GC3 "irk. ra bs UfT S2SE. EJIWaT THE CAMBRIA MM. EBENSBURC, PA., Friday Morning, - - Sept. 7, 1877. lH-mocrntic State Ticket. tint crnt'iif v w rn r- fflHM TUIIMKP V "nf -,,r ri.ntv i JUHitl I HUNKtY, 01 VenangO County. WM. P. SCHtLL, of Bedford County. FOR ST ATt TitKAHl KEU ! AMOS C. NO YES, of Clinton Connty. JJ tin van tic fount g Tick!. I'ROTllOSOTAHY : CHAS. F. CTDOISNKLL, of LortttoRor. msTUICT ATTOKSEY : W. HORACE ROSE, of Johnstown, roou hook uikectoh: JACOI1 KIRKPATRICK, of Chest Twp. (OKOXEK : JAMES MORELAND, of Wilmore Bur. i v . Wm. MiClei.land, Esq., Chairman, has i called a meeting of the Democratic State Committee at HariUburg ou Tuesday nex', Sept. 11th. The Republican State Convention, which nut at llanisbuig on Wednesday las, nominated James P. Sterrett, of Pittsburgh, for Judge of the Supreme Court, J. A. M. Passmore, of Schuylkill county, for A iid 'tor Genesal, and Wm. 15. .Hart, of Montgomery county, for S ate Treasurer. Wii cannot tell to-day (Thursday) the whereabouts of Gen. Howard, but Gen. urgis and Gen. Mcriitt. each l.avine a coi.Mdeiable force, t-taited last week from opposite points after Joseph, and if How- I aid makes anything like good time on his i route it is believed that Joseph will come ! 1 to grit f and that the long hunt after him I will then be over. Lot" is Adolph Thiers, statesman, histo- li.iu and ex President of France, died sud- deuly in Paris on last Monday evening, iu j the eighty fu st year of his ago. The ilea h of this distinguished man at any time dur. ing ihe Ia.it e'ght years would have been a severe loss to France, but occuning as it has only a few weeks before a most im portant election, and iu the face of antici pated domei-tic trouble, it is a great na- i uouai caiamuy. A fEVEHF. battle between nearly equal ! divisions of the Russian and Tuikisli ar- I I niies took place on yesterday wet-k in the , neighl.oihood of Rasgrad, in which the j Russians were badly defeated. On the next day (Fiiday) a similar engagement I occurred a few miles from Plevna, resulting j in the retreat of the Tutks, with consider- j able loss. Shipka Pass is still held by the j Kusahs, the 'ts hating ceased their j ' " . - - -- , 1 funeral of i5, ,Kl,a,n 1 rung took . place nt i?;ik Lake tLitj mi Sunday last, and was attended by an immense concourse of people, the c: jwd tit the New Tabernacle being estimated at from trn to fifteen thousand. His successor as the bead of' the Mormon Chinch will be chosen by the Council of Twelve and af ei watds ratified by the Monnou people. The council is not leMiicted iu its choice, but has the whole Mormon piiesthood from which to select, liiiham Voting was the father of fifty-six childieu. fort y-four oT whom are living sixteen sons and twenty eight dattgh ers. He leaves seventeen widows, not. includ ing Ann Fliz:i, atul his csinle is estimated to be woitn lioni thice to live millions of dol 1 a i s. yer of moie courage than diseteth.,,; has j published in .he XortA American ,YnV,ra 1 reply to Jndge Mack's ar.icla on the Elec- j to.al Commission. Stogh:n seems to ' covet for himself ihe fate of the late Vice j President, Henry Wilson, and John A. ! Uailieltl, both of whom have been handed down to posterity as blasted motiutnents of ! Judge Chick's teirible and withering pen. It is supposed that Stoughtoti has been ptovoktd to wtite his leply from a casual ' remaik made by Judge lilack on a certain ! occasion, that "all stoughton knows about I the constitution of ihe United States is that, j under it the Piesident lias the f ' A oe.mchal jail delivery is about to take place in South Carolina of the most notori ous oflicial thieves who have been plunder ing the treasury of that. S ato wiih un it ashed hands since the commencement of Grant's administration, and until they were , driven fmm .te.m.! m.ftPl ,(,....,.,;..;., 7r w " V, " , V .uiuiiiuiut tuvvnjjitoioi iiicoiaic, last weeK leturtied ti tie bills against ex-f Jov. Moses and several otheis, including John J. Pat trrsoti, for various crimes, amongst which aie forgery, Liibery, conspiracy, breach of (i ust, ami vai ions other offence. Xo State was ever robbed so shamelessly as South , aionu. naa oeei. ,or cue yea,R, I h.dnon.an ot any party w,,l regret that nra'.ice is about to oveitake the hoide of , , , . 1 , . c.Miiuiiels whose raoacitv has orutiD-ht hot- ., . ,, , . , . luiim icijicui u.iimi 11 j-iv j . .jjujdui '.none against who'll criminal proceedings have been contnienced took time by the f.n-eloek and lit d lliti Stntr, biit'bete in force eiiony!; iu'tlie law ttsecuie their return and trial. as well af condign pnuislinient, if ptoveu guilty. iMriiiHKii .joijr nvicti on niid returned them indictmeu $ was coin- . :l. -. ..!.- I T I. t ...... I jMised of nii' while and tiijht colored men, it iainiiil lit. ul Veeil Ihflf tliev ivei A invti- jf, cannot W al rkietl lhat they were insti- , appointing r.reiSn ministers." If Judge KUi"e",e cr,"w a"ved in counting the Rhick should dce.i the reply worthy of sc- Vte of IjOOI"In for Hys or Tilden: ions notice, S ouglilon'a experience ill be I wh,ch Wa co"cll,sivs f t whole contro sitnilar to that of the thoughtless youth j Ve"T, 1,6 WaS ci,her not t,,e Senate, who playfully nude, took toicklo one of' w,,orft 1,8 "8lo ave been, or, if preaent, the hind legs of a s.-lenm looking but wide ! WS " d'JInb "S n ov,,ler- That was the awake iimie with a long iye straw. After j t,me f"r ir Conkling, to have opened his he had been carried to his home and the month, as he was confidently expected to doetorla.lsti.ched and plastered the deep 'do, and eloquently to have protested Caches 111 his face, he asked hs father I ... r""" v :.ci!.er he thought he vould die, and" as tbe .rePort of the Electoral Com- roooled with the answer, "No, my son, ! n,,S!!,0u. Ilia boldness now iu asserting yu.i wo i't di. and in the future will be a i Tilden'a election is an asgravation of his 'lY;1- ,leVt February in permitting the gaii-il io ih. ir action by either peiiuu-l Ir atuil'v Oi' political cobtiJctatijUS. I The Fretu-h Flection. In France t!ie general election always i take place on Sunday, on the theory, per- haps, that the letter the day the better the j The lcaitlf, Bl ticle iu the Xorth Amcri I deed. Iu accoidance with this rule, or ean Heciew for September-October isa time I custom, a decree was published last week , ly contribution to the discussion of the re : c-..-.i ... .1 - im. r cent and Bt ill pending difference between , . , ' . j diy for holding I he elect ion for members of the next French Assembly. This election ; is s iniporta.it an appeal to the ballot as j . J , J. aiM, ila Jesuit lier future weal or woe largely de pends. Although Marshal MacMahon is Piesident of the French Republic, it is well known that he is anything but a Republican himself. His sympathies are all with the . i u .i l vo..s.--t.,c0, . wj v.ttt "'. j ,,,,,, with ,he increHsin population of our resenting the different parties in France I lanrc c'.ties mid business centres and the Inevi ,, , ,. , , I ttthle assemblage at such points of the vicious opposed to a Republican form of govern- nd evil t1inoserl-the lute troubles mny Jie but ment Ml these fnotioOR vli ilfl Reek inrr to a prelude to other inuiiift stations of mob vio ment. All these tactions, w line seeking to j ,tMe, wjlh this added peril, that now, for the promote ineir own political interests, stanu 1 oii a common pun ioiui 01 ueaniy Hostility to the Republicans. The late repressive and high-hauded measures of the govern ment towards the leading men in the Re publican party, but especially its assaults UP" tUe liberty of the press, are assnicidal as they are certain to defeat the object at which it aims, the control of the election against the success of the Republicans. No ruler, whether King or President, ever waged a successful warfare upon the free dom of the press, and the man who embarks on such a hazardous enterprise will be sure to tii ul out iu the end that the pen is might ier than the sword. There is not to-Ha- a Republican paper in all France whose ed itor dare give expression to his honest con victions without running the risk of a criminal prosecution by the government. Nor can any leading Republican give ut- terance to hw true sentiments in a public n,eetinff without incurring the same swift Pcl,',,ty ext to Thiers, the leader of the publican party, Gambetta exercises a K'eater political influence Uian any man in f I - .1 r -i , r,,,ce' ai,u umJ a ,ew caJ8 aK ,,e was arresien lor what he Had saul a short time before in a speech delivered by him at the city o Lille. It is supposed that the fol lowing extract from his speech is what hap given mortal offence to the government and furnished ihe pretext for his arrest : "When millions of electors make their choice ttlf-l-f will mil rift r tn . i-t,,k ; 0-1. 1 France pronounces her sovereign will, there iinst l.f- . m., r- col. mkmn... .. i .. ' must be either submission or surrender. This is nothing more than the assertion of the well recognized doctrine in a Re public, that the voice of the majority, when legally expressed, must prevail. What would be thought in this country of the arrest of n Republican or Deniociatic speaker for maintaining so plain a piopo- sit iou as the supremacy of ihe popular will ? And yet to. do so has come to be a criminal offence iu the eyes of the President of the French Republic. If the Republican party succeeds in returning a majority of the membeis of Assembly, no man in France will have contributed more to effect that result, without intending it, than Marshal MacMahon. It ill simply be another in- stance of political history repeat ibg itself. When the dissolution of the Assembly took i.'-ico last Mm th U..r..,KiiM.,- w.a J - u v r membeis, or a tnajoiity of the whole body. They hrYe ail been renominated and the Republican leaders claim that thev will all utS re t-lec ed, with the addition of 40 or 50 ( which they expect to gain in conservative districts. If all this shi.ttld happen, Prcs i ideiit MacMahon will be confront! d with j a hostile majority in the lower branch of ! the Legislature repiesenting the popular j will, and the destinies of France hang upon j the legislative action of that majority after iue Hireling 01 1 lie Assembly. If Senator Conkling, or New York, does not now hesitate to declare, as it is repre- scntt-d he doeB not, that Tilden was legally 1 ,l u,f1' ,ns s'tement "l ,ast February that he ,,ad PrM"ed determination to deliver a T" denm,nci"8 the act t,f tl"!l"r1 Commission in counting the vine 01 Louisiana lor Hayes. It will be 1 remembered tnat he made a vigorous speech against the right, as claimed by the Republicans, of the Piesident of the Sen ate not only to open but also to count the electoral vote of the different States, thus clothing him with the one-man power of declaring who had been elected. On that question he acted with the Democratic Senatois and was cleat ly right. But w hen , m . iiyn. i.f rvrn nioiuiai 10 oneat Air. Tilden cut of the vote of Iouisians, without rais ing his voice against the outrage. The baseless charge nga-nst Col. Nnye, the Democratic candidate for State Trras nrer, lhathe voted for th'o Nine Million P,ill, was reniodiierri 1 tl n oi.L-I.., 1 1. rr 1 j r , ' " . " wnim, 01 i'"s piaco, the Huntingdon Globe and the these pa 1-ers mizht plead in extenuation that thev copied the statement from the llan isbuig Ttlfgraph, and had a right to believe that the organ of the Republican party at the State capi tij, on a question (.f legislative action especially, would not falsify the re cord. When ther MlU Mm. Harrisbu j. R Xi,1B Mi,jion ni!, w heroleUe j ifiI. turn 11-. .. - 1 , ,l,re H" 'e wai'n advocate of its passage, - .. 1 0 ' "-f 11 V, TT I j V II it t J " m,,,e l""y "ertaiid what mau iter of shnet i ls, and to wha basn nniiii. cal purposes it can Btoop. The three ia lrs we have named will never retract the falMh.K.d. but will leave their readers under the belief that the charge is true. A imuncai campaign conducted 011 the low , iocir.l nt l: : - 1 . . I'lmcipie oi systematic lyiur will not realign 11 . .. ... - cie'.i.uiong 01 those who indulge in it. ac'8 'e Australian boomerang when tvwu by utJskiJJcJ IiauJ. , The llailway Froblein. col. mm. A. pcott'h tikwr on the Iate ,"n ,lKtt,uw- the great railway companies and their em- ativeK It isentitled "The Recent Strikes," ard j from the pen of Col. Tlios. A. Scott, who, who, after reciting the history of the trouble and reviewing the necessities of j the railroad companies, makes the follow ing deductions J This Insurrection, which extended through fourteen Slates, and In many Ciises successfully tit-tied the local authorities, presents a state of faets almost as serious as t hat which prevailed at the outbreak of the civil war. Unless our i own experience is m uiut-r riunt-i mmi un-r countries anil it is not easy to see why It nrst. tune in Amem-itn ini"i j im5iiunnuitra mn'. learned its power to terrorize the law- Hhidinir cilizptis of jrreiit coinmuniti-s. With our recent experience liefnre us. It is tielleved that no thoujrhtfiil man can arrue in favor of deliiy by the proper authorities id deulinir with lawless and riotous nsemlila-es. Delay simply leads to destruction or property and may lead in the end to destruction of life. The force used to repress such as? em blades should be as prompt in its inHjiltosiatioii as the evil with which It deals. The tntei ef tsconcerned arc too irrave to admit of delay. The raising of the black flair anil the stoppage of all vessels on t li irreat Inkes and on the Missisippi and Ohio rivers would tint produce one tithe of the il.im Hlte to the whole conn try that has resulted t roin I lie recent stopptme of the (Treat trunk lines. The hnrninjr of the vessels ami thei i-cargoes mi these waters would raise a storm of wrath which no mob would dare to face, and would tie visited by tin- I ui ted States (iovermneiit, ruder exifiitiir laws, with m.wt exempiitry puni-ilunent. Hut what distinction ean be cs tab'lshed between such a crime and the hideous destruction at Pittsburg of over I SO J cars laden with the products of the v irons Mates, toire tit er wiih tlie ctiiriues ready to move tliem to their destination, and thestatiou buililin's and machine shi ps that wereahsulutely essential to their proper care and movement, and which, with other like doitnrs. resulted in the stoppage of all commerce mid business relations between !ho Mates not only on one highway, but on many important lines, tliroiiirh the concerted action of the mob and its leaders? In the city of I'lttshtiiKh much human life and many pri vate dwelfiiiKS and otner properly were sacri ficed as the rcpiiitol moli violence ; indeed it is almost a uuai vel that a Ihikc portion of that city was not deitroytd by tire. Only Ihe pre vailing directum ot the wind. a ci ted greater and more general disaster. THE FKDKKAI, AfTtlORITV. Tlie authority of the United States, now po tent toprott.ct commerce moving upon ihe waters, should i.e equally potent w.ien the sa me com merce is exposed totciciter peril upon land. 'J Ins '.hoiks us then, to the practical (juesi ion : In w hat shape can this protection tie put so as to be t xictid most efficiently and Willi 1 he least tlela) t The present leg u hit ions all l.ivor, uiiiiilentnuiaiiy, the rioters and the mob. In ine lirst piaco the Mayor of a city must exhaust ins power, the Micritl of tin; county must essay Ins slrenxl li ; then, while t . . W"'"""" . '"" 'on- slinitly Httratds ilauieroua eleuieiits and irrows with impunity and success-the O. .vernor of the slime must be culled upon by the Sheriff of a county If the Suite happens to have an ef fective military otraui7,.iiioii, which at ihe present time is the case 111 pel baps not more 1 han live out of the t hi:! -seven Slates of the I'nion, the (inventor ean tall out the military forces and suppress I he riot. It t he State lias 1.0 such oi'Kaiii.itt ion, or if the military forces 01 the St.iie prove ina:euate to lint euieixen cy, the Governor is pataly-l and must call upon the l.'intt-d States tor assistance. If the authorities 01 any State siiouid, lor any cause, tail or rctu-e to call upon ihe t niled States tjovermiitiit. what possible remedy or prolec lion is h it to liie and property within the liin iis ot t lut t Commonwealth ? It can readily be seen what rrlRhtful possit-il-itit s ot mischief ar- afforded liy 1 he necessarily I n interval which must ellipse in 1 he present state of Mir laws before the Federal 11111 horny ean interv ene iu cases where its intervention is most imperative. In fact, as our recent expe rience bus shown, the only roads which could procure prompt protect! hi and immunity 1 rotn interference were those whose uiisloi tunes had iu(dctheui bankrupt and placed them in the direct custody of Iteet-ivers appointed by the I niled StatesOmrts. 'I'oiheaidot thes- roads the t'nited States Maishal 0011I I call l.'nited Slates iruops, and no rioter iar-! to resist the power represented ly ih small tan admirnhly iJiM-nniiu-.i detachment j guartc-ed near the seidies of ihe ree. til troiiims. It will hardly te contendi'd 1h-t: I lie railway eotnanies nni-'l beeoiue taukriitt in order to make secure the uninterrupted movement ol Ira die over their lines, or to cut Hie them 10 the eihVient protec tion ol the failed States Ooveriinient. If a bondholder or ot h r creditor is entitled to the protection of the Federal courts to prevent the threatened impairment of the value of a pro perty through I'val proceedings, he certainly should not be left without remedy against law less violence which has actually destroyed the security for his invest incut, and has.asiit Pitts buivh, converted millions of dollars in to scrap iron ami ashes. The laws which jrive the Fed erni courts ihe summary process of injunction to restrain so comparatively trillii:ra wroii(f as an infringement of a patent-i ild, certainly must have been iniended or oiiKht 10 give Ihe t'nited States authority to prevent a wroinr doling which not tuny destroy a parlicu ar road but also paral37.es the cut ire commerce of the country and waslcs the national wtalt h. It Is icmou.-trable that durinir the recent disturb ances the (.overmuch! ol the United States was itst-if n direct loser, and through the irovcru ment ttie tax-payers of ihe whole country in a very lartre amount by the dimimirioii (,f thy national revenues, nrisinir from the interrup tion of business and t he interference with many of the operations on winch he tntci nal taxes or the country are levied, as well as by the di minution or the ;ciistouis revenues, us ail the imports diiriuir this period, instead of bcinjr ru warded to their dcsiinaii ns. were necessa rily placed in store, or course without payment ot any dut3- to tile fovt ruinent lor the lime beinx. Sti. pose that this state of Ihimrs had coin imied for sixty days, wuhl not the United States Government tinve been deprived t.r nearly all the revenues on which it relics to meet its current otnufaii n? WH AT IS XKKOF.n. Cert Bin I j- it cannot j have been contemplated in the formation of our xovernuient that the I nlted States authorities should submit to see t.ie transportation of the mails, covering the enormous financial and business tiansuciions ot Ihe whole country, and the movement of supplies reouired tor its own various depart ments, made dependent upon the trrace and fa vor of rioters vvhot-e iiiicimnici iu almost any 01 her form would have seen red their immediate arrest and condifrn punishment, lluriuir ihe recent riots the movement of United Stales troops was impeded at several points, and la rue quantities of ammunition and other Federal stores on their way to 1 lie Paei lie coast were forcibly detained tor days. The operations of the national government j ,,,,me lmi (s ,,r the country were as completely blocked as in the early days of the civil war. There certainly should be 11 protection avrainst such tlanir.-rs and a remedy for such wrouvrs. If the irovern mett of the United States is to exercise its power of protection or of remedy.lt perhaps can do so only throjKh an adequate exhibition 01 the military force that may he ,rivcii it for such purposes by Comrress. The important question is to ascertain in what vvnv Ihe irov- secure the utmost possible clhcieiicy in the lorcement of law and order woi...... i.. - rtuiiiii us :iiii!iary to ree hs to en- dislurbinjr the Reneral framework ol our Insti lut lOllS and our laws. It rm.i t.n 1 ur or tib.c, 111 the I tw lit of recent events, that what ever force is to be used by the irovernine.it in such emergencies should he so distributed and com rolle that it may be concentrated upon any poinf or points that may tie t hrt att ned within m tew hours of any outbr. ak. Several ea.iiipanies t,r .euiilar troops that Wt re quarter u ''""""e. Philadelphia, I'lttVburirh. Ueadiug, hcianton, I. sville, Chinair.,, and otht r places, flurinir the recent riots, had to be tiansporied lorsuch distances that, if they had r-?i ".V"'"'' " "",t:,' instead of moving fly rail, they would have bt-en powerless to avert L r,"".r8. r' the t'nited States were able to .,,., r- ineir lorces where thev did. In some cases formal lesoluiions were iiassed by -he strikers that n. troops should be allowed to pass over the lines. In Jersey City a mon en deavored to prevented 1 he departure of a Uni ted Stales battery and the troops connected nelTnn V'l'i ,V,e..1rte i"vy. bet wee., Cor nell mill Horn, llsviile. ,, tvr lawless men. by Zlii.'lf "'! 'rH'ksv',"Stroyinlf iridires and tain pei iiur with switches, were able s. riouslv t. f-eJt'.?he ""iiIMrv ,,,rcea ,,f 'he State, which were there under the orders of the Governor to re-csiMol.Hh law and order. What is needed, therefore, would clearly Beem to bo thai proper Torees should be so disposed at prominent ! points-larjre cities and tdher irreat business1 1". "' " mVof which th! K overnment has I ..-, cumoui nouses, minis, navy vards, and olh-r propel tv or its own to protect t hat there, movements ean be combined rapidly and thev be directed against points tr danger, so as to be able to act elteerivety and with decision be fore violence can become triumphant. TUB FX AMPLE OF ENGLAND, AVilh the experience of oilier mnnirin. . warn and o-uiile us. and esneelnllt- n-oh ik.. . perienee of England, where the riirhts of the " "res oeen truarued and asserted j,-,,,,y mey always nave been and 1 , u".,rlp ourselves, we shall have only I roKlsm or we pared U tno, leakoess.wB leave ourselves unpro "Pt an ISSlie which frr mil kA ii, i(tt.ttitii itiininv. npm4. . ifvlileaoes ot .he t.mts fjt, ou.y too tlktly ol-i ' totM! forertt upon us. With the approach of winter. Mtirt t htt Iiisa nf outdoor em iilovmcnc which severe weather eveuin the most prosper- ' ' ous tunes entails, the country will have to ileal j not only with the dcsefvlmr Hnmni Ihe unem ployed, who can be reached and helped throutrh local oi(fnniiitions, but with vast numbers of idle, danr-rerotis and in many cases desperate men, who have been allowed unfortunately to catch a irlimpse of their possible power for inls rbief. 8uch men, unless coiiffOMted by a thor ough organization In the cities, States unit oth ! er communities, bncked by the power of the j Federal (Government Rnd no unmistakable pub I lie opinion, will need but little uivitnr to renew the scenes which have already brought such distfrace upon the American nnme. It surely may tie hoped that at the approaching session of Conjrress the earnest, unprejudiced and pa triotic men of both houses will discuss this jrrave subject Independently t-f partv lines, and with the united resolve to secure equity to all interests and to take nil necessary measures i to secure protection to life and property and tlie impartial enforcement or the laws, includ ing the Kuarantee to every man of the riirht to wm k for such compensation us he may sjrree upon with other men. I ree I rum interferanceor intimidation. The able lawyers of the Senate and Hou-e will perhaps frame a law which will irive to the owners of every highway carrying inter-State commerce, whether by hind or water, in which citizens of different States are interested, or carrvinK Hie United States mails or other (rovernment property, th risrhf to ap pear by petition properly Verified before the t l i Initial s of I lie I niteu Mates, in order to show that the movement of such tralTic has been in terfered with by unlawful combinations, by threats or by violence, ami which, upon such j showing, will tfivc these tribunals Ihe ritrnt, wnen necessary, to can upon the t niled "States, in the form now authorized by law, to enforce their process by arrestinir the rioters and the suppression of all such unlawful combinations- THE KVII. AND THE HEM ROY, The magnitude of the evil to be met and dealt wPh can hardly be overstated. The remedy to tie provided should he equally prompt and effec tive. 1 1 must he disc 1 1 "fed and adopted in the interest of the whole country, and not ot any particular class ; for the interests of all classes ! of our cit izens are the came in the inniiiteiiauce j of domestic peace and civil order. Itut to no J one class iu t I.e community is an absolute us j siirance of peace so important as to the men who have no capital but their labor. When the accumulations of labor are put iu peril by 1 lawlessness, capital may silwaxs protect itself by suspetidiuir the enterprises which jrive labor its ve.lut; and insure it its reward. Anarchv I not oniy deprives tut lalioriiiK man of his pres j phi subsistence, but pots iu jeopardy all hl in. pes oi iiiiproveuif in lor ins owu luiur,.- iiuu the future of his family. My own railway experience, extending over a period of thirty years, leads me To believe that ih-- manaircrs id AmcrU-an railways in general may teiirh-sly appeal to their past re lations with the faithtul amoiiir ihcireinpl es to prove that they at least havealways endeav ored to treat Ihe intei cm n of employers .md employed as identical, and have never railed to take into prompt and respectful consideration every urievance which l.u been tan ly mid pro perly presented to them. I am sure that it has been the purpose of I he company with which I tun connected toatall times pay iis eiiipl ijes tile best compensation that the liil-iiies of the country would warrant: and I have no doubt liiMtihiswiM be the polie.r or the compaii) for all future time, as it is founded on sound busi ness principles no less thuu upon the instinct.--of huuianiiy. Fearful Coitlaff ration. A STAIiTlIG JtuSlOK XEIIUI11LE iXf-S OF LIFE. New York, Sept. 3. A fire broke out at 9:4o iIkh iiiorniiig iu I. P. Hales' piano factoiy, ot. West oTnli street, which was en tirely destroyed. It is rutnoied that ten persons perished. The Haines extended to the 1101 Hi side of the steet, between 10th and 1UU avenues, destroying E. M. Con nelly's barrel factory, I. (iialiaiii & Co. 'a silk factory and several houses adjoining. J. iSalkei's charcoal factoiy, on the noilli hide of o5iu street, was also burned. A block of liamo houses on the west side ol Teuih avenue and between 35 lb and 'Mlh streets is on the, and will doubtless be de stroyed. A steam the engine was burned, the liicmeii being unable lo get it out 111 consequence of l he intense heat. A strong wind is blowing, but the iiieiucn think they have the ihtuies under control. LATF.11. A Herald bulletin says, about one bun dled lives are supposed to be lost in ihe lire at odth street and 10th avenue. A piano factoiy, school bouse and tenement house weie burned. Fl'LIEK I'AKTK LI.AKS. The fire is believed to have broken out in the lifth story of the building, and it is known that some of the workmen iu the upper stories had great difficulty in escap ing. One of the workmen named Edward Packmaster, jumped from an upper window and was taken up in a teriibie condition. His skull was ftactured -nd many bones were broken. He was removed to the station house and died in a few minutes. Two other workmen, whose names were uot ascertained, were sei iotisiy injmed. 1 hey were sent to Hellcvue hospital in ambulan ces. A woman is known to have died during the lire, but repot ts differ as to whether she was i. 1 j 11 red in attempting to escape from I he building or died ftotr illness aggravated by excitement and shock. It is believed by many persons iu the neighborhood that from twenty to fotty workmen perished iu the piano factory. A Shocking Raii.hoad Disaster. De tails of a terrible railroad accident on Wed nesday morning of last w eek, occasioned by the the washing away of a bridge near Dubuque, Iowa, whereby twenty persons were killed and forty others more or less itijuted, show that it was attended with the most frightful scenes. A tertitic rain was falling in torrents at the time, accom panied by wind, lightning and violent thunder. The crash put out the lights, and honor reigned supreme. One mother was killed while sitting between two children, who escaped unhurt. One little gii l, who had lain iu the water for four bonis wiih a heavy man lying dead beneath her body, was discovered to be breathing, and was rescued and restored, mid now shows no sign of injury. The Unod had washed the wooden props from under the arch and it gave way, leaving only the rails spanning the chasm, upon which the engineer ran hislrain, feeling secure. The channel of the stream was forty or fifty feet wide, and the banks about twenty feet high. The lo comotive lauded at the ftait of the western side and half buried itself iu the earth, li.trnunf s show car was next to Die en.ne, and it dropped into the channel. The'maii car followed, passing directly over it and smashing it to pieces, but going o the bot tom, a bar of iuni 1 ruining dear through it. The men in that car escaped alive. Even the lamps were not put out. The first pas senger car pitched down the channel where the watr was at least fifteen feet deep 1 he next car plunged under this, telesc.ml ...g w.,h it, and the i.ext telescoped half! through both of the two preceding it. 1 he sleiiijflr car dui ffc ' vireK. Irs ocuupauis were jarred, but none of tl tilled n'id were seriously hurt. Ihe most of the ki were in the car in front of tl. w r.. an ,,,,er 4"? ,;iRer bifi wuuout a wat chnian, was also swept away The Lebanon Adrortocr says : Amos C. Noyes, the nominee of the democratic party for state tieasjurer, is a man of the people. There is not a kinder, more un obtrusive, or plainer hiking farmer in Lebanon county than Mr. Noy. s. He is a hard woi king man, as his brawny hands and weather beaten appearance sufficiently indicate. He has snent tl.A - or Ilia IiTa ... tl... I.. 1.. . . - fiylvania, where he labored at emn ! ..... ...r. , me iinutmr regions or I', 'to ineiumoer i-piriono nr n splitting staves a.id preparing and shippiug timlH,r to market-a labor wl.l.l. ..V. , him the robust, stalwart piece of souare ' timber he now is. His dress iJ ,3 , e P ainest and commonest kind. He is one of nature's noblemen, ami oi.Bo.,.,. t :.. one of the m.mt popular me,, i his section of country. He is, in addition, fully con" Vett for the position for which i,e Las beenVminated, aud will make au honest! , treaS6r.r. Jtriffham Young. We briefly announced in our last Issue the death, on Wednesday, Aug. 29th, of the gieat Mormon prophet. Rrigham Young, w hose disease was inflammation of Ilia bowels, superinduced by cholera morbus, which from the first prevented any passage through them and by continual swelling to ward t he throat finally stopped respiration. liiha;n Young was born iti Vermont in the summer of 1601. lie was the son of a farmer ; became a painter and glazier and Baptist preacher, and in 1832 joined the Mormons at Kiitland, Ohio. Joseph Smith, the Mahomet of the Mormon creed, was also a native of Vermont and Young's junior by four yearn. I5y the aid of Sidney ltigdon he produced the "Hook of Mor mon," which he pretended to "have found by angel guidance ou plates ; and with this he organized a church at Manchester, N. Y., in 1830, and next year removed to Kirt htud, where be built a church, started a bank and was tarred and feathered for fraud, in company with some of his disci ples. Hiigham wafi a suitable co-laboier with Smith ; was speedily made an elder and an apostle, and was engaged iu prose lyting until the whole paity were drireu from Kiitland in 18HS. They escaped to Far West, Mo., but were driven away and settled at Nauvoo, 111. There Smith con centrated all powers, divine and human, iu himself before he was 6hot in June, 1844. Young aspired to the succession ; and hav ing bhown more ability than any other man, was unanimously elected president. He fust cx-conimuiiica",ed his great lival, and when the city was attacked in 184(3 led out his followeis to their promised land iu Utah. The migration was most prudent, and, indeed, absolutely necessary ; and it was cmd icled by Young with great skill and energy against very great ditncuitics and dangeis. In the summer of 1847 the new prophet founded Salt Lake City, and two yearn later organized the tenitory of DeseteT, of which he was the absolute ruler. His first t tl'ott to hi'.ve the tenitoiy admitted to the Union was lefused by Congress, but the ten itory was organized and Young appoint ed governor in I80O. He labored zealously to attract humiliation, and felt himself strong enough iu nuuibeis and distance io defy the aulhoiity of the Union when a non-Mormon was appointed as his succes sor iu 1854. For three years he was not ecrionsly inteifered with, and his ajxisiles sent in many recruiis, from various portions of E 11 rope. His boldness grew uilh his growing jHiwer, and it wait not until lSoT, when a military force of two thousand five hundred men was sent out with Governor dimming, that his pretensions were cut bed. Immediately after his arrival at Salt Lake Young promulgated the floctrine of js jygu'y as a icscrved revelation to Smith. The assertion was denied by Young's fami ly, and led to a chasm in the church. Smie of the eai ly followers of Smith seceded w ith his sons, but Young incorporated the doc trine as a church tenet and maintained it to be the last. The presence of the troops had a w holesome t-ll'eet ; a compromise fol lowed, ami the .Mormons have since been peaceable. The construction of the Union Pacific railroad, and the influx of : large '4entile" element, have considerably mod ified the character of the Mormon colony, and a niatciial change in its policy, or an other migration of the faithful, seems in evitable. The change may be hastened, if not precipitated by thegieat leader's deal h. Rrighatn Young had rare executive ability. Polygamy was openly pioclaimed by l.iiu in lfctr2 as a revelation from the Ijord, and he set ihe example to his followeis of a phuality of wives. It is understood that his successor as piesident of ihe Mm mon rhitich will be Ihe youngest of his sons by Lis first and legitimate w ife, his son John W. Young. Cheap Lamis in Missolki. A corres pondent at Stft leville, Craw ford couuty, Mo., referring to a recent statement that lauds could not be bought in the counties adjacent to St. I,ouis for 30 au acre, writes to say that -improved farms (good laud) can be bought iu Ci aw ford county for $5 to sf 10 per acre, and that there is about 12.000 to : 4.0(H) acres of w ild lands in the county subject to J.-nt ly under the homestead la a- the cost of the homestead entry being about 10foi 4) acres, and 18 for bOacies. Lands in the surround hig counties may be had at the same rates." In proof of his statement the correspond ent semis -i list of several farms oll'ered for sale iu that region. One is a faun of lbO acres wi'h buildings and orchard, six miles south of the .Meraniec iron works, for $700 ; ano her of 80 acies, two miles from Keys! ville, small house, good water and fine tim ber, for -2H); another of 80 acres, three miles from Cuba, comfortable house, good water, plenty or timber, for $400 ; another of 120 acres near S eeleville, small dwelling, good water, foi $.VK) ; another of 93 acres near Cuba, frame house, 400 ft nit trees, for $1,000; another of 80 acres near Cuba, comprising comToi table dwelling-house, foj .$300. These'pi ices are low- enough to place the farms offered wiihiu the reach of au ia dustiious, resolute, man, whether he has money 10 pay for one of them or not. thousands of persons in Missouri have bought The farms they live ou on 01 edit, and paid for them with f,e crops raised on them, supporting their families iu the meantime and thousands of others can do the same thing. There is no lack of cheap lands in Missouri putchasable by persons who really want to make theirown living, and are willing to make s.une sacri fices for the sake or securing a home and an independence. The above facts may be of interest to those intending to "go West." Sheriff Coffin, of Clarke county, 0, and Perry Rechtel, who round the boy known as (?s. leveling, whom he claims to be the lost Charley Ross, visited Mr Ross in Germantown on Sunday morning last. Immense crowds assembled at the dei)t at Ninth and (Jreen streets, and also in Geimantown, where people came in from the country in all du eel ions to see the boy. The child was taken into the presence of Mrs. Ross and her children, all Of Whom f:lilu,l l.-v wis.......: 1 : Ross says he is not her boy, although he resembles Charley, his eyes being like his, but that his wnsls are too large, and he is , Je feilow v " 1.1 1 . , i r e,ween 11,6 C'eek-bonos. The was veiv mne.li a,...-. vexed by the curious attent ion ntiu., j and atone time became so stubborn that I the She, iff w as obliged to , y X U WaV ; and ,-lead with him for nea.Iy an hour li ! '.A,er rmli '"ove- A u"'l'r f Mr. Hos osj s friends who knew fl.orUn .V . he resembles the lost boy very much, and riie u'cSleyT'1 Archbishop Lynch, of Toronto, writes to the p.es. a letter on the Antonelli ease in which he says that the late Cardinal' ,. 'J n "vauon ; uiit there were ve y few priests employed by the IW in his temporal gover ope in . - . "'i ""i war a m niiieiit, and lhat all tlm CCS ,cs Su ?plyed were not priests olZU T1 ",,fl '"',S,,,e a," ir V .Ud not obliged bv the vow i,,rf' ,.. ' . Bsks a s,,sPe'sioii cr fl Zl CUSe , ln,ed a,,1 s "The ' 1 ll,e ""'gel daughter of the Carrti allege I Z'? c1', ms,, v The Imou of l,,o C" V wan try wliera 2'M f"cs, i k Z L tax onluT"1 '," Ch wi,S UvnU ie creduhty of 4,1 Lou- yew? atul fttiter yotingst The poli ic -1 pol lxg ns te bolt, Cardinal Manning siieaks and write six 1 mgu tges ; the Prince of Wales font Six men were drowned ofT Halifax ou Friday by the capsizing of a fishing of Pithole polled oniv .'J''" ti,e 1 '' ECboone A half million bricks were used in the construction of the new Union depot at Pittsburgh. There is said to be a negro woman in Jackson connty, Miss., who has Riven birth to seventy-two children. A Washington county farmer named McVey is said to have threshed 012 bushels ! of oats from 440 dozen sheaves. A negro Woman died in Proridence, recently, after much su (feting, fiotuthef- 1 through a wit-d m- V r feet of a snider s bite upon her lin. I It ; not v..- . ' . e 'il,n i can-al eiuimtv . f" lmiA 1 1 1 iarno ltaa 1. Ill . , 1 ' - ... . n on ii less luoiK,., utteii tuscovcieu in orMi-in ;no, wuote machine Reent atul a Inn . '- niemoers go oy numoers insteaa oi names. I The Ilaiimm , . ' rt-n'if Mrs. William Cochran, of Liberty, i with thetrain r. ti L , , Cl" !" : Ky., two weeks ago gave birth to hoys, all of whom aie alive and seemingly healthy. Alvin Adams, founder of Adams Ex press Company, died at bis residence at Watertown, Massachusetts, on Saturday, aged 73. The br.use in Philadelphia in which f i -ni'nu nt V , r o. t 1 C 1 iv f l Jienedict Aruohl was married to IissSlnr- 1 o t.-; . . " pen has been turned into a hotel and res ... , ...... . . , r : "''- tu.uter ttian h- taurant. . nil I j jrtun l'P t;n. 1. IV. Ullt'HIlI'lll j went tt Iick Haven a poor man. Recent- '. i ly he diet! in New Hampshire worth about ! ; $1,000,000. His life was insured for $50,- j ; 0O0. I John S. Mason, of Washington county, aged sixty-five years, was sentenced ou j Tuesday to live yars in the penitentiary. lie hart been convicted of rape on oath of li is niece. (iov. Young, of Ohio, so resembles his brother who lives in Pennsylvania that they could be distinguished at a pic nic : party the other day only by wearing difler- eiit Colored hats. In a piseo:T flying match between Reading and Philadelphia, on fcraturday, the successful bird made the trip in one hour and forty-two minifies, a distance of fifty-eight miles. 1. W. Rhodes is his name. He is an Ohio mail, of course, and the office given liitu is genetal snpei httnr!e.t ff the blank agency, post-ofiice department. Salary. $3,500 per annum. A woman in Baltimore wears jnirple clothing only, her nutlet garments eten le ing of that, color. t!ie believes That she is a piincess, and must wear royal purple. In oilier lesjtects she is sane. Ldwaid Hawthorne, aged 28, has been ' comntiiterl tit itil in P-.tulnufi J -- - ....-v.- . , V-.. .... I jV. oi uavuig i ii ree wives more titan tlie law allows. This young man had better be elected to succeed Hi igham Young. Tbe Governor bar reptieved Allen C. Laros. of Xoithamptou county, a jxiisoner sentenced to be hanged on Monday nexi. The reprieve is for thirty days, to allow an ' , examination into the ptisoner s sanity. Put lick McIJiide, a maiiied man over I sixty yeais (fage, com milled tape Sunday on Mary nutty, agtd eleven years, at Wil mington. Dei. He eu iced the giil into his loom. Ripe is a capital felony iu LMa ware. Robert, James and Samnel Goodrich, and James Simmons were taken JVimii i.nl and hung by a ni.tb on Monday uiulix at rested and 1 xew v.isue, rvy. i ney were cliarged with murdering a iiumler t.'f persons in Oweu and Henry counties. A Juniata county youth named Renii- tnin Zcidcrs, aged II years, asked bis sister 1 for something to eat. She failed to attend ! lo his wants immediately,' so be lodged a load of shot in her neck, ifiaking an ut'!y ; and dangerous wound. The Now Yoik Ma il says that Tweed's j daughter, who ur.mied Magitinis in 1870, and whose wedding presents cost J'J.Oihi, i is now living in absolute jKivcrty, the bii- ! dal presents and fmeiy having all been j sent to the pawnshops. The most retuaikablo game of base- ! ball played this season was that between j the Allegheny Club and the St. Louis . Ibowns, at Pittsburgh, on Satuiday htsi. : Fifteen innings lesulted in a score of one ! for the former, and nothing for the latter. ' 1 wo nun who died last week have ! ti,,. ,...- i..i eost napli In Ki .. .. t .. . - ,1 ' . ... mn vouuti ies a giHHi ; deal of inotiey. Hiigham Young entailed mi the United States ihe cost of a Mormon i war, and Cant. Raphael Semnies cost ; Great Ri itain fifteen millions of iudenuiity for the lavages (.r the Alabama. j A terrible accident happened in Leba non couuty by which Isiael Daub, a well known former, was caught in a threshing ; machine, horribly mangled and almost it"- j stanlly killed. He was woi king near the j power when the revolving cylinder caught i him, whirled him around and killed him. i Ihe expoitatt hi of wheat from Haiti-I wounds have never I.e.-iV. more last I uesday was unpiect dentedly f exittsed so Hint ! large, amoun ing to nearly two bundled I watched - pie. s ..f I. tliousand bushels. This is the tiouii!,.,,, ,. ti,,s cereal in one day in the! which has al History oi mat port. It was cleated in i i,;eri able eute .vnscis, ii oounu ior iuris north ot U-ib,,!"- ... ! -A vonng mm i ", ,am ,h,os,nns: machine exphnled ; Rover, latelv d..t! i' ' lier boiler on Satutdav in Westminster j t ion at IVa'une. iu 1"; " tow nship, Canada, making a comt.lete i at. the t houeht of hen l' wreck of the machine and all surroundings r ive men were badlv John Mooden dletl kooii after the accident. ! Two others caunot live. The saf?ty valve ' had been lied. Slipiory Joe" Porter, or Atlau-a.Ga., ! who escaped a year ago from the Peniten tiary coal mines, has wrltteu fio-n London to friends in that ci!y to say that he has ' obtained a commission in the Russian ar- : my, has lots t.r money and easy times, and i intends writing his memoirs w hen the ciu- ' el war is over. j G.orge Walcb, a young married man or Syracuse, went out with bis wife on ' Inesday and asked her to sit down on the I bank of the canal while be went iu for a swtn.. He crttssed The water, and had returned alsnit half-way, when suddenly he threw up bis arms, ciied "Nellie, save me !" and sank. ' Isaac Leonard Hess, of Edenburg, Ta.. ' a man of thiity, Wing aggrieved becausa ' bis father called him a luna ic, shot and killed the old man, and carried the body i into his house and sat down by it "in au unconcerned manners." The neighbors waited feailessly fill be had gone to sleep, i and then rose iu their majesty and bouud and jailed him. 1 The Petaluma (Cul.) Argu says ! James Lnglish is still :,t work on the led wottd tree he felled at Russian river station : some months ago. II.. .! r -- -- ------ .. . t , uinua i-. .m I. Of:o rwo. 1 . . J r rwt mingles, 1.1H.HJ fence posts, b,tKK) stakes, lumber Tor a dwelling house "p M,,buil,,i"fi, "d has timber left for JOO.OOO shingles. The tree was fourteen Teet 111 diameter. Simeon Gat net, a negro, committed an outrageous assault on Mrs. Perry Kingrcy, the wiTe of a farmer residing near Oxford, Ohio, ou Satuiday evening. Garnet was arrested and lodged ;n jail. Sunday at noon a number of infuriated men broke oihmi the jail and shot him through the bdy. but not fatally. It is feared another attempt to kid him will ho made. Rrichain Yt mug's fatal illness, accord, ing to the Mormons, w as caused bv too free indulgence iu green corn. According to a Oentile paper it was chagrin and alarm caused by the discovery that the census of faithful Moinious in Salt fat, wl.it.lt just been cotnideted, showed that only v.,..... oicnioeis 01 tne I. nnreli could be tie lauded t on, his belief beiug that there were at least ift),0on. Tbe Yenanco teen iVrrtrs fro, w,v., ,p ': f,..j beigli'. Pit ho,, t bririiet.i ,.f tl.e oil t owns t, - delivery Was eiiotnv.us. - '"K ; in the state Tided lietween t ..". dav the Miivi ;.. and I t .li. of other days i-.i.:. 'W I dissolution ,,r its cli ntcr c"' ( - rf 11. r M r, , . . , .tt was killed by a brother-in-law. Moo,lv 1 MT about his premises, , 1 1 : j Rhot gun, discovei.-d a , !ni ' - . . ... t (a a 1 11 nr fii-d t! in law ,n"i--!:irato.,. apo (rari liii-tli four I . ... . ,lc,ii.'' and I'ar.ifir! n..i w. i r ' " last week, and in . ; n' I eleven occupants w,.,e vuv wjr me snow as its ! . Cost of over ft:t fwifi t, 1 ---.''. l lie i ...... . TI.. were six een rtavs in , I !) HlVMltf.a - .1 i rtosters. miiitio.r ..a . l" I . . - ...i-i cirsi.f ji !iri Thj ... - . - viviiitiu g tibia last 'Vt-l 1 h i; s'" t,, t r. ranft. of IVmi "HlV l,.,r. !: ;v!va'ii i - ..... . . '' n . ' "l. 1 1 i orter, oi i eiinesM-e ka ; Anthony, of K Ml 'kv, .if v. , .oiiiiimy, oi Kali- x-.--Mexico, and New bold, ,,f t',,, ' " ! convocation toCetlM ,, v. .;. j whatever, and as a 'm,..,ll 1 ;. 1 chiefly tematkable f.r t'-.,v ' 'sent. P.nt they f. j tamed, had a go..,! ti.-t.p. a , a.- event the scheme was .,. -0,.s(i k , etiiie--oay evp:i;i,; :,f ,, : the Lowell train wH ruun:,. sylvania pier, in SaVPl. Vs. j group of five iisons. V ;;;,,.E yt ' Joseph Swnzev and M, ; sisibi oi mis. rva ,.. and i: i ra.ii i t (ii eiessuess oi the C m Mrtoi , , who run it down ninn t!,P r ! with no headlight or lr-,te:T! t. ing. Win. K. Sn-azev.tn.r . ; died next rrvinitti;. fiaUit,,. ,i , . tim. fr ' I A letter wri"en t. tl. t -. j irrnn .teicu-j, .v..:i.. i,.,,- ,-f , . Hlalne, who -;s C" "o. ,.v,i I honors at .Notre Iinir ! l.T, j ago, and o? )tf tet-j,.- U.U!(. f ,'.,. j compelled to tuV-iiu eii:(.J ,vm-: ! teacher in the public M-li-.iN ! , (once an officer in t'-P a,t,( .. . his means and heiebcitij jjk , children. Tlciili sl e -Ava ' eflicient teacher .he I ns tliNv.-i: -c!i'K'l ; leasoti d i,t; U olic. A fire in Puis. F, f i ' C utMii'VI-il Te-i ii .i weilinss. I'liice I os mo leiegrapn ami ex; . : among the b;ii!dit!i; c "'m:i - i. is estimated at nj- va K, f i hits. One b -dy lias been f .;! ins. atd several lives ,i:e it .i:t man tia.iu-il Ta ulin i a .-. set lire t theCtty sal-.-i, wli.-if gialioii s'aited. an I ta l. r.o .a .... ..13t .. .,...1 , . woiiiti m;ii i i He . L.: I in i j A Was'iitigr -ti !;".'c'- '-i--I trial of Wells and Aniie!-!. .f j ana letut'iing I : i d. vm! '. j month. R ith left 1 i-r t-k f .! deuce that they w - r.! et-t,-! : : : They were not so '. '.t' : . be aconitici bv a i-- v. i " . found imp- '..:!in. t: . ; any veidii t. Wt II -i-f e ;:i 1 o-t Oi leans seem t. t iki r .; w hile atfoiil' itig th -.I '. : i : -be vig-ioiii, p;i-.''i' i. w: ' ;t tivrti is a iu if. r of ::i i S i On Pi id. iv nttet '!!. :' i South Side. Slack w-til water. In bucket and balance av a -a:e eii! to .1 XM'ii !" leat i.iii' c -. t it o!i Hit 1 fell i-v.-e. ,1 w hieh is t hit t v-if.e -i f . ' v 1 lie acculeiit was wi-:t-- i.' !'i:'l!--'l: i r , render assistance if ;,t- tunate child was soon t!ri- u: siciail suniuioiied. I. !-' ' ever. s!ie having bv kv i -ing tlie wall in her ii-;- The Spi iiijficld. M i". ' : that the case if h. A Mai lb-ro, w ho w as s i i. 1 .' her nephew with mi ax--i i interest among iiipiIhm' m"- 1 was cut open to tlie h-a'a n t but she has gradually iiii-;,,r; she is in vigoioits I rn -.1. r " , -v n l r -till not ai t, ' a;w a l.i ta sit; .1' f ti. years frotu a 'l-otu it VOll'l.t s( A be was liet rot lied, ami it'"''1 Veijus. on the liei ! 1 agreed to dron il" 'i;v vt' cravat he tied liei ntlit nnn t left arm being ll:o ii '''' over Ins riglit shonith-r. chiefs cf each weie t!:e and tied round the bti'i ,t f l"1 walked steadily tnwani Tlie st 1. .101 until I lip 1 . ll'iii r'.r '"' f-r y away, and their Unlie enlaced, at some d 1st. iv.ee W -A building on L'i'i" u rinn.-iti. nsetl as a ho.iTiht'i.' '" women, w ho leett'il i "'" Kean. the landlady, ft ' ,; consetiueuce of mi ein I V ImildiniT. srren w-reil moil being in the lx-n-e -it Mirt immlter or t!:e I.itti'tf '" ceitained. as t'ose tr' ifi" pott. Mi-s. Kcati w-s .lotm W Ilnstiu. a v: r s was itljili red ititei i::i'''. !t ' ' ly. John Finneg.m vl!' a't w ork in tite i si avitu'H. f.tr ilia tl.-hiis fti:d !"'' i. :i- ltom nfte- of Cvlltstf se hi- ,v Hiii'li OuifTiev. a 1 .1! stmitlv tinl loiiie ! ti'iff - . nally." Lottie Wii.i:un ! ' " r', The other women wm ' ,:i ; f .... ed: one. a colored w .trn ' it is thoufilit -s!b!e !'- , The emp! yes of !'e K,' , Island and Pacilio i-s.l. . .. ern division, are havi"v. ifi. .. claimed that the loadis I'".. man iu white." h' ,, -. uight. The shape f s' ' '' , night of last week lo ou train No. 9, between 1' ... . ant Plain. !t was wa.iv'"- - towards the etime thinkim? it a 1 1 1 i iX breaks, aud ahnt lutwi".1: . tt-to.lvr itl Wit li in a disanteaied. Ha si Ufi supposed it either '''f11,, ..( x 1- t .1. ilfif'" uighu it was seen o -- tw(sen the two towns I'J -, i;,f I n.tlfl it trainmen have neco ' jc f r matter is a common t '!' 1 1.' auKig laUitmd u.i-neu i.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers