The National Banner, Volume 7, Number 24, Ligonier, Noble County, 9 October 1872 — Page 2

a Al ; 4 Y Hational Banner. ¢ : o, G e SN e A, ,',;‘s}’a .'(\;\ e Al Wi _— WEDNESDAY, OCT. 9th, 1872, NATIONAJ REFORM t ICKET, FOR PREBIDENT HORACE GREELETY, Of New York. , TOoR vxoz—nxmm:m?: B. GRATZ BROWIN, r : Of Missouri, | s

EDITORIAL CONVENTION. The editors and publishers of the Tenth and Eleventh Congressionnl{ Districts are requested to meet at LuP(lrte on Friday morning, October 18th. Af full attendance is requested.- J. B. StoLy, Pres. THE FINANCIAL SITUATION. * Many of our readers outsjde of business circles may be surprised tolearn that we are passing through a season of unusual distress and ctfibgrra@men# to the com mercial-interests of the country. Such is the case. The money market is almost on the verge of & panic; values ot all kinds bave depreciated in price. | Bankers and capitalists are calling 1n their ‘loans, and refusing all applications fo# money except at ruinous rates of interest, and business men are having great difficulty in meeting their obligations, A |few facts will show the difficulty of obt}liningf'money. Boston and New York bankers fhave ad -

vanced the rate of interesql to 15. and. 18 per cent, on cnll"l‘()ans,-fsul)_ject to be ~ called for any day,—and will ‘not lend money on any gpecified time at any rate of . interest. "As high as five-eighths of one per cent. per day has beenf paid for leans for speculative purposes within the past few weeks; and our local banks have advanced their rate of interest 4 to 6 per - cent. above last month’s rates, and cannot supply half the money called for on those terms. ‘ : , ~Various reasons are given for this state - of affairs. It is ascribed |in part to the action of many prudent capitalists in ~ withdrawing their money.from use until after the elections, in e*pectati(m Iljnt some new features in theé financial policy of the goverament would follow. Again, large sums of money havé been sent West to move the crop, which,i‘in the ordinary course of trade, should bereturning to the gea board in the shape of grain and farm products, but owing to. the want of lake and railroad mmspo'rtatitn,' the grain tor which this money bas been paid is lying in the warehouses and Jlevators of the . West awaiting shipment; and its value virtually locked up and withdrawn from . .the available resources ot‘; the banks,while from the 'same'cause—wjnnt of shipping facilities—the bulk of tbb\crop's is still in | the farmers’ hands, with no prospect of | ~any large portion of it being got to the sea board before the cloge of navigation, - In addition to those causes, Wall strect, the financlal center of':the country, has been in a very excited and unsettled condition during the fall _niontbs, and prudent capitalists are shy of risking their money in investments which may at any time be subject to the |fluctuations ind uncertainties which have been of late a --ruling feature of that market. In short, our finances are in suchgk condition that . ‘any unusual disaster ma} at any moment plunge the country intp a panic which ~_would ruin thousands of Eusiness men,and entail great distress on all classes at the werst season of the yenr—%—pn the approach of winter. - Lfr : This statement may ni)pear ‘to many of our {readers to be exaggerated and over: drawn, but a careful perPs:xl of the money articles of our exchanges, endorsed by the views of a number of b'us,iu'ess men with whom we have converséd on the subject, . convinces us that the fioancial affuirs of the country are in a very precarious condition, and that it is our duty to warn our readers to prepare for a*xy emergency that may arise from this state of affairs. The influence of a stringent! money market or a financial panic reaches every man'in the ~ country, no matter whjt his business or occupation may be, and it is the 'plain :duty of every man to tske such measures a 8 shall protect him from lossand disaster, and prepare to meet every demand that can be made on him. ‘We would say to our readers, avoid contracting new debts and assuming new obligations,—for the present at leest,—settle up all open ac” counts, make a list of your debts and see how you s;e}ind, and another list of debts due you ; endeavor to collect the one and " pay the other as speedily.as possible, but by all pieans commence to reduce the amount of your own |debts at once, the quicker the better. It issafe to assume that every man you owe & dollar to, be he - merchant, mechanic, laborer, doctor,or who ever he may be, wants|it to pay Ais debts < in turn, or provide fon his family on the _ approach of winter, and in many cases - needs it badly. Business men are especially in need of mopey at the present time; their debts must be paid the very day they are due; prqmises to pay “after harvest” or as soon as they can get it, will not answer. Every demand must be met “promptly at maturity,(no matter at what socrifice, or tueir credit is dishonored. In " the .present condition of affairs, they can look dénly to those who owe them for assistance. Bankers decline all applications for loans,and even comimission men refuse to advance a dollar on produce sent them for sale, without a condition that they Bhall have the right tp sell the property for whateverilt ;v:'yill, ring the dhy it ar - rives in matkct. They all agree in saying that since harvest [they have not collected one dollar toev ry',;fl%'v‘e they expect€d, and bint very plainly that ere long thoy must adopt more stringent measures - with those whose claims are due, in order to. protect their own credit. We believe they are stating the correctly, for we kear thé same complaints being made by - every class of people|in the community. - We would sgain repeat our advice to our #enders: Get your affairsinto good shape, pay. gour debts as rapidly as possible,—, ‘they may be far more dificult to pay 2 ""Wfil d prepare to meet what promises to be 8 winter of unusual ~_ Bx-Beoretary of Stite Wm. H. Seward i bio retdence, i Auurs, X, X,

| From the Chicago Tribune, Oct. 9. THE OCTOBER ELECTION, The election in Pennsylvania, Ohio,and perhaps Indiana ( though the latter is doubtful,) have resulted in the success of ‘ the Republican ticket in each of those States. Hartranft is elected in 'Pennsylvanis by an ;apparant majority of 15,000 to 20,000. We say an apparent majoritys becanse it is perfectly obvious| that his majority ot 20,000 in Philadelphia City is the result of stupendous and unblushing frauds. Philadelphia never gave so large: a majority for anybody, by m{zy thousands, ag this which is now claimed for Hartranft. The influences ‘inside the re publican party opposed to Hartranft werg equal to at least 10,000 in that city, and yet we "are presented witfha result whi¢h reverses all the calculation of human| wisdom cr foresight, andfli explainable| only by a reterence to the frauds provied before: the Legislature it the case of McClure against Gray one year ago. _ Ohio has probably gone Rep¢blican by a reduced majority. Cincionatiand Hamiltod county have gone L‘ibgrah by about 4,00 D majority, electing two liberal Congressmen, o [ Ixrdia'na is claimed by both -}frtics, but our latest returns indicate the ¢lection of ‘ Hengdricks by a small majority. ] - ‘TFe most noticeable tact of the canvass|in these Statee, as well as in the previmfls ‘ones in North _Carulina}, Vermont and| Maine, i 3 that the Administration party had all the money, all the officeholders, all the election machihery, most of the large corporations, and jall the adventitions aids which help ti:) decide a douptful contest. Anotherinstructive fact is, that a percentage of the Democratic } votd was cast for the Republican ticket large enough to offset the Libéral Repub lican vote in each of the three States. Althongh this change has resulted in the suc cess of the ticket which we de¢m opposed to the best interestof the country,it points to 4 speedy dissolution of b[oth the old paxkies, and this we cannot but regard as a benefit to' the whole peopld. It isimposéalble that the republican p :fty vsPoulG losg hold together, without hny principl‘ef to contend for er promote. The cry that the liberties of the blacks are still in danger, which has, after 2l], been the mojfit potent weapon of the canvass, being | no'j true in point of fact, Wl?l not avail much longer. The Liberal party is the pafty of the future, notwithstanding the adyerse result of yesterday’s elections. ’;f[‘o the Liberals of Illinois, to the Liberalg evergwhere, we say, go ot bravely in the path you have entered. ¥Your principléfs are as necessary to the }preservation of jgood government to day as they were | s ; s yesterday. It is still possible to elect your excellent State ticket i$ Illinois, — W shall yield nothing in jour zeal for ~Gdfieeley and Koerner so longJas there is'a vote to be gained, or an inch pof ground to contend for. And, after the t)nt,est,‘ is over, we shall still contend for the grand and ennobling principles of Jeace', Reconcijia?ion, and Reform, whiph are more u r fl r n. pl}ecuzus to 8 than any party or any me | A Silly Accusation. ; ilt is a favorite argument with the proplbets of political economy, who ventilate their opinions in the Grant organs, that tl?e election of Mr. Greeley would work financial trouble, if not ruin, to the businfss interests of the countr.yi ‘Gen. Grant (says the Louisville Ledger) is held up as amodel ; he is reducing the Laxes,,leading thhe country steadily forward to specie pijlyment; in fine, 18 doinfi; everything wihieh & well informed and philosophic politicdl economist should do to keep the nifcney market regular’ and equable. Gireeley, on the other hafld, they say, “iould utterly destroy this -beautiful pic: ture ot contented prosperity, and so he opght not to be elected.. The report of Mr. Grant’s financial success is a mere bubble, and it is not unli«kefy that if Mr. dreeley is elected he will ‘:prick it, and | diest-roy the beautiful illné‘ion, showing the country to be in anytlfling but what the administration would ake it appear. 3ut the great capitalists of the country lo not share in this distrust of Mr. Greel¢gy. On the contrary, they express confi‘dence in his ability to proteet the business interests of the/nation. M. A. T. Stewart v;vho is suppégsed to possess sufficient knowledge of finance, and to have as much doncern as to the management of the natiional treasury as any other man in Ameri}ica, when. interviewed by a Herald reorter, gave the denial to his alleged Lscrtion that Mr. Greeley’s election would affect business unfavornb?Ly, and stated qhat he had no fears whatever of such a tesult, Charles Franciy Adams, Jr, charges Mr. Greeley with “} lopping over,” pthers call him “crochety,” but not one has ?cen found to whisper a ord against his iocesty. That virtue, if he had no other, should be ample inducement to the people o put him in a position where he might uard the people’s money from the inroads %f rings and political job%ers. :

e The ‘‘Straighis,” | The “straight-outs,” says the World, jscem unforturately doomed to be getting themselves. perpetually straightened out, by eccident or otherwise: They were to limvc held & so-called Democratic State (Convention at Jefferson |City, Mo., on [Friday, but it did not come off, owing to éthe detention of several Western delegates by a railroad accident. They held a caulcus, however, and then tfie ‘“‘convention” 'was postponed, to meet at St. Louis next ‘Thursday. 8o in Colambus, 0., another grand “Democratic Convention” of the straight out pattern was to have been called , but it wasn’t; General J. H. Geiger, 'who was to have issued the call, contenting himself with merely isuing a procla. mation calling upon all Democrats good and true to vote against Horace Greeley —%, e for U, 8, Grant, | ‘

L SarvrpAY's Louisville Zedger remarked: +“We take it for granted that there are no }1 men in Indiana who will lbe guilty of the j folly, not to use & harsher term, of voting for Morezu & Co., on Tuesday. Better % bave the manhood to vote for the Grant fi| ticket straight. This we can safely assert.” | ' CHANDLER, of Michigan, wrote thus to ( the postmaster at Albany: “I am directed by the Postmaster-General to gay to you that any assistance you can give the Lou. gville movement will be considered done for the administration.” | , : In lijs Indianapolis spe cb,Mr; Greeley pithily announced the two watchwords of i}ha pregept canvass as rdconeiliation and putification. It jo perd to say which is the more important. pro

TUESDAY'S ELECTIONS. THE RESULT IN INDIANA! ‘Hendricks Positively Elected : Governor. BALANCE ol~‘ STATE TICKET . PROBABLY nEF_EATEIL Defeat of Dan. Voorhees. JO}IN PETER CLEAVER SHANKS r. GOES UP THE SPOUT. THELEGISLATURE IN DOUBT The Resuit No Doubt Brought About by a Con- ° catenation of Fortuitous Circumstances, Superinduced by a Chala of Un- ' paralleled Coincidences,

The election returns from this State are very conflicting. On Wednesday evening the Republicans claimed the election of their State ticket by two thousand major ity. Thursday morning Mr, Bddy, Secretary of State, telegraphed large democratic gains; at 10 o'clock A, the same gentleman telegraphea that Hendricks’ msajority was from two to three thousand. ~ Thursday evening, 7 o’clock—The hews. came: “About even,; Impossible to give result.” ! = - Thursday evening, 10 o’clock, the chair man of the Democratic State Central Com mittee telegraphed that Hendricks was “positively elected, but balance of State ticket defeated.” : ' Friday morning, 9 o’clock, the chairman of the Republican State Central Committee telegraphbied : —“Hendricks elected hy abnut 500 majority ; State ticket defeated.” The Legislature is vegy close, both parties claiming a majority. ' The Democrats have re-elected Niblack and Holman to Congress;* by reduced majorities. Wolfe, Democrat, is elected Congressman from the Second:District by reduced majority. Vocrhees is defeated ; also, Gen. Manson. - Gen. Shanks is defeated by Neff in the Ninth District. o DeKalb county reports a majority of 81 for Hendricks, Lagrange county, republican majority of 800; Steuben, 750 repub lican ; Elkhart, 71 republican ; St. Joseph, 500 rcpublican ; Whitley, 400 democratic; Allen, 8,000 democratic; Adams, 890 ‘democratic; Marshall, 477 democratic ; Stark, 80, No dcfinite returns from other localities. . Efkhart county— Brown's majority for Governor 86; D. S. Scott’s majority for ‘Joint Representative 90. | Laporte county elects the Liberal county ticket. ; ~ David 8. Scott is elected Joint Repre - sentative for Elkhart and Noble counties by a majority ot about 140. e

Pennsylvania Elects the Culprit Hartranft by a large Majority. Astounding Frauds in the City of ‘ Philadelphia. Cameron Car‘yrie S His Point. Contfary to all just expectations, Pennsylvania cast her vote in favor of Cameron’s man Friday, John F. Hartranft, for Governor, sgainst the pure and distinguished Buckalew. Fifteen thousand majority was manufactured in the city of Philadelphia. The majority for Hartranft is claimed to have reached 31,000. Eighteen Republican and nine Liberal Congressmen are elected, The Legislature is Republican.

Ohio a Little Better! GAIN OF TWO CONGRESSMEN ! . 10,000 Radical Majority! ] PRI The Liberals made large gains in the cities, but not emough to overcome the vsual radical majority. The radical can—didate for Secretary of State iselected by about 10,000 majority. The Congressional delegation stands; Radicals, 12 ; Liberals, 7—a liberal gain of 2. : Nebraska, 57 » " This State was carried by the Radicals. O P————— ' VICTORY IN CONNECTICUT. Large Gains all Overmtate—md Republiean . Stronghold Qartried. ; HARTFORD, CONN., Qct.7,— 8 P, M.—The liberal party have gained largely in the local town elections in Connecticut to-day. We gain 212 in Meriden. We carry Danbury by 250 ; last spring it was Republican by 215. Mansfield by 26; last spring Republican by 85. The old staunch Republican town of Brooklyn goes for the Greeley ticket by 14 majority. New Canaan is Liberal for the first time in fifteen years. Middletown goes Liberal by 800 majority. Waterbury by 500, Andover a gain. Bristol, Windsor Locks, Ridgefield, New Milford, all are Liberal, and old Suffield is for us by 76 majority.— Towns that have been invariably Repub--lican for nearly twenty years have now elected the Greeley ticket. In otherstrong Radical towns their majorities are reduced one half. The state is largely Liberal. -and Vernon’s 300 Radical majority is cut down to 20, and Manchester’s 150 is cut down to 9. InHartford Mr. Stillman, the salaried and managing town officer, was on both tickets, as were also several: other important officers, so that little interest was manifested, and a light vote was polled here, each party giving about an equal number of votes. o

; The Tidal Wave. The last election for Governor in Georgis, in 1868, resulted as follows: Republican candidate ...........88,537 Demogratic candidave...........76,556 Republican majority.,,.,.,, . 7,171 It bas now elected & Democratic and Liberal Republican Governor by a majority of 50,000, Yet weare told that there is no popular movement going on among the masses, e 3

Grant’s Beef-Eaters in the Custome . House; g ; . Frenchman's Bay is a custom house district in Maine. The whole foreign trade of that district for 1871-2 was: =~ . Im t1.’........-.......'-..............-...-... Bagory oL e _This immense business was superintended by the following officials: - L gy Salary. J. K. Bawyer. C011ect0r............‘......31,310.10_ Moses Hale, Special Deputy.............. 1,200.00 O. P. Mareyes, Deputy...... ............ 730.00 Jobn U, Hill, Deputy...... .cccoiiino.... 600,00 H. D. Coombs, Deputy.........c..i...... 600,00 Samuel Duttom, Jr. .01 sevgs - 600,00 W. B. Peters, 1n5pect0r................5. 1,095.00 8. A. Holden, 1n5pect0r..ic............c. 500.00 8. M. McFar1and...................._.. - $60.00 Wotal ..o ol o e In giving the above names of the officials we wish simply fo point out two names having a familiar sound— Hale and Peters. We by no means assert any rela tionship. We Jeave that to the Maine people who, no doubt will know all we point out is the coincidence that one Eugene Hale is Congressman of the Fitth District of Maine, and one Moses Hale is Deputy Collector, at $1,200 salary, of a port that bas a total commerce of $928. It may also be a.coincidence merely that John A. Peters is a Congressman for the Fourth District of Maine, and that W. B. | Peters 'is Inspector, at a salary of $1,095, in -the Frenchman's Bay district, where the whole business during the .year only amounts -to $928. Congressman Hale, who'it seems is a very religious “person, sent the following telegraphic reply to ‘thesCalais jubilee meeting: . ' “Your despatch received. I send greeting to Calais. ‘I know thy works and thy labor und thy patience ; and now thou canst not bear them that are evil; and thou hast tried them which say they are apostles and are not, and hast tound them liars,’” - ‘ " ‘We hope that Eugene and Moses Hale are only namesakes, and neither brothers, cousins, nor uncle and nephew, as it must be obvious to honest men of a less relit’ gious turn than the exemplary Eugene that to influence' the sppointment of Moses or keep him in a place where the whole commerce. is only $928 at a salary of $1,200 is an impudent swindle on the people, if not downright: theft. Will’ Eugene disown Moses or will Moses disown Eugene? : L And will Peters the Inspector deny Peters the Congressman? We are really curious ‘to hear. : : ~ Perhaps George William Curtis wall: _expldin this piece of civil service reform, and how bad it wag befere he reformed it.

= From the New York Sun. A Plain Statement of the Case. L. Oakeés Ames admits that he wrote the two letters to Col. McComb which have been so often published. il IL In one of these letters Ames tells McComb that he hasso piaced certain shares of the stock of the Credit Mobilier: of America that they will benefit certain members of Congress whom he does not explicitly name, but says that there is one in Maine, four in Massachusettes, one in New Hampshire, two in Pennsylvania, and so on., . IIL. In giving testimony as a witness in a suit pending in the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, McdComb swears that Ames' gave him the namesof these Congressmen, and that he,McComb, then and there wrote them down on the back of one of Ames letters; and- McComb recites. this memorandum under oath. IV. Itso happeuns that this memorandum taken down by McComb tallies with the statements in Amies’ letter in regard to the number of Congressmen and their seyal places of residences.’ V. Five of the Congressmen thus named baveeither publishedsstatements wherein, on a superficial view, they appear to try to produce a sort of impression upon the public mind that there is some apprebension about this matter. = - - VI. Ames has been torced to publish an address to his constituents wherein he tacitly admits the authenticity of the two letters to McComb, and does not deny the truthfulness of the memorandum which McComb made on the back of one of them but says he did not authorize MeComb to make it, : : VII. Ames knowsall about this matter. He knows to what members of Congress he referred in his letter to McComb. If he did not refer to the members whose names McComb took down; then will he now tell the public to what members be did refer? He" has published one address wherein he failed to exonerate the implicated Congressmen. Will he issue another gnd exonerate them, if he can, by telling who are the Congressmen in Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusétts, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana and Tennessee, to whom he did reter in that letter to McComb, which be admits he wrote ? - . Will the Hon. Oakes Ames, member of Congress from the Second District of Massachusetts, once more step to the front and Inake a clean breast of it? -

Ex-President Johnson and DMrs. Sur= ratt. A New York Herald had the other day an interview with ex-President Johnson, at Jonesboro, Tenn., in which the ex President explains his action in Mrs. Surratt’s case. Says the correspendent: Speaking to ex-President Johnson this evening, after the meeting was over, I asked him: o . : » “How do you intend to meet this clamor in Western Tennessee about your action in Mrs: Surratt’s case ?” ‘ “I bave no fear of that clamor ; if there are people still so ignorant as to believe: I compassed or am in any way responsible for the death of Mrs, Surratt, I leave them where they are.” £ “What is the exact fact, Mr. Johnson, about Annie Surratt’s attempt.to reach you at the White Hcuse, and being re pulsed eitber through your order or by the order of Preston King ?” - “I never knew until after Mrs. Surratt bad been executed that her daughter bad been seeking to see me. Preston King bad nothing to do with repulsing her. There was a fellow named Mazzy—ll think he is in Washington still—tacked himself on to me at the White House in some way or other, and finding this girl looking in a frantic way for me, and unable very likely to understand her, refused her admission. Of this I knew notbing until 'some time after, Now as to the case of Mrs. Surratt: ‘Mr. Lincoln, as you may know, was assassinated at a time when he was commander in-chief of the armies and martial law prevailed in the district. The opinion of the Attorney-General was tak‘en as to the mode of trial for the conspirators; and he decided that they were liable to the jurisdiction of a military commission. They had a full and fair trial, and all four alike were found guilty, How 'was I to know that Mrs. Surratt was in. ‘npcent? All I could do would be to pardon her. Could I pardon her without r pardoning the rest, where tbel“é Wwas nothing but sympathy for her sexjto Ijustify it? As for the Surratt clamor; I - shail meet and answer it wherever it comes up.”

THE FIRST GUN FOR GREELEY. | Georgin Heard From to the Tume of ‘ < 150000, ' - Carry the News to Hiram that on Thursday, Georgia declared in unmistakable terms, against the Administration, and in favor of .Greeley and Reform. The 8,000 ' republican majority ot 1868, has changed to 60,000, Democratic in 1872, A few ne‘groes undertook to dictate to white men 'bow they should vote,and the consequence was a small riot at Macon, in which the ‘negroes were worsted. With this excep‘tion the election was the most quiet held |in the State for years. Democrats and | Liberals, you have reason to rejoice at the action of Georgias. Earnest, manly efforte accomplish much, = Wy

: : Grant’s Speechies. ‘ To repay the radical organs for publishing a few extracfs from| Mr. Greeley’s excellent spegches, we herewith re produce all of Grant’s great speeches, and hope our readers will peruse them with care. If anybody should discover a strong point i either of these speeches, we hope the great discovery will be jmmediately made known to the public. . How gloriously Mr. Greeley’s words of wisdom seem, &s ccompared with the following efforts : * President Grant’s Speech to fhe People of Alle—gheny City.—Delivered October, 1871, in response. to an address by the Mayor: ' |- : It affords me great pledsure to witness | the honors conferred upon me in this re--ception. I hope that I shall ever, in the administration of the affairs of the government, receive the approval of the peo ple of the United States, irrespective of party, which shall ever be my effort. 1 | thank you for this reception. : ‘ Presidént Ghmtfe Great Spedch on the Opening | of the Enropean and North Anmerican Railway, in Full,- Delivered in Bangor, Maine, Oct. 18, 1871: - LADIES AND GENTLEMEN—I congratu- ' late you and the people of |the State of Maine, and the people of the nation at large, upon the occasion which has‘bro’t us all here. It is a matter in which you are particularly interested, and the nation -at large, I believe, is almost equally inter.ested with you. I hope that the lailroad ‘ may prove to you, .and to us, all that is 1 expected of it, improvingland building up - a friendly feeling between usand the peo ple of the same language with yourselves, who, I think, are equally|interested in the- - of the most cordial friendship. » ‘ : President Grant's Speech to|the Citizens of Portland, Maine.—Delivered October 20, 1871 I bave a vivid recollection of visiting. your city six years ago. | This is the second time that I have been in your city, and I am much pleased with the reception here as well as at other places I have vis, ited in your State. If do not oftener thdn I bave heretofore, I shall not make many more visits here |before I shall be ‘quite an old man, f President Grant’s Speech at the Newark Eposition.—Delivered September 19, 1872+ L GENTLEMEN—I am happy to be here to--night to witness this display of Newark’s -manufactures. Your farfamed city has done well; her manufactures have an in . ‘fluence opposed to the importation of for. eign manufactures. e : ‘ President Grant’s Great Speech at Newark.—Delivered at Govérnor Ward's residence in response to a serenade, Septemberl9, 1872. Heretofore im‘perfectly given—now reported in-fall: $ 'LapIES AND GENTLEMEN—I could not but feel grateful for the reception I have received at the hands of the citizens of Newark and of New Jersey to day. I had the pleasure of visiting the State Fairnear Elizabetb, whete I saw little else but peo. ple.. I was at your expositon to night, and again people, buf,little what they had to see. I'hope to see to-morrow what I went to-night to see. : ‘ ; . President Grant to the Loyal People of Philadelphia.—Delivered in response to a serenade at Philadelphia, September 25, 1872. : . GENTLEMEN AND M ERCHANTSOF PHILADELPHIA—You have heard much better ‘speeches t6-night than I could make, if I were inclined. lam glad to.see you, and I am pleased to hear that you have been: to hear such fine speeches, and how you have been engaged to night.

A Disgracefal Spectacle. . How disgusting to thoughtful men must ‘be the aspect of American politics to-day, and how they must long for a return to that purity in the management of public affairs which characterized the first years of the republic, Honest men of all parties may well be alarmed for the safety of a country ruled as this is by a set of men who arv publicly proved to be liars, #hieves, and scoundrels. It is bad enough that the amenities of political strife sho'd permit such shameful epithets, but it is ‘immeasurably worse that they should be deserved. W hat more disgraceful spectacle could be offered to t;hle world than that which is afforded by the political canvass in Pennsylvania? The candidate for the hiighest office in the State is proved by the honest men of his own party, who could 'no ldnger remain in political 8850~ ciation with him, to be an embezzler of the public funds. To clear himself he robs the penitentiary of. two of its convicts, in order that he may have the ben cfit of their affidavits. But they prove, too much; they show incontestibly that eitber Yerkes, Mackey, or Hartranft stole the people’s money. They say it was not Hartranft; to say that was the price of Yerkes’ pardon. They deny their own complicity, and so tbe matter still rests between the three. Were a foreigner apprised of these facts he would be surpris. ed tolearn that a la‘rge number of people, men supposed to have some sense, are still in favor of electing that man to office. General Dixfl,ficandidafite for Governor of New York, cannot clear his skirts of complicity in the Pacific railroad swindle. Vice President Colfax and Speaker Blaine cannot prove themselves innocent of ta‘king bribes in the Credit Mobilier swindle. Senator Morton is netoriously indifferent as to the public estimation of his open corruption, and even President Grant is not free from the charge of bribety. Was any country ever cursed with such corrupt officials? But ‘the people have it in their own hands to clean vut the Augean stables. It they do not do it, they deserve to remain the tools and victims of designing knaves.— Louisville Ledger. © ,

} The Glorious Result in Georgia, i The result in Georgia at the late elec- | tion is perfectly magnificent. Forty or fifty thonsand majofity in the Empire State of the South for a Greeley Governor is an event that will wring from. one end of the Union tc the other. It isa bombshell of immense dimensions thrown into the Grant camp. This victory comes in good time to cheer our hearts just as we ) are on the point of the Ohio, Indiana and Pennsylvania elections, It is like the intelligence of Wellington's. victory over & the French at Salamanca, Spain, which came to the Russiang as they were about to grapple the great Napoleon at Boro‘dino. Georgia, tke most liberal and progressive and the most mighty of all the Bouthern States, has peintéd out the road which the friends of the Constitution and of good government aé to take. We 1n . Obhio, Pennsylvania and Indiana will follow. Our Southern friends may depend upon that. The thunder from the mountains of Georgis, which is now driving the office-holders and the corrupt facticns of the Administration to their holes will be echoed back by the explosion of a - whole park of artillery from the Northern nd Western States, that will vote on | a‘uesday rext,” . | ; The Democracy ta‘lnd Liberal Republicans -in Georgia have won this fight against great odds. In no State is the power of the Administration greater, and in none has it been more unserupulously exercised. It is full of office-holders. The negro vote, too, which the office holders have had banded together, is almost equal to that of the white, as will be apparent from the following taken from the census of 1870 e 1 : b e R T 93,784 There are 127,000 white voters, and 105,000 negro voters. Under these circumstances and against the bayonet—for ‘the State is covered with soldiers—to have given from 40,000 to 50,000 majority is ap pchievement' that reflects - infinite credit upon the ra&ibti_& sons of the last settled of the old thirteen States, Bternal honor to the solid and substantial yeomanry of Georgia,.—Cindinnati Enquirer, Ockid, | 0 i

‘SLOCUM TO BURNSIDE., A Real Soldier Proeceds to Excoriate the Hero of Fredericksburg. To General A. E, Burnside. | ; 2l DEAR GENERAL:— I have read withgreat interest your address to the ag)‘ldiérs and sailors who served in the Union army and pavy during the late war. Asl was one of the soldiers alluded to I trust you will not be displeased if I say a few words lin response thereto. You tell us that you, and others, as our representatives, met at Pittsburgh and adopted a series of resolutions which we have already seen. You complain that Mr. Greeley has expressed the opinion that you assembled for polit. ical purposes, and that‘you hoped to ac - complish these purposes by reviving the animosities and hatreds engendered by the war. You further say that these remarks of Mr. Greeley and his entire lack of courtesy toward the soldiers and sailors serve to confirm you in the belief that he is quite unfit to Le trusted in any fosition where loyalty to his government, a just regard for the feelings of others, and an abnegation of self is required. You then proceed to inform us in conclusion, that it only remains for you -to urge us to organizein harmony with the regular republican organizations, and to do all in our power to re elect Gen. Grant.. The first thought that occurred tomy mind on read ‘ing thic address was: “What was there in General Burnside's military career that justifies him in telling. the hundreds of thousands of soldiers who served!during the late war what they sbould do in time of peace?” Did anything cecur at the first Bull Run, at Roanoke Island. at. Fredericksbutg, in East Tennessee, or at the miné explosion in front of Petershurg, | which entitles him to assume ¢ommand of all of us in time of peace, and order us to the front to fight in behalf of a political party® My second thought was: “Isit creditable to the soldier of the late war that obe of their number should be per ‘mitted; as their pretended representative, - to spread broadcast over the land a doca ‘ ment charging Mr. Horace Greeley with | disloyalty ?” The truth of the saying that’ “the pen is mightier than; the sword” is coming year by year to be more generally acknowledged.: In view ofthe election of General Grant to the Presidency, and of the fact that he is a candidate for re clection, there are probably some men in the country who doubt its truth. If, however, we were to add to the saying the proviso that the pen Should be handled by a Gree ley and the sword by a Burnside alldoubters would diSappear. Youand I, Gegeral, know full well that while we were in the field fighting for the Union Mr. Greeley was wielding in behalf of the same cause a weapon. far more powerful than those used by either of us. We know, too, that long after we had sheathed our swords he kept up the fizht and continued it until every object was accomplished for. which even the most ardent Abolitionist’ had ever prayed. He did not cease the fight until the Union was restored, slavery 'abolished, ' the blacks enfranchised, and -all their civil and political rights solemn1y guaranteed to them by amendments to the Constitution, And yet, General, you have the hardihood of charging this man with disloyalty, and are uttering this foolish charge in your assumed capacity as the representative of all the Union soldiers of the land.- You say he has:been guilty of a lack of- courtesy toward.us. In my ‘judgment, any man who eight years after the close of a bloody civil war will ask soldiers to assemble in convention with a view of controliing their action in polhtical matters is & demagogue unworthy of courtesy at the hands<of Mr. Greeley or any other person. When at the-close of the war, we laid down our arms, we became citizens, and we have no interest today except those we have in common with all other citizens. Why, then, shou'd any one ask us, in our cliaracter as soldiers, to assemble in political bodies? Why should you extend to ug'such an invitation, unless it is with the hope that from your former connection with us you may be able to influence our judgments upon matters of -public policy in time of peace? Do you not think; Geueral, that these assemblies -of soldiers for the purpose of perfecting our elections have become slightly nause ating to the public? Did it ever oecur to you that, as a rule, the officers most .active in work of this nature were most unsuccessful in the field ? Permit me, in conclusion, to suy that Ido not believe: that in your action at Pitisburgh, or in the sentiments of the address to which I have alluded, you are én any sense. of the word a representative 0f the real soldiers of-the army. On the contrary, I feel that very many of them unite with me in the hope that this political campaign,in which you seem to have assumed the position of commander, may prove to you and to the troops of your command ‘another Fredericksburg. Very truly yours, ' - : H. W..Srocum. Brooklyn, October 8, 1872.

e ) Two Lists, s We produce two lists of names of men —one supporting Greeley and the other ‘Grant. This list is a fair average of the charactér of the men who support the respective candidates for- President. On the one hand we have gentlemen of pure, honest character aiding Greeley, while on the other we have a thief like Butler, a drunkard like Zack Chandler; and a guerilla likz Mosby supporting Grant. Here ig the list: ' THE TRAITORS. THE LOYAL, Senator Sumner, Rebel Settle, - £ Schurz, Spooney Butler, e Fenton, T. W, Haight, jse Trumbull, Colonel Mosby, Gen. Farnesworth, Tom Murphy, . - Gen. Banks, Gov. Bulleck,: Gov. Austin Blair, G. Chorpenning, Salmon P. Chase, Matt. Carpenter, David Davis, * Senator Morton, | Geo. W. Julian, S. Cameron, - Galisha A. Grow, Zach. Chandler, Gov. Sprague, All the Dents, ! Gen, J. M. Palmer, All the Caseys, Gen. F. H. West, Charley Williams, Hon. I. C. Sloan, ¢#Blatant Dunkey,” Ex-Gov. Spooner, Chicago Times, Hon. J.I. Case. =~ Brick Pomeroy. =

Hear the Greatest Merchant in the . World: The most successful merchant in America, who does a larger business than any other of his class, and who was selected by General Grant as his Secretary of the Treasury gives an opinion on the financial probabilities consequent upon Mr. Gree - ley’s election that are of commanding importance just now. Mr. A. T. Stewart, of New York, was interviewed by a Herald reporter, and to the question asked whether he had any fear that the:election of Greeley would produce any financial difficulty, he promptly answered: “None whatever.”: As to the tariff Mr. Stewart said a change of tariff would lead to no confusion with merchants, The tariff laws he said to which our country looks for its revenue, shoald be dictated wholly by the rules of equity and justice, so as to bear equally in their application upon all interests and. classes. Leaving the adjustment of the tariff to Congress, as suggest. ed by the Liberal and Democratic Conventions, he considered the proper course.

SENATOR WILSON denies that he ever made certain scurrilous speeches that have been attributed to him. Hée does not,howgver, deny,—and he ¢annot,—that Mr Frank W. Bird was correct in saying that he (Wilson) was one of 8 Know Nothing Committee that devised a new oath for: that party, in which oath foreign born citizens' were called “lions” and “bears,' and Roman Catholics; foreign and native: born, “snakes,” with “slimy tracks and pestilential breath,” = = :

ELECTION RETURNS, NEW YORK, Oct. 8, 10 P. M.—The October elections excited intense inter- - est in this city to day, bat despatches in the evening papers contained noth-. ing of real significance, except disclosures of eystematic frauds in. Philadelphia, equal to any pollution of the bal-lot-box ever perpetrated under Louis Napoleon. Npeews_p'ape{ Row .is filled to-night with a shifting multitude, Returns are placarded.in front of the Sun, Tribune and Herald offices, illuminated from the street by ealeium lights. Up. to this hour nothing has arrived from Obio and Indiana. = From Phildelphia various despatches estimate Hartranft’s ‘majority in that city all the way from: 12,000 to 20,000, . Shortly after.“fi:itfi:' Herald elevated .a bulletin claiming Hartrantft’s certain election, which was greeted with faint cheers, 'lt is curious that all despatches from Philadelphia give no returns, but the Republicans’ claim an immense lump, some with the utmost gerene confidénce. Scattering returns * from Pennsylvania counties’ give Buckalew 'gains. The Zribune Sun has a bulledn -that Hartranft’s. majority in }n Philadelphia‘is stated at--16,000, which the Liberals can overcome. .oo Lodd B - NEW YORK, Oct. 8-~The,Sun has a despatch from Hon: Samuel J. Ran-. dall admitting that returns from the. interior of Pennsylvania do not'proms, ise- to overcome Hartranfi’s’immense. ‘majority in Philadelphia. - Buckalew’s defeat is generally conceded here; The crowd around the Times office is cheer: ing thexeturns from Ohio, with Indi--ana in doubt. Dl Sl SR

. NEw YORK, Oect. 8, 1;"'.13:3;—8}0,@..‘\ after 10 P. M. the Herald bulletined 16,000 Hartranft majority in Philadel-. phia, with the State claimed tor Buckalew by 5,000 majority.. - . . All the ‘lottery “dealers in Philadel~ phia made a bargain to-day with the. Hartranft ' leaders, agreeing to give their votes on condition of future immunity from arrest. - AIP the dealers: throughout the State were telegraphed to concerning this arrangement. - ' The Philadelphia. Press says bands of well-known roughs arrived onevery train from New York yesterday, led by the Jimmy O’Brien men and Cus tom House officers.. They formed at the polls to-day in Philadelphia, and repeated from sanrise till sun set, wichout molestation, as had been arranged NEW “YOREK, Oct. 9, 12:30 PM ~= The news of - Hendricks’' election did not reagh here until after midnight, too late to reach the public, which was led to believe all day that Tndiana had gone Republican. This news will -put new .life into. the opposition, tor the town electious in Connecticut also show. a Liberal majority in that State of from 5,000 to 7,000. - Counting the electoral votes Greeley i 3 sure of in the sgouth, and in New York, New Jersey, Indiana and Connecticut, he will want but six electoral votes fo elect him.~ This estimate leaves muncertain North Carolina, Missisgippi, Illinois, ‘California, Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire and Wisconsin,.in which to secure six votes,” The T'ribune presen~s this cheering table, saying : “/This assures it.— Friends, in spite of fraud, we'are on the homestretch, with every prospect of snceepp.! = = EL i :

,The Great Fraud in. Pennsylvania, ADDRESS OF THE PENNSYLVANIA LIBERAL : 'STATE COMMITTER. ~ - NEW Yomrg, Oct. 9.—The following address from the Liberal’State Committee of Pennsylvania has been issued: To the People of: Pennsybvania: - Gz The successtul consummation of a measure of fraud in this city, that must appall alike the guilty authois and their no less guilty - respectable abettogs, has' ‘made Philadelphia appear to give the unex--ampled majority of over 20,000 in favor of continued corrupt rule in Pennsylvania, With every channel of power ready toaid. in executing the systematic defiance of the popular will; with- the’ debauched or pliant canvassers'to register 25,000 fraud. ulent names, with' the most desperate repeaters of three cities to vote the registry, - with abundauce of money plundered fromn .the people to pay them ; with the ele¢ction officers selected expressly to réceive évery vote offered in favor-of the ring ; with a’ police force.to pilot repeaters to their localities, and. protect them in: polling illegal votes ; with officers-of the law to guarantee their immanity from punish ment; with a large preponderance of our citizens who claim to be the champions of “morality and referm giving their unqualified sanction to whbat they-knew to be a ~deliberately planned pollution of the. ballot box, the result is but: the logical result of the rule that is now supremely enthroned in our city and State. Nor was this gigantic system of fraud confined to Philadelphia. In the principal cities and towns throughout the State, thousands of illegal votes have been polled. The Liberal cause was thus overwhelmed: in Reading, Chester, West Chester, Columbia, Harrisburgh, Pittsburgh, .and other localities, while-the rural districts give large and uniform gains.. I am warranted in announcing that- the large majority polled for Hartranft. is wholly fraudulent. Friends of good government, let- no triumph of lawlessness.deter you from giving your best energies to the cause. The highest prerogative of a free people has beeu violently usurped by insolent and debauched power, and the peo ple must resent it, and resent it promptly or give it unquestioned license to wrong.’ Now more than ever in the contest is Z% election of Horace Gréeley to the Pres¥ dency 8 supreme necessity; if peace and -honest government.are nat. to -%‘o,riah, from the annals-of our history. Right will triumph sooner or later, and it will yet triumph in this.desfpemte struggle if the people shall prove faithful to themselves, to their laws, and to their country. . - i . A.K.McCLURE, - Chairman Liberal Republican Com. ¢ PripapeLpmia, Oct, 9, 1872, ¢

A Controversy Between o’Cono¥ and | - Judge Lyeons. s Charles O’Conner,.of New York, and Judge Lyons, of Richmond, Va., are 1n active correspond‘encev(;l?néernin'g‘,the:Lou; isville nemination of the former, - Lyons threatens to furmish the local papers with letters damaging to Greeley, and of course favorable to Grant and his party. O’Conor is suf)posed‘ to state, and will state, that Greeley is unworthy of the confidence of the eountry, and is responsible for all the horrors of the late war. While repudiating Greeley, Mr. O'Conor is emphatic in decling the presidential nomination. The correspondence is spicy, personal and very bitter. If it is published it will make a sensation north and south,. - -

: Eight Children at & Birth. = | On the 21st of August, Mrs. Timothy Bradlee, of Trumbull county, Ohio, gave. birth to eight children; thrée boys and five girls, They are all living, and are healthy, but quite small. Mr. Bradlee was . married six years. ago. ta Eunice Mowery, who weighed two hundred and seventy three pounds on the day of her marriage. She bhas given birth to two pairs of twins, -and now eight more, making twelve children ;q,_s_%gfw%um:;n* ; Bradlee was.a sriplef, ber - uthp;f;mla» mother both being twins; and her grand. mother the mother of- five pgingfgm —incinnats Lancet, = T

- “Mr Samuel G. Brown, of Yorkville, South Carolina, who is nearly blind,in feeble health, and 65 years ot age, was arrested, last winter, on a trumped.up - charge of complicity with the Ku Klux. He was carried to Columbia, and given, a mock trizl before Judge Bond, a car-pet-bag tyrant.who has been the ready tool of the South Carolina ring, Mr. Brown filed an affidivit proving that he, far from aiding the Ku Klux, had receatly gone out at midnight to protect a negro from their murderous. schemes. Suborned witnesses swore to his = guilt, howecver, and he was sentenced to five years’” imprison‘mentat hard labor and a fine of $l,OOO. His plantation has been sold to pay the fine, and his aged wife and his family turned, homeless and penniless, on: theworld. Heis in the Albany: peni~ tentiary. Rev. David Wills, D. D,, President of Oglethorpe University; at Atlanta, Georgia, certifies to _the correctness of the facts here stated, including the entire innocence of Mr. Brown. A full statement of the case, with an urgent appeal for the __'pa.r(_lo9 of the luckless man, was laid before’ General Grant by Governor Hoffman, nearly eight monthsago. The administration has been too busy trying to re-elect it= ‘gelf to come to any decision in the matter a 8 yet, E : :

S e MARRIED: : § Sunday, Sept. 29th, 72, at the Lutheran Parsona%;: in Swan township, by Rev.’(}‘eo%e Weber, Mr.EDWARD E. FRYER to Miss MARTHA AMOS, both of Avilla. s e - Wednesday, October 2d, at the M, E. Parsonage, by Rev. ¥. A. Sale, Mr. A. BANDLIER to Miss KATE BUCHMAN, both of Ligonier. Thursday, October 10, by Rev. C. Caskey, Mr, ALBERT T. FAUGHT to 'Miss SUSAN SHROYER, both of Eden townghip, . el

e AOEEREN L . ‘Tuesday October Bth, in Ligonier, CATHARINE SIMMONS, daughter of Jonathan Simmons; aged 23 years and-4 months, : i - ‘Wednesday, October 9th, in Ligonier, SARAH, SIMMONS, wife 0f Jonathan: Simmons, aged 58 years, : wlpihe i . All Ligonier was in tears. In spite of excitement: over election returns, the ‘féelin'g‘ of sympathy for ‘the bereaved family was intense, Four members “ofthe fantily weré prostrated with typhoid fever. Katie passed away early in the morning of the Bth, and her mother about noon of the oth. It was - deemed-expedient to inter both at the.same time. It is'a rare oceurrence fib,;‘ee,eftwo coffins carried from the same household at tlie same time, and to“witness ‘two hearses start from the-samé door.— ‘Many of the.citizens ahd'neighbors met with the afilicted family over the two coffins and around the two graves. Such a'scene has not been witnessed jormany years, if ever in our community, " The ’sbr-rt_)w of the people was uncontrollable and un= “bounded. The stricken family turned from the . graves of the dead to the bedside of the living, Tn this doulle afliction the family has the sympathy -and prayers of the people,; - Ll e

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ol SN (/JURUDERAS

LELOOD PURIFIER |

It isnot a phyic which may give temporary reliet. to the sufferer for the first fow doses, but which from continued use brings piles and kindred diseases to aid in weakening 5:5 invalid, noris it a doctored liguor, which, under the popular name.of “Bitters,” is 80 extensively palmed off on the public as sover- . eign rémedies, but is a most powerful Tonic and All terative; pronounced so by the leading medical _authorities of London and Paris, and has been long used by the regular physicians of other countries with wonderful remedial results. % ; Dr. Wells* Extract of Jurubeba Is there want of ac¢tion In your Liya er and Spleem? Unless relieved at once the ° blood becomes impure by deleterious secretions, produoing serofulous or skil‘;_diseu,el, Blotches, Felons, Pustules, Canker, Pimples, &e. Take Jurubebsa to cleanse, purify and restore -the vitiated blood to healthy action. . ‘Have you a Dyspeptic Stomach? Un--2:3& @ig:‘:fllon is ‘p;io‘:zlpily aided the system is debili~ - with loss o force, poverty of Bl Dro ‘sical Tendeney, General ‘Wetpl?nm%r L‘auogg'dt. < . 'Take it to assist reaction, it will impart youthfal fli(ln to the wearwufierer’. ) o : ‘Have you Weakness of the Inteste Ines ¥ You are in danger of Chronio Diarrhoea or the Dreadful inflammation ¢f the Bowels.. - -Have you Weakness of the Uterine or ;Itllnfu-y Organ? Y:h' m procure in. ant relief to siffering worse than By i el € Rty S ey e m&m gfim fi!{:wfiu contagions JOBN Q KELLOGG, 16 Platt Srect New York, Lot o a wßole Agent for the United States, i fi““?w.“ B 2 P ’ s‘&s’ 9. @:fi%mm. e