the m&u mmi zzr.mvjac PA.. A htati-r to OC'onnell, the Irish Liberator, "n to In erected in Gotham. JOHN I ill' KUAN, a lOtJlir.tnt . poIiUvian an.t Congressman (tanr.g the retitiliois. died at L reS:OCn'e 111 ' Vwt Cii I'x, OtiTne-'iay week. Ho a politician of t!.;-i k a I t'i3 ii a;.t3 o? the St UUj. . ; filled ; WilATiVE;. oilier niea-iures of i.ij -'ia at t-ie late feion of tue ; I?iUtn-ff , Foyer's Hard-Dook job La-laafU-nveranci tn both l-runc.e3, a:i.l m?t wd'a ilxocutive approval. ; ',ie i; o'v.ie ccriai;! mat; t o:cr t I'.ttlj I-.rab," liic'.i he had r.ursed care and solicit ii'!e wit, i in t!i nd 2 llru: wv.il t nt be permitted , to :ck:n a:i.f p-?r:e:i from enn-1 neg lect iu the ? --n.te. A nl now, all hail ! Foster of Scliu lkiil, thrice happy man! the measure of vour legislative fame la n. , t I or.iv I. lii I'Ui; overuowia : . . i , . a ;.t I 7 li Vi When v.-.i return to your subterr?- nmri Ont crratclui coiist'.tuent?. with y nr pT-A-i.'.' of (hirlcen Hand-Book. in ter your arm for distribution, you t'llil t receive an ovation such as r.c-vtr before tendered to a I'enc srlrfl.oia l. sriIr.tor. 3--C-l Ir Josrrs Crook? noi iitv t i:.? i cue hovernor s ciia:r ui Ar-.;'-as by the aid of (irant' bay :!et. he c;n Income a postmaster tvi :--r rran-. by t!ie an I ccn- tsfn; f ti ? Senate. In hi menace tv 'If sc.:..te, iu F'.-br'.iary, fjrar.t dc--l-.red tii:it tit 'the ckc.i'n iu 1?7-.Io.-..-pi IJ;-jjks ft-ts lawfully elected Governor." a:. I t!uit he ha I been un lawful! v tl-M : i vo I of the p '-cac-ssion of l.'n ofJc ii.'.cz that ti: deiie.it-. ii-oti :i a si:, of !'.:. ii.u was ioun-1 to On this ;:r?rence I et 'V cm 1 exist aa i tiv.'-. an i waiting Y.'r: tO ' t'!! ll Ui) the Jlja? of est -n ta li roo-i, ) re nil uc l m :i ii.!-r Congress aJj-uu n-d. Mi vber. for so:r:-tIun3. wrre-rov.-ar'ic i :v tirani a f?T , I - I - i t. i..s appointrcei; t as v - . - . r. r- -33:tua:ttT st uutu' l. c.i. Any port j iu ts-ic of a strm. Si r .-r. tlie a ') nrninent Corgres Grat.t !ir-s taken under his protecting vri.icr about a dozen of his lulck and thi.i 3iipp ortc-rs in that bo w!jf" swore br the F-orc-e bi.I dor?e 1 herivlan's'dirn 1 i 1 1 i" n y men an I en aniiesto tti 1 ha- appointed them to pllOliC pr- Pttions o; iinp-ntanci witn go no: sal?.r l.'s attac-'ied. T!i3"e men ll i.c-lnr t that nunif-rous clas ol politician.-! avho 'C. 'i. k the prcran' hnge (. t' e knee, Th:t thi-iit u.ay f-.l!ow f.wiiing.' They were nearly all ocfeiie l for rs tb' tio-i li-t November, b-tt with (ra-:t IhcJ 's t'i'ir trong-.st rccorii me:dtioa to hi confidence end ofli- ctsl favor. A radical can possess no i more ceztai.i pa sapor to Presidential ey.r.p.-'.t iy and affection than been politically gibleted by p'.3. It is the "n wzame to I to have the peo- J lie la:c-:.-t rurnr.r is, mat Having hi f .nail family grudge against the Ilm- ' l!.ir r ..f V?oaa?Q flrn.il int::n'1a ct-r..l. . .. .... ,.,...v w.i.:j.3 - , li'g Cr.ati tier ot Michigan as .Minister j t that country. This will be welcome r:a3 for Detroit Lut very bad for St. Pet crst;ur,j.!. Jcdoe CMiisriAXCT, of Mirhigan, the successor of Chandler in the Uni ted States Senate, delivered a speech ! bllt ITerdic's magical influence was po 9?verr.l elays .ago on Grant's military i enough to secure its death-blow interference in the atTaiis of Louisiana, j a P.c-pul Iican committee in the end also on the admission of Pinch- cnate. Tt is pf.id thst Peter and back, which has attracted much rdtcn- j l'ie lumbermen will likely effec t a com tion and which at once has c-tablishcd ProiI1ia-f of this vexed question during Lis reputation as one of the? ablest raom- ! the coming summer, bers of that body. He is a vastim-1 There were doubtless other bills provemsnt on 'blooa-letting Z.achar- ich. and. although a Uenublican. will i not MmnMmis 'Ida own sense r.f riht 1 I" ; ant justice by consenting to wear ! t'1 ine snous runs we tail to discover Grant's collar. Among other sound ! any of a positively bad and miscLiev positions maintained by him, he made ! nns character. Their conspicuous a strong point against Grant's bayonet rule in Louisiana whn lie gave utter ance to tl.e following sentimeiits: "Tl! people of Michigan are a law aV.dir.g people, but I know ihcm well e-'.'ui'i to ventuie ire asseuiou that it wo-i.d t:A-o several rrenncnts e.f sohueis to Vt? them qniet n.Ier a government thus wo-i'.d t;.-o s. vei al rr;imcuts eT soldioi s to imposed. a..d rnoie than all the armies of j ove or le- t're L nitcd iiitrs to make them lo; r-;ect it. They would see, as I kno.v tiiey j d.r t n.y see a -.id f. 1, that the eleefio,, of i :-ta' tt.-ver-.!-.r or airiate Legislature was 1 nr.t to V tf. l...-.i Ird ..1 :r tin c t t . off ...... i . t fit it or nrcvetit"i fro'n rtiti!:'.n. by tho liat ! 4r a tedeial i.ourf. ami that ecn thc t.x rcutive of this Fedeial Government has no light to decide th i'i-sti't for the Sta'c, rr to i?)titute or to es'Llisti a Stata Gov fDii)i t for them." - Jon AjiTCMSLL iicl at .ewiT, in the e--ur.tv Down, Ireland, on Satur day lsst, agel (' 0 years. Ifohad been in ill health for some time4, but 111 Ho.t stormy and eventful has been j hi career ? In 13tS he was convicted ! of treason pgainst the Poitish crown! and transported to Australia In 1S54 ! ue e-.-;i)en raiiK lu 1111s ooinurv, ami 1 . 1 .1. --, - -v- ' . , : -iiieei tne tjiuzen u .iw 1 one, an;i noon afterwards ths Southern C'ilzen 1n Tennessee, in which he advocated the roiieniii2C of tho dive trade. Af- , I ler tile ouiyi emk. ui me; unit ni u , , ronneoterl himself with the Richmond . . Examiner, an extreme secession news- v... . i ! patK-r, A littij more than a month gO he went to Ireland and w3 eject- ! ed to Parliament from Tipperarv and i being declared ineligible was re-electad lie was a born agitator, and the love lie bore to Ireland tbreugh good and through evil repoit, was earnes-t, in tenaa and sincere. He w.n the sworn foe of British rule in 11 shapes and ' forms, ar.d of no other man could it j more trulr bo said thst "Mtet lire a j 5tlul fever hi ?lcf r3 rell." ! Tuzv.x seems to a natural tendency ia the Republican theory of govern ment to gravitate towards compulsion f.r fnro; in nil Lh; r..il r.nd nolitie?! .....o s-.-.j. I T.r,:!;.,, ; lir.tr examples worthy ol imitation .. . .... . in cur own or any other -liberal furin of government, we are directed to the moat vigorous and despotia lorni or ' one-man thiwc-t lor rjreeedenta ami i nrlnrirdo Prne:. which lnt now Uocnn to k ia favor, drivincr its tm'iiJ tvi nur iwhrkrr- tri pjit'i- 3mon its owrffive ciea.urcs. M-ren compulsory military service.- j To nrf.r-er v orenare thete wltlieru i--- t j i -r . i compmsory education has lecu chieny j instituted. S?.V3 Edward Sack, a Prus- sian neJaa-oo-u-: ' Our common school- - are the mean, to .rcrpetjate bondage and etiCe the mind. hile in the , higher schools our chiMrcnare taught to aespise t:;e tower classes, ine com-1 r.un schools ara destined to keep the lower classes tti vile. Tl;e Prussian schools are the adjuncts of the army; j t:ie hifiucr fcchocu turn out llicer5t i the lower the kin-fearir.g and obfiii fiit ra; k and file." Ik-?terwrg in I already objected to this perversion uf the educational object, ami to show its obnoxious character the ruoic forci bly be quotes Sam Laitig. an American, who went to CJermanv for the purpose of studying the Prussian school sys- J tern. hTays the latter: "The Pru-'- sian svfttcm i-rveit3 the otjct ofj ; schooling. and ues tLe latter to mouia ! tus i i:ii- eeiieration into obedient in l i: a. r struuents in the hands of an almost absolute government."' To which the PhiladelrLia Pras adds : - c i:i .v.u-:r;c.i oji:ic u dc cauii"us in , .1 .i;t:r.? a sjstcia v.hjch has proved is:f ! oe.i ci:V2 m ihe hanisof !"vl'."m. That i uen like .Juits Sim-ui. J.ik-s F.ir;e, and i e 1:1 .v.c;r;ca on :it It be cautious in a.i me otht.s S...a.ti.,g. under d.feat, arc willing j to ,iJ...t a system whoieby tliey can ni jii.d j cvevy iiii..? Fie:ichman. aecoi.bii to an ; . fH..!.i: established miiitaiy pattern, so j that they n-.it;ht pit French soldier pattern aj'i:nt Otrman pattern in another war. is no r.;'. on why Anitik-ans should adoLt soiiittimi.' s.imur. l linik, nce, that the ! S..-1'h-ill shive ;iiitrr-.ov 1- ;wl pi. rr-i (he I ... . - - - 1 . em 1:1 ni i:jr o'.n.vP. itiL.i i ' i i .1 i 'Id u I. ' An.inna .i.r t power su leire, and tuimd itito a seivile machine to i err-etuate its rule ! Why, i!ie ! vci y though: is alarming I And yet this j is iho Piutsiaa tu;;c:itioLil system its tloiy. ia a. Abcit iiinet'f bills in ail were pas- j ed I y the Legislature at its recent scs ' sir.n. whereas about nine hundred , would have been ground out by tlie , mill during the same period of time I had not thc new constitution been the j croit.-'.iing lion in the path, j Some measures of the very greatest j importance to the people iu certain ! sec-lions of the Sute failed through diagi cement between the two houses. Tho bill for thc transportation of j oil by pipe lines, which is of vast in : terrt to the shippers cf that article ! in t!;c north-western counties, although it pscd thf Hone, was defeated in ' h: Senate by what it called a Wisla ! tive trick. TliC bill providing a way f u- the erection of new counties, after having- ! assed both houses, went to acommit J tie of conference on points ofdisagree : ment, which proved to be irreconcila- j able, grid it was heard of no more. Then there was the boom bill, which j i,a7l'r pubhsl JT.V, intended to be in the interest oflTmKw lumv.erinen along thc busquehanna applietl in the Pi iui.i jtinnii iiiuiii; nit: l ii?ti ueiia ii na 1 nvcr and to break up Peter llcrdic's ! boon nionopelv at illiamsport by rc'tnting tac pnca ot bootnnge per thousand feet from $1 2o to 00 cents i u j i.'e;ii"crsist wu.iene aii oi a lew P.rpriblic-Rns, pushed it through ths llouso in the lace of a bitter content "'c-.i .m.hl e- nave pssseo, out which. tr vrnons reasons, have now no life ! in them. In read ine over the titles 1 . i . .. 1 we tail to disomop : merit consists in the paucity of their numccr. A vast deal of unnecessary, and as it seems to us groundless reproach. has been e-t , , tl . .c T ... . , 11- Legislature by the upon the Democratic Hepublicsn prcs3, for defeating, as is asserted, the bill fixing the salaries of the new Judges of thc Court 1 and thns ,- eventing the State Treasurer r. -r. i-,... '."..1 " r "oi. 1 i.c uiii 11;?'. was lltfeattil HI the House bv only One vote, did not j rope.se for thc first time to fix the salaries of these Judges, but to increase them. In obedience to a j provision of the ne w constitution the ! l.fgl-latlire Ot 1 1 t lia-l already fixed aii.t oc-terminen ino QtiostKin ot their : V , . , . . . . . . psi.y dec' :ing tliat they shonl l re ceive the sa.n- compensatioin as Presi- iolif -Tii.T.rnj rr- tr t !on r,oi. I 111 A I un tne Act approved April "3th, 1874, i Pamphlet Laws of that yea-, pap 55 j The same Legislature appropriated sj..- rm . . i- 1 , . . I' fH I ,me,,t J"',K ,aI !p,?ncs;JIJ nut r.f trior Tim.1 IK.. I . . 1 l. l nt of thftt t rt 1 oeen .ai-.i er u.i"o- nav e i I'hc late Legislature left i the law on this subject just where it ' found tt, and made an appropriation) of $510,000, an amount sufficiently ! large to pay all judicial salaries. In , . . , .. - . view then of the lesrislatton of 1S74 . , e . . e ;Ko . and of that part oi the appropriation .... . 1Q7-'- Mv . lul ' o7o in reierence to the pav- . ,. ,. . . . '..J . ' Juu,'-,1 l.,,J'i ' " "M'oie t - " ----- " .... ....... .... i,.,. can tee. Whether the last Legis- 1 lntnre oniht to have incrncp,l tha ! ii--- - - cd to be done, hut failed, is a question which at this time it would be iiscleas tofiiscU3, Goid is qtiotei at Wb. rasclnution of a War Secretary. I Curiously enough, remarks thcLan-i - r . jr- it happens that ;"rr ,B,e"""'' about tha same time that congress 13 . ' j- , . i i reEaoTin'Tromcimon iarneron f biioi.i era the censure which it passed npon twelve years ago for the free way j which he dispensed I the patronage of the .--. r.fTToo wo hvp a revelation in c,$v. unaaestionini? method in which Ka ....f rclniKIo r.fTia tn thnci ' n.i.. i.:.i n,,oi..,.Q ,.f filter . i 1 1 ' s iniii Lir. I frn uub w . ' ' .cinate" him ; it seems that he never j (hnnM.i it wnrth whib tn exsm m -"-e j into the Comietency of au applicant ; ; nor tj( ilQ shrink "from putting into i t?. rcm.Ur ,rm,' ne ih ITnlted Statf a i ai) ofiicer who compelled to leave ! the TOinntcer forces by reason of his j dcIir.nuencie. It was quite sufficient to tlie hoioraLIe sccrc-tarv that the i application was presented to Lira by one whom he felt diiofed to favor. The friends of Mr. Cameron were to fe jr tn care of at all hazards; and c-.uld not care for the public -. why it was bad for the ser ::d that was all there was of it. Spmucl Wilkeson, who was in :Iy years c f the war the New Tribune's Washington corres- if th.y serv v ice : Mr. the e. York ponder. t. testified u)on tlie witness star.il rj.-t. Mr. Tilton had tohl him with great detail how he had invaded Mr. Cameron's houe uniuvitcl, and 1 how havini; breakfasted with the fee ri-tary ot war. he had fascinated him j into civincr him a commission in the r u i r - aiui ioi iiiriii nam uwiii-i a se'U. - .. , rj..,. . Mr. W llkeson says that Mr. Tilton a j story is true with one trifling exeep- story IS true tion as j)C h - . ..r, -towing. has the vei v best reaon ; The slight error in Mr. ' r . . ... I Utoti 3 stutement was in supposing j that he instead of VS llkeson had had j this exricnce with Mr. Cameron. , rr Viibp.3on I1S(1 related the storv to ! Tilton and the latter so appreciated it u .1 1 e i-.il I merit mat in tne iape oi a nine time, aided lv the tuct that ne was a man ol I, - ..rlr;..n.1 1,r.t ! ! lius. he C(ntrivcd to believe tliat he j .self had teen an r.ctor in it, and j . . t i j . . i actufliy, aliout ten vcars arter the oo ft,..u currc-ncc, !.e dc 1:1 rateh sat down and entertained Wilkeson w itli the story, simol v committing the mistake of oust- ing iliicson and enthror.ir.g him'elt as i's hero. That we suppose is what mav be politeiv called r.n iuiosvncrasv i of genius. That remarkable judge who presides over the Brooklyn trial let Wilkeson tdl the storj- that Til ton told him. but refused to permit him to mention tlie wonderful mistake he had made as to tiie proper parties, holding that this was immaterial. We sreatly fear that this judge is another man of rniu so stai'tlma: arc some .i ni-s ueeijiyns aiei so ma::C'i nis idiosyncrasies 1 We are obliged to the judge that lie fore-bore to rule out the whole story. The part that he . p i ,i : i i. i l ; and so marked ndmittA.l thpon.- o (.,, r.,f ' T ti 4 l ' ? "' , upon the Style in wLleu the war ollice ; j was administered by the chief of tl.e i iCanrc-rons; and it is iinmateri?l for ! this purpose whether it was Tilton or j Wii!;esoa who -fascinated-7 the eecre- tary. civtt. MR!UWE3 TN ''Htimant. ihe Pall Mill G'lze tie Fay: "1 he Pei lin &uat- er puoiisi-.es a royal elecroe laying i.i Loiiiui imii- imt.ri v nirii on cud marriage is to be an. russian monarchy from the ! 1st of Maich. l,,e aduit n-a'e subject istixed at not under ! i ne nirti i i,tfc;r-rt UJC rtklt? I'l - ' I Iwcnty years, of the female at sixteen ; but ! "c V ' 7 rnauo by uwtui au.ho,,- . - - ...... . ...... . . . i j i btf.ee wedlock up to the end of the yeung j man's twenty-fifth year anJ the voui-a ' woman s tweutysfomth ; but if thn father be dead, then thc mother is required ; and if neither parent be living, that of the s sponsors. S cts that under local customs j uso no sponsors me released from this last lestiiction. Ana where there is a lawful Ruardiansbip, in the absence of paients, r.'V a lamny council its antiiontv is recog nized. I or childien horn out of wedlock. tl.e mot In r's consent takes the place of the faM.ci's, and the child of local adoption ro qunrsthe consent n; to tho f;ill acj', of adopted parent In ail cases of refusal, af;rr ,h' r,,t ,imit of niarriageable ace is .... iisr -.r n t hi son or daughter has a lecal appeal to the District Court. The forbid den degrees are, of course, those recited in ; the original act of the Imperial Diet, j Widows cannot marry, without legal dis-. ' pensation, before the end of the tenth ! month after their former husband's de- 1 cease. None of the sj ecial lest rictions now existing as to marriages of military or i civu i-ii;ssiau oinciais, or 01 loreigners re-v. siding in Piussia, are to be affected by the introduction of tho law, but all oilier im- pntimr-nts existing under former local i 1 ..... 1 1 T - - ... . . ' vi win rt-jn-ait.-u. loiations oi the re sri.ct.ons presc.bed are to be pumshed as ! offenses against the criminal code of Pint sia. And, finally, all disnensatorv mcr I is for the futute to rest entirely in the j j nanas 01 tue oiaee. ' LrMEKR. A Stronger ant Belter Ferlinn ' it. ti- .j 1 r . .. s : the Wntern Market. Yho ll,v Citv ; Ihe wte.. lumber districU fcTTarT. V. : .. I . - ... . 11'rr . . " 1 sli-oneep and better feolin Tl. .- ! . . " . . t.i.niK- lemain- ; i iter ami . .eiormeii . able continuance of the cold weatl Ihe vast qnantitiesof ice which have ""V; . .. .- ,."dK",-"1 ?n I : T; ; v.?.,::,.:. ,mP"ssu"e-i """" lVv "-'" prospects or I loL'-rUTiriin'T. convince nnpiificinvo,. m,. the coming sawing and ship ping season is I ' be a very short one. Under the most i Ivo,i;in'" circumstances the great lakes! . . ... ....ii, eau n.ioor oc I'lurii ki iiavitlio:! lielorn May, and it is quite possible that the n, i . - . nig tt sncn passages as the Straits of, Mackinaw may be delayed until that month well advanced The heavy ico in all the I stieams will be long in dealing out, and the mills will not get an eatly start. Car rieison Ihe lakes are confidently looking foiward to a shortening of the season to make it a biisk one and give them goKl prices, though the trade should not other wise improve. In the wood the work still goes on with no lack, but rather a snpcra bundance, of snow. Camps arelingrap- '"'vort.ken up novv ana ine end of w outer's ..v i , ,o o.c .r.- ,ii in. 1lM"e ' the inanufaotmlng district. a by V'.""' ? hP!lr (,r of 2,100,OtK) - l,.e J.f nn A S1..I.I.. T:1. c i, .... i..i,i-n.( oiio, jv ioi-i . lOWHI I.11.J..H .1 IfPT. 1,11 stll.-i ft 1. 000,000 feet Htripti $35. No other sains this region within ing in the great markets throughout the 6 the wilh , country seem to De oepressd, ar.n j no ptosprct of inapioroment. :ct i i mi . nc i.a- ii' Aimm t ia mvii arp. ami k m ariann tnii rir. YviirtoA itiimMAa MM .1 s A 1 . T 1 A i at - m a A. leW 1 1 V A 111 f AnL 1 . a Lw -rA ATtirotmcliAl lliA frnanAo K.. 4- eMAv. . . . . A liace icith ihe Hoot. Kxcrrrso kidr from rosk's tavern IVIVAI LHU3 4 lUL.ai.VT I .1'. 1 lO-nrpmiTtnrt Xev riH fttn.l Tort Jkrvis, "- V. , March IS. The first approach at this plrc of the ice fl'xnl winch wan so nestrnclire tltmnghuut W.e Delaware Valley yesterday antftheday be- fore, was dliecovered by Supervisor Near - pan, L. O. Koso and James Eachanan about 7 o'clock yesterday morning. They went up akrrg ihe Sparrow bus-U road to the camo prouud. anc tavern, about tivo mill ci inence 10 iose se a The es from !;cic. roaa runs close to the enjre r the liver . ..... .. . Tt T.ITZ S r - .u t. r.I.. i""'1"1' ' it. men uku iu ij 1 1 vcn feet hih. Between seven aud einht o'- ch-ck they noticed that the river was risirg ver-v i:x- LOljl Looking up stream they saw, tank, doin tTwl 'ff. " The ice iu the liver where they were began heaving upward, and wis soon almost up r( ,l-e roan, ine advatxinj r.ooi troai to the road. pbove was throirf cakes of ice high in the air aud hurling them over ihe banks on either side. It :i3 plain to the three spectators that Hides tl.ey could put the quaiterof a mile '.f low ground between them and the llootl of ice, they would be cut of from communication "with Poit Jcivis. THE RACE. They instar.lly jumped in their sltijjh. r,iicli.ii; i!i j ui his hoiscs on a dead run. The ice had now raised above tlie bank, and great cakes Iw-gon to fall in the road ueinud tlie fcitigh. the ice moved wuh bucIi velocity th;it the i mining horses could not increase the distance between it and th e sleigh. Lefore half the distance was accomplished the ic icct ived new impetus oin tue wave trom above, winch had ovo,,:1lke.n ,lie. smailor Hood. Buchanan -caw ll'e ice gaming on him. He olied tLe i,:r. ... : . " , - , , at eeiy jump, and his liorfes almost Hew. When they reached the foot of the aiu, which camcs the road to higher : fe'!oullfli there was less than a yard's spnee between 'ie -d the ice. The oc- vupnmo 1 UiL' lf.ll TUIMTlil I ll''V?ll cxcthlg lhat tfcfjie t Were up the; bill tlie kleigh wouia he ciuhcd beneath the pursuing ice. The 'higher bank was I reached in safety, however. For half a mi!f,V'e 1100,1 1 t;'hreast of them Now : and ,liea a cake cf ice would be thrown ovtr thc t of ,,, , ..... r , within a foot of ii -leigh. When thev ! came to the hii'. A huckley's, on the uki:ts of Ce. town, the river fr some instance leaving ii;e roao, tncy felt that they Lad escaped the Hood. What t was their dismay, on lx-.kir.g o.T to the right, to ste thai tl.e ice lu.d o. en stepped in the channel of Ihe river, and was mak ing a new one through a gulley across iuckiey s liar, and v,is rapi.liy approach ing the road at a :, : lit a loiliditd yaius ahead of the s-k made by both sleigh ani ire to pass that i point was about equal. Buchanan kne.v that lie must make a last ettjit to ontstsip Ihe Hoo.1. Put ling the whip to his h-jrst tl.e men was renewed. The sleigh passed the disputed point n.-t more than a yard ahead of the ice, which a second afiei aid rusted across li.e road and cairiec" destruc tion into Gei ni.iiitown. SAVING HKR CIUPP1.F.D HUSBAND. Patrick Cieighton lived with his wife and nine ehiMit n in a little house on the Geimantown Hats. He lately had one of his les cut oil" on tho railroad, on which lie w as employed. The H-khI came sosu.1- "ei.ij uiai u.e ice whs knocking Holes ill leiily C 'f-hton - house before he knew it, and the water was pouring in. Being unable to escape in his crippled condition, hi w:-re started her nine childien out of the house, and then to-k her helpless busbar d " ,V ' ""'. wi wier place. they possessi d iia j-i lauiijjr lost eveiyiuing M:s. Mary M-1 :iey, an aged widow, lived alone in a small hone no th ri-t In the morning Policeman Elsfen vent to her houso and told Lei- she rr.; , .-iov. Sl.e refused to go. Your house will bs i.- , a- Lrun fail t i ' ' , m: n "Thin I'll O wid it. shnre." she rei '. d. and did not leave her h imsft. It a;ik hiir. rniinnrfl riV lllirf r.U'Pt i.t anrl r-imnd , m - " I IO U twenty -live fat aar, Sha kIuck lo it. and still refuses to quit it, although the ice and water are a foot deep m it, and it is propped nf on every side by huge cakes. Wheir the Hood was beai insr down with groat speed on the town an Irish woman i an to a house near ihe river, and sooa ap peared with a half grown pig in her arms, carrying it otf in the very face of the Hood. incidents of :ik flood. On tha Penns hani.i side of the river !,, r.a tl.,..,.,, i, i.,,.i, r... r..,. Jacob Westfall's house was surrounded with lingo cakes in an instant, and a pass age had to be cut throuuh them to rescuo his family. Mr. West fa 11 lost nine cow s ami a team of horses. There was four feet of water in the gas house in th;s place, putting out all the furnace tiics aud destroying the lower tier j of it toils. 1 he damage is 5. ,000. j The engiue houso of the Crermantown 1 Fire Department was carried a quarter of i a mile, with engine, hose cariiage, and all ! the furniture. Tliey were all ground to ' pieces in the ice. A bog and nine chickens passed, this place on a larga cake of ice. 1 hey went en down the rier, and wcio rescued at Milford. Jacob IIornbe.lc, a wealthy farmer liv ing lelow here, r.o-j-ited forty skunks swim. niitig between nis noii-e ana uns place. nnn.er.ms islands in thi liver. Superintendent B. Thomas, Engineers ngineers Billy Morns and an V. orme-r, and nu v.011- due-tor Gow wcie crossing tlie railroad railroad j biidge on an engine, when they discovered that the ice wa moving the bridge. They ran slowly br z, 1 got safdy to this end. t, I . T-... . ... 1.. ..e V 1 V 1 .' 1 , 1 bridge, know .: .: that several coal and in iiioi'. ki im 1 11J..W x: v x. 1 i ci mi : ireignt trams weie coining over ine ti.vis- i ion, and some of them soon due at the i.dp. stalled, when the biidge was sway- jnjf ar1 ciackii,g un.ler thc pressure of the jce ard tea.liljr raising from its found- tiou, to give notice to the t.ackmen on the tiou, to give notice to the t.ackmen on the other side t.f its condition, no other side t.f its condition. Ho reached t)j(J tre .licr W,,CI1 ti,c t,vo 51,ans aheaj ,,JC. . . ' . ... . 1 . r Knrrio miivnior oil tl; a tu. t.ne.it- He was foiced to return, but first attracted the attention of a watchman who had come down to see the river, and fcignall.-d him to go bac! with a fiag. Mr. Frampton got safely back just as the bridge was swept away, and the watchman stopped a train that in two minutes uaoro would have plunged into the rivor. -It ia reported that an old colored wo man living near Covington, Kentucky, re solved to destroy a bedridden child, of whose care she was tired. She according- j ly seated the child in a chair, and, tying it i with a rope, began carefully saturating it with tarpvntine. a bottle of which she had procured. The child, in its strugele.s . Kiinubi-u uiv ijoine i nun ine hands of its 1 mother and broke it, saturatin is tne motir- rr.al.1 fluid. or's clothing with the intlammabla fluid in tne sirugie ino morner s cioininr tcvtiv ..,... .... . . not until she was fatally burned. When in the agonies of death from l er burning themotherreveledthfaoti.hoprtta,-i-.i . - - - .. w - v v; V M V . - fc . a . t I J ' ' ' "-" ' J c 1 it.a i(l tj I I.ID P - . , - - - - - - - - - v J III 1,1 jc tUVll IS h.TVe been rtiOl ten . liminit.ffiirtf kIio throw !iArlf intni rraalr SlnTWi . j - in . 4 i sj .AiiKsiikiau iiiu iiauirn. if ii l nnriu, itwrr ki'iri r n s . sa. i A Brltal, Stepfathi:!?. A f n ihle and ; disgusting oisc ot cirtlty to a cU.'-.i has , jnst been unearthed in Danville-, Illinois, I III " IXVI 1 V'MIH 1 I tilt i.lILl Ul 1 l . 1C M t Jl- daughter, acred fwe rears, are t lie actors. j The testimony el:ced at a preliminary tril j Wednesday (Trent having- been at rented on f the day previous by Deputy Sheriff Hooton j on a complaint of one of the neichbtmnj; women) went to how the most bmtal t treatment of the child by the stepfather, i Its head was found to be almost bald, its ; hail having leen phiekedout by tlie roots ; by Tient in his race. Its little body was covered wilh black and bine spots eud byjjlws from the hand ot this monster. The bottom Of its Omt were almost solid .... - : .7 " 55j7 Aj V , . . r- . - " rtunu innamea iiom looaeco-jnice bavin i Leen sqniited into them by this brute i ' buman shape. The skin on its wrists was broken and torn by being jerked and swung irom sine to sKte and around in a circle. Some of the witnesfes testified that Trent would keep the little i nnocent dancing r.p and down for hours at a time for his own amusement, and, if the child wouli cease, he would apply thc strap, and this kind of cruelty would continue until the child could dance no longer, and would sink down overcome by exhaustion. Fre quently, during the coldest weather of this winter, the child has been locked in a cold room, wilh scarcely enough clothing to cover its nakedness, and foiced to remain thus for half a day at a time. One witness testified that, on one occasion, he forced tlie child toeat its excrement. Thechild's mother, who is a feeble, weakly woman, in her examination bef.ne the just ice, showed great fear of her husband, at times her whole body being in a tremor. Consider able excitement exists, and tl.ete was some seiious talk of Ivnching him. lie was placed nnder $1,500 bail, in default of which he was committed to jail. i 1 ECRU ! r ProFfrty. Teckibi.e Tornado. Los of Life and : ropert;. A feai fully destructive tornado passed over Augusta, Ga., on ?atuidrv af- ' ternoon last. The rainfall, accompanied j by hail, was unprecedented!- heavy. Pev- ; eial towns in the interior snSeied severely ' in loss of life and property. At Carnack, on the Georgia Railroad, ) several houses were blown down. Thomas Gecsling was killed and several persons 1 wounded. Xear Thomson, foity miles from Augusta, a large amount of property ' was destroyed ar.d several persons killed. 1 At Appling, Columbia county, Ihe de- ' strncti on to propeity is repoited to be great, i At Aiken, S. C., tl.e Caihoiic chuich was : completely demolished, ill lines but one j iio;th are down. . . ; Repoits from the countiy are confused ' and unsatisfactoiy, but there seems to be no doubt that the xtorm was fearfully .le- ! sti uctive, sin passing in extent and violence ; anything of the kind in this section for ' years. The tornado cruisrd o-aifol drstirction along its tiaek. living waste houses, trees and I'er ces and killing persons aud M.-e k. ; Baptists weie holding a n et-ting at Flam t'huich. near ('ainck, when the storm demolished tlie church, killing thiec and wounding twer.tystive poisons. ANoTIiE'l TuIiX.lPO. Xnw Ori.i-an--, Maich 22. Thc Tin reports a destructive tornado in the Oua chita valley. La., on Fiidav, between S.r.ithland a;td ihi's Point. The los of life aud destruction of p.iopeity is very great. Mrs. James Adair ard child are ' among the killed. Smithlni'd was leveled i to the girnnd, ar.d the Hay's Point planta tion, buildings, fences, nudes and hoises ar.d oatlle were scattered for miles. The : track of the torn.ido was three hur.d:cd . yards wide and extended for fifteen miles. ' The rtCK Dttxo Oct. We have de voted considerable thought tothe probable future of the colored races in this country, where they are met with so many social aud political antagonisms, and where seri ous physical changes must be wrought by their alteted habits since the time of their emancipation. We have, too. had con- , Eideiabie opportunity of personal obseiva- f : . . i . ; ..t. l - . . tn.Pii,vi ..f t!- n.li,, r,.,.r, ,t.Jl ... ' mni t-.iiirv n mr.n it tl norm ao luii,. i. 01 n St a'pii ui - ou t huir a rn . iini .n i V- .J.IML.- . ..H.P, l kl II . 'lfHC ll'fll :on is soii e- thing fearful to contemplate. IntheC'aro linas the dealh rate, especially among chil dren, is startling. In the District of I'o- lun.bia the mortalitj- among whites is 17.90 , to the l,000of population por annum, while among the coloicd p-oj.le the average is ; 6-3.70 per 1.W0. In nearly all pans of the South the number of deaths from sickness : among the negroes is so much gieaterthan j it was during ihe days of slavery that it excites considerable leniaik ar.d discussion among the fiiends e.f Ihe colored lace. In the United States army the 1 at io of sickness among the b'reks is much greater than among the w hite soldiers. From present indications thc colored race will be likely to die out even more quickly than the In dians, unless some means can be devised to check the mortality among them. Some of the philanthropists who have heretofore taken so much interest in their welfare should investigate the matter, or the time may come when the taunt of some old-time slave-holders that the "Yankee race only wished to destroy the negroes by emancis pat ion to make room for w hite labor." will be repeated with some appearance of iruin. Tue Death of tiif. Ox-dest Inhabit ant of the F. a i:th. The Mission of Santa Cruz was established by monks of the Or der of St.' Francis. The first rr cord n i.;,h i India,, ahl .,mH Vil .ni ..n Onthe4ihof March following was baptized d Usui. ia4io noins, oy tr. isidro Salazar O. b. I . lioxas was then forty vear f.r-.r u. b. 1 . Koxas was then forty vcars nfa ' and perhaps even somew hat over f rty o . that he was at least 123 vcars eld when' he 1 died. The rccoid of his baptism is Rtill I r. .1 . . . r . " "'Hi I"" regisic-r ol the Catholic chui ch, so that there can be no doubt ron ceinmg tne irutii 01 tus extreme age. i Litile is known of his career ; i k- ; outlived those who were ohil.lren when he was already very advanced in years It is probable, however, that he belonged tothe nccd tothe Aptos tribe of Indians. Farsimif. iim-i, l.A r . . . . . ,tIV , 7 i . r IWS 0eMh was -ii , "'"wrHemsoi the country a Spring it will m0ve lour.J the uf expected to take place at any moment. ' w,1 be consohdated intoone powe. ful mon- j way luaVlnu-lr true lo natine. I Three days ago the Rev. Father Ad..ra'' a'j1 " ultimately they will be- j made r.t Nnreburg fiitv-five " f" .TJnJ;CVrJ,t,'.c. mt. At the a department of the Government, ami w., Iv'u g 1 it as a t ov f r t be T t j- . . i i&.ieioeti oy the Indmn who has been his guardian for '---"-'' v' some lime past. He remained conscious until w ithin a few moments of his death when he became insensible, and quietly passed into the world bevond. W I we an not exaggerate m saying that Koxas j was the oldest, inhabitant of the earth SanU Crui (Cai.) Enterprise. The town ef Rienzi; Miss., was recent- : ly visited by a tornado, which lasted h-df .ti; ...lis., w.-i rtir : an hour and caused great destrueticn life and property. rr. n . v 1 Ue t'lCSbVtei an r,.l iur e"Vn K.u..!!"a KaT.t.st. -l,nvrliPi -, , ... ir.es demolished. Colonel Po. top vn, ; Hon, John Reese and daughter, Mis Mat ne ra.mer, anel several colored neonle t.,q killed. A number of iiWET' injured. among ong them M. R. Armor and ,t.mn. ..j " V" estimated Rt tl hail i sanr.e State, flooding the rivers and hi? ffing the railroads and tile" riiil in a ieiefcrapus in all di- vicinity, in tho V V V IVll V Ai". ciui rttlttical lie. tut. Chicago is flocking to the Mayor's of fice to lik at a three-pound toad. Four Pittsburg girls aie training for a pubhc foot-iace, to cuil lT at Cape May this summer. Champaign conntr. Ohio, is a hollow i mockery. It had a representative of the . prohibition ticket. i Annie Huwe, who eloped with her ; lover in Montifxl the other day, was bound I to b married Annie Howe. : One hnndrc-d Memphians invested 41.- , OCK) in the LtmUviUe Library lottery, acd got each one cent and nine mills in return. ; The T)anfoith II... . T;lw1l : The Dan forth House, at Pit hole. i of. fered for sale. The orice now is a baitrl ofw biiky, although it originally cost $40,- j A man arrived in Wilkes-v-e W3- . . tT 'ortwoag from England and'fj A fine maible stalnecf St. John at the ' wife, who pieceded biin to i!," age of fooiteeD, believed to be bv Michael twelve rears, living with anf.itC ::' Angelo, has recently been onnrihil it llnml ? !...i i... ,',t'. P - la. ity. lTy.t re Frost, ck Frot,t One Fror, of Marion Con Has named Lis five sons Severe AMnteT Frost, White Frost, Jack aca i.iack r rest. A Michigan Granger who tunneled tnronpb the snow s, v.eek or two ago and got out of that Stat, Is now in Tennessee and living to wa.i home. Trie to his instinct. Grant has ap pointed ex-Governor Brooks postmaster at Little Rock, Aikarsas. We hope they will be able to find him now. A veritable Cyclops is reported to be in London. His only eye is in the middle of his fort head. lis name is Piper Wilson, aged 22, and ! c came from Australia. Mr. Win. Laige, of Falhstown, Beaver connty, is the owner of a pair of boots w hich he has worn on Sundays and special occasions for the las: twenty-.ne year. On Saturday, at Pottsville, Michael Flanagan was found guilty of minder in thc first degree. He killed James McGor leck last December, near Mahan-y Cily. William Tailor, a soldier of the "war of 1S12, ar.d the first w""ite male child born in Cincinnati!", died there a few days since. His golden wedding was cell-beared in IS08. At a spelling match in Indianapolis, the first man to miss a wo:d was the for mer Superintendent of Education of the cily ar.d ptesert editor of a school journal. As a oonsetpienee of using bad ink. it is related that the signatuies to the origin al copy of the D claration of Independence have fiided so that they are scarcely visible ' Pittsburgh, 01. Satin day, Frederick Miers was convicted cf the imuder of Gothaid Wsdil in November, lb!4. His accomplice. Will-am Merry, was convicted on 1 h im day. -"d Reed's saw mid, near Ifontzdalo, a ' hige bill of kn .tVss pii:C lumber is bein ' sawrd. the same to be us d in the centetv : nial buihbngs at Fhiladelplda. The '..-"S ' are from twenty to foity feet iu let gth. The local tlrc'iou if, Builiugton, N. J., ; has icsnlTd in the elect i on f t! e Demo- ; oiatic ti.-ket. headed by Hamilton Mc Dowell f .r Maj or. It is the first time Bar r.ngton has gene Democratic for six years. 1 V man named J. . Manning is charged with swl-iduii the ci u crackers bv takTng uideis to supply tht-m with eatbon oil and lcketirg ti e money therefor. He repre sents himself as an agent for a Pittsburgh firm. The Rome Pert find says: "The g:ar.g eresses of Watt-mile aie" discus? i;.g the question, 'How shall w e keep our husbands at home evenings?' subscriber recom mends them to hire hand-somer servant girls." This is the season of tlie vcar when the farmer tells his sou John that if he w iil sort over ten bushels of potatoes, feed the stock, lepair that fe:ic, and re shincle the cornciib, he may have the rest of ihe ; day to go rab'nit-htr.itiug. -'olouL item t "Laly a mountain lion made a i.tid on a ranchman's house in Left Hand Canon. He tore the family d to pieces. He pulled the tiddle-sti ings out of the family cat. He finally succumbed, however, to the family ii2e." The Reuova liteord announces that fitty Centre and Clinton countv hunters J a:e going on n sixy day b.ifTafo hunt in Kansas. They get a special car f,r $1,250 2o each. They will probably want a fre-ght tia-n when they come back. A couple t.f Des" M. ines giils have ' played a gaoie of "Seven-Up" every night for throe years to determine which should ' sieep on the trout side of the bed. Prac tice has made them so peifect i:i the game that no man in that rprdon Ki ti,. Rocendy. near Tit.isville. Pa.. hound was found lying exhausted i-i a field, and ! beside the dog was a dead fox. It was afterward di-cvered that the hound had fol.owcd the f..x for nearly foitv miles, from the vicinity ef Haestown. Crawford ' county. Mr. and Mrs. David Williams settled ! full of youth, health, and hope in the wil neruess south of Syracuse eighty-one years ''. ago. Tl.ey are still living iu the town of Porr.pey. enj -ying health and comfoit in the old homestead with their 6ou, who is! past seventy. 1 An ice gorge has formed in the Dela- ' ware river at h.w.mnl'A.'. : . 1 ii. iiuiL-saoove rer eap, and extends back cijhfeei i -.. ranes ta Dingman's. 1 he ice is piled from ten to fifteen feet high all the way. and much alarm is felt along the valley 'at the P''-Vr3,r f . 1; TLa V" 1 "t r f R Pnrer fwb- Iished at incland. N. J.. was f.ituUv J...t 1 v,;.. t, .. -....' t- " u':i!S XZr t- l".lT.en '"'Mopeily collected, the I ....: i i loeiano. 1 anair grew out of an article ii the w hich Landis thought referred to him. but in wnicn no names were mentioned. A. Mis. Pairy, an alleged medium, 1 who has been giving exhibitions in C hi- ; cagn, was recently detected nsin-r rubber i conH ivn"ces, which, on being inflated . 1 n'e appearance ot lacesar.d ai ms. 1 -A 1 -viler i.emg excised the medium abused her audience in tho most vituperative mn- ner. rT-nrC Va" a VJ 7'rrr,;Py n the persnn of A ilhe Ldmumls. aced ten vpn.o n i Luminary says that the specimens of or namental penmanship, cards bearing in . scripfions and diawinrs of anim-U' r..i I hil' exrci:U'a fcy ,,,is ,;ft, bty are anioc.j ...:..sk c m seen, uc also excels , ui"rr oiancnes. ! Chai les Frar.cis Adams. .Tp . nrnr,!..... . . ,, , r.-r..so.s rorl"1?1 rco'V. annei-bWt and Gariett . . .... ""sj bringing this about. J Thc Xori istown Herald says : We are i rained to learn t,f the deat h of Ada, d:ugh- iei oi .M..J..I venerai Jlancock. who died i ,n ey 1 ' K r "ay. f typhus fever, after y .....era ui iiuoiu xen oays. The Gcueral's family consisted of but ta children, this bemg an only daughter, a youug lady - . -r-, . s o o iv.i.Biu ge .... . . . , k ':l,,P!!lt.?IeJ,l many ithas of : , r t " Z I jL' 1"-, ,n.ai Vle "T51"'! voa a tt 11 ll 1 V .til 11. IX lllllk'niT.r Ia 1 . ' .... t . -V r ;; e- -ouu. Members . '.ev. us ouicers alter a n. - i ter's service go home wmI, their w;. - ! n?.,. V 1 VLV'Ll.-j I ., r V yv","""y nu sum i lho ""rraent of the State finances ? t . ' """. ' 17.1!.. .t;ii iild?u by '- " ill alive and conscious, Pi.;iiv u A' - , . . . . - J' vriir.s, - o.. , ,,o. yet iouiui the ball. t.iii.l tl.A Kli : C"?m.l-. 1llbnc ' TOan? J"st,f 'n? Landis great provocation helio 111 COloner. I'llbllC nlnnmn i. r v.."ju, on account of great provocation believed to hare been received. A t a rr a-i tm .y n?m- V, Ui img Jf ; Ch::d:vu nese f.:i !ii!,rd :lh en. c. 1 -ied ve;y hiu':-.'.;.-, AliicL t!;-v re'h. 0::e of tl:"? clu'.ri tn ic'i; 'ti ' died the next day, and two olhus a -i mont alarming itate. Tl. a..,.t ... colored with aniline and the ! arsenic. In Michigan the people are bo to twin their coal pits to new acec.Un-""s ilhin&inatiiig pas of sixteen cand'.e 1 obtained in the manufacture ofVv Ore Old of wood will make C ' fect f,f C'""' Ras, ir newspaper rervw. ' to he trnsted ; and the cost of r. j ' : r I IS said to be 4nlv er.-rl.i... and feet. , ... u.t iiiisn;,,! v t l.ftnnfv tal-n r.-,i n ! having taken complete possess;.,'"' "f ! premises wheie he found h;s V ' her ar;d his da-igbter a beatir -r ',' ' r he was hcked no. " ' t - Mis. Annie J. Curt:, a f ', rf whom Strackosh predicted liV ruul" oe me rival 01 Allison ard ' died in New Yoik recently fr .tn tl e, of an attempt at aboition. Tl e ;- - which led tol er sad fate was' w'-T"-'" jatr.in Gregoiy, of Jeiej Citv, a K T. a;re, who, however, had no "ha: d J 1.- . - i- I. oui; tiean;, R9 sn-j neciared on her deaiL til i ne iec!pi-oc;ry i rea'v with tsianus nas oeeU rat.S-.i. Tne i, ministtation oigans secra to t!i:ik x- is a raot excellent thing. And et x "u--same in principle as the Cana-l'.-ia':-' ciprocity, which roused all iht Bnt hke the giil, they n.-, d onlt t!r the Sandwich Recij rocity is s-c i a' ' one that no fuss should be made i;b J" It is the epinion of the Ba:t:-V that "rtopnlar eduoat ion tl. ..." 1 l . SIVe 111 lt Itanria. .3 . t t-.s. niin 1 ij: .see- imparting it should sec that te f system is carried out practical ' s : d e? so:; ioe .erier an.j 51 mt. But no H-r.-r - liovernmcni can cons:s:fiit!i- oj ine coat collar and thaw ;. fountains of education. a::d 1.' cannot c mpol them to d iii'k.'' 1- : t ) ; ..t-n.inir; to the advices f; ofii on, liie coveinn.cnt istak-nc f ti biiog chiefs t.f the Sious'x Washington, with a view t, a-i :.g:eP.-noTir which w.il t!.:ow ti . II:. s teg:.no;n t" white settlenif de:. ;s complete such an ,,a as soon Hs tm.ss:oi so s , ( rrevcrf .1.., loin 11 aie expecitd spring opens, L e.ween prospectors r.-d ; dtans. .Ino. Bimpson.t .V(.-,t.i.Tni.r-,., of Quiney. III., left that j.la "'" ago lor Lurop. with tw.- d 1 o - -(.-' wassun"sed to have s.-tih-d 01 b luted Kingdom, ula!, w ,s reo r'l in.iu. .ews is now itceiv.-d ll ai,d his daughters aie sliie .- ..t j :.l none. in n.ai:t:n:e ?I.s l as collected V,0o0 i f.- ii snI..ii. Bimpson's policy, n.asihd ag .:-, a child by her second husband. C -. a.i: -Y l:lu Which is bf'f.;e the Tor.r' "that bacheloiisui i.H hcielv d---pririlege. and every malo i,bl ; v '. State, over thiitv v. ais of ; sound mind and "er.j.ying g ..dT hea.th. romaming uiim.uiied after th 'a-V of Mi,-V' ?" shall pJV a I;:le t antuia.ly. ' I that State single !,:,,' uesS isev;iiently classed am iisr lies, aiiti as such m...i or glit to be 1.1 J for. Abraham Cohn, aCod s"l ve-. r ' in Lancaster on Thn-s.Nv r.rtoni -.n ' ; faai had been a soldier 111 .'er V , .eon I. Af.-erward he j .inrd the 00 ; army of Je;maiiy. and participle.! i . triumphal entry of the German .v.-v Paris in 1S14. He was cmincmlv V . i of h-tteis learned in the tleb.e-v. Fa jane. German language-, and j, ; -j latter ye-ais of his liiV in Kukm -,'" : tinguished Rabbi in the Jewish I In.:: j The New Yoik Sui refers d the chronic abiisos which riw i; . ! proportions under Republican : aV-: cost .f burying a member of C: - j The funeral expenses of Mr. Sum:).". , cited ss an iliusti ntie.n in p- iiit. Tic ; count famished by tl.e S-re-ant '.t ' ; amounts to l.67.iJ. Of Tlrs suia. weic for railroad faivsof pai ty fion K ; ir.gron to New Yo:k. from V- V .' ta Boston, and t77 from B ij i, U. , lllglon. j Some time ag-., s-yS tha r.-,... , l.n.t.iP., when money was le t ; than at resent, a Boston men-' v ' ; scuUd $rm t3 a theological e::',r ; and paid ,3 0f ,he aiIlouIlt at . j Recently, finding it convenienf. 1 e ; waided ihe remaining three bund e' : letiun mail he received a letter of edgment and a request for nu-eicc: Iis and some ,d cents interest .m , thiop hun.bcd dollars fntm ,j,e j,. . origPial .subscription. fact. -.... .J-.....C wuiows were rar. rows of chairs. theotheprtar io i r . . ... , . - . ... .1. . f Virsyi'ii Citv P.. .. . . "r. in viit. r. v .(UK s orr.oe ot V ,,0 . r- a ovinai Co rti:ieate or some other the dentil of hei husband. Thev ; seventeen to t'he w, inkled ma"'!'-. - A j ' P.cbably.Nl e moL r ' "f widows ever known T r..r-..i J"l. . Ka ' V. , varie-ii aj:ecr. . V lw in-over taxes wni.u 1H ne , allow s 1 hem to hol.l a , a' . rd. 1 ' g 'a j ! i T"e largest Democratic vefe i.i ' Ilampshiro plled previous to t! -was that for Governor in 1S1", '. .-: 01, '352. Tho Democi-atic vj. t':i was O'J, 163 an incvae t-f l.f'.'l. largest previous Repoblica i vote mr for Governed in IS'oS. which was I The Republican vote this vear was : or 5.-) less. In other wJids, the T crats have done better than their p best by neatly 3,00o, while tie !1 cans have failed to do as will previous best by oO-a. Which 1 ' I making the bstter time for lit T:- j tial goal of 1S76 ? i A curious a..tom,ton ni.h--r 1-j inventrH ue r.; tl. .i, -...i j ' maoe oi eoi per, u f hhS been So.a are ; Thia automaton is i ti 1 1 ti tiw ir nfat i.u is worthy to rai t l.'stoiic iron fly which f.ew rourd:- ami percceo t.n the hand ot its r the artificial eigle which took tV'-. a perch in fixmt of the Emperor t'x'- and soaring aloft for some dis''-" tuined to its staitirg place. The Kansas lawyeis pron'sr county bonds issued h' ihe I.eri-'- aid those who had suffered fim i ...s. s.i.-ir n u i.i su hopper plague, to b woithVss, hanks refuse to rr.ak n-jVft ini eilvH-1"'" of them. The consequence is ttat - . .1 rr.. ' Ik," 1 ' " rners tied themselves in a stta f. . . ... . . ..tu o sp:ing seeds some relief not be allOidod in tli -they will bein a worse conditis-" !,v than they were last. It is sad t;' m i DT not snfTer i not n (fe ring from lsck of f- , and thev ba mt'A hntiftW oi i.iii io M-nrii' cw.l 1 hrv w ill "i iau to i ! l i... .,...... ".;-.... f. ' 1 hmdo.... 1 1, .i .r Kt'oencf i . r -.r,..rr' increiore, as a matter oi n.' tbe they should be furnished w..t " which they need. other. 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers