Cambria JTrr cm au EDOSBCnti, PA. Saturday Morning, : : June 29, 1872. tl mt Ke-atf atiee. ron nova-ahon CHAR. R- BUCKALEW, of ColumbU County ron tcrskitK jcikjb i JAMB8 TTaOMPSOW, of Erie County. WILLIAM HARTLET, of Bedford County, ron coKORisajK.' at larok: RICHARD VAUX. ot Philadelphia. JAMK8 U. HOPKINS, of rittsburyh. BEMjIHCK U. WIUUIIT. of Luzerne County. VtU&ite to OmMitutkmal Omvtntivn: I. Oiohoi T. Woodward, Philadelphia. 3. JBBKMIAB B. I1LACK, York. a. Wiixiam Biolir, Clearfield. 4. Wiluam J. Baku, Somerset. 5. Wiixiam II. Smith, Allegheny. . P. B. tiuwu, Philadelphia. 7. Joni II. Campbkix, Philadelphia. t. 8. II. Rbymoumi, Lancaster. , JmM Ellis, Bchuylktll. la 8. C. T. Dodd, Venango. It. O. M. Dallaa. Philadelphia. 12. R. A. LmuHTOii, Dauphin. 13. A. A. Pdrman, Greene. 14. William M. Curbir, Clarion, KUctim SKatrial . Etmjab Cow aw, of Westmoreland County. UBOtoa W. Skibbkm, of Franklin County. EUetortReprtM ntatitt. fts-Lbn Marvin, of Brie, JOB 8. Millx. of Huntlng-doo. b. Ubom Fur, oi Philadelphia. iXf. 13. I. Loweaberg. 14. J. M'Knlght. 15. Henry Welsh. 1. Thomas J. Barker. 2. Stephen Anderson, a. jThn Moffat. 4. George It. Barrel. 6. (Not asreed upon,) e. Isaiah B. Houpt. 7. Baiouel A- Dyer. 5. Jesse B. Hawley. . II. B. Swarr. M. B. Riley. 11. John svunkle. 12. F. W. Gunster. 10. jienry J. Htabley. 17. R. W. Christy. 18. William P. Log-an. ID. R. B. Brown. 20. P. M. Robinson. 21. J. It, Molten. 22- T. II. Stevenson. 23. John B. Bard. 14. George W. Miller. Xemwei-t.cle Cewnty Ha-ainatleae .Assembly JOTIX HANNAN, Johnstown. Bta. and Rtc. JAS. M. 81NOEH. Jackson Twi CommiUncT AKTHONY ANNA, Chest Twp, , xj. jtrKQivt jurm hiajjm, jonpstown. .Auditor PETER DOCOHEUir, SuiainltviUe, The Trouble or Itao "Tribune." The editorof the Johnstown Tribune, with a courage almost heroic, returns in his last paper to his stereotyped assault on the County Commissioners for their refusal to enforce Stmuel Henry's atttmpt to pass an act of Assembly changing the mode of collecting taxes in Cambria county. We will pass by his insinua tions against the Commissioners, all of which we have disposed of heretofore, and will refer once more to the facts con nected with tin passage ot this act, which, so far as the member from Cambria is concerned, is a burlesque on legislation. lne first section of the bill provides "That from and after the passage of this act, it should be the duty of the Com missioners of Cambria county, in each suid every year immediately after the as sessment of taxes for State and County purposes shall be completed, not laUr than the Jtrt Monday in April, to cause their clerk to make out a fair duplicate of H seated real estate and personal property assessed, with the taxes thereon, in a convenient form, and deliver the same to the Treasurer of said county,' Ac. This ie tbe first and controlling section of sam el Henry's tax bill, which is ns frail and rickety as a specimen of legislation as was the celebrated house that Jack built. This bill was introduced into the House iu March, and it is to be presumed that its author carefully watched the progress of his own legislative bantling from its birth to maturity. That such a law was In coatemplation, was kept a profound secret, and the first notice the Commiss ioners ever had of its passage was on the 9th of April, the day after tbe Governor iigned it, and eight days after it was to go into operation by tbe terms of the first section. It is not denied that the bill passed the Senate on the third of April, and yet it was to take effect on the Jirtt day of that month, and "not later." Mr. Henry knew, or ought to hare known, that tbe first Monday in April was the first day of the month, and that on that day tbe bill had not passed tbe Senate, and was therefore no law at alL Jn other words, a bill which did not become a law until it was approved by tbe Governor on the 8th of April was permitted to pass in such a shape as to require tbe Commiss ioners to execute it on the Jirst diy of that month, and "uot later." Could legislative bungling and stupidity go further I Why did not Samuel Henry, when the bill was before the Senate on tbe third of April, get bis friend Harry White to amend it, by striking out the words "not later than the first Monday in April," and insert "not later than tbe first Monday in May?' This would have obviated all difficulty, and would have given the Commissioners fair and reasonable notice of what tbey were re quired to do. Hat this was not done ; and now tbe Commissioners are fiercely denounced for not enforcing a law, which, by its own terms, so far as the year 1872 :s concerned, defeated itself. The opinion of the Attorney General, upon which the Tribune places so much reliance, is in the hand-writing of one of bis deputies or clerks, and shows conclusively that be tnows as little about tbe construction of an act of Assembly as he does about tbe language of the Choctaw, jfol even a layman, much less a lawyer, will stultify himself by saying that an act of the Legislature approved on tbe 8th of April could be enforced on the Jlrtt day of the lame month. The mere statement of the proposition carries with it its own refuta- tioo. How much weight oaght to be given to aa opinion of the present Attor ' ney General on this or any other question may be estimated frero the fact, that on the 17th of February, 1871 x be ycrote a message for John W. Geary 'vetoing a supplement to the District Court bill, in 1 which be "earnestly recommended the repeal of the original act ot the ISttVof April, 1869, establishing the Court, and then in September, 1871, seven months afterward, if John W. Geary told the 1 truth in his telegraphic dispatch to Sheriff Honacker, advised Geary to revive the District Court by the appointment of lames Potts as President Judge and George T. Swank as Cleik. The opin ion of suck an Attorney General is not worth anything more, so far as honetty is concerned, than would be the decision of a Judge reversing his own former opinion, upon the same law and facts, in a given case. In the case referred te by the Tribune, in 16 Smith, it is inly necessary to say that the language of the Act of Assembly in that case is entirely different from and bears no analogy to that contained in the Cambria county tax law. We will now dismiss this subject finally, and merely add that if the editor of the Tribune sup poses be can make any political capital for Samuel Henry by denouncing the Commissioners for their course in refer ence to the tax law, in favor of whose passage not a single petition was ever seen in any part of the county, he is at liberty to iodulge his morbid taste in that reprehensible way to his heart's content- usque ad nauseam. Tbe Difference. - The marked difference between Charles It. Buckalew and John F. Hartranft. in an intellectual point of view, was made conspicuously, and, to an intelligent Republican, painfully manifest, in the speeches which tbey delivered to the con ventions by which they were nominated. We have already published Mr. Buck a lew's admirable addiess, and it need not be reproduced here. It was able, digni fied, and patriotic, and showed him to be an honest man and an enlightened states man The Philadelphia Frets pronounced it a patriotic effort, and tne which carries us back to the early days of the Republic, when honesty and intelligence were tbe standards of fitness for office." When Hartranft was nominated by the "ring and rowdy ' radical convention at Harrisburg, the Philadelphia Inquirtr, a Republican paper, reported his speech as follows : Mujor General John F. Hartranft was then introduced. This Was a signal lor prolonged applaue and cbeeta As soon as order was restored be commenced bis remarks by thank log tbe audience for tbe flattering reception, and said he expected that he would often meet his Philadelphia friends during the summer. He felt, without regard to himself, great hopes of tbe ultimate result of the republican ticket. In 1668 it was necessary for the good of the country that General Grant should be elected, snd every man uow who is not ii.ilueuced by private disappointment or greed of office be heves that it is not only a necesvity tbat be should be retained in office, but a military uecejsity ! He here begged the audiei.ee to excuse him from any lurther remarks, and bowing, returned to bis seat on the stage. This impromptu burst of eloquence reminds one of the lofty flights John W. Geary, our 'bullet-riddled" Governor, has sometimes reached when be puts on his highest airs of oratory and does his level best to tickle the ears of the groundlings. Geary and Hartranft ! "Arc tdctambo I ' The offensive and disgusting part of this puerile address is the declaration made by John F. Hartranft, seven years after the close of the rebellion, tbat Grant should be retained in office as "a military necessity.' Where is the honest and in telligent Republican in the State who will endorse such an infamous pretense? Hart- ranft's own political friends in Congress have since given it tho lie by passing, in obedience to the thundering demand of the Cincinnati Convention, an amnesty bill, partial in its operation, but still a great advance in that direction. It does not therefore become John F. Hartranft, who superintended all the preliminary preparations for the military murder of Mrs. Surratt, now admitted to have been an innocent woman, to attempt to revive and perpetuate in all their intense bitter ness tbe fierce animosities and burnino hatreds engendered between the North and the South by the civil war, by making tbe senseless and demagogical assertion that tbe re-election of Grant is a "military ne cessity." Military necessity is and always was the plea of tyrants, and in all ages has been the pretext for the commission of the most flagrant assaults upon civil liberty. In this country, aad under radical role, it is nothing more nor less than Grantism. It means the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus and bayonet rule in the South and all over tbe country it means oppression, and is the sum of all political villainies. The people will spurn it, and neither Hartranft nor Grant can ever thus make slaves either of the people 4f this State, or of the Union. The Secretary of the Treasury having found it impracticable to prepare the necessary regulations and instructions for the new tariff bv the first of Julv. it w ill therefore not co into effect until the first of August. General A 15. McCAUsTJst.of Venan go county, was a candidate before the Heading convention for the nomination for Governor. He is a gentleman of high character and acknowledged ability, and although his name in connection wkb the nomination had only been mentioned a short time before the meeting of the convention, he received a highly fluttering support from his own section of the State. After the nomination of Mr. lluckalew, a ratification meeting was held at Titus ville, in the oil regions, fit which Gen. McCalmont delivered as able a speech as we have read for a long time. He dis posed of the radical twaddle about Grant belonging to the working class, in the following neat and summary manner: I confess it would have been au unpardon able political dodjc,e to Lave got p campaign pictures representing Asa racker with a lamp stuck in the iroul of hi cap picking tor au lUraoiie in a damp mine ; and, if your speaker had beeu successful in obtaining the uotniua tion, it would have been rather a shai p prac tice to lepreseut him covered wiib oil aud third sand, in the centre of tbe derrick, handling a large cable with tbe motto over his bead, 'Heboid the sou of toil." Aud yet my friends, is It any less a fraud to attempt to palm off upon the laboring men of tbe couutry a West Point graduate one not merely, as it is mildly put, "educated at tbe public expense," bat alto oue who is paid by tbe public tor tbe labor of learning a man started in lite. Covered with good clothes and buttons, tbe admiration ot tbe girls aud the euvy of tbe boje, wiih a salary out of tbe public treasury larger tbau tbat of many mid dle aged book-keepers aud aveouutauta is it any leas absurd, 1 ask, to foist such a uiau upou tbe co u a try as one of the hardy sons ot labor, and call upon tbe laboring men of tbe country te rally in bis support T The New Jersey Lemocratic State Convention met at Trenton on last Wed nesday, and elected delegates to the Balti more Convention. They tire uninstructed, but are known to be in favor of Greeley and Brown. On the same day, the Geor gia State Convention elected Greeley dcN egates to Baltimore. The same thing was done by the Mississippi Convention on the Mme day. On that day, also, the Democratic aud Liberal Republican Con. ventions of Illinois met at Springfield. The same State ticket, consisting of Re publicans and Democrats, was adopted by both conventions. Tbe candidate for Governor is Gustavus A. Koerner, Re publican, and for Lieutenant Governor, Gen. Charles Black, Democrat. Both conventions endorsed tbe Cincinnati ticket. The following dispatch was received by these two conventions from the Mississip pi Convention, and an appropriate answer returned : "JstCEsoN, Miss., June 20. To the Presi dents Democratic and Liberal Conventions: Tbe democrats aud couserratirea of Mississip pi iu convention assembled scud greetings to tl.e democrats and liberal republicans of Illi nois, and propce toclatp bauds with the great wes; over the bloody chasm made by the war. J. W. Watson, Pretideut." Anotiikr of Grant's most remarkable and disgraceful appointments was made on the occasion of bis recent flying visit from Lon Branch to Washington. A short time before the adjournment cf Congress, a carpet-bagger from Connecti cut, named Clarke, who Lad obtained a seat in tbat body from one of tbe Texas districts under a false and fraudulent certificate from the radical Governor of the State, was unanimously expelled from his seat in the House on a unanimous report by the Committee on Elect ion. tbat he held it by the perpetration of tbe grossest and most palpable frauds. Yet in the face of this verdict of the House ot Representatives, and in violation of Grant s boasted civil service reform, the present postmaster (McKeel is sum ma rily removed on tbe charge of favoring the election of Horace Greeley, and a dishonored Congressman, reeking with the most infamous fraud on tbe ballot box, is appointed to supply his place. Such is Grantism, pure and unalloyed. - Tue following article is from the Grand Rapid Daily Press, published in Michigan on the 24ih. It is Republican authority, and comes from one of the leading radical papers in that State : We have important intelligence from tbe oia w ar uoveruor oi At ictigan, Hon. Austin tiair. it is tbat be win not iu anv event support Graa, and tbat if Greeley is endorsed at Baltimore he will uke tbe stump foe Gree ley. 1 be uoveruor does not conceal bis sen timents. He says that tbe stampede trom Grant to Greeley will not be bv one or tno, but by platoons. He thinks Michigan will go for Greeley, if a cordial union is effected be tween the oppouents of Grant. We hare direct and reliable information from Senator Sumner, and important tacts respecting bis position. He is now preparing a speech upon the finances of tbe countrv, aud the fiuai.cial administration ot President Grant. It will astonish tbe American people wben delivered. Should Greeley be nominated at Baltimore the Senator ia prepared to speak to his countrjmen in favor of the election of Greeley to the Presidency. The Harrisburg Patriot says a letter has been received in that city from Titian J. Coffey, Secretary cf Legation to Gov. Curtin, Minister to Russia, in which he states that he will return te this country in July, and that he will take the stump in favor of the election of Greeley and Brown. Gov. Curtin is coming home about the same time, and it is said that be will do likewise. The Democratic convention in the Third legislative district in Philadelphia met last Wednesday, and nominated the notorious Sam. Josephs for re-election. Tbe men who committed this unpardon able sin against political morality oaht cow to go and hang themselves. ftews of I lie Week Alaska covers 869.62a.C0O acres. Florida hasn't a daily newspaper. - - " New folk's death-rate is the largest in the world. , ; A new style T fan has a vinaigrette in the handle. A Detroit woman struck by lightning shouted for the police. It cost the New York Herald ,20.000 to find Dr. Livingstone. Schuyler Colfax Smith Isngnishes in an Indiana j.vil for horse stealing. A Mount Washington party had some snow balling a dsy or two since. -Rafts over a mile loog are traveling down the Mississippi from Minnesota to New Or leans. Ulysses; the President's second son. sailed from Kw xork on Saturday last for Europe. F. ur men escaped from the Lycoming county ji! on Thursday night week. A re ward of $200 ia offered for their appreh nsion. Negotiations with Germany for the grad ual evacuation of France aa the installments of the indemnity ais paid, are proceeding satisfactorily. The New Hampshire lions s of Represen tatives has elected B Wadleigh. U. 8. Sena tor. He received 204 votes to 18S for Bing ham and 1 for Patterson. Ex-Prssident Johnson has received 4, 000. the amount of income tax on his salary, which has been refunded under a recent judi cial decision in tbe case of President Grant. Tbe eight-hour strike is growing for midable la Philadelphia aa well as New York, though actual success ha act jet crowned the movement iu cither city to any very great exteot. ' A democratic newspaper of Missouri suggests that ibe Hon. Wm. A. Wallace be selected as chairman of the national demo cratic executive committee in the room of August Belmont. A cow and a German woman in Minne sota, under the same yoke, hauled through the day a drag after tbe seeder run by tbe woman's husband with a span of horses. The cow was completely exhausted. A Virginia toll kseper was lately brought before a magistrate for inhumanly beating his lal1htar luring ta ...ti..l t. when she bad charge of the gate, but peimit ted him to drive through free of charge. The best game of bluff iu San Frauciscn is played by a youog girl of eighteen. She has been known to "raise" her epponeat aiu.uvv on a single pair, and is worth quarter of a million, the proceeds of I poker" performances. The steam boiler in tbe yard of the Co-1 iuioous, vnio, renitentiary, exploded on Fiiday last, killing a number of the convicts ana seriously Injuring nearly one hundred. oesiaes doing great injury to the buildings and surrounding property. Miss Teonie C. Clafio has been elected toloneicf the Eiichtv-fifth llimnt M Ynk State Militia (colored), receiving 195 Votes to 60 in f pnoeition. She had ..flr.rl herself to the Niutfa, but tbe members being " ojbu, turn wss defeated. w usve only tscaped the threatened danger of being knocked out of time by some eccentric comet to be menaced by another equally duquieting. Sir Charles Lyell says uo wuoieoi XMortn America will be washed into tbe ocean 4.600.000 veara hence. Tbe Liberal Republican State Commit. tee are now kiting up rooms at the cottheast corner ot Broad and Chestnut streets. Phila delphia. Tbe committe has Hon. A. K. Mc- Oiure lor chairman and Robert Morris t,f Philadelphia, and . U. Sauch, of Lancaster, eecretariea. A franklin farmer while plowing the other day. discovered a number of potato ouge at me Dot torn or tbe furrow. Tbey were apparently frox-n stiff but on beine ex posed to the sun they revived and immediate ly inquired the way to the nearest potato patch. Aud now we find recorded in the papers an account of another venerable clored man who has fallen a victim to the poisonous in- uuence 01 looacco. tie smoked and chewed bimaeir into a decline in the short space of ..v j.t, mua was cut en fnoe-cutj In bis prime at 118. . A gentleman, residing in a neighboring v.ij. recently Became very ill. and told neighbor that ke felt the need of prepara for the neat world, and would like to tion see some proper person in regard to it. w here upon the sympathizing fiieod sent for a fire insurance agent. Tbe editor of tbe Indianapolis Evening journal nas been nbing,and moralizes thus: "Tbe biggest fisb is always the one that got way. As regards fih. all men are liars. Men who adhere to the truth with rigid ex actness. in oiber particulars, lie outrageous ly in the matter of fish. Oue of the most horrid railroad accidents tbat bas happened in this country, occurred near Delleville. Canada, on last Saturday night, it appears the engine jumped the irasa.iogeiber with a number or cars, which telescoped on the locomotive, scalding and atiuutc irsra eo to 7U parson. n ilkes Spirit, once a strong Grant or gan, now says of him: "He was taken on faith a political promissory note with a forged indorsement and so he might now ; but tbe people have the advantage of know, ing him tborougb'y. his tyranny, his faithless-nes-. and his insatiable ambition stand dis closed." The Rev. Mr. Thompson, of the M. E. Church. Leavenworth, in bidding bis friends good-bye, attempted to kiss a young lady, whereupon ber sweetheart, named Brown, who wax present, ran out and got a hatchet and cut Thompson in the bead and ahouider, inflicting a wound from which ke cannot possibly recover. A locomotive n the Pittsburgh, Cincin nati and St. Louis Railroad ran over two un known men. who were lying across the track, near Steubenville.Ohio. on Monday, and sev ered tbeir heads and feet from their bodies. On one of tbe men was found a revolver and a pass-book, with the name of William Lloyd written in it. An attendant at Mount Vernon not long ago observed a lady weeping most bitterly, her haudkerchief to her eyes. Going up to ber he said, "Are you in trouble, madame?" "No. sir," ahe sobbed. "I saw you weep ing." "Ah," she said, "how can one help weeping at the grave of tbe fataer of bis conntry V "Oh indeed, madame." said he. "that's it. The tomb's over jooder. This is the icebrmse." The Villags Record says: Martin Vail, residing in West lir and y wine. Chester coun-. ty, is the possessor of a four legged chicken, that carries off tbe champion belt. No pony fowl is it, only a f0W dayB 0hJ ; it is a year old and lay, four eggs after the manner of bifurcated gallinacaa. It need to walk on all four legs, but seeiog tbat none of its neigh bors went in that manner, it has of late car ned it. extra legs in tbe air. About five hundred Indians held their annual "medicine dance" near Trempealeau, on Sunday, May 1. The ceremonies were conducted by Chief Short Wing, and the in coming medicine man was inaugurated by tripping hint of his clothing, and marching him around thm inrlnanra in a nnJa statu. while all the brave and braveaaee followed. shaking gourds and beating a dtnm. The meet ing was very orderly. J The largest stationary steam-engine In the world is the one receutly erctd at Friedensburg. Schuylkill coUoty, Pa It is 8.000 horse-power weighs 1.800.000 pounds; the heaviest piece weighs 48.000 pounds) the cylinder is 110. inches iu diameter J tbe stroke 10 feet long ; tbe two wrougbt-iron shafts weigh 82.000 pounds each, and tbe crank-pin 2.000 pounds. The Philadelphia Prist shows that In twenty-seven counties of this State Mr. Buckalew will gain more than 11 000 Votes over the ordinary strength of the Democratic party. This ia conceding his election three months before it takes place. If Buckalew should carry the State by 30,000 in October, what will prevent 60.000 majority for Gree ley and Brown in November? Tbe Ojnrt of Common Pleas of Phila delphia, oc the 16th, decided that the illegal adjournment of tbe lower Uouse of the Leg islature last winter for more than three days without the consent of tbe Senate, did not work a dissolution of the Assembly, as the minorDy-liad power to meet and enforce the attendance of the absentees. It is now said the case will go to tbe Supreme Court. "A rumor that Gov. Geary bad been killed in a collision en a railroad at some point west of B ston, while on his way home from the Boston Jubilee, ere a tod considerable excitement on Saturday The fears of bis frieuds were allayed on Sunday by tbe re ceipt of a telegram at Harrisburg, from the Governor biinvclf, stating that he was well. and would return to Harrisburg on Tuesday last. A conductor of a freight train on the New York Central road, recently, wan at first nattered, then amased. and than Indig nant at the fact while passing through Syra cuse everybody made signals to bun and pointed to his train. He finally in his wrath responded by sundry digital gyrations.. which seared Wben be discovered that one of the grain ears was leaking corn at the rate of a bushel a minute. Somebody bas found out that Mrs. H. G. dooa not believe in the election of U. G. This is a great discovery. But ia theimner tine ut fallow who has given it publicity sure . . y X I . a ... - tnai it is rename ana aoihenlici Shortly after Mr. Lincolu entered Upon the presidency some one asked Little Tad : "Uow does your father like to be president V "1 den'i know how pa likes it,w be replied, "but ma litre it brst-rale." Penioners. on account of the Iocs of aftV members of the body, are, under Act of June 6th. 1S66. entitled to an increase by the Act of Ctngreas passed May 27tb, 1872. No lawyers need apply their persuasion to secure tbe amount for tbe pensioner, as the old pension papers will be sufficient to extabliRb the claim wbeuever it will be allowed. Th Department will soon issue special instruc tions in reference to the matter. A special telegram to the New York noria irom us correspondent at liei.eva gives an account of au interview with Hon Chatles Francis Adams, in which the latter ssid : "I adhere to tbe principles laid before the CinciLaati Convention, and would accept the Baltimore nomination if the platform is good aud tbe oner spontaneous, but I will never be 'wire-pulled into place. 1 am deeply concerned for State rights in tbe fn ture." The Denver and Rio Grande Railway was completed to fueblo. Colorado, on tb 10th Inst., the last rail having been laid on tbat day. freight and passengers for New Mexico will now go by rail via Denver to the above point, thna cutting off over one bun dred miles of transportation by wagon route It will be but a short time until this route connecting with tbe Texas system of roads will be opened through toll Paso and th City of Mexico, farming a narrow g3ge road cf over 2 000 miles in length. On Wedneday one of our policemen started from the j-til with a prisoner arrested for drunkenness to go to the alderman's of fice to have the cate disposed of. The pris oner was accompanied tv bis employer, h intendsd paying tbe bill. Arrriving at the alderman's office, tbat fuctionary was absent and tbe policeman started in seatch of him I : 1 1. 1 .1 :.u 1 icstiuk me priaouer iibdu-cuubu. who di employer for a guard. After waiting h an hour or so for tbe officer the prisoner got tired waiting, and started tor the wood back of the Jamestown depot. Wben th officer returned be went in search of his man but failed to ret h im. The handcuffs ei valued at $4; no insurance Venango Spec talor. Some two or three weeks ago we pub lished a notice of the k'lling of a man nea Bridgeport. It was at first supposed he was murdered, but afterward it was though he was struck and killed by the cars. The man was known as Pinceem along the railroad. 11 is true name was Pat T 1 n -a mar FT . a rica ion. air. i. was in tne rebel army, in stonewall Jackson's brigade. during the war and bad been employed on the Connellsville K. K , and afterward on the B. &. B. R. R He had received bia wages for his week i i . ... . won, ana it is now oenevec that he was murdered and placed along side tbe railroad to ward off auspic ion cf foul play. No clue has yet been found as to who were the au-. thors of tbe bloody deed. Bedford Gazette At the Orange Street Meeting House yesterday there was a Quaker wedding in the presence oi a large assemblage. Tbe simpl ana oeautiiui ceremony oi f riends is not generally known. It consists ia the attend ance of tbe bride and groom at a regualr meeting for worship. After sitting in silence a short time they rise and take each other by the hand and declare that. "In presence of the Lord and those assembled, they take each other to be husbaoJ and wife, promis ing, with Divine assistance, to be loving and faithful to each other until death separates tbsm." A certificste of the fact is then read before the congregation assembled, which is signed by the contracting parties and by those present as witnesses. rhUa Press. A public singer lately died in Florence, Italy, and was buried with little display and brief notice by the newspapers whose for tune, nevertheless, had been rather remark able. Some twenty years ngo a music mas ter was leaning over the parapets of one of the Florence bridges, and beaid. far down the shallow stream, a peasant sing at the very humble work of dredging for fine grit, or sand. He was so struck that he called the singer to him. and took him home to educate. He could not write er read, and all tne operas had to be read to him, but with tbe master's care he was soon singing ic the principal theatres of Italy, and afters wards Europe.- Such was Andrea Mazzanti. the famous baratooe, wbo baa just ended bis days on the banks of his native Aroo. The Japanese young girls who were sent te this conntry to be educated are "now in Washington, and will there for the pres ent remain. Tbey learn quickly, are very studious, obedient and tractable, and act a very good example of deportment to tbe Washington young ladies. They are quiet, self possessed in their manners, and impress strangers favorably with tbeir ladylike ways and quick perception. The eldest carries on conversation in English very well ; but she thinks there are a great many Charlies ia this country, and that we talk very fast. They not only have become accustomed to the American style of dress, but like it. though they de make each little blunders as wearing things upside down and inside out. A Periloun Position Leneel. the Hon tamer, has achieved noto- iety by tbe number of time, be bas suffered aceration by tbe c-aws and teeth oi cagen T . . ...a i animals. He was at Portage City, Miuh., a i few days ago, exhibiting his "lion-taming'' abilities in a circus. Oue of his cages con tained three partially tamed brutes, two ionestes and a lion. lie bad foUBd, con trary o usual experience, tbat the male lion Was tbe most crafty of tbe three, ana on two occasions before the one at Portage City he had detected this bue fellow io the act of sneaking up to seize bia leg. During tbe afternoen exhibition at Portage City tbe tamer was going through his Usual perform ance in this cage, with two men stationed outside with iron rods between tbe bars oi the cage, to assist, if ntcessary. iu warding eff attack. The lion had somewhat puzzled him, manifesting a d iff. rent nature from that of any with which he bad dealt, and for that reason he kept his eye apoo him J but at one point he was obliged to turn ud face the two lionesses as they passed him. leaving the lion, in the meantime, to be watched by tbe attendants But the at tendants failed to see th monster sneak along tbe floor. The audience were watch ing more closely, the danger was seen, and cry of alarm was raised i but it Was too late, the monster's jaws had closed oh the calf of Lengel'a right leg. the teeth met. aud Lengel fell to the floor of tbe cage. His club flew from his band as be fell, and Was beyond bia reach ; the moment was one of terrible suspense ; the.spectators were terri fied, and the two attendants paralyzed at the rw ult f their carelessness. But Len gel'a presence of mind did not desert him. the lion, even in bis race, could not forget tbe power of his fallen antagonist, and tokened his bold for a moment, and before the lioness could gather for an attack the tamer was on his feet, seized his whip, and attacked his foe, lashing him into the corner. Leaving the cage. Leugel walked to his dressing-box across the ring, where be sank taint t urn the loss of blood. It was f und that no bones were broken, but tbe wounds were so large and deep that tbe surgeon who dressed tbem probed them with his fiocer and failed to touch the end. Lengel has been five times before bitten by his petsy and shows a scarred body ; but h every Case before his wounds have been from lionesses. This, he thinks, is tbe mo ood case in which he has been inteotionallv bitten, the other f-ur being accidents, wben in their snarls among themselves tbey have seized bim by mUtake. FEMALE DISEjkSES At the present day it is extremely rare to fiud a female who is entirely free from some one or other of tbe diseases peculiar to her aX. Go where VOU will, on thu mountain top or in the valley, io the hamlet r in tbe city, among tbe rich or the lowly, there will be fuuod very lew females wbo are not laboring trndvr physical afS.ctioo peculiar to womanhood.- The cause of this we will not undertake to explain here. The nu-merou applications made to us for relief duiing our tweoty years practice, have long since induced us to make especial study and invtstigation of these diseases, and their best method of cure. Tbey are maladies ef a peculiar character, and as a general thing they re quire a method of treatment entirely unlike that adopted for those common to both sexes. Ia fact, the very frequency and extent of female diseases in our midst, is piod evi deuce that tbe "common treatment" ha not met with success, and shows that some more efficient course should be adopted. We were long since convinced that local remedies and external appliaoces, bandages. Sec, were mere palliatives for the time, aud of no permanent value whatever, but oft times injurious ; and tbat an efficient course of medicatioo was the only hope of cure. For the benefit of those who mav be nfilxt . i ... i - .. - . eu who Dy uiKease peculiar to the sex, whether from a slight cold, followed by a derangement and irregularity of the general system, wrich msny times produces cough, expectoration, tightness of cheat, difficult breathing, palpitation, &c, with a I tbe symptoms of "going into a decline," or from any of tbe very many other causes which produce such terriblesiiQVring among women as to make lite a burden to tbem. we would say. that our remed.es are selected and pre- pareu with a special view towards tl.ee ends, and will give relief io all these kiuds or cases, without needless exposure to indeli ca'.e examinations, or wearing of disagreea ble instruments or cumbrous appliance. We have cured hundreds yes. thousands or rases by medical treatment alone, hundreds of whom we have never seen, but who only obtained their medicines after having sent to us their cases for examination. Our remedies io these diseases are mild but effectual, and are such as we have fouud out to act in cou fortuity with the laws of nature in regulating health ; and Trom the success which has almost invariably crowned our efforts in these cases, we can promise, and do promise, a speedy cure in every rae where a reasonable hope can be entertained. For the benfit of those living at a diss tance laboring under Chronic Affections, and unable to attend in person, we would say : by sending us a vial of rin for examination, the necessary medicines can be sent them by express. L. Oi dshue. M D. T. L Oldshue. M. D. J. W. Oldshue, M. D. Address Das. Oldshdb. No. 132 Grant street. Pittsburgh, Pa. OIBIOIS DISEASES. For years, we might almost say for cen turies, consumption has been classed among the diseases of doubtful cure, consequently, people wben they have supposed it to exist, have abandoned all hope of staying its pro gress, and have allowed its victims to suffer oc until death gathers them into its vortex. Not so now. Dr. Keyser, with Da. KtT ssa's Luko Cubb. has established the truth, that consumption, like any othtr disease! baa iu remedy. Not one or two sporadic cases, that perhaps would have recovered under the hand of nature alone, but dozens and scores of unhealthy people have been rescued from the grasp of this fell destroyer of tbe human family, snd live to bless Da Retseb's Lung Cukb to their latest breath. So much is this the case that there is hardly a family on whose mantel piece may not be seen the famous bottle bearing this inscrip tion : -Da. Ketseb'b Lunq Cuaa. oa Pulmokabt Restobative," a name signifi cant enough, and before the contents of which incipient pulmonary maladies vanish like noxious mists before the morning sun. Da. Ketser's Luko Coax is a heal.h giving elixir, whfch none who ever used it can deem of dubious value. It can be had at the Poctor'a Great Medicine Store, UT A rr510"-1 60 P bonis, 4 for J5 00. Dr.Keyaer's privsti consult- ia "e rear oi hi itore. from 10 n.to6r.M. A. W have often wondered whether there Is a person in all New Englsnd. who does not know and appreciate the value of Johnson Anodyne iAHimenl as a family medicine? it VQP ..mo"t PPe-. aud is the best pain killer thst can beused. n i n u i i- Arthur V Was b fore tbd mayor yei-terday m, ? auser charges of iich inhuman salY' ' treattiieut f hia wife. as. if true.ou consign him to the penitentiary. ' -r" eveuiog tbe poor woman, half deid' exhaustion, was fund on Wslurjtf. rying a thirty-six pound weigLt h.0" ? rouud her neck by a chain. She wM . I clad, and altogether iu a m0Bt Wtj??M coudition. She stated that her tu' accused her of drinking liquor, atidT frequently of late, by padlock, flktw. A Pntf.! T T n . . . Deck. '' ie She further stated that Martin U,i burned her lips with a red-hot had beeu in tbe habit uf cruelly Us; ' Her story could hardly be credited 7' oGkers. but there wss no mistaken to chain and weight. The povr woman e dently through fear, tefused to picnciiu but her husband Was scut for ard irrrt on a charge of disorderly Conduct. Subsequently Chief Irwin mads an itf4 mation for aggravated assault and Utiej, Martin denied burning ber mouth, u'; claimed thst fcbe had fallen agaius; (Le,i( As to tbe iron necklace, he said that womab would drink, and he had used meaos to prevent it. The accused pi-Ji' fine of 25 and tbe cos's on the d ,rjtr, conduct cusp, and gave bail in $1,000 to swer the other charge at court. J'iu,lu'i Mail. 20tf imt. v FAitifEfis and slock raisers hava feqm-;.? told us thst they htveseen very gnd .,,. from giving Sheridan's Cacalry CuriA;,., Puttders to cows and swine befjre so J if they drop their young. The powderi tbem in good condition, and gire th. strength to care and provide fjr tbe i,. lings. THE BIGGEST SHIP AFLOAT PERSON'S n-oin-r id Europe, or those tm. fort heir , friends to the Oid Cimntry oiiffht to' buy their tickets from M. P. Mka OHM, A pent for the celeb rate m( iaMf 1 I.i tie i nifannTfi to and Trom Europe. Ttx j Is remarkable for Comfort, spft-d ini!iW j Drafts Tor 1 and opwards sold at the., i current rtitcf. For further particular f.v. ' Mkagmek's Doo STORr, ISH Franklin -Johnstown, Pa. IJuoe 22, 167i-C JgXTENSlVE PUBLIC AL1 Or VALUABLE PERSONALJPROPERTY Tbe undeTehj-ned will otter at Public Sale. On Tuesday, the 16th day of July ner. At CRESSON STATION, Pa. R. R.. the follm. in pfiuonal property, to wit: 12 Ml" I.E.. yOUMi BLOODED HOUSES and MAKE .afrof DRIVING PONIES, with Harness to t. 30 JM-ta of Mule Harness, Z nouble ets of Vn kee Harness. 2 double Log- Trucks, 4 Hnirie Trucks. 2 Sleds, 1 Muck Waicon,! t wo-bwx fru Carriage, 1 Bui?g-y, 1 aet sinirie Dure.v Hatr-w. 1 Sulky, 4 four-horve Wag-one. 1 two-bur v& tm, 1 Oi Wagon, 220,000 feet of Cherry, Cutuo ber. Poplar. Ash and Hemlock Log-a, 13'. Phis te rind Lath. .fJO feet of Hemlock Pat.r, fldinjr. 4,W0Ofeet White Oak Flr-or-in. RrfUu:. Kine, Poplar. Cherry, Dass and Hemlock L;.: ber, 1 forty-horse power Steam Eng-ine, two No. 1 Cylinder Boilers 30 feet long aod; Inches in diameter. Sale to commence at 10 o'clock, A. at. A rea sonable credit will be given. M. M. ADA Mi. Cresson, June 22, 1872.-3t. 'TRIUMPH of tlis -ETNA f rf n vlUl.A. t, , I&81E .vAtt,inv' 1-',Vua- rAumuT esMTAiMiMt mu. aesc.ftfriH M0W1XG MATCil. rBOX IHI RATES'! A (OHIO) "DEM0CB1I, JfLT, 1867. A very spirited and interesting Mowif Match was held on the farm of C. II. Bost wick, Esq., near Campbellsport, in this county, on the Uth inst. There ' large attendance of spectators, and mo than ordinary interest manifested ia tb' friendly competition. An agreement bi beta entered ioto, between ihe parties rep resenting tbe different machines, that os'.' Common Machines (such as are ordinar ' offered for sale, and not made for Sp occasions) should be allowed to enter -contest, each machine should mow an eq amount of grass, and one team and dn should be ustd for all, in order that ii; trial might be a fair one, and the meriu the machines alone lay claim to public f vor. The ".Etsa" Mower, made by tbr -a-lTSA Vanufacturing Co., of Salem, 0h:3. for which Peter II. Bean appeared as geV proved to have tbe lightest draught, d this, with its sirrplicity of construction beauty of design, combined with its po erful cutting qualities, made it the favor of tbe day. Captain A. T. King, of Charlestown, chosen as a cemmittee to note tbe drangt' of each machine, as indicated by a dys- mometer, which was found to be as fol!o'- JStna,M. .Draught, 150 1DJ. "Buckeye,", "Excelsior, "World,".... "Thayer's," "Wood'.... 175 17S m 165 200 For Pamphlet .containing full description THE "JETNA" MOWER p REAPER, WITH FIFTY REASON WHY IT IS SrPERlOB, Call oa, or Address, G EO. IIU1VTLET, ge For Cambria County, Eten. burg i a i awt m is i t