BY GEO. \V. BOWUW. NEW SERIES. Select JJ o e t v rj. From Young America. Till: MOTHER'S SORROW. IJV RAt-l'H. Little Nellie sleeps -o quiet; With the flush yet on her brow; Arid the little hands are folded, And her voice is siient now. And the eyelids droop o sadly. O'er the cheek so pale ami chill, Oh ! it pains my (mart to breaking Thus to see her lie so still. 1 shall miss her in the morning, When bird voices fill the air, 1 shall miss her voice at evening, W hen shall come the hour ol prayer. 1 shall never hear her limping , "Keep me till the morning light," * She has gone from earth to Eden, Where the day is ever bright. I shall never hear the patter Of her little feet again, . Up and down the hall and stairway, Like the gentle fall of rairi. 1 shall miss her ever, ever, As along life's path I go, And my heart is burdened ever, With this sad, this mighty woe. Yet 1 trnst again to press her To my heart in clasp eternal, Where the grave and death are never, And the path is ever vernal. * "YEARS AGO." The joys of youth, how soon they die— The dearest ever first of all Another heart, another friend, Thus one by one they fall. But life must change from day to day— And though its course he slow llow little is tju-re often left To tell of 'years ago ?' But oh! when days have fieri and gone— When hearts have changed and brows arc gray. Ilow.sueet the fond remembrance then Of moments past away; llow true the charm, when like a speli, The scenes we pride to know Come back like shadows o'er the soul, In dreams of 'years ago.' llow sweet again when faint arid old, Anil life its course hath nearly run, To know, amid the selfish world, We yet are loved by one ; Then with that heart to speak again Of all we would forego; To live nn-w the failed past As in those 'year> ago'.' ONE BY ONE. One by one the sands are flowing, One by one the moments fall; Some are coming, some are going, Do not strive to grasp them all. One by one thy duties wait thee, Let thy whole strength go to each ; Let no future dreams elate thee. Learn thou first what these can teach. Hours are golden lir,k c —God's token— Reaching heaven : hut one bv one Take them, lest the chain be broken Ere the pilgrimage !>e done. Prohibition in Michigan. —The Detroit Free Press, alter speaking of the failure of coercive temperance laws in other States, says: "Let us look at home. In Michigan, prohi bition was first adopted and the coercive law passed bv the black republicans as a matter of votes; it has since been abandoned, and the law emasculated bv them, also as a matter of vot'S. Every where else the black republicans have treated prohibition as a matter of votes.— They have made the great temperance reform a foot-hall for the very worst party uses." Rev. Mr. Kalloch preached in Rockland, Me., on Sunday last. The crowded condition ol ttie church is cited as evidence of the confi- i dence with which the citizens regard Mr. K.— : Exchange. If Rrigham Young had occupied the pulpit in the jdace of Mi. Kalloch, the crowd, we suspect, would have been still larger. Two young girls in Patterson, New Jersey, were arrested on Monday, convicted and lined j for stealing flowers from a cemetery. Much i pains had been taken hy a mother to ornament the grave of her son, and just as ttie flowers were blooming most beautifully, they were all , taken awav by these thoughtless voung girls, i - *___ z * Among the distinguished strangers in St. ' Louis on the 9lh irisl. were Chevalier Bosch Spencer, Belgian minister: Count de Sartiges, French Ambassador; Mr. W. Corcoran, of Wash ington: Hon. Josiah Quincv, Jr., of Boston, and Gov. Izard, of Nebraska. They arrived on Sunday arid took lodgings at Barman's Hotel. We learn from the Boston Transcript that Airs. Patton, the woman who so heroically navi- | gated a ship into California after her husband lust his mind, is now dangerously ill in that ci ty with typhoid fever, consequent upon the fa tigues and ex|)osure incident to the voyage, and ' her untiring devotion to her husband. Capt. Patton, we regret to add, has lost both his sight and hearing. Governor Bragg, of North Carolina, under a resolution passed by the Legislature of that State, i contracted with W. J. Hubard,ol Richmond, for the casting of a bronze statute of Washington, after the one now in the Capitol of Virginia. The work is to cost $lO,OOO, and when finish ed is to be placed in front of the Capitol at Ra leigh. H SI VT B\YABI> TAYLOR THINKS OF TR AV ELLING IN THE ARim REGIONS. Bayard Taylor has returned to Stockholm from his northern trip, and in a letter to the Tribune, dated February 16, IhOs sums up the relative pleasures of travel in the Arctic and in tropical zones : "It was precisely two months since our de j parture in December, and in that time we had performed a journey of '2,-200 mites, 250 of which were by reindeer, and nearly 500 inside •of the Arctic Circle Our frozen noses had peel ed off, and the new skin showed no signs of the damages they- had sustained—so that we bad come out of the fight not only without a scar, ! but with a marked increase of robust vitality. "I must confess, however, that, interesting as : the journey has been, and happily as we have endured its exposure, I slum Id not wish to make it again. It is well to see the .North, wen af ! ter the South; but, as there is no one who v isits I the tropics without longing ever alter to return again, so, J imagine, there is no one who, bavin seen a winter inside the Arctic Circle, would ever wish to see another. In spite of (he warm, gorgeous, and ever-changing play of color hov ering over the path of the unseen Sun—in spite of the dazzling auroral dances, and the magical transfiguration of the forests—the absence of true daylight, and of all signs of warmth of life exercises at last a depressing influence on the spirits. The snow, so beautiful while the sun , rise-setting illumination lasts, wears a ghastly monotony at all other tiroes, and the air, so ex hilirating, even at the lowest temperature, be comes an enemy to be kept out when you know his terrible power to benumb and destroy. "To the nai ive of a warmer zone tins pres ence of an unseen destructive force in Nature weig.-s like a night-mare upon the mind. Tim inhabitants of the North also seem to undergo a species of hibernation as weii as the animals.— Nearly half their time is passed in sleep; they are silent in comparison with the natives of the other parts of the World: there is little exuber ; ant gavety and cheerfulness, but patience, indif ference, apathy almost. Aspects of nature which appear to be hostile to man often devei ope and bring into play his best energies, but there are others which depress and paralyze his powers. Jam convinced tnat the extreme north like the tropics is unfavorable Jo the best men i tal and physical condition of the human race.— The proper zone ol man lies between 3d and 55 deg. north. "Toone who has not an unusual capacity to enjoy the experiences of varied Iravel, I should not recommend such a journey. With rue the realization of a long cherished desire, the sense of novelty, the opportunity for contrasting ex tremes, and the interests with which the people inspired me, tar outweighed all inconveniencies ami pi i vat ions. In tact, 1 was net fully aware of the gloom and cold in which I had lived un til we returned far enough southward to enjoy eight hours o! sunshine and a temperature above the freezing point. It was a second birth into a living world. Although we had experienced little positive suffering from the intense cold, except on the return from Muoniovara to Hupa -1 randa, our bodies had afta.iy accommodated themselves to a low temperature, ami the sud . deii tiamsitiou to 30 deg. above zero came upon us like (lie warmth of June, "Mr. friend, Dr. Kane, once described to me the comfort he felt when the mercury rose to 1 deg. below zero, making it pleasant to be on deck. The circumstance was then incompre hensible to me but is now quite plain. 1 can also realize the terrible sulieiings of himself, and his m-n, exposed to a storm in a terrq 'ta i ture of 47 deg., when the same degree of cold, with a very litiie wind, turned my own blood : to ice. "Most of our physical sensations are relative, and the mere etuiim-rati >m of so many degrees of heat or cold gives no i lea ol their effect upon the system. I should have frozen at home last winter at a temperature which I found wry roof rtabie in Lapland, will m\ solid diet of meat and butter and my garments of renui-er.— j The following is a correct scale of the physical ; effect of cold, calculated for the latitude of 65 deg. to 70 deg. north: *'ls degrees above z^ro —unpleasantly warm. "Zero—Mild and agn eat>le. "10 deg. below Zero—Pleasantly fresh and i bracing. "20 deg. below zero—Sharp, but not severe ly cold. Keep your fingers arid toes in motion, I and rub your uuse occasionally. I "30 deg. below zero—Very cold: take par ticular caie of your nose and extremities; eat : the fittest Ibod.and plenty of it. "49 deg. below—lntensely c'dd: keep a wake at all hazards, mutiie up to the eyes, and test your ciiculalion frequently, that it mav not slop somewhere before you know it. "50 deg. below A struggle f.r life." There is a family residing in this city, named Connell, from Ireland, who are laboring under ; the most singular and perplexing delusion.— Ti.ey say tfiat remittances have been sent to I them fiom Ireland, and that the letters l ave been taken out by other persons and rifled.— j The amount is variously estimated at between i $1,900 and $2,500. The most singular pait ' of the story is that whenever a court is held in our city they imagine that their own case j occupies pretty much the whole time of the judges and counsel. The brother of the wo j man who claims to have been defrauded out of the money attends the courts, and actually sup i poses that the lawyers are speaking to his case, j The decisions are taken by him as confirming j his own rights.— Trenton True Jlmeriain. The Lake Superior Chronicle has received information confirming the report which that paper published on the 14lh of April last,of the murder of Mr. A. McEwen by the Indians. The body of the murdered man was found in Wood river, near where the road to Taylor's : Falls ciosses it. FRIDAY MORNING, BEDFORD, PA. JUNE 26, 1897. Terrible Calamity. Burning cf the Steamship Louisiana in the ('iitj oj .Mexico—Thirty-. Vine Lives Lost. An extra of I lie* Galvaston .Aries, of the 3D; tilt., furnishes lull details of the sad catastrophe, ! from which we make ihe following extracts; j "We have to record one of the most dreadful calamities that has ever happened in this coun try. !he steamship Louisiana, Captain Shep- \ herd, is now a total wreck, having been burnt : some six or eight miles south-east of this city, in . the Gulf, about one o'clock, A. M. Onr citizens were aroused bv the unusual fire , alarm, as the fire was in full sight. The first b intelligence was the arrival of a boat from the j unfortunate steamer, about sun-rise, bringing j some dozen passengers, our fellow citizen, Mr. Grover, being among the number. Mr. Grover says that he had a berth on the ! starboard upper deck—that the first alarm was; persons asking where the fire was: about one j o'clock he stepped out of his room and discover-j ed smoke, but no fire—passed around the stern j of the larboard side, where he saw from twelve , to twenty persons preparing to launch the quar-.j ter-lioat. A moment after the flames hurst tn> j amidships; returned to the starboard side; saw a few low eiing down (lie quarter-boat on that sidejq wen! to his room, picked up his shoes and coat. ' and returned ami slid down with others into the i boat on the larboard side. The engines were-: still running, hut fortunately the boat was low ered down without filling. After getting adrift they looked to discover if they could find any person to take on board, but could see nobody. There were twelve in the j boat. Mr. G. learned from on- on the boat that ■ the tiller-rope w as broken—was probably burnt of]', in consequence of which the steamer was ! unmanageable at the commencement of the fir<. j I'he first (-hurts of the Captain and officers np>- peared to be to reach the fire engine but did not succeed. All the commuriication between the I irward and after part of the boat was cut off by i the fire, which must have broken out near the'-j furnace. The larboard boat was being launched when | we went into the other. He saw persons on ! the forward part of the steamer throwing things ; over—the hatch doors, &c., for tin* purpose of i saving themselves. The working of the engines j caused the steamer to leave the boat rapidly, so : that those on the boat were unaUe to see or heflr S distinctly. The boat landed on the beach, near , the point, about sunrise. The steamship Galveston, reached lier-wharf ; about half pat seven A. M.,and among others, '# brought Mr. Clias. 11. Huge.-, the puisemydEkhe Louisiana. (SHF *• Mr. Hugcs confirms Mr, Grower's rlatemefm#-* as regards the origin of the li/' j , which broke' out in the fire r am, tvventv minutes past one. He states that the passengers were all asleep j when (lie fire broke out: that the larboard boat caj -:z"d. and thinks some six or eight persons were lost at the time. Mr. H. and the engi neer, Mr. Finn, jumped overboard on the hatch door, which they had thrown over. He savs at that time, there were some thirty around him on boards and furniture which they had thrown over. The Galveston and other vessels subsequently flicked up a nttml t-r of other persons. Several vessels were then employed to plv through the Gulf in hope of picking np others that might he floating about. There was a large n ail on board, and we hear of several large sums of money also !o>t, lie! ng ing to passengers, together with one hundred j and fifty beeves that were on board. \ M.VA.KI2 TAlil'L. Savs (he lawyer: "Animalssometime® very rmartv approach reason in their cunning." "I got interested in the study of serpents down in Arkansas, where I spent the most of a year. I don't know why, but I was constantly watching them in new situations, and surround ing tin m with novel expedients. Of all kinds I experiment,-d most with rattlesnakes and cop per! eads. "One afternoon I s-afod myself on a little knoll in the woods to smoke and read—loi I al ways had a hook or newspajiei with me—and had been enjoying myself for some time when 1 espied a copperhead n aking for a hole within ten feet of where I sat. Of course I threw down mv book and cigar, and proceeded to try a new experiment. As soon as f stirred the rascal made a rush for the hole: but 1 caught his tail ;m he got nearly in and jerked him some twenty feet backward. He threw himself in a coil in no time, arid waited for me to pitch in. But 1 concluded to let him try his hole again.— After a while he started for it, stopping when ] started, to c il hims dftip; but as I kept pretty quiet lie recovered confidence and again went in. Again 1 jerked him out. No sooner did lie hit the ground than he made a grand rush for the hole in a straight line for mv legs!— But that didn't woik, for 1 got out of the way, and gave him another flirt! "This time he iav still a while, appearing to reflect on the course to be taken. After get ting his head a little way in, he stopped and wiggled his tail, as if on purpose for ir.e to grab it. 1 did so; and quicker than a flash he drew his head out and came within a quarter of an inch ofstriking me in the face. However, I jerked him quite a distance, and resolved to look out the next time. Well he tried the same game again, tiut it wouldn't work— l was too quick for him. "This time he lay in a coil half an hour, with out stirring. At last, however, he tried it once more. He advanced to within five feet <>l the hole very slowly, coiled again, and then the rascal got the start of me by one of the cutest things you ever heard of. "How was that?" we all exclaimed, in one breath. "Why," said the narrator, sinking his voice to the acme of solemnity, and looking as honest Freedom of Thought and Opinion. and as sober as any man could look; "why lie) just turned his head toward my hand, and went ; down the hole tail first!" From the E!air County Whig. .Joltia 11. Wfsjfrode. i j - , * A majority of the citizens of this Re present a : tive dntrict elected JOHN M. G IRONY and JOHN H. WINTRODE to the late Legislature. The es timation by which the former is held in Biair County, is so payable, that it needs no nofice j at our hands; the latter, in the feelings jf-the people of Huntingdon county, is well told JJW the fiflhiwing article from the last Huntumdtjnn > "On: REPRESENTATIVE.— We recommend toD j our fellow-ritizens, the propriety of getting up some substantial testimonial of their high appre j ciarion of the laborious efforts in their behalf, of their late Representative Dr. John I!. Wintrode.' We suggest, further, that said testimonial con i sist>f a patent leather medal, with a medium ; 1 sized hole therein, in which shall be placed a piece of red tape. Said medal to be presented to >aid gentleman immediately. Or if this be i not approved by said constituents of said Win trode, then, we suggest a testimonial of thirty j(3 cent) piece? of silver. This would be more j appropriate and we are led to believe more ac cejitable. We offer this suggection on the j ground that a faithful servant deserves a 'kindly i mention." Aside from all jokes, we cannot, lor the life of us, see how a community could be humbugged in working up such materia] in to Legislators. Has the county no better?— ; To be sure she has. and let her hereafter use it. The nomination of such men will weaken our : strength—as the past proves—until locofocoisrn j shall tiinmph: it must be stopped. Since Mr. Wintrode has now some leisure , he can enlight en the people of the county on his refusing to • support the opposition candidate for the State ' 'lleasuryship. The reasons he gave us, we did not consider ourselves authorized to publish.— [ Events have since transpired, which bring us : again to the original question. "Will Dr. Wintrode explain" to the public. We have been beset by many good men throughout the j county for the reasons giv-n us. We now re- i : iterate that those reasons are unsatisfactory j from events which have since transpired. A pair of pretty poseys, truly. - lected to fill. Thank God his term of office is nearly out and his manage ment at an end. The writer referred to, in company with oth er gentlemen called upon Pollock, with a view of pointing out the ohjtjtflfonable features in the bill, hoping thereby to induce him to interpose his Executive power. He says : "After supper I went with them to see the Governor. We found him alone in his room at ; I;is hoarding house, and had a long interview I with him. He treated us very kindly, ami ap- \ parently listened with great attention to our i suggestions and arguments. He admitted that there were many r>! jectionable features in the j hill, that if fie could had the framing of it lie : would have had it differently done.— that he had don! t® as to some of its previsions being consti tutional, hut that the people were so anxious for ; , a sale that he believed the present hill would ! be sustained by a majority of over one hundred thousand, and that.- he felt disposi d to sign the I full. Although I felt confident he was mista-| ken as to the people being in favor of the bill. 1 vet I believed the governor honestly thought so.: and when I l4 per barrel, molasses Si 50 a gallon, pork 25 cents a pound, and j other things at the same rate. The crops last i year were poor, winter severe, killing many ; cattle, and the army of emigration so large as to j devour all before thern. To the question, how J did you live i —the answer was prompt. — Live, said he, live on cracked corn; corn for breaklast; corn for dinner; and corn f fa TERMS, 8 2 PER YEAR. VOL XXV. m 43. * domestic cat," by which they were awakened from deep sleep a! the dead of night. The fire was the work ol an incendiary, and design ed, it is believed, to destroy the whole family, who, as it was, barely escaped with their lives. MASSACRE UK THE SOXoRA EXPEDI TIONISTS. Whether, as it is stated in some of the publi cations regarding this tragical affair. Col. Crabb had pledges from the present Governor of Sono ra, and from influential citizens of the State, that lie and his party would be allowed to settle peacefully, or whether the expedition was of a wholly illegitimate character, there is no imag inable justifibation of the inhuman, wholesale butche/y of tb- expeditionists, after, TOEY IKW laid cfbwn their arms and surrendered {fteiii selves to the Government forces. It was aisa( as iiiipoliiie as it was inhuman. It is stated by an eye-witness that for six days the Americans defended themselves against overwhelming odds. Driven into one of the principal houses in the town, (Cavorca,) harrassed, exhausted, and probably without fod, they maintained their position, until an arrow, bearing a lighted brand, fired into the thatch of the house, set it >n fire, and the whole interior of the roof was soon in Harm s. Further resistance was unavailing, and the survivors, (if y-one in number, marched out un armed and surrendered to the Mexicans. Next morning the whole body, one lad of about fif teen years excepted, were 'hot in squads of five and ten each. In the fiist executions it was • found tha? the calmness of the Americans dis composed their executioners, who shot too high or too low, in many cast s only wounding their victims. The hacks of the fated men were then turned to the troops, and then they fired with steadier and deadlier aim. Col. Crabb was re served for a seperate death. He was taken to the front of the house where he fought, his face turned towards a pillar, his hands tied and drawn above his head, and standing thus, was shot from behind. A Mexican then cut off his head with a knife, and carried it across the street, to the office of the Juez, where it was placed on a table, to satiate the gaze of his cap tors and butchers. But the merciless crew were not satisfied wit: l this fearful vengeance. Four men, sick, had been left at S. noriia hv Crabb. They oc cupied the h use owned by E. E. Dunbar, Esq., on the American side of (he line. On the 18th of April, at r.ight, a party of twenty-five Mex icans came up from San Juan, went to Dunbar's house, took these poor sick men out of bed, tied tbem, and at dawn of day carried them to the foot of the hill, shot them like dogs on Ameri can soil, and left them to rot. A party of Pa pago Indians, more merciful, buried them. This violation of American soil is, at Fast, an ou'- r.ige which out Government cannot overlook. We fear however, from the feeling prevailing in California at the sailing of the steamer, that the Californians \> ill not await the slow action of the Government, but take the task of retri bution info their own hands. Indeed, some of the journa's predict that Sonora will be Ameri can territory within less than six months. The rr assacre at Cavorca, and the more revolting act which accompanied it, may lead to consequen ces of which the Mexicans dreamed not in the hour ol their savage triumph.— .V. V. Sun. WELL SAID. —A western ladv who was not long since a New-England girl, writes to tie* Tribune from lowa with reference to the recent discussion of the subject of Cookery, a lett< r from which we make the follow ing pungent ex tract, commending it to the reflections of whom soever it mav concern: "Believe ir.e that we (women) aie not so much slaves to the tyrianny of'husbands, din ners, children, and servants, as to ourselves, and false ami social customs. We are afraid of each other. We don't live in reference to comfort, or to our own means, but to what people say of us or think of us. and to oveitop this one or the other. I have seen and know women fitted to a 'orn any society in this country or any other, that did their own work, took care of their own children, kept bright h earth stones, and had hap py husbands, and still f nnd lime to keep up with the current literature, write memoran dums, and copy poetrv. It is not necessary, hut artificial labor that makes our women, drudges—eternal house cleanings, beginning in March, and iasting till May—again in Septem ber, and lasting til! Thanksgiving. It is a pride of appearance of being thought good livers and crack housekeepers—for, let women say what they will, they tie as jealous of this as poets (or politicians) are cf each other." A Vit.LACt: DESTUOYEP. —The Ogdensburg (St. Lawrence county, N. Y.) Sentinel says that "on Monday morning of last week, the vil lage of Brasher iron Works, in that county, containing a thriving and busy population, was destroyed by tire. Before night the whole vil lage, the foundry, machine shop, saw mills, and every dwelling in the place except six was con sumed as with the besom of destruction. A fire that had previously raged in the woods was driven by a wind from a point or two south of west, like a hail storm, upon the doomed vil lage. In one hour forty-three buildings and from $7f),000 to $lOO,OOO worth of property was reduced to ashes, and forty families made homeless and houseless, without food or clothing and without the means of employment. The Sentinel states that the call for aid has not been unheeded. Villages in the immediate vicinity have done nobly tor the relief of the sufferers.— Of the suflh rers, Mr. L. \Y. Skinner, of Ogdens burg, is mentioned as the greatest, the loss of lus firm being $7h,000 over insurance. We hear nothing, savs the Panola (Missis sippi) Star, but the most favorable account from the win at crop of our county. It appears that aft.-r the cold weather passed by, the wheat took anew start, and we art informed that the nop was in V'-r b-ttcr than it will he this ytar.