She Republican. (EllRUC 11. (.Olll'I.ANI'Kn, Kilitor. cLEAiiriEr.n, r.v. WEDXESDAY MOllNIMS. OCTOIIF.H in. wa. On. Frank I'. Hlair- Im been nmn inotoil by tlie. I e nine rut a of St. Louis furllit) Loj'iitlutiiiv.jintl will ' elected. I)eao Jloii. J. I.-. Kimklo, n prom inonl ilurrihtiur lawyer nnj pulili dun, died lii tlmt city on Friday, lie formerly rejireocntcd li is district in Congress. O'Neill, ono of llie Uttdictil Con gressmen in, riiiludcljiliin, who wus elected two yi'iu'8 ngn by n majority of 2,6:20, Iiuh been dufvulcd by Crecly, who lia 427 majority. This in cer tainly n good lick nl the black Re publicans. How is Tins! It has been fre quently remarked by military men, that the. negro toldier killed more Union tbun Confederate soldiers du ring the war. If thin be si, it uc counts for the fatality produced in the Radical rank on election day. Their voting like their kbooting, kills their special friends. Such "pet lambs" aro certainly unsafe creatures to fon dlo and care. UtncKMKD IIurriijburj, our Slate Capitol, bus been rescued from negro and Uadical rule. Verbcke, I)em.,and Weaver Dein., huvo been elected Mayor and Treasurer, by 200 major itr. Notwithstanding tho fact that the Radical majority in tho city one year ago was 228, und nearly ncven hundred negroes were added to the Moil" forces. Negro voting, like no jro fighting is a failure, and proves a dead lo.-s to the employer. Hadipa r.ts.M Illiktratk.d. It lakes S2,000 whito taxpayers in this nine teenth disti ict to elect a Congressman. Yet SCO negroes elected ono in the filth, C30 ebcted the member in the seventh, 01)0 in the ninth, and to on in proportion. Tho IT.OuO negroc voters in this State, have moro mem bers of Congress than 200,000 whito men. In other words : Two hundred thousand white Pennsylvania taxpay ers will have fewer members in the next Congrces than the seventeen thousand negroes, twelve thousand of whom pay no tux nt all. How is that for high, "white tiasb ?" Tue Trsr Oath AB.iLisiir.D In the City of Washington, on Saturday, I ,the Supremo Court of tho District of Columbin, decided to abolish the rule requiring the odious lest oath of ap plicants for mcmbciship of the bar. The Supremo Court of tho United States decided tho oath unconstitu tional some lime ago, but tip to Sat urday, the Supremo Court of tho Iiu tricl of Columbia, bad steadily refused to accept the ruling, insisting that it had a perfect right to dictate the terms of admission to practice at tho bur. Thus we see ono prop uftor an other knocked from under the odious fabrick erected by Radicalism. Flow is this "roti limn 1"' The election is now ov.t, but we want to sk everybody, and particularly, Election ofliccrs, how they like the fifteenth amendment? I)id not tho Judges, Inspectors and clcrke all lake n oath lo support tho Constitution of this Commonwealth f If 60, why did they allow negroes to vote ! Docs not that samo Constitution fay that nono but frco xchite initio citizens shall have the right to voto at elec tions in this Commonwealth S The negroes voted. Now what we want to know is, whirl) i worthless,an election officer's oath, or tho Constitu tion? Again: What kind of states manship id it which compels tit iters to perjure themselves fur any pur pose? As such is the fact wo want norno Radical defender lo nnsver iheso questions upon moral grounds. Vie now niuke the charge tli.it every election board which nllon-id the lie grors to vole aro guilty of moral, if riot legal perjury; and tho politics! economist who udvocatcs and enacts such highly offensive laws, should be polilical'y damned, in a country in habited by Christians. Carpet Rao Piiii amiiiioiy Gov. Alcorn of MisMrsipp, ho, had t10 ,. brariiin and a clerk arrested for rob ting tho State Library. They are charged with Healing seventy five Volumes of Slato reports from the of fice of tho Secretary of Slato. The testimony indicates that Furness fur-tii-dicd the books to Werles, twenty five Volumes of which were lo bo sent to John M. Lnngton, tho negro cler gyman of the llouind University, nd the balance to be divided between Werles nnd Furness. Tho prisoners "rebeld iu $1,000 bail They are from Ohio. Both these thnp, Wl.rc ; Ul0 ftrmy during the war, and dipped home l-iunos and silverware, ,ici, t,(J. fovnl down South. HC.I1F6 ,.ir philanthropic ideus in furnishing books for (ien. Howard's Negro I'ni. vcrsity. These "grand moral idea" inculcntors should get out a patent right for their philantropic schemes. or they will soon find tho "prt lambs" infringing ujon their invention. How iiging iijKtn llte.r invention. How .1 restraint, and rer.de., tic, ,.,,- oftb.flAf.r.djli-titirerMtL r, , necessary a hell is, in view of such scoundrc moral erty of tb t r us We feel o good over what buppen e. on Tuesday, the lllhinst, and our i: 1.,-olhrcn bel so bad, that Xve scarcely know nt to niv. " 1 he colored' troops fougl.l bravely," but it was no g . Sometimes wo feci like singing : 'l,. Hi. (I T,'t 1...1 liT llir." "I f. -1 hit.' a ti.,.nnii,; or something tUo. Privately : we were very near get ting "high" over tho result. A gain jif.'i Democratic Congressmen, a N'li ator and eight memiiers oi mo i..;;.- , , r .i e .i..J lature, when nea.ly one fourth of the ...i . f Democrats stayed at home, is eonclu sive evidence tlmt a subslunliul change has set in. and tho day for tho Radi cal funerul is not far off. Pennsylva nia is Democrat io by 20,000 major ity. The Slato of Indiana has gone Democratic by ;",000. The Senato is a tie and tho Democrat have 8 maj. in the House, giving them tho U. S. Senator in place id' tho scalawag Mor ton, who bad promised Grant to go lo England, but now backs out and says he does not want a copperhead to get his seat until after tho 4th cf March next, tiood byo Morion. The New Senators'. The Stnto Senate is composed of 33 members, who hold for threo years, one-third of whom aro elected every year. Eight of the eleven elected this year aro Democrats and threo Radicals from the following districts, viz: 111. Philadelphia, 1. A. Naglo. D. V. Chester Delaware nnd Mont gomery, Hurry S. Evans, R. VI. Hucks, jesso W. Knight, P. VII. Lehigh and Northampton, E. Albright, D. VIII. Dorks, J. D. Davis, D. IX. Schuylkill, Win. M. Randall, D. X I V. Lycoming Union and Snyder, Andrew II Dill, D. XXI. IJlair, Huntingdon, Centre, Milllin, Juniata and Perry, R. B. Pe inker, D., and D. M. Crawford, D. XXV. Allegheny, Ceo. II. Ander son. R. XXIX. Crawford and Erie, Geo. 15. Delameter, R. The Senate will stand 10 Demo crats to 17 Rudtculs. HuTing cheated the Democrats out of Mr. Dimond last winter, w ho was elected from Phila delphia, a year ugo, by the Demo crats. Tho Radicals will have the Senate this winter for tho last tiuio in this generation. How the Cat Jumped. Tho late election has played tho deueo with Radicalism. Its strongholds have, been captured without firing a g'in. To illustrate a liltlo no will refer lo a few counties, Erio gavo Grant a majority of 3,4ii4, she now gives Seo field 1,500; Crawford county gave Grant 1,900, she now elecls a Demo cratic President Judge by COO and sends a Democrat to the Legislature. Mercer gave Grant 000, she now gives tho Democratic Congressman 50 majority. Warren county gave Grunt 1,300; she now gives her own Scofield about 600, and elects a Dem ocratic Sheriff and Commissioner. In other sections of the State tho Ui ion smashers have met a similar fate. The condemnation is most substantial and scathing. Doing done calm, cool, and deliberate. The voters labored under no excitement. A Gratifying Rmult The elec tion of Hon. Andrew II. Dill, to the Scnalorship from Lycoming, Union and Snyder, and tho threo members of Assembly, is particularly gratifying to us. That section was our tramp ing ground during our boyhood, and right well do wo remember old names, although a third of a century lias elapsed sineo we migrated. The Ens, ton Sentinel refering to tho election of Mr. Dill, says : "Just as we go to press we have a dispatch from Klisha Allis, Esq., w ho is at Williamsport, announcing the gratifying fact that Mr. Dill, the Dem ocratic candidate for State Senator in tho Lycoming, Union and Snyder dis trict, is triumphantly elected. Old Cameron' greenbacks could not cor rupt Iho indomitable Democracy of that district. Mr. Dill served in the Uoiie of Representatives lust session, snd is ono of the rising young men of this Stule talented and pure." The State. As there was no State officers voted for at the lute election, it will Lo some time before wo will te able to lay ihe Democratic majority beforo our reuders, as can only bo ob tained by summing up the vote in tho twenty four Congressional Districts. Dul we have returns enough to show that tho State has gone largely Dem ocratic; and tho reason wo havo not carried the Legislature, aiises from the fact that tho Radicals havo so formed the districts that it is impos sible for the Democrats to carry tlmt body without a complete revolution. Another election will turn Radicals and niggers upside down, and of course give us the Legislature. Good bye Cameron. The Oi.n Wm-WAoom. Nobody feels so bad over the result of tho late election, as Came ron and that class of lararoni. He has seen tho United Slates Scnalorship glido away from i him as calmly nsihc selling sun. The result of Tuesday, the llth, has , f , r , ' , " sealed the fate of all such renegades i as him, Forney, tieary, Scott, Scofield and that class of cormorants, who lit erally devoured the Democratic parly in l!."9 and CO. They have, however, done a good work for the State anj people, even in their old nge. They huvo so cfTcctuidly destroyed the black Republican paity, that there is not respectable men enough left in it, to give ihe remains a decent burial. Comiiussmas. We have no official returns from our Congressional district r.-.i , 3 , k ' . .' n'Wr M great dia- jt " w at free, Uuk. were dn- j k (iii(.-;ercun i.iii.icrdian our own county ; but it f.'fN. Itohtl l I.'. I.ff. This greatest of li it'll Americans. cspired nl his home in i.exingion, irgima, ontt.e Uli. im. , , .. , aim .' :n i is me ..;, . tins of that Stale, says : It is with unaffected grief llml I aniioiinco to you tho painful inlelli uenio of tin? death of (iencral Robert i:. l,eo, ul Lexington, on yesterday morning lie died, us ho had lived, a nnlilo example of llio sublime prin ciples and teachings or the Christian religion, llo goes down to tho tomb amid the lamentations of an ntl'ectioii- '.... nn .1 unrciif In! tll'iili UV I OXII IP(I "" i . " . .. . pub he am private virtue, in his lile I ;. of our ciiiiceiilinn of a man. A strick- en family, n bereaved State and iilllic ted people bow w ith reverence and humility beforo thin visitation of Di vino Providence. It is filling that you, llie representatives of tho people, should tuko such appropriate union as the me lancholy occasion suggests, and I believe you would but give ex pression to ihu universal desire of llie people, should you solicit tho inter ment of the remains upon tho grounds owned by tho State, nt Hollywood Cemetery, where hereafter they may ruiso a monumental shall, commemo rative alike of ihoir sincere and last ing tiffeclion for tho man and their profound appreciation of his greatness and goodness." Tho Philadelphia Aje thus appro priately refers to his death : Robert E. Leo was bred amid llie associations of the American Revolution. His lather, General Henry Lee, called popularly Light Horso Harry Lee, was one of the most conspicuous ofll-i cers of the war for independence, lie was afterwards eminent in civil life. As a member of Congress, ho pro nounced before that body tho funeral oration on the death of Washington, and in it uttered ihu felicitous phrase that has since become, proverbial : ' lie w as first in war. first in peace ami first in tlin hearts of his countrymen." By marriage, Robert K. Leo after wards nd led n new association with tho Father of His Country; Mrs. Lee is the daughter of George W. P. Cur tis, the son of Mrs. Washington, and the adopted son of her second hus band. There was no period of bis life, from his youth at West Point, throughout his career in military ser vice, that Lee was not filling with the highest distinction tho position he occupied. As a cadet, he was gradu ated with the highest honors. As a Cuplain of Engineers in tho w ar with Mexico, bis rank by no means meas arcs the importanco of his services. Ho was the trusted, confidential staff officer of tho General in Chief. Scott always made the most ample and gen erous acknowledgement ol big merits They wero varied and impoitant, for he was as ready in action as in coun sel. His personal courage, indeed, was of that habitual and iiupurtura blo kind that seemed too much a part of his nature to bo the subject of spe cial commendation. It is almost su perfluous to ny ol him that ho was brave amid all tho ordii nry perils of Iho soldier. One instance, of a rather peculiar character, however, occurs to us. The battle of Contreras wus won by a flank movement, w hich, at tho ( lose of a day of hard und indecis ivo battle, carried a body of American troops across a region which ihe Mex icans bad fondly deemed impassable. It was tho ground known us "the Pedregal," u vast field of volc.ii.ic rocks, chasms and precipices. Across this, tho American troops (und the brigade of General Cudwalader, of this city, was among them) painfully crawled and scrambled, arriving at night-fall on the opposite side. Lee accompanied this movement; but no sooner was it effected and ihu troops posted for an attack tit daybreak, than be, solitary and alone, retraced bis steps amid all tho perils of the way, enhanced by darkness and in llie presenco of the enemy's skirmish ers, lo inform General Scott upon llie situation, and concert the decisive at tack on ihe next morning, which was to retrieve tho unfavorable result of j the first day's operations. This was a feat of remarkable daring, and it was characteristic of tho man w ho did it. Well might Scott call him, in bis report, "tho gsllunt and indefatigable Captain Leo as distinguished for felicitous execution as lor science and daring." His nioro recent career is too well known to need recnpitululion. Bi ixt News. The "Gotcrnmcnt" at Washington, must have hail a hap py timo of it the day after tho elec tion, if whut Forney's VrM of the loth says is true. The ' Government" und old Simon must havo been terri bly exercised over Allegheny. The "Republican victories" do not prove to be Uiick Republican such as the political hatlots nt Washington desir ed. Read w hat iho "dead duck "says : " Wasimnoton, Oct. 12. 1ST0, "The President lias been ail day in j receipt of dispatches giving accounts or republican victories. 1 ho results, lie says, aro even belter than he bad been led to anlicipnlc. lie to day re ceived a dispatch from Senator I'tim eron at llarrisburg, saying: "This State is right sido up. Tlio Allegheny district we have carried by a sweep, ing majority over tho copperheads and boiler combined. Luzerne de feats Woodward and gives us a re publican Congressman. Killinger, re publican, succeeds Cake, and wo hold our own every where clso. O'Neill is said lo be beaten, but if be is, he it sup planted ly a gooil republican and a soldier. Tho legislature is decidedly republican.' " We nio glad to know ' this Slate is right sule up ami dial Senator Cam eron sees it from our stand point. ror llie purpose of substantiating the Senator's dispatch we give elsew here r,',,irn" f"" the several congressional l','"1,1 l"' W '"i1"0 ,il , ,bo l"i"d tbat tlie radicals havo lost kix, mem- l,t rs of Conurr. Lioiit in Dark Places Sloan, Democrul, ha been elected to the Legislature from Indiuna. Crawford connly also sends a Demwrnt, and so does Delaware county. There aro no three darker spots in tho Stato. The Kgyptian duikness which has prcvai I, s . i L- I J ! l,!.sl,(.(n(l,-,.elle,l,(1.rkie.ai,J nil- ! And '-Wo'll bo guy uml Imppy still." Motiii.r 1'rNTRE. Our demoerntic lirclliurn in olj Centre, gavo the ni ,;er and tl.eir l.ito allies a complete ' . W,' , '. ( l,,"r' l,nm -"' i',tLn l'"')''-'! .J"- MfV1k-1 "p"" unmnriihly." Tl.ia is tl.o l,f r t . , ' w-J-nly year wo l.avc had lately for pwi in.-. for tlio LepsUlur.. 1 l.o whole Iem- j morality, cf tho MeilioJist render otratic roitBl ieljt U lw!rd .10.I.1 n hart-prr ! i;lccHoii Itcliiriis of ( lenrflclil "mrw'l rBin i M.sTiii-,rs. pii.!' I I tiro. SOS ., IMI tUooin 11.. .: Ilm.ll'ont . I!r:uly Ilunixi'le.. ' in,1 Js w f'J i Tl r. I Hi U V- (HI, 51! ifs I it ' I M in Si 77 271 7ll 711' ltd 4'J1 Slli J7 ;.s' s'lt 22 4s as; t 77; 207' 21 I.i7l .VJ 114 C II I I'llClt K. 77' :.! it S7 he.' 4'J T2 Sl' rit-Nrilplil ('nrwrnmlli. Ilirnlur.. t-VrguKHti otiunl llilirii... Oi-Hhton liuh.'h Mutton Joriiun Rurltiaiu Knnl I.iiwrriii! I.tnnlisr City Murro ,,w tYNhtiiiiKtmi O'MSflil IVnn t'nion Woodward So: i.r. 41' 81 :v.! 67l i7' (Si is 4" Sit 22 III' 211 SII; 44 112' SI . i I Hi I IWl II..; S4 fi.s; 4i Total M:otritv . ,!;e,(K ii.'isn i:i7,i2.i The WicKF.itesT Man Dead. John Allen, noted two yours ngo us tho "Wickedest Man in Now York," died on tho 1 til It of last month, at West Forth, in that State, wheru his lather resides. John, it may be remembered, kept a dance bouse und drinking sa-1 plerco their way through the I'ruwdtin loon in Water street, and turned his lines, wero assailed by fresh divisions establishment into a place of daily , of Frisians, which had advun'ced to prayer, under the inflnenco of several llie support of Von Kanimer. During gentlemen connected with the Ilow-'thn night ilia French mado many ard .Mission. More than a year ago, brilliant but desperate and hopeless he moved into a large brick building, j attempts to crush iho 1'riissiun centre, which ho had erected ut Roosevelt and ; A ilispatch from Rlieims announces tlulnviu streets, and kept a grocery, that lbs Prussian commander at Laon on the ground floor. Tho upicr lie has issued a proclamation to Iho in rented to families At first he attend-; habitants of tho department of the ed to business, and prospered ; but uf-! Nisiie, declaring that four Frenchmen, ter the death of bis wife, his old habit ' innocent or guilty, w ill bo shot for of drinking nvercamo him. Hu lived 1 every Prussian whom tlio inhabitants in idleness for six months previous toj may kill. his death, and bis store wus without The battlo of Saturday ended, as goods. In August, ho went to bis did its predecessor on Friday in the lather's farm, remained there until his! defeat of tho French, they being driv. decease. lie leaves over 1100,000 on in confusion into Metis. Tho car earned chiefly by bis nefarious Water, nago was more dreadful lhan on Fri slreet pursuit. While residing in day, and the Prussians now have llie Roosevelt street, ho frequently visited "task of providing for tho dead and the Howard -Mission in his sober ! wounded of both armies, which will moments, and professed religion. Mm hnfi l liKF.n! Forney's rrrs wn soivle ulHieted tho morninir ufler, the election. The slaughter of half a score t.f lovnl scal.iwiHM caused Iho dead duck'' to quack thusly : "Western Pennsylvania hag been do ing badly. It begins to look as if the Sixteenth, Kighieenth, Twentieth, Twenty tirt, and Twenty-fourth Con gressional districts must he given up. A yet the account are conflicting, and in certain points hardly reconcil able; but even if gomo of theso dis tricts are saved, ihe general current of loss cannot be gainsay cd. Wo await) from tho press of that section an cx- plunation. Kastern Pennsylvania cx poets llie west to account for the slaughter of Cessna, Morrell, Stewart, Giltillnn, and Ionley all in rno action is a little too much, and calls for in vestigation." " I.NFAMots. The following sprciul ! telegram appeared in tho J'lrnihj Tt'.- t iroiih : Washington, October 12. The President received a dispatch from Senator Morton to-day, i-tating that tho Stale of Indiana was carried, yes terday, by the Republican by a small majority. Tho Stute is so districted that the Democrat might carry it by from five to ten thousand majority, and slill the Lcgisluluro would bo Uj pubi'can. Hero is an acknowledgment, an blushingly made, that Indiana lists liecn so outrageously gerrymander d by the Radicals, that a Democratic, majority will not give thut parly rit trol of iho Legislature. It wus sup posed that in this country tho pcile and not politicians, govern. : Bri.i.T roa SAMno. Tho genuine black nigger of tho Thirteenth (bn- gressionul District of New York Uve met in a convention and pascd tbc following resolution : I Too-ri iiiirountmuMK sni .envn or periwig hoi ' 'ii cuntitiut in rote tn irmucrtie -1 ct, '.! III. I r .nT lo ,h.n-K.rd lllcm, .n.l .,11 not gir aot plr or pp..rli..n or hfllfr iii'.ur hnu-. or . :. of t.u.msM, but comi.lcr f m as rnt-nif (u our rtc Inrtrtr. Sensible darkies! Wo wish It 'in Democrat of thill district would sluw as much sense, and "resolve thut no nit no 1 rhis ? Vim i wtitc, do not w ant tho nigger voto would help separate tlio sheep llio goals, or tlie black Irom the according to tlio Scripture. Exi'l.osini. Tho powder wntkn of Messrs Lull in & Rand, near l'dtts-. ille, I'cnna , exploded recently, tic troying several buildings I ,.,!, , J n i'iiil t ii lo 1 killiiir two' : ,i,.,.i. Iho works, and instantly men who wero working in ihet'iuk ing house. Tho bodies of ihejiiien wero iicked up in small pieces. 'The uiiiotint of powder exploded ivni be tween til Ml and 701) kegs, the principal jtoriiou of which wns iu ihv dryli'inr fhis shock wns lerrilie, and was fdl at a distance of tti miles I he e.ss o iho company will amotiiit to aliait $(5,000. A Rkmi.t. Tho Radical majoriy in Chester county, in lsOH, was i.dfi. Thisyeitr, over l.'.'nO negroes voted Uf Radical ticket, nnd iho majority ruif down to 1.7.M). This shows a' lofs tf lllul l,a blnssonn lis well as npo Iruit over l,.'.nii. In Delaware, tho sane! "I,0n n maple tree leaf out a ec average Radical loss is exhibited I ) limc ' i'n. and knows of a the returns. This shows that tlio' l,lutl raspberry bush which has borno Radicals oe moro than they gain by I lwo t'r"Ps tlf berries. coiiiiection w ilh llio negro. , " , , j A man in Washington asked the A Milwaukee paper speaks ol n' President bmv I'arrngul's funerul went young lady lliere who "appears is' ""'" -Nljiv York, lie said it was dec fresh and buoyant as a budding rse iM wet, but thai ho had a splendid after passing through iho dew-gil.ed ''inner at Iho Union League rooms sievo of a fiimrant dawn." ., d..ir,j 11,1,1 "'ii1'1. wl,t" ll'c' Wl'ro Jry she llltlsl ho cunninir ss n siinll..,! ,ltt , OUgh. liii'lding roc, come Ihrounh a "d' - ... gilded sieve" and seo u, dew. So siys "Brick" Pomeroy. j A Boston man claims lo havo nude llie tour of Kuropo for tliin. He is certainly a relative of the church d'h- i eon who bragged that he had belon;fd " ? ,M.r''h f,V "' "a it Ii.hIi.'I cost dim a cent, l'rooailv 10 peuuieu wooiten liinmcR,. r ruU liiscxtK-tiHcsi j.rcj irtfj in regular Sew l .... ..... i ...... i ....(j.M.i, ir, ( 1 I A Mell.mlist preaclier. limned I.ri-.I.' onsion, Imi lu-in (oiinly-October lllli, IftTO. i.ms. ' i "' ' n't'" . K j' s, ! k ,' t ! E ' ; A - MM 5 - i ! ; ? e ' - i tr T t Z -9 I t ,j e .' i fil i L'!.l.L !iJL. sr,. r' ims" sr. sn ss sd 4... pi.'. 4:1 l H I1'-' :n , js :u , 21 .".1 j is .11 si1; 2 21 ! vi 21 ! s. ii ! VV 2-' V'.l 2M '' 21 M ;72' ."( ! 271 54 27 1! .'it 117 ! 7.1 117 ' 73 H7 73 III 76 SV 77; :.' 77! W 7t 5,1 tl.l 21. M 21 I ll-l 21 III., ! IS.. IHU ISI VJ ' s ll'l T3i 4'J- 73 j 4v, ?a j 4s, ;:i Sir S2, Hi 32 j m 32 mi j :in M ! y. ;.c sr. i7 k : 57, :i.s IU I 4'l' 2U 41: 2" 1 4i 2n s! si: ii i v si i v M 22 I'.C 22 Ml 22 ll'l 0 : ; 1 1 4 si "3 4S1 A3 I 4 B3 41 i 57: it- 57! 41 i iJi 41 21 5S 21 f7; 21 .'ol 21 24 i S2 21 I S3! 21 I S3 -21 T 1 2U'Ji 71, 2i:' Ti , 2nV 71 2CI 2S 21' 2: 2( 2i; 21 42 ISO 42 , li'.ll, 42 10 1, 42 si 44, ! 4(! fl 41, 8 42! II.. 42i 115' 42! 114' 42 82 53 I 83 S3 52 73! s;i 731 87! 73 t-s 71 31 ; 3'J 31 i :'). 81 3! 31 2s j Tt, 2I. 7, 2 7b 2s I37i2is7 1374 2.''VI 1374 2VJI 1.11,8 I ,'l'.'l:i i .lilll :lt.v sr. I OS i I'S u.V 274 7.1. S.v VI s 4 Sll i Kl 22 4s' SI III'. 2" ill s 4l S'l is, i7 41' 82 22! 4 in' 2H 41 111 S3! Ml' .'ill 7, 72 ; 2i:t 24 i :'' 42! IS"; t-l 4I1 42 ' II.. 611 j 8'-" 7:1 , S7, .n 1 27 j 7', 'Ciie t'Vniipr t v Waii Ilerlin. Oct. 10. The fighting ut Met?., which was renewed to the northwest on Saturday morning, was a serious battle, it being prolonged throughout the day. '1 lie French, who wero cntlcuvnring to reach an alarming number. Tho los ses of iho French and Prussians art very heavy, iho slaughter resembling tbat of liravelotle. The Prussians havo burnt tho villago of Ab U, alleging for this extreme measuro treachery upon the part of llie inhabitants. It is stated that Lord Lyons recently suggested to liismarck the expediency of un armistice, when liirmurck re plied that Prussia would bo glad to make peace at any timo and any w here but tb it no proposition looking to a truce would tie entertained u moment. Bean Hickman tells a New Y-irk StanJiirJ reporter bow ho came by the name "Ueau: "1 was a coteinporury of Henry Clay; hud the honor of ho ing born down near w here bo was. They boast that old Hanover county produced three great Americans Pal rick Henry, Henry, ( lav, und you know tho other hev F There's no need of a great man being no devilish modest, you know. I inn not w hat I wus, though ; that is a fact. Used lo bo a great beau with tho ladies at While Sulphcr Springs well, let me see, about ls:10. There was an up start there, some foreign Count or other, culled tho 'beau of tho season.' I sworo it was a shumo lo America lo havo to import our dandies. Tho af ternoon I gut there, just before dinner, out on tho verandah, whero every body could hour him, hs called out to his valet, "waistcoat for dinner. Then I culled out, louder yet, to my boy, iiriiig mc my one hundred and ninety second pair of pantaloons and my fif- ty sixth coat. Ho bolted by the next evening's train. Rolled is a word from llie turf, you know. I 'saw him and went ono hundred better,' as Ibcy say in bluff. That' tho way I cumo to be called 'Beau.'" Governor Bowio has directed At- torney Gi-ncral Jones to lake step at once to nswrtnin tho fads connected willi tbe arrest of citizens of Mary land and the forcible taking avray of tiieir properly whilst engaged iii rv. ,-;,, jn r1.'..,j,r Sund I.V tllO Vir .. ' 1 ' ailLtcr nounil, ( 1110 IT g"," Oyster Jvuvy. Iho (jovernor has ulso written in Governor W ulker urging the reluasc of Ihe men now imprisoned ut Drumtnondtown, Ya.. and the return ol their vessels, and suggests that no more arrests he made in tho waters claimed by Maryland until the boundary line question can be si tiled. Chief Justico McKcan had decided that tho Legislature of Utah cannot elect a prosecuting oflicrr for tho Ter- ritorial Court over which hs so ubly . , . Vr?,"lc, 1 Iii decision ejects ihe Mormon Alt'irney (ienrrul from oflice. orney iienrral irom ollice, nnd place all criminal case in the Territory in Iho hands of tho United Stales oilier rs. Just beforo the Republican State convention of Now York, tho lamen ted (ireclcy placed himself "in the hands of his friends." His friends solemnly accepted iho sacred trust and quietly laid tho great agricultur ist and philosopher upon the shelf. Tho editor of tho Mendvillo firpuh- l,c,n 1,0 8l t" a chesluul limb The (ieorgetown .Til say "the dentil of the Republican party would bo a great sorrow lo the nation." Yes, but, liko Juliet's parting with Romeo, it would bo "sucli sweet Bor row." Atno wns recently cut flown nt t'.lers,.oi I l.iel, wn, 275 year, ol.l A .-l..,J ..... u. ,l....,i. Lin I... !,, RX found marking tlie grain ol itt. y.itli year ofuije. j a . - linn i?.,,li...it Liiinnl .. l.iii. ,m (),A nll.er witli l.i.vin 1 -..-U IWri nK will, ll, IVinliec, ten ih.wsii in t.-mji.ville ddrinjf r.it.,.r .,,1. I... .i. Sonielliii. nf tlutl iluiraUef seems to i tho Into (ieorgo D. i newspiiper men have died t.-mjiaville dirinjf lha ptt rrnf, riflV the ItatHrnl rai l). 'Ihe lliidii'itl tiiiij'iiily In this lily, w ill ni l l oino up to ihe number of negro lotes lio-t for lb ( uinlidaies ol tbalpaity. Wilboiil their negro nl In s, Ihe whole flailical ticket would 1,-ivo bctlt delcatcl. Not n man would have been clio-ell. This is rcinlered eel tain by tlio figures.- White men ure disgusted witli Radi cal in tu in the nation nnd city. They feel the ill effects (if Radicul dominit lion. They know Ihe debt bus been augmented, mid taxation increased They petitioned for a repeal of llie in come tax, and their petitions were unheeded. They have In bear llie burden of Radical misrule, and loot (lie bills made by scalawag politicians. These lire Iho reasons which scparaled so many w hile men from iho Radical parly on election day. They wanted a change in the men who act us rep resentatives lor tlio musses. They fell. Iho necessity for such a change. lint their eli'orts and votes were neu tralized by ignorant negroes, who till ed up the gap mado by their depar ture. Negroes, who pity no luxes, but those necessary to vote, w ho luive no interest in the city or Stale, w bo own no properly, who have no Ixisi ness relations tu steady their action ut the polls, stepped into tho places ol merchants, manufacturers, inachanics and workingnien, und elected men lo ollico, whom while voters repudia ted. It was, and is virtually a negro triumph. Whito men wero defeated. TheiiitorcNlsof white men were tramp led iu the dust beneath the feet of ig norant negroes, who to day cannot lell for whom they voted, or what inter ests were at stake. They wero used as the tools of the gang of bad men, who rule tho city and rob the people. The actions of the "Ring" hud pro duced u salutary effect upon intelli gent men. Facts bad taken a lodg ment in the public mind, and if whito men only hud been called upon to render a verdict, in would bnvo been far different from Unit recorded by tlio returns. It is important that business men should look nl the ex hibition of negro voting in our city from a practical point. Tliul point was reached on Tuesday last, when their interests fell beneath tho blows of ignorant negroes, and w ill remain there until a revolution, moro general lhan that indicated by iho action of Tuesday, can bo cllecteJ. In the future, the Radical party will be run in tho interest of llie negroes. They must elect thut ticket, und. as a mut ter of course, lliey will be foremost in all movements ol a political character. To this complexion has tho Radical party came at lust. It is no longer un organization of while men, anxious lo futrther and protract tho intcreMs of thut class of citizens. It is a com bination of corrupt w hite politicians and ignorant negroes. Tho former will do the scheming and fixing, the lutter tho voting. And by such a combination, Philadelphia, will be ruled, unless astiil more radical change comes over the mindsof a certain class of whito men. The Democratic party will lubor to effect that change iu the future as lliey have in the pu-t. It must como. Whito men will not suffer iho interests of this city to be ruined by negroes. A:te. IfYsfrrit llrpublirnHitM. In Missouri llie Republican party is divided into two tactions, upon the question of the removul of disfrnn cliisctii' iil from whito men. Tlie Rad ical wing insists that Iho disfranchise ment of the w hites shall remain, while the Republican w ing demand, that ns the negroes havo been enfranchised the disfranchised whites shall be en franchised also. But this is not all of the trouble. The platform to w hich both of theso faction iigreed contain ed a resolution on tho turitf, declar ing for a liirilf for revenue, und against "any system of luxation which will lend to iho creation cf monopolies, and benefit ono industry ul the ex pense of another." This is regarded us opposed to a turill w hoso principal is protection. But this wu adopted without a dissenting voice as tlio pos iti'.n of tho Radico Republican party ol .Missouri on the laritt question, nnd is in direct antagonism willi princi ples of tho "loyal" Republican nf Ihe Must. Commenting tioon this the Cincinnati Gti;itle say. "If any Kas tern prohibitionist is inclined to chal lenge it, he may as well begin to re sign himself litbe fad (hut such a res olution could not bo voted down in any Republican Convention West of tlie mountains. Now, w bat will tho loyal High Tar iff Republicans oi New Kngluiid say to 110? Here i a tc-l of loyalty which louche to the quick New Kng luiid loyalty. We have very great faith that tlio Republican party of the West w ill, ere long, rise to ihu mag nanimity" of making the white man, iu political rights, equal with tlio ne gro. If the bold assertion which Ihe Gizitlc flaunts in Iho lace of Kastern allies is confirmed by Iho general re cognition of tlio principal relating lo tint Turi!! us contained iu the Missouri platform, w e shull begin In think that Ibo Wcsl and the South w ill very soon find themselves in thut very happy condition of harmony, such as led Mr. Jefferson, on a certain occasion to de clare tlmt, "wo aro all Republicans, all Democrats." A IH:ma(io(iik Snn.vr.n. Amon the bright evidence of returning nense it tlio detent of Joshua l)oiii;liis., iho liepiiltlieitn cittulidalo for 1'iesideiit Jiiili;o in Crawford county, nod the election of lion. V. 11. I.owrie, Dem ocrat an nUe jurist and an honest man. Tho pe iplo of Crawford havo achieved immortal honor, and especially those honest lie publican who cast aside the trammclR of tuiiiy lo proservo their judiciary from corruptioii und con tempt. 1 heirs 1st Hie lies! day work of llie campaign Vcnungi Sjwt.it'ir 'UttlrK" Toiiieroy nays : (iraul has a brother in I'hitittto who looks mi much liko tho President thai people are coniiuiially r;ii in him pivsenls, t t - .. i... i I....'. tin., int.. "i.i.i-i i wnj un j i..'iii c;rl any ollice. I'iiss, Kays ll-.ul thini is pla eil mil, nml p ipers ptil'lislied lit that fity fhoiild in justico to llieir icaderM make a note ol it, that they may know liow tlicy uro being victim ir.ed. A vevbimo preacher, who could only ho found on iNiinltty, heinr oblix.l to eerelo himself durum ''10 'ecU lo avoid bin creditor, wn in tl.U wise criticised by a witish henror: "That man," aaid he, "in invisiblo nix dayo intho week, and comprehcnaiblo on tho aeventh.'' Tlie well known unit in New York of Jnliii C. Muliony niriiinst Aui;iist Itt'lmont, for llio recovery ol'il.o I'i ii ian fundi. Iia. been finitlly dt'eided in In vor of Itt liimiit, tlironti the drfuult nf Ihfi f-lintiff, A SstAK AM) Ylf.l.ux Shortly after iho di lh of the lute F. M. Stan ton, Senator Wilson mi inn mil In n miigar.ini) ni l iclr, itit'l dm hired bint a vileTiind cowardly sneak, who. while a member of M r, Pm humtit'" Cabinet, wa in ihe consmiit habit of holding sooret a 1 1 1 1 midnight Hirelings the leading Abolitionist in Congress, and coinmuiiii ating to them ad ibe proceeding ' Ibo Cabinet of which ho was himself a trusted member. Judge Black, a life long Ii lend ol Slnn lon's and on whosa ivciimiiieiiihilioit mainly he was made a member of Mr. liui hunuii's Cnbinel, replied lo this sicminiily atrocious ( barge of H il Sim's, and declared that sii. h lll.l'utli omuble baseness w as not possible, und moreover, us Sinnlon was at ibis same I i mil u while mall, and in the daily habit of denouncing ibo Abolitionists a traitors In lln ii country, and eno mies of republican institution, Wilson was a villiinoiis slanderer of the dead lint Wilson is out in the lust Alliinln' Wuntlily, and puis the mailer beyond all doubt lit Stiinlon wits as vilu a sneak in Mr. Huchaiiaii's Cabinet as he was tyrant nnd villain in that of Lincoln. .Y. )'. J)ny llwli. lieu- JiUf rtiscmcnts. C Alfl KIM. All .r.m r tirn-Lv mnifl.il mt U, nu:alllle s ce;-,tlll I'UO.M LSSOK I NOTK lirrtt br .Nin-jr .McC'riiPkn. in my tuiiil, ilsK"l about Hi ti l r M dr f Wr, la;. ."l ollinj lor $2l'U, st tlit. iits h h'Ti. l"Bl "r ip len lr..m mr. JaAIAII ULOOM. OiMte.vr 19, 170 3t J'-T. 1 1 T A VI'KIH 'I II Silioul IOrrct(,r of Kar 1 f thnm town-hip rmh to einploT Ihrre csin prltnt TtAl'llbH.s lo laks charge "I tlm n-boi-U "f Mid towtiFltip ( Le cotuibj winter. A..li.-a-(ion, with Kajri-r, to b tna.lr to tlie I'rt-ii.lrijt or Secrelary, wiiocan lie sj lrenl Hi bait Livtt I. O., CJcartii'lU couttt5. l'a. J. W. rOTTEIt, Pr:.;j-.,t. Jiiitt'S G!l ulasii, Seeri-tarr. OjllU Zl "I II'lt A V. Strayed from Ihe ut.er,b. r Iu XJ Ura'ly ("wutinj., aot the lirrt of M.ij tatt. a large KEll 11 1 LI., four veara oi l, witli shoe spolv, itar in lit forehead sai lirjfi straight bortia. Anj itil'irinaliun will it Ibukfullj rv reiret, aiei a lioeral reward will l X;Tt-' tu any one fur bta ai-preUcmcn a-id ,K tt n'mi'. ritak ad.lreil ilt.VKY Al'ltANU, Oct. 19 -Slp.1. Treumilc, CliarfiiM Co., Pa. 1.l-.CX'T(tltS) klll K i:. Notice i.lo;-. j I.r ffiren (liat Leiura Teatatnentarv baeutg h"-n ftrnnted (u Ibe tubaeriber, on lite Kitate ul M-IZAlihTil S-Ml Ai deed, late or liraob.rd tt.wnrbip, Ctearbeld eounir, l'v-nnr!ranta, all periKtut tn.ebt-.J to fid Ktatc are rejucted to luaka iiinneiita'e ptyiueut, asd thoie havi.'K eiaimi aaitiat tb aute will pmetil tbeui duly authenticated for atttlrment. KLLIa KUEAL, Eic:u'.or. October 19, 1970 1. IIXIit'LllHCS lllll Nolioe i bere j bv (riven thai letter! teitatocntarj having l.e ii 1n the subieriber en Ihe .-Ma'e ol l.t.olO.K s.MEAL. diesared, lale of Bradford tosmliip, ('learlield eounlv, Pensfylvauia, all pervunl indebted to paid eatate arc rttrit,-d lo make iit'tnediate payment, snd tho- bavitic cluimi agnit.ft tbe aauta will lirtlent tbem dul authentloated for aettlctitstit. W II.I.IAM SMEAL, hll.li k M K A L. Oeiobrr 13, 1 -70:6::p-l. Ktecutora. HENRY RIBLING, HOUSE, SIGN A OHNAMENTAL PAINTEH, Clearfield, Prun'a. Tilt frrvo;rjf putn'inn f cburchfl (. other puMio IuMipj:i will rcrir-panicul4r ttlcQfiun, n wi ll tlte itintinK f carriiffti im aluht. Utt'Jirtc U'ifit in t lie ntrft iyid. A I wurit -rrfintrl. Mi-n uo Fxartti itrtfl, f'Tuterty ocruil by K"ufr il,UC-.rt. osl'J'1 FOR SAL E ! ' TIMBER LAND IN FEIturFON" TOWNSHIP! lIin nuV.Kril-cr off-i fur .Jc rluMt trurt X. of Tim)r Li.il, cuntsiniitjc l"1 Kcni, i;utc iu (tit ft'torr namol tonnshin, within lhr- ciih-i of I-urat er Vity, on the rad U to Arw.tmllt liTtnK on Koth oidei of l.itil OnrStlit Crm-h. SuitaMn- f'ir l-'iCfinj, if (Jriirr-I. Any om t.h in( tn Kfcvrtatn the tcrm or louk nl ihr UhH, mil RbJ the umlf rtito d at i-orpe MrawV, one Hi it a ii'l a half ruth f L'JiuUr Cit. on tbe ruad leading t New .Mi ljrf. IIARNARAS ARMSTRONG. Lumb r City, Octcbtr IU, ls7 linp-1 Uf.PdHT of the rwvlilino of tbe COUNTY KMIONAL lUXKof ClearDel.l, l ihe 0. 0aa of bulincia on tbe 8'b daj of Uotuber, lSTO : tieaot-nctl. 1. 01 aril direoonttw fllM'H 14 OverilratU ,;:.S 7S I'. S. bond! to at'i-ura eireulalioQ T&.tll'O III! liia from redeeming r-aerva aircntl 9.a(.t 93 llue fruT3 mber Vsti.inat rU"k , 6. "In tj Pue from other llankland Ual:berl. t.S.i2 .14 Furniture and lilturvf 1 I. Current exp-naei &.)( ly Chcclf and uttier earb iteuit, tucludinf etanipf (SS 01 Dilli 01 utber National Uana. 4I( e Fraeti.inal eurrenev, including ..Kkela, I,lt3 (0 Sjteeie e-'in t to Legal-tender buUa 17.0UO Oil Tjta! l.t.iiLtrnti. Cnpilat atoek paid .n ..!:. I'ji : ....f)ICM" 00 3 m o eo ll J ill .... J,.1i.i) 17 surpiui lund I'x-.bn je lutereat 1'roSt and Naii.mal Hank nott outmanding In.tiri tua drpueil lue t Uaoaaaad Uauker Tim fi.ru Ml JS .. t.l$3 Vil Tola! X, W. M 8haw. Cahii-r Afth Coiinte XatinM Bn-ak of Clearfield, di aotrmnlr wear tlist tlie alnre lalr.nent ia true to the Ket of tne knnw). l n I O'ief. f. M. Sil Vi, Caakirr. Siibsril.e. an I iworn to tiefore me tti Hill day of O.lulirr, IfTO. (. . Mil (11.11 1, 1. r. J A M r 8 T. I.KONfltp, (iKOUUK L. ItCKIl, Illt'llA'.tD til A IV. llireetora. Correet Attest: Ottolir l, 1879. Kt- PtIHT .r tin eonliil .ri i.f the FIKST . A 1 1 1 1 N A I, U t N K of cteatlel.t. In tha e-uoij. i f llnrne.l. In lha State of Prnnevl. eama. a( th el of buiindsa, od the tin laof Oetwber, lo7u : ttr,a iritrra. t"n an1 Dirrounla ftOS.Ul (l(l leer drafti . ,4,i jj I1. S. Lloet.la to a-eure eirt-tlation lt).i,ti(0 (10 Dua fro'n rt-Jeeniinr an.l Heaerra Airent. i ( j Pua In, in other Nail ma ll..a .s..; VI Hoe Horn other llanaa A llanhera a SVf M Furniture anil Itlturri t,3S!l fo Current Klprnira (il Talea pa'il 745 g Cheeda and 1 ther narb iteota I,JS7 I"1 llilll of other Nati'.nal tUnke IHI l Kraeij.inal eurrenre, inelu.l. oielia:a ZV'J 11 Spei le Coin H Legal rcnilflr notca. fl,ti'0 (in Total, Ilil.JM 4 0.ilal rtoelt fal.l In I Inn MS. 01 uruf lund , 1 7 fit.fi (1(1 I'lirount I. KM It Kieha r;e I 10 47 Interoat ?.l 2t ." a I'n.r.l an.l ! I.;t) 0; National H.n Cireula- ti..n o!itiaalin. I. 491 (II Oivilen-lt unpanl Inn (In lndiei.It.al dei-oeitf 4 0? t? Dua to National llanae .. J. u j( Liua tn other liana. anil Uanaera m p ToUl llabiliiiva )I,J I (1 StUtnf r..'r-..'. CVn,-.f C"'y. .;?. 1. jona. l.., 111.11, -re 1 .. iha I Ir l Nallonl llat.k of I'learl'.i.l, o1., aoh-m il, w-ar ihil tie attoea atat-tn tit ta tfi I., llie be-i nt" mr kn-w. la I if anil belief. JON I. Il' N fn., l Sub-erlbe.l an t ,..rn lo betora uie, Ihia lha llih iif ol Oil. ber, l:ii M. RADEDACll, N. P. Cnttnrrr IrTt.ttl A. K. It' titi., 1 lttrtlann M a..r. Pireetori. A. C. Ktvxrv. I WESTERN HOT eT Opji,,ite lha Ci.url ll.'tire. Cl.EARriF.LI, rtXS'A, Aeeonimo.lation firtl-etan anj eharge mo.lerale. oell JOHN F. YOrMll, 1'r.p.i.tor. I;"! T C -Knnfetnre.l from tbe he7 eharimal 1111, trroee.1 anil aol.lere.1 1.1 oalaiile an. I aarranteilaia- talc I'T 'K i il. f. rr-rn co. S KKT I'lir ATllKS, a( C. K R .TZ Ktt'S, KrplemUer Il:lm (ippoai.a Ihe Jail. 8Tn KS In.n.i.lea A Krrnrr Cook'. Kne., I'atlor Oiorea. Unlet, Tea Kelilei A II .ilera, IV1 J'M A C liRXTJIRH. Crtiiraticiiiit. MH3 II. S. SWAN'S SCHOOL FOK Glim CM: Mil II I.H, I'A '1 11 '!' tttfit'- M"ii'l(i' , S. i.' ntl-t ( jtfj,, i A Ptltnur J ii irFtn tit iM )t r I I- I fi'h'Mtl ihi U'l . I r wlo h fli it. hilt it''iti inr li e i"rn i im t .a ill I ,1 .1.. li .. tit iti'iu iir li e ttr(!tir ami iiWrHf ih'. TMlMn OK TllTlcN. Hrting. ti(i,(frhy, Writinic.Hi j-rf u nt, CritHKiv Antluiiriie nnl i'limaiy ll.o'jrmi-liv j. llictttry, I, -wtil -ut I irtri'tie 4 r .tf T Ja i,j irh sp llrMWiti. ltnmiiirt ul n MVrilifn Ariitimflic f AI'-tTn tlit- vii nct-i u In'ru"ii'in in mtr iinnial m nit- n 'Ml pttlltlid, ?l ltfvJll .... tJh Hni wurk N Kur Full rficuUr fh-l lor t irtjuisr. Clearlivl I, r-t. 7, I I v U. CLEARFIELD ACADEMY, Rav. P. L Harrison. A. M., Principal, , yi-ir ul Mil Inrinui itio ilt i mti ttt , bU.NUAY, lift lh ut .tt'Uii.brt, I A,tl. t ujii dim nntjf Ht Muy lluff. Ihe) t cbafteJ wttt. (uition Iron th tin U t; tbiirii filiated f duratii-n tor onth fnil lb Priprltnl. fciTtnf hud tbt ftdrantttgut uurb iririiee id bin rviiitn, aauri(. remit and jiwird bdd thai hi rmire biiit) tu nrrgin will r devoted lb uml nk tl traibiug tf the jeuih p.Mft-d under bn tiitr I I.NMs OK 1 1 I I Orthofjrmf'hj, Headinfr. Writing, and Prittim tAriihoieiic, per Hvaioti f 1 1 w . - it Grnuimer, Urojtmj br, ArllbnctK. bad Ht-fTj $IH AUel-ri, Geometry. Tritmmftry, Mm- urn t. on, roTxryiftK. rhtlwt'h.T, Tbni. olojTT. Cbrwiatrj. Utk Keeping, UuUitT and l'by-Ml e (trt he . - - ll K Lno, ilrrrk fd Krtatb. with anj f ike Koe Iirnnrle - - - . ft MI'Sli; hma ($ IfPpnfp) . . . $n jfT-Nn df 'lurtt'in tuil) be aiade far aeatm j"Ktr further pert. ruler .t-qaire Af Rrr. V. L. HAHhI&0, A V., fek. J..;o If. P'-nripl. ii. ii it 1 1 (i ii MERCHANT TAILOR (S:orc one dotr eait of flt-ariuld IIjo'i,) Market Mrett. Clearlirld, l'a. KEF P.' a hand a full itf tmeate of Un ,' rurntibinf Uo'de. turb at rbirtt. Liiti u4 Wtiulea t'Dd'-rrbtrt', Itrewer abd iStxli Nerk tifl, Packet flaindberrb.', O'O-, Um tmbn-llaa, 4., In great Tenet. Of tun Uuudf ha keepi the Best Cloih3ofa!l "Shades and Colors,' .-a eh an Black t)fkia of lb ttry ttt anki Kanrj Caeinere, in gre&t ranrif , aUo, rrirl Coating, fifaver, rilMt. .htnrhilia, ai Irira evereusiinf. All of whtrh be eotd thtri Cah, and ma1e up aeerding tu tbe laieit ij.ti by eipeneaeed work wen. AUo. Aceol for LlfartirU rcmale ft I. II iner A CVs. celebrated beaisg Marbinri how, ), lafIS tf. II tihll'tit ST0.E AD EARTHE-MSE OF EVERY UKSCKIPTIOM crocks: rots! crocks; FUhcr'f Patent Al..l,-ht tclf . Stallnf Krnlt I a ml rt'TTEK CKOtKa, wi'd lirla, CREAM CHOCKS. MILK LR0CIJ, AI't'LK llt'TTEIt CFHIKS, I'ltKLE CIU'CKS, flower roi.-, 1'iH Disnrs, STEW TITS. And a great tutor other ftiitia too Bntneraai ta mellllon, Id be bud at FRED'K. LEITZINGER'S STONE - WAKE TOTTERY, turner ol tberrv nnd Third tiuavtr, CLEAKntLD, PA. ai-tJ Xcw Cabinet ! MOPi; NN0N LAND AMI L CM HER COM PANY I'ff-r f.-reate Tuwn Lwtt in tbt hot "uu tt Orvt'nln, t'irertirtd cwet-'T, Pa , end !h lte to suit turchae.re iliMile (be hirt'li ul ti tx-rrMirh. ie eituntr-l t,n tbe IchiiL'ii Creek, in the riheft portion of the ruumy ef Lltnrnrlil, 00 the line ol the ijnme t UiirftK Hfttlnal. where the Mrt heurn.n ani HeaTfrtoa branfh nade interpre. It 11 Uo in the bmrt ef ihe Moihannon cna bain, and lare tw-li-io white pine, brmhtck, oak, and tHr ttrutir tur rcottd it One n the lar,frt lutiibr n anutactur iiig eitalilibiuiata ,0 tbe Male ia located id ti in, wtnie tht-re are mnriT u titer Itiihbcr kc rhtnle un!! ertuind it. Tbe town U but m ri year old, and con tit in t a uu!ativn of out dot land tnhai'itaitt". sY't further in format iro apply at tie o 01 me aivt cvo patiy, JOHN LAWSIIE. pi 14 Si;t'rinrndff,t, SAWS! SAWS! SAWS ! MSTAS'fl CROSS CfT, MILL, DRAO AND cir.cuLAn saws. Boynton's Lightning Cross-cut Saw. ALS3, rATE.tT TERFORATED 1 ELECTRIC f 11, For ta!a t 'i:.:a h. f. biclfii t c ji:w tim siKirt FHRD. SACKETT, Mai nfactarrr of Tin, Copper and Sheet -Iron Ware. Rooting. S.eit ina an.l joh woik Jont oa r.EAoABLR rtKm. fbop od Market St., Drailr oppofita tba Ja.l, 4(I:T Cl.EtRFirt Tl. TA. DAVID REAMS, S C li 1 V K X E II & S U fi V E Y 0 It, I.ullttrabarj;. Tm. f IlilE f ii'.,-riber offer, b: rerrlerl to Ibe ptiVia Jl in llio eapaeitv of rcrieetier ami f'lit ' ee. A.i ellr. f-.r fciiiT. ein pr-mpilv atten-lr-l t". eo4 I tl.e mnking of 'trait!., ,lre.l. ai.il ..th-r l C.I ie-la-j.iauta of witting-, e&ei'Uteil ailbnill e-'ie. r.I aarradlt 'l to be corn et or no ruitre, oK.ru Assignee's Sale. The m.dfTM(jinv w, e i on the prvwiM. FriiT, the "Ut d iy . f flct-.'er, lTH. at 1 o V '"k P. M. A I'ttHTAtll.K is 1 1. A M W JM 1 1. U Jcratisl on the Ihm-J i t 1'rank 'Tnttt, in I '' tow!iFhi, 'irnrtii d fcuuty. Will pjld ll tW pr-j criv vi Jautra li. llr', a Ptn.k'n)t. K. A. 1K IS. Afrr Cirw-nteiPe 0 t 15 it. J. A. BLATTENBEEGEK, Claim and Collection OfTice, C.SCLOLA, Clcarfi.ll Co., Ta. .jTConi-etaneipjf anl all 1--it pat..r tr-." Willi ae.-iira.-t an.l rti.p,t.-l'. Imll. on an I up' hr-keta lo anj Ir.-m rry p...int in 1 .1' r procured. o-rileii VDMlMsTII (TOIf vnil'I'-N"" lie-ci.v ((ti -n tni- I tin ol n 1. 11. ! n ...i Ihe e.lale'm l,tii.HT M.l'l'l I N. J' Lite ..f Cto-.t ti.in.ti,.. t'rari.,1.1 c.ttot, l' baling l,o.-ii .ImIv jtt.1,1, . t the uo.l. r-it'. I-' 1 perm iii.lvl i ... I t.tale ii) pi' '' pi nie.it. an.l tlio-e baMtii: eluiine i-r l?.,l,i, will prrai'itt them propi rle aa hiti'i -" l ' (tetueut. J,i:.? ,1 I'M'l'l . ( li.-t li , 0,. ft A ion .'i.f. iir aciin.m Aki.11 fiior ron itr.T. y 'I be th..p im. iy M-f.i.iril t.( lllli"" Kmctil. d.eenrel. ailnala on lte all-r l.il'fl liei-.i ami I'nie t n-l. ft. nr K. K. Ivpot. t t.a rtnuU on riaeonal 'e li-rm. A -l I" (.l.iilli.K C I A-M0Rr. Cliai di-l.l, Ai'CiiX 17. ISO. Jin. 1 .''Kt If C'l IMI J tHM.-l.arfe Mt TIN CANn anj (il.A.-S J til, C. kRVTl.RN Augm: in, 1:I ?m. ''i'l'" , the Ji'' IttIM tl r-hit l.ea.1. l!ine. Talni.t -eec.l ll I, Tiirt-rntine, 1 arnihe of all kmilr, (. lor. in (hi ami lie? I a'ol. '.mih llro.". m II H T1f M'K A IHVTI". HOrt.-K flli'i:-', llorM fh'Ml Kaile, Nail -i an.l Kapt, a( lil pTe. tba Ja(l.) 0 K RATHEF't