(Cambria Jfrccrnam pa. Satchpat Moknino, : : May G, 1871. Gr-OMiB Bkkoseb. the proprietor of the Iluritburg Telegraph, has made a complete retraction, ovsr his own (ignatnre, of all the charges against Judgo Black, which appear ed in his newspaper. Ho alleges that the cl juctlonablfl articles, were inserted without his knowledge or concent, and stows his heluf that Judge Black was as clear In erery office he filled as mortal man could possibly be. The Lancaster Intelligencer presumes the Jatfge will gracioualy permit Ucrgner to go unwhipped after the publication of a re traction which is so complete In erery sense of the word. It is said the Governor will reto the ap portionment lately passed by both Houses of the Legislature. Should Gorernor Geary do so he must bear the responsibility, for the bill now before him is no doubt the best that can be obtained under the present cir cumstances. The bill has many objectiona ble features to the Democracy, yet they accept it rather than force upon the State tho (lopt&rable reenlts that must fellow its rjecticn. Gov. Geary rhiuld weigh well the effect of the yeto before returning the bill with his objections. So says the Hunt ing Jou Monitor, and so say wo.; Don Piatt, in his Dew paper. The Capital, draws the following rough but truthful por trait of Den But!or. PUtt has closely watch el Butler's career, and is therefore a must competent judge : "We hold Butler to be the wickedest deraa gogugo let loose upon this country since its independence. His iustiucts are treacherous, revolutionary, merciless and avaricious. That he is able to lead any considerable number of coiigreatmen is satisfactory that Republican public is in great part debauched. That he influences l'i evident Grant is not only a iia lioiial but a human ca1 amity. With the final downfall of free government, such caused as his character must be compictoua Rapacity is his oue trait, an Astatic quality never before entirely developed iu this liuruispl.ore." It will bo seen from the proceedings of the County Committee, published elsewhere, that the election for delegates to the next lonely convention will take place on Satur day, theJ22d of July, 8D(1 that the conven tion will be held on the following Monday. The action of the committee on this subject was wise and judicious. Heretofore, with tho exception of last year, for which there was a good rearon, the convention bas been held so early that the smoke of the previous fall campaign had scarcely passed away before the different aspirants for office eom mented the contest fur the coming year. This was a runit-hment which the people could not well bear. There will be two mouths anda half of time between the meet ing of the convention and the election, which Is ample enough for any candidate to rnaka his calling, and election sure. The next convention ought to designate a fixed day iu July, on which all future county Conventions shall be hold. Wb were mistaken, as was the press gen erally, when we stated that the bill restoring the Spring Elections had passed both branch es of the Legislature. It seems that after the bill passed the House and went to the Senate, certain amendments were offered to it (of curse by an enemy to the bill) and adopted, applicable to Luzerne county. The House refuted to concur in the amendments, and the bill was banded over to the tender mercies of a conference, where it still remains with but a slim prospect of an agreement cn the disputed points. It is as woadetful as it is disgraceful that the Legislature will a second time, in defiance of the almost unan imous wish of the people, refuse to pass this bill, pure and simple and entirely disconnect ed with any debateable or conflicting propo sitions. The Senate had no kind of difficul ty in passing, after a few hours debate, a bill of such magnitude as the border claim project, involving the trifling sum of almost three millions of dollars, but it could not pass a meritorious law, like the SpriDg Election bill, without encumbering it with objectiona ble amendment!, which in all probability will defeat it. This is a sample of legisla tion, straining at a gnat and swallowing a car.id. Thh present Legislature has been in ses sion four months one month longer than the usual time. The members receive a sal ary for the session of $1,000 and mileage. This la enough iu all conscience, even though the session should be prolonged until the arst of June, as it is likely to be. It seems, however, that, like the insatiable horse leech, i-ke members of the House at least demand ricre. On the 27th of April Mr. Cloud, from the Committee cf Ways and Means, reported a bill which, amoogst other things, contained an item giving to the members jnd officers of the Senate and House of Rep resentatives seven dollars per day extra from Aprii 7th. By a etrango and mysterious ciociJence it happened, most probably by a previous understanding between the Speak er. Cloud and Sam Josephs, that when '.cud made his report, Samuel, who knows 8.1! the ways that are daik in legislation, c-.cupied tho chair. When Josephs put the question upon agreeing to this item, although z:cl ten members bad the brazen effrontery to vcte in the affirmative, he decided that it ra-I ben agreed I, whereupon the House '.r:r:fdiat8ly adjourned. Ou this occasion Jesephs was tho right man in the right 1 : f. Ut course the veas and nnvs were : ...ed, for the simple reason that with and Josephs, very .f ..ny of the other members wculd have : r-pr.t themselves cn the record in fa . . io swindle. It ia roLbery. bold, in tv.'t ard scandalous. When this ats i rt legislative larceny comes to be W the Senate, we trust that a high ' ! icr and decency in that body will 'i a defeat as ignominious as it is Political Treason. Tho present national administration has piovsd itieif to be so lamentably wesk and inefficient, that evidences not only of a want of confidence in, but openly avowed con tempt for it, have manifested themselves in various parts of the country in the bouse of Its original friends. The resnlt could not well be otherwise. So completely has it failed to realize the expectations of thoee who invested it with power, that even or dinary reliance In ita wisdom has given place te a feeling of alarm at its dictatoral purpose. It is not the entertainment to which they were invited. It has been such a rickety, such a nondescript a&air, that of the six cabinet ministers originally nominated to the Senate by Grant, when he assumed office a little over two years ago, only one ( the Post Master General) now remaine. In its brief and inglorious career, it has done those things which it ought not to have done, and has omitted to do the things which it should have done. In all its workings and sur roundings it is efSMntially a military estab lishment, and the daily routine of business at the White House recalls more the head quarters of a commanding general, with all the pride, pomp and circumstances of war, than the quiet residence of tho highest civil fiicer of the goverenient.. This want of cot fi.JeDce in Grant and his admiaiftration among leading Republicans has assumed definite shape and bids fair to become a power in the next Presidential election. A few weeks ago some of tho leading and most influential Radicals cf Ohio met in Cincin nati for the purpose of consultation in refer ence to the alarming assumption of despotic power by Grant and bis servile Congress. This schism in the Repulican ranks of that State is headed by such men as Gen. Cx. late Secretary of the Interior, Judge Matth ews and other prominent and active mem bers of that party. An address to the peo ple was published and resolutions adopted iu favor of universal amnesty to the South opposition to the San Domingo scheme and to a protective tariff in favor of reform in tbe civil service and a speedy return to tho baais of a gold and silver currency. This meeting was net the mere spasmodic effort of a few disappointed politicians, but the calm and deliberate action of some of the wisest and most prudent men in the Repub lican party of Ohio. It is the entering wedge that, when driven home, as it assur edly will be, will split the Radical party into fragments. This Ohio movement has been lately fol" lowed up by a number of prominent Repub licans of St. Louis, 6tyling themselves "The Liberal Republican Executive Committee of St. Louis." At a recent meeting of the members of this committee the following resolutions were adopted as their platform. It will be seen that they amount to an open ly declared and irrepressible conflict with the high-handed and unconstitutional meas ures of Congress. It is the beginning of the end. First A Democratic ballot-box. Equality of citizenship as established by the constitu tional amendments, and amnesty for all past political offences. Second Supremacy of constitutional gov ernment, that the Executive shall not invade tbe legislative, nor that either of tbe two shall usurp the province of the judiciary. Third We condemn President Grant's course iu committing acts of war upon a neigh boring republic as violative of the constitution which vesta tbe war making power iu Uon grea. Fourth Te are opposed to all enactments whereby it is pat within tbe discretion of the President to declare martial law or suspend the writ of personal liberty except in an actual condition of war, as violative of the Constitu tion in substituting' the will of tbe President in place of the law of the land. Fifth We are opposed to any tariff which is intended to foster any one r another clasa of industry, and thus tax one man or class for the benefit ot another, and maintain that all taxes should be levied with the sole intent to secure needed revenue with tbe least possible burden to the people as a whole. Sixth Believing that tbe time has come when the condition of our country warrants a resumption of specie payment, we favor a speedy return to tbe basis of frold and silver currency; aud we depreciate any effort to com pel the present generation to pay the principal of the debt incurred for the preservation of our Union. believiBg that, as future genera tions as well as the present, derive th bene fit therefrom, they shoull bear a proportion ate i-hare of the same. Seventh Reform in appointments to the civil service, that personal qualifications and intrinsic merit shall bo the standard, and not executive favoritism. Gen, Sherman mid (be Ku Klux. - Gen. Sherman, who is now on a tour of 'nspection to the different military posts in the southwest and on the western frontier. was in New Orleans a few days ago and was tendered a reception by the American Union, Club of that city. In replying to a compli mentary toast, Gau. Sherman, in alluding to the congressional policy of reconstruction said : "I believe this government will koep on growing until it spreads itself over the entire American continent; but in order to gain this much deoired cud, and maintain ourselves as a free and independent republic, we have got to show ourselves charitable toward each other. It has been remarked by some gentleman who have preoeeded me that it was generally conce ded by the soldiers of both armies at the close of the late civil war, that if the questions aud all matters of the settlement of the differences between the north and south were left to tho armies, it would be settled at once, and every thing would become quiet and orderly.- 1 so believed, and before signing tbj agreement with Gen. Joe Johnston. I called together all the generals in my command, and without a dissentinsj voice they agreed with me. I be lieved they surrendered in good faith, and would have lived up to the very letter of the agreement; and in say opinion, if there had been no reconstrnetron by Congress, and the army been left at the time to settle all tbe questions of difference between the different sec tions of the couutry, the people would have at ouce become quiet and peaceable. I probably have as good means of information as most persons in regard to wbat ia called the Ku Klux. aud am perfectly satisfied that the thing is over estimated: and if the Ku Klux bills were kept out of Congress, and the army kept at thbir legitimate duties, there are e notion rood and true men in all southern slates to put down all Ku-K'ux or other bands ot marau ders." This is tbe langnage of a man of brains and not of a stolid, e!sh, unscrupulous aspirant for another Presidential term. Un j like Grant, Sherman takes a practical aud j common sem:e view of local disorders in tbe South, aud would scorn to be the mere echo of such imrnacullo patriots as Morton Cam eron, Edmunds and Scott. In these remarks of General Sherman he administers a stern rebuke to tbe Radicals in Congress who passed the infamous and unconstitutional Ku Klux bill, and takes distinct issue with Grant, who, at the dictation of a set of reck lers demagogues, recommended it. In all the essential qualities of statesmanship, Sher man is to Grant as Ilyperien to a Satyr. Mubdk North and Sooth. Hon. Sha ron Tyndale. late Secretary of State of Illi nois, was murdered in cold blood while walking from his residence to the railroad depot. This ia certainly a fearful tragedy, and yet we have ao comments upon it by the Republican journals. All that is said of this cold blooded eutrage is contained in the telegraphic dispatches. Now, let us suppose that an ex-secretary ef State had been murdered in any of the Sombera States, what would have been the result? The col umns of there journals would have teemed with denunciations of the Ku Klux, and the vengeance of the Federal Government have been invoked. Language would have failed to express their detestation if the deed. It would have been pointed to as only an&ther evidence of the lawlessness of the South. -But occurring as it did in a Northern State, at the capital of which nearly as many mur ders' and outrages are committed as in the entire South, it fails to elicit more than pass ing meDtion. Circutnstaoc&s alter cases. Last week a respectable merchant was murdered in tbe streefs of New York, with out even the temptation of pecuniary gain to the murderer. It vt2 a most dastardly, unprovoked aftVir; and yet we hear of no cs3 for tho interference of the FedflMl Gov ernment. Here in Philadelphia not a week passes in which some one is not tried for murder; and yet the journal that clamor 6o loudly for Federal bayonet inter ference in the South, in spite of tho protest of nearly every Southern executive, do not demand it for this city. What is sauce for the goose should be Bauce for the gander. If a certaiu number of murders in the South demand Congressional interference, whj' then should not an equal, oi possibly a greater, number in the North require the same pans acea ? Evening Herald.- Obituary. Jas. Murray Mason, of Vir ginia, died at his residence near Alexandria, in that State, on Saturday la6t. He was the lineal descendant of an English cavalier who escaped from the fatal field of Worcess tcr, in 1651, and fled to America. Us graduated from the Uuiversity of Pennsyl vania iu 1813, afterward studied law at William aud Mary College, Virginia, aud was admitted to the bar in 1820. He was several times a member of the Virginia house of delegates, a member of congress from 1837 to 1839. and United States sena tor from 1847 until the secefsion of Virginia in 1861. In the fall of that vear he was appointed by the Confederate government commissioner to England, and in company with John Seidell, Confederate commissioner to France, took pas-age on the Royal Eng lish mail hteamer Trent, from Havana, on November 7, 1861, having previously run the blockade at Charleston. On the day following the Trent was overhauled by Captain Wilkes, of the United States man-of-war San Jacinto, who seized tbe commis sioners and their secretaries, and despite the protest of tbe commander of the Trent, made them prisoners and carried them to New York. They were imprisoned for a short time in Fort Warren, in the harbor of Boston, but the British government de manding their release, they were turned over to Lord Lyons, the British minister, after which they proceeded unmolested on their mission. After tbe war Mr. Mason returned to the United States aud settled down quietly in the residence at which he ban just breathed his last. He was in the 73d year of his age. Harritburg Patriot. What DossIt Matter? The people of Arizona recently applied to Gen. Sherman to send more troops into that territory to protect them against tbe Apaches. These savages appear to be more ferocious than ever, and massacres cf whites constantly occur. Gen. Sherman replied' that "Con gress bad so diversified the uses of the army and increased the necessity for it. while re ducing its capacity, that he had no more troops to send to Arizona. All that could be spared must be sent to the South." The troops are to be sent South to carry out the Ku-Klux Force bill and to put down insurrection and rebellion where none exists, except the universal political insurrection against Grant's administration. This is to be suppressed by securing delegations in favor of Grant to tbe Republican National Couvention. and by securing for hint the Electors of these States in 1872. although the majority of their people are against him. If this can be done, wbat matters it whether or not a few thousand people, more or less, are murdered and scalped in Arizo na 7 iV Y. Sun. Grant's Vf.bacitt. In his Indianapolis speech General Or act said that be had no intention of coming to Indianapolis until he met Senator Morton at Pittsburg, by whose soft persuasions he was Induced to make the Indiana visit. It is a well-known fact in railroad circles that two of Tillman's fine sleeping coaches were despatched from Har risburg to Baltimore the Saturday previous, thero to await th8 Presidential party. Ooe of them, known as President Tom Scott's car, was assigned for Senator Morton, and the other (the Jewett car) wns placed at the disposal of President Grant. These two car?, containing the royal and Santo Domingo party, left Baltimore on Thursday night at 10 o'clock , and in due time arrived. at Pitts burg jointly. It was here that Grant says be first met Morton, having travelled with him from Washington in the Fulman cars, and there it was from tbe-time they started at Washington that the Indiana visit was "cooked up." Cincinnati Enquirer. Rkt. "Daddy" Caix, the necro editor of the Missionary Record, published at Char leston. S. C, repudiates tbe Radical party. "Daddy" is a powerful leader smong bis people in the State. He cays in bis paper : The Republican. party started out well. 1 was much encouraged for my race and party, but a set of men have row got hold of it whf are bringing disgrace upon it and running it for their own benefit. In no State of the Union is the Republican party in such odium as in South Carolina. The Legislature ia ignorant and corrupt. Good men have been thrust aside to make room for plunderers. Many of the so-called carpet baggers among us are of the worst sort, and bad men cannot be got out of office until the whole Republican party in the State goes overboard and the Democracy corns to power. There never was a party that had a better chance to do good than ours, never; never was onj that done woise. What tiie Democratic Parly Tl lll Do It lieu In Fewer. I. It will limit tho annual taxes to $250. 000,000, and out of this moderate revenue will apply $25,000,000, toward the extloc tion of tbe public debt ; whereas the federal taxes for tbe last fiscal year amounted to the enormous sum of $411,255,447. II. It will revise and reform tbe system of taxation so that this diminished anaual burden of 4250.000.000 will be equitably distributed. The prerent system not only overloads tbe faithful horse, but ties ome of tbe load to bis legs, puts a part upon his head, makes him drag a portion by his tail obstructing his freedom ef movement, and causing him the utmost annoyance. Tbe Democratic party will withdraw every pouud of the load from his limbs and extremities and collect it upon his back where be can carry it with toe greatest ease. It will, moreover, take good care that the taxes find their way into the public treasury, and not into the pockets of tbe greedy, gasfitfg mon opolists. III. The Democratic party will rectify the abuses of the present banking system ; extinguishing the monopoly by making the husinese free to all who comply with the conditions, stopping tbe interest on govern ment bonds whi'e in p'edge to secure bank circulation, and guarding against a redun dant currency by compelling the banks to redeem their notes in specie. IV. It will revive our piostrate shipping interests and restore to American citizens their former large nhare-intbo prifits of navigation, by freo trade in ships and tbe repeal of -duties on all articles used in their construction.' V. It will extend and complete the sys tem of .universal suffisge by abolishing tbe term of residence uow required, for naturali zation, and giving intelligent white immi grants the same advantage enjoyed by our colored population. There is no reason why a thrifty German who emigrates to Texas aDd bi)va a farm should not at once be as favored" a cHizen as the Sooth Carolina nt-gro who emigraf, to Texas in tho same year and is employed by tlje German as a laborer. VI. The Democratic party will faith fully fulfill all the obligetious created by M'S public debt in their letter and spirit, and will secure to disabled soldiers the full amount of their pensions without allowing a d liar to be deducted for the fees of agents. VII. It will repeal all laws which per mit the Federal government, or any of its officers, to interfere with elections in tbe States. . VIII. It will make a high misdemeanor pnniahable by dismissal from the service for sny officer of the army or navy to aid in the suPMesion of domestic vii.ler.ee in a State utiles the State authorities have made a previous application ato the President for such assistance, in conformity to the Con stitution ; or to interfere for enforcing any Federal law tin If as a Federal judge shall have previously certified that the execution of the laws is resisted by a combination too powerful to be overcome by the marshal aud his jMsse. IX. The Democratic party will remove all the political disabilities aud disqualifica tions imposed for participation in the late civil war. X. It will recognize the binding force of the three new amendments to the Constitu tion so long as they are held te be valid by the Supreme C.'tirt. Here are do flourishes, no buncombe, no vague, cloudy theories which cannot be re duced to practice. If there is any Southern citizen who does not think this lii of meas ures would bring relief from and redress of present evils and grievances, we cannot re spect his judgement. And tf, eu the other Umnd, any Republican insists that the pol icy here sketched is a mere bundle of nega tions and dead issues, he forfeits all claim to be considered ajcandid opponent. X. Y. Wvrld. Imprisonment or trk Akcbbisbop or Paris. In reference to the imprisonment of tbe Archbishop of Paris by the red ropubli caas of France, tbe New York Herald of tbe 30th ult. bas this to say : It appears that the Archbibhop of Paris, held la prison by the reds, was in danger of being sacrificed to the bloody spirit of the commune, when Prince Bismarck through General Fabric notified the commune, that if any further indignities were committed upon the archbbsb'p, the German army still near Paris, to the number of 200.000 men, in the cause of civilization would g into Paris and make short work of the commune. In response to this broad hint from Prince Bismarck General Cluseret says be will pro pose to the commune to release the archbish op of Paris and other ecclesiastics -now in prison. Thus it will be seen that Cluseret is more of the knave than the fool, aud that the hint of Bismarck brings him down. In this view it is a fortunate thing for thu causo of civilization in Paris that the Get man army remains on guard there just outside of tho northern wall. But whut a story for poor Paris as the capital cf the civilized world. The blasphemy of the Paris commune as far as developed, is fully up to the standard of tbe God-defy iug Jacobins of 1793. Some days ago a chief of (he commune spoke of the priests and nuns imprisoned as suspi cious parties "worshipping a person they call God," and now it appears that the Jai cobin Rochefort, in justification of tho rob bery by the commune of the Pjiris churches, says of the goods of the churches : "We do not hesitate to declare them national proper ty, for the single reason that they proceed from the generosity of those to whom the church has promised a Paradise, and the promise of imaginary returns made to obtain any property, is qualified as swindling by every code ; and furthermore, he says our eternal belief is that Jesu-i Christ having been born in a stable, the only treasure that Notre Dame ought to possess is a bundle cf straw." If these infamous wretches of the commune had not yet set up the worship of a prostitute as the "Goddess of Reason," it is because M. Theirs has kept them employ-, ed with something of the pains and tortures of the infernal regions. But the end draws near, when its managers, it ia to be hoped, will meet the punishment due to their heavy crimes. A Tbrbible Death. A heart-rending accident occurred near Bertrand, Mich., on the 3d, by which the wife of Mr. John Pope was literally roasted alive. Mrs. Pope was subject to fits, aud. being a habitual pipe smoker. It is believed by ber neighbors that, during the absence of her husbaDd, she was taken with a fit, and, perhaps, smoking at the time, her clothes caught fire from the ashes, and that partially recovering her con sciousness she wandered into the yard, where she set fire to a pile of straw aud then put it out. She then evidently leaned against the building, and again extinguished the flames with a wet' cloth. During her raviugs she cut her garters and took off her shoes and stockings, and then washed her bands and arms until tho skin came off, as the loose skin and pieces of flesh were found in the wash-pan. Finally, when her clothes were completely burned from ber body, she lay down on her bed and there met her terrible death, alooa and unattended. Political and Sews Bteisis. South Shrewsbury. Mass., ha just en Joyed the first honse afire that has happened there for ninety-five years. General John A. Sutter, on whose land gold was first discovered in California, has located in Litiz. Lancaster county. Out in Carrollton. Iowa, there ia a Utile girl who was born minus tho right hand and the stub of the arm is a perfectly formed cat's head and ears. Charles Oivler, near Botler's Mills. Cumberland county, recently caught a trout 18 inches in length, 6 inches In breadth, and weighing three and a half pounds. During his sermon last Sunday morn in.s at Plymouth Church, on the "Ages to Come," Henry Ward Beecber indignantly scouted the theory of tho resurrection of the body. Corydon has a physician 60 years old who never eat a meal in a hotel or traveled on a railroad or steamboat. If he continnes j-this course of abstineace be may live anoth er 60 years. B.C. Yonng.a printer in the Enterprise newspaper office at Holden, Mo., killed his wife and then committed suicide on Satur day evening. He is said to have been drunk at the time. A youth, about fourteen years of a?!, had one tf his eyes knocked out by a gravel thrown from the hoof of one of the horses during the performance of the circus in Har risonburg. Va., on Thursday. Old Toukery, of Dutchess county, N. Y-. is dead. lie lived in a wild, remote ravine a hermit's life. Fear of witches was his strong suit ; and as he believed all black eyed women to be witches be would not allow one on his premises. A party of young srd loyal amend ments, at Indianapolis, pounded a Caucasian to death when he was drurjk and helpless, because they thought he might be a Ku K'ux. Grant baa been there since, but hasn't sent for any troops. William Norton, a wealthy miser, aged CO years, cf Hyde Hark. Luzerne county, died suddenly nt the breakfast table on Sun .day morning. With all his gold he never would allow a light in his house after sun set ; but the miser has gone, leaving behind all his treasnre. . The Snlt.in of Turkey has presented the United States Government with a mag nificent carpet for the East Koom of the White House. It was woven st the Impe rial factory, occupied a year in its manufac ture, weighs fifteen hundred pounds, and is said to be worth 310,000. Fort Pillow, at Memphis, has wholly disappeared under the abrading forces of the Mississippi. The Appeal says that tbe navy yard there was once mortgaged and adds : 'The mortgage tubuts but the property has been disposed of by a power against which chancery may issue its thunder In vain " The dead bodies of John Donovan, his wife and child, aged eleven years, were found on tbe 23th in a room at No. 20 Bassett St., Albany, lying beside a stove. An investi gation showed that they had been suIToeated by coal gas. A little girl was found in an nt;jticent room gasping for breath but was resuscitated. Naw Oileans magistrates have a way of giving the fines imposed for drunkenness to the family of the offender, the result of which proceeding is that wives who want new bon nets have very materially altered their views on the temperance question, a husband ju dicionsly encouraged in inebriety being a steady source f pin-mony. The most revolting crime that has probably ever been committed in America is now tinder investigation in the Litchfield (Conn.) courts. A father, named Jnel W. Parkins, who appears to have been tolerably well educated, bas been making his five daughters the victims of his inceetueu de sires for fifteen years, and deliberately mur dering several of the unnatural offsprings of bis lust. In Schuylkill county there are some thing over two hundred collieries, with an invested capital of about $12,000,000. The average loss to each colliery, while lying Idle, is at leatt 11,000 per moetb. making in all over $200,000 a month, and 2.400. 000 a year dead loss. This, with the loss to railroad companies during tbe suspension, witl aggregate a grand total of $300,000 a month, or $6,600,000 a year. This is with out regard to the sufferings of miners. A moat wonderful case of stigmata has lately occurred in Belgium, and beeu de scribed with great minuteness by Dr. Day in Macmillan's Magazine The stigma, it will be remembered, is the theological name for the blood effusion with which Christ was affi'cted before bis crucifixion. This girl, it seems, though of healthy parentage and of previously good health, was afflicted with a similar effusion, accompanied by ecstatic fits. The case is one of the most remark able on record. . About two years ago a vein of coal at Yatesville, near I'ittston. Fa., was accident ally or designedly set on fire, and has been burning ever since. Last week ,tho fire seemed to be increasing in extent and intensi ty the volume of smoke being extremely large and heavy. During tbe past winter snow was melted upon the spot as fast as it fell ; and a bare space of about an acre in extent has offered a strange contrast to the sur rounding mantle of white. Tbe ultimate result of the subterraneau fires it is impossi ble to predict. A young gentleman, eighteen months of age, residing in Pawtncket, R. I., re mained quiet the other day for such aa un wonted period that his mother, suspecting that all was not right, went in search of him. She foand him sitting on tbe floor by an open bureau drawer with a loaded and capped self cocking revolver in bis hand, and he was amusing himself by raromiDg the muzzle of tho piece down his throat, work ing at the trigger and hammering it on tbe floor. As soon as the mother recovered from her fright, she took the weapon from tbe child, without any unpleasant result. In I860, when the Fenians set about releasing Ireland from the British rule by attempting to capture Canada, they left tweatv of their number in the bands of the Canadian authorities. These prisooers'were subsequently tried in the Canadian courts, and were sentenced te be hanged. Their sentence was afterwards commuted, how. ever, to twenty years in the penitentiary at Kingston. Since that time three of their number bavo been released, but the remain ing seventeen are still serving out their sen tence. All of them, although of Irish birth, are naturalized citizens of tbe United States. A short time since, a Detroit mechanic had his finger sawed off by a circular saw. He was in such pain at the time, and for several days subsequently, that he did not think to ask what had become of the severed digit. It seems, however, that a comrade picked it up out of tho dust, and desiring to keep it aa the foundation cf a parlor mu seum, he took it home and placed it in a bottle of spirits. Marshall learned the other day of the whereabouts of his prop erty and demanded it. w-Witing to know what business any man had wilh hra-person. The man Ttfused to givo it up, and Mar shall aclrBg under the advice of a policeman. je3terday went to a justice of the peace to secure writ of replevin. In the New Jersey Court or Oyer Terminer, at New Brunswick. Theod Willitts. the -proprietor of the Brookly Opera House, and Mrs. Anna M. Yates, a lady of wealth, beauty and high social sttcd ing. appeared as prisoners charged with subornation of murder. James Baxter, who caused thiir arrest, was formerly in the era ploy of Sam'nel Whitehead .a wealthv citizen of Washa. New Jersey, father of Mrs. Yates, and father-in-law of Willitts Baxter charzes that on three occasions Willitts. Mrs Wil litts and Mrs. Yates bribed him to kill Mr. Whitehead, and that twice he attempted to do so but ruled. How true it is cannot at present be known. Tbe prisoners of coore deny it. They were held in $2,000 bail each to answer at the next term of the Court. In Gaston cnnty. North Carolina, on the night of the 18th of April last, a negro, named Hargrove, with his companion, went to the residence of an old citiien. Mr. Fred erick Costner, and attempted to violate the person of Mrs. Costner. The lady, terrified, shrieled with the energy of despair, which brought her husband to her rescue, when both villains fled. The black fiends then went to the residence of Mr. Sarah Stroup. a white widow lady, residing in tho neigh borhood, and each in turn violated tho per son of her daughter, a beautiful girl of four teen, one of the negroes holding a pistol to the mother's head to prevent her interfer ence. Hargrave ha beea caught. If, now. these two villains should, upon proof of guilt, be hung on the first treo or Jarnp-post. the Radical Da t era would raise the usual cry of "Ku Klux," at.d extol the brutes a? "martvrs" bunir for their "devotion to the Union." To Dhivb Awat Bsdbuosi. vrives the following as a sure An exchange ! way to drive ' bedbugs from old bedsteads: "lake green tomato vines, put ll em into n basin or tray, pound them to pieces as ne as possible, then -talu the bedsteads, where they inhabit with tbe juice, fill the crevices with th pieces of vine ; lay leaves under the ends of the slats." If this is practiced thrice a year not a bug will remain in the bedstead. We know of a much easier and be'tar remedy. Procure an ounce of genuine Persia Insect Powder and sprinkle it along the sides cf the bed, tirwler the slstt, and you can wager any amount that the bugs will give your bed a wide berth. An ounce is enough for one bd. Tt can be procured at the drug soref. Pittsburgh Post. READY-MADE The Largest Stock: In the Finest Goods; Boys .the Newest Styles ; We a the Best Worfc- W8 l:3V9 L-s manship : the " every kind Greatest Va of materia! &. riety, every variety of style, suitable for tt it IC 6th Boys from 9 to 15, and Children from to 9 years, all jru strong, a maao w:th special reference to rough usage. In this de a rtmont our prices are as our Es tonishingly tablishment low. "THE HEAD Market QUARTERS CF a ti d COUNTRY TRADE' 6th. All UiOthinn. snri i i " v V f vve can assure our , friends from out ,of town thst thev 9 3 need lock no fur- A Vhar lhan Oak Hall OurN for satisfactory Cusimn s Clothing &. satis Work is tacicry prices. ofthevery Fuii stock all best character the Easy rules for measurement, prices, dec, sent free to any part of America, and good fits guaranteed. MarJcet and 6th Streets, PHILADELPHIA. nO VFAl MONTH. The HEST SFl JV J SETTLING TIOOK ever published;! AGENTS who sell our new work, PLAIN HOME TALK AND MEDICAL COMMON SENSE, have no competition. There nevr w a book published tike it. Any lolr can sell it. Every iHxiy wants it. Manv Msrem" now making froT-.i Si00 to ff.OO per inoutb 6ellinr wonder ful book. -i iare D-si-ripti t- Catalogue scat free on HppHeation. WwautirouU lit .ctjrents U'.en who fully appreciate the merits of tho work aivl ths fan that it n-t ft universal want. Ajronts who desire to do good as well a) make money. Addros v rj.1.8 & Co.. 432 Broome &t, Kew York. January 5, 1921.-3u. ISISAVE MOEy, M. L. 0AHIUX CIIK1I' CASH DEALtttsix ALL RINDS DRY LADIES' DRESS G00E8, Ready-Made 6MTHIK6. Hats, Caps, Boots, Slices, CLOTHS, CASSIHERES SATIXETTS, J i:XS i mm mm, AnI VrctU tnl omplete Stock,, CHOICE FAMILY (iiiOfEEIt consisting cf I Dome Extra Family Fi GR llX, FEED, BAC02?", SALT, FISH! FRESn VEGETABLES, ; DRIED a CAN'D FRUITS, SUGARS, TEAS, COFFEES, Also, a large stock of the Best Brands of Cigars and Tcba::: STOKE ON IIIGFI STKEET, j four Dcors Ecit of Craichd'i 2,V Kbrnsburg, Pa. TO CASH CUSTOMERS! at tiss: EKK.ISiirnG I1U L iJLi I li II l loiiliMf oi WiJiJ rll - -V .r ii . i citizens cf Ebensbnrs and the t :.'!': atvr ally .that he has mrule a treat v. s prices to CASH BUYERS. MytrOtV coLbji-t,ln part, of Cooking, Paricr mi fa- ing blares, cf the most poj u ar km Is; vare of every description, cf kto:la' ufictvire ; HarJsrare of all kind. Locks, Scicwit, Putt Hinges, T..UeI';:.- Shutter Hingf-s. Polts, In n and Nail?.':! GOOD a I dow Glass, Putty, Ta!'!e Knives and F-i-j Carvinc Knives and F-. rk, Meat Off" Apple Puierd, Pea and Ticket Knives groat variety, FoirSors. Shears, Iazi: Stroj s. Axes, Hatchets. Hammers, 5rv Machines, Angers. Chisscls, rinses, ('.: passes, Squares, Filed, lla?ps Anvi's, T Wrenches, Pip. Panel and CrosvCut S;p Chnins cf all kinds. Shovel. Spa oes.S:;:--and Snaths, Rakes. Firks. Ski-h IV Shoe Lasts. Peps. Wax Bristle. Ci: Wiineers. Grind Stones. Fatent M-V Gates and Measures, Lumber Sticks, H-j Nails, Ilor.-e Shoes. Cast Steel. Rifc.S - Guns, Pvevolvers, Pistils, Cartridges. F der. Caps. Lead. &c. Odd Steve P it' Grates and Fire Bricks. Well and Cr Puraps and Tubing : Harness an.1 Ware of all kind ; Wooden and Tf T.'.'tir in great variety ; Carbon Oil and ChiLi" Fish Oil, Lard Oil. Linseed Oil, Lubicc:. Oil, Rosin, Tar. Glassware. Paints, SxtS es. Turpentine. Alcohol. &c. FAMILY GROCERIES, such as Tea, Coffee, Sugars, b'las,ir ups. Spices, Dried Peaches. Pried An Fish, Hominy, Crackers, Rice and F Barlev : Soaps, Candles ; TOBACCO v. CIGA'KS; Paint. Whitewash, Scrub, He Shoe. Dusting, Varnish, Stove. Clothe? Tooth Brushes, all kinds and sizes; -' Cords and Manilla Ropes, and many cw articles at the lowest rates ur la.-u. ,1 .. roi f.r tnsih. A lilieraM'iV made to country dealers trying ""J1 wholesale. GEO- HUNTLEY Ebensburg. Feb, 2S. 1867. -tl GEO. C. K. ZAIIil ,....JA3. B.ZA; ZAHfVl a SON, DIALERS IX ! DRY GOODS, GROCERIES HARDWARE. QUEENSWAH: Hats,Caps,Boots,Sbct": AND ALL 0TEER ARTICLE . trTSIr WOOL AND COUNTRY Pl TUBS IW EXCniSGK TO STORE ON MAIN STRl Next Door to the Post Oft June 10, 1S69. M'LAUGHLlN, ITTOBNEr-AT LAW, Jo Corner of Clinton and Locus stairs. Will attend to all basiaf ed with his profession. JOHN 1 UNIX' ITTORNEY AT LAW, hnsll(h A nm ;n kniM;n(r on comer oi Franklin street, opposite 'a51!",: second floor. Entrance on Johnstown. Jan. Si. 1867- XOFSLIN, T. w. Johnstown. Gw. OS ViHT.Y. Attokse ce, No. 108 Franklia r town, r a , two mur? - ori; Store. Vrni attend promptly K "pt-' legal business that mj beentr 0. L. PERSHING. 1 w . Jo h n stolen. Fa lin stTeet, tip-stairs, Hardware Store. of?r I KOPIXIN & DICK, Arn.;bf Law. Ebensburg. Ta. OitJ Kittell. Esq., ColonadoKojJ