' oaSSSa. THE CUB Ml FM11. The Local Option Late. Ei2EttSBJ?C, PA., Prllay Mrnia& - Djoswbcr 27, 1872. ndiourned -1ye-iterd week Cor the h-liday.!and Wl11 meet again oa Jl j.day. the 3th of January. Tits Georgia, "eni to tbt Gen. John B. iJontori will be elected Uni ted rotates Senator to succeed Joshua Hill, whose terni of office will expire on the 4tb of March. General Goidon was a rebel ufttoer, but hia political disabilities have been removed fey n tact of Congress pasted at the last setion. Th members of the Plaladelphia Bar gave ft magnificent banquet to Hon. James Thompson, late Chief Justice of the Su preme Court, a week ago last night, at the Continental Hotel in that city. No judge ever occupied a tent on the bench of the highest judicial tribunal of thia Stale who more richlj deserved the honor. And vet Judge Thompson, who had been so clear in his high office, waa sacrificed on the "al tar of radicalism to make room for a mere politician. The Easy lioad to Absolutism. The next question which the people of th different counties In this Btate will be called opon to settle through the ballot box, is th Local Option law passed at the j last session of the Legislature. Although ! the rcI designates the third Friday cf March next as the day for holding the t lec- to chanPe ,1',r form (,f government. . - , ... . , i Fcven years of war were needed to give ns tion, it will be Mn-frow the second pro- fVl. rV,i . As a nation we are in an improving way. We are making progress. Not by fierce political convulsions, but gradually and surely. Accordingly we have great canse for gratitude. Other countries and peo ples have been obliged to pars through the throes of revolution and the agony cf strife The European Storms. Jfetvs and I'olittcnl Ilents. The extraordinary storms which have i A lawsuit is in progress in Georgia be prevailed upon the cmsts of Europe with- j tween the Robinson and Barnum circuses, in the past seven weeks are unpiecedent- j Four tons of fish re waided three draws ed. The high tide and storms of the 13th of the seine in the Arkansas river, the of November were of terrible import, es- j other day. - - ' pecially on the German coast. The do- s 3Jr. George C. Steiger. of ilercera- vastation was great aim the tide reached , burg, is feeding a. hog which weigh 834 telegTaphy." A strip of thin pouuus, giosb. pasted through a registering its maximum hight on the coast at Schles wig at 9 P. M., and 011 the chores of the Baltic Sea it exceeded the hich tide of Embossed Teleobapht. Two young men of Memphis, sons of Dr. J. W. ling, era, the well known convert from the Epis copalian ministry to Catholicism, have in vented a method by which words can be transmitted with eight or ten times the rapidity possible under the present sys tem. I heir method is called "embossed copper Is machine, Child's CoaalSS of ttieyenrlorntreuts vCTl ilroMll.s.OooiKnr., r . ' '1 Two doting fathers swapped babies at such as used to be employed when the . GrT. ro of the first section that when the aside; Fiance neverchanges from a repub- i 1;J4 by 25 inches, and that of loGtt by 28 . and 15 for n boy. the baptismal font in Dubuque, Io. A girl Apthr all the positive assertions on the subject, it is now definitely settled that the mantle of Horace Greeley as editor of the Tribune will not fall on the shoulders of Vice-President Colfax. Precitely what was the cause of the disagreement between him Bpring election in any county, by special legislative enactment, do not oecur oa the third Friday in March, then the election on the Local Option law shall be held on the day fixed for the municipal elections in Bnch eaunty. In this county, therefore, the election will be held on the third Fri day of February. As we stated in our paper a few weeks ago, the constitutional power of a Legislature to enact such a law has very recently been differently construed by the Supreme Court of New Jersey and Massachusetts. "We believe a case involv ing the same question has been pending before the Supreme Court of this State, but has not yet been argued and disposed of. That the constitutionality of the law of which we are now speaking will event ually have to be decided by that tribunal there can be no doubt. - In order that our readers may fully understand the provi sions of the law, we publish it below: IK ACT to permit the voters or this enramon weultb to voir overy three yearaoo the ques tion of granting lict nses to sU latoxlf allr.g liquors. Suction 1. Be it enacted by the Senate and Ilouae of Iteprehuntati ves of the Com monwealth of lVnuylvania in general As sembly met. and it is ho re by enacted by the authority of -1 rr 1 . . .1... 1 . f . 4 nA T r .1 ' auiiioriry or me Fame. j. 111. uu w iwn ana air. urton, the holder of a majority of Friday in March, 01m thousand eight hun the shares of the 7Vt7.. f l- 1. ! dred and se veiitv-three. in every city and tainly known. Whitelaw Rcid, who the editor after Mr. Greeley's nomination, has purchased Mr. Oj ton's stock at an ad vance and will in future conduct the paper. Although he is a much more competent man tor the position than Colfax, he can never fill the place made vacant by the death of Horace Greeley. He was the Tti- bunfi, and when he died the Tribune died with him. - We understand that John G. Enq., of Elk oounty, who is one of the delegates to the Constitutional Convention from this Senatorial district, intends to resign his seat with the understanding that Ex-Gov. William Eigler will be his successor. The ability and experience of Governor Bigler will render him an efficient and useful member of the convention. Cannot some Democratic member of that body from the north-western portion of the State, whose retirement from the convention would not be aericus'y fe'.r. consent to resign in or der that it might avail itself of the great legal learning and practical ability of Judge Thompson. His piesenee In the c-nvention would be acceptable to men of oil parties, and there is no man in the State who would fill the position with great er honor. The irrepressible Harry "White is a member of the State Senate and also of the Constitutional Convention. The Senate will convene at Harrisburg on the first Tuesday in January, and the convention will reas-emble at Philadelphia on the same day. As White, unlike the Iribh xnan's bird, does not possess the power of ubiquity, and cannot therefore be in two placet at the tame time, it is said that he will resign his seat in the convention, and that either Gov. Geary or Francis Jordan, Secretary of the Commonwealth, will be elected as his successor. Although it is eminently proper, for reasons too numer ous to mention, that White tl.ould retire from the convention, it is not at all to be desired that Geary should wear his mantle. That would be what is vulgarly called 'jumping out of the frying-pan into the fire." On the other hand, the substitution of Secretary Jorday in place of White would be an immense improvement on the latter and a consummation devoutly to be wished. During the last session of Congress, Gen. Morgan, a Democratic member from Ohio, submitted an amendment to the constitution making naturalized citizens eligible to the office of President and Vice President of the United Slates. It w. defeated by Radical volea. Some days ago, Gen. Morgan offered the same joint resolution, as follows : Article. Naturalized ritizons who havs attained the ap of thirty-five vars.and have reetdwd fourteen years in the United Rtai- are herby declared HgiVle to the offices of President ami Vice President. A two-thirda vote being required, the amendment was again defeated by the fol lowing vote: Yeas 62; nays 71. All those wha voted in ihe affirmative, with a few honorable exception, are Democrats, while the negative vote shows a solid array of Radicals. Of course all the negro members voted against it, which shows that while they entertain a very the eminent fitness of one of their own race for the highest honor in the gift of the people, they look with supreme contempt on the capacity of the ignorant Dutch and Irish for the same position. This vote against Gen. Morgan's amendment showa that the old proscriptive spirit of Know nothingism still animates ajd injpircs tho Radical party that its leaders are willing to pander to negro vanity in order to se cure negro votes, and that while Frederick Douglass, John M. Langston, Ex-Sonator Revels, Congressman Elliott, and every Other negro, has had conferred on him the constitutional light to be elected to the county in this commonwealth, and at the an nual municipal election every third year thereafter, in every such city and county, it shall be the duty of the inspectors and judg es of electiouH iu tho cities and counties to receive tickets, either writ.eu or printed, from the legal voters of said citiss aud coun ties labelled on the outside, "license," ami on the inside, "for license," or "a.-.inet li- 1 cene, and to deposit said ticicets in a box I provided for that purpose by said inspectors ' and judges, as is required by law in the case of other tickets received at said election, and that the tickets so received shall L counted, and a return of the same made to ' the clerk of th com rt of jttjrtr mmiom of the peace of the proper county, duly certi fied nti is required by law ; which certificate shall be laid lefore the judges of the said court at the first meeting of said court after said elsction shall be held, and shall be filed with the other records of said court ; and it shall be the duty of the mayors of cities, and sheriffs of counties, or of any other officer, whohe duty it may be to perform such ser vice, to give due public notice of such special election above provided for, three weeks pre vious to the time of holding the same, and alo three weeks before such election every third year thereafter : Proridtd, That this act shall not be construed to repeal or affect any special law prohibiting the sale of in toxicating liquors, or prohibiting the grant ing of licenses: Provided, That wheu tho municipal and township elections in any county, or city do not occur on the third Fri day in March, the election provided for in this section shall beh'-ldon the day fixed for the municipal elections in said county: And provided further, That all licenses granted after the first day of January, one thousand eigh hundred and seventy-three, shall cease, determine and become void on the flrjtt day of April, one thousand wight hundred and seventy-three, if the district for which they shall 1ms granted determines against the granting o!" license; and the treasurer of tb proper county shall then refund to the hold er of such license the moneys so paid there for, for which the said treasurers shall be entitled to credit ii: their accounts with the common wealth. Section 2. That in receiving and crnnt ing, and in making returns of the vots cast, the inspectors aud judges and clerks of said election shall be governed by the laws of this commonwealth regulating general elections; a'.d all the penalties of said elec tion laws are hernby extended to, and shall apply to the voters, inspectors, judge and clerks, voting at and in attendance upon the elec tions held under the provisions of this act. Section ;t. Whmever, by the returns of elections in any city or county aforesaid, it 1 shall appear that there is a majority against license, it shall not be lawfnl for any rourt or lxard of license commissioners to insne any license for the bale of spirituous, vinous, malt or other intoxicating liquors, or any ad mixture thereof, in said city or county, at any time thereafter, until at an election as above provided a majority shall vote in favor of license: Provided, Thp.t nothing contain ed in tke. provisions of thisact shall prevent the issuing of licenses to drtiggists for the sale of liquors for medicinal and manufactur ing purposes : Provided, The citizens of the borough of Lebanon shall vote upmi the question on The third Friday of March, one thousand eight hundred and seventy-three, on th same day and time, when the town ships of the county of Lebanon hold their spring elections. AfPROVED The twenty-seventh day of March, Anno Domini one thousand eight hundred and sevonty-two. JfHX "W. Giiit. Two of the negro members of the South Carolina Legislature who made affidavits charging John J. Patterson with having I bribed them to vote for him for United States Senator, have made supplemental affidavits in which they confess that when they swore to that charge against "Honest John," as he is ironically styled awaj down iu Dixie, they committed wilful porjury. This negro dodgo to shield Patterson is en tirely too transparent. In view of the pro verbial venality of nepro legislators in the Southern States, and especially in South Carolina, as well as the notorinnalv . ..-r-r.i- ex<ed opinion of ! i. - e ti. t t- . .,' 1 uiiaialici vt won j x Akicibuii, mo cnai'ge made on the day of the election by Elliot, a negro member of C'angrces, and who was Patterson'a most formidable competitor, that he (Patterson) had openly and corrupt ly bought his way into the Senate, seems to admit of no kind of doubt. The only I question possessing any interest now is. what additional bribe passed from Patter son to these two black swindlers to induce them to repudiate their original affidavits, and thereby, if possible, screen Patterson from punishment ? Patterson evidently understands the frailties of negro legisla tors as well as he did those of his own color V.A., . "--"., oow rouse iwiuijit, iiju n4iiie rouainv 01 Domical i . . - , . ... . ..... v I...,!, iiuutiu uoui arj Schurz, Richard O'Gorman, and other nat uralized citizens of prominence and ac knowledged ability. Although tl.e child is yet unborn who will livo to eicctea to tne oltiee of P there was the least particle .f lie to an empire without bloodshed : io all other countries the shock of political con vulsions accompanies the transfoi mation. But iu this regard how signally blest we are ! We are passing by such easy stages to an absolute centralized government, that the charges is hardly noticed. Let us be very thankful for it. We began, in the usual way, with a mil itary leader. And with a leader whose strongest characteristics were his reticent behavior and the habit of pursuing his purpose in dogged, persistent Nlence. No thing in history is more striking than the ease and certainty with which President Grant has so far made and is continuing his approaches to the form of government he desires. His first step was the very na tural one of appropriating to himself, per sonally, tho Presidential office, and divid ing the patronage among his family rela tives and dependents, and the military hangers on at bis court. Following this was the announcement that he should be independent of politicians, under cover of whirh he made his choice of those politi cians whom he could make most service able, and united them with his military adherents in a ring more powerful than the Persignys, De Mornys, and St. Arnauds of Louis Verhuel. Then to test the tem per of the people he broaehed. of his own motion and Independent of his Cabinet or Congress, his annexation policy, from which he cautiously seemed to recede for a time when lie discovered that he was a lit tle too fast. He made another tentative movement toward absolutism when, under the cover of moving the crops, he took the money market of the country in his own hands and controlled it through the Treas ury. His allies bungled at that, and he cautiously withdrew. In his management for a re-election he was equally shrewd and careful. There was nothing to shock the ordinary citizen in any of the methods or means by which lie swayed the conven tion of his party. They were as smooth and beautiful as an assessor's notice, but they meant business. Aud now having been re-elected by a smaller vote than before, he interpiets the result as indicating, first, that thousands of citizens have so far lost their interest, in political a flairs as not to vote for Presi dent, consequently that they are indiffer ent whether they shall livo under the gov ernment of all or the government cf one ; and secondly, that those viho voted for him aud who alone hav any voice in the Government or any rights under it, are en tirely willing that he should go his own way to the end. Accordingly we find hira in his first message to Congress after the election proposing a system of internal im provements grander than the wildest con ceptions of any European monarch, and costing, if carried out, hundreds of millions of dollars ; subsidies of twenty-five mil lions to private corporations ; the confisca tion of the telegraph lines of the country so that all postal and telegraph communi cation shall be controlled by his Govern ment, and every letter and telegram be subject to the oversight of his office-holders ; and through his Secretary of the Treasury the adoption of a financial policy whicli will give him absolute jower over the money market in order to irove the crops. He sends troops into Arkansas and directs the Legislature of that State, aud his retainers in the Senate rebuke the Ar kansas Senator for iuquirir.g the reason for it. He sits in judgment upon the qualifi cations of members of the Alabama Legis lature, and his law oflicer decides w ho shall be United States Senator. He steps in with Federal officeholders and United States troops, and, in order that his brother-in- law may be elected United States Senator, sustains a man as Governor of Louisiana whose only official existence was as a State Senator whose term of ofiice had expired. Under Grant there are no State Govern ments, and State authority is extinct. He is doing his work well. With all his family in office ; the army under his hand, and no one allowed to call him to account or ask a reason for his disposition of it : State Legislatures made or unmade by him; 'the legality of State Governments and the qualification of United States Senators sub ject to his decision ; millions at his disposal for subsidies and Government works ; and the whole correspondence of the country, by mail and telegraph, open before him, what is to prevent hi?, making the Govern ment in name as well as in fact absolute and personal? By all means double his salary. None of his predecessors everaccomplished so much as he. The man who can carry the coun try through so quiet and so sure a trans formation as that we are experiencing earns whatever he chooses to exact. 2i. T. Sun. inches. Here the water rose about 11 feet above the mean level of the sea. The shores of the Baltic ar so low that an inundation i cannot fail to occur under such storms as i that of the past month. In the srcall twn cf Apeniaca alone DO houses have be- A man in Wnyne county. Ind.. has been married five timt, and is nyw living with hia thiid wife. -Threertlrousaiid English babies are an nually smotherwd to death by their mothers sleeping upon them. rome nvo pigs were recently lounu in coire uninhabitable and nearly 280 fami- j a hollow tree in Kentucky without any ap- lies have not a root over tlicir heads. The news from Eckernforde is still worse : entire streets have been literally annihila ted, while many of;the buildings left stand ing are undermined in their foundations to such an extent that they will have to bo pulled down. The exact numberof dwell ings totally destroyed in Eckernforde can not yet be ascertained, but it will not fall short of 100. Hundreds of inhabitants have lost everything. The news from the district of Oldenburg is most saddening; but here, too, the dam age doue cannot be fully estimated as yet. On one property 350 cf ws and 200 hogs were arownea ; many villages nave been lnun see a negro resident, yot if New York Ar-cca. This is the title of . a most excellent Democratic paper justjes- tablished in the city of New York, by C. T. rykes. I lie number before us which is illustrated, is very neat in execution and sincerity in I -. ;i , th oft-rerated TJ.-.d;,i . .. ' I '""'"""S ,ls selections, it is edited feet equality of political rT tl ,! tl ! 7 "S" Umy d P"' educated and intelligent foreigner Llyt i auxiliarJ ia tl,e cause of Democracy, to be placed on an equal iWint, I Thoso of our rcader8 wish tosubscribe ihe Presidency is concerned, with the more ! '" " PPrtunity reminingitby highly favored "man and brother," i,oj, casing at our office. Price $2,00 per year. i.o.v, and will continue to be as long aa be I Direct No. 17 North William street, New a vo.e, tue special cr,cct or rvadical i York city. We hope it will meet with C"'n ? respect. ..... . . Ubt,, n-.. - G rant's Surrender. It will be re membered that when the President ap pointed Mr. Fairman to succeed Bingham as postmaster here his action was greatly commended as a declaration in favor of civil service reform in defiance of the poli ticians. Besides the fact that Fairman was not really the fittest man of the three who were named for the place, and that his appointment was determined upon at the dictation of a certain Pennsylvania politician and his ring, we felt quite sure that Grant was insincere in professing a purpose to reform the civil service, and that time would speedily prove him to be in this matter, as he is in all others, a hy pocrite and an imposter. And now. even sooner than we expected, comes the con firmation of our fear. We learn from a Washington correspondent that the an nounced intention or the President to eet as.de the civil service rules in selecting a postmaster at Chicago, to succeed Colonel Eastman, who has just resigned, and ap point a person recommended by Senator Logan and Representative Farrell, two avowed opponents of civil service reform has led to much unfavorable comment among the friends and supporters of the Administration. Colonel Eastman had re commended Mr. Squires, his chief deputy, as his successor, upon the ground that he was in every way qualified for the position; but Senator Logan was desirous, for oer soual political reasons of Lis own, that a Mr. McArthur, one of ;;is toadies and tools in the mere manipulation of party politics out West, should have the place, and Grant is reported to have yielded to Logan, and promised that his man shall be appointed. It is with earnest sorrow that we record these facts. It was generally supposed that Grant, being re-elected, and thereby released from dependence upon tho raeie demagogues of bis party, would honestly do what he thought right aud best for the welfare of the country. But alibis virtu ous resolutions has at the very outset col lapsed, and he may now be regarded as having surrendered unconditionally to Li can and other like pimps and peddlers of Presidential patronage. Sun, day Mercury. parent opening whereby tl.ey could have ' made an entrance. "That Wats the toads i blasted out of solid rock "all hollow." 1 teorge r rancis iiaiii and esley Nichols were arrested ia New York, Mon day evening, on the charge of publishing an ' obscene papur. Fifteen hundred copies J ! or the paper were seised on the way to tho pott-ofiice. i ' Five hundred miners, employed in j the mines at aud around Springfield, Illi nois, struck on Thursday for an advance in wages of 2-5 per cent. Tho mine own eissay they aie determined not to grant the demand. Mr. Guidon W. Snicer. one of the dated, and in one of them from 40 to 50 i early settlers of Spring township, Crawford houses have been destroyed. Iu several county, died ou the oth instant, aired 79 i . ,? , , . . .. . 1 . t places numan lives nave wen lost; in tne : years, lie never rode on a railroad car in village of Dahme 11 persons are missing, his life, aDd wu never further away from and the death of reveii has been ascertain- j home than Erie. ed. In the island of Femarn the family It is now 6aid that the poor servant of a pilot, consisting of husband, wife and girls r.ho perished so horribly in the Fifth two children, who had taken refuge on f'A venue Hotel, the other day, had been the roof of the house and were clinging to locked in the upper story so that they the chimney, were washed away and ! could be the better controlled bv the hotel drowned in sight of their neighbors and of a boat s crew which had already succeed ed in saving the lives cf 21 persons- On this island the sea broke through all the dikes, aud out of 43 villages the fields and property of only 11 escaped the devastat ing flood. The entire coast of western Pomerania and the island of Rugon, with proprietor, and that they might not get into disorderly company. Is this the usu al way of treating hotel servants? A New York Coroner's jury can do about as good whitewashing as one would wish to see. -In the Fifth Avenue Hotel fire investigation the jury failed to find that any one particularly was to blame ; and yet messages were printed on paper, the 'cop per simply taking the place of the paper, and having the messages stamped upon it in the Morse characters by an operator. Haifa dozen ojeratoi-B may be eugaged at the same time preparing the messages, while one transmits them through a simi lar machine, except that it is arranged for the copper fctrip to pass under a steel point that is set so as to touch the embossed dots and dafhes. The touch of tlte iMint eom- j pletes the circuit and suffers the 1 assage i of the electrical current, which is inter j rupted by the spaces between the dots j and da'hes, and thus the message is transmitted. The experiment appears to have been exhaustively tried, and its merits are in dorsed by various officials in the Western Union offices. In Louisville, words were transmitted to Memphis at the rate of seventy-five a minute, which is supposed to be the limit of human hearing; but tin) will probably develop means there by the words at the place of delivery may bo communicated directly to paper by ma chinery, and still greater speed in trans mission and delivery be thus secured. The profent average is from thirty to forty five words per minute. If this invention of the Rogers brothers prove a eucces, we shall not need Mr. Creswell's postal telegraph. The Rogers machine will reduce the employes and the cost of wires; and this reduction, if its ad advantages be shared with the public, will make telegraphy as cheap, probably, as it is likely to be made. Y ment for all. i h..- or more ayes r. Kew wf.rvVi V'''' and others. tMi.rerb nr.- ' ' vfi ; ' Money made rapl.liv nl .'! ' -e' Wrlte.nd .rL7?'y r toy, Dusti A Co., Hi.rw,.ri P;. "i. $5 TO $20 Ks-ft- ,. '''Tl. . "Ml" wora lor us iu ttietr spri i- rr time than at anvil: . . "" ' ' ACCIDES X It f do H$ It f Ui tf en lr 1 -sure In the TRAVELER 0, (DUTCH'S Imperifip g wn SfMit, ixM"tp8M. ,,n r,0,..., . ,'N. W. HCKMAM T. KKl' KAI M.!j )0(KKFtlIJ(U MnjTT;-- I and mMchnt fan lea mailed. 60c. H. Gm?i.irNG FntTivj ACENTS! A nARjT" W will pay all Airents H.'i rr K who will engage w ith us at om r (urnisoed and expends pni-i. u,i CO L" L'f EJ Co., its projecting peninsulas and the smaller everyone who knows anything about it knows that the building was simply r. death trap, and that if proper effort bad been made the poor girls' lives would have been saved. Dr. William Fields has invented a mode wheicby telegraphing can e done without the ue of posts, glass and wires which are subject to be destroyed or blown down by storms, and will be entirely indo perdent cf any railroads, ar.dwill not need any repairs perhaps for many years. The Doctor is now iu correspondence with the Postmaster General and the f.Vimmittm the ! appointed by Congress on Telegraphs. - I Wilmington Kevublicon. Terrible storms have recently occur d in England and France. A dispatch islands lying around it, have also motst se verely suffered. The long and narrow island of Hlddeu ree, near Rugen, through which the sea osce before forced its way, has been di vided into two parts by a channel 17 feet deep. Two villages were completely in undated, and had to be abandoned by their inhabitant!. Vitte wu.s also entirely cover edbythe sea, ai-d its inhabitants had to be rencued from the garrets by boats. Pro visions, winter Etores of all kinds and fuel have been washed away or spoiled, and the wells are useless on account of the saltwater, with which they are filled Want of shelter from the cold is bitterly felt and the unfortunate people have not the primary necessaries of life. I he chief i from Liverpool states that four bundled trade of the island has been fatally des troyed, as all the fishing-nets have disap peared, and the boats were either knocked in r ;eces or carried off by the sea. The penisula of Dars and the Island of Zingst, the forelands of a part of western Pomerania. were also devastated by this un exampled inundation. The natural dikes have been broken through in five places, and the artificial dikes and embankments, constructed not long ago at a heavy cost, have been entirely demolished. fititburg Dispatch. DAKCijfo tor Okphaks. Mr. James LTennovan, a gentleman well known on the Pacific coast as a celebrated 100-hour walker and athlete, has engaged to per form the remarkable feat of dancing thirty-one consecutive houis atFarragut Hall, Yallejo, California, for the benefit of the orphans. This novel proposition grew out of a promise made by him two years ago this Christmas. At that time he walked from the Bank Exchange, San Francisco, to San Jose and returned, walking in all a distance of 108 miles. He was met by a band of musio near San Francisco on his return, and the collection from the crowd amounted to $1,400, which was equally di vided between the Catholic aud Protestant orphans. This year he proposes to dance a round about jig on the stage of Farragut Hall for thirty-one consecutive hours, begin ning precisely at seven o'clock on Christ mas Eve, and closing his performance at twelve o'clock on the following night, and only taking fifteen minutes rest during the time. Cf course he will take his regular nienls and refreshments during the time, but he will eat and drink walking. At seven o'clock when he beginR his perform ance, a grand ball will open, which will continue during the evening and afternoon until the feat is accompyshed. Tickets for the ball, good for all time, will be $1 per couple, or fifty cents for single admit tance. The proceeds will be equally di vided between the Protestant and Catholic orphans. Mr. Kennovan is fifty-nine years of age. Not Gkserai.lt Kkowk. Martin Van Tiurrk im ly 'ximia -who lieltl the Office of president, vice-president, minister to England, governor of his own State, and member of both houses of Congress. Thos. H. Benton is the only man who lias held a seat in the Lmted States Senate for thirty consecutive years. The only instance of father and son in the Senate at the same time is that of Hon. Henry Dodge. Senator from Wisconsin, and Augustus C. Dodge, Senator from Iowa. Gen. James Shields is the only man who ever represented two States in the United States Senate. At one time he was Sena tor from Illinois and subsequently Senator from Minnesota. John Quincy Adams held positions under the government during every administra tion from that of Washington to that of Polk during which he died. He had been minister to England, member of both bou ses of Congress, Secretary of State and president of the United States. He died while a member of the house of representatives. and thirty-nine persons perished by ship wreck in ten days on the coast of England, while inland great destruction of property has taken place from wind and water. In France, most of the rivers oci leaped their tanks, inundated the country and carried away property of all kinds. The loss of h'e has also leen considerable. The severity of the season is shown in the fact that between Huntingdon and Peru, Indiana, sixty locomotives were fro zen up for near ly forty-five hours. Hogs, cattle and sheep were frozen to death, and many persons traveling through the coun try wero frost-bitten, notwithstanding their buffalo robes. On Sunday morning the thermometer stood at 25 degrees below zero at Wabash, which was about as cold as people generally can stand who have to move about in the open air. A rather remarkable case of the in termarriage of two families exists in Amity township, Berks county. Two brothers, William and Samuel Sheirer. each had ten children, and four of the children of one brother are married to four of the children of the other brother. Two sons of William Sheirer are married to two daughters of Samuel Sheirer. William Sheirer, one of the brothers, is dead all the other mem bers of the family are living. The young folks seem to be rather 6hy about marry ing anybody but Sheirer. For the third time in P. T. Barnum's checkered experience, he has met with an immense loss fiom that terribly distruct ive element, fire. On Tuesday morning last hi" mammoth circus and menagerie in New York was burned to the ground, and every animal in his costly collection but three, it is stated, perished in the flame s. The loss is estimated at $R00,000, on which thereislesstl.au $100,000 insurance. Grace church, adjoining, and several other build ings were also destroyed. The entire loss is put down at $1,000,000. A cm?trri. experiment to use petro leum as fuel for smelting metals is reported to have taken place recently in San Fran cisco. The experiment was'tried in a briok furnace eight or ten feet long and six feet bigh. The Alt California says : "From this tank a pipe about an inch and a half in diameter led into the side of the furnace. A small jet of oil, not larger than a small goose-quill, was permitted to flow out of this tube. A light is placed beneath this jet and it immediately ignites. Another pipe, about an ir,ch in diameter, leads from a steam boiler stationed sorrt fifteen feet away. This pipe leads a small jet of steam upon the burning oil, and the moment the steam strikes the oil the oxygen in the water is set on fiie and ignites with a tre mer.dous roar, generating in a very few morrents a most intense white heat. From this small source the entire chamber of the furnace, which is .nie two feet by five feet, is filled with a P.ame so brilliant and dazzling thatone cannot gaze on it for more than a moment at a time. This flame pos sesses all the heat of oty-hydrogen flame, and beneath its fierce power the hardest metals melt in a few moments." j DOORS, SASHES, EL!S I Kf nti for lllrxslrnlert (! I BKAm-F-Y ctrmir.it, 5t & is i" IA OttEATliVg- stock of UILLlAKD TAM.ESst i" above cost. First -class axln NcWV pltte. s.TOO. Second-hand 1 at.,,, new. Won. f25, tSJO. Ac. A ar..t v,-t' all buyers. Send rr a C-u.mI."li- KA VASAGU i i e-r Cor. Canal Centre St. , ' EOSEcfCASHMREBlf Is unsurpassed s a Preriinrprr,' , "i theHairand Whiskers. J-,, ,n f S-reas.v. vet it sr.ltei.sn;,,' n;, better and more termn ' ' Pomade. Used as a lU,r,1,n. "' 5 the nist beautiful ami hi-irm."'' ' ed perfectly harmless. It, ,t ''' is quite tiurivHled. hei,,,, ,it,,'.;j'V" world-rn.owned Hoses ,,f (vL 57 ."'""-'r-t. A,!.!rs '.7 -MILLfcR, mo N ad St., HhMs.Je Ph t 'ht McLean county, III., Bank lias just purchased $1,000 in g-!d. which had been stored away by an old settler before the rebellion. Had it been sold when gold was high, and placed at interest, it would now amount to more than $20,000. Cnfy Si a Year. 8 Tks Best Fsrailr Taper. 5" The Best AgriraHnral Tspir. Ths Best Toliticsl Ppr. Iks Bsst Story Ppr. Tfcs Best Fsshiea Repertt. Tks Be:t Cattle larkct Et Tks Best Crarral 5l,rkrt ! Ths Best Ptptr lrj W TniwrrKi.TAEW iorkmi pa-e, a oolumns. 81 a year, er , cents a nornUr fend Tnraar. Address Til E SL'X Npw yni Top Goes the Weasel !". The fol lowing story was told to us, says aa ex change, as being a positive fact, the narra tor professing to be one of the workmen who witnessed the performance of the said weasel : A party of men were prying at ne in a field, and found under a large rock a nest containing four young weassls, which they captured and put to one side. Upon the return of the old weasel quite a scene ensued. She became very much excited, and very angry, and at once set off", but soon returned, and going straight to the little pail containing the drinking water for the men, she spit something in it, and was about to go a second time, when she dis covered her nest and her young, all alive and unharmed. She immediately returned to the pail and continued jumping and push ing at it until it was overturned, thus say ing the lives of the men she evidently meant to punish for the destruction of her offspirng. Excuhstow to Europe. We learn that an excursion is in course of preparation at Columbia, Pennsylvania, for a trip to Eu rope, with a special purpose of visiting the great International Exhibition at Vienna. They start about the first cf June next, and will make an extended tour through Great Britain as well as on the Continent. A contract has already been entered into for carrying a limited number ocean passage, railroad faro, hotel bills and all other ex penses incident to the trip, all paid. A fine opportunity herd presents itself for making a cheap and pleasant tour to the Old World. Persons desiring further information on the subject should address A. M. Rambo, edi tor of the Courant, Columbia, Pa. The CaIl value of farms in PrnnoT-l., j nia aa fixed by the late census, wae over ' one thousand million of dollars. A Rem ahkablk Dream. The Lancas ter Inquirer is responsible for the follow ing : A married ladv, residing in an ad- j joining townshhip, who has been atfiicted j f r two years with cancer, and had been , treated by eminent physicians without ob j taining relief, dreamed that a stranger i came to the bouse, and gave her some j medicine, with directions, which he said j would ofiectually cure her. Next day on i going to the door and looking out, she saw j the identical man of her dream approach I ing the house. He offered her a bottle of medicine to cure her cancer. She took it and followed hia directions, and is now near ly well. Remarkabi.k Case. A very unusual and wonderful phenomenon was found within the body of William Wiliauer. n.fpt i about 19years, of Cedarville, Chestercoun- ty, who died on Dec. 9. The deceased had been afilicted for soveral years with curvative of the spine and enlarged spleen and liver. Ascites, or abdominal dropsy, set in about eight months ago. Dr. J. Davis, who has been his attending physician for several months past, performed a post-mortem examination in the presence of several persons, and, strange to relate, after hav ing drawn about eight gallons of dark-colored serous fluid from the abdomen, found that the liver, spleen, kidneys, stomach, and bowels were completely absorbed, with out leaving any portion of them remaining, nothing being found in the abdomen buta portion of the ementum and the serous fluid. Pottstoicn Ledger. PUBLIC SALE REAL aai PEESoIIl PROPEBTT Id rbrnvbiir; and Tleltalty. BY virtue nf a decree of the District Court of the I nlted Staffs for the Western District of Pennsylvania, the undersigned will sell at public outcry, on the premises, commencing AT IO O'CLOCK. A. ST., OX WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 15, ,1873, the following described Keal and Personal Pro perty, to wit : A Largo Kew PLAKIKC P3ILL Sf Yiy AO feet, two stories and basement, with a toiler Shed SO bv M fft attached, containing a !i-w4n HORSE POWER EXiiSE. !.-re lionblt fl ie BOIPEK. HA 1. 1. ESTER MACHIN E. CIU Tr.AU SAWS. LATHES, and the neee-ssry Pulleys, Shartit-s. Keitinsr. ic-f rontinir on the F.O-nsbiira- anl 'r.sn Kaiiroiid - w.t h about ONBACHE OF GIMICXI). on which the above described property stands. Tne Mill and Ma chinery are nearlT all new and constructed in the most complete nnd modern style for man ufacturing Handles, ISrueb. Blocks, Stair JJal lesters. to. Also. -A. Iull Lot o " Cm round OS by 364 feet, fronting-on Hia-h ftreet. hnrlnr thereon erected a two storv Kit A MK DWELL ING HorSE. STABLE, and Ol'TDEILDINliS. with a lartre number of choice fruit trees, etc Also. 5 Acres and lOO rerches of Land situate in Cumbria township. sU.ut one-fourth mile from Ebensbur, well fenced and in good condition. Very utbirbie for meadow or pas ture. Also, d Ijots oT Ground situate at the forks of the Huntingdon. Indiana and Pitt sbu nr Turnpikes, pirtly in the borough of Ebensbur. known by the Not. 1. . 5. 6.7 and 10 on Myers" plan ; fenced and well inproved. Very desirable ns buildina lots. There is a one 22.". story FRAME IV ELLIN'U HOL'SE STABLE, Ac, on Lot S. 10. A1, at tame time and place, the foXlnxrlng Valuable Personal Property! win ue onerea ror sale, to wit: 1 Alcott El centric Lath, 1 Saw Mandril. 3Cnsrlron Jill leys, 1 Mortising- Machine. Circular Saws. Cool Stoves. Gratj liur. Tie Yarn. Ac. Also, l.V) OK) reetof Cherry, Ash, Maple and Poplar Lumber 4,0X Cherry llallrsters. 8.0OJ Handles. Sti? irross of planed ash Scrub. Horse nnd Shoe Brush Blocks, Ac. Ac. In and about the Mill CAII which Keal Estate and Personal Pro perty will be sold clear of nil mortirnres. liens Court"11 eucutubrunce9- J order of the said Terms made known on rlsv of ssle. GEOKOE HLNTLET. Atmgnfr of George J. Rodaert. Ebonsburr, Dec. 20. 18T2.-3t. ! r Agents W The unparalleled snccest of t'T.-t ln Machine, opens a rood be wing Machine A fnnts and rex-f take toe igencj for this Coui i "7 r lars, samples of work and teri.:( K.-,n THE VICTWt Sewing SlaefesV J. L. FERGUSON, M AXJlGKR, . . he ff" ; t irt d 1 T. f f-r tlh . to . th tjr- . ans r car, tie pre are Ly rie V int! led tot Co SCOI fort he r prl the Frc wee strv Act; It jui ir-n Tt, HO tr.v.t. t T h! rjTiT.AnnT.rjii a. lurt text ihe - Ultot kind. 1 Too The Z-rrrgrcF.t and Itrrt Shil'htif F U R N I T U R9rr: 1VE3T OF THE MOrXTAIKS. ( Of oca Own f AKrrACTi Rr.. will fc. . , the MlXMOTB FCRSIITK Esiablurn"6-"' C. 6. II A AIMER Jr SOXi The newest and most approved itj'.es it ,i and Medium Furniture, ia laryer tar.rt-rv any other touw, at, vary ro.ioat:t k 8t i: Persons furnlshlr.a; bnusc-s wouid 'io - ,' writ for our art circular, or wti-a ' 'dnri nrffh we sespectf !ly solicit a im. , ' wareroosas. Don't forget the p-sc. JiLr. , tttU Sara.Hi It.., ntb&,Wt We chsjlena-e the world in n.-tces riai;7 quality of materisl snd workuianahlr pOKlt s-ood. CUT THIS OIT. isl -.aaff, GREAT OFFERS TO AGI', are mado by Ta Satcrdav Eteiikg?'. TacLAOT'e FbiebD. A beautifnK hrnx: " CHILD-PROPHET ' PAMVEL,- ''cr-' worth 15 00. Io riven with the I'aprr .fc6 tion price at) or with the Mssruaine !Vr''''C Do not fail to examine into this o.Ter: ::Xarr. A GKEAT COMBINATION:: te0rt Address for particulars, sample. etf .T ' 4 Plrpii, 31 Walnut St., rUlhrf a. r-L fcraV STRAY HOG. CME, premises of the subscriber. In Uhieklick township, Cambria oouutv, about the latter nart of Novemlwr ...... 'n-m-i n -i.fV l,.rr"w)- "bont one year and a half old, I vTT- CTAPTT with both oars arid the tail cot off. The owner ! xNE W STOCK, is hereby notified that if all the requirements (Jr depo An Institution for Jhe th Trough rrafi n,a,!; atioa of young- and n i idle aged mc-'was department of Com me o il life. The oldest, larrest at 6 anost comp;",f eal Business Collere In A nerlcr.. an one havlnr connected w it i it an Ar.r-:l"e 1 S9ieprtment.conduot?d on aeritf-Jing j Patronised bv the sons of WerrhaotjlU, rs. Farmers. Mechanics, and Bu:o f '. from all parts of the United State. "l - to4BU ta vaiter mi nvy Altc For larr descriptive Circulars ft'" particulars, addreaa uesn lU-.-2m J. 0. SKrTH.A. M .rrlJf I i. I " r 1" ..i 5iii.il ran-snrc no compiled with In due time, the ho wlil be sold as the law directs Blaekllck Twp., Dec. 20. 5&$JT ILLIN- Isitate Notice. rPnE undersirneL Executor of the last will -- testament of M. M. Auamr, Inteot Ores son, Cambria co., decVJ.Juerehy notifies lll'ner. sons indebted to said estate that payment must be made without delay.and those havlnr claims against tiiesam arn requested to present I hem duly autheutia-ed ror settlement . . J- E- SCANLAN; Executor. Ebensbury, Dec 20. ls7S.-6t. Estate Notice n A VINO taken out Lettera of Administra tion on the Estate of Patrick: Cari late of .l!itzin township, Ot.nbrf. ciuift" dSl ceased, the subscriber hrh. ii sons indebted toeaid estate that payment must be made without delay, and those ha vlnr claim. Ik , r BHm.. W,U Present them properly Probated for it mn K J a,. T,K'MAS aRLAXD, Administrator Altoona. Deo. 13. 1873--6t. "iiraior. A Christmas Evb Horror. Fright ful Railroad Accident. Cleveland, Dec. 24. A fearful accident occurred to-day on the Cross-cut railroad at Prospect station. One coach and a baggage car fell off the bridge, twenty-seven feet high. Cause, a broken flange on tender. Twenty-two were killed and eighteen wounded. Corrt, Dec. 24. The cars fell bottom upward, the weight of the trucks crushing t hem in. There was no way of escape for the imprisoned passengers. Tho cars im mediately took fire, but there was no water to extinguish the flames. Only two axes could be procured to chop the cars to pie ces. In this situation some twenty-five persona were roasted alive, filling the air T YL7- nourwith t,,p": rty'UP Sbrieks. notified that unless he af.peVrs, It is be lieved wvaral of those rescued will ! ty. P;ali cha,Rsd takes hej T.shVZm a, Stra.v llll. I ) vJ,E. ,be Premises of the subscriber In .w1,.Qton tonship, one and iUlfinU north of Uily;. Station, on or abot thf i"th uiu, a year and a half old BLACK BULL No other color or marks on him. The ownerls rl2 queeteU to come forward, prove propV pTv b.8dndVfk W.4h,,ton Twp., Deo.1;t..MrER3- Stray Xleifei-. CAME o the residence of tho subscriber, at .iei f Cambria oonntv. some t me durinjt lat summer, a DAItK BROWN HEIF tll ,no year old past, with whirr bellvsnd a small sht in the rhrht cr Th. ..IZ.l- l'A.'lB... dia of thir injuria Fall Trade, lSTn frien FtConf EXCLUSIVELY WHOLESALES O. 13. Urvn-ott & O. 12-20. K. 60 riFTH Atcdbs, Pittabsnr" A G EX2 S WA -V TED F0l Je y BOSTON AND ITS DESTRl'frC A full. deUiled and Brraphica-cunt cf rt'lSeo rln, progress, suffer! njr, losses and 'Rf "tj'fcncl. the Kreat conflHKration. A rrr aKents. as every parson wants to krK" w'-Ci , tmrticularsof this arent di-ss'er. er :t nj jiu for 50 cent . WILLIAM VI-I krt,i tlm.l Philadelphia, I'a., i u i Cnweni( S250 A rOXTTT, SS WE WAST lO,00O. A ',J err Hire 1; " MALI OR FEMALE. . . . . . comuinatiox Nri:ii.r. CA-t . , ,, MONN AIE. This is ao article cf ft- ;..t osty with every laly. nnd '"J ' z For circular and Terms nii-y ..,,,.iarf "'in 12-13.-3in. l IttfbBrc Sspplj f ' - ,ni ,v : 1 TIKST N NTI - hailness shop ok Iliirh street, (opposite I ni' ,, Westward, Ebcnbura-. in-- .' . . , w pairtHl and'all other work in ni? in rhw bet manner, on the shorted ...t lru iheT In rhw lxt manner, on in- ,-j at the most reasonable rates. l OAL! COAL! ! -The now prenarctl to f n rn ish. " ' JTTT t1 ? ' iinntitie. all me of A N 1 " rtrt C irn.i-f i.-Ai-.. . . 4 t - t li,n-esl w,nI lilll.iil.o'l.'i ip rf:i Coal delivered Drouiuilv and ,ur ha.Omir at any poml in Et -m-w r , -r'k-J "".'Ml, . . I " "u,u '" iaw Quanta Tc. 18.-3L ANDUBW CTLL!!f. uiL . c : ii ! "ZTs n r- "1 -IH!