ADVERTISING RATES St 1 mo. 9 moo. 6 mo■ I.r • '.4•N 4po.lßfo '4ll . 4.60 . 0 . .23 9 . .18:1 1'7.03 200 11.00 17.00 2.5.00 46.4 • 19.60 22.00 40.03 6410 20.00 40.00 60.19) 80.00 16/.00 110 CO 200.41 One Square. Two &nuns Three Square Six Squares. seamier Column Ilalt Column . Ole Column Professiorml Cards sl.ooperllne per sm. Admiuletrator'■ and Auditor's Notices. S3.(XI go Notices, SO cents per line let insertion 15 cents per Ins *sett subsequent insertion. Ten lines is rate itonatitnte c &quer,. ROBERT IREDELL, JR., PUBLISHER. ALLENTOW N. PA CARPETS, ,01. L. CLOTHS, WINDOW SHADES, • MATTINGS, &C, Closing ont balance of Spring Stock at reduced prices to make room for new geode for Fall Trade. Every Article Marked Down. FIXED PRICES. FIXED PRICES AT SAM'L G. KERRS' CARPET WAREHOUSE, 632 HAMILTON STREET. DRS. JORDAN dr. DAVIESON, Proprietors of the Geller!) of Anatomy and Museum of Science, 807 CHESTNUT ST., PHILA. Hauling published a new edition of their lecturee,oes. taming most •aluable Information on the cense,. goose eneleCee and trestownt of diseases of. the reproduotive system, with iteldelelre ox 111•881•11 e and the carton causes of the LOSS OF !Mennen, With foil lustructlons fo its complete restoration; also a chapter on aseeeeal, lie• People.. and the cease or Celle, being the most• cost• Yasuissiva Woe! on thesubAect ever. yet published— comprising 200 pages. Math, free to any address for Twenty•five cents Address Drs. JORDAN R. DAVIESON, CONSULTING OFFICE, 1825 Filbert Street, Philadelphia do.w CANDIES ! DRAM SI G. A. FREY, 3IANUFACTURER OP ALL KINDS ^.F CONFECTIONERY ! would Inform the poblio that he ban (be larded display of Candy, of all kind., Lamy and common, new style., inch a. Cream Choecqate Cocoa-Kist, Greek Cocoa-Nut Paste Iceland Moss Paste, Extra French Cream Almonds, be.. ate% and dealer la all lambi of FRUIT, each as ORANOES.FIGS. LEMONS. DATES NOTE, &C.. &C. fga"ALEID—A largo variety of TOYS 4 conotantly on hand 0. A 'Fitt Y, jyll3.lrndaiw) 27 North eleventh Street LACE CURTAINS, WINDOW SHADES, CORNICE DECORATIONS, LAMBREQUIN% LACE DRAPERIES, • PIANO COV,ERS, FURNITURE COVERINGS, TASSELS AND LOOPS, NOTTINGHAM, CURTAINS, CRETONES, SUMMER CURTAINS, BROCATELLE, Special Interior Decorations, TO ORDER, AT MODERATE PRICES. WALRAVEN'S MASONIC HALL, NO. 719 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA. teb2. dkw CAUTION. To families who welt. Kerosene or Combination Oil. Kerosene Oil le not safe unman It's from 110 to 173 deireet which yea can allonym find at oho well known China Sloe of _ _ WM. REIMER 611 HAMILTON STREET, =! Also. heythlng ID the CHINA. GLASS or QUEENS WARS Hoe at the rely lowest rstea. and Blau+e the ver but ENGLISH WARE, Warranted not to graze. N. o.—ln regard to the Combination Oil, which agent. tell ion le non-explasive; I have thoroughly •••tad Rand 1 any It la Explosive an.l Dangerous. I can icier to a, explosion.; In oue week In this City where the Combine lion Oil wee in nee 0c1.211. d LADIES' lIAIR BRAIDS, I ward lung, verY SO inches long, very full' Diadem Braids neros the head, very thick. without roll, Long Site °uric ...... Very Long Side Curls, Natura1 .......300 IFizettes GUARAN rEE FOR REAL NATURAL HAIR. LOUIS BALZER, 1230 CHESTNUT ST., PIMA ma7l.9mda,w) LensEß I LUMBER 21 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 MACK OAK SAW LOOS wasted . • . Vphlch the highest market prip will be geld o r deltv rs. d•er'.lutv 12.1 g POPULAR MUSIC BOOKS 'Now select the Music 13onks needed during the next Autumn, and agreeably occupy your Summer Leisure in examining,' playing and sing leg from them. THE STANDARD! Price CM I $13.50 per tins Destined to be the Banner Church Mutio Book of M Beason. Rimer., leaden, tesehere I 'Baby round' the bit nor! SPARKLING RUBt ES I Price 95 cents. ' For Sabbath &hoots. Noce better. Tilt P•LORIM'S HARP! Price 00 canto. • For Vestries end Prayer Meeting, Unexcelled. T.ke wtrb you.for enterteloment at Ibuntnar Retort, , Tglt 110SI0a TREeetrell. 225 piece of new and popular Songs and Pianoforte 8111;.:11111411. I" F l u l l ‘ t e Of the beet Vocal Duets. Or. OPSR 010 "SAW, of the bed Opera . Bongs. Or, PIANISTI A _M. InU pail of the best Plano Piece.. Or, • P141".1°11711 0 1;111%f the but Plano pieces. Beelt of the abo•e fige book, rods al CO Inboards. or IM 001 u cloth. Has more than 200 Ingo Pogo. full of pop ular tousle.. and either bole a most entertaining eom 210•F:slOgirieltAlailttlIRD eent.for thePresent.post• gLag. sod of the other books for the T. tail Prise. OLIVER CITRON & CO., Boston. V. g. DII/BOS & CO., Nevi York, • our limiosisdr • KO VOL. XXVT HAYES, COULTER & CO., = Heaters, Ranges, Low Grates, AND MARBLEIZED ELATE MANTELS, Rio. 1305 Chestnut St., PIIfLADELPIIIA i!!l.Bend for calologoo JEWETYS PALACE RITHIGFRATOR! The Coolest and Most Perfect Rit PRICER- ATOR ever Constructed ALSO, SA R PA TENT COMBINED Dining Room Water Cooler ATM REFRIGERATOR PORCELAIN LINED. For unto at ISAAC S. WILLIAMS & CO'S. ROUSE FURNISHING STORE, No. 72S Market St., Philadelphia .Descriptivo Circulate mint on appllc.ion Established' 1804 mayl7 -2m Jaw) A K. WIT'I`BIAN, NOTARY PUBLIC AND CIVIL ENGIABNB T. B. LEISENRING NINTRANCE AGENT, FIRE, LIFE, AND LIVEBTOO3 WITTMAN & LEISENIIING Real Estate Agents and Scriveners 708 HAMILTON STREET, (Up-Stalre.) Have upon their honks some very desirable propertle which will be cold at sew prices and on easy terms among which are the following 142 N. Sleventh Street. Zl9 N. Ninth Street. 921 a . Fountain Street. 438 N. Seventh Street. 8•I Ilatulitun Snout. Pal S. Ninth Street. acont Lets In all parte o 101 North Tooth Street. the city. 449. Firth Street. GAS FIXTURES. THACKARA, BUCK & CO., MANUFACTURERS, Have Just opened at their wholesale and retail salesroom 718 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. NEW STYLES OF GAB FIXTURES, TO WHICH TREY INVITE TILE ATTENTION OS I.I.IRCUASERS, Their new styles, color and finish aro unsurpassed LOW PRICES. They sloe thvite the attention of the public to their flu assortment of lifilOlCF. Ac. lapr2O.9mdsw I=l •11 CC . 700 11 , ; ', 1 , arctint ileSt roved by miner ti poison or other means, and the vital organs ursted beyond the hint of repair. 1/y•petnilla or Indigestion. Headache, Pain in the Sitoulilers, Conglis 'ltghtness of the Chest. Dirsi. nets, Sour Eructations of Stomach, had Taste in the Mouth, litho+ Attacks, Palpitation of the limo, In flammation of the Lungs, Pain in the regions of the Kid neys, and a lunched other painful symptoms, are the off. spi hogs in Dyspepsia. In them complaints it has no equal, nod one bottle will prove a Letter guarantee of its motto. titan a lengthy advertisement. For Female ('Gut plaint Ng in young or old, mar ried o Mogi.% at the dawn of womanhood, or the turn of life, r the, Tonic Bitters display so decided an influence that a marked improvement is soon perceptible. For Inflammatory and Chronic. 'then tttttt Inns and Gout, Ilihot. Remittent and intermit tent Fevers, Diseases of the Blood, I.iver, Riciness and Bladder, the, Bitters have Nil' equal. Such Diseases are caused be Vitiated which is generally produced by derangement of the Digestinco Digatix. They are n Geatlo Purgative as well as a Tonle, posseonsing aim the peculiar merit of aciing as a ptowerfol agent in telievitig Congestion tie Inflammation of the Liver and Visceral Organs. and itt Bilious Diseases. For Sklar Diseases, Etuptions Teller, Salt Rheum, Illoteltel, Spots, Pimples. Pust ules, Iloilo, Car. Ituneles, Iting-worms, Scald.ll CM!, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch, Scurfy, Dionollorations of the Skin, Humors anti Dis. ease. of the Skin, of whatever tonie or nature, are lit <tally dog up auulcarried out of the system in a short •tinte by the use of the, Bitters. The properties of DR. WAI.KP.R'S VINNGAR I - S ervos are Aperient, Diaphoretic and Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, Sedative, Coutder•lrri tanboSudorific, Alterative, and • . . Grateful Thouaanda prodaltil VINHGAR BIT• 71 , .. the most wonderful Invigorant that ever sustained tlwe sinking system. J. WALKER, Prop r. It. II. IIIeDONALEV& Druggists and Gen. Ants., San Francisco, Cal., and conic! of Wadtington and Charlton Sts., New York SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS. march o.9tu do. PIIII.A.DELPIIII4 NII It OEONS' DAN BABE INSTITUTE. No 14 North NINTH street. above Market. B. C EVERETT'S Patera Oreattettue Pres ure 'nuns rotative Iy cury runtur.s wheo ell others roll. Also, lane •14. •rity• of Cl.tp Truesee. Improved Mantle Stvelloge, Beni. Shoulder Bruce., abd.eulosl iuppurtere. sales. B adages. Spine lontruntoois, Crutches, Ate. Lodlos Mtnoded by Mr. Everett. Eir Remember, the eecood Truss Store tame Mute Street • . . . . . .-. . _ .. . . . . • . . ~: ~, ...,.., ~.. . ~ .. . . . A 1 • .. .. . . (mv7•6mdrw PATENT Presidential aimpaign! CAPB,CAPES& TORCHES 'Hood for ILLUSTFUTIth Cm CULAIT, And PRIOB LIST. CUNNINGHAM & HILL NUFAO PURBRS, No. .04 Church St.. WWI w PAlladdlphfa i tc iicinaL NO CURE, NO PAY. DR. H. 1): LONG A KELL • °redo:HA/the Hui varsity of Pentaeylrani., at Philadel phia hot been In aureessful practice for a number of yearn in rations parts of the Putted Status; will promptly at tend to all I.rlteCil.. hiu.profeegion at his rosins. Enat side of Sixth street. Gel. Ilamilton and Inattea, ALLENTOWN, PA • No Patent Metileinix are tai l or recommended; the rem. fallen atimial-teregi are linage which will not breait down the constuutiou. but renovate till. ggyetem from all lajorlex It ham anatainmi from enineral tneglicinex, and leave It Dia healthy tied perfectly cured condition. CONSUAPTION, BRONCHITIS. DYSPEPSIA. and ull diseases of the Lange, Throat. Stotnach, nod which yearly carry thousands to untimely gray.. can undoubtedly ho cured. • MELANCHOLY ABERRATIO:s.7,t that state of alienation and aberration of mind which ren ders persona Incapable °Conj.:yin, the Pleaaurea of Per forming the duties of life. RHEUMATISM AND PARALYSIS, in any rum or condition, chronic or acute, warranted car able. Epilepsy % or falling sick neat, and chronic or :Web. born caves aft hMALE.DISEASES speedily and rguliriglly removed: Salt Rheum, skin Dike:tees (of yearn Milintiing) every description of Iliceratioue, Piles and Scrofulous die. noaen, warranted cared. Niii-Particular MIOIIIIOII given to private diaeases of every description of both sexes. Ladles sulteriett front any complaint Incidental to their sex, con consult the doctor with assurance of relief. Cancer oared. and To more of all kinds removed without the knife or drawing blood. Diseases of the EYE AND EAR duce..folly and effectually removed. 4WD, Longaker will te...ke visite any distance If de. tired ; can be addressed ny letter (confidentially) and toed. urine sent With proper dituctiona to any part or the county. Orrice: Elva tide of Sixth street, between Hamilton and Walnut Allentown, Pa. may 28-ly POLES OR INEMORRIFIOIDN. PILEu OF ALL KINDS perfectly and permanently CORED, without pale, timpp r. cattailca or inetrnmonts, by WM. A. IticCANDLESS, M. D., 'SD] ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA, PA, Who can refer you to over 1200 cam. cured lu Philadel phia uleme. we demiro to any to therenflileted, there IP positively no deception In the cure of these Dtanaars, it mann. nut how long or how mt..ly yen one hero °fir( elvd, cation. you. We also cure Etatula, nature Frahm... Stricter«, and II !creation of the borer bowel, Come you that Ere SIIEEIIOE, we win ME deceive 1.1, We bore patient, from almost every State in the Colon cud (rein Europe. nave treated theme di.asea for twenty yearn without a failure. apr 26-1). • piIIILONOPIES' OF 311AltItIAGE.—A NlttP Cooling OF I.NOTOloloo.dollvero,l at the Ponna. Polytechnic and Anatomical ?deem.. 12iFt Chestnut et., three, doors ,1110V0 Twelfth, Philaibilphla, embracing the subjects: Mow to Live aid Whitt to ',lvo fort Youth, Ma curtly and Old Age; Manhood flenerally Reviewed; The cause of Indigestion; Flatulence end °oriel,. Dimiases accounted fur; Marriage Philosophically considered. These lectures will be forwarded ou recelpt of 25 cents by sildres ling: S , ecretnry of 11.0 lieu.. Pet.yrgettgic AND AN•TONIII:At. (3111t011t St., Philadelphia. P AMIN nue wi urnEttotiEirs FLAVORING EXTR A CTS Are warranted equi.l to slily made. They are prepared from li,, a (rom. 0101 will be too IA much hell,; thou inarty of thu Fit roc. 0 tiiot ere sold 4(4-Aok pour armor or Druggist for Wittnerger's Extracts. lIA BLOWS INDIGO BLUE sothou, doubt the best 'wart. In the market. for W goringlot/tux . It it color more 0 eter 111 II four times 11,, 01111.• trelelit or indigo, sad •ri• then toy oth• r /cosh Aloe lo the soariiet . Thu only ge:/111.171E IN that pot or et • ALFRED WILTBERGER'S D LIR) STORE, 'o. =1 NORTH SECOND STREET, PHIL Aft' A., I'A The LADVI. hove 11101 WILTBOIIIIEIeg (101 l Ii A RI.I.IV'T 13.1108 010.11. al eau, are counter/41Y. For mac by most ()roes, and Druggist. WILTBEB.OEWS INDELIBLE INK Will he/ou lld 00 trial lobar; superior art fele. Always ou baud for sale et resit ushln takea l'u o around S ICEs, °rookie MEDICI s 51, Chatuoie Sklar, Stiouttes. Tapioca, Pea I. Sag°, d all strtielea In iho drug Ilne, at ALFRED ‘VILTHEItti ER'S DRUti STORE, Juno 211-17 •0...^3.1 North Second et.. Phila., Pa. Ayer's Hair Vigor, For restoring to Gray Hair its natural Vitality and Color. color, with the gloss and freshness of youth. Thin hair is thickened, falling hair checked, and baldness often, though not always, cured by its use. Nothing can restore the hair where the follicles are de stroyed, or the glands atrophied and decayed; but such as remain can be saved by this application,, and stimu lated into activity, so that a new growth of hair is produced. Instead of fouling the hair with a pasty sedi ment, it will keep it clean and vigorous. Its occasional use will prevent the hair from turning gray or falling otf, and consequently prevent baldness. The restoration of vitality it gives to the scalp arrests and prevents the forma tion of dandruff, which is often so un cleanly and offensive. Free from those deleterious substances which make some preparations dangerous and inju rious co the hair, thee Vigor can ()lily benefit but not harm it. If wanted merely for a HAIR DRESSING, nothing else can be found so desirable. Containing neither oil nor dye, it does not soil white cambric, and yet lasts long on the hair, giving ita rich, glossy lustie, and a grateful perfume. Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Practical and Analytical Citemistei, LOWELL, MASS. 801.1) IN ALLENTOWN BY W. E. BARNES & BON. ' Ayer's Sarsaparilla Is widely known ft ' - `lc;it• i.. as one of the most • kt* i i ke ' C• 1. effectual effectual remedies I;tIf•\ l /i '',i• ever discovered for .. , ,,A,s ! V r cleansing the 5y5.;,,,,W• .;,, , ,W• ,', :5 tern and purifying '•V, ‘ , 17 ?- . ‘ 1 ,,: %,,:!.'' the blood. 'lt has -` , 1,' ,. k.:L:i40/ 4 ‘ , stood the test of s •••, ,N,.'4,y :-'f7. years, with a con - -,. "•:. stantly growing rep • • • • ' utation, based on its intrinsic virtues, and sustained by its re markable cures. So mild as to be safe and, beneficial to children; and yet so searching as to effectually purge out the great cor ruptions of the blood, such as the scrofulous and syphilitic contamination. Impurities, or diseases that have lurked in the system for years, soon yield to this powerful anti dote, and disappear. Hence its wonderful cures, many of which, are publicly known, of Scroilda, and all scrofulous diseases, Ulcers, Eruptions, and eruptive dis orders of the skin, Tumors, Blotches, Boils, Pimples, Pustules, Sores, St. Anti y's Fire, Rose or Erysipe -1118, Tetter, Salt Rhe , Scald Head, Ringworm, and internal Ul cerations of the Uterus, Stomach, and Liver. It also cures other com plaints, to which it would not seem especi ally adapted, such as Dropsy, Dyspep sia, Fits, Neuralgia, Heart DISCLISIN Female Weakness, Debility, and Leucorrhoea, when they are manifesta tions of the scrofulous poisons. • It is an excellent restorer of health and strength in the' Spring. By renewing the appetite and vigor of the digestive organs, it dissipates the depression and listless lan gunrof the season. Even where no disorder appears, people feel better, and live longer, for cleansing the blood. The system moves on with renewed vigor and a new lease of life. PREPARED BY Dr. 1. C. AYER & CO., Lowell, Mass., Practical and Analytical Chemists S OLD BY. ALL MIUGGISTS EVEIIir%VILERE. tiOLU iN ALLEN TOWN 13Y W. E. BARNES' & SON NoTicE. CITY TAX for 1872. By a implement to the City Charter of Allentown. ap proved the 221 atty. of March. IdO. the City Treeenrer is made the receiver 0.11 city taxes All of said city tax retnelolog unpaid n the firm day of •osnat next. five Per cent. shell he added; .11 of •ald tax pereining ennsid on the drat day of umber next tee cent..bAN De added. Notice Is hereby given that the city tax fof 1872 will be recalled atoffice. No: fi39 Hamilton etroet, Allentown. lell.4mdaw) JONATHAN NEWHARD, Treas. ALLENTOWN, PA.; WEDNESDAY MORNING, AuAllsT 7..187 ...In the Name of the Prophet Sign 1 Resolutions at is Greeley mass meeting in Scott county, Tenn. From tlip Knoxville Chronicle Wninums, The millennium has dawned and the welt is lying down with the lamb, and the lion la eating straw like an ox, and the A.B. ti nista and secessionists metal tinder the same Ileg, and the radicals and rebels walk arm in arm and the free traderii anti protem thinites are cheek by Jim), and the •Irish end negroes eat out tl the same dish. and Horace Greeley and Jeff Davis sleep in the same lied, and a sucking child is playing on the hole ,of the asp, and women vote and ride a-straddle, and everything 13 lovely and the gouge badge high ; therefore, Res•lved, Ist, That inasmnch its the time has come for all men to eat tort and turn somersets, and no man thinks what he says, or believes what •Ite thinks, we unanimously recognize the. absolute equality of men, in eluding negroes, women mail Chinese; that we believe a mule's ears are as :Vain as a horse's end that the leopard can change his spots, and that the negro is a man sad it brother, and having always favored his nd mission tii the ballot. hex, we now welcome him to the social circle, having something of an idea that all the world was born ol a mon. key, that things arc not what they used to be end that there is a great deal of upsidedown. ed ness and downside-upwardness, and a be ildering mixed.up arrive ness generally. Resolved, 2d, That being in great doubt whether the rebellion tidbit or succeeded, awl not being certain whether Grant or Lee sin rendered to Appomattox, and being of opinion that the Ftoath was either right or wrong, and the North was either wrong or right, and that neither was either hurt, we are unanimous ly in favor of letting by.gones he by genes. of burying the stars and stripes in the same grave with the stars and bars, or mixing three rats of " Dixie" iv lilt two parts of •` Yankey Don. die," and of marrying the Union eagle to the rebel buzzard. That free whisky and universal ignorance coupled with free love and universal salvation make earth a paradise and heaven a certainty ; but that, nevertheless, all things are turned round anti the times arc out of joint, every straight road is ero(died, the earth turns back ward on Its axes, Alen waltz ziz nit; and their brains are topsy-turvy, the world is all lie witched, and a woman is the coining MIL lieolved, 'that inasmuch as Jtulas 'setoiot, though once a wicked man, afterwards he came an apostle, and inasmuch as 11,thediet Arnold shed blood in defence of American liberty, and inasmuch as .1• It'. Davis stns not noininnted, we art heartily in favor of titmice Greeley, believing as we (I() that the D,lnoc racy is not dead, but steepen', and that all roads from Greeley go to Grant ; that Greeley as an original abolitiorost and Jett Davis as uLa aboriginal secessionist always worked to the 8111110 end, and their present combination is only a renewal of past co-operation and watt (lentil! will It be in the eve of all men when the arch m.etny of the Ku-Klux becomes the it chief captain ; when the prince of Protection becomes the king of Free Trade; when the champion of temperance bears the banner 01 the bar-room business, and Satan leads the Host of Heaven, then truly shall the last be firs:, for great Is the Greeleyness. FROM WASHINGTON The !li'eir Orleans •• Republican** Almn %lee% Greeley. WASIIINOTON, July 29.—There is consider able cinunotion among the Liberals herd this afternoon over a double-leaded editorial In Friday's New Orleans Republican, foresitad owing its intention to abandon the Liberal movement In consequence of an agreement between Governor %Yarmouth, and leaders a the Democratic party in Louisiana to hold a ccnventiou and consolidate the two tickets headed by Governor Warmouth Liberal Re- Republican, and McEvoy, Democrat, so that there will be but .one ticket as against the . regular Republican ticket. The Republican which has been the recognized organ of Wai - mouth, says : It is_bust to be frank at liist in matters of grave importance like this, and we cannot help it while we regret it If we should now differ from the expressed views of Governor %Yarmouth, whom we have so long and so faithfully sustained, because we believed him right. • Strom; Le orange. " We, therefore, emphatically say to the Liberal Convention that if it indorses the Mc Evoy ticket, or forms one of similar material, we shall Strenuously labor to defeat it. We regard the McEvoy ticket as representing the negro-hating, schoolhouse-burning, re eating Bourbonists, who never outgrow a prejudice. or permit progressive innovation upon their worn-out notions. Good these last ditchers cannot learn, and bad they will not forget. " That this class should be inexorably ex cluded from the exercise of political power is essential to the well-being of the State. Their ascendancy would, in our view, reinaugurate the horrors of tour years tezo, when the Re publicans were cast into jail on false preteneta, In order that disguised assassins night. revel in murder at midnight. We cannot forget that their clubs, which are now being rem gunized under their old designations, were in strumental in. crimsoning the streets of New Orleans with the life blood of unoffending Re publicans, and that they Manifest the same unrelenting spirit of hatred toward the Re- publicans to day." A dressing which is at once agreeable, healthy, and effectual f 0 r preserving the hair. it soon restores faded or gray hair to its original =9 The Washington correspondent id the N. V. Times stye : Gen: Pleasant. ii, in his letter to Mr. Schurz, prides himself up in a reputation for veracity. There are a good many ovoid, here, however, who would not place implicit trust in any statement of ills till it had some ether evidence of truthfulness to sustain it. Just about a year ago he was representing to everybody who came In contact with him, and especially to such members ache press,ts he could reach, that in his quarrel. as he per sisted in calling it, with Mr. Boutwell, lie was sustained by the President. The day beffire he was dismissed lie stated positively that he had-not-beenrilinested to resign, and it after ward turned out that lie bad received a writ ten request of the kind a week her .re. lie rep resented to many Senators and members of Congress during the whiter previous that he was acting in accordance with the wish of the President In lobbying for the repeal of the in come tax in opposition to Secretary Bo atwell's recommendation for its retention. The re stilt prdved that be acted on his own authori ty, no doubt having a "distinct impression" that'the President was personally favorable to a repeal. He wits dismissed front the service virtually—that 16, was suspended and a suc cessor appointed, Who was confirmed by the Senate without opposition, sod the whole country, including the New York Tribune. approved. Ile did not resign as that paper effitori liy affirms. In reply to the President's request that be should resign he sent au cili a,' letter declining to do so: This he accent peeled with a private mite assuring the PP si dent of his friendship, and devotion and fti ture support. Ile will hardly c aim that his letter to Mr. Schurz does not give the lie di met to that voluntary statement of his own If it should seem to be called tor,' a good many things not likely to increase his reputa tion for truth or honesty can be recounted. Gov. McCoox,who is one of the most prom• bent statesmoi on the Padfile slope, says : "I have not been in California lately,and cannot say much of the State from personal exper ience; hut I am daily in the receipt of letters from prominent gentlemen, who know what they ale talking about, and on whose author ity 1 can rely, and they assure me that Cali fornia wjll give a large Republican majority for Gun. Grant in the fall. * * * In Ne vado, too, Gen. Grant is safe ; the State will give him a rousing majority. I can say Oda with confidence, as I have a personal knowl edge of the tam that warrant me in making the assertion. In' Nebraska the Influence of Tipton will not be able to control two bun dred votes, notwithstanding. the vigorous stumping he has made of the State. Utah and Montana are also sure for the prese ad- mtnistrat'ou, and I cannot sea any quarter in which Greeley can look for success. ' Ton Trenton Gazette replies to the Tel bunro,s boasts of Greeley's popularity In New Jersey.: "We are In the pits salon of infer• mattes carefully and conscientiously gathered from every part of New Jersey, and we have yet to hear of the first locality where there Is such development of Liberal sentiment as. to create the slightest alarm:" LETTER FROM KANSAS ATemsoN, Jnly.2s; 1872. Friend Ireddl :—Perlinps you would like In It ar from "beyond Om Mississippi?" Row things look here politically, and whether wit have any tiberals. The fact is, we have few; ' hut then they are such who have held all the offices in the Republican paily they ate coin. indent to hold and now go Libentl-Democratie to go through the "chairs" again in ease'they win, or have been disappointed In not getting one they are incompetent to 1111. Front the mimes I have heard from your city as Repub licans who " went over," I should judge you are in the Pllll3O predicament. Well, it's weed. ing out ; It's handing, over stereotyped candi dates; it's driving out the tumble bug who gathers the trumps as they fall front the table. Kansas is good for 30,000 for Grant and son. The Republicans of this State will rally Mill meet the Old Keystone next :November. We will elect all our Congressmen and United States Senator and Governor, With equally as handsome a majority. We are so used to Democratic assurance that their blatherskite dots not frighten us worth a cent. I receive a paper from your city once in at while, that huts for its motto " ludependent Nni Neal rid,'' nod then goes for the fool of the Tribune for President. I presume the aka Is borrowed from England. She wits inde• pendent but not neutral during the war, and then sided With the South. But how In lleav• en's mune did Nelson and Tilton ever get rec °netted. The fact 61,110 even (tilers Tilton's Paper as a premium. To err is human, hut then I never thought Nelson wotild peddle " tree love documents," or is it all the doings of the "man froM across the sea 1" Dow will those old Andrew Jackren coppers,ever man age to vote Inr the old "spiritualist 1", 1 ant inclined to think that if they COMMUIIO too much With the spirit it Will beat them worse than in ISOS, in October, when they all came " in" to hear and see Nelsun figure out the victory, but Nelson h ul busitiess out or town on that day. They are not apt to be tripped rap on a similar ple.i the second time. I won der whether this Greeley, they are supporting, is the same individual Nelson and the mar with the chow tobacco on his shirt front for a Melts! pin, used to teat: t the heroes from the country as IL dangerous demagogue, abolition ist, nigger lover, and the man who putt the ievenue stamp on the much box. If it is and they find tint, they wtll consider them guilty el duplicity and won't stile for Greeley. I suppose it will take some liberals of your city at me time before they ca.: take the stump for Greeley. That dozen campaign old " goat story" can nut be fixed around so as to lit in a day, and the minority representation (pies lion must undergo sn ou t tiller:ohm before it r•nn be used on that side of the question. That, I am told, will be sent to Kutztown to he re• modelled, its owner cover beta:; ticeemel of possessing much in V.•ntl t'•• If we had nothing more at ,take than the men at the Mal of the tickets. the 'weld, at ot Greeley's election a..nit be bearable, bat then we hav, something higher in view, We want to perpetuate that whose CstabLshment cost is many a dick hour and many a dear lite. All Greeley advocated he surrenders; every theory he advanced, every principle Ile expounded, every view he held, during the war, he throws down and says, gentlemen, only make me President, and in so doing he shows himsell a vaccilating, uncertain and unreliable man, unworthy of the position for which he a.aks our support. I need not allude In his insta bility (luring the War. was as cluing cable as the four winds of heaven. He advocated some very wise measures, all honor to him for that, hut he lacked that executive ability to ex ecute them which said at the Wilderness " will light it out on this line if it takes all sum mer." S. THE GROWTH OF SUGAR AT 4031 E The annual statements if• the commerce of our lead ng Atlantic snipers (hit& a heavy importation if cane sugar aunt inola , ses from Cuba, Port-Rico, Brazil and anilla, with no returning trade sufficient to pay more than a traction of the cost. In Enelan , l the tra Ii in sugar always sir ws the same results, so that, heavily as the tea trade is against the two countries, that in sugar is not lesi so. The countries from which we obtain cane-sugar in sure these results by levying enormous tariff. rates on all kinds M . imports. Their ut cessit les for revenue are impetions and their resources limited. Hence the pokey tiny pursue is inure a twitter cif micessit y than choice. 'thishiings us to the conside•ration, ••W try do we not raise enough sugar tit 11.4110 for our own use ?" We have every adv ming.- 14 soil and cli• mate, and the cultivation of the sugar-erne in the United States Is so far Irma being an ex periment, that it has been a very ext. us ve in lerest fur generations past in portions a the Golf States, chiefly Louisiana. Before the civil war this cane sugar culture had risen to considerable importance in that region, though always r e taided by the 111111111 v of the sugar plantations to be sulimergi ti by the overflows of the Mississippi river. But the war lett a interest in a sad plight, inure than imir fi 0 plantations being inundated or abandoned, and since the return of peace the work of re cuperation has been proceeding with unavoid able slowness. . . . .. The vast importance of the cotton culture in the south has already overshadowed sugar; No doubt it has been for the hest LI at this has been so, slice it has enabled the American cotton•crop to obtain and keep lin I of the markets of the world as the lending source of supply. IL is out now probable that the as cendency el the Amerman crop will ever ho shakenots it hiss survived its greatest pet I , the destruction of the slave system., and is now as strong as ever. 'This, then, seems to us 11 to it geed dine to urge renewed attention to the culture of ettne-sugar In Florida, Lonishout, I exits, Arkansas and Mississippi, as the Anler• icon demand is tar greater than ever and con. stately increasing. • The sugar planters must be aware that the northere people are, and have been for many years, making great efforts to tied some means or raising their own - supplks of sugar, told they ought to be aware that these northern States when once they set about a thing et this kind are not likely to be easily diScour aged. The general effort 'mule to obtain a supply of sugar from the sorcum, although successful only in producing . molasses, has resulted in making the stagum a large and perhaps permanent crop, its the records of the Agricultural Department and the census show. The ettlutre (tithe sugar-beet 11118 111 011 at. tempted fit .so teeny places 111111 With such tonsifest determination to persevere, that here again will itlivitoito) he in 11 18W 3 . 84114 an other largi3 nothern resource for saccharine juice. While we would not discourage these ef• forts, but rather rejoice at them, we should prefer to have cane sugar-culture rehabilitated at the south in all Its former poisperity, for then there would be some prospect of Its go lug ahead in the sane manner as 'the cotton production. We can really see no eft td rea le) 1 why the American production cif sugar, stiould not in tune rise to as great proportions as the cotton-culture. Bat New-orleatia, which is the headquarters of the sugar plant. ing 'unrest, Is . 0 bs 'cited in the cotton-.r it e its v isibly to, neglect 811V,81. Under such eireurnstio ces the only resource for the northern States is to go Into the pro. ductlon of beet-root sugar 011118, large a settle its possible, and at the earliest moment. 'rills is the Mimi reliance of France tint! Germany, and•w•as made 110 ill 1118 era of Napoleon, when the Ilritisit bleckade closed the centi nental ports. Although we have no such stimu lus of nee. salty now to impel us to the move ment, yet the exhaustive nature of • our com merce with foreign sugar-raising countries Is it,sufllclent reason for raising a home supply if we can find any possible means of doing ao. —Germantown Telegrrph. IT has also gone the.rounds, or is going. that Judge Sherman, brother of Senator Sher man, is for Greeley. The Judge writes to Gov. Noyes that be is one of the strongest Gotta men iu Oiilo, and would take an active part io the campaign but for his position on the bench: JORNSONISM REVIVED =I President Johnson's mistaken but well in tentioned policy tanned into ,new life all the embers of the old plantation oltgarchy at the south. He. led them to believe that they might still come hack awl rule the nation again nn tier the awmices of ,the Democratic party, with a m lid' submit tile for slavery such as they easily contrived and 'pahned lift upon Johnson anti Seward for a paternal code intended to pro vide anti care Ihr the freedmen. 'The rude awakening of the indignant north Was a coin. plete surprise both to Johnson's administra lion and to the planters, but it was effetaual. A new contrivance, not very dissimilar ill character now makes its appearance wider the auspice.; or Mr. Greeley. rile ,iltgluelly hay • ing failedao get back into power under the auspices of the Dentoendie party, now wants to get hack under tile anipicei of tile "Libe ral Republican" party, at: oil friend with a new face. What has become of the Dennierals P They are all there under that hood, and till the dlr. ference in. the situation is that. instead of Johnson and his tribe we have Greeley and Ins tribe. The people repudiated the other mess. Will they now rpliedy swallow this nue Y Suppose they should, what would they now gain that they could not have gainea un der Johnson Y If there was any sense in re. pudia'ing him and his policy. what sense is lhere in accepting tire. Icy with his P Gree ley presents amnesty ;sn did Johnson. Grett• Icy demands peace ; o did Johnson. Greeley wants its all to ground anus 31/11 call it a day's woik ;so did Joheson. Greeley denounce,' what lie calls the c;,rrttption and misrule of Radicalism ; just so did Johnson. Greeley ignores civil rights ; precisely so'did Johnson:. Gieeley has b , :en the wildest of Radicals; s,, was Johnson. In lam, Greeley is nothing nuts than ti new edition tit Johnson r not even eel- ed and improved. There is the stone old siring against the policy and acts of the He putilican party as in .folinson's case. Sub stantially the thing' is the same, and us .101 in sonism came from the brain of old Frank Blair, of Silver Spring, just' sa does Greeley• Ism. If we defeat this trick this time it will no doubt tusks its appearance again hereafterun• der some new guise. The, ,•1 , 1 enemy is seek leg to return to power—not slavery', but a worse enemy, oligarchy. 'Phu condition of things at the south is 'yet such that, if this should happen, all the conceded fights of the• freedmen would prove shadowy and unsub stantial far as yet they have no land, no 1101111'9, no schools, nee education ; and, as the Kukina proved, no real defence against a re. viva) of the 01d plantaiitm terrorists, It' may the national administration be not Republican. Slavery is abolished in New Mexico, and yet a lbw rich ElliiillVSll , 4ll everything, and• the people are a helpless mass of dependen is. This is pretty much what the freedmen of the south would be under Greeley, should lee, by any untoward accident, become President. Nor let any man think we do injustice to Greeley ; tbr, since the distempered vision of the Presedeney entered nis brain, he has ex hibited a positive reptignaneJ and rudeness toWard the whole colored race. Johnson was kind, personally, to the cohered people, as most men Of s(inthern birth are. But Grey Icy belongs tee a dos of fan dies who labored her abolition and yet could not abie'e a negro. reds, hlll.ll, is llel• tirtill4 lend appropriate tool se..tweed Its the subtle letup er, Blair , tee re store tic eel I plantation oligarchy, to throw tea 1, ill- frett.:ineti into the condition of peons .•r.elepeeidenis, and so to • undo all that has been done with suck infinite labor and cost. hi hen a man or Ibis kind 4/11Co goes astray in eels te titsieel reckoning, there is no returning ' e..nvici ion in his muol. 'There wets none for r:e.warel, none for 'Johnson, tome for Cheese, none her tiny who have lelt the Marty to travel •hat road. If whin the Republicans have done was worth doing at all, it is worth looking after and preserving. But we very greatly tear that the mass of the people are not sufficiently alive to the real character of this emergency. They really do nut see that this is merely Johnsonism over again—a new effort to recs tabl , sh the plantation oligarchy in power at Washington and over the eolith, to dictate tie policy of the nation, and rule with a rod of iron the hapless freedmen over whose liberty we have been sending up such means of joy. And yet these are the plain facts. for every body to see. Johnson was but a tool taken un to serve the purpose 01 the oligarchy he cause he was the accidental President. He served their• purpose ant titirown aside. Greeley hiss cxbib fed the-venomouS char c. ter of his policy by his vehement assaults upon the character of every Stale governmgot at the south in which the freedmen bear sway. These people must find a way to get up In toe world somehow, but all their efforts to do so have met with his untfornt opposition, misrepres. teflon and denunciation. They c nom have schools without taxes, and Mn .Ureeley SUS. lid Its the planters in their repudiation of these taxes. So it Is at all points of tid'. policy. In fact, Greeley would manifestly he a more vio lent mud bitter enemy of the freedmen, if he were Preshden•, than Aodrew Johnson was when 1n• held the office. The transformation in the man is complete and wonderful. An original abolitionist, he is now rattler more oh a negro hater than anything else. It, there fore, auyt ody wants a peculiarly willing tool ,if plantation oligarchy and reaction, we can recommend Ore, ley. lie is just the man. He would eat more dirt than Fillmore or Johnson did, and stoop lower to his old enemies. Tni Binghanitim Republican reprints the Trihune'sstatement concerning Greeley's part in the alleged negotiations with t7eymour. It chains the defence substantially admits the whole ease. The. Republicm reports with greater emphasis its statements of Mr. Car michael, of Unadilla, and pronounces Min not only the originator, by Seymour's help, or Greeley's at Cincinnati, but the author of the tariff plank of the platform that was adopted. it reaffirms its statement that Mr. Greeley ex pressed himself by letter in favor of paying pensions to disabled Confederate soldiers, and that Mr. Greeley consented to be aDeinocratic candidate for President. provided Mr. Sey mour and the Democratic leaders would sup port him. It reasserts that Mr. Greeley pia poeed by letter that a Liemocrat should go to Cincinnati in his interest. AN atrocious forgery is going the rounds of the Democratic press du the shape of a pur ported extract from a speech said to have been delivered by Senator Wilson at Boston in in which he . is represented as insulting our foreign•burn citizens in the most outrage ens manner. No one Who knows anything of his public life and services will be imposed upon by this infamous fabrication. But let his own words answer. Inaspeech - deliver ed at Brattleboro, Vermont. on the 2:ith of May. 1854, when the Know Nothing party was at its strongest. he Held : "I have no sympathy with thatnarrow,big• oted, intolerant spirit•thut would Make war upon a race of men became they happen to be born iu other lauds, a dastardly spirit that would repel front our shares the men who sought homes byre under our free institutions. Such a spirit is anti• American, devilish—l loathe It Iron) the bottom ot my heart." Any attempt to creole hostility against a man of such wide and nnir•rhal sympathies, by steely attributing Ai, him sentiments and lan lenge utterly foreign and impossible to his•nm tn re, is en insult to the intelligence of every naturalized citizen in the country, and will be so regarded. . • POILITICAL SCILION4. GRANT IS AT THE HELM, BOYS ! Oh, ace the gallant Ship of State, with freedom's hug on high; She throws th•: angry wasci aside, And dashes proudly by, For Gnilit Is at the helot, Übye, Snot, calm and lirn, ; 'And he shall he our pilot, boys, 81111 another term. Oh, see the call int Ship of Statist Her crew is true and triad ; Hate steadily she holds her course Upon the' foaming tide. For Grant Is at the helm, boys, : Silent calm and firm ; And he shall he our OM, boys, ' Still another term. Oh, see the Collect Ship of Slate, She'll reach that hArbor yet; While emllluir skies look ever down, And storms am never met. For Grant Is at the helm, Goys, Silent, calm and firm; And he shall be our pilot, buys, 81111 another term. —N. Y. Herald AN EXCITING TIME. A Race for Posseaston of f)150e000 Worth of Property. From thorbitasatshis thirsts. It js true that " money makes the mare go," and mankind, too, is readily, moved to extra ordinary activity by the same mighty motive power. The old adage was never more truth. Cully exemplified than In the following inci dent, Whirl occurred the other day. Un the 10th of June Colonel Joseph M. Bennett. the well known clothing merchant of Tower Hall, Philadelphia, purchased at sheriff's sale, for $120,000, under the foreclosure of a mortgage held by trustees, the great Continental Ho. tel" of Long Branca, which he subsequently transferred or the Laland Brothel... the tamous hotel men of Saratoga, for $llO,OOO, consider. ably less than one half the original cost. This immense place, first opened in 1800, then fa-, At Ms as the largest hotel on the continent, has Shire become farther home. , thronvii Do c ',wet of law. The details of the litigation of ti is concern would form an Interesting •chap ter in history, and it would be a curious item to learn how much the legal fraternity have lugged in the shape of fees out of this rich placer. On Monday evening, July 17th, Mr. Bennett aotwared. by appointment, at the sheriff's office In Freeeold, paid the purchas money, and received a deed for the real estate told a bill of sale for the personal property, and the necessary order for the discharge of the sheriff's deputy, then in possession thereof. Mr. F. A. Van Dyke, formerly of Philadel pith', but now of New York, representative of the trustees, was present. wan an attorney, ex meting to receive the nmonnt of the mortgage, $75,000, (min the purchase money; but an order front the court of chancery to pay the money into thou institution spoiled the loath . game, and raised particular mischief. All hay org been settled with the 111113.1(1101: 011101.1.8 01 111.. law, Mr. Bennett started for Loug Branch. ill company with Mr Woolman stokes, pia) prietor of the Irving )louse, Philadelphia, sr earrinv drawn by a pair of fine horses W hen near Eatonville a onmhorse buggy did pitted the road with them, and in the evident lust-- of the driver to give them•ihe " gmby" Mr. Bennett scented mischief. This suspicion WAS aqmOgLlteliCd to a c .rtainty when, by the glimmering moonlight, he detected (though they were cleverly disguised) Mr. D. A. COD over and Mr. Van Dyke. The discovery was mutual. Now came the time when " blood twist tell," and, at the risk of using up Ms fine animals, Mr. Stokes was induced to try their mettle. Then appro. ed a beautiful exhibition .4 . horsemanship. " Crack" went the whips, the dust rose like a cloud, corners were turned regardless of consequences, and, like. a whirl wind, the rival horsemen dashed through Ea ton ville, and down the turnpike, in the 'eel' . cuing shades of night, like the flash of meteors It is whispered that Mr. Co lover's in fuce• ments to beat Mr. Bennett represented some thing weigety in greenbacks, and in this case money did make both " man and mare to gn." Fos or and fiercer grew the speed, till, fearing a "smash up." and admitting the superior prover of a pair n 1 fine horses,the int gy yielded the lead to Mr. Bennett, who reached the Con Oltenia', discharged the sheriff's deputy, se emed the keys of the property, and assumed possession jest 34 Mr. Van Dyke, with his samicieg team. appeared upon the see te. Pos session is nine points of the law ; and It is pre. slimed that it was thoint , mtem of this gentle man,having failed to obtain the mortgage mon ey,to get Into the hotel, and so, by holding vie .AV9SIOII Of it and the personal property, to pre vent, by the "laws's delay," its being opened during the season, or force Mr. Bennett to pay a consideration to yield to him amicable pos. session. Bet in this manom ere he Was euchred. However, nothing daunted, he app roached the hotel, and opened a sharp fusilud ' o of words, Which ended wii h Colonel lieu nett lorcibly re moving the corporeal proportions of Mr. Van Dyke from the prentis. , s. Mr. Bennett then proceeded to station guards ut all t:te entrances of the building, and posted a regular cordon of pickets around the grounds. With the idea that probably, under some quirk or strange construction of the law„ he could continue to hold possession, Mr. Van Dyke returned un der cove- of darkness and sought an Interview with the sherdl'a deputy or ,s tchinan, woo had been allowed to remain in one of the lower rooms of the hotel alter he had formally yielded up possession to Mr. Bennett, and re quested hint to remain on the premises In the position to which the trustees and the sheriff Thad nopolnied him, Whilst he himself took au airy snooze on the piazza till daylight, when Ina learned, through telegraph from his attor ney, that the course pursued had put Mr. Ben nett legally in possession„ During the day the deputy sheriff opened the safe claimed to he owned by the trustees, and delivered to Mr. Bennett the silverware 01 the hotel, being a part of the personal property purchased by him. Mr. Bennett then ffirmally delivered the whole concern to Charles and Warren Le land, and, heartily. wishing them " luck, wi' yer prize, mon," shouldered his valise and wended his way back to "ye City of Brother ly Live." So endeth the last episode In the history of this remarkable institution. Though situate near the roaring breakers of the Atlan tic, the hotel Is once more sailing in pucaflo waters tinder the name of" Ocean Hotel" and is full of delighted visitors, who know that where the Lelands are the good things of ho. tel life arc sure to be found. M=M==lEM!! BosToN, July 30.—The following letter from Senator Wilson explains Itself: NATICK, Mass., July 26.—J. C. Culver, Esq., State Journal, Madison, Wis.—Dear sir : The mail has jest brought me your note aid extracts clippeu from newspapere,purport lug to be speeches made by me. In answer to your inquiries I have to say that they and all thoughts and words of like character which have appeared in the papers are pure inven tions, wicked forgeries and absolute false hoods. Never have •I thought, spoken or written those words,nor anything resembling those words, nor anything that the must tna hgnaut sophistry could torture into those words. I could not have done so, for they aro abhorrent to every conviction of . royjudg meat, and every throb of my heart, and every aspiration of my soul. Born In extreme poverty, having endured the hard lot the sous of poverty are too often forced to endure, I came to niaohood passion ately devoted to tile creed of human equality.. All sty life I have cherished .a Might Impound held and avowed as a living faith the doctrine that all men—tv about distinction of color,raco Or nativity—should have complete liberty and exact equality—all the rights 1 ask for myself. My thoughts, my record, my pen, my votes have been consecrated for Mare titan thirty six years to human rights—in the Constitu tional Conven ion of Massachusetts, in eight years, service in her Legisluture,in more than seventeen years' service in the Senate of the United States, in thirteen hundred public ad. dresses, In the press, In speeches and writings that would 11.1 utility volumes cud make thou sands 01 pages, I have Iterated and reiterated lie doctrine o 1 equal rights fur all conditions of men. . . la it not, my dear sir,. passing strange that partisanship' should so blind men to a sense of truth, justice -arid lair play that 'they could Forge and print abhorrent sentiments, insulting to . God and man, and charge them upon me, whose life has been given to the cause °Cecina' rights at home, and whose profound sympathies were ever given to the friends of libbrty of all races and nationalities abroad. Yours. e tc., = Mr. Buckslew, the Democratic candidate for Governor, says, I did not go Into public life for the purpose of making profit for my self." This is so honest concession, but con• sidering that he did not centemplato making money for the Philadelphia Send ty Republic thinks lie lies made out very well. He was first prosecuting attorney of Colombia county, and of cimrse made something out of that ; he Was thew Stale Senator, If we are not mistaken, for six years, for which he received $4,200 ; is 1854 lie was a commissioner to ex change the ratifications of .a treaty with Para guay, which duties it is not likely he attended to for nothing ; in 1857 he was chairman of the Democratic State Committhe,and he didn't lose anything there, and In the same year Was one of the commission to revise the penal code, and we all know how code commissioners are paid '• he was then made Resident Minister to Ecuador, and received $7,500 for an outfit and $BO,OOO fur four year's4alary ; he was then elected United Staten donator and received $30,000 for six year's salary and has juist en ded a term as Stale Senator, for watch he re ceived $3,000 salary and $5OO for putting Meek :McClure Into his seat. Bo certainly should have some more pap. TUE Buffalo Evening Post, which has been for twetty-flve veara a Democratic paper,wiih George .1 Bryan as editor, has twisted the Grant nod yr vain ileac', accompanied by an editorial explaining Its reasons ,for dolns So. ROBERT IREDELL, JR . plain anb itancg sob No. 'BBB HAMILTON STREET, I 1118E04kr? PRINTIttiI i 1,1.'1 • :2Ng*.PBSiONB • ' 'MATIST. , BTTLES Stamped chocks. CA rd 4,, rlssoisss, Taper Books, ronsti. tu"° oB kad iii•Lasys. &Foot Cslklogikpf. 818 Heeds " %Vt.? TtpflOri iTh i lgi l ti "4 1. 113 .P.‘ 111111)P gie 7 ; Y , ,slse, ete, pll3hottt Bolles NO. 32 EST. Bad news from "Confederlt ,Cross Roads" (Nigh, is in the, BMle'ur KentuCky.) Eldet Pennlbaeker isMentore.: This,greeley move ment killed Mtn. So lays Ruby, who further patticularizes " He never woe capable inv-inntlerstandinfr it, and at first refoozed to .yield ; pc rt. 'oozed to by one uv the white:hats-Mehl brie front Cincinnati, and Bascom woe forst to lak•• stern measures with hiM. 'Nary drink, Eli) er, till it goeti under that hat l' I - That fetched hint. He put it on. "'l'm a Dimocrat,' Bed be. sadly, with puzzled look, 'and I add, akkording to ins c.ttulldate for Preablent,lthat Pm a hoss.thiet. liar_a perjured villin, a slum, a harlot, an i that I'm bought with British gold. I ain't harlot, and never wile. and of I've lire, bought with British gold, ,where's tho,gold Gond lICViI3B I I steel go mad l' "And the wretched old Stint, who waz n' dieted wit'. a mind wich wuzn't calkelated grasp the sutleties ov modern politfa, woo rush out ov his house into the field. and cal... hlsself of co =unite with nacher." • After the ratification meeting,' which ft' lowed, Elder P. took to his bed and dellrin set in. Nasky called upon him and was tht.: saluted : "Parson, amnewhere I've read an anccdroe nv a man with wuz drunk, and wish, leant., up again a trove, vomited. While he was cc i templatin the ejected contents of his stumici a little dog came snuffle around, mid the mit saw him, and wuz amazed. "Thunder,' 1.. remarked, 'I know where I eat them cracker: I 'member with utmost 'stinctnea a where I got that bolony sassage,but me ef I knot , where I ate that dog.' Parson, I'M in the same fix. I hey taken theiCincitmail emett.• and it's worked. Ire nember distiekly why' I swallowed Stales rites, but I'M of know ahem'. took in that, Greeley, pup, will an Ablishin head and a high protective tart, tail. Parson. it's too' M1201. * • And here are Nasby's reflections over Per.- nibacker'a demise : "Thus died Eller Pennibacker,, ono uv my best friends at the Corners. Ire Was 'item • and stoopid. lie wuz a Liquor. in States rills, in Ham and Hagar, and In; Ponmeracy He tiled. ['real a severe attackuv supposin Hot rle Gr,•eley to be ez honest ez he wuz Itlinselt Ho woodent turn Ablislienist for itif 0111 S, am, ho spnzed that Harris wuzr still Clio same old heathen that he ixiluz wuz. tieiileaved thou Harris hed swallcred the Dimocratic party, and do wat I Wad, I enod net make him no. rler3tand that the Dlinocratic Partrhall slat ered Harris over with Presidency and•swal lered him. Poor old man I He don't tinder stand sich pollitishens ez I do,or he wood het knowed better and lived. Ile died Of stoo pidlty, a disease with, of It wuz allitz fatal wood redoose our party to a mere nothin,noo tnerically. "Deekin Program and I are administrators uv his estate. Ez Bascom her. a mortgage in. . . - .... .. the farm for all it la worth, our dootle;iill light. There ain't been a crop raised ou the place since the . emancipashun uv the niggers, and Bascom bee furnisht him and,ltialons likkor ever since on tick. 4nst uv the prop erty in this visinity is in the same fit. ,nine Wood be, but unfortunately I haven't' hay." Eli Perkins on Economical Girls. Gus Finds nn Economical Girl My old statistician says there are. Jost. four of these beautiful sate green dresses In Sara• toga. Three, he says, are worn by very styl• ish young ladles, and one is worn by an old lady who has no business to be wearing it. Every time ho sees one of those beautiful dresses he goes into an employ of delight. Ile rubs his hands and says, "There comes the agony of Paris—s4oo, if it's a bent I" When we look up It is a save green. Yesterday one of the beautiful young ladies who wears a sage green took a ride over to the lake with my friend Gus. Gus has get good blond in him, but he Isn't very " stampy." He always takes to expensive girls, and after getting interested in theni they talk such ex pensive talk about camel's• hainkyolvet suits, and trips to EUrope,• that , poor Gus gets fright. coed otr He comes up In my room end 'says he don't believe there is a girl In . Nevi York who don't cost her father $3,000 a year Just for nice clothes.—Then ho buries his face in his hands and says, "0 dear, there Is no chance for a poor fellow on $5,000 a year I" Yesterday Gus came into my room looking light and happy. His eyes fatrly•shone 'with the ecatacy of a blissful emotion. " What Is it, Gus?" I asked. "I've found her ! she's here I" and then ho stopped to catch his breath. " Who's here?" I asked, thinking that perhaps Mrs. Woodhull or Susan B Anthony had arrived. . • . " Why, the girl I've Neu limiting for— swett —young—stylish, and not very expen sive !" "Lightning, Gust" said I, putting on- my glasses; " I'd like to see such a girl myself.— Where is she V' " We just come In from a ride—she's down in the parlor—s regular stunner, in imp green I and so economical I" " Sage green—sage g.r.e c•n, I murmured to myself, intuiting of the $4OO I saw a young lady pay for just such a dress—how do you know she isn't expansive. How do .you—?" !' Why, confound it I" b'oke In GM "I know it, I've been talking to her for Vireo hours. She talked very economical, just like a sensible girl." " What did she say V' I continued. " ‘Vhy she said 'she was looking for a true man, a man brave and ttenerous,, wiy.4 loira in his heart, and with such a man she, stud' silo could be happy-In a garret--yes, -slie'said' she could be happy in a garret with the man she loved.' Ha I Ha I" .and Clus whirled round twice and kicked the crown out 01 my best Dunlap hat in excess of Lis mirth. * .* r M * * * * • I made Gus take me right down for an In• troduction to his economical friend, and then I let him go off to change his coat for dinner. Miss D. was pretty and stylist), too. :She had on a love ola $75 hat and those pretty $lB laced gaiters which the man makes under tile Ottlemon Rouse. Her dress. was Cs the richest gras grain sage green with, artier foal• lean potonaimotud court train. It contained exactly 170 yards of $9 silk: 'Oa hiir Pretty hands were six button gaslight greett kids, which lost themselves under point lace un deraleevea and over dia nond bracelets.. On her arm she carried a $1,500 camel's hair abawl. ' "'t'his is mother's, Mr. Peeples,'. shei re marked. " I took it else at a rain, I don't expect to have caniel:s ha r and molar diamonds until .I'm married. Author's jest words when I left home, were, 'Now Lizzie, don't he Introduced to any foreigners or 10E0 your Jewelry.'" ..1 , ; " Couldn't, you belmppy after you aro mar ried, without catnel's hair and diamonds 1• 1 .' I asked, taking her $75 pearl endpoint InceTar, and looking down at her point' lace 'under skirt. " Why, I hadn't thought mUeli about , it. That's just what your friend Motley and I were talking about. And such a nice tang talk—" "Then you and Gus have been dinimlng the love Ima•cottage idea, have you ?" Ldn terrupted. " Yes, that was it, sod he's so nice. , "And din't you say that you emit& livd In a garret with a breve, handsome man,.Whom you loved dearly C" " Yes, I tint say that. I don't care if ,do blush. 1 said 1 could live happily In a garret with the man I loved.--and 'I couldif-we could have a nicwelevatorond havemuktntiala sent in ; from Delmoulcp's. I Why,. those, Perim Stevens $O,OOO garrctsuilroarejust as cozy as they can be * * * 5. '•••: I • This, alas 1 was• the VcottomlCtil tiwbetness of My friend Gus, win) could live,in a:$0 1 000 garret with the man 0Q Thcso,aro the economical young-ladles who come to Saratoga and deceive us poor fellows-rcwho talk garret, get our sOlitairee sod, Wei come the elevator luncti-from.DelnionlO6 'dod ges on us.' These, ales rare the young ladles who gain our honest lova Just to !steal. our money for $4OO sago green !frouses NY4I nat— tering and polonaise all cut on the bias,. or sell us. Thai° are the dear matured Whom 'mag nanimnus fathers generously give away to us —saying, "Take her, Adolphus, and, ho, hap. py—sloet If you can l"—.N. Y, Conanereuil Advert set. HENRY WILSON During the DAltego,fire a, poiiceipaniim preesed an express wagon Into service Mx car rying a weenie:wile...Nes bailliNifited out of danger.. The magnanimpux proprietor of the wagonstied'the city for paymen t for ;Iti'ese. and the Demmlssioneier here! lest ' decided against him. ' . - • Sawa:on B,orrprn ~,xpfctmi, de dared for Greeley and Brown iod nobody .ALLRBTOWIr P 4.1 '3;f .. CONGREB9 HALL. July 22 1115 MEM
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers