UL Paaawaa-aawaaaMaaaaaaaaMaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa the mm mm. ZDENSDURC, PA., FrWaj M.rnirjg, - - Oct 16, 1874. Democratic Nominations. llox. TTAnREN J.T700D VAKD, Berks. IlECTE-fAHT COTERSOR T Ho. JOHN LATTA, TTestmoreland. ACDITOB GESERAtt Uox. JUSTUS F. TEMPLE, Greene. ECJtETAUT IKTEHSAt ATFAIllS : Oex. TT1L McCANDLESS, Philadelphia. coxoriss : Col. JOHN KEILLY, Altoona. asSEJtlBLY : JOnN II ANNAN, Johnstowa. JOHN BUCK, Carrolltewn. PROTHONOTAKT I BERNARD McCOLGAN, Wilraere. DISTRICT ATTOBHEY : IT. HORACE ROSE, Jebastewn. COMMISSIONERS : tTif. P. McCLELLAND, Jehnstowrr. MAATIN F. CAMPBELL, Iunstr Twy. rooB hocsb uieector: CHARLES FLICK", Allegheny Twp. AUDITOR t MICHAEL 6 WEENY, Cambria Eor. CO RON EH I JOHN BRADY, Jobnstewn. 6CRTETOR: HE.TKY E CAN LAN, Carrolltewn. Ijc many places in Ohio where Republi cans helil meetings the majoiity Is largest gainst them. Men who never, hithcito, voted anything but a Republican ticket atood at the polls and worked forth Dem ocratic candidates. They said there, they say here, there must be a change, and the n!y way to effect it id to turn out the present administration. TnE elections in Ohio and Indiana last Tuesday resulted in glorious Democratic victories. Ohio went Democratic by from ten to fifteen thousand majority aud elect ed twelve and probably fourteen of tho twenty Congressmen. In Indiana the en tire Democratic State ticket was elected by from five to ten thousand majority, and a gain of two members of Congress. The Legislature is claimed by both parties. low ef conrre stuck to her idols, and as trnial voted strongly Republican. Nebras ka also elected the Republican State t icket. "We have nothiug d.finite from West Vir ginia, except that, in the Martiusbnrg Con cessional district, Charles J. Faulkner, Democrat, was elected by a large majority. "Wk publfc-b elsewhere the able charge of Jude Dean in the case of Cambria couuty against the Commissioners, aud ask the at tentive perusal of it by Republicans as well as Democrats. Judge Dean is a good Re. publican, aud, what is much better, an up right Judge and an honest man. His charge is the best reply to the filthy epithets gathered from the slums of New York, and retailed through a press whose editor received Lis education there. The couuty officers do not give him their patronage hence his hatred. If they fed him, he would lick their hands. If they patronized his .'ibelous sheet, he would be as gentle "as a sucking dove." The crea ture who is trying to swell out his lank and dyspeptic figure to the proportions of man hood by official pabulum filched from a maimed soldier, cannot be choice of the n-.eaas-by which be hopes to grow fat. The County Commissioners, under the direction of an Act of Assembly, were pos itively directed to have assessments and election papers put into the hands of the proper township and borough officers. This they did, as was admitted, at less ex pense than the same services could Lave been rendered by any other person or per sons. Judge Dean, while allowing their expenses, as will be seen by his charge, 67i-allowed tho cervices, which reduced the amount a few dollars in each case. And this only applies to the throe Commis sioners, while the bill of the Clerk to the Commissioners was allowed in full. In the case of the Poor Directors and Steward, the Court plainly intimated its opinion, that the Auditors had nothing to do with it, and hence tb?ir report falls. There were eiylit cases, aod the Auditors were not sustained in a single case ; ai d the costs of all the tight cases must be borne ly the aunty. Of course the eounty is tho loser, not the gainei, by '.heso suits : As the Act of Assembly, Purdon .3)1, pi- Whatrver difference of opinion may exist amongst Democrats in reference to the financial views entertained by that dis tinguished member of the party, lion. George II. Pendleton, of Ohio, uo man from Maine to Oregon questions his un equalled ability, or for one moment doubts his pure and unsullied personal character. Thaddeus Stevens, who was a good judge of public men. and who served in Congress with Mr. Peadleton during the war, said of him, in a speech, that he was tho ablest and most accomplished Democrat that he ever met in that body. Coming from such a source, this was a high and well deserved tribute. "Piaise from Sir Hubert is praise indeed." In a recent speech delivered by Mr. Pendleton before a Democratic mass meeting at Lima, Ohio, he concluded with the following eloquent peroratioa : Fellow t-itizens, iay I speak one word of myseir without egotism ? I believe you will Jiurhing in Buffalo. THE BODY OF A LADT STOL&- FROM THE CHATS AND FOUND IN A MEDICAL COUiEOE DISSECTING KOOM. On Wednesday morning last the sexton who has chargo of the Holy Cross Ceme tery, at Limestone Hill, noticed that a new ly-made crave bad been disturbed during ' the night, and an examination found it to , be that of the wife of Richard J. Carey, which had been buried the day before. The . foot-board to the grave was not as it had i been set, and there were indications that ' some persons, had been digging there. The sexton at onco opened the grave, and found that the body of Mrs. Carey had , been removed, aud the grave-clothes and j colrin left. On learning this Father liincs j informed Mr. Carey, who was greatly in ' censed on hearing the facts, aud at onco ! did what he could to lead to the discovery of the body. The police were informed, and the most experienced detectives were set to woik. Mr. Carey sent to the news- JTeiva a rul Political Items. bear witness that I have always been a zeal- ; of 500 $250 for the recovery of the body j one and fathful servant of the democratic : and $250 for the arrest and conviction of! 1 fliM r,,n ""'l"?0 it prinriples the grave desnoilers. Subsequently, sus- j n?nndV ' I-ect"S that ' nse miSbt have been notnnduly aspired to Ieadershiporattempt- i , . ,t - j- W. it , , ! ed to dictate its profusion of faith To make I akcn t0 tl,e Iedlcal College, lie applied a creed has been heretofore reserved for the ' fr a warrant to search that institution, high powers of the college apostles, or the ' a"a "cn a warrant was issued uy Justice councils of the church, or the conventions of i Waldron, and placed iu the hands of Ofricer the party, or the commanding genius of Jf- j Bonncll for service. Accompanied by OiS ferson. That day has passed, and now the ; Sccr Terrenco Boyle, aud by Mr. Carey and iciia in akv ana eniorce creeus. i never : a sister or the deceased, he nroceded to dreamed of aspiring so high, and vet some republican orators and papers, and notably one democratic paper, have done me the hon or torall the opiuion which I entertain, in common with the democratic party of Ohio, by the name of Pendletonistn. They honor me overmuch; they tax ray modesty. lst through noieapprehension or inditfrrenre they may mistake it, lt me tell them what Pendlf tonism is. It in olwdicnce to the con stitution and thlaw cheers; etpiality be fore the law and faithful administration of the law; the largest liierty consistent wirh public order; eiial rihI exA:t iuslice to all men: honesty and fuiclitTin e.vnrv f,m, r the college, corner of Main and Virginia streets, about half-past three o'clock. Ar rived at the College building, the ofliceis proceeded to search some of the lower rooms, but f(und nothing, sayed to go up stairs to the dissecting room, but were stopped. They fehowed j their documentary authority, and were al- i lowed to pass. Opening the door of the dissecting-room they entered. Tho scene that presented itelf was common to the medical student, but one of horror to the unaccustomed visitor. Upon as manv dis- laws: taxation onlv for revenue: snl.Wt to revenue, tree trade; gold and silver the basis of the currency, and specie payments to le reached assoou as industry will parmit; hon est payment of all debts and a sacred preser vation of fl.A t . ' 1 1 1 , , f 1 1 B:.u 20, provides that if the judgment in Court i nmnt: home rule: ..tates rights- small t. is more favorable to the appelUes than the ' ponditures; low taxation; lands to actual sunns; iwiiipsnaci exemptions, ana a heart whicn can always ieel for the struggles and form whrvor them is abuse; no sumptuary ! eecti"if tables lay si naked bodies, four of ever did." 1 i a n n.l C , 1 i : ? a. I -m v The Archbishop of Cologne has ueetl released, after an imprisonment of six mouths and nine days. A correspondent of the Pittsburgh Leader says Tilton made $20,000 out of the publication of the scandal literature. Twenty-one girls of Kenosha, "Wis., have "resolved that if the young men won't come aud see us, we will go and see them." Two of the persons injured by the stampede of t he Texan steers in New York, a few days since, have died of their inju ries. According to an English photographer common white cot toe cloth becomes water proof by being dipped for an instaut in dilute sulphuric acid. The deepest coal shaft in England, and probably in the world, is the Dunkenfield, 2060 feet, and reaches a seam of coal only 4 feet inches thick. A Teutonic resident in this State, aged seventy-three, has recently had presented to him by his wife the thirtieth pledge of tbeir mutual aftection. Mary Kelly hung herself to the bars of her cell in the lock-up at Pittsburgh on Thursday. She was a hard drii.ker, and about thirty years old. There are only three Republican coun ties in Georgia. It is expected that tho entire Georgia delegation in the next Con gress will be Democratic. Senator Morton, whose physical infirm ities will not permit of his standing, is de scribed as "the statesman who wears his pants out when he sreaks." An old lady from the country, with six unmarried daughters, went to AucusTa, Ga.. tho other day. hunting fur the Pat reus Then they es- j of Husbandry. She meant business. 1 robably the largest rope in the world is one lately made in England, which mea sures 10,'WO fathoms without a splice ; it is of three strands and two ii.ches in diameter. A man having a bill against a distant merchant sent a letter of inquiry to a bank er in that locality. The reply was : "lie is dead ; but he pays now as well as he GEIS. FOSTER U EXTRA ANNCUHCEMSHT ! VTV X3rL13T 1: STOCK OP AT EXCEEDINGLY LOW PRICES. Medium and Fine Dress Goods! 13XrmzV GOOD BxVilGAIXS. At 1V cents, new Fall Dress Goods la desira ble style nnd colors. At S5 nnd STH cents, extrs irood bnrjraius in lliack Mohair AIohchs. finest kinl. At SO cent, kin press Cloths, all stadtc real bargains. New Fniigh Seriren. SaWn T. .. i-uitniifs. earners flair fl..,s .'''-""'. Mourning Ires Goois, ai i::,u'',j . '-. , sort merit at verc low pt..v-! ' 31 ivi uV. Clioico Selection oi Ladies', Misses and Children's T700LEK E9S Muslin, Calicoes, Domestic Gowf.i, fc, very cheap fcr f Extra (rood tarariiin in f ,inen Towels and Tow- rlinir. Rnasia lttb T.a-fu. c. 151eaclieil and Colored Table Linens, very low. Shirt inr-, S!ief an;l IMIow-Cii.. Wirtl us BTul (iiuililit Furi.iiure CUijitii.-8, Liiinitics, c f .W t n i . -NT , -w I -- . i mnnrans fiiRMRiK .ANKfw yahnx u .anmtwspt?- ALL. TUB LATliST NOVELTIES 1N" Ladies MIssas', end Chlldron'c HATS cnJ ECKXSTT T0E Democratic Congressional conferees from this district met at Bedford on Tues day last to nominate a candidate for Con gress. Four gentlemen were placed in nomination "W'illiara J. Eaer and A. II. CofTioth, Espt., both of Somerset cour.ty, and Major Jesse II. Crawford and Col. John Heilly, both of lllair county. "Ve are unable to state how tho different bal lots stood, but on the ninth ballot Mr. Ucilly had six votes and Mr. Eaer six. After that ballot, and just beforo the tenth one was taken, a telegraphic dispatch was received from Mr. P.aer, at Somerset, iu which he absolutely declined ; where upon the nomination of Colonel Reilly was made unanimous. Mr. Ileiley lives in Altoona and fills the important position of Superintendent of Transportation for the Pennsylvania Rail Road Company, one of whose most honored and trusted officials he is. He is a native ef Westmoreland eounty, a modest, unassuming, self-made man, aud has always beeu a true and con sistent Democrat. His popularity in Al toona and throughout Blair county is con ceded, and if the district can be carried by any Democrat, as we honestly believe it can, John lleilly combines within him felf all the elements of success. He is popular wherever known, and is well enough known as a gentleman of integrity and ability to make things quite warm if not entirely too hot for his competitor. The Republican conferees from this Congressional district, af;cr three days' un successful balloting at Bedford, week be fore last, adjourned to meet at the Sum mit io this county on Tuesday of last week. They balloted there during three days, nnd it was not until the 277th ballot, on the following Thursday nihr, that the Gordian knot was untied and a nomina tion was effected. On that ballot, B. S. Blair received tijht votes, John Cessna one, and A. A. Barker three. Blair re ceived the votes of the conferees from his own county, the conferees from Somerset, and two from Bedford while Barker's three conferees from this eounty voted for him, first, last, and all the time. Each one of them seems to have acted on the defiant motto of the warrior chieftain, who, when hemmed in and attacke'd by his enemies, planted himself against a rock with his face to his foes, aud proudly ex claimed : ''This rock from its firm base shall fly Boone r than I." Well, it is certainly a gratiCcatioa to any candidate to have such vaim and devoted friends. We have nothing lo say against Mr. Blair. Wc know him well as a gentleman of ability, and, 6o far as we have ever heard him spoken of, his integrity is not to be questioned. It is due to Mr. Blair that we should saj this much. We are well aware that this is a decided Republican district and that the Democracy, therefore, abors under great disadvantages iu a pol itical coutcst. Buc still the raco is not al- leport of Auditers, the county shall pay the costs, which in these cases are much heavier than the few dollars of reduction. The Commissioners were not liable on the report at all, as they had not been notified but they voluntarily appeared before Court to have the matter adjusted. The County Auditors are all Democrats. They had heard the harping of the Johns town Tribune, and "sich like," and sup posed without knowing, that there might bo truth in the charges. The counsel era phjed for the county by the Commissioners, at their best, and Judge Deau's opinion shows the result. We give credit to both the Auditors and the Co nmis&ijners. That the Audito.s ; were mistaken, and involved the county j iu costs, was not their fault. They were ' honest nen, and did what they thowjht ' was their duty in the premises. The Tri- j bune praises them, and yet opfoses the I Democratic candidates for Auditor ! Ai d j that because its editor is not after honesty, i but spoils. j If tho Auditors had been Republicans, j and frauds had existed, they would have ; slept unexposed eo far as tho editor refer- j red to is concerned. Xo man ever heard j of a Radical exposing a Radical, excepting ! one, and he got his reward. When Evans ! unerings of labor, and would sliapo every policy as far as possible to relirre it from the burdens which oppress it. Loud and en thusiastic cheers. This is Pendletonism. I believe it is de mocracy. Cries of "It is, it is." j It is that, democracy which has carried this yar in New Hampshire and Oregon and North Carolina and Colorado and Dakota. j and Wyoming, and now does battle for Ohio j aod Indiana end Pennsylvania and New ; York, and which iu Qod's own geod time I will rsscue tli federal government frotn the hand of tiie spoiler and drive corrnp'i n and , dishonor from th high places of poer. I Tumultuous applaas6. men and two of woincu, around which be tween thirty and forty students, clad in the usual garb of the dissecting-room, were at work with their gleaming instruments. One moment, aud the sister gave a wild cry, recognizing one of the bodies as that of the stoleu dead. Mr. Carey also identi fied it. Anion? the studniits ther 1 cc:Lm i something akin to a panic when they leal- j izeu me iact mat me ouicers or the law had invaded this private sanctuary of their work. TUey crowded together iu one end of the room, some pale aud coufused, and would gladly h.ive hidden both themselves aud their instruments out of sight. The students, thirty-eight in number uoue others had been touud in the room and the janitor, John Fersuson. were marchud j dowu Main street, iu a somewhat grotesque i procession which attracted mucu attention. I Arriving at the Police buildinr, the prison ers were escorted iuto the I'oiice Court room. Justice Nash, addressing the prisoners, said that the officers had arrested them on suspiciou of a felony, as was proper for them to do. He shuu'.d, he said, allow them ail to depart upon their word of honor "There never were taken altogether so many good men in any conference as on fcrees and at c artdidatjs, ml the earnest ness with which the content was carried on ! that they would appear before the Court tuo idt poiMi irnimjr mat at ail nnv-k pre- wiien c.iiled. vailed showed tliateah was conscientious ly in favor of his own man in prefer-nce to any other, and was. willing to accede to the -Bujj'tilo Express. stole $300,000 of the people's money, Mc Clure, then Deputy Attorney General, ex posed the theft ; whereupon he was forthwith removed from office. What right had he to cxposo a Radical? Radicals all over the country, during the present rule, have stoleu moie than would pay our National debt. Which of them has ever been pumished ? The Radical office holders of the State have stolen more than would pay the State debt. Which of them has ever been punished ? The Freeman has always treated its op ponents fairly, without descendiug to low ( abuse, and even now re not attacking the t Radical candidates. We shall defeat them j on principle, as we have heretofore done ; but if the editor of their leadiua orcan sees ' proper to put his character for truth or j any other virtue in opposition to theirs, we shall be obliged to say things that we would fain refrain from uttering. While our neighboring county of Indi ana the strongest Radical county in the State has cue of her officers in the Peni tentiary for stealing $30, 000 worth of bonds, Cambiia county has not had a defaulter siDce she, in 1834, elected the last Rcpub- winh of the majority The foiegoing paragraph is taken from ' the Johnstown Trioime ef last Friday. I We have romething to say is icferenco to : to it. We have the authority ,f several : leading Republicans from this place, who j attended the conference at the Summit j last week for saying that the editor of the ; TV I . . . j r.'.'iiHi mano ins appearance at the con feience en Wednesday night, the second day of its meeting that, with his pocket beok in bis hand, he proclaimed that he could buy one of Barker's conferees for the sum of f-200, aud that he had the money then and there fer that purpose. He was careful net to state the nrnne of the particu lar ceuferee whom he proposed to bribe, but the impression was that he meant Cap tain Graham, of Johnstown, whe was Mr. Earker's conferee from the south of the ceunty. The writer of this knew Patrick Graham in Armstrong county in 1849. He was then au old-line Whig and a respecta ble gentlemen, and was iu the employ of what was knows as the Great Western (now the Brady's Bend ) Iron Company. He subsequently removed to Johnstown and went out as a Captain in the late re bellion, behaving gallantly and losing one f his eyes ie battle. This is the conferee who it is said the Tribune editor meant. j We wish him (Mr. George T. Swank) to j difctincly understand that ire are uot in any j way responsible fr what wo have said, j but we Teeeive ur iu formation from his i awn political friends. If they misrepre- sentjhim, it is their fault, not ours. Thom j as J. Davis, chairman of the .Republican j county committee, and Alrin Evans, a Romance of an Organ-Grin-der. On a curbstone in Atchison, Kansas, nits an j aged woman turniug a hand organ and i watching for the straggling pence that1 thoughtless children or benevoieut men or women may toss into her lap. A very sad i story is tho history of the old womau's later life. Less than a year ago she dwelt ' iu a German cil3' with an intelligent, proiu- i I i"iK lamny or unee a.tugnters and a s.n. j Their circumstances were fair, and they were all happy. Kathrina, the eldest J daughter, had a lover who had some time previously come to America to lay the fouu j dation for the future prosperity and bliss oi ms ivami ina and lnmselt. As is not ua frequeutly the case, honest merit received its due reward, and tit young man did well in the laud of-his adoption. When he thought the proper time had came he returned to the fatherland for his sweet heart, 1 1 bring her back his bride. In their humblo obscurity Kathrina and her people had lived lovingly together and were loth to separate, so they all determined to come ' to America together. The young man cs- j poused Kathrina, and the mother and son ' and remaining sister prepared to cross the 1 wide sea. They took passage on the Vil'.o j da Havre. The rst may be imagined. ; The young husband and wife sleep at the 1 bottom of the ocean, the widow's son and daughters went dowu with the others, and ! she alone of the little circle was picked up. I She suffered a maniac in a New Yoik mad house for a while, then went forth friend less desolato aud poverty-stricken, yet ! struggling to increase the tenure of her ! miserable existence by a few years, or months, or days. And she sits on the curb stone daily, half-witted and half fed, grind ing away. Mr. S. S. Jackson, a Boston auctioneer has iu bis possession an umbrrlla seventy two yeais old. It is of English manufac ture, and till seven years eince was in con stant use. The Republicans in tho Norfolk (Va.) district have issued a ciicular, assessing the laborers employed in the Portsmouth Navy Yard at so much a beau for campaigu purposes. It is said that the dyestuff known as saflVanine, if mixed with strong sulphuric acid, develops a fine blue tint, which bo comes emerald green by the addition of a little water. Gen. William M'Candless, the Demo cratic eandidate for State Secretary of In ternal Affairs, worked in the Erie "shops at Susquehanna depot, about the year as a machinist. Several citizens of Columbus, Missis sippi, among them the Postmaster, applied for admission to a negro ball room several nights since, but were lefused on the ground that they were white. A county treasurer iu Alabama can't read or write, but he lias put $7,000 where no one buthimselfc.no tind it. This shows that a collegiate education isn't essential to the acquirement of wealth. The Georgia election indicates the break-up at the South. Tiio Democratic majority is GO.Oi.lO. Alabama and Louis iana can only be pinned fast .o the Republi can faith with bayonets and bogus returns. Davis, the colored Governor pro tern, of Mississippi, has taken advantage of the absence of Ames to pardon fourteen con victs in one week. Davis is ambitions, and he knows v here the strength of his 2;rty lies. Another Washburn has got into office. His front name is Elmer, and he is the new chief of the secret-service bureau. The re commendations of Gen. Butler, Col. White ly and Alleu Ilnkerton nearly lost him the place. Some unknown man committed suicide in a hotel in Pittsburgh on Saturday last, by shooting himself through the head. There was nolhin; abr;it his person that would furnish a clua of who he was, or where he ramo from. A Texas paper contains an obituary notice of a Confederate war horse, which served throughout tho whole conflict. At the end of the war he was tho only survi- inrnmrn nnu nut r:iniiten. r.i'rjni n-w r ren?n tioxtrf. I'ompon. I iuiunt,. w i Ifiii'jons. iisniloine rasnes ann :asn i:uiious; Ladies .-cc.rrt, 1 ie. Kochitic". A ! Silk Gloves, Lisle Tbreud hl Cotton (,l.vts. LndivV, Mioses' and "tr.Krjo's L'n on Ltfgipjrs. Luby Huodd, Cloaks, dearie, ic, &J. Veils, Shawls, O loves. Shroudings, Crape ITat? and Uonnets, alwuvs r. BEADED TRIMMINGS, LACES, CELTS, POCKETS, POiUMONAI.S, A FULL LINE CF MERC'.DIRIES, LACES AKD CRESS TRIMMiMGS AT LOWEST r?3. " . V. . . r w ar rw r-i w - - tnrifiiiHu.il .r-iiijijia ana u lliMxl J tf I J 1A1: a c AT THE roi'VLAK MAMMOTH STOKE OF GEIS, FOSTER & QUDiH, 113 an. 115 CLINTOK ST., JOFiW On Thursday some boys in the woods Orphans' Cotir; ar Girard, Eire county, found the f.kele- ! or VALI.. , , n of a man hangins twenty feet from tl. - - Doai and 'limber near ton of a man hangins twenty feet from th ground, suspended by a rope. The remains could not le identified. In the pockets ..f his clothing nothing was found but a pair of spectacles and a tobacco pouch. The greatest distress prevails among the quarrymen in tho neighborhood of Eangor, :a Wales. About 3,0tiQ men em- ployed in tho slate quarries of Iwird Pen- rhyn struck for higher wages some weeks since. Loid Penrhyn refused then to ac cede to their demand, and has just declined to submit to an arbitration, a proposition which had been made on behalf of the quarrymen. Fitch, the Lieutenant who recently ' captured tie:). Sherman's daughter, comes from a family f Fitzpatricks who lived in Drumbiuekles, Cavan county, Ireland, where they were called Fitch" for short. When the Lieutenant's father came to this country he retained the abbreviated name. . Thus says a correspondent of the Chicago Tim'., who gained the facts from a Erook lyn Irishman who knew all about it in Ii- land. According to the Frtrmtrt Joxirr.nl. Gen. Sherman is not a Catholic, but when ! lie courted Miss Kwmg he was required, before Father Ryder could marry them, to promise as an ohtcer and a gentleman that ' he would never interfere with his vtiTe ia the practice of her religion, and that her children should be brought up Catholics. The Journal adds that the pomp and fuss attending Mis Sherman's wedding belong to something besides religion. The elei k of the county court at Cald well, O., dpsiros information f the present residence of John IIagl.nd, who, in ISJO, jointly with Tcrrenoe McCune became own er of litSO acres of land in Tioga couuty, Pennsylvania, which is now worth over tli SA TV Kit A Y, v . t Ks: at 2 o'clock, p. ::.st ' l)T virtue of an order of t!i? Hi.-i lie M.iin. nt Lilly's sitatiw. t!:- v'l'. ii. u OCT. 2-fi.i, e fl!ow,r.:j t?rr:ti "e iur.;: A TILTE Oil PARCEL OF I. Si'a-itu in 'Washinir.cn tuvtil.-i.. :':.; I'enn'n. s i jiinintr ltn l (f . ...., -an. I -larr.i,.irinrii!ic l ! f ..f ,' r- c .i. ,;i rs. con; ,n or Irs, s'x iir firn nr err-:.-! STEAM S V VILLr AN'T IIOl SKS. The 1 mi is .; u:i itrl.ti l n j;!, coal Aliriv., rn ! the coal is or rotT'or v- lur.T.sr pn.-os.-s. it r;.-i aw! :.'-. tl:at the cal c:.r, t IV Silt : exit ! o. A im; a:vt doi-r.UU lacJ i't .r -i-:. 1 iw cf S.tir. One-third cf ; t'!..i.-y to b r.-51-i on ronnrrirtMini of! Mlar. ;i t. tit :ifin- fnrjn. ' ' !"urv. v fjeju Jg.-al-iH tri"4 ! H'C '.,r: h-is.-r. u; t iic M im!i,ii twit Uy KAlL.UO.lLt 1UON tr v.. Txctitors October 2. 1;4. z:. i Tittv.h A 3'WM jrtsLl w Kjsi I i -t tluo lilVNzii, u TTAL1 All LP. VAUMYOPtS. vor of sixty equine comrades who were mustered into the same troop. Lishop Qninlin. of Mobile, ha recniv- five million dollars, and in course of litiga ed a dispatch frwn Pensacola. announcing tion. It was said for taxes in 1:5 and -liat three of the Sisters of St. .Tosctth, who I new tho heirs of McCune are claiming th-ir indebtedness is still unpaid ; and we sin cerely trust that it will bo many a day be foie sho has, another one, Radical or otherwise. lica-i Register and Recorder, whose heavy i yuns 'publican lawyer, both of this piace, were tnc- oilier two conferees for Mr. Earker, for the former of whom Messrs. C. T. and Job W. Roberts acted as sub stitutes for one and two days respectively. Ne man could bribe either of these gentle meu to betray their trust. We know them all and respect them enough to beleive that no man could buy them or any one of them, for two hundred dollars, or for any other sain to disgrace themselves or to betrav Thk Philadelphia Kteninj Hail, speak ing last wsek in referenco to the Republi can aomination for Congress in this dis trict, said : "Barker ierrej in Congress once 0 fort. Hi leading characteristic ii in- norance, vhich is ahout on a pa-with Joan i tl,eir P0'itical integrity, and their devo- Leanas dishonesty." The Altoona Tri bune endorsed this statement by inserting it in its own columns. We have nothing to say against the imputation of the dishon esty of John Ccssaa, for the simple reason that his entire political career fully justi fies aud warrants the charge. He was rolitic-lly buried by the Republican con ference at the Summit last week and we now bid him an eternal farewell. Of Mr. Barker we have a kind word totay, however. He is not an inoranf.man, but, on the con trary, is twMutd of Bolid intelligence, and if he had received an early education would have figured much more conspicu ously in the political world than he has heretofore done, lie is not a fiaished or ator, as John Cessna claims to be, but he has mora solid secse and infinittlv mnm i t tioa to Mr. Barker's political interests. ways to the swift, nor the battle to the f political conscience than Jehn Cessna ever Rtrong. vetio not regard Mr. Blair as jersonaUy a strong candidate with his own party. He is essentially deficient in what is called personal magnetism. That there Is a decided and openly expressed opposi tion to him in the northern section of this "We have had enough of the working men wejwant brains and money now!" Such was the taunting reply made by one of S. 8. Blair's conferees when the merits of A. A. Barker, as a laboring man and friend ef laboring men, was brought before the late Radical conference. Three soft-handed lawyers and one hard-handed laborer were before that body for nomina tion to Congress. M, Baiker's claims were urged, as he was himself a laboring man and the representative of the labor cause, when the moneyed reply was made: "Wo have had enough of the working men we want brains and money now!" And tho conference said Amen I m k w Aftkh Cambria county, in her Radical Convention, had instructed for Mr. Car- We are not an admirr of 1 er r Congress, and Geo. T. Swank had been appointed delegate to ttie State Con- liad Itcf-n nursin- the yellow favri im'ifMit at the Navy-yard, were themselves strick en with the disease, and died of it. Hon. Jas. Pdack, of Lancaster, has been placod in nomination as the Prohibi tion candidate for Jndgo of the Supreme Court, in place of Simeon B. Chase, of Sus quehanna county. Mr. Elack was the Pro hibition candidate for President in 1872. At a confirmation lately held by Bish op Walsh, in the township of Stephen, Canada, he caused all the boys confirmed to take a pledge of total abstinence from i ail intoxicating drinks during twenty-ona ; years, and the girls that they would abstain j from excess in dress. i The Catholic temperance societies of I Boston and vicinity made a grand parade ! on Saturday in honor of the anniversary of the birthday of Father Mathew. Govcr ; nor Talbot reviewed the procession. The ; day was honored by paiades in other cities ' and towns in New England, j The New Orleans Republican records I the presence there ef three- or four thous I and regular United States troops with eight I ships of war, and says that two battalions i of cavalry are on thair way thither. All ! this is to restore a usurpation whioh can I only be kept alive by such means. I Gov. Ilartranft has iss:ifd r'finMi war rants in the cases of Daniel O'Mara and Patrick Irvin. for the murdfr of tln mutli. er and sistr of the former in Susquehanna At the election held in Georgia, on Wed nesday, 7th iust., for members of tho Leg islature, the Democrats made a clean sweep. There will not be more than fourteen Re publicans in both houses of the next Gen eral Assembly, thus giving a Democratic majority on joint ballot of 5 ).!. In every Southern State, such as Georgia and Vir ginia, where the intelligence and wealth of the white population prevail, this election is a certain forerunner of what will take place in the future. There is not and there cannot be in the very nature of the iutimate relations between t lie white own er of the soil in Georgia and Virginia, aud the black man who is the main laborer in the South, any conflict. It is only in such States as South Carolina and Louisana, where carpet-baggers rule, that anarchy p revails. On the same day, the 7th, the election in Delaw ave took: rIC nnii rrti.1f.4 in Democratic victory in each of the three ! " ,y' a'la .11 m- " Cdderzook, for the oonntins of lio stt. 'pi.;- , muraer of -V infield S. Goss in Cliosfor counties ot tlie Mate. This removes all doubt of the re-election to the United States Senate of that able and sterling Democrat, Hon. Thomas F. Bayard. Right Rev. Francis Patrick McFau i. and, liishop of the Roman Catholic Dio eese of Hartford, embracing the State of Connecticut, died Monday evening at Hart ford. He was SO years old and was bora at Franklin, Pa. Ho was educated at St. Mary's College, Emmet tsburg. Md., and was ordained priest in 1345. He la'oorcd in Watertawn and Utlca, X. Y., until he was consecrated Bishop of Hartford in J I is residence was in Providence until 182, when the new Diocese of rVovi county, and fixed the date of execution for Thursday, November 12th. Thomas Ballard, alias John Dawes, one of the most expert counterfeiters in the country, his wife, Elizabeth Ballard, and Ann Adams, were arrested on Friday, in Buffalo by United States detectives. Ten thousand dollars in counterfeit money, with press, dies, plates and other articles used in counterfeiting were found in their possession. A special from Knoxville to the Nash ville papers stales that the Hv r;, Washington Levere declines the call of oioieu citizens to run for Congress on ac- j count of his moral worth unfitting hira to dence was created, and Bishop McFarland ! , srressn1,a"- IIe Ppoes. tr stand wmttn llf.rtfi.,-,1 i... v .!: i ! oy too JNational Republican iartv ilpsnito --.....v.vi, u.ic ii umuu ii ii: im.i i a, ... . - j j..- "",""8 jwiiiiciaus, ana uetermines to re- could boast of. Mr. miner politically, but tue very i terse : still we are disnesed to do him full county among leading know, because we have heard them nnh licly avow it. Whether or net this will bo the case on the day of the election we do not pretend to say, and hence must wait for ooniinj events to develop tbcmselycs. vention by Mr. Earker's delegates. th and impartial justice. Asa member f j said Geo. T. Swank, regardless of his hon Congress he discharged his duties faithful-! or wroe and published a leading article ly, and, beyoad all question, honestly. We I 111 ,Le Johnstown Tribune opposing the arnone all sects. He erected a convent, ami Episcopal residence, and had made plans j far a crand cathedral. He had been in I failing health for about a year, and his j j aeaetti linally resulted from ulceration of the oowels. His funeral took place yester day morning at 10 o'clock. Republicans, we ! .ay this much in defence of Mr. Barker, f Mr. Barker, thereby not t.aoiKo i - - - l;- i i : i onlv disracinr v; . .i.wu " v -ivi mm aim trcj'SCt flllD it j " " " w I II COUniy, UUt paVlH" a good citizen and one of the most useful, ' thc way for the defeat of Cambria's choice industrious aud enterprising men in Cam- ! V1 Con?rRsior'l conference. And yet bria oonntr. he ((f- T- ?wa"k) etinies-aye, fre- J ytently pratea of honor ! ' ' Heavt oats are good for horses ; none 1 will deny that ; but oats can't make a i horse s coat look smooth and glossy when he is out of condition. Sheridan's Cavalry Condition Powder will do this when ail else fails. Cramps and pains in the stomach are thc result of imperfect in die-estion. -n.l may be immediately relieved by a dose of main in the trosnel mitiistrv. There is a house in Massachusetts once occupied by one Sargeant Weed, who had two sons Benjamin and Nathaniel, who married, and one daughter. The two sons ' had families of ii and 3 children, all ef ! wnom, but one, from grandfather to grand children, died in the same house, and all of one disease, consumption. The last death occurred about a mouth since. A Mobile man, on returning home re cently, was surprised to receive the con gratulations of his family on his happy es cape from drowning. He thought some body had been playing a joke on them, and laughed heartily until he found that they had given bis best suit of rlnthaa Johnson's Anodun LiiLintnt A f.icn, - ...v- ... T ,ull u, cl si.arc in it, and are anxious that .T.n IToajfland or his heirs should shire with them equally this im.i;enso fortune. And now there is another reported convert to Catholicity ; this time, indeed, one of more note even than were the re cent accessions to that church in England. It is the aged Quen Dowager of IVussia who is announced as having gone over, and me assertion is lurther made that sh means to enter a convent. This singular I statement comes over the wives to the ! American Press Association. It sounds j so strange, considering the attitude of the I reigning family in Prussia towards the 1 Catholic rcclesiosties, that it is no easy ! matter to give it ciedence. " j One of the most pathetic reminders tt '. the recent Fall River disaster, is the habit ! of a woman whose three daughters were 1 killed, but who still believes, they arc alive. Every day, when thefactorv bells arc i inf- ' : r j 101 uinner, ine woman, nho saw her three daughters borne away to be buried. takes a tin pail, as she used to do. and starts for Granite Mill No. 1. Sometimes her neighbors divert her attention by tell ing her that it isn't bell time, but other days she walks to where the mill once stood, sees nothing that she can recognize, turns back in a dazed way, aud goes to her deserted home again. Edward P. Sipler, who has a wife and three children, removed to Washington City several months ao, and has since then been in charge of the laree circular saw used for cutting heavy timber in the navy yard. Saturday afternoon, while ad justing the guides of the saw, which was running at the rate of eight hundred revo lutions a minute, he mised his stiike, when tho weight of the hammer head car ried him in front of the saw, which instan taneously cut off his right arm. The few horror-stricken employes endeavored to render assistance, but another revolution cut his body in twain above the hips. In the mangling process the left arm was bared entirely, thc flefb being torn off, and in other places hanging in shreds. They have a hermit at DinErman's Fer ry, 1'ike county. Pa., named Austin Shel don, who has liyed thirty years in a cave six by eight feet in size. He is now seventy years of age and his face has not been shaved for forty years. His lieard, which is several feet long, is as white as snow. He has worn the same suit for twenty years, and now fastens the rents together with hickory withes. He subsists In the summer on roots and berries, and In the winter on wild game. He is well read and intelligent, and a firm believer in the Chris tian religion, devoting most of his time to reading the bible and ether sacred works, lie is so deaf that it is necessary te com municate with him by writing. He is a bird charmer, and has captured and reared a large number. He has never used a lamp nor candle in his cave. His bed is composed of Rtraw scattered upon a solid rock. Sheldon enjoys his peculiar n.nde of living, and says he expects to make this eave hi final resting plac. tr.tcr s v.t r a t:ii t crr..'V Afwri-n. (on" 1ib!i" rinsri. t t- ' J IsTlTl?.! in fonil..;, n.iri.fl.-'T. V. m:h- s t;th ,f n','' " TwiK-n more is fr'", c.i n i storv l:)'r tl'iV ELUMI IKM'SF. f. intl fix rn'iiu?. a Io Rn, ;xix- vt t? Si-riso Hort.1, Sm Hc lo- ki th"! lan.l Iswll timit r-,1 wi;. ll'-n: I'im Sn.tr. Mapit. an-', sow rry .."0 l-trifi.- benriii Ai-pk- troi a:.! - sn.1 1'cr trcc .n tf-u j r'. '.;:. '-. a water itfir th- .v(5- nr i ri-.-.. : CVlTV fie! i fXOCl-t '1 I-ni.l -t 1 1 ami of Hi-pit-" n Inn" I :il tnvc n r tnt pea.u. Snt.l 1 arm il tv r-.ri i Fi'll or in coniiepi ion with i!."'t -' . : th jitirc'tuser my (c?.rc. r" ' r titaWe. CaU'on u-e on tlir !a. , 1?'. 1.ti , K'ipnsiiurjt. tcJ. 3, K74.- ni. ilAH TIN' G. Y. YEAGER& WhalMtile and Uctcil Xarsuf.rTsn i eorpEii ami wj-m A Nil I'.AI.riS IN i . Esatini, Parlor sal Cm 2,'v. J40i Klrventh An ni.'.MUlu 4'rJc-rs ri"-3;oetfiiI!r s-:i:Teil fini p ntli i' ii'fl to, nn.i pi r at t.'i:ti"fl at-ji lui. wri-M rt'T IMcr ji!i:fn;:e or 1-kiV Aitoona, Sei't.Tv l"T'.-ll. 1 !iT;:e.l ' I , .,1 S t: a' 1 " 1 r.'ii PIIOLSTKItlNfr. Ifa toil pprman"ntlv in il:: : a CarrinGr1 Sh Tt il !. M "ho saw her j icircs to inturtn t Ii j n. nar: ii; ii"i-nt t! kin 1 ol 1 IMIULS I Kli)X( riast-s:. htixii.s am) i-tlii-r v. I.n 'r.-. t ?i';i!. chairs. it( om.it. .l.ii'i. 'c . iloiu all wo.-k in that l.:u. Oi l :ir': tnri-. vehicles. -tc.. nn ie as o-i particular. nml -rfc Fiti:.n-ti"r. fcry inMan' 'h.trircs nm '. r.ii'- -' tcn'lfil to prttmet 1 y. Yl LI l'.t en?lur. J u!v 31. 1S74.-D!U. III' QPLKNDID TOWN FOIi SAI.K. A rrry el.-s;it tmvlious rcsiileno- in Kbcn.-'nirv ! on ri'ainatilo i-r'v . Tli H i" 'ii:t:iins Vt rot mis. s feet lutl'. f : i litme, tx-s'iilcs I K'J:"! c. l'.'-i u . ;! ' mcnts. Thc It is U'iJiJ.v i ' ' with all kin It ot fruit aii i 'ir't r. : Mc. Ice Hutisc. and i!r-p I !u i ' : ' ' i oliiiT?. 1 lti iirnjivrtv iil- .r..i ' '' , lv, .r with vcrr ltitlc imiir-i-Tin 1 first class hotel or nttim-Har !.! JXO. IT H( ALJ Ebensbursj, Anij. 21, 174.-U. t I A DM I XI STRATI OX X' . Kst.ita of .1 A Mr Y. UK TTotlce l hcretir pivrn th;.: trAtinn on thc cstn:c of .lar-n - 1 ;r twnyhii of WasliinuH'ti. cniin:vi' CcastMl. Invc txi'ii jrrat!'"l ot!i"N ttte prcjicr stith t: y. IV rs y estate are rciiin-'c I to mak'- 1 V1 " enil thoc bavinir claim? P f'!-' lirescnt thi-m I'ttlv r if licii! -tf l 1 7.1 A K V FA i K KN. A V. C. O IlAiliiA. A Tt'sshington Twi.. Jl't. II. l-7i E XECuToirs xoTirr AS"hcrcs LfttTJ Tc'antcnT.ry I OroK(5K Kmiko. l;:c i.r I.-'-i-itr, ' f eniictv. have twen ifueil to tin- : ' i. n. iiv -til nrm iti'lcl'tcl !" f inin-",H-iti "lint M. -ill I llcil'.m t-.-.l. ' ina cliintf aa:n-l th? jsiit a"-" r si-nt their n ciive aecotic: t theiiUcatcl ri.r ctilcn'int. yu A t 'is o ihltl.. Lorctfo. Oi-t. 9. lSTi.-ti- ADMIXISTitATIOX X Estate of Matthew Mill letters of A.lminiTt'iitiiit'"" cciit nt. l itof Miuitrti..!n!'!.T- i...;.... !.- (rr.-.i).! lo tin- uif.t-r- son in lct.t-.i to ii 1 cfi.ttc '' Tr'' aa(nt the same w'ill rrt-Ml th-'l bated for 'ttlcmcn: KKANCIS O t hli-I A Lwretto, Uot. 9. 1474. -tft it i 2 t2 lui hi hi- Tt I.Lfl net -1 Dt I" I V.A ra 'i IVI T&r i i ' .1 tii 041 ttt -(.! trl: -T il.r' U-asit 1. Ei ij. fts Wfli ':ll. l. if: Vir, ft rir. f-v,!i -A h :.!i -l 1ST , -1? "Int ! rtrtirj i-JTir, .t -il"; Who '. ra to I ft'l "an r Llt!t0U 1 Rot 1 IJ ca ii
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers