The Somerset herald. (Somerset, Pa.) 1870-1936, September 04, 1872, Image 2

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    The Somerset Herald.
WtPSESDAiT
' Sirmsci 4. lfrrx
KAT RlLRErt BUrAK TICKET.
FOB TRESIPEXT,
ULYSSES S. GRANT,
OP ILLINOIS.
FOB VICE PRESIDENT,
1IEXRY W. WILSON,
OF MASSACHUSETTS.
BEflBLKAK KTATE TICK ET.
FOB GOVERNOR,
J. F. II AUTRANFT.of Montgomery
FOB 61'PREMC JlIHiE,
ULYSSES MERCUR, of Bradford.
TOR Al PITOU GENERAL,
HARRISON ALLEN, of Warren.
FOR CONGRESSMEN AT LARGE,
GLEN I W. SCHOFIELD, of Erie.
CHARLES ALBRIGIIT.of Carlion.
DELEGATES AT LARGE TO THE CONSTI
TUTIONAL CONVENTION,
U M. M. MEREDITH, Philadelphia.
J. GILLINGHAM FELT, Phila.
GEN. HARRY WHITE, Indiana.
GEN. WM. LILLY, Carbon.
L. BARTHOLOMEW, Schuvlkill.
H. N. M ALLISTER, Center.
WILLIAM DAVIS, Monroe.
JAMES REYNOLDS, Lancaster.
SAMMUEL F. DIMMICK, Wayne
(JEO.V. LAWRENCE. Washington
DAVID N. WHITE, Allegheny.
W. H. AIKEN, Lehigh.
JOHN H. WALKER, Erie.
Ol NTT NOHINATIONS.
FOR SENATE,
E. D. YUTZY, Lower Turkcyfoot.
(Subject toOwderlsluoof the. District Conference.
FOR DELEGATES TO THE CONVENTION
HON. S. L. RUSSELL, of Bedford,
J. w
CURRY, of Blair.
FOR LEGISLATURE,
McMILLEN, of Middleereek.
J. R
FOR TROTHONOTART,
M. SCH ROCK, of Stonv creek.
E
FOR SHERIFF,
OLIVER KNEPrER, of Somerset.
FOR REGISTER Si RECORDER,
J. ROBERT WALTER, of Milford.
FOR COMMISSIONER,
VAL. MILLER, of Qucmahoning.
FOR POOR HOUSE DIRECTOR,
JOHN II. SNYDER, of Stonycretk.
FOR AUDITOR,
JACOB SPEICIIER, of Stonyeieck.
FAILIRE.
There is no question about it, the
Greelet movement is playing out
The Tribune frantically shrieks to its
followers, our only salvation is in or
ganization and a more vigorous effort,
we must not expect that Mr. Gree
let will lie elected by a general up
rising ! The World says "there is a
lull in the camp ;' while prominent
Democrats everywhere say, there is a
"pause' caused by the forthcoming
Louisville Convention.
The fact is, the result of the North
Carolina and West Virginia elections,
has scared the doubting, stopiicd "ac
cession''' and proved the expected
"avalanche" a failure. The Louisville
Convention that was pronounced a
"fizzle" in advance, a "side show" run
with Grant money, Las loomed up
into such formidable proportions that
II. G. has thought it necessary to at
tack it from the stump, while the
Tribune has ojH'ned its battery of lies
ujton Blanton Duncan its originator,
and it is admitted generally, that if
Charles O'Connor will accept its
nomination, while he has no show fur
an election, he will play hav
oc with the majority Greeley ex
pects to receive in New York city,
and other Democratic strongholds.
Moreover Mr. Greelet as a
candi-
date will not bear examination ; the
criticisms of the canvass expose and
t-ll on him as they never did on a
candidate lxTore, and the hunching,
proselyting and prophesying of a ti
dal wave that will carry him into the
White-house, has died away. Amid
bowlings and insensate abuse hurled
at him, Gen. Grant pursues the si-
lent, dignified, even tenor of his way,
and while his enemies rave, the good
works of Lis administration daily
speak for him, and the hearts of the
people are stirred and warmed to
wards the man who stoutly Wars the
storm of abuse, and conscious of his
own rectitude and high intention, is
content in the cabinet as in the Geld,
to let his works, not words,
forth his praise.
herald '
cas-t eat crow. ; the Constitution ; Grant would cn-
Joiin M.Cooper, Esq., will thi force for him those civil rights which
week issue at Philadelphia the first VrJ' itizenmghttohave."
number of a campaign paper oppos-j " . . .
. r . . 1 1 Colonel Bryson, of St Louis, iu
ed to the election of Greeley and I '.
. , i. i , ' the course of an effective replv to Sen-
Brown, to be called the Democratic 1
f, rw, .;,w'ator Schurtz, said:
known as one of the ablest Demo
cratic journalists in this State. He
originated t?e Lancaster Intelligencer,
long the home organ of James Bu
chanan, and afterwards founded the
Chambersburg Valley Spirit, which
he conducted for eighteen years and
established for it a reputation as one
of the ablest Democratic journals in
the Commonwealth. For the last
few years Mr. Cooper's ill health
compelled him to abandon journalis
tic labors, and be has been quietly re
siding on his farm in our neighboring
county of Fulton, where he was a
few weeks since nominated as a dele
gate to the Constitutional Convention.
But Mr. Cooper cant eat crow,
and has determined to fight the
truck and dicker by which his party
was sold out to Greeley. He is a
Kharp and vigorous writer, well ac
quainted with the politics of the
State and country, and we doubt not
will deal many a trenchant blow to
the thieves, who stole the livery of
Democracy to serve the Greeleyiteg
in.
U.S. Senator John Scott and
CoL E. C. Carr will be present and
address the Republican mass meeting
to lie held in this place on the even
ing of Tuesday aext( 10th). Both of .
those gentlemen are able and attrac- State and country. The working
live speakers, and our friends have a ! men, whose prosperity and , welfare
great treat in store. This is the open- j depend upon proper protection.sho nld
ing meeting of the campaign and we remember these facts when they vote
exjtcct to see them here by hundreds. ' in Oetobor. J r ;'
x-i..A DFJiPEKATE SAME."" 1 J"'
It is conceded by the politicians on
all tides, that a Pennsylvania goes
thin fall, so goes 'the Union, or, in
other words, if the Republican State
ticket is elected in October, the State
is conceded to Grant in .November,
and Mr. Greeley is a badly beaten
man. Fully recognizing these facts,
the New York; Tribitne is devoting
much attention to our coming State
election, and is not content with sim
ply advocating the claims of Bicka
lew, but has embarked in a crusade
of defamation against General Hart-
RANFT. Nothing is too vile or men
dacious for it to publish against this
gallant soldier."' It hag raked the
slums of Democratic journalism for
its alleged facts, and rehashes for its
readers the slanders just given circu
lation through its own columns and
those of the Sun, thence copied
by Forney's JVc, and now reeopied
by it, as originating with the latter
journal, which it pronounces the
"leading Grant paper in I ennsyl
vania." It was proven before the Legisla-
tivc Investigating committee last
spring, that the slanders re-vamped
against General Hartranft, were
manufactured by the notorious Doc
tor Payn, the friend and surety of
Evans the embezzler of the State
funds, and furnished the N. Y. Sun
and were written with the purpose of
scaring Hartranft out of the prose
cution he was at the time vigorously
urging against Evans, for the recov
ery of the State's money. And it
was further testified before the same
Committee, that Col. John W. For
ney and his relatives had received
over six thousand dollars of the stol
en money; hence the animosity of
the Forneys to the election of the
man whose faithful discharge of duty
caused the exposure of their complic
ity with the thief who robbed the
State.
It is said that a women who has
fallen from virtue and taken the
downward plunge, can reach a lower
depth than any other human being;
that a renegade is worse than ten
original Turks; that in fact, those
who lapse from virtue or Christianity,
having known the letter and higher
estate, in their despair rush into a
greater degradation, a bitterer antag
onism to the truth, than the originally
vile or unbelieving.
So with the Tribune falling from
its high H'dettal, recanting its faith,
and totally ignoring the examples
and teachings of its former and bet
ter life, like the vilest of strumpets,
its present degradation marks the
immensity of its desccut
But neither the mendacity of the
T ribune nor the railings of the Vf,
co-workers in the iniquitous effort to
destroy the personal character of the
Republican candidate for Governor,
can shake the faith of the peoplo in
his integrity. TJteir object is trans
parent, his reputation is aliovc and
beyond their reach.
The Republicans of the Keystone
State will, in October, prove to these
political harlots, that their fall did not
produce a uuiversal lapse from virtue
and truth, as they appear to imagine,
and by the triumphant election of
Gen. John F. IIartranet will again
verify the old adage "as goes Pennsyl
vania so goes the Union."
THE RIUHT TALK.
In his eloquent and unanswerable I
speech at Worcester, Mass., Hon.
Geo. F. Hoar said :
"Is there anything in the Ilepub-
lican record which any Republican
would blot out ? Is there anything
in the Democratic record which any
honest Democrat would not wish to
blot out ! How can you hesitate be
tween the two candidates? Greeley
would have let the South go ; Grant
would have conquered them
Gree
Grant ley encouraged the rebellion
destrej cd it, Greeley would have
paid the slave-owners from the
National Treasury ; Grant would
educate the freedmen. Greeley,
more than any one man in the
country, is responsible for Bull Run ;
Grant for Donelson, Henry, Vicks
burg, Appomattox. Greeley would
leave the colored man half a slave,
dissuade him from asserting his own
constitutional rights, and recognize a
dominant race as still existing under
"But Senator Schurz says we won't
' shake hands across the bloody chasm.
Well, we have Wen offering to do it
for seven years. I ask him if any cit
izen of the South has been maltreat
ed in the North? What Southern
man has been treated otherwise than
as a gentleman in the North ? I re
member, in 1867, being on the floor
of the Merchants' Exchange in Cin
cinnati. I met Kirby Smith there.
You remember he attempted to take
Cincinnati, and many citizens sold
their property for little or nothing.and
left I said 'General, I am astonish
ed to see you here ; I should think
you would feel a little strange among
these merchants.' 'Well,' said he, 'I
have been astonished myself. I nev
er was treated better in my life.'
That is the way we have been shak
ing hands across the bloody chasm.
I say that is right I have treated
these men as my friends, but I dont
like to be asked to go too far to give
and not receive. Don't ask us, as
Senator Schurz has, to bury the men
who fought through the war in that
chasm and trample their memories in
the dust."
Buckalew is a free trader, and
Gen. IIhrtranft is in favor of pro-
tection to the great interests of the
A POOR MAX.
"Mr. Buck A lew is not ashamed to
say that he is a poor man," says the
N. Y. Tribune, which at present
takes a deep interest iu Pennsylvania
politics. No, ? Buckalew is not
ashamed to do or say anything. He
has not been ashamed to pocket over
$100,000 of State and national money
within the past eighteen or twenty
years, "poor man"! He was not
ashamed to thrust his hand into the
State Treasury and draw out $500 for
"extra" services on the McClurb
Gray Committee.to which he had not
even the shadow of a right, "poor
man"! , lie was not ashamed to - sit
in his seat in tb- United States Sen
ate voting against every war meas
ure, and drawing his $f,000 per an-
a w
uum, "ioor man : lie was not
ashamed to visit Canada and sssoci-
ate with Saunders, Tuompson and
Holcombe, who were conspiring to
burn Northern cities, introduce the
yellow fever into Washington, and
stir up resistance to the government
in the Western States poor man I
He was not ashamed to encourage
the "insurgents" and the malcontents
of Fishing Creek to resist the draft,
and now he is not ashamed to come j
before the people and beg them tol,pged murderer w.as to hare !)0,n
give him another office in the face of j mnrried to a Baltimore lady of high
41... -.1. f. .1 .aaam! -.? I . T .- h!i!Ta 0
reer. Toor man ! Before this cam
paign is over he will stile bo poor
er. Stripped of the specious garb
thrown about his character as a pub
lic servant and exposed to the light
in his true nature, his poverty will bo
such as to leave him without friends,
even in his own party. The certain
defeat which this aristocrat, cold
blooded and heartless, will meet at
the hands of the people in November
will thclve and put him away from
sight for the remainder of his life.
Poor man! poor man ! .Pittsburgh
Dilath.
The New Y'ork Tribune, thinks
the West Virginia election of no pol
itical significance, as both the candi
dates for Governor were Democrats,
"and both supporters of the Cincin
nati and Baltimore ticket" This is
a dishonest statement Both Cam
den and Jacob are Democrats, but
the former was the Literal Dem-
ocratic candidate, and received the
A r r i i -
support of Greeley a friends and was
11 .
terriblv beaten. Jacob was voted for
by the Independent Democrats and
Grant Republicans, and was elected.
He is not for the Cincinnati-Baltimore
ticket and platform, and, it is believ
ed, favors a straight-out ticket at Lou-
isville. There is just this "political
significance" in the election, namely,
that the Greeley candidate Camden,
was effectually defeated, and that
West Virginia does not hold out any
promise to the mongrel ticket for No
vember, and this the Tribune, might
as well acknowledge without further
misrepresentation.
The Soldiers' and Sailors' Conven
tion to lc held in Pittsburgh, com
mencing September 17th, promises to
lie the largest affair of the campaign,
notices having lieen received from
nearly all the States of the intention
of the heroes of the late war to par
ticipate iu it. A large numlier of the
most distinguished soldiers and sail
ors of the country will lie present,
and one of the features of the occa
sion will be a grand torchlight pro
cession on the evening of the 17th.
We hear that quite a numlier of the
boys in this county, who " vote as
they shot" contemplate a visit at that
time. They should take measures to
go as a delegation. Provision will
be made for their accommodation if
they notify the proper committee in
time. Tickets at reduced rates will
be issued by all the railroads center
ing at Pittsburgh.
In his Portland speech Dr. Gree
ley said : " I have never vet heard of
a man who invited his neighbors
to raise a house, who proceeded to
kick them out as soon as the roof
was over his head." This was meant
as an assurance to the Democracy if
they helped to elect him that they
should share the spoils ; but the sub
scribers to the weekly Tribune who
paid their annual subscriptions in
January last under the assurance of
its editor that it would continue to be
a Republican and protectionist jour
nal think that kicking out has been
rather summary, and propose to let
Mr. Greeley hear from them in No
vember next
Ex-Go vernor Curtin, who has
just returned from Russia, is lying
dangerously ill in the city of New
York. On Wednesday of last week
he was nominated by acclamation for
Congress by the Republican Conten
tion of Centre county.
OI R WASHINGTON LETTEK.
Washington, Aug. 29, 1872.
DECLINE IN GREELEY STOCK.
There is a manifest falling off in
the prospects of the coalition party.
Now that the lines are drawn and the
Republican proselytes, who are gen
erally fence men who go to the strong
side, have halted in the bolting move
ment, and begun to come around to
their old first love, there are scarcely
a handful of Republicans in the Gree
ley ramp that are not manifest sore
heads. The X. Y. Herald is strongly
in the interest of Greeley, and its
corps of Democratic correspondents
uniformlvterite vp the friends oiurec
ley and trrt'fc down the friends of
Grant, and yet the editor admits that
there is really nothing against Grant,
and that be is almost sure to win in
the contest It also gives as the rea
son why the blow and furor that in
augurated the Baltimore nominees
has quieted down into absolute in dif
ference, that the business interests of
the country have considered the pro
posed change, and decided that it,
cannot be afforded in the present
time of business prosperty. The
gold market which is the most sensi
tive index of the cautiosncss and
fear of a change which now animates
business centres has continued to
vary with the popular pulse regarding
the possibility, of Greeley'a election.
Shortly after the Baltimore Conven
tion gold ran up to $1 IS and yester-
day it was down to $1 12. Other
influences may last a few hours, but
the fear of Greeley's election is a
permanent dread and hangs like an
incubus over the operations of mon
eyed men.
EXCITINU CRIME." "7, : " y
The last sensation here is the mur
der of Mrs. Wheat in our neighboring
citv of Baltimore. Her nephew, a
veiinc man of the name of Jesse Up-
pcrcuc, who had ingratiated himself
in her goou graces and already se
cured most of her proiierty in his own
right, is in prison. He gave the
alarm and asserted that the heuse
was infested by robbers who had shot
his aunt, and that he had folio wed the
robbers and fired his pistol down the
stairway. ,11 is pistol was a four bar
rel revolver and was loaded when
found after the firing except one bar
rel, with cartridges which resemble
in size that with which the woman's
life was taken. Search was made
through the house, and no mark of a
pistol ball could be discovered. It
Beetus that the deceased was weak in
body and mind and had been left
from $75,000 to $90,000 and that
there were rival interests iu the fami
ly as to the securing of the money at
her death, but that voung Uppercue
being an Attorney, Lad managed to
secure most of the property and mon
ey and to antagonize her other near
relatives. The case is involved in
mystery and is enhanced in interest bv
n.illiin fan .lava trA ttt-
respectability.
CAPITAL
ITEMS.
We are having an interesting con
test between the Washington Si
Georgetown Passage Railroad Co.
and the District authorities in which
the city police attempted to take sides
with the railroad Co. The efforts of
the Company to get rid of paving
their tracks with wood pavement, on
streets so paved, in lieu of cobble
stones is the point of the trouble, and
on Saturd ay the Company forci
bly removed their track from the pro
posed line of the wood pavement and
placed it on that part of East Penn
sylvania Avenue wincn is intended
to be parked. They generally win in
all tilts with the people, but this time
they will have a lively time of it
against the Board of Public Works,
who are clothed with full authority
ovcr the streets and street improve
ments. A. 11. Shepherd in charge,
will, it is thought, prove niore than a
match for the Railroad. At the
point of removal by the Company
'the railway track lately occupied
I has been torn up, the new track re-
placed on the side, and the wood
pavement between the track is now
' completed, and all the Railroad Co.
; """I" l"u: . t, . .. ... .
! has trained by their action n et arm-
in is the shortening of their availa-
ble track nearly a mile.
A yacht race took place here last
Monday on the rotomac river, start
inir from the Seventh 6treet wharf
and ending at GIvmont. The "Fan
nie Bell" took the first prize, and the
"Maria" the second. C Al.
Baekalew'a CH Scheme.
In his Lancaster speech Mr. Buck
alew claimed credit for having pro
posed, while he was in the United
States Senate, that the soldiers in the
national service should be paid in
gold. This was in May, 1864. The
resolution providing that greenback
payments to the troops should le dis
continued was offered by Mr. Powell,
of Kentucky, a Senator who was in
earnest sympathy with the rebels and
who invariably voted against the
measures introduced to the Senate for
the promotion of the Union cause.
Powell could have had but one object
in devising such a scheme, In May,
1864, gold rose from 176 to 190, and
two months later it touched the
highest point that was reached during
the entire rebellion. If Powell s res
olution had passed, the pay of the
army would have been nearly doubled
and the United States Treasury would
have been unable to meet the drafts
upon it Powell, Saulsbury, Carlisle,
Riddle, Wright' Garre Davis, and
Charles R. Buckalew voted for the
resolution, which was opposed by
evcrv loyal man in the Senate. Of
course Buckalew could not have hoped
to carry such a monstrous scheme to
its legitimate conclusion. His objects
were, first, to annoy the Senate and
to embarrass it and the government ;
and, second, to excite dissatisfaction
and discontent in the army at a most
critical period. It was a mean, con
temptible and most dishonorable epi
sode in the bitter warfare waged by
Buckalew and his Southern colleagues
against the administration and
against the cause iu which the whole
loyal North was enlisted. It was one
of many attempts to place obstacles
in the path of those who were strain
ing every nerve to suppress the rebell
ion and to save this government from
destruction. And yet Mr. Buckalew
actually has the audacity to stand up
before a Pennsylvania audience and
to lioast of his participation in the
trick ! The insolence of this proceed
ing is paralleled only by the wicked
ness of the deed of which he boasts.
He will find, when the people have
learned the truth respecting his con
duct in this matter, that it would
have been better for him to have suf
fered the record of his baseness to
remain in the oblivion from which he
recalled it
ASOTH EB COX VEST.
Ueaerml XeTalaMt tmw rat ftad
WllMM.
Franklin, August 29. The sol
dicrs of Venango county held a con
vention to-day for the purpose of
making the necessary arrangements to
attend the great Soldiers' Convention
to be held at Pittsburgh on the 17th
of next month. . Judge John S. Mc
Calmont, one of the roost prominent
Democrats in this State, was chosen
President of the Convention, and in
his address came out squarely for
Grant and Wilson. This is the first
public announcement of his inten
tion not to support the Democratic
ticket, and has created the greatest
excitement Judge McCalmont is a
man of great influence in the Demo
cratic party, and will no doubt cause
a great many Venango county Demo
crats to change their views. He will
head the Tcnango county delegation
to the Pittsburgh Convention. .
Samper Killed.
' St. Louis, August 28. Some days
ago two desperadoes named McClel
land and Wright got into a quarrel at
Hays City, Kansas, in which Wright
was killed and McClelland was badly
wounded. McClelland was placed in
jail and chained to a post with Pony
Donovan, the noted horse tnicl. Hie
second night of the murder, a band
of citizens visited the jail and killed
both McClelland and Donovan.
Hon. Thomas Steere, who was last
year the Democratic candidate for
Governor of Rhode Island, addressed
the Woonsocket Republicans in favor
of Grant and Wilson.
The Blaadjr CkHB.
The Iit'vieic, a Greeley paper pub
lished in Quitman, Georgia, offers
these remarks :
"The atrocities of the Northern
soldiery arc still too fresh in our mem
ory ; the" scars on pur . heart are not
yet erased; the names of Chick
aniauga and Elmira still suffuse the
eyes with tears, and the heart with
terrible thoughts of vengeance - Ah !
it is too soon to make light of the
four years' struggle for liberty.
Widows have not,, ceased to lament
the loss of husbands ; mothers still
cherish the memory of departed sons :
brothers and sisters still remember j
idolized fathers and brothers. The;
reminders of war's terrible havoc are
Mtill visible the grim landmarks of a
vandal host are not erased the
blackened ruins made by incendiary
and hireling armies are altogether too
fresh in the minds of Southern men
to expect from them even political en
dorsement of all the atrocious acts of
a vandal host. When we so debase
our manhood when we so outrage
all the nobler feelings of humanity
as to stand over the graves of our
Confederate dead, nnd, iu the lan
guage of the ninth resolution of the
Cincinnati-Baltimore platform, ex
claim, 'we remember with gratitude
the heroism, and sacrifices of the sol
diers of the North,' may our tongue
clevo to the roof of our mouth, and
may God's thunderbolt lay us lifeless
over the sacred mound we thus dis
honor." "No ?" implies the Kei-iew, "you
may talk about peace and reconcilia
tion and hand-clasping as much as
you please, but we sec our way to a
terrible vengeance upon the Govern
ment and upon the negro through the
election of Horace Greeley. We will
aid in electing him because we see in
his success new hope for the lost
cause, but we do not, we will not en
dorse even politically the platform
upon which he stands. That is all
well enough for the North, but as for
the South, it is just where it was in
feeling when Lee invaded Pennsylva
nia and Thompson was concocting
measures to bum the cities of the
North."
A FAR WENT TBAUEDY.
Tv Mrm, One Womaa mud ( hll
drea Inhumanly Butchered.
The St. Joseph (Mo.) Gazette gives
the following account of a tragedy
which has been alluded t in our tele
graphic columns:
Most of our readers will remember
the case of Johu Grable, who was
hung in this cityjtwo years ago. The
defendant murdered his best friend,
and packed the body around in his
wagon for three days, passing through
this city on his way to Parkeville.
The horrible circumstances attending
the crime, as well as the subsequent
conduct of the prisoner, shocked the
entire community, and it was su
posed the case was almost without
parallel in history.
Yesterday morning the telegraphic
despatches contained a brief account
of the discovery of a crime by the
side of which G Table's becomes ut
terly insignificant Yesterday, thro'
the kindness of Colonel A. P. More
house, of the Nodaway Z)fMoeraf,we
were furnished with full particulars of
the shocking affair. On last Tues
day a man drove into the town of
Clearmont fourteeu miles northwest
of Marysville, with two horses and a
covered wagon. The man had
broken the neck yoke of his wagon,
and spent some time in trying to pro
cure another. His actions were
somewhat strange. He was intoxi
cated and gave a little girl five dol
lars to bring him a drink of water,
and seemed much excited. Mr. John
Giffey happening near the wagon,
discovered a disagreeable odor, and
asked what he had in the wagon that
smelt so. He replied that it was a
quarter of beef that was about spoil
ed. Mr. Giffey asked him why he
carried such beef, to which he made
no reply. Soon after he left the wa
gon, Mr. Giffey and others, think
ing all was not right, coucluded to
make an investigation. And such a
sight as was revealed to their view
was enough to "make the knees of
terror quake and the face of darkness
turn pale ! " There, wrapped up in
bed clothes, were five human beings
piled together, partly decomposed,
and presenting as sad and mournful a
spectacle as was ever beheld. The
victims were two men, one woman
and two children The children were
small, one a babe of two months and
the other two years. One man, the
woman and children, had their throats
cut from car to ear. They were prob
ably murdered in the wagon where
found, as they were in their night
clothes The other man was of large
frame, and had been killed by being
shot in the head and beaten with a
club. He had probably been sleeping
under the wagon, as his body had
been cut in two for the purpose of
getting him into the wagon.
The feelings of the citizens of Clear
mont may well be imagined when so
direful a crime was known to have
been committed . Manv of them ad
vocated
Instant death
to such a fiend in human form, who
must have committed the crime ; but
wiser counsels prevailed, and his life
was spared, not, however, until he
had made a statement of what, he
knew about the crime, which he did
not do until he had the second time
felt his weight at the short end of a
rope. He at first said his prayers
and made his peace with bis- maker ;
but, upon being let down the second
time, he made the following state
ment: He said his name was Osburn;
that his wife and wife's mother lived
near Mt Ayre, Ringgold county,
Iowa. He said his mother-in-law's
name was Delilah Ayres, and that he
had a boy five years old. He said
the name of the murdered family was
Ormes; that tbey went to Kansas
from Minnessota last spring; that the
name of the other murdered man was
Daniel Dickerson; That he bad ac
companied the murdered family from
Minnesota to Kansas, and wa3 a
cousin to Mrs. Ormes. He said that
Joseph Williams murdered the party
on last Thursday night, near Holton,
Kansas, and hired bim, for a consid
eration of $700, to conceal the bodies;
that be started to do so, intending to
secrete them in the first brush patch ;
that there was a keg of whiskey in
the wagon, from which he had imbib
ed freely, and he had been drank ever
since ; that he desired to put them in
the Missouri river, but that be got to
White Cloud in the day : time, and
could not do so. He stated that he
could not find any suitable place to
hide the bodies ; that it appeared to
him that Providence was against him,
and it smote his conscience so that he
was not at all conscious of what be
was doing. '
He stated that Williams followed
the Ormes family from Minnesota for
the purpose of
MURDERING THEM;
that the cause of his bate was an old
love affair between himself and Mrs.
Ormes ; that Williams had sworn to
slay Ormes, his wife and posterity ;
that when the parties were murdered
they had the wagon in which the
bodies were found, two yoke of oxen
and some loose cattle. He . said he
had traded the cnttlo for a span of
horses, and sold the loose cattle just
before he arrived at Clearmont, and
that he had also hid the 700 in a
sack.
The parties who have him in charge
are the best citizens in Nodaway.
They started on the back track, and
found his statements correct about
trading and selling the cattle, but
could not find the money where he
stated he had hid it.
Sheriff , Wray went out to bring in
Osburn yesterday, but could not get
him, as the parties who have hini in
tend to keep him until it is ascertain
ed whether his statements are fjre.
The sheriff left for Kansas last night
to have Williams arrested and kept,
though a telegram was sent to Holton
to make the arrest yesterday.
LATER.
The following despatch was receiv
ed from Colonel A. P. Morehouse last
evening:
"Marysville, 10 p. m. (JazetL-:-The
place has been found, near Burr
Oak grove, in this county, where is it
supjKised that Osburn killed the
Ormes family and Dickerson. The
party were seen on the road before
the terrible tragedy occurred, travel
ing together, a short time before they
got to the sjot where they camped.
Great quantities of blood were found
on the ground, and other evidences
that put it beyond a doubt that Os
burn killed them. He is yet in the
hands of the citizens, and there is no
doubt of his guilt
Niagalar Aeeldeat.
The dreadful accident of yesterday,
which may result in the death of two
unfortunate men, calls to mind an oc
currence of similar character which
took place, some years ago, on the
Lexington and HarrodshurgPikc. It
seems that to construct the winding
road down the hill near the Kentucky
river, blasting was neccessarv to as
sist in the removal of the rock,
one occasion the blust failed to
plode. The workmen avoided it
some time, and, as it was finally
On
de-
termined to widen the road at that
place, after it should be completed
throughout its length, the old blast
was altogether neglected. After a
lapse of twenty -one years the long
delayed improvement was commenc
ed. The old blast was forgotten;
workmen set to work to drill new
holes near where the old one had been
made. Three men were thus engaged
one day, when suddenly the rocks
were torn asunder. One Gormley,
standing on a loose rock, was thrown
fifty feet into the air, and was saved
from death only by his falling upon
an elevated bank. The other two
were blown down the hill-side.
None were killed, but all were bably
wounded, Gormley losing an eye.
The explosion of neglected blasts
is by no means uncommon, and some
method ought to be adopted to render
the powder in such cases non-explosive,
and thus protect human life from
such terrible risks. It would seem to
us that some chemical preparation
might be invented to answer the pur
pose we have mentioned.
Aa Vafertaaate Raaakulll.
John C. King, of this city, met
with a melancholy death on the Rail
road on Saturday night Mr. Kingbad
been an agent for the old Champion
Machine Company (Whitely, Fussier
& Kelley), and had been canvassing
New York State in the interest of
the Champion. He was in company
with Mr. Clay Whiteley and W.
StillwelL The party took to their
berths in a sleeping-car on the Atlan
tic and Great Western Railroad, at
Marion, at about 11 o'clock. All
were in good spirits, and were much
pleased with the prospect of soon ar
riving home. Mr. King asked one of
the party at this time when he would
get to Springfield. On being told the
time, he said : "I am glad of that, for
I soon shall see my boy."
Nothing further was done until the
train arrived at Urbana, when it was
discovered that King's berth was
empty. His absence could not be ac
counted for. The party came on to
Spiingfield, and on the next tram east
Mr. Oliver Kelley started to find him.
He soon ascertained that Mr. King
had been found at Potter's station,
four miles east of Lewisburg, and
that he was most seriously injured.
From all the circumstances surround
ing this sad case it is evident that the
deceased must have got up out of his
berth in his sleep, about one o'clock at
night, and t alked out of and off the
sleeping-car. He had fallen by the
side of the track and there laid a
considerable time, and then dragged
himself a distance of about fifty feet,
where he was found. The injuries
he received were on the head and
side of the body, and were so mortal
that he died iu a short time after he
was found. He had been kindly
cared for by those who had discovered
him in his helpless situtation. His
body will lie brought home this after
noon. Dentrurtlve Railway Aeeldeat.
Philadelphia, August 27. The
loss by the wrecking of a train and
the burning of oil and cars, on the
Reading Road, this morning, is nearly
a quarter million dollars. , No lives
were lost ,' ' ' ,
The New York freight train consis
ted of twenty-eight cars. "The fif
teenth car jumped the track, aud,
striking the end of a bridge carried it
off the abutment, carrying the rest of
the train down on the Reading- track
twenty feet below. . This disaster had
hardly occurred when a train of ninety
coal cars, fully laden, came running
up to the bridge. The engineer and
fireman jumped from the engine and
escaped with their lives, though sus
taining some slight injuries. In a
moment more the coal trains collided
with terrific force with the huge pile
of ruins which filled the chasm. The
shock to the train threw every car
from the track, while ten were com
pletely smashed and battered op,
lying piled upon each other. Some
were tossed a distance of twenty feet
Others were thrown back upon the
train. Their wreck was complete.
In a few minutes after the collision of
the coal train a conflagration ensued,
which destroyed all the ears that
plunged into the chasm, with vll their
valuable merchandise, and the loco
motive of the latter was completely
destroyed and lay plied upon the
charred cars and ruins of the bridge.
The cars of the New York train con
tained dry goods. The fire depart
ment was quickly summoned, but
despite the efforts of the firemen all
that was combustible went to ashes.
The last political bon mot is this :
"You'll vote for Greeley, of course,"
said a white Liberal to Mr. Mitchel,
who was sergeant in a colored regi
ment and lost a leg in the war. "My
stump will have to grow first," was
the retort of the crippled sergeant
A m4 Haa'aOplalea fOreeley.
President White, of Cornell (N. Y.)
University, was asked what he
thought of Horace Greeley and
promptly answered :
"Whv. he's a failure. He's failed
in everything yet We sent biin to
Conercss and what did be do 1 Why
he left the grand national issues of
ireeuom and slavery struggle on whii
out his aid, and fuddled away bis time
on a picayune one-horse scheme like
the mileage question. He is always
penny-wise and iiound-foolish. He
would hold up a cent In-fore his eyes,
and because he couldn't see the dome
of St Peter, ho would set the world
on fire to make people believe that
the cent was the biggest If he was
President he would get some two cent
st henic in his head like the frauking
privilege, and let broad questions on
which the happiness aud prosperity of
the nation depend go to the small
dogs who hedge in around the White
House. He's a narrow, fussy, preju
diced, vacillating, picayune man."
IT A II.
a Outrage Deatractlaa af
Frlvata frapertjr.
Salt Lake, August 29. By order
of a Mormon Justice of the Peace,
the police this afternoon made a de
scent this afternoon upon several
houses of ill-fame, and with axes,
knives, Ac, demolished all the furni
ture therein, worth probably $10,000.
Bureaus, bedsteads, pictures, carpets
and everything were chopiied to
pieces. A Considerable amount of
money and jewelry had to lie taken.
There is much excitement among the
liberal citizens on uccount of the
wanton destruction of property, and
there is much bad feeling and threats
are made to organize a vigilance
committee and clean out Brigham
Young's and other jMilygamist's
houses.
Yol'ngstown, O., August 2S, 1872.
A battery of ten Iniilers, each fifty
feet long, exploded at Brown, Bennet
& Co.'s new mill, about three o'clock
this morning, with a loud report, jar
ing houses a mile off. The boilers
wi re heated by gas and attended by
one fireman named Garalby. who
was instantly killed. Pieces of the
boiler flew in all directions, some
nearly half a mile. One piuce fifteen
feet long struck a house a quarter of
a mile distant, penetrating and kill
ing a woman and child in bed and
mortally wounding the husband,
named Ouiglcv. One boiler weut
through the mill, knocking down the
furuace stack aud tearing up the ma
chinery in its path. Had the explo
sion been a few minutes sooner or
later the loss of life would have been
terrible, as the force at work in the
mill hail just gone off duty and the
relief had not yet come on. The
causo of the explosion is not known.
Loss fully $20,000 ; partly insured.
This explosion was the most destruc
tive that evur occurred in the vallev.
A Terrible Taruada.
Chicago, Aug. 26. A Jackson
ville, III., despatch says a terrible tor
nado passed over that city and vicini
ty last night About half of the roof
of Capp's woolen mills wa9 torn off,
and one-third of the roof of the Jack
sonville Home Woolen Mills. The
walls of West Charge Methodist
Episcopal church, in course of con
struction, were blown down. Several
barns and small houses were upset
aud torn to pieces, while shade and
forest trees were snapped off and sent
whirling through the air with terrific
force. The corn anil fences through
out the country are flattened, and the
damage is very great, even if there
has not been loss of life. The storm
is the severest that has visited this
vicinity for many years.
Derricks Ntraek fejr I.lffatalac-Taaks
Deatreyed.
A special to the Titus ville Herald,
from Triumph, says : About nine
o'clock Monday evening three der
ricks, belonging to Benner & Son, S.
B. Kennedy Si Co., and W. B. Fores
man, were struck by lightning and
took fire, and the flames soon reaching
two of the tanks, they were consum
ed ; about four hundred barrels of oil
flowed out upon the ground in a solid
sheet of flame. The total destruction
of the wells down the valley seemed
almost inevitable, but the vigorous
efforts of the men succeeded in build
ing, a dani across the stream, and
thereby saved the tanks of Currie,
Uuidekoper and others. A large
tank of Benner Si Son caught fire,
but the flames were extinguished be
fore much damage was done Grant
fears were entertained of the flames
reaching the wells of Luce & Barber,
Raydure and Watson Si Co., which
would have been in dangerous prox
imity to the town, but the favorable
direction of the wind prevented the
further spread in this direction. The
loss is about twenty-five hundred dol
lars, mostly sustained by Forcsman
and Kennedy & Co.
Salt Lake.
Salt Lake, August 27. The sale
of Montezuma, Savage, Hiawatha,
and Last Chance mines, last Saturday,
was for $400,000 cash.
There is quite an excitement to-day
on the receipt of precious gems by the
Savage Company from New Mexico.
The rubies, emeralds, opals, garnets
and sapphires are pronounced genu
ine. Lapidaries of New York are to
decide the diamond question. An
other expedition is organizing here for
gems. Specimens of gold-bearing
rock were received to-day from Tintic
assaying over $40,000 per ton.
Wife Nanlerar Lyacka.
Cincinnati, August 27. A special
dispatch from Memphis, Tenn., says
G. W. Martin, of Hipley county,
Tenn., who a few days ago murdered
his wife and threw the body in a
pond, was taken out of jail on Sunday
night by twenty armed men, who
conducted bim to a place a few rods
from the jail, where twelve charges
of buck-shot from as many shot guns
were emptied into his body.
. Bailer Exalaslaa.
PlViMWlTf Annniut O. I k;iup
in the rolling mill of Brown, Bonnell
Si Co.. at Youncrstown. Ohio emloded
this morning. The fireman, named
Garathy, was instantly killed. A
large piece of the boiler fell in the
house of William Quigley, instantly
killing Mrs. Quigley. The hull will
be Btopped about a month. The loss
will be about twenty tnousanu dollars.
Ta CaaUra la laala.
London, August 29 Advices from
India received here, report that the
cholera is raging fiercely at Lahor
gong and Meenaru. I n the former city
it has carried off thousands of inhab
itauts.and the greatest consternation
prevails among the people. At Mee
nam, also, its ravages have been terri
ble. The authorities are exercising
every means to check the progress of
the fatal disease.
POLITICAL ITEJIB.
Gov. Noyes says he is of the opin- j
ion that Grant will carry Ohio by j
from 40,000 to 50,000 majority. j
Grant's majority in Illinois in 1 St'.-S, j
was 51,150. This year it will be
much larger if the signs of the time
are not all wrong. j
Col. Moseby thus defines the term
"Liberal Republicans :" "They are '
those who have been disappointed in '
getting into office, or have lecn kick-
out when they were iu, and suddenly
they become "Liberal" lilnTal to -
ward tbcniselvcs-h.ving never ln
anaitnMi.jl nf il lilutritlit v tiiU'nril flnr
I , .. , v j ;
one else, .mosuv is correct iu w uii -
nilion. j
The Mauch Chunk Gazette. knvs
of an iron furnace at which !'
hands are employed. The manager .
is a Grant man, and he offer the sum
of one hundred dollars for every Gree- '
ley man among his workmen. 1
A remarkable evidence of the high ;
esteem in which General Hartranft is j
held by men of all parties in .Mont-;
gomery county, is given in the fact
that at the Democratic preparatory '
meeting, at Norristowu, (near where'
General Hartranft lived) mi Tuesday, i
no word was stiokcn by any of tin- or-
ators derogatory to the character of.
I I
"
the man who led their first regim
to the war.
Richard II Daiiii of Boston hits a
. . .. ...... I . . : . r .i ' . . : ..
,
ana in a letter to some coiorea cm-j
.... . . . -.1
... ,
zens of itobton lie photographs .Mr.
Greelevthus:
"He seems to me a vislonarv with -
out faith, a radical
wiwioui root, an;
extrcmest without persistency, ami a
strife maker without courage. He is
generally admitted to be vain, unprac
tical, loquacious, o-n to flattery, eas
ily intimidated, easily deceived as to
men, and intensely desirous of office.
And while I have never regarded his
hat or his trowsers as strong argu
ments f"r or against him, there is no
reason why we should shut our eyes
to the fact that he is whimsical, affect
ed, boorish and profane."
A Geutleman of New York author
izes the Time to announce that he
will bet one thousand dollars on
Grant and Wilson, on every State
in the Union. Not less than'$10,000
to be dejiosited by each party, in any
approved Trust Company, to abide
the result.
North Carolina is out of the woods,
says the Boston Commonwealth. -It
, gives 2.20H majority for Caldwell Re
publican for Governor. This is a sad
fii-ct for the Octnocracv and Assistant
Democracy who burnt their powder
on a claim of 1",00) majority for Mer
rimon. Before Mr. Buckalew anticipted his
nomination for the office he now seeks,
he paid the followingdeserved compli
ment to the man who is now his
poncnt :
"I know General Hartranft well,
both as a public officer and a man.
As Auditor General he has shown
himself a most faithful, upright effi
cient and accomodating officer, aud
he would make an excellent Gov
ernor." The Buffalo Evening l'oat, for a
quarter of a century the advocate of
most unimpeachable Democracy, rais
es the people's standard of Grant and
Wilson. At the West such conver
sions are of common occurrence. The ,
calculation that only five per cent, of,
the Democratic multitude would es
chew "crow' is evidently too modest, '.
for although many "swallowed"' it Im--gins
to look as if few vould be able to
"keep down." I
Some of the Greeley ites pretend to:
support Greeley on the one-term prin
ciple, and yet they support Buckalew,
who has been steadilv in office for the
past quarter of a century ; Thompson ' state. ft term, te ajar ke. jm.
who has been in office back to the ??."1'hl1:
time when the memory of man run-! pnuKiiitx military sk hou
neth not to the contrary, and others ! ierehaaiHie. x. j..
of like character. If these men de-' ,r r"u n;lle'7m. 1!"'''''' r
, , ' !"rmerl loealed at Pnncetim. V J.
sire the respect of the public, thev r.ev. s. n.'huwixl. a. m.. Pr:wit.
shoul.l display a little more consist- Vrt- ' ur,h IJSZlSF''
encv. -
! q i SI AKon i f CHILE M1IM1
The Ku Klux are aeain murdering A Acidemia. j. t
unoffending citizens in Missouri, burn
ing and pillaging their homes, and
yet tho Democracy want universal
amnesty and these blood-thirsty dev
ils given place and power. Thev cow
er and cringe under the bloody edict
of a Godless crew of cut-throats,
thieves and assassins, who live but to
destroy.
What will those clamorous
T.nral
Republicans have to say when they
. . . . - . J
stow this away in their brain pans.
that Charles Francis Adams, the idol,
Whom tho-anVtbillg-tO beat-Grant par-
ty were ready to fall down and wor
snip, nas announced, mat iroin
the
riSlllg Of the SUn even to the going
down of the same he is for Grant, and
under no circumstances
Will lit' favor
Greeley.
An elderly colored gentleman of
this city found himself, a few days
ago, in controversy -with a Greeley
Democrat, who assured him that Hor
ace had always been a strong Kepub- j
liean. and a steadfast friend of the
blacks. "Very true, sah, very true,"
said the Ethiop : "but then vou know,
.- . .
Sail. the debit WttS IU lieaoen
nn,,, or 'n r 'r-,.rf
once . 1. 11. rjXpreSX.
city, Saturdayhuntinga c'aim agent
to seeure a pension. Hit offered one
$50. but the honest .cent refused to
take more $10. The applicant insis -
. . .
tenon paying $50, whin the agent
ovIbiI wUt nirimn k kJAmKul tn
asKea wnat regiment ne fcetongeti to,
anuwuerenc nau lost iu leg. lie
answered with Stonewall Jackson's,
'
trying to whip the Yankees. Tno
agent advised him to wait uutil Gree -
ley was elected beforei he presented
his claim. "Sladinon (Jvurirr.
It was rather a cruel rejonaWr the
Republicans of Michigan made to ex
Governor Ulttir, a recent convert of :
Greeley ism, who was reiieating,
among other things, thu railing occu-j
sations agains the President about,
gift-taking. They called to mind the (
r i f" l ,r i.t en i
fact that When Mr. Blair tilled
the gubernatorial chair he was the re-
cipitent of a splendid pair of horses,
an expensive carriage, and a pair of
beautiful mirrors, from officers of the
army. Were these presents tho price
of favors enjoyed or expected.
Buckalew dare not deny, says the j
Pittsburg Commercial, that he coun-
i.t : : :
.
hviuu n uu nul l niiiiiii&.rir iu uatiu-
da, in 1863 4, when he was serving)
as Senator iu the National Legisla-
ture ; and Ilolcombe, the Confeder-
ate emissary
. .
of the interview
bv cullivatin
such men as Hnckalew that the-He
bellion could hope to succceil ! And
again : Buckalew's record proves
him a pro rebel Democrat of tho most
ultra class, and Republicans are asked
to make him Governor of tho State he
so basely betrayed in the hour of dan
ger. And yet again : Buckalew "s
record is before the world. We chal-
itugc 1113 eupyv.tcia iu Buutv a siujiej
sentence of his, that was calcuiateu
to aid the Government in suppressing
the rebellion.
in reporting me result ,., ,.,-, ue lahei.
, declared that it was 1 wmier 10 .store . .KS. -
I
Xew Adi'ertiiwmvnit
Agents Wanted
fRTHK
Florence
SEWING MACHIKI
Wlwwir'r 111 FIHEXf'K Ma-Mn.1-liitnalwwl.
It h met Willi the Kr.t.M' -
I If ia f tm ..til v ma.'titn fllM kint fun.
, . mn.t hvui the KTru.i Tiri
;ffhtrwW.;
lllf.lt.
: henm. u.l ft lU tHMUtiftjIly.
1 tUr.
lh H-mniT will turn w;...
All .t:1-l.r
, nii w m-Mn.
kt bifciriitituoii api'iy to or Kl.lf .'.
HECKERT4 McKAlN,
o.HKIilh Street,
I'ITTSBVk(jH
June 12-72.
kMONDs
I a -
THOS.M?rAD0E,
4i.r!,ApinsBsp3
t -
I Political Campaio.
! j
Grant 4. Will
, .
. i
YJ
vv.xy'
' op, CAMPAirit
! tVS
: CPJ',V "k C APC
' JKCHt?
lane and Tur
TRANSIMRKM'IES ASD Btv
With I'urt rail or nj ilevlre f..r Ht-
Sili, Itantini; art. I Muxlin FT if" of L
hnl or inaie ti onler. I'hlnejH Lan.-, , ?
iL noil tvlfs ; Pniier l!al o. Fire w
fce. fainpriio t'lu.n flttcj out at th
Kate at
WM. P. SCnEIBLITS
CAMPAIGN LErOT.
40 South Third Street PhilaJe.y
SEND FOR ("IRI't'I.A R.
July 10, Ti.
A.
DUNHAM,
WITH
MOSELKY, METZGFR d(i
MAM-rAf-rriiKita asd-iohticr
'.HOOTS fc STIOI
Ni. !J MARKET ST., rHII.AMXPK:.
NO. T Wml) ST.. UTTsnt'K'iH. Pi
July 10. -:i.
A
IRT VIEW Ai:AIEMY. Pfrru
ft. R. It. (tor Mulrand trmtir friuui '
eihlobrl. thitrough. urefiii: l'K-a.-e
ful ami aixrpfiii.le: ounniunity pcial. m.n.
liKioas; builitintrs lan;e aixl oieily : a lu.i
&Fle teai-ferrs: mountain air. pur: wavr. 'j .
inir. fine kiiti!iir: eaujluitU'aUy a H ,
Wh'le e.jeTilr Bnarl. Tuition. R"'m.
Wasiiinu (!.r 4u week. Irtt than Irohu-.-n.
tart. in!r-r M-"i.Ti 1!ti S-j-t. S- r: : -rular".
W 1LNI N a. PATTERS' N. Pri.
Juniata i'-o.. Pa.
Presidents of Colleges. Minis??
Sll'CESsFl'L BLSl.ESS Hi.
Trtlfy t the many aJvanUKr" u:
Tuscarora Acader
ACIDEMIA. Juniata Co., Pi.
Send for a f 'Irrnlnr .ind Testimonial'
I. I). Stoxe. A. M., Ph. 11. J. J. Pr-TTKRj-vJ -
StenteETille 0., Female SeiiiMi
This ilely-knownSnooi aflorde thortmr.v
tUn clueaiion. at a eot of Utile mure ::u:,
week: nt fourth off for tUrvymrn. TbeS- ..
Ion CJ0 wevki') oiii S.-pt. llih. The aUrry.
i ttnner pupil H requested. A rrand rv-ut
the close ol the next year. S-md fit inr.t
, Kev. I llAKLtS l HKATTY, !. I' LI
j Sup't.. or Kev. A. M. KUl). Ph. I., Prion;..
i VKIKTilWN ('. J.) FE MALI'1
J LKtiK. Th"r-.oh iu.!ru.-ti.n. H.:
ami lieau'.ilul lo-ath-u. I lie of the w t-.
MUTUAL
Fire Insurance.
The Mutual Plan inwninttw to the mu:a-'
urtM the rrraU'St Mscumy r the Uxt
curt. Th prvmlura mrfe rr thecal ui :
mi iivi.lenU are tietiil tu I hi? MiwktU'l-ifP1.
;ininil l PW? Bin rijru!". ann n m
l.l MB1A l.NSlKASl'K COMPANY.
' rut1, wr'-cutum upun the oivmiuai -
I fc,er than the rate paid in trie he Iven."
mipni,."duru,) the -..me i-n.-i f t,m. ;
! '" .t.-n lbJa'JV
I an ac-umul te i'iun d hVenienrewieii: i
- ) i,.
cimin-j and wiping ni iVrnvaiiy ut i
I hand until needed, aiid pay dhfleo1 tu
1 'J,TX.
ierar.1 i!-;retitlnBllplv.thu-pP't.v::a
UVr Pr inminince ..r Ascerx-le. ad.lrcw
. . . - , rr
IVlumtia, Lancaster I vast? S
AliKT
WlITU TtlR I'll AJfRKRUJ o
l'AnpAis Book, this
Struggle of 72:
A Sarelty in Totuwl and Popular lilm
A Orai-hic HitTT of the Republican ia:
orratir Parties; a raey tketrh of the xail-
j SJ V
an nrae T-.tw w w
rh Miin.tr tirtptf '
Papwa,
tree
once.
I the cam
Published. Al
iiputirn. Thennert Hlumraw--
" -
A ll..k wanted by every r-
eitiien To eeiire ten-ltlrT at once. nrt 1
frit. rXION PI BLlSHlNtHH.. Ciuaf
, Philad a, Pa., or StwinciwM, Mw.
dpalol
of Pitti
ties OH
j CAMPAIGN GOODS FOR
. Axenu wanted f..r or 'amjaitm .
J2J-. .CLTJi ir Pu
i ""r"""" "J'"-! tow.
idldates. I'araimlifti lttnrraphte.. hart. ' amd ant
itrapb, nadjres, pins, irs and ewryUf' 27?"::
i ! to the timed. Ten Dollar per day "f'-V. "tll;
j Fnll Mm.,, fr A, ,,,... mi !..
, utKinsi'ttii, ji rm buw, .-
. . if i t in v
Thirtr new al afiactur
desitrn. UetPr hatm'tt
T.'.KirHAKl "TV'
MTra,4;MurrjS..' We ,
f f
! IlAlJurjb !
aai
vtctfeaj
"Hortm
1 The rtiemitry of l...u Pn.vid.n ' y ,
i , mineral water whleh fumbinei'
mtJSSS
TAKRAiT fcrrcicx !iTSietTiair j
; fta-1-1" stock..
dy' SOLD BY ALL PRlV.t'.iSTS.
REWARD kiS
u u i rintntr nr i kti -
lino
t a. i riK -avjaja but
Drill .)' Pi LB Kkuckt fiH. f"- im
t z " . - It
..iimm , m mm iu mm w
isvi.1 by ail uruggMta.
"r-. . . ...
Price the S "
new
Barlow's IlHlif0 1J cbiae.
i tiweneape and w aniei i ,BTSu,',-!
Niuian Miii.fi ineirenuiw - . ....
k wnu nam
d. . ; St.. riuiadeipma. naa
strengthening pri,,-. i tj irmi.t ' or." W .
ft '
riW IT HANOY.-Tb. Kfe.
JV Medlctiie f.T the prompt r
arrniea. r holer Infantum. "Lari'Z '
Su.ner Complaint. J-ii? S1
up of Blaekherry Ko. and Rhubarb.
well-tried remedy, entirely Cat-,
(a ke. uul. and eertaln In elfeel : fan " r V ACl
..n In the ni.l anient eaaea: '"-!, n Vt. Il
T.un,re.t infant a well a- lo "'', h. 'ru. .
llv taken by children. Keep K In '"'.b!." T9 t
nie in tin.. S.4J T V,",, V. BROS
BKU.,'i"UU Market Street, l'lutaJ'!- .
- - nvato
4 GENTS WANTEP-A1"!
make mora money work -tlOn.-
auvlhln. le. BMn? "F..IT, 'O.
Particular. fre. O.STtNSO
Pmblisher, fort tana, .suw
Son
I v .