o o THE MflBBII FREErfl&H. EBENSBUnC, PA., FIIIDAY, OCT 11, 1878. ! - ! : -r. -rrr; Democratic State Ticket. j TOR OOVFRNOK, ANDREW II. DIU,, of Union County. rtIK LIEUTENANT (iOVEKNOM, JOHN FEItTlO, of Crawford County. FOR SCPBFME Jl'IKiE, HENRY P. ROSS, of Montgomery County. SECRETARY INTERNA I. AFFAIR!!, J. SIMPSON AFRICA, of Huntingdon. lcmoci-atic IHatrict Tichtt. FOR CONGRESS. II. COKFKOTH, of Sumersst. Oek. A Democratic Comity Ticket. L. T. WonnntrKF. ronrcnmiirh riorouuh ; JOHN FK'UX. EhoiiMburtf. MKOISTER Ann RECOKUKH. JOHN G. LAKE, F.bensbuig. THIAPlltlll. 1R. A. T EA(i LEV. JnhnMoTn. COM M ISS IO! BUS. JOHN OAMPHELT.. rnriemnu!i Tiorougb I ftEOKUK OCKt.EV, Etensburg. POOK DIHECTOn, JESSE I'ATTEKSON, Johnstown. SLMIVKTOR, HENRY ECAN LAN, Cnrrolltotrn. AUniTORS. Ml IMP. I. SKKt.I.r. Porfftjre Twp.; I'AXUICK niiXON, El.Jer Iwp. We liare only space, biietly to give the latest returns from Tuesday's electious. In Ohio tho Republican State ticket is elected by probably 7,000, while the Demo crats elect 11 Congressmen to 9 Republi- cans a Democratic gain of i. In Inrti- ana tlie Democratic State ticket has 12,000 majority and a gain of 2 Congressmen. We cannot f-peak definitely of tbe Le-I . . . gislature. Thcie is no change in Iowa, all tha Congressmen lein -IJiTcJuiirafTS. he sa meus n-it.. f'Veat ViiKinU there i ''a "fi'rtUge, all three members of Con- j o.-e.s being Democrats. Tlie Greenback . " -. . i t.. i:...... r. t? r.- i.,.f of the estimate. Tub widely known and eloquent Daniel Dougherty, of Philadelphia, will address the people of Lancaster city on Saturday evening of next week, on the question, 'Why should Don Cameron he United States Senator?" This is the richest kind of a subject with which a competent speak- er Ilka Jir. uougneny can grappie, auu u ( Le can't furnish his audience wilh reasons! as thick as bl;icltei ries wliy Don Cameron j never ought to have been, and never again i i.liould bo, elected Senator, we know of no ' other man in Pennsylvania who is capable tf doing 6o. Rky. T. Dkwitt Talmage, a Protestant ! clergyman, of Brooklyn, has ways peculiar to himfelf in the pulpit, and is widely , known for the sensational character of his j discourses. On last Sunday week be ' preached a seimon on Communism, espe- tially a sit developed itself in Paris after the j downfall of Louis Napoleon at Sedan, in ' vhich he drew a very giapbic picture of; pome of its hoirois. lie entertains no fear j of Communism in this countiy, for the lea- sou that he regauls the Catholic Church as ! ... . l . J !f an impassable obstacle in the path of its j rojress. After describing the scenes at- tndin2 the brutal murder of the brave aud deoted Archbishop of Parii by the iufa- Campin pamphlet in this district, with mous agents of the Commuuc, he con-1 it9 ,io aza5nst CotTroth about having cor tinued : rnptly sold a cadetship, is scattering them Alnt th march of CV.tnuiunU:n to-d:v Is the priesthood .f tl: Itoni-tu Cat holfn I'liurch. Tiiere In not it conveui. or a monastery or a ca ttiedral on earth, or a soul, Trr :n t hi- f of Leo at iioine lo l he poorest Kninnn C'atliolic rervnnt jirl in your kitchen, who can ever forifet the inhiitiian. heart. e. heu ven-daring massacre of tut; Arohbisnop of Pari." 1 l'ii joi . my iiieou. ine irujc'ii iri uin ot Sam'i. R- Mason, the Greeulack-Lahor candidate for Governor, declared in a speech in Philadelphia last week that he could never consent to disgrace himself by appearing on the same pla'form with Den iia Kearney. If Dennis would now give fuson a Itowla id for his Oliver, by pro testing that be would never so far for 't bis high station as to appear on the f - me stand with Mason, wouldn't the holl os between the wo lenders, as they say in j Ujing the game of "whist," be eay. The last news we had of Kearney was that ., , days aeo he addressed a mixed audi- 1 a-.ee in East Boston, when, in the midst of j u::0of bis bold (lights of natural and na- : t onal eloquence, good sized onions and ' t'iiall sized potatoes began to fly, wheu tho ' j ,itle from California mcckly.vociferated : "Chi you miserable, blood-sucking bum-: xaersl Ou I you sneaking thieves and po. i volitical cut throats! If I couli find the1 ri-rty, contemptible whelp who threw that 1 r iion, I'd shoot him as I would a doy." ( Thti the crowd yelled, and the small boya burned blue lights under Kearney's feet. ! M. S. Qcat, Chairman of the Republi tMi State Committee, has been fearfully a id wouderfully deceived as to the effect ; f John C. Delaney'a charge of Kuow ! Noihingisni against Andrew II. Dill. As f..,iu as be discoveied that every decent rrsn in Philadelphia was thoroughly dia ".ited with the attack on Mr. Dill, he' ,5f ued a ciicular from headquarters false- ' y asserting that a discussion had ansen ' l-etween some of the Catholic journals swl the orgnns of Mr. Dill, uhu the Ifuow Nothing record ot the latter, and 1 as it was purely a Democra. ia quarrel, he advised Republican uewspapeis not to en p f.e in the discussion beyond the men i' n of the fact that such a controveisy exists. Does Quay thh.k that he can miis any intelligent man believe that he, Iprrfolf, did not know all about Delaney'a vniaitious woik before it wa outliucd in the Catholic Standard t Delaney was act ( Ipg as the agent of the Republican ling, cf f, S.ieh Quay is the very head and front, aud the latter was Bimply beaten at hit own rMity game. In view of Quay' liiue j ?.iltnonilion to Republican ediioi, lieithcr to touch nor hauolu iuo uucltsnii thing, th extra copied of u-v &Utno'ard fct-nt to tb Herald of lii Id tfat!. anu l fi,e Irib'tn f .lolimrnwi, Viil ioiv lo be regarded as so ijnioli fK'ittr;H Utiud 'irood, ' nfsr!y nle" and imnvsilahl tor eit ck nrf ibe tuipo ui.fciuniiy cuuitiinJKtfcii. The Biggest Lie of fJe Campaign, If tbe leaders of tb Republican party in this State had permitted the present cam I paigu to pass by without inventing some , Riant ,ie Acdiew II. Dill, the Dem- ocratie candidate for Governor, it wouic , bave been an f xceptiou to all former expe- j would mateiially aflect his fitness foi the position to which they propose to elevate I him. It having become apparent, howev- j er, as the campaign progressed, that Mr. Dill's election was absolutely certain, the; Republican managers bave suddenly re- i vived their old and well known mode of waifare, on the theory that desperate dis- J eases require desperate remedies. As au evidence of this spirit, we note the fact that , the Catholic &landard,of Philadelphia, iu J its last week's Issue, contains a lengthy j editoiial article in which Andrew II. Dill is charged with having been a member of. i the Know Nothing order of having assist- : j ed in organizir.g Know Nothing lodges, and of having made Know Nothing speech es. Tbe Standard does not specify either the timci uhen nor the places vhere Mr. j Dill was engaged in doing all these things, ; now so dreadful in Republican estimation, but asseits its ability to maintain them by competent proof. Andrew II. Dill was ' born (if he was ever born at all, which the j Republican papers at the outset denied, j because he (It st saw the light of day beneath i,j9 father's roof iu Baltimore) iu 1S38. Kuow Nothingism first became 3 political nower iu this State in the Contest for Gov- i . . . . . , eruor between h'nam liigler ana dames ' pniwir in 7hA in nhid. P.itrW wa de- ! - i.feafed by the midnight conspirators of the "f ... , . . i . t-A-,i nrosciiptive order. At that time Dill was just eighteen years old, and was a student of Dickinson College, Cai lisle, from which he graduated In the following year (1335), wheu he was 19. Know Nothingism, ow ing to the bitter feuds among its corrupt leaders, Simon Cameron being its chief, .:n.. j:.- r ti.o H (tciiCtiiijr uiasppoaicu iiuui mo puuii a j this State after its fir6t aud ouly victory in 1854, for in 1856 Buchanan carried it over Fremont, and in 1S57 the Democrats again came into power uuder under William F. packer, their candidate for Governor, It is cutting it too fat, to use a vulgar phrase, j to charge young Dill at the age of 18, when ; he was diligently prosecuting his college ) studies, with having been the organizer of i Know Nothing cabals, and au orator before i Know Nothing midnight conventicles. j As will be seen by an article from the ! Ilariisbnig Patriot, published elsewhere, the editor of that paper is authorized by Mr. Dill to pronounce the charge made by the Standard as thoroughly and utterly fule. The Standard will now have to ! produce the proofs of its charge, or forever forfeit tlie respect and confidence of its ; icadois, wbom it has either ignoraiiily, or j f... ....,o. ..... ...;.. m ; : iviii Bums nvi i.iuhii, onvm,;i.suuiuio- load. This last effort" has been the work of tbe Cameron ring, and the Cameron State Committee lia9 purchased one hundred thousand copies of the Standard containing the infamous libel, and. like J;icob M. broadcast over the State, taking special care that they shall go into Catholic fami lies, The Herald, of this place, has been furnished with a liberal invoice of the precious document, and will take care that they find a lodgment among the Catholics of northern Cambria, wilh whom it is sup prised they will do the most good. The Johnstown Tribune, always ready for such an emergency, will meantime not fail to minister to the political salvation of the large body of Catholics within its bailiwick by its free distribution. One of the lowest and meanest political scavengers about tbe public offices in Har risburg Is John C. Delaney, of Luzerne county. lie is now, and for many years has been, a messenger in Haitranft's orhce, i and being an Irishman and a Catholic, and i " itmate terms with the Governor, he believes that he holds the votes of the Irish Catholics throughout the State in the hoN low of his hand. He has sounded all the shoals and depths of poliiical baseness is rieiiee. inn i ipmoci alio, i reas has ireaiea i - i . r- i, u- i hp itm. n can maimrpm aia mAicmcr at. i-.,n ... - - j- . . e i. P.AeKtAf n haanca t. ; bU opponent, Henry M. Hojt, with beconi- j IlA member of the Know Nothing eiy PS!,ibj5. "Jf5 of .,u'8 ttack. aud have , ly 100 feet, the other day, and escaped un- I the fashionable one of the village, and she j enough to inform those around Lim ,, . Inir rPn,.rf ,! r.ir..-., not even taking I , me"" vl 1 . procured 100,000 copies of the paper to be i injured. j wanted to goto the Baptist one, because , bis name was James Donnelly 1 r , lng respect aid fairness not ecu tak ng . ol(,er dohvered Know uthlng speeches cil.cu,:Uedasacampaigndocnmentthiough. -Mrs. John Varner, aged fiHy six, of ' she used to sing in the choir there. The been in the ship hold since its de,!ai.Ud I advantage or certain infiimities attnbuteU , Rnd assisted in organizing Know Nothing ; out the State a use to which we believe a ! Salem township, Luzerne county, is the ; quarrel snapped the engagement. j from Liverpool, twelve days, jlb ' .U:e j to him by members of tbe very convention J iKiges, The article also attacks the Dem- ! religions paper was uever before put, and J mother of nineteen children, thirteen of ; Preachers in the West are going into morsel of food save a small "bottle t,f i.; ! that placed him before the people as a can- ' ocratic party for tailing to confer nomina- ; one which we know tbe patrons of the . whom are living. ' j politics rather extensively, about forty of ! ky which he had in hig pocket when i ! j-,i -.e . ' tioiis and offices noon members of the Standard and the authorities of the Church Gold in small nnnntitipa hn hoon rtis- - them beini? candidates for political offices. ; boarded the vessel. It apne.irc n.. .. 9 th name mn who i Ihn nnspmr.,il,vna u 1 -v i cu uisiuip in a SB- r un. iiti. tin tne motion to lay on the table the same man wtio, as the unscrupulous . verCt thon?1, ven deserved, rebuke to the tbe Silver bill, wit t, Senate amendmems. Camp agent of the Republican leaders in 1575, editor of the Standard for nermittino- bin,. ! I","1.' Vrl wi,h lhe rest of the opponents , 1 1 . p. , , wueu iiariraiui aim i ersmng ran ior CtOV- ernor, visited the anthracite region and i j .1 ft r t , corruptly purchased the support of Jack . y 3 . r . . . . Kehoe and his confederates in crime in f.- vor of Ilartranft's election, which accounts fur tha fact that Kehoe has not been hung . . ... ,. . j , , but is still living and is also the man who visited Pittsbuifh two or tDree times dur- . , fa ft . lllg the Summer Of 18i , to Array the Cath- olic Democrats of J MWhenv eonntv mrjin.l Aliegneny county against Col. Noves. the Democratic candidate for State Treasurer, upon the miserable pretext that Daniel O. Barr, of that county, a hi other of the editor of the Pittsburgh Pott, had been defeated in the State Con vention by Col. Noyes simply because Mr. Barr happened to be a Catholic. This is the man who has been for weeks engaged in concocting this charge against Mr. Dill, and who has succeeded in persuading the editor of the Calholic Standard to endorse it by giving it a place in the columns of his paper. In the language of tbe Patriot ar ticle, the man who furnished tbe Standard with the pretended proof of the allegation contained in its article ''it too well knoirn in thU State t be capable of tentifying or producing tetimonj 'o the injury of any Democratic candidate." -- The only statement to be made this week in relation to the yellow fever sti ick eu poitiou of the south, is that it shows no peiceptible abatement in itsdeath deal iuftf wuik. To-morrow, the 12th. la tha cauicbL dftLO biucd 1SG2. that a euud frost .... " ' Iihh apptxticu ttt .Mtuupui, uioi as a geuei al iulik Iimh uut Leu seen until two weeks irtier. When it comes, but not until then, tm ho, umm1 b lujulod iu of Us career A. liase Slander. ' AIT EDITOR IMPOSED UPON SOME MORE OF DELAKY 8 WORK. Tv.r. nhlUhed in Philadelphia a wceky journal styled the Catholic Stan- (Iardt in the last Lssueof which appears an edilor5ai artic1e assailing the Democratic Calholic Chuicb. Keferung To tUis article the Hanisburg Patriot of h nday says : ThP prtltnr U pit nor the victim of ii irrofeS and wicked impost ii" or ..e n H"";' VhaVne-! fiiirHcie. in cnriiy !et i.9 believe that be i hs been impose.1 upon nod that th extrit edi- ; tiun r one ?na 'Kn"Xn . w e- 1 Republican politicians, was printed at bis owii p roper expense, or that or the publishers, anil wa not paid for out of the Uepublicau corrup tion fund. . , As to the charire made by the Stawlanl against Senator Dili, we have the authority of that ir.-nl!enian for eaylnir that tt i' thnnmhhi ami utterly folsr. In answer to iiKjuiries made or him by the editor or this paper respeenn the charge that he had been a member of the Know Mottling order and had made Know Nothing speeches. Senator Pill replied in the most explicit and positive lang-uae that the alleg-ation is raise. The Standard says: -'What we have said is based not on conjecture but on i certain knowledge. We know whereor we i speak and have proof of every word we have written." Nevertheless It withholds the proor. It conceals the soutce of its knowledge. It carefully avoids all mention of the character i of the evidence on which it liases its charge, j Why this singular retieene In repard to the na 1 tnre of lhe information it claims to have? Why this scrupulous concealment of the "proof" it boasts is in its possession ? Is it fair to Senator Dill or to his party to make this i charre and send It out in an extra edition of a 1 hundred thousand copies without nccompaoy ; irg it with an lota or evioencer All me uio i tive which aetuat-l t he Stai'P?rti in this reitard 1 is only too transparent. Hi a xcrrMu jutiriial andtw rtbn;ht(i the )ithlicrttii if the. fr feudal , Jiruof Senator IH1I and hi friend will be dt prirrd ; t1 the Hiafrtunity rifntitm the charye thrmtjh, ; it column until it r'hall he too bite to cntrict the 1ale imvreii)n ititetulcd to he trrndneed. It Is evident, too that the euitor is iiiny aware o the flimsy and worthless character of the "nroof." and therefore cunnintriy excludesit rronl m., extra edition. Thus thousands who see the charjre will never iret a KlinP8e ot the evidence on which it is based, even if that p..j,iencp on i hou hi be printed in future in the ord inary ed- i ition of the Standard. Itesides tbe cratty editor ! j knew that the mine of the person who broutrbt j the pretended "proof" to him would have to be ; iiivultred whenever the nature tr the "proof" i ' Ix'came publicly known. That (-r)ii i ton ! i veil hituv n in tin State, to he c.ijxif.i? f tr1ifuing i j or jrrodncwiy t'timonu to the inj'iry of a?y Item- i-eralir. candidate. He. i the mime nirin ivl,o wtnt I to the anthracite region in C5 to rr4 the, - rtained palm of juch helioc ana in confetti rati tncrnne villi lhe. hrd,e. rnone,, of the le,ml,Hcan panjzjng Know-Not hinff lodges and socie Itddti. the editor ot the standard may well r- ,, . ... , postpone the puhlication of bis pretended ! ftroof, That iho churirc made by the SffludYtrrf niralnst ! Senator Dill is lalse must be apparent to every j intelligent mind for the followimr excellent i reasons: Know Nothintristn rose and tjouiishcd in and disappeared In 1S55. In 18'itj the slavery question overshawdowed all others ami the struggle was between the Democratic party and t he nascent Republican oriraniz.n ion. Now Andrew H. Did whs born in IttWi. He was H years old when Know No'.hinir lodwres were beiiiff established and he was tf when Know Notlnntf ism was absorbed by the newly organ ized Republican party. The case, therefore, is too plain for argument. If Senator Dil! made ' any political speech In or ls."7 it was upon the issues of the time, and Know Nolliingisin was not then one of them. In answer to the allegation of the Standard ' that t.ie Democratic parly does not confer noin- ! illations and offices upon the members of Its Church, let it besnid that the Democratic party does not inquire to wha: rciipiuiis sect candi dates for Its nominations adhere or whether they belomr to any. Jt nominates candidates because of their supposed tltness for the transact ion of secular rather than spiritual af- ! fairs. Nevertheless it has been thediliicult but : righteous province of that political orguniz-i- ! tion to do battle sinjrle-hauded and alone in defence of the riirhts of conscience. IT the cd- ; itor of the Slan iard is not wholly ijruorant of '; tnenisforyor his ownlhurch be must know thai it was protected from Know Nothinir in ."-...; uui w nif piini Binuu uiKeil III IIS neu'iite oy the Democratic party. Nor I mat stann taken iiy Democrats because it was i the Catholic Church I hat was attacked, but be I cnue th j jrreat princ.pie of Democratic liberty, j Freedom of Religious Opinion, wasasseiled in the attempt to denv Catholus the riht to i worship God in their own way. Had not the ' Democratic party been tlie constant defendir 1 of the co, tit I religious and political riirhts of all. ! there would be no such paper as the Catholic i Standard published to-day, nor would the pub ! lishersof that paper, or the miserable reni-raile who furnished the pretended "proor' of Seim- ! tor Dill's Know Nothinirism, be clothed with ' : those riirhts of citizenship which enable them I j toineddle i n politics for t he purpose of stahbinir j I in the dark Hie political organization that, has ! ! defended and protected them. I i In conclusion, we call upon the Standard to I : publish the "proof" on which it pretends to j base its charge, and hopu that the Democratic ! State Committee will at once take siepw to un- I j mask the conspiracy which has culminated in ! this foul buttiitiie assault upon the integrity I i of Senator Dill's political character. In honor ! i and in justice, the editor of the .Sfmidard can i not anU will not dare to deny Senator Dill and t his friends the tuilest opportunity to refute tue sianuer lie Das utttreil aifaiust luiu. Ancnmsnop Wood, in the card herewith published, has promptly and officially dis avowed all responsibility for tbe baselesss attacks, through the columns of the Cath- OtiC Standard, npou Andrew II. Dill, in- t ment to repeat the resnmptien bill. Campbell spired by that notorious political huckster, j X'e? on fMr. Sten.cr John C. Delaney. However successful ' to ln iin Mil. offered as a substitute -n-, , , , titled a bill torepeal the resumption day clause Oelaney s former efforts may have been m 1 in the resumption act of is;:,. Campbell, still transferring the Mollie Maguire vote to the j Rppublican State ticket, his occupation, iiko viueiio s. is gone Wlien ne impudeutly attempts to sell out tbe vote of tbe respect- able Catholics of tho State upon a trumped , , , . . up tiiaige vi niiuw x oiu nig isill against 100 Democratic ptndid-itn for Pwiuoinnr mat were pouirnt witn rreenbacks at two bun !':, , , 11 , , , . . - ,TOVC.,r,or- dred cents on the dollar. if . t .. ,. r.-:---. ; sen in oecome me wining tool oi such a i disreputable trickster as Delaney, it will add to tbe high and well earned reputation ., i- - , j , . . , r1".1" i "f the distinguished prelate m the estima- ; tion of every decent and high-minded man i in the commou wealth. Followiug is the I car . AncnnrocusK of Pmt.AnET.pntA. 1 ' cathkhiiai.. I.ooan ,gi:An I ... ntuD.i.PHu, Fa., October 5, 1878.1 ! e nnve seen with much reirret. in the Cath- t nlic Standard of this date, an article headed ! "Know-Not hi nism in Fennsy I va.lia Politics." We desire to disclaim all resnonsibilitv for i the article; and, indeed, for any article, no matter where or how published, on political Issues. Without renouncing our political riirhts. which we fully eppreciate, we have never in terfered In politics, and are too much occupied with infinitely more important matters to do so. Any tine who will tike the pains to examine the approbation we have iven to the Catholic Standard will find that we approve it "as a use ful auxiliary to the (.'at holic cause, as well as a eareand Instructive family journal." and not, therefore, as a machine to be used by political managers. We could scarcely have riven an approbation more specitlc and more clearly defined. Jamks Woop, ;,Archbishop of Philadelphia. Cats asd rats have been mortal ene mies since the fii6t syllable of recorded time. Hitherto, moreover, the cat has been the terror ; the rat the coward. But now, in this age of small-fry miracles, it seems that the order is to be changed that the rat will be the aggressor for from Texas, by way of tbe Dallas Herald, comes this story : A irentleman livlna- in the vicinity of the T. suiine Convent Informed a reporter yesterday that he was awakened Sunday tilirht by an army of la rice rats chasintr a cat about thp room Tn.tin.ii.. ii. k, k.i, .. . . . . movements of the rodents, and Is positive that tnev naa completely w tit oped the cat. and would soon !iave killed it. One ear of the cat r.T'V mnu WMS ,,Jealn pro" I J It U boned that other rats will not take lft l i cuwugiu. cat arouna, out hi lie worst OUIDDI to the worst, a-A mn conanleii iirr tlio thought tliat we can go to cultivating rats iuBtead of bootjacks. Philadelphia Times. A. Libel Answered. To-day's sensation of the political cam paign in this State, says the Lancaster In telligencer of Friday, is the attack on the Democratic candidate for Governor by the Catholic Standard of Philadelphia, a lead ing journal of its Church, edUed by Mr. G. D. Wolff, formerly a lawyer of Norristowrj Biid a minister of the Reformed Church. for wnidi it claims to speak will deeply ! regret; for the Catholics of this State, : two miles east of Point Pleasant, Xor'.b i through their venerable head, Archbishop , amptoti county. " fMH1 1,:iVe 'ime a"a protested against supersei viceable friends or malig- I nant eninnes dragging their Church into ; PI,tlcal anairs, ana wun a aei.cacy ana eir faith, the piiesthood, as a bod', keep lhemselves and their relig- iou aloof from party contests. It is no im pugning of the propriety of Mr. Wolfs motives to assert that he neither represents his fellow Catholics nor his Church as a body when he uses his paper to demand of political parties political favois for Catho- ( lies. His service in this respect is eiatui- tous and ill-timed. The Catholic Church is not a political organization, and they are not discreet friends wbo would seek to make it such, We emphatically deny the 8tandarF allegation that the Democratic party '-has entered upon a race with the Republicans for tbe favor of Know Noth ings, avowed foes as they ate to Catholics and Catholicity." The intelligent Catho-' lies of this city and elsewhere know to the contrary, and it has been the profession and practice of the party, here and else where, in tbis State, and erery olJwv State while championing the cause of religious freedom, to steadfastly ignore religious differences in the selection of its candidates and tbe declaration of its principles. With regard to the special charges of the Standard against Mr. Dill, we republish from the Harrisburg Patriot that gentle man's specific denial of them. It covers every point and must remain conclusive until the alleged proof is produced. If for that proof the Standard, as is intimated, is relying on the notorious emissary of Gov, llaitranft to the Molly Magnires, it will find that it leans on a broken stick. The historical refutation of the charges is very clear. It is said that "Andrew II. Dill has taken an active part in Know Nothing conventions and public meetings, in making Know N.ithing speeches, in or- nes. nu yei iioiuiiig oi iuis.kuii iook place after 1855, wheu the Know-Nothing : movement had spent, its force. It will be remembered that at that time Mr. Dill was a boy of 19, and even if the facts alleged : a;e true they bear not at all on his present ; candidacy. We accept his word that they ' aie not true, but we repeat that if they were, his boyish opinions should not be al- ' lowed to outweigh nor be counted against tlio fact that in twenty years of vigorous I manhood, in tbe discharge of repeated public trusts, in all his private relations, he : has been the consistent friend of religious ! liberty, and has shown the same uniform ' regard for persons professing the Catholic j fait h as for t.baf of any other. J jst as it is I not to be set down to tho discredic jf the editor of the Standard that, whereas he now is the champion and defender of the Catholic faith, it has not been ten years since he was a member of an entirely dif- i I ferent religious denomination and was as ; bilteily hostile t. the Catholics as those who organized Know Nothing lodges. But ' ! we repeat that the charges of the Standard i are explicitly denied by Mr. Dill. Its ; proof is called for, and pending that all 1 classes of right-thinking people can only 1 i regret that an issue so foreign to legitimate I political discussion has been projected into . j the campaign and s being used for such : purposes that the Republican managers i are distributing a religious paper as an electioneei mir dodge. Gen. Campbell's Financial Jiecord. It will be of interest, in this stage of the j campaign, to read tne record oi .Jacob JW. j j Campbell on the financial issues during his ! one session in Congress. We copy from ' the Altoona Rational, as follows : ' In tliis record of his votes taken from thp I journals of Contrress it will be found that the . ! name of Campbell is never by acciuent or in- I j advertence on the side of the people. In the vote on every nnancial proposition for the re lief of Industry and labor he Is recorded on the side of the money monopolist. The first isur raised upon the currency ques tion between t he supporters of t he bondholders and the representatives of the people in the present Congress was Nor. 5th, on the quest ion of suspendiiiK the rules and nsinir the Bland bill to remonellze silver. Campbell was paired witn Rirett, who would have "oted ane. Same day. tin the Question of tlxlnir a dav I r.v - - : . . . ' ,..! c ... i voted faithful in his servitude to the money inonopo- " ,hp flJ?"' P"""""? ,f the resumption repeal Tto. Jan. 2!th. It-7. On the resolution declaring j ZT&wtXl j Campbell voted - The dollar of the fathers, in the opinion of thisrr prowufofirr thehnnd- holder, was not (rood enoiitrh to pay off bonds oiin.-i.iii. March Hi. On the ouestion of nsssino- the present Silver oi II over the veto of Hayes, Camp bell, still true to the money monopolists, voted no. March 2f!th. On theblll nuthorizinir the coln- nire of silver dollars of 41:2'$ (trains upon the! same terms as Brold, the issue of silver certifl- I rates to depositors of silver bullion, known as Sprinirer'a bill. Campbell voted tin. I On tiie question ol brintrimr up, same day, bill ' provkiiiur for issuing silver bullion certilioates, ; Campbell voted wo. I April 10th. On the motion to fix a day to 1 consider the bill reported by the committee on i banking: and currency to retire National Hank ' notes, and to authorize part payment of cus- ! toms in treasury notes, Campbell voted na. J Jan. 15th. On the motion to suspend the rules and take from the speaker's table house . bill to repeal th3 resumption act, to non-concur in the Senate amendments and as for a com- ' mit teeof conference. Campheli voted ?io. The j vote on this iiestion decided the fate of the 1 bill for the tepcnl of the resumption act, and ' Camp'iell attain obeyed the orders of lhe money nioiiupoos's wnom ue ao umtrcntiy serves. . i , .... - . -.me i:.,n. wn tne nui to repeal tne provts- Ions or the resumption act which authorizes I the sale of bonds for the purpose of roaump- tion, Campbell voted no. ll e was opposed to any Bmendment to the resumption bill that won Ii1 r wnt relief to the debtor from its iron exaction. June aith. On the bill reported from th committee nn bankini? and currency lo retire National flnnk hotcs and substitute treasury notes in their place. Campbell voted no. As a champion of National hank monopolv, he was compelled to vote Mirainsf the adoption or any other system of currency, no matter how much relief niitrht be afforded to the depressed busi ness Interests of lhe countrv. Such is the record of Jacob M. Campbell dur ing his brief service n memhe-r or tomrress. As he is strain a candidate, let the farmers, me chanics and workimrmen Rent rally, or this dis triot, carefully scan this record of a bond slave and say ny their ballots whether he is fit to represent them In the next Contrress when the struirirle with the moneychangers Is to be strain resumed. This record of Jacob M. Campbell shows that he voted nsrninst the Silver bill, atralnst the repeal of the resumption act of the ...... ft n i nc i t-ii in viiioii net oi no .lonai oaiiKiiur system, and airainst anv and all efforts to britiij- financial relief to a aulforlnr people. As the servant of the shyloeks of Wall street, he insists nn the bond it it should take with it the blood and the life of the nation. I,et the worklnirmen of thisdiatrlcl anawpr in thnn. i h.' " the bond it it ahonld take ! ""1 o t"P blooil and the life of the nation. I,et rier tones on the 5th of November next, whether the roan Is worthy lo represent them. i In four of the States which voted Tues day the Republicans lost five Congresstneu. Jfexcf and other Votings. The Catholics of Baltimore raised last Sunday by collection $7,621 for the yello- i fever suft'eiers In a quarrel between some colored boys in Washington, D. C, on Saturday, James Walker was shot dead bv lleniv; Watson. j John Clayton, of Greene county, was ' covered on the farm of John Griffith, about On a Berks county farm there is a chestnut tree that measures twenty-two feet and rive and a half inchcB iu circum- fcrence around the stump Memphis is now the Niobe of South ern cities; its population of 40.000 only two months ago has been reduced to 2,500 whites and 6,000 Africans. Mr. Henry Brocket hofF, a well known citizen of Bellefpnte, died on Sunday last, aged 84. He was a native of Alsace, and Was worth about $1, 000, 000. An island Moating down the St. Law- reuce river passed Ogdensburg, the other; day. It was of swamp-grass and willows, j and looked like a runaway marsh. ! A man in Bradford, England, has ; been held in bonds to keep the peace for i sending out a bellman to cry the procla- j mation that his wife, Amelia, was for sale. The latest novelty in the collar box line is an inkstand and pen holder in the ; lid. It is dangerous, however, lo forget to cork the iuk bottle tightly before closing ! the box. j r. C. Moore, Ib 7?riYTgeport, Conn., pedestrian, on Friday night completed his ; walk against time. He made 100 miles in i uineteen hours aud forty minutes, actual j walking time. j Harvey Ormsby, who lived the life of a hermit in the vicinity of WilMamspoi t, ' died last week, at the ape of seventy years. ! His property, valued at $15,000, he left to a Mr. Overdoi f. I Abo Ranch, well known in Weatherly, ! Pa., as an habitual drinker, entered the Gilbert House and stole a bottle of rum. j While swallowing it hastily, behind the i bar-keeper's back, he fell dead. j The City of Glasgow Bank suspended on Wednesday nf last week. Its liabilit ies i are stated at $50,000,000. The bank was established in 1839 and this is the heaviest ' failuie in Scotland since 1857. j Jeremiah Donovan, a convict, commit ted suicide in tbe penitentiary at Jackson Mich., on Thursday, bv throwing himself! upon a last revolving flywheel. He was under a five years' sentence for burglary. A six-year-old daughter of William Rogeis, of Warwick township, Ontario, bitten by a cat which had previously re ceived a bite from a mad dog, died on Fri day with all the symptoms of hydrophobia. A colored man named Stone, at Wash ington, on Saturday, killed his wife with a razor, and mad a savage attack upon his sister-in-law with the same weapon. She lies in a dangerous condition. Stone was arrested. The six days' walk in New York for the long distance championship between O'Leary and Hughes terminated on Sat urday evening last in an easy victory for O'Leary, be having walked 403 miles and Hughes 310. A Franklin (Tenn.) special to the Nashville American says that John Thom as, colored, was caught and lynched on Sunday for the rape of a five year-old daughter of James . Shannan. He con fessed his guilt. B. S. Snider, who recently arrived in Washington city fiom Cincinnati, and who claims to be at the head of 700,000 commu nists in this country, has been sent lo the Government Asylum for the Insane until his friends or relatives can be found. The West Chester Jeffernonian says that Mr. James Dirks, faimer of West Goshen, has a sow that gave birth a day or two ago to a litter of eighteen pigs. This is the largest litter of pigs, it, is saTd, ever known in that section of country. ; iviie and rive children depended on fohn Ziber, of Birdsboro, for a liveliinHid. In a fit of despondency he severed twoar tenes or his arm. A physician bound them up and he was recovciiojr, when he ; tore the bandage off and bled to death. ! A Yirginia woman offers to sell her husband by auction, and apply the pro- ! ceeds to tbe liqnidat ion of the Sia'e debt, ', 'I can recommend him to puichaseis,'' she 1 adds, "as a man possessing all the qualities ; a woman capable of controlling him could i desire." ; The Tnikish Government has received intelligence that Sasd Detden Pacha, on announcing that be had received orders to surrender Podgoritza to the Montenegrins, was kiiled by the Albanians, and 15 offi cers and men under his command weie massacred. At Pittsburg, Richaid Edwards and wife celebrated tbeir golden wedding; Mrs. Chisletr, their daughter, and her husJ band celebrated their silver wedding, and I George B. Edwards, their son. and bis wife celebrated their crystal wedding, all ' on the same evening. i The congregation of Trinity church, in Bristol, Conn., were gieatly surprised on ; Sunday week w hen, at tho close of the ser . vice, the pastor, Rev. J. H. Gilland, an nounced his resignation of the pastorate, j with an explanation of his intention to join , the Roman Catholic Church. I In the St. Louis Female Hospital, Fri I day night, Miss Emily Moelier, a nurse j administered a solution of corrosive sublN mare to nce Wood, a natient tl,rnnK mistalce, causing .,; deffS Miss Moelier took carbolic aeirl ni u,. ended by death her agony of icgret. Among the curiosities of the Pacific is an oil well at sea, iu thirty fathoms of wa ter, on the California coast, off Santa Bar bara, which seuds forth a constant stream of oil running to waste. Reflecting the light of the snn In all the colors of the rainbow, it produces a singular and beauti ful effect. ? John Carpenter, while intoxicated, Sunday morning, entered St, Francis Xav- ' ii tiiiii I'll x , ...... . : . i i . , oik, auu wuuout warn K piuugeu a lillge knife into the abdomen of Marv Loiran l,m i, , , , . omf " r ' g . vuonl "6 took for his w fe. c ' pen ter was locked no to avca-t n. ift ,f !,. s...r, ' icnuit i " injuries. Bridgepoir, Conn., recently had a kick r match between two r ! 'ng match betwecu two WMnen r,na Npw I1j, ,t. iv .. ,ro it . von 1 1 f .'in New Haven and the other from Providence li. 1., for f 0 a side, each kicker being al. .r ojriRvve Kicks. The fair daugh ter of New Haven won by kicking seven feet nine inches high, her opponent reach ing seven feet five inches. Robert Johnson, black, and Alice To ney, white, prohibited to marry in Staun ton, a., by the law, went to Washington WPfA .Harriot ansl " thrown into .ail o..i 7. R.re Supreme Court of t'hS aTe, and e lower Court sustained. The case will now co to the Supreme Court of the United s7aS -It will bo a matter of uteres? nn perhaps a good erf of surprise, to Sshermpo hereabouts to know that eels do not spawn ! that eels don'l spawn, and offer to put ir, r, and pay expenses f exnressace to n one who will send hiui au ee, with a roe in Tbe Fifth Annnal Congress of tbe Protestant Episcopal Church in the Lnited States is to assemble in C iucinnati on the ion will extend . .1 subjects of im- 15th instant. The session over five days, and several subject portence to the church are to be discussed. A young couple of Lo Hoy, N. Y., had issed. , had j ii put : their wedding day selected, and then got into a squabble over which church the j knot should be tied In. lie wanted to g' Some of tho religious journals do not look upon tins new departure witn a lavoraoio eye. One thinks that if the result aimed at is to purify politics, they may well be spared, yet It th'nks that politics will effect some of tberu more than they will eflect politics. William Brombam, the Connecticut youth who shoved his younger brother, Edward, overboard into the Long Island Sound, and, turning prow toward land, with a wet sheet, a foaming sea and waves that followed fast, left him theie to perish, . now Knows tne musty smeii oi a pi ison. Edward, who has recovered from the ef fects of his wild, five-mile swim, is the prosecutor. Colonel Edward W. TJpshaw, wbo was long connected with Tennessee jour- nalicm 1- a rt nn rplnlivpx in I T I 1 V SnrincR- ....... .... - ' - J r- Miss., but he was there when the yellow fever broke out, and when urged to leave be said : "My duty is here with this peo- pie. If I live, my Master will approve. If I die, my friends will bave tbe satisfac- tion of knowing 1 died at my post." Ho died there. Tbe Jackson (Tenn.x, Trthvne says that a true and grand hero died when ' Father Rio.dan, Vicar-General, laid down bis life at Memphis. At Bon Aqua when j tlie pestilence struck Memphis, he hasten- ed from the life giving waters to the dark : rushing stream, on whoso banks sat the I plague, tbe pall of death. Ho fell ad- J ministering to the sick and dyiug, and has j gone to the martyi's reward. j Nineteen persons were killed outright ; and one hundred and foi ly more or less injured on Tuesday last by an accident on tbe Old Colony Railroad, seven miles fiom Boston, whereby an excursion rain re turning from a rowing match was thrown from the track, through some fault, it is thought, of a freight conductor whose train bad just been switched off at the place where the catastrophe occurred. Five noble and wealthy English gills are about to take the veil, all having con siderable fortunes in their own rights. They ate Lady Edith Noel, daughter of the Earl of Gainsborough ; the Hon. Constance Howard, sister of the Marchioness of Bute ; i "two daughters of the Hon. Maxwell Stu. ! art, of Traquhar, IVebleshire, and the j youngest daughter of Mr. Blount, of Ma j pledurham, the repi esentative of the stanchest Catholic family among cotnnion j ers in England." j Lucy Osbtirn. a pretty young woman, had her entile scalp torn off by machiueiy i in Nrtw Milford, Conn. She was brought ; to a New York hospital, and there the te ; dious process f grafting on hor head a i new scalp was successfully ended a few ' days ago, and she has returned to her home. The new scalp was composed of ; minute bits of skin, 12,0"" being ustd, ta i ken from the arms of the hospital surgeons. ' and put ou carefully one at a time. One surgeon supplied more than a thousand of them. ! Some time since it was published that ' an rx-M-ijor iJeneinl in the Confederate i service had enliste 1 as a private soldier in i the ipgular at my and thcie has been a great deal of cm iosity exhibited as to who the lednced general might be. It trans , pi res that the man is Major General Stock- ton, who is a graduate of West Point Mil itary Academy, and went into t he tbelli.ui, j lenciiing the rank named. Upon bis en listment he wa.s not sent to the frontier , with the otdiuary recruits, but wa.s detailed ; for clerical duty at the War Department. That there is more heroism in 1 lie i Catholic ll lan in Protestant churches, says ; the Indianapolis Herald, is abundantly demoustiated by the mortality repoits iu 1 the fever sti ickeu cities of the South. Not a single priest has forsaken his Hock and sought safety in flight. They tlie at their posts. The dark-robed Sisiei s of Charity also brave the pestilence without flinching. and offer up their pure lives a sacrifice to , duty. There is something viral iu the Catholic failh which inspires its piiesis with more than mortal courage when they come in contact with the destroying angel. Ten years ago there settled near El Paso, Wood foid county. Illinois, one P. C. Ransom, a man of wealth. His wife was a gentle lady, lie had n dr.ik, wild man nered boy, named Paul. Ransom prosper ed. Everybody liked him. lie was elect ed mayor of El Paso, was re-elected and is mayor now. Last week adaik-faced wo man, resembling Paul, appeared. She : went from door to door in El Paso, de'clar ing that Ransom was her husband, that he : left bet, taking 30,000, twenty-five years ! ago, and that since then she has been bunting him tho w ide wot Id over. EUu- ! som denies all. The womau appeals to I the law. i There is a solemn warning to farmers i who hold back for higher prices in the I story of Elias Black, living near Doyles j town, Pa. Mr. Black has one hundred j and thirty-three acres of the finest land iu j Bucks county. In 18o2 he stacked up his i crops in tbe fields for higher fitrures ami ; he stacked up each succeeding year's crop ii me name way aim ior IDe same purnose One hundred and three stacks of hay and . , , tmy nuu cr.n HL 'Zt thousand dollars have been piled up to rot, hut Mr. Black is more stubborn than ever and still holds on for the higher prices be win never get. Tbe Republican candidate for Lien tenant Governor is Senator Stone, or War ren. His opponent is Senator Feitig, of Titusville. Stone is a lawyer, and not a producer. Feitig is a producer and not a lawyer. Both attempted to exercise their influence at the last session of the Legisla ture in favor of a free pipe bill. Stone succeeded in getting five votes out of the thirty-one of his Republican associates and those five, like himself, represented' oil producing constituencies. There were eighteen Democrats in the Senate besides himself, and Fertig induced thirteen of them to vote with him against the Stand md monopoly. Among the thirteen was Andrew II. Dill, the Democratic candidate for Governor. A touching yel.os-. fever romance comes from Memphis. Less than three weeks ago a letter-carrier named Zack Oliver encountered, very ill with the yellow .v.v., n j"..., ..ewess, .U1SS 1'hCObe Men. dleson, who had como into the citv to in ouire for letters vliU j - 1 her parents, who had fled to som. imnt,..- ' ., ,--r' i"i irom "t'"6 ! , f onllt,on' ,nd h4 took her I I T ,,,d WPnt ,n LaS,e for R Pyi f.?1? -he "cured, and by bis atten- I , "V. ",c"J"nction with the nurse furnished bv tlm II. ,i. ess was saved from death. Ten days ago she had so far convalesced as to be able to j ' ' f. 1 i . i levnirff.iftH, o , f, -r T"" aMack"d. d al - hough leehle 'frorn hr illness, she aided a few days SS he had saved. A maivelous illustration of the ten t of life in the shape of a living skele.. T found in the hold of the steamship C"t Chester, which reached New Voikonp0-' day from Liverpool. When th ,... nen xbt- i,,.-. were removed, a few houis after tbe at ship's auival, the emaciated fiame3" man was discovprprl -xoh i - ' ' man was discovered with animation to feebly say, thank i .. After a little brandy and beef tea Lad Cln , man had induced one of tlie shin's" i, In ronrpal liim in tl.p lnll ... . tills "'1 ' iJrti a V(,v., v' ' " ' . u 11.1 TT M'C!1( ( man was removed to the hosnitai .. .. last acceunds was on the high road t'c valcscencc, " Mrs. Jacob Kuntz, of Wooding,. Conn., met a most horrible and extra,,,',) nary death on Saturday forenoon AM '' COC ft - , n COOKlll,' t), -the flames buiFt through an rjnir i the stove and ignited her dress iu ! paralyzed by her peril, and befo-e td,. 1 : . . . -cruel. e t recovered presence of mind nil l,er elm., were ablaze. Shrieking. rl,e rail 1 -J j barn and began to roll in tbe Imv. nr. ,. , r.uiu( ..it-mo i-uo ju.ujieu anwn ii, ii, a. well and was drowned. Her littie naurU". ter was a horrified siec:ator of ti, .' t an1 ftftpr elm caw lir f.i 1 . ' ' i ' - - ......un J 11 rt,p rionn ; tbe well gave the alarm to tbe neielibn i but too late to save tlie bain and outliou' ' which were consumed w ith tbeir cotnei u When Jacob Knntz, who bal been aaT j at woik, leturned, he wa.s almost rV.", ;. 'i of reason at his affliction and l vs. M. Knntz, when taken from tLe vill found to ir tern i.'ieta.'.'y loa.vd 'alive and her Ilesh was black from bead to ftet' She w;is VA years old. Between ?, and 4 o'clock Thursday af ternoon a negro named Edwaul ficeman kidnapped a seven year old (iautL;er . f John McCi indie, of Ansot.ia, ( ,,i,ii. ht j to,k her to a bain, where he coinn.itttd an outrageous assault upon her. af:r Lic'i he couveyed her, after dai k.to D.- bv, left her beside the road, wlieie sit au found by neighbois, r.nd returned M her home at about nine o'clock Tlaiisinv night. At 2 o'clock Fi iday nion.ing Kiee- man was arrested and taken to he lock v nn.j rti'i'ii rccu uouib ailfr in.o .1 1 r. f r.r hundred prisons collected, knocked ,!.) Timothy O'Sullivan, a grand juior. i..':,i!i. ed the keys and emend the j.i l. 1 u y took Freeman from bis ct-li, i i .1 a t 'o around his neck, and dragged 1 i:n a ?r.ur ter oT a mile, to tbe top of t .hinn n Li'l, wheie they were about to hm.g liim whe.i he was rescued by Deputy She ntT Wl,ij.r. He was taken to Birmingham and after ward to New Haven. The gii l's coinl.ti'm is sei ious, but not ciitical. Freeman l;a.,a bad reputati-n, having served one term in prison for a similar offense. STATKMF.NT FKoM CoI TlP-s A S-"TT. The following ntaTeni-iit ). i- .,-n f ,rn . d ly Col. T. A. S.-..U, Pr.-i.'.-i.t of -1..J lVnnsy 1 vania raiiroail, to.- j.u! :;. i-: .t. I'i:v,:vi.vami Uui i'nM, c. v, oi. Ill i: l." Till. I'M I ! ! N I . 1 !1 !l 'i ; t 11 M. i . - tola r 7. To Hi- . v k l i. ! r- ; n e r-t . vania Itii'lrotid Co-iii um v : I n-.'i h :- d , t elesrra in to ihv t Iim t im " i'" U 'i hi-''-.. !. : by T he 1 .-!u t v .Ato.riitv liein-ni ; ition wea It h to t hi s i i.ri tv i i 1 1 ! V .-ii 1 or per in iis. on to ti le nKmn-t v e rt- r I com pa niea. n n I n 'Jiotur 1 le I !, !.:;; ,vi. i na 1 1 roan . oinjiaiiy. a i . k 'hi im ' ' . i ' -jn -! tins (iinimnr a "n!imt:-n ;!: t'e- :. , ! ( i 1 t'otiipany, p;p- 1 1 : . ju-.I -t-mt i- ' I iM'iHuinii (. In ((inlinl i he t . ,i -: t . ' ; r. ', ... ; lite, lot in, and sellimr an i ttar.M" s ' '. nod thtit in carry iuir out ilr- , -. . -i . ' . i i : " , . : has in m d i" imtiov f u I ! s. r: oi i "-it - i. i i . I ti'lri. In 'till" fi ll th- r n v: . i i - r'Md i 'Ulipany t III ! t- ' i I retrioo i rin'ri-in t-ii:-tr. c i wis- ie;i;:i-ir iu i l. niul tent ,i ,;. lieve tb.it it ha-; in o'.i a too nn l ion a I a ny I me r .i;i.1t'i' ii'i;, i noil upon i. e hi-ai'in of t;,. conns to a b'Hrni. it 'hk , plain to ny court I' lme "t.-:n r r ' ' rts -t ; heard. II any s!i ,-i- or I r it ir r- ; f-el t hetnsf lv- ii ."k ri- i d. tl c " i .. "' ' nt their in livid l.il i 1 1 t ;i :iie t 'r .:; r i that may be due them. ' The n hole tno vem-i: t seems to r-i . : parte t stmif.nv en'iri ly. a lh' c-m.j A' never t.en irivi t; an (i'ior!iu i'v i- tf i on t his subject. I a in not . t ii r,! . rt-. -t.r. at t he Supreme Court h.; t V i:;ir. ;i- the questions a'tdrisel by ih j i- ti-puty attorney sr n no. litem t.:M.i.r o.cin n in the matter. t desire to repeal tn It a'! eh r"- . tions to the eflect that Ihi f . i.T v or of its ofhi-er are in any : nt y t , directly, interested iih-r wit'i I'm - .) . i Oil Company or any other party, in th-.- !r 1 duc'nir. tc hnif or Irattiei'iir in a:.y wy r. till. Hve without f.iiin t ition ri f : -r . Whv your ooin any shoi! i be :i-"t .1 m t mminiT and at tliii time Till erhi; s i-e iu i-' plain to you at no d'tant dav . , Tiiom s A. So'TT, Frei ! ' ' tpiiK ii:rt.T rosmvE a at: fbraU ntrtVSE.M rttr.c frm "-f '.' Jm "f tlie JH.OH. MVLIi, M-KM. iut;i:vTi ft. uuua.vn. The Best Family Medicine on EarA- $ioo i:v c.otj j In iiit TMrwin afflicted wltTi i1t- tt.at ;, B-n rrllsve or mm, prorl.tlni; Uie tn orio' " - -,,1 t-TQlw rl"L Ol TipiT -ft T"l 1 wntincln .iniix jn,l-a lr..m Hrrl-. 1 "' v ' -ai Onnn fwoi In" Cmll(.-rnl ni th rrt lrv1'-. r Tonic, Cmthnrtlc, Altrt!v. Plorrtic nd st " ' '' ii imisiNiiiift enct upon tv i. ' - - h . i 'au lhf vitnl tirrv to rcn'- I rM-t tnl pnrtflr the flnl, toae t-.e oto lunrs vaeir bemitliy furicuoo. THE ONLY TSTJE EE3IXDY TCS C?Li- f Tt1lMla tn -rTiifttl!iti rivtl tM Tlr'tinf cf t ,N KtSKIi,. If too tr fiifT.-r'.rtf I.-.1'1,' .iiniH MKrsH, or IMUi.CSlMIN. K II M V. ,'u l)ll'ls IU1JTT, ll-TirrHi. HOMIj r'VJur I -t . t n vr ny CTr5.r arlnfoir from IvrruK 1,1 ,Jl-, of l'iOUKR ana tk. It as jht air-iKwi up ',r i In F.r.C!lsh,Ofnon, S'-nniiti nn.1 Frnrh I rmmt bpttoreonvlnc jou ol lu munu Uiu o.uok -e prlntr' Ink. . . -r v ",, A trial ol one twttln lnnrM t ailopt! J"" j . IWr no M uv, W oman or Chlid ran lako !' ' .-v f loneelrk. it Br-t rl-u-- t!i ,mi,!T ;,.'.; builds cp, thnnrsHnc diawwe anJ iab,l--n!. pcr-nan?nt, afi and fndnrine ba'a. . rut up In lr bo0k and to Pwt,,T "T"ai. Halkcr & Radger Mfg. C'., 1 rPl' 10 Jfibft Slnft. "Kor sule bv Umnrnn Mnrra? . , ' Tr,, r author'lieil to nuarant ' "' -,v t prove as represented. 1 11 ' i J AD M I X I STItATIONN CT I CK., Kstate of WtLUAM KittfU-, w Letters or administratitn on the ";- .,rlr-r Ham Kitten, lateel tbenst.urK N-nu. :" un.,r. eotinty, deeeayp,!. bave la-en r"n:"' , . ,: n slirned. who herbv ifiven norlr to all 1 B. dbte,l to a.vi.1 et'lo tl.t l.avmeut iuu - M,,r4 without delay, and those havititt et ;j -,:r the same will present them properly fur settlement. ,rII kin'1- M ARC. ARET KlTTtU j Ebcnsburjc. Sept. tsTS.- ii. skciileh. w Isii", Ehensbnrg, onad How. (recotly occuj I,,) Centra ireet. mm Worn T p. ', ni by v m .. . T7l v3 O G
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers