THE BEDFORD (iAZETTE. Bed(oril. Aii;u( 8 B. F. Meyers, Editor. DEMOCRATIC NOMINATIONS. STATE TICKET. FOR AUDITOR GENERAL: RICHARDSON L. WRIGHT, OF PHILADELPHIA. I-OR SURVEYOR GEN ERA I.: JOHN ROWE, OF FRANKLIN. COUNTY TICKET. Fftfc ASSOC! ATK H'DGE, WM. STATES, of W. Providence tp. VOlt TRBASnREIIj WM. SCHAFER, of Bedford Borough. TOR. DISTRICT ATTOUNKY, CEO. H. SPANG, of Bedford Borough. I OR COUNTY SURVEYOR, SAM'L KETTERMAN, ot Bedford Bor. FOR COMMISSION Kit, WM. M. PEARSON, of M. Wood berry tp. Ron DIRECTOR or THE POOR, JOHN KEMERY, of Schelisburg Bor. FOR ALTDITOR, DANIEL FLETCHER, of Monroe 'p. OpiiHu ratic Meeting. A Mass Meeting of tlie Democracy of Bed ford county, vvili be held at the Court House, on Monday evening of Court Week, the '29 th inst. Able speakers are expected to be present 10 address the meeting. The people are re.,pect tußv invited to attend. Let there be a grand outpouring of the gallant Democracy ot old Bediord. By order of !he Democratic Co. Com. O. E. SHANNON,Chairman. PENNSYLVANIA AND IS©. The coining Presidential contest, so fraught with the most important interests of the Repub lic is fast.looming up in the distance...'i lie various [xjlitical parties are already throwing out their a vaunt guards, and the skirmish* between the different factions controlled by Presidential aspi rant', has already begun. From present appearan ces the fight will be hotly contested, and the wa;- iare between geographical divisions of the Union will be more violent and bitter than ever. New England Abolitionism again tenders the section al issue of 1836, and again the Black Republi can party is about to march into battle with the mutilated flag under which it marshalled its for ces three vears ago. Fifteen ot the thirty three patriots'a'nif of I 2WR-T",Y! r p' n ' a > scene ?/, 1 Marion's hetoism and ot Sumpter's daring—are again to be ignored in the platform of the Nor thern Opposition. A wild and frantic crusade against the rights of the people of the South the last, but most determined and furious strug gle of Abolitionism to dissolve the Union—is ihe aim of that Opposition, and to bring it to a successful issue, all their energies are bent and 1 every available means in their power will be called into requisition. The question is made i up. It is simply, Shall l/ie Union be preser ved. The issue is a fearful one, but the Demo cratic party, the great bulwark of our national- ' itv, has met it before. It met it in 1856 when . Banks was "willing to let the Union slide," and ] when Garrison pronounced the Constitution "a i league with Satan and a compact with hell"— U met it in ISS-F, when Anli-Slaverv agitators burned in etiigy the author of the Nebraska Bill , and organized Emigrant Aid Societies to pillage < and murder citizens oi the South who had emi- ] grated to Kansas—it met it in ISSO, when the Whig party was crushed to atoms by the ex citement raised by Abolition fanatics and dis uniooists, and when such patriots as (.'lay and ! Webster were compelled to overleap party lines i and work shoulder to shoulder with former j oliti-1 cal opponents, to save ttie Union from the immi nent peril m which it was involved. And this bydra-headed monster, thrice decapitated, pre sents its horrid front once more. In lormer contests, Pennsylvania dealt the decisive blow to this arch enemy of our united Republic.— What will she do ID the fight that is coming 1 j Is she prepared to take her old place in the van j of the Democratic army ? Is her armor bright and her shield buckled on I Where are her patriotic ciptains, the men that never flinched : when her position as the Keystone, the prop of the Federal arch, was to he vindicated? Where is the voice of her people, that thunder-tone which makes the very heart of Sectionalism : tremble ? It is time, high-time, that the patri otism, the nationality of Pennsylvania should re-awaken. It is time that every Democrat who lias a spark of true Democracy in his j breast, should rouse himself and prepare for ac tion. ft is time that every national man, be he Democrat, Whig or American, bestirred him self to stay the rushing tide of Abolition fanati cism. "As goes Pennsylvania, so goes the IT nion," is a saving that has long ago passed into a proverb, and one that w ill doubtless prove j tiue in 1860. Let us, therefore, he up and do- ; ing. Let us win the battle at the coming elec- ; tion and the "victory will certainly be ours in 1860. Democrats ot Pennsylvania ! arouse and | prepare tor the onset ! Forget your bickerings, and your hejrt burnings ! Offer up vour per- i 'onal piques and petty grudges on the altar of v Mir party's good, and think only of the fearful j i.sye tlut e impending over your country ! Oeternuiie to elect your State Ticket— resolve thnt it shall be elected —and a2i will be well, < lot to will c to Jo, and to strive is to conquer, t ••I'XOER HHU H KI.VC ! " On Friday, the eleventh day ol March, in the year of Our l.ord, Une Thousand Eighl Hundred and Fifty-nine, the House of Repre sentatives of the Slate of Pennsylvania, resolv ed itself into committee of the whole on bil No. 151, entitled "An Act preventing the in termarriage of the white and black races," a; follows : Be *i enacted by the Senate and House oj Represent at ices of the Commonwealth oj Pennsylvania til General Assembly met, and il is hereby enacted by the authority of the same That from ami alter the passage ot this act, i shall be unlawful lor auv black man to marr> a white woman, or black woman to marry t whrte man. SEC. 2. That any person or persons whe slnil marry in this Commonwealth contrary u the first section ol this act, and any justice o the peace, aiderman, clergyman, minister 01 other person, who shall join in marriage anv person contrary to this act, and every person who shall be present ai such marriage, shall be deemed guilty ot a misdemeanor : and shall upon conviction thereof in any court of quar ter sessions having jurisdiction thereof, be lined at the discretion of said court, any sum no exceeding live hundred dollars : which shall go one-half to the prosecutor, and the other ha! to such county as may have jurisdiction in sue!: case ; and shall be imprisoned in the count} jail cf such countv any time not exceeding ont year. After some sparring between the parties op posed to the Bill and those favorable to it, Mr.. MILLER ("Republican") moved tin indefinite postponement ol the Bill. On thi: | motion, the yeas and nays were required am ! were as follows: TEAS—Messrs. Acker, Barlow, Bayard, Dry ' son, Burley, Church, Custer, Dismant, Dodtls Ourboraw, Fearon, Foster, Galley, Goepp, Gra | ham, Gratz, Green, Hamerslv, Hill, Irish, Kin i ney, Lawrmce, ( Washington,) Mann, Mehaffev | McDowell, Miller, Neall, Ni I, Patterson Peirce, Quigley, Ramsdell, Rohrer, Stoneback ; Taylor, Thompson, Thorn, Wagenseller, War i den, Witman, Wigton, Wilcox, Wiley. WILL fA.MS, ,Bedford.) Williams, (Bucks,) Willis ton, Wilson, Withrow, Woodring and Zoller— ! 50. NAYS —Messrs. Abbott, Barnsley, Rertolet ; Dover, (Clearfield.) Broadhead, Campbell, Eck i man, Ellmaker, Fleming, Glutz. Good, Gray Gritman, Harding, Hottenstine, Jackson, Ketch am, Laird, McClure, McCurdy, Oaks, Palm Pennel), Pinkerton, Price, Proud foot, Rouse Sheppard, Shields, Smitii, (Berks.) Stuart WALKER, Wolf and Lawrence, Speaker —34 So the question was determined in the atiinn ative, and the Bill was "indefinitely postpon or in other words, was lost. ft will be seen from the above, that GEO W. WILLIAMS and GEO. G. WALKER the two members elected last fall by the Blacl Republicans of this district, voted in direct art \ tagonism to each other, the name of MR WILLIAMS being found among the YEAS and that of MR. WALKER among tin NAY'S. These men, Messrs. Williams an< re-nominated by the Black Reoub licansof the district. The question, therefore arises, can any consistent man vote for both o them 7 MR. WILLIAMS, by Iris vote, de clares that he has no objections to whites am blacks intermarrying, while, per contra, MR WALKER, in the same manner, emphaticallj opposes such intermarrying. Which one an you lor, Messrs. Abolitionists 7 Are vou fot Walker, opposed to white and black amalgama tion, or for Williams in favor of it? Which horn of your dilemma will you take ! Whicl of your candidates for the Legislature will yoi drop 7 The Westminster Eleview, For July, contains eight articles, in additior to the usual copious account of Coutemporan Literature which forms a valuable appendage tc ever}- number. The paper, What Knowledge is oj most Worth ' is a comparative estimate oi the relative values of the different kinds ol knowledge for the purposes of education, witli a strong leaning to a greater infusion of flit practical element in tV ordinary systems. — Jewell ttnd the Broad Church, is a phrase which will convey a distinct meaning to few readers. We will briefly say that the book under review is Professor Jewett's Epistles of St. Paul to the fhessalonians, Galatians, and Romans, and that the Broad Church includes very distinct types of character, and is altogether of a more libera! cast than the HighChntch or the Evangelicals. The Influence of Lord Causes on .Ynttonal Character is an inteiesting exposition of the op eration of nature in determining the pursuit, po sition, and future destiny ot a people. In the Life of a Con jurer ive find an account of that wonderful mechanical genius, Robert-Houdin, who, the reviewer remarks, "if not born with a silver spoon in his mouth, may be said to have rivalled that physiological abnormity by coming into the world with a file and hammer in his hand." The most laboured article in the number is a very long one on the Government ; oj India, its Liabilities and Resources, which : is well fortified with statistics, and appears to lie a lucid explanation of the internal adminis tration of that country. The Recollections of ! Alexandria Von Stcrnburg give some pleasant j glimpses of German notabilities of the early pari; ot the present century. The Roman Question ■ and .lustrum Intervention carry us into Italy and have all the advantage over the hasty com ments and uni ipe speculations of the newspa pers of the day, which a carelu! and methodical arrangement of lact and argument is sure to ! confer Republished by Leonaro Scott &. Co., 54 Cold Street, New York, who also reprint the London Quarterly, North British, and Edin burgh Reviews, and Blackwood's Magazine , it $3 a year singly, or §lO a vear for the whole j five Periodicals. AH these Periodicals commencing volumes | villi issues forkTulv, the present is a convenient ' ime to subscribe. Local and Miscellaneous. I —There are '-(ill a con-iderable number of visitors at the Springs. On Wednesday last, ! file number was '2OO. —The recent rains have greatly refreshed ! and invigorated the fall crops. We are infor med by farmers that the yield of corn will be tolerably good. The oats crop so far as we have heard, turns out well. —The Union School House about being erec ted by the citizens of this horough, will be a i beautiful and commodious building. It is situa : ted at a delightful spot, and if the grounds sur rounding it are taken care ol properly, will be quite an aifdition to our town, m point of land- I scape as well as of architecture. i D. J. CHAPMAN, ESQ., of Philadelphia, IS at present on a visit to his friends and relations in Bedford. Chapman is the very "prince of good fellows," and we are always glad to take ! him by the hand. "May his shadow," ! &c. President Buchanan, whilst here, wrote a letter to the Hon. W. McCandless, of Pitts burg, in which he says that his "determination ■ not, under any circumstances, to become a can ! didate for re-electioc , is linal and conclu , si VP." i Mr. Charles Allison, a driver t >r the I- rank iin Paper Mill, near Cbambersburg, met with a j sudden and violent death, one day last week, by ! being thrown ftom a mule which he was li ! ding. To persons trawliag westward we would recommend the hack line of Col. Jos. A Car man, running between this place and I.atrobe, 011 the Pennsylvania Railroad. The route is cheap and pleasant. —The editor of the Blairsville True Ameri can, has brought a libel suit against the editor of the Blairsville Record , for publishing a portrait iof the former which resembled, in many re spects, "the long-ea red animal that chews the thistle." If the editor of the True American . exnects to make ar y money by suing his brofh j er printers, lus portrait as published in the Rec ord, was decidedly truthful. —Says a "Republican" paper, "the Republi can party lies North of Mason's and Dixon's line to which a Democratic exchange replies. "The Republican party Ires wherever it exists, and exists only by tying." "More truth than poetry" in that "remark. —MADAM FIU:YTET, of this place, will re-o --i pen her School for voung ladies, on the first Monday of September next. Madame Freytet ! has the reputation of being an excellent teach- I er and, therefore , is always well patronized —On Monda'V last, an election was held for ; Trustees of the O. S. Presbyterian Church, of ! this place, when the former Trustees, Messrs. D. Washabaugh, G. IV. Rupp and G. VV. Ben —Among the recent visitors to the Springs, I we notice our yc uag friend, J. 11. HOPKINS, of Pittsburg. Mu. H. i* a lawyer of much protn ; ise and a radical Democrat in the bargain. ; —lt is said that in South Carolina there has never been a divorce granted and there is no law in the state authorising divorces. In Mas sachusetts almost eveiy neighborhood contains j a "grass widow," and divorces are of constant occurrence. THE SNAKE MAN.—A man with arms like snakes is exhiinting himself in town.— Pottiol Sr Union. "He has optics sharp, 1 ween, That sees what is not to be seen." Do you take, Mr. Patriot ? Col Braxton Bragg, fo whom Gen. Taylor at the battle of Bucna Vista, addressed the fa mous words, "A little mart* grape, Captain ; Bragg," is reported to be the Democratic candi date for a local office at Lafourche, Louis i i ana. —Joseph C. G. Ivennedy, Esq., formt-rly of Meadvifle, Crawford, co., Pa., has been ap pointed to make the preliminary preparations 1 requisite for taking the census of ISfiti. —The S >merset Democrat savs that those far j mers who cut their grass immediately after the hard Irost, have <jiod prospects of a plentiful "second crop." —HON. HOUACJ: MANN, President of Antioch College, died a few days ago. MR. MANN was j well known as a writer and lecturer. The Buckeye Mower and Reaper adver tised in our colunuis, is an excellent machine, as many of our readers can testify. JOHN AC- • sir, ESQ., is the agent for this county. All persons at present subscribers to the ! Unzeffe, are again reminded, that if thev wish . to obtain the paper at the reduced price of j $1 f)0 per annum., they must pay by next court week. This requisition will be rigidly j adhered to on our part, and if onr subscribers do not choose to live up to our terms, thev must not complain of onr own determination to do so. Send your money bv mail if you have no other wa< of forwarding it. A sad accident occured at Saxton, on Saturday last. A young lad, a son of the switch-tender at that place, was standing on the j "bumpers'' of one of the cars as the train was | about to start, and being thrown from his posi- ! tion by the lurching of the car, was run over j and instantly killed. No blame in this matter, attaches to ar.v one connected with the rail, road, as the boy had put himself in his dangpr ous position, unknow nto any body present ex cept another lad with whom he was talking at the time of the accident. The Union, " is the title of a new Dem ocratic paper just started at Huntingdon, by R. i MILTON SPEER, The number before us gives evidence of much ability and contains nothing but sound Democracy. Success to the Virion. [From Hi- 1 I.oiw ville Democrat, Align t, I s •••", J Foreigners Head ! Klrrliou Itiois ! I- Dreadful Loss ol Life! ! ! Monday last will be remembered by the citix*n- of Louisville tor many years to romr. Such hellish and diabolical acts as those com mitted in our midst, in a civilized and en lightened community, are without a parallel. j The following incidents and loss of liie and j piopertv without comment or note, is as near as we could get at the outrages committed. It will satisfy those living at a distance that the great est, tlie most vile outrages ever known in any country have been perpetrated in the tree city oi Louisville, Kentucky. Helore the [tolls were open hall an hour the know-nothings took possession of lliem, preven ting all democrats and foreigners from voting. The first tight took place between anlAmeri ran and an Irishman in the vicinity of the Kentucky engine-house, which resulted in the death of the Irishman, who died in jail. The American we believe was badly hurt. A man named Townsend was shot and ! stabbed on Jeffeison street, while walking from his store to his residence, lie will probably die. 1 A German shoemaker was killed while harmlessly walking home, in tlm second waid. A crowd ol know-nothings attacked two Germans, who were standing in front of their j shop, and would have maltreated them had ! thev not made good their escape. We heard ol five Germans who were lying in a drug store, in a dying condition, on Jeffer son, above Preston street. A gang of bullies infested the upper part of the town, and torp down several tenements near the bridge, on Jefferson street, and cruelly beat several Germans, robbed them of tlie valuables in their possession, and broke every article of furniture in their houses. Late in the evening a brewery was set on fire, on Jefferson street, and burned to the ground. The She!hi/ street Catholic Church was bro ken open, searcher! and manif things broken. The mob then proceeded to the court-house, and got possession of a cannon and several guns, with which they marched through the Second and First wards. Later in the evening we saw them marching down Jefferson, we sup pose to the Seventh and Eighth, carrying a banner with the motto, " America, Jur .Imeri rims." At the first ward we heard of the Germans 1 who with bloodv heads, made their escape to their dwellings, on Main street, but were followed hv the mob, fired on in the midst r,f women and children, and afterwards dragged ; out, unmercifully beaten until they fell sense less. J.-sse Hughes, a good democrat, was beaten, cut, and shot so badly, at the corner of Jeffer • son and Jackson street.-, that he died shortly alter. At the First ward there was a continual row, in which several men (we could not learn how many, or what side) were killed and mortally wounded. During the whole night that part of town was illuminated from the conflagration of the houses of poor and peacea ble (in mans. set afire, bi/ the base incendiaries* match. We heard of two cooper-shops, in which nobody was, that were set on fire ; they were opposite Atkinson's pork house, on Main street. flames a German leaped fmm the house, tried to escape the blows aimed at his head, and nearly succeeded, when a man whom he was passing in fiis flight knocked him down with a monster club : the crowd gathered around him and beat him till he lay insensible. At the Sixth ward, at the court-housp, the know nothings were determined none but one of their order should vote ; not a democrat, but particularly a foreigner, dare go up the steps, Several Irishmen were attacked on the cornei of Fifth by the know-nothing bullies as tho\ passed from one poll to another : we saw an unlucky Irishman who got in, but finding the place too hot for him, jumped out of the second storv on the ground, for which he was taken to jail. * A man.'we believe named Ke!lv, was shot in the court-hous square through the heart, and then taken to iait—to die we suppose. Two others were lying in the yard all nighl who had been shot anil brutally cut during the fight in 'he evening. The Eighth ward was the crowning scenr ofall : here death and destruction wpnt hand in hand. The Irish were driven from the polls ; they retaliated, in which we heard an American was shot. To revenge their brother, they attacked a whole row 'of frame buildings be longing to Mr. Quinn : shot in among wnmpn and children, then broke in and took out two men and tried to kill thprn ; succeeded with one and hung the other, amid tantalizing gibes and ribald jests, unbecoming even to cannibals or vampires. A WOMAN WHO ATTEMPTED TO SAVE HEP. HI'SRAND WAS PITCHED DOWN STAIRS, BREAKING HER NECK AND LIMBS, SO THAT SHE DIED. Several other men were killed, the exact number we cannot learn. The mob, finding their game becoming scarce, set the torch to the houses : the women (1"<I : ONE WE HEARD OF, WHO WAS FLYING WITH A YOUNG IM ANT IN HER ARMS. WAS FOLLOWED BY A HARD-HEARTED WRETCH, WHO COMING UP, PUT THE MUZZLE OF THE WEAPON TO THE CHILD'S HEAD, FIRED, AND DASHED ITS BRAINS OVER IIS MOTHER'S ARMS." !'p ton tate hour fie horizon with the flnmos of burned dwellings, in which mnrtxj a poor honest working man, with his wife ami dear Utile ones, perished in preference to to commg out to meet death from pistols and bowie-knives in the. hands of freemen. At Oakland a moh from the 7th and Bth wards, l p d on hv VVix and Georgp Jones, made a sortie on the polls, harit% heat several Germans, who retreated as quick as possible.— One of the Germans died at 7 o'clock yester day morning.' An accidental discharge of a pistol shot a boy in the leg and a man in the hip at Bth ward about noon on Monday. The mob continued all night on the watch for the (1 d Irish and Dutch. To-day , an Irishman got beat on Market street so bad j that he is not expected to live ; he was arrested i and put in jail. The mob became excited at the court-house, ami would have again went on j with their J diabolical practices, had it not been for the exhortations of Judge Bullock'and May or Barbee ; Captain Rousseau got a decree from the mayor to organizes company of citizens, police for the protection of property and life. The mob, we are informed, while the police were organizing at the court-house, badly beat a man on Front stieet. The Nashville Union, in commenting on these enormities, says : Such is a brief portraiture of fhe bloody riots I ill Louisville in Jt inutilities alb 11; chapter in ottr history a i tree people, winch ran fleVfi he wiped out. Its Vi I V reading tnust make tlie hlooii uf our adopted citizens still run colli in their veins. Tney can never forget it. f a'her will transmit it to son to renio lest generations. Soon alter these terrible scenes, the Hon. Neil S. Brown, ol this city, addressed a letter to the know-nothin its ol Louisville, stimulating them to renewed effort "to redeem the country Irom the wiles of foVeig n influence." line is a sample of it. Let the foreigner read "I would despair ol the Ri public il I did not belie ve there was enough of stern .•Jmeriaw isrn left to redeem the country lrom the evils offoreig n influence. The foreign eieinenf now in our midst might he 6orne without arcumula ! (ion. But the dolhs, the Huns, anil the Vun iluts are coming villi all their furious, lawless, and licentious ideas oj liberty, to not on our delicate, and cotnjder system, of government.— , The gates of Lome must he closed or the terms lof admission limited and restricted, or else her I most sacred rites will be profaned and trampled i under foot. "Let us make one unbroken effort to vindi | rate our rights against foreign aggression, t.et as make, every fed it of the coming conflict HOT with true native-born Jluierican indignation j The field was made "hot,'" and oilier scenes ol riot were added to the already deep disgrace , ; ofthat unfortunate city. The scene is now changed, and this same ; party, with their same leaders, lion. \. S. j L>r UVII among the number, are insulting the intelligence of the foreigners by trying to make ! them believe that thev alone are their reliable j ; and trusty friends. Was ever a paity so deser ving of the scoi il and detestation of every ' honorable man ? The foreigner who could vote with them will prove himself as coutempti i ble as thev have been intolerant. " Hannibal ami St. Joseph Railroad lauds* ' A friend res id ins in Missouri, sends us the I • following : j The Hannibal and St. Joseph Railroad, | commences at Hannibal, on the Mississippi River, and follows a general course, nearly West, across the northern part of the Stale oi Missouri, to St. Joseph, on the .Missouri River. | Its entire length is two hundred and seven miles. The Lands granted to the Company, are contained in alternate sections of one mile j square, within a breadth of fifteen miles on each side of the road. Through some of them the road passes, and other portions vary in distance, from one to fifteen miles. At the time the grant was made by Congress, all the remaining Covermnent Lands, were fixed at a minimum price, of Si,so per acre. Thes" were rapidlv soid, and are now owned bv individuals. One of them, considerable ! progress has been made, in settlement and cultivation. Any person now settling on the lands of the Company, will find it widely different from £ new country : as at no point, will neighbors b< very lar distant, while there are many Village: '! and Cities, ranging from a few hundred, t< I three thousand inhabitants, all of which, an rapidly increasing in size and importance, f Wherever depots are established 0:1 the roaci a village at once springs up, with shops, stores surrounding countiy. It is expected the entire road will be openet in the early part of 1559, when trains will be . run to acominodate its business, at inodcrat: charges. REGISTER'S NOTICE. VLL person* interested, are hereby notified ttiat the following named accountant; have filed their accounts in llie Register's cliict of Bedford County, and that the same will b* presented to the Orphan's Court in -and foi said County, for confirmation, on Tuesday, tin 30th day of August inst., at the Court House in Bedford 1. The administration account of I). L. Keag gy, adm'r ot the Estate of Jacob 11. Keaggv, lati of Mid die VVoodbe:rv Township dec'd. 2. The administration account of Joseph B. Noble, Esq., adm'r de. bonis non , of the E tate ot David Stoner. late of South Woodberrj Township dec'ii. 3. The account of Samuel Wdlet, surviving ' Executor of Elizabeth Green, late ot Wells Valley Bedford (now Wells' Township, Fulton : County, dec'd. 4. The second and final account of John Si Samuel Snider, administrator? of the Estate oi Adam Snider, late of Snake Springs Tovvnshq: dec'd. 5. The account of John Cessna, Esq., adm'i of the Estate of Solomon Harcleioad, fate of j Snake Spring tp., dec'd. (i. The account of Charles McLaughlin adm'i ot the estate of Sarah McLaughlin, late of Eas Providence township, dec'd. 7. The account of Samuel Oster, adm'r o the Estate of John C. Furney, late of South ( Woodberry Township, dec'd. 8. The account of Ephraim Foster, adm'r o | the Estate of Richard L. Foster, late of Broad top tp., dec'd. 9. The account of Jacob B Eegarice, aJm'i of the estate of Jacob kegarice, late ot Monroi ; to., dec'd. 10. The final administration account of P. F. Lehman, Esq., one of the administrators o John Kellermau, late of Harrison tow lyiip de^ | ceased. 11. The final administration account o James Blackburn, Executor of the last will &c. of Amos Penrose, late of St. Clair Townshif 1 dec'd. 12. The account of Job Mann, Esq., Execu tor of the last Will &c., of William Maiken late of Bedford Township dec'd. 13. The 3d. and final account of Job Mann, Esq., adm'r of the Estate of Joseph S. Morrison late of the city of St. Louis, State of Missouri, dec'd. Renter's Office, ) SAM'L II TATE, Bedford, Aug. 5,'59. ) Register. SSI'IWA&SII: The above reward will be paid for theappre hension and and delivery to the Bedford Coun ty Jail, of WILLIAM RUSSELL, who broke Jail on Monday morning the Ist ot Aug. inst. He is about five feet, seven or eight inches high, stout built and dark complexion. He had on when he left, a dark colored coarse straw hat, blue coat, and check pants. WILLIAM S. FLUKE, July 5, 1859-3t. Sheriff. AVER'S CHERR ( PECTORAL and Jayoe's Expectorant, at Dr. Harry's Drug |jul 3'), 1858.] I Brilliant Democratic Victories • Tht Old Whiir States, Kentucky, 'l'tnan.- t , and A'arl/t Carolina, in the Democratic £ o/ unm ! KENTUCKY.—The Democratic candidate lor (Governor is elected by about TUCK) majonu Seven of the ten Congressmen fleet, it is re ported, are Democrats, and in one district the candidates run a tie vote. The Legislature ~ Democratic bv about 3 J majority on joint bal lot, securing a Democratic U. S. Senator in place r>f J. J. Crittenden, Opposition. 2c the (HrxRV Ci.AY's)lhe Democratic candidate for Congress was successful by 72 ma jority. the present Cltvei nor of Kentucky u an American. TENNESSEE. —ISIUM G. Harris, Deim crat, is elected Governor, by about 6000 ma j >rit v, over John Netheri.and, Opp. The Legislature is also Democratic. The Congres sional delegation is in doubt, owing to the fact that in several of the strong Democratic dis tricts there uas a triangular contest. NOR ! II CAROLINA.—The Congressional delegation will he largely Democratic. There were no State officers elected. ALABAMA.—A. B. Moore, Democrat, is re-elected Governor by a large majority. The whole Jelegat:or to Congress, is solidly Demo cratic. A number of tire-eating secession can didates for Congress were badly beaten by their conservative Democratic opponents. In a,! the above named States, the Opposition took the ground that the Democracy were not as true Irlends of the South as themselves, and in Ken tucky, Tennessee and Alabama, a slave code for the Territories, was made a part oi the Opposi tion platform. MISSOURI.—In this State the dection war tor members of the Legislature and local offi cers. In St. Louis, a city that gives usually about 3000 Opposition majority, the Demo crats have elected one member of the Legisla ture, their candidate for Clerk ot the Crininal Couit, and two of the tive Commissioners. Estate of Samuel Burket, Deed. ETTERS of administration having been j 3- n ET granted by the Register of Bedford couu i ty, to the undersigned, upon the Estatate of Sam ! uel Burket, late ot Union township, dee'd. all ; r .. „/> r* - '• nd uLI aJ LY oAid JIQIO are 1 fied to make immediate payment, and those having claims against the Estate, will present them properly authenticated for settlement. JACOB BURKET, August 12, 1859. Administrator. STRAY MARE. (Tame to the premises of the subscriber, about the first of duly last, a bay rr.are, supposed to be about 1-1 or lii years old. with a small star in the l ore head and some white on the risht hind leg, and v ay-larked ;no other marks. The owner is re quested to come forward, prove property, pay char ges and take her away. PETER RIFFLE. Juniata Township, Aug. Sth, 1839. | IST OF CAUSES, put down for trial at 1 J August Term (29th tiav)lSf>9. (ieorge Mullin vs. J.S. Morrison's adni'r Nathan Karns et al •' PeterSunther.il John Kemp <£ John \V. Puncan Amos Willison " Jesse Dieken (ii'teon iittchew J. R. Jiowry et al | Richard .McEnesp ' John Atsip Gideon f>. 'flout 44 John Feas'er Thos. J. tlorton " A. \V. Evans Juniata School Dis't. " Joseph Xicodemus Thos. N. Young '• Jacob Steele James Entriken • >. Washahattgh et al John MeVicker et a! Geo. W. Powell John W. Beeler " .M. Smith's Ex"ors Job Bowser 44 Parr 1 Stem man et al E. L. Anderson '• Wm. Bucher. Prothonotary's Office ( S. 11. TATE, Bedford, Aug. "dh, 1N59. \ Prothonotary. I IST OF GRAND JURORS, drawn for 1 J August "Term (5 Monday) 1859. Geo. \V. Gump, Foreman, B. R. Aschom, George Beegle. Christopher Carper, John W • Cnsman, Solomon Dicken, John Eshelman, Jo seph Fisher, Wm. Fluke, George W. House holder, Wm. Overocker, Wm. Otto, Lewis Putt, Adam Pote, Oliver J. Robinett, Rinehart L. Replogle, Win. States, Jacob Stuckey, Le vi Schater, Samuel Stntler, John S. Scliell, Val. B. Wertz, Samuel Walter, Stephen IVon | ders. PETIT JURORS. Adolphus Ake, Jacob B. Anderson, Satrue! Boor, John C. Black, James Earndollnr, Simon Brumbaugh, Wm. Bertshimer, Martin Brum i baugh, A. BeckhoefTer, Jacob Barkman, Henry Beckley, Andrew Baker, Francis Beard, George Beckley, Fred. KauSman, Cornelius Devote, M ich'l. S. Diebl, Robert Elder, David Evans, Ephraim Foster, Jesse Grove, Adam Mite, David Imler, George Long, John Lav ton, Richard Langdon, Daniel Miller, Simon Nycum, Cyrus Ober, George W. Powell, Jacob IVa, Dan'] Rice, Wm. Rock, Nathan Robison, John 11. Rush, \ alentine Steckman, John Watson, Isaac Wilson. NOTICE. subscriber, adm'r of Win. Stuckey D-. I late of Monroe Township der.'d, having filed his account on the Estate of said dec d, which lias been confirmed bv the Court, will apply lor discharge from his office as adm r, at the next Orphans' Court to be held for Bed ford Co. ASA STUCKEY, Adm'r of Wm. Stuckey dec d. BPCKEYE MOWER AND REAPER THE subscriber would inform the farmers oi Bedford that he is agent for the sale of the above .Machine, and their orders for them can be fit.ea immediately. JOHN ALSIP, Agent. August 5, 1359.-Cm.
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