U. B. Senator Stark and Judge Converse, three of the ablest Connecticut Democrats,wlll not support Gree ley and Brown. The Buffalo Post (Democratic) will not go for Greeley and Brown. The recent Republican victory in Oregon has disorganized the Democrats of that State. It is now sure for Grant. The Quokers of Indiana have been claimed by thd Greetulles, but they would not allow Julian to deliver a Greeley speech in their ball at Dublin, the other night, and ho had to speak. out of doors. Judge Biddle could not accept the Demo (attic nomination for Congress, In the Eighth Indiana District, because Ito would notpledge his support to Greeley and Brown. Hon. Thomas Duncan Stiles, Democratic member of the Ohio House of Representatives, repudiates Greeley and Brown, and nay the nominations leave D.mocrats absolved from party fealty and free to vote for Grantor who ever they please. It Is estimated that 25,000 of the conserva• tive, order•lnvine Democrats of Georgia w.ll refuse to vote fur Greeley and that the State will give Grant a good majority. Hon. S. T. Streeter has resigned from the New York Liberal State Committee and now goes for Grout and Wilson, because ho sees the present contest is simply a war between the Republican and Democratic parties. Not a single Republican minister has yet declared for Greeley. Judge Ould, in the Recent Virginia State Convention of Greeley men, spoke of a cer tain distinguished Virginia politician as a fit bearer of the Confederate flag to victory. A strong reason, in the eyesof the Greeley men, why he should receive the nomination. Toe Republican party of Michigan is split in half. Ex• Governor Blair and Johnny Drlggs compose the Greeley half and every• body else the Grant half. Ex-Governor Blair opposes the Republican candidate for Presi dent because, before lie went into office, he received presents. It shows remarkable con sistency because Blair, while Povernor, ac cepted as a gift from the officers of the Twenty sixth Michigan a pair of horses, and from the officers of the Ninth Cavalry an expensive pair of mirrors, besides silver-ware and numerous other articles. The Detroit Free Press, second in influence only to the Chicago Times, has created a nasty division iu the Democratic party by its refusal to support Greeley and Brown. BUCKALEW "I (lid not go into public life for the purpose of making profit, for myself."—Buckalste tlarriaburg Speech. C. R. Backalew to United States, Dr. To 6 penes' salary as 11. B. Senator, 85000 $30.000 Outfit as Mininter to Ecu Mtn 7.500 4 years' salary for came, 7,500 50 000 To State of Pennsylvania, Dr. To salary as member of Constitutional I. onventlon - $ 1.000 3 rears' salary as Senator 2 1011 CI " " " 2d term 3,000 Extra pay to pat McClure into his seat upon contest . . 500 Total Tait Tribune of Saturday published a list of the Government defalcations as an evidence of the awful dishonesty we are having under President Grant. Now, these names and amounts are taken from flies of the Tribune In 1870, when the Tribune praised the Grant ad ministration for its honesty and economy Flow differently a man sees matters when be .s running for President. The Tribune was lust as well aware of those defalcations when it praised Grant as it is now when it condemns him. Either the Tribun :was dishonest then, or it is not honest now. Which is it ? WHAT a queer party it is. The News ad vocitt?s Greeley and Brown and calls them Liberal Republican. The Democrat goes In for the same ticket and thinks it is Democratic. The Defender, of Norristown, still claims to be Democratic and says it is not Democratic to support Greeley and Brown. Still another, Dr. Acker's paper, the Norristown Register. elves the Greeley and Brown ticket its best sapport and calls it " Democratic•llepubll can." Two of the Readiag nominees for Congress men•at large—Dick Vaux end Hendrick B. Wright—are very unpopular. Vaux was such a ridiculous disgrace when he was Mayor of Philadelphia that be went out of office with the contempt of every man of sense resting upon him. The other Is a great blatherskite and the nomination was given to him, amid the disgust of the better men of the Conven• tiou, merely to prevent a row. BEFORE Greeley was a candidate for Presi dent the Tribune was In falior of making the National taxes high enough to pay the whole debt off in ten years. Now the same paper, for policy's sake, advocates the next thing t nit taxes at all. Before the campaign closes It will favor running the Government on wind. (Immix—Suppose the wishes of the Norris. town Register bad been carried out, which would have involved the hanging of Horace 'Greeley and several other abolitionists, would Dr. Acker today he advocating the election of Greeley or of Jeff Davis GREELEY went back on the Pennsylvania miners when he advocated abolishing the duty on coal, and now the miners advocate abolish ing him. They will help to do it in Novem ber. Tug, whips of the Democracy to bring the old•liners up for Greeley and Brown Is no comparison .to the whips the News uses to keep its subscribers from falling off. ANOTHER LIE NAILED. The charge that Senator Wilson ever pro• Patted the doctrine of Know-Nothincism Is denied by his owo words in a speech delivered to the citizens of Brattleboro, Vt., on the 26th of May, 1854 t I have no sympathy with that narrow big oted, intolerant spirit that would make war upon a race of men because they happen to he born in other lands, a dastardly spirit that would repel front our shores the , men who sought homes here under our free institutions. Such a spirit is anti American, devilish—l loath it from the bottom of my heart. Henry Wilson is a man of the widest um. patilles and utterly free from the miserable prejudices against race or color that formed tie cardinal doctrine of the Democratic par. ty before It espoused Horace Greeley. GOVERNOR CURTAIN. A Report that ho 19. In Favor ottipont, A Washington telegram to the Herald says: Henry D Moore, formerly State Treasurer orPennayi vaniounder Governor Curtin, writes from St. Petersburg, under date of June 19, that he is adthorlzed to say for Mr. Curtin tint he earnestly desires the re-election of Presi dent Grant, and that neither Curtin nor him- Bell have any sympathy whatever with the Greeley movement. SOME of the Grceleyanpporting journals who want a pretty item should publish ttio news front G. o gia, and send it "out west.'s Irpurteen out ot twenty-seven Democratic p, pyre in the Statb arc opposed to Greeley a d Br iwn, and Alexander,Stephens is reported es prominent in a movement to tiring t n• en inlvnendent ertn , idate. Send down your I nsh•money, gentlemen, and be lively, there's another dbuitlected State to boy I 6tanlitig Dorelopments. • How Greeley watt Non - slanted—The Alley;• ell Party Itarir iiiii Important lita lemon G Medal Dispatch to The Evening Telegraph.) Bittoumirrox, July 20.—The pledge of the managers of the Bigliamton Republican Is at last .redeemed, and the gnat conspiracy of Greeley, Seymour, and Hutchins is proven to the world. The "challenge" of twenty days standing direct to the trio has fulled to call forth a denial. One charge was that Horace Greeley agreed In October, 1871, on his own behalf, to be a candidate for President if Elora do Seymour and the Democratic leaders would support him, and that he held a correspon Junco on that subject; that Mr. Greeley form ally recognized his nureedre t, and comment sate(' the feet rant Democratic proposition to ttenben E. Fenton, who cons..nterl togive as • sic lance to the scheme; that Horatio rdeymour subsequently agreed to give his support condi• lion, fly; that he communicated to Wnldo Hut. chins on this subject in reference to the Cie. cinnati Convention, and that 'Seymour ac knowleclged the correspondence with Hutch ins in n letter dated May 1, 1872, three days before the Cincinnati Convention ; that Hut chins respond , d, and became n dr , legate to that convention ; that the tact of Democratic coalition was well understood by some of the delegates do that convention ; and that the ex pectation of Democratic support secured Mr. Greeley's nomination. The disclosures show that Lewis Carmichael, of Unadifla, New York, is the originator of the movement which made Mr. Greeley the Cincinnati and Baltimore nominee. He wrote to Mr. Greeley last September, giving his views about the coming campaign, and invited him to becoine a candidate. Carmichtiel's letter was address ed Inside to lion. Mimeo Greeley, the ni at President of the United States. lie Mid Mr. Greeley the time had come "to raft over." Mr. Greeley expressed his willingness to be. come a candidate, but feared the DeMocratic lenders would not support him. Ile invited Carmichael by lett. rto an Interview. He ac curdle ply went to New York and hod a long talk with Mr. Greeley in the 'Tribune oiiice when Mr. Greeley told Carminettel that icy. moor was a standing candidate with the Dem• emetic party, and that Seymour would not ' step aside for him. Carmichael replied that Governor Seymour had not been chnsulted, and had not said what be would do. Carmichael then offered do undertake to secure Seymour's consent and co.operation to the movement, and Mr. Gree ley agreed to become a candidate if Seymour and other prominent Democrats would en dome him. Carmichael saw Seymour, who was at first inclined unfavorably to the pro ject. He Boon saw , Seymour ti.ain by appoint ment, and said he, "Seyniour had concluded that Carmichael was right, and that the Dem ocrats could support Greeley." Carmichael soon' informed Greeley of his success with Seymour, and went ab ,ut the State immediately to consult with the Demo. eratic leaders. The first plan wan to call II convention in Otsego county to nominate Mr. Greeley and start the Campaign. Last April Greeley wrote to Carmichael that he would withdraw,ns be did not think the Dem iieracy would support 'him, but the latter prevailed on him to stick until hi , hail time to work the thing up. Tlw above is from the lips of Cartnichao himself, who at the close nt his statements nervously said th it he would rather be in tire than in this business. State- ments are given of several citizens of Otsego c aunty, rel Ming to the whole matter, whose charm t , ra for vend y are unquest oned, and who are about, equally divided politically. G. A. Dodge, editor of the Umatilla Titnes,Bain• bridge Review, and Oneonta Democrat, said Carmichael began to talk of Greeley for . the Democratic nominee last tall, and that Car— wicha,l, to prove what he was talking about, Mx° produced the Greeley-Seymour letters. Henry Van Denson, of Unadilla, has seen some of the letters'from Greeley and Seymour, among which were quite a number of Greeley's. They all had more or I. ss reference to Mr. Greeley's being a candidate for the rresiden- cy. One letter received trim] Greeley the last of April spoke of the necessity of some 'Democrat going, to Cincinnati In order to secure his , (Greeley's) nomination there, and his preference was for Carmichael to go. Hon. Robert W. Courtney, of Sidney, wits shown by Carmichael a letter from Gree ley 'last March on the subject of holding a convention in Otsego county to nominate Wchn Mr. Courtney advised hint that such a movement at that time would be pre mature, Carmichael was just starting for Sy-' racuse to have an interview with general John A. Green. B. F. Arnold, Esq , attorney and counsellor at Lined OK saw and read the let ters of Seymour and Greeley. Carmichael told him that at one of hie interviews with Seymour the latter agreed to . go and see Hutchins. which he failed hi do, but wrote to Hutchins giving his views on the subjectof nominating Mr. Greeley. He also wrote to Carmichael, sayithr that he had failed to see Hutchins, but had written to him and enclosed to Carmichael the substance of ols letter to Hutchins. Seymour's letters to Hutchins was used at the Cincinnati Convene lion. and a copy was sent to . Fenton. E M. Packard. Postmaster at Unadilla, law a letter Rom Greeley to Carmichael, dated last April, urging the latter to stir around with the Democrats for him (Greeley). Cann ichael informed hint that lie had received the Trf bone since April free of charge. Carmichae .aid when he went to Albany to see Peckham and Cassidy with his scheme, they called him a fool, and told him to go home and stay there. there is good authority for stating that Car michael went to Mr, Foist, a banker at Ostego, and imparted information of his plans, when Folet advanced hint money on his wool crop to pay his expenses to Utica and New York to confer with Gree ley and Seymour. He ft , quently visited Folet, and showed him letters dated lass Octo ber. Letters received from Greeley and Car diac! were enclosed in another envelope• and sent to Seymour, and vice versa. lu the o urse .if time they were again sent to Carmienth with other letters. Win. T. Finch, Esq , has lead the special privilege of translating difll cult letters for Cartniehael, and can tette gimd deal When he Is authoritively summoned •Cartniehael's'firat interview in the Tr,bune of flee lasted finer, or five hours. The following a thlovit is by Charles S. Carpenter, editcr or t Oneonta Herald, and a highly esteemed tC1.600 E 74,100 _enth•mun. 0:11er allb.hivils will be tele grupheil hereafier:— Allidnvil of Mr. Carpenter, ONtsoN•rA, July 17, 1872.—C. S. Carpenter, being sworn, deposes and says that he is a resident of Oneonta, Otsego county, in the State of New York, and'that he is well ac• quainter] with Lewis Carmichael, and Unit flint). in said county : that Carmichal has for many years been a Democrat, interested in county, State, and national conventions, which be frequently attended, and that he has for about a year past been engaged in seeking a Democratic candidate or the Tres idency ; that Carmichael was last fall in cot , respondence with Horace Greeley and flora tic. Seymour on the, question of making nt issues, one of which was the payment of pen. +inns to disabled Hebei cold) rs as well as to Union soldiers, and that deponent BIM letters from said Greeley and from Seymour on that question ; that one of Greeley's letters—which deponent recognized by What he knows of Greeley's handwriting and by the Tribune heading this letter being an answer to a letter of Carmichael asking his views on the Con federate pension question—expressed the views of Mr. Greelt•y as favorable to the pas sage of a law providing that the General Gov ernment pay pensions to Southern disabled soldiers, although he (Greeley) doubted whether Congress would pass snot a bill ; 'lilt deponent rend the letter carefully, and this was its true expression and meaning,and it was freely discussed between Carmichael and deponent; that this letter was, according to delimit nt's best recollection, dated In Au gust, or early In September, 1871 ; deponent saw a lettet from .Horatio Seymour on the some subject at about the same time ; Mr. Seymour expressed himself in opposition to making the pension an issue then ; that de• poaent also saw another letter of Horace. Greeley addressed to Carmielml, In which Greeley invited Carmichael to call on him in NeviTork to talk over political. lEMPB that bad been hroseiied betw • e bum ; meet a sep orate part o' that letti-,whi Is epotient llnf t have °ppm unity carefully, ex passed, as deponent casually noticed, and W,s distinctly inform , d liy Carmiel ael, the possibility that On•eiey would at cep the nomination for President if the nom n ttion were tendered to him in 1872; that t arml elte' was absent from Otsego shortly after ward and received frrin Greeley, his Carmi chael distinctly and emphatically stated to him. Mr. Greeley's positive consent to be the Democratic candidate for President in 1872, if the nominitflon were elven to Wm. The date of this letter was In October, 1871 ; that Carmichael endeavored to induce depo nent to consent to advocate paying pensions to Southern soldiers, as a measure of concili ation between North and South and to sup port Mr. Greeley fin• the Presidency ; that it was fully understood between deponent s a d Carmichael that Greeley was to be pressed for the Democratic nomination; that deponent regarded Carmichael as a candid man, who treated these subjects with the utmost serious. netts ; and that deponent Is fully convinced that his correspondence and Interviews, nod thetr meanings and results, were described by him honestly and faithfully._ C. B. CARPENTER. Sworn before me this 17th day of July, 1872 E. M. CARVER, Notary Public. Add/Ilona! Testimoney The following interesting revelathins of Dr. Ireland give important fade connected Greeley's bargain with the New York Derma. racy : • Louis E. Ireland, of Unandilla, Otsego Co.. New, York, being sworn, says that Louis Car michael. also of Unandilla, whom ho has known for six years, has frequently been In deponent's office in Hriandillii, and has shown deponent letters from Horace Greeley. of New. York, five or six in 'number, and one letter of Horatio SeymOur ; that deponent old not read ily rend Greeley's letters, except the heading and eignaint.—Carmichael being addresced an "Priend Carmichael" in ono or more of tin m -which letters deponent held In his hand. Their contonte related to matters understood be tween Carm chit& and Greeley,some of the let t re pa'sing on as though connected with pro. vloon boßities.; one of lb • leti• rs inured Cer ra h e! to go tot'inclunatl. T eso lett. re weie itoown to deponent in th host ot nt tech or first of April, 1872. Carmichael then said to dept. rent tha. Greeley would be nnintuateil at Cin cinnati ; and the Democrats would adopt him; teat lb only point there was that Greeley should get the Cincinnati nomination. De ponent perused Horatio Seymour's letter, which he read easily and recognized the hand writing, according to his pr. vines knowledge of it as Seymour's. The subjects' ()fillet let. ter were es follows: It mentioned en inter view of Carmichael and Seymour, and an In terview of Carmichael and Greeley; Baying lie (Seymour) was more lavorably itnprestied with the turn of matters, with which he seem ed satisfied; mentioned the tariff qu. stion, and said tile beet way was to leave the issue a vague one, as Carmichael had proposed, so as to unite persons of different views in the coali• Wm movement; suggested that if Greeley fa. vored this, it would snmothe the way to the end. Deponent's strong impresion is that GreeleY's candidacy was mentioned ; but of that he does not say pos tively. The time when this letter was read by deponent wee about the last of March or the first of April, 1872. The subject had previously been brought to deponent's attention, by Carmichael ; but when the letters were shown, particu larly Greeley's letters, deponent thought the mat ter almost too absurd for notice; but alter the Cincinnati nomination he understood their im poriance, and endeavored to procure copies. tie would have exposed the matter, except that he had hopes of procuring the letters, -or cop es of them. pep-mein was Informed,in December, 1871, from the statement oft armichael, that Gree ley had promised Carmichael the tone of the tribune would be changed about the first of the year 1872; and that deponent, on noticing the chunge—which statemi nt of Carmichael deponent can prove on competant testimony of a public officer. Deponent further remembers that in ono of Greeley's letters Chase was mentioned as now feeble and broken down. Deponent makes this statement on his hon or as is citizen, and becatuie he believes the facts he has mentioned should t c exposed. L. L. IRELAND. Sworn to and subscribed before me this 17th day of July, 1872. FREDERICK A. SANDS. Notary Public for Otsego county, N. Y. sbbecial Nottecs n'..,7 ,,, P1LES OR HEMORRHOIDS! INTER. ll VX.rERN‘I, BUN°, ULESDICM AMD Pertrefly and Permanent/1i Clt It p.l) by.l/I• SOHUTION. IN, Det-ot from Ilartness.) taloa /imager (Nt.iles or hattruntenty, by WM. A. McCANDLASS, M. D., NO. 2001 ARCII STREET, PRILADA., Who can rotor yon to our tA)00 caaex cured. We demire t toly to Mom, nlll,cted there In pcdtively no deceptiou Ihe core of thue thavaias It mettera Dot how tong how ereerely you have boon afflicted. wit can care )o We also cur Fletut., Vilouro Proispous, B.rlcture4 ao Inceratino of the bower bowel. Here trowtcd then- di. mites nxn llpfeinitV for twenty years. (001 Umw GETTING MARRIED.—ESSA YE FUR ucr Toting Men. °natant SOCIAL EVILS Mild AnUeEB vg Slob lutetium with MARRIAOE—wIth aura manila of relief for th e Erring and Uunirmunte, dhleaued and debit- I tatud dAddrem HOW ARD ASSOCIATION, No. booth Nluth atreet, Philadelphia. Pa GREAT CAUSE OF HUMAN MIS SKY.—Just Published, in en healed fincelope Price SIX cents a Lecture oa the Nature. Treatment. sod !indica! Cur of Soothlul Wokahoos. or Sporiontorrloca, todoc-d by Sri Simon I ovolotoury Suilusd.us. ItopoLodcy. laorvouu De 11l Ity, oud Inspedilueuts to Morrloso. seonrUlly ; I 'on suminion Epll-p-y, sod F I ; Mental nod rbyalcal to csy.scity, &o —8y14.011 J CULVEKWisLL, M. D., no abur of the Goon Book," Stc. . . . . Thu Worle.re..owned author. In thin edm ruble Lec ture, dourly proven from Ills own corer race %bet the awful cone qunocen of Sea. Airier may b effectually rue moved without onedicloe, and without dengeron 40- operapone. boyirt hourutneuts. ring, or cordlele, p doting out a mode ef cur. at once certain a d en' cleat. by which every sufferer. uo [natter Whet hi. to..clitiou orgy be. may co CO (provepl privately and real e aly. Title lecture and a boon to theueend“ and thou... Lode. ' bout under Neal. to a plain or viilopo, to any addro“, receipt el tix coot., or tint, Voting., :imams, by adore log Inc ptibilahnra alto. UM 'llarriana Outdo," prl 50 coats. Adilletill tee Pubilrliero. • • . •• • • • • • • • J t;IIAS. J. C. KLINE & CO . 127 Bowery. Now York. rost °Mc° box WU. Jan17.72.1yw vxcetrrows NOTICE.—NOTICE IS 11.1 HEREBY OIVEN that totters tostowenlary having been grouted to the uudern Sued lu the estate el (1W il.csosed. lute of the I.ltv of Ai entOW o, high county. county. thoraforo all porno. who know them !el vox to ho indebted to ',aid ectuto are requested, to rink c pitymout witlonsix weeks from the ditto boom!. and tiny uic cluba will present theta duly authenticated for settlement within the above speclded (liar. . . W Executor, 7.lm.pnrt P. 0., Pppor'Ssuc.m, Lelllgu Cu., Pa :Melt) l'o.i•1 1 XFCUTOR'S NOTICE.--Notice Is 1 hereby given that letters testamentary upon the e• • tate of SnLOMON /I NEIL, Into 01 Al.Bertls. o,ooly, . ed, h•ve boon granted to the us All p.r.o[lll Indebted to, or havlsur ela • neatest, the null eatste tale preseut the MIMI tvlth., .0- lay to UtPr • Kit ',FINER, AL-Ilerpr O k l L 'A sh L l E g N e . 2l7a 6 ty ` . " u `v ne ' 2 A l v , l v S n 72 . . } Ex°l;;:lt"breV. ' CANDIES! ORANGi. S! Q. A. FREY, MANUFACTURER OF ALL KINDS OF CONFECTIONERY ! each as would Inform the Public that hn hna the Inr ¢ oat Air play of Cream Chocolate Cocoa-Sot, Creek Cocoa-Sat Paste. Iceland Moss Paste, Earn French Cream Almonds, Ac., Av. and aealerln all kiwi. orFRUIT. Koch an "ANGES.NUTS,FIGS. LEMONS. AC. DATES Are , ALBO—A largo ••rloty of TOYS, ronnhintlr of hand O. A S'S. Y. jyllLDud•wl 27 Nerllt Seventh Strtel NOTICE, OFilell OP Tne CITT LLIOUTOWN. March 43, 1674. Notice la hereby Overt that ;ha Dopllcate tor the colb•e• lion of Water Hents for tt o •neolug year hoe bees placed to he beads of the uoderalgued, Ie accordance veldt the p frovpdordt o the Stlttectlon ot an flrdload. reulating Mc dietrlbolloo of watat to the CII ) of Alleolowog.as . . . ••f ac. 3. That all unto for the use of the water shall 1 . 0 uyablo In advance to .he fret day of April u• xt after the cn ire t. and annually In advance from that day. to City Treasurer, at lilt °MCP or lib Plecoor let•lowm, end to all rents nonalning unpaid on theildth day of wild mouth of April there 'hall be added 6 per ceut., and to rents r. roaming cop I on the Oral doy of June tOttiMilltt th en. oh no added lower cent., mull to all rents romaluing un paid on the fluidity ofJoly thereafter thort. Abell he add. t'.o per coot., which amount shall be collected with th• cold rents. and all dolloquit•ts at that date 'the Treasu rer I. forthwith to give tor person owning the prersileu WritteU uoto of cold delhquenclu, 'toting the atimuut tif root including the amount .it per unbolt. (or nun pat moot In full to uld date, nod on the fa lure of tho delloquento to make too required paymeot within ten day. niter 'lute surest, It shall ho the duty Other N .ter Committee forth• with to reuse the ferrule. of such delinquent, to be de. tattled (runs the pipe of ..1011, and cause übs - to he lo• raltotod for the recovory of the root. nod per' truths so due, cm testi MI for ell expenses Incurred In detaching the forrulos. •. liy order of the Committee. JONATUAN lIEICUAIID, City Trustful.. mnr2.9wd mayB.9tw BARGAINS IN WHITE GOODS, SHEETIN GS PRINTS, ETC. GO LOOK AT THEM AT JUSTUS' EVANS'. NO. 730 HAMILTON STREET. p 11(1Pk/S ED AIIENDHENT TO THE CONSTITU TION OF PENNSYLVANIA. JOINT RESOLUTION Proposing au Amendment to the Constitution ef . Pennsylvania. . Be it resolved by the Senate and House r/ Represents• tires of the Ounamonweallh of Pennsylvania in Oener• wi Assembly met, Thst the following amendment of the Constitution of this Commonwealth be proposed to the people for their adoption or rejection manumit to the Provisions of the tenth article thereof, to wit : AMENDMENT ; Strike out the sixth oection of the cloth article of the Conctqullon, aid loam to lien thereof the following: State Trettanntiaba.l be choeen by the qualified elec. tom of the elate, and at such times and fui such term of service an shall be precooked by law." WILLIAM ELLIOTT, 6peaker of the House of itepfeeentallees JAMES S. RUTAN. Speaker ot the Seattle APPUOVID—The twenty-ascond day of March. eau° Domini one thousand eight hundred and seveutystwo. . JNO. W. GEARY. • Prepared and certified for publication puranaut to the Tooth Article of the Constitution. FRANCIS JORDAN, Secretary of the Conatnnntrealth. On1c•1 SEC RORRRoP. TO I P C B MM . P OWI•L 1 TL 2 I 1 ImdhW Dru Goobs. LerIIAISTRE ez RONS, 212 North Eighth Street, Phila. By torololng themselves to a spacial lion of 'sonde and doing. large trade are able to buy add sell cheaper than those who deal In a morn 'emend w or. Nut n>thiug de sirable is wanting to mako up ton most thorough stock of .WHITE GOODS, All aorta of Laces, and at lids season • speclalti Pi ado of NOTTINCIIIAII LACECUUTAINS VogrocaNWbVentaCl:eltWrotuheed."rd. The Our 2700 piece., representing more than 30.000 yard. of HAMBURG EDGINGS AND INSERTINGS Alt select r.tterns and Luttou•Lolo edged. Bins tacking and Lifts tucking combinations made solely fur their own ea.". WHOLESALE AND DETAIL mil I.trw SIIIMER.I oult (A.S. 811151 ER Increase in Businses NECESSITATED INCREASE IN STOCK I SPRING AND SUMMER ANNOUNCEMENT D NIL Y ARRIVALS MEM " .MAMMOTH STORES." E. S. SHIMER & CO., 705 AND 707 HAMILTON ST., ALLENTOWN, PA FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS 017 R STOCK le entirely too extenalve to enutneratn Cr tide.. and will only x 4y. that It In .ull and cotop•ote I every part cular, coninridng nil the &Ire Out noveltlea n the Ileac., mid at privet ihat ...et be uude,eold b any our. Wn keep everything usnAly kept In a Wel regulated Store.• In DRESS GOODS Bach an BLACK SILKS, FA SILKS. FAETY STRIPED SI K.S. JAP A RSR STRIPED SILKS. BLACK • oIIAIR and ALPACAS. BLACK 11 , 001, DELA! SRS BLACK Eo.IIIIAZ , NEs and CANTON CLOTH, ALEXES CLOTH all SHADES. CRETONS. (•A1 ES I• ST h ES. . LIGHT IVEIHIIT PI•P(.INS. COLORED .11•111.4111 S Cobol? b AIPAcAS. C/loNS DRESS 000.05. DOLLY VARDENS, of every possible description nod dodge SHAWLS! SHAWLS! CASHMERE, THIBET, BItOOTIE and FANCY and STIIIPED SHAWLS. WHITE GOODS ! Plain and Plaid Nainsnoks, Victoria Lawns French Nainso• ks and Organdies, Piques and Manua:es, Swiss Cambria, t yv. AIARSAILLES SPREADS, EMBR 0 ID F.RIES, HAMBURG EDGINGS, LACES and IN .BER TINOS. PARASOLS AND UMBRELLAS, FANS, &C Cloths and Cassimeres, Prints, Sheetirgs, Cheeks, 'Finings Cottonade-, lientucky Jeans, Denims, Chambray, Flannels, &c. I=l GRO CERIES WOOL .d other Produce taken fn ex chime.. for floods, for •whlch pay the hucheat market price. Respectfully, E. S. trIINER & CO., Non. 705 and 707 lianditest street apcl7-tf ALLENTOWN, PA. TO THE PUBLIC • REMOVAL. jUR NEW STORE GUTH & KERN, DEALERS IN DRY GOODS WOULD most respectfully call the attention of their friends, customers, and the nubile generally, to the fact that they Lava just reinoved to their newly and elegantly titled ❑p STORE'BUILDINO,one door west of their fern, er location,and Immediately adjoining tiro First National Bank; being the building formerly occupied by Schreiber Bros , where they propose to continue e DRY GOODS BUSINESS n alt Ile varied breaches. They have, the finest. be ..ed cheapest stock of GOODS over offered to the Puhll• erobraciair everythleF that the public can wick, The would especially invite the attention of all to their Be tssortmout of LADIES' DRESS GOODS This department they flatter themselves to be the best ever offered to the public of Allentown and vicinity, for style, quality and cheapuess.good• of the moat approved pattern.. &c., consisting of Black and Fancy Sliku. Black and Panay Silk Poplin, Black and Fancy !admire Black and Vat cy Alpacas. Black and Colored Stripell : Sultings, Black Bom- . ballnes, Black Australian Crape, Black Pop lin., Illyck Velveteen., Bilk Velvet, Sot• in Striped Veraailles Cloth. Hann Striped Lorne Robes. Bilk Strip ed Efoli•ir, Glik Planted pal. taus, Brocade Japanese Silks, Brocade Pop lins, Serge Wool • Plaid. scotch Wool Plaids, Cord Mod Colored Velvet... Eng Ilab and French Chintz., Plaid Poplins, Plaid Plald Nall:woke, 'troche, Thlbet, Ho. • lena, Saratoga, Vigilla, Long Branch, HI . and Watorvliet Loog add Square SHAWLS, In OREAT VARIETY. I'EALL and SEE.jm A. they are buying strictly for cash, they flatter them selves that they can offer or, eat Inducements to parties wiebleg to buy good Roods at reasonable price.. They only gels the public to give them a call and exam• . ne their !dock, and compare prices and quality. They defy competition. Thankful for pant favors. they will endeavor to Merit a continual:ice of the patronage •of their old customers, as well as of all new comer, lllRahl GUTH) aIIOR. KERN. Jan 21 tmd • • 1 an9l.3ns w CAMPAIGN OF 1872. THE LEHIGH REGISTER will be malted to Soy address FROM THIS DATE TILL TEIE NOVEMBER ELECTION FOR FIFTY CENTS We make this Importaot redaction 'for CAMPAIGN 80BSCRIIIIIIIS fur the purpose of furthering the disseml. nation of sorted Reptibllcan doctrines and we hope rein' Repisbilean le this section will assist oar p elect by send. tug . In the names of their Glands. 'more peeled . with prise of aubseritition. am A Good School for Your Boy WIIERE lIE Wild, BE Well Taught, Well fred and Well Cared For, tonal happy tArroon hig., pool! him to CHAnisEItsBURO ACIDEM.Y, J. H. SHU3fAKP: ,, , l'h. U Plloc[psi, Chambenbura. Pa. LEBANON VALLEY COLLEGE, FOIL BOTH SEXES. Bop to builillows. Fell term beg ne Amr.l9o. For •nddrepe the President. L. H. HA OIMOND, A. M., *aural, COTTAGE SEMINARY, FOR YOUNG LADIES, Pottstown. Montgomery County, Pa. Tim I.monty.f.lnrth !tumult xelmon t lb:e4 I nnillutlon Forthrcubirp.utlilresx Rey. JOHN AMILY BOARDING SCHOOL, FOR YOUNG MEN AND noys. At Pottstown, Montgomery County. Pa. au PIIIIN & lila:Wog It H. 'NVOlity x cnml :Modal Poo* NIOU ,•1111,1x gtpt. lIVI allnata.n lwaltliy and ltantirut. Lind :11•tbotuntinal Cann.. of study— tho..aigh anti practi•ti. For (Arcola.. 0.101010. full particular. aatiret...G En. P. 51E10.., A Ai., Principal. ooLLEA:i .Tir, ANllwciiVil3lll.:ltil'LLlL 11,,,m Comm. Ptoparetury to ,c 1101... 11. N. Mllitur. and Nn .a 36L11 y..mr. hi , to.iopt. 13 For Catalogno, addroot lieu. WM. 11. ItUaSeLl... =I JAS. FISK, JR, Coto.tin, blortraplil N 01 D ..w, Vandorlillt. 0 0Rld. Two. d, &c„ with n Motto:lid 111.tory rocntry for tho ioroo vo.ti 0, ILIA Olt ANT lINNW About "BLACK FRIDAY." over :433 Trice $2 Ad dress NEW YORK BOOK CO., 141 Nae,an Ft., N. Y • Campaign Goods for 1872. Attenht WilOted fir our Cutnpat¢o knot's. Rut,. AT SMUT. FAY IMO P.M °HOT uhortr. Now In 1110 tto • ••howl at oura 1.11 ratan. nod Prier Lists or our Floe strut EttKravihg..el llle• Ca...Pais. Moir ruhilles. Charts Photograph . ... Bataan., Plus, Ft a,, and over• time suited w t 'run 11.1 ars po • out'. easily mild, Full ...rules ,tutt for Fl Addrern•MOOßll lloopeerho. 37 Pork Row, Now York. A GENTs %IV ANTlElll o .—Avetits muko more kJ\ money ni 'Work for no thou otonythlug oleo. Bud les,. light yerm.inent Pam:miler., free. O. Bolo so sr co., d Fine Art PrOolfmliers, Portlood, tiatu I. Ub PIANO CO., N. Y. PRI" $290 . • No Awents. Cireulnrs free. BARLOW'S INDIGO BLUE. le the eltenyt,t filet bet erliele In the 10141" k et for BLCRINI/ M A ,. • Th.• gin nit e h both Itarlete ' and Wight, 111.110 On hthoo, end In utta bereorbi DI tbr Set 0. No t.:13 .North Secoud St.. Phllddolph.e. D. I Proerinter. For not •by Drugglete and Grocer,. lert rill 1 . 101 , 111 P ryill Thoy .ho tom , of th.t...w I. mud wu4k u .111 , 1i14 iOll. • rtAIIANT'A I>nuvEsrufir APRNIENT tittod by r.tho,l two. pie AI. of rulluviug ul I dor vu.viney.l4 th to. IV r Kw! into•ono, 110'4.0 it irtll vox oh-fruc ttonl.witluut undo ,tuf linpArtu vl,orto the 0/1.0144 mulch F uud r $1.)000 REWARD For any ratio of Blood ing. Itch!, nr tilrentted I'llits that DR ltsm run' WI. onto. It In prnon-rd ex. nrrontly to curt. tho and nothing also. Sold by all Orntegint, (10 A PPEA • IIN , TED STATES RN R . • . . Nolte.. Is hereby alYou to all persous totaling or dolnx basalt.e lu tic Alt •11 Colltrtlon ni.orlet of I', o..uylva• la. mop. ed o. two coma eg of Lehigh and • ••olaotouty,tbat the Ott.. of A too •1 Tope. for 11,71. nt , cod wider the Act of C. 111.0.1 eni 10,1 •• Act lo pro no vido ft, 1 1 0,.1 tn., 3r ." unproved July:(. IF•CA rot July 14 1070, pod the but.hthoeut.• thereto, tons he • xatellheJ ht toy often rot. 0 0 tn. t•• :1 p ta., for too day. (iota rho Auto day of . Jauo uext. and COURT OF W.PPEAL. will ho hold on nth toy of July. 1872. - ftom an m. to 4 p tn.. at nty oilleo, 6:18 Hamilton street, to ;Ito City of Allentown. All nopools must be 'n wriltntr and a r eal' ' , the puffin. lar mutt, or thing Inspect og which It deol.l. n In equtted,ood mate ti grounds or prluclules Or 411 , 1.1. Ity or error comp/slued WARD RUIIE U.S. Assessor. Ogle° No 518 ltumhltnu street. Allentown. Pa. 'At.l.gulows, Joon 'AM, 0571 POLITICAL CAMPAIGN I • 07 1872. GRANT C WILSON, GREELE Y Sz BROWN, CAMPAIGN CAPS CAPES AND TORCHES, TRANSPARENCIES BANNERS, With portraits or any device for all portion. (Ilk, Iluntiog owl Muslin Flogs of oil lot hand or rondo to order. Chtueno .4tuterk.n of all nito. nod n.y ea ; paler 13AlLoote, Firo SEc., &c. Cotatotigu Clubs fitted out at the Lowest Rates at WISLy.SCHEMLE'S, CAMPAIGN DEPOT, 49 South bird St., Philadelphia. ir3) SEND FOR cluctlLAn. Elm,r BEST FURNITURE 1IEIIE! GEO. D. SMITH, NOS. 621 A: 623 NORTH SECOND STREET, = ERTAIILISIIED OVER QUARTER OP A CENTURY TIIE Altutt rum vomit rplloble bunco on North Second airst li• tog it prartlcul and htt•lng lung nat./- ri In the Imnlnms nil a loc. ',moult" my lot pectin°, mak Ina It mtfc In bnYom 111 , on Nottlmltlon or ...c,Pco ncol.,toin I untie nll lily Old p OM. atm Mouth , throuchunt my native county to call nod gut nulled, a. 1 !UV/01,1110,d My prime. to BIM GEO. D. SMITH, Nos. 621 and 623 North Second Street, ( (IItTWEEN WM, AND COCM STRISTH) = DI I'llo said 'Fre:tourer charges himself with the followliwiteciaints LIS motley; Mt, By Will. Nnale, tax eollector South Whitehall Seine,' Ceara 'l'. I'. 11111711 note tllsroUntetlt 'l'. F. Max " State appropriation County appropriation Cash on halal frollr last year • Cash revolved To ienelling the different sehools WllllllO5 Et: tll°6l Ilnutto It pulling 011th :root ol houses Fool awl ra tistor,for different schools, Hotel ex 510110014 for stated meetings Dreth , %1t( lonerv, Fire losortotecTax Insuring Egypt School House_ 2 N . ..! Interest on money !mined 161111 Discount, 11110 ut Allentown National Bonk, Collecting tux Secretary 'S ssiory Treasurer's Sninry A.,ulltorU4 ret Balance In • hands or the Treasurer, May 2.1, Iff;2. . • 60 .13 • We.tholinilerstaned,have examined the allow, fiCe4lllllim fil the Treasure• 14 Whitehall School Board. and found the shove trite and correct an repre+ented 25 1 , 72. E. XENOPHON KOHLER. NATHAN EBEIIIIA RD, Ant torn.. MEI NOTICE IS GER Ell V GIVEN THAT the otolereigned have made applicall•qy to the Court of Common nee.f Lettish Cooney to grant ch•rter or ty.c roorattun to the' 1111/1W STREAM METH.. OW a El'lt.oo PA I. Cit MICH," to hero 11. pie a of lep mowed smote city to Allautoo n. catd county, the yoticlee aunt a loosot which h• ve b•en Moo Jur the Prothonotary's 01Xce, ad note.. coMotent niacin Do ehowu to the coutrary ou or ho' re the fith day of rieptent• her, A. U., 18.72,, it WWI be for the Court to [runt said chatter of I LO neat roan of • JAMBcowl. I; D. COLE, M. J. KnAllEti. Jll•vigi IMAIII/10. DAVID A WALKER , JUbl A El a. ALM.. EIZE 85119 7W 11 fil 9 , 3 15 LM II 141 2 , 4.14 411 11 I NI I 111 2 111/ =SE S2R2O 90 2.'15 41 11:10 19 , L l 2 111 2 ta 8 11 000 00 02 /12 I I 40 110 4 (0( =EI
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers