BUTLER CITIZEN. JOHN H. *TwTc. HE6LEV. PROP'RB. EnteredTaTthe Poatoffice at Butler at second-clans* matter. Republican National Ticket, FOR PRESIDENT, 1880. GEN. JAMES A. GARFIELD, <»«r «»•» *«»- FOR VICE PRESIDENT. 1880, HON. CHESTER A ARTHUR, Republican State Nominations. FOE JUDGE SUPREME COURT, Hon. Henry Green, OF KOBTHAMFTOH COt'HTT. FOB AUDITOR GENERAL, Hon. John A-. Lemon, OF BI.AIB COI'KTY. Republican County Nominations. Congress. J. D. McJUNKIN, of Butler Comity. Senate. JOHN M. GREER, E«J., of Butler borough. (Subject to the Dietrict Conference.) Assembly. WILLIAM P. BRA HAM. of Meroer townehip. SYLVESTER D. BELL, of Milleretown borough. District Attorney. A. M. CUNNINGHAM, E*»., of Bo tier borough. Associate Judge. mPiBtM MoOAND LESS, of Butler townehip. Coonty Surveyor. NATHAN M. BLATOB, of Butler borough. NOTIOB. There aru some of our subscribers falling behind to such sn extent in their subacription accounts, and the are so much needed by ua at present, that we bare to request their early attention to the same. TURN out and hear Mr. Grow in the Court House on Friday evening, the 10th inst GIN. EOKLKY and A. G. Williams, Esq., will address the Garfield and Ar thur Club at Centreville, on Tuesday evening next, 14 th inst MR. Wit. CROOKSHANK has on exhi bition in front of the Court House, his celebrated driller, the "Farmers Favor ite." This is said to be one of the best drillers now in use among the farmers. He has sold some twenty-five of them in this county. He will exhibit it at our coming Fair, September 21st. STATS elections, in what arc re garded as close or contested States, will come off in the following order: Maine on next Monday, Bep. 13th, Colorado on Oct. 5, Ohio, Indiana and West Virginia on Oct. 12. The results in Indiana and Ohio will have quite an effect on the Presidential election. will certainly go Republican, and Ohio as well. Indiana will be looked to with the greatest interest as both parties are olaiming it and its vote may decide the Presidential con test TOT assertion of Thomas Robinson through the Eagle that he had pro cured the names of a majority of our Connty Committee to a certain paper on the Congressional nomination, turns oat just as we suspected. We hare called twice for the publication of said names, and now call again for them. This is but one of the many falsehoods being put in circulation by a defeated candidate and some men of like character. No committee could stultify itself in the manner alleged. For them so to do would be as ill timed as ill-advised. A DEMOCRATIC paper quotes Han cock's remark that, in this campaign, the people are the leaders. Yes, and they are satisfied. They are at work with brain and hand in every depart ment of labor, and they are prosper ing at their work. Every lurid furnace blaze in the courftry is a beacon to gnide the Republican party to victory; each blow on every one of all the thousands of anvils is a campaign ar gument in our behalf; every dollar of debt paid and every cent saved, by reason of liberal wages, is another, and no man, to whom the Lord has given common sense and a common patriot ism, can deem a change from all the far-reaching prosperity of this crowning year of our American greatness, either possible or desirable. OOURT. The regular September Term of our Coarts opened on Monday of this week with Judge McJunkin and Associates Storey and Dodds on the Bench. No other than the grand jury are present this week, which body is now in session acting upon bills, etc., bronght before it. Next week a trav erse jury will be present and criminal cases tried, a full account of which, as well as of bills found this week, will be given our readers. MBBTINQ ATSABVBBSVILLB. The Buffalo township Garfield and Arthur Club had auother rousing meeting at Sarversville on Saturday evening last. A torch-light procession, two martial bands, one from Leasure ▼ille and one from Bricker's Mill, and a brass band from Saxonburg, enliven ed the occasion. The ladies were in at tendance. The Miss Hershbergers pre sented the Club with a fine banner of their own making and bearing the in scription "To save the Nation, vote for Garfield and Arthur." R. P. Scott *nd G. W. Fleeger, Esq'rs., of Butler, nade eloquent and able speeches to the Urge assemblage. It was estimated that not less than fire hundred people i were present j GALUSHA A. GROW will speak at the Republican meeting in the Court House on next Friday evening. THE position of the Congressional nomination in this district remains about the same. The only practicable and fair proposition for a settlement that has been made was that of Mr. McJunkin to Mr. Miller, to each choose a friend and have a third party as umpire outside the district. This was agreed to by Mr. Miller and a paper drawn up, naming Lieut. Governor Stone as the said third party. But Mr. Miller as usual went back on his own agreement This is the second time he has done so. His doing so the first time, at the Mercer Conference, has been the sole cause of all the trouble now existing. And yet he and bis friends keep up a blustering and a pre tense that they have offered thus and so. They, for instance, talk about the committees of the three counties again meeting and voting on the question, while they know that that is impossible and impracticable, from one fact alone, and that is, that there are two commit tees in Crawford county, both claim ing to be the regular one. We forbear further remarks at pres ent in the hope that reason will pre vail. The great mass of the Republi cans of this county insist on Mr. Mc- Junkin standing to his rights, and the rights of this county. He was the first nominated, and has the best and most regular nomination. Mr. Miller was the bolting party, and took a second nomination from the Dick faction of Crawford county, who had no right at the time to give it. The course of his friends here and elsewhere is, and has so far been, such as to irritate and keep up bad feeling. Their policy is to rule or rain. And if defeat comes they will be held responsible. IMPORTANT NOTICE. The officers of all Republican march ing clubs throughout the county are respectfully requested to send their names and addresses, with the number of men enrolled, to the Secretaries of the Qarfield & Arthur Club of Butler, without delay. The County Commit tee contemplate holding a grand mass parade and torchlight procession of all the clnbs in the county, at Butler, sometime after the middle of October, 1880, and the importance ot communi cating the desired information should be apparent. J. T Domlt, \ ~ , s8 2t Wm. H. Lusk,| aecjs - OROW COMING. Hon. Galusha A. Grow will speak in the Court House at Butler on next Friday evening, 10 inst. This will probably be the only op portunity our citizens will have of hearing this distinguished gentleman and orator during this campaign. Therefore let there be a general turn out to hear him. Republicans through out the county should try to be pres ent There are few, if any, more able and eloquent speakers in thqland, than Galusha A. Grow. He always sounds the key notes of the campaign. Let there be a rousing meeting to greet him in the Court House on Friday evening. Nominated. The Democratic conferees of this Senatorial district, Armstrong and Butler counties, met in Conference at Freeport last week and nominated Jacob Ziegler, Esq., of this place, as the Democratic candidate for the State Senate We congratulate our brother ' of the Herald upon this honor con ferred upon him by his party friends. The district is about one thousand ■ Republican and of course it is but an , honor, unless some "streak of luck" I should strike "Uncle Jake," as he is : generally called. Personally Mr. Zieg • ler is a very clever man, but politically ■ he is on the wrong side, and, like > Hancock, his gun is "pinten" in the > wrong direction to-day. | OREENBAOEJ3RS BACK AGAIN. The Greenbackers of this county r had another meeting in this place on Monday last. Although apparently [ few in number at present, yet they i seem determined to keep up their or . ganization at least. Two years ago i they bad a considerable following in • this county, but from all we can see or ■ learn their ranks are greatly reduced. And indeed it is difficult to see any ground they have to stand on at pres ent, with any show of reason. Just the reverse has come to the country from what they predicted two years ago in regard to our financial affairs. And no change in our financial system ' could certainly be advisable at present. Mr. Plummer in his speech in the Court House on Monday evening ad vanced nothing new. It was com posed of the same old arguments that time has Bhown not to be well founded. We und"'Btand they completed their county ticket as follows: Congress, W. C. Plummer, of Crawford county; State Senate, left to conferees ; Assem bly, John A. Brawley, of Parker town ship, and one to to be filled by commit tee ; District Attorney, S. H. Piersol, Esq., of Butler; Associate Judge, Al len Dunn, of Franklin township. Doctor Sutherland, of Petrolia, was appointed Chairman of the County Committee. Mr. Plummer having already re ceived the nomination of his friends in Crawford and Mercer counties, is therefore their candidate for Congress in this district. Hon. Thos. M. Marsh all, of Pitts burgh, made a Republican speech at 1 William sport, Pa., last week to a very large audience. fElr* (Kit***** j W»U**r, fl*., |jjept*mfe*y 8, IBBQ. THE ENORMITY" OP TXIE ACT. We met recently an old Republican of this State who, in the course of a conversation with him on politics past and present, had occasion to refer to the enormity of the act of the Legisla ture of 1861 in repealing the Tonnage- Tax law. The subject of Ex. Governor Curtin's present candidacy for the Democratic nomination for Congress, in his district, was the one we were conversing on, and Governor Curtin s change from a Republican to a Demo crat was what called forth the remarks about the Tonnage Tax repeal. This old gentleman stated that Curtin, then Governor, had received, as his share, the large sum of $55,000 for his ap proval of the bill repealing the law. He gave the particulars of how the money was paid the Governor by the Pennsylvania Railroad company for his signature to the bill. The amount the Railroad got clear of paying the State by the repeal, and which was then due and unpaid, was upwards of a million of dollars. Some eight hun dred thousand dollars of this was al ready in the shape of judgments the State had obtained against the Rail road company for back years unpaid taxes. The balance, some two hundred thousand dollars, was also about due and similar legal proceedings were be ing instituted to compel the Railroad to pay up. It was under these circum stances that the Railroad conceived the plan of getting the Legislature to repeal the law, thus taking off the tax. How the Railroad succeeded is a mat ter of history. The law was not only repealed, thus cutting off all future revenue to the State from this Rail road tax, but actually relieving the Railroad of the SBOO,OOO due upon the judgments that had been obtained. The old gentleman in speaking of this great outrage of the Legislature, in not only repealing the law for the fu ture but in releasing the Railroad from payment of the back taxes then due, became very emphatic in his denunci ation of the Legislature for passing the law, and of Gov. Curtin for sign ing it. The tax had been imposed when the State had granted the char ter for building the Railroad along the ronte of our then State canals. These canals it seems had cost the State some eighty millions of dollars to build. The making of the Railroad destroyed their business —as was well known it would —and rendered them useless to the State. Hence the tax on the ton nage or freight carried by the road was imposed, so as to remunerate the State for the loss of nearly all her public im provements. And hence the repeal of that law was the great outrage inflict ed on the taxpayers of the State by the Legislature of 1801. THE OAT OUT AT LAST. Among the resolutions passed by the Dick side of the Crawford county Republican Committee at a late meet ing of the same, on August 24, ult., was one in substance as follows: "Resolved, That Hon. Samuel B. Dick waa entitled to a renomination ; and that his voluntary retirement, when it was in his power to take the nomination, was a personal sacrifice in the interest of harmony" etc. That the above may be better under stood we will state, that the "nomina tion"' referred to above waa the one that was given to Mr. Miller, of Mer cer, by the Greenville meeting of Aug. sth, at which the Miller and Dick conferees were alone present. So here it appears that after all Mr. Dick | could have gotten that "nomination" —had it "in his power to take it," and would not, but give it to Mr. Miller. This confirms what the Butler con ferees observed at the regular Confer ence at Mercer on July 6th. Every thing there, as well as everything be fore that time, pointed to the fact that Miller and Dick understood one an other and that Miller was to nominate Dick at Mercer, provided he, Miller, succeeded in getting the Dick conferees into that conference. But that failed. The Greenville meeting of Dick and Miller was the next thing that fol lowed. And now we have it an nounced by the Dick faction in Craw ford, bis own county, that Miller, of Mercer, waa still willing to give that bolting nomination to Dick, but Dick declined it, although he had it "in his power to take it." We refer to this admission now for the purpose of show ing Miller'? double dealing and trifling in this whole matter. He pretended all along that he wanted the nomina tion himself, and a great stress was, and continues to be made on the claims of his, Mercer county, to a nomination. He now puts his whole case, we may say, upon the merits of his county of Mercer. But here we now have the fact acknowledged, that so late as at the Greenville meeting of himself and Dick, he was willing to waive those claims and to nominate Dick, but Dick rofused to take such a nomination and turned around and offered it to Miller, who did take it. What consideration was Mr. Miller giving at that time to the claims of Mercer county? None. And all this accounts for why he wanted the Dick bolters admitted at Mercer. He has been the cause of all the trouble we have in this Congres sional district, and while a few disap pointed men in Butler, headed by a defeated candidate, may be making large promises to Mr. Miller, we again assure him that the Republicans of But ler county will stand by Mr. McJunkin, their own man and the regular nomi nee* - THE telephone is being introduced into all our cities and large towns in the United States. THE NORTH AND T.iE SOUTH. 1 In a late speech at Staunton, ir ginia, Senator Wade llanipton said: "With a united South castiug 138 elee- j toral votes, we need only New York ! and Indiana, and I believe we shall have them. Will Virginia, when we . have success within our very grasp, j sacrifice the Democratic party ? Will . she sacrifice the South?" That is the precise point. Shall "the South" con trol the Government ? The particular ( declaration that the principles which ' he was supporting were the principles for which Lee and Stonewall Jackson fought, Senator Hampton denies hav ing made. But whether he said ex actly the words attributed to him or not," he made the speech, and the speech says nothing else. We do not mean, of course, that he intends to an- | nounce another war, but he desires the supremacy of "the South" in the Union. His loyalty is to his section, as Lee's and Jackson's was. He feels, as most white men of his section feel, that "the South" is something worthy of a devotion which can not be paid to the Union. We certainly do not re proach Senator Hampton, or any other Democrat, for holdiug views for « hich he was willing to give his life, nor do we suppose that he or any other South ern Democrat feels any "repentance" for his part in the rebellion, or has changed bis views of the nature, what ever he may now think of the power, of the national government If the situation had been reversed, and we Union men had been defeated, and the government dissolved, undoubtedly we should have held that this event of the war did not determine the justice of the victorious view. We do not sup pose that "the South," for which Sen ator Hampton speaks, has changed its mind, except in regard to methods. It would not attempt, under the circum stances, any kind of open rebellion, nor the restoration of slavery. In that sense it is loyal. But it does unques tionably mean to control the govern ment, if it can obtain control by the most resolute suppression of the op posing vote at the South, and by suc cess, as Senator Hampton says, in two or three Northern States. His ap peal is, "Will Virginia sacrifice the South ?" It is not, in our judgment, possible that upon a free and honest vote of the people of this country would in this generation, and while the old party associations and divis ions continue, intrust the government to the section and men and principles which attempted its destruction, what ever their acquiescence in the inevita ble. We do not object to any body of voters endeavoring to acquire ascen dency by legitimate means, but we ob ject emphatically to an election car ried by the Alabama plan and the tissue ballot. We presume no intelli gent roan believes that the vote in the Southern States will be in any sense fair or honest. However much this sectional aspect of politics is to be regretted, the fact itself is undeniable, and it must be ac cepted. Senator Hampton states frank ly and clearly the alternative offered by the candidacy of Garfield and Han cock. He puts it fairly and plainly. The election of Hancock is govern ment by the South ; the election of Garfield is government by the North. The sectional names are inevitable. They describe the two forces that have always contended for the mastery. The contest is the key of onr politics, and it will continue, whatever the name of parties or the aspect of elections, uutil it reaches a natural end by the abso lute supremacy of one idea over the other. For a generation "the South," slavery, and the Democratic party have been different expressions of the same political element. We shall not discuss the causes of this fact; but when the ascendency of the South was imperiled by the election of Lincoln, it flew to arms, and after a hard strug gle it was overpowered. It has re sumed its place in the UnioD, and hopes now to obtain the mastery of the government. "We need only New York and Indiana," says Senator Hampton, "and I think we shall have them." The Democratic party does not pretend to hope for success ex cept by the solid electoral vote of "the South." Democratic success, there fore, would be wholly a Southern vic tory. Deduct the "solid South," and the Democratic party disappears. The sectional alternative is the result of our whole previous political situation ; and admitting that the South has an equal right with any other political force to control the government if it constitutionally can, is it dcsireable that it should ? Is there any great public and national object which is more likely to be obtained by a South ern than by a Northern administra tion ? "The South" is a political phrase, like the North. It describes certain principles, policies, traditions, tendencies, a certain general spirit and character, which are familiar to every voter who knows our history. There , is a Southern theory of the Constitu tion and the Union. It is as old as the government. Is it the one upon which patriotic and intelligent men wish to see the government administered ? Are the historical results of those views, put into practice in the social, industri al, commercial, educational, and politi cal systems and development of those States, such as to encourage the hope that in control of the government they would do more and belter for the whole Union than the con titutional views and social and industrial sys tems of "the North ? " Upon any spe cific subject, questions of finance and currency, or taxation, or protection of rights, or sectionalism, or administra tive economy or reform, is it probable that "the South" would do better for us than the North ? And why, since slavery is gone, since the abstractions of State sover eignty are not to be reduced to prac tice, since the reasons for the exis tence of the South as a distinct politi cal force have disappeared—why does Senator Hampton still speak of it as united ? why is it conceded that it will be "solid 1" Why is a Republican vote assumed to be hostile to "the South ? " "The South," it must be re membered, is not ouly the political force and theory that we hikve men tioned, but it is now used by the Dem ocrats to describe a Democratic white majority which has systematically and successfully cowed the colored vote, which in the days of the old "South" did not exist. This South is arrayed against Republicanism as its mortal foe. Now Republicanism is to be judged by Republican Administration. Is ttere in the measure of this Admin ristation, which is that by which we are to be tried, anything unjust to ward any section of the country ? If there be any trouble or injustice in the Southern States to-day, is it caused by , Republican administration, or by Re publicans within or without these j States, or by Democrats? The "South" < is not "solid" because of Republican i misconduct. The Democratic party is i in power in every Southern State. It i has everything its own way, and there is nothing in any Republican platform i or performance which threatens in any i manner any constitutional right of any J citizen. The victory of "the South" in this election would not, therefore, be redress of any wrong. It would be merely the transfer of the government to the control of the most sectional of sections, which would not hesitate to use the whole power at his command to compensate itself for alleged wrongs, and it would be the national approval of political theories subversive of na tional liberty. It can not be supposed that such a radical aud alarming change of administration would con firm the present business prosperity of the country ; that the most dangerous financial quackeries would not at once threaten industrial tranquility ; and that projects of recompense for all kinds of alleged losses would not im mediately follow. This would be "change" with a vengence, but not with advantage to any conceivable in terest.—Harper's Weekly. Conciliation of the South. The great problem which the Ameri can public, or at least the Northern and major portion of it, has had to wrestle with for the la9t ninety odd years is how to conciliate the South. The attitude of the States south of Mason and Dixon's line has been ha bitually that of a spoiled child. In ordinately selfish, quick tempered and petulant the unwise policy was early adopted of giving way to them on every occasion simply to preserve the peace. They came to regard them selves not merely as so mauy States of the Federal Union, but as being of themselves a political entity called "the South," whom they conceived as the feminine gender. This querulous female has always needed a good deal of coaxing and fine words to keep her in anything like a good humor. Her interests and her honor were so easily affected that the North was kept in a chronic state of apology for offenses which, with the best intentions, it was always unwillingly giving. It was impossible to please her, however. Those of the North who resisted her demands were regarded with deadly hostility, while those who adopted a contrary course they nicknamed dough faces, and made little attempt at dis guising the contempt in which they held them. The Constitution is a series of compromises between the large States and the small, and between the advo cates of a strong government and those who still clung to the idea of a mere confederacy. The South, however, needed some special concession pecu liar to itself to secure its adherence to the Union, and the North, even then ready to yield everything to the threat of disunion, allowed the slave States alone of the thirteen to have represen tation in Congress based on property. • The removal of the National Capital from the Keystone State, the natural centre of the Union as it then existed, to the banks of the Potomac was a bonus to the South to secure its ac quiescence to Hamilton's financial • policy aud to put a stop to its mutter ings of disunion. The whole history of the Federal Government, from its for mation uutil Fort Sumpter was fired i upon, is a series of concessions to a South always solid for its own adran , tage. It was by this means that, though a minority in population, wealth and intelligence, it was able to ! make its policy thejpolicy of the nation. Using secessions as a standing menace, ' its will and its rule in the United States were paramount. To dispute them was I instantly to bring home to the offender p the charge of "stirring up sectional . strife," while both sections vied with . each other in covering him with ob , loquy. , Had the South designed to accept the extravagaut concessions which the , compromisers of 1861 were so ready [ and anxious to make, she might have centinued to nominate, perhaps, to the I present day. The North was always , ready to yield everything for peace I* and only accepted war when the . proffered olive branch was rejected [ with scorn and the national flag greot- I ed with shot and shell. The spoiled child had, however, in this instance ' gone too far, and was astonished at re ceiving one of the most terrible drub | bings on record. To reconcilo her to her defeat, to make her rather glad of it, in fact, by reviving the old plan of I unlimited concession has been the pol ( icy steadily adhered to by Northern Democracy. To this end they have aided and abetted the South in its prac ! tide nullification of the Constitutional amendments adopted since the war. They have enabled it to again control both houses of Congress, and now furnish a Presidential candidate whose election will place the South as com pletely in control of the National Gov ernment as it was in the days of Pierce and Buchanan Will the process of conciliation be then complete and sectionalism at last at an end ? With the Executive, Leg islative and—by the process of adding twelve new Judges to the Supreme Court —the Judiciary Departments un der the control of the South, will the "bloody chasm" be closed and pacifi cation concluded ? It is, we think, probable that the South will then ask no more favors, as its will would be law. The lauguage of request would be heard no more, but instead of it the words of commaud. When the South ern Brigadiers gained the ascendency in the National Capitol the Union sol diers who were employees about the building were at once discharged and Confederate soldiers put in their place. When these same Brigadiers have complete control of the purse-strings of the Nation, is it reasonable to suppose that they will consent to vote pen sions to the Union soldiers while the wearers of the gray go uurewarded ? When the principle for which Lee and Jackson fought shall have triumphed will their followers bo forgotten ? There is nothing in the record of the men who now dominato in Democratic counsels to warrant such a conclusiou. The proposed scheme of conciliation i and overthrow of sectionalism would not only be humiliating to the North, but, without doubt, extremely expen sive. Pensions for the rebel soldiery and payment for all the Southern prop erty destroyed in the war, the canoni zation of the rebel leaders, the re habilitation of the discredited doctrine of the State sovereignty, the return of the North to its old abject and apolo- j getic attitude to the South, the com- | plete abandonment of all that the war gained for the victors are each essential to the completion of the much-desired reconciliation between the North and the South. Sectionalism will end when there is but one section, and that the South. Conciliation will be complete only when the North shall have un conditionally surrendered.—Philadel phia Press. Southern Justice. The storv of the experience of W. L. Sprung, a Special Deputy Collector of the Internal Revenue, will illustrate the true Southern spirit. Sprung was an efficient and zealous public servant, and by his pursuit of the moonshiners of South Carolina he incurred the hatred of their frieuds and sympathiz ers. lu one encounter with the gentry Sprung's brother was killed ; in anoth er he himself was obliged to kill an as sailant in self-defense. For this he was arrested and an attempt made to take him to the interior and lynch him. The United States Court promptly re leased hitu on habeas corpus, when he was rearrested on a trumped up charge of stealing a watch, sentenced to three years' confinement in the State Penitentiary, and, upon repre sentation that he was a dangerous character, condemned to wear the ball and chain. Strenuous efforts have been made by President Hayes and Secre tary Sherman to secure his release, but although the injustice of the convic tion was admitted by the State author ities, they have been until Ihis week deterred by cowardice from granting a pardon. He reached Washington last Thursday after having suffered for two years punishment severe enough for any felon, for no worse offense than having done his sworn duty to the United States Government. Truly, the Solid South is in a fine state to re ceive control of the reins of the Gov* eminent. General Butler. General Butler, like Colonel Forney, has retured to the Democratic party. The General has labored zealously for many years to secure the Republi can nomination for the Governorship of Massachusetts, but his success has been disproportioned to Irs zeal. He was electeu to Congress after the war, and was an extreme Republican, and at times a conspicuous political figure. He was especially derided and de nounced by the Massachusetts Demo crats to whom he now returns in order to take command of them. But the General was never at home in the same political camp with Senator Sumner and Governor Andrew. Gov. Andrew, indeed, always looked upon General Butler and General Oaleb Cushing as statesmen of the same school, which was not bit, or Sumner's or that of Massachusetts. For the last few years General But ler has been prominent as a Green backer and an Independent Democrat, and has stumped Massachusetts as a Gubernatorial candidate. His amus ing appropriation or theft of the regu lar Democratic Convention two or three years since, with the indignant protest of the "regular" organization, is familiar. General Butler is a "smart" man, but it has been sometimes thought that he was altogether too smart. There is no significance whatever in his support of General Hancock, for he had already ceased to be considered a Republican, aud there was nothing else for him to do, unless he declared fon Gen. Weaver or Gen. Dow. Speaking Out. Democratic journals In the North will take notice that Will H. Kernan has not been for some time connected with the Okolona States, and that any jerky outbreak of Grey untamed State Sovereignty sentimnut in that Missis sippi paper can no longer be charged upon the "importation from the North whose object is to misrepresent the South." That "noble old Roman," Colonel Harper, that "true exponent of Mississippi opinion," has the paper in his own hands now, and speaks tho "real sentimont of his section." And this is what he says in the latest is sue of the States : The States are tho supreme power of the Government. Thoy made it. They can command it. Like the King, they can do no wrontf. Their will is the law of the case. They know no master but God. They have made the Constitution — they can alter or amend it. They are wise. They are just, They are patriotic, They are liberal, They despise bruto force, They hate coercion, They love law, They will die by liberty, They are the Government. The Federal Government is but a delegated authority. It never was, It never will be, It indeed never can be Sovereign It is beneath, and not above the States. It is subordinate, not superior to the States. It ia the mere agent of the States. The State's rights theory of this Government must be recognized. It is the land of the land ; It must be respected ; It must be obeyed— When this is done, a Federal Union will bo perpetuated by consent. Those are the principles for which the Southern States went into rebel lion and which Lee and Jackson fought for four years. They are "the same principles" for which the Democratic party, controled by tho Solid South, is now contending. IT is the pride of nearly all the Con federate Brigadiers to "wear the gray" as a testimony of their devotion to the principles for which they fought with Lee aud Jackson, but Hancock laid aside bis "blue" to please the rebel women of New Orleans. If he were President he would be ready to hand over tho control of the Government to Jeff Davis, who is the ablest surviv ing representative of the principles for which Lee and Jackson and the other wearers of the "gray" fought Fees of Docltr*. The fee of doctor* is an it*u» that very many persons arc interested in just at present. We believe the schedule for visits is $3.00, which would tax a mail confined to bi« bed for a year, and in need of a daily visit, over SI,OOO a year fur medical attendance alone ! And oue single bottle of Hop Bitters taken in time would save the SI,OOO and all the year's sicknese.-~.fW. PERFECTLY SAFE IN TIE MKT INEXPERIENCED HANDSI For DltrrtHM, Dysentery, Cramps, Cholera, AND ALL THOS* NUMEROUS TROUBLES OF THK STOMACH AND BOWKLN SO RRKVALtNT AT THIS SEASON, No Remedy known to the Medical Profcalon baa been In nae ao long and with «ncb uniformly w>rl .factory reaulta aa PERRY DAVIS' VECETABLE PAIN KILLER It hu bsen uaed with rich wonderful aucceaa In all partaof the world In the treatment of these difficulties, that It haa oome to be oonaldered . AM IMFAIUm CURE FOR ML SDNNER COMPLAINTS and inch It really la when taken In time and according to the Terr plain direction* lncloalng each bottle. In inch dlioaaoi. the attack is usually sadden and frequently rery acute; tat wttk m mA remedy at haal for Immediate me, there la Nldna dangtrof the fttal reanlC which ao often follows a few days' neglect. The Inclination to wait and aee If the morrow does not bring a bettor feeling, not Infrequently occasion! a vast amount of needless Buffering, and aomettmea toata a life, a timely doae of Pain giiiw will almost invariably save both, and with them the attendant doctor's fee. It hu stood the teat of forty yean' constant nae In all countries and cllmatea, and la perfectly safe In any person's hands. It la recommended by Physicians. Nurses In Hospitals, and persons of all cities and professions who have had opportunity for observing the wonderful results which have always followed Its use. THE BEBT EVIDENCE: D A VWVISSETABLK and woold not oo anjaeoeant be without it. When Cholera was last epidemic here, I need no medieinfl of aa7 son hot the Pais Killer, and *ltlion«h myself and several members of my umily were attacked eererelr, I am hapsp to «? that the Pain Killer waa equal to every emergency. I consider I should not be doing my dutj to the ootnmnnlty did I not ssy this much. If I were attacked by the Cholera to-dM. Pais Killer would be the onto remedy I should nee. I have llwwuhl/ tested it, aad know it oan be ratted on. f. S. BEBGUCSEKD, Galena, niloata. No family can afford to be without It, and Its price brines it within the reach of aIL The use of one bottle will go further to convince you of ita merits than ""'"mns of news paper advertising. Try It ana you will never do without It Price Dtc. 50c. and SI.OO per bottle. You can obtain It at any drug-store or from PERRY DAVI3 A SON. Proprietors, Providence, R. L 105 S £■: A 18 SO. 105 NEW NOVEL STYLISH PRINTS, ARMURES, SATINS, CHINTZES, KOMIES. VELVETS, FOULARDS. CASHMERES. SILKS. GINGHAMS, POWDER CLOTHS, SATINS DeLYON. SATIN FACED BLACK SILKS. ■ Satin Finished Black Cashmeres. WRAPS, JACKETS AND SHAWLS. We cordially invite & personal iiu paction, either for information, or profit through purchases. The activity of bales causing oontiuu.-.l change in stock, precludes mailing samples. Heard, Biber & Easton. Between stli Ave. & Liberty Si., Pittsburgh, Pa. 105 MARKET STREET. 105 i " EXPOSITION OF Fill EfIOPS, M BPIIIB6 M MtlHI I Fall Styles Hats, tint rimmed. Fall StylfM Trimmed lints. Fall Styles Plume* and Flowers. Fall Styles Ribbons and Flowers. HOSIERY and GLOVES. WOOLEN HOSIERY, REGULAR MADE. KID, BERLIN AND CLOTH GLOVES. GENTS' HOSIERY, UNDERWEAR. RED UNDERSHIRTS, ALL SIZES. FULL lines GENTS' FURNISING GOODS. BEST DOLLAR SHIRTS in the CITY. DRESS TRIMMINGS. New Style Black and Colored FRINGES. BUGLE TRIMMINGS and BUTTONS. SATINS, VELVETS, VELVETEENS. Spanish, Guipure, and French LACES. SUNDRIES. Zephyrs, Saxony Yarns, Shetland and Germantown Wool, German and Cash mere Knitting Yarns, Corsets, Skirts, Underwear, Scarfs, Laces, Knit Goods, Wholesale and Retail, at lowest New York prices. ROSENBAUM & CO., Was. t!4 attd) Market Street, Corner of Liberty Street, PFUrSBURGH, I*_A.» Hi* Ifc 3X September Ist, 1880. new eallTress goods. SO cents to 03 per* yard. New Striped Silk Velvets. New Black and Colored Brocade Bilk Velvets e'egant goods, $2 to 15 per yard. New Satins and I'lain Velvets ront valuos and makes obtainable in Black Dress Silks. *!, *1.25, *1.50, *1.75 and and up to *4. Black Trimming Silks 50 to 75c per yard Two assorted cases Black Satin d'Lyon, *1 50 to *3.50, best value yet offered. BOGGB & BUHL, 118 and 120 Federal Street, Allegheny. N. B. N«w Prints up ; New Chintzes and Mimics : New Gingharua GJfc up ; N':w Flan nels, New Blankets, Harmony Flannel* and Yarns, wholesale and retail. 4-4 Lawns and Huntings, placed on counters at bargains that are a sacrifice. Now Light Jackets and Traveling Dusters. JAMES K. REED. ESTABLISHED 184'7. geokue M. KKEI). JAMES It. BEED & CO., DEALERS IN DIIMONDS, WITCHES, JlIflMI MO SILVER SIM, Gold and Silver "Watclies, Gold Vest Oliains, Gold Guards. Piated Chains, Bost Plated Table Ware. CASTORS 1 JEWELRY °' " Ho. 93 Market St., Pittsburgh, Fa, 3rd door from Fifth Arc (M n n naasismß ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ flf Remedy MI. to nn. It allaya th. Itching, r I *>rt»tb« H tnmo" (rlr,* tmmhl.-iir relief Pr.pared by J. P. Miller, M.D., ■I ■ ■■■■■ ■ ■ Phllwl. Iphlv T.v CAFrifl*.-.V««|« uim tmltHwrap- US ■ U U pcct«i. Department*—Normal. Clawdcal, Commercial, Mimical. Tne Fall Term of IS weclu will open on Monday, September 6tli. 1880. Expenses, as low as those of any other school affording equal advantage* and accomodations. For Catalogue, address JOHN fl. FRENCH, LL. D.. )tUK2B-2lu PRINCIPAL. Messrs. PEKRY DAVIS * BON: I know yoo need no testimonial to eanvtaea yw that your medicine is all that you claim for It, but I cannot restrain the Impulse to wnrnenkate to yoa the fact that in my family it has truly done smlst 1 administer H to my children (one months, and the other three rears old) with perfect success. It vacillates their bowels, aad stops all diarrhoea. Myself aad wife reeort to it in auoisas. both for internal and external nsa. rveused it inmvfajnilr for live yean, and wit l mat be without ttTYeelias myself under nrach obligation to yoo, in many timee bona relieved from pain, I em rery truly yonrs, L. F. MOORE, Bau*all, Dutchess Co., New York. Opened fresh, 100 pieces Double-width Heavy All-Wool French Cashmeres. At per yard, in all the best shades. Special value iu "fine Colored French Cashruerei at 62% and 75c. One case 44-inch All-Wool French Momie Cloths. At 75c, usual value *1 per yard. All-Wool lilack French Cashmeres at but direct special attention to our Black Cashmeres at 65, 75, 87%'e and *l. 40-inch Goods at these prices, 46-inch Goods at these latter prices. Ex. ex. fine Black Cashmeres *1.12%, *1.25 up. Special and uuequaled bargains Black Silk Warp Henriettas. At *1.25, *1.50. 81.62%. *1.75 and up to *2.SO. All tho new things in Black Goods for Mouru irg and Walking Suits. New Fringes. At 50, 65, 75c and *l, blacks and colore, that are unique designs and extra values. Fine Black Fringes up to *5 per vard. Just opened. New Buttons. 6c to *2.50 V dozen. New Laces. Embroidered Miulin Fichus, in Cream and White. New Hosiery and Underwear. (SjK flO Will get a iu.ll wet of FIXE PORCELAIN TEETH Warranted for 10 YEARS. Will extract Tenth WITHOUT PAIN. NO EXTRA CHARGE when Teeth are Ordered. DR W. H. PERRY, Dentist, 255 Penn Avenue, Pittsburgh. Pa. jiily23-Sm d>7(i A WEEK. tI2 a day at home easily made.