The Cambria freeman. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1867-1938, November 05, 1886, Image 2

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    mmmmm-MK,tm i f m rem
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saissmc. pa.,
FKIDAY. - NOVEMBER 5. Js6.
If KEAH !
The fTM rtUnt victory, nil the c'rcum
strtiices being ..'u.-iS, lered. thu' was
achieved on ijmI Tu-sdav, whs the ele e
tiou (,f Abr.tuj S. Ilr -Aiit, an Mayor of
New Yoik. II- receivr-d iki.ooO vo'es
to r.7."i fur Henry Ceurge, who whs
claimed to be lh sptiial friend of thy
workirgrneii. it'i! ough the cUiro rests
uinn a very lender foundation, and
60NXt for I! tf. v. It, H e Republican
nominee. Mr. Ilrvvitt is a IViuocr.iL,
but lils election v,s :Le people victory
aud not a partisan ' iiumph.
OFFICIAL VOTE OF CAMBKIA COUNTY
At the election held Tuesday, November 2, 1886.
!V. 'S2 OoVKRNOR
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-
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3
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I'KllTHOS'T 1 Ks'i.n kit.'. D. AT 'v.
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U. H.U. .iW ...
BY AN OLD TIME MAJ3RIFT !
I HI. S I ATi; (iONK IiKHl'H
I.I 'JAN MY Alio lT
1 ,, ji ).
The offi(iin: returns ut 'hee'ecion in
this county wil, u t . n ; i . 1 elsewhere in
our iai t r. 'i!i? m t Iuil he highly
gratifying :.j every Democrat in the
conn' v.
VI lino T"wn-Mp ,
All-.;rtn-nv T'wn-h p. . . . ,
H irr Twn'top )
ItUckll'-k Township ;
CumlTia Rir. m Ward,
XI 1
Cnfn'vrl T'.wn-hlJ '
' it,.i It.. n H-ir ;
' trr.i'l T'-wn-hip 1
CIih.'I trin4 B.r
i -i,(.r T'lwn'" ip j
'le irri I.I T"wnhii ...
' 'on.-tn k'lkfh Town-hii .j
f'oneinH'iirh Rr. lt. W.
i W.
i '.Mi.fr.1' B.ir
..v!e T .wn-hlp I
ian T.iwn-hlp
ft '.imm tih Hr..
Kit T-ty'kir r"tlip . .i
West W. . I
F.'.It Township :
Krinklin Kor I
fdllltzln HoroTiifh )
Township i
rrnlittow n H'.riuih '
.I;ik!oq T.iwntnp I
Johnstown B.T I 't W . .
- l " ;
- 4th ' I
6rh !
.. 7lh j
I.llly'i K..rimith j
I.'irett." H'.ri.jtfh ,
I. .wr Y'vtkT I'nwri-hip
lAIillville BiT. 1-t War.J. '
' v.I Wiir.l
Muneter T..wnliip
Fi.rtiiiie Township
J'ropct HorotJich
Keii.le rwnhip
Ku-hl out T.-wnnhlp
Stoiiyore-U Town.-hip ...
tiinni.-rliill low hip .
S'lunnit H-.r
S(i-.iU"hnnr.i Town-liip.
Tun'ieiliiit Borough
l i.pfi- Yoiler T.iwnMp.
Wii-liuiat.m I'ownf'lip..
W lute T.iwn-lii p
V ilmore It.rouKh
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Wfs'.lrtyior Township..
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NOTE. -I) W. Evans. I
Ttms. Ciair rti-jtiipso'), re--.
..Coroner, (no opposition) had 42.51 votes ; R. J. Huston, 20 votes tor CJuveruor ;
Intern? .1 Affairs, 10 vote ; C. U. 1'tiotDpson, Con.-at Larije, 1? votes.
John Tarker, L'.-(ioy., 15 votes; Early, Aud. ien., 18 votes,
MIOf mX AT 11 IN I)IK.
A TrajffJj at the ew York Custom
II ou tie.
Tatf, the i -mocratic candidate for
L'o;:re58 So this d is' lift, ia de f eatetl by
t-u!!, of S'lrnt-r-"', l y htut m. St-uiPs
nij''tiiy in mv r-"t alwiu: 1 C'0 and
h. I!! vir tie h.is TiJ'J ; Camtiria ptve Tate
1.131 :":! ii'.ttuih tli- Democratic
lend-rs i.i II '.: ! 1 ir.ui:3rd at leant
I'Ctlrc hmidred ui j nitv for l.iru in that
County, he received only at:ou' three
huiulied. The D-rn icracy of Cambria
can j'roudly ho d up their heads with
th full 0)!i8ciou-'.'-9 that they have
perfornv-d the'r whole duty.
It was very anpiretit t hroiikfh.Tit the
late fittni likin tlitt nrle-.s t he !ah,.r vo'e
jn na' f.r tci -e -iitl hi' miii.'ioiis coal
rtk;!3 v.:3 nTy thrown in favor of
Ulack, he did.t Ft::"i tfiP Kho-t f,f a
chape of heii.a elee'ed. T'-re were
plenty of rea:-.)!. t 1 y well authenticated
rumors that it w .iiMI-j so cast, hut 'hey
proved to be n.iih'r more than rumors
and the end was therefor" plain'y to be
seen. With the p?ni.! Nrg majorities
in l'hiladelph':; and A'legheny counties
and the failure of the lalor vote in the
regions aoovf mentioned ti concentrate
on IVack, the election of Heaver was
assured as well as a Republican majirify
on joint ballot in the Legislature. Bea
ver's majority will be over forty thou
land, or aoout one half of Diaine'a
majority In the State two years ao.
Dk. D. W. Evans, of Johnstown, who
waa elected Coroner on Tuesday last on
the Republican ticket, simply because
be had no D uiocratic opponent, can
now proceed to perform the fit3t and
most painful duty of his official carper,
which will consist of summoning a jury
to be composed of th Chairman of the
Republican County Commit'ee nDd the
ueTeaied candidates on the Tinpublican
county ticket, and holding ar. inquest on
the scattered and bleeding remains of
the Republican party iu this county,
provided always that he pan find the
pieces, lie will te able to find a few of
the di?jcted nif orders of Edmnrd
Jamas' political vnrpus etered over
the c'Minty from R-ade township to
Upper Yoder. but we don't bel-.eve that
he will ever fird ftioucb of Joseph Mus
ters to enable the jury to identify him,
or to satisfy them that he row has a
political existence.
TBB'ew York Sun. which is conce
ded to be the most reliable authority in
the country on election results, es'ima'es
that the D mocras will have a majori'y
Of about 'JO in the next Congress, which
19 a reduction of one half of the Demo
cratic mxjori'y in th present Iltis..
Each parly hnsl. st and gaire l memt-ers
In several S'a'es, and the Sun. wi'h the
information it had nn hand on Wednes
day, arrives ar th" ronc'iisi.m stated
abve. A majouly cf ten in that body
la always more desirable thn an un
wieldy majority of one hundred. In
this S'ate the Democrats have gained
two mewlf rs, I.vurh over Snan'on in
the I.nckawanna dis'ri-t, and 1 1 1 1 over
Roberts, the nominee of Q iav's 8'ate
Comni'ttPe. in the Mercer dis'rior. and
Lave loft the We'mrelanrl disMici-. in
whicti M, (,'ulloneh. Republican, defea's
Dr. Dmrif lly by a verr sma'I mj-rirv.
It is probable a'si that l;:t'on, R"iiib
lican, is e'ecfeil by a snn'l majori'y over
Had, Democrat, in ti e Centre .jJatrict,
alrttoujrh it is by m meane cerfa;n. W.
L. Scoft is re elected in the Erie dis
trict in which h made such a remarka
ble run two vearo wgo. again defeating
Mackev. the Hepublicnn candidate.
Ciiaklks S. Wci.n: sufft-red two de
feats on Tin .-day I.i-'.. He w.i.i defeated
as th I'lohii itiui; c.niaii'i.i ' ii f,r (J jVr
nor and also as the l'rohibition canlidate
for Ass-mL'v i'i I'.i hi county where he
1 i Tt-H . He !;! not, uf cours-, expect to
be elected (i nei nor, but h" had confi
deiiv.e in Lis anility to carry his own
county for the I.'h' 4 ore, over his RJ
pnb'icaT "opponent, O'ovei , whose ma
jority is ubou- I"". U:. de'e.it a to be
greatly r";r';,:n!. for, Hp-.rt from Mas
Prohibition li"bby, l is cinced-d abi'iry
aril fe.irh"-s ii. lep-Mldenc'- won't! luve
aff ni - i h'ni n:i opportunity of again
ad tine to his reputation as a most able
and iif"ful member of th" lower branch
of the Legisla'uro.
A TKL'E DEER MORI.
Remarkable Domesticity of a Pet Doe
Captured while a Fawn.
Worse than Se gro Mayery.
EXLAXD'S BOLD MOVE.
f Special to the riltsbnrg Post.
New York, November 1. Th sen
saUon ot i day waa Ihe shooting of
y;-;'"-Rratue, of the Port of New
York about noon, at ills ClrsS 'Q the
Cu itom Hou'.-e. Ttie excitement perva
ded the business community as deeply
as it agi'ated the employes of
the Custom House.
The madman who essayed the assassi
Di i'iu ia I.ouis Ritral, a person who
gained a.nxie distiuclion m the war of
the rebellion. He was for about a dozen
years attached lo the Custom House.
About a week ago ihe -Survey jr dismiss
ed him from the service, it being proven
that he was in the habit of exacting
money from the poor emigrants at Cast It
(rarden, where he was lately stationed.
Tne specific charge on which he was
removed wid compelling an emigrant t.
pay .J duty on a sowing aiachine. He
came to ii e i tliue tbout noon to-ilay and
gai ied eiitr ince Lo ihe Surveyor's private
t'tli e iU i bt; back ot the building front
ing on S uith William street. At 12. oU
o'clock the reports of the pisiol shots
v.-re heard by Piiva'.e S-cretaiy Louia
.Mchois and Examiner Thomas Hyatt.
The di.-.cliarned inspector I uslied iu
etantly oul ot the private otlice, pis.ol in
hand, and ran through ihe corridor lo
t'je exit on Hanover street. A man at
tempted to stop truj, and lie yelled : "If
you touch me. I'll kill you." The man
stepped back, and H:eral rii i along to
Beaver a reet. 'uto which he turned and j
ran lollie l.iilluu .XVIirtlige. AUUUJb.M
of citizens lollowed him. Finding escape
impossible, the man turned and ran into
the arms of a policeman. He was irem
b:i;.g ;tn tear, and seemed lo anticipate
that ;ns pursuer would iiarm him. He
na!.l to ihe policeman, 'For God's sake
arit-at iue." He wai taken to Ihe (),d
S.ips.aiion house and locked up. He
tit-scribed himself as being seventy-two
years old, a ml ive of RiaZll, mariled,
and living at No. Sot Six tl anue.
M rtiiwl.iie ti in ic on was being cared
lor. Tiir news ot I lie Uoo. lug, gieatly
eXdggi-rai d. spieail lapidiy. A lalge
sQuoll cr biid all Liey could du in
keep the corridors clear. Large ctowds
ot anxious iuq'iirura surged around the
doors. Surgeon Bt-altie, w ho is attached
to the Custom House, was promptly ol.
baud. At'.er examination hecouoiudtd
that the wounds were not of a dangerous
character. Oue bullet, passed through
Ihe 1'alui ot the rigbt hand aud a 6ecoud
penetrated ihe Hugh. So far as a hur
ried examination couid disclose, the
latter bul.et look a downward course
and lodged iu the muscles of the upper
pari of ihe leg.
Surveyor Beatlie remained cousc ous
and endured ihe ptin wuh great forti
tude. He spoke calmly lo those who
were admitted lo ihe room, and madn
close inqu.riesof his medical a'.lendaui
as to the nature of his injuries. The
fact thai he was not mortally wounded
and had not received Live bul.et wounds
as was al tirsl reported, was speedily
coin oiuuieattd to the surging crowd in
waiting, and rc-lieved their anxiety in a
marked manner.
Coroner L-vy look the statement of
Surveyor Iieaitie this afternoon. He
said the prisoner was removed trom his
post of inspector ou his recommendation,
as ha had illegally lakeu money from au
immigrant girl. The surveyor was sit
ting a. his desk wneu tils door was
lurown open, and the prisoner entered,
with a pistol in his hand, exclalmiug,
"now, b God, I'll teach you !"
He fired three shots, two of which
tooK ffi-ct, one through ihe fleshy pan
of the hand, and the other struck the
crest ot the iiium, giaucing iu an inward
and upward direction. This ball has
not el been extracted.
Thepiismer was subsequently taken
to the Tombs Police Court, when he
confessed to Justice Muiray having fired
'.he sliot, and Said he did It beCaUS"
Reatlie had discharged him w ithout any
cause.
He was born in Valparaiso, in 1814,
anJ came to this country at fourteen
yvhrs of age. When twenty-five years
of age, he enlisted on the trigate Colum
bia, lor a three years' cruise around the
world, dining which he assisted in burn
ing three Chinese towns, for filing on
American ships. He next speculated in
hors-s, and accumulated considerab'e
money, and went to C.t ifurnii in l3'.i.
where he added to his wakh. He was
in ihe first California Regiment in the
war of the rebellion, and at the battle of
Rall s Bluff rescued Od. Bak-r's body
and killed his slayer. For this he was
given a medal, and a pension of ?.'50 p-r
month. He had f-en in the Custom
House twenty-five years, receiving his
first appointment through Gruerals Ilau
cork and Sickles.
He denies tbe charge of taking ?:2 from
an immigrant girl, and says that after
"hoo nid Ihe Surveyor, he turned the
pfo! o-.i himseif, but wvs so nervous
tKi' ;h builet went through his hat.
He was he'd to answer for Ihe shooting.
Dk. Harcotirt. a d-ntiaf of Cincinnati
and t reaurer of the Kn -ghts of t he Gol
den Rule, is rep-.tf.-rl $10 000 hort in his
accouii's, and 21 iVX as treasurer of the
Uinveisal Bioihe-ilurod.
Robert A.
been sentenced
Louis on December Id
Grver, colored,
to b baDtred at
has
St.
Five years ago (in 1831) (Chester Fos
ter, of Wharton township. Potter coun
ty. Pa., caught a female fawn, which
was about five weeks old, at Camp Run,
neai Gravel Lick, on the East Fork of
tue oi u c uia uGlj llt, rttOUH SIX miles
from Wharton, in the wildest pait of
Poller county. The iiU.le creatine soon
became domesticated under the care ot'
Mis. Mary Ann J jrdau, a near neighbor
of Mr. Foster, to whom the deer was
presented, associating with the dogs and
catsou terms of friendship and equality.
In crder that it should have some pro
tection from hunters, ;s i. frequently
strayed into the woods and was liable to
tie killed, Mrs. Jordan piact.d a leather
s. rap around its neck, to which a bell
was attached. Iu January, 1SS4, the
doe, which was then about three years
old, let i Mrs. Jordan's pi c, a;.d wis
not again seen uu'.il the first day of
Apnl, lollowing, when she re'ui'iK-d,
brii.gibg wnh her a beautiful yearling
Luck, wuich ahe had picked up in Mlf
woods aud which followed her into Mis.
Jordan's bam, and has remained ever
since. Iu June following the doe had
two lawns, which Weie boiu in the barn.
They git w finely, aud one of them was
subsequently s !d to a Mr. McGee, who
took it to Clearfield county. The other
was sold at ihe same time, but it refused
to be caught, and uuw remains wi:h the
mother, a tine, beautiful deer. Iu Dc
cember, lhSo, ihe doe again left without
warning, and took to ihe woods, :nd
nothing We-. seen of her until March IS,
lSSij. being again abSeiil three moio.hs
as before. Since then she has remained
quietly about the place. During the
Litst week of September last she gave
birth again to two fawns, which aie now
six weeks old, frisky and beautiful. Th:;
mo her, with her family of ihree, inclu
ding the yearling she picked up in ihe
woods, roam about at pleasure. The
mother deer is docile and aff.-ct ionate.
The lawns are shy, and svklurn come
about ihe hou e in ihe daylime, allho'
ihey never leave ihe farm and generally
can be seen in the adjacent underbrush
and Lhicket. but run on Ihe approach of
any ore The old doe frequently comes
inio the house when the family are at
meals, takes her stand at the table, and
without, any invitation takes bread or
other ft rod from the table or accepts it
when offered by any one. She will fre
quently accompany a neighbor home and
hen at once return to her old quarters.
Oocasionally when in the adjoining
mountains and woods, which are full of
deer, the dogs have started and endeav
ored to catch Mrs. Jordan's favorite,
but be has always reached her home in
safety, and, finaing the door closed, has
seven rimes jumped through the window
into tha only room, which is on the firsi
floor and into the middle of Mrs. Jor
dan's featherbed, and there remiined
uniil assured of protection by her owner
cr one of th family. Mrs. Joidan has
lived forty five years in Potier county,
and has eeen elks, pauthers. beats, deer
and other animals roaming in front of
tier, and will verify this story to all un
believer if they will take the trouble to
visit her.
Tbe Boston Herald of Nov. 1st devotes :
a column and a hall lo ihe exposure of j
the impositions and abuses practiced by j
a German contractor named Henry j
Schroder, upon laborers employed in !
blasting and building operations at Hyde
Park, Mass. The barracks ot tbe men .
consist of a brokeu-roo ed one-s'ory 23
by 12 foot structure of rough boards,
! divided into two ap.irtnients, one con-
j taining a cot and a few articles of rude
' furniture, the other a greasy cooking ;
' stove, table, benches, Ac. In this hovel
! as many as eighteen men are at limes !
j compelled to slet p. According lo the j
I statement ot one of their number, Ihe
, men.s couch is the cold, damp floor, and j
j frequently the water during ihe night
! rist-s around them. Then bedel uhes j
' are rough, and their food is ot the vilest i
i quality. Ou oue occasion a cow wu.ch
: had died was cut up for the men, many j
of whom fell sick after eating of the
: meat. The local Boaid of Health was !
; notified of 'he tacts, au inspection w.s
, made, the remains of the carcass
were ordered to be buried.
The pay of ordinary workmen is 10 a
monlh and found. Fine mechanics ru
' ceive In.m 52 io " more. The JltralWs
' informant asseited that it isj Scnio tier's
practice to withhold wages until his
men are lorced lo compromise upon a
' part payment of their dues, The gangs
j aie continually bwing superseded by olh
, ers which Schroeder hires at Castle
: Garden, New York. Wnh the present
i party came a young man and his wife.
! He had been clerk in a Beilin bank, and
both he and his wife gave evidence m
i their dress aud deportment of good
bretdiiig. Lodgings were assigned the
couple in the kitchen of the barracks,
! but the woman refused to pass a night
in the loathsome place, and during the
fourdasof their stay they slept upon
leaves and boughs in the oiher room in
the mitlsl of tight or ten men. Evec in
thi long days of summer the men were
compelled to work from suurise to sun
set. The writer concludes as follow 8:
"From all that could be learned of
Schroder's method of obtaining bis
he'p at Castle Garden, some one em
ployed at that place must be cognizant
- of the tact that neatly every mouth be
! put in an appearance for a new supply,
; which wouid naturally lead to the con
' elusion that something was wrong.
But as yet he goes through the Garden
. as often as he pleases, aud unmolested
i he entraps ihe newcomers from foieign
! lands and bnr.gs them to his den iu
Hyde Park."
Russia Must Keep Her Hands off Bulga
ria Pending a Conference.
London, Nov. 1. The Cabinet at ihe
first. Council since I tie refess, decided to
instruct Sir Wm. White, the British
Ambassador at Constantinople, io insist
un.in an immediate confeieuce ai Con
stantinople lo consider ihe Buigariau
question, and to demand the suspension
ot Russian intervention, diplomatic and
bClive, pending the decisions of such
conteience. The Pone is renewing its
entente cordial" wnh E'g and and is in
favor ot the proposed conteience. Italy
concurs, w hne Russia and Fi ance oppose
the? pioj! ci. Gtruiauy and Austria re
main neutral. Prince Conza, halt
bro !.ei of King Milan, o' Seivia,has
bec.ioe a candidate for the Ru-garian
thr - Ho is a relative of M. de filers,
I he Wnssian Foreign Minister.
G :. ::t! K unbars, the Russian agent.
I has K-i used to iir.-ct ut the leoiv of ihe
Gu. : r rnent of Bulgaria to his ultima
tut., vvi.i have Sofia. He threatens
to bombard tne ban ack- olid government
I ni i::'.s i,t. VMn: it any opposition is
offend to the debaiki. i.'ii o: Russians
al ih.il p.ace. Nearly ail the .0 deje
gatt.s were present al Ihe rnee.mgof the
Bu'giibui S-.i-lanje at--Timo a today,
including ."0 adherents of ZaiikofT, ihe
leader ot ihe pro-Russian party. They
appeared lor the purpose, ot protesting
against tLe legality ol the assembly. It
opened wild a despondent feelit-g. Iu
vit vv of Europe's apaihy to Bulg rian
interests, it is believed to be useless lo
struggle against Rusia"s ascendency,
and Bulgaria is willing to accept almost
any terms of compromise.
VEWS ASI OTHER .0TIS.
A prisoner In the Santa Clara county
jail. California, ha invented a water wheel !
which is said to be a great Iroprovemrnt on
trie turbine wheel.
A well-instructed Boston four-year-old
said to his mother at breakfast the other
morning, boiled eggs being on the bill of fare: ,
"Mamma, unshell my egg." Then appa- j
rently thinking he had not been sufficiently j
polite, added: "For Jesus' sake amea." j
Miss Sallie McOrath, a niece of the ;
well-known turfman Price McGrath, was !
burned to death, in Lxingtnn. Kentucky, !
on Snnr'ay morning, by her clothes catching
fire from the gratfl. Her sister. Belle, waa
severely burned while trying to put out the
flames.
! The steamship British King brought to !
; Philadelphia on Wednesday .107 Mormon
; converts, principally Scandinavians. Two j
; hundred were women and children. They ;
j will be distrirtnted among the Mormon
, settlements in Utah, Colorado, Wyoming.
! Arizona and Idaho. j
i illiani Touch, In Walsh county. Dak.,
seems to be right 'v named. II is reported
to have decamped rerontly with a Mrs.
Sanderson and her two small sons, taking
seven head of horses and a wagon and set
; of harness ti.ey did not own. A reward of
i $100 is offered for them.
' Twenty years aeo a woman borrowed
, 20 of Alderman Ilartman of Pittsburgh,
I and failed to piy it. The other evening she
: attended church, heard a sermon on the
: subject of doine as one would be done by,
' and the next day surprised the Alderman by
; paying the debt with interest in full.
I James Craft and Mrs. Etna Brass have
j been sentenced to life imprisonment at Ca
I dillac Mich., for the murder of the woman's
' husband. Mrs. Brass confessed that she
i killed her husband with an iron and helped
1 Craft bury the body. When arrested Mrs.
! Brass and Craft were living together.
The Standard of Buenos Ayres. South
America, puhiiihes an account of losses
cauPd to stock owners by a recent drnueht
in the "upper country." More than 20.000.
000 heep have died of a lung and throat di
sease formerly unknown on the plains, and
the loss is estimated at, nearly J20.000 000.
Rev. Simon P. Smith, a colored min
ister of Knoxville, who attended the
ContrrPBational conference in Chicago, has
brought su;t apa'n-t Robert J. Masson,
restanrant keeper of the latter city, an,i h 8
hed waiter, James Ilnohes, for refun to
give Smith a meal in the restaurant, because
of l is color. Mr. Smith wants $5,000 dam
ages. Quails are almost unknown in Dakota,
and some uf the gun clubs are Irving to in
troduce them. Tne Kimball Graphic notes
a remarkable freak that eight of the little
birds alighted on the sidewalk In the busi
r.es parr of that dity recently. They were
evident'y s-trangers to the country, or the
strji t was on- of those noted sometimes,
where the merchants do not advertise.
A gang of youths who bad attended a
political meeting boarded a passenger train
at Tipton, Indiana, on Tuesday night. Sev
eral of them were drunk, and the train had
hardly left the station before they commenc
ed fighting among themselves in the smo'E- j
inp car. ( Jee man had an arm broken, two
or three were seriomly. and probu ty fatally I
injured with knives. wM!p there was no end I
to olack eyes and bloody noses.
CARL Ri
Fame and Infamy.
of all (Tj,
the !
WATCHMAKER $
AND DEALER IN
Fame is the sum
time.
PRACTJC.ramyisthesumof
'imp.
confers the hihe ,
e deeds' dis-rve
O T r. . J ...
maiu o: an
Watches, Clocks,
lE'.VELUY.
Silverware, Mnsicallnstran eits
AN I)
Optical Gocdc.
Sole Agent
KOK THE
Celebrated Rockford
WATCIIKH.
CnlnmMa and Fredonia Watches
In Key aud Stem Winders
ml af a pi-:
LARGE SELECTION ok ALL 'KIN lis
of JEWELRY alway on hand.
Mv iine of Jewelry is imsurpass -.t .
Come and see for yourself before pnrehm
ing el-' There..
f-? A I.l. WOKK OlAllANTKKIlJ
CARL RTVINIUS.
Ebensburg, Nov. 11, lrts.l.-tf.
' r.--i-7k, mistake
p."; e.-v.-tt
, ' '- .-"i-..
i ;i 's.'-vt'-
1
3 X-BrS.
it'
i . t. ' - "
I
I
P. WAGNER. JR
401 WOOD
Snrr.)r to Al um I it ( o.
STREET. CORNER FOURTH iwr
lJLillJt
PITTSBURGH, PA.
IWI olesale and Retail -Dealer in-
BOOTS, SHOES aMO RUBBERS
THE PEST GRADES 07 SOLID LEATHER GOOD.
'XQUKirABYIHII I'ltOH l-TI.T AMnrRFn
"llT: S8 rsl. 5 irr ; "fa- mm ' ll i i i ,
eirtotlne nrt n.-o ' "
fe nn cn toe BiT...-
P'rrtsccurary fnrnwa and th m'i lt.
" r- kuji.iiijiK. nu.'innir. aoo
illerv. Fnnrtina- sail
C't Rlflt-. wu.-.i wi' Fi.d
Iourtn dlffer.nl .tylefc prune, from flS.uo up. Staj tTZ'l0-
ew Haven, Conn.
WARLIN FIRE ARMS CO
- r,iU tl "or 1DTB rM a
wiy b ii on t)B4 ' ready been flred md tin ri..t, . 1 ... - . ' - J
v j ti
! STEUBENVILLE .'. FEMALE .'.SEMINARY
l -.'T'.'.l,...', . VJV.iLV; hu;;;,,,.
Labor In the North and Sooth.
The Bulldozed.
In his admirable speech at Philadel
phia, Gov. 1 1 1 1 1 touched a very weak
point in the R publican argument.
During the progress of the Maine Pil
grim through Pennsylvania, bis heart
has bled continually, bleeding for the
supposed wrongs, outrages and crimes
against the suffrage which are perpetra
ted, according to the Republicans, in
the Southern States, and for which no
other evidence is sought or admitted
thau the fact that those States are not
Republican. Brother Blaiuers argument
is substantially this :
o. There are negroes in the Southern
States.
b. Those States ought to be Republi
can. c. Consequently the negroes are bull
dozed. This is not logical, but it '3 funny.
Governor Hill pertinently inquires why
Mr Blaine did not stop in Rhode Island
on his way lo Pennsylvania, and ask his
friends there "why ihey do not strike
from the Jaws and Constitution of that
little, narrow, bigoted State the require
ment that before any foreign-born citi
zn can vote he must have a property
qualification. "
Gov. Hill might have added that in
the manufacturing States of New Eng
land bulldozing has become a fi e art,
and workmen are expected to vote as
thev are ordered, or lose their jols.
But these facts (o not cause the Re
publicans the slightest perturbation, nor
do they even feel that there is any incon
sistency in the Republican position. In
a Republican State they think that dis
crimination agaiosl foieigners is all
righr. As long as bulldozing increases
the Republic tn vote, in the North, it is
a high, laudable and holy procedure,
which allows "the better element" to
assert its superiority. And as long as
the R -imhMcai.s remain In a minority
in i He Soti'h, so long will the assnmp
tior: :h it there is bulldozing there be an
arM 'e,,f faith among Republicans. A".
1'. Sun.
ILmry Brill, of Southington, Coun.,
has invented a wrench, the. principle of
which he claims to Lave dreamed.
The public man who passionately por
trays in slump speeches ihe imaginary
d inger that the "servile" labor of the
South wil! injuriously compete wilh the
free labor of ihe Noiih, beirays his Inca
pacity to patiently consider, much iess
to intelligently discuss. questions of labor
and wages. In this vast couutiy there
will be remunerative employment for
labor for a long time to come if it be not
devoted to wasteful and unproductive
pursuits. To apply the term "servile"
to any portion of the worklngmen of the
United States is a gross perversiou of
language. With ihe freedom or locomo
tion that exists, no portion of the
country's labor, no matter how bumbie,
is condemned to a serfdom of the soil,
If the laborer in the rice or cotton fields
; of Georgia be discontented with hiscon
I dition, he can go elsewhere to better it ;
but the southern fleid-haud should not
I expect the same wages as arf paid to
; the intelligent farm worker iu Miuneso
i ta.
j For various causes rates of wages fre
i quently differ much in the same count ry.
I Farm labor is better paid in some coun
. ties of Eugland than in others. There
i is a wide range in the rates of wages in
; different pans of Germany. Custom,
; methods of labor, cost of living, (inclu
j ding rents,) and skill in production have
j much to do with it. In Cnieago the
j nominal rate of wages is from 15 to 20
! per cent, higher in most mechanical
j occupations than it is in Philadelphia,
j Jim there is not a rush of workingmen
from Philadelphia to Chicago. If there
t were there would be a temporary decline
' in the rate of wages at one point and a
; corresponding rise at the other, but the
1 balance would soon be restored. A stout
: Georgia negro might earn somewhat
better wages by cutting lumber in the
, pine forests of Maine than he now does ;
but climate and a prolific soil that yields
: a cheap living will keep h:m where he is
i unless too great a pressure should quick-
en him into locomotion,
j Some years ago an exodus from North
' Carolina to Kansas was stimulated by
I the activity of railroad and land agents,
i The effect of this partial movement of
colored people was to severely derange
production in that portion of the South
whence it was made, but the void was
soon filled. Sectional demagogues and
alarmists might possibly excite a general
exodus of the colored ieopleof tbe South,
and 9uch an upheaval would be fraught
with great disaster to the industrial and
social interests of the whole country.
Bur only in such a remote and improba
ble cent irpency cou.d the workingmer.
of the North be serionsly placed in com
petition with the colored labor of the
South, rVit?a. Record.
An Important Decision.
The Supreme Court of the L'nited
States has rendered a decision which sets
a', res; the question ot Stales regulating
iiivtr-Slate transportation. Iu ihe pres
ent case the S ate of Illinois attempted
lo regulate the rates of Ihe Wabash, St.
Louie fc Pacific Railioad Company, an
inieiference which the company resent
ed. The charge was that ttie road
charged one shipper fifteen cents per
hundred for carrying goods to New
York and another shipper only two cents
tor the same class ot goods, although
ihe latter was eighty six miles further
away from New Y'ork. The law of Il
linois prohibits discrimination m rates
over the railroads of ibe State. The
main points ot the decision are contained
in this extract :
"When it Is attempted to apply to trans
portation through an entire series of States
a principle of mis kind, and each ooe of the
States, or halt Cozen of States, shall attempt
toestaoiish its owu rates uf transportation,
its own methods to prevent discrimination
In rates, or to permit it, the deleterious influ
ence upon tbe freedom of commerce auioug
the Mates and upon the transpoi tation ot
goods through those Slates cannot bo over
estimated. That this species of regulation
is one which must be. if established at all, of
a general and natioual character, and cannot
be safely and wisely remitted to local rules
and local regulations, we think is clear from
what has been already said. And if it be a
regulation of commerce, as we think we have
demonstrated it is, and as the Illinois Court
concedes it to be, It must be of that national
character, and tne regulation can only appro
pnately be by general rules and principles
which demand that it should be doue by the
Congrass of tbe United States, under the
commerce clause ot the Constitution. "
Justice Bradley delivered a dissenting
opinion, in which ihe Chief Justice and
Justice Gray concurred. It will be seen
that the right of Congress to regulate
inter state traffic is conceded, I in, inas
much as it has not done so, StalfMdo
not lose their power to regulate the
charges of their own railroads within
their own territory simply because the
freight has ben brought from a point
beyond the State border. This decision
will shelve a vast amount of legislation
which certain States are contemplating
or have already enacted. A cherished
State right is demolished. It will now
be In order for Congress to step in be
tween the jieople and the corporations to
protect tbe former in their rigtits.
Samuel Cross of Cherry Camp, Va., has
a 36-year-old horse that is as active as any
young horse, and has just cut a brand new
set of teeth.
Renews Her Tonth. .
Mrs. Phoebe Chesley, Peterson, Clay Co.,
Iowa, tells the following remarkable story,
the truth of which Is vouched for by the j
town: "I am 73 years old. have been troubled i
with kidney complaint and lameness for j
many years; could not dress myself with- ;
out help. Now I am free from all pain and i
soreness and able to do my own housework.
I owe my thanks to Electric Bitters for hav-
ing renewed my youth and removed com
pletely all disease and pain.' J
Try a bottle, only 50 cts. At E. James" ,
Drug Store. j
north Carolina has 20 negroes
who are W3rth from $10,000 io f 30 000
each, according to the Ailanta Consti
tution. John JJtKee, a Philadelphia
negro is worth a half a million and owns
400 bouses. The richest colored wom
an of tbe South, Amanda Eubanka,
made so bv the will of her white father,
is worth $400,000 and lives near Augus
ta Ga. Chicago the home ot 18.000
colored people has three colored firms
in husiue5s whose proprietors represent
$20,000 each
W. Elwood Rowan, sheriff of Philadel
phia, who tias for some time past shown
aberration of mind, is now confined at Eil
borne. in a private asylum. A nice point
will now be raised in regard to his successor.
Some of the leading lawyers contend that
tbe coroner must assume the Sheriff's duties,
while others that the Governor will arpoint
If the latter is the case a Democrat will get
the office,
The "big trees" of California will soon
be extinct. Seventeen Inmber companies,
owning from 3,000 to 2.000 acres of red
wood forest each, are waging the war of
l extermination with all the weapons known
; to the modern lof.ging carrp. The demand
i for the wood is unlimited, and all the mills
! are kept at work to the limit of their capaci
i ty. The forests are large, but the force
' employed against them are swift and irresis j
j tible.
j The house of Yilon Cone, at Chase, !
; Michigan, was burned on Wednesday of :
! last week. Mrs Cone and her baby were '
! In the iiouse. Tbe family dog ran Into the !
1 building, caught ihe child in its feetb, and j
! carried it ont in safety. The intelligent
! animal then returned and sought out Mrs.
! Cone, who was laying unconscious in one J
. corner of the room. On leaving the building !
j thedrgwas crushed to death by a falling
j chimney.
j Hannah Sar.ds, an old wnmai, supposed
I to be very poor died at Rye, Westchestet
County, New York, last fall. A search
among her effects resulted in the discovery
of $400,000, in moneys and bonds, sewed up
! in an old skirt. She was related to the late
John A. Merritt, a wealthy drover. She
had never married, and had no living rela
tives except four nephews. These m-n.
therefore, became the residuary legatees
, and on Wednesday, of last week, theSurro
! gate made a decree of distribution by which
each of them received an eqnal portion of
the estate about $100 000 All the heirs
j were, till now. In a condition of poverty.
! The number of documents for the
! private use of the members of the Iiouse of
j representatives for tbe past session of Con
gress is 14 000. This exceeds by half the
, nnmber bound for the Forty-eighth Con-
gress. These volumes were mostly bound
i in expensive material, half Turkey being
! the roost popwler, and the estimated cost Is
about $25,000. The members either give the
books to favorites among their constituents
or kpep them for their own private libraries.
ptomlnent official of Congress, epeaking
of it, says: "It is pnre demagoggy. I would
call it a steal but for the fact that it is done
under cover of the law."
A singular snit for bigamy has jut been
docketed In Fannin county, Ga. A suit for
divorce has for some time been pending on
behalf of Mrr. Jenny Lind Orton against
her husband. On Tuesday night last the
jury granted her the desired release from
conjugal bonds. While the jury was ont
and before it had rf ported It? finding, so
anxious was Mrs. Orton to clinch matters
that she appeared before a justice of the
peace and was married to a neighboring
farmer, Jasper Weaver. The Indictment
for bigamy, since found, alleges that at the
hour of tbe pretended marriage to Weaver
the woman was still the wife of Orton. The
flflST PBlMI.lv TN
Boys i
Kwiirk
Rt'O s-
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n. : Tir," ' .";:;." i";;occi.''-r,.",c?1:;c.r-
. ieiiryUicdta. 1 ... ... Ezra White. Ti
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BAUGH'S S25 PR'OSPHjltf
A tin a I iK't-r- ns-r1e.t- rt,.. :
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ANIMAL
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OAliH fir.
RAW BONE
SUPER-PHOoFrlATt
MANURE.
SONS
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rH.LASaFH.A. PA,
Etasliiui Fire Insnrance Agency
nr. av. dick.
General Insurance Agent,
EBEXSliURG, I'A.
R. 1. JUWM, I. J. BICK. A. I. BI'CK.
Johnston, Buck it Co.,
ha:vivi:hs,
lbensfburs:, Pa.
o
Money Received on Depsit,
pa r i r 1. 1: os n km a ; n.
! INTEREST ALLOWED n. TIME DEPOSITS
COLLECTIONS MADE
T ALT. ACX S6IBLB POlTB.
DRA FI'.S on the rrincipal Citie
RoitKtit and Sold nn d m
General Mlm Bnsiness Transacted.
AVCUUXT8 HOLICITKI.
A. W. BUCK, Cashier.
Kbcnsliurii, April 4. Iss4.-tf.
Policies written at ftiort notice in tee
OLD RELIABLE "ETNA"
And other t Irl l Ui Companies.
T- W. DICK,
'UFST I'OH THE
OLD HAUTFOHD
FIRE INSURANCE COU'V.
UOMMESCEII BVSINESS
1794.
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nb ( ; net ftiaMWkv w t - -k,-
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OADf;
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TTair .ar-kjb. -k ii 11 rt rur.b.-i'.
II."
tue public debt BtHtement issued on
Monday shows a reduction of 'be public
debt during Octobor to be $13,201,019.
50.
Colorado w6otDbmocitic on Tuesday,
case will be cailed up at the next term of j
court.
Chambers Miller, of Sewlckly, below
rith-burch. holds tbe theoiy that natural
gas ia confined in the earth In a fluid state
ard has filed a caveat for a patent designed
to conduct this fluid to tbe surface and into
receptacles for Us preservation. If this
theory should prove correct It will te the
greatest discovery of the age, as the fluid
brought to tbe surface and confined at a
pressure of, ssy six hundred pounds to the
square Inch, can be utilized to an incon
ceivable extent as fael. A locomotive, for
instance, with a few gallons of the fluid
would have a supply of fuel sofflcent to run
it from Tittsburgh to Chicago, and an ocean
steamer would require only a few barrels ro
make the trip to Europe.
MYERS.
AT T( I R N'EY-AT-1, A W .
-umce Id t ollooarle Row, on feat re atreet.
ST. FRANCIS' COLLEGE,
LOKTTO, PA.
IN CBABGE tT
FRANCISCAN BK0THFE5.
Board and Tuition
for the Scholastic Year, $2 -10-
March 2th. 186. tf.
Ebensburg Insurance Agency
T. WDICK.
General Insurance Agtz
EBENSBURC. PA.,
Policies written at short notice 1b tt e'&
reliable
jETNA.
Old Hartford
And other Ftrat-riaia reiar""
CHEAPrsT and BTST. Prlee-a ",rt
HOLMAN'S NEW PARALLEL EIELE3
GEO. M. RKADE.
AmiKNKY
WUfBce on Centra t treet
AV-bAW,
I.S1I1HBPK4, Pa
ver a. nor ,(.
I'irculitrs tree. V
J. Hoi
a'4 Al'tt w,'r
A e . rt"
M. D. KITTELL,
Attorn o y - n v . ju.f,.AV
tBENSBTKH. PA.
m.-e Artr iry Fa "rll rsr. ot.. . ourt Houae.
TtI-I, lie? and aetjt'erai
countrv tA tsk Itaht m.k '
hi.iref. 83 tS f a ,1av can m
work snt hy mill : r.- rara-k:rg
goorl detnan i lor our worn and lurn-a"
rl..Tmr, k II-... . ' K
! DKirAXT. Tin at-Cl1"
nail, Ohio.
He !
VREIKI. FARMS
cirrolar. A. O.
LAn
AIM I HATrn-To w -k
-ink : : t io - r f ' r
nil nmi' f o if w- -r 't.
JnoitMi iji t'.r h i P
A1
nVIRTISERS by addressing Seo. P.
Row el I A to.. lOSnraM St.. New York
can learn the xxant coet of any rropod line o
AIVF.HTl-.TVO ta .n;er-a Kvpn. lOO
Tage l amraltt, Or .
IMS. -ntrikJI.-. V. !-
q OMsiisviPfi o n WSlHSg
iiL-r!?i! tZ Z, el. MAM'AKIi MI.VtRWlltO'4 "
. , 1 wT' " -" B Hon. Mm.
euaiviii M two kittl raaa, ttZJrm .?17: ' a i r
Xr'isr Jr. x fl VIRGINIA FARMS FOR
. 1 1 U v f'Hi. La !.. a. - " " .
it 11 b
r irsj c k :
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