The Somerset Herald. WEDNESDAY. - - . October T. 1171. Republican State Ticket. FOR JVDGE OF grPEEME COURT. EDWARP M. TAXSON, if rbiladclpLift- FOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR. ARTHUR G. OLMSTED, of Totter County. FOR ACPITOR GENERAL. IIARUISOX ALLEN, of Warren county. TOR 6ECRTERT OF INTERNAL AFFAIRS ROBERT B. BEATII, of Scbajlkill County. Republican County Ticket. CONGRESS. 8uhj to aXUk of District Conference. W. H. KOONTZ. KTATE SENATK. K.P. YUTZ1. ASgEMBLT. Wm. exdsley. JOSEm D. MILLER. DISTRICT ATTORNEY. james l. rucn. COMMISSIONER. OLIVER W. BOYER. POOR nOCSE DIRECTOR. SAMUEL TUEXT. ArriTOR. DANIEL S.MILLER. COCNTY 6CRVEYOR. JOXATnAX II. FRITZ. To the Farmers. last year, ". BUTTER Commission Merchants TO THE Dairymen of the Glades. We hurt a very Urce and Increasln f BUTTER TRADE, SatisMoa to our SMppsrs , .ellln at high price; and wtUalwey. 1 Sales and Check as soon is tbe BITTER l "If HT'n"r0. "rveTarJe shipment. f til U lades, we remain Respectfully t. Keanard & (hdeshys, Batter Ccmissioii Mils, 83 EXCIIAXGE TLACE, BALTIMORE, MD. For tbe proceedings of tbe Sena torial Conference, published in an other column, we are indebted to the courtesy of the editor of the Bedford Pre, who kindly furnisrjea us proof elipin advance of the publica tion of his own journal. Mr. Jcstice Temple, tbe Demo cratic candidate for Auditor General, npr hoard of before bis nomi nation out side his own district, and Las no reccord except that which he kept when prothonotary of Greene county. And tbis is tbe man the! Democrats want to supersede Gen. Allen in the roost important office in the Commonwealth, except, perhaps, tiic office of Governor. Tbe idea that f -ich a man would work a reforma tion in the affairs of tbe office and . ,ld the State Treasurer in check i- too preposterous to be entertained. Says the Adams Starar.d Sfhtirtel: Ten days ago tha whole country stood on the brink of civil ar. A tinj:le hour o' irresolution on the part of President Grant and the tragedy .f ISf.l would have been renaeled. Had a Democrat, divided in bis duty iK'twccn his country and bis party ronvictions, been in the Presidential hair, the land to-day wauld almost surely have been wrapped in tbe flames of war. Let us see to it in Xovember that we do our personal duty in avoiding tbe very possibility of such a danger. Let-Pennsylvania how to these white leaguers her firm determination to stand by the Repub lican colors until Peace and Order reign supreme, and tbe Rights of Citizenship are respected, over the entire Republic, north and south. Xot till then will the mission of the Re publican party be ended. The Prt&$, speaking of the Demo cratic candidate for Lieutanant Gov ernor, says: When in 18G4 a constitutional amendment was projwsed to confer the right of the elective franchise on Pennsylvania soldiers in the field fighting for the Union, John Latta, then in the Senate, spoke and -voted againbt the measure, doing all in his power to defeat it. Among tbe reas ons given fur tbis opposition to en franchise the soldiers of the Union was that men who bear arms are not fit to exercize an elective franchise, and another that tbe proposed amend ment was contrary to the genius of our institutions. It is for services like these that tbe Democracy of Pennsylvania now hon or John Latta, because be did other lit tle vork while in the Legislature save that of deli veringbiUerpartisan speech es against all propositions to secure (be liberty of the slave and do honor to the soldiers who were defending the Ucioa which the slave holders were waging a traitorous war to debitor. The dedication of tbe Lincoln monnment will take place at Spring field oo tie 15tb of October, tbe Uj appointed for tbe reunion of the Army of tbe Tennessee. The rrobibitionifts of Allegheny county kare resolred to Btation six ladies at each poll on election day for tbe purpose of urging votera to cast their ballots for tbe prohibition ticket Will the people of Pennsylvania support, for the office of Secretory of Internal Affairs, Col. Beatb, who served with distinguished brarery through the war, and lost a leg in the service ? or, will they vote for Gen. M'Candlesa who, although a ! good soldier while he remained in tbe army, k?t it after a comparati re ly short service, declaring that "the i :P.fa ct t inn poEt ci nonor w ) We put the ment question without com- After a protracted session at Bed ford la6t week, tbe Congressional con ference being unable to agree upon a candidate, adjourned to meet at Sum mit in Cambria county on Tuesday, the Cth inst Of the two sets of con ferees claiming to represent tbe senti ment of Bedford county, those favor ing tbe nomination of Hon. John Cessna were admitted by a unani mous vote At the date of the ad journment of the conference mere were no positive indications as to the probable nominee, each county hav ing tenaciously stuck to its own fa vorite. Each of tbe four candidates has acceptably eerved in Congress, tbe rivalry between them is spirited but most amicable, and be the result a hat it may, we have tbe assurance that the conference will present us with a good candidate, who will un- questiunably carry the district There is one portion of the public record of Gen. McCandless, the Dem ocratic candidate for Secretary of In ternal Affairs, that is of peculiar in terest to tbe citizens oi mis county: and that is his persistent and unscru pulous efforts, when in the Senate, to prevent the completion of the Con nellsville railroad. Tbe repeal of the charter or this road, when its construction was be ing energetically pushed, was the grossest outrage ever perpetrated by any legislative body claiming the at tribute of common honesty, and no man in tbe Commonwealth ever at tempted to justify it .on any other than the highwayman's plea of might, and yet this Democratic candidate, totally ignoring all sentiments save those possessed in common with a receiver of stolen goods, stolidly vot ed during his Senatorial career against the restoration of the charter, filched from this road. Tbe man who could thus outrage every dictate of propri ety and honesty, is unnttea lor any public position, and is not to be trust- ed. The enterprising citizens of the numerous thrifty towns . and villages now dotting the line of this road, and real estate proprietors who have been so largely benefitted by its construc tion, have now an opportunity to show their appreciation, at the polls, of the man who voluntarily stood between them and the restoration of their rights. Let tbem remember j what the valleys of the Wills creek, the Cassclman and the Yough were a few years since, contrast it with their present condition, and then determine what they owe Gen. McCandless for bis persistent efforts to prevent the development and the progress which the building of the Connellsville road has secured. The, nomination of CoL E.' D, Yatzv as the candidate for Senator in this district, will afford unbounded satisfaction to the Republicans of this county, and is cordially approved and will be endorsed heartily at the polls, by our friends in the other coun ties of the district Col. Yntzy was born in Llklick Tp., in this county, in 1 835, bis parents soon after removing to Greenville Tp The limited school facilities of that neighborhood induced him at the age of sixteen to leave home in pursuit of better educational advantages, and of the means to procure tbem. lie be came student at Mt Union College, Ohio, working during vacations and Machine durinir the winter terms, and tj j after graduating in a scientific course went south and for some time taught school In Mississippi. In 1858 he returned to this county was afterwards elected county sur veyor, became clerk in the office o the Prothonotary, and commenced tbe studr of law. At the outbreak of the slaveholder's rebellion be vol unteered as a private soldier.was elec ted captain by his company, and was attached to the 51th regiment, com manded by Col. Jacob M. Campbell In 1863 be was promoted to the rank of Major, and at the close of his three years' term, commanded as Colonel the consolidated regiment composed of veterans of the 3d and 4th Re serves and tbe 54th. CoL Yutzy participated with hisreg iment in nearly all tbe battles in the Shennandoah Valley and in front of Richmond, at Piedmont, Lynchburg, Kerntown, Snicker's Gap, Opeqnan, Winchester, Fisher's 'Hill, Cedar Creek, and a number of .minor en gagements and skirmishes, and in 1865, near the close of the war, being disabled by wounds, was honorably mustered out of the service. Since the war bis time has been de voted 1o Lis own business affairs, and during tbe construction of ihe Con nellsville railroad he was alloted and prosecuted to successful completion several heavy and important sections of that work. He is a gentleman of liberal culture, strict integrity, and indomitable perseverance and will, was two years since made the Sena torial candidate for this county, but was defeated for nomination by the present Senator from Blair Col. John Lemon, and if elected, as he undoubt edly will be, will make a useful and valuable Senator, of whom the dis trict will be proud. Ot SEW YOB K LETTER. Xew York, October, 5, 1874. THE YOUNG MAN ABOUT TOWN. I had the curiosity the other day to sit in one of the eluba of tbis city a part of a day, to tbe end oi study ing the iilv iife of the "young man about t .vn," a class very numerous in tbi it;, where fortunes, colossal in tb r report ioos, were made by the luat ffeneration for tbe present irpnpra'ion to pnend. It was a sen 0U3 study, and one, I trust, that car ries with it a moral. Th voonir man about town is. of course, wealthy. His father made a large fortune in something, and sent the young man to college. lie grad uated somehow, without learning anything, and being too rich to fol low any business, gave bis whole mind (it wasn't much to give) to tbe spending of it - liis day commences at noon, wnen he rises. Before be gets his pantaloons on he staggers to his side-board aud swallows a brandy-cocktail to give him a little life, for the night before took out of him all the vitality be had, and his 6leet)has not been souDd or refreshing. Before be has himself encased in his elegant clothes, he Las swallowed four or five of these invig orators, and has got up enough friski ness in his stomach to be able to eat a breakfast, which he docs at his club. He may plav at beiog a broker, in which case he goes to Wall street, and, with a set of choice spirits of the same kidney, be makes a few "trans actions," going out for cock-tails be fore and after each one. After busi ness hours, he drops in at Delmom- co's, and takes a bite of something, drinking tbe while every fifteen min utes, and about say six in the even ing he is ready for dinner. At din ner he dnuks cbablis, sherry, cnam- pagne and burgundy, winding' up with cognac. Tbis brings him to the serious bus iness of the day. He may go to tbe opera with his sister, or the unfortu nate young lady wbo is to be nisi wife, or bo may join a "stag party," , and drop in at one of tbe theatres fori an hour. Following tbis he goes, if he is in a virtuous frame of miad, to a ball or two, dancing a little at each, and drinking a great deal; or, if in a vicious mood, there are balls of tbe demimonde. In default of these, there is always a game of draw-poker at the clubs, with ?takes unlimited; or, if his system demands a fiercer excitement, there are the furo4anks. where, with the aid of wine and bran dy, the young man may lose as much money as he chooses, and tbe proprie tors generally manage tbat he shall lose a great deal, lie keeps at this steadily till six o'clock in tbe morn ing, when he goes home, not drunk, but in a semi-intoxicated and general ly befuddled condition, and drops in to a sleep which is not natural an alcoholic 6leep that comes from the inability of a not over-strong consti tution to bear any more stimulants and cigars; for be it known, this gen tle youth smokes the strongest cigars every minute of the time . tbat he is not in bed or in the presence of de cent women. The "young man about town" does not confine himself to the three vices of alcohol, tobacco and gambling. Xot he. There is not a woman of doubtful character in the city who is unknown to him: and he has al ways one, and generally more, mis tresses, who share Lis income with the faro-banks, tbe liquor and cigar dealers. He dies at something less than fortv, as a rule, though if he li vea be yond tbat age, it is to wish that he had died before; for his death is not tbe ordinary absolution. It is break-up. The system infeebled by dissipation, kept alive by stimulants, and drained by every known excess, comes to a point where stimulants, wll no longer act for tbe tissues up on which they acted arc gone. 1 here is not enough of the man left for rum to take hold of, and as rum has kept the machine running for years, it- is really all there is of it Then it brakes and eoes in a minute. There is no fuel for the fire to take hold of, and it dies. Poor fellowl A life that might have blessed the world ended with not a good deed to leave behind career characterized by nothing but lust and self-indulgence, and a deatn mourned only by the harpies wbo ministered to bis sins, their regret be ing that be did not live long enough to squander upon tbem his entire for tune. There are forty thousand of these voung men in Xew York this dav living the life I have only in part de scribed. THE COSMETIC ARTIST. . If the young men of Xew York are given to one kind of dissipation, their sisters are to another. Tbere are the city at least one hundred men and women who have amassed, or are amassing, large fortunes by beautify in? women. The cosmetic artist is generally a lady whose antecedents are unknown. Where she comes from no one knows, but she always professes to come from that especial vanity-fair. 1 aria. cue Jives in quiet and severely respectable neigh borhood, and no sign advertises her calline. for no lady would, for the world, be seen visiting a known beau tifier. She is admired by her custo mers, and if she is tkilful she has enough of them. What does she do ? Lock at the complexions on Broadway, and there find your answer. A lady has good enough features, but her complexion is bad. She would be completely beautiful, so she goes to Madame X . Madame seats her in a chair, dips a soft brush into a villainously smelliotr liquid, and paints the face tbe neck and bust, and presto, the suuburn, tan, freckles, or whatever may be the trouble, have disappeared, and id lieu tberof, tbere is a complex ion as clean, clear, soft and beautiful as tbe most exacting could wish, Tbis is enameling. The preparation is a mineral paint that pimi'ates the clearest flesh, and it stays on several days without repairs. The victim onco enameled has to go regularly for repairs, which gives Madame a mortgage on her purse. Unfortunate ly for the artist, tbe mineral gets into the system, and tbe victim dies in a few years of paralysis; but as there is a new class of vain women born every year, she never lacks custo mers. The hair is another source of reve nue to the beautifiers.- Does the lady want to convert ber black tresses into tbe yellow, now so popular 7 Xotb ing easier. Tbe hair, is plastered with something about as pleasant as lime, which roust be kept oa night and day for a week or so, which bleaches it to the color required, the eye-brows being similarly treated, tbat tbe effect may be harmonious. True, this induces paralysis, but where is the woman who would not take the chances of paralysis for tbe enhancement of her beautv? Is the forehead too high? Madame shaves the bair on the forshead an inch or two. and applies a liquid which si e makes, aud a fine fuzs grows, ims is shaved again and again till it gets thick, aud long enough to be arrang ed to the taste of the wearer. Women arc not the only patrons of Madame. Men write to her, from all paru of the country fer her prepa rations to make bair grow aud to change the color of hair. i .They drive a profitable trade, for i a woman may go without euniciem underclotbiDg but she will have the meaus of beautifying herself. Ilridget, in the kitchen, buys her ten- ;ce(HJ', worth of white lead for her face; Vad the nnsLreas uo-siairs pays Uie coa-4 metic artist $100 for enameling; but it is all to one end. One-half the world lives on the vanity and folly of the other half. ' J .."' . beecueh-tiltox." - ; What happiness! A week has passed by and the papers bre had nothing in them of the Beecher-Til-ton scandal. Tilton's Fast statement is acknowledged by every one to be a remarkable production, and it 'las changed public opinion in 1 the mat ter to a wonderful degree. The good people of Brooklyn who believed Beecber innocent now admit that his guilt is possible, and those who sided with Tilton are stronger 'than ever in the belief in the strength of his position. -Tilton keeps, close to his house in Brooklyn, and keeps from becoming morbid by the hardest kind of work. His children see bioi occasionally, and his intimate friends are admitted, but none other. He was in Xew York yesterday for the first time in three weeks, ne looks strong and hearty, and has full faith that be will be eventually Justified. Moalton is a3 jolly as a grig, and is full of fight. He is getting ready for tbe numerous libel - suits that ' have been instituted against lira. Mrs. Tilton is still at tbe Ovingtons',' and, it is understood, has expiessed her determination never to' resume her lifo with her husband.- By the way, in the prosecution of Tilton's suit against Beecher how is a jury to be obtained ? Where can twelve men be found wbo have not formed an opin ion, pro or con ? '" ' ''"! ' r ; . business' ..".... l. shows a slight improvement this week very slight, but it is am im provement Merchants from tho great outside are beginning to bay, nd though they' touch it litrhtly, they, are touching, :and the whole sale people here are brightening up a ittle. - But it is not lirelv yet not even fairly good. They are'buying just as little as tbey can, and just aa close as they can. But the flood gates are open a little, and it is to be' hoped that they will be lifted higher ere manr davs. The sale of domestic manufacture keeps up better -than imported ' goods. Imported finery hangs heavily, which would indicate an economy on the pan of the people that leads .them only to such pur chases as are actually necessary. ' And jet the boot and shoe ; trade ia very dull, and the grocery trade still duller. This is one of the seasons in which all aigns fail, and in which judgment is good for nothing. . - ? ; f the weather is 6uperb and glorious. The days are cool and brifrbt, and the nignts are pleasant. Xew lork isva , blessed city to live in, in . September" and October. Have you had any rain! Xew Y'ork has been blessed with three days and nights of rain. It has been a very wet rai&. The streets have been flooded, the air has been coqjed, and it has becomc'a pleasant, decent thing to live once more. It was needed here,' as it was 'everywhere else. ,", . ',.'". .. . " -. : '..-- . . ..... .. Pjktro. , Terrible. Affray Among the Trnaters f tUe Justice Jllnlnx Ctmpmj. SiLYiR City, Xev., October 3.--A terribleafTray took plr.ee to-night at TA aller 3 Defeat, or Lower Justice Hoisting Works. Two men were in stantly killed, two have died since, and the fifth won't ,live over , night. There has been trouble among the Trustees cf the J ustice Mining Com pany, two parties fighting " for the control.. One side was represented by Mr. Minear, President of the Com pany, who appointed . . Kellogg Superintendent daj before yesterday in the, place of Fred. Smith, the . pres ent Superintendent.' Trouble has been anticipated Tor the laet two davs. This evening about 'seven o'clock a parly of men headed by .Kellogg, tbe newly ' ap pointed .superintendent, went', to Waller's Defeat Works. When near the works they were warned off. " Iu stead of obeying they' made a rush for the entrance when tbooting com menced on both sides. The follow ing aro tbe nanic of the killed : W. Kellogg, M. Kane ; Reily' J. Brown, mortally wounded. The men kil'cd are represented . as most desperate characters. The affair caused irreat excitement in Gold City and vicinity. Sbipple died during the night'. telnl Arrident. ; ' A fatal accident occurred tn Satai'. day' morning at the f pipe-works -o William Smith Jfc Sons; n.Twuity tbird street, between! Penn- avenue and the Allegheny river, resulting in the almost instant death of an em ployee named Thomas Stevanski. A heavy casting was being moved by a large crane, and had. been elevated some feet above the ground, when suddenly tbe hooks gave way, -and casting and flask fell to the- ground. Stevanske, who was under the cast ing at the time, was struck by . the descending mass, . and was knocked into a casting pit, .some twelve fee in depth. The workmen ran i tOj the assistance of tbe unfortunate -man, but when tbey reachecLblm lifo wa extinct. Coroner McCallio. was sum moned and held an inquest on the body. A verdict of accidental death was rendered by tbe jury. The body of deceased, wbo was about twenty one years of age, and unmarried, was removed to his boarding-hou.-e, on Spring alley . PiUburyli , Di patch. ' : '. - , JOnrdrr Mt CMcso, Chicago, Oeloltcr 3. A 6l.oc.kTn5 murder was comtuitied in J.he .north western part )t the city to-night. Jobn Pcppielcr, a Belgian, engaged in peddling on tbe Btreets, 'rjnarreled wun josepn anacKer, a ienow Uoixy Spkincis, .Miss . .September countrvman, . and. also a peddler, ( 27. .Wj-dny, Wut oue p. M. a wben tbe latter drew a batcher knift'i north-bound mail train on tbe iliii- and stabbed Pespielcr in; the' Irg-Uippi Cvutfal railroad wa precipitat- severing an artcrj and catf3ing dfatb je,j dQMn n(1 embankment uver thirty in a lew minute. Tbe murder? r fret, tbrei miles ub tf here. TuV was arretted and conSned. ; ! ladies' car and 'Pullman palace - cur , . ' urned ovr twice. Xo nie;: was Terrible Hall Sro. - , ' ' , , r killed. J-ifteen were wounded, Jne . El Paso, Ter., October' 2. The!,H'ria!,,Jr' colored man, iperiu moet severe baU Horn) passed over tendent Sellnrs and Conductor fowl tbis gcctlon of country last Sunday ,cr are nioug-th !igbtly wounded, ever witneed here. - Soqje ttonp. j Tl tccicfent was cau?ed by a heavy weighed six ouncc.v Tha tree were ' r'r? dnrinf the. mornipg, which un entirelv fitripiK-d of their fruit. deruiined the embauknient. Terrible Hale mt Charleaton. Charleston, September 29. The j , niosfe fearful gale knowu here since I 18o4 occurred here to-day, beginning i about davlicht with a siroo? eoutb west, wind, and increasing in vio lenceintil nine o'clock, when It had become a hutricane. . For an '-our thereafter, the. gale was the rfltst se vere "known here. The 'tide" was forced up to a most unp'ecedeutal height, inundating tbe t-ntire river front -cf the citv. damagiug tbe wharves, and in a great stances sweeping away many m- thc pier heads. The lou btouc eea wall, kdowtiBs ! the battery," a famous promenade resort, was laid in ruins ftnd the p'ublic'" bathing bouse was demolished. -The shipping generally escuped eeriuua daivage. Some small crafts were wrecked ; but large ves sels were only- t uaffed. Throughout the city the effects of ' the srale were everywhere visible, feuces and out buildings "were norstrated. branches tora . from trees, and during the height of ib -tempest tuo air was filled with tJau-s .-and tin, atrippvd from the roofs, making the streets im passible.: The massive brick walls if the uew theater which hud just ben redy for roofing, and which from its position iu tbe burnt . dis trict was exposed to the full force of tbe storm, were leveled '.witb tuc ground. About noon the wind bhifted to the ..west, moderating the violence of the sea, and it is hoped that the worst is over. Two houses are reported to have been 6wept away ou bullivan s island and one life lost. .The inmates of the bathiug bouse were rescued with the utmost difficulty. Probably a quarter of a million of dollars will not repnir tbe damage caused by the gale. A Terrible Uaopowdcr F.xplonlou. London, October 2. 12-30 p. m., There Lj great excitement in this city in consequence of an explosion which occurred Xhis morning; in Kegent s Canal. At fiye o'clock itbia morning a barga lying in that waterway, near the Zoological Gardens, with a. load of. gunpowder oo board, exploded with terrific force. Three, persons were killed and many hurt. Bridges and houses in the vicinity weresbatr tered. Thousands of persons arc hurrying to the sceno ct the explo sion. -A number of newspapers have issued extras announcing the occur rence. - They contain but few.details. Later 1:30 p. m. Tbe report of the gunpowder explosion on Regent's Canal this morning was beard twen ty miles from the place where it oc curred. The firemen have been dragging the canal all morning. Up to this hour five- bodies, victims of the explosion, have been recovered. Tho lights in tbe railway Matiohs and other buildings two miles away were extinguished by the concussion. Many persons made narrow eseupes from death. A number of animai in the Zoological Gardens were killed. .. The latfM 2:30 v. M. The quan tity of powder that exploded on Re gent's canal was four tons. Details of tbe occurrence show tbat its' dis astrous effects ' were widespread. Many trees were uprooted, and houses two miles distant from the cadal were shattered. - Seven - per sons are yet missing. ' There was a perfect panic here for hour9, end it was not ontir the cause of the terrific report was learned tbat the fears of tbe; people were allayed. Several persons died from fright. - Scrionn RaIIi-oimI Accident. PiTTSBnuiii, Sep. 30. About noon to-day a collision occurred on the Low Grade division of the Allegheny Valley railroad, three and a half miles east of Xew Bethlehem, between the mail train going east and a freight train going west James hster, en gineer, M. Kiliier, fireman, and II. Doyle, a passenger, all on the mail train, Were killed and Henry Ilatz, an express messenger, was fatally in jured. J. M. Fair, baggage master, John Browra, a newsboy and John Garrison, a passenger, w ere seriously injured. The baggago car contain ing baggage, mail and express mat ter was burned. ' Tbe accident was caused by the 'telegraph operators ot'Xe w Bethlehem failing'' to ' hold tho passenger train for orders as di rected. Sftratoiral' Saratoga, October lThe upper story of the Grand Hotel caught H-e at eleven o'clock this morning, and notwithstanding 'extraordinary exer lionshthe building was completely de stroycl The effort rf the firemen resulted in saving the Grand Union and Congress Hotels intact. The ori gin of the fire is as yet : a mystery. It originated in the north end of . the south wing in the' upper ftory, and it, cannot" be learned that unv one was in tbat part of the building.' ' The opinion prevails that the fire was set intentionally, that the principal hotel escapud the conflagration ia regarded as providential. Tho wind wns blowing aluion a gale from the south west, carrying a phower of biiniiig cinders on the roofs of the Grand Un iou and Congress Hotels. ' At one time, about noon, the firemen had the flames pretty well under control, and it was believed tbat thev would be confined to thcitoutb wing, when sud denly fire was seen to burst from the Grand Central tow r, driving the fire men out oi tne outiuing nJ gaming sudden and irresistible headway: At tuis time -'it 'seemed as though the destruction of the Grand Union and the Congress was certain, when all'at once'tbewlnd shifted more to the southwardand the flames were thus driven-' in the direction of Congress Pork. Severn! times fire caught on the roofs aud windows of the' Con gress and Grand Union Hotels, and was only extingu? 'ted by great effort in the face of the a blind riig beat and fniake. As soon as the wind shlfied. the firemen regained comre! t . i i 1 1ttr fire. It M-fined hi one ti'.iifi as if the destruction i,f half the village w inevitable: and help was sent for from Troy and Whitehall..'' Aid cauiefrm both quarters nud 1 from Bullion, and ,the fiiv was prevented from spreading. ' The (Jrrfiid Hotel is en tirely destroyed. The buildiiig Ivas worth $300,oU0, and was io-nred for about $200,000. The f.iniit?ii!- was iuenred fur aWit $"5,000. ' ' A nltwy Train Irer I pi tnfed Over sn Enibaakurnt. ! Japan. I Sam Francisco, October 2 The Vaseo De CJatna brings dates from okohaiua to September llth The soul hern wss one portot Jfip;m Amrust 20th, of the most severe ever . experienced by foreigners. The earner Ping or Goaloot and the Gcrui.tu bark Ham burg, were driven "on tbe ncks at Xagasak:. The iron-clad ram Stone wall was sunk. Huadrctls of Jap aneese junks were wrecked, and fully two hundred lives were lost at Xag a iki alone. Storehouses were over thrown., The G ivenior's new house is a heap uf ruins, i Cabe also suffer ed. Xot less than one liwusnud junks were wrecked. " SHgok- t came in for a thare of the typbo'-,i. Six thuusaud houses were de.:r ) t d aDd one hundred lives lost. Thousands of catilo on tbe plantations were kill ed. Yellow Fever t Prnaacola. Washington October 2. Tbe fol lowing dispatch was received at the navy department yesterday afternoon from Captain Sft.nmes, executive offi cer of the Petisacnla navy yard, wbo is again on duty: Commodore Wool sey is hopelessly sick. . Lieutenant Coimuod'ir Kellogg and Bar Ivy are seriously ill. Acting Assis tant Surgeon Miller end Assistant Engineer M'KIwell are doing well. Assistant Engineer Landen and a" the saibrs and marines are couvah cent. To-day another dispatch was re ceived from tbe same officer, announc ing t.h-3 denih of Commodore M. B Woolsev, commandant of the i'ensa- cola yard. He died of fever this morning. The deceased had been iu command ot tbe yard about two years. A J. Ittle Roy NhoofsIIU Brother V ! JHc la t'oneqnence. Op Saturday afternoon two small boys named Floyd Ross and John Wesley Ross started from their home in Wilkinsburg towards the woods with a shot gun, for the purpose of shooting a squirrel for their sister, who w sick.' The former was carry ing the gun and in crossing a fence near Mr. McKelvey's residence in Wilkins township, he allowed the hammer to t-trike against the rail thus discharging the weapon. Tbe con tents lodged in his brother's side and inflicted a wound from svhich he died about twelve o'clock the following nigbt. Tbe coroner held aii inquest yesterday, the jury 'rendering a ver uict of accidental death. Pittsburgh Dltpatrh Oct. 5. . Khot in t Drunken Ilranl. - Wilksbarre, September 2 Jobn Dunleavy was shot and killed during a druuken brawl in the saloon of John Jones, at Plymouth, last night. Jones and tu'ce others have been ar rested, but it, is not known which did the shooting. The temperance politicians of Blair county met iu Altoona on Saturday, and nominated Aloxander M. Lloyd for Assembly, and A. A. Stevens for District Attorney. Both accept ed. The convention was not a large one George Labor, who claims to be tbe oldest man in Pennsylvania, ex hibited himself last week at the Eas ton fair, lie says ho is one hundred and twelve years old. Let him fetch out tho old woman who saw him born, to attest his veracity. The Pottstown Ledger says a bed of singular clay has been found on the premises of" Samuel Lavea, Fruitville, that bids fair to be valuable. For about eighteen inches in depth the clay is as black as tar, and very oily in its nature. . Below this are strata of white clay (kaolin), which when dried is perfectly white. Cleveland boasts two of the oion stingy men iu-America. cbam One gave a car conductor nineteen cents for returning bim $50 worth of reve nue stamps; and the other, when a boy restored him his pocketbook with $500 in it, invited the youngster around to a fruit stand, bought a dime's worth of .caches, gave the youth one, and put the re.t in his own pocket. A Mobile may, wh , on returning home, from bis day's luiii'itfs, was surp. icd to receive t!u congratula tions of his f.iends t his having nar rowly escaped from drotviiiug.tLought it a very good sell.aiid laughed immod erately until he-learned tl: l ihcy hud liaaded his be?t Sunday-g j-to-meel-ing mil to a darkev w ho had called to break the dry clothes. news, and gel h;i:i some E XECUTOR'S SALE. The un:kT)lirneI execntur oTtho ln. will mt louiini-ut il Jhn Uamino, late ot Sonn-rect Tp., Jeoease.l, will "ll-r for sule on ilia i.rvniiws U-i ThursJaj, October 22, 1874, f 1 oVlaelt p. in., the follnwinir real et:ite, vii: Til lioinvu.'.l uf Icce.iseJ, coutaiuicil J4 toiv. f wlili-h alxmi m aores rn clfur ami amler a Ifjwl f:e ot cultivation: alxut 45 acrwa in aiead oi, with a lrjfu dwclllr.r h.m-e, riDi houso, wmxl hnie and bank b:iro thereon crwte.1, marsr orvbaril, a'tle-1' 0,1,1 1-31'1 orrhaM, lime stone quarry, auJ many line dowlnic fpriiiK" of never tailing water. Tliia-'faria le ituaieU aixnit f"Or miles uorthwent of thfl l.rouih ot S.iioersat. al Iainini; ln.t of J.'hn C. Uarr.aie, No;i!i Harrune, William Ij. Yuunir. Peter UclUey, Jobn 1L thl anl others. i TERMS. One-tMri! to n-mitin a lien after pay ment uf xjen-a. of w Uleli tbe Interest is annu-u-iv to be paid to the widow ilurlnii her lite; oiie thlT'l on the ftrnt of April, 18T5. an-l the balance in five etiual annual pay menu, to lie aeeurril by ju.itr inrnt bond on ths prenib-os, without interest; 10 u'reont of tho hand muiicy musit be pai 1 on the Sayol saJu, JAC'Ull N LFF, acpio Executor. DMIXISTRATOR'S XOTICE. iaic of Jane II. Jlurrijnn, lale of Ml. I'leasjct, WotnuiroliiDj Vo.. dit-cascil. Letters of atlmiaistratiim on tho alwva estate l... t ..... lw.n L'rantetl to the nnilereiiTBcd. notice Is ! hh. rirra i,.tlmseinilelitv1 to it u mke Imnw- i Uiaie luvvineui, ma w...w ...... ...... to nreiic'iit tiieui iluiv ulhcntiraieJ for seulemtnt. .... J . l ... .. h.vn.,.iinid u:li..L if. Jttlie reM li-we ol tlio aJministrator. in Mount i iviuant, ra on iuu aui.ii i . HIKAM.MOKKISOX, m.p-jt AJmiui.;niiur.. A 11MIXIST11AT0TS NOTICE. Esoao of Jonathan Walker, late of Summit tp deceased. Letters (fainilniit ration ontheahove MtatehaT been mi-lied U the nn.lenfiKi.ed by the pnp cr authoritv, notice is hemby ttirvn U thoo in debtctl to it'lo uiakeiinii.di:ite payment, and those havliitr vlaiius ajruinst it will piesout Hum tor aeUleuifiit aod allowanr. DANItXP. WALKEll, wcf& -' AUtuiuintralor. A UDITOK'S' NOTICE. ,i ncuaorslL'neil aiklilor. apwlnteil theConrt ot Common Fleas f Soioc-rset cvuniy to iitrit ale the tun.ls arisiu)? out of the SticrifTs sale of 1 be real estate in A. Duuhain t and among those hKIW enlitk-.t thereto, hereby nlves netk-e that he will attend to the dalles of his aplntment on i'ri.lav Otuoer 9. 1ST, at his othee in Somerset. 1'Al'LH. G AITHEK, - ; Autlitor. pXECUTOR'S NOTICE. iuite of Henry' JIusr. of Jturtherarallejr tp Ueceaseil. letters testamentary on the above estate ha T lna; been ir.inle.l to the nwlersifrned, by the prup ):r'x9ihority, u-Hi'-e ia hcrely given to those hv ih.liti-j to It. to make ImructlUie payment, ami tluisa harins clilm ngninst it wjll present them totlia innleralifueii. at ihe house of Aleic Musser, ou Satilnl.iv, (Mober 31, 187. ALKX. MtlSSER. SAJU'KIiMI SSKH, KUZ fcxeeutorg. JTEGAL NOTICE To Harriet Shaffer, widow, George Shaffer, wli,e Intermarried with John Anawait. rejlutnir In f.ainbrta to., ra.; Adam nner. sum Minf fer, Aaron Shatter, Noah Shatter, Samuel Shaf fer, retiJins; in Somerset eounty. Pa., fciiiabeiii Shatter, widow ul Uavid Shatter, deceased, and issue unknown, tbe cumber, nao-.cs sd I resi dence of the ahildren are unknown; Levi J, Long. Loelnda khuads, Mary Suafier and Cath arine Lung, (said Catharine beinir a minor) the last named lour are children of Nancy Snatler, who was intermajTied wita Levi Louo-, but wh Is now deceased. "Voo are hereby notified that fa tmrmanre of a writ of partition, issued out of the Orphans" Court ot Somerset county. Pa., 1 will bold an inquest on the real estate of Jeremiah H. Shatter, deceased, in Jenner Tp., on Thursday, the Sib. day of Nov., lti. on the following named tracts of land,-vlx: No. 1. The home place, containing V acres, more or less, adjoining lands of Henry W. Maarer ami John Brooks: No. S. A tract ol land containing '4 acre, more or less, adjoinin N'o. 1 and the Luth eran parsonasre property with the appurtenances, when atd where you can atten 1 If you think prop er. OLIVER KNKPPKK, oct3 Sheriff. ELECTION Hi Hod savs tem Common weai.tu. Wheueais. In and by an Act of the Ocneral As sembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, entitled "An Act relating to the elections of the t-ommrtiwealth." passed 1 day of July A. 1). 1S3B. it is made the dutv ot the Sheritl of every county within this Commonwealth to give public notice of the Geueral Lleotions, and ia such ntv tn-e to enumerate : L The object of the election To designate the place at which the election Is to be field. I. OLIVER KNErPER, Wen Sheriff of the Piumiv ,.f Kitmnnwr. do hprebv make known and give tliis public notice to the electors of the Coun ty Somerset mat On the 1st. TUESDAY of NOVEMBER, net. helnir the 3rd dav of the month) a General Elec . ion will be held at the several election districts Mtabiished hv law In said Coanty. at which time they will vote by ballot fur the several offices here inafter named, vix.: TWO PFRSOVS for tbe office of Judze of the Supreme Court oi the Commonwealth ot Pennsyl vania. ONE PERSON for the office of Lieutenant Governor of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. ONE PERSON for the oftire of Auditor tln- erftl ol th i .tramnnwealth of Pennsylvania. ONE PERSON for the offlee of Seer tary of Internal Aliatrs for the Commonwealth of Penn sylvania. "ON K PERSON, to conjunction with the coun ties of Bedford. Cambria and Blair, for the ortk-e of Representative In the Congress of the U nited States. ONE PERSON, in conjunction with the coun ties of Bedford and Fulton, for the omee or State Senator for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. TWO PERSONS fortho otilee of .Members of the House of Representatives of the Common wealth of Pennsylvania. ONE PERSON for the olflce of District Attor ney of sai-1 eountv. ONE PERSON for the otnee of Commissioner of said county. ONE Fti(SN for the office or County Sur veyor ol said eounty. ONE PERSON for tho office or Poor House Director for said count v. ONE PERSON for the office of County Audi tor lor said county. 1 also hereby make known, and give notice, that the places of holding the aforesaid Election, in the several boroughs and townships within the county of Somerset, are as follows, to wit : The electors of the borough and township of Somerset, to meet at the Court House, in said borough. The electors of the township of Milford. to meet at the house lately occupied by 1 nomas a.ing, in said township. The electors of New Centerville, to meet at the tchoul house In said borough. The electors of Ihe township 01 vpper 1 under foot, to meet at the house of John A. Shulti, In said township. m . The electors of tho township of Lower Turkey, foot, to meet at the school house In I rsina bor. The elector of the borough of I'rsina, to meet at tho school house in said Ixprough. The electors of the township ol Addison, to meet at the house of Levi Dean, in Petersburg, in said township. . ... , , The electors of the township of MuMleereek to meet at tho house occupied by Aaron Hechler, in said township. . Tim i,.t.,r of the townshln of Elklu-k to meet at the new school bouse, lu the borough of Salis- 'ti' ,wih of the borouirh of Salisbury, to meet at the new school house, in said tKirouvh. at the school house In Dale City borouith. The electors of the borough of Dale City, to meet at the school house in said borough. Th electors of the township 01 sunimii, 10 nieci to meet at the school house in said borouirh. Tbe electors of the township of Oreenvllle. to meet at the school house, In Pocahontas, In said township. - ' The electors of the township of Southampton, to meet at the house of J. L. Kennel, in said town "hThe elcetors-of the township of Northampton, to meet at the houjo of Jolin Poorbaugh, In said The electors of the borough ot euersourg, 10 tovmshin. -TheVlectors of the township of Larimer, to meet at the house.iormerly occupied by Win. May, In said township. ...,. The electors of the borousfh of Hcrlin, to meet at the house of Archibald Compton, in said bor- ""fne elector or the township cf Brothersvnlley, to meet at Bittner'i school house in said town- 9tThe electors of the township of Stonycreek. to meet at the school house at Shanksville, in said township. Tho electors of the borough of Styosfown, to meet at tho house formerly occupied by Kenry J. Miller, in said borough. The electors of the township of Qacmahontng, to meet at the house of Jacob Custor, in Stovs town. A . . Th plwtnM n( th township of meet at the house of George A. Kiuiuicll, In said township. The electors of the borough of New Baltimore, to meet at the house of ; . u Mid '"'Fbe'electorsof the township of Conemangh. to meet at the house of Peter Levy, iu said town- Sh'Ihe electors of the township of Shade, to meet at the honse of Jacob Helman. In said township. tv. .wi.n of the townshit) of Paint, to meet at the school house erected 00 the lands of Henry Bcrkev. In said township. The electors of the WwnshlpT.f Jenner. to meet at the house of Tho. Gallagher, at Jenner X Roads, in said township. The electors of the township of Jefferson, to meet at the house of Solomon Baker, In said U TheeiuctiTS of the borough of Jennerville, to to meet at the School house in said borough. SPECIAL ATTENTION Is hereby directed to the 8th Article of the New Oonstitnuon. Section 1. Every male citircn twenty-one years of age, possessing the following qualifications, shall lie entitled to a vote at all elections First. He shall have been acitiiensofthe Uni ted States at least one month. Seeond.-He shall have resided In the State one year, (or if having previously been a quail ed elector or native horn fit iien of the State, he shail have removed from and returned, then sn months.) immediately preceding t he election. Third He shall have resided in the election district where he shall orter to vote at Wast tw j months immediately preceding the election. Fourth If twenty-two years of age or upwards, he shall have paid within tw.l years a State or, county tax. wlik h shall have been assessed at least two months and paid at least one month be fore the election. ..l.llk. Secti n 1. Ail elections ny iikciukh" ....... . hi- hllot Everv ballot shall ue numocrci in the or.ier n whieh it shall be retetvod, an.l num ber recorded by the election officers on the list or voters, opposite the name of the elector w ho pre- ents the nauoi. auj - : uiwn his jiekot or cause the same to be ""it" hereon and attested by a cltuen of the district. Theelc-thmomecrs shall be sworn or alhnnci nottodiselosohowany eleet.-r hall have voted unless required to do so as wiinasscs in a judicial pr.ieee.lu.ir. , treason, felony and breach or surety of Vf " In- i.rivilesed from arrest during their attendante on eleelions and in golDjt to ayd returning nerc- Section 0. Whenever any of the qualified elec tors ot tills Com mon wealth snail ne in eiu.w n.i.i tary service, nn.ler a re(uisitlon from the Prel deut ol the I tiitcl Stales or by the authority of thisfommonwealth, suen electors u.j "'-7 the rlKht of sirrsKe In .11 elects by rtmn. under i-ncn reeuiation? - , , -.. ed bv law. as fully as if they were present at their uraal place of elect ion. Section 7. ah laws rt-au......... "" ,. ; ..i.. t,. h. ..itiiens or for the rei!ration ol electors shall be uniform throughout the h ate but no elccior sliall be deprived of the privilege ofvotinnl y reawn of his name not lieliiK regis tered. Section . Any person whosliall sivc.or prom ise or oiler to (rive, to an elector, any money, r ward or other valuable consideration for his vote at an election, or for withholding be same, or who rhall pive or prouii.w to (five such eonstuera tion to auv other person or party for such electors vote or lf the wlihboMin thereof, and any elec tor who shall receive or aifree to receive, for him selforloranolher.any money, reward or other valuable consideration for his vote atj tjtlon nr lor wlthholdlnn the same shall thereby forfeit the riifht to vote at such election and any elector whose ritfht to vote shall be challenged for such cans, before the election officers, shall be ' retjuir. ed to swear or affirm that the n.t'rof the chal bTne is untrue before his vote shall U ' reeeU-ed Section 9 Any person who shall, wniieaettndt .:..r.....m' h iruiltv of bribery, fraud, or will ful violatbm of any election law. shall be forever disqualified from holdine an ollice of trust or pro. ... 11, u 1 -m mon weal ih. and any person con- victctl of willful violation of the election laws shall, in addition to any penalties provmei ny law. be deprived of the rli?ht of suffrage al!ute ly lor a term of four years. Section 13. For the purpose ef votlnir no per .hull u deemet to have sriincd a n-stilence bv reason of his presence, or lost It by reason f his abjenee. while employel io the service, either -t..u ..r niiutnrv. nftliisStnte or of th 1'nited Slat'-s. nor while enlaced in the navigation of the waters ol this Suse or of the l'nite.1 States, or on the hifrh seas, nor while a student f any liistitutiMi of learuiafr. nor while kept lu any poor hou or other asvlum at public expense, nor while confined In puldic prisua. Section It. Pistrlct election boards shall con sin ot a judt nnd two inspectors, who shall be chosen annually bv the citiiens. Each elector shail have the riicht to vote for the udno and one inspector, and each Inspector shall appoint one clerk. The firat election board'for any new dis trict shall lie selected and vacancies in election board? tilled, rs shall be provided try law. Elec tion officers shall be privileged from arrest upon davs of election, and while euif.iired In making up anil transmitting returns, except upon warraut of a court of record or a judre thereof, for an elec tion fraud, for felony, or for wanton breach of the peace. In cities the'y may claim exemption from jury duty during their terms of service. Section 15. No person shall bequaliiie l to serve as.m election officer who shall hold, or shall with in two months have held any office, appointmeot or employment in or under llie $overmueut of the 1'nitoilStalcsoror this State, orof any cltv, or eountv. or of an v municipal board ; eommlssi-m or trunt in any cily, saveonly justices of the peace, and aldermen, notaries pnldic and persone in militia service of the Stale: nor shail anyeiectlon officer be eligible to any civil office to be filled at an electlo at whieh be shall serve, save only to such stiU.rdiiiate municipal or local otllcers. as It sUall be designated y general law. And alio tothe following Acts of Assembly now In Torre In this State, vii.: .4 nf :11th June. 1S7. Sectitm . At all elections heri-afier held under the laws of this commonwealth, th-) pdis shall be owned at seven o Clocn A. at. anil cioeeu at sevso o'clock V. M. ' Section 7. Whenever there shall be a vacancy in an election lioarU on the morning of an eleo- ef,Tnliy- wun exuHiug iaw. Seetioo . At the cpuifi!t of ths n-!N a! a! one of the in?jector. whose duty it 5t.:i:i e t hiive In cartiT tho rri'istrv of v.;?r. ml Diakft the eti;ritn therein ivqulrt-l by Uw : aw iiiail IX9 the tin y ol tii Mthr 'f 9 ii -f In ! tiri )! ion. "Iho Mlti an of Afffm! !- ?n:i:I'-l 4.in ft - r iinir 10 the ltjiaos of thu- 'orT.im.riW'M;; h. et .Inly 2, liu, tmjv,.iei as fi. x.z I' 'That tho Ui9iH..r an't J uSv- ih tll n it elfvtltm 10 thotMs.rj,-! ttt whk-h 1 hrv rv; -r -ivfrv laffniifty ul itircm)r. an-i e;i.-h i nhrtll pfu;int one cl-rk, wh siil a tlon, aaM vacancy shall be filie.! r I"" VuiTOI uvtt uwru'L In rase the por'n wh i h:l hwe r- M-l:t; teoaU fclahert number of t.;s f.,r i;).,rs' (-N.i!l not Bileatl on th J.iy of a;iy el c i- u. i tii ern who vhatl fc.tve rv(MVr t tho ?.-t-n-J hiV-r number of Ttt- for Jatlift" nt tl:; nvxt i:e-'in election tha swi a. Uii rct.r id his i.',V- A1; ! In en the rHfrj.n who .:v i-,-..r ;.) ih- hisrht rt nutuVer of votejf Ur Uv"ttr U.-ti "f ftttuml. thcpt:rn eU'-t-l Ju U'.? il itH in l li-i impertnr Ui bU y?as?. aa i lo e. ivr :i eltMt3tl .lutlir fhall n:t ttenl. then the irij)vlfr who reciMTnt the hihe,t tium-r of vot- h.tll appoint a Ju-Ie in hi phio: on I if any KMny shall continue in the Narl for the ?pa.M vf one hour after the time lix'k'l by Imw lor ttK t :r'T.tnc of the eipctioa. the o:iIlti-.i foicrs of th towi hip. wanl or di.-!ri'-t forwhf-h uh o?tn-'r ;.itl fctue len elerte-, present a, the pho-e of elti shall elwt ouoVi Un ix nu:un r to till such vuii- Section 9. Ail elortion? hr the Hlircus le ' ly ballot : evry bilot rotml jhaU b iKiciinr- In th onb-r In whk'h it ?h.iU be rr.-rirel. ao I the j miinbcr rtH"jriiet by the olrrlin on tbe !i.t of vo i tr oj7y?ne the name tt the elti tor fnun whom ' rwive I. Ami any voter to .rig twi nit r; j tickets, the !fveral liekrt? s) vot-.i ux e.ch bv ; nainlxT-1'! with the minkr eorrfi.a'!iPij; wih ' the nomlfr to the name of the voti .An, .. -tor may write hi? name upoa hifl ti kt t. or cum? th fbtine to be wriden th;reon. an! ttr!te.l bv a ' citlieoofthe diotrlrt. In a-i iiti m t. tho ou-i 1 now prr-serilrfxl by law to be t.ikfa n! nuns-rib.' i by elootion officer. thj nil,! wverally bo w . rn or affirme! not to .ii-ie hw any elWtor th-. i have Ttel. unless re)uiret to !o a wi'm-ei In ajU'Hciui ppreetlii!i'. All ,uIia, inprcl T. clerks, ami over?eer8 of any election hi l l nn!er this art. nhall. before entrina: opon (heir dnri-, ! te dulT fwofn or amnntsl In the presence cf M.-h I other. Tbe jale shall te sworn by tiio miiinrt- ty lnftpoctor. If there hnll bo soch" niiairiv iu speetor. then by a justice of the pctc or a'.t r-' in 1 man. and the lnsiectt-irs, ovorMrr anl cU rks''1 shall be sworn by the jula''. CVrtin-at of -uc". j swearina; or allirmln 8hail ie luty ma!..' an i , !'"' signed by the off ie-T! . sworn, mid a' ttMe-l by f the otflwr who anlminsttTtMi the oath, li any s jU'Iire or minority inJpe.tor rpfu V fail: t j ") swear the officers of eitrti m In the uninniT r- j "' qnired by tbis act. or if any olK(-r of t-lf.'-ii-rn : c" shall act without befnjr ftrt duiy sworn, or if ny j c:t' otBwr of elcetttn shall jiifn tho form oi ca:a wi;ii- ' oat teinar duly strorn r if any juie or niinrity iiipfctr shall certify that any otier was sworn ' whvn ho was not, it shrill be !eotnc 1 a ir.io- noeunor. and upon e-mvirtion. the othotror i.:ii-f r- . o oMcmiinar s..all be lined not ext'eiio ono : thnoand dollar, or imprioiiel not e. ) :;. ! year or lith. in the dlrmion of the einr,. j I a!:o irive otftcial notice to the oltor' ! Sni- ; eret ont that by an a't entitl-l " n A t further supplemental to th-? at relalive to election of thi Connnonwealih, appp-ved J in. Cn. A. 1. H74 :M That it Is provided In S"!b'n 10. that n the ty . of election any peri.n whose name is n:it n t!ei saifl list, and claiming the riht to vote r t h -A ; eKetion. shall protluee at least one u;liii I vtt it j of thedistriet a? a wiines? to the n-sidc ii e of the rlaimant in the district. In whieh ho claims to !e a l rn.ltiw w1 V!.wii..n whi,-h It n.-M h- 11 (.i-o'.t... vi.lir tV .r ti nt'-.f l uf IWn m.inlliit ti,v M. stibserlbe a written or partlv written and pa-lv printed affi-lavit t the facts staled bv him. which affidavits shall doiine rle-irlr where the r -; iem-e is, of tho person s- claim inW V be a T.dcr; and the frerson so claim in ir the ri-riit to vote sm.ll also take and Pub.rihe a written or paflv wri-ten ;ind nartlv rrintetl afhdavit. statinif. f the tn:' of ins knowle;ire an-.l belief, when- and when he w.:s born; that he ha been a ci i? no the V'nit'-i States for one inon:h. and of the Com nnn-t-al : h of Pennsylvania ; that he has resi.e in iiij 'rn moa wealth one year, or if formerly a tp. alined elector or a native born citizen iherc d. Had has removed therefrom and relumed: that he ha re sided therein six mouths p recced ie;? said eie-lTi..a: that he ha resided iu the district ia whi -h he claims to lc a voter for the period o! at le.?s! two months Immediately preceding sai 1 clec;i t:; l hat he has not niove.1 into tho uis;ri' t !-r pnr NfSe ttfvotinir therein: that he h.: if trj y:.rs of aire and upwards, paid a S'l-fe or tVmay tax within two vears. whieh was H-sescd ;tt le.is; tw. months antf paid at lest onemonrh. b-f.-re sai t election; and, if a naturalized tiuren n'.? state when, where and by what e-.urt he w:i na turalized, and shad aiso t.rir-iueed li:s eeriiir'a1-? of naturaliziition ftir examination : that sai l eti- iavit shall also state when and where the :ix claimed to bo paid br tho atlhiM was lisesjj-Ni, a:i I ! wnen, where nl to wii dii nai-j : nmi ine t;ix r - oeijit therfifore shall he prhieed lor ex:tn:inaii ti. unless the aOinnt hiU si ale in his atudavit 1 i , i t It has been lost or dest roved, or that he nevt-r ri - ceived any ; but if the person po ehiimiuir Vu- the rltfht to vote shall take and urs-noe uh .nf;- davit. that he Is a nt ire-born iti?en of the 1'ni- twt Stales. )or if N;ru elsewhere, shall state ti.. fact in his athdjivit. nn-i siiiiil onHince evi -1: 0 that ho hns been naturalised, or that he is mU io-i to citizenship fv reason ol hi! I;itl'r s nat:n tion :) and shalf furtht-r rnle in hi arii.'.u'. j be Is. at the time ot makirr the a:ii isvir, h.- the aires of twenv-oiiennd iwentv-two vours : Tii.it he has In-en a cUizen ol the I oite-l S:-ite ,n.i month, an-l ha re.i-ie.l in the Slate one vear. or. if a native !rn eiiizen of t h- tate and rem -v. el therefrom aa-i returnvd. tbaf he Ii;m r--I 1 therein six months next prrv.iiriir said eIo--..i and in the election district timmcdia:y t-.v months preeeeiliiii? siii-h el-v.i-'n, .'Ii.-.ii he entitled to vote. aU!.on--h h" shall n -t have paid taxes; the. said affidavits of aM persons makinir such elain:-. an-i the ati;oavirj of tbe witnesses to their resi It iice. ,!iall be pre ed by the election lx)arl. and at the close ol' flic election they shall be eneee-l with the lif of v.- j ters. t.-i!Iy list and other nap rs nMiuire-l hv law to i twnie.1 oy tne Keturn ju-itti" wun ine rp'iiw tarv an-l ?hall remain on nle witliin the 1'r !: tary's office, subject to examination, as oih-r eli - tion papers are : if tho election officers shall li-i 1 that tho applicant or possesses ail leiral .iualiiii-ation of a voter lie .-h ill Im) permitted to vote, sa l tee n:i:ne j shall be added to the list of tax-ibips l.y Hu-i election officers, the word "iax"' Ix-lntr ndd-d where the claimant claims to vo'e on tax. and the word aeM where he claims to vote on niro:t!! same worls Iwins? tulded by the clerks in ea- case respectively, on the lists of persons votinir at such election. Also, that in sceti-.n llth of said Act, it is pr -vided that it shall he luwinl for any qunlic-.I citizen of the district, notwithstanding the fame of tbe profxwd voter is ctnita'-ue-l on the list i-f resident taxable?, to challenge the vote cf -oi.-h iMTS.ins wtiHreniMtn thrf same Iir.tf l tho riirllt i.f sh rt ns i ro.w r,.fitiired bv law shall tie lo; fi- liely mule and acted on by the election hoard, and the vote atlmitted or reieete-l, accord intr t- the evidence: everv iers.-tn claim ini? to le a natumii.- eil citizen shall le rr.mired to nr. uluce his naittr- alization certilieate at the election before vi.t ittr. except where he has len for five years. c..i.sl--u-1 vote ; and on the v.de of sm-li person liiia riveir- e.1. It shall be the dutv of Ihe election . ncers to tivelv. a voter In the district In whu-li ne o lurs to write or stamp on such ceniiicale the w. rd "to- te.1," with the dav.month ivear:aii-i ifa.ije!'.- tion officer or officers shall receive a sevoit.i vote on the same dav, by virtue ol the same certilieate, excepting where sons are entitled to vote by vir- tae of tho naturalization of their fathers, thev and the lierson who shall ulier such set-imd vot,-. upon so ofiendini; shall be iruiltv i f hiirii mis V- meanor, and on conviction ther-of, be tu.cl or in:- .risoned. or both, at the discretion of the :-tr: : rat the fine shail not exceed live jtindr-d !'!- Urt In each case, nor the imnris. umertt m-ivthan onevear: the like punishment sliall he ii,tli.-i-! onc'invictionontlieotlt'-ersol el.-ction wli. si..,U neitlcct or refuse to make, or cause to I ni:t.e. the endorsement r.-iiired a af..r. s ii i ot s.:i i ita- turalization cc.-tiLcatc. ., . . . r ...... -. , Also that in secti .n 12 of sal i Act. It is i.rov ;..e-l that ir any elct ion officer slot! rettise or a -;t tore.uiiresuc!ipn.foltheri-''itolsitt!ri-e i,s is prcsx-rild bv this law or the iaws to wnt.-ii ton 1- a supplement. fnin any iers 11 oil. rin-' to v..::-. whow; name is not on fiie list ot tis...-,i v. :-'!-". ..r b.e rielit to vote is eha'.b-ir- -1 bv unv ou!i:ic. voter present, an.l sli;:ll admit su.-h person to v.. without reipiirin-j siu-b ppd'. everv -,- rs .n )u of. fcr.dinii shall. U.n e..tnt.-ti-.ti. lie ir.:iUv a l.t-jii mistlemeanor. and shall be s-nten.-.-l i-r ev.-i v such otl.-nce, to par a tine n." cx.-ee-lir.ir nve hua- dred dollars, or tu'uudcrtr 1 an impris..-.i:n-at n -t more than one ver. or euli-.-r . r 1. .:h. at i'.e ..:- cretionof thel'onrt. I Also that in s.v(i..n of sal ! Aef. il -s pi- -. : !.- I that the same rules and reaut.iii. ns shall t-i-Pl " at every special el.-c:i-.n, an 1 at every s--; . r . e l:v, rwrf.ufi or waM ejection, iti att r...-1-ft. s, as at Ihe general elections. A 11 that in section 17 of . ill act. It is prov.t! -1 that the rest-eetlve as assesses. insiv:..rs 11.1. 1 ju.iircs of the election shall each have th.- potu r toa.iniitiisteroatns to unv per-.ti ciai'iitns : 1 . ..- . ... .,- rtaht to be assesse.1 or tlie'riu'tit of stulraa-e. or In I b-ii.-c . -rp.it tin I pay I'tesii 1 liv.- tiun ,retl ....I- regard to anv ether matter . r tl.tmr re.ptir-.l to i Urs tt tbe ;s-r- .n a-j-rieve-i tu.-r.-1-v, to iK r--v.-r-le done or in'.iulred into bv unv ai.l oln.-. rs n-i- I ed by an a- :i n m ii.ecas.-. ki.Ii inn w.sts ..ti l sa ti der this act: and anv wi'Ufui' r,:Ne sw-arii-- bv ilowan--cf.-r.-..un-vi K-.-s as t .lectin so til .!-t.i anv person in relation to anv matter and tt.iit-j; I it. 'd -i..ia al-s ...revcry sui-u ..il.-iKa-. I ...viu ooncemin? which thev shall "be lanfuUv int.-rr - ! ed titntty -f a im.-He.iK.iitor. and st.ail. oU -..1 , iratel bv any of sail otllcers or overseers, sliall be ti.i th-n.-.f. be lined n.-l 1. ss ti. 1:1 live i.mi r. ! puuisheVl as penurv. l..i...rs or be ii.ipri..i:---! n-.l W ilian oue n.-n:u ttnd r..-t m-.re ttt.iu t.-tje y-tt ir. r L ;.o. ai 1 t.e ..:.-rt.--Sbt. 19. Any assessor, election otTi.i-ror p. -rs n ii..no! thee.urt. P(M.in-,ed ns an overs.-er. who shall ne-zlet-t or re- j,,. rh.rtat. li. is d.-t .ared i.y ti;- ..-.-.-n.i :4 fuse to perform any duty en) in I by tins a. t. ;?V ,; tl.c six' I: artai-- ot Li..-1 ' 11 i .11 ..1 t 1 .... -out rennabie or legale use. shall besul- .-ct t-. 1 ,. j .,,.., ;j,., f.-n.-; itutioa and ri..- law- ..-1 penalty of one hundred dollars; and if any ,- - ,- 1. -iUS s at. s wl:i.-it siia.1 n u..t.l m j-irsa shall knowinijly assess any imd as a v .t.-rwho tiiercf. shall be tho m.r,-Mi k.w of tii.- I.in.l- ls not qnnlirie.1, or shall wiftuiiy r.oitse t.. ss. ss . . tmvtliim in tne O-it- ituiH ti or laivs i-i any any one who Is ipi ilified, he shall U1 uuipy t ti s. tit" to fi-titrin.. ,;-'rw''i';aii littr. niisdenienn..rinottU-e and on c.-nvie1 i.-n l-e putiisit- vt.- u-.'.-r-rtj. 1 i.e L :-!.:ri:t-e ot t ot- '-.trin.-n-ed by a tine not exe-e.liii2 one ttiousan. dol.tir-. r w-tilili. on ttieit.i .i.iv ..1 April. A. !. l.;o.pa-s--l imprisonment not exceeding ta-o years, or lif.t ii. tit ;Ln -i.-r..- . Itir.K.r stippl .iii.i.f to ri.e a.-t 1- ' ititiir the discretion ol" the curt, and also 1 sit! t-i t t-l...- i rs Pi this 1 ..ii.m.iwe.i!t!.." t:: t.-ii:U hw an action for dnma-ji s by the party atisrrieve.1: ati 1 tion ..1 a lii :: ; rovides as p-lloivs: If anyjierstin sliall Inm-lnletitly aiter. add t...d -- .-St;.-, la. That so Mi'ieh ot r. ry act of As-em-fiw-eor ilestrr.y any list ol voters uitideout asdir.---.- hir't.s pr- i b-s tbat only wiu.e li.f 111 n sti.tilt.e ed by this act, or tear down or rem. ire ti e same e,,,it!, .l to vrfe or be rs-tristcre-l as v..f rs or as from the place where It has been fixed, with frt-.u-u- ,. iimniK t vote at iny en-r.ii or sf.i.il e. -tj. n lent or mischievous intent, or for any impr- p-v pur ,,1 tliis i oininonw.-.iltfi. l-e ami the s um- is hereby pose, the Jicrson so oHen.llinr shall be guilty ot a r,.Ts-;ii.'.i: arid that iter.-tttl. T ait tri-oni a, w-.tlin.it. miieniennor. and on conviction shall !. (.tint -te-.l .ii-tin'-tt'.n ot color snail Ik enr.l!-.-! and r.'isi'-r'd by a tine not exceeding live hundred dollars. or tin- a.-.-urdiiitr to the provispms ol the first S".oi..u ol'tlto prisnment not ex.-eeuiiiir two years, or '' U. at the Rl.( appr.ve.l 1 p.iiii day of April, l.v;1.), i' ' d discretion of the court: and if any -rs..n snail, oy ; - ri further 'tippl.-in.-iital to the a.-t n-l tt iv ;.i violence or intimidation, drive, or att.-inpl to dr vo j t ll -..ti..i.s of this ( o.i:n.itneal: It:" and .-ii.-.ll, from the polls, anv person or p-r..ns appointed w t...., her--. :-u "pialiri.-d un !er exi-'ins .a', l-e by the Cuiirt to act as oversc-rs ot an el.-.-;:-.it. I ,, pp.. 1 .,t itil iroueKil aui sxtUi Iv.-ti- iis In anv wav willully prevent sani over-ci-rs in anv wav wuinny i.n-iei.i. m... from perlormlnit the duties enjoined 0x bv this act. snch persons shall be iruilt v .. M-n tin-in f'-- demeanor, and upon conviction thereof -di ill f.e punished by aline noi ex.-ee.iinz one ;n..iiin 1 : .lobars, or by iinpris..nment not pxct-edintr twai vears, or lioth. at Ihe dis-.-re'. ion of ttic.-.-urt. Any pers.m who shall on the day ol any cut ti ai. vi-.t a p-dlin place lu any election Jis ri. '. at w!.: -!i he is not entltle.1 to vote, and sTiall use ioti'ii'. la tin or violen.-e for the purp.o of pr--ver.'in a.iy officer or elect Ion from perlorinina thedntis re quired of him by law, or for the wins -so ot pre veatini any .jiia'lili.-d voti r of su:-li ilistrtet tx-r-eisinir his riiit to vote, or from ext-rei-ircr hi riuht to chalh-iitfg anv pers .ti otr.-rintr to v- te. such i-erson shall be lieemcd irut'.fy ot a mis le lneanor. and npon cnvieiion thereof, shall Ik punished by a line not exc-edintr one thm-Mit-l dollars, or" by Imprisonment not excee.iii. t w. years. Pr both, at the discretion of the e nri. Any clerk, overseer or elect ion oihccr, who shall .dis close how any elector stiall have voted, unit s p.. quired to do so In a judicial pr.?ce.!his. sii.ill i. j artillty of a misileweanor. and upon eonvi li.rii thereof shall be punished by a tine not ex -e-iitu j one thousand dollars, or by imprisofiient not ex- ceeding two years, or botb, iu the discretion of :iic j conrt. Sw. 4. fni the petition of five or tn ire epiz. ns of nv election district, settintr forth that the a;?-; Tk.l.itinenl of overseers is a rrts.inable rtrectlil-l.-n to secure the purity and fairness of the eice: i'-n in said district: it shall 1 the duty or fb-curt . f common iiletis of t lie prop, r county, nil the i lW judurcs of the said curt aid; to act at the titti .--'n-currinir. to appidnt tw.i jndii-i.-us. sober and int. - -Ihreul citizens of the said district bel.n fvrent p.ditical parties, overseera of el.- t. : ' 1 pervise the proceedinss of election "tfi ers tlier - .1, and U make reporter the same a? th y m :y u; re quired bv such court. Sal I overse.-rs shad N per sonsqiialifiwl to eerre npon election o.-aM hall have the riht to be present wtt.i t l.e o.:P- rs of such election durinir the wb. lc time tuo s.itn ,4 held, the votes ennnted. an I the returns m.v.e .iu end signed by the elect!' a offl.-rs .to keep -i :.H of voters, if thev see proper: to chalk-Dire any r- son otrerlusr to vote, an.l uucrr.-j. witnesses under onth, in regard to his rwht orsu.- frauo at said election, and to examine bis papers IinJuced: and the offitersof said election are re. quircl toailord to laid overfeers. o se.-H-n .uti i , appointed every convenlenae ana ftiftnty bit the ; dKcbartfea-f thvirdaUos: Mid li s..U 1,-r'i. n. ,!!-,- n is rM'i-o I-, permit si.i rerwT t U- Lrv. em. Hii nu!vrm ,1.. ir uu It at ; n 1. Ui-n'.'i. .'H..n .mi-ti .a ,),, r.t t;..n I,- tr-.-.t not e-e r. ct-ohiof 1 ... "OU UH,MMH t ,1,. or l??:j.;;.mirnr a-. c-art; or ii ia.- til- by v., 1- i;e l i'l m--h t en- i-r-:' r:rn- N'ih. i:i rf.e dm T'-Jion !" I;: U- ii-;ve(i s,;i y fr-.-in or i't i:i:t.;.tiwi. a,i N .:i.-irt--t m y 1-e r-' !'.-ri"l i v 11 rvua - : y -. a ju.-'i ... if a;y fi'r. ; jiiiy ,;: -i-r e:j. ii t ,.:.-r v u l 1 tf' Hi.-. I i- 1 1 r-K ll-. I- r i,:.- i ; :ri ra r a., a..- ,-. rru... V i:a 1 -J .' n ..1 t,,s I ;.! k Xiue In U:'r It: 11 l-i I t'w or ;n,-:iue to any si-: be h iiis-n, ,-r si.:s.t rt u.-!v o..- t -.o.j sacb r!..vti.,ii, or snail u.'o or r.: -t:-.-- iT!rni-;.iTj ;i, li:r-.'j,:s. ..r-o or vi.uL'fvv. wito tt.e to iii.Iu cite.- iii..o.y or ovraTc any k-. i..r. r (.it-v.-iu tnai Ir an fo-io. or to rt-s; rain tin- ir !--m ot ch-ji-.-, Sti- ti i-p-ios i-ii .-.Hivu-k!..n-i.'iii ite ttni--; in any -utn cxc.-e..;,,. r,ve iui,.r.-t .L.il.ir-, lo bo isinri.-.'i;-el i..r any um,: t,t ic lb in nor u-.rc tii.ui l--l.e mi .nr.'is, a p.. I if it sh .!! "m-sip wti t.iilw nrt whre tbe ti ial ot sn h oib-m-e shall be Ua-I. tnat toe irson s. cit.-noing m. a t a r-sl i'-iit of the '-i!y. v.:,r i or ii:st ri.-t where- the said ollrnce wail eo.uiiiiit" 1, ju.j en;i:l-.i tovofe tro-rni, on f-u- 1-H.w ' yi'-ti ai. r.T ii he S4-ntcn.-e I to pay a rtm- n-)t Kss tn., . u- :tiit-:re.t or in-. re u: u i.or thouaaa u.-i- lar. an 1 ini,risoiivl iw! lt.'S li. un si , mimths u..,ro than years, "li L- i-- !i or l-r-,.n !ia'l m ike anv bet . tri-j- C'-iolu-.iivi-ai.-h. orsn.il! or -a-:ii r. citto-r by v-ri :i ii -:t- n w Inn i 1; loin.ik--- aay su.-b N-v . I un.it it'll t :.-r-.l .-r 1 y any wniu-n piintct .idv.-r; -cniei::, or in. t" i- -i ii l or v;U' r. l.-rtt it ir -lb ret tu :nmoiw' h fui- : fs. j ii.lir'S Jlli i any pvr.:i or m :-"iis to m.ifv M-rc-t' i.r ioc toe m-,:;t . thi tlittc An i ibe t-ik--th r pr.i'.i'ie ,:i-'rU.. sn 1!!. I" iillit'. s v-Til tiring, t.-ii hrrc : la U- Irs J. . -in Ua oi t!i ir i fi out h or ni-.i-i n!l be a i. ; Al ;en:i;p -r u ai;iuir.iu : .UaT 'iir.--- ! tillli ri to lii' .n I v a:.y . t !hff irV;i.-!: Jut n it . IK t!f il:"i:Xl'r ih; 1 v.-.. t.i- i.. jr. Hli i i : i !. .i ;t-l:;:i(. T li:-' .( ii f : 'in . ! Uf f. l:iw I ra re ni.e.- y t a ihr rn- Sh-iii t ;ke -fid e lt h. ut ud -i.tv An l it llr ii-'l (Kit !:S slui il br r. - i-ed i aid ;t ti U.w ' 1- c! oy i ' i-:e-; ii-n. Toe Ii II. win 4 si f r:nafi n to i t .a Ici-ii-.a dun.i :h .-pc..-r and ii U- th. f i r:i"iiuiy at en; amar.' ul n -t r- i. o; io-r th.ii! .'r.mz ;o i--.r. oi i!, td."-ti..n. ta .T !!:.- - t . t ir. v Ii-t:-t to It; : "I i . cn-n,;r' e I iicfiH.i. n 1'iv;' any -such .is I .-;:.U ie j'p.i l-i us ,s -Ui:ll' f!H ir -ti) .inv -f : - Iv tu f- coo-r en.i!. ri; 'l t;ic n'i.t to v.. 11 I V.'A.t L 1 II-:V de! to irotn any pr-in 1 d to Vo!; ha Hi-'H' :, truly, impjnialiy law, n -r w reive any v. to he cntt:!' iu nil r i , t ; : i.e ijt ur'Tvrl . -iv or r-iu-e o r-:-f"io 1 ;id, tail tl;af 1 a:i 1 i:w.;itii:;v p- r- io.!ii my 'tut) titiTt ia.iol.ae i . t ol u.y ju ; .til l a.'iiaies, and that 1 am not u;r -t -n.vt :y mrere.-n-a iu acy b t or w..: r n ii..- r- - i.: of tins eit-etioti." Tae following Sa.iil bo X !i Ii Hflirm ir; n I Wll Uiri': VI.: I i A. li. do '.hat 1 k... . I .JU.ltfe dlliy atfnl tllC I'lHUHl ( I1 i Mitinuanco i:ier.-- .l, ami Uiti,:i;,lv ii.-.-i ;,, 1 ,1'" in t-arrv-t on th.- sr.me: th.: I v:.: 1 '" 'viis-.-m that any vote or :i k-t si:. -a , WIVt;,i lr'vu l"T' ' t':n ! bia-ve to a-.ir-ii; io me pr-v imoi;s o: t:,e, -"luittioa an i taws o ;ms ( omaionv.-a;. n. c5:i I t'oie at fiuvh el Ji.ai, wi:h !ii r-.)Uir:i;- -a-:. to vote at iu-h rl vii' ti, Ideiicc m tin r.irht 'a aud iliai I v-i'A iij uxv 1 1 ' J'. r-''1 !" us lH "i;Vv :'' 1 ,,v :i aiiv Ini'jd. dec.at or it!u.-' in e;.rrvi.ij; t ori iii i.ors t- i..t- bv'M.iZ'-tis tju.aiiK' l to vote, or oUi'TS. una t nar i wiil m.ike a iru; and p. r;-tri iaru oj ti.e -ii : eit n n. 'iici n iil in aii in:i: truly, imp i .u :y .t id laa.'iiudy pi-rionn my -tiiiy r .-p- ;h- .-.tine :a t!o hr.-L '-t my j j lira;-:it and a: U les. .1 a i t ti;: t 1 aui n-'t 'iii-.iy or m-.i;- -ot -y ijii'-p'-.t'i iu j'.iy it.i or wa'T oti i iie ro.ii I t a is eieefi' 'ii." Toe ! lio-Tn: -had i iie i. pi! t he t:-i: !: t tlniiati'-n i- t..n !.y e:u !i cl-rk. via: i ( A. li. ) d-i a.ii 1 v. ii; nn : ; i.i i. v na a iri.iv w rr - d-.-w a j tl.e name f : d lv t.-r who -drill ote it li.e eu ! uin etocr j. . w hi ai sii. 11 be ivin me :n di irr. I ;i:i t ;l;o t nv n inie o; ( h ,- twns n ip. wur t or i-.r; t ! win nan -ui h tl--' tor n--its. an i r.tn-aaiy .iii i I truiy T.r;".1.: : ,wu t" nuin?- r a v,i,t .iu: a .d -o i xi ': n i--r L.i.-ii -au a-zait ,t -..i A' n n ;a 'i .i.-: j tas fi:une sii;;d !-e r i 1 to y i )ie i!i-M.-t-;..rs tn.T-Ml ?iu 1 in ad tiiiii-s truiv i 1 Tin my . a' llil" to i !K u:m .iMin;y. .tnd t. -it i a ' iiioiri' V llli iu iny kr will t or k . j. .-a;t d ( ins !.-' rio: otnliii' -I lowing io-L ' I" A .vn;; !y. a .j,r -v-d 1J: h ! iv f.f t.in-h. An A'-l ii iruia: iivx t 1? ino-l- oi oin.j;it ; U id-', ii -h m tdj a-jvr.ii a:i:i-: ot ' ihi t'cin-uionwv'.il-. h. u Tn- 1. 1'j it v.w.i bv ti;i St-n.i'" w; ! j f d ii ' t-r-::: 1; iv- of ; h: t '(.iiti:!HVT":i' ( li d ivjin.i in i- r.'nil A -.-i'-iiioiv n;rt. iiud ir v.: i-'l' hy til" ;iu ison: y th. t :u.-. Id , 1 tin- 'U.ii. :!'.( vott-w ot tii nil t-oii.i'ic ot . i; i - t i'lsii' iiwi-;-i; ti iit iiii un'Til. tt.w:il.ip. lwrou-::i ;iq 1 ;'-i:l t-iv'i ::rc h. r";y. h--n".iTf,T. :n: n-r-u.-.i i.iid r-'-tinr-'-i t v.'ii, iy iirk- (H. jruiE.-d'r htiUi'.i. or p.'niy pr.ntc 1 and .ir iy wnti-.-n. -T.:;Iy cu.-.-l.l.'d JS I mt: li- ktr -i.-id br;ioj tl.y n:nn'S oi ;id ju i.- ot ,'.,nr. vt"d Ur. ;in l to U-.tI. ou;.-ido "iii'h ii.ry:" tun tit --z y.i.iU i'iiil'r,"T t:i'- n.n.u-5 of nil '.ii" o,;i,'. rs votrd lor. ;'iid bo lub-di-d -St.ttv-;" c-t; t::kot ii::tl :; brace tiio u.n:)-! ;" r.U c un:y . 1 r- v--t,- 1, r. i;i ci't'iinic tin- o;uv-..' .( s.:i,;Kr. u: :io tr :i:id niciii'M-r d A nii'-y, it volt-d 1 -r. ;iud hhtji:. r ot't'-n-jrv. il Vot."d lor. :tn 1 i e l.dr:i- i -ri'tJilty:" o;. ti.-kt-t .-i:..!! t'iiii'r.M' ti;- n.ni;-" or ;'. t.'Viii-ii:n t-rn-t'M vot- l 1 r, and be -IW i t.WT:.iiio:" on? firktft r.'i.tll vCi'ir.o? t;o; n.nn'-d of t'- p-uirh or li'-iM voji-d i-r, aad t-e i.ii.t-li.' i -i-t.p u!i:" nnd a; !i s:i.;d !-o dd; i'.c 1 in S ' iriit: biili'd- ir-. S;f. 2. That it .-!:ii!5 the du'y of th( Stj-rii'M in t . vt-r.il -wUiiri. of t his t 'onunoti-vVtriUh to ins.-n in liodr eb ciion prwiain;; hcrontt'.r is rtu.'d t iic lim sq "ti'-u of tin-- n-'t. .1 A.l i. R. K1XL1T. Sic'-k'T of tn li'-us of h',jp'--!!'.irive. 1AVII t LKI i.Ni K :lik'.-r oi th- s.-nrttp. At t.'ii'.' i d (h; l':;h tlnr ot Al ir h, Anno l.mih: ni ei'id hai'!re! :!hd -ixrv-!T. A. ti. CL UTIX. 1 ft 1: i:n r u a :: i ;m:.i kn t. .ion i,i(Wr wi;L takt n -t th;it t lit act kUI i V r nr;:u r Suj:dt'!nfui to tii-' Kb otivu Iiwj O.nini-'i.w.-iiiiii." (i:.-ou.iiiivt!i4 d'-s-rft-iS :b d of tid I r- 111 tile a V oi tt.C I l.Hc i;v .rorn voiimr, s'ituri. t;jl l.y t!,j . i-i now null a-:d I has rc-vnliy ..e-.-n -K-lar-fl .-.. I "ui-.-ime fourt .. i-:.nsylv.in:: ! v.-id. an I that all p-.T.its l.-n r-i'-riy di-q-rilin- l 'oitr.J. it o iii.-nvie I tllor--il:: Wr afJ ll.w iawUil -pi ilihe '. ito-'w-y t.y...7..iily.c. m S.uriJ rj tU ' J "j " . . t ri.ieent.i Aii-.en iin-n: oi the C n- stii uii.-n ol tne I tu'c I Sttites is as loiiows: 1 .jth i. i;-i.:-. "i iitize:., .,i ine 1 mi-M sta!.- t. vote shall 11-t I detii-l t.raftndire I br the I nne-1 st.it. s or by any state on ttf-unt ol nic. ci ! r. or previous c .1; iv 11 i,i servitude, Sm-. :!. i li.it t -..ituress shall have p., r to in- fc-r.-e this ar.i-l i-y appropriate b -l-hitio;., Am whkuka-, 1 ue t t -'r s ol 1 !,.- I iu'.- I States "n h -i't .lay ot Mar , h, l-7o. j..i.--. I tin act cm it led -.1 1 eel it r,:jn: t-c fie ri.j".!i of tji- -'' V "".' ierecr Sh" f ' " '.: u.i-f.f or o'l-tr ,i:,rp tti-s -in ! -'" '" ,,''": "MitmI. It tMuh-A 6y li,r V.-o.-f,- a-:-.' ' J n.'t ires ol the I .t.-.-t.i sun or .twc-i.o m town .iWcrf. That all --i: tz- t.s "i t.se I wiled Mates who are or sliall !.? ..t!i-rv...-o .plain:.-.! to vote at any K-.-ti..n,b..- tl.e ; 1:1 aitv ;aT--. i.-rr:r..rv. o,-:ri--t. e.u:r v. ci: v. i..ats:i. , -. . ,.--,,. , ,.,,,.;., . ,.-v, (. iH,lti.i :',.:. a;i ; a M ,u (l t.i . .:i, ,. w,.K,.ul ,,.., , ,., ril.,. (..,,r ,.r ,,r..T1,,Us 0 u,:ili., (Pi rv,-,, ,.. .. ,J :iiru, ;.;. Uw ,u,:. ,a. u r r-.'m i-i-n". i -.... ,.t- r.-rri .'v ..r !.v ..... . r i , r--- , .-. , ' ,..,rl- . t ' f f . ( S.i-.-- -jC if Jn;.:er If.ai i. . r under t lie :.a.:. -r.y ot the e tt.t.itnt. n orl.n-.of ;-i;y .s:.,ie..-r;.!.." lacs... any l-.-mi.ry.anya.-t is !''" 1-- r' 'i'-r'-l to .-iw as a pr r- : ti : - or .iM-.:i,-t. l-rv -f.r.z. an I l.y s-i -tt .- -nstiiu-.-n or I i r--i.s or . :l.:-rs nr-.-r snail be.-hars.t it H per:-riiian. e 01 uuncs in luruistun t.. ei:w -v. an i-i.oortiiiu.y 10 pt rtorin s.i.-n pr.-.T.iu.-iii. -. or in "c 't" ""ici t- v-.tc. it snail 1- t.ie .ittiy o! cv.-ry.-a-11 --rs..n3 and l..tii -ers to mv.-ad cmi.-r.s ef ' L 1 --."- -i- .. t-;- . . ... . l'-Tt" i-r-r-.1jt.-!..-t. ati-i a...-c.Hic.j4:iim- t ."- -7 r - vi.e.is c-it lit 1011 ot s. rvitn,!.;: and it any su-11 p. r- j -n T oiti a-r !uii rx-iu.-e or kii..v. ,i.-.v . i:,h ... a.ve . i:, !!,;!!.- .ne-ii;li.' j.i ... .... 1-- mv c.n--itu:I..Ti.-!l in 1 ....'I i.i I lititv "to take etw '.hat the laws lie taitliiutlv ex-- ; cute..: i It ht s .-..tne To in;- kn.-w't-ixe l !..it -tt-rs .m-l re -tist.-rs o:' v .t -rs I. ive r-- u-- i n-.in- to ttss- a::J r zi-trr .iiv'-r 1 r. ' ns of ia-a : ul ti ir -, : n : .-tti. -,c -pt . 1 . an . ed nt- lie ili -1 rt 1 id-, tors .Vw.c. th?rr)f. Tn e-r-.-i 1 r...ti..n'.f the pr -tn s tit? c-n-tty '.(Virttts-.! ro ts -.1 said rt-iinty are h.-re- l.v notiiied an-l d:i-"-t--: io iti-tni.-t Hi.- see.-rai a. . si-..rs an i r.-tr's;t-rs ot v..' .-rs tie r1 in t. oi ey and j i-.iif..nn io the n ..iiirei... :rs .-.f tii-l run., it n-ionai ' tuieMl I'll'-n's fnl la-.s:.i.ll tiic S'e-riil of nl .ouTpy is fiereoy ati:ti..rijt-d r.n I r'dn.red t-i n i- lish in bis el.-'.-te.n p4.-!.ini.-f I- u t.-r me next i-r..-u- intreh :-.ii 1 ite .'c-fetn re.-ii e.u- nst it u: :. -n.ti titncnd i ttiet.t. act "ft Vcrr. ss. and a"t d tne Iisi.ttura, . to the -n ! tfitit tt.e sa:ne may be known, ex.eu'-.! alt 1 ot i-v.-l by nil assessors. r.-.'i-t.-rs . f v.Mer', ; . lee' ; ni I'-ffl -ers tin 1 others, an I tliat tiic riij'-ds an-l I i.rivi!. --s --ii .r.tntee 1 t h.-r in m iy l5 s-s-ured t in!! ihe t-i-i ... ri.-! 01 ft.' t tttl-.: .tt-v.stith ee.tpVsl t.j i the 1 1 c-n nn-'er m Le Sttit- at ii ir alcvc v. ri'."--ti. - ban 1 and th? arrcat seal !s:d:r-. tlu .'.ay and year JOHN- V,'. GEAEY. ru-s-. :-. to tii" r- n i-d. ns cAn'rtitT .! In the ?.'tvi -si alor.-stii.l. itto Jiel-j-.-s . i' i-'s sh-iil rests--tr.-elv tit,? -a'l-s .-I f'ttlnts ot the el.-e:!.. --T-i.-ts.cn. I pr-- oi.-.. rrf.-tn j.t ! s. tl of 1 he Act 11 atort-st.t'l dKr 11 cli .rtrt- of Mie certiti in tlo-ir r a of one .1-1 ipmii et-.-h .!i--rie. ni ttM H'-r-.u of S .no t-i- '. ti li.u.-f. m fee the :H day tider the vl-- t-;ti. b Intf "ti Ki(il.VY, tl.e ts h of X. ve:n:-e l7i. then :i I 'h.-re 1 atid j-rlor-n lite uu:i--s re luired l.y law oT :tl-l Ja-' i -. V ii.-t-e 1 J .:;. by kn c or nnnv..: 1 d ie a-vl-.1-1:1 I? ite -.bte -. a , -.-i sn--fi tfi t in-r of -Iti l";es, the e.-r. ife-ate -r r-t-irn .-i af (ti;i ci iil i-v .ali.-n .-It .r--:'1 ot by on? -f t;t.- in-pv-e-'-rs r cl'-riis-.f f ho el.-e ;. ti if stM fivr;-r.w'io slt.ill da art 1 iH-riorttt the-'tt , t-n I. r - tviir.-1 ;'.ti 1 Ju-lo antvti.'j lu at. Oicn r . (( s. j !. r my hand at Seaier -t. toe rt h i! -r.'.'a-r. Atiiio l..min...on- Tv.isin.! eftSit I nbd is-venf y-three ar;d of the Ind.-in n. ffhe r.lited'Sra'rs t'te nine' c-eiht Ii. ; SHtu:i r HKy . : j Xi, 1-Ti. ) UUVliii KSlirl'tK,