Democrat and sentinel. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1853-1866, April 19, 1866, Page 2, Image 2

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    CLAKK "UlLSO:V,KUtor& Proprlelot.
EBENSBURG,. APBIL 19,:
:18GG.
von ciovEJiXon.
HIESTER CLYMER.
fcrj- School Directors stud ethers interested
should bear in mind, that at the last session
of the Legislature, the time for holding
Conventions for the election of County Su
perintendents, &c, was changed from the
tirst Monday to the first Tuesday in May.
See advertisement of County Superintendent
in another column.
The Vote on the Negro "Rights" Bill.
As ii matter of history we give below
the vote of the Bump House, on the 9th,
in '-'passing" the Negro "Civil Kights"
bill over the President's veto.
Yeas Messrs. Alley, Allison, Ashley
(Nevada,) Ashley (Ohio,) Baker, Banks,
Barker, Baxter, Beaman, Benjamin, Bid
well, Boutwell, Brandagee, Broomwell,
Bioomall, Buckland,Bundy,Clarke(Ohio,)
Clarke (Kansas,) Cobb, Conkling, Cook,
Culloni, Darling, Davis, Dawes, Defrees,
Delano, Deniing, Dodge, Dixon, Don
nelly, Eckky, Eggleston, Eliot, Farns
worth, Farquhar, Ferry, Garfield, Grin
nell, Griswold, Hale, Harding (III.,)
Hart, Hayes, Henderson, Higby, Hill,
Holmes, Hooper, Ilotchkiss, Hubbard
(Iowa,) Hubbard (W. Va.,) Hubbard
(Conn.,) Hubbell, (Ohio,) Hulburd, Hum
phrey (N. Y.,) Ingersoll, Jenckes, Kas
son, Kelley, Kelso, Ketcham, Lafiin,
Lawrence (Pa. ,) Lawrence (Ohio,) Loan,
Longyear, Lynch, Marston, Marvin, M'
Clurg, M'lndoe, M'Kee, M'Buer, Mercur,
Miller, Moorhead, Morrill, Morris, Moul
ton, My ers, Newell, O'Neill, Orth, Paine,
Patterson, Perhani, Pike, Plants, Pome
roy, Price, Rice (Mass.,) Bice (Me.,) Rol
lins, Sawyer, Schenek, SchofielJ, Shella
barger, Spaulding, Starr, Stevens, Thayer,
Thomas (Md.,) Thomas, Jr., (Md.,)
Trowbridge, Epson, Van Aernam, Van
Horn, Van Horn (Mo.,) Ward, Wash
burne (III.,) Washburnc (Ind .) Washburn,
(Mass.,) Welker, Wentworth, Wilson
(Iowa,) Wilson (Pa.,) Windoin, Wood
bridge and the Speaker 122 All Dis
union Republicans.
Xay-i Messrs. Ancoha, Bergen, Boyer,
Coffroth, Dawson, Dennison, Eldridge,
Einck, G lossbrenner, Harding, (Ivy.,)
II arris, Hogan, Hubbell (N. .,) Hum
phreys (N. Y.,) Latham, Le Blond, Mar
shall, M'Cullough, Niblack, Nicholson,
Noell, Phelps, Radford, Randall, Pa.,
Randall K. Y., Baymond, Bitter, Rog
ers, Boss, Rousseau, Shankhn, Sitgreaves,
Smith, Strouse, Taber, Taylor, Thornton,
Trimble, Whaley, Winfiold and Wright
11 All Democrats, except Mr. llay
mond. A. A. Barker, from this district, votes
disunion, as usual. He is impotent for
evil except in his vote, but he uses that
against the Union and his white constitu
ency on every occasion. I lis conduct is
infamous.
As in the Bump Senate, says the Pa
triot j- Union, the bill was declared "pass
ed" by less than the constitutional two
thirds majority of a full and lawful House,
of 239 members.
Voting for the bill 122
Voting for the veto. 41
t ffor the bill 12
Absent .,-.,. 0
jtor the veto 8
Southern members excluded, 50
134 105
Tt will be seen that, out of a full House""
of 239 members, the Disunionists have
cast lut 2 votes more than one-half 1 19
of the whole number lacking thirty-seven
and one-third 37 votes of the requisite
tiro-thirds ! 1 59 . E ven had their twelve
absent fellows voted they would have wan
ted twenty-five and one-third votes of the
all essential two thirds ! And -et the in
iquitous bill is declared "passed !"
To have passed the bill fairly and le
gally it would have required 2C out of 50
excluded votes from the eleven Southern
States a number which the Disunionists
well knew, long ago, they could never se
cure fwr such outrageous negro-suffrage
and equality legislation.
There are hundreds of thousands of
good men in the Northern States who are
hopeful that President Johnson will de
clare such "legislation" revolutionary and
so pernicious as to warrant him in com
pletely ignoring it. Not only is this their
hope, but it is their prayer, and they will
sustain him in such a course with their
blood and lives, if need be.
The President's recognition of the le
gality of the Bump Congress in matlersof
less weight; that were not unconstitu
tional ; and which were not, as is this
bill, swecpingly subversive of both State
and Federal Constitutions, cannot be cited
ugainst him in the event of such a course.
He i bound by oath and duty to sustain
the Government. Can he do so while
the Disunionists are allowed perfect free
dom in battering it down ? Shall he wait
for the Supreme Court to act a Court
hostile to him and presumed to be in the
disunion interest? Shall he stand idly
awaiting the decision of that legal engine,
unn, by the same illegal process by which
this bill was passed over his veto, he shall
have been impeached and hurled from his
position ? Wculd that be right ? Is that J
his duty to himself or his country? We
think not. Desperate diseases require
desperate cures. The life of the nation
and its Constitution are paramount so
the Disunionists taughf. us to all other
considerations. They will certainly not
demur at taking a little of their own
physic now, since they have got at "the
other end of the line." A little more of
Chandler's "blood-letting" may purify the
moral atmosphere, and teach traitors in
high places that our Constitutions State
and Federal shall not be overthrow, and
that the Union Flag shall emblazon upon
its field NOT ONE LESS THAN THIRTY-SIX
STAItS, !
Tiiadeus Stevenj- Ilarpci's IVeeJily,
which has hitherto advocated the peculiar
politics of Thaddeus Stevens with much
bitterness, has recently shifted its ground,
and gives in a late issue the following
sketch of the leader of the Badicals :
He Mr. Stevens is strictly a revolu
tionary leader, reckless, unsparing, vehe
ment, vindicate, loud for the rights of
conquerors, intolerant of opposition, and
as absolutely incapable of fine disci imina
tion and generous judgment as a locomo
tive of singing. Of a pleasant humor
and personal kindliness, he is no more fit
ted for the task of reconstruction which
devolves upon Congress than a jovail
blacksmith to repair a watch, or "a
butcher to take up hidden arteries and
sundered veins in the very region of the
heart." Yet a Congress, which is un
doubtedly one of the ablest that was ever
assembled, has quietly allowed itself to be
almost a puppet in the hands of such a
man and at such a time. The conse
quence is that Mr. Steven's crude and
rash talk is supposed to be the voice of
Congress. A legislator who undertakes
to regulate the price of gold by law is the
tacitly acknowledged chief of a body of
practical business men. A representa
tive who sneers at the press is a per
mitted leader in a party created and tri
umphant by free discussion.
It is one of the marvels of the time that
no man known as a Badical has vindica
ted the party and. the country against Mr.
Stevens. Yet nothing is more
certain than that the calm, good sense of
the great Union party has strongly con
demned the views and policy of Mr. Ste
vens. "A Blxch of Fives." Geo. Wilkes,
of the Spirit of the Times, the organ of
horse-racers,gambIers and shoulder-hitters,
quacks at the President in the following
style :
"But if no adjustment shall be made,
and the President, ignoring Congress, shall
press on the issue which we have fore
shadowed, we give him warning that the
muskets which now hang in honored ease
in every houshold north of the Potomac,
may soon be hurriedly unslung, and a ru
mor pass throughout the land which may
break into the roar of battle before this
year has closed."
It would be strange, indeed, if the men
who perilled their lives through four years
of warfare to restore the Union and main
tain the Constitution, should join with the
plunderers and demoniac fanatics in des
troying that very Union and Constitution.
Wilkes must mean the John Brown mus
kets and the arms which the Hartford
Conventionista prepared for a Northern re
bellion, but which, through cowardice,
were put away and ever since have been
hanging in dis-"honored ease." They are
not dangerous neither are the plunderers
who might chance to be their carriers in a
war against the President and the Union.
Patriot ij- Union.
The Gazette is fearful the Supreme
Court, will at once take up and decide the
Civil Bights Bill, unconstitutional, and
warns the people they have much to fear
from the Judiciary. It may be these
Judges are very corrupt as charged, for
they arc nearly all Republicans, at least
two-thirds are, and we would not feel dis
appointed if they made monstrous decis
ions. Yet in recent important decisions
affecting the rights of the peeple, there is
manifested a higher order of statesman
ship, a more comprehensive grasp of the
true principles of government, than can be
found in either branch of Congress of the
same politics. This thing of channn"'
treachery and corruption upon every body
who does not agree with the destructives
is about played out. Pittsburgh Post.
Mrs. Geary Ought to Know. A
gentleman who recently met the excellent
lady of General Geary at Ilarrisburg,
tells us that Mrs. G. seemed highly elated
over the nomination of her husband for
Governor. "But," said she, "I do not
understand why the Bepublicar.s nomina
ted General Geary. He has always been
a Democrat and is yet." Mrs. Geary
certainly ought to know the nature of
John's politics. But the truth is, he
would have been willing to be the Demo
cratic candidate for Governor, if the Con
vention had asked him, but as nobody
except Mr. S. Maguire proposed such a
thing, he cheerfully accepts a nomination
from the other side.
fcy General R. E. Lee's name does not
appear on the list of Gonerals who appli
ed to the President for pardon.
NEWS ITEMS.
IS James Ilammill, of Pittsburgh, will
sail on the 21st for England, where he is
to meet the English champion oarsman,
Kelly, in an international sculling and
rowing match
C3- Fred. Douglass, after an interview
with President Lincoln, remarked that
"Mr. Lincoln was the first white man he
ever passed an hour with, who failed to
remind him, in some way, before the in
terview terminated, that he was a ne
gro!'" Tiik report that Mrs. Jefferson Davis
is or ha3 been recently in Washington is
incorrect. She is now in New York on
her way to Canada, by permession, to
visit her children who are at school in
that Province.
The people of Nashville are nobly re
sponding to the call for food from Ala
bama's starving poor. The Chamber of
Commerce, Churches, sporting men, all
have come forward with money, flour,
meats and corn.
At the recent election in Madison,
Wisconsin, thirty-five negroes exercised
the right of suffrage under the receut de
cision of the Supreme Court of that
State ; but the Democratic ticket was suc
cessful notwithstanding.
C3" A girl, not fourteen years of age,
died recently in Smithfield, N. Y., from an
overdose of arsenic, which she had been
taking in large quantities for a series of
weeks in order to improve her complex
ion. It is said that the reported case of
cholera in Delancey street, New York,
was in' fact nothing more nor less than a
case of poisoning.
Some excitement has been caused in
Washington by the discovery, within a
few days, of some gold quartz, about
fourteen miles from the city, on the Poto
mac. The Macon Telryraph says that there
are forty-three thousand negroes and up
wards led at the expense of the govern
ment in Georgia, and that in all the
Southern States the number exceeds four
hundred and thirty-four thousand thus
fed.
The United States Counsulat Halifax
reports that one hundred and thirty addi
tional deaths have taken place among the
passengersrff the England, being an addi
tion to the forty that occurred during
the voyage.
C- Henry Gardiner member of the
12th United States infantry, has been
convicted of murdering an old man at
Elmira, New York, named Muleck, and
sentenced to be hanged on the 1st of
June next.
Great destitution is reported to exist
among the citizens of Marshall county,
Ala. Many are in a starving condition.
It is said that three persons recently died
there from absolute want, and thousands
must perish unless quick relief is furnish
ed them.
A supposed accomplice in the late mur
der in Philadelphia was arrested in Lon
don, C. W., on the lGth inst. He gives
the name of Charles McCutcheon.
E3" A horrible murder was committed
in Richmond County, Va. , on the 3d inst.
A man by the name of Julius Hall went
into the kitchen where a colored woman
and her three children were and with an
axe killed them all. It is supposed that
his mind was deranged at the time the
deed was committed.
A few months ago "No Prefix" Geary
declined a nomination because "The
wealth which it seems necessary for the
candidate to possess is not mine." As he
has since accepted, the question now ar
ises where has the wealth come from ?
Who knows ?
The Democracy of Toledo, Ohio, car
ried the late city election by 325 majori
ty. Last year the Kepnblican majority
was 529. Democratic gain 854. ! The
10th Congressional district, misrepresented
by the notorious Ashley, will bo redeemed.
The Democrats of Fort Wayne, Indi
ana, carried their spring election by 700
majority the largest majority ever polled
there. In the adjoining townships the
Democratic gains have been from fifty to
seventy-five.
1ST Mr. Davis, Senator from Kentucky,
said something last week which Sumner
didn't like. It is therefore intimated that
he must be Stocktonized. The next vic
tim in the House is said to be Mr.
Dawson. What a pretty lot of prece
dents the Disunionists are making for the
Democracy to carry home to them in a
couple of years ! Won't their faces be
wry when they shall be made to swallow
their own sauce ?
The Charleston Tribune makes the
statement that, contrary to all previous re
ports, there is no demand for labor in the
West. It says hundreds of laborers have
been sent on these wild goose chases to
the Upper Missouri from St. Louis and
Chicago. The Intelligence offices are at
the bottom of the knavery.
In Charleston, South Carolina, a few
days ago, a lot of negro "soldiers" at
tempted to rescue a drunken and disor
derly negro from the authorities, and in
the riot which ensued several persons were
injured, among the number Air. Walker,
the British Council, who was passing at
the time. A squad of white soldiers fi
nally arrested twenty-five of the rioters
and restored order.
gtmocrat anb j?tntincl.
EXMT1 CF BOQSER AID IWil
Inasmuch a we intend to delay our pa
per until Friday evening, the day fixed for
the execution of Booser and Ilouser, who
have been tried and convicted of the mur
der of Polly Paul and Catharine Munday,
we commence our report on Thursday at
noon on the information in our possession,
and will continue it until the termination
of the sad scene.
IiOOSER'S CONFESSION.
Booser, one of the condemned murder
ers, on the evening of Tuesday, the 10th
instant, just previous to his attempt to
commit suicide, wrote and placed in the
hands of Bev. Wilson, of the Presbyterian
Church, his spiritual adviser, the follow
ing letter, with directions that it should be
opened and read on Wednesday :
Eisensdl-ko, Apr. 9th, 1800.
Mr. Wilson : They think they have
the odcs that done this deed, but God for
bid. They have not. Those that done
this are far away. Now, good sense and i
reason will tell you that we are not the
men, and in particular poor Houser. He
don't know anything about it whatever.
You will bear in mind I have always told
you that we had no hand in killing thoso
poor women, and I tell you so again.
We had no hand in killing them. I will
tell you, though, what I did do ; I givo
to George Blanchard my draft or map.
He lost the one he had. He had one of
the same kind as mine, and he told me he
lost his in the woods, and if he lost his the
time he was up here or not I cannot say.
He got out (of the penitentiary) before I
did, and he knew of the thing as well as
I, and I met him on Troy Hill on Sun
day, the 21st day of May, and he wanted
to know if I was going to come up here.
I told him that I had sworn off going on
the cruise and he wanted me to give him
my map, but I did not give it to him.
Then we set to meet again on the first of j
June, and again on the Cth, and on the !
afternoon of the Cth, I gave him my man. I
Now I will tell you that the men that j
were seen by James Cooper, they were
the ones. They had a carpet-sack, but no
box. Now, Mr. Wilson, the time that
Mrs. Graham saw us go away was on the
15th of June; then we had started for Oil
City. Now, please take notice I made it
my business to stay in Allegheny from the
second of June till the 9th, because I did
know that the robbery was to go on on
the 7th of June. Now you see that I
was at home at the time, and I done all
this behind poor Ilouser's back. So you
see he don't know anything of the matter
whatever. lie is innocent indeed, and as
for being up here hunting is all a humbug,
for I know it the best. He never was up i
here in all his life till the Sheriff fetched .
him here. This is the honest truth. !
And now if Mary Miller can recollect that
I told her I had to go to Pittsburgh on the
Gth of June, to meet a man. I went on
the Cth, 7th and 8th, for I was to meet
him Blanchard from his returj), but I
have not seen him since, and I never
heard anything of the robbery. I bought
the German paper, and I never found any
thing in it, and I thought he gave it up
and had not done anything.
Daniel Booser.
Booser acknowledged to thelheriff and
other persons, that he was implicated to
some extent, in the murder and robbery ;
that he furnished Blanchard ami his ac
complice with a draft of the roads, &c,
leading to the house of the victims, and j
that the real murderers and robbers were
to share the profits with him ; that the
draft was drawn from information obtain
ed from Philip Fulgert, while in the Pen
itentiary ; but he has alva3's contended
that Ilouser had no knowledge of the
murder or robbery.
application fou a respite.
On the strength of these declarations of
Booser, efforts were made by a number
of our citizens to have a respite granted to
Ilouser ; but up to Thursday at noon
their efforts have proved unavailing.
VENITANCE OF THE PRISONERS.
Ilouser has acted like a penitant man
ever since his conviction, "and appears to
have been endeavoring to make his peace
with his God. Bev. Christy of the Cath
olic church has been visiting him regu
larly.
Booser, until a few days ago, had been
visited occasionally by Bev. Wilson, of
the Presbyterian church, but manifested
a wicked disposition apparently regard
less of God or man. On Tuesday morn
ing he sent for Bov. Christy, who on
Wednesday baptised him, since which
time he and other Catholic Priests have
been with him almost constantly. The
convict, it is said, has become very peni
tant, seems to be repenting of his sins ;
prays almost incessantly, and is appa
rently at this lato day endeavoring to pre
pare himself for the fearful fate which
awaits him.
THE PREPARATIONS.
On Thursday evening the gallows and
scaffold, entire new structures, have been
erected, ropes and coffins prepared, and all
necessary preparations made for the exe
cution and disposition of both Booser and
Houser.
CONDUCT OF THE PRISONERS.
Friday at noon, April 20 Bev. B. C.
Christy and Rev. Giles Christoph wore
engaged in prayer with the prisoners dur
ing several hours last night and this fore
noon. Ilouser appears to be mucli dis
tressed at the fearful fate which awaits
him, while Booser seems to look upon the
execution as a common business transac
tion, and talks to and endeavors to recon
cile Ilouser to his fate.
THE GUARD.
A guard of armed men was placed
around the jail about 10 a. m., on Friday.
THE CROWD.
Contrary to the expectation of our cit
izens, and to the credit of the people, the
crowd in town up to the hour of execution,
is quite small not exceeding 300 or 100
visitors. Beporters for the press of Pitts
bugh, Greensburg, Johnstown and Eb
ensburg are present, and are to be admit
ted to witness the execution. At the time
the execution came off not more than liftv
persons were about the jail.
THE PRISONERS ON THE SCAFFOLD.
At twelve o'clock precisely the two
prisoners were brought on the scaffold
by the Sheriff and his assistants, accompa
nied by their spiritual advisers; the ropes
were then properly adjusted.
The prisoners whispered something to
their spiritual advisers, but said nothing
concerning their guilt or innocence that
could be heard by others.
the drop.
The arms and legs of the prisoners were
pinioned, the caps were drawn over their
faces, "and-at 11 minutes past 12 o'clock
the drop fell and they were suspended in
the air.
HOW THE PRISONERS DIED.
Booser after being suspended at the end
of the rope struggled for a few minutes
but Ilouser died without a struggle.
The bodies remained suspended for
forty-one minutes when they were pro
nounced lifeless, cut down and placed in
the collins. They are now being remo
ved to the place of burial.
BURIAL OF QUE BODIES.
Graves have been dug and the bodies of
both Booser and Ilouser are to be interred
in the Catholic cemetry one large grave
has been prepared for the reception of both
bodies.
At half past one o'clock the bodies arc
being consigned to the crave.
CCJ- Wo direct attention to the card of Dr.
J. C. Wilson, in another column. The doc
tor, previous to locating here practiced for
a considerable length of time in Armstrong
ccunty, and acted as Assistant Surgeon of
the 1200th Pa. Rejziment.
Dentistry. Dr. J. M. McClure of
Johnstown, is at present in this place, at
the Ebensburg House, on professional bus
iness, and will remain until Saturday the
2Sth instant. The Doctor will visit Lo
retto on the 30th instant, and remain for
a few days. Persona in those localities
desiring dental operations will do well by
calling on him.
Suicide. Nicholas Keim, a citizen of
Addison tp. , Somerset county, on the 2d
inst., committed suicide by shooting him
self. CwT Mr. P. Markey, of Conemaugh
borough, has lately lost two fresh milk
cows, by being killed on the railroad.
Each cow was worth about seventy dol
lars. The last one was killed last week.
t$ If you wish to procure a life-like
likeness of yourself or any of your friends,
call at the room of W. II. MTntire, on
Centre street, formerly occupied by W
S. Stiles.
A little negro boy twelve or thirteen
years of age, was brought to tow n from
Johnstown on Thursday evening and lodg
ed in jail charged with intentionally shoot
ing and wounding a white boy while out
hunting with him a few days ago.
We are happy to inform our readers
that Michael Sypher, Esq., has been ap
pointed postmaster at Nippenose in this
county. Mr. S. is a staunch Democrat,
and universally admired for his candor
and honesty. A better selection could
not have been made. Williumsport Dan
ocrat.
Office holders in this part of tho State
will please read, and preserve for refer
ence.
THC M4IKKETS.
Ebensblrg, April 19th, 1800. Com
is selling at $1.00 per bushel ; Butter, 3.3
cents per pound; Eggs, 20c per d.zn .
Beans, Si. 25 and 1.50 per bushel
Onions, Si. 50 ; Flaxseed, $2.50 ; Tim.
othysccd, 3.50; Cloverseed, S8.00 :
Coffee, 33 and 35c per pound ; Molasses
90c per gallon ; Syrup, Si. 25 and l.4Q-'
Brown Sugar, 12 to 10c per pound; 1
White, 20 to 22c; Bice, 15c ; Wool. 40
and 50c ; Flour 10.50 to 11.50 per bar
rel :
The following report of the Philad.-l-phia
Markets, is copied from the Satunliy
Kveniny Pout, dated April 21, 1800:
Flour and Meal The market con
tinues very lirm. Sales 0000 bbls, chicly
Northwestern extra family, at 'j ar"j
9,50 per bbl, including 100 bbls ULio
do at 10, and some fancy lots from ll
to 14. 100 bbls Bye Four sold at S i,.
75. Smalt sales superfine Flour are ma
king at 5,75 and 7, and extra at from
7,25 and 8.50 per bbl.
Grain Wheat continues scarce, wi:h
sales 39.000 bus, including comiaoii r. J
at 2 and 2,10 ; fair to good at 2.2-)
and 2,40, and prime and choice do a:
.2,45 and 2,50 per bus, and small 1
of whitest 2,40 and 2,S0 per bu, a
to quality. Bye 1 800 bus sold at 90 and
92c per bus for Penna. Corn; about
10,000 bus sold v.t from 77 and 80c for
prime yellow, and 1 200 bus white at 75 e
per bus. Oats About 15,000 bus SuIJ
in lots at from 5 I and 00c per bus.
Provision.- The market continue
very quiet. Small sales are making at
27 per bbl for new Mess Pork ; 2u ai.J
21c for Bacon Hams; 17 and ISo f,r
pickk-d I lams: 11 and llic for sa;t
Shoulders, and 1S.V and lSc" per lb f.r
Lard. Butter ; solid packed sells at fvrj
2S and 50c, and roil at from 50 and 02i
per lb, accord inc to quality. Ezgs are in
fair demand at 24 and 25c per dozen.
Groceries Su'jar is less active, 2 CO
l.hds of Cuba sold at from 8 and 1 ' t0
per lb in gold, as to quality, and 15 hhds
Porto Rico at I2!2c per lb currency. Bio
Coffee sells in a small way at 20 aal
20.c per lb in gold.
Seed Prime Cloverseed is in de
mand ; 2000 bus sold, in lot?, at from 4
and 5,75 per bus for common to prmp.
Timothy is in dcmai. l at 1,50 per b'is.
Flaxseed sell? at 2,50 and 2,00 per
bus.
Wool Th maiket has been more ac
tive ; sales reach about 200,000 lb?, in
lots, at prices rannin; from 58 and GO por
lb for full blood, 5o and 5Sc for three
quarter blood, 53 aiK1. 55c for half bk- J,
10 and 49c for quarter, 40 a:.d 45c for
common, and 47 and 50c for tub. as tj
quality.
Live Stock. The supply of Beef Cat
tle during the past week amounted
about 2100 head. The prices reallz i
from 10 and lO'c per lb. 150 Cows
brought from 50 to S0 per LeaJ.
Sheep 10,000 head were disposed of a:
from 7 and S.c per lb. 1100 Hog? fJ.i
it from 13,00 and SI4,50 per 100 iU
The following report of the Pittsburgh
markets is copied from the Post of iL
ISth instant :
Butter, 40, 45 and 50c per pounJ.
.ggs, 25 and 2Gc per dozen ; Wheat.
l,o and SI, SO per bushel ; Bye, 7:c
Corn, Go. I and 04 : Sugar Cured IIa.;.
20 and 21c per pound : Potatoes, Sl."J'
and 1,30 per bushel; Flour, sS,7o.
9, 10 and 11 per barrel.
Horrible MViider. A most ternl'
murder was discovered in Philadelphia c
Wednesday, the 1 1 th. Christopher 1 ::"
ing and family, comprising eight per-
in all, residing in the "Neck," some c
tance below the Navy-Yard, were four-
dead, having been brained with an as;
It is supposed that the murder was c -
mitted on the Saturday previous, and th
plunder was the object, as the house Lr:
been ransacked. A German, who w.i;:'
Mr. Deering's employ, is suspected '
committing the murder, and has been a
rested. He confesses to murdering a b.'
but said an accomplice murdered the v.her
A Democratic Victory. Willisr
Corwin, Democrat, was elected Mayer.
Lambertsvillc, New Jersey, on the l vr
by 08 majority a Democratic gain or
The insult put upon New Jersey by
expulsion of Senator Stockton has iiifus4-
fresh life into the Democracy, and the re
suits are seen in all parts of the State j
the recent election. i
Saturday April 14th, was observe-
by order of the President in Washing:
A journal of that city says of the oecr..-."
'"It offers an opportunity to recail -past,
with its ten thousand admoni'.i "
to revive the responsibilities of the
ent, and to prepare with stern resolve '-:
the mysterious ordeal of the future.'
The order of the President to -heads
of departments to give preterm
to soldiers in their appointments cm!'.':'--'
only ichite soldiers. We are assured :
others need apply.
There was never so much crim'
Vermont as now, and the officers
that four-fifths of it is to be attribute
liquor. One county has fifteen crinK
who will be sent to State Prison.
3" President Johnson has appw
the bill appropriating 800,000
burse the State of Pennsylvania