V nir rtisnmi r dicmij fli mi on a r: EBEN3BURC, PA,, Triday Morning, - - Oct. 12, 1877. Democratic State Ticket, FOn St'FKEME JL'PC.E : ! JOHN TRUNKEY, Of VenangO County. ' YOU. AUDITOR ;EN KHAiV i WW. P. SCHELL, of Bedford County IOH 8TATK TKKASmEK : AMOS C. NOYES, of Clinton Connty Democratic County Ticket. PROTIIUSOTAKT : (7HA?. P. O'DONNF.LL, of Lorttto Bor. DISTRICT ATTOR5BT : W. HORACE ROSE, of Johnstown. POOH HOrsK DIRECTOR '. JACOB KIRK PATRICK, of Chest Twp. i C0HO5EH : JAMES MORELAN'D, of Wilmore Bor. L - - - - The State of Ohio has gone West in a horn by a very large majority for the other man. tm At the State election In Colorado last week, the question of conferring upon wo men the riffht to vote was defeated by a , . . . : -1 nn. I and one Ahich we venture to say will be a p. pnived by every true and right minded wo in;iu. Thb letter of acceptance of Hon. William P. Scliell, the Democratic candidate for Auditor General, is published elsewhere in our papor to-day. Among other things Mr. Sch til says : "My rule has leen to lryirl)tt4 so as to prevent vrong, and secure fiat vchich teas right to all classes." This one neuteuce is a sound and siillictcnt plat form in itself one on which woiking men ami all other men cau safely and securely stand. Tub funeral ceremonies of Archbishop Bnyley took placo at the Cathedral, Balti more, Tuesday morning last, and were at tended by an immense coucouse of eople. Cardinal McCloskey, thirteen Archbishops nod Bishops, and a very large number of i cleigymeu nsitcd at the service. Gov tiiKt Cat i oil, Attorney General Gewyn, May-wr Latrobc and other prominent, orll t:ials w--e present. Bishop Wood, of Phil adelphia, was celtrbiaut -T the Mass, and Bishop Foley, of Chicago, pi etched the fuueiAl sermon. Tint American Sunday School Union has seconded a call issued by the Honorary Secietaries of the Sunday School Union of Great But sin, setting apart Sunday and M,u.I:kv Orf Stli ftii.t "nth. f..r niiiteri I , I t r u , o i i I siipphcatiotis on behalf of Sunday Schools 1 t..r ,i. 1677 a...t .. P.....ti!a ! Sabbath School Associations urges com (banco wi'.h the call by eveiy Sabbath tcliooi in the Slate. It is suggested that on Sunday. Oct. 2ti, thete be special services held in all chinches for prayer in behalf of tho object indicated, and that ministeis pieach special sermons upon the claims of j bttnuay schools. Jons J. PaTtcrsoK, carpet-bag United Sta es Sena or from South Carolina, was arrested iu Washington, on Fi iday last, on a w ii rant issued iu pursuance of a icqui.si tioii of Governor Hampton, and taken tie foie.Iudge Humphrey. A writ of hnbras rorpu was iinmedia ely piocuied by Pat- ..f-Jh-.'M ,111111111 Ullll lllM fmllim ll.l I" 111 IT I d ... , . ., i . . , II,. six aa a. ...liniiArl mil ii W ml im.H 1 1' I I:U 1 1..! vwiiiiiiuvu u.ii. v. v. o j , ... 17tli instant. If Patterson is taken to South Carolina and tried for the offcuces charged against him by a Republican committee of the Iegis1atnte of that State, the chances are good that he will not find it convenient to serve out the balance of hia term as Senntor. Ttta business of mannfactut ing candi date for Governor of this State is progress ing with fctuful rapidity. Almost every county in the State bids fair to Lava 4 Re publican candidate by the time the nomi nating convention meets next summer. The following named have already been entered for the race : John B. Packer, Northumberland ; Henry M. Iloyt, Lu aerne ; Win. II. Armstrong, Lycoming ; J. I'. Wickersham, Lancaster ; Gen. James A. Beaver, Centre ; Daniel J. Morrell, Cam bria, and Henry Rawle, Erie. The Demo crats are more modest, and thus far the tiames of only two gentlemen have been mentioned by local conventions Hendrick B. Wright, of Luzerne, and A. II. Dill, of Union. Of the Republican candidate iu the foregoing list Mr. Morrell, of this coun ty, is much the strongest. A t rem bn noes Democratic storm pre vailed throughout Ohio all day last Tues day, iutlict ttig incalculable injury to that Republican stronghold. Scarcely one stone upon ano her of its massive walls re main, anil over its ruins might be wiitten "I was, but am not." Richard M. Bishop, Democrnt, was elected Governor by a ma jority ranging fiom ffteen to twenty Jlre thousand, as was also the balance of tho State ticket, and a Democratic m-ijoiity of the Legislatuie on joint ballot of between twenty and thirty secured. The Labor and Greenback ticket leceivtd a heavy support in Cincinnati, Clcul.ii.d, Toledo, and other locali les, but wo cannot yet estimate its full strength in the State. The challenge, which by their great victory the Democra- fv of Oliiti scud to their nolitical biethern j l:i I eiin.-y ivama, is, -o nave lougui me good fight nnd have triumphed on the i-ixth of November beat us if you can." ' The result of this election in Ohio fin nishes r" newed ev deuce of the vitality of the Den -ocratic puty, and demonstrates, as has re- peatedly been shown during the past forty- live yeare, that there can be only two great political parties in the country. Other or ganizations may spring up and 1m c.nne for midablc, as Anti-Ma onry and KnowNoth inKis;ii did, but aa tht-y aie based only on a bingle idea lhey mjou disappear, and theii nit.nbo s eventually tcek tiitiit old j aitj .isbcciatious. GZ2 JJSL. fn D3 I A rnnnpoM)KKT of the New York I Herald, while recently traveling on a rail- 1 road in Scotland, had a conversation with General Grant, who was a passenger on I the same train, in reference to Charles s.imner, j..bU Latbmp Motley, both of whom are aean, ana tun c?cuuie, me jhcs ent Scorotary of the Interior. An old and charitable maxim admonishes ns to say nothing of the dead except it be in their j Grant is known to be a good , i hater he entertains quite a different view . I : CB : of the matter. He 6aid to this correspot ! ent that Sumner was addicted to the vice ' of habitual lying that Motley, when he ! was Minister to Finland, was guiltv of of- j ficial infloVlitv to his own government re- ' ticial infidelity to his own government re , Fpcctlng the Alabama claims, and that Schuiz was a humbug, loassauine iepu- , CPU- ' ' tations of two men who are in thoir ir graves ! j , ..r .i i aa i ailCl IirOWeilCBB III lieiCIIU Ulllli.icicn) uiu , . , , i not mspiay muuu t-.uiaitc on hd , of f3.nt. AVhatever else mav be said of j Schuiz, he showed Grant on one occasion at least, in co-operation with Mr. Sumner in the Senate, that be was anything else than a humbug. We refer to the time when the San Domingo project of Grnnt, Ilabcock & Co. was before that body, and Grant will never forget or forgive Summer and Schuiz for their terrible exposure of that corrupt measure. John W. Forney, who knew Sumner better than Grant did, has come to the rescue of the dead Senator's t reputation from the aspersion cast upon it by the latter, and declares in bis Press that "theie never Jived a more truthful man than Charles Sumner, and that he never violated a promise or uttered a falsehood." Be tweeu these two conflicting statements the country will readily draw the proper con clusion. The Democratic State Convention of Isew York met at Albany last Wednesday I week. An unusual crowd was in attend ance, and many of ihe most prominent and trusted leaders of the party occupied seats as delegates. The only question on which the convention was divided was the policy of lenomiiiatinghe present State officeis, or the selection of an entirely new ticket. The latter policy prevailed by a large ma jority, with the exception that the present j Comptroller, who was appointed last win- j ter by Governor Tildcn to fill a vacancy, was retained on tho ticket. This result may be saiJ mainly to have been effected by its steady advocacy by the New York World. The Republicans have no hope of electing their State ticket, but claim that they will elect a majority of the members of the legislature and re-elect Conkling to the United States Senate. To carry the Legislature, therefore, will be the exciting ques'.iou in the campaign. Under the pres ent unequal and one sided apportionment bill of that State the Ueniiblie-tit narf v maw i oiuoi mat. ?.ate me JUptlUllcail party may 1 carrv the Legislature, as it did last Novem- I I 'er, although Mr. Tildeu received a rxtu- ' 1 1 ,i,r majority " over 82,000. The same thing cau occur in this State urder the 1 present infamous apportionment. Two suc cessive Republican Legislatures in New York have refused, although required to do so by law, to rtdistrict the S:ate, and the Democrats at the coming election will make a determined effort to secure a ma jority in the Legislature and pass an ap portionment bill that will reflect the foel- ings of a majority of the people. General Mii.es, wi.h his force of caval ry and infantry, struck the fresh trail of Chit f Joseph snd his Nez Pcrces early in the morning on last Sunday week, near the Bear's Paw mountains, in npper Montana norih of Fort Benton. He surprised the Indian camp at 8 o'clock and captured six 1 hundred hoiscs, mules and ponies, veie fight followed, in which Gen A se- Miles I reports that his loss was twenty-four killed and forty wounded, and that the Indians had seventeen killed including Looking Glass, three other Chiefs, Joseph's brother, and forty wounded. The Indians retreated into a deep ravine, where Gen. Miles had them surrounded. He says that to take them by assault would cost many lives that he hopes to wear them out and eventu ally compel them to surrender. In his re port Gen. Miles also states that he is hourly expecting to be joined by Gen. Slurgis and his command. We do not very well see how Joseph end his men can avoid being captured. If he is, he will probably be tried for murder and 6hot or hung, as an example to all other Indian chiefs who will not consent to be driven from their lands by dishonest and rapacious government agents. Joseph loved his home in Oregon, and for doing so becamo a fugitive at a cost to the government of several hundred thousand dollars, and the killing and wounding of about two hundred soldiers. This whole business has been a blistering disgrace to the government. P. S. A dis patch from Fort Benton Btates that Joseph has surrendered. The General in Chief of the Turkish army in Armenia claims that he totally do faated tho Russians iu a three days' fight twelve miles from Kars, commencing on Tuesday of last week. The latest advices seem tt. con fiim the Turkish report, which desttoys for the present season all chances of Russian success in that quarter of tho seat of war. Rain and snow storms again prevailed south of the Danube the early pu t of this week, and the opposing armies in Bulgaria have not therefore been able to renew hostilities. The present cam paign in that country is rapidly draw ing to a close, and may possibly end without any more severe fighting. The Russian soldiers are represented by army correspondents to : i ,. . . ... . ue very niucii uispii ueu, owing to their re peated disasters, all of which they attribute to bad gcneialship on i he pait of their chief officeis. Either this is true or else it must be conceded that in al! the essential qualities of a g.axl soldier the Turk is su perior to tho RHssian. Tho Emperor Al i cxamler wll0 M Icmaine, wit,, ar my. has telegraphed to his wife that he will not leave it until final success is assured. This would seem to indicate that be intends re maining during the winter in Bulgaria, which was not what he anticipated when he left his palace in St. Pefenburgb to Join his aimy iu its boasted tiiumphaut maich to Conbtantinopie. nSL 131 EF S The Auditor Generalship. Following is the letter of Hon. Wn. P. Scbell in answer to the note of tbe com roit'ee informing bim of his nomination for ; Auditor General on tbe Democratic Stata ticket nrnroHt), Oct. 3. C.tntUmen : Tour letter or the 2Pth ult., in- I forminir me of rnv nominstlon fur the office ! of Auditor Generttl 1 y the Democratic Slate BCl., -rjue r'nnvfntinn. i hetnre tne. ! accept the nomination unwr a nopp jphsv , n"""!15?"Lv:i" IU H I'l I i. n 1 1 k ...... - The office of Auditor r.enernl Is of jm-nt Impnrtttnce. As far Imck :s 1811 t he I.ck is"a- tore enacted "that all accounts between the Commonwealth and any person or persons, tnent body politic or corporate, as well as those 7. .""JVTh.. '. hereafter may become possessed of pnt.Iic ln,,n,,yt 8,0 Ihe ttOC,,,IIIte of 8u persons huvinir j chums on the : ' "V' l" 5 1 ,! 'I'.f ? A'. .V" r 'iw nn,j P0itv f hpws cioinm wnn pxrpnMt : III) TV . sillfM lilt" iimtirii ire . .....v i i. i..r..rt rw..,i,u. m jii jiii:t- Klin . - . tion. and new sources of revenue have opened j nn. it i of the titmo.-rt importance io inc lax- i payers that th.se powers l.e inu-lli.rei.tly and lohestly exercised. Integrity, vigilance and j a due sense r punuo repponsionuy nnum ; jrovern in the admlnwnittlon of tliealfairs of , th!VuTer,p terms to my labor9 on behalf of the working- llll'll Ul IIIC ClnlM. mj lllll'niil III turn is nor oi reeeni oirin. iiriiiif h punnu ranrr, now pxteri'ling" over mMny years. I have always deemed It my' duty to vote for nil measures tendinjr to diniTy labor, anil to elevate In the moral, social and political scale those who fol lowed ii as a pursuit. I do not think :h-re is any necessary antag onism between capital and iMlior. On the con trary, there is a close relationship between the m hich should work to the advantage of hoth ; a relationship whioh onirht to be so ad justed as to divide bet ween them the results of industry in (rood faith and unod fcrliiifr. Experience, however, hasfhown that in many instances the power of capital, directed by f-l flshness. has wrested from labor the rljht that legitimately; belonir to it. My rule has been to legislate so as to prevent wronjr. arid secure that which was rltrht to all classe. I am sincerely gratified to know thst hereto fore I have enjoyed the confidence oT, and re celred hfnnra from, the industrial elates of my feilow-eitizens. It Is rny purpose hereaf ter, whether in public or private life, to dn no act which shall cause them to rcjrret these manifestations of t heir r'4r;ird. I can on ly say, in conehis'on, that should the action of the der the eH ,o 'se-e them in a M.hele as iinpisiiiir on me the mot weighty obliga tions to iroard mid protect their interests with strict fidelity. I am, irentlemen, your fellow-citizen, William P. S(;hei.t,. To J. R. IMIiinprr, William W. Ker. S. A. Cos grave. Edward 8. Hei.ly und Jurntrs 11. Ueilly, Committee. 27ie Late Archbishop of Baltimore. Want of space prevents us from giving more than a brief biographical sketch of the lato Archbishop Bayley, whose death was announced by us last weik and whoso funeral on Tuesday last is referred to else where We copy from the New York Sun of a recent date 'James Itoosevelt fTaylay was born in this city. Auu.2:i. 1S4!. lie ennie of a trood stock. His (rrandlath'-r, lr. Itichard Hayley, was one of the most eminent American phviieians of the list century, prof-sir successively if an atomy and Fiirp. ry in Columbia College, n tut the first Health iillicerof New York. The doc tor's dauircler. Mr. Seton. was the founder of the Sisterhood of Charity in this country. The f u I lire prelate was educn ted at Washington mow Trinity! College, Hartford, where he was for a short time a tutor; studied theology wi,h th" l!eV- ,)r- '""vis of Middl.-lown. took ordel.s in ,ho protestant Episcopal Church, and nccessivrly served pnilshesin Harlem nnd In . . .. .1 ' I ' I . W. .. . . ! Iltlirl IHW II -1 ' I I lit II II,- -.1,7. i , r-ii irilll the Itiiimiii Catholic Church, prepnied for the pilisthood nt St. Sulpice in Paris, and. on March 2. 1sl2. was ordained in this eitv bv the ,B,.e Archbishop- (then Mishop) HiTghe-;. Ap- pomieu j,ri,sr -rir to him iis-hm i rt-s in ri . .1 01111 s College. Fcrrthiim. he became President of that insl ii ul ion in ll". The following year Arch bishop Hughes made him his private secretary a post which he helil uniii lsV. On let. HO of that 3-eiir he was consecrated first Hit-hop of Newark, N. J. For l ineleen years heruied his pincese with an ability and succ"Sss of which Heton Hall t?ollcge au l the many lesser institu tions of learning, hop:tals. and convents, called into exis'r-nee bv him are lnstinir monu ments. On July:l. lHT'J, the Pope raised him to the Archbishopric of Hall i more and the Pri macy of the Church in the Cnited States. Of late years his h alth has been very feeble, and quite recently th" Pope gave him a coadjutor Itishop dictions wtio now suceeeds him in the Archbishopric. Ir. Hay ley lenvesa number of pnMisned works a "Sketch of the HKiorv of th Catholic Church, on the Island of New York." "Memoirs of Samuel Cnhricl Brute, firt Hishop of Vinecnnes." and "Pastorals for the People. "Ill his last sermon to the loved people of his diocese. In St. Patrick's Cathedral. Arch bishop Itaylf y usedthe-ie ominous words: 'I am almost too old a tret to be transplanted. ' 11" was invested with the pallium of an Arch bishop, ir. Unit imore, on the HCl h ot J lily. The See of Italtimore being the oldi-st In America. he attained precedence of all the other Komnn Catholie HIsiKips or AmTi-a. liuring the in vestiture Archbishop It.iyley sat in front of the vacant niche in tlieCntliedml in lliltimore, in which the tablet to his memory will be In serted. The tablet will tie in a line of tablets commemorative of Archb:shopBay ley's prede cessors In the diocese of Baltimore.'' Baru Oct Square Toed for "Square Timber." Mr. D. O. Barr, the defeated aspirant for the Democratic nomination for State Treasuter, has, as will be seen by the annexed letter, freely and fully declared his intentions to support hi? successful competitor, Col. Amos C. Noyes. Read what he says : Pittsburgh, October 8. A. J. Stineman, Esq., Editor of the Lancaster In trUtUCiicer : My Dear Sin : In answering yourfnote of the 2d Inst. 1 reply at the same time to a number of letters received from different parts of the State. It is not usual for a defeated candidate to ileflne his position, but I have no objection to give yoU my views In relation to the iiending canvass eo Tnr nS t relates to I lie State Treasur er. Colonel Noyes w.;" nominated in the State Convention after sn arduous sirgw'e that na turally left bebind It traces ot '"ssatisfaction. This is not unusual in our political cor. eats.but time and reflection will, t hope, eradicate (II differences sn our ranks, and the Democracy o VMiegneny couniy win givB unu i neir support. No on- doubts his capacity or asperses hia in- UK.". iiu i-w.r. iiiT.rr,i,Lc , ..c ilo ring In Its pledge that he will uncover to lh people that sealed book, the Slate Treasury, and present them a statement that will plainly exhibit the actual condition of iheodice. That Is what the Democracy of Pennsylvania have been vainly demanding fr.r years. Mr. Mackey plutnply denied it to a legislative committee, and Mr. Rawle, after piedtiing himslir to i-how the people the books, torgot his pledge as soon as he was snug in olhco. Why this secrecy about matters of which every tux-payer in the State has a right to the fullest information? Does it not atgue something wrong, something the treasury ring desires to cover up until a more convenient season? Believing Colonel Noyes, if elected, will be honest and true to his letter of acceptance, and will fully reeognr.e this demand of th people for the fullest in formal ion ns to the condition of the State Treasury, which I regard ns the first esseutinl step to brenk itig up the treasury ring and its :, he has my warmest wishes, corrupt practic as he thai I have my constant labors to promote nis success. Very respectfully yeure, D. O. Barb A Pittsburg Mystery. A special Pitts burgh dispatch to the Phila. Times, dated Oct. 8th, says : Some three or four weeks ago Willis M. Hatch, a young lawyer of NeTV Castle, who has always borne an irre proachable- character for steadiness and sobriety, came to ihis city with nearly two . . , , ii r l - inousaiiil uouai8 oi uis own money in uis pocket to make some purchases for a farm lie owns. He mysteriously disappeared in a day or two, and a most vigorous search was made for him by the detectives, aided by his brother, lie was finally found in New Oi leans, in a semi-demented condi tion, bearing marks of extreme violence. He was brought home a day or two ago and states that he was decoyed by a woman on DiKjnense way to show her to the Union depot, wheie he was attacked by three ' men, who bound, gagged and chloroformed him and placed him on a train, lhey nc- companyiug him. After that he has little recollection of w hat occurred until he found himself in a hospital in New Orleans, lie wai robbed of everything but his gold watch, which wns brought to hiui iu the hospital by a b-y. The Storm Last ff'eek. SOME OF THK TtAIMUlAD ACCIDENTS WHICH FOLLOWED IN ITS WAKE. rtlffislXvlxMs, Oct. 5. Last night a terrible accident occmred on the Picker ing Valley branch of the Reading railroad, about two miles west of this place, to the Pennypackcr excursion train, killing seven persons and injuring about forty-three. The rains had washed away the track, and ,i)e ..in was carried down allien emoatiK mcnt. A culveit. too small to admit of the passage of the rapidly accumulating ' w:1ter, had been washed away, followed by . '.. . . ., u th nilmid the entire bank undeiiieath ti e railionci track. The train which left 1 hreniXVlile . Rr (j:o() consisting in the order named of au j engine, tender, two passenger, a baggage mid a milk car, loaded with participants at tLe iennyi,acker reunion, fell through 1 1 . i wash in the road. The night was rimL' qiwI thooA nf rKf-m not iimirfit bv the ' niasli-up upon emermni! from the cats, . . . . r , . i nearn ine L'roans oi ine wouiMieu nuei- - .. r . r .1 mingled with the hissme of steam from the engine. It was terrible in the extreme. i ie i onr-iown wiecKeis wcic-rm.j .... ... grouno, ana an nigui inng iiib iienu hou Wfn,ndetJ wele being removed from the de- t'ty rive-wonnded were taken to lielliboi me larni nouses ana some eighteen to Fhoenixville. There were about 150 excursionists on the train, most of them being from Phc tiixvillo and the surrounding country, of whom 7 were killed and 43 wounded. Pikenixvili.e, Pa., Oct 6. The debris at the scene of Thursday evening's disas ter on the Pickering Valley railroad was burned last night by older of the railroad company. The coroner's jury, after view ing the remains of the victims, allowed them to be removed to their la e homes. The jury t It is morning visited the scene, viewed the surroundings and adjourned to meet on Wednesday morning, when wit nesses will be heard and evidence taken. Four of the persons injured have since died Michael Corbett, biakenian, Mrs. Al bert Pennypacker, Peter Daniield and John Latshaid making the deaths bo far foot up eleven. Wn-MiNGTOJf, Oct. 5. An accident oc curred tn the Wilmington and Northern railroad -by w hich an engineer was killed, ami a fireman so badly injured that a fatal result is expected. The train left Reading at 4:15 yesterday afternoon, and reached a point between Isabella stat ion and Waynes burg junction when suddenly the locomo tive dashed into a ditch, followed by the tender, both of which were badly wrecked. At first the body of the engineer cotild not bo found. Finally alwiat twelve o'clock 'last night the wreckers found it under the engine. JI is name was Amos Peacock, aged 40 ycai s. Tkentok. Oct. 5. The express train eo,,ng soiiui on ne i.e.v.o - .i l..i..:.l l 1"..L. isvh ran into a broken culvert near Milford, N Jersey, last evening, and was completely wricked. The train was washed out into tire Delaware, and now lies in the stream some distance from tho shore. The latest dispatches s-ate that no bodies have yet been found, and that the conductor and en gineer and three passcngcis comprise the missing. G he en pout. Jj. I., Oct. 3. The steam er Massachusetts, which left New Yoik last night, grounded on Rock Point, five miles east of Horton's point, at midnight last night. The cause of her going ashore was loss of reckoning in the storm. The opinion is that she will go to pieces. Much of her cargo, consisting of bales of cotton, oil in baiiels and general merchandise, was thrown overboard to lighten the vessel and is strewn along the beach. Two hundred passengers iu all were on board. The ladies were nil landed, and all will bo safely ashore by ten o'clock. Fout Washington, Oct. 5. A bridge was washed out near Fort Washington, across the Sandy Run, into which the en gine and an accommodation traiti plunged. The engineer, George Bartle, was drowned. No psssengers were on the train. The train hands are somewhat bruised. A number of schooners, si-Mips anil small er boats were wrecked at. the mouth of Chester creek. Several mills iu Chester were damaged, and six houses were blown down. The loss is roughly estimated at from $20,000 to 30,000. Shocking Trageiy. A terrible nnd heartrending tragedy took placo in the westein part of Kansas City, Mo., on Satur day morning. II. W. Mann, cashier of the Kansas City stock yards company, killed himself, and before inflicting his ow n death wound shot his little daughter, aged two years, through the heart. When he was found a smoking pistol was grasped in the rigtit hand of the deceased and the j bloo.i was oozing from a little hole in the right temple, which showed where the ball had been sent. The little child, who was found dead in the same bed with her father, was lying on her back, with a tiny baby doll in one hand and tho other thrown care lessly over her head. The little breast was blackened with powder, showing that tho muzzle of the pistol had been placed direct ly over the heart before the trigger was pulled. Mr. Mann was from Oswego, N. Y., and had been located in Kansas City for the last five years. He was a man of great popu larity. The cause of this act is not certainly known, but the death of his wife, w hich oc cuired about six months ago, is believed to " ...v-n.,. -, in ......n iui, since the death of his wife, Maun has been have incited it, and it is now alleged that c.,r,i.ot r GnolU il tnmnorarv insjnilv ""J '- 1 j j' A romantic stort is going the rounds of the newspapers about the late Archbish op of Bal imote and a brilliant Connecticut belle. It is said that when Mr. Bayley be came a priest he broke off an engagement of marriage to this lady, w hom he had met on a Summer holiday trip, and that she took refuge iu a convent, whence she soon fled under very peculiar circumstances, and finally she died of consumption and a broken heart. It is a pity to spoil such a work of the imagination. Mr. Bayley and the iadv in ouestion were friends from j childhood, but not lovers. They were ' . . , . , . h h v . ,j kjuu iicixi suffered from either consumption or a bro ken heart but remained in excellent heaLh and spirits for more than thirty years alter he had entered the priest hood, and she died in Europe only a year ago. She made a j short trial of convent life as a novice of the bisters of .Mercy, but as this was when she was a middle-aged woman, and as much as twelve or fifteen years after the alleged I separation from her supposed betrothed, it I T ,J I. .. m.A I 1 . .. I ...... . . 1 . .. . i. . f 1 - wmu immiv uo "ceil lue icsuii oi cis the appointed love. Neither was there any thing peculiar in the circumstancer of her return to the world. Finding that the convent did not suit her, she went home in the most commonplace manner, as novices and sisters uotuiifrequeutly do. Pittsburgh Post. A drunken man named James Riley, of Bnrghill, Trumbull county, Ohio, was knocked down with a two-pound weight, on Sunday evening last, by another party duly sober, named Mike Kelly, and was af terwards pounded and stamped to death by the rufliau. The murdered man was the transgressor, be having sought a quarrel with Kelly on acc unt of alleged false tes timony given by the latter in a criminal suit id which the fuirucr was defendant. JY'ir. and rytut-r Js'otinys. A Berks connty, Pa., shoemaker man ufactures "medicated" boots. Potatoes have been selling at Tiemont, Schuylkill county, recently at 14 to 18 . cents per bushel. Rev. Hubbard Mintrr eloped from Nel- son, Ivy., wun a iourieeu year oiu gni, ae scrling bis aged wife. A dispatch sajs the Buenos Ayres floods drowned 10,000,000 sheep. We doubt wether it's true though, don't ewe ? At Houston, Texas, a white man was fined $1 and cost for saying to a passing mulatto girl that he would like to kiss her. Mrs. Delarmel and sister, w hile di iving across the railroad track at Cochichnate. Mass., on Fiiday, were struck by a locomo live and killed. The incendiary fire at Napticoke, a mining town near Wilkesbarre. Fiiday, burned fourteen building. Loss, $35,000; mostly insured. A building has been erected near Brigham Young's grave fir the shelter of a party of men who keep a continual guard j over it, day and night. ( Frank Welton, a young man of thirty ! years of age was shot and killed in Camer on county by a burglar while he was at tempting to capture bim. Two boys in Cincinnati baUied the leg of another boy, from the knee to the big toe. with gasoline and then set flro to it. The victim still lives, but may die. Mr. Charles O Conor, of ew lork, is Chairman of the American Socie ty of ihe i Red C ross, organized for the succor of tho sick and wounded Russian soldiers. Miss Nellie Thuiston, of Utica, N. Y., made a balloon ascension a few dAj-s since, at Baldw insville, and landed in McGran Ville, 00 miles distan', in 515 minutes. W. Gale, the Card'ff pedestrian, who began to walk 1,300 miles in 1.0K) hours j in London, on Sunday, August 2n, success fully finished his feat on last Saturday. A mussel was recently taken from the Tennessee river, near Chattanooga, con taining five genuine pearls. 1 hey are of i good quality, quite lustrous, and valuable. J A negro clergyman w at- arrested in his ; pillpit iu Houston, Oa., on a charge of murder. He had whipped his little daugh ter to death and hidden the body in the woods. At Eric, Pa., Monday night, Sferrett's lining stable was burned, together with thirteen horses. But little of the contents of the building were saved. The loss is unknown. Eighty-seven years ago, at the birth of Kimball Laverin, the first apple pie made in Springfield, N. II. , was cooked, the mess of twenty apples being the first raised ft: the town. At Landaff, N. II., fs the grave of a Mr-. Brotison, who lived in three Centuries, she having been born in 1G93, and died in 1S01. It is said that there are but three such cases on record. Hearing was suddenly acquired by John Burt of Crow n point, N. Y., by an explosion in a mine. He had been deaf and dumb since bis birth. He is now slowly learning to taik. The Iltiftunin's Jnvrnal is authority r-r tho statement that theie arc between 15,0O0,('0O and "o.(tOO,0!)0 feet of logs be- ! tween Cleaifield and Lock Haven, which a t'o id wouid put into market. ! Hinry Shaw, a w ife-muidercr, and! Gus Johnson, one of the most notorious ! murderers in Georgia, both under sentence j of death, burrowed out tf the jail at Atlanta j onJJFriday night and escaped. The Stale Department has received a pi aster cast, of a remarkable treaty of the Greeks of 409 B. C, containing mention of ) the first political acts of Alcibiades. Jt j was discovered in Greece in April last, and presented by General Meredith Read. A social sensation has been developed i - , , i . - , .. ' . ! in nan i more oy tne ai rest ot wiipam t . Schley, i wealthy member of the bar, on the charge of having forcibly outraged Miss Nellie Fitzgerald, employed as a seams' ress at his residence while his family were absent. Professor Ambrose Lehman, of the geological survey, pronounces Chimney Rock, r Franklin county, to lie the high est point in the state east of the Alleghenies, From its top there is n gcs,d view of four counties, viz : Franklin, Adams, Cumber laud and York. The wife and sisters of Gilman, the New York forger, offer to give up a large portion of their private fortunes, amount ing in the aggregMe to $110,000, in case the creditors agree not to prosecute him criminally. It is thought their proposition will be accepted. The Louisville Courier Jovrnnl recalls that Cassius M. Clay killed a young ma:i named Turner nearly twenty years ago, and says : "Turner was a candidate for the Legislature, and in a political discussion forced the tight on Clay a thing that was never hard to do." A terrible accident occurred to a rail way con voy of sever, wagons, which was crossing tne river Don. The train con tainrd a large number of Abchasian pris oners, who were chained together, and were being transported to Sibeiia. Four hundred of them were lost. A terrible disappointment lias befallen the scientists. An examination of the fos sil recently exhumed at Hazleton, Pa., by Professor Leidy, of Philadelphia, has dis closed the fact that instead of being the skeleton of a mammoth extinct animal, it is nothing more nor less than a concretion of iron ore. Hon. Robert Smalls, colored, Con gressman representing ihe Firth South Carolina district, has been arrested at Beaufort on a charge of bribery and ad mitted to bail in the sum of $5,000. He is charged with receiving $5,000 for vo'ing for a rascally printing appropriation w hile iu the State Senate. The scoundrel who paid him the money is the witness against him. A Republican victim of Tassmore's "reserve endowment" scheme says: "When I found out what kind of a policy I had, I went to Passmore and talked plain to him. I told him I considered it a downright rob bery. He commenced with his Oh, now brother Wren,' and I told him not to brother me, I considered I had been swin dled and so I spoke my mind about it." The holder lost $900. Michael Hurley can keep a secret, He has served thirteen years of a sentence of twenty-six years and nine months impiis ontnent iu the penitentiary for burglary, rape and ftlonnious assault, in which be had two confederates. Vhcn he was sen tenced Judge Maynard offered to take ten years from the time of his confinement if he would name his companions iu crime. He has never done it. Fernando Wood gave a break fast party at his residenco iu NewYoik on Saturday last, in honor of Hon. A. II. Stephens, of Georgia, who had been passing a few days in the city before the meeting of Congress next Monday. Among the persons invited was Cardinal McCloskey, who wrote a let ter to Mr. Wood complimentary to Mr. Stephens, and stating his inability to be present owing to other pressing engage ments. The fast freight train on the Delaware j and Hudson road ran off the track, owing to iinsniaccu swucil. llimsitav n m n 1 near Melrose Station. Patrick Riley, en , eineer, was scalded to death, and Michael Merrick, the fireman was crushed so badly that he soon died. Jones, a biakeman, was badly injured. The section watchman reports examining the switch half an hour before the accident. The disaster is at tiibuted to the strikers. --Among the novelties of tl.e coming , Paris exhibition will be a youth f foui teen with feet shaped precisely like bis bands. ; He can use them for the same purposes, and plays upon the piano with lioth bauds and feet, having a jieculiar chair w hich en- ' ablos him tocuil his body into the neces sary jvisition. He is a very goxd pet form- ; er, and speaks both English and German. 1 His Fieiich is yet impei ft ct, j The exposure of the attempt to repeat : in Allegheny county with Hileiii)ans and ' Catholics the corrupt and ci iminal p:acti- t ces cat tied out with the Mollies in Luzerne and Schuylkill in 1875 wlU, says thrjPitts- burgh Poxl, have but one effect, and that will be to consolidate all classes of Demo- ci ats no matter of w hat religion or nativ- t ily in opposition fo the ling candidates, j who adopt Mich insulting practices to cou- t i one their teigu of plunder at the State capital. J Francis Biron. a French noble, who . many years ago left bis country in conse- t qnence of a family quarrel, anil became a i lumberman in the West, has just d ied, an ' old man, at his home in the Wisconsin pineties. After his success was assured his family wished for a reconciliation and i bestowed upon him a large estate in Cana- j da. He was very --ealihy at the time of ; his death, and was very well known in the i Western S.'ates. He was a man of a noble , and benevolent natuie. I In Fritz own, Pa., lives a man jwho is ! insensible to the pain which usually attends the stingof bees, wasps, and hornets. He j can take the honey from the beehives with out either stujiefying or destroying the j bees, lie destroys all the hornets' and yelbw jackets that he can find, and, al- j though frequently covered by the insects , which have alighted upon him in swarms, he has never been known to flinch. On ! ge'ting hold of a hornets' nest, he empties it by shaking the hornets out of the ajierture. A San Francisco newspaper has ac complished a remarkable Teat in telegraphy. ! The morning after the intei iia;ional rifle shooting at Cieedmoor it came out with a ! broadside of diagrams of the taigtts bear- : ing accurate representations of the scores. ! as proved by tbe New Yoi k papers received ' a week afterwnid. These diagrams had been transmitted over the wiies by a new 1 process, invented and patented by one of : the proprietors of the journal, and not yet ' generally understood, bnt which may con- j tain the germ of great things. j A German colony w as established three ' years ago upon Sand Mountain, in Alaba- i ma. They have now six thousands acres of a former wilderness blossoming as the rose, t and have built tip a rlom ishing town, which pays thousands of dollars in taxes to the ' State. The grape intercbt is profitable, j One German on half an acre last year rnied ! $200 worth of giapes. and ibis year be will raise $500 worth. The tobacco growth is' equal fh quality and size to the Virginia ' leaf. Tobncco, cigars and wine, the chief , products of the colony, find a ready sale in Louisville and Cincinnati. j Edward Smith, one of t';e Lebanon Valley bridge bin tiers, w ho w as nppi ehend- j ed at Troy. N. Y.. pleaded gtiii'y at Read ing, Pa., on Saturday morning to :hc charge of having fired "the Lebanon Valley j Bridge, i:t company w ith Humphteys and others who wese stra'-.gcrs to him." This witnsss not being able to idenify TiouT. Langlotf and B'.:zz:trd, of the defendauis, a nnUe prosequi was entered In their casc-s and they .vt re dischaiced. Hiram N .r'i. trieb. the only other defendant, is charged with having counselled the offense. The Lancasrer Jttlligenrer con?iders it very cool for Il.irp'r's I'WrUy to publish a cut illustrating that "the " President's policy" has disbanded the Ku Klux organ izations, when for months before the elec tion it published the most fiendish ami in cendiary pictures o shov that such a pol icy would be the le;..t!i of ihe neg; o. South. I jet it come out frankly and give the- credit to tbe Southern people to whom it belongs and not to the party which so long sought to evoke a race conflict. Jl'irpir's Wuk'.y being most conspicuous in the effort. Win. ('. Oilman, the New York f.x-gor. was one of the most pious men in that un happy city. He belonged to one t-f ti e oldest ami most re-picted families. His father, who died a few days ngo, was a merchant of cod it and stand insr. and his fister ma: lied thtv-Rev. Dr. Thompson. Oilman was Superintendent of the Sund-iy School of the "Little Chinch Around the Corner a man of no small vices, as far as known, happily married, and a few years ago inherited a snug fortune. He wns un known as a speculator, and what he has doi.e with the -f ;0.(w. is another "mystery' , A special dispatch from t leve land "gives ' the details of a tenib! trngedy which oc- j cut red near thst pl.tce cm Fi'i-iay mght. A man mined Carper cut bis daughter's throat, knocked his granddaughter in the bead wi h a smoothing iron, then cut the ' child's throat, afterward sluvitin himself mortally. The hrs of his bouse were ', found bolted i:ex morning. f 'aier was ' still alive, but died in a few moments. , The suicide was an avowed atheist. He had been beaid to sy that he had better kill his family and get out of the world, j He came to Ibadlcy county a few years ago. j All his family who were at home at the I time were niuidered. Thre is a young lady staying in Jolict j whose history is romantic. One evening , three years ago. in the southern part of III- i inois, she was out walking with her lover, j They stepped into an oyster-house Tor re- ! freshnients, and while seated at tho tal lea : drunken rough came staggering in and in- ' suited the lady. Her lover warned him ' not to do so again under penalty of death. ; The rough was just drunk enough to re- ' peat his insult, and the lover pulled his re- j volverand shot him dead. For this the . lover was ai rested, tried and sentenced to ' two years in the Joliet penitentiary. The young lady is there awaiting the time when ; he will regain his liberty, which will be shortly. She has elegant clothing, jewelry : and plenty of money awaiting his release, aud then they both expect to bo happy. Mr. Charles Olton is what the Phila- j delphia Times calls an enterprising gentle- I man. He was arrested about midnight on I Thursday on the charge of countei feiting, shot at Officer Lyons, sending the ball so j close as to graze his lips, made his escape j only to run into the clutches of Piivate , AYatchman Trippler, drew on Tiipplcr and ! sent a ball through the edge of his band, 1 was then adoined with nippers and held . unt il morning, when thegrand jury prompt- j ly found a bill against him for assault with intent to kill, his tiial was proceeded with J at once, and before three ti'clock yesterday J he was convicted, sentenced to five years j in the penitentiary, and on his way to i Cherry Hill. Most strangers commend j Philadelphia hospitality, but Mr. Olton j doubtless has his own viewson the subject, j Father Reveille, a Catholic priest at ! Washington, who passed some time among I j the Sioux, thinks that they are only two , simple i tiles to be observed in any success- ; ful attempt to settle the Indian question : To find out the savages tastes and to lead : them up to civilization by tretlnds not trm j violently conflicting therewith. He would j have tribal influence eliminished so far as may b?, and when the Indians are settled on a reset vation keep them there instead , of discouraging them by moving them away as soon as thev have irot used to their i j home. As for the present com plications ; he says that the Sioux aie light in protest- j ! ing against their removal, the Missouri , i lands not being fit for any man to live on ; , and that the war on the Nez Perces is tin- ' just, and only waged to diive them from lands they Lave madia valuable by their ' on labor. 1 How tiif. Laws p., ANI. LAI!oBrhS.-.!.r 7t,'T piled cat. go, jrtl,ea.l,a. toreei,, t bin" St Ate ; lU U 1. 1'nder the rim.) T every wcik!i.g:,,n ,.,., Tu,k... fund our other c-i l.t I'Vi"-1 . , dolla-s. ' Utxv,, 2. Coder the Inw.r.f p , prvferr.-d claim h,,!,,,, ,t,7.Z t'"' ... ..-.in -tnpi....r ... ,. , ; nunoren not tarn torwi.k '-':t jate w iihin s,x m-.nth. , , 3. He l as a similar r- r, , . tate lH-sitr,.-(1 !, the!,,.,., v T '!-' J.-r Hurt da,, hive .-i U'Vf' ri! - . nt.r.-ly and proceed , J cured. " jh-i , ,; 4. He has a :mi:r r.- ., rr. r . tors in Ihe disti !., ' . . rfl -., MierifT's sale, lu.vieg , of hi-claim wit, th,. s!.;.'), Uk 6 5. The pit-ferr-d !,., f " , Is postpon.d s the ,. wg-s in nlU-H ot i , .j , " t oiiti'.nc. !tH-heif-t,ts,a- . fi. He Lhs a mil ir i-r.-f, I ' operates us a !i,-r, , .., ! " '- . faclorii-r, business pri p, ri- " witt. in six months, prior x-j'J- J or such propi rtj . - r 1. Under the Meehani.-,- r , fil.ng in e nurt r.f to. ,-;,.. -. of the property snd a-,.,, Of tl.e owners and ,.,?. r'";"' months of the ccn-.-i!....'i.j upon the tin p--r', whi.-h '" r. corded ti-.r:k-Mg.- mt j,!, Vn obtained after wo.w , l.y the wmktneri. ,'Hr'-"i a- , . tVrtiifn ciass.es r.f .,.k-.-,i red claim upon ve.-. r'hvfc , as a( Hen. and ;bt . In the nil nnd rn: T'-gir . encr s are riven to ,.. ,- H..n, In addition io th- M- ,.,.,(,!, ,,. - M. In eppeals ftr.tn r fn Miiftnoonvt tli.mlr,f;,;- ' t" emend for ,-,t -.,,! in al! other CMM-s.-t ,,,., .a tered tor -o:s - 11 V.. St...- r.f "... , . , -. ' ' "HI!. 1, ) judtrmeiit given Tor J;- -, T wares. 1 it: t i Wares ennnet t-e R-tnr l., , , whatever. 1 1.1. In all iictio.is r.1 jn wnres. upon appli.-nti, ,n ,,, ,,, '., r' " Precedence wil I i ....-... ... .. such rases r vr-r li rh. r . r 14. I nder the ;.-i,.r;i ',, .. Stork holrl.-rs are liMt -ej., ',. pac-itv to the nnn u.it r-t thr -tlM-k for t lie WHjr'-s i I wnt kTi-n.' 15. I'r.d.-r Hie Kci ., , mfniiir. msniifm tii-i,u.. h,. ra;lot.s re i r.,i-siu . 1 , wares f ,,r w,,rk .). -r.e ' i, , v T ,. demand made on the ,.i- -,, ,,. fnrnmn "t.r.i.na 1-i 1-:.-t,t '-l..'. f - t !'M1 tor Ies 1 h ?n the r ,, tntn a fnv tf n,-,-,, , Vl, cannot withho! I w: r- ?r , r reason nf n ?:i ! r,J B , ;j , 16. Hy A ei f.r As, ,-.,t. a day's term of l.t!-., r. v ) Singular L.wwsr, or a IV-- C A II IN A Mk Allow. i !,) t! e N fvlvan'a R.iiln.ad t!,i .e a sr . which presented s , jn-r;: ;r The tl sids hci-.w Fort W'.j r .. impaired the ;.;t ..f ihe h; --r an extent tint n hen tl.e T' r. m t -Fort V.s,;:'- tan ;:j,n ti, .-. H ati gate way. prer; r?a!:f.k . and baggage car d n a ;r, -i f, embankment. Ti e ,-- ;.L-.-r, , became sep.-nate-d U -nn r-.j. , can ied "' by the f u .f :'t rent at.d l-u-ded in a n t-a-!.. L,. from the I'liuge. Sioan'ar to reia'e. ri.-; n-i a : ,'i car was d:-;ibi d. i-..-t -,i ; cup till t !:e water ft , '-. r. ft : n: r! ing came the -g!it- ve;e f -; -.' i all tie aj j-i:ii T::et;r i f r .- c t- : Ci'tifliii.in a wijtr. ',,!;;!( pievions lrgl.t. A t f-.i.t- .-.,-the cat tl ,iitcl v. : ii r :, L i i a i! having t-i-en u r. i .:. The C'lt i!"-ei , h-f i'.;' " ' . and his body 1...-J i; -t bt-i !. ! -la'.e Tiotir la-i tiii-t. 1 i,-.- ; . i luoMiinj. w ;t f- iii ...i i. '. '! s ' "- distance d in li.'- ,-;:... ;'- i i Hged i fire ! ':f !'.. ,;, ; - '; . TliCJl C.ll 1 ied 'SV ! '' ' lie was st::! ar.ve li-.r. i:i a . condition f:oi:i i r - car. foitunaltrlv. v -t u-- r .. time ,.f tie ;;t-.-.-l-i-' I tiains jesteidiy i- i' v with. Al. tee vi'ti is-i :- to tie ti atisfi s i . o. ..! ! t ' ' freight t !!-V S ;t t ...5. : A Ptiu.st'Mi.NAi. W ,.!'-: four miles s ui Lwt -1 ! ' ' -augo ct ,uii t . is a wt .. v ; ! f ptod net in. su:j;i . . Covered in t!,;i c,:",'- ' stiuck by Mess's. M. KmelSoM. Pel III S'nl J l- ..- puled uj .nd t-l .i iir ; : founil, but an ;:inie'r i v' : countered at ti c p! ' t 'e ; exjf cled. lit f, rt- A- s " ' s owners icsoivcd t ri.a'""' This was at'.t-ntptt-d in tl.e i- must be Ma d li.at t!.t c ,v ! statu pn. except t!:.i! K k 1 above its foinn-1 it-ifC i "" elevated tn irs j rt st t ! j-:"!-water from tbe nj j-i r ,"i ' lushed into the wvl: h the ; casing in gieat i;-.i o.t 't;-. A- . gas took h.-!d of it at il I----;- ' face of the eaith. r.f- i ! ' S l it,. ..... . f ll,e .'n- that cotiditi.-u it c-::t;:--i-s blow to this day. at d "i f is estimated thai at U-ast - ' t.i i ti water are tluown out . remai kshie phi-ii'.'itHn.Hi. i--'' Herald. ... - - - T- '. ASTOSIHIM M it"s ' j. of everv person wlt. h" .. OFKMAS SVKfl' to 1ft :;f " ... ties la know n to th' ' '." '" suuipti.Mi, severe "' "';ij"4 , (.tr,. , Piieumoina. and in fa,- ' " , : tliseases. ', per "i i ' - ' mediate relief. Three! , "; case, and w e ,.:''' r ':, " '., Druggists to reeoti.tn. t 1 :t ' '- ' ' ,t eounmpti e. at !-at ( . .. 40.(oo dozen Is.ttlfs .v.-r- no one case where it u SA.ieli a ,tit-il;et lif Itie fii..--- cannot be too widely Ut Druggist als'iit it. t-'"r " .', .-.l ; in..u lVi'll.S' 7- sale lv Iemmon it M'trrar. - Woleslagle bm, Wlltl'err-. Di Our -V- aal ' jtt'lMirfu" "l jf . ..i Ton, 1.1 CIlY J.,' Tf luff n-eebr KW-L-ai.t t talmas and circulars. 1 , hair shawls in t-w ''ll .. ,. , -. flnect gH!s breiiiiiJt t. . , v - . r- new r.'M'in proper display ot " Fifth avenue an The Great C t.J&.-rr TiS sjtfWisr' 'r- i rrf A IwHrfMlN'!""-1 . - t are ol M-nimsi duced bv Self Al u;'"-,l!;V'' 15 - I, ' -' ' 1 v t '- 11- ' j,i k ri ik- k, -. . - KUHKliT.I.tM I.VKKAt- th t.reen H.H'k. K'- v, : The world-r-n..nfd i- j , , lecture, flfsrlypr-vf '; (. . that the !ul '""f n:- cut tlanrtrousMTiriCal; I; liiriil rinrs. er r- i' ', ",. .tmi cure at cli.f Certain .-. -r utlt-rer. u tnntier 1 mav cure hiuistil cli"l i .,.. t:t-i th..ttt'ifi. , , . , Sent, iiiuer ?' " 1 ltC s or Sd.lrfsa. en rft--.pt ' .,..; r tamps. A-l Jresn ! 1 . i , B rli ,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers