ADVERTISING RLTEB. ft :2Smlcdms2 171. g .k 2 1 21m m. 7. 11.60 17.00 25.00 am Coallus Saimaa Square tit._lllEuets, • am E 65 ROO E 615 Half Column . 20.M1 40.01 00.00 110.00 Ole Column : 50.00 00.00 110 0) 200.00 Professionsl Cards 41.00 patine per year. •llDlnlatntor's and Auditor's Notices, q:00 Cr . : *otiose, 20eents pie line Ist Insertion 15 seats per In. stab subsequent Insertion. Ten lines agate constitute square. ROBRRt IREDELL, JR., PUBLISHER; =I P ROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE CONSTITU TION OF PENNSYLVANIA. JOINT IIESOLUTION Proposing an Amendment to the Constitution, of Pennsylvania. Be it resolved by Me Senate and House of Representa tives of the Commonwealth of Penn:tit/co:tin in Gener al Assembly met, That the hollowing amendment of the Constitntion of this Commonwealth ho proposed to the people for their adoption or rejection. pursuant to the provisions of the tenth article thereof, to wit AMENDMENT : Strike out the sixth sestina of tho sixth article of the Constitution, and Insert In lien thereof the following: .. 1 State Treasurer shad bo chosen by the qualified elec tors of the State, and at much times and for such term of service as shall be prescrlbed by law." WILLIAM ELLIOTT, • Speaker of thellonee of Repiesentativee. JAMES B. RUTAN. Speaker of the Sonata. Arrnoven—The twonly•eecond day of March. Anne Domini one thoueand eight hundred nod seventy-two. JNO. W. GEARY. Prepared and certified ror publication pursuant to the Tenth Article of the Conetitution. FRANCIS JORDAN, Secretary of the Commontroalth. OPTIOPI BIiCRSTART OP TIM COMIWITTEALTIT. lIARRIPHOIM. Juno 26th. 1672. UYl•9mdbw , i • boites are not destroyed by mineral poson or lIIIIEr and the vital organs wasted beyond the point of repair. Dyspepela or Indigestion. Headache, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dissi. nets, Sew Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpitation of the Heart, In flammation of the Lungs, Pain in the regions of the Kid neys, and a hundred other painful symptoms, are the off. springs of Dyspepsia. In these complaints it has no equal, and one bottle will prove a Letter guarantee of its meinw than a lengthy advertisement. For Female Complaints, in young or old, mar• tied or single, at the dawn of womanhood, or the turn of life, these Tonic Bitters display so decided an influence that a marked improvement is soon perceptible. For Inflammatory anal Chronic, Risen. tameless, and Gout, Bilious, Remittent and Intermit. tent Fevers, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have 210 equal. Such Diseases are caused by Vitiated Blood, which to generally produced by derangement of the Digestive Organs. They ars a'Gentle Purgative as well as a Tonle, 114.sming siso the peculiar merit of acting as apowerful agent in ralieving Congestion or Inflammation of the L iver and Vie:evil Organs, and in Bilious Diseases. For Skin 'Diseases, Eruptions, Teller, Salt Rheum, Blotches:Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Car buncles, Ring.worriet,Smild•Head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch, Scurfs, Discialoraticred of the Skin, Humors and Dis eases of the Skin: of whatever name or nature, are lit erally dug up en 4 °pitied out of the system in a short time by Ille IMP or these Bitters. 'rise properties of DR. WALKER'S VINEGAR iltirruns are Aperient, Diaphoretic and Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, Sedative, Counter•lrri• rant, Sudorific, Alterative, .d Anti.ltilious. Gratefni thousands proclaim Vinecnn BIT TERS the most wonderful Invigurant that ever sustained le sinking system. 5. WALKER, Prop r. R. 11. PIeDONAIAD & CO., Druggists and Gen. Agts, San Francisco, Cal., anal corner of Washington and Charlton Sta., New York SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS. amok D.9m dew HOW ~ ~•~ .~=~~ TO ADVERTISE u;B. BY MAIL 2EI CENTS GEO.R ROWELLICO: I. 41. PARK ROW 11.1 NEW YORK =OEM PHILADELPHIA Pi U (I£ollli . BANDAGE INSTITUTE. No 14 " Street. above Merkel. 11. C. .11:V 'NETT'S l'etent Graduating PreneUrPTltler positi•e r cure. mini:tree will. all other,' Alan, a largo IrB• Wa. .gl r ho c u h l e te p r n T r r are7 . abdU r l o nn . l l lu E r i p a ge c rs 'i' lfu k,' eerie/. Pile D.udigea ' Spitio uetrumeute. Crachms, P Ac. Ladlea attended by lies. Everett. IGrm aeember, the second Truer More above Marko Street OPEN] NG ! NEW BOOT & SHOE `TORE, NO. 706 HAMILTON STREET, Two 'lours above Kramer': o.,rner Share ALLENTOWN, PA tta T s i sTllTOW l e g oVartt ' olbg?gsV i ti : it ' ll 'r, l ' :; " Onit ' s: It i gi stook o! • BOOTS & SHOES of all purchased at low figures, en. EXTRA INDUCEMENTS to buyera, trusting that by fair dealing we may merit your favor. Tory Reapeetfully. RITTER & lIUBER. ilarimoTs AND RAGES MADE TO ORDER. ALSO MENDING done to tho neatest manner and with prompt nem. Jos. M. Rirrsn asp 7-d 1872 FALL SEASON. 1872 WALRA_YEN, Masonic Hall, 719 Chestnut Street PHILADELPHIA' Respectfully calls the attention of his numerous patrons to his well•selected sleek of CURTAIN MATERIALS and FUR ° NITURE COVERINGS, Selected Personally during the susnuier mouths from the most celebrated manufacturers in Europe, and are now arriving by every steam r and being Illioned fur lunpec lion Immediately. These 000 d. Ca 11 0 ,1( lie excelled fu beauty of design, color , a d teolity IN A LI, SI i K, AND WOlluThD, ALL WORnTED AND COTTON Fall KICK "The Leen Curtain I , op iraneht enuteino demigna ray before olforod lu thin c .untry . and at 1111C0.1 to in 1.1 Immediate ealeo, LACE AND HOLLAND SHADES, LACE LAMBREQUINS CZEIZEI Au 1T011.14 NOTICE. in the Orphnne' ,florerf of Lehigh egiott p fp the ro.tt,r of the meant of Jtt J. WISHING • Adrolutstrator oJohn Bohlen. late Of Upper s a op o ; township. Lehigh countt • ecessed. /Lod now. Jane 11. Mt Itforrnt L. Kauffman, Esq was A ppototed Auditor. to female and rtiettle, necessary, the above cronut and make dietrlbutlon- From the lie:ords, A. L Rune, Clerk. The Auditor above nenool WRI r (teed to the eoil-e hb eppolotineut on vitt it, DAY . OKP r. Ai HER 2611, a' 30 o'elork. eau., at his once. Runllton cireet. over Flit National Bans, Allentown. when end where all person! Interested may attend If nor thlnh nror hA tr• MORRIS L, UFIIpAN .„ .11.3eadas11.3tiv VOL. XXVT Non at , crtisrmento. Pennsylvania M litary Academy, At Cheeter, Delaware Corlett', Po. (For Resident Wets Only ) The elevo..th an nal session commences Wed• Sept. 4. boron, . Wart:talon Betel s Reel neerine, the Mathematical and Netnrat en. The Classics and b. - elleh In Imparted by West Point xrednates tabled er comoJtent professor. Circnisre may be oh. of Cul. TilEo. lIT TT ores". Y. fkl. EATON FEMALE INSTITUTE Du Philo St Dalt. Central R. R., Kennett Square, Chester Co., Pa., offers all the inducements that coontlt.tte a home In eoanertion NVI r, a tbororonah English Education, at tip per school year. No atm. exce Paintingott ructloo is ex, Music. Latin. Fre ch tier.. and Drew. log Pastern teacher., g.adn.leo of our hest New Eng• land schools . , have beep employed for several yearn in quire of E% Ap T. SWAYNE or BALLIE W. B's, AYNF, Principals. 11Q01RUFNTOIVN (N. J.) FEMALE Iv CO LLEO —Thornuch lintel:Aloe. Healthful and bearl location. Ono of the inont cm...ruby conducted and boat suntamed iro.th thing in tho Slate. For term ele.. addrenti Heir . JOHN H. BHA bt.EY, Melt. A DV 14:ATI SI N AT 1 OW RATES FOR lan PER INCH PER MONTH wo will I.leterl au advortinotoont In ID FiRET CLASP vAPEntI In Penna. L of rent on oppllrmion to OEO. P. RONVO.LL & CO., Ad vortlolog Agentn, 41 Pork Row. N. Y. Campaign Goods for 1872. Agents wanted for our Campaign pool, BRI.I. AT Stour once NO ran CENT PROF , Now ri ce Bead at once for Peserlp.lve Circulars and PMats& our Fine Steel Enuravinga or all the Claudio' Mex. Campaign Blall• roobloo. Charts Photograph,. Haag.. Pins, Pl. go. and over' thing nutted to toe timer Ten DePars per any earthy mad. ' man:pies neat for 4.1. Address Moons & GOoDePfiED. 37 Park Itow, Now York. AOHNTEI WANTCII for Chamberlin's Great Campaign li. ok, Tun STRUGGLE OF '72. A Novelty it, Political and Popular ifferafure. A On•PHICWary of 1. o Repolilino and Democratic Purlieu; n racy sketch of the ao•oullial Liberal Repolill Clitl • arty; inakferfemor the Cincinnati COOTOUti. The minor ticket. or style chow of the campaluo. The Bt Illustretcd 11. ok l'uralohod. A 800. wanted by eve , y Antiulcer , citizen. To secure territory et once,send al for outfit. dirt UNPI3II Pitt INO CO., Chicago, 111., Phila., Pa., or !Springfield, Musa POLITICAL GOODS OF ALL KINDS. FIREWORKS, FLAGS, LANTERNS, TORCHES, BADGES, usiFoßms, &e. JOSEPH B.kPURDY, 32 AND 84 MAIDEN LANE, ESTABLISHED IBL7. NEW YORK. r71 4. 1tS A SURE ODDS for this dletroselssg complaint is now made known la a Teen lee tor 48 inlayo rages) on Foreign and Nntive Herbal nisei - mations. publlabod by Dr. O. "R•'LPN BROWN. Tnowto.crlption woe discovered by him In such ft prnvtdes•lsl m-nnor that ho cannot conect ontiously reface to took It known. as It cur.d every. boil. who has oe d It for Fits, never having fall d in a elnglo case. Tbo ingrodlents twiy tin "bullied friiut any drugrist. A copy soon free to all applicants by MAIL Addy,. Dr. 0. iitiELT'S BROWN. 21 Urand tis, Jersey My, N. J. Tictiler's Recipes for Liquors Contain tho Intent Improved inetructlons for mining Bran dies. Whiskeys Rains, aloe, Bit.era. Fancy Cordials , Fruit Syrup s.)Say Nom. &c. tic No one en/fairs , ' in the Liquor Businese ran affor d to do without them Ask for them an exam!oa shim at the book et r• a. Delivered by mall, ou rerelot of h 2, by ASCIiEN BACH & MILLER. N. W. car. 'Third and Callowhill Sta. Philedellibis. Ps. ludcir and maniple sheets soot free. IMMO Itt; ' ,11:1;11O1011. t foii,WCWcli. lotion, 1 , perept....__ medi cine. a atomachic. adierellc awl 'ea admirable a cern] alterative Ouch are the ark otterledgnd and daily Pray a properties of TAlllteNT'a tYPERVINCENT SZI.TZtIa FOLD BY ALL DROOOISTS BA R L() NV 'S IN Dl(' 0 BLUE. In thn cheapont and hoot artlnloln the market for BLVEIPIn CLoTITIO. 2h., igunVto Lon both Outlaw , a sod W Moe, nlrm'• name on the la, al. and la vat on at WU. hornet's Drug Store, o. 233 ttortb. th;condjit.. Phlladeloh D rod rOnrlo.or7 ret — nuragvg 10 - ruggleus nd ‘Jrocore - Xl,OOO REWARD Por any caserOr blind, Blood- Itching "Petflttaral" PII°. tliat. Da Pita R63,13DT foils to cure. ..ItlD prepa,ed 00. proud) to corn the Pllea, and nottium olio.. Bold by all Drill/glom Price la 00 A GENTS W NTED.—Agente make more A - A. manor at Work for us than at anything also. Boni n!ss light owl porrnaornt. Particulars frees , U. STIN• NO NE CO., Fine Art Pal Portland. Mins • ITIMEIR 3 LIAIRER WIJOLEHALE AN]) RETAIL HOFFMAN 0 -Imw STEAM. SAW MILL LUMBER YARD! KIN IDLING! BILLS OUT TO ORDER OFFICE AT THE MILL, FRONT AND LINDEN STS WRITS AND BLACK OAR BAW LOOS wanted, far hlch the hlgheet market price will be paid et ,r 1 dolly d-w in 712-17 NOTICE CITY TAX for 1872. By a enppiem•nt to the City ("barter of Allentown. ap proved the 221 day of March. WO. the City Treasarer Is made the receiver of all city loxes. All of said Lily tax remaining unpaid un the firm day of August next. dye per cent. shall be added; all of maid tax remaining unpaid on the drat day of October next ten per cent. shall be added. • Notice le hereby given that the nit, tax for 1872 will received at my taco. No. 699 Ilamlltoo street, Allentown. lell.emtlevr] JONATHAN REICHARD. Treas. OUR NEW. GOODS I EN'S WEAL vAIL DRENS GOODS. SHAWLS SHINfe BLAIIKHIB, FLANNHLR, ADs VAR NiL UNDERWEAR. AU.. AC., A.O C. LEWIS Hoses . n w 111 In good variety. J uat received end for sale at orh nanal moderate ..ricee. The public is reapertfullY In cited to an en inlaatzon of our stock and price. before Ourchualog ellievrbere. JUS'I'US EVAN'S, 730 HAMILTON STREET A cli oleo line of GROCERIES. TEAS. SPICES. /Et alsvet aon baud HATSUPI, The grant remedy for bet., colic, and ell diseases of the .tornech and bowel. In horses. Cures every Case. 011100LD BRIX EVERY ATAIMR. Bunt free by mil for Fifty Cent.. AOHNTS lyßuled oyeryvrbAre A. BW9 r All -w HAYES, .COULTER, & CO Heaters, Ranges, Low .Grates • AND • MARBLEIZED PLATE MANTELS. No. 1305 Chestnut St., PHILADELiFITA, 113.8ead for catalogue frbitib CI El MEI IM Succemors to W. A. Arnold =I rmv7.omdaor ittebtetnal. NO CURE, NO PAY. DR. H. D. LONGAKER, Oraduate of the Uulvorolly of Penusyloanlo, at Philadel poi. has been In successful practice fora number of years In various parts of tho United Status; will promptly at tend to all branches of his profession at his rooms. East olds of @Wit street. bet. Hamilton and Walnut, ALLENTOWN, PA No Patent Medicine, aroused or recommended ; therm edies adtninletered aro those which will not break down the constitution, but ronovnte the system from all injuries It has sustained from mineral medicine., and leave It in • healthy and perfectly cured condition. CONSUMPTION, BRONCHITIS, DYSPEPSIA, and all dines., of the Longs, Throat, Stomach, and Liv er, which yearly carry thousand, to untimely grave,, can undoubtedly be cured. MELANCHOLY ABERRATION, that state of alienation and aberration of mind which ron dere persona Incapable of enjoying the plow:tree of per forming the dune, of life. RHEUMATISM AND PARALYSIS, in any rirm or condition. chronic or acute, warranted cur able. Epilepsy, or falling sickness, and chronic or stub born caeca of FEMALE DISEASES speedily and radically removed; Salt Rheum, Skin Dine.. (or years' standing ) every description of Ulcerations, Piles and Scrotal°us din eases, warranted cured. afirParticalar attention given to private diseases of every deacription of bulb sexes. Ladies suffering from any complaint incidental to their sex, can coneult the doctor with asaurance of roller. Cancer eared, and Tumors anti kind, removed without the knit° or drawing blood. Diseases of the EYE AND EAR dneceaefully and effectually removed. I ; D e r a . o L l ' e n fed ` r e ,;,:. ' ,l l b m y at t ie v r i tc l o " nfiTe y ritll l l . 47;gd i m r e d it lathe rent will proper direction. to any part or t P county. Orrice: Ennt nide ollilxth.treat, betwnor, Hamilton and Walnut Allentown. P. may 28-ly PILES OR lIIIMIORRIIIOIII3I9. PILES OP ALL FUNDS perfectly and permanently CURED. without pain. ding. r, caustic. or instrument., by WM. A. SIOCANDLESh. It. D., 2001 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA, PA, Who can refer _you to over MO eases cured In Philadel phia alone. We desire to stay to those agllcted,lbere is positively no deception to the cure of these Diag•Bes, it maters not how long or bow Reveres, you aye been Rgtfcfcd, we can cure you. We also cure Finials, Plenum Prolapse., Strictures and Ulceration of the lower bowel. Come you that are aulfeting, wo will not deceive vou. We have patients from almost every State In the Union and from Europa. Have treated these diseases for twenty vents without a failure. apr 26.1 y IDOILONOPIFIV OP NIARIRIAGE.—A A. New COOMBS or LBOTITRIOL as delivered at the Penns Polytechnic and Anatomical hiuseum, 1205 Chestnut St., three doors above Twelfth Philadelphia embracing the anbjecta: How to Live and ' What to Live ion Youth, Ma tartly and Old Age; Manhood Generally Rev lowed t• The cause of Indigestion; Flatnlence and nervous Diseases accounted for; Marriage Philosophically conaldered. Those beeline, will be forwarded on receipt of 25 cents by addressing: Secretary of the Penna. POLTTVICIINIC •ND ANATOMICAL 3100 NON 1205 Chestnut St., Philadelphia. enna an 22.1 v WI LTBERGER'S FLAVORING EXTRACTS Aro warranted equal to any made. They are prepared from thafrutte, and will be found much better than many of the Extract.. that are eold . . . . . ir dek your Grocer or Druggist for Willberger's Extracts. BARLOW'S INDIGO BLUE is, without doubt. the beat article 111 the market, for blueing clothes. It will color mare water 1h n four times the meno weight of Indigo, and mach morn than any oth.r wash blue In the maraet. The only genuine Is that put up at ALFRED WILTBERGEIVB DRUG ETORE, N0..293 NORTH SECOND STREET, PHILAD'A., PA The LABRLS liavn both WILTFIRROIM'S and B•ncow's name, no Thom. alt others are counterfeits. For sate by most Grocer, and Druggists. WILTBERGER'S INDELIBLE INK Will be found on /Ha/ to be a superforarticfe. Always on hand for sate st rags •n+bterite,. Poe Ground B ICES, Genuine MEDICINE, Chamois Shim Sponges. Tapioca, Peal. Sago, a d all artlolos In the drug lino, at ALFRED WILTBERGER'E DRUG STORE, Inge'Cl•ly N 0.231 North Second at., Phila., Pa. IA ES VEGETABLE SICILIAN HAIR !,• • ENEWER Ever,- yea, increases the populari t y valuable Hair Preparation; which is due to merit alone. We can assure oar old patrons that it is kept fully up to its high standard; and it i the only reliable and perfect ed preparation for restoring GRAY on FADED HAIR to its youthful color, making it soft, lustrous, and silken. The scalp, by its use, becomes white and clean. It removes all eruptions and dandruff, and, by its tonic prop erties, prevents the hair from falling nut, as IL St litialutun he hair-glands. its use, the hair !r rows thicker and stronger. In baldness, it restores the capillary ! dam's to their normal vigor, and will create a new growth, except in extreme old age. It is the most Cell- Doillittal h Au l HanssiNo ever used, as it requires fewer applications, and - gives the hair a splendid, glossy appearance. A. A. Hayes, M.D., St ate Assayer of Massachusetts, says, -The constituents are pure, and care t. illy selected for excellent quality; and I consider it the BEST PREPA ii ATi N for its intended purposes." s,,bl lu ill Druggists, ruts: Dealers in Medicines. Prion One Dollar Buckingham's Dye. FOR THE WHISKERS As our Renewer in many cases requires too long a time, and too touch care, to restore gray or faded Whiskers, we have prepared this dye, in one preparation; which will quickly and effectually accomplish this result. It is easily applied, and produces a color which will neither rub nor wash off. Sold by all Druggists. Price Fifty Cents. Manufactured by R. P. HALL, & CO., NASHUA, N.H. SOLD IN ALLGII e OWN UT W. E. BARNES & BON Ayer's Sarsaparilla Is widely known as one of the most effectual remedies ever discovered for cleansing the sys tem and purifying the blood. It has stood the test of 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 no 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, nutty of which are publicly known, of Scrofula, and all scrofulous diseases, Ulcers, Eruptions and eruptive dis orders of the skin, T umors, Blotches, Boils, Pimples, Pustules, Sores. St. Anthony's Fire, Rose or Erysipe las, Tetter, Salt Rheum, 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 Disease, Female Weakness, Debility, and Leucorrhtea, when they are manifesta tions of the scrofulous poisons. IC 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 guor& the season. Even where no disorder appears, people feel better, and live longer, for cleansing the blood. he system moves on with renewed vigor and a new lease of life. A . A ~c ... .. ..„ . 4 . ,- ,"7",,,,,,.,5wz., PRE.PARE.D B.Y Dr. I. C. AYER & CO., Lowell, Mass Practical and Analytical Chemists. COLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS EVERYWIIERE. BOLD IN ALLENToWN I Y W. E. BARNES & SON Preeklentka Campaign Q i iaMPA/4 , 4 , CAPES & CAPS. CAPB,CAPEB& TORCHES Bond for ILLUOTRATBD Cltt CULAII and PRICI Liar. CUNNINGHAM HILL. MANCF4OTORSI2II. No. 204 Church St.. - • PhandelpAta Juarl3.4mw ALLENTOWN, PA., 'WEDNESDA Y AI I NG. ( BER '2, 1872 AN E. OQUENI' SPEECH Address of General Hawley at the Pittsburgh Convention. Comrades and fellow-citizens—l Judge from ho aspect of the great city—from the multi udes that throng its streets, and the continu• nue roll of drums and these great cheers, that a certain statesman of the land is slightly mis• taken. The time for the soldier has come. [Applause.] The time for the soldier is now and always will be in this land.(erres of that's so) not to be called to battle-field ; I trust, perhaps, never again. I hope this may al ways be the land of peace and there will al ways be occasion here for that spirit of patri otism and self sacrificing loyalty to the coun try ; that devoted attachment to Republican principles that love of order,and civil law and peace that distinguishes the American soldiet. 'I he spirit of the army that we are thinking of, not the army organization. This distinguish ed statesman has told us the time for the sol dier has passed. I think, judging by the slanders and these malignant attacks on Gen eral Grant that the spirit of the rebellion is still rife. They say that the doctrine of seces sion is now at rest, and that the policy of the nation is unduly severe and harsh towards the men who were engaged in the late rebellion. That the time for the soldier to appear as a . . patriot and voter has come again. We have heard " that the pen is mightier than the sword ;" so it is in the long run, Charles Sumner has been an eloquent and powerful advocate of the principles over which this great contest was fought. The sword was merely used as a last resort in deciding this contest of ideas. . . Half a generation has passed over our hcada in discussing this question. The contest was as tierce in the Senate chamber, and on the field of politics as it was on the battle-field. Now, then, to remove this presence of the soldier is an offence to those who were defeat ed. What shall we say in the presence of his assertion, and in the presence of an orator who is no less distinguished for his part m the Grant campaign, and loose men who are cry ing and lamenting as Horace Greeley laments in his letter or acceptance to the Bnitimoru Convention, and that where the spirit of re bel, ion is unable to send to places of Palmer, Davis, Brecklnrldge, every man of them reb• This same Horace Greeley is the man who desires Jefferson Davis and Breckinridge to be returned to the G. S. Senate. I want to know which is the greatest offence, the pres ence of Grant or Sumner To have a regi- mental flag with its inscription, is out of place as Sumner says. If it be out of place then Grant is the flag bearing the odious inscrip tion, Wen if we have to remove Grant, then let us remove Sumner and Ilia ten volumes of orattions, also you must level every grave. That will furnish a reminder of their van (wished enemy. Thle Is what &raper speaks to us : You must remove every monument of the Old contest These men who ten years ago went to the front and perrilled their lives In the defence of the country, are to be told, It is sap, to take back seats—go to the rear, least, indeed, their presence may be offensive to those who were loyal in the rebellion. Of all the charges that this combination make against us, none is to me more offensive than that. That we are actuated by Some spirit of hate, and by a pol• icy of revenge. Now we may safely say that wo challenge the history of any country to produce such a record as ours. Such a record of magnanimity expressed to this Union. Wherever we went in the South we ted the women and children, whose husbands and brothers were engaged in rebellion against the Government. I remember well a little chapter in . my own experience In the Wilmington, North Caroli na, of ree.dvlug ten thousand men from An dersonville whom we fed, and µleo fed 7,000 white women, a majority of whom had relit dons In the rebellion. Was that the spirit of hate, or the policy of revenge P And when the last day of the contest came, and General Grant went modestly under the apple tree ut Appomatox and conducted the services of sur- render, what did this nati on Al.• throush its ./ •./1.1 • • ...- sacrificed five thousand millions of dollars and a halt a million 01 lives—this Union that then had within Its grasp the last of the rebellion— what did It do ? What did It say to thoSe men ? It let them go to their homes, not to be molested by the United States authorities, so long as they obeyed the laws. Wits that the spirit of hate? [cheers.] Was that tile spirit of revenge ? [cries 01 no luu I] And the great soldier of the land bald this to the civilians of the land. Many of them were clamorous for revenge, and men reproached him, and rebuked him for his excessive etc- m,ney. After Ili{ papers were signed, Ore. Lee turned to Ole. Grant and said ; Gen. Grant, there Is one thing I had forgotten ; the papers arc signed ; it Is perhaps too late now ; it is this : I was about to ohserve that many of our men in the ranks own their horses, both n the artillery and c ivalry. I would ask that hey might have them, as you 'lave permitted he officers to take their side arms. . . No matter about the papers, said Gen. Grant, I will give orders to the officers to let these men take their horses home with them ; they will need them -in the spring ploughing. [Cheers.] There was a great army victorious and triumphant, the army of the United States, and these men would have us bilieve that our spirit was the same then us it is to-day, and the same to-day us It was then:—That they are animated by a spirit of hatred and revenge ; was this , saying to these men who were en gaged in the war go home, rest at peace, just 0,43 y the laws, and take your horses with you and feeding iem'too, the-men dividing their haversacks with themlcheers] —and that too by the thousands—these same rebel soldiers had been taught to hate the Yankees, but this act caused the tears to pour down their cheeks. This was an inexpressiole magnanimity. Was Ulla a policy of bate or revenge ? No ;we are the same to diy as then. Did we confiscate. property No. Did we banish them ? Never a luau of them. Several thousand of then, felt a bitter hatred to the old fig, and swore they would never live under its folds. The banished themselves to South America. In it short time many of these men were hungry, ragged and home-sick, and Uncle Sam brought them home free by the hundreds. Was this, twain, the policy of hate or revenge ? Yes, comrades, this was our Government. This was our Republican party governing the Union then, and when a greivous visitation of Providence brought salvation to the South, our Congress, by our own tree will, voted one ses sion five millions of dollars to Iced them. The purses of the North were opened, and the grainerles dis Charged of their benefits. This indeed was not the policy of have and of re venge. W e have one request indeed to make of these men. We have but one disability, ongjink of approval remaining. Only one statute rTm tins. One act of legislation to show the sense of this nation that this great rebellion was a crime. That is the temporary seclusion from office 01 few, a very few of the guilty superior , the terribly guilty leaders who drugged their peo ple into this awful slaughter. We say to some of them,—less than three hundred remain, now—you cannot hold office again, until Con gre.s permits. We have one thing to say to these men. We had at the close 01 the war really but one thing to ask of them. Every step of reconstructed legislature, every eel taken by the Republican Cormieas every act. and every °Hi rof General Grant hits had iii slew this,—the safety of the lines and the per sons and the property of our loyal brotuers ut the South. We have confiscated no property and ban ished-nobody. We whipped no one, drowned no one, we have hanged nndentlemen, men who were in rebellion, can you say in. much tor yourselves during the war? [Cries or "No, no.": 1 Have von done none ot them itint.ts to our Wends down there? If you twee ever been angry it is, these which too filbd is with lighteous Indignation after the dog itt oc in triumph over every foot ut S'mho in sett. After you have professed have surrendered in good Nth, and u. h lVe accepted,the situatiwi. Week atb r week and ' month after month the cry cone up, and wits l'rolls many 01 the white regions 0 the S 'bat the loyal white men and 11b . Limor black men were taken from their homes wer. scourged—were sometimes drowned, sum ,- times banished, sometimes hanged—that Se y could not enjoy their homes or raise Met crops In peace; that they could nut hold Re publican meetings or any meetings In honor ol the flag. This has been the complaint from mouth to month and year to year. If wt have some harshness in our legislation, it was 'hat this might be prevented. Why in tit, name or God and humanity, was this just and lair to these men, and why do they coon. . us with the pretense ol shaking hands awns,. the bloodier chasm, es hen their is a chasm and a bloodly chasm at their own door ; ha tll3lll of their own making which we shalle to bridge over. Do mat nrst and you ww had the great heart of the North, where it has Limn aching to have . all men, praying for the day when justice and peace may prevail every 'where; and the answer to all the appeals of these men ; is answer to all their cries I have but one thimr to say, I would placard It upon all cross-roads. I would put It upon every court house. I would print it upon every door In the South. I would have it where every one might read it, " Do unto others as you would have others do unto you." [Great cheers.] I say I shall not thing of eulogizing here Ulysses H. Grant bilore these soldiers (;beers.] There is not sn audience in 11119 and that need it less. There are people, how- ever, that ought to be reminded of what he has done for the country. [Litughter.] There are men who are famous as defenders of the land whose speeches are daily tilled and pa- ==l=l [nation of the mil They look in at the back door of his house, tiny peep Into his cellar, they smell about his stables, they hunt for the little deeds of his lands, they search through the certificates of stock that he may hold, tney suffer no relation i4lllO to be met without putting upon It the venomous stain of their slander. There never has been a Presidential candidate since the orgrnization of the government so venomous ly unceasingly and uuforgivingly pursued. I beg for him in the name of the memories of the past,l beg for General Grant something of that universal amnesty of which they are talking. [Cheers.] Forgive hint Forgive him I [Cheers and Inushti.r.] Ile may sometimes nave cried. Ile may have made n mistake. Ge may not be absolutely beautiful or sub. timely perfect. [Laughter.] There never was but one man who was perfect. General tiritot may have erred sometimes in the ap pointments he has made. Alas, I know that the cry of his enemies is that he did make many mistakes, but I say we can afford to overlook some things, and we must remind these men of some things also that he hat done' for the hand. They say he Is a man of no ca. pacity. There are several thousand of us who started early in the war as captains and as col- onels. One of them went up and up and up, and again by the unanimous cry of his party he was sent up again until he was called to shington, and the little man as he gave him his commission said, take this; as the people now trust you so under God they will sustain you," and then every loyal heart in this land prayed God that his little man who seemed to have been brought from obscurity to save us, and leave us to triumph would succeed, and when he went down to the wilderness we knew there was fighting to be done. Then my comrades you of the western armies know that there was a soldier over the Army of the Potomac, and that there was a man at the head who meant work. [Cries of "good" and cheers.] There was a little man who meant victory and we all knew that if ever this country was to be saved it was to be si.ved in those months. Ob the first, sec• and and third of May, 1861, we hastily per fected our muster rolls, we gathered our cloth Ing and provisions and sou; back surplus bag gage. We hurried off the long roll. flow many gallant boys heard their names called for tile last tune that night. Next morning all atoll; the great circle we started forward and fougnt in the wilderness over miles of broken land, where a man could no more than see his comrade. We were slaughtered that day and noxt (lay, and the next. The fourth day and the fifth day.w•e fought until the darkness tell upon us. they did not know what we were doing or what we might do. Able men came to Grant and Bald : " General we must stop a day or two. Vie must indeed bury these dead men, we must indeed, really we cannot go on.. We need more clothing. We must halt." Said the great General, " You have done very well so far,—very well under all the circum stances. Tomorrow morning at half past 3 the army goes forward," [great cheering] and terriole us the slaughter was as yon answer now to the memory of it, so the great heart of the nation answered, "go on," and on the night of the sixth day, he wrote a little dis patch "our losses have' been severe, we have captured Johnson's division and two brigades beside, and we have taken about thirty pieces of artillery, and it seems to be with us. I shall lit it out 6n this hne if it takes all summer." enewed cheering.] . _ member how they telt in ilibej . days ; IZi him through the Wilderness to the Appo mattox, of which we have spoken. As a sol dier he was everything the crisis demanded ; as a victor atter dictating terms, never equall ed tiff magnanimity, Instead of affording him triumph or even time to rest, he started right from Richmond and took his bag and started for W ashington. (Cheers.) He started for Wasbingtou and telegraph to stop expenses, and whatever his course has been, it has been marked throughout with forbearance ; what- ever has been done has been done for pence, life and prosperity throughout the land. Now a single word and lam done. (. ries of "go on.") The election of a, cans date in the field against General Grant would have sever al meantngs. I give as the first of them, It would be the triumph of a man who believes in the theoretical meaning of secession. Now I appeal to the files of the Tribune for the inter of 1860 and 1861 for the countless dec larations to that effect. They are known to the people of the land. [A voice, "And the year '63 also."] You are right ; all along through the war. And if it be said that these declarations of the newspaper press ma) not be directly authorized by him ; if it be wild said these were the sentiments then entertain ed, and since laid aside, I appeal to the of the "American Conflict," wrltted since the great struggle was over—deliberately written in re view of the principles and acts of the great struggle—many years back ; in the first vol ume, on the 39th page of the book, If I re memember rightly, he says in substance, •'if Any considerable number of States desire to go out, let them co, anti 1 would resist all measures devised to keep them in by force." Cries of "never," and hisses.] This was 'he sentiment of Horace Greeley, and with a full kdowledge of what lam saying, and I feel the consciousness of the presence here, and am fully aware, of these busy pens and these wires. I say to you here, that whatever there be left of the spirit of rebellion in this land to-day, these are thessentientsm e nts of Hor ace Greeley, ar.d if he be elected there will be a man in the Presidential chair, entertaining in substance the sentiments of James Buchan an, and with these declarations to view, in the event of another insurrection, Horace Greeley would say the same thing as Janice Buchanan. It is impossible to see how we could call upon him at the first symptoms of insurrection to put it down. It has another sign fleance now. We may differ about the details o I amnesty. We are all well agreed in this that if entire perfect peace and justice would really and thoroughly be established in the South it would bring very soon an en tire atun:sty. And we are also perfectly aware that the day has not come for that state of affairs. Horace. Greeley, by his letter of acceptance, addressed to the. Baltimore Con vention, dwells at some length upon the harshness of forbidding the people of the South to chose its men to rule over them— there being only three hundred so excluded. According to Horace Greeley there is a desire to elect these three hundred with Jeff. Davis at their bead. Ile stands as tile peculiar re presentative of that sentiment, and the elec tion of Horace Greeley will be to say that we ”rc ailing for Bone men to come back to places of power. [Cries 01 "no," "no."] Thirdly, the elevation of Horace Greeley would mean this, that the nation has been un duly harsh and unjustly severe in dealing with the rebels. That is one of the great points, oerhaps the chief point made by them against us. if we are unduly harsh and unjustly se vere in dealing with the rebellon, it is not the Republican party alone, butt the nation ' • for the policy of the Union has been during those eleven years not to confiscate or take away their property ; they have not hanged a man or tried a man for treason. Has this great nation been severs in dealing w ith them? Is .hat the judgment of the past eleven years? rhe nation is asked as itjury to send in a ver dict that this party Is tiled. iind is found too cruel to combine in power. Will the people of this cottony give I l;t vet diet? [Cries of ..en," "n I." 1 But .11111 er, there is 44ne other point that the mece , a .1 oor 4.11, tni , s would decide. One ether pflril,jlllll in the verdict of the eleva 111111 of Greeley would be to say that Genera (Irani is hand pertontily unworthy of 111 oigli position. is MA that so? Do not it .heir writers and their presses dwell largely ~, the exclusion, I might say, of other things mum the personal unfitness and personal Mt worthiness of General Grant ? Then the tri umph of our opponents would be the decision of these few points. Now, gentleman, it is entirely competent and proper for us who have been soldiers to have soldiers rule over the American people. We are not seeking to inaugurate a civil war, std we are not:seeking to Inaugurate a policy 0' hate and revenge ; but we have coma here o ask for those rights for which our brothers Sled, and that they shall not be periled by the wiles of. scheming and corrupt politicians, Now, M. have entertained you too long itlreudy, and we will proceed to the deliberations of the Convention. .THE DEMOCRACY.'D CONGRESS. Meeting or the . eligl► :n►d Montgom ery Joint Convent.on at NorriNtim orri.tom►. FIRST-CLASS POLITI.:AL ROW. Hon Wm. H. WOW, of Montgomery County, Nominated for Congress. The Now inatiol Sub , ;equently Repu diated by Convention. The Lehigh Dek•Wnlcw !Licked On of Con . uud Dr. E. 1.. Acker declared the Nun. Ince by 711 my. From the Nunistosre herald of Tuesday Yesterday marked an important epoch in the political history of this county. Lehigh and l'allutgoinery joined in a hand-shaking "over the bloody Comm" that ended rather disastrously to certain political aspire: is mud which has no doubt caused a breach in the Democratic -party that neither time nor the efforts of a State Committee will be able to close very soon. Delegates to the number of 411 from Lehigh county met a like number representing this county in the Court. House at 1 o'clock, p. The meeting was an adjourned joint convert. Lion, the first session of which was hvid at Allentown on Friday last, Inc the purpose of nominating a Democratic candidate fcir Con gress. 'I he meeting at Allentown adjourned after twenty two ineffectual ballots, the Mont gomery delegates having gone solid for Acker and the Lebig.i men (livid ing. their forces be tween Messrs. Horn, Schnli, Stiles, Bridges, and' others of their own county. At the second attempt, yesterday, Enos Erdman 01 Lehigh, the President of the Con. ventiou called the delegates tr. order. D. D. Roper of Lehigh and Jonathan M. Hart of Montgomery acted as secretaries. The roll was called and the convention proceeded at once to business, i. e., balloting ibr a candi date. The first ballot of the adjourned meet ing, being the twenty-third of the joint con• vention, resulted in Lehigh casting her 40 votes for the several candidates and Mont. gomery being solid for E. L. Acker. The balloting then proceeded—interlarded by a number of unsuccessful motions for an inter- mission—until arriving at the thirty•fourth ballot, which resulted in Montgomery's 46 votes being cast fur Acker and Lehigh's 40 for Horn. The next seven ballots resulted as follows : 36th—Acker and Schutt each • tit .—Acker cud Stiles each. 37tn—Acker and 61-Ickes each ..... . ...... .....46 votes Mtn—Acker and Ifolben each. ....... votes 39.91—Acker cud McDowell each 96 vote• 90th—Acker and Dr. M. Newberry each.. 46 votes 4lst—Acker and W. 11. Witte each......... 46 votes An intermission was again proposed by Le- high, but Mr. Boyd, chairman of the Mont goinery delegation. vehemently objected, charging that Lehigh bad put her request in the shape of a threat. Subsequently,' how. ever, the speaker yielded, and the convention took a recess of fifteen minutes. The convention reconvened after half an hour recess. After roll call the chair announc ed that the convention would proceed -with thy 42.1 ballot. The names of the Lehigh deh•gates were called and they all responded in favor of William IL Witte, of Whitemarsh, this county. The secretary then called the Montgomery delegates, who voted, as before, for E. L. Acker, until the name of Jacob M. Weber, of North Wales, was called, who vot ad for Witte, giving that gentleman 47 votes and making him the nominee of the Conven tion. As soon as Mr. Weber repeated the name of Witte he abruptly left the Court- Emai aassitlF Dr. Acker, who immediately get for his votiri stately followed it is impossible to describe. The Montgomery delegates to a man rose to their feet and the next half hour was exhaust ed in curs-s so loud and deep that people from all quarters rushed Into the Court house. The mob. spirit got to so high a pitch that Sheriff Larzelere mount, d a table and commandeu silence, but there was "no peace." Threats . were made and charges openly declared against persons suppost4 to have bribed We ber to vote for %Vote. The hyena-like howls continuing the brass baud was called into re• . quisition ' imp when the hand stopped playing Mr. Boyd, mounting a chair, succeeded in malting himsell heard. He demanded a sub. stitute iu Mr. %Veber's seat, who had left the convention without asking permission and in such a way as to brand him a corrupt man— one who had the price of his infamy in his p 'chin. Mr. Boyd's demand was not tweed ed to and the noise and confusion continued. Messrs. Wilson and Good of Lehigh, on be half of the Lehigh delegation, said that Dr. Acker was objectionable to the party in their county--that any other man Montgomery would produce would be accepted. Tney fi nally agreed and so stated that Mr. Boyd would be acceptable to them. Mr. B replied that under the circumstances he could not think of being the candidate, and asked that Lehigh ogre to an adjournment, with a view of r,,concillng matters. Finally an adjourn went uuul.7 p. m., was agreed upon, the rec ord to stand as it was. EVENING SESSION At 7 o'clock promptly the court-Louse b'- gnu to be filled with an excited audience. Tlt.• chairman - took his seat, but the roll was not called. The delegates were in their places. wnen Dr. Bigony, one of the Montgomery delegates, asked his colleagues to retire for consultation, which they did, and In half an hour returned. It. was soon whispered around that Acker had backed down to Le- high and that the Montgomery delegation, at Acker's request, had concentrated ou John U: Smith, of Pottstown. Albs!' the chairman of the Montgomery delegation communicated the result to Lehigh that delegation with drew I'or consultation, and in half au hour returned with their decision, rejecting Mr. Smith. It was very evident now that another ex citing scene was to take place. Mr. Boyd arose and said that Lehigh had agreed to ac cept any man but Acker that Montgomery would name. Accordingly r in a spirit ()Icon" cession, they had.presented the name ofJohn C. Smith. In violation of the agreement, _ . however, Lehigh now refuses to accept Mr. Smith. Mr. Boyd then proceeded In very violent language to denounce the action ot the Lehigh delegates. The storm of applause was dealeidug, and the speaker continued in explanation of the attitude things had as mimed, Lehigh, in the mean time, vainly at tempting to be heard. Mr. Boyd concluijed his speech by asking the audience to imagine dientselves in independence Hall, declaring their rights. and violently commanding the Lehigh chairman to vacate his seat, nomi lsted, amid the wildest enthusiasm, Hon. 13. M. Boyer as Presieent of the meeting. The mutton was carried with a howl that sent the Lehigh men, chairman and all, out of the court-house. Mr. Boyer advanced and said substantially that he lett justified in assuming tae position to which he had been assigned, the chair hav ing been vacated. He had hoped that Lehigh would have remained and that matters i would have been amicably settled. They were in a position very much_ to be regretted. The re• erimination that had been heard would be re peated in the newspapers. Dr. Acker had made sacrifice In order to secure harmony rho ii maul' had been a silent spectator. When Lehigh said Acker was ohjectionable the lat ter tetited mall offered wind was fair. The speaker reheats the manner ..1 auhstilatiug Stilith for Acker. Notwititswooing a hat had been done —that Dr. Acker had n sold id Pha lanx ul th legates fur him—he was willing to retire and give op what he tioashleteil hia Plat chum. Yet Lehigh r. win's. Wits this tott;i, nanimou.d . Mr. Smith watt a Wan tint EC -ption ai.le ia character. Ihe Lehigh delegates had gone hack au their word by rt jetting the set tlement. lint the Montgomery delegates were still willing to make a further a wrifice, by presenting another individual. One of the Lehigh delegates, however, Wits Neared to say in his place that Mr. Boyd, who was sug gested, was the last mail they were were a li lung to vote for: Thus when we offer them other candidates they refuse and insist upon the ballot proceeding. Although William Witte received 47 votes he was not the nond• nee of the convention. The titan who had voted last fled like a ciimiw 1 trout the hat', Lt high should have said tuts was a pslimble fraud. She refused to do so. The speaker proceeded at length to show the fairness of Dr. Acker in yielding the nomination and the unjustifiable course In Lehigh refusing to en cept him as a candidate, and against whose Congressional record they could say nothing. If be was worthy their suffrages two years ago he is worthy of them to-day. The election was near at hand. It may be that the act ion to-day will lose us the district. It was their duty, however, to do - what they could to pro mote his election. Chas. Hunsicker,Esq., followed Mr. Boyer, denouncing the treachery of the Montgomery delegate in voting for Mr. Witte and fleeing with the price of his treason In his pocket. lie was sorry Mr. Witte had not appeared, and with his clear ringing voice, repudiated the manner of his nomination. Not to do so was very un like him. ,Mr. Boyd referred to the conduct of the del egates who at the previous convention refused to vote for Dr. Acker, and wa,f very severe In his denunciation of Mr. Witte.. He pitied the poor devils, who, having a candidate, yet were afraid to declare their choice. Was Mr. Witte at the bottom of the whole trouble? Let him come forward and explain this thing. What was to be thought of the refusal of the Lehigh delegates to permit an honest man to be substituted iu Weber's plaae ? Better suf fer defeat and - preserve their Integrity. He looked to the people to sustain the nomination of Dr. Acker. George W. Rogers was the next speaker. This was the proudest day he had spent for twenty years. They had offered the olive breach to Lehigh and she had rejected It. Dr. Acker had been declared the nominee for Congress by the unanimous voice of the Du mucracy of Montgomery county, and they would stand by him. This speaker conclud ed by calling for three cheers for the nominee. Patrick Tierney was asked by Mr. Boyd to take the stand. lie did so and stated that be fore the oraanization of the convention he was approached with a check to vote against Dr. Aker. He refused. A second offer was refused. He would mention no name, because he thought the parties were but the tools of other persons. The meeting adjourned with cheers for Acker. The excitement during all yesterday after noon and evening was intense. Such a row at a political convention was never before witnessed in Montgomery county. Weber, the run-away delegate, had lie not left the convention and tied the town,would probably have been severely handled. Whether or not be Is guilty of selling out his party we can not Say. Hon. Lin Birth()lamely oa the State Ticket. On Saturday evening a very largo Republi can mass meeting was held in the "Wigwam," Philadelphia, Col. Wm. B. Mann presiding. Lin Bartholomew, Esq., was the first speaker, and was Introduced amidst much ap plause. Ile said that he wished the gentlemen pres ent to believe that he was in earnest in the advocacy of Republican principles. He was not going to give a history of the war ; what he intended to do was to notice the parties in existence, and their claims upon the people Mr their support. The Republican party was based upon a great truth ; It had come into power with Its great representative man— Abraham Lincoln at Its head. [Applause.] When the party that had ruled the country for forty years saw that their power was going to pass away, they resolved to either rule or ruin the country ; and, In the war which fol lowed, the country came near being destroyed. The man who killed Abraham Lincoln was not a rebel soldier, but he did his work at the bidding of Northern Copperheads The first man in he great struggle who gave to the contest the stamp of victory was Ulysses S. Grant. [Api euse.] In alluding to Copperheads the speaker did not wish to include all who bore the name of Democrats, because many who bad been al lied with that party went forth to fight for the Union, and did fight manfully. But It was not to be disguised that the rebels found sym pathy and encouragement In the Democratic party. And the man who struck down trai- G votes .9G votes tors and made treason odious was General Grant. And now we find the old rebel ele ment again raising its head. It has selected as its standard-bearer the good old Horace Greeley. Tweed is among them, and the met his reward; NVelreptribb ;SW time. We dont hate those who rose in rebel lion against the ciiuntry and Bought to sunder it, but we can never forget what they did. l'hey may repose on the bosom of the venerm Me Horace, and seek to get into power through him, but we are not going to pin our 'Milt to a man who has for selfish purposes al lowed his name to be used by his life-long po litical enemies. lam not going to speak of me Administration of General Grant. All I need say is what Alexander tin:Miens has said tit it, and that Is that it has been success ful iu many things, especially In the reduc tion of the national debt. I 'would ask you where Horace Greeley was in the days of the rebellion, when hundreds of your sons were going forth to do battle, never to return? He was for peace. He put on his cocked hat, be girded on his sword, and lie went forth to iiiipress the rebellion ; but no din not go out of New York. [Laughter.] Whea five hun dred thousand wen were called for, and the additional tax was levied, Horace Greeley sung up his sword, unstained as it was, and shouted, " Peace I peace I" And later, when Grant was driving Lee from Richmond, where was Horace Greeley then? He turned his lace towards Canada I [Laughtt.r.] He again cried out peace, and he was willing to unite with the worst men to accomplish it that the country has ever known. Horace Greeley cannot check tile car of progress, nor Charles Sumner, nor a hundred such men ; and the result wilt be that the car will roll over them and crush them to powder I [Applause.] It Is not for to-day nor tomorrow that We are making history. The men that are true to themselves and to the noble cause they have espoused w 111 be remembered ; those who are false to themselves and to their principles will ite either forgotten or remembered with de testation I [Applause.] Now let us look for a moment at this question of Liberal Republi canism. If you go into Lancaster county you will tied that It is all Liberal Republican, be cause the county is Republican. but If you go into Serbs or Schuylkill county you will find it all Democratic and nothing else. In Schuyl- kill county, where I came from, there are only two Liberal Republicans and one of 'them is going to leave it very soon. But let us look a little closer at this Liberal, so called Reform movement. What do they propose to reform—what can they reform with ten Demo crats to one Republican? [Laughter.] When did the Democrats ever eater upon the work of reform ? Answer me that. And so far as tile Liberal Republicans are concerned, the only reform they have attempted is In leaving tee Republican party, by whiz"' the'party is benefited. Iu Pennsylvania the standard bearer of General Grant—the foremost in the tight la—you know hint well—General Bart ranit, the gallant soldier who Is going to be your next Governor. [Prolonged applause ] l'he speaker then said that Colonel Fort ey had expressed himself favorably to Ho ace Greeley on more than one occasion, and op posed to General Grant, and he thought that Colonel Forney ought to avow his preference openly and boldly. He does not Mons out lu opposition to General Grant, but he does it by attacking General Hamann. If he has any private grievance to settle, lie ought not to do It over the back of a gallant soldier. I I h. and Simon Cameron cannot live in harmony together, let him fight S'mou, and let the man who has been in seventeen batiks win another battle at the polls in October. So far as the Evans business is concerned, the speaker was not going s Ir it up ; but he would say that the charges made against Gen. flartranit cannot be sustained by testimony that would have any weight with any grand jury in the land. Who would tney have us to vote for, II nut for Gen !rid Bunn oft? Only tier Charles it. Bu ekttlew, a man who bas been in publte tile a considerable perioo "t . hie, tad has never obtained any p isi tip n in . statesnianshim l live In u county ad joining the one_ in which he lives, anti I tell you he will get smallest vote there.that he will to any portion of the State. He had declared that he ought to have the soldiers' vole, bec.ins! he voted w p.ty the S tillers in gold. Anil wily did to do so? Was it be cause lie loved the s diner 1 Oh, no I He dill it to cripple. the Government,.as his acts well shoaled. Mr. 11.irtuolo.new closed by saying t h at the people in the northwestern portion of the State Intended to do their part in the coming contest, And all he asked was that the voters In the other part of the Com• numwealth would do likewise. [Applause.] A tnoven.ent is on foot In New York to an early abolition of the usury laws in that State. As preventives of usury these laws have bee tlturouglily tested, and have proved not onl uselesi, but positively inluriOus to the business interests of the community. . El NO. 40. ROBERT IREDELL, JR . {plain anti Jancp fob Irlnter, No. 688 HAMILTON STREET, ALLIII( TOWN. PA.) ALIGANT PRINTING NEW DESIGNS LATEST STYLES Stamped Chocks, Cards, Circular.. 'Payer Booke,_Conell tution. and kly-Lawe, School Catalogues, Roads Envelopes, Letter Beads Bills of Leans, Way Bills, Tags and Shlyolocearde, Posers °tiny else, etc.. etc., Prlhted atShorttNottc• The Union Lengne and Generallinehronft On Friday evening, of a fell meeting of the National Campaign Committee of the Union League of Philadelphia, to whom that Influ ential body delegated the power to express its sentiments upon the issue of the present canvass, the following resolutions were unan imously adopted : Resolved, By the General Campaign Com mittee of the Union League of Philadelphia. Tdat now as during the rebellion, we have Implicit confidence In the patriotism, Judg ment and ability of General Ulysses S. Grant. As the legitimate fruits of his generalship, as well as of his wise and firm Administration, we point, with pride, to a country saved ; peace restored and secured : laws faithfully administered •, honor maintained ; the nation al aebt diminished and diminishing ; a reduc tion of taxation, and all the necessaries of life free from taxation, while protection to Amer ican Industry is carefully preserved ; a great Republic, with political equality of all races and colors—prosperous at home and respected abroad. In recognition of these benefits, the sound patriotism and enlightened judgment of the people guarantee to Gen. Grant a tri umphant re-election. IL Resolved, That In John F. Ilartranft, selected by. the unanimous voice of the Repub lican party of Pennsylvania as our caudidato for the Chief Idagiat.acy of the Mate, we re recognize the tried, true and faithful citizen, soldier and honest man—the soldier, who sprang to arms to defend an imperilled coun try, and the honest man, who In every posi tion, private or official, has acquitted himself with honor and fidelity to each trust reposed in him. His calumniators have basely and ,falsely endeavored to destroy the esteem In which he is hold by his fellow-citizens ; but the people, who know the man, his unsullied reputation and spotless integrity, will 'con sign his detractors to the obscurity' they de serve, when the grand Inquest of PennsylVa nia shall render its verdict on the second Tuesday of October next. 111. Resolved, That we recognize no half way men in times of great political exigency, and that those who aro not with us in Vl° sup port of the principles wo advocate ' and the standard-bearers regularly selected, are against us, and that we will give to the Republican ticket a united and hearty support. Jaues.ll. CAMPBELL, Chairman. Attest : R. P. Otuallounu, Bec'y. BURNSIDE ON HARTRA.NFr. General Burnside, In the course of his ad dress before the veterans at the Pittsburgh Convention, spoke of General Hartranft as EIMEI General Hartranft, your candidate for Goy ernor, la my old comrade and tried friend. He went Into the field with us at the first bat tie of the war, and joined the North Carolina expedition at Annapolis. From that time un it the end of the war we were together on the fields of Roanoke,Newberne,Snutk sloun tain, Antietam, Fredricksburg, Vicksburg, Knoxville, Campbell's Station, Blue Spring, the Rapidan campaign, from the Wildernesi'% to Appomattox Court HOlll3O. He proved himself an efficient and gallant soldier. Com rades of Pennsylvania, it is clearly your duty, without reference to politics, to see that so gallant and true a commander Is not harmed by the malicious slanders of designing politl clans. You have but for a moment to think of the course pursued during the war by his opponent, Mr. Buckalew, In order to find the strongest reasons for a firm support of General Hartranft. Comrades, my personal duties require me to leave you before the de liberations of our meeting are concluded. As you all know, I have never in my Ills solicit. ed an office, and never expect to do so. lam therefore, speaking unbiased sentiments. I beg of you to make every honest effort to re elect General Grant, and to elect General Hartman to the office of Governor of the Com monwealth of Pennsylvania. It gives me great pleasure to announce that tho National gBPLffil/iTA eumpaaJozwp ranc,xliakrciltipc soldier in the land, General Hawley, of ' Con necticut. And now, comrades, let us join In an appeal to our late enemies in the field, the • confederate soldiers, to step in frodi to oblit erate the great wrong therhave done their country. BUCKALEW. For an open, avowed, manly, honorable opponent all men have a respect. In case or triumph the victor always treats his vanquished foe with a certain amount of generous esteem. But for the foe in his own ranks, who pro fesses to be with him and yet Is scarcely in league with the enemy, no ono has or even can have any esteem. By all the laws of war a spy is a doomed man, and no Intervention can or should save him. Yet we have now in the field as a candidate for Governor of Pennsylvania a man proven by the rebel ar chleves to have been in secret conference with duly commissioned rebel emissaries In Canada, at a time when he was himself bound by the oath he had taken as United States Senator to support, maintain, defend and ad here to the Constitution, government, laws and national arms of the United States gov ernment. ,That such a person should have the impu dence now to present himself as a condidato for Governor of a Commonwealth that throe hundred thousand Pennsylvanians enlisted in the army to defend, surpasses belief and defies explanation.. For be cannot deny that the rebel archives :are -correct In recording the fact of his conference, since the witnesses are still living to testify to the accuracy of the statement, What did he go to that confer ence for? What did-be do there? What did he engage to do? 'What was the programme of action to which ho assented? What part of it did he carry out, or attempt to carry out in Pennsylvania? What was the object of the programme thus arranged ? Why confer at all with rebel emissaries? 'these are queries that Mr. Buckalew has not attempted to answer, nor can ho with any safety to himself. GLEANINGS AND GOSSIP. The Congress of old Catholics has convened in session at Cologne. The attendance of delegates is, quite numerous, and the opening proceedings, which were witnessed and as. slated by dignitaries of the Protestant churches ~t England and the United Stars, were of a very animated character. The most important consequences may result to the civilizations of the world from this congregation of the modern Council of Cologne. Boston's highest judicial tribunal has decid ed that it is not burglary to enter a house through a window which Is left unfastened, forasmuch as it is the duty of citizens to make their abodes secure. A German In New York drove a long nail to the head In his skull, but failed to lilt any. thing inside, and the spike was withdrawn without injury. A citizens' committee of twenty-five has been created in Chicago to aid the city au. tiler Wes in the prompt arrest, speedy trial and sure punishment of criminals, lawlessness, rol be y, and even murder, having become . alarm ugly frequent in that city; and the po .ice and courts having proved powerless to stay the evil. We are said t be too practical and prosaic ov, r here; but what shall we say of tho , prat. tical nature shown by our-foreign friends, who recently knocked down the chateau of William the t onqueror, on the west of Nor mandy, to be used for kindling wood This chateau was not only the home of William, but it was once the prison of Richard Conn do Lean. Ban Francisco is In a aliment nonce rning railroad subsidies. Thu rrlor. ty of tho voters of the.city petitioned for a grant of ton mil. Boos of dollars to the prop ct Id Atlantic and Pacific road, but the city Council refused to entertain the proposition ; In lieu thereof, they, have passed an order to submit to vote a proposition to grant subsidif sof two and a-half mflllone to the Central PBC Be, ten millions to the Ban Francisco and Colorado road, and other amounts to the Northern Pacific and Banta Cruz railroads.