Cambria JTrtemmu EQEXSnCRG, PA. Saturday Morning, : March 23, 1872. IMnCrntl Sfnto ('ntenlUu. arenimt to a resolution of the Democratic tare lxecutlTe Committee this day adopted, a Democratic Statu Convention in numbers qua! tm the representation in both bouses of inn Js,iUliice. is horrhv called to meet id B.-ihnr, Pa., ou Thursday, May KOth, 1872, at 11 e'rtoclt A. u to nominate candidates for Gov ernor, Judirn of the Supreme Court, and (should tbe L-epialamre so determine) for Auditor Gc-u-rsrl ami delegates at large to the Constitution al Convention, and also to form an electoral Tfckt an 1 select senatorial and representative lerare to represe nt tlio State ia the Demo cratic National Convention. Hj erdkr of the Executive Committee. Wn.i.f.tM A. Wallace, Chairman. Attest Wm. M'C'lillasd, Secretary. Harrisburif, Feb. 15. 1372. A joint resolution passed Ihe Senate and House of Representatives on Tuesday last extending the time for final adjourn ment until Thursday, April 4th. Never before in our national history were the corruptions of Federal officials so glaring nnd universal. Twenty five year9 ago a defalcation of a thousand dollars on the part of an official, indorsed by tho political parly to which he belonged, would have doomed that party to defeat. To day, when Grant's office holders have stolen more than a hundred millions from ths tax-payers, Ihe managers of the radi cal party turn up their noses and ask of .tho people ; "What are you going to do about it !"' It is said that the notorious Pete Her die, of Williamsporf, owns a majority of the members of the present House of Re presentatives. This allegation is based on the fact that a short time ago he came to Ilarrisburjr, as he has often done before, well supplied with greenbacks, and at Monday night's session succeeded, after a struggle lasting until midnight, io de feating a bill reducing tha price of boom age at tho Williamsport boom, in which , he ia a heavy stockholder. The bill was designed to protect the lumbermen from the rapacity of Ilerdic and his associates, and ought to have passed withoit a con test, but Ilerdic has a monopoly of the boom busines?, which is a big thicg to him personally, and his money proved more potent with rural legislators than the just demauds of the hard workers in the forest who sought to be released from the oppressive tyranny of his boom exactions. Since Grant's home supply of brothers-in-law has been exhausted, he has turned his attention to the brothers-in law of those who 6 wear by his administration. Tha house of lijtler is now tho fortunale recipient of executive favor, Grant hav ing just appointed one Parker, who is the brotber-in law of the immaculate Iienji ni'm F. Butler, to tho office of Surveyor of the Port of Now Orleans, made vacant by the resignation of Gen. James Long erect. One would suppose that the ap pointment two years ago by the same U. S. Grant of a nephew of Men. Ujtler's as Consul General at Alexandria, in Esypf, and in which he has brought deep disgrace upon himself and his country, would have ratisfied Presidential expetiments in that direction. Parker's merits and eminent qualifications for the office have baen set forth briefly but comprehensively by Gov ernor Warmouth of Louiisana, who savs that "Parker is the most nccomplshed liar and the greatest blackguard in New Ors leans." Is reading the proceedings of the Legis lature, it is very amusing to watch the changing forms assumed by thafjonstitu tional Convention bill in its various flights between the two Houses. We bsve a'rea ly explained the provisions of the bill as it originally paFsed the House. When it was afterwards taken up in tho Senate it was radically charged. When it left the Senate and went back to the House, it provided for iho election of the. delegates on tho second Tuesday of October next and the Convention to meet on tbo 12ih of November. The number of members was fixed at 158, to bo elected in the following manner: Twenty delegates at large, each elector to vote for ten -four delegates from each Senatorial District, making 132, each elector lo vote for two -and sir additional dakgafes from the cily of Philadelphia, each elector lo vote for three.. It will be seen at a glaace that under this plan tho Convention would consist of an equal number of members of each political party. Wc can conceive of no objection to this arrangement, but the House, in its exercise of tlist profound wifdnro'for which it is so distinguished, refused to concur and sent the bill back 'to Ihe Senate. It was again taken up in that branch on Tuesday last, when an attempt was made, by a radical member of course, lo entirely undo what the Sen ate had so well done before. Tho bill was . then postponed . until Thursday, but what was done with it then we are un able at this writing U say. To the aver age mind it would seem lo bo an easy task, a decent regard being had for public opinion, for the legislature to perfect a bill of ibis character. It would be so had not Providence in its inscrutable ways once more inflicted upon the. Stale-a .. House of K'prcsentatives which,' for stu ' pidlty, ignoranee.mid venality, has seldom - "been t i iHod and never surpassed ye must therefore 'possess our 6ouls in pa. iScuce aod calmly await the final result, The Apportionment .Rill. Whenever a dominant party io exercises its power as to trample upon and crush out the just and admitted political rights of its opponents, it deserves aothing but unmixed execration. Where the provoca tijn is great, the resentment is usually vio lent. It is therefore difficult to use the language of moderation and propriety in relening to the Congressional Apportion ment bill which passed the lower branch of the Legislature last week. Under the late census this State is entitled to twenty six members of Congress. No man who is familiar with the relative strength of parties in Pennsylvania will place the rad ical majority of more than fifteen thou sand, and that being the esse, a fair and honest apportionment bill would give the republicans at the 'very outside fourteen members and the democrats twelve. Against, this equitable proposition no valid objection can be urged, 15ut the present bill, as it passed ihe House, gives the re publicans seventeen districts and the dem ocrats nine, beuig a radical majority of eight in the entire delegation, Whom do these eight members represent? Why simply the radical majority in the State which we hiva assumed to be fifteen thousand, which represent a population of ninety thousand. Is that honest? is it fair? and can any man who has a polit ical conscience at all stand up and defend the infamy ? . And yet it has been done and by men too who took an oath to dis charge their duties faithfully and honestly. The ratio for a member under the late census is 135,453. At the last Presiden tial election, in Philadelphia Grant re ceived G0.9S5 votes and Seymour 55,173. This bill so manipulates the five districts into which that city is divided as to insure the election of four radicals and one dem ocrat. In Philadelphia, therefore, it comes down to this, that while it takes 55,173 demecratic votes to elect one member of Congress, 60,985 radical votes can sleet Jour ; or, to state it differently, while 55,173 democratic voters can only send $ne man lo Congress, 15,240 radical vo ters can do ihe same thing. This is a mon strous outrage, not capable of being de fended or explained away, and we are not afraid to assert that every man who voted for it deliberately violated his oath of office and committed moral perjury. The iniquities of this bill are also ap parent fr ota the manner in which it unites two or more democratic counties giving heavy majorities sud assigns to them one member with, a large surplus over the re quired ratio, and on tho other band gives to two or more republican counties a moraber on an eqially large deficiency. Take for example the following instances of democratic districts : , , . P'ljmhttiim. Sixth District Bucks nnd Montgomery . HV.Hi Seven tb District Ilerks and Lehigh .. lia.VJT Eisz-hth District Northampton, Carbon, Monroe, Pike nnd Wayne H0,M2 Sixteenth District York, Cumberland and Adams 150,.oiCl Nww look at iho following republican dis tricts : Population. Ninth District-Delaware and Chester.. 117,203 Twt W'tb District Lycoming-, Cameroo, Potter, Tioga and McKeari lt)7,0S8 Twenty-fourth District 'Washington, licavcr and tiutlur , 121,141 It may be hero stated that when the bill was before tha House a democratic member proposed to amend it, so as to give the republicans fourteen members and tha democrats ttcclce, but the proposition was promptly rejected by the radical ma- tij nty. L.very sense of honor and decen cy appeals to the Senate, in which justice nnd fair play yet exercise their legitimate power, to interpose its arm and prevent the consummation of this most foul and unmitigated wrong. . For this bill Samuel Henry," who misro presents the democracy M Cambria coun ty, voted in all the different binges of its infamy. Every amendment, every altera tion of it, so as to do simple justice to the democratic parly, met with his uncompro mising opposition. A legislative club having been placsd in his hands by the aid of democratic votes, ha wielded it, not in the cause of justice and moderation, but for the deliberate purpose of knocking out the political brains of the men who placed him where ho is. Not only ibis, but he famplea open the acknowledged rights t;f o ie-f jurth tf the democracy of the entire Sute and makes of them a pleating and acceptable sacrifice on the altar of radicalism. Figs. will not grow on this tles, .neither will grapes flourish on thorn bushes, and (lie whole course of Mr. Henry on this bill has only strengthened our conviction, heretofore expressed, that democrats have no political rights which ho feels himself bound to respect, . ' Thk Auditor-General MrT Brig ham, who was appointed by Governor Geary to take the place made vacant by the death of Dr. Stanton, Auditor-General elect, has declined the proffered honor. In doing so ho says that his po pition at the head of a prominent Repub lican journal, (the Pittsburgh Commer cial;) quite eatiifis his ambiiion, and that ha feels that he ought to accept no position which might, under any circum stances, inlet. 'ere with, the free discharge of his duties is a journalist. What would have been tt.e action of the legisla ture if Mr. Utigham had not declined, must remain in mere conjecture. On receipt of Ihe news that he had refused the appointment, the .Senate promptly passed a bill, continuing General Hart ranft in office, aad providing for the I eloction cf a successor in October. Gen. John F. Haktkasft, the present Auditor General of the State, is a promi nent candidate for the radical nomination for Governor. He is understood to repre sent Ihe corrupt or Cameron ring, of the "God and morality' party, and for that reason his partisans express the utmost confidence in his success before the nomi nating convention. Since the robbery of George O. Evans became known and has been publicly exposed, Hartranfi's name has been unfavorably connected with the swindle. - Whether he is guilty or inno cent is not certainly known, but that a vast amount of suspicion attaches to htm is very manifest. His financial operations also with C. T. -Yerkes, jr., once a Phil adelphia broker, but now an inmate of the Eastern Penitentiary, have not been re gardod as legitimate and have still further tended to compromise his character for official purity and integrity. If there is any truth in the following affidavit, made by Yerkes last DacemUer, but only recent ly published, Hartianft would more com pleicly represent the rottenness and de bauchery of Grantism in this State as its chosen candidate for Governor, than any other man whose name has been men tioned in connection with iho office: Charles T. Ye.kes, jr., of the city of Phil adelphia, being duly sworo according to law. doth depose aijil say, that for some years ast he had Leea acquainted with J. F. llartrauft, auditor general of the state of Pennsylvania; that he has at various tiosrs purchased aud suM stocks of different kinds, and carried the same, with money belonging to the common wealth of Pennsylvania, which the same J. F. llartreuft haJ caused to be deposited with this depouent by the t-tate treasurer. That this depouent did pay to J. F. Ilajt ranft. auditor general, on the 10th of Decem ber, 1870. the sum of two tho'isand seven hundred dollars, which turn was derived from profits on j.urchases of loans of tho com nionwaalth and sales of the same to the sinkiog fund, which sa'e was made on the 29th of April, 1870. That said deponent has a'so paid lo said J. F. llartrar.ft various amounts of money for print arising from stock speculations with money depoitsd with this daponant by the state treasurer at the instance of the said Ilartratjft. C. T. TFRK38. Jr. Sorn and subscribed before me the 23d day f Dacember. A. D. 1871. r -- Wm. W. Dououekty. seal J- Aldorman, 406 Walnut St., Thilad'a. Unhkijgrocnd Hivek. The Crawford County (Lid.) Democrat, gives the fol lowing on tha authority tf "one of the best citizens of the county" : "Two meu named Johu E. Stanley and Frederick llenniger, were employed to dig a well on the -farm of Baiij-imiu Ellis, who rfbidea in Washington county neur the line of Harrison and Washington cou.jties. They had proceeded but a short distance, when they enc wintered a bed of loose 'nigger head' r-.'eks, which, upon being b-oken opto were found to contain water and other ub stances, supposed to Le ore of s:rae kind. When they reached the depth of sixty feet from the surface, tbey came to a large cave, which they followed a distance of ten or twelve feet, when there before their gaze was a beautiful river of clear water, which upon elimination was f ut-d to contain an iounmerahle number of, small white fish. Upon a closer examination, it was found to be sixteen feet wide and five feet in depth, and a clear as pring water. As an experi ment, a Hghted candle was placed upon a haiall piece of plat.k and set ntliat. It ttarted off in the darknesa with the current, and was sojn lost to sight. Several persons have visited this great curiosity, and many were tbe cor:j-ctures as to where the water came from and where it went, but nothing satii factory cculd be learned." The Votks of thk Soits must be Counted. The Chicago Tr bune warns Grant against any attempt to play over again the game which was attempted in the last presidential election, when it was decided that the electoral vote of Georgia should be thrown out if it would effect Ibe result and counted if it would not do 60. It says "reconstruction business is at an end. Let ui hear nothing of rejecting the votes of States at the next election. When the votes of the people and the States are cast, the attempt to set aside that verdict would raise a whirlwind puch as no ordinary power could allay." That Grant would bo willing to risk a revolu tion rather than give up the position which he has managed to make a source of enor mous profit to himself and family, we have no doubt. He mut bi overwhelmingly beaten A crushing defeat will put an end to all ideas of military usurpation nnd will restore the country to the peaceful sway of civil rule once more The McCi.cre-Gkat Contest. The Philadelphia Inquir r in ppeaking of the M'Cl ure-Gry contest, says : "Sj far the testimony Gray has offered is decidedly frivolous and does not reach any vital point in ihe cast. To call election offi cers opon whom palpable fraud had been proved, and policemen who were implica ted in wanton violence at the polls by di rect testimony to exculpate themselves, is a confession of weakness that a conrt would doubtless rebuke ; and the attempt to hold a second election in -a "division where no election was held on the day ap pointed, is worse than triflins : with ' the lime of a Senate eoru'mitfeeV - If Mr. Gray has testimony lo prove frauds on Ihe part of his opponent or his friends, let the committee and Ihe public have it at once, or let the farce end by a manly surrender to what all fair men must accept as inev itable. .. -. ' i -., Petroleum Fibe is Smelting. Exper iments with petroleum as a fuel in smelting have been tried in St. Louia, with very grat ifying results. A lot of p:g iron, which had been smelted with Illinois coal and had proved almost worthless, was treated with petroleum fire, and in. a single hour was converted into iron of the finest quality, clwseiy resembling 'steel. - Common moun tain pi? iron. It is claimed, may, by a single application of petroleum fire iu tho puddling furnace, bo made into the best flaogs boiler iron. These experiments were made with temporary apparatus, and under "prabarrsss nvnts pot calculated to develops- their full vj'ue. - Be rial Placi of St. Patrick. Saint Patrick was buried at DowDpatrick. and the present ancient cathedral at that town is said to have been erected on the site of his grave. The tradition is that St. Bridget, of Kildare. asd St. Celumba Cilia (pronounced "Kill") were buried in the sitne grave with St. Pat rick, and the following translated couplet is still extant : ""Three saints' bodies this grave do fill Bridget, I'trick aad Colli in ba Cilia." The further tradition is that after sevaral centuries tho right hand of thegrt.it Irish apostle was found in an upright position over the grave; that it was placad in a silvar shrine, and a church, yet staadiDg on a neighboring hill, was forthwith arected, where the shrine containing the hand was o'eposited, where they remain to this'day. There is an extremely iuterestiug and. up to the present moment, an unexplained natural (it may be so called) rnriosity to be seen at thia church, which in 1849 was in good pre servation, as the writer saw it that year. The church etands on an elevation soma twenty or thirty perches from the high road leading frooa Newry to Downpatrick, and as one ap proaches frem either aide there appears a wall which takes tie most serpentine curves im aginable, bat when you come up to the end of it on the road it is as straight as an arrow. Many reasons are given for this strarjge acd beautiful phenomenon, but none are aatisfactory.. While on the eubject. of St. Patrick. .we may state that tho late Very Rev. Monsianor John Hamilton, D. D.. arch bishop of Dublin, and parish priest of St. Michael's in that city, published in a very handsoaae pamphlet an exceedingly interest ing document entitled tbe "Confession of St. Patrick," translated from a Latin MS over one thousand years old. It was printed by O'Reily, Chapel tireat, Dublin, and contains many most interesting aod little known par ticulars about our great aaint. The pamph let is rare, but not yet scarce. Some months ago in Clark county, Ind.. a family of the name of Park were murdered under circumstancss of great atrocity, and shortly afterward three negroes, who were in custody on suspiciea of having pepetrattd the mnrder, were taken from prison and hanged by a mob. One of tho negroes, Squiro Taylor, was horribly burned and tor tured before hanging. It has frequently been acserted that the negroes who u rifted at the hands of the mob were entirely innocent of the crime with which they were charged, and it has been thought that certain white men who took part in tine lynching were re ally the murderers in tbe first iustance. Government detectives have for some time been engaged in invettignting this matter, and, it is said, have made some surprizing discoveries implicating in the affair a number of persons in Clark county who'have been regarded as reli?i'us men and good citizens. The Louisville Ltdjer sayt that one of the sons of Taylor ia about to bring suit against the Sheriff -if Clark couaty for damages in the sum of 125.000, claiming that his fiher came to his death in consequence of the Sher iff having failed to ua proper diligence for his protar'in, and that this neglect was in tentional, in as much as the Sheriff had been notified that there was great danger that the Ijail would bo attacked, but refused to pro vide a suitaMe guard. It is probable that this suit will lead to positive disclosures re specting one of the saost shocking crimes that have ever difgraced a community as sumins to be civilized. - Fight wiru a Nlgro DEsrKrtAno Two Kii.ld and Foch Wounded. Memphis, March 18. A desperate fight occurred on Prtsident's Ioland, a few miles be.ow this city, yesterday. Deputy Sheriff F-Rodegau went there for tbe purpose of arre&tiug a negro named John White, who for some tiaie has been the terror cf the negroes living there. Ilodr-gan was mot by a large body of armed negreeiJ, who proposed to assist iu the arrest, but they stated thai White had barricaded his cabin aud would make a desperate fight. Ilodegan approached the cabiu and demanded the surrender of White, who refused. After s ima further parleying, ono of the negroes approached the cabin, aad was shot dead by White, who rushed out and secured his gun. In a few minutes he shot another and secured his gun, but was wounded as he retreated to his cabin. White theu opened a sharp firo, wounding four others, llwdegau seeing it was impos sible to d.isdgo him, sent to the city for assistance. Deputy Sheriff Miko Payne summoned a pos.-e and went over, and pro ceoded to take measures to burn White's cabin. While thin surrendered, but after his arrest it was with prtat. difficulty that the negroes were kept fruin shootin; him, they eveu threatening to shoot the officers if he was not delivered to Ihtm. White was brought to this city and lodged in jail. The prisoner has served aTgu!ar term in the Third Cavalry, and, it is said, Las killed several men before. Bark b si's Ridisng Goat "Alsxis." P. T. IUrnim- baaia tha world in rinJuclDg novelties. The last sensation wo have heard of. is tbe training acd education, in Cairo. Egypt, of a beautiful Circassian Goat. This annual rides pn horse-back, jumpa through hoop.', over garters and banners, and other wise performs all the most difficult feats of the accomplished equestrian. We always knew that Pbineas was skilled in zoology, entomology, ornithology, anthro-po'ojy-r-iu fact all tho "ologios," including that of (the famous Jerome) chronolngy, but we had no idea that he would ever be able lo add to his vocabalary that of goalology. ' ' Biirnnm has" done wonders to elevate the standard of the once beautiful aud health- giving equestrian art perhaps he can suc ceed better with the genus enpricornus than that f the genus homo. At all eveuts the riding goat, belonging to his great show, which made his debut.&t Nibhs last night, is the rareit novelty ever introduced to a New York auiience. We' congratu'ate our country cousics on the opportunity they will enj y this season of watching the "cape rs" of this distinguished equestrian Caper, as it constitutes ono of the many leading features of Barnum's Great Moral Exhibition. We don't know which will create the greatest furore, the Fiji Cannibals, the Giraff,' the Sea "Lions. 1 the Automatons, or this Riding Goat. X. Y. Sun. ' v .: The Scranton, Pa., Times has an account of a" great txcitemeut among tho Knights of Pythias. A nice looking person, young and gent Jul, came to that place a few months ago,, giving tho uama of Francis Williams. , lie became acquainted at the boardiog-house with several members of ths Knights of Pythias Lodge, and finally expressed his de sire to jiin. Ha was propesed, went through the usual routine, was elected, received the Paee'a degree, and was duly prepared for the third or Knight's degree. , but in a certain part of the work an accident disclosed to all of the officers present that they had been ini tiating and giving the degrees of the Ovder to a iroman! - The members'were startled and nonplussed. 'and - for a (loDg while eilence ruignod. No cne knew what to do. It was finally agreed thatjshe should be kept under- supervision untu ine worthy, u rand, Chan cellor be heard frcm, - Hews of Cue Week. Indiana now produces glass which rivals that of Franco. , - There have bsen 237 Topes, from St. Peter to Pius IX. Alligators run races with railway trains on.tho Panama railway. Portlaud has had seventy days of cons tinued hleighing this season. A bed of meerschaum clay has been discovered near Taylor, Mich. An old woman, for selling shoestrings without a license, was fined $2 and costs in Btstoni . . A "girl" died recently at Portsmouth, N. II., who had been in service in ono family sixty nine years. . A bill granting Paul Sol ceppeja new trial has passed the Senate, aud been favor ably reported from tho House committee. - There are said to be ight hundred dif ferent wash in? machines rasnted at Wo ioton, three-quarters being of New England origin. ' - Oue hundred and fifty million feet' of! lumrer will be t:riven out of liennett s branch and Trout run, Clinton county, thia season. On the 91h iast. a cog-wheel brokein the Allentown Rolling Mill, which will cause a stoppage ia the manufacture of rails in that mill for several weeks. A man who left O.dcaloos, t.. recentlv for Colorado; paid for the lcal Herald of five years in advance. Thereia uo other case of the kind on record. Goiben, Ind., has a woman who I angs around the railroad depot, looking for newly, married couples, to whom she eudeavora to sell a patent bed-apritfg. She is always suc cessful. Senator Sumner privately denounces Grant as "ignorant and dishonest" Greeley in private conversation never apeaks of Grant except as tho "dinnken tanner from Galena." A Reading carpcn!er has made a bid fer fame by carving a complete "tea set" plates, cups and taucers. knives and foiks, cream mug. sugar bowl, teapot, etc. out of peach stoi;es. Jacob Bender, residing in Swatara township. Dauphin county, committed sui cide by shootiug himself iu the breast duriug Saturday or Sunday uiyht. Deceased was subject to weak-mindedness. The election r-f a State Senator for the Fifth District on the the 35th int.. to Ell tho vacancy caused by the death of Senator Evans, resulted in the return of Waddell, Republican, by 700 n.gjotity. Q leen Victoria has presented her groom John Brown, with a gold medal, and has granted him an annuity of 25. in recogni tion of his promptness in arrtsting O'Cjoncr when he assaulted her Majesty. A thoughtful Connecticut widow has had a mourning ring made of the gold fill ings in her decea-ed husband's teeth, think ing it wasteful to let the precious metal be Worn out in post meitem genshing. The D x on (III.) Telegraph says that a German family, consisting of a father, mother, and two children, havn at! di.d i. Reynolds t.wuship, Lea county, of trichinae spiralis. They were ,in the habit of eatiu ! raw pork. Tho Democracy cf Armstrong county have chosen E. S Golden, to represent thtm in tho Heading Coovention, and Grier C. Orr, Esq , Clarion, Forrest and J, fferton con curring, as the Seuatorial Delegate ; uo in structions. Mr. Wm. S. B'ack. editor cf the Ga zelU and Democrat. New Catl, Pa., was elected Mayor of that city on Friday Iaet by ICO majority over Carpenter, Bepublican. This is a healthy signi for the Democracy in tho strong Radical couuty of Lawrence. Tho small pox at present in Philadel phia is said to be the most general, fatal and long continued epidemic that has ever visited the Quaker city. -More than two hundied deaths per week have filled the bills of mortality, and the cry ia, still they go. Senator Morton, chief spokesman for Grant's administration, has introduced an amnesty bill in the United States Senate. Morton knows that Sumner's Civil Rights amendment will be tacked on to the bilTand that the measure will thus be killed. Liberal Morton ! We learn, says the Lynchburg News, that W. W Corcoran. Eq., of Washington! has purchased the "Howard library" of thirty-six hundred volumos, and presented it to the Wai-hiugton and Lee Univerity. It is the most valuable clasn'cal collection in tbe State of Virginia. Tho Valley Echo states that "Mrs. Samuel Kuhn. of Antrim township, gave birth to a male child, a few weeks since, that weighed three and three-quarters pounds only. The child is. perfectly formed and in the best of health. Commod.-ro Foote will have to look cut fer bis laniels." Seth Wilbur Paine,- the editor of a little newspaper published in Utica, called the Bee, has been sentenced to four months' im prisonment at hard labor in tho Albany Penitentiary fra libel oa Ju.la. riute, in wuncutiuo with tbe recent shooting of a man by a woman in a street car in that city. Tho jail at Palmyra, Missouri, was broken open on Tuesday night, and all tho prisoners escaped but one, who refused to leave. Among those who escaped is Am brose Coo, who, Jast summer, murdered Miss Abbie Summers, formerly of Quiocy, IU. It is believed Coo's friends wore instrumental in the escape. Mr. Suainer mu3t exert himself in be half of tho man and brother. A preju diced Democratic ifficer at Shelby, Ohio, recently arrested . two colored citizens and hustled them off to jiil. And they had done nothing, absolutely nothing, except smash the tkull and ent th thrn-if or. .old man, named James M'Xe&lo. ' L ing Island has a lusus naturae in the shape of a child with an alligator's head. Tho mother of tho monstrosity, a Florida lady, is dead, and the infant is uot likely to survive ber long. The time wheB the mother Ibft . the everglades cf Florida and the par ticulars of the child's paternity have not been'communicated to th9 press. The New York Tribune dies not think that tho result of the New Hampshire election was such a great Republican victory atter all. that it should be crowed over. It thinks that a State which has gone Repub lican; for soveotean years, with one excep tion, ought to go Republican on the eigh teenth year, unless the party is very. rotten. A drunken man.' a blacksmith, named Jos. Nelson, Mivlng twelve miles north of Sedalia,' Mo., shot and killed his wife on Sunday. , and then shot . himself, inflicting a very dangerous wound. - He was arrested aud locked, ud. His wife bad i . fc,-u IU. Ltlt to leave bun in conseniienm of omi ,-ot ment, and because she would not return and live with him he shot br. : r; A little girl, named Morrison, went into her father's .barn -at' Chester, N. Y., on .Monday last, to hnnt f. rough board partition separared the haymow . from ItiA ntKi- nn.t f U I - J ped on Ihe end of a board which proiected over a beam, and put her h!ead through a hohrn the partition to look into a ne.t. The board tipped and fell to the floor below leaving- tha sirl Imni.in k.,' t, u r - - " v . in. i irai b in i 1 1 M , rn s i I , , . vj una irom 1 ScdT Hi' p,rtlti0V. She wm 6tran. A young man, named Somers, and a girl, named Lauguard. were run oTer by a train, near .Zaneevilje, Ohio, on Thursday night, and Somers was instantly killed. They were "sitting on Ihe track talkiug." Tho Pittsburg Dispatch (Radical), says that General Ilartrauft will oot do for gov ernor, on acctunt i-.f the development in tho Evaue matter; that Colonel Jordan's show is still worse, and as for Harry White, ho has libeled himself outside of ali proba bilities of a umina:ion. Either of these, says the Dispatch, would bo badly beaten before the people, but that Ketcbum or Morrell ruigbl win. Nearly li e entire business portion of the town of Laurel, Indiana, was destroyed by firo on Monday niht Inst. Tho jil and other buildings were badly damaged, and both hotels arid a printing office are entirely destroyed.' Fifteen houses were burned to tbe grcnndLesidts a comber of ttablts and sheds. But four of the houses were insuiud, and it is impossible to estimate 1he loss nt present, but it will probably re?ch J150 000. People ar continually on the lockout for strange freaks of tho weather, and evwry now and then. Vhen in a dtubtfnl condition of mind aud body, somebody 'thinks ho ha6 made a 'wonderful raeteorological discovery. A person tli5w h in Virginia, c me out now with a fctory of a shawer of rain from a clvudiessky while thetars were tbinirgln every part of the heavens. . Now, wo are inclined Ao belie vo that either that rain or those stars were wholly imaginary, or the gentleman had been snvk'tng a "strong" cigar. Oa Wednesday evening wetk. while a freight train on the Cumberland Valley R R. was passing through Mechanicsburg, Cumberland couuty, a boy named Zichariah, aged, about fourteen years, attempted to jump upon the moving cars. . His bold giv ing way, he fell down upon the track and ten cars passed orrr his legs, severiog the right h'g below the knee and crih!cg the left above the ankle. . Both of his legs were amputated one above the knee' and the o'her below. Tho boy ras still livicg atlasl accounts. The controversy which fir f-ome time has raged , in the oil regions, between the producers and carriers, has resulted in a close combination of the fi.rnur, called the "Petro'euTi Producers' Association." It divides the oil regions into sixteen dis-tricte, and pledges the producers t sell all thtir oil through the hand f a committee, to be chosen by them in each district. This p'an of action will bring iho ca-riers and the rfiuers to terms, and, as it takes the contrd of the business out i f the hniid of middle men, ought t be satisfactory to consumers. Tho large clock at tho English Parlia ment house is tho la'gast ore in the world. The four dials cf this elm k are each 22 feet in diameter. Every LaJf minute the j tJirt of the minute hr.iid moves nearly sevm inches. Tho ekek will co eieht and a half days, bnt it only strikes seven and a half. lhu3 indicating any neglect iu winding it up. The mere winding up if- the strikii:2 n:e chaniim takes two h.urs. The pendulum is 15 feet long ; the wheels are if catt iron ; the hour lelln8:f.et high and Qf.ut in diameter, weighing r early 15 ton?, and the hammer alone weighs more than 400 pound.--. A Sickening Tuagsdy - On Friday, the 1st inst. Mrs. Sarah Meyers, wife of Theodore Mejers, living at Crown's Mill on lijonetl's liranh, about six miles up from Driftwood. n mtu. ner iiiiatii sou ageu ntiio months bv routing and boiling him alive. It .aPPea that on indaj Jlrs. joyers went cut to one of her neighbors atul oa rtituroin' lo the -i . nense sno picKe.t up tfce youngest child and put him ou the hot stove, after holding him there a "moment she took him up and put him into a larye dth of boiling apple sauce, crowded the babe down into the dieh and held bia-i there, she then turned the child over and pushed him into the boiling sauce apain thus boiliug him on both sides. The other children scared by the screams of their little brother, ran to the mill and told tbe men at work thfro what their toother was doing, and they hurried to tbe house as fast as possible, but not in time to tare the life of the child. It had been literally roasted and boiled alive before medical aid could be obtained. It is alleged that Mrs. Meyers is subject to fits cf insanity, and that it was wht'e the was in one cf these fits that the committed this unnatural anj horrible deed. Wo have not heard that any inquest has yet been held or. arrest made. The authori ties should investigate the affair at once. Cameron Herald. Bronchial Consumption This is a f. rm of cousumptiou usually of easy remedy by means of Dr. Keyf.r's Lung Cvrv. which, whilst it eliminatrs the mucous and phlegm from the throat, heals the membrane and allays that morbid irritsbiiity which produ cos j-uch harrassing cou-hing. and when the disease involves the laiyt.x, hoarseneso and ptin in the throat, ltca.ler. if you value .' he u n and life, do not allow such a con dition to on until it has attacked the lungs wheu.it will .not bo easily cured. I?in Tm time. Then a few liottles of Da Kkyskr's LtTNaTcRic'will eradicate the disease if ne glected it will take more than a dczu. There is hardly a form of lung disease which Dr. Kstseb's Lvsg Cube will not cure, if used io time. It not only heals the lungs, bur it puts tho constitution in a healthy condition, acd enables it to resist di sease. Sold, at the Di-ctot 'a preat medicine store, lf.7 Liberty street. 50 per battle, or 4 bottles taken ot a lime. $5. Dr. Keyser's Medical Office iu the rear cf his store; 1C7 Liberty street. Pittsburgh, from 10. A'.Munlii 1, p m.. and from 3 p' m. until 6. ' AN ExTBAORDISARY CqCCKUENCS. A- child died at Pembcrton, New Jersey, on Tuesday, ' whose illness liad been attended with strange aind -apparently inexplicable maoifestations. The child wss therianghter of a Mr. . Williams, and .was about four mooths old when sho was taken ill with! the croup. She was. in a dangerous state for some time, and on Wednesday, the 6th inst., , khe, to all appearances, expired. A coffin was procured, aud a grave was dog in Munt Holly Cemetery. Suddeoly, onFri day last, a short time before the funeral was to have Ukcn place, tbe child couahed, and instantly opened its eyes full of life. The cofhn was returned to the undertaker, and hopes were euteitained that 'the child, so strangely spared from burial, would regain its haaUh. On Tuesday, however, she died, and her parents, after waitinc for auother return to life until there could be no rea sooablo hope or such an occurrence, interred the body in tho gravo opened the week be fore. More than forty years have elapsed since Johnson"s JnoJgne Liniment was' first in vented, during which time hundred of thou sands have been benefitted bv its use., Fro bably article -ever became so univorsally popidar with all classes as Jvh nsons Ano dyne Lintment. - Pills which contain antimonv, quinine and calomel, should bo avoided as severe Cnptpg pa,n would be their only result Ihe sart.t.Buroj. r,l best .jl are ru X rvrj ttn-e or uU v e wing Machine Agents TO SELL THB I 53. The r mrttic is not a now mt C'liino. but li a been po(, in a nmll wcy, for some six yrv. liirinir which tiine the mst skillcil inv entors have lahorfd to simplifj nnd i in i r o v e. until to-day it i so far ahead of all others as to defy com petition. It hnsbut sixly'pieees, count ina- every purr r,; Machine nnd Hand, while tbe Howe Mueti iid contains l- This will kvq an iiea of its i,:r.i. plicity. It will do work, tine aii'l coarse, u nt no other machine will attempt, fiorn the tini ro5;unf-r to fifty thicknesses of drostd irv:u lin ; it will sow without chtiUK oof rioc-dlc. Urn -a 3 or tension. All movable parts are ma .t jf hardened steel and ournisht-d bcai injrs. it nxurji xo xoisr wiiATtvti:, and the proprietors hereby eifftr A newnnl ef One Slnuftrrtl Itollfira rr any nther lock fell tell aincbluo thai uill run ns lijrhl. Tbe shuttle is a cylinder, without a rivet cr spring:; can be tilled by a blind person, ar.i holds one hundred yards of cotton . We claim it. and ccn t-how, a liht of firty poivs of superiority over any machine in tli mark-1. To experienced nirt-uts the most libemj duce-nients will be offered. Machines er,r.r-j,-i . and commissions paid in full, in tusl. nt tl.i end of ech month. A handsome wsfton. v nmi tiVi.CO. furbished without churfH. nnd sotL.!-; ; time (riven to purchasers to enable the airi-Lt tj compete with any Company in the state. R- W. STEADMAM Zl CO., So. 29 Street, I'aTTSISL'ElUII. P.l, WITH THK HEW BS AW FEED. Kri1.,vtM,t" received, and Is now tbe Bk: m,rkct. n mat''? ;i I.orll Stltoh. i KinttMv. 'ol-'.vsr, Ktxsily )kcrnl't. shd very f ffectivo. Wo w ant ii Or PF V. I: MACHINE AGENTS in h11 unoccupied f.;,, ; ry, to whom wc will give He v.i m-, TmiH. The KLLIl'l ii ' is !, LAsILST CHINE TO SELL in the market. HOWARD FAT 017 & CO. VfiHt aVA g. rs, it li J- a ii AVi;ii:, Feb. 21. l?T2.-0:n. I I ITS DU I. ".'. Agents Wanted -ron the in Scaring Mae Xriierever the FLORENCE Maciine ha? introduced, it 1ms met vith tho ifrer.rcsr y ce.-s. It is the only machine making four ! StS: fcXS&l ' itive. It runs liu lit. an.l very fast, and conrr-c or line i a ones. J tie Hemmer wiil t wide or narrow hems, and tells beautifully, attachments ro with the machine. For information apply to or addrc-se HECKERT & McKAIN, Xo. S Klxth Street. rrrTsuur.y. March 2, lS72.-sm. Agents Wanted fotj thk Xtw Wt r.i, OUR CHILDREN : OR Hew to Make and Keep Them Kea'i: llr AUGUSTUS K. GARDNER. !. D . " Late Profenur in Sew Yi.tl; Jt.-iiai? t ".".'-; It treats of Amusements. Edncntion. Vh v-'r-.: Development. Diseases. Accidents. M:irr;-L". &c.. iinp.rrtiinf a vast amount or riiuu vie i. loan. m conducive to tho Health, H:ipp:nr- a:. . vvclfai ecf the Young-. Written in a ; li style, it is exceeJinciy Interesting-, as wK'.iti instructive. Kveru Fatr.ilu KhnuM have it, and r.n Frrf.tr-'. afford to he xrithuvt it. Send for Circulars -iiS full particular". ,a DUKF1ELD A fill MEAD, Pub!if;er. bl. 711 Ransom Street, I'hilaci -i; -i.ia FAMILHXITTIXC MKIIffi The Xcotest, the 7?rf. aiiff the Cheep,-:. NEVER GETS OUT OF OUDEE Knits F.Tcry Ihinsr. l'riee 25 IVt-- Peron desirous of rmrcbapinar Maehin'S Pt circulars and information, and have t! -.r Mc,ine9erit free of ebuweoo receipt of priov, by apply ina- to JAMES McllRIDE. .Ap't fer Western Fenc a. " ,-Xo-1 ixth s-t.. PittburB-h. Fa. Entcrpristnjr"Ag-ents wanted in every tYvurr. tojvThoni liberal terms will be given. 3-lG-lih ;. c.h.woi.ff, lake, iJ8-1-';:; . WOIFF mi 1 -r,.T...... J-'n uuitus A rv l) DEALERS IX bign ot the Anvil, No. 50 Wood St., (Three doors above St. Charle Hotel PITTSBURGH, PA. Invite the attention of buyers to their S-rf to took, which, in selectiou aud price, is unsur passed in the countrj-. I'Uey nre A-eniH for American Ft!e Com pany s celebrated r iles an.l IUn, itubirrr ICettin? and I'arklns. Ullon. Ilnnk vworili. Illsnn A t'n.'a Kni(ll!i aierl, PlUlbnteli lrrl, Lockl, Miorrli, Ac -Sold at uiuuufacturcrs' prices. -iM.-3ra.j nowisth e: t"inTeet tl Uollablo Aaonts TO SELL THB ti:av xjrsxm fx:x:t TCr.r: :tx ctd ra.- vv SEWING MACHINE! in THIS COUNTY. Host Machine in tl.e T-i Is M:,l hne iu Market. Price, com plete, f4j.0O. Written warrantee for five ve.- Apply lmmediatelv to - SMITH "& FORRESTER. 33-2-3m. n SIxtU ., ril tfckar6L, r T O H O O K A G E N T : Mark Twnln'a xw t:..i, Is ready for Canvassers. No book is look, .i f: more unimtiently tlian this, and niteiits wi:l 0 wall to tret territory for it as early as pi.:L-'' A.inJy tr Circulars aud terms to " - f ' DUFFIEI.D ASH MEAD, PnMi-brr. ' . .7II Sanson Street, Philadelphia- p I CK ERSE L l7Ty 6 N SJL CO,. Manufacturers atul Dealers in LOOKING. GLASSES ' Fino Mantel nnd Pier Looking- G lasses anJ ";;- turo Frames a specialty. 3-10. 141 Wooxl St., rittkburgb, r- S3. B. COCHRAN, : : J'lTTSBrRGH, lA., ronlr in Iron mill Wood Worklni rpiinery auri .Mnuiirnvlnrc-r' Niijrlii' has .constantly on hand n complete t'' i' Smith's Sash and Door .Muchiti.Tv, Jii.'.op ;'n' ornor. T'jua and Pi-. ! '-.ci ".. ' W F2f i rr I fr