f onibria Freeman. L'DCXSDIJHG, I .4. Thchsdat Mousing, : 1'V.b. 3, 1870. Tub twu Senators from Virginia, Messrs Liwis and Johnston, who were elected last 6uremer. have been qualified and taken their seats. The members of the House from that State hare also been sworn in, with the ex ception of two, whose seats are contested. A bii.l has been introduced into the Leg islature to repeal that section of the R.'gis trj Lav of the last session which abolished the Spring elections. There onght to be jv obstacle interposed to its passage, nor dn we anticipate any. The change of the ancient orde" of 1 1 i gs was done hastily, and with out rt -flection, and a the universal sentiment of the people is against it, there ought to be no diG'.cuMy in cotuii g back to the point of depa; tare. A rrTiHON ha been received at Wash ington, from son e of the inhabitants of the Fe -iff Islands, in the South Pacific Ocean. risking thr- G vtrt.meiit of the United S ates to extend its protection over them. This request is entirely too modest. The one hundred and fifty islands firming the group, with a population of 200.000, ought to be annexed to this glorious and progressive Union at the earliest possible moment. Thalcmbaw is the King if the Islands, and has bi eye on a seat in the United States Senate. He would make a first class radi cal Senator. And then how pleasant it would sound to hear the elegant Sumner in debate refer to this unwashed potentate as "the Senator from the Fiejee Ilands." Foster and Covcde, From the boasting and confident tone of the Washington dispatches, for the last two weeks, to ti e radical press, we were pre pared for the announcement that the Com mittee on Elections had decided that "Alli gator" John Covode was entitled to his seat, as having been legally elected frt in the Westmoreland district, I5y what improved process in aiithmetic this resu't has been ar rived at we have no means of judging, not having seen the tcpert of the (on. mi l tec; nor is it at all material. The conduct, or rather .the acts, of this ladical Committee on Elec lions for the last three years prove incontes tibly that no democrat, however plain his case n.ay be, can ever hope to retain his peat against his radical contestant, and that n democrat contestant against the right i f a radical sitting member has no earthly chance of sueccs, although his case may be as clear as the noon t'ay sun. The decision of the committee in the con tested elections of Dan. Voothees. of Indiana, three years ago. of Gen. Morgan, of Ohio, nnd of Col. SwitzYr. of Missouri, not to mention several other cases, established the fact that the Committee was organized for the sole purpose of admitting every radical to his Mat, whether he was elected or not. and of excluding every democrat, no matter how decided was his majority. So far as the Committee was concerned, it acted on the cne-fiiled principle of the old game, "heads I win and (ails you lose." So fltsrant has been the action of this Committee, so one sided and partisan hare been its decisions, that only a few days ago the democratic mtmbers of Congms held a consultation for the purpose of dccidirg,.whether a sense of self respect did not demand the withdrawal of the two democratic metnbeis who are on th' Committee. It was determined, unwise ly as we think, that they should remain at tl'. ir post. The next victim of the wrath of this Com mittee will probably be the gallant General Shields, of Missouri, the only Northern offi cer who CTjoys the honor of having defeated Stonewall Jackson in a square fiht. Gen. Shields was ns fairly elected as Daniel J. Morrell, but his devotion to the democratic p-irty is :in m pardonable sin in radical esti mation. Col SwitzYr, of the same State, likewise a Union soldier, will doubtless share the same fate, although fairly and honestly elected. The political guillotine is now in full operation, and democratic head roll rap-Mly into the radical ba.-ket. There is. however, such a thing as political retribu tion in this world, which will eventually make all things even. THE VIRGINIA BILL.. The radical mountain has been in labor since the meetirg of Congress, and has brought forth an act for the admission of Virginia which act has received the signa ture of the President. The law u steeped in wrong and infamy, which is not at all singular when it is known that at its birth Bet Butler acted the part of Congressional midwife. In his message to the present Con gress, President Grant used the following expressive language : "In Virginia the elecMon took plieo on the f.th of Jnly. 1S'"9 ; il e Governor and Lieuten nnt Governor elected have been installed ; the "Legislature met nnd did till that was rrqu'red bv this resolution at d hv all the reconstruction nets of Congress, and abstained from undoubt ful authority I recommend that her Senators and Representatives be from ily i.dmiited to their seats, and that the State be fully restored to its place in tbc family of States " In pursuance of ibis recommendation, the House passed a bill, known as tho Bingham bill, for the unconditional admission of the State, and sent it to the Senate. Tin's was dote daring Butler's absence, and on his re turn, breathing wrath and vennear.ee, he established his headquarters in the Senate Chamber, and there by sheer dint of his un equalled impudence bullied the extreme rad icals of tLat body into voting amendments and conditions to Ui bill which entirely de stioyed its one original feature. In these amendments, the House concurred, thna sur rendering its original ground, and die bill r-.aased. Virginia may therefore be regarded ah having been thoroughly reconstructed, Ajcordang to tbe teteU cd most approved radical plan. The mother of States aqjL of Statesmen ia permitted to return to the Union, not with the equal rights and privi leges enjoyed by any other State n t the equal of New York or Pennsylvania but she returns to the nation il household in in famy and in chains, w ith fundamental con ditions to be performed by her which even a radical Congress would not dare to impose on any other State in the Union. It is a sad spectacle and one that plainly shows the unconstitutional and revolutiona ry tendency of the radical paity. Grant's advice is treated w ith scornful contempt, his influer.ee with his party is of no avail, and Virginia dpcnd for a lecngnition of her con stitutional rights on the mere whim an- caprice ol a set of political demagogues and trading politicians. The radicals in Congress have deliberately violated their most solemn pledges, made to Virginia after the State had literally complied with all the iniqui tous demands of the reconstruction laws, and they now stand before the country dis honored and despised. Horace Greety. who has some of the milk of human kindness in his veins, and who was opposed to keeping the word of promise to the ear of Virginia, but breaking it to her hope, speaks as follows in reference to this duplicity on the part of his political friends "n Congress : "The House has adopted the Senate's per verse action on the Virgin bill without amendment. The terms on witch at length Virnit ia is to be admitted were yesterday set ton li in our columns, an l miy lie found again to day embodied in the report of the proceed ings. NVe do not eee.t 'o repeat that we deep ly regret the resti't finally nt'iiinel at the end of these weary weeks of dcbrle nnd recrimina tion Consress prescribed eitain terms for the admission of Virginia : the State complied to the full with those terms ; Congress mm prescribe- fresh tirnis! This is punUhing the treason of Virgo ii in I -111 tv bad faith on the pari, of Congress in Ib70 We do not believe such a course to be st:item inship or even souml p-Mtv nnlicv : nnd agar v-iting us is the wrnna done Virginia, we bidiere slie will suffer less from it. in the end than will the p:iriy th-it has wrought it " Sound Doctrine. When the bill for the rrstoiation of Vir ginia was before the Senate, Mr. Trumbull, a Radical Senator from Illinois, ably and eloquently advocated her free ard untram melled admi-pion. But his argument was unheeded it was "throw ing pearls btf. re swine." The following txtract from his speech contains the broad views of a states man, not of the school of inipracticables, like Sumner, Wilson and Drake, but of oue who has studied and understands the constitution of his couutry aud the nature of its govern ment : "Now, it is proposed to do what? To i mi pose what are called fundamental condi tions of a political character, subsequent conditions of a political character to be per formed by the Slate. Can you d that ? It seems to me not; and why? The States which formed this Union were co-equal Statei-. Dock any body controvert that piop osition? They w-rre co-equal States when this Union was funned. Congress has au thoiity to admit new Slates into the Union. Into what Union? A Union ol c-tqual States. There is no autlinrity to admit States into any other Union. "New States," says the Constitution, "tnay be admitted by the Congress into" what ? "This Union V What sort of a Union was it? It was a Union of coequal States because they were ad equal w hen they formed it. It is into "this Union" that Congress has authority to admit States, and Congress has no authority to admit States into any other Union. You have a d.ff-ient Union if you have a Union of Unequal States. I deny that Cougress has any authority to impose a fundamental Condition upon the State of Virginia, or up on ary other State formed out of new terri t 'iy, or any of these reconsti ucted States, that it cannot impose and enforce upon the State of Idinois. If the C- ngres if the United Slates can say that Vnginii siiail never alter her Constitution in icgard to I'hm! matters, to which the Constitution of the United States has no application, then it can do it in regard to 1 linojs. I deny that it car. do it in regard to either ; and it it could you have a TJnin of unequal States, and you never couid maintain such a Union. It would be a destruction of the government. The States of '.his Uuion must be equal in all their rights as members of the Federal Union, or you cannot preserve it. Such is the Constitution ; such is the language of the acts by which new States have been admit ted ; and though I have voted fov the ad mission of States here with conditions im posed, 1 have done it because I was iu favor of Ihe admission of the States, and a majori ty of the Senate insisted upon imjosing the conditions which in my opinion, were of no validity whatever. Therefore. I have been in favor of the simple resolution recognizing the State if Virginia as entitled t representation, and I have voted against all amendments to it. I Voted against the amendment offered by the Seuator from Vermont (Mr. Edmund;) and amended on the motion of the Senator from West Virginia (Mr. Willey). which required the meui tiers of the L-gis-lature of Virginia to take a certain oath and imposed penalties for falsi sweating. I did not do that because I was opposed to the F iirtcenih Amend ment. I voted f r the Fourteenth Amend ment. I am in favor f its enforcement. I have reported a bill making it a penal of fense to violate it, and I am ready to pass that bill ss a general law. But when we by act declare the State of Virginia entitled to representation in Congress, and thereby make her one id the States of the Union, equal with ail the others. I do not think this Congress should pass a law making that a cn'me in the State of Virginia which is not a crime in the State of Massachusetts or the Mate of Illinois. I am not w illing to make that a ciinie ;n any other State that I am not w i'ding to vote upon my own State. I am opposed to that p&rt.al legislation ; and while I am for a general law, did not f.ivor putting that provision on this bill ; but. sir. I shall vote for the bill nevertheless. I am so anxious to see Virginia and all these St ites restored that I am willing to vote for the bill when the Senate put conditions on over my vi te if I think those conditions are iu operative or of such a character as are not fatal to the measure itself. JJow, sir. I apjieal to the Senate to recog nise Virginia as entitied to representation. She has done all that she can. By more than two hundred thousand votes she has adopted her Constitution, with only nine thousand against it. Her candidates for Governor, of l th parties, ask to be admitted ; the loyal men of the State ask to be admitted ; and it is due to these people, who have complied with all your requisitions, that you should now comply on your part, and at once ad jr.it that State to full representation in C-n- gress. nnd to a full participation in all the privileges of this great government. Sir. I m.ike this appeal in behalf ol justice, iu be half of the material interests of the country, in behalf of the loyal men of Virginia, w hom Governor Wells represents, end. as I believe, in behalf of nineteen-twentieth of all her people. give no heed to these unknown letter-writeis ; and I give no heed to these charges of a fraudulent election, because 1 rely upon the tfikhd reports of the Com manding General ; I rely upon the supervi sion of the President of the United States, who has looked over this whole matter, and who lias entrusttd its execution to efficient, loyal and faithful officers, and who tells Us that Virginia has complied w ith all the leqii sitions that we imposed upon her. If you must put other conditions upon her. so be it; but in any event let us pass the bill. Our Slarrisbuig Letter. HaKKisbi ro, Jan. 31. 18T0. Deor Freeman S.nce my hist th Legis latino has bet-n trxing to ;el settli-d d..wn to bu.-inei-s, and inasmuch as the Iltcxtrd and provision for postage h.ive been pretty defi nitely settled, they will certain'y tec down to the work nxt week. Notwithstanding the tff utsof Beigner and his friends to re lieve the treasury .f a portion of its funds for the publication of what they term a Leg islative Record," and it is generally believed the arguments were very strong from the fact that the Senate iudtfiuittly postponed the resolution of the select committee to rati fy the contract, and the next day reconsid ered the vote and passed it, the indications are that the Recvid is a "dead cock in the pit." Jut what the inducement to change the votes of certain gentlemen in so short a lime were, I am not able to say. and it is not likely the public will be enlightened on the sul j-cl for a few days at least. It i as much it a mystery as the tlcciion of Irwiu fur State Tieasurer. The II :ii.-e held a special session on Thurs- I oay to eousii.cr the same resoluti n, when a number of gentlemen unbosomed themselves on the su'. j et some for and some agnins-t. Yi u will cuuclude from the v.te (10 avis to 7G nay) that the pressure wasnY, vi strong in the liouse. Among the advoOi tjs of the measure was Mr. booth, or Dauphir, who is a new man, but who has gained quite a reputation for buncombe and not an envia ble one for anything. I would jiidge from his speech on t!;e Ileeord that his memory won't fail soon. The resolution to ratify the contract was loot aud a motion torecnu-t-ider the v-jte was also lost. This w id cer tainly dispose of the job for this session. White the vote waj being taken on .this resolution a number of gentletnt-n. as their nanus wtie called, gave their leasons for voting as they did. The Speaker reminded them that it was a constitutional right the members possessed to have their reasons for voting enttred on the record. The House adopted the resolution appro piiitiiig one hundred dollars to members aud cUrksou postage, but the venei able Senator couldn't see th necessity fur the stamps and failed to coucur so goes the stamps. Ii 'Cord, &c. Thus tar all resolutions providing for the pubiicatiou of the reports of heads of de paitiuents, messages, etc.. have been defeat ed by the lloiie some of them as often as three times. Nevertheless, the Senate has passed a bill to repeal so much of the ap propriation bill ot last year as prohibits t he publication of these reports, but it is scarce ly pos.-ib!e for it to j;et through the House. It issliongly insiuuited that certain parties who have been iuteiesled in I he State print ing for a number of years, and who have lattly elected a magnificent printing house in this city, are engineering this measure through with what success time will tell. The House can't well pass this biil aud re main consistent. His Excellency gave a recept;on on Thurs day evening which was largely attended aud very generally enjoyed. Everything was "ineiry as a marri.-ige bell." A resolution providing for the final ad journment of the Legislature on the 17th of March was passed by the Senate, but has not yet been reported by the Committee of Ways and Means, to whom it was nferrerf in the House. The general impression is that an adjournment will uot be eff.-cted to early. I hear a number of members complaining that their r- n.-ii u-nts are w riting t- them for the li-cord and other public d.cnments. and remindii g them that their predi-cessois had furnished them la.-tyear. They should re member that ht y-ar there whs, h Record and Repoitofall the Departments publish ed, while this year there is r.o documents ol any description, nnd no provi.-don in regard to postage even if there vere. If I was ad vising them as to how they could keep post ed I would tell them to subscribe for the Horning Patriot printed here every day. as it furnishes the proceedings of the Legisla ture and cives all general news besides. - Mr. Dailey, of Philadelphia, read in place on Wednesday a bill increasing the Juris diction of the District Gurt at Johnstown. It has been referred to the Committee on the Judiciary L'ical and will be considered by them on Thursday next, when I suppose we may look for a number of distinguished Cambrii ns in the city. Among tbe acts passed this wiek was "An Act to repeal the third section of an act relating to Judicial Sales and the preservation of the lien of mortgages, approved Merch 23d, 1857." Tub Cjiii.drks'k Ih uu We notice that the pubbsheis of this beautiful magazine have offered special terms to Day and Sunday-Schools ; ami we iearn that it has al ready beeti introduced into manv day-school as a leading-book. The freshness, interest, purity, thoughtful earnestness, and liih moral tonn of the "Hour" render it partic ularly valuable for this purpose. Teachers cannot but find its influence on their schol ars beneficial in a high degree. We can well imagine how almost imperceptibly its beautfu! lessons, read, with each monthly visit, in our schinils. would tako the place of authoiity, and so raise the moral tone of the children as to make dircipline easv. We hope each teacher who read thi will send for a specimen number of "The Chil dren's Hour" and examine it careluUy. The yearly subscription is Si 25, or eleven copies for $10. The special terms to schools are exceedingly liberal. They are as fol low:,: 20 copies, one year. $17 ; 80 copies, $25 ; 50 copies. $40; 100 copies, $75. Ad dress T. S. Arthur & Sons. 809 & bl I Chest nut Street, Philadelphia. The Edccatiosal Gazktte This mag nificently printed and exceedingly interest ing monthly, published by C H. Turner & C., Philadelphia, offers $3,000 for competi tive prizes for 1870. upon the follow jug con ditions: For the eleven best essays $1,500 will be awarded, and $1,000 additional will be paid for the tictntg best Composiiions of scholars at school. These are to be submit ted prior to April 20. 1870. and the decision will le announced in the July number of the Educational Gtzette. For ihe ten larg. est Hits of Subscription $-500 will be given, the first receiving $125 ; while unequalhvl offers are made to pupils to become active canvassers. The January number gives full details of these awards, and the terms will be exactly fulfilled.. Local Con eupoudence. Johnstown, Jan. 8', 1870. Dear Freeman There is some talk here that the Rolling Mill has stopped for want of a market for rail iron. It did stop tem porality, but we think for repairs only. Congress spends its time legislating on a much harder subject lhau either iron or sUel. and still runs the "nigger" up in the scale ol moral ideas." Our idea is that there will, before long, be a wonderful revolution in ublic seutitueut and that the "negro" will be loathed by the veiy party that has so long petted and patted him. At any rate lwtarij" as dead as the Cardiff giant, ami, right or wrong, it will never be, ree-ui rected. We have jtiat read that Pi entice the witty, sarcastic, intellectual Prentice is dead. Many a noble cause did he advocate muuy a feaiiul battle did he fight and many an antagonist has he slain. We sup pose his mantle may as well fall upon us as on any other, as he has ceased to be Pren tice here, and lias become an "enteied Pren tice" in the premised land. Wi.l McShane object ? It is thought that Congress will abolish the Fiaitkn Privilege as tiu-y have 6o long practiced deception. If they do, it will be lor the sake ot consistency, uot reform. Mr. William Orr, whu has buried about three thousand persous iu fifteen years, met with a sad accident last week or at least hie he-iise did. Ao he was passing through Couemaugh borough, the wheels ot the hearse went dowu deep mlo a rut and jolted to hard that the coffin was thrust agaiust the glass of the hearse, sma.-hing the thick glass to a thcusaud pieces, The. hoarse cost near a thousand dollais. He talks of suing the borough tor damages. We caw him iu search of another glass. W e have had a remarkable January in deed so reiuamable us to be the subject of comment by the oldest inhabitant, aud it deserves to be recorded as such. It has been often sai 1 of Maich that it came in like a I lion ami went out like an old tice. So Jan uaiy came in as extiaoruinai ily as Andy Johnson and tveut out as iguouiiuioUsly as Uet Budtr! Wk never knew that Henry Ward Beech er wassjgod looking, tiil the other day, wl.eii we iiccioeulaily saw his likeness in the Police Guzttle. No wonder that he at tracts so mutli alleulioii in Gotham, where he is known, not only as a Becchci, but as a son if a Beech er ! J'nat dcient-e ol Edwin M. Stanton, pub lished in i.ur last isi-ue, is, we fear, t-jo JJlack to while-U his political character, and as to his moral thai acier. we thiuk noth- t ing should be said against the dead. Our salcon keepeib aie iu great distress about ihe condition of the nveis. They will have to go it b'iud, it they do uot miuD get eyes ('cej, or at le 1st their ice-cream i?a 100ns win become tce-olated next summer. Hon. D.J. Moiieil presented a petition iu C ngress from 45 citizens of Cambria county iu tavor of abolishing the Franking pnvilege. hat a sidy movement ! Cam bria county has about forty thousand mhab- itants. ii.i n or Ii ss. nf u Imhii i n I V fintv.fi vt I appear to tie iu fvor of a measure tnat all 1 , , i i. i i) - .i i would endorse. Laud Bnai ms strikes ! j. ou a ui iiv. ic-ui oocici y w.h 1110; u iiiumiui rail ball in Union Hall, on February 22J. It is t:mo that every one should know that the b.rthday of vashington comes ou the Th. 'r.,...v..r..;.. Sl.itt, Ii 1,, u ay ot Washington 21st now, if not the 2uih. Uy giving i bap year every four ycais we leap ttni far. and j.ain eighteen houisevery hutuiied years, ai d this time amount to more than one day since the tiirlh ol astung'on. j Through the politeness of Mr. Leopold j Mayer, t lie great dry goods merchant here, ! we were invitc-d to htar the iuimmutable j Peak Family of Swiss Dell Lingers." on Saturday night, and we do unhesitatmgl y ! say that it was the most talented pud refined j performance ever given outside of our large j cities. Johnstown never saw its equal, i either as an exhibition of musical skill or high social cuniue. The Opera Hou.-e of1 Johnstown has been greatly honored by their presence and their choice of a place. There have beeu meetings of all kinds here lately. The churches have had religious re vivals, the United Uieihreii a conference, the Siss Bell Uingers two exhibitions ; aIs-i lectuies, seve-rjl balls, and various either en tertainmeuts, which has made the place quite lively. The Johnstown Literary societies, two in number, have lieu greatly troubled for a yeai or to back, with hydro cepholus. or wufer on the brain. Time was wneu the old st cieiy.in its younger yeais and more healthy condition, was quite a bri.-k institution, hut its old members have fallen off, and the fungus excrescence that giew in their dac is decidedly weak and ualtrg ! We under stand these societies have had no meetiugs lately. We would advi-e some of our neighbors who buy milk from the wagons that is some wagons to take the advice that St. Pant gave to Timothy, and "drink no l inger water." There is to be a "Co operative Lie brary association" here. The lawyers are all stock holders by natural as we'd as acquired right, but more btock is wanted, and we hope the matter will go a head Success in this would be a God send to our ZtZe-ary societies. It. B RT. Ai-tooxa City, Jn. 31 . 167;). Faiesn Mac There is nnv amount of local news this week, the particulars ol which are decidedly rich," t use it common rxprcsion, but they are of a rharactir more befitting the columns ol the Podce ti.tzeite than those of a respectable iiewpnt tx like the Freeman. I may lemaik. howctcr', that notwithstanding the high social position and moral pretcii.-ions ol wime wui.M be gentlemen lureawiM, t-ioy arc subject to as coriupt passions and are just us apt lo i rod the path of sin as the ra inv men among us lu possess less of those carthlr riches which are deemed so inseperable from respectability its at present constitute.!. The guilty ones iu this in-t .t.ctj are of that class which is generally denominated the "'upper crust," and although, by reaeon ot their rao kksbioxs, their evil dob gs are always prod tie live ol the greatest scandals and ni t demur aliz'iig vfiecis, these lespectable (?) sinners are never without friends to excuse and palliate their crimes, if i.ot to champion their cause. How very different ia the tesult when a poor unf'ortuna e like Maggie Campbell or a com mon sinner like Arthur O'Neill nre the actors in such sinlul trai sactins! Then the moral sense of the entire community is shocked and the u liversal cry i t h ive the guilty parties arrested and penished, so that our laws may be vindicated and the peace and virtue of the community protected and kept untarnished The (tood Will' boys propose to hive a grand calico dres ball on the 'Jid of February a day which w as once held 8 acred and dulV honored tor its as ociations, b t which is now scarcely noticed, owing no doubt lo the fact that so many 'second Washing-ons" have risen up of late that the first Washington has been cast entirely ic the shade. But I said that the Good Will Fire Company intend to have a ball, and It is to be i calico ball tlntt is, calico will be the recognized standard of dress goods. The fire laddies know how to make everybody happy on sucb occasions, and I hope there will be an abundance of p'easui-e-seekers to enjov their hospitalities on the 22J The Catholic Ladies' Bazaar bids fair to be the grandest af fair of the kind that has ever been held in this city. The good ladies who are "pushing on the column" are sparine neither trouble nor expense iu the effort to make tbe Bazaar what it should be m source of innocent pleasure and pastim to the public Mid a roi-.sing benefit to the good cancc it i cYsigned to aid. May it prove a great succes! Quite a spirit f religion has been awakened among our people, nnd nearly all classes out side of a certain learned profeion have e come interested in the good woik and re mix iouslv inquiring whet they shall do to be saved The '"Church of God," under ihe pastoral care of Rev. Pugnu. is nightly crowded Vuh peni tents who seem desirous of finding grace. The Herman C itholics of this city deirn to build qniie nn extensive ndditi n to ihei.- fine church in the early siring. The mpUly in creasing membership of the church has reti tiered an en!argcment of this kind necessary. General Sews Items. A severe earthquake occurred at Vir ginia Civ. Nevada, on Saturday. II. R Revels, colored S-nator elect from Mississippi, has at rived in Washington. The late Rev. Father Dunn, of Phila de? hia. gave in chatity during his life the whole of his income. The BrH kville J ffersonian announces the deah of a voting man in that county, named Robert Teadly. from injuries received by the falling of a trie. A kerosene lamp exploded on Monday in the house of Nicholas Bliss. Buffalo. Mr. and Mrs. Bliss were burned seriously and their two children latally. The chances are that the censns of 1870 will be taken under the old law. Better this than have a fresh supply of hungry leeches fastened upon the public treasury. On Ihe morning of the 20th ult. John M'D nough and Jacob Muitick ere instant ly killed in the Oxford cool mineB near Scrardon, by the falling rf th roof. Robert Miller, of Shinpensburg was killed last week by a tree falling on him. and Robert Ford, colored, was severely, if not fatally injiued by a tree which he felled. Seven men wre fr zen to drath in are cent storm between Pembina and Fort Aber cromhie. Dakota. On Sunday week the ther mineler at F. rt Abercrombie maiked 35 degrees he'-ow zpro. 1'ihn Dresham. of AsVland. Schuylkill conntv. last week undertook to ki:l bis wife, and after being arrested attempted to kill the i istice who committed him. He was in fir killing som-bndv. Senator Hiram R. Revels, whom sme i of the Mississippi papers irreverently call a j thousand dollar darkey." ha reached j Washington, and is the guest of Mr. D wn- i ing. the eminent black oystrrman. lliri.ni is to prrsent his credentials this wek. A new disease has broken out in New York. It i-i called trn relapsing fever, is i i r- v.... i . :.. .v,;.. I K,OA" ln. '"-""T'". u'? ",'7'"?,1 country lor me nrst nine, n is i"irm, m its svmtitnms. hut not necessarily fatal. A suspension of woik in the construction and steam oneinering departments of the New York. Philadelphia and Portsmouth ) lHVy irt.i.J- I. A? I'tii .... ....... ! tl. ....... . ..f en. mi nl rwr.r P-flftO tm rciirw llirnw i iji ii rii'li-'i"" in "v" -..- - The Dan ville Intelligencer reports a heart rending accident at that p'ace on Saturday afternoon last, of two little hoys being burnt to death, in the pile where the hot cinders from the Pennsylvania Iron Furnace are de- pometi. . hVv. S'mon M- Tjandis. M. D.. Pastor " ' , r-u n u- n' ' ' first progressive in is.. ...i ....... ... !....,.,. , . 1 . - I Wphi was lecently sentenced to the j ronUrnt inry for ver d;rg r.l.scene bor.ks. Ihe I I'mgressive Chr.Bta.n Levertnd progressed nsfiiiishinl 1 . ... " : . . . i. wi.. i .,1 .. mnJA -em ouniiay last ine umic ....-. umu their appearance for the first time this year, and farmers in IViks have been ploughing lands in many parts of the county, which has not been done in Pennsylvania at this season of the year for many years, if ever before. A large Feman military demonstration took place at Bnffilo on Saturday night, and the first of a seiies el mass meetings w a- held, at which the Administration atiWash- ington was denounced f.r not demanding the re'easeof Irish-Americans confined iu Kng- li.-h prisons. . Three thousand cotton spinners in Lan - I 'ISJ i.C. X..i.I.J.i, rt.i-i.i. . . ..... - the workmen aie discontented. Here labor ers are beginning to f.t-1 the iron grip of cap ital, upheld by partial laws. There will yet be a death struggle between the men who earn and the men who spend. George W. Crawf.ird. of Scioto county. Ohio. 15 years old. stands six feet one inch high, mea.-ures around the shoulders three feet and eleven inches, forty-one inches a. r.-und the chest, forty-two inches around the i - . i - i i i - . .... : .1.. hips, weighs me hundred ami e'ghty-tight pounds, ami wears a No. 10 boot. A short time sine, in Crawford county. Mo.. Mr. W. W. married the eldest daugh- tor of Mr. L. l) . and Mr. L D. rra iied the eldest daughter of Mr. W. W. According to the laws .if consatiguinitv. what relation will the children . f i nch hoiivehold bear to the other, and what will be the status of the parentage ? A few days ago Mr. Gabriel B Eldred. of Su-quehanna cuutrt wrote to Governor Geary stating that tho then prothonotary of the county was dying, and asking the ap pointment to the flice when death actually recurred. The j rothonotary is dead, and his successor has been appointed, bui Eldred is not the lucky man. A man name ! Earsman. while going to Ids home fr.m Washington. Illinois, to Deer Creek, tin Tuesday'night last, froze to death. He was going home in a wagon, with his wife, somewhat intoxicated, and the woman drove while fie tooK a nap in the bottom ot . I . IX' i . 1 1 1 1 . I the wasron. When they reached home he was stiff and cold in death. A new railroad is proposed to bts built, to be called the Pennsylvania and S ulus May railroad, connecting with the Lehigh Valley railroad at Waverly. N. Y.. and run nine through iietwetn the Gn.oa and Cau ga lakes to Sod us Diy. on L ike Ontario. It will establish a direct line from Outario to Ihe coal fitrlds of Pennsylvania. A fire in Towan.la. Saturday, con sumed the entire bri k block occupied by Powell & Co. .Tracy & Moore, dry g mrismcr chants; II. N-dilo. wholesale and retail deal ers in wines and liquors, together with the office of the New York and Pennsylvania Central Railroad Company, and other offices aud shops. The loss :.s $225,000. So long as John W. (ieary lives he will continue to mike himself ridiculous by dis playing his vanity and indulging in self lan dation. At his reception, the other evening, some one asktd him if he did not dance. No." 8 i'ul his Excellency, '"I have not dan ced since the war ; my legs are to full of bul let hole." Comment would be utterly supei fluous. The "Grand Army of the Constitution" is the title of an organisation just tffected in Ihe city of Brooklyn by Democratic sol diers. Already eighteen G "nera's and a large number of other officers have joined it. and application has been made to open fourteen encampments in the State. Hy the New York dispatch it appears that General Kose ly haa been elected Commander. A new remedy is anonnced for the cure of chronic lung disease. The patient is to place the skin if a cat upon his chest everv night. This remedy induces easier respira tion, and finally clearsea the lungs. As these patients require a fresh cat every day, it follows that these animals will be in great demand, and there will be a chance for some expert Yankee to make a fortune by raising catt. " s The Hartford Conravt ban news from Robeit P. Keep, Consul at At hens, of I he lo tal destruction by earthquake, on thr mor ning of Dei ember 29. of the tow.i of Santa Maura, on on -f the I .nian Islands of that name. At the dale of the advices Jannaty 1 ten dead and fifty wounded men have been taken from the mins. Not a house was left standing. Th survivors slept iu the open air or under tents. The government at Washington is sud denly dispensing wbh the services of bun dteds i f woikmen employed in tho vetioiis Navv vnrHs. Five hundred were turned adrift at Bn-oklwi on Sstnn'ay. and thir teen hundred at Charleston. There being no ele Hons on hand in Nc-w York or Massa chusetts, the services of those laborers are not needed. Next fall, however., an immense amount of work and votes will be required. A man named Baker Armsrong. a citi zen of Tennessee, was shot nnd killed during the n hellion, while lying wounded in his mother's arms, by a man named T. L. Jack son One day last week a man named Jacksoc. answering th discriptioa of the murderer, was arrested in Polk county, where ihe murder was committed, and was identified' by Mrs. Armstrong, and while being taken to prison was shit and killed by Anderson Armstrong, a brother of Jackson's victim. It appeats that great complaint is made at the Briti-h Legation ol the wart ol a proper civility on the part of the Imperial pling to or addies-ing P. H. SHIELDS. President towards I'rince Arthur, in the monarchies of Europe it is the invariable custom for sovereigns to call in person upon any prince of the bhvd royal wh may visit their capitals, and the r.f gleet to do so by the Executive who represents the sovereign fy of the country is v;eed as an act with a studied meaning. The Legation al.-o feel j Ii. quest will he held at tl that the declination to dine at the Embassy 1 tne deceased, in UamUri, was a purposed discourtesy. During the past eighteen months sixty five new blast furnaces have ten erected in j fifteen diffi-rent States, nnd it is probable j that a f w mor could be f und in West Vir ! ginia, and perhaps l-ome in the far West. ! Thr re r fifty-eiht ni rekt own to have I been r j-oted. renly all f which will be I built during the coming yenr. ami the most ! of which are in the we-1. Of the sixty-five1 'i .... , . vi i.i:. mint orr ng in- pa-r jea- ami a niu ininv one are in the Mississippi vallev. some of j which are h largest ever erecr-n in any country. It is snppn.-od that li O00.OCO t- n of pi ir'"n were produced iu this country dming the past year. Tde Gbkat Tornaio Singit-'ar Phe nnmena. 11- tVrring to the rec nt torti':d i in Tetine.-see. the Gallatin Examiner tf Janua .... Oi I 1 1. 0 ..... - Tl.u rA-i. i,f llwi U-ii..l M -. ... " ( rP .1 ...i l -L..1 . ! .liar'ni Ward, .Ld-earu IMiCii, t alrickll,; i u-oi ui.ri ir i int. .rtiiiu srr hiiu uji'mih a. r. ... , , , .. , , , , , . Vr. Win Oientwortn, mil etliera cnti ii iirin iii wr n lilt? p fnipni s s iir -ii 1 i-ti a sight which t ever ran fride from their memories. The sky was n.t crowded with thick, impenetiable clouds. f..r the "strug liug moonbeams' misty light" lit up occa sionaly tlie f.ce of the earth. and the lagged fib'fd cldii.ls in confused j-enaiate masses j .idtd through the heavens bke broken ma-ses of armed battalions of men dashing wildly over the field of battle. The light ning i xibited equally as singular phenorne- i- it ri. ii 1 J j lrll!.e M.ltklittfIl as llie eyes be ; wiUl ,iie bniliancy oftheb.lt. Mltl)ll;l. m(1Mlills. For long na. urdinaruy a oiaze is i.uioweu oy an iu- became blinded but n-t so on iiihmtes the whole firmament was ablaze witn a soft, al most v'u l.t colored lint which ieneotd every ..l. .-. a? ..l .in ou ot rwu.rtil-iw TliA lfttfU .if v i irv t iniii a. n. in. iii ? ................. i.. 'i l the northern ridee. t which the writer was LndCi.esi 1 uwiis.upa - I t 1 - i 1 . . 4-1 gazing. sliN.).l out IK ooi'l reliei. tne trees oi the f rst, even, appearing as d;stit ctly a though but a few hiunlrcd yards distant. The earth almost set n ed in a stte of repose j nieiw fc,i ve, the tii ge of the aurora j t,..realis. vivid contrast to tbe w i!d, mad j rjdj,, careering clou Is owr head hearing j Struct ion in their bosom. Ben. ath it wa-a ; f xe wand of an enchanter had been waved j OVer earth, commanding peace and beauty and light above as though the furies and Imr- j u g were car(,uir.e in wild orgies. This i isirange mail nesirti n.n if j jert i ru iiiuir tu.tu once before the cessation of the storm.- The latest dispatches from Jenkins, at Washing'on. read to this effect ; Priuce Ar thur arose this morning at eleven minutes past seven. Cntrary to his usual habit, he put on his binds before getting into his pan taloons. Seven minutee later, after having siiecesi fu'lv accomtdished his ablutions, he ; passt.,j rapid !v from the washstand to the ! r . . . . toilet table, where he experienced great dif ficulty in making the curl over his forehead hang properly, owing to the cantankerous inlilR.,)Ct.s ,.f"the Washington atmospK j u ,,Uckered his lips for a 'd n." I ti,liau f iXA mother and held in. Elpl sr-here. but E'phin- stone heloed him on with his coef , and Fi'z roy tied his cravat. He put three to thpicks in his vest pocket, and, being told that soft boiled egg? would constitute a portion of the morning meal, concealed an extra handker chief beneath his coat tails The patty de scended to breakfast at precisely three min utes and fifteen seconds tj eight Elph in stone xhistliing "Shoo Flv." What $30 000 Wiix Do. The rhiladel- I phia Evening Star says that a wealthy lady ( i mat city nas oneieo a young mar, 000 to marry her daughter. The strangest part of the story is that the young man never saw the young lady, and is required to abando.i her forever, immediately after the marriage ceremonv. We will engage to fur ' . . . . . . nitdi the young man fo- half the sum. and will give a guarantee that there will not be any hesitation about the abandoning part of the business. We think we could also count on getting Mess-s. Frothingham and P.eecher to perform the ceremony ; Mr. Greely to endorse it in the Tribune, Mrs. Calhoun to stand ready to intensify the s-cene by her ''clear tinging voice" and "thrillint: presence," and have Sam Sinclair board them after his own peculiar fashion. Information Waxtkd. Mrs. Geotge Lewis, now rtsidiug in De'aware township. Mercer county. Pa., (post flice address. New Hamburg. Mercer county, Pennsylvania), desires to learn of the residence of her broth er named I tees Mynich, who came from Wales about one jear ago to this country. She left Wales in October. 18C9. to meet her husland. who had preceded her to this . 1 . . : . e . . I country, out on arriving nere louna mat lie had been killed from the falling of a tree in the month of October, 13G9. Mrs. Lewis is in destitote circumstauces. and is anxious to learn the whereabouts of her brother, and desires the newspapers of the Country to pub lish this notice. Adam Ruff. If this should meet the eye of Adam Ruff ("or any person acquainted with bitn), now about twenty-two years of age. w ho left home in Au2u-.t. 18U7. tdnce when nothiug has been hard of him. a line addressed to his father John G. Ruff. Easton. Ph., will tend to allay the mental suffering of a pareut. Papers please copy. Tnic Little Corporal for February. Pure, crisp, and brilli int; as usual, full of all the fiesh juices of Young American life. It grows better and better. No boy or girl should be without it. One dollar a year, when it is worth double that amount. Pub lished by Alfred L. Sowell & Co., Chicago, IHinoit. lly nam-l DmiMi- , Somerset towns captured an eae. which the shnrrsh of that section have h.UiT beon Hf,er "'l'"1 capture.) it by p'acing ois-,n on 'p ' " upon which it fed. After M,t,kine poisoned n.eat. i-.flew t n ,, from which in a short time it p.') t 1 ground, m-.d when Miss D "naMsori rrJ the spot, she l. tind it dead. It rr.f j. T overeteven feet from tip to t ip .,f wjnn" weighed over twelve pounds. t'u D ISSOLIJTION. Th partner.,;., here dore exi-iii g hctvn iV.- signed in the manufacture .ni le r,f j HKK. under the firm nme nl CcNiGnA i SToNtnicK. has this Way heen ni-w.iri, mutu d cons-em The tuisir.e wi;i heClp. ou by Owtx Ccxmnuiiam. 1,0 ii antW,!! to settle all a. counts. l OWE X CUNNISr.niy JAMES STONEBEl'k Ebensbnrg. Jan. 2S, 1C9. 0t HOTEL PROPERTY in LOKEm FOR SALE 1 he uinipr. 'J under si.ned offers tor sale his e!l known and desirable TAVEUX STASO, -. i ii.i . ... SI I rt - ...... a commooious Sial It-. Ice House, Warehn'c" Cistern, &c The House W in gno.j tt., t ' Tcrni will be made eav. If i,t snM won 'i me itces-eiry ouonnl iin M t. 1 r..l. , . . Further information can be obtain.! v.. Loretto, Feb lc7j tf. 6 T I 0 E IN I A Ii T IT 1 0 T Tl . I 1 t o t iiuui.1.- ivuurriK, wnose w lir-r.,i-. i- i;i, Known, anu iiooeri Kooern li'eoi'f, Orleans, heirs and lcg:d repr sennit , . . ...... 1 t i . . r . . -- oria e-ountr. ueee iseu : i k nonce thit .. ie lari' reoidn- i' town-fun e'.n- county, t ennsyivania. on Satcrdat, rut i"-? rjT ok r uBKCAr.y. at 1 o"e-!ok, j., m.. Urti purpo-e of making partition of the re.l t,-Xl oi saio ueceaseu to ami among Ins l;e.rj lepal lepreseiitatives, if ihe same cin be.'i ; wi'houl prejudice to or spniliag ihe other isc tovilufland pprai-e thePtme ; w! ich time and phiee you are rrq-iti eJ to t tend it' you think t rj-r. JOilN A BLMR. Si,.v Sheriff's Office. Khensburg, Feii.rt. l:V IIEHIFF'S SALE Uy virtue writ of Al. Fi. Ta. P. Vend. Kxixn.i. out ot tne court o; Common He;i,iaCrC county. Hi d ta tne ''irecte i, thr-ewili ti Kised to Public Sile. at tfie O-Jiirc II m i: Khen.-burg. on U'ep.visrar, t.ie Q'.ia i j Fi kki'akt Mir, at J( o'clock, a. m . tde - lowiug iCeal hst.ue. Vj wit : All llie rijht, : tie and inteiest "I Wni. K Can, of, i,, KU ;. piece or panel of Hud situate in S iimiicr, iowiislii.i, Cambria county, adj "ini :lll-N 115 Ai res, n.'re or les, ab ut u Acr-s . liic:i are cir.iiei mw mine oci'iin.rt; Win. Ii. Oarr Taken in exeeii.ion unj so!d at the sn'.t of M.s. Levmia B.ou, L.t for use of Robert L J dmi.ni, K-q. JOHN" A. rtL.IU,hr:i blienn s Ulnee. tnensnnrg. no. a, i-, i.i J O T ILE OK APPEALS A( fiotn tbe Asse-smeiUs fur l?7u::l held at the Cflice of the Count Cjuii; ers. in Eben-bnrg ns follows: Ffbrvakx 21?t For Carroll Toircs!.; Ciirroillown ami LtuMisourg r. (nj'ih FtDKCAiiV I Tor Johnstown, .'iw.ir Cot e-nnuih, vi ward-,) E.st I'oiiem.iuh.lI.J lil'e. Pro pecf. and rranklm Eoruu;1 Fkbiiuaky iJ.'id For Cootier-.iaie Bonir and Aileuhenv. Cambria, Muiis'et. liji-k i.i I Fib. c.AHT ii4ih Clearfield. 0-nm::. Crovle, liichlaiiu and Summerhiii Towl- and C.mtiria Ib rough Ft BitACT t!5ih. Chest Sft ii. L-o and Giliitzin, J.iekson, Sasuehaiiuiii, la; acil i odcr I otvnshii'S. March 1st Loretto, S-.irainitvi:!e ssd ' more Uoroufjli and Wasliiiit.iu and Vol Tow uslnps. JOHN A. KENNEDY. ) M AU IU CE M N A M A KA Cjs's JAM KS K. NE.VSO.N. ) Attest T J. Glass. Uerk. i: r pill A I, LIST. ( JL trial at an Adjour Cau-e set (ion t ourned Court to cjZ'f on Monday, FtB. 21st, !S70: Fenlon vs. Puncaa Black vs. Simpson. Lantzy vs. CorJerhun tM- Snyder vs. Byrnes. Trainer ...vs. M Cabe. McGonigle vs. Burk. A. II. Ii. & Coal Co..t?. Oailaherft : Swone vs. Flvnns. I Keith vs. Bower'. tan: Vi. bowers sna- Litzii.ger .vs. Lit:iner 3 A::' Hodgtrs, for use, vs. Be-k. Fry vs. A!c!if: r Duncnu V3. I.ciiy's A.-t Wibel. for use vs. Bvrre et al rt ir. ; Storm vj. Leraon'3 Ai',r s , b' McGarrity vj. Bnrom i 1 Oeis vp. Dir. root, e Kring.... vs. Crook. J K. HUE. FroO.i Proth'ys Office, Ebens'-.ur?. J.n ' : r v. M 1 Ii A ."M IJ L KM'1 NURSERY ASSOCIATE l. O .IXO.V, ITCi t. I r- ! r-' ; V n lh.n Tr.'r T. R Jens - - .. i r. n r.-rti I - - ..... .-, . - - - . p, t'lumbtrtburg, Fraiik"" c"" The conductor of this etab!iiw':,:-";' in" their ch irac:er and b'lsim"'' rf: tion above transient con determined to ir0i. ch a quality of NURSCRY Sp- shall give entire sati.-f.ici ":l " Such as lon.eis. 1 hey cultivate n . FRUIT TIIKES. fillAPK VIXKS SM'-L':" ORNAMKSTAL TKKKS AM A"51' IMSKS AXl UKCMXG n-STS that are rrown bv the very bwt ?'u ; J The underM-neJ hai been PP" dent Agent at Johnstown 'or the ,c ... " - I' I ui .1 ill icM lisliment. Cataiocues supni.eu . . . . ' ::..,t-iiti. maliou lnruisbeU upyn aj'i'"-,,cr; P.h 1 om J.,hr.stu;j . ....... if,, t'r'-'l i. ... f . I f.m.n. i-UWl'1 it wru oi ri.'. --"- ; ..-.p. Court of Common P eas oi v - . i .l.r- mi l I"? fI anu i nie unce.e... ..- i ,u I ublic Sale, at tne ri'M .,j . .1. n.lllf I" on SA I UKUAl , TI1K l -',"" ,. ;,, xxt. at 2 o'clock, r . e ll"10 Estate, to w it : , aii 1. 1 iWlonr.il interest ( . . . . . i .. nf i-n)Utnlf i Kinney, ol, in and to i"1 y f rosnect iiorougn, 100 feet on Cen.re a venue, rum.. land of the Cambria Iron t emp- K'. lot of Iternard keeian on er Green or. the w e-d. having . , l.,t- H...i.e. w.iti ua"- .mil ' I V, u i.,niPi01)- ' in the occupancy ot Juscpn o-" (Ji it: execution and to be sold ' A young 1 ? e Jr - 5a i fed 5a 'er jf 3U ESI H f t i i f liran A: Harshbarcer. . ,n ?f I .loHXA.EU'V Kb:T'- rnr,.o r.tmiisliurg, J"- V- IN THE OKFIIANS ' Lt ' CAM 1 R 1 A COUNT i u. or TH acc cxtok Fmm 1k1.w rnrl'1 on motion F. A . Shoemaker a, r fipO' to distribute fund ui hands ot Tt lha tiurt. .?t l-'j fL.R I JAMl'u" V.iK 1 m ill attend to ti e t,wnvi ' ! on TrtsuAT. Ft.. I5tu. at - ,S ot w.' III J 1 ' " -7' inieresieJ may appear. noJ4 J.a 37,3:. F - 5