ff;c 'gkfferoatt' goimtaf, glcarficfb, gfa., (grfoBcr 27, i860. Raftsman's Journal. . J. BOW, ITO AMD rROPKIKT'iR. CLEARFIELD, PA., OCT. 27, 1869. ThkResclt. la another column we pub lish the official figures of the recent Pcnu tylvania election. Gov Geary's majority is 4,S0G, and that of Judfc'e Williams 8,701. The vote this year is 70,692 less than it was last year for Auditor General. The Itejis try Lav, no doubt, prevented the Democrats from polling, as usual, some IO.OjO or 2'1,. 00 fraudulent voles for their candidates. This fact, in connection with the sniallnc.s of the vote cast on the I2h iiist., warrant? uk in saying : Had anything near a full vote been polled thia year our candidates would have received from 23,000 to 30,000 of a majority. The result then, notwithstand ing our meagre majority, i.s of a most grat ifying and encouragiug character, and one over which the Republicans of Pennsylva nia, and of the whole country, have great cause for rejoicing. How it Work.v The IVndktonian pa pcmiill policy of finance is in full force iu HaytL The mills are all at work and yold advanced to $1,8K) paper for $1 pold. In consequence dry goods and provisions were at fabulous prices at the latest advices the price of a barrei'of pork being $05,000, a box of smoked herrings $-550, a bos of eoap $2, 600, etc Clearly Peud:eton should cini grate thither at once. Salnavc evidently needs his perviee.''. A similar state of affairs would exit in this country had the Pendie tonian Democracy been successful at the last Presidential cleetion,and at the more recent State elections. From the condition of mon ey matters in Hayti, the people of the Uni ted States can now see how great a financial disaster they escaped by the election of Gen. Grant, and the retention in power of the Republican party. Goni Lip. On Friday last, the Tennes see Legislature put a quietus upon Andy Johnson, by electing Henry Cooper as Uni ted States Senator from that State. Al though the Legislature is largely Democrat ic it rejected the '"Old Man OListinate" by a majority of four. It Li almost a pity that ho was not elected to the U. S. Senate, wber he would have done no harm, except to indict upon that body his old long wiud ed speech about the Coustitutinn, while his absence from Tennessee would have afforded that distracted State a blessed season of re pobe. The defeat of Andy Johnson is the severest blow the Democracy ret-rived" this fall, excepting, per Imps, that of Repudia tion Pendleton, for Governor of Ohio. Right. It is announced, says the N. Y . Tribvn, that General Guttei field is either to resign or be removed, in consequence of alleged speculations in iro'J, while holding the office of U.S. Treas'r in N. Y. Vt'e have already said that there should be no disposi tion for one moment to uphold this officer, if the charges against hiui could be sustain ed. Wo niay now add that, if the Depart ment has any rcasou to believe cither that lie was in any way concerned with the oper ations of Messrs. Fisk & Gould, or that he was in any way responsible for the silly and damaging "defense" of himself which has been put forth in some of the newspapers, it should take prompt measures to put its Interest here in wiser hands. Deatti of an Ex Governor. Ex Gov ernor Joseph Ritncr died at the residence of Lis son, in Carlisle, on Saturday, October loth. He had attained the ripe age of ninety years. During hi prime he was one of Pennsylvania's active pjlititions. He filled the Gubernatorial chair of the State from 1S35 to 1S3S, and it was during his administration that the excitement incident to the anti-Mawiiie movement prevailed. Governor Ritner was never credited with brilliancy of parts, but he possessed earnest ness of conviction and integrity of purpose. The last twenty five years of his life were jajed in retiraey. The Financial Paosrcer. The steadily continued reduction of the national debt, for the present and at least five ensuing luouth-t.is anticipated atJWashitigton. With peace at home and abroad, and with a rea sonable degree oi popular prosperity, our national debt, at the close of the present AiuiicNuuiun, March 4, I S73, is not like ly to exceed J l.M0,lK000 a reluction of more than oua-fourth of is immense volume during one single term of a Republican President DisArroiNTEr. It is said that Mr. Pack er is sadly disappointed by the returns frt m the anthracite counties. He Iones 2,574 votes in Luzerne and 315 in Schuylkill, while he gains 47 vots in Carbon, the home of his family, 9'J in Lycoming and 12S in Le high a net loss of 2,645 to .the "Pride of the Valley." These returns were a aiore unpleasant damper than the souse his boat men gave him in the canal some years ago. Tns Attorney Generalship. The Hon. Fred. Carroll Rrews'er has been ten dered the position of Attorney General of the Bute by Gov. Geary. It is understood that the offer will be accepted. Judge Brewster i ha!f borther to the present At torney General, and a man cf elevation of character aud fiirst rate ability. Moee IIelp. Vermont has ratified the ifteenth Amendment. The vote was unan imous in the Senate, with twelve negatives in the House.. The great measure by every new expression of the people gains string! h and its consuniation is little less than abso lutely certain. The New Virginia Senators. John 1 Lewis, Esq. and Judge John W Johnston, recently chosen by the Virginia Legislature to represent that State i the Senate of the United States, are said to be gentlemen of considerable ability, and to have been true to the old flag throughout the whole war of the rebellion. They both can conscietiously fake the required oath. Mr. Lewis Is a native of Lewiston, a small town iu Rockingham county, and a lawyer by profession. He was never known as a politician, but was an uncompromising Whig, although residing in the very midst of what was then knowu as the "tenth le gion" of Virginia Democracy. Ha was a member of the Constitutional Convention of 1S61, but voted against and refused to sign the ordinance of Secession, and was a stanch Union man throughout the rebellion. He is greatly respected for uprightness, integri ty aud independence of character. He is a son of the late Gen. 3. II. Lewis, and has devoted himself principally to agriculture. Judije Johnston, who has been elected as the culleague of Col. Lewis, is a native of Washington coun'y, Va., and a lawyer by profession. Except in his new office of judge, he has only been onee in public life, which was as a member of the Virginia Sen ate in 1847 8, from the Tazewell district. He was then one of the twenty three who refused logo into caucus with the Demo cratic party, and who united with the Whigs in electing Mr. Hunter aud afterwards Mr. Mason to the Senate of the Linked States over Gov. Smith and Gov. McDowell. He is a nephew of Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, who figured prominently in the Southern army during the recent war. He was al ways a devoted friend of the Union, and so remained to the end of the rebellion. A Democratic Ignns Fatuu3. The Democratic "gains," of which their papers have so much to gay every year, and which are always to elect,but nsverrfo elect their ticket, are the most deluding Will-o'-the-wisps we have ever heard of. "There is a curve," says the Pittsburg Dispatch, "known to the students of conie sections, the peculiarity of which is that although it continually approaches nearer and nearer to a given straight line, it uever reaches it,and never would reach it, if contiuued to the confines of space. The "caius" of the De mocracy are very much like this curve. For the last eight or nine years they have been continually and everywhere increasing, but somehow they fail to reach the line of suo cess, and for aught we can see, the elections oflast week, which show the greatest "gain9M of all, according to Democratic arithmeti cians, give them no more hope of really at taining success than any of the others over which their roosters have flapped their wings in vaiu. Notwithstanding their gaining, the Republicans still keep a little ahead, and show no signs of giving out. The worst of it all is that these gains merely encourage the Democracy to persevere in their delu sive struggle. Rut for them they would long ago have given up and saved their streu-'.Ii nd wind till by rest aud the adop tion of new and souuder principles they might win in some future contest. But like the "fire fly lamp," in the old Dismal Swamp ballad, these deceiving "gains" are leading the poor Democracy deeper and deeper into the morasses of prejudice, until at last it must perish in the slimy ooze." Unprecedented Coolness. At Mead ville, on F riday before the election, while Gov. John W. Geary was addressing a large mass meeting of Repubiicans,and just as he was in the middle of a well-rounded sentence, the platform on which be,together with the officers of the meeting stood, suddenly gave way, precipitating all to the groud. The Governor, as he was going aown, continued speaking, losing not a word, and he strug gled out from the broken timbers still talk ing as though nothing had happened to dis turb bis equilibrium, affording an exhibi tion of thatenoluessandsolf-possesfcion which combined to make him the great hero and soldier. Scarcely one man out of ten thous and could, under similar circumstances. have controlled his nerves so effectually and re tained such .presence of mind, aud it is as much lrom these little circumstances as from greater ones that we all draw our esti mates of a uiau'scharacter and qualities. Conti stlt Election Case. The Sen atorial scat of Mr. Scull, from the Somerset district, will be contested by his late oppo nent, Mr. Findlay. The former claims his election by a majority of 17, while the friends of the latter insi.it that he was elected by 21 majority. Our friend Scull, should employ Mr. Swoope, a counsel in his behalf the Utter having some experience in such cases. Speaking of the Secretary of War, the Quincv ( 111. ) Whig bays : "The sensation al nonene from Dos Moines about General Belknap's political unsoundness is all bosh, as we personally know. The whole etOry is a fabrication of ignorance or malice. Gen. Belknap is not an active partisan, but he is a good Republican, and a very able man." Rascality Unmasked. It has been satisfactorily ascertained that the wires freighted with the government dispatches directing the sale of gold, during the event ful conspiracy days, were tapped in or near the city of New York, and its contents made known to the gamblers in advance of its de livery to Gen. ButterBeld. California Election. Incomplete re turns from the interior coun'ies of Califor nia indicate that b th the vacancies on the Supreme Bench have been filled by Demo crats. The vote wis very lieht, and the re sult is in accordance with expectatiens. It is stated that the large amount of traf fic drawn to the Pacific Railroad has so ta ken away business from the Panama route as to render it impobable that the latter line can ever again enjoy prosperity. This is a change which might have been foreseen. Fiscal. The Secretary of the Treasury, from the 1st of May to the 30th of Septem ber, purchased $52,691,000 of Five-twenty bonds. The saving of interest on these purchases amounts to over two millions per an urn. Pennsylvania Election, 1869Complete. 1883. 1869. 25 63 O "3 33 "9 5 - e 2. I - sr a" E .2 & ' 1 P I COUNTIES. Adams, Allegheny, Armatrong, Bearer, Bedford, Berks, Clair. Bradford, Bucks, Butler. Cambria, Cameron, ' Carbon, Centre, Chester, Clarion. Clearfield, Clinron, Colombia, Crawford. Cumberland, lauphin, lelairare, Klk, Erie, Fayette, Forest, Franklin, Fulton, 3171. IRft 3fi09i 2642 3M)3 23KSH: 14923 1 7Kll: 13:H1 1894(1 12442 3UK7 3439: 34391 3079 3421 . 30 null s;s' .liwiii 2402' 3076, 2391 26251 31119 24S5 2s3j'j47' 2M . i - - ....... . . n n I ,.11111 3-41 75I2 fi!SI 3723 2St'J 31. S3 3434,' 2773 3S63 6653! 3696 34 S5 6557 2763 356 7S3H! 6S05 7ol 32tf2 3ii0 2994 3iW"i 2o.t9, 3187 JJli 4711 4?3 65501 3281 2418' 471 I 6993 3ml 3220 537 425 2I29 2772 1940 j 2"25 3765! 3I02 3464 1977i 2591 3093 3447 8244 ' 6134 1908 2S5fi 17851 2rt31 1761 j OOJOl ono "x-t 282 lS95j 3037; 1799 3015 1797 2992 992' ZiOOi 1S.1U .MUW 20771 405S 1845 3714 1842 2500 1 Still 6072 35S7 5704 3679 4795 7026j 5390' 6107 4S65 30l 4433 S5l4i 44U8 6190. 4535; 5i60; 4328 4396 4295 2291 936 40161 2761; 3532: 22D5 3541 608 1054 7702i 4531 475 6498 3340 365 3.398 963! 465 4338; 6426 4229 1 3338 293! 374 4(106' 3707 1066! 6s3 4250 Oi43i 4l7U 352j 348: 4:i21i 4278 782! 1113! 17221 33741 3473 2498 4842' 2.ifll! 2u7ts: 2094' 4179 287 3974 1064 2981 2319 2058 !2t 1639 '-!! 4 680 Greene, 1542 2992! 1527 Huntingdon, Indiana, 2-i25, 2368i 2s34 4003i 1V67! 2070 3970 2J39 1937 Jefferson, Juniata, 14ii7l 1863 1254' 1612 1217 Lancaster, jl5513! 8570 1301' 8316 13876; Lair re nee, Uill 1711' 3'17l 14!1 31911 1476 4267; 2i5s! 4027 2J6 ! 4((4d' 2663 Lebanon, Lehigh, 47331 6305 4aoai 0133 4o64 6777 Luzerne, Lycoming, S992,'l340 46801 5031, 8090 9698 457 696 3785 1702 8494, 9637 4066! 4487 879' 697 4514! 37al 16301 1701 665 j 2675 7376 8424 1059' 1562 4044; 7316 3408! 400V 4053 j 880 M'Eean, Mercer, Mifflin, Monrce, Montgomery, 4793 1850 745 4177! 4529 1828 2789 8905 1640 659 7363 2692 8447 7943 1194 -Montour, 1683 1555 Northamp'n, Northumb d, Perry. 4452j 7701 4023! 7449 3694 4146; 34971 4000 9..7I1 09i! 2439 240S! 2431! 2103 Philadelphia, !60632 60808 51202;46SU2 51838 46485 I'ike, Potter, 38! 1269 313 J034 Z9Z 1049 1604 811 81931 9538 1334 70Xi 1318 7902! 89011 7724 677 9027 1315 1685 T54 2890 1111 1192 3172 1648 4628 2678 6186 1724 Schuylkill, Snyder. 1865! 1343 17191 1315, 1721 .Somerset, 3195 461 4682 1829 1 846: 3377 2051 2940 406 4064 4535 17SM 3507 2430 4476 2275 17001 2908 751 J 403 298j; 4098 1825' 4321 1207 1791 3241 3519 1679 2404 46321 4470 27li! 22a5 6I95 4535 1772 1475 8326; 6581 Sailivan, usquehana. Tioga, 5410 2054 1 I nion, Venango. Warren, Washington, Wayne, 1340 4431! 3761 2900j 18H2 4916! 4918 269S, 3397 Westinorel'd, a335i 6569 4853 W yoming, York, 1549: 1765! 1452 64531 9o06j 5545 Dem total, 321739 2859j6 282a75 Hep. totals, 331461 290552 2913G6 32W39 2S9J0 iixjj Majorities, 9677 4596 8791 By comparing the vote of 1869 with that of 1SG8, it will be seen that the vote cast this year is 76,092 less than that of last year. Of this the Ilepublicans lose 40,009, aud the Democrats 35,783. Father Ejacinthe. This eminent Catholic priest arrived in New Yoik last week, and the papers of that city are making the most out of bis presence there; bat he is unusually and sensibly re served, and np to this time little has been drawn from him by the numerous interview ers who have pestered him with important questions. Father Ilyacinthe haa not re nounced the Roman Catholic religion, but he is not au extremist or a bigot: disagrees with some of the doginvj of the church, and favors, to some extent, liberty of concience in religious matters. What stand he may feel obliged to take hereafter, should ex communication follow the heresy he k charg ed with, can only be conjectured; but as revolutions, whether in religious or civil af fairs, "never go backward," we may reason ably anticipate on the part of the Caiinelite .Monk a step in advance of Lis present posi tion, before many years, or even mouths elapse, if his life should be continued &o long. lie is credited in one of the New York papers with the following account of the rupture between hiinself and his eccle siastical Superior: "My views are embodisd in a letter I wrote to the Superior of my convent, which was published at the time. The Catholic Church is divided into two parties, the Ul tramontane, or stand still party, and the party ot progress in both religious and polit ical thought. To the latter wing Monsieur Monialauibert is now attached, though he was formerly on the othor side. Its ideas were also held by the Abbe Lacordaire, pre vious to his decease. I bad been in the habit of leaving every Sunday the Carmelite Convent, in which I was a monk, to preach in the church of Notre Dame do Paris. In my sermons, 1 leaned towards liberty of con cience in religious matters, and attacked the f-pirit which, in the past days gave birth to the Inquisitiou. I considered protestants to be Christians. They had been baptized as such, and their doctrines were Christian. The Superior of my convent objected to this freedom and perpetually took me to task. This aunoyed me. I felt niyi?e!f perpt-tualiy seized by the throat and gagged. The an ger of uiy Superior was still further aroused by my attendeoce at the Peace Congress in Paris, where I delivered an address. The harm of advocating peace, I could not see, but as universal peace was in contradistinc tion to the past practice of Christendom, probably that was the reason of my repre hension. Wearied, at last, by perpetual and unreasonable restraint, I threw aiJe my robe, anc? quitted the couvent. My Su perior wrote me to retorn within ten days or consider myself virtually excommunica ted, although the Pope's anathemas might not yet have been promulgated. 1 replied by taking immediate passage for America," The Great Tobacco Marts. Louis vife is reviewing the business of the past year, and finds that of the estimated crop grown in Kentucky, Tennessee, Indiana and Illinois, amounting to 121,000 hogsheads, Louir. ville received about 40,000 hogsheads, worth at least $4,100,000. She has thirty tobacco factories employing a capital of $1, 0lK),000: and the businsss increasing. Rich mond, Va., during the last twelvemonths, has manufactured over 12,0u0.UOO pounds of chewing tobacco.and about 800,000 pounds of smoking tobacco, paying into the internal revenue thereon nearly $4,000,000 as duty. Think of the enormous amount of puffing and chewing done in consuming this enor inous quantity of vegetable product. Deerycd Compliment. The senti ment in the annexed paragraph, from an exchange, meets our hearty approval : "The Ilarrisburg Telegraph has done noble service during the campaign, just end ed. It has been edited with great vigor, and if it will now keep a sharp lookout for the different schemes that will be organ ized to get the cash out of the State Treas urer, in one way or another, it will put the Republican party nnder a double debt of gratitude. Economy must now be the word of the National.State and city authorities." News Epitome. The late authentic news as to the wherea bouts of Dr. Livingstoae, the indomitable explorer, says that he is not only alive and well, bat in prosecuting bis geographical researches has discovered that one of the sources of the Nile, emptying into the great lake V ictoria Tyanza, rises some teu degrees south of the Equator. This.if correct, makes the Nile the longest river in the world. A fair idea of the long line of the Nile may be formed from the fact that tho distance be tween its last reported source and its delta along the Mediterranean is equal to the dis tance from Lima, in Peru, to the city of New York, or from the City of Mexico a way up to Mount St. Elias, the end of the backbone of this continent, in Alaska. A Washington dispatch states that Attor ney General Hoar, in conversation with a friend a lew days ago, stated that he was not a candidate for the Supremo Bench, and would not take it if offered him. It turns out that Edwin M. Stanton is the most prominent candidate for any vacancy that it may be necesssary to fill in the Supreme Court, and the President, it is said, b not avers to his appointment. A very large number of letters recommending hiui have been received from the most prominent law yers e-f the country. It may be stated, how ever, iu justice to Mr. Stautou, thai he has made no perscal elTort or application for the position, but he is strongly urged by his friends and emiuent members of the bar. X Female suffrage for municipal officers in the boroughs and cities of Great Britain was continued by a law of the last Parliament About 300 female voters are now on the register of municipal voters at Lincoln. Eng land. At Stamford the number of female municipal voters for tbeensuing year will be 130. At East Retford.out of 514 munici pal voters for 1869-70, sixty will be women. At Norwich the municipal rejister for ISC') 70 will comprise upwards of 10.000 names. and about 1,300 of the voters will be women. At Liverpool, Manchester and Birmingham the number of female voters ruus into the thousands. Gen. Sherman calmed the excited fee-l ings of a Committee of Washingtonians, the other day by piving them his opinion the capital will never be moved from Washing ton to the Mississippi or any other valley. He thinks it would take one hundred years to get a bill for the removal through the House of Representatives, one huudred years to get one through the Senate, and even after the passage of the bill by both Houses, one huudred aud one years would be Ppent in discussing the most eligible point in the Mississippi Valley to which the capi tal could be removed, The petrified giant exhumed in Onondaga county, New York, the other day proves to he nothing bnt a colossal statue, carved from a species of stratified sulphate of lime known as Onondaga gypsum. The features are of the European cast, aud the sculpture is so- like any remains of aboriginal plastic art ex tant, llenoe it may be surmised that the figure was 'executed by the Jeauits, who had missionary stations in that part of the country two hundred years ago. If they did not make it, who did? It is rumored that Wall street is again plotting to engineer Secretary Boutwell out of the Treasury. The particular device pro posed to this end is to be another oaairuoth operation in gold. Those engineers have been already onee hoisted by their own pe tard, and will show more couraga than wis dom if they try it again. The seeond ex plosion is mysteriously stated to be fixed for about the end of November. The gloves and mittens of buck, sheep, calf and horse skin annually manufactured n Johnstown, New York, amount to $3,- 000,000 nine-tenths of the entire product of the United States being wade there. There are more than thre hundred manu facturer.! engaged in the business, aud fam ilies for twenty miles around have pleasant aud profitable employment in making up the goods. Acouple of gay youths, forced to spend a couple of days in a country town near Cin cinnati, dropped iu at a church where a fu neral was in progress, to "see who they were going to plant." They were march ing with the rest past the open coffin, when one of them flung himself upon it and would not be removed, giving away to the most poignant grief. It was his father. The ei-lebrated Foacanlt experiment to proove the rotation of the earth was tried Tuesday, in the rotunda of the Ohio State House, by Mr. Mendenhall, of the oity high school. The pendulum had a clear length of one hundred aud twenty feet,and showed the motion of the earth in three minutes after its starting. The experiment was in every way a success. The Rothschilds of Tsris have been swin dled out of $20,000 by a former, who turns out to be aclerk in a Vienna banking house, and who, after purloining $5,000 from the bank, forged the signature of his employers to a letter advising the Rothschilds of the draft upon them, which he cashed immedi ately after his arrival at Paris. Advices from Nassau state that the steam er Lillian, which sailed with an expedition ary force from Florida for Cuba, had been captured by the British gunboat Lapwing, and taken into Nassua where she was releas ed by the authorities under the ruling of the Attorney General that she could not legally beheld. Three consecutive decisions in the Massa chusetts Courts in the same case seem to make the law pretty clear, that if the owner of a horse with the glanders peraiit him to range so as to infect other horses, the owuer of the diseased horse is liable for the dam age that may ensue. English papers say the wheat crop there, and also the potato crop.have been the heav iest known in this generation. The value of the wheat on one farm is mentioned as equal to fifteen years rental of the land, and that farm is said only to be a sample from many. The Jewish Mssenyr avows the belief that the establishment of tho Suez Canal is another step toward the fulfillment of the divine prophecy that the Jews shall return to the land of Palestine. A Little of Everything. Low tb b'hoy who fell in th gutter. Ia demand good butter. Priee 40 eenta. Scare potatoes Now is tb time to Nil. Bad for tb rata the earning of tb Chin. An improvement tb crossing pat down last week. Wet and nasty the weather, for several days last week. Appeared ia market aom excellent venison, last week. Wanted a load oi good oats straw. Inquire at tbis office. Reported that many ladies in New York get drunk on bitter "Th pride of the valley-' A.a. Salt river valley, we presume Just opened a large stock of Dew goods, at J B. Graham A Son s. Should be cut down Market Street, in front of the new briek hotel. Should an old acquaintance be forgot? Not If he has plenty of money. Hilarious the chap who indulged freely in "benzine" the other night. Important to farmers the advertisement bead ed '-0 yes, O yes." Head it. Needed a good crossing at the Post Office. The Boro' Dads will please notice. Politically perisbod poor Pershing, oa tb 12th. Baioo ; scarcity ot coffo pots. An oil weil in Pennsylvania if sailed '-Olive Logan." Runs olive oil, perhaps. d route for Salt nver Asa, when last seen, with an old carpal bag on bis back. Still improving oar town. Several buildings have gone up daring the past wk. A good pair a yung lady with a Qreeia bend and a young mia who parts tj is talr in th mid dle. A recent invention that has ben patented Is a bead rest, attachable to pews, and called th sco rer's companion. Tb Sew Tork Tclrfram thinks that Asa Pack er did not prove very successful "as a paoker of election majorlti." "I cam near Felling my boots the other day." said Seattle o a friead. "Hw so?" "WU, 1 bad them half-soled." Jolly th warr of that dilapidated stove pipe hat. Shouldn't bnmp tb hitching post so hard, lest be mlghtget hurt. A poor eoffe-potist Mutchler. If h'd been half as good a performer a " ilham th f s would have been righi aid up. A piano maker informs the public that au- factnrers make a oroBt of two hundred pr cent. That's a lively greenback waits. Everybody 1 having played out, sm of the c'uies are celebrating Christopher Columbus. It's about time that Noah bad a salute. Mr. Dalrvmpl, tb grt Minnesota wht grower, baa finished threshing hia crop of wheat, which this year amounts to over 50,000 buehels Eight littl girl in Boston bav bn working all summer, aad manufactured artioie enougn 10 hold a fair la aid of the Children's Hospital ther. Om hundred and ffty-two "interviewing" re porters bav already oalled upoa Father Hya- uth Talk about the terrors of tn inquisi tion. Th Chicago rogues' gallery bas only thre hundred and sixty-four portraits. The artutiare taking tho ret of tbe population as fast as pas sibl. Prematura the display of poultry, by some of our Democratic cotempcrarles. over racier election. Never erow befor you are out or the wood. Aborted by the St. Mary's Gatrtte. that Hall bought his election with chs. lager and pret sels, although a good templar. Tb at s rather bad on Johnny. Teaa paper y that If "tho enfond 1 . , ka aj.m A greasers don t stop irnum , hawing ap done some Bigut, aaa 11 ." " that'll b bit." John Chinaman Is an Imitative chap la tbis country he drinks lager kr and makes Limbur- ger cheese and sausages uae we piaoe ' nest and dog Chicago hns two fat offices that make her local elections iaterentieg The county eierasnip ia said to be worth 5 H,5uO aanually , end te circuit clerkship 565.000. . Accordier to Gov. Walker ."What Virginia new needs is plenty ef honest. industrious ad intelli . . . .v gent men." Trat s aoeai wna ererj uu - stands in need of. A lot of extra floor was sold at the rate ef 54 70 gold, per barrel, in Richmond, last week, and the current rates were but little higher. That seems like th "goed old times." Slated that ti largest tannery in the world is located at Wilcox, in Elx county. Ithas six hun dred vats In eperation, and contumea 15,000 ton:, of hemlock bark per year. A man named Talley, In Bedford county, Va., has slain n hundred and twnty-six bear. It was the wore: of a life time, during whioh th bears, we suppose, kpt TalUy." Th Altoona Vindicator, Democratic, wants a live young man at tbe head of the ticket next year; "some such man as Win, A. Wallace " Yes, certainly ; give us a genuine coffee pot next time. The New Tork Herald, a wli known religious organ, proposes, with much earnestness, Father Hyacinth for Pop of America, advising tbe se cession of American Catholics from th Church f Rome. A pretty woman, like a grost truth or great happiness, has no mere right to bundle herself nnder a green veil, or any other abomination of like character, than th sun haa to put 00 green spectacles. Some one wants to know if things haven't come to a pretty pass, when $500 is offered for the best trotting horse, and only to tor the best twenty acre field of wheat ? We have thought that way for some time. The question why printers de not succeed as well a brewers is thus answered : Because print ers work for tb bead, and brewers for the stom ach and wbei twenty men have stomachs, but one has brains. The Washington Chronicle informs us that Beau Hickman will be removed with the capital when it is removed to St Louis. It is far more than probable that Beau will be a "demnitiou body" long before the removal takes place. Astronomers report, says the Springfield Re public that Tau Coronae. the dog star, is missing frem tbe firmament. Wasn't muzzled, probably, and th celestial police have got him. Can't comet over them when there's seventy-fire cants to be made. Tbe prison barber at San Francisco bas made th shorn locks of th criminals who bav passed under his hand into a lariot of considerable length and queer appearance, which he exhibits at the county fair. Tbe Democratic Scmpson is shorn of his locks. -If there is snybody under the eanister of heav en that I bold in utter excresence," said Mrs. Partington, "it's the slanderer, going about lik a boy-constrictor, circulating his calomel upoa honest folks." She refers, obsc,are)y, to Demo cratic newspapers. A Cincinnati bookseller saved a stranger from bankruptcy some forty years ago by umaH loan, and now appears as legator of sons tw millions at the death of the man he benefited. Democra cy hoped to rase about that amount from Packer; but it wouldn't work. Sad, wasn't it. Ar Earthqcakk. On Friday last, Oct, 22d, a severe shock from an earthquake oc curred at Newhuryport, Mass., shaking the doors and windows and tuacy movable things in the houses. The people generally were awakened by the commotion. An old brick mansion house, built seventy years go, and having the thick massive walls common to those days, was shaken from the roof to the cellar, rattling the doors and windows, and creating general alarm among the occupants. The people in their beds were very sensible of a vibrating uiovemeut below them. At Waldsborro, Maine, it said the shock was very severe, and that the earth opened eight or ten foet wide causing great alarm in the village. At St. John's N. B., the shock was strong. Houses were shaken violently. Everybody was awakened from their slumbers, and many rushed from their homes in alarm, but no material damage was dne. At St. Andrew's the shock was more severe, throw ing down chimneys and cracking walls of houses. Similar shocks were felt at Halifax. Spain. The bill suspending civil rights in Spain passed the Cortes on the night of October 5th, when the Republican minority led by Castclar abandoned the Congress in a body. Prim made an appeal to them to stay, half entreating, half menacing. Ife urged them to meet together and consider the propriety of remaining at their post ; but unfortunately he accompanied his words with some intimations they, in their excited state, oould not brook such as that if they retired he should consider they had joined the enemy, and he should meet iron with iron, force with force. . Castelar rose and thanked him for his remark, which, he said, contained two things a counsel and a threat. If there had only been the coun sel they might have pansedbefor it, "but before the threat, neverr" Thus saying, he and his companions left the building. France. Special interest again attaches to the news from France. The Emperor has given notice that he will be prepared for any emergency growing out of the pro posed irregular meeting of the Corps Legis lat if, an the 26th inst., and the troops are gathering in Paris to enable him to keep hisjpromise to "insure respect for the law and the maintenance of tranquility." There is no little significance in the caution to "all good citizens to be on their guard a gaiiiht imprudent curiosity." This appears to be the latest mode of cautioning citizens to beware how they kick against the pricks of Imperialism as practiced in France. 5Sew dvrrti.snufittjj. Advrrtu'meius ma tnlrgetyp,T tuff plain etyle,nUl be charged double ueuul ralee. ft e cute M'CULLOUGH A KREBS. Attorheys-at-Law, Clearfield. fl'a. All legal business prompt ly attended to. Consultations in English or Ger man. Oct. 27, 1H6 T. J. nVrLi.oisn. D. L. mm. SPRVRVOB (iESERAI.'S OrHCB, ) llarrnburg. Pa.. Oct. 22, 1S69 ) To the Owner of (JiiputrnUd hand z In obedience loan Act of Aarcmbly. approved tb eighth day of April, one thousand eight hun dred and sixty-nine, you are hereby notified Jihat tbe '-County Land Lien Docket." containing the list of unpatented lands for Clearfield county. pr pared under tbe Act of Assembly of the 2uth of May. one thousand eight hundred and sixty-four, and the supplement thereto, has this day been forwarded to th Protbonotary of the county, at whos office it may be examined. The liens can only be liquidated by tbe payment of the pur chase money . interest and fees, and receiving pat euu through this Department. JACOB M. CAMPBELL Oct 27,"6 ra Surveyor Ueneral. The only reVtahJe cure for DYSPEPSIA IX THE KXOWX WORLD. Dr. Wishart's Great American Dyspepsia Pilia. and Pin Tree Tar Cordial are a positive and in falliblcure for dyspepsia in it most aggravated form, and to matter of how long standing Tbey penetrate tbe secret abode ef this terrible disease and exterminate it, root and branch, fortvsr. Tbey alleviat more agony and silent suffering than tengne can tell. They are eoted for curing the most desperate and hopilee cased. when erry known means fail to afford ro'ief No form of dyspepsia or indigestion can resist tbeu penetra ting power Dr. Wishart's Pine Tree Tar Cordial. It is the vital principle of the Pii e Tree, ob tained by a peculiar process in the distillation of the tar. by which its highest medical properties ar retained It inigorates the digestive orgatu and rrstores the appetite It strengthens the de bilitated system. It purifies and enricats the blood, and expels from the system tbe corruption whieh acrofnia breeds on tbe lungs. It dissolves the mucu? or pblegm which slops th air passages of tbe lungs. Its healing principle acts upon th irritated surface of th lungs aud throat pene trating to each diseased part, relieving pain aud subduing iitflamation. It is tbe result of years of study and experiment, and it is offered to the af flic ted with positive assurance of its power to cure the following diseases.il the paiieut bas not too long delayed a resort to tb means of cure: 'Jcn'VtnptioM of the Lunge, Cough. Sore T'.roat and Errujtt, lirunekiti, Iiver Complaint. Btintl and Klreding Piles, Asthma, Whooping Congh, Dipthrria. 6c. A medical expert, holding high collegiate hon ors, aevotes his entire time to the examination of patients at the office parlors Associated with him are three consulting physicians of acknowl edged eminence whose services are given to the public free of ctarge. This opportunity is offer ed by no other institution in tb country Letters from any part of the country, asking advice will be promptly and gratuitously responded t Whr convenient, remittances should lake tbe shupe of drafts or post office orders. Price of Wishart's American Dyspepsia Pills SI a box Sent by mail on receipt of price. Pi ice of Wifhart's Pine Tre Tar Cordial, Sl.iO a bot tle, or SI I per dozen. Sent by express. All communications should be addressed, L Q C. WISHART, M. D., No. 332 North second street, Oct 27,'69-3m Philadelphia. y EN DUE. There will bo sold, at public sale, on the premises of Jeremiah But ler in Clearfield Borough, on SATURDAY, NO VEMBER 6iA, 186a, th following personal property, to wit: Five young horses. I wagons. 2 buggies (nearly now), set double harness, 3 set single harness, 1 pair light sleds, 1 sleigh, 1 patent cutting box, 1 grindstone, and a number of other article. Terms, inoluding a liberal credit, made known on day of sals, bale to commence at I o'clock, p. m . October 30, Is6. JOH3I BCTLHB. T J. CUNNINGHAM, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Keal Estate Agent and Conveyancer, TTROX, BLUR COCJITV, PA. Special attention given to th collection of slaims. Tyron, Pa , January 27, 1889-tf. "HANKING & COLLECTION OFFICE op McGIRK & PERKS, Successors to Foster. Perks, Wright A Co., Pbilipsbuko, Centre Co., Pa. Whore all th business of a Banxing House will be transacted promptly acd upon th most favorable terms. Morrh sn .r J.B.M'GIBK. ,wn B A CON, Hams, Sides and Shoulders at redueed pncs, ai MOSSOP'S. RUNES a quantity on hand and for sal at May 27. ORAUAM'S. SADDLES, Bridles, harness, collars Ae., slat MERKELL A BIGLER'S fcr "DEPORT OF Till: First-National K 7 fof Curwesvil!e. Pa , a hC book at th close of biwines. on th. A 7 1U October, It. V!h dy cf Loans and Discounts, ; - - . . Overdrafts. : : :::::'" U. S. Bonds deposited with ij 8 TJ-. to secure circulation. : : : Dee from Redeeming and Re serve Agent :::::-- Due from National Banks : : Due frum other Banks and Bankers, SI ftu M : 4 ' I' 2-5n ; 1 rfl ej : T in 1 a 1, : aw Danamg uouse. : : : : : -Kuriiitnre and Fixtures : ": ': ": '; ." Current Expenses : : :::'." Taxes Paid : : : : : -Cash Items (including stamps) Bills of other National Backs : : Fractional Currency (inducing nirkle"sl lteci. InftiDl : 1! t, Legal Tender Notes ; : ; ; Total, :r:::::: LIABILITIES. Capiusl stock paid in, : : : : burplasfund. ::::::; Discount : : : : : : : : Kxchange : : ; : : : Interest, : : : : : : ; Profit A Loss. : Nat. Bk. CiroulaKen eaitstaudlag. Individual Deposit, : r : : Duo National Banks. : : : : Du to other Banks and Banker Total Liabilities : : : : : Ml kv : is : it : M.S m : irn, M ni .ru u : t tit 11 : : 11 j v T . ... --1 A ..... 1. 1 P..V1.. .V 1? : - . al Bank of Curweasvill. Pa , do . .;, ,. that the above statement is tree, to the beat 4 my knowledge and belief. ri.VM'L ARNOLD. Casii,, Subscribed and sworn to befor ui tali day of October, lc!i9. Juki liui.J t Correct. Attest: Joum iitvm. B A.Invi. Wu. isvis. tree tor. Oat. 2t "REPORT of the condition of the Firs National Bank of Clearfield, Peua s t the close of business on tb. uth day of Oetcber,is6; - RSSllt'BCBi. Loans and discounts - - ... !-.. jj) Over Drafts ------- 5 ; j U. 6 Bonds deposited with Treasurer of C S. to secure circulation - - 108.000 00 V. S. Bonds and secureties on band 1.60k l Due from redeeming and reserve agents a O.'j S7 Due from other Nat Basks. .... 3,Nij Due from other Banks and Backers S 6s gi Furniture and Fixtures ..... 1,25 t Current Expenses ........ TvJt Taxes Pai.l -47 4i Cash Items including stamps - . - . -41,01-) Bills ot other Nat Banks ..... 109OI Fractional Currency (including nickels) :f ;j Legal Tender Notes It SUM Total YJ4V7 LIABILISMRS Capital Stock pid in, S100MOM Surplus Fund ......... 0 on (i Discount ...... .. .. i.soj it Exchanges lot Or Interest -- -3141 M Profit and loss Silt) Nat. Bk eiraalation entstanding - - & 773 is Individual Deposits, .... - - C 2H a4 Due to Nat. Batiks ...... . 1.141 fi Due other banks aud Bankers, - . I bN s Total Liabilities ...... "'l4 447 Irt I, A. C. Finney. Cashier of the First .Natictal Bank of CleatfieiJ. do solemnly swear tbat let abuv atateic.ct is tru t. It. best of mv knoil. edge aud belief. A. C Ft.NNat. Cub s Snhwrihed and sworn to liefora rntt IV ',m lfc day of October, A. D. 1PB9. nsi. riADbi.4.tMti, 3 t. Atteet: D. O NtVLiso. ) A. F.Bor.ir-.N; Directors. Joss. Bovstos. J Oct A DMINISTRATORS' NOTICE. -U-tors of Administration on ike euts of Cathariue Whitbtide. ls.te of Goelirh I. dc i, having been granted to the UKrciaee. as'.iM is hereby given tbat all persou? indcetttd I uii estate are required to mar. immediate (niarit, and tbose having claimsagainst the sams n f re sent them, properly authenticated ff r vttitsir to M W. J Ct'LLT. October 7. 1SC9 f t pd. Adia;rwr A DMINISTRATRIXis' NOTICE. -L trrs of A Jmiuir-tratiou ou the t itai of Jacb 6. Cole, iate of Lawrence Ljai. am i. having beeet granted to toe uudrrb!ee. aciitt J hereby given tbata!! peroD? in,WW;eil te mi m tate are required to ma' iinmxiuie paaal. and those hawrg . laims a&inst lb m itl present 1Uew, properly authenticated, fwt mi ment. to " S. A. O'Li. Sept. 22. lSbV-Ctp. AiuiiaUt:vux A DM IN ISTR ATOfVS NOTICE-Let-tors of aluiiuitration on tb ests:s"f Win. P.Alstoc. iate of Morris tusrokip. uroaid. having been granted to the undtrsijeed no tice is hereby given tit all perwes iaiiebiso tid estate are requested ti make istais lits fi ment. and those naving claiats agis the will present them, properly aatkeuncatr. fs settlement to ALKX. KAlT".N, ii Ait Y RALSTON. October 6. ln9-fitp Administrators UDITOR S NOTICE. The uniurjip ed an Auditor appointed bv the Or phans' Court of Clearfield roanry. to tasks I tritution of monies in the h-r,is of Cyretn lions and Charles loan. AiuiiEistrtor iJ Jacob (arhart. late of Morris tiwaliip. d'J. to and aruongst tho. legally eotit'e-1 thereto "ill dichare the duties ol bis appointtnuit at b: 'if fie in Clearfield, on THCKS1MV. THE 4th DAY OF NOVEMBKil next, whea and beraa!l lo gons interested may attend if lUry w projitr. Oct I.V60-3L D L. KKEUb, Anir. rplIIC WONDERFUL LINIMENT. This Liniment havini bca ucd, fef some years pastas fami'y modicin by us pr prietov, and its good effeow coming to the ei: of Lis neighbors, has. at their cuggeitios. seuted to mauulaotur it tor tee oeueui i -6 10 ted everywhere. It is tke best rsn-eJy LV.arrb and ilillious Chulie. ever offered t puoiio; an", win cure many o.eer ui-BM" - , human body. It is also a sure cure forPtUs" and Wind-galls in horses Directions for its accompany each bottle. Price. 31 per koine six bottles for S5. Eent to any ddr b.t MM iLg the price to WM II WAGONER Ilurd Pe!K.fl. Oct. fl. lR6i. Cleartiold "REGISTER'S NOTICE. -Notic L-b-re- CUIOILU O .U1 lUf.. .luuwi.- - l.y given that the following svecti'-' been examined and passed by m r"' , of record in tis otEee for the iuspecue have I filed comm'.ucing on the 2d Moa-iay of No"ittr. lttC : Final Account of A. S. Dickinson. AlminW tor de 4mm non cum trettimrnzo annexe ol ' Dickinson, late ef Beccaria township. d a Partial Account of sry Mullen E"00tr, j Thomas Mullen, late of Beccaria tLliip ,s Oct. 13, '9. A. W. LLE, R.ri" 0, YES! 0, YES.'! A GOOD FARM FOR SALE! Persons desirons of purchasing trm reeled to examine thai valuable properly f reuc township, and situate at tb ' Clearfield creek two miles Eft of the 0T"Jti of Clearfield, and convenient to sesooi. churches. Th. property contain. O.VT lWJB AXD TWEXTY A'Ul ES. part of b res proved aud under a high r.at. of '"; ti the wool, being well fenced. Coal, iron r other minerals ar found on th same- Tbe buildings consist of a good Trt'O- DWELLIXIS IIOUSE.isfr W-iti BARX. and other convenier.tootbnn" . ? ther is growing 00 th premises a yosoj orohard of choice fruit tree. This property is very pleasarsly ''"'''r, being at th oonfluenc of tbe erees for it is a very desirable and inviting reiil" . private family. It position on tne river also render it a good situatioa for a ig bouse during the rafting season. Th west and north sides of this prf r;J . bounded by th.ereek and river. si tbe bett rafting grounas in this ' such yields a handsom rreau year I The owner. Mr. M. A. Frank, hsvis. I nently settled in the west, is m ror(erisi.t,f ' posing of this valuable propertv. r" w t,nli t - : -.A Pi -t-r-j ciearoci". - ootcher o, io. heirs.legateN erditors.and all c.htrs in interested and will be presented u lbs "'"'' phans' Court of Cearfield couaty, to be '