.tiai''.:'ij::;.9i,:.:,..4.,. - i .- :.. , • , Ml= 1,kr3;,, pim.pipyomber74s;--imls: FOR vov6nsoB,cle6,. j - CAU3. .. ', sugg °BlB: ' that the Democrats, MUM Amy are J through; iiiingto'stitlGenilliant,mialit"Mtbmpt the /9110,YAFAC,Rgoky,VS uritiiina. • • • f4ilkl,/t9EICIIT .1.3. LEE has beerf.olferetl the aPPoYittnent n i"Stiperrlsor- "of Agenelet" of the. Ilriiickertiocker, Lilo Insurance Company, of South. Balary .slo,ooo, l :,with the inti 7 Motion if It is,qcot enough - the amount ; will.be Tnz Hon. John M. Kirkpatrick: has:been appointed Judge!' of the District of Pttsl► . ►frjh, to Alt the vacancy occasioned by the appointment, , of Judge Williams to the' Supremo Bench of Pennsylvania. : , Tun ;Harrisburg ; Sato uard declares for tbefenotnination of 'Governor John V9,2Gell rycand.in aco doing justly rellee4 the ptyvail ing•judgenient of the Republican pnrty in 'Di ver of a brave and laithlbl public servant.. ifoUses MAYstino,Of Tennessee, iacan (pante forinpnblnet office, and Gay. Brown low; itOillidPaPki, bneks him for Poltmaster . Goners}; and it is furthermore said that Mr. Marma Is , n candiaate for the Speakership of the Zaino of Representatives. , . Tun national ;army, according, t d the last report of tholcliumnt Generalls c.snposed of but 43,741 men, white and black, *pnk ah:pried ...and non•ommuls.sioned: General Grunt's gradual retrenchment has told siguif- icantly,on its numbers. A E I BIEND of the President elect having re minded idin that he would now, be.constrain ed to forego all' the case of pint] liCantipipa tesl!4 the end of the:war, the, General quiet ly could not help it; I (Dd not volunteer, and then niy count ry drafted:inv." x - 12IDLETWS repudiation I platform hai been rejected in staunch Staes of the Northigthi by a popular majority of 214,000. ills greenback theory, and the plCa that It was demanded by the West, is Simply a gross libel tlidt boldly loyal and honeit section . 'of mir great land. adtaire those Democrats • who 'now claim that Grant will make "almost a Demo cratic" President. We alwnys'did admire that conservative .who, when refus4 admis ston Into thriark,:fiwored faithful . 1 : 1 oalt. with the prediction that the ,:coming deluge "wouldn't be much of a shOwer aftir all." Inp i tdatement from Washington that our revenue frdip' all,sourcos is sufficient to pay tho interest on the public debt and the expen- Pcsof the 'Government, leaving a largo sur plus I for,"' the reduction.. of the debt, and that there Is no. necessity fort falling bank on in cieaSed will be. read with great Qatisfac- I, Ion:- • Ttrn Crituribrd Journa runs up the name of GoVernor JohnlV. Geary as its candidate for the RepubliCan nomination fur Governor; and says :. "Whenever the people get held of enable and holiest putitidiervant it, is hfit to hill on he him, and believing. Governor Cleary to be such a one, we earnestly rectal . - mend his remMunation by the Republihan• party. for the office of GOvernor of this Com- Monwealth:'•.l IT.IB reported that the Ktia Klans of Arkansas, in consequence of the discovery of their signs and pass-words by the State au thorities; have burned up their records and 'have . suspended operations till further • or ders from their general huidquarters at New- Orleans.' ,We guess (that In view! of the in coming administration at Washington, the best anus° of the whole Ett-klux:organiza tion, and for all other secret i)olit cal distur bers of the same character down Quint) on either side, will be to disband, dislerse,,, and go into some-honcit calling as somi as liossi bit ' ME reduction of the army is one of the subjects which congress must dispose of at its coming session. Afrairs'in the South are bound to settle under the influence of the qm litical results just produced at the North, whence the stern decree has gone forth that the laWs of the land mist be obeyed, or, they will be enforced with Military power. Satis flea of this fact, the people of the Sciuth are now resolved, undoubtedly, to yield to what must rind does seem an irresistible power, and ,therefore the army 'can be reduced; the treasciry relieved of a great drain, and thou sands of working men restored to trade and labor. The Fortieth Congress should not ad journ without reducing the army. • _ Tun electors chosen in each *le meet at the Capital of that State; on the itrst Wednea dayin December. • They vote by diitinet bal lots for President and •Vice-President, and send the result, carefully sealed, by a Special messenger, who will .deliver it to Dan. Ben jamin F. Wade, President of the Senate. The Senate and liouse,Thaving lima' a day for a joint convention, will assemble togeth er in the House. Mr. Wade will open the certificates, count the votes, and announce that Illysks S. Graiit is eleetal President and b'eltuyler Colfax Vico President of .the Uni ted Siatei. Neither Gen. Giant nor Mr. Colfax tire therefore yet legally elected ; and they will 'not be until the first Wednesday of December. CCM • GER- GF.OUGE u. MCCLELLA I N :has at laSt. - been settled for life. The executors of the Edwin A. Stevens estate have 'employed him rit'an annual salary of $lO,OOO to superintend the completion of tlic famous Stevens buttery at Hoboken, And which. when afloat, is to be tendered as a free gift to the skate of New Jer sey. No time is specitied.for the completion of the job. The. General is the td' ost fortu 'nate man of the age. Ile leaped into a full grown military reputation without ever bay ing gained a victory. He became the ida and the candidate of the' Democratic party without having paved the way to such pre ciainence, by, hatring done any "dirty work." Without submitting himself to being Made the tool of Tanimeny, ho has got a ; ",job" as good as half a doz4n "court houses." The 'election ofGeneial trait is a good thing for Generalignelellan'ii nciv enteritise. Pret- tient orrant'sillsposition and ability -tp keep ate will prevent any necessity for the use pc ' of the Stevens battery for Inapy%en m t tro•comcd. henCO McClellan Will have fr argese X4* , his .rulino• passion, an 9}47be - ittrairtyr as he I -pleaam-with-:'none to t irlest, of)r n;* eilt : u afraid.—Sidc Gude 1 Kt v-, Tits fittern tirlllllS ' which refused to publish the fact that the national indelliltins for the last month hii'd tlecreasal - Mlle $7,000,000, should be called to the'adattionat.fact rrFatttnapi7the 'rigid 'sySteni.of tienaltinerit• inaiskali;upon by 9ongreslhtie expncli tare of thegirdnancc Burau for: the last year only amounts to .$3,011,000,-or less , than titre'olfths of the ex- Pm.diture et: the Previctus Year. This in iy ririusly impair their charges Gfextravagance, but they van goikuothing - now by . insisting upon falsohocal-ForneVa'Precs.' . ' . ' 'State Treasurer: Irwin; The' dudrd has'inade •it a point, in%tefer . - ; rin6 to candidates for office, only - t o• urge re , nomination ,11 ,cases where tilts practice. , of t heltepublican party has been to accord' ttvii . or three . terms !knee !knee tyc are glad to' ite,6. the general and,coitliallmantfc.'statidn' of kayak evincettfor gate Treasurer. %Irwin- Iliscoutso as the financial officer of the State, has:been „t prudent*, straightforwinca and'spc ceigful..te'an 'eminent degree. ,AC . ,Zitilitig , precedent established by the Rcpublicaint of thelLegislature, Sinn! Trettsures are re-eice-", ted•for'three termi.,' • Gen. Iruirt,isin hialirat torn, and 'we qaestio4 whetbBi any man placed at the Leinl of ths , ,,a4casurY.evev; In so, Shari a time, made so able and so success ful Jai financial odie , eiti Ills unitrir , m tlepUrtof meat, htith tut man:iiiid eilleer, hag been unexceptional. Without regard to faction,, or interkistp, hu has impartially pc rformed his duty. • These persimal advantages, added ;Atilt: precedent nalai l cdcnutke (ice. Irwiu's election•a fact already cUnceded. • •-. The New York Election Fraud& The Committee ofth3Nnirin.League IClub of New York, recently appointed to investi zate the conspiracylin .the late -election in that State in which it iS alleged that .a large Majority of.theiegal riders of State voted for Grant, Colax and Griswold,,and that that vote of the majority had been overruled• and subverted by wholesale fraud, whereof •:I he' issue of counterfeit. naturalization certificates, the registration of aliens and • non-residents as legal votes by repeaters, have made a pre liminary report; in which they set forth the objects of the present movements: Pint—To satisfy th t. two houses of Congress by abundant proofs,• that, the reported ma jorities in this State fur the electors of Sey mour and Blair are tainted with fraudulent conspiracy ; ',hot thUr voles should be re jected in counting the votes of the Electoral College; such rejection being demanded as well by exact justice in this particular case as by a due regard to the protection of the nation from similar frauds in' future elec tion's. Second—To procure evidence touch inc the election of the State ticket headed by A. Griswold for Governor, and tvect ally with a view to judicial or legislative de cision in regard to the .districts where the election may have been entirely vitiated : by the implication of inspectors and canvassers, by a violation of the law in the appointment of inspectors, in the fraudulent conspiracy, or by the unlawful interruption of citizens in their statutory:light of challenge; Third—To setaire from the State • Legisla ture; ifpossibli, and if not: from Congress, suchlegislation as may - be ne•zesaary to pro tect.the purity of the franchise, and to facd itate the conviction and punishment of all attempting to debase It: Fourth—To sninnit to Congress such proofs of the irregular. _augL i fraal...... whicn, unuer the exit , mg aws.• li " r ' frM.CS of citizenship luive been manufactured by wholesale and scattered broadcast, as to justi fy that body in reconsideri4 the entire sub ject of naturalization, and do declaring the, invalidity of all the jpretending certificates which, in the pending Canvass, have been is sued in defiance of the act of Congress. Fitch—To awaken the people, not . alone of this State, but of the whole country, to the imminence of our dangelfrom the Increasing demoralization of ourAmlitics, and to induce good citizens of all parties to combine for the minium protection against political fraud and corruptibn. The Congress Investigating Com- mittoc. • The sub-Committee of the Joint Congres.3 Committee resumed its session yesterday, and testimony was taken showing that frauds are being perpetrated under the present. revenue laws; that distipers are as successful now atl they were under the Old law in evading the payment of the tax, and that from one-third to one-half of the whiskey manufactured es capes taxat ion. The various modes lsy whjelr the frauds are carried ml, and .by which,the revenue is defrauded, were fully explain ed.. • . . The suh-Comuntlee of the joint Commit:- tee of Congress, now silting in this city, had a witness before theta yesterday who stated that frauds were as frequent under the new revenue law, with. the tax on whiskey at, GO cents a gallon, as under the old law, when the tax was $2 a gallon, aria who also rela ted Cu: mode by which lilts frauds on the Government are 1=01111)11AM. This is lint extraordinary, when revenue officers who r ) ' have the experience of yea .• in theilitating frauds pre retained in the G vernuieut ser- I vice.—N. 11 Tribune.. i : ; Shocking Accident—TWO 11!cn In , - 1 • stonily !filled; ..* i Yesterday morning betv en scvm and eight o'clock,a shocking accident occurred atjohnstown, on the Penns dvania Railroad by which two men Were hurriedinto eternity without a moment's, warning. It seemed that the men, whose names were respectively Joseph Noble and David Bee, wers employed in the ore hark of the Cambric Iron Works. At the time in question they had arranged the Luse for a blast, and were tib6nt leaving l the placc, after setting lire to the fuse, when the blast prematurely exploded, killing both' men instantly. Mr. Bee was struck by a frag ment of the ore; which nearly severed his head from the body. Mr. Noble was also struck by a fragment and his head crushed in. Both the bodies were mangled and lacerated in a terrible manner. The deceased were hratbers-in-law, both married men, and leave families to mqurn their awful death. Thc intelligenc e was first conveyed to this city by a telegraphic dispatch to a rehitiva of the deceased, who started for the place on the thst train thereafter. . A lir.ruotamo PTIOrKeTIVE TATUM— The Republicans, true to the policy that leas prevedso briliant ii soccer.; thus Ter, propose to increase the tariff rather than to retluee it, contending that Nrlpt we should lose in ens• tom receipts we shOuld more than make up in enhanced internal I evenne, in consequence of the multiplication of industrial works, the imprdved condition of the nurss of the PenPle, the increase or capital and; the gen oral diffusion of prosperity. If protection be beneficial to the great leading intere.sts of the. Republic, we cannot have too • Mitch of IL That le the tenet of the Republietiti Party; an g l i tinder that It has now been itOng' fgt . ci t yeas past, with a success so Liston ishlng that nothing but the stupid perversity of partisanship could haie induced the Dente-, crate to - opposo 'ti./ policy "Upon which' the country. has done so well.—Phikidelphia 'ad- . • • —— - . lllouse of IS.ef ute —Report. of ' % - • - Grind Jury. -\ The granctanort-thelate term•ofemirt rektiol4l to toiall 1.. selves of an inVitation glnniti•Alma .iireviously, to, visit the io •.$ [House ..:firolltefuo, in Allegheny . ; 'City. 04' thk . rOlFrn, k "'Wroth, Rsq„ the 4111- e nt;filitemitti,'prt*nted the subjoined clear and satisfactory xenon, which the Court pr dered to bellied, and,published in the papers ..• • • the county ,-_ ,_:Pfirsnnricao.llarc 1-0 8 c. 6 -_, To the„Graila.hirt tl ! '6l,idviir coos y, atßeSvaOlat: • .' At ii ) • regunt`rifittetliii of Obi' Bolva - z_f ganiluers, I . Wes Uktructed ; to Inyik 51%0,, .... it 'Visit our lintitiiiiOn, that you may have an • eldlorlUtniY .of Paging theausuagement and Iworkiw of,theltCl, Ago., .., ~- e ..: ~ i; , • ,, i ' 'You are dt.liberty",to Make , this visit; anylithe' threuirlibuv'the"year .yen find it' ebnvenient•to do stn. . Sincerely, - ,- . (Signet Je• IL L. - Ringwalt,Sec. P Th Hoilorable,la. irit4964.w.:(Anirt •c,f , • :. ;war Suotie/ a froarid ~the. Court ~ of Oyot „a .rermitorf Ohlearsr - Co.anty::; , -' .- e , ' ie:grund luquiest in and for ' , Said: comity min efiriseatirieut ds folloWS;to7Wit? ltellinird of.lianege* of the Honsic: of Re . go for the tistern:Dietriet. of."Penns,Yl - " .V • i l va: fa, hy resolution;luvited Mfg . :n:4y to pat an. fficial Visitio hit Itouse.:•,TheinVitation WesLueeeP .! : ••ted • • --• ' • •'' .' • - , ant accompanied •by Rev. D. P. Lowary, at present represent ing; thin county in the Bl , ird of Mantigerallf • the In ,. .t. stitittiOn; and In , &en:lance with the, reedit-, mendiition of the ooirt, wo went on•Wednea day., Nov. 11thinat. , ..• Our report:llo necessarily be.both.-brief and imperfect, and to . be better understood; should be read in connection with the "ita. mini Weliziot,:intit,u by the .31anugersto. the tomtit Legisletore and the "Rides and Rego.: lutiens',' . now goferning• the House. ; This due,. however, to ~, lie citizens cf the county, and to those havi ginimediate ohnige of the House, that Whati billows should, .be written Odr reception atl the halide of Rev. It N. Avery, the efficient and popfilar Superinten.' dent, , and his uthiable wife, and:, the accom plished and sueliessful‘ matron, Miss 'Belle, McCoy ; add irydebd all the pincers were both. kind mid kairditili - und each uppeared to vie with all others in' hoSpltality and in the effort to interest and • iiiise. , The officers , seem,: from the highest Ito the lowest,. to evince the soundest judgment in their selection, and arc evidently well :qualified for thou' arduous attain:spot:able N L ork. : They have our grate -1 ful thanks for tl Or cheerul contributlcu to ottecoutflirt, and for the facilities they gave for our close ant : accurate inspection of the Institution.and its workings. There are sixtCen acres of. land, . two of which are inelOied within the wall. The original cost ofi the unfurnished buildings, was about sixty-five thousand ($95,C60) del-' lars, and two wings nave been subsequently• raiStat at a cost of about sixty thousand (?.60,. 000) dollars. The amount of tire inauruncif upon the .property now is. sixty-five thous and ($55,000) -di Ila rs. Thu entire buildings are lighted with gas, which is manufactured on the premises, at n'cost of about tivo dol lars per day. About two thousand burners are employed three hours each. evening, and about four hundred all night. Steam is used for warming nearly . the entire. buildings, as well as for heating water for was.hhig and ba- thing. Much I/the dooking is also done by steam. The. se me: -building for the forge boys is 120 by 27 leet e and is capable of seat ing 215 ' pupilsJ. It la„