Jolly Ohio. YR. PENDLETON'S REMTAIgCS AT TIlE CIN CINNATTI JOLLIFICATION. 'Mr. Pendleton. on nearing the front of the platform, was welcomed with round after round of hearty applause. lie said : M!I' Fellow-Citizens--It d oes one's heart good to witness a scene like this. [Rcnewed cheers]. It is very proper that powder should be burned, that rockets should rise, that fires should iunr and illuminate to testify that our hcarts heat quicker and our blood flows more rapidly at the results of the last electiou. [Great cheering]. It w as not my good fortune to be able to take part as nmuch as usual in the canvass. But I made a little speech at Mozart Hiall one night, as some of you will re memlwr, and I want you now to bear ine witness that I told the people of Cincinnatti the truth here-as I always desire to do-when I said that William Al in would be the next Governor of Ohio. [Cheers]. As I came up to this meeting, this evening, I met an old Re publican friend of mine. lie was not in a very good humor. [Cries of "I guess not," and laughter]. He said he did not know what we had to rejoice about or whom we had to congratulate. I told him if he would but come up and listen to-night that I and others would answer that question. We rejoice to-night, my fellow-citi zens, because we believe that the peo ple of Ohio have done a patriotic duty, and have done it so wisely and so well that its results will inure to the benefit of the whole country. We rejoice be cause the people of Ohio have set the seal of their condemnation upon fraud, corruption and the general demorali zation of our public affairs. We rejoice because the people of Ohio have re buked that general want of high toned integrity which has manifested itself in salary bills, Credit Mobilie, and otl er corruptions. We rejoice becamus' the people of Ohio have said that they have lost enfllence in and will not trust the destiny of our State to a party which is foundled in unsound principles and tainted with corrupt practices. We re joice be-cause the people of Ohin have said they have confidence in alnd will trust the destiny of the State to the party which we believe is sound in piineiple and whose crowning glory it has always been to maintain purity in iegislation and lhonestt" in adnuinistra tion. Ahove all, my friends, we re joice that this triumph has beeno sccn red to us in the person of an able, emi nent, honest and distinguished states man, whose sagacily, judgement and patriotism wil! be exerted to enable us to use power so that, while serving the eonntry, we will insure and extend the saccess of the I)emocratic party. And whom shall we congratulrte 7 To whom shall we give thanks ? Gen tiemen, we can give thanks to and congrat!late the young men of t h e State who have for the first time cast their votes, and who, in spite of abuse, in spite of dectraction and enmity, have fouilwed their own noble instincts and impulses, and have allied themselves to a party which, in all its history, in all its acts, in all the power it has exer cisedl; has been true to itself, to liber ty, and to the country. [At this point the speaker was inter rupted by loud cheering on the out skirts of t he crowd, and continued cheering and laughter as a novel "Bill Alle"' te'am made its way throngh tlhe densu mass to the front of the stand. The te:am was drawn by a yoke of creant.colored oxen. Tile wagaon con tained a crowd of good-natured Demo crats, a bag-pipe, and a large National banner.] The speaker resumed: I say we have great reason to con - gratulate the young men who voted with us, and we also congratulate those Republicans whilo, convinced of the maladministration of their own party, have had tie patriotism and nerve ta leave th eir organziation and trust themselves to the promises, the profes iOns and to the acts of their ancient adversaries. And, gentlemen, there is another class of mea whom we may thank andl c.lgrrtalate. I speak of the old line Democrats. I speak of the men who, amid the disastrous defeats of the past, have always kept the fiaith as it was lhanmled down to na by our fathers. I speak of the men who ill twenty years of disastel have never lost confidence, have never lost courage in hope, but kept their arms burnished and their spears bright. I speak of men who are satisfied always to do their du y as patriots and leave the rest to the people and to God. And let us never forget, let us remember to-night in the midst of our victory, in the moment of our rejoicing. that victory brings with it responsibility, a n d power brings with it duty. Let us show all the world, show so plainly that even the blind shall see aad the deaf hear, that the Democrat ic party has been purified in the fires of political misfortune. That in the discipline of the last fifteen years it has gained strength, nerve, purity, honesty. And that now, more than ever, it has an aspiration for a loftier, honester, and a more exalted patriot ism. Let us show by the wisdom of our legislation, by the purity of our administration, that our highest ambi tion is to serve the people, and our greatest efforts to do them good. Let as show to the Republicans who aae dissatisfied with their party that they have a safe refuge in our party. Let us show to the "People's' party that we are the true party of reform, and if they want to establish purity and hontesty the way to do it is to return to their old seats within the Democratic home. If we do this, if we show that the Democratic party is neither dead nor useless, but imbued with hope, strangth, activity, courage, and patri otism, we wfll gather them all in. This is our opportunity. I beg the Democratid party, and each of you, gentleman, in hi s own particular sphere, to see that we use our power wisely. If we do, the movement that was commenced in Ohio on Tuesday last will, day by day, appeal to the honest men of all parties, and all slhades of opinion, till it will form an overwhelming mass, by which we shall achieve a victory that will se cure to us the power of the Federal Government, restore to you a pure ad ministration, and bring back to our people a return of the days when we will again live in fraternal peace, blessed by a government whose char acteristics shall be honeskty and purity. [Lond and long contilued applause, and cries of "You shall be our next President."] A FOSSLLIFEIOLUS TltlUMPlr.-T lie Republican designates Governor Allen, of Onio, an old fossil-a Democratic fossil. This suggests the inquiry, how a Democratic fossil could achieve a victory in a strongly Republican State -a victory which all other comnbiia ti:onls have heretofore failed to achieve I It is a fair assumption that a man w lho is elected by the people represents their will, their preference, their ideas. The electors of a fossil nmest therefore le fossiliferous in their character and nature. Does t he great progressive community of Ohio deserve to be class ed as a fossilized, petrified population ? If so, a very remailrkrable chahle hIas swept over this great State, which has1 hitherto been the favorite honie and arena of exreme Radicalism. It is a marvelous revolution. Ilow can it le accoenluted for Hlave nlew lhingis, new idetlas, and new men le comIe so distasteful atnd unreliable to this hitherto so progressive and enter. prising pecple If so, coubl! th.:::. !h SiC,,t:g-" "er"ict of conlldemnateon of thee party which has originated these new idens tihan the admlission that an anlcient fossil was preferable to the freshest atnd most ligorons represents tives of those ideas T--[N. O. Herald. Ax AnrxINsTRATrox OIGAN CrITI cre:s BOCTWELL -Says thile Washing ton (22) special of the St. Lonis Repub lican : The evening Administrationl or gan Ilhere is becoming more fearless and outspoken in its commenttes pon tile leading mIen among the faitihful Radi cal sulpporters of the Adluinistration. (It says editorially this evening: "Just as every old woman hii as a certalinl 'emledy, or thinks shle has, for toothl aclhei' rliielim:tism an d other tnm an aillents, so every pulblic nman 1has 1 his pet in financial theories, whicl ifadnop led will, in his opin ion, bring about ti g n ae ell wheen everybody will Ie able to buy clheap antd sell dear.-- Wages will be high and produice low, and black Fridays and flitncial panics and recvllsinnS will ble unk:iown. e. Secretary of thile T'1reasury Boetweli is the vetry latest statesanilin to give the ietllic his views on this illnpertlntt sllb ject, anId as hie had experliellce inii thliat lhirec'tion Ilis opinio:ils alre Centitled to mnore weight tlhanl are those of' niost of the woutll-Le wise nlen whlose rellities woeld lie worse than tlie disease." The Outrage in Grant Parish. Additional particulars bave been received which fasten the Lacour outrage in Grant parish, upon one' "Hamp" Henderson, a former slave, and of late years the confi dential agent, foreman, friend, and associate of Tom, Peter, John and D)enny Hickman, who own a plan tation about twelve miles below Colfax, on the river bank. These; brothers have been known for years' as bad characters, and the colored man, from his intimate association with them has become permeated with their pecul;ltrties. He iS known to all the neighbors around as a desperado, a wicked, danger-' ous man. His brutality has led him' for years to be shunned by the col ored men of the parish and dreaded by the women. He is an open andt avowed D)emocrat, always voting that ticket along with his friends, the Hickmans, and was unqualified in his expressions of ill-will toward those of his race who espoused the Republican cause. In 1867 he committed a terrible outrage upon the persoa of a young colored woman on the plantation, whom he then killed an.t bur:ed in a ditch in the field. The matter was investigated before Jtudge Rutland at the time, but the wit nesses and others were so intimi, dated by Hickman that nothing was done in the matter, although the crime and the crimtinal were notorious in the neigh lorhood. Latterly, at the time of the April riot, "Hiu'p" took an active paitt with his friends, the 1lici'nans, in the Colfaix massacre. lie belonged to a party who were stationed at a certain point to cut offH the retreat, of the negroes. When the Ozark reached Alex. andria the Hickman brothers-a-;l but Peter, who had a1ready flted to Texas-mounted their lhorsets and made their escape. "nlamp" te mained behind, seized the oplpor tunity to commit a terrible crime upon the person of a relative of a man olbnoxious to the lpohltit-al desperadoes of the lpuarisli for hlit identity with the Republican ltiarty. His fiendish lust andt- diabolical hatred alike gratified, lie probabltl overtook the IHicknrans on thi-ir journey, and is.safe alike from the enraged colored people of Grant and the militiamen, who at last ae counts were seek'ng his hiding place. He is so well known ini that country as an enemy of lI:Ipubhli cans that prominent Fusionists have doubtless passed hinm aionug to a place of safety, where he and his comrades aredoubtless gloa ting in the political capital they have made against the Metrlpolit.tans and the colored people of Grant parish. But it makes no difference what are the political preferences of the .!!!.:: o. co,, m.its ,such a dleedt of villiany. The enforcement of law and the security of life and prop erty are more imtportant thani all other considerations. Had thtis most cruel outrage been conmmittedtl by men under tihe control or withint reach ot Captain Loan or Uolo nel DeKlyne, the penalty wouil have followed the crimte as surely as the night the day; and if the man who did do it is not brought to punishment by the authorities, it will be because they are not properly sustained by the Demto crats of that section, who Ipermit their political ilTeferences to warp them from their allegiance to the commonwealth.--[N. -0. .Rel)ubli cau. I Fine Candies and Fruits always on hand at J, Levin's, Confectioner, uu der Town Hall.  I. ,4m,.oen--.-- --- .% _Fresh CAKEs cat be had every lday by calling on J. Levin, Coifection er, un-lr Toirn nail. Death of a lHeroiue. We have already stated that Mattie Stephenson, a brave Illinois girl, only seventeen years old, when site heard in her home of the fearful ravages ot the'pest in Memlphisi and that nurses were lacking, at once without consul ting her parents or friends, started for the death-stricken city, and on arriv ing there at once reported to the IIow ards for duty. Dr. Blackburn their chief physician, gave her that night the care of a woman stricken with the fever and thereby bronght to a premna ture conlinement. She was only on duty in this unselfish, devoted spirit, unsing the sick and attending on the dying, though totally nalacclstomned to such work, for two weeks, when she was herself taken dewn with the fever. The modest girl was, unknown to her self, the object of profound admliration and respect, even from stern, gray headed old men and the roughest wo men. She was nursed and tended, therefore, with the most assiduous care and tenderness, but her frail body overstrained, doubtless, by the labor and trials she had endured, yielded to the disease, and on the 17th she died, and was buried on the 18th. The Memphlis papers all pay the most touching tributes of regret for this good and gentle iniden's untime ly fitle. We cannot refrain firom gir ing space to some passages of the Ap peia's pathetic sketch: When it was annonuced at the How ard Association rooms on Madison street that the little girl was dead, a pang of sorrow pervaided every heart, and preparations were at once wlade to follow her remains to the crowded city of the dead. The Ileroi,.e had arrived here with out a change of garments, and her wardrobe wao on her person, or in a Jlittle satchel she bronght. She de dlined any pay for her duty, and re I used to accept articles otfere:l in the way of clothing. So, writing back htotn for a few needied articles, a box was sentl by express in return, which onlly caine here; day before yesterday, when shite was too low to know any thing of it. Yesterday, in presence of ole tor two persons, Mr. Langstat' opceed the package to find, if possible, sitne tr:,ce of the girl's history. A couple of clean, plain calico dresses, somule lllffs, a few garments of unde.r wear. several pack;es of nick-:acks, evidentlly ,ut up by tiny hands of loved kindired for their angel of mercy to distrihbte among the sick, these were all the box contained, and they were all carefully repacked and laid sidtle, w'hile the bystanders shed tears, lanl tll ned away in silence. T' l e Ilowards passed approlriate lihonors to her memory. As the solemn tnllier:l procession piased throngh tile streets, the people looked on in reve rt ut silence. A. the grave, the Rev. I !Mr. iDogus,said: I must not trespass upon the precious time consecrated to the humane task of caring for the living. Yon of the Ilowaid Association may no t linger e\en by a spot so hallowed as the grave of this brave and tender woman. I saw her but once, and under the most try illng circunlstlanees to which a modest girl could be phiced. It was in the chamber of a victimi of this fearful scourge, who lhad been hurried by it into the pangs of mniotherhood. Terror had broken the tendereut ties of life. Men had nerved themselves to face tihe danger by strong drink; women, (ti, erwise so ready with tlheir sympllathy iand aid in that hour of agony, whose bitterness only a woluan can know, stood aloof with pale flces and parted lips. A slender, shy girl hovered over t h at panting youlog nmothler, whose pangs weie not repaid by hearing the welconme cries of a living child. She knelt with tne in prayer to the great Father to heal the exhausted body, or If such Was his higher will to Ieceive her departiitg soul to HIimself. There was inotlhing iof' the self-counscious hie rouie labout thle shy and gentlte cre.i tire-uo tiellacesof the Jeanl d'Arc or Chatlotte Corday, as we see tlhen por ftrayed by the pailnter's brushi; and, rndlie mani that I was, I had well. high 1forgotten tile vircunstance until re called by the statement of tier nolble i e al r (ted llihysiclalt (D)r. Blackhnu:n,) who wept for iher as for ia beloved dughiter. The two wonllo now sleep /t', very far from each ether in the quiet shatdes of our beautiful Elmwood -the one from Illinois, the other from the more distant hills of Bonnie Scot land. Lips like mine cannot fittingly speak the praises of snch a life-such n glorious death. Ilenralter, when our duties to the living siifferers shall al low of it, let her simple story be told to our boys and girls when we are cold, and it may be, forgetten beneath the green sod. Let the breathing marble and the eculptor's art do some justice, not to her merit, which than can never reward, but to ourselves and to grati tude of our city. Married: IN Pineville, at t h e residence o f.the groon's fattier, on Monday, the 10th inst., by the Rev. J. B. Avenard, ED WARD DAVID to MISS MARIE C. POUSSIN. NEW THIS DAY. TE3IPERATURE AS REPORTED BY FERGUSON & CIHNACK Date. Mlorn. Noon. Night. 5. 52° 650 60i. 6. 58° 650 620 7. 680 700 650 8. 580 64°0 03° 9. 590 68 6tio 10. 520 660 600 THE SUN. WEEKLY, SEMI-WEEKLY and DAILY. HIE WEEKLY SUN IS TOO WIDELY known to require any extended re commendation ; but the reasons which have already. given it fifty thonsaud sub scribers, aid which will, we hope, give it many thousands more, are brielly as follows: It is a first-rate newspaper, All the news of the day will be found in it,. con. densed wheo, unimportant, at full length when of mnoument, and always presented in a clear, intelligible and interesting miiaInner. It is a first-rate family paper, full of en tertaini nr and instruc.ive reading of oeve ry kind, but coutuiniig nothing that can ol d tuo most delicate and scrupulous to sta. It is a first-rate story paper. The best tales and rolnances of current literature are carefully selected and legibly printed in its pages. It is a first-rate agricultural paper. The r'ust fresh and instructive articles on at1riculttial topics regularly appear in ~ is del,artment. It is an independent political paper, be longing to no parI.y and wearing no col lur. It lights for principle, aid tr the clec;aoa of the best men to oltice. It es pecially devcctes its cncegies to the expo sure of tuhe great eorruptions that now ciweaken and dis srace o0111 country. and thrcaten to underminn reapnhlicai institu. tious altogetiher. It has no fear of kiaves, and asks no iavors fromi their nspporters. It reports the fashions tor the :hulies and the markets frh' the men, especially the cattle imak,:ts, to wilch it pays par ticui:ar at:ut ioun. l inally, it is the. cheapest paper pub iislhcd. One ud,;ar a year will secure it tr :iany subscriber. It is not necessary to ge't 1up a club in order to have T1'Il iWEEKLY SUN at this rate. Anly one who.i- -~tds a single dollar wili get rae pa per ftr a year. WE HAVE NO TRAVEL LING AGFNTS. THE WEEKLY SUN. Eight pag;s, fifty-wi. columns Only $.1 a y.:S;. No discounts fromn this rate. T'IlE SEMI-WEEKLY SUN. Same size as the Daily Stn. 02 a year. A discount of 20 per cent. to clubs of /0 or over. THE DAILY SUN. A large four-page newspaper of twenty :ighlt colunmas. Daily circulattion over S120,000 All the news for 2 cents.- Suhlsriptton price 50 cents per month, or '6 a tyear. To clubs of 10 or over, a dliscount of 20 per cent. Address 2"AZE ST,'W New York City LOUISVILLE Weekly Courier -Journal A FIRST-CLASS FAMILY, NEWS, PO t litical and Commercial paper, na tional in its aim, reputation and circula tion. In uaddition to its usual quantity and va,'iety of m,atter, it will piullish rOlIlCINAL STORI ES and NOVEL !'ETTES, and, commencing with its (issue ofi Desemnber 3, will, each week, for a year or longer, pnilish a series of LECTURES ON BIBLE HISTORY, delivered by Rev. Dr. STUART'ROBIN SON, revised by himself expressly for this pllper. On the 1st of January; 1874, the publish. ,.rs will distribute $5 0 00 0I PREBENTS .cuuoug its subsiribers. All who wish to avail themselves of the opportnuity of se curing a gift worth several hlunidrted dol lars ciRn o biy senling in their .subscrip tinls prior to that time. iGreat inducements to subsclibers and (jF Circulars, with ful! particulars, poe. ters, and specimen copies, sent gratis on application. Address COUIEI-JOURNAL CO., Louisville, Ky OB PRINTING NEATLY DONE AT THIS nrFFIC