VOL. 44. liuntingdou Journal :IN /iUt7dial, ;ie 'mi. ILL'S TlN‘lt/lIN jOI.;ItNAL is publi,ll,l every Friday by .l. A. N. 1,11, ate2,uo per annum IN /..'t paid for in six tuontlis front date ut is eo - ipti...:md Waif not raid within the yvar. omlesi at the option of al, pub- Ii until alt :irrearages are paid. paper, however, trill be sent out Of III" SIX Maid fur in advance. 'frain,ient advertisements will be hoerted at TWIMTE ASP A-II kl.l , cuts per line for the 11,d ilim•rtioli, SEVEN A N k-lIA LI , CENTS for the Second. and Ft% s CLNTS per line jar. all tient illisertlon3. .pi irterly and tearlf will he iii,erted at the f‘iito,nr. rates: f;in ,dill Iyr 1144•1 4 :w I :w :www s ;14 I-;:•wwl 9 ;41 . 15 win ••• :w 1 10 wwww 1.2 flit 4.,,•••••1 IS thl• 4. 5 , • 1.1 1-1 34- f; 1 " I I 14 90 . 1t; Sit, 20 6,1 otb: sI1; All Re,,olutions of Ass.ciatiens, Comitinniemi , ms of limited or indiridnal interest, all party ammem,ment,.. and notices of Marriages and Ileath4, exceediug live lines, will be charged TEN CENTS per line. Legal and other notices will be charged to tip , party havi,4t them inAerted. — A.l,ertising Agent. lutist find their commi.,ien ont , id of their figure.. All advertising OCCOUNIS aro date and 'Own / 1 .• adv , rtisvntvat i$ once JOB PItiNTING 01 .very kind, Mai, and 1 - ani•y r•edera, done with neattn-N and dilpkteh. 1! All(1.1,111., 111:1,11,. Card,. ke., of every vari ,, ty and ,ty printed at the .4torte4 nt.tice, and e v.•rytlih, in Ow line will In. exacnied in tho n+..-T arti-lir manner and at the lowe.t rat,•4. Professional Card:, WlLl it , , lt ,e ` t , l l \ l % , ;. ut p ii t Rl,il..:l,),llSPaA.ltorney-3t-L:11,::, ~,1 . in : 72 I'e 73 11 n CALWEI.T., ttornry-nt-Law. No. :11,1 grn...t. • Whet, formerly occupied 3lessr4. NVooLls S ‘lii -11.11usou. TIR. A. B. DRUM BAUGH, offers his prol,ssional services 1/ to thecomminity. 01lice, No 523 Washington stmet, one door east of the Catholic Parsluage. Ljan4;7 lias permanently located in Al..xamiria I/ tg, pram:Lieu his profession. FC. STOCKTON, Surgeon Denth:t. 01lire in Lehder'A .building, in the rOotu formerly occupied hy I. E J Greene, Huntingdon, Pa, Gl3. MILADY. Attorn,y-at4.aw, 405 Penn Street. lit Huntingdon, Pit. L. I.Cliiii, Dent T. EtrowTC. new J. Nu. Pell!' Street, l'a. Lapl2.'7l p 1 C. 31 - kDDEN, Attorncy-at-Law. Oilice, —, Prn • Street, Huntingdon, Pa. lapitt,'7l JSYLITANVS BLUR, Attorney-nt-lAw, linnliu dun. . Pa. Ottice, Penn Street, three duere wr-t Strvet. Urtn4;7l T W. IMATI'F:I: N . , A thirucy-at-Law and General ti . Ageut, II untingdou, i'a. t-',ldiers'Elaimsagainsi the Gorerunierr for haek-pay, Nullity, widow.' awl invalid pen , intim att,•wied to wish great earu:iud promptiies , 1)f- Ike {III Pena Street, I jail 1;711 LORAINE .V 4 IIMAN, A it ,, tiwy-:it 1,3 w. ( N". 40:, 1 . ‘1.11 Pa. IS. Attar..you-law, Huntingdon, Pa., 1.7. olio:. in _l/,:albs bni!ditez. Penn Street. Prompt and v.:ireful attention given to all legal business. W NI Penn (1)11,1.,Bn tin t ey A - s - 1 , 1 1 t -4 ; ; 7 711 : 11.411,4 promptly attended to. New Advertisement U. B. Mutual Aid Society -OF Pennsylvania, PRINCIPAL OFFICE Chartered by the Legislature, March 11, JnIIN C. STE lIMAN, President, GEORGE A. MARK, Secretary Cash Assets Assets subject to assessment ....;20,01)0,0110 Death claims paid to Jan. ISSO l,fia I 2,1120 certificates issued in 1579, aggregating 093,000 insurance, The class, assessment, and class renewing sys tem originated and successfully pursued for over a decade of years by the U B. Society, has caused a radiesl reform in life insurance, reducing its cost to the minimum, and thereby placing its benefits within the reach of all. The payment of $S on appli., - ion, annually for four years, ana thercafier annually darin g life, with pro rata mortality assessment, graded according to age, secures to wife, children or assigns the sum of °Fie thousand dollars. Healthy persons of both sexes may become members. Certificates issued in sums ranging from E 4509 to 'SIO,OOO. Agents wanted. Fend or apply for circulars giving full informa tion to W. W. WITIIINGTON, Agent, PeterNburg, Pa. Or to D. S. EARLY, Gen'l. Aft. Cor. 9th street .t Railroad, Lebanon, Pa. [may 21,5i1-ly BEAUTIFY YOUR C) S The undersigned is prepared to do all kinds of HUSE AND SIGN PAINTING, Calcimining, Glazing, Paper Hanging, and any and all work belonging to the business. Having had several years' experience, he guaran tees satisfaction to those who may employ him. r .ICES 3101311,A.T1 - B. Orders may be left at the JOURNAL Book Store. JOHN L. ROHLAND. March 14th, 1879-tf. CHEAP! CHEAP! ! I! PAPERS. v FLUIDS. N-/ALBUMS. rai s e r D Sour Stationery . youfillankß u o y ysok AT THE JO UR 1L LOOK STA TIONERY STOR Fine Stationery, School Stationery, Books for Children, (lames for Children, Elegant Fluids, Pocket Book, Pass Books, And an Endless Vtrrif rll n> Arre Thiny.l, AT TTIEJOURNAL BOOK d STATIONERY STORE GENTLEMEN, Avail yourselves of the opp,rtonity. FOR A PERFECT FIT, GOOD MATERIAL, BEST WORKMANSHIP, COMBINED WITH MODERATE PRICES, CALL ON JOHN GILL, 315 WASHINGTON, ST.,EUNTINGDON, PA /17,- BEST Ftorl: of CLOTTI , CA SST :SIMMS, V EST. EquiS, Ac., in Ow comity always on Min.!. STAMPING ! Having just received a fine assortment of Stamps from the east, I am now prepared to do Stampins for BRAIDING AND EMBROIDERING. I also do Pinking at the shortest notice. MRS. MATTIE G. GRAY, No. 415 Miidin Street. May 3,1575, DR. J. J. DAHLEN". GER3fAN PLIESVCIAN AND ACEGEON Office at the Worthington House, corner of Seventh acid Penn FtrtctF, HUNTINGDON, P.A April 4, 1879 DR. C. 11. BOY ER. SURGEON DENTIST, Office in the Franklin House, IitiNTINGDON, PA A pr.4-y. R NU DIV ITT SURVEYOR AND CONVEY:INC:V:7I, CHURCH ST., bet. Third and Fourth, Get.l 7;79, 47' Cul I{'r •10. [apL" 11.1;5;744 1 m. LEBANON, Prxx.t .£195,6;?) 1 - 1 4ri 17.7 , f.1 -' 3 7- 7 1.:07L - J l. PI tyal tn.", • ia i— ,75M - 70;67211MMM1S CIELLIZIVIL7=7.Z—.. - 42—"7.11-I=CMCILELES.S Mis34lCl * 'Flit- Laar g t-.t .A.:..-,t)rtilient 4)1.- 1 WattheS l Clocks, Jewelry SILVERWARE AND SPECIALTIES I 1 IN CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA P A A i Iv `:,, ( ) 2 I. Rirti,,lar k. ATTENTION .., paid to Repairing. ~,. rt r tri PROMPTLY AttOlio.oq To ~1a..1 BE BEAUTIFULGLASSWARE li" ~!:^ ~ STAMPING CASH & .etas or GLASS af , 1,0.7 :IS ctg. The place to buy QUEENSWARE by the niece or in sett , , is at F. 11. L A E'S STORE. Illnasotne TEA SETTS' consisting of 441 pieces of White Stone China, can be hou ; ;lit fur $l, at F. 11. LANE'S luw price store. F. TT. I.7tne , loos not buy or sell short weight packages of Fish. You do not want to buy salt at Fish prices. CANNED t,OOD►S, ineluling lifornia Choice Fruits, Evaporated and other Dried Fruits. t;,reen Fruits, F,:reign and Domestic. All kinds of choice TEAS, from 15 to 20 cents per quarter, tiood Sugar from S cen t s p er pound to the host Maple Sugar in bricks or granulated at 13 cents per pound. SALT MEAT, FLOUR, NOTIONS, CONFECTIONS, WOOD and WILLOW-WARE, and in short, about everything to be found in a first-class Grocery and Provision Store, can be bought at F. 11. LANE'S Cash and Exchange Store, near the Catholic church, on Washington street, Hunting don, Pa. .11101 TO :—GOOD QUALITY—FULL QUANTITY—SMALL PROFITS. HUNTINGDON, PA. ~_~~ ~ t fir; 3 .• r., ..,. ~.,.. .. , I trl ...Ai rt :0,11... • 14-4 k -- ,:r.:: .* ...... - 4,__A +i -:::g :,r.: ei.,.. ;-:,:, Q..). -.: . ;t. Vi.l- ? Ifia.-) ~,,1 [L . : , 0'; 1 -I ' . : ... --. . 4 1e). 41 n TO MAKE ROOM FOR. TO :NI kE ROOM FOR r r7 R- 31 v i vvirn i f 7 t.q.z, 777 _ , ►h tett V tz -1--w r : 11 1-I"7'AT 7 - -- -4 I Vti _II._ _ILI - N -A_ _if_ CNit , Cl VI 3V Ikt riv:r. 7. % ' 1 I /A 2a:Ar y: 3 •• ,1 z / I, I lit STOCK OF DPNO.4OOOB# V,j , 4:4 4 , 3 4, 4- ` 5 l `1: -- 'zni-0 4 (- 4 04v441..” 8 eAPsA DV TYVT 1 VT A Tvil rtyriT - 7-ri au...it-1J I;A.L-4 • - uuu nilltt 3 1, • t in Or r•,,:a for the 174 17 .\ - I,Qrfolz.v, ._. I ; 1 .1 OT( E, )()It. 1 ' EC/I ) " ARG -1 1: in Black and Colored Silks. ELIDED ARGAB -.:, in i A ECIDED A_EGAINS in Cashmeres and Alpacas. Summer Dress Coeds, Decided Bargains in ALL:WOOL BITNTINGS. Decided Bftrgains iii ~, k l- , L-WOOL BUNTINGS, Decided Bargains in Pereales,Piques,White Goods, Decided Bargains in Percales,Piques,White Goods, - -DECIDE!) BARGAINS IN-E. 4 -DEUIDED IL\.RGAINS 11:1Illgs Inytill Clovol liriPry Palmas Susharas , t, L, , , , LAIDIE.S' TIES, COLLARS, &C. 7-? - 7 1 , A 7 1 .7,7„,7,7 AD7 °THING • 7 11 : Ai -, V c an d 01 , ilrl • . i oaLity Boys -„iigi.L.lc,-), ri PRICES THAT DEFY An COMPETITIOI. Now Is the Time to Buy at (...71,reat iy Reduced Prices, -AT THE INIAMATOTH STORE T___ h; T - 3_, HUNTINGDON', PA. doe- American Watches, flowaPd 'Pitches, Elyiet MatcheB, ,Sip I' I tlgfield Watches, I attr deit ivatclte Fine Swiss Watc IX GOLD AND SILVER, KEY AND STEM-WINDING ~~'r .........~ 1~ .t: , Tcr 73 ,1 wiLLEIJA 222 t.,-.7) J . 0 EXCHANGE STORE. MAC KE]iEL- Mackerel, consisting of Peep Extra Shore, New Fat, an.] all the best va ric•ric:, and numliers known in the market. Also Large lioe and Lae Herring, Cod Fish and :had in Fe a,=.4 n SPECIAL NOTICE. — .71 tg ti ii* w 0...,. • ..I'l .- -..4 : . f ! 5 , 4 ;., ...• : - . ...-: _, . -...- .:. - (-- it i 4 Vt f i ''.. 1k :i _ ~.,.., r . - 1 ., ...„ „. ~..... ~ Li u ________ ~.„....„..) . .., I) u_ Al L 1 ~, LZ a - i 7: IA P 4 ; i _4..1_ 4... .__ _.....-__ _am:L. , , I. ; 17- ''. ' ;IL. 1 0 r ' 2,ew Mvertisemenf.s 7.41 7 : 1 g e . 4 t EMET if rata g gt ~l ~l titat they ri 4 H E ! g;A ~~~ -OF 40.13.. M. Very Large and Varied Assortment or Ladies' and Gents.' Gold & PlRiad. Cliglls, Rlu s &c. ENT FOR T. 11 LTSTLY CELEBRATED . 3Z) Q' rCK-TiME. t'VATCH, :t I 1 :f ti '• •. ...Tr \....,1 qr. kb) cte STORE, c: giant stock HUNTINGDON, PA,, FRIDAY, AUGUST 6, 1880. _!:iverti.-:ements I.X; : NOTIC E.—Not ice is 11-1 1 here!,}' givi-ri, to all i:er,uns interested, that the followin . .4; named per,..llS have settled their alt noun t s in !he Regi,ter's Otlioe, at Iluntin._.;:lon, and that the said av,..nrats nill he pre,enled fur eon lirtirtlion :1;1d ailvnar.rc, at an Orplia»s' Court, to he held at lloniin:_tdon, in and for the comity of NVEDNI.;:-.D.AY, the lath day id . 1.• wit: 1. Arec,ant .4 I ; t•07::e thi:trilian of George I)l,l,i, : sur„ wir,r LLu,I of .Mrs. Hannan I'. I)ielt inson. 2. First aiie.iunt of Calvin L. Boos lough winiinistrator of the write of :Mary I:•inslaugh, lLtle of Alexandria lioriiu4h, d ceas..:d. and final :le omit of I)a% iii 11. and C. L. Truz.teon to sell the real es tate of of Alexandria, tie- 4. Fir,t Itc:•woot M0,1.$ D. Sitknitter, a:ltnin istratur of the o;.tate of 11.2stec iiandolph, late of Barrce town:hip, docea,e(l. 5. rir,:t and linal aeeount of John tt. White, Guardian of Mary J. lirith. (forwerly minor child of James 24,,Niy.lin, late of Fulton connty, tleeensf,l. :1,4i1111t cf . James. A. .:1 .t.,:o•h••( 11.'oriey, (nnw )lacht.l S. TrcNl.,r.) 7. (if 3. li i r •• , ,•1 Thom, Lit, or Jackson S. The f-ur! , l a hnini tr i n rAri tru , t aenunt of S.lty.tp,l T. Ilco,n, Exc,itor Truster under the will of Dt.vid. t , t,are, dveexard. 9. APcount of D., vid l'eat•hey, Cam-ilia:l of (Ittorge li.. Oiris K., I),iniel K., Mo:ps W., and Catharine Inuier, witior e . ,tildren of Christian Yvtier, deceased. 10. Account of..Tohn Peachy, Guardian of Menno M., Abner amd Christian Detwiler, minor children of Christian Detwiler, late of Brady township, de eCtl 11. Adroin'str.ti::n e.,,u t Fr,lerick C. Krause.actiitr Ext., , ator of the la,t scitt onil testa went of Ffzricriok Krause, htto of Tud township, deceased. 12. Guardianship ite;!ount of Gorge Jackson, Guardian of the, minor ciii!dren of Nicholas Deck er, deceased, as filed hy Thomas Jackson, admin istrator of said George Jackson, now deceased. 1:1. Guard;anship accounts of George Jackson, Guardian of Llizabeth, Ann and Margery .Jane Shaver, minor ehildien of Roger Shaver, deceased, as filed by Thomas Jackson, administrator of said George :Jackson, deceased. I I. Gus rdia as iiih account of George Jackson, Guardian of the minor children of John 11. Green, deceased, as filed by Thomas Jackson, adminis trator of said George Jackson, deceased. 13. Account of George Jackson, Trustee ap pointed to sell the real estate of Benjamin Corbin, Jet:eased, as filed by Thomas .Jackson, adminis trator of George il:telison, ileeea Ned, 16. Fir,t and partial aeeuunt of Rev. John G. (Hoek and .I,.►:n tea,h‘iar, Ex.eutors of the last will of John Ite;1,11o3r, late of Shirley township, deceased. 17. Fiist administration account of Samuel T. Brown, adininistr:l , ,:r d. b. h. e. t. a. of John P. Anderson, deeoaat•d. IS. Account of Samuel h. Stryker, administra tor of the e=tate of Sainti..4 l►. Stryker, lute of West township, (absentee) with distribution ac count ani.cxed. 19. Account of Win. B. I..:!:LF, Executor of the last will of Mrs. Mary Long, late of Shirley town ship, deceased. 20. Final account of Joiepli M. Kricier, admin istrator of the estate of Mary E rider, late of War riors:nark township, deeeasvd. 21. Account of J. F. Sehock, Executor of the List will and testament of Jane O'Kain, late of Henderson township, deceased, with distribution account anucxeil. 22. First am( final account- of William Ewing, Executor of the will of :11.1.riha llennen, late of Barrett town6hip, 23. Account of Genree V. i;afes, one of the Ex ecutors )t the will of Mary M. Hoffer, late of Bar ree township, deceased. 21. First and partial account of Andrew My ton, Executor of the will of Jacob Smith, late of West township, deceased, with his partial account as Trustee to sell real estate of said deceased, an nexed. 25. First and final account of Dr. W. T. Brown ing, administrator of the estate of E. E. Roger, late of the borough of Orbisonia, deceased. 26. Account of Alfred and Calvin Porter, ad ministrator of all and singular, the goods, Ac., which were of Anna D. Porter, late of the borough of Alexandria, deceased. 27. First and final account of George P. Wake field, administrator of the estate of 11. Augustus Wakefield, deceased. 26. Guardianship account of George Jackson, Guardian of Maggie McCollum, (now Maggie Suter), as filed by Thomas Jackson, administrator of said George Jackson, deeeased. 2i. Second and final account of R. L. Hender son and Jerry Beck, Executors of the will of Jacob Beck, late of Warriorsmark township, deceased. Guardianship account of Andrew Smith, Guardian of .lohn McCool, a minor child of George McCool, and legatee of John 3leCool, deceased, as filed by George M. Cresswell and Ann M. Smith, administrators of the said Andrew Smith. 31. First end final account of John Flenner, Executor of the last will and testament of Eliza Steel, late of the borough of Huntingdon, deceased. 32. Account of Darvin Grazier, Guardian of Robert Ross, one of the minor children of George Ross, late of the township of Warrioritnark, de ceased. 33. First and Final acceunt of Jesse Goodman, Executor of Sarah Ellen Logan, late of the borough of Huntingdon, deceased, with distribution an nexed. 34. First account of J. R. Simpson and Eliza Conprobst, Executors of Henry Conprobst, late of Barree township, deceased. 35. First and final account of J. R. Simpson, ono of the Executors and Trustee appointed to sell the real estate of henry Conprobst, late of Barree Township, deceased, with a distribution annexed. I. D. KUNTZELMAN, Register. July23,lSSO, NOTICE is hereby given to all persons interested that the following Inventories of the goods and chattels set apart to widows, under the provisions of the Act of 14th of April, A. D., 1851, have been filed in the office of the Clerk of tho Orphans' Court of Huntingdon county, and will be presented fur "approval by the Court," on WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18th, 18,50: 1. Inventory of the personal property of J. J. Robison, late of Mt. Union borough, deceased, as taken by his widow, Catharine Robison. 2. Inventory of the personal property of Thomas Wilson, late of Springfield township, deceased, as taken by his widow, Mahuhe Wilson. 3. Inventory of thepersonal property of Samuel H. Grove, late of Lincoln township, deceased, as taken by his widow, Susan C. Grove. 4. Inventory of the personal property of Joel Kauffman, late. of Brady township, deceased, as taken by his widow, Mary Kauffman. 5. Inventory of the personal property of Eph raim Yingling, late of Clay township, deceased, as taken by his widow, Rachel Yingline. ii. Inventory of the property elected to be taken and retained by Ann Eliza Martia, widow of Cun ningham Martin, Lite of Walker township, de ceased. 1. O. ELMAN, iuly2 Clerk Orphans' Court. PROCLAMATlON—Whereas,byapre cept to me directed, dated at Huntingdon, the sl day of April, A. D., WO, under the hands and real (lithe Hon. John Dean, Pri,ideut Judge of the Courts of c om m a n pl e as, Oyor and Terminer, and general jail deliv ery Of the24th Judicial Di.trict of Pennsylvania, compo sed of Huntingdon, Blair and Cambria counties; and the Hons. Grad. Miller and Adam Ileeter, his associ ates, Judges of the county of Huntingdonjustices assign— ed, appointed to hear, try and determine all and every indictment made or taken for or concernii, all crimes, which by the laws of the State are more capital, or felonies of death and other offences, crimes and misdemeanors, which have been or shall hereafter be committed or perpetrated, for crimes /iiiireS,llll-T am commanded to make public procla mation throughout my whole bailiwick, that a Court of Oyer and Terminer,Co 1111 l 1011 Pleas and Quarter 'Sessions and general jail delivery will be held at the Court House, in the borough of Huntingdon ' on the Third Monday (and 16th day) of August 1561 P, end those who will prosecute the said prisoners, he then and there to prosecute them as it shall be lust, and that all Justices of the Peace, Coroner and Constables within said county, be then and there in their proper persons, at 10 o'clock, a. m., of said day, with their records, inquisitions, examinations and remembrances, to do those things which to their offices respectively appertain Dated at Huntingdon, the day of July, in the year ofour Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighty, and the lath year of American Independence. BAWL. it. SUMP?. AUDITOR'S NOTICE. [ERtate of BENJ. SOLLERS, deceased.] Notice is hereby given that the undersigned Auditor appointed by the Orphans' Court to dis tribute the balance in the hands of Jonathan Evans and Trustee appointed by said court to sell the real estate of Benj. Sellers, late of Springfield township, deceased, will attend at his office, on Penn street, in the borough of Huntingdon, Pa., for the purpose of sad appointment, on FRIDAY, the Gth day of AUGUST, A. D., MO, at one o'clock, p. m., at which time and place all per sons interested can be present, .tc. IL C. MADDEN, July23,lSSO. Auditor. y• • 1 011t1Cal rr , • The Issues of 1380. CONCLUDI NO PORTIONS OF THE SPEECI OI• HON. CARL AT INDIAN APOLIS, .1U1,1" 20, 1880. On the evening of Tuesday, the 20th ult., Ilen. Carl Schurz. Secretary of the Interior, addressed a very large Republi can malting at Indianapolis. ills speech was lengthy, covering the whole ground of the present canvass, and we present below its concluding portions : And now I appeal to the conservative citizens of the Republic, to you who de sire the public faith sacredly maintained, where will you go ? Can you, in view of pia Sell t circumstances, conscientiously go to the Democratic party ? You will, in deed, find there not a few men who think as you do ; but with them you will find elosely :tilted in party interest of those ele ineuts to whom our national obligations are the fbot-hall of momentary advantage. You will find on that side every State that , has repudiated or speaks of repudiating its ' public debt; you will find there all those who decried the public creditor as the pub lic enemy, and whom no loyal tradition and impulse attaches to the national honor. You will find there a party, inside of which the public faith has still to fight a battle with its enemy, without any certainty of its issue. Is that your place ? Or will you go to the Republican side, where the loyal maintenance of our public faith has become a fundamental principle, univer sally adhered to with unswerving fidelity, in spite of the gusts of adverse public sentiment in fbrmer days? And you who desire to preserve the fruits of the success gained in the abolition of the curse of an irredeemable paper money and the re es tablishnient of specie payments, where will you go? Will you go to the Democratic party, where again you will find sonic who think a 4 you do and yet with them as a powerful and perhaps the most numerous eomponent part of the organization, wield ing commanding influence in a great many of the States subject to its control, the great mass ofthe inflationists and fiat money men who were gathered under the Demo cratic banner by a seemingly irresistible power o 'attraction, and furnished many of the ac owledAed leaders of that organi zation,i d who, even now, when the pros perity the country has been so magnifi cently aided by a sound financial policy, would be ready to subvert it all, and throw the country back into the wild confusion of the fiat money madness ? Will you bus iness min, farmers, manufacturers, mer• chants tif the country, find the safety of your interests there ? Will you help a party to power, inside of which, between its component elements, the battle of a sound money system and an irredeemable paper surrency is still pending, and will you trust the earnings of the poor as well as the fertunes of the wealthy to the un certainties of its issue ? Or will you go to the Republican side, where great vic tories for the cause of good money have been achieved ; where sound sense and pa triotism have won every fight so far deci ded, and where we may with certainty look for the same sound sense and patriotism to solve the problems not yet disposed of ? And you who desire the administrative business of the Government performed in a business like way by honest and capable public servants where will you go ? Will you go to the Democratic party, which has no other reform idea than an eager desire to take the whole administrative machine ry of the Government suddenly to pieces, and to fill it as rapidly as possible with pol iticians demanding offices as spoils? Oe will you go to the Republican side, where you have the assurance of a civil service which, in spite of shortcomings and mis takes, has already, on the whole, proved itself capable to transact your business honestly and efficiently, and where you find all those elements that are faithfully and energetically working for a more thorough and permanent reform ? I might go on with the catalogue to show you where the path of safety lies ; but it is enough. Your own State of In diana furnishes you at this moment a most instructive illustration. Look at the con tending forces here. On the one hand a man put forward by the Democrats as their candidate for the Governorship, one of the leaders of the wildest inflation movement, one of the most vociferous advocates of the repeal of the Resumption act, the success ful execution of which has conferred upon the American people such inestimable bless . - es. Where would our prosperity be lied be and his followers prevailed? And now you find him the representative man of the Democratic party, still advocat ing his wild doctrines, and hoping for their triumph, which would be the ruin of your prosperity. You are certainly mindful of the fact that the wise and patriotic men among you, and I am glad to say that they were a majority of your voters, made an effort to do away with the scandals of fraudulent voting, arising from the absence of a good registration law and the seduc tive opportunities furnished by your Oc tober elections. You know how a major ity of your citizens with the applause of all fair minded men in the country, voted and carried that reform at an election held for the ratification of your constitutional amendments ; you know how by Demo cratic .Tudges that decision of the majority was set aside upon reasons which made the whole legal profession stare the country over. Is that the party. which, as citizens of Indiana, mindful of the welfare and the good name of this State, you will support ? Now look to the other side. Your Re publican candidate for the Governorship, one of your purest, best informed, and most useful and patriotic men, who on every question of public interest, he stands on the side of the honor of the country and the welfare of its citizens; whom even the voice of' slandsr cannot reach, and to whose band- his very opponents would, without lie: !ation, commit their interests. This is t!. illustration Indiana gives of the cha - . v.:ter of our national contest. Wha's, is there, then, on the Democratic side which could seduce you from the path of safety ? It is the nomination for the Presidency of a soldier who, daring the war, did brave deeds and deserved well of the country ? It is a sense of gratitude fur those brave deeds that should make you elevate the soldier to the place in which a statesman is wanted? Gratitude to those who on the field of battle bared their breasts to the enemies of the country is a sentiment of which I shall not slight ingly speaks ; it is a noble sentiment; but is the Presidency of the United States a mere bauble that should be given as a re ward for things done en a field of action wholly different ? Is the Presidency like a presentation sword, or a gift horse, or a donation of money, or a country house, given to a victcrious soldier to please him ? if so, then simple justice would compel us to look for the most meritorious of our soldirs and reward them in the order of merit; and, brave and skillful as General Hancock has been, there are others who have clain.s of a still higher order. Then, Gen. Grant, havitt!! already been Presi dent, we should reward Gen. Sherman and Lieut. Gen. Sheridan first before we come to the Major General nominated by the Democratic party. Certainly, let us be grateful ; but let us not degrade the high est and most responsible trust of the Re public to the level of a mere gift of grat itude. Let military heroes be lifted up to the highest rank in the service which be longs to the soldier. Let them be rewarded with the esteem of their countrymen ; and, if' need be, let wealth and luxury be show ered upon them to brigoten that life which they were ready to sacrifice for their country. But let it. never be forgotten that the Presidency is a trust that is due to no man ; that nobody has ever earned it as a thing belonging to him, and that it should only be bestowed for services to be ren• tiered in the way of patriotic and enlight ened statestnaushift. But above all thiugs, the Presidency Should never be pointed at as the goal of ambition to the professional soldier. I certainly do not mean to de preciate the high character of the regular army. But I cannot refrain from saying that in a Republic like ours great care should be taken not to demoralize it by in stilling political ambition into the minds of its ellicers. The army is there to obey the orders of the civil power under the law as it stands, without looking to the right or left. And it will be an evil day for this Republic when WA) inspire the Gen erals of our army with the ambition to se cure the highest power by paving their way to it with political pronuncianientos. I will not impute to Gen. Hancock any such design. He may have meant ever so well when he issued General Order N 0.40, which is now hold up by a political party as his principal title to the Presidency. But you ores establish such a precedent and who knows how lone- it will be belbre you hear of other general orders issued fir purposes somewhat similar to those for which they are now issued in Mexico I am for the subordination of the military to the civil power. And therefore I au, for mating Congressman Garfield Presi dent, and for letting Gen. Hancock remain what he is, a General, always ready to draw the soldier's sword at the lawful command of the civil power. What have we on the other hand in the Republican candidate ? His youth was that of a poor boy. He lived by his daily labor. Ile rose up from that estate grad ually by his own effort, taking with him the experience of poverty and hard work and a lively sympathy with the poor and hard-working man. He cultivated his mind by diligent study, and he stored it with useful knowledge. From a learner he became a teacher. When the Republic called her ions to her defense he joined the army, apd achieved distinction in ac tive service as one of the brave on the battle field. He was called into the great council of the Nation, and has set tere for nearly 20 years. No great question was discussed without his contributing the store of his knowledge to the fund of in formation necessary for wise decisions. His speeches have ranked not only among the most eloquent, but among the most in structive and useful. Scarcely a single great measure of legislation was passed during that low , period without the im print of his mind. No man in Congress has devoted more thorough inquiry to a large number of important subjects and formed upon them opinions more matured and valuable. He was not as great7a sol dier as his competitor for the Presidency', but lie has made himself, and is univers ally recognized as, what a President ought to be, a statesman. He understands all phases of life, from the lowest to the high- " est, fur he has lived through them. He understands the great problems of politics, for he has studied them and actively par- ticipated in their discussion and solution. Few men in this country would enter the Presidential office, with its great duties and responsibilities, better or even as well, equipped with knowledge and experience. He need only be true to his record in or der to become a wise, safe and successful President. If the people elect him, it will be only because his services rendered in the past, are just of that nature which will give assurance* of his ability to render greater service in the future. The country wants a statesman of ability, knowledge, experience, and principle at the head of affairs. Ilis conduce as a legislator gives ample guarantee of great promise in all these things. In a few months you will have to make your choice. I know that when a party has been so long in power as the Republican party, many citizens may be moved by a desire for a change. In not a few cases it may be a desire for the sake of a change. While the impulse is natural, it should not be followed without calm discrimination. Prudent men will never fail to consider whether the only change possible bids fair to be a change for the better. It is true . that parties are apt to degenerate by the long possession of power. The Republican party cannot expect to escape the common lot of humanity ; but no candid observer will deny that within a late period the Re publican party has shown signs rather of improvement than deterioration; and that it possesses the best share of intellegenco, virtue and patriotism of the country. In matters of most essential moment to the public welfare it can be safely better-coun ted -upon for efficient and faithful service, while its opponent opens only a prospect of uncertainty and confusion. The Dem ocracy may, in the course of time, gain the confidence of the people ; but that should be only when the repudiationists and the advocates of unsound money have ceased to be in its ranks so powerful and influen tial an element as seriously to threaten the great economical interests of the country; when by energetic and successful action in protecting the rights of the voter, whether white or black, whether Republican or Democratic, in all parts of the country, and by the suppression of fraud at the ballot-box through a healthy and irresisti ble power of public opinion within itself; it will have won the right to appear in its platforms as the protector of the freedom and purity of elections, and when it will find it no longer necessary to discard the ablest of its statesmen and to put a General of the army, who has never been anything but a soldier, in nomination for the Presi dency, to make for itself a certificate of loyalty to the settlements of the great con flict of the past. And for these reasons, in my opinion, the interests of the Republic demand the election of James A. Garfield to the Pres idency of the United States. Hancock as a Brute. Cincinnati Da,;ly Gazette. It is not our intention at the present time to expend any campaign ammunition on Gen. Hancock. We have no need of so doing, for we have alleged facts in re gard to his ways recorded five years before his name was ever mentioned in connection with the l'residency, and when there was no apparent motive for invention or exag geration. They show that he was not mere ly the ornament of dress parade whom the . soldiers nicknamed General Strut, but a coarse and unfeeling man. In 1563, Sur . genii Alfred J. Castleman, of the sth Wisconsin Regiment, Tublished a volume entitled "The Army of the Potomac, a Diary of Unwritten History from the Or ganization of the Army by Gen. George B. McClellan to the Close of the Campaign in Virginia, about the Last Day of Janu ury, 1863." This testimony of an eye• witness is very interesting and may be maid to give a pretty faithful portrait of a rer eonage often mentioned in its paees Un der date of October, 1861, Dr. Castleman says his regiment was "transferred to a brigade under command of Brig. General Winfield Scott Hancock, an officer of fine appearance, but with ratar a narrow fore head, and from what little 1 have seen of him I should presume hint to be at least excitable if not irritable." This opinion was not mistaken, for about three weeks later we find the author writing : "Brigadier-General Winfield Scott Han cock it' the very antipode of Gen. Smith. He is fully as long as his name, with the title prefixed, and as for quiet and courte sy—Oh, fie ! I saw him come on to the field one morning this week to brigade drill. He was perfectly sober. He is one of those paradoxes who believe that one man, at least, is to be known by his much talking. Ile became excited, or wished to appear so, at some little mistake in the maneuveering of his brigade, and the vol ley of oaths that rolled and thundered down the lino startled the men with sus picion that they were under the command of seine quartermaster, lately made Gener al, who mistook the men for mules, and their officers for drivers. He must be a facetious chap. that General, to wish to excite such suspicions. I think he hails from Pennsylvania, but nobody seems to know much about him, except from his statement that he has been "seventeen years in the service and knows all about it." Whoever he has been, he has cer tainly acquired a perfect intimacy with the whole gamut of profanity." This was by no means a solitary out break. On January 2, 1562, the men in hospital under the Surgeon, twenty seven in number, were rejoicing over their Christ mas and New Year's boxes. Then follow ed this scene : "This morning as I was prescribing for them (all sitting up,) some reading the morning" papers, and talking loudly over war news, some playing whist, some chess, some checkers, some dominoes, all laugh ing and merry, Gen. H. walked in, and looking for a moment along the line of sick, exclaimed, "What the h-11 have you got there ?" 'My hospital, General."— "A brigade," replied he in his roughest manner, "of a d—d sight better men than you have left me. Where are your sick, sir ?" "All here, sir." "Well, this beats anything I have seen in the army, and if you give your men such beds and such comforts as this you will have every man of your regiment in hospital before a month." A little later during the winter the Sur geon went to see a detachment of his reg iment which had been appointed to guard Hancock's headquarters. He says : "Around the house occupied by the General was a large ditch some five feet deep and some ten or twelve feet wide, dug as the commencement of a fort. In this ditch, over which a few evergreen boughs had been thrown as a covering, stood a well dressed lieutenant (from my own regiment) with a squad of soldiers guarding the General's house—the lieu• tenant trying to infuse into the men a lit tle warmth of patriotic feeling, while the winter torrents poured through the ever green branches, and their whole frames shook with cold in this sentry house, char itably built for them by orders of the Gen eral, who at that moment was being joyful over his wine, and with his friends But it was not cold-hearted indifference only that characterized Hancock's conduct toward the men under his command. He was mischievously meddlesome. Dr. Cas tleman writes under date of March 13 : "The effects of Gen. Hancock's vindic tive meddling with the medical department are beginning to manifest themselves.— When he took from me my well trained hospital attendants and my -experienced druggist, on the sth inst., their were ap pointed in their places men worthless in the ranks, and without knowledge of the important duties which they were to per form in the hospital. The druggist knew not one medicine from another, and to day three men are poisoned by a mistake in dispensing medicine. One of them is al ready dead; the other two suffering severe ly, though I have hopes that they may yet be saved. Thank God I was absent at the time, and had nothing to do with either dispensing or administering; and yet,should I write that the vindictiveness was not yet gratified, would the world credit it ? It is even so. I have addressed to the General a respectful letter, setting forth the facts and urging the restoration of my druggist, but he refuses ! Would he decimate his brigade to gratify his vindictiveness ?" The sick were not the only persons who suffered from Hancock's unfeeling selfish ness. On the 14th of May the journal no tices the arrival of his command at the Pa munkey River, and continues : "One circumstance occurred on our ar rival here this morning, showing the dif ference between officers and men, and so characteristic is it of the man that I can not refrain from recording it in my journal . as "feed for the thoughts" hereafter. We found some negroes drawing a seine in the river here. Some soldiers made a bargain to make a draw fur them, fixing a price and paying fur it. The men had been on short rations of hard bread and salt mo.:t for several days. Being compelled to carry their provisions in their haversacks, they can carry nothing but this simple food, while the officers, having transportation at command, take with them all the comforts of the country. Well, the net was cast, and while the drawing was going on, Gen. Hancock rode down to the beach and watched the operation with much apparent interest. The draught was nearly at shore ; the hungry mouths and watching eyes of the soldiers were being gratified by the an ticipation of a feast, for it was now be yond doubt that the net was cast at a pro pitious moment, and was coming in loaded with herring, shad and eels. But what right had common soldiers to indulgences like these ? The General's mouth watered, too. The instant the draught was brought to land the bayonets of the General's guard bristled all around, and the General's ca pacious bays received every fish ! Off they were carried for himself and friends, with. out even a nod in acknowledgement." Too months later the journal declares that Hancock was evidently "possessed of one very Napoleonic trait of character— that when an object is to be attained the lives of men are not to be estimated." It adds: "The men were exposed and hard worked. The efforts of the surgeons were not seconded. Their advice was disregard ed. Sickness increased." In August, when the weather was very hot, another example of the General's inhumanity was affogded. On August 19 writes Pr. CAS-. tlewan : "This morning we started early. The day has been intensely'hot, the dust almost insufferable. Gen. Hancock was in com mand of his brigade. We had made a rap id march of about ten miles. The men were fatigued, footsore and thirsty. In many instances, two or three having to de pend on one canteen, it was soon emptied, and when we stopped to rest after the ten mile march, were in sight of a large spring of beautiful cold water. But the General ordered that not a man should leave the ranks to fill his canteen. It was hard to bear. but the men submitted iu patience till they saw the soldiers from other bri gades passin g from the spring with their canteens fille d. This was too much, and they began crying out, "Water, water."— Immediately the General dashed among them, proclaiming "Mutiny" and demand ing the offenders. Of course, no one could tell who they were. He then turned upon the regimental and company officers, "d—d them to h—l," and spent some time in con signing the soldiers to the same comforta ble quarters. After he had got them la beled for that kingdom, he told them their officers were "not worth a G— d—," and having exhausted his vocabulary of gen tlemanly expletives, calculated to encour age subordination, he called the men in line and put them through the evolutions of a brigade drill for about half an hour, and thus were they rested to resume the web. These men—this remnant of a fine army who bad been dragged through the p utrid swamps of the Chickahominy till they were more like ghosts than men—were thus rested, thus drilled, thus marched, thus abused." And the subject of these charges is the gallant officer whose martial qualities are set forth equally to be admired by North and South! If sneering at sick men in hospital, if robbery of soldiers' food, if pro. fane denunciation of the commanders un der him, and utter disregard of every in stinct of humanity are puts of chivalrous strategy, the less we have of it the better. If such are the graduates whom West Point turns out, no one will regret to see it soon among the instituaions of the past. The late war was fought by American free men, who voluntarily sacrificed home and even life for the welfare of their country. They were no unwilling conscripts, forced into battle at the point of the bayonet, but had they been a horde of recaptured deserters, they could hardly have been treated more contemptuously than by Gen. Hancock. He may run well at the South, but the votes which he will get from those who served under him will be wonderfully small. The Party of Free Ballots(?) The Yazoo Rebels' Plan—They Don't in tend ilny Votes Shall be Cast for Gar. field There. F. P. Dixon, the brother of H. N. Dix on, the victim of the assassin Barksdale, has just returned to Washington, from Ya zoo City, Miss., whither he went against the wishes of his friends to see his broth er's widow before she died. Mr. Dixon remained in Yazoo for a few days, altho' his friends believed that his life was in per il, for after his brother's murder be was driven out of the state by the murderers, who warned him that death awaited him if he should ever dare to return. He is as fearless as his brother was, and on one or two occasions he said to men whom be knew that he was a supporter of Garfield and that he believed . that Garfield would be elected. These men at once informed him that they would not tolerate such talk in Yazoo and that it would be safer to in dulge in such expressions of opinion in Washington, to which place they advised him to return at once. The Yazoo Herald noticed his arrival and also his political views, and informed him editorially that such opinions were not wanted there.— Even one of' the most conservative farmers on the river, about three miles above the city, Nathaniel Ingraham by name, gave him the same warning while Dixon was making a social call upon the family. "I like you personally," said be, "but we can't have men here who talk as you do, and say that you hope and believe that Garfield will be elected. We don't intend that any votes shall be cast for Garfield here, and if you feel as you talk you had better return to the North." Mr. Dixon says that a half dozen colored men cannot get together in the street in Yazoo with out interruption from white Democrats who declare to them that they shall not discuss politics, and forbid them to mention the Republican national ticket. He adds that it was the general expression of the Democrats in Yazoo whom he met that no votes should be cast for Garfield there; and that no discussion involving any sup. port of the Republican party should be al lowed Cemeteries for Dead Confederate So!- diers. 6kiutheru Democrats are now quietly at gulag that the political disabilities of those who participated in the rebellion having been removed, and the living relics of the rebelion having been thereby absolved from all taints of treason, the time has come when immunity should be extended to the rebel graves, and the dead be treated as magnani mously as the living Confederates. In oth er words, they say that while the law makes no distinction now between the living ones who fought for or against the Union, and rebel leaders are allowed to fill any office in the land, the dead Union soldiers only are commemorated with marble monuments at Government expense. They mildly sug• gest that this is a discrimination unfair and inconsistent. J. J. McLernore, a candidate for Congress in Alabama, announces him self as favoring the pensioning of Confeder ate soldiers and establishing National cem eteries for Confederate dead. lie grandil oquently says : "Of the Federal soldiery, marble slabs proudly mark the hallowed spots where sleep the martyred fallen,and gilded annuities gem the bosoms of the honored living; while of the Confederate or Sou th ron, the dead moulder unrecognized—expatriated —and the living go unrewarded. This distinction should cease, and we should place ou r countrymen —Federal and Confederate, living and dead—up on the same plane of equality." NO. 31.