iitf (Siisdtf. Friday Morning, August 11, ISBS. Democratic Nominations. UATIOKAIi. FOR PRESIDENT, HON, HORATIO SEYMOUR, OF NEW YORK. FOR VICE PRESIDENT, GEN, FRANK P, BLAIR, OF MISSOURI. STATE. FOR AUDITOR GENERAL, HON. CHARLES E. BOYLE, of Fayette County. FOR SURVEYOR GENERAL, GEN. WELLINGTON H. ENT, of Columbia County. JUDICIARY. ADDITIONAL LAW JUDGE, ./. McJIOHFLL SHARI'F, of Franklin or if. (Subject to derision of District Conference.) COUNTY . CONGRESS, It. F. HEY FItS. of lint font. (Subject to decision of District Conference.) ASSEMBLY 1 , A lilt.l H I V W//..50.V, of Somerset, O FOltir F Met; OVER X, /' Fulton. COMMISSIONER, HA XIEI. F. lIFEOI. F, of St. Clair. POOR DIRECTOR, 11 FX RY FdOLF, of Xajiitr. COUNTY SURVEYOR. S lll't KFTTFRH AX, of Itcilfird. CORONOR, the. I'. 11. I'FXXSYI.,of Illootlt/ Ran. AUDITOR, H. A. Ill' XT Fit, of Itroail Ti>. EUI AI. TAXATION. Tli* i:< OSrtiToySj, s>** A vn,l,Axor (OJIPORSN OF *AM >ll V ASH LIES. The last issue of the Inquirer fairly stank with falsehood and malignity. Forty Torn Peppers, kicked forty times out of Hell, for lying forty times more villanously than the original Tom himself, if rolled into one, would not be equal to lying Lutz, of the Inquirer. For instance, the Inquirer declares, with the solemnity of a Pharisee pray ing in the market-place, that the Dem ocratic party, by adopting the princi ple of Equal Taxation, proposes to tax the poor. Do the poor hold govern ment bonds? Did the poor make millions of dollars out of the toil, the sweat and the blood of their fellow poor in the factory, in the workshop, by daily labor on the farm, or on the gory field of battle? Who is it that made money during the late war and whose wealth is untaxed ? The bond holder ! Aye, the bond-holder who jrays no taxes upon his millions, whilst every poor man in the land does pay at least one-tenth of his duly income, in the increased prices of every thing he eats, drinks and wears, under the present Radical regime. By Equal Taxation, the Democrats mean that they will tax every citizen according to the val ue of his property, including the wealthy and aristocratic bond-holder. Every other interest is taxed now, and in order to make taxation equal, the bond-holder must pay his proportion of a just and equitable levy. Tax the thousands of millions of government bonds, and the taxes upon other inter ests will be lightened, and of course the poor will be compelled to pay less, when the rich who are now exempt, are made to pay their just share. Lutz can lie, but let him chop us some logic on this subject. The people are not tho fools he takes them to be, and when he undertakes to make them believe that by taxing the bond-holder, the poor man's taxes will be increased, he only exposes his own contemptible mendacity. The L. L. of the Inquirer, has turned poor man's friend! What a pity that he didn't think of assum ing this philanthropic role a little soon er. During the war he said, " poor men ought to go and Jight ," but the L. L. considered himself a rich man and of course, didn't "go and fight." And then, when the veteran braves came back from the war, how snugly, like an innocent little spider in its web, waiting for the coming fly, he sat in his cosy office, waiting for the bronzed and : scarred soldier to step in and give him the collection of his bounty, back pay, j &c., for which he charged him only a ! small fee, say thirty, or forty doliars, ; because, you see, the soldier was a poor : man ! Oh ! yes, the L. L. is the friend j of the poor, and doesn't want the bond- j holders taxed, for fear of injury to the j poor who hold no bonds. Long live the great philanthropist, L. L. "True it is that the Republican Con gross has not made an equal tax law." j —Bedford Inquirer, Aug. 8. THE Somerset Herald, in an article complimenting the llarrisburg Patriot \ as "one of the handsomest papers with- ! in its knowledge," talks about the "revolutionary sentiments of Frank Blair," Arc. Our friend Scull possesses talents which we are sorry to see per verted in an abortive effort to bolster up the fortunes of a party whose record during the last three years, we do not and cannot believe his judgment sus tained. But as party ties seem to be so strong that they bind men of even Mr. Scull's intelligence to the support of such monstrous outrages as the Im peachment Conspiracy and the forcing of Negro Suffrage upon an unwilling people, at the point of the bayonet, we are not surprised to find him de nouncing as a revolutionist, one of the bravest and purest of the great soldiers of the Union army, one who fought to put down armed revolution and who seeks to check Radical revolution by restoring the governments which Con gressional Reconstruction has over thrown. 1 >id not Congress, by the sword, overthrow the governments formed by the white people oftme hack Into the Union f You eonnot deny this, friend Scull. Well, then, is it revolution to restore the governments thus overthrown, even if the army be used to do it, as Gen. Glair suggested? Your party has revolu tionized the Southern State govern- ments ; we seek to restore them as they stood when the people of those States had reorganized them after the close of the war. Your party strives, by force of arms, to give political power to the Negro, whilst it disfranchises the white man ; we seek to give the peo ple of each State the right to determine for themselves the question of suffrage. Now, who is the "revolutionist," Frank. Blair, the Democrat, or U. S. Grant, the Radical ? Is not IA\HH! Taxation Republican? Is it not Democratic? Where is the true Republican who will follow the lead of Lute in opposition to Equal Taxation t The Radicals hung the keeper of the Andersonville prison,Capt. Wirtz, and gave its founder, Govern >r Brown, a glad welcome to the Chicago Conven tion. DKNLRTIXG THF. SHIP. Almost every exchange that we pick up, and every flash of lightning as it passes over the wires, bring the intelli gence of accessions to the Democratic ranks. The people are getting sick of the party that is taxing them to death and destroying their liberties. Below we give a few prominent conversions to the Democratic ranks: Hon. F. G. Backus, who was elected Judge of the Supreme Court of Ohio, has come out flat-footed for Seymour and Blair. The Judge has "gone back" on the Radicals, and is going to back-us in this Presidential fight. Col. Lyman L. Jackson, of Perry county, Ohio, made a speech recently, at Circleville, renouncing Radicalism and declaring in favor of Democracy. Hon. Charles Morris, of Troy, Ohio, late a Radical State Senator, has forsa ken Grant and taken the stump for Seymour. Col. C. C. Gardiner, U. S. Assessor for the 27th District in New York, has written a letter to Maj. Gen. Sloeum, announcing that he will support Sey mour and Blair. The Ulster Democrat, New York, heretofore a Radical sheet, has discar ded Grant and Colfax and placed Sey mour and Blair at its mast head. The Jordan Transcript, hitherto Rad ical, has become a warm and efficient supporter of Seymour, Blair and the Union. The Ripon (Wisconsin) Representa tive, heretofore a leading Radical pa per, has become disgusted with radi calism and left the foul p: rty. Senator Henderson of Missouri, elec ted as a Republican, is going to take the stump, in that state, for Seymour and Blair. The City Treasurer ofSt. Louis, elec ted by the Radicals, has left them and joined hands with the Democracy. Col. W. B. Thomas, Collector of the Port at Philadelphia, under Lincoln, has come out for Seymour and Blair. Judge Mellon, of Pittsburg, has left the Radicals and is using his influence for the success of the Democratic nom inees. Judge It. M. Biggs, of Fayette Co., Ohio, always a Republican, made a powerful speech the other day, against the levolutionary measures of the Rad icals, and urged his friends to support Seymour and Blair. Col. J. M. Council, of Lancaster, Ohio, who was a Lincoln Elector, for the State at large in 1801, also add ros ed the meeting. *gro .SiiffVng'! JPropoKO* to tnke tho Stump in this Dis trict, lor John 4'cssiih. on that Issue! Last week the GAZETTE proposed a few questions for Tom Marshall to answer in the speech which he was to make at the Radical meeting on Satur day evening last. Our first question as to whether the Radical or "Repub lican" party is in favor of Negro Suff rage, he answered by saying that the Chicago platform fixed that. It de clared that Negro Suffrage should be forced on the unwilling South, and that the people of tho North might enfranchise the negro if they saw prop er. Rut he took issue with the plat form on this question, and said that it was a shame that the "mudsills," the "doughfaces," the "poor white trash" of the Nortli did not give the negro the ballot! lie was in favor of it, whether the people of Bedford county liked it or not. He said he would come into this district and help to elect. John Cessna to Congress on that issue.— All of which we hope he will do. "True it is that the Republican Con gress has not made an equal tax law." —Bedford Inquirer, Aug. 8. DOST BF. GULLED ! Some of the Radical blow-hards in this town, are engaged in circulating the story that Democrats in Bedford borough and elesewhere intend to vote for their fuss-and-feathers candidate, Grant. There is not a word of truth in it. The story might well be told the other way. There are numbers of Republicans in this place, who never before voted the Democratic ticket, who will vote for Seymour and Blair. The ides of October and November will prove it. "True it is that the Republican Con gress has not made an equal tax law." —Bedford Inquirer, Aug. 8. "I denounce as a falsehood the first Tammany resolution, which alleges secession to be dead, and declare that it is more alive now than ever."—Got?. Wise. TlfUs falsely quotes the Bedford In quirer. Gov. Wise said no such a tiling. He did say he differed from the first resolution of the New York Platform, which declares that secession is dead, "for" said he, "the people intend this fall, to secede from Radicalism:" Of course, the Inquirer will not have the honesty, or manliness, to correct its false quotation, for that would spoil the effect of its falsehood. A party must be hard up for political capital, when it undertakes to twist a playful witticism into a serious assertion. "True it is that the Republican Con gress has not made an equal tax law." —Bedford Inquirer, Aug. 8. LITTLE John Cessna has obtained the conferees from Franklin county for Congress. Of course, he will be nominated, and then we shall have a pretty renegade ticket. Grant for President, Hartrauft for Auditor Gen eral, Cessna for Congress, Itowe for Judge, all "renegade Democrats." Well, there is one consolation in this, the old Republicans, who built up the party, are getting cheated out of the offices; the trading politicians who joined them after they had triumphed, are eating them up. Serves them right. TIIE Inquirer has the following THE TWO SOLDIERS.—"Let the President elect disperse the carpet-bag State Governments." F. P. Bair, Jr. "Let us have peace." U. S. Grant. It might have added : Arm the uiggersand disfranchise the whites. — Radical Congress. GRANT'S peace—arming the negroes and taking the right to vote for Presi dent from the people. Later advices from the Kentuey elec tion indicate that Stevenson, the Dem ocratic candidate for Governor, will have a majority, of fully 100,000. The crowning outrage upon the peo ple of North Carolina has been consum mated in the appointment of a negro mayor of Ilillsboro,'by the man who writes himself "Governor" of that State. The Senate of Alabama has passed a bill taking from the people tlie right to vote for Presidential electors, and giving it to the Legislature, and it is said the bill will undoubtedly puss the House. The Nebraska Democratic State Con vention has nominated It. J. Tapple ton for Congress and James It. Porter for Governor. During the month of July twenty five hundred eases of cholera and near ly fourteen hundred deaths occurred in Havana. The yellow fever has not in creased in violence, but the cases, though few in number, are unusually fatal. In the case of the State of Kansas vs. General Sheridan and others, for as saulting the Postmaster of Leaven worth and taking postage stamps, United States currency, Ac., all have been found guilty. General Sheridan was fiued SIOO, and the others $1 each and costs. If the Radicals mean equal rights, what do they put the negro above the white man for ? If reconstruction is a success, why isn't the army withdrawn ? Campaign Gazette! REPUBLICAN GOVERNMENT, Civil Liberty and Constitu tional Rights! "Light, more light!" is the start ling cry of the honest people groping in thcdarkness of Radicalism. "Light, more light I" shouts the groaning tax payer, bending under the load which a Radical Congress has heaped upon him. "Light, more light!" is the pleading cry that comes to us from those who earnestly seek a remedy for the disease that is tugging at the vi tals of the nation. Look and ye shall see! Read and ye shall know! The BEDFORD GAZETTE, for the Presi dential Campaign, will lie a complete compendium of political news, speeches, documents and every thing that per tains to a iKditiral canvass in the col umns of a weekly newspaper. It will be published from the 7th of August until the seventh of November, next, at the following low terms, cash in ad vance : One copy, $ .50 Ten copies, 5.00 Twenty copies, 9.00 Fifty copies, 20.00 Not only should every Democrat have his county newspaper, during the coming campaign, but he should like wise make it a point to furnish his Re publican neighbor a copy. This is the plan upon which our opponents have acted for years, and it is alKjut time that Democrats do something of the same sort. NOW, GO TO WC)RK and put pour Democratic newspaper into the hands of every Republican who will read. If you will do this you will accomplish more good in six months than you will by any other means in six years. Democratic politicians, throughout the county, are enabled, by the above low terms, to circulate Dem ocratic newspapers at a very small cost. We appeal to them to see to get ting up clubs, and to see to it in time. Now is the time to sow the seed. Af ter a little while the heat of passion and prejudice will beam upon the pub lic mind in all its intense fierceness, and then seed-time will have passed. Friends, let us hear frora you ! sr.ws IX BRIEF. Queen Victoria has arrived in Paris. Mr. Jefferson Davis arrived in Liver pool last week. Thad. Stevens is better—in health on ly. —New counterfeit fifty-cent curren cy has made its appearance. The Missouri wheat crop this year is the largest ever gathered in the State. There are apprehensions of a politi cal outbreak in Spain. A colored jury has been empanelled at Nashville, Tennessee, for the trial of a negro. Samuel strung, or New YorW, disappeared. He is a defaulter to the amount of $55,000. —ln the week ending on Saturday, the 25th ult., there were 781 deaths in New York, and 286 in Brooklyn. Two more Democratic Senators have been ousted from the Louisana Legisla ture and Radicals seated. The Florida Legislature has adjourn ed until November 3d, when it will choose Presidential electors. There are eighteen murder cases on the docket for the fall term of tlie Cir cuit Court in the second district of Indi ana. The number of emigrants that arri ved at New York during the present year, up to the fifth instant, was 132,- 875, against 151,289 to the same date last year, and 160,000 during the same period in 1866. The day is not far distant when the majority of the people in want of musi cal instruments for their homes, will not rest satisfied with the mere testi mony of advertisements, but their pur chases will be based upon the actual musical merits and mechanical excel lencies of the desired instruments.-- Messrs. S. 1). tfc. H. \V. Smith, of Boston, manufacturers of the AMERI CAN ORGANS, have been favored with such a class of customers, and have thus been enabled to build up an im mense trade, notwithstanding the great competition which exists in this par ticular branch of business.— .Musical Review. BKMOUEST'S MONTHLY for Septem ber, prompt to time as usual, and full of good things lo overflowing for the ladies. "Maude Estvaring" is worthy of the perusal of every mother. Its Fashions, Music, Literature, Fun, Art, Household (we can not enumerate half its good things), render it the most attractive and useful Monthly pub lished for a family. You need to see it to know its value. $3 yearly. Ad dress, \Y. JENNINGS DEMUREST, 473 Broadway, N. Y. PETERSONS MAGAZINE, for August, is on our table, and fully comes up to the standard of excellence which that periodical has reached. Published by C. J. Peterson, Phila. BALLOU'S MAGAZINE, for Septem ber, has reached us. This popular monthly, is a model of cheapness. — Published by Elliott, Thomas & Talbot, Boston, at $1.50 per year. CANCER, SCROFULA, AC., CURED.— Persons afflicted with Cancer, Scrofula. Tu mors, Eruptions, Ac., are CCRED by the use of Dr. GREENE'S ELECTRO-MEDICATED BATHS and Indian Vegetable remedies which cleanse the blood of all Humors, Mercury, Lead, Ac., and restore health to invalids afflicted with every variety of disease. A book describing Cancer, Scrofula, Hu mors and other diseases, with their proper means of cure, may ue obtained free at the Medical Insti tute, or by mail. Address Dr. R. GREENE, 16 Temple place, Boston, Mass. To CONSUMPTIVES. —The Rev. ED WARD A. WILSON will send (free of charge) to all who desire it, the prescription with the directions for making and using the simple remedy by which he was curel of a lung affection and that dread disease Consumption. His only object is to bene fit the afflicted and he hopes every sufferer will try this prescription, as it will cost them nothing, and may prove a blessing. Please address Rev. EDWARD A WILSON, No. 165 South Second Stroot, Willinmsburgh, New York. sepl3mß SPECIAL NOTICES. DR. TORI AS' Celebrateu^^^vui Liniment whvse wonderful cures, surcytE!j), ( , r , a taneous action iu cases of Chronic JrBP#J board- Headache, Toothache, Cats, and Dysentery, etc., have world. It is no new catch-pe— tt / . wa w Inshort, that has stood the test of tv IRST-CLASS HOTEL UIOHS sale and rapidly ji -ast favors, I respectfu once the surest evidence „ the ularity. 'fry it and be should be without a bott| W. DIBKRT. Prop'r. _ of dollars, and many hov OTE L. The un saved by its timely use. charge of the Bed entery yield at once to its 'f Col, John Hafer, an tics. It is perfectly innocent^jgj^£ the travei to the oldest person or youngest!*™-,, m will bo ter, if you have no confidence in Paten s*® ciueg—try this, and you will be gure to buy and recommend to your friends. Hundred *ifcr Physicians recommend it in their practice. None genuine unless signed, "S. I. Tobias." Price 50 cents ber bottle. Sold by all the Druggists. De pot, 5(5 Cortlandt Street, New York. ju1244 FIFTY THOUSAND HEADS now clothed with masses of rich black and brown hair would, if they were unfortunately Cut Off from a supply of CKISTADORQ'S DYE, begin to Turn White, red, saudy, and gray. Manhood and beauty, with tho one defect in their personal appearance remedied by CRISTADOHO'S HAIR DYE, rejoice in their good fortune, and recommend it to all who require a perfect dye. Manufactured by J. CRISTADORO, 68 Maiden Lane. New York. Sold by all Druggists. Applied by all ilair Dress ers. jul24w4 A NEW REMEDY IN CONSUMPTION.— A Physician who had Consumption for several years, with frequent bleedings of the lungs, cured himself with a medicine unknown to the profes sion, when his case appeared hopeless. He is the only physician who has used it in his own person, or who has any knowledge of its virtues ; and he can ascribe the degree of health he now enjoys to nothing but the use of his medicine ; and nothing but utter despair and entire extinction of ull hope of recovery, together with a wuut of confidence in all others induced him to hazard the experiment. To those suffering with any disease of the Lungs he proffers a treatment he confidently believes will eradicate the disease. Medicine sent by ex press. .Send for a circular or call on DU £ BOYLSTON JACKSON, No. 250 North Tenth Street, Phila. mayß'6Byl. #- ■ ITCH! ITCH!! ITCH!!! — Scratch! Scratch!! Scratch!!! —ln from 10 48 hours WHEATON'S OINTMENT cures THE ITCH. WHEATOX'S OINTMENT cures SALT RHECM. WHEATOX'S OINTMENT cures TKTTBH.. WHBATON'S OINTMENT cures Barbers' Itch. WHBATON'S OINTMENT cures Old Sores. WHE AXON'S OINTMENT cures Every kind of Humor like Magic. Price, 50 cents a box ; by mail, 60 cents. Ad dress WEEKS A POITER. No. 170 Washington Street, Boston, Mass. For sale by all Druggists. sep2o,'67yi DEAFNESS, BLINDNESS, anil CA TARRH treated with the utmost success by J. ISAACS. M D., and professor of Diseases of the Eye and Ear in the Medical College of Penn sylvania. 12 years experience, (formerly of Leyden, Holland), No. 805 Arch Street Phila. Testimonials can bo seen at his office. The medi cal faculty are invited to accompany their pa tients, as he has no secrets in his practice. Arti ficial eyes inserted without pain. No charge for examination. july3,'6Byl INFORMATlON.— lnformation guar anteed to produce a luxuriant growth of hair up on a bald head or beardless face, also a recipe for the removal of Pimples Blotches, Eruptions, etc., mi in® kjn, leaving the same soft, clear, and beau tiful. en bo obtained without charge by address ing THOS. F. CHAPMAN, Chemist, slitt Broadg way, New York. sepl3mß jSatcs. JPOR SALE OR TRADE. 2 tracts, of 160 acres each, within three miles of a depot on the Union Pacific Railroad, back of Omaha. 1 tract of bottom land, timbered and praire, two miles from Omaha city. One-third of 7.000 acres in Fulton county. Pa., including valuable ore, mineral and timber lands, near Fort Littleton. Over 4,000 acres of valuable ore, coal and tiui ber lands in West Virginia. Also—32o acres of land in Woodbury co., lowa. ALSO—Twenty-five one acre lots, adjoining the borough of Bedford with limestone rock for kiln or quarry, on the upper end of each. .ALSO 320 acres In Reynolds Co., Missouri. 480 do do Shannon do do 2701 do do Bollinger do do 80 do do Franklin do lowa. ALSO. 5 lots of ground, in Bedford, 60 by 210 ft . former ly part of the Lyons' estate. 0. E. SHANNON, jun2l,'67yl Bedford, Pa. T7ALUABLE LAXI) FOR SALE \ —The undersigned offers for sale the follow ing valuable bodies ot land : THREE CHOICE TRACTS OF LAND, containing 160 acres each, situated on the Illinois Central Ruilroad, in Champaign county, State of Illinois, 8 miles from the city of Urbana. and one mile from Rentual Station on said Railroad. Two of the tracts adjoin, and one of them has a never failing pond of water upon it The city of L rbana contains about 4.000 inhabitants. Champaign the greatest wheat growing county in Illinois. ALSO —One-fourth, of a tract of land, situated in Broad Top township. Bedford county, contain ing about 45 acres, with all the coal veinsof Broad Top running through it. ALSO — Three Lots in the town of Coalmont. Huntingdon county. Jan 26, 66-tf F. C. REAMER. ACRES OF EXCELLENT OHU FARM LAND FOR SALE.—ONE TRACT containing 2>2 ACRES, with good h>g house and barn thereon ; also a goiid SAW-MILL, worth a rental of S2OO per annum. About half of this tract is excellent bottom and the balance upland. About 100 ACRES CLEARED, well fenced and in a good state of cultivation. Balance well timbered. The whole tract is well watered, and is situate on Cunning's creek, in St Clair tp.. adjoining lands of John Alstadt, Jacob Andrews and Jacob Beckley. The mill and farm wiO he sold separately, or together, to suit purchasers. ALSO, one tract containing 183 acres, having a good log house and barn and out buildings there on. About 65 acres cleared, well fenced aud in a good state of cultivation; balance covered with an excellent growth of valuable timber—well watered and situate near Pleasantville, in St. Clair Township, adjoining lands of John Alstadt, Jacob Bowser. Jacob Beckley and Joseph Smith. ALSO, one tract containing 157 acres, about 26 acres cleared, well fenced and in a good state of cultivation; balance covered with an excellent growth of valuable timber; well watered and situate in St. Clair Township, adjoining lands ot Jacob Beckley, Joseph Smith and Christian Mock. , . . r These lands formerly belonged to the estate of Nicholas Lyons, deceased, and are in a neighbor hood well supplied with schools, churches, storos, Each of those tracts will be sold as a whole or in parts, to suit purchasers, and will be offered at private sale until SATURDAY, the 1 -41 li ot No\ next, when, if not disposed of, they will be sold to the highest and best bidder at public sale, of which timely notice will be given. For further particulars, address personally, or bj letter, J W DICKERSON. Attorney-t-Law, july3tf Bedford, Pa. ** D ICE * AS CROESUS" TREMENDOUS EXCITEMENT ! Unpre cedented Rush for the New CKCESI'S SOAP. The washing powers of this Soap are truly mar velous. No person who has ever tried it will do without it. Its recommendations are perfect PURITY, utter HARMLESSNESS and wonderful EFFICIENCY. Warranted to contain more washing power to the dollar's worth than an/ other soap in the market —therefore the CHEAPEST. Try it. Satisfaction guaranteed, (if used according to directions) or MONEY RE FUNDED. Ask any grocer for it. Manufactured only by HtECKLEY A HALL, (LR KSITS SOAP WORKS,) No. 44) Y< Tk Ave., (Old York Road,) Pbilad a, ftug7m6