Lancaster 2ntelligencer. IVlODRoDi:l , 74VdKeleillE loo Dltemcvol l Oar Rooster. We hoiskii4r hig rooster because he has a right to crow loud and long over the restileof the elections held on Tues day. Ite stands in all the pride of pure game blood, and his exultant notes pro•, claim'the dawn of a brighter political day. The Result In the County. In spite of all the obstacles it encoun tered, the "mule ticket" proved to be a rst class team. If it had enjoyed the advantage of an even start, it would have won the race: The majority of 0. J. Dickey has been reduced more than one-half, and a little more vigorous work would have wiped it out entirely. The Republicans who supported Adam IC. Witmer, for Congress, will not fall back into the habit of voting for any candidates who may be set up by the ring masters. They are a pow er in Lancaster county, to-day,'and will make themselves felt hereafter. The Election In 11118 City The election in this City passed off very quietly on Tuesday. Thevotepolled was not a full one. The Republicans turned out better than the Democrats. Every negro eagerly availed himself of the privilege of voting. The white bummers of the Radical party in some instances walked up arm-in arm with the greasiest and filthiest specimens of the African race. In the Ninth Ward the whole Republican Council Ticket would have been de feated but for the negro vote. The Rad ical politicians ina themselves on a per fect equality with the blacks. The friends of 0. J. Dickey were of fering to bet throughout the day that he would carry the city, but the returns tell n very diffiirent story. Our Victory 'Pie election of 'Tuesday resulted in a glorious JDemocratic victory. As usual on election night the Itadicals started oil with loud boasts and tinfounded claims, and the I)emocratie gains and triumphs were slow about finding their way to the public air. When the smol:e cleared away from the battle-field, and a cluthee was afihrtled for recognizing who were killed and who alive rind victorious, it was discovered that the first bulletins in regard to the fight were all wrong. In this State, upon the hardly contested field, were found stretched, cold in political death, O'Neil, Cessna, Morrell, Armstrong, tilfillan and Donley, all Ittalieal members of the last Congress, all candidates for re-election, and all leaders in the infamous schemes which have made that body odious ill the sight of honest men. To these land-grabbers the people allotted a space of seven feet by three, just enough to furnish to elicit a political grave, from \Odell they can never be resurreeted. Aild there too, 01l that disastrous field, inns Stretched the corpse of old " 'l'arill"' Andy Stew art, of layette, the cotemporary itt l'on gress of .Itiies Buchanan, I leery Clay, :old the great men trio made that body illustrious half :1 century ago. instead of a meagre minority a six in Congress th e Democrats of l'ente,ylv:i nia can now ho:ed Ili - having elected t e n s tr a ight-old Democral , , :111(1 11111. Independent. IZepoldicati. That is a result of NV(' may' NV(.II be 111'01111, ('ho h;giclnlive 1 . 1(11ll'et 111,1V(.11 ill be :L1111 1, 4 1`1111:111y disastrous to the Itadil cats. Oar by one thusorrupt and vela 6 ' roosters and pinchers" fell before the blows or lie sturdy yeaman rs o f 1',IIII sylv:111ia, until a majority a (ffil , in (he Senate and a beggarly hall-dozen in the 'louse inns all that was left. Till' i111(1- 111111(.4 gerr . vinainh•r n'as rnnt•orl rid fat' Ilic express purpose of preventing :1 fair I..xpres,ion of the polo Mar wilt (vie , all, that prevented the I) e nto e rfi e y from seeming an ocer whelnting in berth braiielte the Stale Legislature. In I inliana the I)..inocraey inalie a clean sweep, electing Hale oilleers and a decided majority (Is' 1 ,(.:4'i,1(11111'1.. n'i'l 111'41 Vl' Vt.lsy 1111111(1i:11 'lll'4' 1(1 ( (I, it will compel hiuh L. revolve the appointment of Senator Nlorton Mister to garland, in or der to prevent the election of a 1 , 1 . 1110 - er:11 ttl till the vacancy that would thus be Created. ' Thal. the 1)1 . 1110er:1k 1111. Ml. 111:111(' decided gains ill the l'ongressiiiii al delegation of Indiana fuller returns will no dould clearly show. In I/11 . 11), 11C1 . 1mr V11111:1, lIILS Loeu beatcu allii "Wel' !_!:1111s :\ survey...l'lbl , battle-11,bl slittNys that the Ltatlieals have been badly whipped, 111 spilt thealtl aMtrtletl them by their 111...12,T0 :Mil,. Tie white own of this Limitary are not prepared to aettept negro ttqualily withttut a slrot4gle, anti they Itave resented the rat ilitta thyto or the Firt,,,,th frel.llloll. 111/11,1 Inca are tired of Jtatlittal rast.ality, 01111 sit.l: of l'nu gressional anti Itogislative frauds and jobbery ; and they spoke their lIIIIIIIS a Lie reecnt cleitions. 'Phis is but the be ginning of a still brighter end. lion. Isaac E. Mester As soon :to it (you announced that I ). J. Dickey had been renominated for Congress, very many of the best, the most intelligent and the most h o med Republicans ol• Lancaster (minty ex pressed an earnest desire that lion. Ssaac E. Mester should consent to be- COMC a ealldidtal'. high does Mr. Iliester stand in the estimation of the people of Lancaster county, so convinced are all Men of his great talents and his personal and political integrity, that multitudes or it,publi,:ms would gladly have voted fur 1611). Mr. IlieSter dins not seek oilier. lie steadily declined yield to the earnest solicitations ot• 11. multitude of friends. I lad he accepted the nomination we believe lie could have been elected. lie has lost nothing by his refusal to enter the political arena, but the people of this County inns( feel that they would have gained greatly by the election ot• 511(.11 a mall to represent them in Congress. We hope the day of Bmall politicians may speedily pass away, and the lime soon ndurn when such men as lion. Isaac E. I I iester will no longer regard the private station as the post of honor. We need such men in the eouneils of the ilatiOn. Drumore Township Democrat ic The Democracy of Druniore township run a straight-out ticket for township officers, and elected it Trout lop to bot tom, and that in spite of the fact that quite a Dandier ut negroes Voted the itadieal ticket. The Wo part It,: ocetipied ditrerent sides of 41 road in an open lot of ground in front of the voting-place all day, and it is said to have born laughable to see how much ashamed many - Republicans were of their negro allies. Home while men came boldly over to the I /enmeratie side, and many others who had always turned out punc tually to vote the Republican ticket staid at home. The men elected by the Democrats are among the best and iitost substantial eitiz.ens of the township. The Radical sleeken onivers could scarcely believe the evidence of their own eyes w h en they counted the ballok. They could not imagine where the Dem ocratic majority came from. It came from white men who will keep the township Democratic hereafter, unless we are very much mistaken. As will be seen by the official table o returns Mr. Dickey's majority for Con gross is less than twenty-four hundred In 1808 he had a majority of 0,319. Those who laughed at the Independen movement before the election, laugh of the other side of their mouths now. Pr is announced that owing to the lateness of the season, and time required to prepare business for Congress, neither the President nor any of his Cabinet will be able to attend the Georgia State Fair. Thus Is another big drunk prevented, no doubt greatly to tile disgust of Ulyi Ties. THE - LANCASTER WEEKLY . INTELLIGENCE - ft, WEDWESDAY . , OCTOBER 19, 1870. The Result In Lancaster County The official returns from Lancaster County shoW that O. J.:Dickey; the reg ular Republican candidate, is elected by, a majority of 2,311 votes. Two years ago his majority was 0,310. What has caused this remarkable changeTh the Jilmne o'T Thaddeus Stevens? It was not owing merely to personal unpoirtklapry". - The causes lie deeper, and they_ are to be found in a prevailing dissatisfaction with the action of Congress and the gen eral conduct of Grant's administration. The people of this great county' areslow to move and difficult to excite, but they have a rugged sense of honesty, and are distinguished for taking care of their pecuniary interests. They have not seen the public lands divided up among railroad corporations without feeling that they were being defrauded out 'of their share of the public domain. They have not forgotten the appeals which were so artfully made to tittim in the Fremont campaign, when they were urged to vote against the Democratic candidate, in order that the viygin fields of the West might be kept free from the contaminating touch of slavery, and re main, as freesoil, a free heritage for them and their children. They have not for gotten the homestead law by which every industrious citizen who chose to emigrate to the \Vest was fissured of a cheap home. These things they have carefully considered, and they were na turally exasperated when they saw a territory larger than that of France and Prussia combined, given away to pri vate railroad corporations by a Repub lican Congress, and the bills which completed this great robbery of the peo ple, signed by a Republican President. Having an opportunity for calling Mr. Dickey to account for his votes in favor of these gigantic "land grabs," the hon est Republicans of LancaAter County refused to vote for him. Another cause of dissatisfaction was the mismanagement of the finances by the present administration. 'Pile farm ers of Lancaster County feel that they are bearing a greater hurdler' than should be put upon them ill the shape of indirect taxation. So long us the necessities of the war demanded great sacrifices they were willingly made, but our people naturally and properly re volt again , t unnecessary taxation, even though it be disguised under the speci ous plea of paying the national 'Pile strongest plea, made by the Repub licans in the recent campaign, was eon- IlinOd in ilgure:i which ciricti h) show that some millions of dollars wrung from the masses every month, in order• that the principal or the debt might be diminished. The leaders of the _Republican party will soon discover• that a frugal people, those of Lan• caster l'ounly,will be satisfied to s e, the mere-'t 4 the debt honestly and pun, tually met. will :Lllolv posterity to filt• IrreS - VrVat 111 or thv Diel;ey's Colll s, e in thing.; tilt' uiil Sill( the people of Lanea.,ler County. 'flimmluat current expense' , of (:i . alit's lire vastly gicater than the 14'11111e of lilts 1 , )11111S believe they should he. They compare the emt of the government in thesedayswith what it svitswheilacitizeriiif Laticasterl'wility got iii the Pre.iilehtial chair, and they see that the p:u•ty is extravagant :mil wasteful. Ciiiigress 111:111e hi) propel• ellln•ts lu rut down os ponditurea,:uul Mr. Ihel:ey acted with the IL:idle:Ll hinhirity. Thal eil,l many votes. Tho ItepuMiran. of I,:tittt,lor ',.tinty have altytty, hecn vt.r,y anti tila\'l.l'y ill sclitillll.lll, hula iii:tjorily of have ugairiot 11,gro they had Lien ,2:ivett an op portunity. They helieved they would he allotted L. dooide the4ol,,tion for thoim-oleos , and did not rcli.h theon foreetnent of the Fifteenth Aniontintent by the joint :lethal 'of l'olngr,.ss and a S:nto Ltd,4islalur, Nvidolt \t - as (dueled without rererettoo to the nuttier. Itiokey's emir:, upon that sithjeol had 0 tendoney to cut do‘vit his majority. result in (his County is a dirt et :111t1 Vcr.)' decided cr)1111011111:11i1.11 of fho iwijurity in 'otigrc, , , and of the administration of l'rusidunt ;rant. Thi. I udepondeul movement allinded the people 1 rh:uu•o togive sotit..I2NIIIVS- S1,)11 to their Sills It Wits iii ti l lby I heappliaticos which:ire tt.ually deutned no •es,:a ry to t•t,111111:111 , 1 political SIII•t•eaS, :Ind so fccble Ilia it seem to be that poli thlaits were afraid to identify- . them selves with it. ()ne after another, the wen who had been named as I..adidates, published devliii:ll ions, until only n frug- Intent of the original ticket remained in the liol 1. Th,olientic,l.t the itiovinciit laughed :It it, and it looked as if they might succeed itt laughing it out of es i..tenee ; but there tel 1110l1S- :Inds of honest li.epublicans iu till. t'ounty who NVere ready and anxious t.f break the yol:e w hich a sel LI corrup , and mercenary ',Militia" trailers lute imp.,ed upon them. I lad the lode pendent movement, been pushed :ts i might have been, Mr. Dickey wind, have beeit three ,tt . the cantlitlatts lot. the Legislature, the l'ouuty Solicitor and the Itrittifit Lt sprrturs \vanld have shared thv sante The Independent ticket was beaten, but its supporters may congratulate themselves upon \vital. they iicooloplish- ed. They are a poker in Lancaster County to-day— a power which kill Ue :dannlantly iidt, if properly mutated, lo break in Litre.; all the slates made ring, and trading, poll icians hereafter. Radical Rule In Eolith Carolina The present government of SontliCtu. Mina afllinla a fair speolinen of carpet - bag government. The State debt has been more than doubled in two years, and the financial condition of the State threatened by partizan legislation and the creation of monopolies, in which the State officials tunes at the public expense; natives of the State are almost. wholly exeluded from mita. apices; the Covernor has organized edanumerous colored alltl refuses lu permit 1110 Clillip 1111`111 Singh , white man. ( tovernou Scott appointed commissioners of elec tions from :inning his own zealous parti zans; the Legislature is notoriously venal and corrupt, and open to bribery; the elianteter of ltepublitianism is indi cated by the willingness ol• nor of the largest Congressional constituencies L. sustain such a man as NVliitteneire. The Pure !treed l:eptildican politician: lute• pretnd ed to think that they had rubbed out the lines of dicisinu by reason of color in the South ; oil the mod inhered of that section do not seem inclined to abide liy that idea. From having just risetmgainst the white adventurer, who undertook In monopolize all the offices, the new element in South l':u•olina. has now gone to drawing lines by sh,t(l, s of odor, making a political list ineti.ll be tween the ainl mulattoes. The genuine, unadulterated blacks have put out a manifesto " to denounce the (mu latto clique ) party now ruling, which 0001:0 to exclude the Idaelc unlit front participation in the controlling influ ence of nominations for office." This is San .Doittingo over again. A NtYrilElt victory for the Itadivals in Pennsylvania, - Ohio and Indiana, like that of Tuesday Isat, will leave them in such a state of utter rout that they will never see their forces in' line again.— Where is thulit's 10,0(11) majority in In diana? Uone, along with Smiler Col fax, " where the woodbine twineth." SuE what a gigantic business that of 'linking sewing machines has become! Twelve companies sold during the year 1809, 3:20,660 of these machines. The largest number sold by one company is 80,781: These wonderful contrivances do the work that fingers used patiently to accomplish without assistance, and yet the sewing work done by fingers alone has notheen decreased measurably. Collateral Inheritance Tax on Thaddeus Stevens' Estate. The Register of Lancaster County keeps a. docket In. which the char !toter and, vales) / Of the estates of all persons dying without father, mother; wife, childy - Mi or lineal descendants:etre required to he recorded. And p . "*lMall suds estates the Register is refiukrea' law to assess a tax of two dollars and fifty cents on every -hundred dollars clear value of such estate, for the use of the Commonwealth. The law makes it the bounden duty of the Executors or Administrators of all such estates to pay the full amount due to the Common wealth to the Register within one year from the death of the party whose es tate may be liable to such collateral In heritance tax. If the Executors or Ad ministrators faith) pay said tax within one year from the death of the party from whose estate it Is coming to the' State, then interest is to be charged thereupon from the death of the dem dent at the rate of twelve per cent. per annum. If any Executor or Adminis trator shall fail to render Isis proper ac count to the Register of an estate upon which collateral inheritance tax shall be due, it is the duly of the Register to cite said Executor or Administrator be fore him to show cause why such tax should not be paid. More th . an three years ago Thaddeus Stevens died, leaving behind hint two Executors in this Chun ty, 0. J. Dickey and Anthony E. Roberts. Of the exact amount of Mr. Stevens' estate, and of what it consisted, no one has yet been able to discover. His Executors failed to comply with the law which required them to exhibit a true and perfect in ventory of all the goods, eltattels and credits of the deceased into the Regis ter's (ace within thirty days after the proving of the will. They have for three years and 111, , r0 failed to tile such inventory, and the State has been kept out of the money which is due a.".q- col lateral inheritance to from the estate of Mr. Stevens. That the estate was large, is shown by the terms of tile will of Mr. Stevens and the character of the be q uests made by him. One of the Executors hoe been Lean] to declare that it would 0(000111 to more than two hundred thousand dollars. If all put it down at even two hundred thousand the amount duo the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania at the death or - Thaddeus : , -Iteveus was lice thousand dollars, and, at the rate of t welve percent. per annum, the amount now due the State is tiny-six hundred dollars. ux3mination or the collateral in heritanee docket in the office of the Register of Lancaster County shows that, no return of the estate Of 'Thaddeus Ste- Veil: , has ever been !mole, for the pur pose of allowing the collateral inherit ance tax due the State to be levied and collected. There are records of the es tates of other 111011 NOW 11:1V0 dial before and since, hot none of that td . Thaddeus Stevens. .1 fere is clear:old conclusive proof that. the Ext•cutors of Thaddeus Stevens have Leon guilty or gross 111:111 . 0:1S:1110e in Of fice. Why the former and the present Reg i:-ff el' or I,:incaster I 'ounty 11:100 never Cited Itickey and I:oberts to an swer is sour than we can tell. t'ertain it is tint( there has been such neglect of duty, to use the mildest term possible, as must east very grave suspicions on the conduct of all concerned in this matter. Now that t h e election is over we Think lesirs. I 00Itey and Itobetts might lied time to spend to the duties required lo . thoin by law as the ENe,ii ton; of Thadden stov,lN. They have no right to hold bade money belonging to the State, and it is the bounden duty of the Register to cite thin to answer in this matter. Let 11101 discharge his duty by summoning the delinquents to an swer Tor nut having Bono Iteckleyi ing 'l'li,• Expr.s.i make it :ty pe;u• that out• big rooster crowed too soon over the Congressional election in Penn sylvania. It attempted to correct our list of monikers pipet, :Ind had the audacity, with the returns. staring it, in the face, to claim that Cessna, :Morrell, I I ilfillan, Armstrong and Donley were elected, tt•het, I'vo+'S ono of I hem 113 s 1,0 " slum . " by the official figures to be beaten by their Demovratic opponents. In order s to make a'good show' for its credulous readers it e t ch ;went so far as to put down Henry D. Foster as a It:elk:al. \\lca must be thought of the truthful ness of a newspaper which iseapable of such:glaring:mil unqualified falsehoods's' As a speci men of bold ;mil barefaced lying the leading editorial of the of Saturday f veiling surpassed anything we ever saw in a newspaper. Itatllcal journals fear to let their readers see how completely their party has been con demned by the people. That is t here:lsm] the !:'stirs•, lies so outragemudy. 'rile Democrats not only make a clear gain of five members of Congress in this State, not counting Creely, Independent Republican, who was elected over the regular Radical candidate by Demo cratic votes, but they carry the State on the popular vole by a very handsome majority; and that in spite of the large negro vote which was east solid for the tcpuldican party. The Krin,.sii is wel come to all the consolation it i::111 de rive front a truthful statement of the result, hut we must protest against such reckless lying as it indulges in. Grants Whiskey Taster Some people have wondered not a lit tle what eculd be the duties of the reti nue or brigadiers on duly about the White lioust. One of them has at last thrown a little light upon the subject. Ueneral 1 , . 'l'. Dent acts as whiskey taster to the President, and does a little business in the way of advertising such lots as he appl,VeS. The New pork San publishes a fife /Mil, of the follow ing letter: i)l:Antt ENEItA Tilt': NVIII litt.l . ll,lll,t` to \ .Inner of Ky. Sim Intl 'Well to NOP the SIII}TOII-ttenol . lo suit,, refers her tii sill ; her Lu=inoss is to tlisposo of some Vl`O' Sllllollol' NVIOSI.,' —it. is capilal, has ago, and nnr the price is I think the best. Gt he hall in thin U. S. As col are purelmsing by I lin I innnity I lien, also refer lien to yon. N'tirs, It \you'd be intereAing to know how many gallons of 'Mrs. Jones' whiskey, or lIONV much ready money down 1 rn ;rant':i brother-in-law reveived for the above elaborate pull', and the influent* or an endorsemenl di reel from Ihe I'res idenlial matmion. Very Lugubrious The tone of Forney's Pfc.: is very lugubrious indeed. Speaking of the Western Slat a it says : Front the Western States the political news does not grow clearer. It is proba ble that we shall have 1 wait a short time until the official returns shall enable us to know with veil:duty what the day has brought. forth. Western Pennsylvania has also st ruck terror to the soul of Forney. He d is courseth editorially thus: Western Pennsylvania has helm doing badly. It begins to look as if the Sixteenth, Eighteenth, Twentieth, Twenty-lirst, and Twenty-filurth longressional districts must be.given up. As yet the accounts are con flicting, and in certain points hardly recoil- I,ut oven if some of those districts are saved, the general current of loss can not be gMitgayed. We await front the press of that go iion , an explanation. Eastern Pennsylvania ,a'x'pects the west to account; for the slaughter of , Cessna, Morrell, Stew art, Gil fillan, andliiMiey all in one action is alittle too much; and -- calls for investiga tion. T 1 E negroes have elected the Radical ticket in Philadelphia. heeding Re publican papers say so. Andnnw the negroes are: demanding clerkshipetand other offices. Several have applied-for positions under the Sheriff and the Re: ceiver of Taxes. The Radicals will not dare to deny thein. Tfll).ey . do the black vote will go against them. Wltey have got a black elephant on hand, and the beast is troubling them greatly. General Hobert E. Lee The announcement, of the death of Robert E. Lee, will not fail to nicifti:eritiotions of regret even in the Ntiith, While it , will be received with' *Wry Indleatloh" of profound sorrow throughout the South. The military career of this great chieft -' has h24seil Into history, and is ft to every American school-boy. mum ma ry of the events of hi: all that would seem to be 11e( lie was the son of the celebrati it Horse Harry" Lee, one of J.l 'Hinton cavalry officers of 0t... .tionary war, was educated at West Point, where he was graduated with lionor, and at once began his career as an oflicer in the army of his country, in whose ser vice he continued, rising by dint of merit through the various grades, until the breaking out of the rebellion, at which time los held the rank of Colonel of cavalry. At this crisis he chose to cast his fortunes into the scale of war on the side of his Southern fellow coun trymen. He was at once assigned to the - com mand of the state troops of Virginia,and, when these were turned over to McColl federate government, he was placed in command of the forces at Cheat Moun tain. In the winter of j 2l :ti ' he was relieved of this comma and ordered to inspert the fortifications along the southern coast. In April, he was apPpinted military adviser to President Davis, and was soon after : appointed general, and placed in command of the armies of the Confederavy. After tile battle of Seven Pines, or Fair Oaks, he took the field in prsmi, and planned the campaign that hesulled in the.rotreal of I. lencral McClellan from the front of Richmond, and carried the army of Northern Virginia to the field of Manas sas and thence into Maryland. Then came the battle of Sharpsborg, the return or the army to Virginia the battle of Fredericksburg., in Discern her, 1stl:2; the battle of Chancellors ville, the invasion or Pennsylvania in 1863, the return to Virginia, the battles of the Wilderness, Spottsylvanin and Cold Harbor, the evacuation of Peters burg, and Lb e final capitulation (April 10, 1555) at Appomattox. Whatever may be thought of 1 icneral Lee's course, in siding with and directing the military operations of the rebellious states, not even ]us most bitter enemies will deny his splendid military abilities nor his personal honor as a gentleman and a soldier. When the war ended he accepted the consequenecs and retired to private life. As President of Washington College, at Lexington, he discharged the new duties 'doi•pdved upon him in a manner which speedily made ttnitArtitittion'firnnyt popular seat of learning in the South':- He was lately elected President of an important new railroad in Virginia, and proposed to :old the supervision of that to his other duties. I lis health Ims been declining for a couple of years past, but his decease was not so 50Q9.,12XL)p044. •011.t11W0U1 . 1.1161710, - lie ;Wag. sei•iothwi th .. ri , fitlhting fit, mid, thOngh he rallitd somewhat, did not recover. lb` died on Tuesday morning at 9 o'clock of conges tion of the brain. Even hi enemies have spoken kind ly of him since the war ended, and there will be but one feeling as the news orhi: death spi•eada over the land, that of iv gret at the (112(Ta ' S(301 a (..; eneral who wa.: great in action, however. wrong. play, have been the cause in which he fought, and of a wan whose pH v:ite Model of purity. A Calm View of the Wreck The editor or the St.(b• ./0//rwa, the new Itepublican daily :it Harrisburg, does uot,lu•opose to stultify himself by claiming that for a victory cliieh is djslistrous defeat or 1 he Itepubl icall party in.Penfisylvnit la. lie elnyostSs ritLbStitA tell the tratli, to force the urt,a,sse; of the party to look the defeat. squarely 01 the face, and to show them who is responsi ble for it. nder the caption ".\ Cahn View or the \Vreel;" hr discourses as follows : .„)Ve,fail to lied yatiso fox .i3ougili . l,4laLli)ik. Ji„trlCCiamult, of tlui.eliNction uc'iliis The Itepublican gains in the mining regions are cheering. The reduction of tho large Democratic majorities in Lehigh ;aid Mont gomery counties, and the election of Shoe maker in the 11th district, with the holding of4ke.lo.th'ilistriet, are notable episoilet4:l In 'Llso•protierit , Congress, the ite4lublitfui-bliVe , IS linanbers against Definierats f In' tile' Legislature, an joint ballot., a majority of 22.1 n the election on Tuestlay, we lost O'Neil in the 2,1; Cessna in the 10th; Mor rell in the 17th, ttillillan in the '2oth , Stew art in the 21st, and Donley hi tlic,2lth ; in all, six members. 'rho result in the 1:Ith district in still in doubt, the loss of that, which is not improbable, carries us to sev en, to offset which we have gained iineo The Pennsylvania delegation in the next:4:ml- I gross may, therefore, stand 12 Itepublieanii 'to 12 Democrats. In national logislariori; therefore the power of the State is exactly' zero. The Republican 1114)rity in the State Senate will be one, and in the I louse about 15 making, on joint ballot, Ic. In the case of the elected Congressmen, several have escaped defeat- by beggarly majorities, and among the defeated aro several who should have carried their dis tricts by majorities of over one thousand. In the inain, the candidates were good men. No triter mail I n ks ever gene from any State to Congress than Ifon. I), Merrell. O'Neill, Cessna, and Giltillan have proved themselves worthy and accept:tido repre sentatives. Stewart was a patriarch, MU of honor, and Donley was a gallant soldier in the late war. Armstrong, whose ma jority of 2,000 is red ticed to 300, has ever been faithful in the discharge of Iris duty, and against \I r. Dickey, who falls frt tin 4,500 to less than 2,000, no charges of derelict tign have been entered. (If the candidates for the Legislature less can be said. Those fur - the Senate in the "double district" were esp Wally objectionable to the people, and they_were, with others similarity situated, defeated by more popular, H . not in every case morn worthy Men, nolninated by t h e Democraey. Here, then, is what some of our ex changes are pleased to call a great Republi can victory. Wherein: lies the victory? Who has triumphed? Nay, gentlemen managers and manipulators of the Reim], lican:party, come view y o ur work. Tell us plainly how many such " victories" or are able to stand? Tho :al4•iltion of the na tional and State directors generally are in- Vi(Pti br 11,SO fart.. Show is wherein you are condjortt•d, while the people mourn. !lore 13:trharlan Voters Wanted taving been badly beaten at the late municipal election ill Earrishurg, in spite of a very large negro vote, the ref fifirtrph is notv turning its attention to the Chinese. I t says : "We have hal ,iiiveral Chinese esiiling ill our 111111.4 for a mllitbor of year., aunt they are not 'tall so detestable as some of our ea - changes would have us tillpf.,l% till the contrary they are as toilet, orderly:Het cleanly its are a majority of our natiVC iZellSl/f similar eiretineattnees in lire... F. T. Dent, A. Se That paragraph put forth as a sort or Airier, :111.1 Nyl` expert ht sre the 7i leympli boldly ail viiiiating i Iho imporhttion and enrranehisement of va,t hordes of " the heathen Chi M.Sc." The State Le:Ohl:Hare The l'hiladelnhia snys, "seven kill lit• the utmost majority en joint bal lot fur lLc Itadicals in the Stale Legkla lure." l'hat is less than one-third or what, it was last year. Even the niest unfavorable returns show that it II:LS been reduced ono-half. Th.. .flicial re suit wilt be needed to determine who are elected in certain close districts. One Month of tilegt Thu siege of Paris lovi litstod ,fflo month, and not a single gun has Leon fired against the city by the Ptussians. The question whether they really mean to bombard it, if they can do to, eon ti ti nes to be discussed in European jour nals. Meantithe . there are sorties and skirmishes, and rumors of events to take place, with some slight hope of peace, which we hope may soon be n allzbd. Democratic Victory in Columbia The Democracy; of Columbia swept the borough yesterday, electing their municipal . otHeera'irr: spite of the two hbridred negMllofo. The white men 'o'f,th.attown revolted against tlio degre datiOn.of the ballot, and many. who had always stood by the Republican party abandoned It forever. OBITIJAII 1 Secretary Cox wag- one of the few proper. appointments made by General .Gniiit He is a tine lawyer, a perfectly helf&t man, and onoof the few officials wo has devoted His whole time and at tention to thCduties of his office. His managementeif the Department of the Interior has won golden opinions for him treenail except certain Radical pol iticians who found they could not use him. lie went into the Cabinet with certain old fashioned notions not in ac cordance:with the t views of certain lead ers of the Republican party. Ho be lieved it - to be his - ;duty to administer his office fur the.good of the country, and not for the aggrandizement of in individuals and the advancement of mere party purposes. When a levy was made upon the clerks in his department for funds to be used in this fall's 'if am paign, ho resettled the interference, and informed those under hint that they should exercise their own discretion in the matter, assuring them that a refusal to contribute would not be regarded as cause fur dismissal. The Dismissal of Secretary Cox This action gave ilk enemies the op portunity they had so long sought; and Simon Cameron, %itch. Chandler and certain other prominent office brokers, immediately determined to force this obnoxious and honest Secretary out of (ace. They set to work upon ( /rant at once, and succeeded in getting him to inform Mr. Cox that his resignation teas de,dred. 01' course he could not honorably remain in the after such an intimation from the !'resident, and a letter tdf resignation was promptly sent in. We ehose to let a prominent 'tepid,li can newsp:tper express Hs opinion upon the elntracter of this removal and the runeelucneos likely to Ilmv front it, nailer tlotit to mal:e comments of our tINVII. The following article, from the editorial columns of the Er, - ,/”. , / 7', l• tph , slimvs 11(0% this ttetion of the President is regartleti by loyal eyes: Although nonlllcinl announcement of the fart lets been made, the fact that all the Washington vorrespondents of the newspa- I pet's state positively that the resignation of Secretary Cox, or do Interior Department, ' has been accepted, loaves no doubt that the President has committed an act that is dis groxeful that will alienate more than ever the best men in the country from his administration, and that will be a per manent injury to the Republican party. Mr. Cox, to use plain language about it, has .been literally kicked out of ()Mee to oblige a clique 'of disreputable •politicians who would disgrace any political party, and who have done more to Injure the Republican organization than all the attacks of its open enemies. 'rite offense of the Secretary of the Interior was that he made an honestand per sistent effort to commence a reform of our civil service. Ile very properly and wise ly eontined himself to his own department and, so !lir as lay in his power, exerted .himsetf to bring his clerical force up to the dlighest site of etlicieney, to free it its much •asiguasiblo from the demoralizing influen ces otipasLy,pollLies, and to prevent the in turferenee of nur*e political wire-pullers in matters for which he alone was responsi ble. In the task which he undertook to perform Mr. Cox was entitled to the cordial support of President (frail!, who, more than any man who has occupied the executive chair since the lays 41- , Ver.hatteksputwas a position at the dilife'vf.hi4"inktAtirntitirr to coII4OI4aOAPP : reforms in theeivil service for which all the, best Mon lit. the country were calling. The President, it is true, did make the shadow of nn ollorl, lIIIt he speedily allowed him sell to be checkmated by Congress, and gale up the tight. There was much that he could have done, however, ill spite of Congress and in stile of all the " rings'' in the country, and such a total Stirrender of his personal inde pendence as is invoked in the dismissal of Secretary I is calculated to disgust. every right-thinking man in the country. We say the dismissal of Secretary Cox, for that is what the resignation of that gentleman innounts to, and his exit from office will lie hailed by alto enemies of reform as an indi cation that no serious attempt to regenerate the civil service may be expected so long as the present administration remains in Some months ago, when the letter of See rotary Lox to the Republicans Congressional Committee, riMising to allow acompulsory assessineld to ho made upon the clerks of Iris olliveror party purposes, was published, we said that he would be Maligned without Mercy and be Made to stiller for his Mile ..fLe.ll4llinee .there was ally power "Parnihrof the' - 001itiOnl wire-pUllers Who ' 'composed the vominitive to wreak Von grottos, mom him. Vie did not, however, anticipate the result that has actually taken place, for wo gave the President. credit 1 . 01• lul illdPl , olllloll,q , Or Spirit 1111t1 an honest desire to servo the public that it seems he does not possess. President I :rant ,wits elected quite as much upon the beIMI: that ' he' Wag' not s ifintisitn, awl that' he would strive to correct the evils that mere ;mildest h e !mama:tiled upon the I foverninent of the country, as upon his political record, and the disappointment among his most enthusiastiesupporters has been most profound at his :logged obstinacy in matters of no moment and his yielding almost witifopt a struggle where firmness was imperrith - mly nocossary. In this 'Ma r rel between Secretary Cox and the Con gressional Repulilman Committee the duty of the President was plain, and heought to have supported Mr. Cox at all hazards, and that he did not do so is ;is disreputable to him personally as it is discouraging to those who supported him in the hope that, while upholding the prineiples of the Republica n !arty, he would prove himself so far su perior to party itilltionces as to reruso to yield to them when they were clearly an tagonistic to the interests of t h e country. Of course some pliant tool of the polit ical adventurffr whose chief business is to traffic in the distribution of 1/1111.1 . will take the place of Secretary Cox Thus will Cameron tC Co. be enabled to provide fat places for their adherents, while the interests of the nation In this matter (Avant has furnished new evidence of his utter unfitness for-the high office to which he was elevated by a people who imagined that he possessed civil as well as military capacity.— Thousands of honest Itephblicans are fully convinced of the great blunder they made in voting for hint. Our Victory Acknowledged The eNultant tone which pervaded the It:idle:11 newspapers the morning after the election has changed completely. In reviewing the election the .`l7liff SayS 'l'lleelection in tldsSlntrf linty beset down as a Itepublican defeat. In Philadelphia the contest for Sheriii was spirited, and yet I,eed,' majority is barely a I /1,0 I leary's in 1 , 0,1. Colltltitl4 the colored vote, as we I id, solid Itepublican, 1.4.e11s should have received a majority of at leaSL 111,155. elected h . , - a majority of :2,620 in 1,6 , , is nom defeated by an independent candidate, supported by the Dentocr:tts, by a majority of over Ann. Harmer, \Ow should have carried the sth I nstriet, is beaten by heading. In the 9th lii tri-1, Dickey the . present idember, is elected by a majority :n , and one-third what it IVaS WO yi.ars ago. The Dist District. is lost. The :2:241, With a Rep iblican majority of 1,5011, elects Negley by' a im(aaity of Irss than 3,000. The 1:411, the halt and the :21tli Districts, all of wini,•in , in,nnid have elected ll.epublicans I, decided majorities, :ire so close that only theultirial count will decide who is chosen. 'l'o orl,et this we have the brilliant canvass in the 111.11 Distriet, re sulting in the oltetion of :iimentaker, and the success of :\ Ir. killinger, in the lutin I rislrirt. The result in the Congressional ticket, therefore, iv a loss of at Ica , i two morn, probably three members, and the• saving tit . others by greatly reduced major ities. The returns will not warrant a review of the Legislative tickaH. haVO 11.1 wort, Tories Ina 110110 or gains; of greatly OH ittinished, hilt 110110 of increased majori ties. The Senatorial District composed of Blair, Huntingdon, Mifflin, Centre, Juni ata and Perry, known as the "double Ms pact,- hast elected twit keener:Ms to the Slate Senate, which it: a liollll of . 1)110. In our own countythe members are elected by reduced majorities, running he.- hill!' in nearly every ward and township. With rare exception, the failureof the tiek= et is directly astiribable to the personal weaknega if the ~inditlates or the interfer ence and- trortehery of diStappOilltod.: party managers: Men aro nominated by corrupt combinations, by the sharp practice of pp !Meal ,managers, and to servo personal ends, witnopt the slightest regard to the wishes of people. There was no material change io the :in thracite coal trade last week. The Phila delphia Ledge says: " The supply of coal is rather on the in crease, but not ao much in advance of or • tern as to affect prices. 'the market may ho characterized as adull though even one, prices of the several, sizes having closely followed Cho change of tolls as announced by the Reading dtaiiroad Company. All the several railroad coal carriers are in full work, and ought now, if over, to make mdney. The total product of all the an thracite, semi-anthracito and bituminous coin - regions for the week, as far as report ed!by the several crrrying companies, is 431340 tons, against . 4ss,6Bl tonif'tho previ ous week, a decrease of 23,324 tons, and for the fiscal year 1.1,043,456 tons,. against 11,- 807470.t0ns to the same . . date Last year being ao iperease of 2,145,086 AN exchange speaks,eloqueutly of the greit merits of a new wringing machine. INC can beat our revenue department it fling be a powerful affiiir. ' ' A Negro Triumph in Philadelphia. The Radicals would have been over whelmingly defeated . in Philadelphia if it had t fur the negro vote. For weeks .past 'they have been busily endeavoring txt pile up obstacles in the xay of the Dein ocrat ic eand i dates. The registry law was perverted from its in-, tended purpose,and made, not the means of securing a fair election, but an agency for - the perpetration of frauds. The Board of Aldermen, to whom is en trusted the appointment of election offi cers, violated the spirit of the law by refusing to allow the Democrats of the different precincts to name the men who should represent them. Men who were capable of being corrupted were chosen, in some Instances, utterly iucompetent parties purposely selected in others, and Republicans in disguise not unfrequent ly named where I hanocrats should have been appointed. Money was lavishly used to corrupt voters, and every . des perate device which politieal rascality could suggest, NVILN boldly and freely re sorted to. Vet, in spite of all, the Rad icals were only saved from an over whelming defeat by the aid of the negro vote. The leading Republican paperS of the city do not hesitate to make this humiliating confession, and some of them even go so lar its to boast of their disgrace. The /: '( ruing l ity P. In says : election yesterday was warmly con tested, and produced results mainly Bak. factory to the nthlicans, who have to thank their colored allies nit: their BUCCeSii. lint for the four thousand migre votes, our readers i,lll plainly see whore the Republi can candidates would have With the exception, perhaps, of Judge Paxson, not ono of der city ticket could have been eloeted. 'Phi! Not anig Post says : All honor slmnltl lie give❑ te the rnlored citizens ~r Philatlolphia. I n this, their first (.:AvaNS, they ilaVe shown energy :tlitl devo tion that have heel, 44 . great Value Lo the Itotitultlittan party. Daring the Calllpaign Olen' loader+ worked hard, aml gave !money, 11110 and :Utility to the tiel:et, and they Wore nobly sustained yesterday. ll:Lying thus openly confessed that the Republican party of Philadelphia was only saved from an overwhelming defeat by negro votes, the Po./ urges the recognition of the services of the black allies. It Insists that they net be given a share of the onic...s, and put on a plan of perfect equality. It says: The colored vote Wit. solidly thrown for the Republican ticket, 11111 i in the distribu tion of honors this must he remembered. The colored citizens have swelled our grand majority, and should be represented in the city offices. The first Republican office holder wino appoints an intelligent colored man deputy or clerk, will have the credit of doing a necessary act of justive—of rec ognizing practically the truth that the Con stitution of the United States no longer knows distinction of race Or eOlOl% What must be thought of these things by the white voters of Pennsylvania? Can any decent, Republicans glory in the election of corrupt and desperate men by negro votes '.".rhat a number of the candidates for local offices in Phila delphia were disreput,•able characters was openly confessed, just after their nomination, by the very newspapers which now admit that they Were only saved from defeat by the aid \ of the ne gro votes. The Republican party of Tenrtsylvania,..no longer deserves the support of any respectable Whitt,eitizen. Despatelies front the South hill of pro found sorrow For the death (q . (;en. Robert Lee. In the various cities emblems of mourning are displayed and flags half masted. Ihtsiness is suspended and meet ings aro held in respect to the memory or the deceased. At Itiehmond, yesterday, lov. Walker sent in message hi the Virginia Legislaturaformally announcing the death oil ten. Lee paying a high tribute to his per sonal character, and suggesting that the in terment .of his remains in the grounds owned by the State at Hollywooil Ceme tery be solicited. A tier the reading of the message the Legislature unanimous ly paSSett n joint re.tillti4/11, expressing their sorrow, anil requesting that the body be interred at Hollywood. A joint committee, was appointed to go to Lnxing tion to:escort:the reinititis to Richmond, should the rep pleat hogranted. Thu Legisln titre theft adjourned. 'Phe licorgia Legisla ture has al,so adjourned' oventiq j attend the • :literal, whielvw ill. take place'ro-miirrow,at noon. Should the request iir the state au thorities not die neeudeditu; the.body will be plaveil in in Vallit beneath the College Chapel at Lexington. It appears that during the earlier stages of i:eneral Lee's illness his mind occasionally watideml, reverting to the itrmy. Ile at in., time ordered his tent to he struck, and at another desired that "l fill should be sent purr A ,le,4patell received frier 71,ex high,: gives tile folloNvingileciiilllt th, hi !lend of I I enerai Lee: At ten o'clock precisely the procession was formed on the college grounds, inn front of the President's house, noel uneven IIOWII WeNhillgt , /11 street, up Jefferson street to the lorankli in I lall, tlusnee to Main street, where it was joined in front at' the hotel by tine Itepresentatives Of tine State of Virginia and other representative bodies in their order and by the organized body of the citizens in front of tine court 11f11140. The precession then started by the road to the Virginia >lilitnry Institute, where it was joined by the visitors, I . :lenity and cadets of the Virginia :\ I ilitary Institute, inn their respective places. '1 he procession was closed by the students of Washington Col lege as a guard of honor, and then snored 1111tbrongb the institute:tad t,llegogrounde tin tine chapel. The procession 10114 liallea in front of lhe clun.pel, when the Cal lets of the Institute and the students of Washington College were marched through the college chapel past the remains ' a and were alterwrds w drawn up in to bodies on the south side of the chapel. The remainder of the pro cession then proceeded into the chapel and were seated under the direction of the mar shals. The gallery and side blocks were reserved for ladies. As the procession 1110V(41 011 to 11 ROlOlllll dirge by the Insti tute band the bells of the town began to toll, and the Institute battery fired min ute guns, which were kept up during the whole exercises. Inn front of the National Hotel the procession wino joined by tine nbminittee of the Legislature, tine delega tion from tine city of Staunton, Colonel C i S. Venable, chairman of tine faculty, teed a committee ii . ,.;ttL(ici,ts front the University and others. Along the streets the buildings were all appropriately draped, and crowds gathered on the corners and in the balconies to see the procession pass. Not a flag floated above the procession, and nothing WILY Arm that looked like an attempt at display. The old soldiers wore their ordinary citizens dress, with a simple blitek ribbon in the lapel of their emits, and "Traveller, - led by two "hi soldiers, who hail the simple trappings of mourning. The Virgi, is Military institute was very draped, :utd Irnm its turret., Ming at li:di m:lst and draped in noel rniog the Hags of all of the Stte: of the late Simi horn Con federacy. • When the 110111.0.5i.0t reached the Indi -11110 it 11.94.1 the e,rp s 111 r.t.lel drawn tip in lino, :1101 a guard arms n. the \\'h.. it I'd 010 ,•11:1)11.1, all la:111,11 , 0 tlir.mg 11,11 a..sellhlrd, the , d‘Ht•rtts and eadrt:, strrall2. int,/ the len rind ttislt• past the rein:tins ;11).1 “It, by the right ;lisle and 111,111' to their :tpin,itriato The rest of the plleessiml then filed in, the family, j,ined by Drs. IS.lrtntt 1110.1 MAtlistm, lint al Lending physivians and ('llls. \ 11. Tnyl(lr and I'. S. Venallle, members nil:en. Lee'ss(dnidnring 11111 NV:IA 1”•011114.11 111111WIllaillly in front 1.1 the ttnd the clergy, 101.111.1 11111111/l•r Stll,' lorrwent, fa 1•11110 anal nu•tiily "r the ill4tiLme, 11x11 place+.al the platflaal. The coOin W11...1 literally o..Verv.l with flowers:n.l evergreens, whilc the front of tin ,• drapery thrown over it tens WWI erOS.Se. , of evergreen .0111 it11111 , , r1,110, Hoc. Dr. long inliwuly personal friend of (Mineral Lee, his chiol'of artillery during the war, and his pastor the lutist live years, read the beautiful burial services of the Episcopal,(:lll:ch. Nil molt was preached, and me; said besides the simple service. in m•cordance with the kinftvn wishes of Gen. Leo. After tine Mnoral services Wereeoscluded in the chapel, the Ludy WaSrestovol to the vault prootred for its reception, and the concluiling services reel by the, chaplain froth the bank on the southern side of the chapel, in front of the vault. The vault is construeted of brick, lined with cement. The top just reaches the floor of the library and wilt be dun lilt-cappedwith white mar ble, on .which is tint sintple inscription, "Hobert Edmund Leo; born January 10th, 1007; died tietobar.l2th, 1070." The burial easo wile handsomely mount rd with silver and lined with white silk. All along the lino of the funeral cortege the wind6ws..itrid porches Were crowded with woepigOvoinon and children. After therMieral the soldiers were march ed to - tha - 6burt-house, and there unani mously adopted resolutions expressing their earnest desire that the remains of the groat chieftain may continue to lie hare. The,delegation appointed by the ( ;moral Asse4ilgy. of Virginia to attend General Lee's funeral and request Iris remains for interipcnt at Hollywood Cemetery at Rich .rilbip received no positive assurance front ttie family of General Leo that the request of The 'State would be granted, but it is aore'than probable that it wit t be conceded atridd istantday,to be hereafter determined. Gerieral Lee's sons, Custis, Fitzhugh and Hobart; and his danghterS, Mary, Agnes and Mildred, aro living in Virginia. blissouitt has furnished the latest definition of "disloyalty." It consists to arteffort to confer on white men equal political' privileges with negroeS. Glorious Democratic Victories ! ! Rout of the Riotient. nod their Negro The Colored Troops Fought IlravelY to White IlnViols Ilea' Then, A nentoerntle MnJorlty In Old Penn rtylvnnlts on the Popular VOW. Eleven Conwrrommen Elected by nen., realm. (trent (]alas In the Slate Lei;Walla re. A CLEAN NWEIP IN INDIANA Morton Hoe. Not (:o To Enginuti. Schenck Meet, With Another Alen on 1/0:1=112 Tito rlcttilier eloctions Lard resultod in devilled Dont...ratio ViVtories in l'otinsyl vania and Indiana, %ditto tlto Itadicol eta- juritivs in (Ono, lois 3 'rash a MI relltlVed. Pennsylvania we gain live straight oat Democratic Congressmen, anti elect ono Independent Republican, defeating Cessna, Armstrong, Morrell, Donley awl all numMers oi the la , t Congress, hi the State Sen:Lto we have reduced flit It:Linn:ll minority to one, and in H. , kayo cut it 11 , ,ril to l'ight. VII carry Indiana, iiiiinting him Slate tigliot, a majority iit kith nit LLo Stain l&gislatririi, mot giving its., or litre Congrt,,itien In ()hit, )vo gain t,k,, It flatting - Vienna S,11(.1),•1:. Over these signal vinlnri, and gain:44)llr reestererews with rxnitaill nob, announcing tho dawn of a better and brighter political ',turns ha,' hveti all but six CongreAsi.mal tli,triets iu tilt, State. 'rho fkaimvia g :are the inajurities each candidate- eilicial and tinotticial. It Iv ill lie seeo that, l'etinsylvania I)entoer:ltie on the poptilor vote, in spite of the who c bill solia Nvith the Ilali tol.s: CreeleSi• Myers 1,:,21 larnier A el: er Townsend 12,177 Het', Dickey I K illinger Storm I,7;;;; Shoemaker Mervin* I:fo Packer .. Haldeman Meyers I - I I Speer Sherwood 1!I Scofield '.Oll Foster 7:1 in I intlopvntictit—Huppm.led EC= I),•ti,her 11. 11111:1113 1)01110iTatii, hy 2,000 majority. The ke t tis latiorc is oat:duly Democratic. It \NI t 0.0., Chairman Democratic Committce. rehires have twee receit oil from hl tva except a low scaticriog Veto • townm. • t•hoStale ;zone largely Itop ul lican u•ntal. ni,_ 1110111'N%, l7um ()hick is still ille:tgrp. It ruw tll 110 ill 'lint Svltencli is Tht. I itiLittAi 'l'ickcL is ciceti I. Esiii• it", 14•.. IG, I s7t, M rsns. Korritits : The eleeth,i, passed ~ft quietly in our WWll,hil, and with !totter results to the Democrats than they expect ed. The township always gives a Demo cratic majority, but it wasttlionght by some that I lininigger v;te tvi,ilhl alter-the result. !Mt out SadShllry h u ts coveted hflrSVir with glory by electing the whole Denweratie ticket. The colored vote WWI out in torte, and there was thirty negro votes milled, Ind some of the white Republicans 11.1 . 11Sed to vote with their party, and 'others were Cu) ashamed at the Ulll alrah'S had taken that they !intuitively refused to go to the election. They were active members of the party and have never been known to lilies all election, but they saintopenly that there was Lon much nigger for them. ISM for every white Repuldivan that staid at home, a bland: voted in his plaeo A few words to show the intelligence of the negro about which so 11111V11 has been .said; and what is here stated is a fact.. The circumstance occurred at the poll where your vorrespondent voted. 'l hero wore three darks come to the window to vote, when the question was asked "have you paid tax ?" "no Sall, " WaS the answer. They Were then directed to the assessor, pain( their los, and got their receipt, when they made the remark to the assessor, "dat all right isn't it," to which he answered "yea," when the poor darks thinking they had done all that was required of them went home highly gleaned with having cast us they thought their first vote! And with such intelligent worthies as these the Republican party is trying to save Its rot ten car mss from the flue it so richly dc- There has been eonsideraltle itomplaint by passengers arriving at Park osburg by rail that there was no conveyance to take them to their different destinations. This has been overcome by Mr. J. Whiteside WllO resides in the village and . has every conveyance that is necessary to aceommo date all who desire it; and. those who are fond of thriving a good team can be action, tidaled at short notice. Moro anon. .1 [Aix. The Disorter at Mont Itlone—Dhaeovery of the Bodies. A " Tourist" writes to the London •• of tine '2.91.11, regarding the late :Le eidenton Merit Plane:—Having rerently visited (ffitunouni, where I obtained info, math.% front the most reliable source :Ls to the rreent loss of eleven peri.mns oil Mont, Wane, the iffilowing ad,ddint may lie valu able tii persona eon !meted with the tin l'ortn nate travellers nn,l to others. 1 )il the 2 -, th of September, Ur. Bean, nil Baltimore, another Anterieall gentleman, and :gr.( Ire • nit Sedation], aenumpanii•,l hy then' guides alit] 11% . 0 porter,, left I 'ha neretli, and on the next day reached the sit ; hint before they had pr , enette , ll . ar on their return a st,rie arose which :t'l prehension. t, the Nvatcher4 below for the safety ref the party, him her they were nit seen again alive. As snot' a, po."-illle air alLialikt Made to recover the lidelies, which, owing to the iniset.l.4l u, 031111,, NVili`i unruvrrsl ul, allii it sea, that 110 elr,tual search would this sear; but .t favorable eliding° neverring, the 17th, eighteen guides started, std, alter a perilous discover,' in Oa' day tlei End irs of pr. Bean, Mr. 31r1 'dirk ingffitle and three porters, at n spit w hie h appeared from Ini- IfiW to be not far Iron' lin, • PnAnt, Nvitin tnnelt 1:010r and ditlieulty their re mains were brought thnvn to l'lntinottni nn the 19th instant. Silica I left. Channittni I liaN i tt Lem' informed that the remaining undies have been Mittel hit:idler down the mountain. veteran guide, whose last asrent was will' Mr. Freshlittld, stated to we that the setiering4 nof the unhappy par ty minuet have been il• shorl duration, as they could not have survived] live minutes after tieing overtaken by the hurrir:uu•, which sullneated them with Dealt. of ntiliny — Nolps. John C. Nolen, who was shot I,y A1ex :1,144.r Crat 0110 of the Retllnti Judges, in a ditlit•tiltv in the Court !louse it, l'itila dttlphia, on Sunday morning. Brion., his dist:ea-so no trail,, Ono iol loNv itig deposi tion: 1, John 11. Nolen, do solemnly and sin eerely make thin my dying doelaration That I was shot witha pistol in the hands of Alexander Crawford. And 1 further declare that thin murder was conunitted at the in stigation and by the agency of William B. Mann, late District Attorney, this act being done while I wily upon the -floor of the court-room on Chestnut street, above Fifth. JOHN C. NOLEN. Sworn and subscribed before me thbillilth day of l letober, A. Ik 1870 J. MCCOLUAN, Alderman. Crawfortl was arrested immediately after Me shooting, and a warrant has been issued for file arrest of Wm.B. Mann, who is ab sent from the city. LF:WISTOWN, Oct. 12.—A lamentable sui cide occurred to-day in Dorrytownship, a fow miles from this place. Joseph Kearns a man generally esteemed and of excellent character, asked his wifo, to whomhe had been married only a few months, to take a walk, and after strolling up a by-lane, jumped over afence,and then back andsud dimly drawing a razor from his pocket, cut his throatfrom oar to oar. Re died.in 'a few minutes. No known cause . e.* . isted for the rash act, and It is therefore.seppos ed ho labored _under temporary Insanity. ;:f 4 ;"' cit...J r 4.- . - , .--, v,,, Af 'ii. WigVii.Y: .-71*2 • ,___ ____ g ;.En V- V, FAE!.i . E Ir. 7 '4 . :; , :•Fi . , =.:ni i.; - . -..._U•: - . F.T . :EW - Pr Z '4.':i . = . ql;i Y17,1' i' 7 .! FL . =ii:'/- - 17 . ;_ ' 74 t7':'l'.4. l .:lF:g I,':':'i r ils ;W:7-:=.!_l4, li : / : 1 - --' - - ,-- -- - , --: -- ~`- 4r:-. '2','-! 4 IMI!_ . M.I! ?.-_! 22?J,. - 2:2,eY 5 114 - : .1- i 1 igEFI LI '.. 4 .1 7 , L'in74 - =ff . _ __. _ . . 4 :t E - _I V11:1 ; . -7. V- , 11 .7 =1:1 1-" " z:E:".i.:-._ 7,- ~71 EE'Z''=',l, 7, il-1)_ 52..ii4. '...K _ ,1 1 -- - ' _ - =.,_ .., __ '''---J..; -::.7, It , ; - ', i '4',- , Lirlyi= - Z . i .. , =-7 . 3 ..:- ~ =,/ =MEM - .. : -.-- '-. - ' 5 -- - " - - " ' '-''..'" "IP \ ' . .. .411,0. I" I y • . I TIIEDI:)11WIt \ V11"1,1,1 IN Cpll.l•Nr it( .t. —l.avltr:tl the I lemoorat,oarrioll 'ohnipn Lt' a small mniority, 10-tn I hall tiny. TM yoar over ono hundred anti tiny ne t ryno w,ro mlmittl.l to the ballot-box in thn toNvn, nna they votod the Itadiv:tl 'lhe re,llll man 111111 Inairy whin mon ahandoned tho !tow] iplionn party and 1,1 roil Iho horongh. lidlntcinq i. rho h0. , 11g11 Oille(3114: MIIIIIII=I 115 , 1•01., . .......... . 1-+i . • .I:rvut , 15 X 55 it 111 , 1 1 , 1;1. 1 . 1 . 175 . 11:11.! , :11 11 IIKI.1..•1;r1 . I'ILI (M1......_.5‘v:111/. t Itti .1 lid, 'rho tho vi,tollw throe , \V:tr.l oinnhinoJ I'm' 11.4 vonerd Minll..l 19'1 ItrontAnalt ,ccc•licrccl Iclrrrlca c . Vl - ccf Tric,c•ccl Sccicrlucc•cc. Pcct too Slac•clic c r c'ccmclalcic• Irc:Ofcci;ccciti 111,11 c 01,11c1c1c• Rural . ); Of /I 1 . 001i1•1 . ~,,,, . Ar,riculto rad hitatimt lr% The I: tot report of the l". S. flu react of Statistics contains the following interesting returns of agricultural statistics et the l'njted l'lngdont of t; real. Britain and Ire hind for Istis, including, England, \Vales, Scuthuid and Ireland. The ;trust of the coun tries mentioned is 77,51:1,5,5, arriN, of which 45,652,5.12 Inert , under cultivation in 19:S.— Tito crops %vei, planted as Corn crops, including mina[, barley, tuts, rye, beans and peas, on acres, or 25.:. per cent.; green crops, including potatoes, turnips, cabbage, A:c., and ex.cluding clover and grass, on .1,56.".,1127 acres, or 10.6 per t•ent.; intro Ldlule, 951,21 G acres, or 2.2 per cent.; clover and grass on acres or 15.:1 per cent.; permanent pastures on 22,161,r.5.1 acres, Or ts.O per cont., :Itul flax and hops on 2Y.5,.15:, acres, or 11.6 per cont. 'rho) tires in groin crops Were distributed as follOWS: Wiest, s,:t2l Ills acres; barley,2,3.lS,OGN acres;L:69,- 3 , 7 acres; rye, r. 1,027 acres; beans, tires, and peas, 2 . .)7,G12 :tore,. The acres in grill Crops svon• 41ktribliti.c1 ns ; acres; tit.ingel-, 2GsT, acres; carrots, acres; cabbage, Ac., 17.7,:.25 acres, and vetches, ::11,1s , acres. The stali , itie, nr I relitiel ..eparaled Cl , lll till' :LIN)VII {:moral rellirre4 l'er dm I Mile.' K 1 . ”1:t1 area 1,1 Ireland, 2”,;;22.,64 I acre., v, Melt :1,1, are tinder cult; c alien. under grain criip , , 2,19 - 2.,TM ;ter:, t.l. I per ;mitt.; Under greett rn q,. I, :term. ;t; I per iunt.; Under 1.1;1' 1 . 3111/W, :20117 3f•I'OS per emit.; tinder (-lever gra,-, 1,1;91,7n7 :WITS or Ill.!' per i•elil.; tinder permanent pasture, :tern. er 61.2 per rent.; and ll; amen nril.:; per emit. The :times in Ireland under grain ernps were 'Moiled its I'i;ll;,v's: -Wheat, 7..11) ; :wren; I :Wt . ,: acre:, arid post: I, In 7 L.0 , - ;07 nil itt Ireland limier gri•eit crnpx were plantedas MI sere.; turnip , , :3211111i1; mangel-wur zel, mui;7 earrntii, 31•1 . 4, ; k... 1 ;term+, vete11e.,36,*2.1; I aerei, At in Ireland \Vila : In lot- not exceed ing. one :tore, Is,'2;t6 ; in one to ii yo acres, 79,717; in lll',' I li noon acres, 171,3:,7; iii lirteen to thirty aeriu, 136, Oa: in thirty to :wrcs, ; in Oily to 1110 litin4fred in tail' boll acres, 21,9n0 ; in two hundred to live hundred acres, 1:110, lig a told or :417,62S hold ings. The total nimilier of I,ttlo in l Treat liriLain, in 1501, Nvas..yr-.:1,110; sheep, :15,007,- 012 ; 1144.5,3,159,167 ; mileheows and heifer, 3,62:,,137, and otliercattle,:,;:".S,•_'79. In 1,4;9, the number of liorie.4 in I; teat. Britain xvit, 1,161,000. The number of cattle in Ireland, iu 10114, was 3,620,:;:i2; sheep, 1,522,-111; 062,1 , 13; Inileh cows and 'wirers, 1,163,005, and other cattle, 2,1:i7,21)1.-- Phifft, ILemarhable Changes to Fortune The Cambridge Pict, details an interest ing account of how a discarded daughter Ilaa fallen heiress to ~ , f7s,uou. Eleven years ago a Prussian lady in Faderland, rialred in affluence, incurred the displeasure of her fattier by marrying against his wishes, and with her husband she came to America. At the end of a few . years the husband died from the effects of debauchery, anti failing health at last compelled the mother to ?leek homes for her two children. on application at the mission school on Trallaralt street, in Boston, two smart little boys of eight and eleven years, were admitted and provided with suitable homes in North Bridgeton, Mr., where they were carried and "fanned" out with good people engaged in agrictil to rat pursuits. With her boys in trustworthy hands, the mother visited New York and learned that her father had followed her to this country, and taken up his residence in Ohio, and had there recently died, leaving a will bequeathing all his property, valued at $75,000 to his erring daughter. The moth er, with this unexpected turn of fortune's wheel, at once proceeded to Bridgeton to reclaim her Children. Legal application hesbhtin matte to cancel the terms of In. denture. cf6g FIE !r; =iBMIIEN _~ ~~J 11 .~~ ~1l .• ......... •qt MMMiI .jl* '571:1 bolOptil lit 7 li.,1b11113441."411:4 '1: •-•p11111191r _411191rq1: . 1 1 . 1 Jofr ttfislllll,l :":”.* - 16ickjICITY‘: . 0 1 .11 _ :71 'VI I A.l 17, 11. Mll`M . 91 :V4_l • •!nlj . lll . 1 .q •ri.,IILAO.I •i; macworlo.) MEE ' . J.!.!:. , .'zt Zr.-i eI'OIM=S , _ - 7,- . .7.7-i. 11.1tt,i.11.11,...: , = ~~=ry =MEM I. • •.‘4,..1.44.ut1ie s , ,Lasi:ottir •J.llo,l.llllsij MEM= I=l • !1.) ~. .•1 ST •Ak 1: :1 I ,k.llll • col . lc I' . =MEE =l= 11111=112 IMEZEIEMZEI Itnlnsv trill Lo fnlnnl the result o• tinn u n Tlin..l/1y fir elty olllver.. It will 81.4.,1 that lurth bruwii,s of cmiueilm 1.01111 11.4 llivy trmv hi 4 3,81', Ow I lru a Wrais lost t,lll. 0 , 111110 , 11 'mlll , lllllllll our in the :S; ill! Ward. IX° h ( 1 n11,13111, , 1.11n.116er in Hie 11'111 :In,' gun, 11110 in thll /Ch . nno In the Si :n.l Imo in IBHCALi : - 11• 1'..111111.01 • .1..1i11 .Itthn 1'1111.11: \ 11 s,ll;lt•ii.q. 11.1.11111 A Shull% .1..1111 A Slidblp., .coll+1:011... 171,1\\'u: II A , owAsor. , )1.•1.:111,;, .1 2111T11.0 . .fulIKVOZ••• 151:11',111111.1.)61,r, 11E1=1 Inspercpr. I I'. I. r I'o 1 l • ro N N/1 , 1110 I .I 11,1.• .14,111. II Sk „ g.• . 17i,11.111111,:n =TEM 1 , .,111." II .Itmc..y I .i."; 1 I icuj F 11, r. I 11 , 1,e0 or. • 1: , .1 K r TM.. W.\ It.. I'ollll.oll C.I1111:11. A . I 1 , .1.,1ut I .... • .... • 10 .15.L.... 1 II I'ri'r .. I 18, .It9y A 141`1,11g;i ) r, .11141 MEESE I high I.4azgh , rIY I ti4pvet or. r 16.11Wlinitm A Wil,um w A 111). ( . 1.11111111 Uf. l / 1 /1)il, . II 11• fin illOl./0//11 Pearstl... Ir. Ito !Joblci.,•rbiey I,li.plori,•l( IT:;11It•nry Iksessor : I ISIJonIIII4. Potts I.[O Atilrllis U riot 1 nsiterttir,' • .. 110/j A totrow MIMI MEIEBI (701/11clij .1 1.:1,,r 1.-y Cl/11111/011 ... ISt .F7L~Jvlhlnc Huniw•l S Idrrignn: • • . Ato Imam/.l . .4lllullAdlint 1291Javellr K 11111444, A .. 1 0 , 01111 . . J.:91.101in Tuelter..... 12.] If 16.1 itliohl 11,po•hor. I LIIII;or =ME! A i ll ••,ro w 4 . .0m1 oo to ttttt -• • Itautitgitnlner. 1:111,1,11. Jt , ll' A. Miner 1.111 , 1.51 , 1,mi.:him I'Lebzviter •or,lable. 2L911 , . I . 1:11.1(m).0m.., A K....t0r. • P.R;porlltuk .h. lEEE lII= • I \l'llllloll John WARP; • s.•le.c. 1 . 11.11 1 , ICI it. l'itt.er 1 Itiadinan I TILL W I tr.... li 21s 1 . 21...1 W 1'0%1.11 .‘lllr rolluU ' II h i I TIIII Sl' r,j.r./S Li • 11111 I I 111 C. 11.10151;1Lit , frri 11- ..... " . . AI 1 falubrlL; lit .1 I.: V, J r U . ' '.2 " l ' l7\t l' ; ', ; , *44l' Coillit.lll , -• • • • s' fi ,t %Sflrlght . 1ia1c.11....1...11y 1 . 1., • I, NI, ll= 111 . 1 , tiaII Wi.lll El= "Ii STU Prslinuat..3ll4lll...r. 11111111= 1•01.1111 on Comte A .1 ii:,l•l,..rgd, .211 0)1)190 1.311.41. N Martin Donvart. Wain lii 11. pavlll !ailed ::p IJullA~Bhcrtz..l Attieasnr. • 11 Blickentlerf,..... IMIIIIII lj 1301.14111,1 Q F. Lit . , .3)61 Itlltssl,slorfer, tugpictor - . s1 :0 . 11111kWA1:L •J ME= Elect 10.. of Se4oollitrecilons. 'rho following is tee result of tin , elorth fur School Direetois: .. . - I . 15172; 14 iii 7 11 911,fti iii; 1 I , ,ll..ratie -.-:, —-- — l l--• - .... 4 t ,-- -•-• Levergood Is 7 177 l i i ) I 1) ito tizit Ls /to. s It Zeelier. ..... 15117 s 1:111X.V ' • ' ~tio :,I,•rologey 192 I7S III; vArito 1, y, , ,i, I r y k, Nfl.'oll ~,,, s IsS 178 191 iatthld lf:',' *9 •K. V, 1t0y09919.,i IFS 1;9 WI 1 , 1411440W10 AN ‘', baby WO 119.1c0,111,511 1 4 1` 'l:4'. 444 t 1:e p adios ft 1 I 1llVit.011,: tit t'll '1...4X2 , 411%1VtAr i - '4 ' 14 . o , ' '' Vi 4,1,, I i I Ilti IlUitit. ' • ,ii I. A1 1.419k itivywiaktm. gi - 141t1;;;;Z: vz 1 $ k 4 . k!:e., ai l • .I. ~., .tt1‘1,ttv,...... al.,lmiNiecsini • . • . .• v IMIBM =EI DIE= MEEE ESMISES
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