Dill, loss, Fertte and Africa!; Gioroi B. Uooulandeh, Ktlitor. CLKAHF1KLD, Pa. WEDNE8DAY.MOKNI.no, JI NK i, 1178. Xtidar, if yo wint to kiow what U no Ire on ! th bailntt. world, juit reJ our ftdvertUinf tulannt, tht Spttiat oolumu In ptrttcuUr. MAXIMS FOR THE DAV. So tnkD worthy tbt offl of President ibould U wilhnff to MdHlfcornttd In, or plM-d thrt hy tiny fraud. -r- Omm. I ooulil nvr b rwonHM to tht tic vattoo b tbt .uit licit alii of mint of a pernio, Uuwtvtr' rriptotibla In prlcatt lift, who wuit fhrtrer earrr Anon bit brow tbt it amp of fraud flrtt trlutuphant ia Auarloan hlitury. No tub aqutot aciloo, howtvtr merltoriouf, can warh away tht Ictttn of that record. Charlki Kntii Adam. I'odtr Iho forai of law, Jlutbcrford li. lUyti ban bttn deolarod 1're-Mnit of the Ualtad Htatca. lilt till rciti upon diifnncblietncDt of lawful votera, tbo faltt atrtlfloatw of the returning offl ten aetlnf eorruptlyt and tht dtcUlon of a ootn m Union wbicb bat refuMtt to bear tvldr net of Itfftd fraud. Vor tht Brat tiaio art tb American ptoplt tuofronttd with tht fact of a fraudulently elected President. Let it not bt understood that tbt fraud will be tllmtly auleced in by tbo country. Let no hour past In wbk'b tut usurpa tion Is forgotten. Ahdrxhi or Deuoohatic M.O.'i. Out hundred years of human deprarily tocu uulaled and concentrated Into climax of crime. Nerer again in (Ivt hundred years shall they hart an opporttinily In repeat tht wrong. 1aibl W. VoonnirR. I would rather bfivo tbt entlorstnent of a quar ter of a million of tht American people than that of tbt Lviililana Returning Board, or of tht Com mit! Ion which excluded tht fuels and decided tht question on a technicality. Tna. A. IIkiuihickr. Democratic State Ticket. van aoYMXoa, Hon. ANDKKW1I. DIM,, OP OXtON COOJITT. ron uti TtsANT fiovt anon, Hon. JOHN KKliTKi, orctAwronicoiNTV. Ton RRCRRTARr IHTstftXAL Ari AIRR, .Hon. J. SIMPSON AFRICA, op npnTiMnno nirmr. por v prbwr j mar, Hon. H. P. liOSS, OP HONTflOHBRT roiHTT. Dill, Ross, Fct tly and Africa! Hiovernor Dill," is llio way the Williamsport Bulletin says it. Tbo ed itor socs it all. All Hiiiiit. Tho Williamsport Bui Min intimates tliut wlion Andy Bill is clotted Governor, Hob Alton, of that city, will bo Attorney (ienorul. The reader him no doubt noticed ' how short and handy are all the names of our candidates for Hlalo officers Pill, RokS, Fertig and Africa. Of their overwhelming election next fall tlu ro is nu doubt. Titkiii Uibtii Days. Senator Dill was born IHlh Jan'y, 1SW. 43. Judge Uoss was torn Dec. 10th, 1S:1C i'i. Senator Fertig was born Hlh May, 18354;!. Mr. Africa was born March 20th, 1832 4li, average 43 years. Hoxruilk! It appears that lioturn ing Board Anderson is going tor John Sherman in n startling way. IIo charg es him with urging Wobbcr to commit frauds in Kast Feliciana and aflorwards procuring his murder, ll looks as if John has been trifling with a bomb shell. lUua fob Ri'iAKEa. Tho Radical members of tho Stato foliate, before adjourning, eloatod llorr of the Dauph in district Speaker pro tern. Tbo Dem ocrats all cast their Totes for Hon. R. 1 Allen, ot Williamsport. II err is tho head and tail of tho Cameron ring on tho floor of the Senate. The crises," is what tho liadical leaders term the approaching investi gation ol tho Presidential frauds. The sentiment was properly soloctod. It will be such a "crises" that will bring rogues to tho surlace and many of those now seated in pleasant places will be disgraced and sent adrift. "Postmaster Grncrsl Key eriti eisee bl. Bouth n critic, roundly. II. would have dnn. Jolt I. hi did had h. stood llono, bat he etuieji Iho sympethy ol tbo people of tbo whole Sooth, end anowe that bo hu onlj Iht politicians against hltn. Radical J7.iraaaos. Well, bo will hear somo other tune phyod on that nolo before thirty days olapso, if wo aro not mistaken. His recent lottor is a piece of impertinence only equaled by that of Sherman and Noyes. BitiAKiRg Aiikad. Things aro be coming disjointed in a political sense. The Ilarrisburg Fatrint makes return of the following "straws," etc. : The Lewisburg Chronicle, tbo Re publican organ at the homo ol Senator Dill, refuses to hoist the name of Col. Hoyt for Governor. The Huntingdon Journal (Republi can) it fearful that J. Simpson Africa will carry that county and pull the Democratio local ticket through. Resiuned. As soon as Mr. Dill rej turned to Ilarrisburg after his nomina tion for Governor by the Pittsburg con vention, be resigned his seat in the Stato Sonate. lie was olected in 1876 for four years, and bis torm would ex pire with tho session of 188A. Mr. Dill would have been justified by procodent in retaining his office, but bis prompt resignation was the proper step for him to take, and will be remembered to bis credit. The Eastern War. The battlefields of Turkey, having been turned into fields of diplomacy by the interferences of England and othor European pow ers, in the war botwoen Russia and Turkey, we bavo paid but little atten tion to the question recently. Tbe treaty entered into between the two belligerents at Santa Stafano in Janu ary last, by which Russia and Turkey combined against thebalanco of Europe, is bound to be wiped out and new treaties enlorcd into, sanctioned by the other powers of Europe. Tbo attemrlt on the part of Russia to make the riv er Danube Its southern boundary, bas been frustrated by England and Aus tria, and thoy have driven the two powers so far that they have lor tho aeoond .time consented to meet in a European Congress in Berlin, where U the controversies of the war are to be submitted lor settlement. This tarn may be a little humiliating to the quarreling aeigbbora, but tbey will Jiave lo submit at this time to such a tribunal. Dill, Ross, Fortlff anil Africa!: ! Till-: DEMOCRA TIC FLA 77 0f.Uj ceedings in full ot tho Convention, but they are too lengthy and wduld con sumo two issues of tbo Rkpuhlcan, and we therefore give our readorB only a synopsis. Last week wo gave tho balloting, names Of the members of tho Stale Committee, and tho speech oi Senator Dill beforo the Convention. Below will be found the report of tbo Committee on Resolutions as read by the Chairman, Senator Wallace, whoso appcaranco on tho stage excited great onthusiasm. Tim l'LAironm. Tbo Cemoeroc of Pcnai? Wonts ananlmia.lj dorlin i That tin Republican party, Hi tnaa.um mil (ti m.D, ore roipomiblo for tbo flniDelol dl.lron ond thimlKry and want that unw.iliu; It ba. had control of tbo Iff illation of lb. ooonlrr, and has onaotid and parpctuatcd a policy that hal enriched Iho lew and ininnreri'hud the many t III lyitcia and finaooo baa beoo ono of faror In aonelil monopoly, of unequal taxation, i,f on imption of claim, of blub ratoi of intlreit, aod of roinorielMl contraction, wblob hu dulroyoj orory nl.rpriio thai fare mploycn.ot tu labor i IU proaeat bold upon tin Moral power wal ao oured by fraud, perjury and for(tory III lawi aro unjust and III practice. Immoral they dli lre.1 tho poopio and doitroy thilr Mbatanoe.' Tba only remedy for Iheie llla I. In an entire change of nuliry aud the dethronement of Ihuee in power. And we reiolre that further contrac tion of the TOlume of the tiniled Hlale. legal lender notai Ii unwiM and vnoeoe.aary. Tbey linuld be reoeived for cuitomi dutloi and re-la-.ued ai flit a. reoelri'd. Oold, illrer aud I'nlted State. leKal-tender note! ot par therewith are juit base, for paper tirotdalioa. Tba clot oon nectlon ol the federal government with the bu.l neio Interetli of Ilia people through national baoka tenda to monopoly aod centralisation : but In changing the system, uniformity of notes, ae earity ol Hie noteholder and protection of the capital inreitrd should be prorldeil for. Trrae nrr antes, Itsued In eiohange for bonds bearing a low rate of Interest Is tbo best form in whiob the credit of Ihe government oan ba given to pa per enrrlney. Labor and oapilal have equal de mands opon and equal responsibilities to law. Commerce and manulaot urea ihould be encour aged, so that steady employment and fair wages may be yielded to labor, wbilst lifvty of Invest ment and moderati return, for iU n.e belong to capital. Violence or breaking of order in support of tba real or supposed rights of either should be suppressed by the strong arm of the law. The Hepwbliran parly, by its legislation in 1872, which reduced the tariff upon bituminous coal from ll.So to 75 eenls p?r Ion, and opon iron, steel, wools, metals, paper, glais, leather and all manufactures of each of thorn ten per cent., ilrurk a fatal blow at I be Industrie! and labor of Pennsylvania. The public lands aro the common property of the people, and Ihey ihould not be told to ipeo ulaton nor granted to railroad! or other corpor ations, but ibfauld be reserved as homesteads for actual settlers. Our pnblio debt should be held at home, and Ihe bonds representing It ought to be ef small Jrnominalisns, in which the savings ol'lhe masses may be ssfely Invested. Thorough investigation in to tho electoral frauds of IsTS should be made; fraud should be expos ed, trutb vindicated and eritninals punished ; but we oppose any attack opon tho Presidential title as dangerous to our institutions and fruitless in Its results. The Republican party, centrblling the legisla tion of the 8Ute, has refused to exeoute many of tho reforms of the new Constitution t among other things It has neglected aod refused to com pel Ibe acceptance of all its previsions hy the corporations of the State; to prevent undue and unreasonable discrimination in charges for the transportation of freight and passengers, aod without abatement or drawback to any to give to all equal means for transporting the raw ma terial ot Ihe State in lueb manner aod to such points as they may prefer; and to publish In good latin woniniy stn:emeuis 01 wnere too moL ey of the people wss kept. Tho Republican party creates Qw offices and adds enormous perquisites to others, and fills them with favorites whose chief duty is to man age Its politioal machinery. Its ndmiulstration ol the rotate govertimrnt grows more expensive with each year ot Its rule. Legislation has been dirtoled bv Republican lobbyists, who ia tarn manipulate anal control the nomination, of Ihe Republican party, and its candidates are the cre ation of a junta, whose decrees are aocaptod ai the irreversible mandates ef absolute hereditary power. We denounce tbesemelbods, these meas ures nad these men as unworthy Ibe support of an bonesl and a tree people, and we invite all, ot every shade of political opinion, tn unite witn us in delivering the Commonwealth from their hateful rule. The resolutions were ununim.usly adopted. Promiscuous Gatiierinh. A Con vention of Prohibitionists, Murphyitos, Local 0) tionists, etc, male and lemale, met in Alloona, on Wednesday last, and put ticket So. 4 into tbo field. Captain Dowler, of Bumsido, and T. Ronton Dill ley were scored as the dele gates from Clearfield county. Little Blair had ten delegates, four of whom were Hon. Archibald McCallixter, Mrs. MeC, Miss Ida McC, and Miss Sallio McC. Cambria turned out a good flock too, among them Hon. A. A. Barkor, V. S. Barker and Miss E. V. Barker. These, two families wore the "heavy weights" in tho Convention, from tho Inct that tho fathers at one time were both Congressmen, and they havo tried various ways to got back again, but it looks bluer now than over, since they have cut loose Irom tho parties to which tbey belonged, and mounted the hobby-horso which they are riding to death. Tba resolu tions adopted allude to everything, female suffrage in particular, but settle nothing. All tho chief leaders in tho,. movement were broken down political hacks belonging to both parties, and, of course, ready for improvements in religion, morals, political economy, etc., but being as weak in the flesh as tho balance of tbo race, it is very doubtful whether they will commit many ro lorms during the present perverse gen eration. Tho nomineo for Governor, P. II. Lane, of Huntingdon, is a fraud ; Judgo Agnew is an ornament, hut tho other two, Shallcross and Parsons, wo know nothing about. A Trie State or the Case, Tbe people of Pennsylvania adopted the constitution by a majority ol more than fifty thousand votes. This elec tion will determine whether tbey are willing to defend their own offspring or wbothor tbey will give it over for violation to the barpioa of tbe lobby The issue is very simple. On tho one sido aro tho friends of the Constitution with one ol its ablest defondcra in Sen ator Dill for their standard bearer. On the other aro the enemies of the Constitution with Honry M. Hoyt as tho candidate of their choice With the oleclion of Andrew U. Dill the provisions of tbe Constitution will be carried into effect in good faith for tho first time since its adoption. With Henry M. Hoyt in tho office ot Gov ernor, the warfaro of tho ring on the Constitution will be maintained with all its vlndictivcness. On- por Brazil. The Philadelphia Record says : "Throe hundred colored laborers leave tho city of Washington next week lor Brazil, to work for the Messrs. Collins on tlie railroad tbey are building, under the guarantee of the Braiilian and Bolivian govern ments. As tho doath-rale. of the negro population of Washington is greater than in any othor city of. tho country, those laltorers may not find a change to tho malarial regions near the equa tor of any particular disadvantage." Investigate. A writer in the St. Louis Timet declare that the real par ty aimed at by the Totter invostlga tion is General Grant. The Demo crats expect to show that the frauds committed were within his knowledge If this can be done it is supposed the most formidable Republican candidate for the Presidency in 1880 will be laid npon the shelf. Dill, Ross, Fertlff and Africa! KLECTIXO FUTURE FBESl The terrible strain upon our institu tions caused by tho last Presidential election, has awukoncd in the minds of leading statesmen tho necessity of do vising some measures to prevent the recurrence of tho dangers that attend ed the declaration of that clectorul count, and (o provide against future emergencies and complications grow ing out of the election of Presidents. Senator Eilitj.'.Js, Chairman of t,he Senato Committee charged with tho duty, bus reported a bill on the impor tant subject, which admits the author ity of every Stato to decide upon the correctocs of its electoral volo. This latter shall be decided by tribunals cre atod by tho State, and in case of din putes arising in the Electoral College, Congress may havo power to investi gate whether tbo tribunal appointed by the Stato Is legal, and if it is, then its decision shall be considered conclusive and final. To give tiino for the full de termination of such questions, the elec tions shall be held one month earlier than now, or in October instead of No vember, while tbo meeting of the Elec toral College shall not assemble until the following January, ono month tut or than at present, thus affording an interval of three months for the cor rection ol mistakes and a thorough canvass ol the whole case. When a single'return from a State is sent in, its validity is not to bo questioned, nor can It be rejected except by tho affirmative vote of both tho Senate and the House of Representatives. Should thotUcslion ariso whether the propor Stale tribu nal has decided upon tho legality of tho electoral vote sent in, or in caso of du plicate leturns, whother their respec tive claims have been acted upon, then the two Houses of Congress shall act scpcratoly in tho matter, and only such votes ho received as both havo agreed upon. These aro tho essential features of the bill, although it contains a num. berol othor regulations chiefly relating to tho manner in which the joint meet ing of both Houses shall bo conducted. JriiiiR Roh. The Hometown l)e fender, published ttt the homo of our nomineo for Supreme Judge, in allud ing to the ticket, thus refers to Judge Ross : "Our satistiction is heightened by emotions of prido not exultant, but honest pride in the reflection that the choice of tho Convention has fall en upon Judgo Ross, of our own homo, for tho office ol Supreme Judgo. No man beforo the Convention was better qualified for a position of such meas ureless importance or more entitled to public confidence than Judgo Ross. A profound thinker, a logical, analytic and close reasoner, united with ripe lugul learning, high literary culture and an exquisite aenso of justice and right, ho will bo an honor to the Su premo Bench, and to which position wo have the utmost confidence in his triumphant election. His career as a jurist is well known throughout the State, as was testified by tho popular vole he received on the first ballot, and bis character as a citir.cn is without reproach. In bis official career on the bench in this and Bucks counties, dur ing tho past nine years, he has sustain ed an unspotted reputation ; against tho purity of bis motives even envy iteelf has never made a charge." Hart Overboard. Tbo Cambria Freeman says : "Quay was more suc cessful in dealing with the lato model Legislature than his friend and fellow office seeker, Hart, who claimed when he was a candidate for State Treasurer last year that be bad learned how to make bricks when ha was a boy. It was really (Quay's right Bower, Mackey, who englnoorcd tho Philadelphia Re corder job through both houses, al though Quay himself ia an adroit lob. byist. Through the treachery of Bus- soy, a Democratio 8cnator, the BanW Commissionership bill, Intended for Hart's benefit, passed that body, but after having past first and second read ing in the llouso, and when it was on its third reading (.wo days before the adjournment, twenty Republican mem. bcrs refused to face tbe music, voted with the Democrats against it, and aa a necessary consequence Wm. B. Hart, the Montgomery county brick makor and late cashior oi tho Slate Treasury, won't ba Bank Commissonor undor ap pointment by Hartranft, aided by Bus scy's voto for conformation in the Sen ate, as ho confidently expected to bo. A Handsome Coupi.iiiENT. Tho ed itor of the Cincinnati Enquirer, tbe Democratic organ of tbe Buck-eye State, in alluding to the proceedings of tbe Pittsburg Convention, speaks to Senator Wallaco in this way : "Tbe ticket nominated is worthy and the plat form unexpectedly good. The ticket is understood to be and is the triumph of Senator Wallaco, if any personal triumph appeared in the result, but there seems to have bocn nothing in the contest to mar tho party unity. Tho unassuming Senator, whose name and face and charaotor, coiucido to toll of the Scotch determination, Rooms to havo been entirely triumphant among the Democracy of the old Keystone Stato. The victor is worthy of his vic tory. He ia with tho foremost among the Democrats of Pennsylvania in the cause of the people, in the peoplo's' great cause, and he deserves the confi dence of the Democracy of his Stale to a largo degree." Altoona'i CoNCf.AYE The twenty fifth annual conclave of the Grand Commandory of the Knights Templar of Pennsylvania, assembled at Altoona on Tuesday, the 28th ult. Mayor Hurd delivered an address of woloomo, which was replied to by Grand Con mander W. H. Egle, ol Ilarrisburg. A large numbor of Knights were in at tendance. A grand parado came off the next day. The city was highly decorated and presented the appear ance of a Centennial day. Lieut Iloxio, and bif new wife, Miss 'lnnio Reams, who had been married in Washington in the morning, roomed at the Logan House that night Vinnle aayi the nols was awful during the night, and she evern that if simply riding a goat produces all that confusion her hus band must stop off at once or she would produce a bust of somebody else be aide that of "the late lamented" Lin ooln. Those who happened to look In on th scene came way satisfied that Vinnie would never join the Mason, Dill, Ross, Fertlff and Africa! .1 FRO FEB STEP. . j n--r"i t - J. .i..-. -. low days ago, presented a petition in the I'nitcd States Henute, numerously signed from naturalised citixens of lihodu Island, asking for the adoption of an amendment to tbo Ecderu) Con stitution which would mako any dis crimination against foreign born cill ioiis in regard to th franchise impos sible. In Rhode Island no foreign born citisen can vote unless ho owns real oslutu, while native born citizens not owning real estate may vote upon registering their names and paying a poll tax of $1.00. Tho property quali fication, though essentially unjust, and un-American, is very convenient for real estate owners; for, onco a man's name is on record as holding reul es tate of tho requisite value, he need neither register nor pay a poll lax, but. year after year has simply to walk up and volo. But thu discrimination belongs to an ago gone by, and should bo abolished. Tho citixous of no Stale bavo mado more fuss (for thu sir.o) over "odious laws in other States," than Rhode Island, and yet no other State has a more intamous law upon its statue books. Had the embargo been entailed upon tbo negro, it would havo been repealed long ago by the Stato authorities. A Goon I'l.tA.-The plea of Sitting Bull that bis followers should be allowed to retain their ponies and guns, because "when we got into an agency we can not gel enough to cat without them," is not unreasonable in view of the ex perience of Indians with agonts of tho Government. Rancid pork, spoiled flour, rotton blankets and meagre hoof have beon the tissual portion of the red men and women who have intrusted themselves lo tbo mercies of tho cor morants oi the Indian ring. It is not strange that Sitting Bull, while anx ious to live in pcaco with thoso who have robbed bis tribe of their domains, should bargaiy for tbo gun and pony, without which ho would bo a helpless dependent upon a Government dolo. IIo bos lived by tho chase since ho was a child; tho fields and the prairjea have been bis larder ; tho succulent buffalo hump, the gumey antelope, and an oc casional fat dog bis diet ; and he should not be expected to confine himself sud denly to greasy pork and bard tack. Lot Sitting Bull keep bis gun and his pony. Tug Storm Kino A ternfio storm passed over Richmond, Mo., on last! Saturday afternoon, lovcling to the d, ,,. ., , ., ,. . over bait of the buildings in the town. Over Ono hundred bouses were totally destroyed, and tbo loss on property will reach 1250,000. Whole blocks wcro oompletoly swept away, and the debris was scattered for miles. The storm tamo from the southweet, passed to the northeast and was pre ceded by a heavy fall of rain. Trees wcro uprooted and carried through the air liko feathers, as were tho frag ments of houses, and in fact everything the storm struck. Tho Shaw llouso, a large brick hotel, was demolished and its inmates buried in tho ruins. From twenty to thirty persons were killed and many wounded. Horses and stock of all kinds were swept off the earth like grass. A train load of citizens from Lexington have arrived to render aid, and physicians from all surrounding towns have boon sum moned to give medical attendance to the wounded. Patrols have been de tailed to guard the town. A TiiUMntRlKn Report. Congress man Potter being the author of the resolution looking lo an investigation of tho Presidential fraud, has address ed letter to the public assigning rea sons for the examination, Ono clause of his lettor reads this way i Unless the proceedings be exposed, the outrage trill be repeated. It an admin- istrirtion can d.fraud jit opimnenlt out f ' r81'"4 ,a" '''T'""1, hick H had seventeen electoral and three hundred thousand popular majority, and no effort is made even to inquire into the wrona. there is nothing the next time to prevent tne time administration cheating their opponents even though the latter have for ty tkctoral votes and a million popular majority. And tint will go on time after time, until the outrage becomes intolera ble. No page in tbe Biblo has more nak ed truths strung together than aro to bo lound in this paragraph. And yet, tho Radicals bowl revolution I Cuandler on Hand. Senator Uowe'a attack on Hayes bas brought Zacb Chandler nut ol tho Michigan woods. He has turned up in Wash ington with a now assortment of oaths, which he drops as bo passes along Pennsyvania Avenue between tho White Uonso, and tbe Capital. The Washington Fori in alluding to him says : "Tbe venerable Keehariab Chandler il said to have brought with him to Washlogton several qaalnt and ewrlous forma ef profanity of hil own invention during bli lata respite from the active cares ef oflioe. It Is also said that one of bia oaths Is liable te be nfteea minutes in passing n given peiat." This Chandler was tho Chairman ol tho Radical oommitteo in 1870, but Hayes' Southern policy banished him to the Northwest snd be now assumes the role of tbe ground hog by coming out of his holo, to see bow Howe and Hayes are going to make it. Exactly so. The editor of tin Bellofonle ll'iid-Amim crucifies the Had ical growlers in this way: "If Senator Wallace ran the Pittsburg Convention as the Radical papers allogo he did, the Democracy of the Slate have only Ibis to say : that they are thankful to him for giving them to strong a plat form and so popular a ticket, and that be Is deserving of all praise lor having the wishes of tho Demqerutlo massos faithfully and harmoniously executed. If our Radical friondsare right, It only prove Mr. Wallaco' fitness for the leadership they accord him, and that the confidence reposod in bim by the Democracy cf the Stato is neither mis placed or misused." A Conundrum. There ip not a bulk in tbe United Stato navy that was built or repaired during the rolgn of Secretary Robeson which has remain od at sea forty days without develop ing some grave defects, necessitating immediate repairs. What would have become of the human lamily it Robe- son bad been Secretary of the Navy in Noah's lime, and bad tbe oportunity of letting tbe Job or making the con, tract lor tbe construction of tbe Ask. Pittsburg Telegraph Dill, Ross, Ferlljf and Africa! Dll.li at nu lieu. Tbo reception neighbor at bis homo in Lewisburg, last I riday ovoniitg wut a greeting of which any man might be proud. It was k welcome In whiclf tho whole people participated men, women and children to show their appreciation of tho man, without distinction of par ty or creed. Tbo spcot lies wcro ex cellent and to the oint. U is rurvly the case that a clergyman mingles in such demons! rations, but the liev. D. 9t Monroe, pastor of tho Helhndist Episcopal Church at Lewisburg, could not resist the guueral enthusiasm. He said : II alforda me mueh pleasure to ass ielele with you In oB.ring the high,st congratulations lo uur neighbor aod friend. My personal aoQuaintanoo with Senator Dill aiaoroe me that be is an boa est aod upright man. With ynu I most heartily eongratuUte him upon the distinction that has been conferred upon him by bis party, and I feel assured that if elected he will never rett.el dia credit upon hil psrty, upon biaie!f, nor upoo the people whom be represent.. Union county, the homo of good old Simon Snyder, will roll up a vote for Andrew 11. Dill in November that will attest bia popularity at homo and in dorse the wisdom of the Convention that selected him as tho standard bearer of tho Democratic party. Te nanyo Spectator. A itoYAL victim. Tho Emperor William, while taking a rido in his carriage on Saturday afternoon, was attacked by an assassin named I)i isoMiing, vriio hrcil twice with a double-barreled gun. The Einpnror received about thirty small shot in the face, head, both arms, and back, but by about six o'clock this evening his general condition hud already improved in a satisfactory manner. An immense crowd from all parts ot the i-ity thronged Into the avenue I'ntor den Linden on the news becoming known. Tho assassin is Karl Edward Nobcling, aged 32 years. Us is a resident of Berlin, a doctor of philology, an agri culturist, and habitue of Democratic Socialistic clubs. A quantity of arms was found in his apartments. He con fessed the crime, but obstinately refused to state bis nativity. He is at the hos pital station of Ihe Malkon market police district, attended by his mother and daughters. This is the second at tempt that bas been made on tho Emperor's life within three months. RloodV Shirt Twaddle The Itud- icals in their State Convention made tho following plank the corner stono in their platform, and expect to Im poso it upon tbo masses as a reality, as lollows Thai we are now ai ever opposed to the pay- oient of claims from Ihe National Treasury to lhoi, uiely s.g.gl In or .ympathi.ln. with 'beuW No ooeq iemr should be forced to psy iiviemniiy 10 conquered, aou tne presenta tion of bills, demanding ovar three hundred mll'ion of dollars al Ibe present session ef the Ifemnorolia House is a warning lo tba country of tin est a' A 'larger of rtloiolng in power a party whose chief aim Is to mhe reprisal on Ibe tat-payers for loe.re tt-aica fie crisse y' freusoa brought upon the Southern people. Now, the fourth section of the Four teenth amendment to the Constitution of the I'nitcd Slates, which cannot be changed by Congress, recites, ' Noil her tbe United States, nor any State, shall assume or pay any debt or obligation incurred in aid of insurrection or re bellion agalnt tho I'nitcd States, or claim for tho lose or emancipation of auy slave, but ALL urA debts, obliga tions and claims shall be illegal and void. n Appalmno Disaster. The British Channel between Calais and Dover was tho theatre of the last hor ror. Un tbo J 1st ult., two German steamers ran into oath othor, having on board over 800 porsons. As may be imagined, tbo details of tbo disaster are most horrifying. The colliding vessels wore tbe Kaiser and the Gross er Knrfurst. Tbo weather at tbe time of the disaster was fine and calm, end what led to the oollision Is a mystery. Both vessels were undor lull hood way when tbe Kaiser Wilhelm ran into tbe Grosser Kurfurst. The shock was ter rific, the latter vessel Ailing with water and sinking within Ave minutes aftor the collision. To add to the horrors of the situation, tbo boiler ol the vessel exploded, scattering death and destruc tion in every direction. From all re ports received, It is believed that noarly four hundred persons lot their Ijvc hy tbo disaster, "flpeaher Randall's defeat at the conTenlicn baa been tbe subject of general conversation to-day. There are thoee who go so far as to predict that Senator Wallaoe will earrytbe warlolo me Speak ers district, and, by defeating him for thenomina tlon, punlab him for leading the Sold against Dill and the reel of the elate." Mif.aMa.il AW 4.Woaa. There i not aapeckaof truth iu this Washington dispatch. We know tho reverse to bo true. When a remark lo that effect was made in the Senator's presence, ho replied, "nothing ol that ; wo have a campaign on hand that must bo pushed with vigor against the enemy, and Randall must be let alone, wo need bim in Congress, although he had no business at Pittsburg." The "war" indicated by the journal in ques tion, is a bit of imagination on tho part of the author. Sl'oRTiNt). Tho de. facta. Vice Presi dent, Wheeler, and Mrs. Ilayes, have been on a Northern fishing excursion tho past ten days., A telegram flora Malone New York, on tho 31st ultimo, says: "Vice Prarident Wheeler and party left Prospect House, UpPr Ba- ranao Lake, yesterday afternoon, for Paul Smith's, thence to Malono to-day Mrs. Hayes caught a magnificent trout yesterday morning, weighing fifteen pounds, which was sent to tho Presi dent." She should send tho next fit toon pounder to the "Mrs, Rutherford B. Hayes' Temperance Society," and thereby engraft herself again into the affections of that humane organization. TheTrucView. ThejCincinnatlirn qvirtr in alluding to P. M. General Key 'a impudent lettor remarks : "Mr, Key, in abusing Northern Democrats, show hi lack of sense. Instead of abuaing the men of the North he should on'? havs appealed lo the good Judg mont of hi own section. If Kev was taken a a representative Southern man, the President ba made a mistake. Tbo only avenue open for Mr. Koy I hi resignation. 11 is Sou thorn country will repudiate him." That (Jdeer Hun. The Pittsburg Telegraph remark : "Because tbe Dem ocratic Convention last week declared against any attempt at interference with the little of President Hayes, the New York Sun bo become a Cameron organ. If anything were still neoes sary to ensure the defeat of the Cam eron candidate, that lock Is fully sup. piled by ibe course of the Sun: Dill, Ross frrliff and Africa!; (ir.TTVsiii an, I'a , May IIO. Thu an nual tribute to Ihe national dead at Gettysburg n paid under ciri-iiiii-slances of the greatest Interest. Not since President Lincoln dedioutod tho cemetry has it been graced by so many distinguished cilir.ens. As tiuly as Wednesday morning strangers begun to arrive, and by night the hotels were crowded to overflowing. The weather to-day was fine ; flitgs were every where displayed, and the streets were thronged with visitors, 'the Chnm bersburg Gray arrived about 1 A. M. uller Vi miles niaivli. luoy are a guard of honor to President llnyes. j During tbo wholo forenoon tho rush of. incoming strangers eon untied, five large excursion trains from All 111 in, IUrrialiurg, Lancaster, York and Wash ington brought at least 6,000 porsons, accompanied by a number of bands of music. The morning was spent by tho Presidential party in viewing the bat-tlo-field, visiting Hound Top, Culp's Hill, Cemetery Hill, and other promi nent points under the guidance- ot'tien erul Crawford and Colonel Bacholdor. About noon the President returned to tho residence of Mr. MePherson, wboro ho remained until the beginning of the memorial exercises. . The projected procession was much marred by a dreucbing rain which loll from 1 to 6 o'clock. General Bullor delivered an eloquent oration on "Tbe American Private Soldier in the War ol llio Rebellion," showing with much feeling that while older nations honor ed only. their warrior chiefs, to whom they built pyramids and monuments, A merica honors her private sol-lier and decorates bis grave, not with the cold tnarhl", but with the emblems of a peo ple's grateful love. ('resident Hates, Secretary Me- Creary, Attorney General Devctis and ex Governor Curtin ull made appropri ate speeches. The touching ceremo nies ol bestrewing the grave with flowers was performed by the Grand Army of tbe Republic. The Presidential parly left Gettys burg for Washington On a special train at ti P. M. Potter, Potter ! Tbo editor of tho Ilarrisburg Patriot, makes an excellent point on Congressman Potter, Ui this way : In bis letter to n New Yorh clergyman on tbe objects of tbo electoral i nvestigetion, tbe Hon. J Clerkton N. Potter, speeking of the menace ef! civil war preceding the count ef the votes for President, says t 'Tbe whole thing was, as I j thick,! gigantie game in which we held I he oardi I and the Hrpublleani bluffed as." How is n oler g) man to underslend those naughty Srurne of speech, borrowed from Ibe gambling room, of "holding oardi'," and gelling "bluffed " t ie, Mr. roiter. j What docs a preacher know about "ltiirh low iiu-Lr nml flu, n-nmA " , e o ' , v ' - " "right bower" from a queen It's tool Latin. ' ! Tho Knnxville Tribune recently printed a statement in a Washington letter to the effect that Senator Burn- side was lately seen in conversation with a car-driver in Washington "in a state of exhilaration," thus intimating that the grave and reverend Senator waa drunk. It now does the loir thing by saying that tho person referred to wits not General Burnside but some one who looked like him. As if any ono over did look like tbo hero of Fredericksburg! A Crooked Lank. General Frank lin II. Lane, the Temperance Prohibition-Local Option, etc., candidate for Governor, represented Huntingdon county in tbo Assembly several years ago, and we know from what we learned from hi brethren at the time, that ho was esteemed ono of tho "crook edest" members in the House, His weakness seems to be vanity, a char acteristic very unbecoming in a re former of either ancient or modern times, Two More. The Second National Bank of Scran ton closed up on tbe 31st ult., and tacked tbe following card on tho door : "Circumstances com pel us to suspend lor the present." That' laconic Tho First National Bank of Dallas, Texas, suspended tbe same day. Tho liabilities cannot be ascertained nt present. There i due lo depositors (22,000 The nominal assota are $110,000 ; capital stock au thorized, 1500,000 ; paid up, 175,000. This is news ! Cameron's paper, tho Ilarrisburg Telegraph, through somo occult sou rce.haafouudlhatSenator and our next Governor, A. II. pill, was op posed to c rushing the Rebellion I It was a queer way to exemplify that op. position, going into service in the Un ion Army. But these Cameron organs, with their Kickapoo flavor, always know something nobody else ovor can find out. Next tool. "The Color Line." The Selins grovo Times man says the black Re publican Stale Convention sustained its old prcstigo for things that are dark, by nominating for Secretary of Internal A flairs a nun named Aaron K. Dunkel (Dark!) But the Democrat clean outdone them by taking for tho same offlco Africa himself At Charlottaville, Va., last week, Mr. John S. Wise, son of the late ex Governor Honry A. Wise, bought at auction tbe Shadwoll farm, tbo birth place ol Thome Jefferson, for William and Mary College. The farm contains 800 acres, and brought 114 per acre. "Mia Grundy," tho Washington correspondent of the N. Y. Graphic, is always arraigning poor Mr. Tilden for not getting married. Mr. Tilden docs net marry because he baa cold foot. Now what excuse baa "Miss Grundy" lor not getting married f "The boy stood on the burning deck but he only succeeded In saving tho jack of clubs, the nine of hearts and four of spades. All the other 87 wo believe there are 70 card in a deck, but we may be wrong wore Irretriev ably ruined. Another. George K. Waterman, tho defaulting Paymaster of the Pacific mills, at Lawrence, Mass, wbo stole 1111,000, baa been aoutonced to twolvo years in the Stato prison. That Is partly right ; but where 1 the stolen cosh ? A Connecticut Yankee has Invonted a contrivance for tbe trisection of an angle. We have often wondered why some gonitis didn't turn hi inventive powers in that direction. Edison will have to take a back seat now. Eugene Rohuylcr aays New York is the dirlioet city in tbe world, sxceot Constantinople. Ralph Waldo Emerson Is no longer "spring chicken," having reached the nge of seventy five lost Saturday. 1)111. Rosk. Fertile and Africa! tils OOUI'l.lUZJvTS TO HCrf. A. II. Dl I.I. ANII OPINION or UAVES' TITLE. from tbe Philadelphia Times Judge Biack wasalthuGirard bouae recently. "1 am ahy of you newspaper people, but protmbly you have soma right to think that (iiiie-ht talk on an occasion so interesting a Iho present, when tho Democracy of the old Stale is ubout beginning a new struggle. "Mr. Dill,' continued b, "is a per fectly good nomination for Governor, lie is u man of tine talents, remarkable prudence, pure inorul and great politi cal integrity. He comes from the neighborhood of Simon Snyder, and I hope if eloctcd that he will walk in the footsteps of that great magistrate of the ancient time. You ask what Sim on Snyder did to make bia name illus trious. 1 answer in tho words of a Kentuckian who wanted to nominate Nhunk lor president (Sliunk was very much liko Snyder) : 'Ho armed the state against the enemies ot the conn try, vetoed the banks and gave tbe cor porations hell.' I believe Mill will turn out lo be as good as either of then. But the great business now on band is to put bim in, and that 1 confidently ex pect wo will do very handsomly. Your suggestion that I might dislike Dill's nomination because Wallace favored him and Randall . opposed him has nothing in it. 11 there be a dispute, personal or factional, between those gentlemen, I don't know its merits. HI Mr, Wallaco has won a victory let bim wear his laurels and be satisfied, and as to Mr. Randall you may rest as sured that a man who tills, and worth ily fills, so largo a space in the eye of the nation is not seriously injured by being outvoted in a state convontiou. However that may be, we all know that Dili is neither Wallace nor Ran dall. As tbe nominee of the party he is equally entitled to the respect, con fidenco and support of both." Judge Black then spoke in biirb terms of the Democratic nominee for judge of i llio supreme i ourt, Hut It was evident that he felt great personal respect perhapa it should be called wurm ad miration for Judgo Slerrett- Ho gave Mr. Fertig an enthusiastic indorse ment, and there seemed to be some old recollection ot Mr. Africa that quite stirred him. On the whole he was not merely satisfied, indeed thoroughly pleased with the work ol the conven tion. He did not speak very freely of the investigation going on at Washington into the frauds of 1870. It was easy to see that he was under soma restraint in this part of his chat, arising, perhaps, out of a past or present professional connection with the subject. "I have no stock in the prospects of turning out Hayes by quo warranto. No doubt Hayes got tbe Presidency by means ot a fraud. But hu got it and bas il it was conceded to bim by the House of Representatives, which ought to hare withheld it Irom him. Posseaiion under such circumstances is title to every legal intent and purHmo. Mr. Ilayes is rrestuenl lor lour years un less hid term shall be abridged by im- peacliniont, resignation or death. "tan he bo impeached for tho Iraud practiced to elect bim. ? Certainly not. But if there was a fraud to w Inch ho consented or tor which be bargained beforehand and aftor be got into pow cr he rewarded tho guilt of tho rascals by giving them otllces, he is impeacha ble lor that. So also is any subordi nate officer wbo did tho same thing. That a Irattd stupendous, shocking and outrageous was perpetrated in Louisi ana and Florida is beyond denial. It has been already proved many times, in a thousand ways and by clouds oi witnesses. Tbe pending Investigation can only bring out some particulars showing by whom it was instigated and paid tor. 1 hope tud beliove that Mr. ilayes bad nothing lo da with it. But certain 'visiting etatosmen' may have gone down there and committed the crime, using tho state officers as mere instruments who did thoir corrupt work on a contract. If one of tboso visiting men became Secretary of the Treasury aftorwards end carried out the filthy bargain by rewarding tbe criminals, then there is no law or jus tice either ibat can save bim Irom im peachment. An example ia needed. I think the houso ought to have proceed ed dislipctly and expressly on this ground and moved to this objective point, giving Mr. Sherman either a clean vindication or a just condemna tion alter a fair bearing. As it is the investigation seem to De aimless. 1 be mill is going, to be sure, but there is nothing in the hopper that can be le gally pounded." GaowLiNd, or Course. Who will make the disturbance! asks the Albany Argus. Will tbe Democratio majority. who were defrauded ot the results of tbe election 1 Not at all. The limo for them to have violontly disturbed the macbinstora wbo overthrow the republio In wbicb tho will of the peo ple was Ihe law of the land, waa when Hayes was inaugurated amid tbe re strained anger of an outraged people. Will the Republican minority? With what decency can thev nrovoke din order at the exposure of the crimes of Hayes and hia ogonta? Are they pre pared to indulge in lawless acts ? True, they lawlessly supplanted Tilden. Are they willing to go further, and invoko disorder by tumultuous opposition to retribution for tboir crimes f The groat mass of the people, in both parties.will frown down any such rebellious hos tility to the lawful exercises of the power of Congress. Although Gen. Grant was elected in 1869 without the vote ol Now York, yet Republican in Congress in 1869 passed a resolution for the appointment of a committee to investigate the frauds in New York city, and the excuse thoy gave was, "that it was necessary to expose the frauds for fear they might be practiced In the future in the election of a Pres idont." Tbe Butler Herald says if it was ncocssary to do so in I860, why not now, especially when every reason able man knows there wore frauds com mitted in Florida and Louisiana. It will be seen also, that Republican in I860 made a precedent lor Democrat to follow in 1878,' nd, therefore, tbey ought not to complain. A Correct View. From an ex change we glean tbe following fact and figure, which do not present very hopeful view to those Republicans who think that tbe onwrd march of I tbe Democratic party to complete con trol of this country can be stopped or stayed.' If they revert to the political record since 18U6, thoy will be remind ed that in that year they bad 27 major ity in the Senate ; in 1869 they had 52, la 1871, 50;, In 1873, 30; in 1876, 10, and now tfcsy have but 2 ; and are sure to be In minority noxt year. Of the five euocessor already elected, two are Democrats, and of the fourteen Repub lican Senator whose successors are still to be chosen, six are certain to be Democrats, and the other are in doubt. Tbe Senate, after the 14 lb of Marco next, is certain to be Democrat io by at least (en majority. Their prospects lor regaining control of the uouso are not very bright, Fifty three seats n tbe House are held by majorities of loo thsn on thousand, and ot tbesv thirty four are Republi can and nineteen are Democrat, and ot thoee wbo went in by less thsn five hundred majority, sixteen are Demo crats ana nineteen are ltepublicsns. "By the war," asks the Bocbeeter Express, "what was Congress invented for, any bow r w by, to pave Beg pardon. We were thinking of "good jnisnuene, not invention. fir dvfrtisfutfuti. BOOT & SHOE STORE, There la now being opened Ihe largest new slot k ever brought here of KTKA.W 1IATN, FELT II ATS, BOOTS. SHOES, GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, TRUNK8. ETC. After having looked at goods at alUthcr places, como to us and com pare prices, and you will be convinced that ours are positively THE CHEAPEST GOODS. IX i'HOQF'WE HAVK THK FOLLOWING PRICE List: ' Baby Shoes, ; '. Children's Shoes, Misses Shoes, . . Women' Dress Shoes, Womcns' Morocco Buttoned Womons' Kid Shoes, . Women' Slippers, Mens' Shoes, Mens' Dress Shoes, Mens Dress Boots, Mens' Slipper, We bavo ulso an asaorlment too numerous to specify, at all prices. We take your measure lor any shoes at prices comparing with list prices. Anything we have not got we will got you without extra charge. All kinds of produce tuken in trade tho same as though it was cash. BOOT AND SHOE STORE, Clearfield, May 2278. Second Street, opposilo Court Uouso. THE BEE HIVE. To the Citizen of Clearfield CjuiiIi : I have opener up one of tlie largest nnd most attractive stocks of goods ever offered in tbis county, which must be seen to be ap preciated. It is not necessary to go into details, but will say that the following departments are thoroughly full in all qualities ond styles. Pry Goods, ' Cassimers, Shawls, Linens, White Quods, Millinery Goods, i Hosiery and Gloves, Corsets, Ties, Ilandkerchie fs, Furnishing Goods, ! Kid Gloves, ! Embroider)'.; Linen Suits, Skirts. These goods have been selected with the greatest care, were bought for cash and will be sold for cash, and my expenses being very light they will be sold cheaper than the cheapest. AVM. REED. Clearfield, Pa , May 1. 1878. ALL RIGHT Tbe Lancaster Intelligencer ably re marks: Persons wbo find it noccsyary to define their own position regarding tbo impending politicul campaign in i this State, need have no uncertainty, and have no occasion to give currency i to any misapprehension, regarding tho attitude of thu Intelligencer. Having! never skulked in its lout nor remained j for a moment indifferent to tho issue 1 of a struggle of the Democratic party with its opponents, our readers know that the Intelligencer and its editors will be found where they hare always been found, in the forefront of the battle, and striving to plant tbo victorious Democratic standard on the ramparts of the enemy. In ibis causo il wel comes tho aid of its old companions-inarms as well as of thoee who, having bocn long indifferent to the result, and slragglers in tho rear, are now inspired with tho enthusiasm ol tho hour to lend thoir aid in achieving Democratic victory. Mr. Dill has been in the receipt of continuing ovation from bis friends and neighbor at home since his nom ination, and tho words of solid sense which he speaks to thoee who assem ble to do him honor, fulfill tho expecta tions of all who pressed his nomination, and realize the full mcasuro of Demo; cratic demands everywhere. The en thusiasm created by tbo local demon strations spreads to every quarter of tno commonwealth, ana there is but one echo in the call lor a vigorous, uncompromising prosecution of the campaign. The high praise of Mr. Buckalow re garding the Democratic candidate, is fitly met by Judge Black' emphatic declaration that ' Mr. Dill ia a perfectly good nomination for Governor. IIo is a man of fine talents, remarkablo pru dence, pure morals and great political integrity." More than this can be neither said nor asked of any man who is named for political honors, and it could not come from sources ot greater authority, nor that will command more respect than Messrs. Bnckalew and Black. Exactly Khibt. Somo of our Dem ocratio Tempcranco advocates aro of fended because tho Altoona Conven tion failed to put a Democrat on the tickot. Tho four nominees, Lane, Ag now, Parsons and Shallcross, are all Radicals. That, in our judgment, is right, bocauso all tho Democratic nom inees are temperance advocates, hence no Democrat need go elsewhere to voto for a temperance man this full. The Democratio or "Confederate" House, as our opponents love to call it, keeps right on insisting upon economy in official administration, and the"loy al" Senato as persistently in favoring ex. travaganco. A Choctaw Indian girlie learning to set type in a Kansas nowspapor office. When the graduate she will go to Now York and work on Indian tales ihe hair lifting, dime novel species, wo presume Plymouth Church ha quietly drop ped Mrs. Tilton from its roll of mem bers, without trial. Othor women who show signs of a "o,uickoned conscienco" will no doubt be served in the samo way. H. Clay Preston, who took the thir ty-third degree in Freemasonry, and was Past tirsnd Master of the State ol Now York, died at Binghamton, S. T., on Tuesday the 28th ultimo. "Vickt" in Taoi BLt Victoria A. Woodhull must have acquired a now character while abroad, as she has sued the london piper for 1400,000 for damaging her reputation. To TBI Poirt. An oxchange per tinently remark: "Speaker Randall find it a good deal easier to pack a committee at vi asbington than a con vention ia Pennsylvania." Elictiok. An election was hold in Oregon on Monday, the 3d. for State and county officer, and member of ibe irfgislalare. or coarse the result is nnknown. The Philadelphia f'AromWc wrnnt. somebody to tell it "the site of a nieco of chalk," It la about as big a a lump w wsx. lion you are satisfied now Congress has concluded to nilinnrsi ob Monday, June 17th, providing the Senate recede Irom its tenth day movement. $tw g.dt'frttsfmfrits. . Shoes, , 20 cents a pair. 75 cents a puir. 00 cent a pair. 00 cents a pair, f 1 25 a pair. 1 OA a pair. 8S cents a pair. 05 cent a pair. ?! -IS pair. 00 a pair. y 0 F A F E R 8 O Ii ! E I S SO cent a pair. Carpets, Oil Cloths, Wall Paper, Window Blinds, Trunks, Valises, Rugs, &c. STRAIN SAW Ml 1. 1. FOR SAI.B-. seeond-hand 2i horse power. Blan-hr porta ble sear mill, alooal near, full rlejrM anl ia per feet order, warranted, will be eiilil Terr eaeap. Aiplj in person or teller lo WM. HOLT. Unsbaanoa, May It, ms-sl. Cenlre Co, fa. lT. tier f'll poorer. aVanjrnltaaaIi,lb,ttusrSNti k Bine- T at'eulM, J'Wtxmll, O. " Il Oiti.-a.itn. K,t If fared un tpaa m rVref in) rhia4H.tya.la. - sTra. sT .'eNr,fat isfrt.1V 1-r.rr II. I C til).. p t, riiiSMrn, rtv eWaJ f srttffiaw em Michigan Lnds for Sale. KIIO.IMM) acres of best fermlnt; lands, U to II per tore, anal 174. One aores of Ihe heat pine Uudiat freaitlsto "b per aere, oa railroad, nnd good navigable streams. Hood water and good sail. Kor paaiphleta and full lafnnaetl'in, sell on ornddrees I1KNJAMIN HI NTKR, Agent, S Federal St.. mar . 78-Ib. Allegheny City, Fa. DIMSsnl.tjTION.-Tbe ne-partaership here, lofore etisting between A. B. Reed and A. J. Hagertr, doing business nnder tbe Irse nans of Reed A llagerty, was dissolved br asatoal eon aenl oa Ibe I6tb day ef Mar. It'. All parsons t owing aeid Arm are reqaeeted to aaake immediate payment te A. B. Reed, wbe) retains the booae and aeronnta. And all persona having olaims againet tbe Arm will preeeot tbea te bim for pvy meet. A. B. P.KKD, A. 3. HAUKRTT. Cleaileld, Pa , Ma It, H78 tie AnSflPJlHrR ATORS" NOTICE. Notloe Ia hereby given lhat letters of Ad ministration en the estate of WM. (iLINX, :ate of Pike towrrship, CtearnelJ eoaety. Pa., deeensed, having been duly granted to tbe undersigned, all persona indebted te aaid estste will please mako immediate payment, and thorn having eleitnt er demanda ngwaet tbe same will present them properly antbantimtHd for settle ment without delay. ELIZA ALKNN, FOHBSTKR BLOOM. AdusiBistrators. New Millport, May 16, U78-l. t't)lTOR, NOTICE. ' Daniel Kanat vs. J. K. A J. C. Kraiaer. In the Court of Cnmntou Pleas of Clearllotd oounty, Fl. Fa. No. ill January Term, IS7S. The nudersigned Auditor, appointed by the Court to distribute the preeeeds arising from tba Sheriff's aula ef Defendant's pereeoe! properly, gives notice that he will nttend to the duties of his eppointment nt his oBoe. in CkvarSeld, on the 11th day of June, 1178, between tko hoars ef II o'eloek a. as., and I o'rlook p. m. W. M. McCl'I.LOrOII, Clearfield, Pa , May ti, lsrs-.1t. Auditor. ORPHAiCOLi op nsiAZi xtrnvjek-TTa. OF WILLIAM BELL, Deed. By virtue or nu order Issuing ewt ef tbe Or phans' Conrt ef Clearfield eonalT. there will he oxpoeee te ramie Base nt Ike Court House iu lie Uorough of Clearfield, ea Tewuday, Juno t. INTet, at I o'clock p. sa. tbe following deeeribed, Real Estate of Wm. Bell, der'd, to wit i Xo. 1. A rertajoj farm altnato in Greenwood township, Clearfield oonnty, Pa., bounded aod deeeribed as follows i On Ibe nortk by tho west braneh of tbe 4usqaehnaau river) on tbe soatfe ana wool ny ether Hud owned by nald Wm. 11.11, dee'd, and on tba east hy land ef Keed A Oweaa, containing twa hundred aad eiihteea aeree. about silly aoree nf which Is eleared and under cood eulliva ion, having thereon erected n good log dwelling bo est, a targo new bank horn and other eo.tbuildi.igo, and n bearing orchard. There ia use en tan promisee n veluahlu mill oaet, and eoosiderabfo oeh, pine nnd hemlock timber. No. 1. Another tract of laud situate va said township of Oreenwcjod, lying on tbe bWb hook of tbe Sasquebennu river, eontniniug In acres, snout Unerase which ia cleared, aod thebaleaee is well limnered with pine, oa ond hemlock. No. S. Another traet of laad situate iu said townsaiu of tsreenweod. en the North bonk of the ttuequr-haana river, oonlelalng about tot as res. more er leae, a heal It eeree ef which es cleared, aad the remeinder boa upon it n oonsid- erable quantity of piao, oeh and hemlock timber. Tnnua or 6ilu : One third in onsb en confir mation of nolo, and tbe boleuseo ia one end two years, with late rest oeeured on the promisee. . ritAMriON HKLli, I. L. 1I00VBH, Adonioietratnrs. Bower, May It, 187 41. NOTICBTOTAX PAVEKuV Inaoeord nnoo with nn Ael of Ike General Assembly of Ibia Commonwealth, approved the ttd day cf Merrb, A. D. 1ST, aad tbo supplement approved tbe M day ef April, A. D. 18 7 J, "relstlaf to lha eolleclioa of lalee tn tko oounty of Clear field." notice la hereby given to tbo tai-pnyeee restdiag In tbe ditlrloU below named, that tbe t'owuy Treasurer, la neoordaaeo with Ibe aeoond tefiea. of sold Act, will uttmd nt tbe places of noidtag tne oorougn nnd township eleeuooa en tne lei iowtng named daya, for the purpose ef reeeiviag Ibe Oounty nnd Sulci ales aeseaeodi lor IS7S: For Jordan lowasbtp, Tkuradae, June I, frdn to t. For Ferguson township, Vrhlay, Juno T, from I to II. For Lumber City kor , Friday, Jane t, from I to t. (Happy's Hotel.) For Penn twp., latarday, June t, from led. For Uuioa tuwnshin, Weduooday, Jena -II,' from tad. For DuBola, Thursday, Juke IS, frees t to 11,(01 Carter's llolclj For Tronteille, Thursday, Jane IJ, horn I tot For Lulkerskurg, Fviday, Jane 14, from t to fi. For Bloom township, Saturday, June It, from I tod. For Plhe township, Friday, Juno II, from te For Cerwenevillo Moturday, June It, from Hlo e. For Okeet twp., Monday, Jane fie, from II to 4. For Newonrg kor., Tuesday, June It, from I te It. For New Washington, Tuoedny, Jam II, frees I in. For Burnei,i twp , Weduooday, Jeae Iu, from t tu t. For Burnside borough, Thursday, Jane 17, free lo . For Bell tewuahlp, Friday, Jan M, from t to I. For O rosewood twp., SoMrday, June IS, from I se 4. Upon nil tales paid lo Ike T restorer there oil be s red eel ten of Bve por rent., while five per oent. will bo added aftor the Brat dayef Jelf ae-li, to ail napald taxes, meatag a dlfereoee ef TBN par oont. lo prompt tea payers. PertM eon, frees tko first of Mae, pay their Uses al Iks Treasurer's office. Nonce vo MuaraaBTt. A euro unporlualiy will be glreu te merobnnla tn nemo forward el let Hum and pieces ret forth, nnd ft tkslr Lieeesa (or Itrt. DAVID McliAl'UUtV, Clearfield, Pa., April It, 1ST! Tree rarer 3 m v- X.