Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, October 02, 1879, Image 10

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Taws:lda, Pa., Thursday, Oct. 2, 1272:
tiIIMLIO4II EWE TIMM
FOki STATE TILEASUREB,
;HO SAMUEL BUTLER,
• .or cussto oourrY. '
mmosi ooinrry TICKET.
von JURY comitutatosie,
VOLNEY M. WILSON,
'OP : ALBA BORCCOM
•
FOR CORONER,
DR. YOLNEY HOMET;
OF WYALUNING. •
,Iv is said that Governor Darr has de
cided-not to calla session of the Legisla
ture this winter, under any circumstan
ces. For which wise decision let all:the
t tx-payers praise - him. • ,
DENNIS KFATINEY, after threatening tt,
burn Gen. GRANT In:effigy, had
effrontei'lto send up its card to the. Gen
eral at his hotel in SanFrancisce. It is
hardly necessary to state that it was re
turned, 'With' a refusal tc; receive the great .
agitator and fraud.
• THE death of Judge Woonwinn makes
a vaaint , seat on the Sfipreniiii Court
Beech which will be filled by appointment .
of the Governor. The new Judge will
hold his'place until Jauary, Sever
al able Judges and prominent lawyers are
alreatiy, brought fbriaid for the vacancy.
A sotistx !and emphOic warning to all
sleepy, worshippers who slumber in
church, is afforded by the sad fate of
HENRY JonNsozi, of Chatham, Virginia,
who went to sleep the railing of the
Methodist Church- gallery. Tiff 3 attrac
tion; of gravitation; carried him to the
church .floor; 'and 'be alighted upon the
head of a Mrs. TtiNSTALL. Both mere se
riously injured.
THE apparerilly innocent but- decidedly
idiotic'game of,croquetiis`not - without its
perils. 'decently when Mo:snor. HELLER,
of Nazareth, aged twenty-sii,,Was playing
croquet, tbe mallet-head slipped off and
struck him on the right side , of the bead.,
'After a few hours hours .he, was taken
sick, and died shortly aftersVards of .on
gcstiou of the brain. Ilia'young wife died
a few months ago, leaving a little babe.:;
THE Tammany, memhers of the New
York Dem?crape. State 'Committee have
beeitcxpelled.. Their places will be sup
„plied by friends of Ex-Geivernor TILDEN'
'arid Governor ROBINSON. The fight
against Tammany is conducted with such
exasperating vigor that it will nerve the
friends of Mr. KELLY . throughout the
State`to the most strenuous efforts to ob
tain their, revenges.. They will probably
carry off Mr. TILDEN'S scalp/ in Novern.
, •
her
TnE linnber manufacturers of Wil-'
liamsport, who have severely felt the bus
iness depression of the past few, years,
have agreed to . advance all common
grades of lumber two dollars per thous
and and on the upper grades they will in
sist on an advance, of from .five to eight
Illars. A feWdissent to anadvanciftand
argue that if, too much is demanded; the
;Michigan manufacturers will be'.ayle to
undersell them:in•the Eastern market. ,
Trig Greenback leaders believe in
taking time by the forelock. They:l:lave
calldd their National Convention to nomi
._ pate candidates for President' and Vice
President . for January 8": They evidently
forgot that that day in the anniversary. of
- the victory won by theahard-money hero
'JACKSON. Ily s the Bth. of January there
will not be enough . left' of the party to•
• make,. a Convention of anyliize. The
Greenback party, is already dwindling
t a way under the influence of revived trade
and prospefous times, and soon there will
be nothing left of• it but a parcel of
chrotiic idiots, who are determined riot to
• be satisfied. _
„
o PRESIDENT UAYES has. been making
quite an extended Western tour, and has
been received with great enthusiasm every.
where. His addresses , have &fen, plain
and.practical, full . p[ sound good sense,
and have pleased the people. He an
nounces :that hia pledge not to be a candi
j": date for President the second time, rim
made in sincerity, and that he still ad-
heres to it. Whatever criticism may be
indulged in as to President HATES acts, no
•
one can charge him with a design' to ac
• complish 'a 're-nomination. Hence the
pelvic believe in his honesty and unselfish
ness, and give him credit for upright and .
patriotic motives.
CoL. McCLITRS has fallen out with the
I'hiladelpbiaDemocracy. He informs an
interviewer (as reported in the Pittsburg
Gazette) "that for. plundering, thieving
and corruption, the present Democratic
administration is the worst Philadelphia
ever had. He says of the prospects in
the State that "there is no possibility of
Ilsan's election, because the Republican
victories iu Maine.; and California have
had much effect." From which it would
appear that the-Colonel's-summer sojourn
in tile pure air of Montrose, has . "pnrged
*his- visual orbs from film," and that ho
now sees things clearly and correctly. In
both these estimates tire agree with him.
It isn't often we have the pleasure of
agreeing with him.
THE, muse of the
.nrggro exodna from
certain sections of the South, is as plain
as noon-day i.un to the dullest apprehen
'sion, but a special agent of the Treasury
department who has made an investiga
tion by order of Secretary SIIERMAN, es:
tablishes the fact in hia report that in cer
tain parishes of Louissinia the'nld slavery
fortniNoU , restricting tthi movements of
theq:blacks by stopping all travelling
;negroes, and requiring them to„produce
passes (Vim their employers, haire been
revived hi full force. . •
THE Prohibitionists are in the field
with .a State ticket and the inevitable
platform. Devotion to principles the un
sophisticated Call it; hut the knowing
ones see that it is a scheme to divert the
votes of unsuspecting and cridulons Re.
publiCans. , The PrOhibition party is a
tender to We Democracy, whatever may
be the hidemions of 'the managers. The
temperance cause has nothing to hope
for except frotn the Republican party,
aid every vas 'drawn by such - a pretext
from that party damages the total absti
• !tepee cause'to that extent.
•
, .
vi
-•, , Q 4. ,, I us "Mississippi plan" still continues
1 effectually its beneficent ! operation&
_ Sometimes it i disposes of an Obnoxious
\ , candidate, iio* it ilapplied to an unpopu
-I', lar;poitmaster. Tbe,postmaster at }Mack
vine; \Souttytarolin& - swais not only a Re
'- i public* but •be was a colored one,
MI
Either would. have been sufficient cause
for his sudden takint, off, as recently do
tided by thit Kemper - county jury. SOll
Routh Carolina gent an applies for his
mail, and while the tmaster is looking
for it, pokes his pistol! Orough the deliv-'
My and attempts to create a vac**
The aim was not true, and the postmaster
still lives, tbough badly wounded. As
the Blaikville people have decided that
no Repliblican -AWL .hcdd -tie office, the.
POsttruuste4,Cleneral . will ,dO wall fantod',
Mn. Malin. Ximatif / Pui.E.irbs, Member
of Parliament _kr._ Devonport,aailed.in
the steamer - Pennsylvania, from Liver
pool, on : Baturday (if last Week,. for Phiia- .
delphia, on a brief to the United:
States; to investigate' the subjeCts con
witted with agriculture in 'Americo in its
relation to British interests:: Mr. P. was
at one time the 'editifir of afpapOr tin Pitta-
We, bin going to
.England demeaned birti 7
self sulicieutly to
,becomaJP.ineixiber of
Parliament. It is a
,consOlation however
to know that had he 'tarried in Luzern° .
County, heiniglai even bare bevii. a nuAlk.
ber of Congress. But in spite of all temp
itation hais still au, Engli'shman.
THE negro exodus from the Gulf Stites'
still continues, notwithstanding the em
bargo laid npowthe steamboats, and , the
free use of the shot-gun. The negroes,
are. not soignorant as not 'to - red the
modified condition of slavery in which
they are placed by their lath masters, nor
so spiritless as' to tamely submit. The
experience of past years shows :that as
force and violence could not keep ,them
in bondage, 'neither will it serve, to pre
vent thein
_froth endeavoring to reach the
"promised 'land" whore they imagine
they can enjoy_ all the rights of a free
man. ' •
SHE fooled with a revolver with the
usual result, A young rwcanan named
SALLIE RODOERS, was in a restaurant at
Reading, with HENRY W. ''REITZEL,
brakeman on the Reading road, When he
drew out a Sharps' fourbarrelled revolver.
She took.it and askedsif it — isms loaded.
Doing told it was not, else playfully-point
ed the revolver at' REITZEI.4, 'Ana pulled
the trigger. The joke was no fun to him
as the ball entered his heads on the right
side just at the edge of the 'scalp and
passed through. It was probablirisivesti
gating the question whether or •not a
young man who . displays
. his revolier on
succh an occasion • has any brains. As
REITZEL was not seritiadyinjured, the
question was decided. in the negative.
Mn. GEORGE W. Crimps, mf the Phila
delphia Ledger', who is suppdsed to know
as much of Gen. GILANT'S desires and in
tentions as any other man, has been
icter
viewed by an inquisitive newspaper man,"
who wants to kilow all about it,. you
know. Mr. C. says that the General "will
remain in California and_ Oregon for at
,leaA two months; then go to Colorado
and neat to Chicago, where ho will arrive
in time to attend the reunion of the
Abby of the Tennessee on the Zitti of No- 7
vegiber. After this he will visit Galena
and settle down there in the seclusion of
,a country town to take 'a rest. • About
next May he will visityhiladelphia,'as he
will then be on his way . to Long Branch,
where he intends to spend the summer.
Re has already declared himself on this
l atter point."
IMS
REALLY we had entertained hopes that
the pedestrian fever had ciliated, but after
the late exhibiticin 'at Madison' Square
Gardens, in New York, we have renewed
evidence that the race of fools is not only
not extinct, Init increasing and flourishing.
Twenty persons entering upon a protract
ed walk' which is simply a matter of
physical endurance, and dropping out of
the contest, one by one,.tired, sore and
crippled, is' simply 'a revolting spectacle,
calculated to disgust every humane , per,
son. Athletic contests, conducted in a
reasonable manner, and intended to shovi
- what.the human frame is - Capable of, may
have their mils ; but exhibitions in which.
the participants are expected to en du r e
suffering until their lives' are jeop arded
" and they arccarried off weak, exhausted
and fainting, are no better than bear
baiting oii a bull-fight. The projectors
reap a pec9iary harvest from the gate
money, but he public morals sutler.
Tun Philadelphia Times, which is the
superorviceable apologist for Southern
vagarics.and excesses, tries td break the
force of ';the ti,ogro exodus by asserting
that it W r as in the beginning a heartless
speculation upon the partof transporta
tion agents and companies and land job
bers, and that it has been encouraged by
the cruelly,mistaken sympathy of philan
thropists under the false impression that
the negro was really driven away frerubia
pld home by oppression, whereas he was
only tempted away by gaudy pictures, of °a
promised land ' where food and raiment
may be had without toil that is always
their price. The Timm outdoes itself in
suellstatements, andpresarnes too much
on the ignorance or Credulity of its read
'era. The testimony of opiression and
acts oftlence practiced upon the color
ed popu ation is too accurate and well
established, and the' crimes too general,.
to be successfully controverted. The ,
negroes . may have been unnecessarily
alarmed as to their perrOnal safety, but it
needed not 'the labors of emissaries to
convince them that they had been forcibly
deprived of all. their civil, and political
rights, and placed in a condition nearly
similar to their former state of servitude.
The threatening possibility of Democritio
dominance overthrew their last hope of
the coming of a better time; and they are
fleeing from the presence of the oppress- .
or. The incursion of theusands of people,
undersli ch circumstances, taxes too
severelitbacharity and liberality of any
community, hand it cannot be expected
that they will encourage it. - Kansas has
ample room and a hearty welcome for,all
refugees from the bond* of oppreuos,
but not always ire her people able to fui
filtsuccessfuliy the promptingsof charity
and benevolence. •
IT is with feelings of regret that we an
nounce the death of Hon. Wainuta J.
WOODWARD, one
_of the Judges of the Su
preme Court of this State, who died at
his country seat at Hanolen, New York,
on Tuesday afternoon of fast week. Judge
Woonwann was born in Wayne County,
in 1820. When twenty years ad ho stu
died law with his uncle, Hon. GEORGE
W. WIRMWARD, till 1841, complet
ing his legal education in the oak* of
Hot. Enno - Nc L.,Dexa, aow Additional
LaW Judge of the Eleventh - Judicial Dis
trict. 'He Was admitted to the.bar on the
let of August, 1842, and began his clover
in Columbia COunt3r, and from the time
of his 'admission he was-engaged exclu
pively in the practice Of his professiooup
theist of June, 1850. During the session
of the Legislature of that year a new ja r
dicial district, the Twenty-sixth, Tsui
created, compoaed of the counties,of Cot
l‘bbi, Sullivan and Wyoming. The or
ganixatiiin' took :effect from the_ Ist of
June, and theVirwernor was required to-
select an incumbent pending the election
;and qualification nt • a President Judge,
accoiding7tn,,conatinitinn*.fort, The
i9o l ,*?PiklioYAP -4 144':imP l ii r.. :vr ac : .
Difinocratie,lind 47#43veniei40* 3 4' ; alt,
il tit
th ''. b k,, tfopiiiota.liolitacp;iipononpOito,
' jig De:nog:rat: tuappointot4Ar.
Woonwkii • .it the haste of a nineber
of members of the bar and business men
of the district. At the generalilectionfof
VW, 26'.....WOODWARDwa§...e._eq4 and. ol..
was subsequently commission ed as Presi-
I dent Judge for ten yearis, froth the first
Monday of December in that year. In
1861, upon the expiration of the term ofl
tic". .1. 1 .-PaisaLir.:.invltik .Thilge._WObit,.
.WARD received.the - . Democratic nomina
tion: ko "Berks &nriti., composing the
Twenty-third, Judicial •dititaiet, and was
elected to the bench in thatilistript. Ills :
term expired with. the close of the year,
but in October. of -that year 'he was re
elected ilUr the ensuing term of ten years.
In. August, 1874, be was nominated by
the Democratic State Convention for As
sociate Justice of the Supreme Court over
Hun P. Ross and Judge ' Lon.ow, of
Philadelphia...and was elected under the,
minority clause of the new. constitution:
Ho secured prioriiy o of commission by lot
over Judge PAxsoc, 'the Republican who
was sleeted at the same time. Judge
WoODWMID had beini unconscious and in
a dying condition for some daytk '
WHAT STAl.ll4.Wiliafi fEM
We have altiead, and heard a great'
deal about the neeessity bringing
the Republican party back to its
original ground ; of • reforming its
,metliods and discarding the bad' ele
rdents. There has been a'great deal
of talk about this going back, to first
principles and party purification; so
much' talk about it, in fact; that it is
rather smatter of doubt whether the
men who did and do most of tlit
talking exactly know what they are
'talking, about. And some= sneer's
have 'aimed at the " stalwarts " and
stalwartness" of • the =party. The
men echo assisted in the organization
of the party may .fairly be.assumed
toknow something about its first es
t Ate , plans its men and its meth
Whed men talk about going
back to the original ;purpose of, Alm
party,- what do they mean ?, .; !: The
original purpose' of the party was to
check thejneursions of slavery into
free territory. To- thatwprk it was
adgressed as an organiiation, and it
was directed; by men' wli? were not
angels, but men with liuman
ambi
tionsand' passions ; men *go deter.
pined to make it. an Issue in politites
that free territory , should remain
free, and that there should be no
more bowing down to' the oligarchs .
who had wide the republic odious
and our civilization a stench in the
nostrig of mankind..
Bringing the arty back to its old
`holding ground, then, means treining
it ass force against truckling for
power, and against any Alliance of
the Democratic party with .the oli
garchs of ithe South. Slavety, in
form, is not more; it is dead, but its .
spirit ealk4 "peeping and muttering
like ti• troubled ghost up and down
half the area of the republic. The
spirit of slavery. still dominates in
the Capitol. It
~c an. no longer en
slave the negro in legal form, but . ..it
aims to nullify the act of emancifs
tton Virtually by oppressing the freed
men in various ways. To . bring the
party back to, its original estate is to
train its organized 'forces against
Southern- domination. And this is
precisely what the stalwarts demand.
Wliy, then, shtOuld there be any cry
raised against stalwart Republicans
by men 'who insist than the party
should be restored to its first estate?
Who are the men who are obnox
ious- to . these fastidious gentlemen ?
Sucb i ) men as.ZACHARY CHANDLER,
GEO. 4 ROAR, GEO. 8.. BOVTWELL,
EDMUNDS, 60NKLING, BLAINE, CAM
ERON, Gaow and others. But these
'men participated in the organization
of the party; were fdremost in it."'
directioi in its infancy and i young
manhood. Is it proposed to drive
these men out of the party in order
to accommodate men' who demand a
return to the first departure ?
. Is any
one of the men named less deserving
Of confidence than of old ? Which
of them has forfeited the confidence
of the people ? If any 4 -let him be
designated. What was the Republi
can party in the old time if it- was;
not stalwart? of what !did it boast(
if not of its manly, straightforward
fight against the apologists of wrong ?
It was a stalwart -partf-in its cradle.
It grew . up and increased in stalivort
ness, Every year of its life was
-marked by an increased disgasitioa
to make war without truce or parley.
It scorned trick and, stilifertnge;tlt.
scorned to gain anything by cloakv
ing its , designs. It mule war upon
oligarchs, upon a lo* order of CiViS:
ZatiOn. Wherever wrong lifted its
head it struck.. It struck . hard. It
called- things by their right names-.
It arraigned the Democratic party
for its base subserviency to Southern
rule. And ,it demanded that, the
control of the government should be
enjoyed by men of conscience, who
, would not sacrifice the common weal
for power and plunder.
Very well. The' stalwart pretiosi7
tion is to renew the conflict and, car
ry it forward until a higher civiliza
tion shall prevairall over the land.
The men who led iii 1854 and until
the end of the war, ire good enough
to' lead now. Some of them, are dead,
but enough survive to do,good work.
Such of them as remain true to the
original purpose. of the party are to-,
day sneered at. as "stalwarts." That
is eirivalent to calling them honest
and earnest. Such men "
are-never in
excess anywhere. Political Miss
Nancyism may object to them, but
they cannot be ignored: We have
heard enough aloout conciliation and
hand-shaking across the bloody
chasm—enough to turn the stomachs
- of sensible men,who knotthat there
itr no more' bkicsly chasm now than
_there was befotili`gte War. If there
was evet - rOcimi*Seniiinnt;therii
is no room now: , The Republican
ffilMil
party must makembr;urisoConfed
erste rule, all Oittift,llpilliZßMAN
armies.
t9nUtit'it6o . o nlegfi,,nt* off sup.
besinipnalientievry whoreirer .
-#; : ,4,t 110 4 4 ~*lknitlOt brings
"thatiltraitiofou4Od :4lebed old
to its iinalAppnuistf4x. This
is stativart Republicanism. Make
the most-of -
Ahei
loorld, - herein - ira - never-ending - eon-,
l ust liet*een and :Wrong. Ar
Itagonistic forcea — tife incessantly etk-
!gaged in :a wftfaie , wpieb Ultimately
ends in the triumph arid establish
tmeatof ecirt.4l, primiples, what
iwe may, pax, what; we will, Ahe, strife
geies - 'on, because the influencei4 , are
,irreeencilCatle t ' until suticiatition,
,
ignorance nor ,. dishonesty give ; way
before knowledge, justice and sturdy
jntegrity. , .Such has bed the experi
ence ited all nationii, and
• . • , •
,the history of this ecittetryifernlitott.
eieeption :this 'gsnisil;rule.
,WheiLour 'forefathers shoilk
.off, the
yoke:of. British -tyranny, andfounth
ietri . was 'to be an
a~ylutn• for the oppressed or . all:
natiops, they granted the largst
iliberty of conscience, and: the great
cid, security Mid - freedom nd lv
I coUsiStent nth the sathtY . and . re
.
'quireinents / lof good government.
, The principles of tiliberty, equgity
"And justice were asserted and stab
lished, securing to every one the
peacefUl "enjoyinent of _life and liberty
and the, pursuit of ',happiness.
Pat ; the patriots of the revolution'
'as puritanic as they were in their.
religious ideas,-as :inflexiblec as they,
were in their determination not. to
submit to the tyrannicaliconduct of
the mother country, as self.saerifie
ng and heroic as they were in revo'
!ing, and , battling for their independ.
ence, when they had bravely con.
quered 'their freedom, neglected to
extinguish_the great , moral, social
and political eyil then - in their midst,
and, handed down to their posterity a
'crime and wrong from whiter
,come • unnumbered troubles; and
which has been -the.chuse of much
- woe and suffering. ,It is ncr reflection
upon the men of the Revolution,tbat'
they , failed to see the enormity of
'the wrong they were perpetrating in
perpetuating the institittionof human.
, slavery and transmitting it as an in
heritance to their posterity. It might
,be supposed that a people, who after
years. of warfare, and after undergo:
ing great privations ; had y kroken the
yoke of the oppress4,Avould have
testified their 'joy aiixt gratitude by
thosening the fetters ; (O .- the bondsman
and setting him free. Public septa
went at that time was not ripe for
such an tact. The irrepressible con
flict tad not been inaug,nrated. But
the moral forces were at work as
silent and irresistible in their opera
tions.as the laws Of nature, and soon
brought
i on the -discussion which re
sulted n gradual emanciPhtion in
the Northern States, and in' awaken
ing in, the minds of many Southern
statesmen a quickening of conscience,
which brought lout the condemnation
Of the institution, and plans for its
ultimate extinguishment.
Unfortunately, cotton-planting and
slave-breeding becae profitable, and
the moral bearings t iof the question
were swallowednp - or forced Out - a
sight by considerations, of icterest,
while as a political element slaVery
by consolidating the'South, became
powerful and aggressive. New fields
were 'acquired, to make servile labor
profitable, and 'new con Cessions de
manded and conceded, to,make more
—l kablei the grasping and arrogant po
litical power of the slave 'oligarchy.
Two years before the tiring on.
Sumpter,-which was the death-knell
of slavery, the institution, never
seemed more firmly fixed upon our
soil. The aristocracy it created were
never more insolent nor rapacious in,
their demands. They had succeeded
in destroying the compact which re
stricted the Spread of slavery into
free territory, and, were confident ofl
their ability to establish the right to'
carry it into all Territories of the
Nation. Doughfacism was rampant
in the North,'and it seemed as if the
day of triumph . for slavery had
come:
But "God works -in a mysterious
way wonders to perform,", and
underneath this. apparent triUmpli;
lying close to the snrface, werein.
operation the moral influences which
were gradually but certainly destined
to overthrow 'slavery. The Wrepressi
ble 'conflict, which had ,been silently
waged by moral causes, wa4recipi
tated by the madness of the slave
holdtrs into the: dreadful arbitra-,
went of the sword, and the arbitrary'
domination which threatened to con
trol the whole country, was broken
on the field of bloody battle. . The
arrogance of - fancied power and as
hamed auperiority, accomplished in a
short time, the- results which 1t half
century of unwearied, and persistent
effort on the part of t philanthropic
and conscientious individuals had
failed to achieve. The sted„.it is true,
was sown by those who feared not to
denounce the crime/but apparently
they :had made but little progress
towards ;its eradieation,when its sup
porters and friends, by their unlaw-.
ful acts; brought down upon- them
selves condign
, and fearful punish
ment: Whht religion and juitiee,
failed - to accomplish, 'rebellion and
injustice secured to the 'colored race.'
The act / of emancipation was born
amidst / the throes of civil war, and
the sulferinp of the country. The
result was, in the course of events,
inevitable, yetibitt for the wickedness
of the', slaveholders it might have
beeridliferiedlor years., •
/ Slavery has been abciftshed f it is
.~..~.,._ . .. ..,. ...,,..~._._..,... .:,,..F......
, ,_
true,,#)!ltr as constitutio nal_. ,biked over by , a
third irtrty. *l l,o, pre- I
ions can ;of it out, but the ro of: eerie the signature -sitt,lgiiateriel'
the sop a na l - i ii4: llB ,***: , : l #v
~.'.**. 4
'4ratiPiat'floia.Tobl.:_ i rb la
deep 4 - ,** 41 04c 8 0 1 0 1 4.in t ' 404100* 14ar bean dea4diii a
and ai a) / -#0! Pen*S -, 0: * 1 14 ' , iitifieiral*lt,' * 10' le.. ait*lrbe•
6
at
~,i ,41 ‘, o ,oo,l4.ititr,it.not,
ohs eiblivation ark the laiti . 'A , •i ' . '"/ ' • -
4' r '`-
V ',-, ~,,--..,,,,,,--....
, , ,••• ...
tree. • The conditions of S •
_utilie,rn ------ 1 -"' ~.- ~,`
communities are still affected by tar. Govsatroa Bort has ' - liteOlated
Went and inhumane influmosewhioh Jou....artfaX 0141 1 1'. „or_ .EliatOn, to.
are the natural outgrowth of. the k bar.. this; yafiertcy . on - the Supreme Court
barons ,system of holding hnmai bencii;caused !vibe death of Justice
being In I:io44 . lFge r .',' The' slave bee 3 1 V -4 ►P I : I 4 IN rAt -% , 1 4 r, rilr, muL , ,fudg e,
lbeen freed,:birt-the. cura'notalaireri 00.01* bop, ' In_w__l47ren county,
yet shede iia ! balefel effects,aver, the Tear Je.rit Augaitt 29 1 1 828 ; grad
country. The: irrepressible • con fl ict stlai44, at ,. layette I.o.Oiloge la', the
is not yet ended, nor , Will it, end; until olaaa , of 1 8 40, wail. *4 OW. to the
the triumph of the Right iieoutplete. bar in 1849+sad was the law-Part:ter
Life, liberty and - ..the)purstiit of hap. "Or 'Governor Awntutw , IL RIZDZIL..
illness must 'be ' free 'and properly Tbe`oldy office Judge Gnash' eve r
,_
secured to aVery citizen in • every held was as reertaber-ai- large, of the
county in.theliatioe, before thceon. Constitutional Convention..of 1873,
filet will befended. _This co n trover s y to which- position , he appointed
—..
is eenaueted la nO 'spirit of animas. to till the vacancy , caused by ;the,
ity Or' unkindnese on th& part of the ,resignation
,of the late :Attorney-`
Norih, , It is not , the 'arraying of one GrOenii• l Saaittu.' E. Dimwit. i For
the iStist ten or *en years HENRY
section against another. It is alvar
fare of .the powers 'of: light. kgainst GREEN has stood at the head'of , the
the powers 'Of . darkness; of
bar , of -'- Northampton - county, and
Peace, against lawleiseess " law bar
and' ViO. wee • reeota)o4,l43 the most distin
'once. ;; it. w ill.-, continue,inotil ' the guis h ed lawYer ' throughout the
L
Right tritintOhs,..-and. i , the American high • Valley:: Governor Moir .
citizen shall have the'canie deferenoe could ,iSYR :searehed . :the Common
paid, to hip ' personal f i n d political Wealth ot Pe ' from the
rightsin, Mississippi' '
niin y e i n kiii. Delaware to, the Ohio line, and from
vania. When that time oome4 the the. Northern t$ the SOuthern border
contest wllreeare, and all sectional- and not sman more eminently
ism will be. obliterated, and until it (Multi"' to . adorn the Supreme
does come,' : it is' useless to endeavor sindiciary, of the State than Ibin.
to, stifle : the discussion, or..hide ••the HENRY Germ. The appointment is
fact that the conflict is going , on. - one that - will meet with universal
approvali'for we -do not believe that
-
the lean lives who will
,question his
qualificationsforthe• di I' -
.ju cary,nor his
purity i aa a man. ' .'.,,
GENERAL CHAL?dERS; . Of MISSiS•
sippi, is really startled to find_in the
co menu of
,the ; Republican press
upoq the trial. oE the Carlini mur
derers fresh indications . "of_ the ex
tent' to . Which the Republican party
is prepared to go in the - destructiou
of civil liberty." Cuitiugais ideaof
civil : liberty, it will he noticed; seems
to be the kind. of, generoqs freedom
which allows a Democratic , rritlian to
go about banging Repnbliair men,
women and children with shot-guns
With perfect iinmunity punish:
ment. CHALMERS alsc positively in
sisks that the Republican press wants
to abolish the Jury system in the
South; but this is not exactly the
case. - -What the loyal pecoplo..of_! , ,he
country want is the laws ( „oE. the
Southern States against murder : shall
be enforced by Ulb methods' which
thosc laws provide. The men who
bring the laws of
, Missisirppi into
contempt are jurymen who acquit
,Democratic editors in defiance of the
evidence, and men like Cuacluzas
Who apologize for such conduct bi-
eause the jurymen and , the murderer
alike belong to a political party
which gave Cu minas a seat in Con•
gress to which'he was never elected.
TIIEROS much Well-meaning talk
in favor of beginning at once to se
cure a Rep.ublican majority, in the
next Congress. It is claimed that is
case a Democratic President is eltet
.ed in 18s0 a-Republican 'Congress
will be a much-needed check upon
him and his Southern supporters.
This is all very true and sound, but
it is also tree that there is nothing
gained in fighting a battle in advanc - ii
The.newCougress
,wilt not be elect
ed until next year, did the:best way
'to get ready for the contest then is
'to win the battles which are engaged
in now. If the, Republicans secure
Ohio aud New York this . 'fall,'there
will beno tro uble
, : about the next
Congress or the next Pre,sident.
Tnnur is doubt Omit the great
deficiency in the erops',' , of Great
Britain. Mr. DONNAS, the . United
States Consul at Belfast; Ireland,
Confirms the' reports made by other
Consuls, and shows., that in that
part of. the realm there • has been a
lamentable .failure of agricultural
products and' there is but' s. gloomy
prospect before the people. When
the greatJamineoceurred in lreiand
in 1845, the crops. of England and
Scotland were fair. 'Very' differenti
is the case now. Disistrons reports
come froui even the most celebrated
of England's agricultural, counties.
In the first week of September the
griliflS'hnrdly colored. - The*tato
crop is deficient, ,as also tlie'.alinost
equally impartsut . roets— turnips and
mangel. '
IT appears from thereturns made'
by the Colleafor . ofiCustoms at - New
York tu i • the Bateau of Statiatics
that duringthe first twelve weeks of
the,current fiscal , year, embracing
the period from July 20, the imports
oftpecie% that port exceeded the
exports by $25,306,314. The recent
flow.bf the precious• metals toward
the United - States is the more • re
-markable in view - of the fact 'that .
during the years since there hes
•
'been an excess. of exports pf ,apeele
from the United States: :Even so
late as. the year 1875
_there was an
excess of exports of specie over
its amounting to $740(1,000.
TEE sad' fate, of Mi s s ximiy K.
BUSSING, a Brooklyn young lady
who was nm ever an killed on the
Northen mdirold On
Tuesday of last week, is , another
terrible w rning to persons who per
sist in wal '-"ng on railroid •tracks.
She saw the train comin g ; but In
leaving the ek her foot beeame
'wedged betwi , the- rails and after
that nothing: could save her. A
large portion of tie people Who are
killed while walking, on., Failway
tracks meet their :death from the
same - eitise.
.JuwE D.EO recently, rend• ied a
decision inthe eourts of Blair ett,unty,
pa., that is of considerable hitpor.
fence. The.'point dedidedis.the the
signatures of - the makers ; 'pc iv note
eiecuted in pencil and afterward
Wnif an uneasy state of affairs
exists in Europe shown by the
attention .given to every movement
of the Chtumellors, Premiera,.and
leading Minist e rs of Rms.'s, Austria
and goinlany. Eversince•the Russo
'irar it seems to have been
a°
accepted ,a s
,as matter near possibility
, .
that war involving most of• t u be
great Powers May come at. any time
and must be prepared for. Month
after month the movements of the
Pr i emiers 'are interpreted in the light
of that suspiciop. Russia and Great
Britain have been and are yet strag
gling) for vantage points to Asia,
while in Europe, Germany and Aus-
lain Etre keeping a sharp lookout for
'their interests in case of war. This
generation 'is likely to see the time
when new editioni of an atlas Vast
cannot ,be printed frOui old plates
will have to be furnished the public
'schools.
Tux tramp law-seems to work well
in Connecticut. There - are now in
jagat New Haven only 150 prisoners,
egainst 230 at the same time , last
year:: Sheriff BUXBEE says this
marked decrease in the number of
prisoners is due to the fact that the
ramp Ipr has driven out of , 'the
State .a large number of people . who
were formerly' regular visitants of
the jail. There are now - very few
commitments from the smaller towns '
in the county, which is also due to
the tramp law, as in times gone by
nearly all the commitments have
been from a class Known as tramps.
The month before the law went in
force, theltramps would, all ask as
they left tke jail, which was the best
way to' get:; chit of/the State and,
across the line to New York. When
informed they. invariably started in
that direction. /
, • •
OF the im mense lumber of Ottle
raised in Texas some ides may be
formed from the fact that up to July
14 Lase, ;500' head of cattle this
year hasl il n - t
passed Fort Worth on
way to t e famous pasture lands of
Kansas.' In addition to these, 50,-
1
000 more were on the road to . Fort
Worth. Yearlings sell in Kansas at
$g to 9; two year-olds at $l2; three.
year olds at $14.50, :and beef steers
at $16,50. .
ettOttzsr.-Scutrrusit, a telegraph
operator at Little Falls, N.Y., ab
ductd a daughter of a prominent
citizen of Buffalo on Tuesday and
attempted to secure $5OO for her re
turn. Ile also had planned the steal
ing of the girl's brother, for whose
.surrender be was going • to demand
$5OOO. The girl got away on Wed
nesday, told her father what had hap
pened, and Thursday she had SCHUY
LE4 arrested; 'He confessed - his crime .
and was committed for trial.
.___. .
rPRZPARATIONB .1 . 0 1 the reception of
S e
fieneml GRANT in icago are quiet
ly, progressing. Th Palmer House
will be his headqua rs while there.
The Exposition Building has been
secured from November sth to the
10th; incinsive, for holding a military
reception rusd, 14. It is intended
to have the military spectacle the
grandest witnessed since the war.
ACCORDING to the testimony taken
by tlielqcw York Legislative com-
Mittee at" Sulfalo on Saturday, the
discriminations of the railways in
that State have well-nigh milled the
farmers; stock-raisers, millers, cheese- -
makers r and pork-packers of the
northWeitern part' of the C'ainmon
wealth. °
I'4, meaning of , this prolonged .
grumbling of the Democrats about
another fin. • Tams,
when' literallY translated, • is about
1 1 16 an irants it again he
must paylot it handsoniely. ° •
-
The Yasuo tininess and the CHle-
was verdict 'have accomplished one
thinip r -they, have' nearly , silenced the
Northern DemoCiatie flapdoodle
"out:" bayonets at thepolle
• Emir Ouvaa, of Ilttabnrg, has
been named by some entilastie
friend for the United States Senate.
ik,„,41= 12 na PSZAPIMIZA•,,
eljtaso ~ ,
, PIMADIMPINUiikvindor 24 1/1711.,, .
The Phi/ 11 "0 4 % IDMINIFTII4 ba men
in silf#olwingfi* " l i e U 1136
li" This mrtlillaiierrllreil` MO
a mcm g st thi1f41 1 1 # 644,4 /Wets; MO
it tamer to any oMA eatiOt * *
mod
attention of tbe rank sank' The sii&
age city Deinoerst is not a native produci
tlion, but an impOrtation, and be takes
the stoUbt.ticket. CaLelectioa_day,, and
does not ask who the inindhlateware. The
_ilea which bad the apiewaricie of 616 g
rerybitter was only a '" tempest in a tea
sit"--ao some respectable gentlemen,
wbo train with tbs Democracy-sidled • a
RaPil ccementi",,f4l/°FhwAqi'll ticket
*Wood 'or decent . m en pi, candidate's.
This ticket has ;now ibli - eridooment , o#
,
both wings Of the Democracy who harp
butened to give lather adbesiOni - • They
were both very glad to be let down so ear l
ily, as , both were sick.of the quarel. Ae
the candidates of this :new dispensation
havenot the slightest chance of an elect
tion, they could well afford to make a vit.-
too of necessity, and ;nntke a show: Cc
triiisfully.deferrila to a sound and heal+
thy sentiment.
s :A large party of Presbyterian missiona
ries will sail from Philadelphia, the sec
ond of 'October. They igo to ladle under
the direction of. the Board of Poreigii
tissiOna.. The day before their . depa*
are fueled meetings will be held in say,
'Ana of ibe Churches.
In a little less than, two, years a Phila..
delphis firm have shipped, over Ave hun
dred street car wheels oa axlee , to Brazil,
Itud two hundred to the River Plate couni
Xryi and they hare present foreigit
data from the West Indies, South Ameri-,
ca and Europe fur some 1,360 of. their!
chilled . railroad- wheels. Some are' for
reads in Cubsoipd others for trains in
Great - Britain . •
The Coroner's jury investigating tbe
cause of the death of George Truman,
late Clerk of the Court of Quarter Sere
sions, reported tultbeir verdict that be
died from Ilia' injuries received at the
hands of A. A. Shinier, and that said in
.
Juries wo re inflicted bY &dealer after pre
meditation and with intent to do him
great bodily bairn. Siiissler was' then•
committed to prison. The funeral of the
deceased took Thursday, in con
' forrnity with the customs of the Society
of Pniands, of which , he was a member.
Mayor Stokely telegraphed to General
Grant congratulating him upon his safe
arrival, and bstriting him to-visitthiscity.
To this General Grant answers that he
cannot now rime a time for the visit, but
will let him know. ;°.
Much gratification is expressed, by the
many friends of Bishop Stevens on receipt
of the riews . that his recovery was 4.)tifi-
-dently anticipated, his condition &Aug
the;past. feW days, having slowly but sure
ly improved.
Smith, Vowel! & Co., commission mer
chants, rand heavy grain speculatom - fail--
ed last week. They. wore - "short"'on
wheat and:corn, losing heavily by the re;
cent, advance in prices. They carried
down pith them the firm of Righter,
Cowgitt & C0.,1 gisin dealers.
General Grant begin his tour of the
world in a steamship built os the Dela
ware at Cramp's ship yard, in Philadel
phia,-and returned to the United States in
another Delaware built steamship, the
City of Tokio, from Roach's ship yard,
at Chester. •
The coal operattirs bare made several
futile attempts to form a combination,
which shall have the effect to increase the
price of coal, or at least to place the'kusi
ness on a stable foundation. So far, the
Lehigh Valley people have been the great
obstable, as tiro Lehigh Vino , Railroad
claimiricse a common carrier, and is no
willing 'to agree •to limit - the- amount /of
coal Carried over the road. The real trou
ble is that the supply exceeds the de
mand. Perhaps with the boom in • busi
neas, the demand will increase, and the
coal operators - will-again see prosperous
times.
Kdward Kelly, a noted pickpoCket, was
recommended by the Board of Pardons
for release, and Go!ejmor Hoyt pardoned
hunt, but on representations made to him,
thatkit was not SPAsper act, be recalled '
tiie pardon by telegraph, so when M.
Kelly's! friends went to release' him from
durance vile they were shocked and disafil
pointed*, learn that be was not to be -set
at liberty. .
Inquiring otproniiy...mutbnsiness houses
the gratifying infon*itien that theY are
all more thaoiatiafierewith the business
they are doing. The - retail- bonies are
particularly busy, and . several say that
the volume of Wee is largey in excess of
any corresponding period for years.` - There
is olioverthe country increased activity,
ando steady appreciation ill Prices. .
. Two engines'', in active-Seri , * on the
`Pennsylvania Railroad, hair . ° rea ched . the
unprecedented record of one hundred and
ninety-nine thousand miles of travel with
, . .
out' needing rpairs.
A twelve-year old girl, in order to es-.
Cape the fury er -her mother 'who was in-
Sine from liquor, leapedlroin ; the, second
story of a house in the lower part of <the
city on fisturday of last week, and receiv
ed dangerbus injuries that compelled her
removal to the Pennsylvania Hospital.
f Dr. Henry Chapman , Physieian of the
'Coroner, has receptly been very ill at his
residence at Bryn Mawr, from blood poi
soning and symptoms of tetanus, which
originated from an absorption of humor
into a Scratch on his hand, while Making
a post. mertem . examination about tea
days ago, on the brain of a subject; who
had a taint of era sipelas in his system. • •
The first ease of the naturalization of a
Chinaman took place in Judge Finletter's
court Saturday; under the auspices of a
Naturalization bcitnix4tee. .Admanto Le
nen is the name,, and the Oriental aware
~ , .
with evident satisfaction, to be a faithful
'subject to the great United States; and to
bear true 'allegiance thareto.
A poor, old man lapparantly) has been
.piteously soliciting alms
,on Arch, Chest
nut sad Eighth streets. He was recog
nised as the possessor of a fine; residence
In Camden, and .1. comfortable income,
and committed .to jail, -but being-released
went back to his begging. He was again
arrested and held to bail. .
A young - man of good character, named
Voight, was so enamored of chess, -, that
be took books' in the *Mer
cantile Library,"to obtain china 'problems.
He pleaded guilty,. but having been in .
•prison eleven days, and his previous char
facterbaving been established, he was let
`coif with rt lee**. .
l'hOßriulliait railroad *Untrue of - the
Meolles t rAliMihrietitrned out .failure,
Principally by, neuron of ;the deciakin .of
the British Court , trhieb. either' - . tied up
of diverted the rnoney: , : - Tho contractors
and most of the < persons employed have
retOrneilt? .
The Building Commission ask 'for one
and a quarter million of dollars*, expend
on the Mei city - buildings the coming
3ear.: Considering the Present financial
I condition Of the otty, this request is deem
ed excessive:
The - Peyntspnuila
,jisqlroad given
BridgeloAeUer (1011, of Lancaster. .
GM= lows.
-DENIS KEARNEY on Saturday again
sent up his card •to General Grant,
tido, as before, declined to see him.
PIENZEAX. BEN HARRIEON, df
Igdi-
OOa; grandson of President Harrison,
Is said to be one: of the finest orators
in Indiana.
-PRESIDENT McCosu bas dismissed
five students from the College of
New Jersey . - for ungentlemanly con.;
dnatkat : Trenton:lately. •
Tuz,,Sapreine Court at Providence
on Saturday „morning uppointed
Robert Thompson trustee of the
property - of ors: Williaar-Spmgue
PRESIDENT 11AYES held a levee at
Topeka, Kanner, on Saturday. Fri.
day hes left for . Springfiield t Illnois,
where he. Rill arrive this morning.
COLONEL FRED D. GRANT, arrived
at Coahcil Blufra, lowa, Saturday
evening from . "San Francisco. 'Re
says his father will ,come east about
the last of Cetober or the first of
November..
ON Saturdays Large :boulder of
native white quartz rock was moved
from the mining regiol, near the
wilderness of Virginia, "and placed
to mark the spot when Stonewall
Jackson received his death wound.
A simple inscriptiOn will be engraved
upon the stone.
IT is reported that Secretary Sbhurz
has, promised to Send the Foncas back
to their old: hunting-grounds. -
RAMEI, Convicted of arson in the
third degree,. in attempting to blow
up the steamer Drew, was s ,on Satur
day, at Albanyp e EmentencCd to seven
years' imprisonment. ,
• _ -
Two bold highway robberies were
committed at Long
.Branch on Fri
day. -In one ease, the thieves_ ktwek- ;
ed a man dOwn on the street and";
took from him SSS in monek. -
AT Pittsb_urg, Va.,on Friday
. night;tbecolored peopl held a grand
mass meeting :and adopted resolu
tions _favoring , the payment of. the
State: debt on the McCulloch prin.
OUT of five hundred '3lpplicants . at
St.:Louis, one Winched. and fifteen
boys were selected for.naval appren,
aces.l,he lads
r ofi Cincinnati ,7?111
now have a‘ — e - liance to enlist: . '
'Five tramps assaulted a young
girl named Mary Gregg. at Stephen
towtioiear Troy, N. Y., on Sunday
September 21st_, and she died from
herinjurie. -
GENERAL Frit ex-division.
commander of cavalry in the confed
erate army; was WedOesdav of last
week unanimously nominated for the
State , Legislature by the Debt-payqs
o f Stafford and King George counties,
'Va.
`LEwis CLEak, of Louisville, last
week bought far Keene, of New
York, the great colt Lord Murphy,
the first three year-old that his . ever
been able to capture the Derby and
St. Leger. The price- paid was $lO,- -
000. •
REV. ;DAVID L. Lot:Ns - oral - wis
sh Ife at Strat-
Morning of
Jeep in bed.
,•alltd, and is
because the
tate.
.eturns Made -
bytthe - eckllector of Ciistoms at:New
York to the-Bureau of Statistics that
during the first twelve weeks Of,..the
cutrent fiscal year, 'embracing the
the
period from July 1 to September
the impotts of specie at that port eX-
Ceede:d the exports by $25,306,314..
AT Boston, .WedriOday 'of last
Week; in the case of De. Kimball and
Madame Gerlisch, clinrge'd with the
murder of Jenny.P. Clarke, the jury
declared it could wit • agree upon a
verdict. There were eleven obstinate
fellows who favored conviction and'
one whe"hud his doubts„" and stuck
to them.
A c T a meeting of the . grain trade in
NeW York on Saturday, a resolution
changing the time of buying and sell
ing grain by the ventaLfrom actober
Ist to January Ist was adopted.
MARCUS H. WeirELT, was hanged
aQ Pocahontas; Ark., on Friday, for
the murder of Duke Summer in Feb
ruary, 1877. Whitely made a writ
tefficonfession, which was made.pub : s
lie after'his.death.
A DISPATCH from. Silver Beef, Utah,
reports that a party of • twenty-eight
prospectors, who started on the ex
pedition two months ago,' haVe.been
massacred by Indians near the' east
ern. houndary of that Territory:
. .
JAMES' WYATT. STONE, ' &lore
charged with the murder of his
wife, -Alberta Stone; on the sth of
October last at Washington, by cut;
ting her throat—with a razor, was on
.)-
Saturday. convicted of murderthe
first degree. . .i„
DuR!No a drunken ,brawl'in
saloon- ott :.Canal street,- RutfalO,
Friday; a bartender named - Bagess
stabbed John Walsh, a sailor, several
times, from. the effects of which he
will probably die. Burgess escaped
to Canada..
THE Spinners' Union,. of Pall.
River,Mass., held . a meeting, on
Saturday morning; and it is report
ed..that they, voted to continue the
strike, and appointed a committee of
thirty to lsit New York
,and Penn
sylvania to solicit aid.
. .
A VERDICT of acquittal was render
ed in the Boone countY
final Court on Saturday aftermion in
the cage :of Col. William G. Terrell,
indicted for the murdet of Hon.
Harvey Meyers, at Covington, March,
1874.. . •
JOHN. ADAMS, residing. at fiatton's
Hill, -Prince George's county, Md.,
was fatally shot by his stepson in a
quarrel about, household Obits on
Saturdaa.fternocin last. There'had
been ill-feeling between the parties
fora long time.
Is the case of Edmund T.'ll.lViral
ter vs. Charl e s C. Fulton R. ,Son, .
publishers of the BaltimoreA meridar!,
for libel, the jury being unable to
agree, were discharged. -.The 'jury_
stood, ten for $5OO and two for:one
cent damages.. •
_ONE of the most brutal Fmurders
ever recorded was committed Wed
uesday of last week ,on the - farm of
:Alektindei• White, in
.the town, of
Porte'r Rock, Wisconsin. Mi.-White
left the farm early in 'We morning to
make Some purchases, and after , he
had gone, his little _five-year-old son
was missed trim the house, as was
also', George Barrington, a German
farm-band. Search: was instituted, ,
and the boity of the boy wits d iscevCr
ed- lyineniider a manger in the sifeel
barn, with'his . throat cut from ear, to
car' nd his bead nearly severe&. He
was entirely - disembowled,' his_arms
tied behind-him and his test securely
bound. : From" the'• situation :it was
evident the murderer hattOrst hang
ed' him, !and finding - death by that
means slob, bad cut him down
and finished him with .a knife. Bar
rington had fled on a horse taken..
(Om the farm, and had been. seen -
several miles -away making for,,hiN 71 .
borne Fort Atkinson. Xo cause for
the deed can be imagined._
STATE AHEWS.
THE jury in the Terry Jembezzle.
Molt case at Pottsville, after behig
out nineteen hours failed to agree
upon a verdict: They stood eleven_
for conviction and one for acquittals
A =mum eiplosion of fire-damp
took plice at Scranton Wednesday
of last week in the Sloan Colliery of
the Delaware Lackaianna and West-
ern.Railroad,by wbich . - five men were
. badly butned. • . -
. .
lIAIRIETtatANS, of William
'sport, was mitering her door the other .
day with an armful: Of wood, when
.she tripped and fell,• breaking her
ABRAITAN PLouct; a!nd wife, of
ChOster county,y.will have their
diamond. weddink, t yetxr,.and
claim to . he the oldest ' married couple
in the Stite: - . -
-Br a f ill.of .slate at N0..3 Colliery,
LoSt , creek; near • Pottsville,- Thurs-
Joseph Zeubris, of Shenandoah, wa ; :,
killed andcanother man badly injured..
Luznnr county spent $01,545
last-yearsand has now in the tftra.surY
$30,8 - 0.- It owes $l 1 A,855 with re
sources timohnting to $292,7fi5, but
many or thern,unavaihible.
TunaADA Y afternoon Nora
aged *yen Years, fell into the canal
at• Harrisburg: She was re-cued in an
unconscious condition and died Bout
3 -
four•kours atier*ards... •
.aged " about
eighteen years, while in the l'ennsyl
yania Coal - Company's No. colliery ;
tt • Pittston Thursday,T was can glit
between 'a* car and . a pillar : , and -. 1 7
,altnost instantly killed. • •
ON 'Tuesdy of Inst week, Thorn
Leonard was ilirown .by a runaway .
mule_ nt the Bart - more., Mines, ueia
Wilk4barre,_ and his . feet became I
:entangled in the harness, he was l iL•.
dragged' ai diStancp of over
and inangliid to : death. • • ( . '
HENRY M.: RUTZEL, a .I.frakeinam:
on the 'leading and;: l tlolittnbia
foad,-vas shot ~ , Wedriesday niglitof
last shot by kiss Sallie .
Rogerg.at George Pond's restaurantin Reading. . - .Thelban entered
the right: eyeand' came out back ; ) f
the rtia, .ear, • inilteting a :seriou s
The stiootnig is said by
both 'parties to have.lieen ticeidt.ntal.
AN unknown nian was killed .oft
the iracrinf , Lehigh Valley Rail
road,,n,fenn Haven, Wedueday
of last reek. From papers found on
his pers . * his name is supposed to
be Edwi,ilds or freeman. A memo-•
minium containinglle names of Mrs.
Cornelia :Rock; No. east Fifty
fourth str:et.. New York, tiud Mrs,
Emma Sacket, -23 1- Vialet9a
avenue. -Bijooklyn, -. Was foutii in his
pocketbook.. He was about sixty-five
years of age. - -
!harge(l with
blow up the
le, was eoni
last week at
was issued
New York.
ortant. wit-
inavetfers Dirgitorii.
r.T.Ile .1011,...vinz tat,!ei of tlrae ai - ir carefully pre.,
..
parr,. and s. Iti be pr. loptly corrected, a..t.1.1 may 410 ,
relied on :ts accurate.: - , a
SOtTlf F.JtS ‘C-,E.NTI;AL'.II4kILILCI,ND
=1
Phila., Eapr,s:... 6.30. r M Phila. 1 ,- .%p,..t0.50 A3l
Nt., i. 24 A3l Phila. N r3l
Frltlgll/ 31. ye .111.5.0 iVrel,ght Start!: 4.554. n
. LEAVE SA 'V !: E. e 1" It RIFE, AT 3:.
Way Ft. Sr ,V+. 4 c - .S.J:i ANt Phi la. Fxr.rt,..)1.25 s!.l
rit Way FI. Sr A 0,1 t•
141114..74i% kr...".5 - .30 AAt Phila. NI. 'Ex.. 9.4 r m
Altp.lN - F. AT, r 9.;:0 1. m ;
Nxt)ry.,, 9.5 A A ; IV;ty';Erpilla and
A ccurn tnudt. t km, 4.90 1'. M.
I.lcnvc.'AvnertN—Ptilla. rxpre.xs, 7.5; A
Nigh: Exi'ress, 5,25 I' M ; Way Freight Imd
Accommodation, II 20 A M.
SYRACUSE., JUNG AIITON ac NEW YOTZK
AILROAI).
LE ti -E t:INGIIA3ri , ,N. I
N. Y. r m
Syracu.s.,! .... .Si 7 A 31
N. V. Eirtt'a Ex 1,45 A. NZ
Lwal reighl
COWNING, CONVANEQUT.
•
. .
Coruin7... ....Leave 10.20 A ]1..5.10 r. ]t.l 4;.::: A M
Lawr.neerWe. 1 i. 15 A It, 6.51. .1 A NI .
Wtilsboro tithe 12.::0 P M P M. /0:!5 A. 5.1
cortilpg Arrive M, A NI. 3.95 9
!INT
Las rencevillo :1
. .74 31: - 51! A :a, 1. it; Psi
We . .Devirt :4.20 rm, :535 Pm, 31.70 r m
ITHACA
LIt.AVE F.l.3llllA—Tra4t No.l at 6.10 A .m,l'adth
throi:O, malt and E:tpr p ss.nia-Iting t.tinelt , a) ttol,s,
and artiVe at - 'Mara at 8.1.5, Freolile ieort
!and 3.55. Syr:lease 1,1,cm..
•
Traiti No. 3 leaves at 3.10 p st, Vaa
Ithaca 3.p. Freeville 5.52, Cortiaud . 6.06, and .7ra
-7.10 r3l.
. . ;
.iItItIVE IN FLNIIIIA 2 —rroni the.aboVe polDs.t
12.r)5 and ll.lb I' M. ' ' !
• I'lll A.CA St (.; EN.. F. VA.
rift Sayrol. Rairroird
Trnitts retivt - t-Snyre going torth at 4.! A 34' :PO
5.4 , ) t*,:m, art triog a Ithaca At 13.tri ,ttand 3t, P
M. 31VIr l ill Genera at M and 9 . .21P N.,
• A train Ithaca at e.oo a It, t;e
nei'a at :AG a
Trains lewoYfieneva grang s;altb at 84'3 -
r mlnd P 31, an P. lt.g at '..,ape 31.
and 9.3t0 r • .
•.
. .. ,
4. _.
. ,Y.:AVE El-M1: 4 4. I AIM IC. AT ELMIRA.
nicits..tirg Mall ',.:23 A n • thlurn. Ex.., :.11.2 , 1 ..4. n
nius4l.lirg,r.[... 5.20 1 ,. n r Kliiiira :Ntail ~. 7.:30 r m
Way Freight...l2.V, r n i Way Freiglrt..lo.:o.A m
. All Exprvs: , . train; •1 ? , t . 1t t f!..antl
hltd "a1;1^ at.
, ..•
. .
SESEG\ S..\KE s.TE.vv, NavIGATioS - . Con-
(7.01NG 1•711-;-1.e:44:: Gettevt 7.23 3t,arrivlt g
at Wallan , at i 1.0 .% at.
x.; Watkinv r.c 1.301` M. mil,
riving at I.lenevn at 3.0 r 31.
_
NORTIE
-I
1 - 1
W 1
.
r m A Nt ; ,
, • _ • ‘ ..trPm
G.'2olle.liY.Artive.....Tovtacla....ilelmrt:7.4" .. 3..lt)
6.e3;10.00• • '...'..!...ti0rtr0c...... • ' ,:.49.3.P6
,%sii 9.54 •• _ Mtuottsto'ca ... "" ' 17.r.5 3.1:0
.),3! 9.41.) -•• ... (;) , ,ctiwood.... " 15;(413.`45 t
.•
s.4ti t 9. - 41, - ". W".." , t0tt...;:. '• I S WI 3.3'2
5.:19•, 9.:131 1 .:.'..) 1 :7111:01t, ••• tS:I4 3.:t11
.5.1:1, 9.301 ••• I antoka .- .•• is.,'2l't ... 13 )
5:201 9.40,. ••..,Fcot Ot giatte.. •`• 1J to 4.00
r lu: A, - .4 j '• . .
~ - jA it I.'3t
STATE LINE &..SULLIVA:N RAILROAD
F.• _7 !
!•!:
11111
'A. sC 1 - Court 14(.use.- i•-04
9.36 :Arrlce.T.;wBo;l:4.Depart 0 O.We
8. 5 0 • 21.1 " •• 4
0.20 ; •
.`• II - "4 10.
13 10 .1571 " \t-•r
7.30 13.; " `• ;• 4.43\
7:50 ; ``, " 5.15
6.45, 0 rilfee : 7 23 -.5.'3 •
- or. E4TIV A RP-LE V \:•ttV itt.Y.
0. 5. St. LNIIS FiX - M , SS
No..a; Pacific Expruns
No. D. AccornuoulatiUn :Ma Way train
No. I. Buffalo Kmprois
No: IS. Monitor....
No. 1, Day Express
No. 4, Night ExpreBB
No. 1G; Monitor
N 0.32, A oi , moniodatlon
.No:8, N. Y. kilpreBs '
No;11. Way Mail
N0.1'2, Ationtle.E%PresB
sot :tit
P: )11# 5.11.A. , 51 ' 1 • ;1 I*N 11. 3: 11
5.2.5 - 9,05,1,371
CIO 9.4:11.45 . 9.0 Q(.. averly.. '4.4:411 .50,5.40.7.5 •
0;2040.10 . 1 ,1.5: 9.15•.:. Sayro 11!'7. I :
6.25 10.1 a 2.0, 9 .20i ...At he fi5,...41311 j.33.4.0•1'7,? •
7.06 10.46 2.3040.001..Ti08:471 , 17....
..... 10. ttl: a. oei io. Ns[.wyab , lnc. ..;19.05,3,5.,,__
• .
NAIZTfiEWN CENTRAL nmf.nt-vAD
ARltivF. FROM NORTII. LFAVI: NOItTIIIVA4n. -
I)Ay - Expr! , s9 9 trio A3l Fast A3t
Ac.12.:;-5 '.ll C . ;itrioßßgaa Ac
tln%tra A?..... :Au 1. 31 :rtiptru E x...12.2r) r
Ntrlobern F.t....9.318.1. 31 Niagzsis 5.i5 r
ritt.isa sorxit. I
Vaal, Liar r )a I
Nuriherr.Ex "..12.20 r
Nial;ar4 Ex.... 3.1,5 r u
MI
D=2
I=ll=
A lticr. AT . IIINr.II'3ITON.
Ititig'ett..ii I!. P M
N Y.& P1Cx1:7.1 . 2. - ,5 P
Ae'rtniin. , "tat 6.1 41M
►..'ca. Freight... v-8
I=
=
TTOGti RAII.IIO Xi)
ME
':' . llAlt(2 . l.tY 'IL\ 11,110 A T 1
STATIoNS,
N tMES
Mil=
-OF
LE=
STATIONS
Eltir RAILw
... 4 0,•••
6.11 v "
B=!
IEIIMI:13
1.31 2 , •
PA. 'di. N. Y. 11-A11,1:0:t.
F.TATIONS.I
' _
NJItTlt. !t!,
=
Day Express. _5.05 A_M
Wllliangpt Ac..x.30
.. , :outlierti,l4l,:.„ 9.30 m
El
~~9
MEM
17 3,, 9
. 2.40 A NI
,-5.03 `.
OEM
DEMI