The Cambria freeman. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1867-1938, September 01, 1870, Image 2

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    JU
H.
Cambria Freeman.
EHEXSm'Stfi, PA.
Tiu:ksiiay Mousing, : Skit. 1, 18V0.
dkjiockath: coi:.ty tickkt.
jiivcmhlHW. HORACE ROSE, Johnstown.
Sfu-riff WM. U. IHINACKER. Johnstown,
f Vmh ,i hxionw KH A NCI S If FR llI. I net to.
i. ir. lilrihn- V. H. m:H(;. Cumbria Tu p.
.Iri.hror .IOIIN VA(;X'i:i!. Chest Springs.
;nu;r JACOB A. MAlMfObD. Johnstown.
Jm u Vom. At.KX. SKLbLY, SuininerhUl Tp.
Tlie Removal Iniquity.
The Position of Messrs. Rotte and Hon
Kcker on 1Jo ; nest ion.
As the validity i f ;1ic following letters
nnnot be qucstiont d or their import mis
t nken, wc deem it quite sufficient to sub
nut them to our readers without other
comment tban the remark that are they
plain and pointed enough to b understood
by all, and set forever at rest the silly To
ries pnt ir. circulation by the Removal
candidate and the friends of that cause, in
regard to rho alleged sympathy of Messrs.
Kosk find JloNACKKit for that iniquitous
measure :
.ToriNSTOwv. Are. 2fi. IB70
W. H. Frrni.i n. Fpii. Denr Sir: (;ross mis- I
rrpisentation of the elvraerer ;md contents or
the note handed by mo to you on ih d:iv of i
the moet:ng of the I'emocritic Convention,
leiving been indi.strioesly eirrulnted here, row
wilt obliged ine ty having tlie same published.
Very truly, Ac., W. Hobace Rosk.
EnRSsBuno. Aui.. 8, 1H70.
VT. II. Srcnt.FR, E-q Uenr Sir: An im
piess'on, 1 ntn informed, hits gore out th:it I
am in fivor of the movement latolv inasnrated
to Feure the removal oi in. i,oon:y reai irom .
J-.benshurg to Johnstown. I t.rke r.o notice ot i
the common u?e of political misrepresentations
made in a contest for nominations, but desire
to piv thit the pp?rrtion lint I nni in nnv wnv
tmn)itte1 ti n n r-t tliT' n fVin rnmnvn 1 1 r
w.,...t,. itL v ti 't n
take the Democratic nomination for Assembly
and be in favor of said movement.
W. Horace Kg sr..
JriiNSTOWx, A"g. 24, 170.
' To R. L. ,Tphton, E.-q.. Chairman Pemo
rralic Committee. Deir Sir: As the declara
tion? of Capt . AVo.idrr.fi' at Kben-bur..', while
opposing iny iiominati.ih, anl the failure of the
Crescon convention to nominate a candidate
for Shcr:fr, may be con-trued by some to p'ace
rqnivocal position. I Vespeetfully re
mc in an
quest you to publish the following. During the
present campaign my entire ami energetic
efforts will be used to secure the sueee.-s of the
V1101.K Democratic ticket, and as the Ciessor
ooiivention has placed in nomination a ticket
in opposition to the one iiomina'ed nt l'bens
burg and pledged to secure if possible the re
moval of the County ISeat from Ebcn.-burg to
Johnstown, ro cue who owes lea by to the
Demorrntie party, pud desires to maintain the
in'egiity of its organization, can do otherwise
than, oppose the removal issue as now presented
by its friends
With the Democratic party, its ticket and its
organization. I propose to stand or fall.
Yours, rcspeetfullv,
W. B. EONACKFU.
Queer, Is It Xot J
The mongrel convention which assem
bled at Cresson on the 20 ih of August,
placed in nomination a full county ticket,
with the exception of Sheiiff. At the
head of the list of the nominees stood the J township, by way of Ebensburg to Johns
name of II. D. Woodrcfk for Assembly, j town, oo miles ; from the same starting
lie was nominated as the Bemoval candi- point to Ebensburg, 20 miles. These
date and has accepted the empty honor I figures do not He, and after reading them,
thus conferred upon him. ' what becomr s of the Tribune's- mendacious
One may look in vain over the pages of ! assertion, that Johnptown "is more easy
the Johnstown Tr.'lune and the Johns- 1
town Dunocrat for the publication of this j
Cresson ticket. It cannot even be found, i
where it ought to be, among the latest
advertisements. But, strange as it may
poem, the Democrat still publishes in one
of its columns the full Democratic ticket
headed with "W.M. II. Kosic for Assem
bly. Dors the editor of the Democrat
flatter himself that he can impose upon j
the Democracy of the northern portion of j
the county by such a transparent trick
as this? It is simply a device to conceal
and cover up hi own well known and
shameful duplicity on the removal issue.
The mere fact that he keeps Bosk's name
nt the head of the ticket would, under
other circumstances, be conclusive evi
dence that he intends to support it. But
this of course he will not do. He is new
the removal candidate himself, although
ho publicly and emphatically declared in
this place, time and again, on the day of
the meeting of the Democratic County
Convention, that he would vote for neither
l!os nor Bonackku, simply because
tin y irvre both in furor of the removal of
the county seat, and that kc (Woonuci K)
tens opjwsed to it. Woodruff to-day occu
pies the very sarao position which he al
leged at that time was held by Kose.
This interesting question here presents
itself: If II. D. Woodruff, on the 8th of
August, was honestly and sincerely op
jioscd to removal, how can he on the day
of the election vote for himself as the re
moval candidate. He ought to vote for
Bosk, since he stands on the same plat
form on which Woodruff most solemnly
declared he stood and would continue to
stand. We detest a political hypocrite,
and if II D. Wooijkl'KF has a fpark of
shama left in him, after the treacherous
and dishonorable course he has pursued,
ha will take down the Democratic ticket
from the head of his paper and hoist the
Bemoval ticket, or at least the small
re mo ant of it lhat is loft.
Dcking the la9t hours of the late ses
sion of Congress, when an objection to a
bill was fatal, lion. Samuel J. Randall,
and a few other Democrats, who were
skilled in parliamentary usage, took their
stand in front of the Speaker's desk, and
by the peremptory declaration. "I ob
ject," stopped the passage of many
schemes of robbery which would have
cost u tax ridden people immense s-jms of
s?oncy if they had been allowed to go
uglt.
f
"Johnstown is the metropolis of the county.
i. :., u A ,. t. .. . . 1 . v. - ........... r.f I
Here' IJicIiiicss for You.
population. It is more easy of access lor the , h't on Thorsuay the gentleman
extreme north thnu Ebensburg. It is the de- j whose name Iieads thi3 article was nomU
pot ot the counties of Cninbria. Somerset, Id- j . ,
tlinn.n. Westmoreland, and much ot the other nated as the Democratic candidate lor
counties surrounding." j Congress in the !edford district. Mr.
The above elegant and comprehensive ( MliTERS j8 ,hc C(i(or of ,he Hufiford Qa
extract is taken from on editorial article j gtUe nnil h flJso je sevor cihor of the
in the last Johnstown Tribune, eulogislic j jfnrr,ing patrjot at Ilarrisburg. He is a
of the merits of removal and irs candidate j gentk,m.u1 of acknowledged ability and of
for Assembly, II. D. Woodruff. Al- I pure anj ,inuIIieI repufalion. Congress
though the mere reading of it is its own j staml3 pjMy 5n nCf of men of h5p Merling
best refutation, it requires a brief notice. , intr;rritv amI the ljeint,crncy t,f ,l,e ,li
We always knew, and have said more j (rk.t ha'vc honored themselves by making
than once, that Johnstown is a big pluc -, ernincny fit a nomination. It is con-
but we confess that we never had at, ad- '
equate conception of the true extent of its :
1 , . . v ;
grcatoess until we road the toregomg ex-
tract from the Ti lhunc article. If Johns
town is not tho centre of all creation, it j j-
is qoite apparent that the editor of the j
Tnlmne, in his simplicity, wishes it to be !
. T. . , . . j
legrrroeu W rammers ceuwe o, t-M-
ern I ennsylvania. Assuming that it is .
the "centre of lutues and the centre of
me cenue .i nu.tue . nni me ctmie
P"P - ",
7er $e in favor of the removal of thecounty j
t j '
IIo utterly iuuorr-s the important and
conclusive objection to the removal pioject
J 1
I an iil.ieet ion lhat must forever d:i;nn
an objection that must forever damn
it and that is the loc"t-'o:i of Johnstown.
Altootia is the "centre of business and of
population" of Blair count-; Phccnix-
... , , Ci,oft,fir otu.utv. tUkt
J ;
occupies prrcistly the sane geographical
posi'.ion towards West Chester, the county ;
y i
3.
. I . 7. vd n t.v.i.f,! 1 1?
'
ourgn ; rtcranion, in luzerne c.ouiuy, is
also the centre of business and population.
And yet the man who, in these respective !
;
counties, would advocate the removal of j
ine county tn m tt. tou:&,.u.g .u . ,
toomt, or from West Chester to Phojuix-
ville, or from Wiikcsbarre to Sera 11 ton, j
. . r . it 11: 1 . 1 ... 4 I
ould be regarded us a fit subject for a
lunatic asylum.
"i (Johnstown) is more ray of access
for the (Xtrcme vorlh than JChtnthunj." So
says the sapient geographer of the Tribune, j
Let us test the truth of this Matemcnt. j
ritr .t irr1 ..I
ment,"' which is in the eastern part cfhl-a is a prominent ai.d well j hCK
White township, to Bell's Miiis, on the ! Democrat and the latter an active mem- , are VCAlei contains, with the adjacent bor
Dennsvhimia Kailroad is about 15 miles; I l,er Uepublican party. They wcie ' oughs, front ten to twelve ib anand inhabi
n " ' ' I , c .i lir.i taiits-, all of whom, in a great measure, are
from Bell's Mil s to Johnstown 47 mi 1 not, in any sense or the word, delegate , , , , r .. ' ,
iioitt ita .iiiis iu .uiiiiMunu, ti uiii . i c- dependent upon ihe works for support, and
total G2 miles. From the Glasgow !
"settlement to Eb nsb .r?, 23 miles 28 j
!
miles. From the eastern poition ot L'icst
townshin to Ebensbure aud then bv rail i
" " .
to Johnstown, 57 miles. From the same
starting point to Ebensburg, 22 miles.
Fnm the northern portion of Susquehanna
of access for the trireme north than Ebon?- j
n"-g- nti yet it is oy inc unuiuwting
publication of such barefaced falsehoods
that the removal inirptity is attempted lo ,
bo bolsteied up and defended.
As a grantl enmax, we arc modestly ;
...
fold that "it (Johnstown) is the d'pot for
,, , , ,7 j '
all the products of the counties of Cambria,
1 - ' ' !
ssomcri t, lnUaua, n t pinion land, and
V other counties surrounding."
Is not such vapid nonsense superlatively
rl cmt 1 1 f i in r "?
Does the editor suppose that
the people arc all fools, and that they will
swallow his Munchausen statements with
out even an effort at bolting them ?
In view of the existence, hitherto un
known, of this great commercial mart,
called Johnstown, the wonder is that the
green grass is not now growing in the J
pfrects of Ebepfeburg, Somerset, Indiana i
and Greensburg. Oh! how it would j
gladden the heart of old John Johns, if !
he could, in his bodily person, revisit the j
banks of Cor.cmaugh and Stony Creek, J
and view with astonished eyes the mag- '
nificcnt commercial metropolis which has i
sprung up, as if by the wonderful magic
of Alladdin's lamp, upon the site of his
once humble but happy home. Old Hip
Van Winkle's astonishment would be
tame and commonplace, when compared i
to what would be that of this old Somcr- j
set county pioneer. It is a pleasant sub-
ject upon which to philosophize, but we i
must not weary the patience of our read
ers.
"We asked you, Mr. Freeman, to fell ua
what Mr. Hose's views were in Jo'iristoicn.
If you dare not say so, when it is 'conveni
ent' we will print yon exactly what, W. II.
Hose has on paper. 'We want facts.' Dare
you give them V Johnstown Tribune.
You said that when it was "conveni
ent" you would tell us what Mr. Ivosk's
views were on tha removal question "in
Johnstown." In our last issue we asked
you to make it convenient to do so "right
speedily." You now ask vs to furnish
3'ou with the facts which you boasted
wcro in your own possession. We reiter
ate our demand of last week. Tell us all
you know, or think you know, but be
sure, like Davy Crockett, "you are right
before you go ahead." Wo have no
reason to doubt that Mr. Kosu expresses
precisely Ihe Fame views on the Removal
swindle "in Johnstown" that he has been
in the habit of doing in Ebensburg and
elsewhere. lie is not a second edition of
H. D. Woodkltf, who, like an oare
utau, rows one way but looks another.
Benjamin P. JTSejers.
It affords us great pleasure to announce
, . ;t onnnpfnt u.;n i, Jmiv i
Ihn mptr.1(1.
Cfna, the present I, adical merr.bci.
nlc.,., .:,it ,ua rw,c
gated political demagogue in the State.
ven John CtiVOOK, in that respect,
p.lleft uig j, firca l)efore hlft iKh1.
fnTV, .,, ! L,,lv Tnvf' I
lord county inal. We know JoiiNLto- j
NA weU ,Ie u what ;s cal,3j ft t.(rim j
. :nsI;rir, ri:s Congressional
, , , . , ;
cnrefir ,ias l)0en n.ihra by more than
,he hatrod an( vit.diclivencfs of Wendell
...,. r ..,.r, '
. .
kji mat iair region oi ourconniry tor wouiu
make it a wilderness and call it i
, , , . , j
! . , c , j
j As a member of the committee on elec-
I. . .... .. '
tions he achieved immortal infamy, from '
the partisan and unpi?t course ho pursued '
J 1 i
! wan rcgc.rd to the case ot every lJemo ,
cralic claimant to a seat that came before !
the committee.
He shrank from no in
! justice, however glaring, and was always i
ready to perpetrate the most palpable and
.. . I
villainous wronjr.
Between Mkyf.ks and
Cessna, it is as Hyperion to a Natvr. j
If Hi.-v- Mi,-vl-i. r-jn )r;.- thw rrnt !
. , . , . !
in imhsuu iiuui iiiiun ui .jii-n-fa
... ri,,,,lv (t,n.p tht ,i.ni;a r .i,,, tv..
, . p.i . i-. . t.i- i
nocracy &f 0 rnI;re Stste j c, ,im ;d
Up bis loins and striko a vigorous and an
effective blow for justice and the right.
In the proceedings of the Crcs.aon lie", j
, ,. ......
mcval Copvcntion us published in the
I
: Tribune and T)mccrat of Johnstown, the i
names of A.
II.
Kiskk Fn tnd Ciias i
I'AKKUt appear as delegates tiom
Wrliifi t'MUi!!. in "I I i r fii-tl tiotrn.l yo
t:J tnc Cresson conclave, but were mere ;
'"lookers on in Venice." They did not j
. , . ,ii ... i
lt"tu "eH,s "ujong inc. ueiegaics, nor uiu ,
they by their votes assist in noniinnting h
Hn-le man on the Bemoval ticket on that ;
;
momentous occasion. They took no j
part whatever in the proceedings, and to j
ronroBOiif (lirni na h-ivinnr i nno o.i is !. .
r n't
U,C'T "oaKu.g u nine capital lot a ;
rotten and a doomed cause. '
.1 c i 1-..1 . r '
Vki:y I?kv. Thomas HtTDtN, pastor j
1 i
of (lie Catholic congregation at Bedford, ,
l a., died suddenly at his residence in that j
Qn T,
.ore. :iv over.in.
II
. j .. (
e was
ibout 7G years of age, and wa? bom in
I Ireland, that land of ernius and of fiti.'.
. , , ,. , . , .. . r ,. j
CTi C- '
! sacrod fiice for almost half a ccnturv in
j .
. . ... . . , w n i
r - . ..... ... . j
man of PrPcminent ability and learning, !
,, r . , . . . 1
as well as of true and sincere Christian
.:.. -" .ii-r - .i i :
piety. INo man stood higher in the love
r ' . j
and esteem of all religious denominations '
in Bedford than Father Ileyden, and no i
., , , , . . . i
man was more widely known or highly j
revered in this part of the State. In his !
death his own congregation has sustained ;
a loss the full extent of which they alone
are competent fully to appreciate and sad-
Iv to mourn.
Whitti-mow'., afraid a second. time to
face the indignation of Congress, has
declined being a candidate in the first
South Carolina district, and one Hfany,
an American citizen of African descent,
has been nominated in his place. The
four candidates for Congress to which lhat
Slate is entitled are all necroes. That
they will all be elected admits of no doubt,
for in 18G0 South Carolina contained
402,400 negroes and only 291,383 whites,
What an instructive commentary this will
be on negro equality and negro sufiVac.
One would have thought that Kevhxs was
enough. We have no doubt they will all
be Wiiittkmokks -.the only difference
being in the color.
The Germans and Iii?,hmcn that vote the
Radical ticket musi feel complimented at the
attempt to supplant the German and Irish
laborers in the coal region. Upon the sub
ject cf the Ridical coal operators movement
to put Chinamen into the mines in place of
the present white laborers, the Ridical organ
of Schuylkill county gives its views in the
following language : "As the Irish and the
Germans are the prominent opponents to the
Chinese, and are asking Congress to prohibit
the emigration entirely, we believe if any
class of emigrants are to be prohibited by
our government, the best interests of the
country demand that IrisJt, atul German cm
igration instead of Chinese should be prohib
ited. If the Chinamen are pagans wo may
convert them to Chrulianity. and mere pa
ganism cannot have a more demoralizing ef
fect upon the country tban the crime and
pauperism of the Irish and Dutch."
A new spring has been discovered in
Bradford county, similar to the already
celebrated Miunequa spring, near Canton,
brjt is stronger iu odor and in taste, and
is more chalybeate. Larger bubbles are
constantly rising to its ttirface and then ex
ploding, and at intervals there is an upheval
of tho whole body of water in it never 1ea
than fourteen feet deep with an explosive
souud, caused fron accumulated gaseous
forces from below.
Preachinsr vs. Practice.
Two missionaries from the Workrnjrmen's
Benevolent Association of the Anthracite re
gion, Messrs. Parker arjd Kealy, says the
Pottsville Standard, were lately on a tour to
the bituminous mines of Pennsylvania. In
one of their letters we finl the following in
raference to the .extensive iron works at
Johnstown, nt t he western bate of the Alle
gheny Mountains :
"in our last we promised to pay some !
more of Johnstown, its people and their em- i
plovers. In a few words we will redeem our j
promise. We find tlie men of this place j
more thoroughly in the hands of their em-
ployers than in any place we have yet vis- j
ited. Wages ar lower and men more timid j
in asking tor their rights than any where else :
in the western coal fields we have visited.
In fact they scarcely dare breathe of such a i
thing.
"Miners' wages average nnont forty do.-
i.ug er monlh This is the highest arr-
o.. f.,;t ,r ,..r !..
U'sa ,favurc'1, consi.lerably loss-say .Jl lb j
; hk-h von mav nurchaso anvthiny from
a needle to a crowbar, or from a cracker to
a u:tneI1 01 UuUr Vpy KePV occ nepart-
K(;nt for rcetk.Si a() for ;).,r ami f,n
auJ anut),er f(ir 6,y pootlS) rr tr;ri)
and b"3 -s' clothing, a hat, cap and shoe store
and a tutcher s'ore tuns supplying their
,llcn wilh evervtLing thev need for their
Jamily necessities, pacing them low wages.
and taking the money lack again in their
stores. Our leadcis may therefore judge
uf themselves how much nmnev it will take
to I a' ,1,e n:tn tmp'-'rd by ihe Cam
lion & Coal Co. This is one of tlie lar
bii.i 1
jrnst i
monopolies of the Siaie of Pennsylvania, and !
at the bead of t lie company is Hon. Daniel
i J. Morrel!, of tariff nutoiiety. When we i
.",rrt'':' v f:iri
visited this place w
e were more than ever
Htistie.l that we would rather have a union
of the workiug mmi witnout a tanlt, than !
have a tarift without a union.
j "lieie is a tariff chain ion professing to
seek for p;oc clion to American LuhisUy
P:l.v,n5 l,;en mea j, lo. sluve wages.
Out upon Mich huu. buggery J Dtn Moireli's
I America a industry, like B'iU 15 i:inau's.
means the good and benefit of Capital, and
that alone. Money is Cueir G od . and fir
mat they win p. ay the hypocrite, Knave ami
public robber, wilh unblushing t.ices. We
Pe'ieve in protection to American industn,.
but we have no faith in such men a thes-c
God help the poor man iu Ihe hands of the
Cambria Iron Co."
To this we may add that Daniel J. Mor-
reil is not only a heavy stock holder anil
head manager of the Cambiia Iron Woiks,
but he is ttie Radical nieinher of Congress
, ., , ,, . . . .
troio Seventeenth district.. rift is i.resi-
dent of ihe Tariff League, and in Congress
hist winter labored so succt ssfuliy as to se-
I rliA o lil'.li t'lrff ... I Icf. . . . .l- t c. 1 urn. .
(u. .iiich bis company uie now prepared i
I r...nofa,.t on. I w . m nod iA i r i..
almost every branch of businees is absorled
by the gigantic monopoly. Ti.e company
have shops of all kiuds, over each ot which
js a ..ii(sm ihrm they enter into
competition with every individual earring on
?"
citizens, furnihing stone, brick and lumber;
d;, the pawning, glazing, papering, tinning,
dumbing, aud, when finished, l'r. in their
i 'l-K ..-;n 1 l l . . .1
v .1 ...r . . : ... n .
. . ' . '
1 iiira with furniture an'i n o!.. i'-t. i u
Th
.
njaku wngous alul felt.ilIS coais and p.DS, I
hxta and idiots, and are not above actinc '
- - t .
ey
the part of miiiii tis. They have also a
W0"Ie tory near the town of very large
rornr:rv nr.t tiro Inn nvbcK t S t.-.t (jtnvi.i-l
upoc l.i a con.-id-rabie village isgro'w- j
iug rp r.rout d it. The factory when fully
, completed Win be One ot the largest m the j
All around that region nature has lavishly
scattered iron ore, coal, and other mineral.
so that mining (or drifting) and smelting
than in anv other nart of theconntrv. Gi.hI
- - . ..
an-1 ore lie in veins one above another ia tbe
hibs all around the woiks, and tlie distance
from where the ore is taktn (rvrn it , ,
. , . , . . , ., . , 1
bed to the place where tbe metal appears
as shining Meet is not mere than a coup e
. , , , v. . ... . ,. .. .'
hundred yards. Notwi Uistandi-m all these
facilities and advantages i.i manufacturing.
tl'e Wf,Ss 'f the workmen not only coal
and ore miners, but pud'ers, heatirs. help-
tr8 Rf.d mechanics of all trades-are cut
down to the very lowest. Only those who
occupy controlling positions receive compe
tent, salaries
The manager of the wotks has been re
nominated lor Congress and will necessarily
be elected, notwithstanding there was strong
opposition to him in the other counties of
the d strict. Neither tlie company he rep
resents nor the Tariff League can afford to
allow his defeat, ami if fifty thousand dollars
are required, it may not be withtld.
Mai.kixant Pif.ty. This cutious case is
reported in Indiana :
Miss Lizzie Lanker, of Richmond, in that
State, was engaged to be married to Milton
Birely a persen of large matrimonial cx-
i pcrienceand felicity, who has had tour wives'
variously disposed of by me.thods not men
tioned. At the time appointed for his latest
wedding Birely instead of awaiting th. ar
rival of Lizzie, concluded after a brief delay
that she had changed her mind, and with
remarkable promptitude secured vengeance
upon her and consolation for himself by es
pousing another woman, who had come to
wituesist he ceremony Luclnda Morrison.
But Lizzie had not changed her mind. She
had been detained by railroad irregularity
and arrived at the church just after the mar
riage had been perfected. She listened so
quietly to the offered explanation that the
false lover and his accomplice in treachery
? opposed . they .were forgiven. This belief
was strengthened when Lizzie exclaimed :
Let us pray !" and all fell upon their knees.
Then did the betrajed betrothed calmly pour
forth what was more like Lear's curse than
a devout supplication or thanksgiving. She
prayed for herself and for power to bear her
humiliation, but her successful rival was the
subject of most earnest appeal : "Have mer
cy on this new wife. While I thank Thee,
O God, for my deliverance from such a fickle
husband, from such a pitiable creature. I
would ask Thy blessing npon his poor wife.
Give her grace, to bear the affliction of such
a husband. Keep him from drink, and may
he become a better man. Watch over me,
our Father, and preserve me from ever again
approaching so nearly to utter ruin. Give
me strength to return to my home and pre
serve my sex from such men."
' A few months ago a beardless young
man in his travels viseted Meriden, Conn.,
among other places, selling hoop skirts, cor
sets. &c. To aid in gaining access to that
portion of the population who use such arti
cles, he dressed in woman's ap pearl and
aided in fitting the articles on hi? custom
ers. Another man trying the same game;
though with a difi'crent article, has been
discovered.
The Burning Forest of Cnnatla.
Making All lne allowance for the cx.pcr-
ations of newspaper correspondents." wc are
comnellt-d to believe that a tire of uur.rece
dented magnitude has made widt-spreHd
ruin in Cauada, and is yet ragingjn tMe
neighborhood of Ottawa, the capital of the
dominion. This lire has been binning for
several wcths, but it seems to have leached
its height in the woods aronml Ottawa, on
the 18th, when the citizens feared h-s-t the
whole town might lie laid in ashes. It was
dangerous to he out of doors on Account vl
the furious blast of smoke and Ihiders that
swept through the streets.
The condition of the city, indeed, as de
scribed hy eye w Pnessesi recalls the darkness
and terror of Pompeii, eighteen hundred
years ai;o, just before the lava stream of
Vesuvius poured down upon its devoted iri
habitants. The light cf d.ty had been oi-
scuied even while dav yet lingered, ami
afier nightfall the duM rod glare from tbe
blaring forest wau only fitfully seen through
the dense smoky atmosphere. We can well
believe the volumes of nn- ke to have been
blinding m Canada, when it is asserted and
possibly btdieved bt son that las; night
they reached Long I.laLd Sound, ai.tl made
it so murky as to retard the ariival ;n this
citv of the Pall Kiver boats.
The loss of life aitetiriing ti e fire is a'ready
known to o: Ctiitsidcrabh;. and the? distress
ot t!ie Uanall;u country people :ind the ie-
s! ruction of property occasioned by it mio.t
he great. Two thousand persons, wo r.re
... i i..... .i .1 i..... ... ...... .....
coin, nave uecu renoeifu iiiii:e:t-r-, n:-- (uc
value of the barns, ciops ami tarni hu.scs
C'-!s'.inicd is est'rcattd at two miiiions 1!
doliars. New York Ereniifg I'oxl.
Ottawa. August 21. I-arpo srtrnr: have
ueen siios.-noe.: here rr ins rerei 01 triiu'r
ers by the late fires, and the government
will, probably giant assistai.ee. Lin;e
numbeis r f people are living uuder t.nts
loaned by the governor;
Sir John McDonald, whoso health is f'-m-
pletely restored, is xjected here in a few :
days. j
SIontke.il. Aliens!; 24- Immense fires I
are racing in the woods back of the vii:e j
of Ashton. The village has been saved I y j
cutting down trees to make a gap between j
the wo'ls and. the vi'.'age. T'le. devatai ion I
is fireat bvtween Ashton and Sratsviile.
O iiv ne r two houses are left unharmed, i
St. John's. N. B., August 24 Heavy !
fires ate raging m ihe woods a!o:ji tha bouu j
rlary of New Brunswick and the Stato of;
Maine. Tbe -haibor of Sr. Ami'cw, last '
mailt, was ilhimin.V.ed bv suru.undii " fires.
Several villages in Charlotte couu'y are a Ino
severely Mifiering.
According to the lafpst roports, tlie fires
are still burning. The two villages of I'.eli'o
Gorners ami Alaticli turners have leen en-
tirelv burned, as probably, are Buckingham
j-nd'nthers ; hundreds of people are leme
le.-s and mined; millions of property aie
destroved. Worse than ult, it is feaied that
manv persons have been overtaken, arid
h-jvc rc-t i--Ied in the fl-tines. "The w bobr
townshin of Terntveron." we are told, ' is
one blackened wi!der:is of desolation."
Ufm a n k a nt.K Cash f i'r.TR'F.u-rny.-
A writer bom Ileao'ini; to the I'lttsbur
"irviViu i:,t.t;rr:l r. bp a rjiii..t.Kt. .....i
apparently well aut bent iented case of pc-tri-
faction cf a bim.r.n body. Mrs. Calhetme
Hippie died at Monrovia, Kansas, on the
22 1 of Febru trv. 1 ;.. in tlie both vear f
her ago. She was buried there on the 2fih.
In December. 163. her hnban.l died ai h's
hi home in i'remoi.t. Schuylkill county,
Pennsylvania, n questing thrit his wife's re- '
m;-.ins be brought and buried by his side in ;
Tremoat Cemetery. On the 2vi h of J Vor na '
ay. 1SG9, three year, after the mother had
been buried, the grave was opened, and after
the removal of the covering of the outer cof i
fin it was discovered that b. tit cofans were ;
tiiie l with a dark colored water, and on '
raising the coffin to the eurface of tiie earth ;
they found it to be remarkably heavy. The !
cofiin was emptied ..f the water, aud on ex-
atr.iuition of the body it was pronounced by j
those present complete? if pttrifbul. Tho color
of the face and bands was, peihaps. two j
shades darker than natural, and somewhat i
resembling a varnir-hd surface. The tea-
tures were as full and pt-iftct as when she
was alive, so that all who had known her,
and came to see her remains, instantly re j
coirnized the well-remembered countenance.
Tne body remained exposed to atmospheric
inltuerice for f ur days in order to ascertain
whether any change would takn p!-'co prep
aratory to its transportation eastward. No
change whatever wan manifest. The tctnu'ii j
were roughly handled at all transfer points, j
were transported fourteen hundred miles by i
rail, aud before the burial at Trcmont the t
body was arain examined bv Dr. Prevost. of
that place, and found to be" thoroughly pet- j was discovered that they were all deaf, ap
rified, and in the same condition as it was I parently beyond relief. One of them is now
when taken out of the crave. ! ln tKC c'- .V f-T treatment, though we have
A Drt Tdrti-q as Stouy. A strange story i
is told by a correspondent of tbe Albingdon j
Virginian, which vouches for its truthfulness i
in every particular. We give the substance
cf his statement for what it is worth. He i
says he saw on the 2d instant a Confederate j
lieuten.int named Parker, who had been I
confined since lSb2 at the Dry Tortusas as
a piisonerof war until June hist. Parker
says there are still about three thousand men
on the island, who have no means to pay
their passage and n'o way to make money
enough to do so. They wcro all released at
the close cf the war. but had no means of
communication with their friends, and they
are still there in the mo&t wretched condi
tion, their only means of support being de
rived from labor at the levees at fifty cents
per month and by begging. Parker "worked
over five years at fifty cents per month and
saved ,r3b.50, with which he paid his fire to
New Orleans, from which place he has
walked since the 7th of June. beir"hv7 his
way. lie is in a most pitiable condition,
being entirely blind in one eye and very
nearly so in the other, caused by exposure,
and very lame and crippled un from bmsr
wrtio..-,, im b.i)s mo poor tl lows- on the
.t. . tt .1 f .. .
isiaoo are praying lor rcuci Irom their Mends,
but he does cot know how that relief can be
afforded, as he seems to be onlirely ignorant
of the means of communication with the is
land, and only knows that vessels go there
for coffee.
Another advance toward practical mis
cegenation has been achieved by the leading
Radicals of Indiana. Negroes and whites
are now indiscriminately mixed up in the
State Normal School. In the language of
the Terre Haute Journal, "they occupy the
same class rooms, and recile together in the
same clasess." In a short time, some one
of the colored brethren will run off with a
white girl iu the neighborhood, ami then her
parents "would like it pretty well." But
it is a part of the Fifteenth Amedment sys
tem, and the faithful must accept the situa
tion.
The Lacona Democrat Bays fhat a
couple recently married in Gilford, N. II.,
after two weeks' experience, of the sweets of
matrimony, havedissolved partnership with
out tho intervention of a court. She said
she wouldn't live with him, and he said he
would give her a hundred dollars to quit.
Sins look the greenbacks aud wcut.
General Xeus Items.
Senator Morgan,- of Mlsspni, with.
j his dusky bride, had to ride id the adorer.
tour.
A r'li'nnthronic Tndianian
and his ;
mesei.t soouse have charitably offered an j
t .
axylum to one of his former wives, who has :
become an invalid tincf her last divorce.
Hy ; curious coincidence fivenaniCS on j
one page in the Norwich C:ty Directory f.,r j
1870 read : -S'.aek Thomas, Slow George, '
Slv John. Small Nathan and Smart Mary.
Andrew liut!er slipped and fell upon a the upi r j.:irt f Uir ;
revolving saw in Jefferson cotioty a lew .lays ui.. wnMrtmscf th:,,.ni vi,.
ago, splitting his bead open to the neck and j the Interior, and the r.xu-vu.r." '"'"X
fevering one arm from his body. He leaves Thocntfriorat.c-.ru i. T
a wifu aud five children.
(i;et;eral I'.utlcr lately made apphcitiori 1Jri:M. ,., ,I)V, v lx t i.
for all the pensions due to a.'I the .(!. tiers it;
national asylum;.'; but with the mott re-pie-hensiblt!
want of confidence the commissioner
I refused to trust hint. Another investigating (
! committee should be immediately ca'hd for. j
j The Vet roio Spcclifor says: "Whit
j i few weeks ago was the gamboling gn.unds ,
j ,.( t! ytinds of r.-it'I .nkss copperheads, ami 1
I other natives of the wi.d w o ls, id now Fa- ,
j fnindiu city, with one thousand itihabitan's. ;
;l Meiho.iist clmrtli under headway, ai.J a j
; wilderness -f tivrricks.''
( The
iieroic c-n!uct oi ...irs. iipain i various lurol i.,ns. Iff,,.-..
I TrintblPj in saving the life of a mar. named : and jrt,1)!iV l:.inY ,.,
! Uchaligblin recentH'. at Musi, rvi iss,. n is ;
1 ereited so much admiration that s sid scrip- 1
i (;or, has been opened wilh a view of pie. en t- :
;i
e h-.dy with something tubstai.ti.il a ; .,'.... ;. 'J, ' "",!"
a mark if pubiio appreciation-. ' so;ir-s. ' 1 '"'
The y-.n)g?.-st aeronaut in the United j
States is a bov ti.imcd V. rd. at l'ou-hkeepsic. I ''t"r. on JMirrw wnm.- v. ::.
Although en'y ihiitecii years ot" age, he l a.,
made mole than fifty ascensions. a:.d hoks
forward v;ith no l.ttle eagerr-Css t) !!:: time
woeu he may travel across the continent in
a ballon made tinder his own dirtei-i-'ii.
A military cU: any paraded at iioston
a few days ago, with twer.ty-t'o men hear
ing muskets rod twenty-three placing ?u
musical in-ttutn"nts. . Thi has always bten
the way with Massachus-tta. We have
ntvei yet hail a war in which t-ht-did n;t
do a great deal me re b!fr.ving than fighting.
Twob'mfidi. united ala Siamese twins,
were caught in thv Great S .nth ly,
n'jeticut, week b-fre last. The taiss and
firs were grown together f r sevt-rai inches,
the heads and tnils be ing nearly at riii.t
rnyies w sin ea.cn i.er. u is whovm iron
no finny pair were ever f-nuu before with
such a finny tie to unite them.
An investigation is beinrr made ir.t
affairs of the late Philip 11. M'-tz. the banker h5V arrr-i d !yj.-.iria.or ci.Ti
who crmtT;ited Mitcide at l'.fsl urh, last I
1'ridav w-ek. His Iiab;ii:iei accriiP2 to ;
the latest report, add up $?-3.bnO, an.l the ;
available ch assets S-'i ;)- Tiio stram:- i
j est part of the investigation thus lor is the :
; -lisappearance of J 59 ,000 in bonds of recent j
' purchase and de; osit. ;
. During a shower m L-i.ity. It , lst
; we
k. a conp'e of men upon the edge of a
I p'n 1
w tin h-! jnst puded ashore fr-m a fis.i-
' ins expot itiop,
received a severe shock Ircm
' triL-:r.., ..f -i t I . i. . i .I... I ii .1 r in fl.xo i rni.
; -v.r.'y to th.f-tn. Ore of ti e men. Wi'bnr I
j Merrill, of Ch-.ru st . -.vn, N. II.. who has!
I beu .'e.if ev.-r s:nce hi- y. u!h. was resto'f-d j
S t o eo'H U ; en n Ti i! v the napt.y cuat'ce. ucii
, .... .
a" ,T,,lt. tl'liS l:u'i, is tep-r'.ed as.
i lrue pemveninre.
-T! e New York
i iiiics r r
-.aik. it
fam.v w-:is a ro.-st smju ar i.ict tint no oin-
rial represent if ivo of the government ws
I pre t at Adm ral lirra tit's 'it., ral. V-t
week. Sin-ihtr in.lt el. General Grant
i . - i
was at Long Branch, while the old fighting
sai'oi's remains' were b i: g b me to thvir
lo-t repose. Why wis lu not present to
represent tlie government on this occasion ?
lie can travel hundreds of mi'cs to see a
hor.-e race, but rot a f .ot to h -nor th-1 man
who spent bis 1'fe hi the service of the nation,
and Under its flag.
--The following reports were k'.l'ed by
one stro'ie of lightnii g at Kingston, N Y .
near Bailey's circus tent, ou Tii'trsd ty rdeht
Ust : Edzibeth N-v.k'nk, of Iluriey ; Jane
Montague, of Marbletown ; Arthur S? tt, of
Kingston ; James Bosh, of Marbletows, a!!
colored, and a-i unknown man supposed to
be W. J. livers n. Ab nt ty persons in
the immediate vicinity were knocked down.
Inside the circus ttnt scons were stunned,
and quite a number slightly burne 1 by light
ning. Several pc-sens had their hats and
bhoes torn from them.
The Memphis (Terr.) Ledger prtys :
"A very strange report comei up from Hel
ena. Ark., on apparer tly go-.d authority.
S'.me day? or evening jji live voiing men
passed a few hours together in a social man
ner at one of their rooms, and separated for
tbe night as young men usually do, without
anv unusual occurrence. Next morning it
' nf' met him. These are the leadiug features
of this remarkable event, as related by a ' Should any doubt Mr. McCone '
senlleman who came up from Helena last . ho refers to tho followim.' pent: '
wet !; : but it seems so incredible that we
give it only as a rumor, and forbear giving
names or fmthor particulars at present."
REDUCTION $ PRICES!
FOR CASH!
TO CLOSE OUT MY ENTIRE STOCK
OP
Glass Fruit Jars,-&c.
rpO MAKE BOOM ion othki: Goods
J I will sell for the next FIFTKEX PAYS :
J lirt :irSH. Tin Top njul AViro. fil.OS
1 i"rl Hero .inm 8U.OO or Inz.
-i.no por tUr..
.IIO - ... r
; : !; Jnrs,
; I nunrt XI. ,!nm l.'in i)ri'i7.
- iiart I'n.loeltir Jars,... fJ.OO iitr lox.
1 (ttart Hello Jjtr -j.so pordoi.
Tilt Cans, 1 rpiart. a pints, and 2 quarts, vr.itv
Iii:Af; One bushel P.ist.-. t. fj to r ..o,,,.
0 .'sm-is. :t oi
t lv.t'.ie Ilaskots. ;K cents to I.IVI; Toilet S-ts.'
i ' rout to o.H) per set of thrc-o Pieces
frijfcrators, AVuter-Coolors, llaUi-Tubs,
10 PEfl CE5T. LSS THM CITY PRICES
rThesc price are strietl v fash when eoo.ls
ere taken away. A lurK-o stock of Brass Kettles,
I nt ware, Kiianiele.i Ware. Housokeopii!"- Goods
and ( ook Stoves, c. at prices to please.
CALI AT
IV. 2SO AVnililiiKton S(reo( ,
.70M.V.SIOH A', l'A.f
AM) EXAMINE lOU YOritSELVESl
FRANK W. If A Y.
Johnstown, Aupr. 12, 10.-2m.
l'MTFD SIXt UITY
life mim a trhst gompaby
OF f'K.V.YS17.r.bht.
CAAriiRTA COUNTY AGEXCV.
E. If. PUNK, M. T., I GEO. A. IIEUKY,
Malical Uxaniiiter. Aytnt.
Kloiivlirft-, It.
k.V rOLICIES XO-V-EtUlKKITABLK. S-H.-tf.l
Is llrifrlitor, will not KaiTe, Costs I.os than anv '
othr-r boenus' it will l'ainttwii-e
hs tutu h siirfaet.
SOLD BV A 1. 1. IKAI.EK IX
J. II. 1VKKKS & ro Mannfacturcr
ill-) Xnrth 4th .Street, lliihiitct prot.
Tho KHlnr r.3 ;
two
file, or veins, hi ),
rvr 8
U I
ri';r is a eoty'ru-tor
tui to. ;mit iiil:-il t,
lieeteil with the M;;:', !,
V.
t'n..:C: ,
r. Th,n
The Ma'l.ler U eo-i m :
or tiroes rtivi.h-l intor.amv:.
the I.wtr, the NVn ,:J,'
"o; p-r sjm-K the lew. r r. ;:';'V
l.-ii-o to mk-ate .,(,, ; ''''
UrillKttr Wit hoot Ihe ; 1 i I T y ?(1 ',
joently occurs in i,i!,ir,
To euro tl;. ye iiiT. tu r. ...
' aet'ii tho OMT-f li t- ,..t,:..t. .
. f w . ."i':'ii..
i ho r i'.l.-r mu-t :,i , ,,
he w -ever slisrht may 1. the -tv!
,1... 1. i
(UTI.iP 111 J
rs'-:t .
-p'-a-.l t-.a.-i,;
eht Iky siT'tiois.
Ut et or ;;:pr-..; r tr. atia.-nt ,f
Tln-se orartiiK bi-io w. ak. ti .
pe:h-.l from thel : r. ;,.lt
it or -oi:;es fev-rih, and h
tr.-i:i tht-idepor.it that th.-st..r.-jjnivf-l
'i;?i!ofii
I
ton
;s a e.
' wutfrh:.-,.
of the
i.f.rle.
i"v to tlie purr afTi te.;, v .
t1:ui--.-4 oer the tM.ly, it i .
when of the iil-.ii.jnr-ii. ,
t-h est , I f y1 rot h - na x .
TitrAT.VTNT. Tie!:,.; -.' ' Vs I,-.;,
t'-'l cninpf.uncl Kxirac t huhi: is ."
?T the best rr-molic - f. ,r i!( a , ,
ki.incys. prvel. 1rop- ier.l w,
tisni.ard fr.a.fy :i:T r-rious. pn
,.a-.n;r v. :i..-r. .i-.'r.ry ."( ri ti". ,
frequent ''.i.--!-o-ir ,f n-a'.r: :
i-ioppiv.-r Of wat'-r : I T.--ioi I oria, r-j
fjotit ar.r! Itheoinatism T ?!!. !:
any change in f.rian:iy. !;:
or dark water. It was n!irn-.-s ;
m.-n.ted by tli' late l)r. rfcy-iik.
tions.
i Th? rricdiofno iner-.""!' t!- r
! tion ;.rl ofi-s t!:.- :.h- i r- -. I
j tion l-.y which the wM.-ry r.r .
i tions, nl ail rr.h.ttiirril f!i':;-'.-j
as pain and inl; iiiiitio.i. ;;re r
j taken by men. voruen, ;::.! c!
t u ii.- tor use ami .:: aee i: ; ,.:i
v.
I IH'i.. r ri .. ?.... r '
' If. T. IIr.l.MK.l.l.. I ::
Peak Sir I have i e.-:; ;, -k-Tt:-'. '
j of twenty year, with i-r-vt . ! :...';! i
j noy affection. d:r-:i.y w r.telj ' ':. 1
; varfo', i- m--!-!.!' -.'-jr. pr.-. ;i.-.o:i -. , '
t!;o troattnent of f.:e i:r-;
i rserioncinr but1' trie r. !:.
Ttavtnjr scort your pv; :;rst:cr
advorttM-d, I co!--::;: '-.1 ;;i ny U.
j tian In rejr.trd to n;n- j ..ur i'.v. -o
j I rtid Ihi- because i r-.-i -. ;j kir.
! t!-fl !i-iMe-.".!i's an l ha 1 foroi 1 t!r :r
: ar.'t sni!io(.i;iii' L:ji:r:o : inf:-.?. I
1 or ever jroittnjf well, and defenrir.'-'
i rowdies thercaft. r tmlcs I k:i-vr :
i uionrs. It wh this that pr
i yostr rowdy. A you mh. ; '. :
; oo:nposc-.l i -f boeh'.:, ei:b-t :t::.l j !' '
i 11 .Kt-Orred to nti'atd tay j.l;y-:;-: sr.
j lent eoinbio.-it ion. and. wit't !,.'-
! oxutPtr.ation f ih pi tieh-.r:: io .
v-ith tho rtrujryist, rv.iH'.a.J. -i p :rv
i menof.i Jtsus!tt.o;it -i-'..t ia!.:.;:.--.-!
tifoe I was cirnf!!'. d to my
' t'Ottte I wasast 'l.i. U. d ,rr..t:.:..p
! e!'u ia! ePVcr. nod .: ri"r ' it ie- '
! nblo to walk out. T f. it nr.-eh ':' "''r
! a statement of riy . n-.-at ih-it tinv.
inyimpi-iircinnt ntitrht on'y 1
tnoi'toro eonehniod too. i. r;
.. r
j t tTeet a perfect euro, hnowiiv "
' of (;Tci!ter a!ue to you and mere:
j to lllOi
i lam how able i rop'-t t!:at a "'f
i after ttsi ha: the rem"ly f. r i.cv:. "
t T have riot u-ed nnv ii"" f.r !'r
j and foi.d as well in all
I Your Hiichu t.cini.-
r. pee!
devoid,
tonic ;.
d.v
taste and odor, a nie;
: the system, I do net tnov.n to be n
I ever occasion may require i: ;"
tio;is. :.yj
i Hon. William iPoirr
i x-r.
I sylvania.
! lion. Tnos. V nTtFNCT. rhl!:: '' : " "
Hon. J. ('. Knox. Jtidu-e. l'h;:'
Hon. J. S. lli.AOK. J-.s-'h-o. rhiia ! '"--
Hon. It. !t. Poi;ti:i:. cx-CJ.'v. ni.r..'
; nia.
Hon. Km.is Lr.wi. Ji;d'. TV-l :
j Hon. W. A. 1i;ti:k. City S "r-1
plua.
Hon. Jons P.ioi.fr. ex-Coveni'
Hon. K. Hanks, Auditor (o i!
ton, H. t
And manv others, if rrcefsary.
V.;
r-V" Sold by Pru-i:i-t-! '!'! r'r
where. IV-wareof eouiUerOits. A
hold's. Take no other. Thick-
or siv bottles for -.V. P
rlress. Desetibe syinpton
tions.
in
all
Ke-
H. T. HELMBOLD.
Bill AO li
11 U
Stll Xtroattw.-rj, w
rM.Kss
'$r.
Done up in Steel Engrav
wrrn
FAC-SIKILE OF MYChEMiC.H
June St, 1ST0.-1.V.