The Cambria freeman. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1867-1938, December 26, 1873, Image 2

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EQEKSBURC, P
A
Fritov Morning;, - -.Ifcc. 2C, 1873.
., ,. ...IJS,.,
The counties m the State whih give
majorities ajair.it the new constitution are
Achims, Lebanon, Dauphin, Perry, nydrr,
Bir.ir, orrrOiset, Indiana, and Oiceac.
'i-i'K me where of the Constitutional Con
vention will nuet in the hall of the House
of ITtpicwii.atn cb it llarrisburg lo-iuor-rrw
Saturdays for the purpose of op:niog
and eouiititig ihe official returns of the late
election on the ad't tion or rejection of the
Dew Constitution.
TVnEK the iuple of this Stale voted on
the present constitution, in October, lSi.'"1,
tic total Vote polled was 220, 7CJ, there
being 1!?,971 for the au.e..d:i)cnts and
112,7ol agnimt them, showing the rmali
majority of 1,212 in their favor. The cte
in Cambria county, nhicli was a full oi:o
at that tinie, stood 618 for and 1)20 agair.ist
the amendments, being a majority of 303
a':in. the present Constitution.
5KVT0S LoTli, tho present Governor
of California, hasjant becnelcclcd to the
United States Senate for 6ix years from
"March -it!;, 1S75. lie U au an ti-monopolist,
and hia e'ection vra brought r.bout by
f. union cf the anti-Giant Republicans and
the Democrats and is regarded as a great
victory over the Central Pacific Rail Road
ring. The same combination Las also
elected Judge llager, Democrat, to the
Senate for Jthc unexpired year of Secator
Cngforly'e term, who resigned a few vtetkb
ago.
Both hor.scB of Congress adjourned for
the holidays on Friday lnt, to meet again
on Monday, January 5th. Although this
is the usnai custom of Congress, it is ono
that would bo more honored in the breach
than in the observance. The constitution
requires that Congress 6hall meet on the
first Monday in December. Au amend
ment oight to be adopted by that body,
"and presented to the different State Legis
latures for their ratification, changing the
time of meeting until about the second
Tuesday in January. If this were done,
there would bo no ncct-ssity for a recess,
and the business of the twc legislative
branches conid proceed without unneces
sary delay or interruption.
A Rurt'BLirAN member of Congrcs
from Illinois remarked last week to one of
LU colleagues, that he hoped the Senate
would confirm the nomination of George
H. Williams as Chief Justice, and when
asked his lenson for saying so, gave tho
following brief, but comprehensive answer:
"My leason for the wish is, thatlr.suiting
and outrageous as the nomination is,
yet if Williams is Grant's first choice for
Chief Justice, can any human being im
agine who would be his $eeond V The Il
linois member believed in accepting the
lesser of the two evils. Sometimes there
is sound plrlosophy in this rule, but hi the
case of Williams it would be a fatal prece
dent, and on the part if the Senate a most
tame and impotent conclusion.
The steamer Virginius, which ws cap
tured off the coast of Jamaica ou the COth
of October by the Spanish r ar vessel Tor
nado and taken into the port of Santiago,
Cuba, where fifty-three of her passerers
and e;e were speedily and inhumanly ex
ecuted, was formally delivered up by Spam
to a naval o.'tiecr of the United State, on
Tuesday, the ICih inst., in the haibor of
1'ahia Ilnda, about sixty miies west of
Havana. The surviving passengers and
crew, numbering between eighty and one
huudicd, who have been in prison at San
tiago siiicf then eaptuie, were released on
yestciday week and placed on board a
United Slates vessel of war, and will be
brought to New York. These two acts
were done iv pursuance of the settlement
of the dispute by Mr. Fish, Secretary of
State and the Spanish Minister at Wash
ington, and thereby all danger of war be
tween, rhe two countries has been happily
averted.
Never was a corrupt and unscrupulous
Ring so completely riddled and crushed as
was the Philadelphia Ring at the election
on Tuesday of last week. The official vote
in that city discloses tho magnificent and
decisive majority of 34,120 in faver of the
new constitution. It is a proud and noble
verdict of the friends of reform in that
metropolis in favor of honest voting and
an honest State government. That tho
most gigantic frauds were contemplated by
the Ring election ofliccrs became apparent
on the day of the election, but the storm
of popular sentiment was too violent to bo
resisted and the Ring was buried without
Lope of resurrection.
John W. Forney, who was the steadfast
friend of the constitution fiom the-beginning
to tho end of the campaign, in his
Jcs refers to the attempted frauds as
fellows :
The first returns fr.m the Mayor's ofiiet,
rt one o'lloek on Tiu sda.v, showed a major
ity of .",41)0 against th- con.-iit miyu in llie
Nineteenth ward. This was subsequently
correeted in p:,rt, at 'east, and largely re
duced, the small majorities returned for the
instrument in all thy other wards, exempt
the tenth, b'-iii at tin same time greatly
increased. Hn even after all pretenvled cor
rections, the Nineteenth ward was returned
on the eveniufl of eleetion day as "jiving
uijainxt cc institution. ISy tli nfheial re
tarns the same ward is found to have east- a
majority of L'.'.CT for the instrument. The
changes in the other ward are sufficient lo
make n a. ili'ierenee of over 7,000 in tho
Ut:tl majority of this city.
There could he no clearer evidi'tiee of th
fnet that the vote of Philadelphia lias of
late, been returned at whatever rWurra suit
rd the neeessiiics of the political leaders.
They have been able to produce majorities
to oritur, and thus completely nullify the
will of tiie sovereign people. The new con
stitution aims a destructive bl.,w at the vast
tnuinery, and it needs only a few finishing
stickes freiu the pi oplo to I. my it U-yond
resurroethni. A new rrwiiry law is iiievi
t: lle in the interestsef honest elections, and
if th earn overwh-fmirij; popular scnti- :
meiii which carried through lit? constitution ;
shall now Ivj brought to bear npnu tlm L- '
isltt'ir1 ; which is soou to met, its demands
will be otvcvfd aui the work of rul'orui au
ftplcjouilj teun
H Hllti it (tH'l the S naf?.
I From the time of Washington's adniin-
inflation down to that of Grant, the Somite
i of t he United States, in defence of its own
high character, has never thought it proj-
er or necessary to send for jieimins and
papers in order to satisfy its members of
; the oapaeity and integrity it a man whoso
name had been sent to it as Chief Justice
f the United States. And vet this it- :
oa.r.'delcd proceeding took place in the
... , r-j j
naie iase. wceK, tvueu .ai. .-.ul .
Republican Senator from eraiont, who
is Chairman of the Judiciary oinimttee,
asked the consent of that bedy to tend for
i . i.. ,-utv.nn..a 41,
i-ersoiia :-i'd rapt:! m leieicnce lo tii6
11 . t e -
charges which have been preferred against
the character of Geo. II. Yilliat.is. Could
tiich a humiliating proceeding have oc-
carrrdintho Senate when John Adams,
in 1S01. nominated John iiarfihall for that
high and responsible position? or in 1S3G.
hen Andrew Jackso.i nominated Roger j
B. Taney? or in 13uJ, when Abraham,1
Lincoln nenninated the late Salmon P. j
Chase? Such a movement in the Senate j
would hare shocked1 the moral and politi- j
ical eento cf the whole country. It was ;
reserved fcr U. S.Grant, in this year of
grace 1S7S, to force his own political
i friend in the Senate to adopt this unusual j
and extraordinary course. j
j No final action was t.iken on ths nonii- !
: nation before the adjournment of the Sen- j
J ate on hu t Friday, and none can bo until it j
reusEcmbles on the 5th of January. It :
; will then be seen whether Senators will
surrender their honest convictions of V il-
Hams' total incompetency and "admitted
unfitness for the otlicc at the personal ap
peals and solicitations of Grant, or wheth
er they will l eject him and compel the
President to send in another nomination
fit to have been made. Cndi r all the pe
culiar circumstances of the case, if George
j II. Williams was gifted with a proper sense
; of personal honor he would demand of
; Grant that he should recall his name from
i the Senate. That, however, is not to be
j exjxeted in these degenerate days, when
r curvy politicians will attempt, by crook
ing the prcgn.tiit hinges of the kuces that
thrift may follow fawning, to crawl into
high judicial positions for which neither
nature, education nor experience ever in
tended them.
. -q-
1 hk efhcial vole from all
the counties
in the Siaie except McKeau (v. hich t;ave
a majority of V24 for the constitution) has
ben received at the office of the Societal y
of tho Commonwealth, llarrisburg, and is
herewith presented In conjunction and by
way of comparison with tho vote on the
constitution of lb" 3 and the vote for Su
preme Judge at tho recent October elec
tion :
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jii27t9 I .22--.nt11as.vo
Major;-.
12 2
A Roat Steekf.d hy a Corpse A Afy
tny Lake Erie. On Sunday morning
two fanners snd their families who were
driving to Maiden to attend church, when
about eight miles below, or east of che
town, saw a ship's yawl on the lake bead
ing towaids the beach and about half a
mile away. '1 hey could plainly make out
a man in the stein sheets steering the boat
with an oar, and, although there were no
vessels in sight, the morning was so pleas
ant and tho se.i so smooth that ii was sup
posed the man had put out from shore to
pick up something, and but little attention
was paid to the yaw'.. Passing the same
fp t on their letuin the men found the
av. 1 hard on the beach, and the man sit
ting slid" and motionless in her stern, life
less, and frozen as hard as a rock. Ho sat
bolt upright on the seat, the oar out be-
ninii and botli liandr, clasped tho handle,
antl
11 required hard work to wrench it
ircim 111s en a-.ii-gnp. I heie w :.s about a
ftK.t of water in the boat, but the craft did
not show rough usage. The man's legs
were almost covered with ice as far up as
his knees, and the spray had dashed iover
his back and shoulders anel frozen there.
There was n, name on the boat, and the
pers.'it who brought the information to
indsor yesterday could not say that any
thing wa- found tin the person eif the man
to revfal his identity nor to show how lie
liael be en cast adrift, lie must have been
ileael at least three days er inure. There
was neither sail nor mast to tho boat, and
nothing iu it but the "one oar, showing
the poor fellow had not intended a long
trip anywhere, - and that he must have
been blown tiff the shore. He had used j
bis oar to keep Wfoie the wind, and had j
frozen to elealh on Ids scrrt, where lie was ,
so firmly held by tho ico that it hat! to be '.
bieiken null a stone before lie could bo ;
Ou;' JYcr Constitution.
The newspapers are commenting very
generally, ami, almost r.ithout au excep
tion, in most favorable terms upon our
new constitution. Among others the New
York Jit rail approver of it heartily. The
new State constitution of Pennsylvania, it
say, framed by a convention of aLle men
of fdl parties elected for the purpose, and
ratified on Tuesday hist by an overwhelm
ing majority of the popular vote, marks a
great and glorious revolution in that slur-
I a? commonweaiui m bei.all ol honest
I elections, honest legislation, the entail-
i . . i -
j meilt of the powers and privileges of grasp-
, , a.ilWAy monopolies, and for the protec-
; Hon of the public treasury against bribery,
corruption and frauds and leakages. In-
! deed, cince the adoption of the constitu-
i ' P., r. .. , , ... . . .,
tion of the Lr.ited States, no State in the
; Union, at a sinirle bound, has advanced so
far in the good work of reform on the
I broad platform of popular sovereignty and
lTw ..ngfcts as Pennsylvania has ad-
vauced in the adoption of this new consti
tution, this Magna Charta, as we may call
it, of a new dispensation.
This new constitution, r.mong other
things, provides that the term of the gov
ernor shall be four years, and that he shall
be limited to one term ; that the represent
atives of the State legislature shall be
elected for two and the senators for four
years, and that the elections and the ses
sions of the legislature shall be biennial.
The term of the. supreme court judges is
extended fioin lifteen to twenty-one years,
and varied as modifications are made in
the" terms of other State officers, the "one
term principle" being generally applied to
them. This is a good principle, and will
operate as a salutary check against corrupt
political intrigues among the officers con
cerned in reference to the succession in
their respective offices. The American
people are liokinc for the application f
i this one term principle to the President of
the United States, or for somo- limitation
of his eligibility, in an amendment of our
national constitution. But, again, this
new constitution of Pennsylvania provides
that the legular State elections shall be
held on the same day as the Presidential
election. "and that the municipal elections
shall be held in February. This merging
the State election of the Presidential year
in the Presidential election is an immense
reform ; for we all know that Pennsylva
nia, being considered the balance of power
in many of our Presidential contests of the
last fort v vears. her October State elect ion
has too frequently been made the wager of
for the Presidency itself. We all
know that this thing has operated not only
to spread broadcast over Pennsylvania all
the vices of political corruption, but that
it has brought in from time to time cor
rupt appliances from other States and from
Washington to carry the Pennsylvania
October election in the Presidential year.
This fruitful source of political corrup
tion no longer exists ; and if we could have
all our State elections iu ihe Presidential
year on the same day as the election for
President, the scheming politicians, whose
game it is to carry the State elections of
August, September and October, for their
"Presidential purposes in November, would
find their occupations gone. Our Stato
elections would be carried, even in the
Presidential year, upon their own merit.,
and the politicians ot every State would bo
kept too actively employed at home to in
terfere in the affairs of their neighbors.
Rut. again, this new constitution ef Penn
sylvania, for tho purification of the ballot
box, provides that the ballots cast shall be
numbered, that voters may put their names
on their ballots, and that the confidence of
the voters shall not be betrayed by the
election officers. Various other safeguards
of the ballot-box are provided, ail calcula
ted to secure fair voting and honest returns.
Next, the checks and balances upon the
legislature are well considered for the pre
vention of corrupt or hasty legislation.
Each bill, for example, is to be limited to
one subject named in the bill, and every
bill is to be read three times in full ou the
Uifierent days, a
vl
ierc appropriations
are mado the governor may o to a part or
parts of the bill and approve the rest of it.
The hint to the convention eu this subject
v as, perhaps, taken from the 4 "back jiy
grab," slipped into a regular appropria
tion bill in the closing hours of the last
congress. I
Stringent provision for the protection
P.i... ei..i. , i :.. ii.:
of the State treasury are made in this new
constitution in the heavy penalties ordered
against corrupt or negligent officials : but
the particular feature of this new State
charter, which was doubtless nio.-:t heartily
approved by the people, is the strong con
trolling power which it gives to the State
over its railways and canals, ami over
grasping corporations generally. Iu short.
Pennsylvania, in this new charter, has
achieved a great revolution of wholesome
reforms in the administration of her local
affairs, and particularly in throttling her
corrupt Philadelphia, and. llarrisburg rings
of political ga.nestcrs, and in clipping the
wings of her railway Lings, so that, they
cannot pass beyond the limits assigned
them. We congratulate the people of
Pennsylvania on the good woik achieved
iu their new constitution.
St-nator John J. Patterson of Penn
sylvania and South Carolina has been vin
dicated again. On Tuesday hist he w.-vs
brought before a trial justice in Columbia,
having been arrested upon charges ;on
taincd in an affidavit made by Col. Ii.
II. Rice, a Conservative member of the
South Carolina Legislature, who swore on
information and belief that Patterson had
offered R. M. Smith of Spartanburg ?:!)(
eaoh for every Conservative vote which
he could influence in the Senatorial olec
tion. When the examination took place,
('ed. Rice testified, giving his reasons for
believing that such an offer had been made,
and Mr. Smith travo evidence that a few
evenings before the election he met Pat- i
terson, who told him that he would
1.:... .1... 1... 11 ...:..
I1 I
him (Smith) srjoo for even- Conservative !
vote that he should influence in Patterson's
favor. To this otfer Smith testified that
he replied, "Yes, and damnetl cheap at
that," anel left him. This evidence hav
ing been heard, Patterson brought 011 his i
forces, including a Deputy or ex-Deputy
United States Marshal, a Custom House !
man, and one Gunn, who was the chief,
witness in the Ku-Klux prosecutions, all of
whom testifieel in his favor, after whidi
Honest Jtihn himself took the stand and j
swore Smith out of sight, testifying that
that individual had endeavoreel to coirupt !
him, had proposed to sell the Conservative !
votes to him, and had offered to take j
$500 for his own, whereupon the accused !
was discharged. So far Patterson conies'
out ahead, for it is certain that lie will be
able to furnish men enough to swear to '
the purity ef his character to overcome '
any prosecution instituted befoi-e trial jus- j
tices in South Carolina. The worst dan- !
ger lie has to enoounter now comes from i
his own admissions that he bought his
seat ii) the Senate : hut-that is a matter
which can be easily fixed. He will have
no difficulty whatever in producing any
number of reputable .witnesses to swear i
that they would not believe anything he
might say under oath, and thus "effectual- 1
ly spike tho last guu of his enemy. Jv. Y.
Have the leaders of tho Trctm-m ever 1
used any cf l'arun's J'urnatine. IVtn ? If
not, why not? They are the best family phy- ,
lf !,,V 5 bC-,n- 1 f Z11 anti-biliou. !
idi.-.cdr there- i. in this country. -
I A lienmrkuble Ci-ltaln.il Trial, j
A MAN WHO TKIC1) TO 11001
JJUIJN HIS WIFE.
STAB AND
The trial of a. mau for one of the most
extraordinary and atrocious attempts tsj
commit murder knjvvn in the criminal re
cords of this country,- was begun on Thurs
day in Elizabeth N. J., in the court of
Over and Terminer of Uuion county.
Ilcrinan Krull alii Koewjng, w;;s put
uj;ou his trial for attempting to muider
his wife, Lucy Krull, in Elizabeth. The
first witness Geo. Sayers, testified that on
leaving his home on November 1
a woman crawling on her hands
r 1J, lie saw
and kuec-s
in the roadway. He ran to her, and lift
ing her in his arms, carried her into his
lionsc.
where lie tuscovereei .nai sue nau
been wounded in the head, evidently by
pistol bullet, and that the arteries of both ( 0(H), the interest of which is annually to be
arms had been cut at the wiist with some j expended in bunting.
weapon. She was then so weak from loss a. miner named John Carroll was brn
of blood, that she was unable to speak. j tally murdered near Monongahela City on
He had informed the ptoliee of his diseov- i Saturday last. Two men with whom he
cry, and they bad arrested the attejnpted
murderer.
Mrs. Krull then narrated the circum
stances attending the attempt upon her
j life. Her testimony was translated by an
interpreter, as rhe gave it, she not speak
ing the English language. She became
acquainted with Krull in Hamburg, Ger
many, in August last, and married him in
September. She arrived in this country
on 'November 5, landing at Philadelphia.
The day after their arrival he slid he wish
ed to visit his children in Brooklyn, and
went to that city. He rejoined her on
Nov. 11, and told her that he had selected
Newark as their future home. Previous
to starting she pawned a watch studded
with diamonds and three rings, and gave
the money to her husband. On the way
to Newark he got off the train at Eliza
beth, at 8 o'clock in the evening. In that
city he walked through dark streets until
late at night, and finally led her into a
piece of wood on the border of the city.
lie then stopped suddenly and said, "Lucy,
we are both going to die here. 1 love you
too much. "
He then took out of his iocket a hand
kerchief saturated with chloroform and
placed it against her mouth, but she push
ed Ids hands away, lie then fired a shot
in the air, and in an instant afterward
Minted the pistol at her head and fired.
She fell to tho frrouud insensible, and
j when she recovered consciousness found
j him cutting one of her wrists. Slie at
' once wrapped her handkerchief around it.
lie tore the handkrcheif otf, and asked
! her paidou for w hat he had done. She
! said that she could never forgive him. He
1 then seized her right arm and inflicted
1 with a knife three terrible gashes, saying,
! coolly, "It will give put little pain ; die
i bravely."' She thcr. tried to take the
j knife away from him, but was too weak.
I Ho then again cut her arm, and said,
This will help you ; lie down ; to-morrow
morning they will find you dead."
j She fell to the ground. He then lit a
match, and applying it to her undeicloth
, ing, set it on lire, and then left her. Still
I conscious, she readied out one of her
I arms, from which the blood was stioam
1 ing, and quenched the flames with tho
. blood. She laid almost unconscious on
the ground until daybreak, ami then, as
she was endeavoring to crawl to a house
near by, she was discovered by Savers.
Puling Mrs. Kru'l's examination the
clothes she wore on that terrible night
were brought into court, and were found ;
to be stained with blood and partly burn- ;
ed. The accused testilied 1:1 his own be- .
half that he missed his w ife in Philadel
phia, followed her to Elizabeth, could not 1
find her there, and then went back to :
Philadelphia, wheie he was arrested by ;
the police. '
The trial of Herman TCoewing closed i
on Friday at noon. The jury after being j
out fifteen minutes brought in a verdict of
atrocious assault, and he was sentenced to
ten vears in tho Statu Prison and to pav a :
line of $1,01 0.
Mist rr hk Extermination? Whe::
Tliomas Clarkson made his exposures of
the nefarious character of tho African
slave trade, the parliamentary advocates
for a continuance of the detestable traffic
tried to meet the condemnatory tone of
I public, opinion proposi
. .1 . n
to regu-at
and
I ret : :u the system. Ih.it treat logicia'i.
Cb:ri-s James Fox, in the course of a
spect Ii on the subject oxp!ouil tins spe-
ciui.is pica oy one jt those vehement ex
clain.t! ions for which he was so famous;
"Regulate tho slave trade !"' cried Fox.
"YOu might as well attempt to regulate
murder!'" "Itoform it!" continued he.
"The ouly way to reform it is to exter
minate it !
Congress seems to be doing its best to
raise this very issue in regard to tho Re
puliean party. The Republicans hae a
ina.joiity of four to one in the Senate, and
of three to one in the House. They are j
responsible, therefore, for every measure j
which is adopted or defeated.
Recent elections have shown that there !
is a large body of honest Republicans who, j
though well aware of the corruption which i
permeates their party, still cling to it with !
the hope ol being able to regulate and
reform it. Cougiess appears to be eager
to dissipato this hope and elrive this large
body of Republicans to the conclusion
which Fox reached in regard to the slave
trade.
The Republicans in the Senate have con
firmed Shepherd us Governor of Columbia.
The Republicans in the Ilemse by passing
Hurlbut's salary bill have sunk to a lower
deep than their predecessors. The latter
would not sell their honor for less than
I $.",000 each, while the former place theirs
; on ihe market at .")( )(). Le t the Senate
j now confirm Williams for Chief Justice,
I and let the House stick to its o00, and a
' hii-To Tii.-i ioi-it v eif tlirt oo.onlt will vlum' bv
i,,il,. ,rvi r.l! ti,,. it. .,i
" J
reform the Kepublican party is to exter
minate it. A. i. l'7i.
Mrs. An n Elizabeth Youxc. has deliv
ered her great lecture in Denver, Colora
elo. She says that at present polygamy is
princiiially fed by the foreign element,
Swedes anel Danes. Many, times wives i
are thrown r.side and a new one taken, j
simnlv fin- flw wnl'L sho. .mi Tiii-r.n-m ui .
dairy maid, housekeeper, tn- cook. It
cheaper than paying as well as boarding j
help. Polygamous households are widely j
tlistributed. Brigham Young has one wife j
in Plovo, fifty miles south ef Salt Lake, j
and another in St. George, three hundred ;
and fifty miles away. Many of the wives :
of apostles provide for themselves, and i
Senile support their husbands, the fourwives j
of a bishop sustaining that elivine by wash- j
ing and house cleaning, llusbauds- dis- j
criminate in the treatment of their wfcmen. j
Mary Ann Angel, Brigham's first wife, ;
lives in retirement and neglect, while j
Amelia, the favorite, has every luxury and j
indulgence, anel lives in a palace which j
cost .? 100,000. Neglected wives learn to
hate thoir husbands, and their children
sympathize with them. A iittle cirl said
one day to her mother : "Mamma, I do
wish God liael made men enough, so that
every little girl could have a lather to love
her." Mormons sexuetirnes marry their
sisters : a bishop married his brother's
daughter; another welded six of his nieces,
anel there was an instance where mother, j
daughter and grand-daughter were n,
to one man. Mr. Young's picture
lvgamy is certainly not a"i Srtezbl
married j
s of i. '
Ie ons.
V?fs ;;Z j'olitrval Hems.
Fifty-eight counties rteoid majorities
for ami eight, against the constitution.
lodge Goidon has in-, ented a telescope
doubtless with a view of discovering thu
opposition to the new constitution.
II is reported that Miui-sier Sickle has
determined to tender his resignation.
Why dou' I he. tairy Lis dctei tuiuatiou into
cScct ?
'i !;e Rothschilds, t welve in number,
aiv worth s:M.ut one thousand miliions ol"
dollars, as a firm, including their individu
al fortunes.
In Sunbury on Saturday evening, four
dwelling houses and four stables wero des
troyed bv iusendiary fire. The loss is es
timated "at S,OO0.
Cornish, Mass., is well provided w ith
a , liags, an eccentric citizen having left ?1,
: had heen on a protracted spree were tho
I perpetrators of the crime,
j A young man was struck by lightning
i near Trenton, N. J., recently, ami when
the neighbors began to flock to the spot to
I view the boely they found a man standing
i beside it trying to sell lightning rods,
j A curiosity, in the form of an Indian
' woman S3 years okl and thirty-six inches
j high, is ou exhibition at La Crosse, Wis.
She belongs to the Chippewa tribe, antl
lives about fifteen miles from Ashland,
i Lake Superior.
j A workman at a planing mill at Rock
Island. 111., was recently explaining to a
: visitor the way in which his son ha el au
' arm taken tiff in a planing machine last
summer, when his own arm was caught
and taken oft' in the same maimer.
Tho wool .grenvers of Washington
county gave a majority ef S,(.)HS for the
new constitution eut of a total vote of 4,
(i'2i. There was much cry and little wool
I in that stoiy of the Pittsburgh Cvmnier
! fi"f? about the revival of the sheep tax.
Peter Van Dyke, an old chap who
dieel in New Hampshire, the other day,
: worth 140,000 in e-ash. requested in his
will that no ene "should shultie anel shed
! crocodile tears at his funeral, but cover
him eiver and then hurry home to fight
over his money."
I The constitution of Pennsylvania form
ed in 1700 was put into operation by the
convention w itho.it submitting it to a ve.te
of the people. The present e institution
was framed by a convention in LslS, ami
after an exciting campaign, was adopted
by barely 1,200 majority.
Tho rumor is t'unent that the English
Government will demand and enforce the
trial of lv.uriel, the Santiago butcher.
The rumor lacks confirmation at this writ
ing; but it has been intimated before this
that if our Government elid not enforce
this point, the English would.
Herman Kulm, e.f Schuylkill county,
has a document to which is attached the
genuine signature of Napoleon I, who
styles himself emperor e.f the French, king
eif Italy and protector of the confederat ion
of the Rhine, etc. The names of other
high officers are attached to the paper.
If John T. li ving's object in pretend
ing to know so intich about the Nathan
murder was to secure board and lodging at
the State's expense he succeeded adniira- !
bly. He has been sent to prison for seven '
and a half years for the old burglary busi
ness, and we are just as wise about the
Nathan murder as we were before'.
A ridiculous report comes from Mad
rid that the Castelar Cabinet lias decided
to demand from the I niteel States govern
ment the return of the Virginius and her
surviving passengers and crew. President
Castelar would not be a party to such a
tlemand, which would cover both Spain
anel his administration with disgrace.
The generous hearted little girls of
Madison Square, New York, have written
to Mr. Bi ace, of the Children's Aid Socie
ty, anel informed him of their intention of
giving up their Christmas presents this
jear, and stating their elete; initiation ef
sending their money instead to he distrib
uted by hhn among the sick and poor.
-Jacob Brunner, of Berks county, had
his fortune told by an old hag in Rcadino
leeently. He was informed that his tirst
prize would be a coffin and in four weeks
from that time he would die and that
meant hue Iroth he ami his father would be
robbeel. He believed the o!tl woman's
story, and t Ik; man is now a raving maniac.
The little sum of 27S.r13.(;0 is ..11
that the Secretary e.f War calls upon the
saintly General Howard to account for.
When it is understood that this pious fraud
1 mis set-iiii cituicnes, tnc l onug .Men s
Christian Associ.it ion e.f Washingtem, and
a horele of small-fry newspapers, it seems
cruel to annoy the great man about such a
trilling peculation.
Henry W. Genet, one of the New York
ring, who was convicted of fraud last Fri
day, escaped on Sunday night. Genet was
allowed to remain at his own house in cus
tody of a deputy sheriff, and he got off w hile
the latter was enjoying a short nap. The
Sheriff ef New York offers .,0O0 reward
for Genet's apprehension within ten days,
antl expects to have him in custody and
ready for sentence bv Moudav next.
4 1 - , . -.
. . - . - . 1 . 1 1 . 1 . - -. .
( -v woman living near f-alamanca, N,
1., recently insisted upon her little step
daughter, about six years old, going one
evening recently to look for a shawl which
had been lost on the mountains. The
child went, antl lost its way in the dark
ness, and three days after was found by
some neighbors nearly starved to death,
and her hands, feet and ears badly frozen.
The woman and her husband are under
arrest for cruel treatment of the child.
A lady survivor or the steamer Ville
du Havre, writing to the St. Louis Demo
crat makes the following extraordinary
statement : "I scuttled the ship in half a
dozen places with hair-pins and paper
cutters. I tell the unexaggeratcel truth
when I say that, lying em the sofa in state
room No. 50, I dug into the pnnky wood,
two or three inches away from the porthole-,
with a paper-knife, till I struck the
glazing ot iron that formed its outer coat."
Miss Sarah Smith SpatTbrd. of Trenton,
New Jersey, the only daughter of Lieutenl
ant James Bayaiet Snafford. who v,;ti.
John Paul Jones on the Bon Homme Rich-
aru in the famous fight with Serapis, Sep-
tember 24, 1779, is the owner ot the lia"
carried 111.- Ilia uacnl . .
,j I . , , .,
far J.' b ,,h.e v?ssel t'at occasion, and
,w ..... uivu luu insc ever
tlnown to the breeze bvan Ampriemi vi.;
i i i' pvi'i in ii-iT-i. ii. n i
ever
and the fii-st ever saluted by a foreign
power.
A piece of phis tin stnn wo r.,il..
exhibited iu St. Louis, which had been
. - . - j jAutir
lu.niieti near Uoklsboro, N. C, and has
been presented tn ss Ts; p..: :
. ,- . uiiocisi-
ty. it is a bar of white sandstorm r
leogin oy one inch in width and
thickness. It is easily bent in any di
rection, returning with a spring, when
.. :.. 1 .1 ....... vuw
y ,"JOSeueu. to its proper a.tis. It
miv ni i . '. . 1 "
uiay aiao be compressed with asliht mvs.
sure, or cxi.n.?od o,i v..
. . , , i--ovci us snape
ni(u,m.... i i .- - 1
.. ,..ih.ci, iiiiii :il ein 1 1 mo .ii oIm. r.r
collector of
the township of West Oxford, killed his
wue antl torn- eliildioii o T., ii
tJnt., on Sunday, by cutting their throats
with a butcher knife. He then tried to
murder his two oldest boys, but they dis
armed him and tied for hfd
Lfr's Iiouse. Ou their return tliev tin?n.
their father had cut his own throat. At
the latest advices he rtiii aii'. The
cause ass noH f,w tt,: ...-;n v...t
is insanity caused bv linaneil tro,,hifi
. --.-.-......
! The regular annual business meeting
of the Pennsylvania Editorial Association
will be held in Hariisburg January jth.
i Mr. Frederick W. Schneider, of tho
Troy 7Vr... set ai.d distributee! from Dee.
12. 17', to Dec. 12, 173, 3,t:U,;J, ems.
i This amount divided among o!3 wen-king
days, gives 10.SOG ems per day, aveiagh.g
iu round number. 10,000 K-r day, with a
li-tie margin of 114,1 The highest m.to-
; Her set in any out? tl.w was l7.4"o. For
' C days Mr. Sceneiuer " sci 12,01) ems par
, elay, and for five weeks averaged 70,000
' per week. For SI weeks he set 60,000
! ems. The matter was of a general nature,
and outside of any depai tioer.t.
j On Friday last a terrible crime, fol
. lowed by swift retribution, was briefly re-
ported by telegraph. A fanner living
near Cambridge, Mo., was on the racru-
; ing of that elay, while returning home
from the town, murdert-el by five man,
j who killed hiin and then robbed his per
, son of 1,000. A traveler passing by dis
j covered the body, quietly raised a posse of
I neighbors, and captured three of the mur
: derers, whom they ac once hung to a tree,
and then starteo in pursuit of tho remain
ing two. It is not yet known whether
the latter have been captured.
The Attorney General has decided,
upon examination into the facts of the
case, that the Virginius had no right to
carry the American flag. This was appar
ent from the first to ail who uinlerstood
the management of that vessel. However,
the Attorney General's elecision will serve
to still further show the idiocy of those
who, a few short weeks ago, were clamor
ing for iinmeelite war with Spain, on the
score of the seizure of the Virginius.
There was great rejoicing at Madrid when
news of the Attorney General's elecision
reach eel that city.
Lucy Carney, a coloroel woman, has
been interviewed at Buttle Creek, Mich.
She is 112 years old, recollects the battle
e.f Monmouth, in which she saw a party of
Biitish dragoons chasing a squad of Con
tinentals.' She liveel at Monmouth. When
peace was declared, she remembers they
had a grand celebration ami roasted an ox.
She was a slave, and her master, a patriot,
was captured by the British and kept iu
New York until the close of the war. Sho
was taken to Ohio later in life and was
given her libeity. She drinks a great deal
of tea, and has always used tobacco.
Two young men of Detroit, anxious to
exhibit their nerve, laiel a wager with a
third person, which resulted in some rirle
shooting extraortliuary. A dozed apples
were procured and one gentleman stood
forty fett elistant from the other, who shot
with a liileeach of the dozen apples in suc
cession from his friend's head, after the
manner of the late William Tell. Not
satisfi.Hl with that the apple-holtler pro
duced a common pasteboard match box
cover antl held it close to his head, between
his linger and thumb, and in that position
permitted his friend to fire three shots at
it, each going plumb centre.
! George Wagonseller, one of the three '
: Democratic members of the Legislature of
Pennsylvania who, in 1857. voted for Si- i
; mon Cameron for United States Senator, i
! elied at Sunbury, Pa., ou Monday last.
; He was born in Chester county in 1S1 1, but
', became 3 resident of Schuykill county in ,
early life, and was elected a member of
I the Rouse of Representatives from that :
I county. The Legislature was Democratic, i
; but failed to elect a Democratic Senator,
j on account ef the defection of Mr. Wagon
, seller and two other members eif the par
i ty Messrs. Lcbo and Menear. Mr. Wagon
I seller was never again elected to public of
i fice.
' Tn view of the Villi? tin Havre disaster,
the New York Chamber of Comnieice has
; passed a memorial, to be presented to
. Congress, asking that btdy to take lnea
! surcs for the appointment of an Interna
tional Commission to be composed of del
! egates freun the maritime nations ef Eu
I rope and America, whose iluty it shall be
. to draw up a map ujHn which the patb
; ways of inwarel and cnitward bound ships
( and steamers shall be maiLcd out se clear
ly that there shall be no possibility f a
j collisiou. The memorial stated that the
i managers of a single line had already laid
' down the tracks which their steamers
1 should follow.
A law suit was brought to a close this
i year, says a ctrrespondent ef the New
i York Times, uneler the decision of Judge
j Van Brunt, which was coiamenceel when
; the Jutlge was a child. It grew eut of the
j will of John Mason, a name now almost
! forgotten. John Mason died in IS 10. For
: twenty years previously he had been the
' heaviest dry goods dealer in the United
States. As siKui as he was dead his creat
projerty gave rise to litigation, and one ':
suit ran into another so that although the
first parties tlieel others kept it up. Thirty
three years of legal warfare were required
to bring t he case to a successful issue. The
first plaintifl was dead, anel so w as the de- I
feuelant. i
Not a few members of Congress are j
said to regret the votes they cast for Hurl- !
but's salary bill. It adds f500 to their !
pay, and enables each oue to keep the j
amount he has drawn under the deserved- i
ly unpopular bill ef last session ; but Con- I
gressmeu have already found out that this
will not satisfy their constituents. They ;
cannot conceal the fact, that this bill
takes nearly a quarter of a million ef elol- j
lars out of the treasury in excess of the !
old rate, while it leaves untouched a half
million of dollars in the increased salaries i
of the President, departmental officials j
antl congressional employees. Such a re
cord as this, is one which even men who
voted for Hurlbut's bilL feel that thv ftn. I
not afford to make.
An old woman in the county of Dur- 1 s'ore"s'f,P : or a cd Ti
ham, England, eighty-one years of age, j ZZ:
ot the name of lirigham, thinks and has ' Jour Parlor; or a fine Accent
bo informed a correspondent of tho Amer
ican press, that Brigham Young is her hus-
I band, w !io ttescrted her and her children
antl disapeareel from England forty years
i ago. It appears that her husband Brig-
I. am was t lie natural son of a man named
! Young antl a woman named Brigham ;
J that he was adopted by a man named Al
j len ; that after his marriage lie proved to
j be anything but a devoted head of the
family ; that he worked for some time in
I William Bri
I and his wife
:
liondon as a cooper under the name of
igham, and that he left Lonelou
: uii ins wnc .nct cuooieii iu pjlll llie .Hr-
i mons in America. The Pittsbur- Dis
:r., 1 i,:u . i ;:.. n.. -r-
. -
patch says that if this be true the old wo-
I man should conio over and lecture ; for, if
I Ann Eliza, Nt. 17 brings ?10,000 for a
season, the Durham No. 1 surely ought to
do much better.
A shocking accident occurred on the
Eastern Railroad, four miles east eif Eidde-
ioro, iiiaine, on tat
t r u i
ford, Maine, on Saturday morning. Ths
iJfdl'Ull LIOlllIll 1IO
lit trair. with fertv-
seven cars and two eugines, left Biddeford
Station at one o'clock, and at Kennebeck.
the en-riueer, "Walter Gowan. discoTerrd
1 that a portion of the train had been lost
iiii.inuiii nam uei ueen lost.
i 9rninr, thA tWr:irwH . - ,
. . r . , r r . u "s---- ,.,h- ia
watciiman attne ticpot not to allow th i ne wnrw-rfnownci ,,.jCf!
...-. t.oo. utj recovered
i and attached them. andJiad imct f meiicines.'nd without dnnFerou-
ne.Kiway to ivennebeck when the Port
, t , , : ....i.,n. kmiT M. intruiueio -- r ,.,f
lanct train camo along. Gowan had just
time to jump from the train, receiving se
vere injuries. Bisbee, the brakeman.'klso
the fireman and conductor, names un
known, were killed. Theodore Davidson
had hisanklo broken and shemlder dislo-
! wV w". ThT 8S
i .x . ; . vmPeiy. iiif. accident
' .i,t,-,. lUB np'd eonduot of the
1 u iiip.j,
The
I'f- I t:i'
ami !.
'' 1 i:!Nf i .,
nirnt f H.T. 1!
.- uie l.,,;. . , ,
ai-d princely
Mr- L'ehnb,
-
1
,i i,.
:''-'.y.,
f.17,'
oiisi...ess ;,.i.,i:a:.(,
lorn Pait. h,. fi
f".-s. let w
lease bin. f.
and the:: l.;.
fi I.i j,
:-'i h:
'J.I '.;
and pay even a,
the liaudd of ass,g.
all of his prope.fy
and his ciedit,..."
f"t ar.,;
"Ill enr "C
frankly tells ho
teusiva system of 4 Ue,, " h -- V
him rich. He fitted n,,'," i
the Metropolitan-h.,.,.) Ui '!
000, and tr.ad it ,.' ,'; V -;. ?
lishmeiit of its kind in "',, . j '''t .
world. He puiehas, Vi 'S, , '
in New York, at Lou
n.U.- 11. :. .' '! : a: 1 .
er nlaces. He. i.,v.,?j "... ,; M
did horses and c.i:ThCe ' " l." c
rich. But he sayv. t..., 1? V
tit . ? v M f f i 'tl
ampled business s "
S-.li-i-...
iinav with the .. a 'i
ty was ouly another ,,an,; ft.":
I followed the exaiiq.'e .f -
1 : 1 elu.-r .
j
: , l : .
i vui oiismess men ,
; travagant expetiditme. (-
caused shadovt s t.. ii'.
t!:.
directed my attention f ,-,,, , fi:
: He indulged t.H, fitely ,,4 j."!'
inany"shaiiwows''irub.luv 1,' .
in the hands of agents, ran ,1.?
fortune evertook him i,i.rie r. ,
1 his fortune was made. Ti
"iitr.
jrusBi-Miuri ; ins o-j.OOO fcja
.in c.tui.iges was s;ii t ,1 ,1.
; his $100,000 drug stole Wo. .
:"'.it
j !'. 000 ; ins i.ong rbancli
went t.fT for a song. Hc
::ni!,:fr
aim ins pretperty assaerif.,Vti4.
able rate. He was csll.-d
3
was not what ailed him. nj
gay. Here is a lesson fir otSc
is not by any means, a solit.nv '
kitid. '
b
1 TllF.OHOtlF. FAUy".VORTH. f,-r
the ft aud ltcr:i.-r oflie. . ii
, Y., has been arrested on a ehait
ing poisoned his father, at llXi'
' Canton. St. Lawrence e.iuntv, j.
! 1872. Farns worth was l..ukeVr
1 folllAI Il . , l-,.t ' I , . . 1 , '
ue nau a Droiuer named Am,,
not agree with the father. a:.,i ,
named Brow n boarded in tle h
the evening of the pnisoninp it
t had a quarrel with Brown, wlioow
soo. Theodore left the lar to
jiurenoiogisi in another rym.
drawn a pitcher ot ale. I lis .nlt!
eif the ale. w;ts seized with craw
; elied. The doctor declared t!,r
.1 1 . 1 . .
w as c.inse u oy sirycumue poisninii .
ounces of the ale killed a cat afny.
stautly. Brown was tried for the it
ami aequittetl. Amos Fa; nsa.;l.
also !een arrestee!, charged w ::h !r
jilicated in the crime. The fiti.e
llireateneel to disinherit A 'ims ! :..
tion. A man nsined Xtr.hh i in
Brown sajs that on the night 1 f t!
eler he stoeiel across the Mivet f-.i'ii!:
tel. uneler an apj.letree. ar,.', a.v Titt
Farnsworth hold the ale 1 itclie- wo
1 1.:, CT.-., , .
oi i iioe; .-sniitii emptied the C"ii::;:4
small package into the r.le. aj i
t 1 . . T
siooa guara at the door.
Ik your horse is lame, f-ie ?
you sliould use ii?!!iiw;'j J.Wr"
hient ; wash th part with c.'.st;! 4
warm water, rub drv. n:fi a e.'e.m
then apply the Linin.cui, rah is weh.
the hamt.
Ttii!
Tliis Firet-elass Chrmno will t 1
fubcritcr li
GODEY'S LADY'S HOOK Yl !
Y.Mietln-r 10 a Sinsl- Sal s-Tiiior f r 7.
or in a Club iif Six. for tVur?vr 1
AIJr . Ii. :
N. K. tVir. Sixth ami t'hetnnt S'?.. 1 !
J-?ec Irrms in LadT't Hovk for uthtr tii
' TAKES ON SIGHT. 'H
nnl
Altl liEKrHER's hiin lv iifv r ;
Ful.scriher a pair of lUf i.o vr ?; ,u' ! -
tilt A PUS two west a'tru.-ti . - ;
on Hittht punned l.y M r. .?!! r- r.
and companions fur i.r -. 1 1 1 .
A'lri j.."' Aifcnt have IM.MKNst SI
call it the -Lest Imsia-ss e-ver ef'.Tf.! r
We fumifdi the lihte?I and han.' .-:i:t r ".
pay very hijrh cviuinission?. l-jffc !
IVITHOI T HFI.AV tWO hoiiuomi l.l.-IUf'
ready ferl.MM EII ATE I lil.I V Li.V T
itself rtainl ieerls9 ainon? laniiiv ..-ra
o popular that of its c!.i. it ha !!. ' :
liifioii in the. trvit-M.' KmpiMvs tie r--talent.
Kdward Kea-le'!tfir i-rial -r
irinninir: hack e-h.ip'er? suppi:.-.! !
Iht. Sirs. Stowe"? lonir cx..-, i : .1 ,-'-i'i
ll"i' Tiif " begins iii O'i- in j
wlfhinu a good salary or an i;i lrp.-:Vi-should
. ni lor circular? an I ;::. i
to .1. IJ. Flllfll X !'(... New Ynrk-.V"
liostou, Chicago. C'incamaii, or Sun Fr '
4
"D -s
9 s : t
s-i tn iOO Pr dav ! Airent ai:trj;
e of working j..-op!r. ' c
younir or old. make more ninnov a: rt
their spare moments, orall the i.mt.
tniiiif else, i'artieulars free. Ai .r.
o. stinso.n i Co., ivr.u
OLD MAID
Teachers. Stulent. C!eremen.
Oli'rri men. F' l
ltru. and. Menu- I
fir;-e in5' Sc" i',,: f
and witte-awakc Yeans;
ei an clashes :
i ill e n ..11 fi 1 tr ,fi wr
or Hooks ymtifi. mo n 1 :l.nin:
liable Pictures to beatititv
vniir li'.co-. v J
'illie-k-ej-f ,1 I
. 11
us-.rated Uuaxto l'ietionarv : .-r V. .-?'
I renowned Statuarv Groups ; or a r.nt ':
i Keiuinjrton Kitlo Cane: or a Kor-.r,'1
Barrel Preach Loading Shot t;ur:'"'r
l Orsran worth 140: l.y simply rl..rr-?
occupied titue in a wav explained in tf
! the AI.H. I. Co. Perfect l'v leir:t ni.-ff ...
I able ; mny would s.iy phihinthrrpif.
H. P. CO.," 129 Kast ath St.. ,N i'vrk
S10
Sinn in Woll ;r often
tune. NO K1SK. :
stamp. Valetine i
Bankers and Prokors.
T T i , r, T .1 ! v
-I J. years, and was curett bv a sf'',!,.
W ill aend recii. postage tree, to
Kev. X. J. MEAD, Prawer lT
VDVEKTIHIKV (J.4ZFTTF.
Sent hy mail for 2.V. A d.in "? o te
JEL.L. & 0J., 41 Park now, Nowor
iSCXTo Yomiff
Juft Puhlihtd,ina Scried Cr.rrl-rt- '
A Lecture on the nture. treatnu-ti
leal cure of Speriuorr!uea or - -
nes, Involuntary EmiK'ii- xu' ' y,
and Impediments to VrriHc ii i
vousness. Censtmiptioii. d'1''' iorf
Mental and Phvaieal 1 n parity. r-EB'
i i lli. KO ! 1 J.l 11-"
Author of the "Green . BoMc. tb!t,r
I
palIe " .i
5 tViii s-jf
. i I
ill! fI"" 1
rpf oi-oinl x hnaa tnnv 1 effectual. ic" .., -if
dials; pointine out a m'11e.C,',!rrl suff?1"
tam and effectual. bT wliica ' J'- va
mutter what his oo ti d 1 1 . o u "d', d , IT. -Hm!-lf
chertPlv. pr'Vii'H' "n,j(,o JO J
I.Ei t I'KK W ILL PRiK A HO.
iiiv H AVn THOl'SAM'-.. int1
......... v .... - , . .. , -i r'-- -
Sent under seal. ?-'-", ,,f t C-
-aied envelope, on the
two posiage itamps.
Als J. Tk. CcLVeiewELi. 5
MarriiJ c'
Addretb Pnt.lish?re. -usiCp'l
CHAS. t..7toB.-Jl