u y THl CH3BRI1 FRtEhUH. i E---. r V.- UUcn JyhU, K A., r-t.t.,- vr : c, on ioi- 1 iiudj iUHiiMHS, " " iHtf-. IOHI. . - . . . . i . '.' 1 1 . ' . j. 'Democratic Xativnul Ticktt. FOR rilESIDENT : SAMUKIj J. TILDKX, f NV.r Vork I Oil TICK I'RKMDK.NT : TII03. A. HENDRICKS, of ln.li.a:ia i:i.FX'Ton .L tick nr. AT I. AliCiK. I1.! V. It. Itt CK Al.tW, HitlUEI. H. VTll ..v. . . . llsf ItlCT : 1. irob-rl F. ft It-r. ,' !V .!.. R. Mft'ollum, a. O-tMir H. H-rifll. t ' Pi. Vrfiklfri 'V. Knox, a Vtu. H. H riiflil. j IT. John II. I hl, ovi r, .'. John Motr.-r, , in. !iviil f. Julni A. Morrison, 7. i lirrii June, r. V,l,mni K. 11'iMir. 0. I.. I.lifi.ui. i. I'l. H. T. Triim lii; r, 11. i-. II. Kowlillirf, 12. John Nttilon. 1 1. Joe.' li. (IiChiiiuiiI 14. 1:i!i-I D. lUms, 110 fl;ll'ii Wimrppr, "I. .Tim-s .1. 1 1 l.l. tf , .'iiii U. li uthriv. E? !c ''"T'.H-. G ;t"""' ; Hot), r 5. IP-own. 1 'i", U;nj! 1. ilon'is. ' j ! Jtinovritic District Ticktt. Fou (-ONOi:fi : IIox. JOHN 11E1LLV, of Altooua. state erATjK : F. A. SIIOIIMAKEK, Es , HScusl.urg. tt'ut'Ject to District Curiferciu-o.) D.-mvtrutio County 'Aloktt. assembly: JOIIJi DOWN KY, Johnstown. JAME8J. THOMAS, Cauoll Tup. siierikp : JOHN KYAN. C'aml.ria "...rough. ASSOCIATE Jt'IHlliM : f JOHN FLANAGAN, Stony Cn-ek Twp. JOHN 1). THOMAS, KDensPmg. l'KOll HOfSE Fl HECTOR : ISAAC N. Wl!?SIN(iEU, Itl.it-klick Twp. J l" K V COM M I S 9 IO K I! R : JOSEPH CJtA-MEK, AU.-glu ny Twp. In four States the Democrats have gaitu-d over 100, WO popular vtes out of 500.000. and secuted a gain of 16 electoral voles out ! of 29. QuiKT as ii is kept, we foe I m'e in sajing that not a fow honest, tesiectablc Kepub- lic.msin this vicinity and elsewhere will vote the Democratic ticket, or a g-;od!y J portiou vf it, at the coming election. Fail-j ing in that, they w ill at least decline to ; vote for some of the candidates on theii owu j ticket, because they see. as eveijbody cl.se j sees, that the samo rim. oi- what. i t.ft of! it, that run the political machine in years past to the great pecuniary loss of our peo ple, aie still managing matters in their on u peculiar way, much to the disgust of the j moral aud respectable poitkm of tbo Re p iblican party, many of whom know and leel that they have su fiend iu pocket through tlie manipulations of the desper ate crew that n.nv seeks to d.agoon them iuto the support of their chosen f.tvoiiies. What possible difference it can n,ako : to the Johnstown TrbuM whether ie i Fhbeman U or is not run by thiec law vers i Mild contractor Is beyond our ken to de termine. We never did vaunt our own bilities never pretended, indeed, that we i '""'"r.is or winch will come Irmn t!i Rr, , . .. . lt , . ! pul.lirans, and prolmlily lj enough to give 1-iessed any ability worth making a fuss , ,, i,,11l.r;lts n ,,!, aiifv. The .lanC r to alv.ut but if we can't fnd abund r.t Ue- t Ohio is tl,;tt u,e l:. iiullic:tr.s norrinaied a public,.! pr.H.f that wo are the peer of Ton, i I'VTV-"fV" f,,r,tV"t;bU'f l'm,' 0' 1 : tnat or Si-crc1;iry of Ntate, In tlie liops that rwank m all that relates to the conduct ef his nomination would keep the Te m rt-ran nnewspaier, we willagrce thattho Tribune . ri.,h n;., ... - ......r -...i i ..j,-.. ... u...,.. in.o. u liavo sadly missed our vocation in ad 'pting i tifn of thn Crusader Milton nrnen. iy th the journalistic profession. Tuie, we are ! iI,,'''lieans. drove a gn at many W-i mans . ... . , , , . , : over to t.ie support of the Dennhr,tic. eaadi- liot able to abuse and defame the eharactera , date. Th t-er-loving Itepuhlieans who will of some of our best citizens, simply becauso i vo,,, forth Dvino.ratie ticket in preference they do not ag.ee with us in politics, j Tom Swank can and does do, but we; Temperance Candida? may lie enough to able to treat the current events of the dav ' f;a,,so tl,H regular candida-ie to fall. The , ,A , r , ,-, , , , ; hopes are tli.it the Ilepul.li, ans w iil pull and defend our candidates and political co- j ti.rough In both casos, but there is room for laborers from tbo aspersions of creatures j doubt. such as ho with aa much ability and as I w -- much familiarity with the subject tieatcd j Tx-Skxator Lthas TtirjfRt i.T., of II a was ever displayed in the columns of the linois, a wnim peisonal and political friend Tribune. Fm ther de ponent saith not. j of the late President Lincoln, and one of ,--.- the brightest intellects that ever paid tri IVe know whereof we affirm when we ' lute to the Republican cause, made his first assureour Democratic brethren throughout speech in the present campaign before a the county that theio is no fear now, what- j Democratic audience in Chicago on Tues- er there may been heretofore, in regard day evening of last week, in The course of to the election of Mr. Ryan, the only can- which be gave the follow ing sound reasons didate on our county ticket whoso defeat ; f"r Hie faith that is now in him: was and still is determined upon, either by ! We hav tried the Republican prty for fair mpan or f....l..,. not l.v f ,, .. ' , for bis discomfiture could t-.ever be aeconi- plished by any such method. His political enemies have played their best, or rather their worst caids, and as Ihey have been shown to be utterly devoid of truth and ...... . , .. prompted only by malice and desperation, tlie reaction has set in and the sober second thought is beginning to manifest itself f, , , . , , everywhere. Had the judgment of Mr. Davis and his friends been equal to their i- .- .1 ii i I , v.ud.ct.vcness. they would have reseivcd their wholesale lying for a more oppoitnne niouient i'i the campaign : and if they find , ., , .. . , , ,, . themselves thus early without the following they hoped and worked for, they may at- tribute it to the fact that truth is mi-l.t o aud must pievail. i lie Democratic renaioiiai tontciencei well that 'current street talk" is not the is called to convene at Cresson to day, and kind of material upon which lo base a there is every reason to Iioiks that a candi- charge against a candidate, and although date will be chosen that can and will be the editor aforesaid may have no doubt in elected over John A. Lemon, or any other his own mind that John Ryan o.-his friends man tha. may be pitted against him. The used money lavishly to secure his nomina district is Denriciaiic by a clear and deci- tion, he should expect no intelligent person ded mnjoiity, and nothing lias ever been to take stock in such a rumor unless be is wanting to make that majority efficient in able to name some one or more of thedele the election of a Slate Senator except a gates who were bought or sought to be little more back-bo.io iu the Democrats bought by John Ryan or bis fi iends. We themselves. 'I he foolish presumption that defy him to name any such delegate, ot to John Lemon could not bo beatcu has done produce any eridmce whatever that Mr. more to disphit the Demociats than any Ryan, or any man on bis behalf, paid, ten other real or iinaginaiy cause that has ever dered or promised any money or other val entcred into a Senatoiial contest, and it is liable consideration for the vote or for the l.igb time for this fallacious idea to be , voluntary absence of any delegate in the abandoned. Mr. Lemon can be .beaten, last Democratic county convention. More ai.d easily beaten, by any Democrat who is than that, we believe we are safe in saying worthy the confidence of his pa.ty and is ; that Mr. James can earn a goodly sum by fit for the jxis'tioii spoken of; and we know presenting what in a com t of justice would that the conference can anil wo have eve. y bo considered proof or w hat he himself says reason to believe Mint it wiiiseh ct jnstmch be has no doubt about in his own mind, a man. C nnbri . i onutj isjus'Iy enti led to So come on wit Ii your evidence, Mr. James, the honor of li ie irritation, but the qucs or else, like a fair man a yon are, admit tiou of Jocat oi is rot blf s i iuipoi t-.uit that you have done an injustice to a te as the question cf fity.6 and popularity. 1 spectable citiaen. Oik readers need no assurance of ihej pleasure it alTo.ds us to place at our mast- trail tuis nuK me name i io. I KeiliT, who, as we briefly announced in; , . wart le,limiilllltell for j ...... ' l-. ,,,- .v.. .rm.mim.tcd for J..n-i ;g,con U.nrs.lHy i.y ti.e i7eniT.crat..ccou- , fen iice if this district, then in wMion at Ti-.lf.url. r. Mr. o 1 v. as wesiH know, i was not a seekon after the position-in fact I ,. , , ' ! his own peisonal interests and inclination. ; i were decidedly adveise to the acceptance ; w,jc, been made riming the war. ' fur a becond time of l!ie lionor conferied j 'I lie leaders and the managers who had S upon him-bnt being a line man in every j revelled on patronage, contracts, and job i , , i.ii- i ,t i, ' bery for four years, had no idea of rehn- ',-uiise of the word, he believed that he , their sou. ces of wealth. They owed a debt nf gratitude to tlie people w ho j ine enormously rich by the war, . had so triumphantly elected him two years j and would gladly have kept up the fieht ' a-o and with that ever piesent desire to "C. which, while exhausting the blood and i " ' , , 1, I treasure of the people, was a souice of nu- 'se.ve his friends ... every honorable way fai)l,m)lit J,,,' clrr.ii.tcombi.m-.io.is I w hich has at all times m.iiked his Inter- : and ,,ut of Comrrcss. course with bis fellow men, ho once more , ' sul-.miU with grace and diguity to the will J of his constituents and accepts a nomina- tioti w hich might as well have been made on the first bailot, Uut wliicli is none tlie less heaity and in accordance with the pojmlar will because, for reasons entirely fat if-factory, it was debiyed until tlie ninth ballot. Of the nominee himself w-e deem ' j it sujteiilitons to speak at any great length, i NVc did what we could in our own bumble i way to secuie for liim the unprecedented ! majority which Cambria county lolled up j iu 1874. and if there id any man who voted ( for him then who can find it in his heart to say that be has not proved worthy in every respect of the confidence reposed in him, we certainly have no idea of how such a man could be conciliated. Faithful, attentive and earnest in the discharge of his duties, be has made a record for hiui sclfiii Congress that cannot be impeached, i and aside from the fact that be is entitled j to a full share of the honor justly due o tlie Democratic majority in t he lower house, be deserves to be returned because be ha proved emineutly true to eveiy trust and because be has left out of view bis own peisonal interests in order to suln-orve the eiests..f tlie people of his own distiict in particular and of all other districts in general. He is the most popular ai.d nu juetioiiably one of the purest men that could have been named, and no honorable effort blu-uld therefore be wanting on part or bis friends to send him for a second time to represent tLi strong Republican district iu the lower bouse of Congress. n--.ii. WnE" lLe Johnstown Tribune is forced acknowledge the danger of defeat for its party in Oliio and Indiana, as it does in the follow ing outspoken editorial published in Holiday's issue, tbo average reader may ve,'J" reasomibly conclude that the "jig is up Willi the party oi plunder and corrup tion, not only in the two States named, but in almost every other State of the Cnion. The Tribune is ab ut the last paper from w bich such aa admission could bo expected, and when it seeks to explain the d' feat j which is inevitable in bo'h those States, the ays oi orani.sm are iruieeu numocieu, and number is exceedingly small. The Tri- i'n4 SS Th? daticr to th K.Mmbliean rarv in Indiana is that titers Is a Orexnlinek fat-lion whirh will have from 2."i,tii) lo 30,0oi votes n,," nominating a ticket, but the latter wer At,f,r r!i,1,,n 8 hT 1 "r money atl)i I norninati'd all the nm. t,iltt tl.n .,.;.-.. 1 yers sn.l Ximw 11 to be. a .l,lu i slon. .Inilge.l ry Its own standard. Its record" of the last five years, it ts a fraud and a cheat. Tli Democratic party can do , K. lrnl ' form is its watchword, and we hare the r- ' of l!'a M:,,,of U-presentativcs, w hi. b, : willi hostile Senate and Executive, has 1 acomnplisli.il great ihinpsiti ain?!e senihvi. lf Gov. Tilden ts elected President, it w illlsi 1' 'I'f.'i'lVr a,lmini",rftf" J "lout the reforms promised in lb.; St. Louis platform, because the same vote which elects "i,n r-tlrii to Congress members in v cord witb him. While, if Gov. Hares is ,.,ecte.l President, however honest may b" bis iriteniions tr purify the Government re- f"rT" r,,v'1 r,'!r.vire' a'"1 ru,r sound enrreney, he w 1 11 ha ve no power to do eitber. because live-sixths of those elected with him, who vii;l control the pariv in set, in, are VJ''' kW hj ' 8UC5i leiu.uia. I mmi a Ju The editor of the Herald knows rerr 2Vi Vaue if the 1'resent Distress. Republicans bad desired to restore the Government to a peace looiing aiiwi ,e dim. of the; civil war, the roan lay ope:, before the..., nml tne task was broad ope:, before the..., nm All thev had to to w as to apply the - -, , ..e H,, t)f w iat ma y be called the ,n jiltary vstem, recur to the expenditures f lSW. Willi me necessary aouuion, nnu Mart the o.k of retrenchment. That is what I lie country asked and expected, as t fJo aftp.. (he sacliflces These sinister influences prevailed in leg- isiation. and ius:caa i a rigin system oi economy, such sis was at once adoj.ted in Fiance under a similar condition of things, a vicious ingenuity w-is employed to keep , up the expenditures to the highest possible point, to create oftices, and to expand in every direction. Of course the appropria tions had to be reduced from the war foot ing. but no (hanks to tlnse in power, for tlie country would never have submitted to the continuance of such burdens. Uut this diminution was never honest or earnest, Kvery million of reduction had to be extorted, and wherever one was yielded, two at least ought to have been obtained. This truth w as demonstrated at 1 1 1 o last session by the facility with which the House cut oil at a single blow forty millions of dollars, and would have struck at lifty millions but for the 'logged and bitter hostility of the President and the Senate, who tinally succeeded in impairing the work of the people's representatives to the extent of ten millions of dollars. The howling of discharged officeholders, the outcry of Rings depiived of their ac customed plunder, the resentment of offi cials thieves and their confederates at. short appionriat ions, and the lying of thr Administration about cripplingthe service, only mean that honest and resolute men have commenced n practical reform, which cannot stop until the rotten and proliigate system is torn up root and branch. The close corporation that has been running the (Government fjr sixteen years, and would never admit outsiders to its secrets or its dividends, is very much disturbed at. he actual situation, arid a great ileal more so at the outlook, which plainly reveals that its days of power for evil are number ed. It makes the blood mount up with hot indignation to think how the ieopleof this country have been cheated, robbed, be trayed and misled during the last elevens jeais of so called peace. If the saving of the last session alone, forced through by a Democratic Houso fiesh from the people, bad been applied during the decade which closed with I he depai tnreof I he Republican majority from that body. 1he state of the country would bo far diiTi-eut fiom what it now is. Leaving out of view entirely the moral .fleets that would have resulted from econ omy in national affairs, instead of the reck less exti a vagance which has been in prac tice, the material results alone are well calculated to excite the deepest feeling at the profligacy of the paily which origina ted, erfi cted, and carried on the atrocious system to which we have referred. This rati. of reduction in ten years would have j yielded a capital of thrco hundred millions i of dollars, exclusive of interest ! JVopeily invest ed and applied, the fund thus saved from extravagance or dishonesty would have enabled the Government t.o re sume payments in specie, would have ad justed all our financial tionbles, would have harmonized conllicting interests, and would haro made the peoplo prosperous, instead of being bank.upts and weighed down by oppressive loudens. Thews arc palpable, facts which cannot be disputed. They put the responsibility of the present bard times on the Republican naifv. and they prove that retrenchment is the short j and sure cut to reform. In view of this demonstration, which I he plain people see ami know to be. true, it is no wonder that there is distrust of the uieu who brought on this prevailing distress, and a loud and geueral demand for a change of adminis tration, of measures, and of men. Y. Y. Sun. Tuts Plot to Cawbt Indiana. A ' Lover of Fair Play" from the Fourth Ward, New Yoi k, writes as follows: To the Editor of the World. Sir : On Monday night, as many a man can be found to make affidavit to, a gang went, from the Fourth Ward, leaving it lo go to Indiana. These men are sent there by the Republicans, for what purpose can well be understood. Now these men also are to have their expenses paid there and back. Mr. Editor, I think this an outrage upon the intelligent and honest voters of the whole country, and should be attended to at once. The Philadelphia correspondent of the World writes fiom that city that picked men are to bo sent from New York and from Pittsburgh, and that they are to be paid all expenses and $100 each in addition. This scheme was actually worked in Ohio at the election of Hayes and Allen last year, with this variation, the bogus tickets were adroitly dropped into the ballot-box at intervals during the day, instead of waiting until the boxes wero being empiied for the purpose of emitting. The ballot boxes in all of the cit ies and most of the populous towns of Ohio, were worked in that manner, and it. was by that process alone that Hayes was enabled to sccuie his majority over Allen. The Republicans in portions of Ohio having been initiated in this art. of manipulating the ballot boxes last year, it is not considered necessary to send as ma.iy men to that State this year, but to turn their efforts to introducing the science in Indiana. My informant admits that he visited Ohio last year and helped to instruct some of the local officials in the execution of the Philadelphia scheme, as lie calls it, but knpt himself out of reach on elecliou day. FnTotiTFO. Railroad Accident. A terrible accident occurred at an early hour on Friday morning last, at Blacklick sta tion, on the Pan Handle road, about twelve miles from Columbus, Ohio. The train was running at a late of speed perhaps forty miles an hour., when from 6ome cause oi other four cars of the train jumped the track, and rolled dox-n the embank ment, which is some twenty-five or thirty feet at that place. The engine, baggage car and mail car remained on tho track, while those in the rear went off. This leads some to think the accident was caused by a broken rail, whilo others are of the opinion that it was caused by jumping the track while making the curve. Tho cars that went down the embankment are in a terribly broken condition. One gentleman who was on the t rain states that tho cars are fine, enough to make kindling wood, and that, there is not a single wheel on any of the cars. Four persons are known to have lieeii killed outright, two men and two children. It is variously estimated that there must have been leivcen thirty and forty persons were more or less injuied ! oy me acciuent. Ttrz ragged coat again.t the bloody abut. The llepid llcnn l'anic. There is a panic at Washington in tbo Republican camp, in regaid u Ohio aud Indiana, which is fast spreading to the io Ittital cfuires iu the states. Cbuudlo.'s recent vnot to this city for more money, the luyslerous movements of bis confideu tial agents, and tlie suddeuly changed out look of tlie canvass in both bttites, berve to explain the cause of alarm. All accounts that pretend to be impartial now agree that the Germans are diily con soliciting Iheir strength on tne Tilden ticket. Various causes have contributed to this powerful accession.. The Germans as a body are intelligent, frugal, indejeiid ent, honesty, and for refoim. They favor a policy which embodies these ideas more than they do either party. Hence they may be called a fluctuatiug force in our polities, voting this year for one side and the next for the other side, according to changed conditions. They know what Gov. Tilden lias achieved in this State, arid they see in him a candidate fit to be tiusted for genuine reform. They know, too, that in the event of Hayes's eh c ion, the influences which now control the pa.ty would necessarily con trol him, as they have held Grunt, who is infinitely stronger and more self-willed. The Germans, like other adopted citizens, regard Hayes as completely identified with a secret proscript.ive Know-Not hing or ganization, which lias for its leading dogma "the exclusion of all foreigners from oflico" and nr toleration tor Catholics. They also consider Haj-es as representing the fanaii cal temperance interest, wh'ch the male and female crusaders in Ohio cariied to an extreme of folly, and as fa vo. ing sumpt nary laws and other offensive legislation. These reasons may be classed as partially per sonal. They are operating not only iu Ohio and Indiana, but in Wisconsin. Illi nois. Michigan, Minnesota, and other States of the West, as well as here in the East. The Germans hold the balance of power between tlie two parties in Ohio and Indi ana. Within the. last ten da3's especially, they have united in a manner to surprise both Demoeiats and Republicans. The drift is all one way now. t'arl Schurz has completely lost his grip on his count iy men, and lie feels the pangs of a false position and of a ruined leadership. There is no probability of a reaction before the 10th of October, and if the current sweeps on as it is now doing in the West, there will be a practical end of the campaign in a fortnight. No wonder they are panic stricken at Washington, and that the most desperate efforts are made to turn the tide into a new channel. Frantic appeal wiil not. stir I lie German vote this year ; and if the Democratic managers w ho have charge of the campaign here will do only half their duty in bringing out the vote, in organiz ing st every point, and in confronting Chandler's intended trickery and frauds, the election of Gov. Tilden may be pit down as sure as any human event can bo. X. Y. Sun. A Treading Hayes Speaker. The best-praised man in the Radical news papn is liob Ingers.-ll. a hired stump speal i-r for Hayes and Wheeler, now trav crsti. the tioithern States. Ingeisoil bus only one speech, but hat is enough when we c .nsider his remarkable talent for a low older of blackguardism. His sharp pas saes have long been current injbai -rooms, and his outrages against common decency are worthy of the Erie Canal "iu its palm iest days." Rut be draws the crowds ; men whoso animal natures are stirred yell with delight as some sentence more vicious 1..... iiw.lL. f-jllu f. nm -ii it i jii Ii i i... even people with self respect and Christian I proclivities listen to Ins ribaldry and blas phemy without demur, in the hope that the pai ly may be benefited. 13ut it is an insult lo the understanding to call this mau ait j oratoi. He is a man of evil impulses and ! bad passions, capable of influencing men like himself and of attracting others of the better sort, who come to his meetings be cause the show is cheap and the entertain ment comic. Pateut soap peddlers and tooth paste merchants tin our street cor nets draw as well every evening and get rid of as sharp sayings, in inns the profanity, us Mr. Rob Ingeisoil. An old-style Al legheny raftnian. with a pint of red eye to warm him up, would be found full of the staple utterances of this model Hayes or ator. Rut it is not witb bis style nor with bis lack of the amenii ies of life that we most find fault. His defects in this regard are no doubt the legitimate lesult of early tiaining or had associations. He is au avowed unbeliever and a shocking blas phemor of evotything a Christian holds sacred. His attacks upon Mr. Tilden are trivial in compai ison with his utterances against tho God that made him. To en nbie the reader to see what manner of man this is that the Radical party a party claiming all the morality and all the de cency in the country delights to honor, wo append an extract from a led tire de livered by Rob Iugersoll a fow years ago r "Search tlie records of the whole world, find ont the history of overy barbarous trlte, and yon can fled no crime that lonched a lower depth of Infamy than those the Hible God commanded and approved. For such a God I have no werds to esprevs mv loathing and contempt , and all tbo words lo all the languages of man would scarcely be sufii-cie-.it. Away with sueli a God !" None of his diatribes against Tilden aud tho Democratic party equal in intensity of contempt this quoted passage. Iu addition to his lecture be has written and published a book full of such blasphemy. The Radi cal brethren should ciic.ulate it as a cam paign document. Venango Spectator. The FroiTivE Slave Law. John W. Forney and Col. Rob Itigersol ate attempt ing to make the fugitive Slave Law an is sue in the present contest and trying to show that the Democratic patty are re sponsible for it. That won't wash, how ever, for I he Fugitive Slave Law was pass ed by the Whig Congress that was elected with Gen. Taylor, and wassigncd by Pres ident Fillmore, who succeeded to the Ex ecutive office on the death of President Taylor. Moreover John W. Forney, who now says be can remember his own "shame and humiliation on the passage of that law " was himself a red-hot supporter cf it and one of the loudest in demanding that its provisions should be enforced. What Col. Rob Ingeisoil did at that time, we do not know. He was not heard of then, and will not be again after the November elec tion. The Fngit ive ??lave Law is of too recent date to allow Mr. Forney to palm it off on the Democracy, or to palm himself off on tha people as having held up bis hands in boly horror at the passage of that act. He advocated its passage both with his voice and bis pen, and that he now stands i'p and in the face of niPn who know that he is lying, declares that he was overwhelmed with "shame and humiliation," is most astonishing. Surely, Forney is losing his reason, or elso be has become Mie most un mitigated liar in all Christendom. Belle fonte Watchman. Springfield Republican : Mr. Haves wasn't a "Crusader," and didn't put his ! band in his rsKiket for the benefit of that curious movement. Rut it is charged that j be let the ladies have a hall of his in Fie- i nmtit rent free, tbar. Mr. Hayes went to the meetine,, and that a nephew footed tha gas-Jill. Aeit ami Other Votings. Henry Wain Heec-her regards our Un cle Samuel as an immoral man. The c; editors of 11. A. Pierce, h Springfield baukiupt, get one tent o a doiiar. . . A New Haven gill renounced Ch.isti- anity and professed Judaism in older to fctt married. Mrs. Mary Potter killed herself with laudanum in Middle'own, Conu., through disgust at getting drunk. Near Summit, Mis-s., a man jumped off a train to get his bat, and did uot get it because he broke bis neck. The fire and life insurance companies of Hartford, Conn., have contributed 100 to the yellow fever sufferers of Savan nah. Thomas Fisher, another Molly Ma gti ire, lias been arrested at Maucb ('hunk, charged witb the anuider of Morgan Powell. John O'Connor Power, M. P., from Mayo county, Ireland, is on his way to this country with au Irish centenaty congratu latory address. A young lady in Williamsburg, N. Y., was driven to suicide by scandal motigeis, last week. Her name was Wright, but she didn't do light. On Saturday R. Riggin shot and fatally wounded J. Ford, at Cristield, Md., the cause being that Ford objected to liiggin as a Fon-in law. The Dardenong, from Melbourne to Sydney, foundered near Jcrvis Ray during the hurricane of the 11th inst. Sixty of the crew and passengers were drowned. It was Mary Newton, daughter of General Newton, and tnt quite three yeais of age, who fired Hie mine that blew Hal lett Point Reef to pieces on Sunday last. Two Mollie Maguires, John J. Slattery and Michael Doo!:n. charged with conspir acy to murder William and Jesse Major, were convicted at Pottsville on Saturday. Chairman MoGowan. .f the Philadel phia Democratic city committee, repoits that for the first time in eight years the various -elements of the Democracy are united. The monument to Christopher Colum bus erected on the Centennial grounds at Philadelphia will le unveiled on the 12th i if October, the anniversary of the landing of Columbus. In fourStates, Vermont, Maine, At kar sa. and Alabama, sll of which voted for Grant, the Republicans le 120.000 votes, or nearly one quaiter of tlie ei;tiie vote of both patties. Miss Martha Rntler, of Rrisfol, Va., bad to drink half a gallon of wine aud a pint of whisky because a spider bit her. She recovered, and now spiders are worth thiity cents a piece in tfiattown. A woman has spread dismay among her fashionable Newbniypoit relatives by appearing among them wearing the same bonnet she wore when she married and went to Texi, twenty-five years aqo. A Roston jm y acquitted a woman of keeping a bouse of ill fame recently, but when the Judge found that they had "visited tho scene" and partaken of her hospitality be took the case under advise ment. The Republican platform in If 60 con' taiued this plank : We denounce the law less iuvasloo, by armed force, of the soil of any Stale or Territory, no mutter under what pretext, as among the gravest of crimes." (-Sen. Newlon on Monday pronounced the Hell Gate explosion "a thorough one." Some persons were inclined to believe, from tho slight noise and shock, that only a part of the explosives had been dis charged. On Thursday an old woman named O'Hira, while gathering coal ou tlie rail road track near Hawley, was run over by a freight train and had both of her legs severed from her body, llet death follow ed soon after her pitiful mishap. Milner, of the Irish rifle team, the man wiio mace the titteen consecutive bull's-eye shots at Creed moor, is vaid to be as fchy and reiiting as a girl. They think he could hardly le induced to pop the question at less than a thousand paces. A terrible state of things is repotted from Rrunswick, Ga., where out of u pop ulut ion of 2,r00 there are GOO cates of yel low fever. No material change bus taken place in Savannah, but if anything the epid emic is becoming more virulent aud wide spread. Charles Seidle, a Pittsburgh youth aged 21, was married on the 2G;h of August to M iss M'Clelland, and was so well pleas ed with the married state that on the 2Sth of August he married Miss Czarnecki. The father of his first w ife has bad bim ar rested for bigamy. Long engagements have always been considered unwise, and now the Indiana Supreme Court declares tbtui illegal. It has filed a decision that if a promise of marriage is by its terms not lo be pel formed within a year it is void, unless iu writing and signed by the parties. Several of the more prominent colored citizens of Baltimore have joined in au ap peal to the colored people or the south to vote for Tilden and Hendricks on the ground that in this way they will become ident ified w ith the people in the communi ties in which they live. Sunday evening, when the tide was at about half ebb, t he steamer Providence of the Fall River Line, passed over the scene of the Hell Gate explosion. She encoun tered no difficulty, and sailed about fifty feet neater to Hallett's Point than any steamer has ever done tie fore. William Hart was arrested in Roston on Saturday on the charge 'of having stolen, ontheGtli inst., $5,000 worth of jewelry from the house of William II. Kemble, in Philadelphia. It is said he pawned the jewelry in New York for $1,200, but bad pent the money when arrested. On Sunday, the 10th inst., while test ing some cannon on the leach near Pana ma, C. A., one of them exploded, killing four persons, dangerously wounding two or three others, and slightly injuring about eight more. The President of the State and leading officers of the squad are among the hurt. A crazy man was tied fast in a wagou for transportation to Rlountville, Ky. He yelled so loudly that the frightened horses ran away, throwing out Hie two keepers and breaking an arm of each. Then' the lunatic seized the reins, controlled the horses, dtove alone to the asylum, aud de livered himself up. A French physician, who has just been received by the Pope, reports : "The Pope is healthy and vigorous ; ho has no disease. All his organs are in perfect harmony, and his countenance, voice, and gesture are those or a man of 60, not of S3. He can, and even should, apart from unfore seen accidents, live thus ten years more." Last Friday, near Freehold, Pa., Ira Root, who runs a threshing machine, had a quarrel with a farmer named Roland Huntley regarding the measurement of grain. Huntley drove R(ot Trom the barn with a pitchfork, and while following him was hit. on the bead with a stone thrown by Root, from the effects r which be died that night. Root was arrested. Thursday morning a man named Dry was killed in the vicinity of Newton Hamil ton, on the Pennsylvania railroad. He was walking on the track, was knocked down, inn over and so horribly mangled bv a freight train that scarcely any part of bis body was without ghastly wounds but bis bead. Dry formerly boarded at the Second ward house, AUoona. He was unmarried. IV1 ET HODS P 0 1 N Ts"; METHODS OF BUSI?iESSPO!aTS GF AB'Jl IN THE PUHCHASE CF-k--. OLiOTHIHfl i Mi a i I,, WANAMAKER & BROWN'S (Kx To artlca wa liwiia we intrttiM anenuon and CarM . -CUP gf THE PTjnCHASINO PUBLIC lirTHODS: rE hare lut una iT'.ca All w receive Te-:- I fcyrutrit bum All give a tiuriilee protecting AIL.. WE Kef urn Monty when we cannot suit AU WE buy our goods at e.rtf hands, Ja immense quautin.s, aul at U.e loweet prices for Cuhh - WE manufacture frith xTTeme tare every garmeut vie fee 11. WE laericrt every yari cf pood that goes into our gunacuts.. . WE yr.t a ticket on every rrmer. (bowing plainly Its quality and jTice...... WE cut off evtry Item of uanece!ry expenditure.... WE employ flret-cless workmen in every department WE gtve Batlfa'-Hon toevery purchaser r return the juowy, In addition to our Tmmenae Etoci of Eeaay-M ad Ootliir.p .t u. v cf Men'a anl B )y' rurslaUln Good, Eliirts -cf our own mtit; aaa d-w iT Very Iaj wet. t Frieea. WANAMAKER & BROWN S. E. COR. SIXTH & MARKET STRrET3, Ilev. Kail e"J. II. Langlois. pact or of the Catlmlic chinch at Mhcmi, went to Savannah promptly afier the frt ap peaiauce of the yellow fever, ami has since been untiring in his attendance to the spir itual and physical wants of the sck. On Saturday last be died of ibediead disease. A patent has lx en taken out in Eng land for liovni paer blankets as bed cov erings. They compensate for their l'gbt ness by their density, aid add mateiially to warmth. They are peifoialed at dis tances of about fur inches, in order to pro mote ventilation, aud the small izes, 4 by 51 inches, sell at about nine cents each. Several cuitracts have beeu tuade for hos pitals and schools. One eek ago the New Tosk Tribune tinted as not the least of the wonders of the Exhibition haTe been tlie safety and dispatch with which an aitny of visiters has ben carried bark and foiih each day. The Pennsv Ivania load alone has aveiaued 14.000 pas.!!gei a day for the past two weeks, and on some days b., cat t ied 30, (00. With all this ttavtl. not a s-insjie passenger has been injuied m:;co tte opeu iug of the Ei.hiluk.il. Compliment could not say more. Yellow Jack ison the march, R')d be leaves a fearful ttail. A sri.u'.l seapott ton in (Jemgia lepoits one f.uuth f its population sick, with a pitiful dearth if physicians, food, and tunics, and staiva tiou on the bieshnld. Appeals uv c-.irae, which cannot be too promptly met, fir help for these new claimants ou Xoitheiu boun ty. Meanwhile the Goveruui-iit medics) authorities give their reassuring opiuiou that the fever will not travel lioitb cf its present territoiy. The bank managers of St. Paul. Minn., have mbscnbi d $ot0 tow aid a fund f.-r the support of tlie wife and chi d cr J. L. I Icy wood, the heroic cabier of the ISoitl -field bunk. A ciieular bat beeu prepared and forwarded to all the h.iiiks and bunk ers in the couutty, desciibing the attack upou the hank by tlie eight ibteis. and Heywood's refusal ui:djr penalty of death to open the bank vaults. Contributions are nskd for the fuud f.om bank officers and all othrrs desiring to contribute to it. Right Hev. Jamea O'Couivu, who was lately consecrated Bishop of tLeC aih.dk diocese of Omaha, Neb., snivel Here u Satuiday night. All the public Catholic institution! of tho city were illuiubiated, bells rung, and tbett' eie many other manifest ( ions of welcome and joy. Hish op O' Conner was on Sunday inUllod in the Cathedral. Immense crowds ihiovjifd the building outs'de I'neHs fiom a'l pans of the diocese weie piesent. Uisb.ip Regan, of St. Louis, conducted the set vices. In Forest county, ou Thursday, the mouutaiu Mreatns became giently swollen from the recent storm, the waters tilling the partly-settled valleys in the lumber regions and doing mnki damsk'e. Near Kalston sixteen persons lost their lives. In McKean county tlie storm was of long du ration aud eveie. Two persons were drowned near South port. Iu Tioga county tlnee lives are known to have been lost, and it is authentically reported that four persons were drowned while attempting to cross a swollen stream at Wellspoit. -The wife of Hon. Iorenz.. Dattfi.rd.M. C, of Ohio, attempted to throw hetself and four-year old child into the rapids of the Niagara Iliver above tho American Fall on Tuesday of last week, but was res cued. She was taken to the International Hotel, where she said that she bad come to Niagara Falls intending to commit sui cide, but would make uv further attempt. Mr. Danford was informed by telegraph of his wife's action, and he sboitly arrived nt the village. Mrs. Danford refused to give any information as u the cau that prompted the act. There resided until recently in Terry county au eccentric individual 'known as James H. Devor. Iu anticipation of his final retirement from earthly scenes ho de citlcd several years ago to become the ar chitect of his own coffin, and. Wing rather particular in the matter, concluded to fashion it out of locust. A tree of that species was cut down, and he had the same mannfartuied into lumber, front which his proposed last home was niado. The other day he died, and when the e.offiu was brought into the house for the purpose of depositing the body iu it, it was round that he had mada no allowance for an increase of stature, aud it as accoidingly tontJinrt. - Oeorge Winthrop made an ascension in a hot air balloon at Paxton, Illinois, Saturday, and at an attitude of five hun dred feet the balloon bursting with a loud report, began to descend lapidly. The wreck formed a parachute and checked the rapidity of h is descent for a shot t time, but when about three hundid feet high a col lapse occurred. Tb man shot imo.llv i esrthwaid. striking with such foice as to drive his legs into the ground up to his : knees. 1 1 is forehead was cut open and J time binken by the basket falling on him. j His back is badly hurt and it is thought be suffered severe internal iiijmies, which will prove fatal. ITe was alive at last accounts. AT -. ;x We rel F rn tr,- iac4wJtiliT-,l-e:,,l asre of r.rr.-., ix . I T T is ee.y to tjTfTT are denied tu utuii.1"' ost heTing to tj Lr'i-'. ' m lofrenr. j.mti 1 ' ; WE J or !. . rw'-ITri rr rartciLArf. .... '- c-;--al NOTa janlrVtrr.-iT-... ae a cio 1 'J tf Jit 11 utt Wll Hot i A'.. Nkw Toiik. S- !; ;, etigltierlU'g ir.it ..J ii i. j which ebMiei u i ti e f-l 4-,-'. tlate h;i Leu in the pr. cise lime .,1,.T aud without Hixi.if Ai,.j ber of pen; -It a-n-ii.t'. ii ii ;.- bHd tt liLie:, tllf tlW.rC . lock, etc. local h, u r. ,; 11I4UI Irjii'u-lj'.S ..f r". ' .-.. VI I'P? Pill. lc lr '.II . sixth s;irttN lii'd 1.',,-. tirely otiud t; :' tv.v fear of iuck. ben.; l,c -Evil V Li'U.'M in U. i! v h: ; u' Alld W IliUo ( li t l : -i r lioll, but tt.t j;iv.i: !:,-.-! jr. ft-ais w l :iievi i. ani -f -i ..' :- Ibe pit-is and kv iii--u.c.. w it U t Lie i t k. At t" - . to iL:te -it U r nj, ..,. ' 111 .1 Mia'Ll a; vi Mtu.ii,;. i I Ullli '1 I "i 1 Li ! L'.; i I I llUl d.rli Ai it.-- lir i rl i. a lose it;i:iv 'I :ee ; i'l.?'.:: Hbod" a tea-c. l -.;-. the tret if ll n.t.h ; - uuu l. strut i u r.a i - I i. t. Ibe w ater. v-ui:i ifr.t!; ti ti'aiyl'.'i atiau i..r.i..t. b ap iu ii iegi:'.;u ' k . . :. tvktlve feel fc;ii. Uui-.-J s 1'ituu the J.Mia'iiite : '' " iu a iiinuient lot it.-t. lrf;,lfill :il't'L,t. 4 i I ti a:oe tu'iu ll't i i -m'-' city ami f..ia i' steam t List ies were t; " lui-n ai d llv: i.': scaice.V iicticeab.e. llit-llt .'f lH.'k III., i-l 't'- much as i i i i te - w--i water. sae jii-l eici v t--- explosion ti't k j'Utr. II-'" CUMtioll in the n at - r wab broken sti tin- '' ':- "' luiuieJiat-ly after llf tp 1 of n.' Louts sti ;ii tl ' ' Uate. eiuh .1 is l" !',,t tirst i as.Mi.K i-vet .: - si. tt i'u:t lU 1 ' is the peneiai let?iit. n-''1 fiom tlie t.ct 1 11 i" ove: LLe "Jt s-tttiv. A BnnisH Si:r V:---n dispsteli i-f Spt. . 1. I . itni.-l lii 'V. t' ,: I. to Uetnerara. l"'---1'-' it-cr. h is lH-liTflJfU I alPhand a:ui tliree U'-'r-giant. The magnificent ir n -- '. .. tnensiotis tie - , 25i feet ir.siJe. 4 ' ' l.'.,tT and iaT-lOCH'tlief i " 1.6-6 tou. i" ic'p more tons f i'"i tl- -Molds' first t-laKS T;.S. masts were of no".'1"' M . . 1.. - ..... - 'U 1 - nseil in an uvi . , the topga'-hnt m was intended b'r :l ''It - il ... f..r I C ' ! - vessel, as f'i "' , The Latunieriiio.)! " . lv two ca "U- ; , r . . age fiom Livt-r'H'"- ami her m-cmi.1. f",l vo.k, I.. vV,;Jrf.V- latter iott in .lit. ' ... i return to Ca'.cuvs . awtotou. Miif;,:, Auieiicauwa'e;her,-f!l,,tr. aut Oeoige Pui.cia. j v P.eseives; her tut -,id her second a'"1 !", ' M V Charles Macaulej bik , , . addition to these r. app,entices,i:h::-;i. Her ciew, an ,? that she bad o"b,l"1 ' - t.rii.gatleat'-'r'Vi,,i l W.'si'il. ,'-: erpool. Sunday ui: vhtbr by three men i" ' oy I in' r . , i f young man naim-l- ' icdhandc... apjeaied to have ,-.rfr when their desig..Mp ; r were frustrated 5 1 '. 4', r ance of the watclura' i - . ; at he shouts I " "i alarm, and hasu'yd.; r. ran down t the ard. ..:JI.: theindice f-iee. smi K-liev:ng soti-ell""2 -H tl.m ami cai- ' ., ' n Immediately he , t aims, and wounned in ,iKl,t bresst. It t,. .,. ivsutt. The pobee , ' haxcas vet n . cne alsuts.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers