1 ' laajBX'fiirnisr EPWHSflscuffAretf EDENSBURC, PA., Friday Morning - - Sept. 24, 1875. DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET. cm us rEiisiiixa, Of Schuylkill County. For stats tkeasuuek : VICTOR K. I'lO LETT, Of Bradford County. DEMOCRATIC COUNTY TICKET. ' KEOISTFIt AM) K ECOK PEK : JAMES M. SIXGEK, Ebcusburg. treasciveh: N. J. FKKIDIIWF, Concmnugh Boro'. COMMISSIONED : JOHN CAMl'BELL, Coneniaugfe BW. J. D. PAKUISII, Ebensburg. POOR HOUSE 1)1 RECTOR : JESSE PATTERSON, Johnstown. acpifohs : ' JOHN R. ROSS, ttl.-irklirk Tewnbip. f. p. Mccormic k, wiim.r. Tiir. X. V. Herabl very wisely con cludes that the Maine election, follow in the democratic victory in Califor nia, is disheartening to the Hepuhli- c.in, niul mat Its piled win oc ieit m Ohio, Pcnnsylvaui:i anl New Yolk. ! The people are tired of old cries and of ' , -r,. rttw. n..m,.r..tii. appeals to the r fear or the Ii-'-t't. , party. The elections this fall cannot - lx earned liy the lieatmpf ol gongs. , Thnt begins to be very plain. At the solicitation of Messrs Persh ing ami Piolett, lion. Hendiick It. Wright, of Luzerne county, presiding officer of the Eric convention, has been selected as Chairman of the Pcni ocrutic State Central Comuiittce. and j has already called upon that IkmIv to ; meet at the (Jirard House, Philadel phia, on to-morrow (Saturday) evening. The hope is entertained that there will be a full attendance of said Committee. Isaac Wire, Esq., of Wilmore, was IecUd Chairman of the Democratic County Committee by the late conven tion. While we hare always believed that the chairman of that committee ought to reside at the con. ty seat we j t:ke great pleasure in commending 31r. Wike's selection. The county does not, so far as we know his record, contaiu a more thorough and consist ent Democrat than Isaac YVike. He is a veteran in tlie cause and we have never heard it intimated that he did not ' stand firmly by the integrity and or ganization of his party. He has leen bold and fearless as a private in the ranks, and now that he has been in vested with a high command, there will le blows to give as well as blows to take, anI under his skill ml and ag - i KNssivc leaaersnip uve democracy oi j ine couniy are conntiem. oi auiiieing a luilliant victory. We take special pleasure in paying this tribute to Mr Wike, becuuse.althougli we have reason to believe that he has never looked with favor upon our political aspira- 1 1. liio ni dpein his record as a Demo- i . - ; crat none the less deserving of coin- i metidation. There are many honrt : co-laborers in the cause who Iieliovc '; .hat ll.nra nro tnn in th mnks more deserving of the honors of the party than we arc, and as they have a perfect right to that opinion, wc think none the less of them because they entertain and act upon their convictions in this as in other respects. " TnE proceedings of the Democratic county convention, held on Monday hist, will be found published in the lo cal department of this week's r kf.eman The convention was composed for the I moat part or as good material ns the county affords, and it is therefore not ' saying too much to declare that the in- v nf I lm I LinlAt n ( tit t it t w o a ... ot c .- , very generally represenieu irmn one . township in tlie northeast to oder townsLip in the southwest. Tlie ut j most enthusiasm arnl irotsl feeling pie- i vailel and the delilierations if the convention were entirely harmonious throughout its greatly protracted ses sion. Next week we shall refer in de tail to the merits, qualifications and claims of the several candidates selected and will, as we have always done, urge ; in calculating the three-mill tax, on the and ad vocate the election" of the entire ! $3",00Q reported an the total bonded, ticket. First and foremost, the con- t indebtedness of the city of Williams-; vention was what might very properly I prt, the State only received $10.80 be called a public proclamation of the instead of $103.00, on a real bonded I i eoplk of Cambria county in response j issue of over $000,000 which should 1 to the nomination of Judge Pershing ; have liecn assessed yearly for $1,800. for dovci-nor. The convention was j The difference between $10.80 and $1, cotn posed of his old friends and neigh- j 800, of course, either goes into the ,Mrs of men who have honored him : pockets of the bondholders who escajic with their confidence in the past and : taxation, or of the city treasurer who who will renew it at the ldlot-lox on j makes a fale return, or, perhaps, it the first Tuesday in November. Of , may le a source of common profit to course a large majority of theaspiranta all parties to the fraud. It is not a for nomination for the reflective ' matter of so much moment who has ' offices have leen disapointed. This . this money which the Attorney General has always been the case at all former : has authorized the Auditor General to conventions and will continue to lw collect ami which will not be lost to until the end of tlie chapter. They the State. When Auditor General must remember, however, that tlie j Temple can get his hands upon dclin regularly constituted tribunal of the , quents,. as in this case, he will have pirty, to which they submitted their j their stealings and their seal ps. But claims, has rendered a verdict against , there is a disclosure of a marvelous them, and that from its decision there J rottenness and of a possibility and a ought not and should not and cannot probability of defalcation in the State in honor lie an appeal. When tlie ' revenues under this kind of ad minis-: convention has discharged its duty ; tration which is appalling. The. lairly and dispassionately, as it did amount of it evidently is only to lie last Monday, no eood Democrat has 'measured by the scrupulosity of tax-J juiv right to raise his voice or to oast ' payers nothing else. The sworn of-' his vote in opposition to Its final do- ; fleer of the State, whose special duty, crec. We ask the Democracy of , It was to guard against any abuse of Cimbria to move in solid colmnn to ! official fiduciary trusts, was the medi-j the support of the entire ticket. Mate and county, which is submitted to them, and to endorse it at the polls by a majority such as they can always ?;Ive wli:i ther are nutted and work or a com r noil purjios. An Astounding Disclosure. It is onlv necessary- to a clear oora- j prtbciiSHon of the accompanying offi cial narratire of fraud presented to the raiders of the Patriot, that it should j I nnderstmxl that in Pennsylvania the State tax on loans is, by autlioniy of law, deducted from interest paid to Itum! holders ly the coqioratioiis issn ! ing the bonds; and that it is the duty J f mnnw-iivil froroorations, through I their treasurers or other officers, to make an annual sworn ictnrn of the loans due bv such corporations to tne AuditorGeneralof tbeState,who, upon this data, makes up the quota of State tax. The penalty for a violation of this duty is $5,000 line and prosoeu- ; tion forpetjurv. The penalty incurred by the late Auditor General of the ; State was impeachment, during his. term, had the fraud leen discovered, : rmr prosecution for misdemeanor. j It hit HIT OK THE CHAIRMAN OF THE FI KANCK COMMITTEE Of TIlK CITY OF VII.- j MAMsrOllT. ! Iii the matter of the state tax on tle city : bond of tlie city f Williamsport : The nndci signed chairman of the city council of : said city, in behalf or said city council, makes and presents to the auditor general j if the commonwealth the following allega- j turns of fact in relation to said bonds, and : the state taxes thereon assessed by the j commonwealth and paid by the treasuier of said city, and also the names' of the par ties by w hom said facts i proven : First. The tenth section of an act of as spii.I.Tv a ovod March 21. 1S67, author- i7f..i ihr. nniioiiito ant hoi it ies of the cit' of ; 'TiIlianspoit to Issue bonds uoi cxceeuuig $2i0T0fW. P. L., page 516. Seam. Cnder the pretended anU.or.fy of th s net. of assembly said city authorities c,b;I f npo to ,he lllollllt f $t43,ooo, of the date of Septcm- ,. jf iir8, and having tweuty years torun. This cau bo proven by Win. F. Logan, ex rnaror. Third. All of these bonds except the sum of $17,000 vcre iutd to citizen of Pcnn ..,,.,.'.. .iniu'iniillir ti I'oter 1 Iri dic. This can be proven by Or. YVm, F. Ijog.m, ex. . mayor, and Kiiam Mndge, ex-treasurer, t both of the city of Williamsport. Fourth. The amount ot tnese nmuis out M;irij,,g n 13 was f;i!,0)0, and in 1874 SOI.OOO. This can be proven by extreas- ! nrcr Hiram Mndire, by tbe treasuier, YVit liam . Jones, by O. 15. Ke, ana Mso by ; the report of the city auditors for 1873. j Fifth. The city treasurer for 187;?, in- j stead of returning the true amonnt of bonds ' outstanding, returned the amount as f3n,-j 000, upon which basis the state tax was j levied and naid. Sixth. I). H. Else, the said city treasurer ; for 1873, when paying the coupons, retained j from the bondholders the amount of the state tax on oil the boi-d then ontti lifting, j V . : 1 I . . r. It- A v .f t It A 1 IllKll Vf irl 'mi(00 ".u. 1,1 ! aforesaid. This can be kIiouii by the said j p. h. and Wm. U. Updegraff, his, deputy. j f-eventn. m. .onrs, me cuy iieas- urer for 1875, mado a correct return to the auditor general's office, of tho amount of bond outstanding for that year, but was subsequently induced by .Auditor General Itiri'iii Urn 1,i rim nnf thr. return tit :!P- .... .. ........ j. - - - --, 000 and the correct return tra destroyed by the auditor general in the presence of said treasurer. This can bo shown by the raid Wm. N. Jones. j Eighth- If direct evidence is required as to what portion of these Itotids are held by j citm-ns of Pennsylvania, it can be furnished bv calline Pearson S. Peterson, of the citv ( - f 1Mlil.J(,eiPhia. AU of which U resct- fully submitted. S. T. M'Cormick, Chairman. CERTIFICATE OF CITY TREASURER. To the A uditor General of Pennnylcania: I hereby certify that from the lest attain- ; able information existing in the treasurer's n: . l. , r ' : 1 1 : 1 .. ' ' . there ' were outstanding on tne nrst day ot .lune, 1S74 nio,ooo of the coupon londs of the ' city of Williamsport, of the issue of Sen- ; temtwr lf 1808; and further, that on the 2-d of August. ie74, f ,000 of said bonds were redeemed by the commissioners of the sinking fund of said city, leaving outstand- : t ing at the time the sum of $615,000, and I so returned the amount to the auditor gen- ? eral's office, except that there was an error of $1,000 in my return, and further, I called ' on the then auditor general atout January 9 or 10, 1875, to adjust and settlo any claim ; that the state had against the city of Wil liamsport, and vn induced by the then- ' auditor general and other to change my return to $:($, 000 (see return on file in your office), and in doing so I acted ;n god faith ! i and had no desire to defraud the state of Pennsylvania, or protector enrich the own- ' "not said bonds. I am, general, ith '. "J. CERTIFICATE OF CITT CT.ERK. J1,, the Auditor General of the State of peunMylrnia . i ,,erebv certifv thsit it ap : poar by the report of the city auditoisof the city of Williamsport for the year 1873, . ou .In 11,0 mayoi s omce oi saia city, that there were outstanding on the 1st day of July, 1874, $010,000 of twenty year six jxr cent, bonds of said city of the issue of 1S88. E. S. Lowe, City Clerk, j Seal of the city of ) , Williamsport. f liy an error of AnditorGencral Allen tun of a villainy whioli required forlta successful execution not only jierjury on his own jiart but on that of others. He was the candidate of the radical party in this State last year for re- ' election to the place he disgraced. Worse than all, Trhen his dereliction was dicovered by his late partisans it was not denounced from the platform or in the press, and he was allowed to depart from the State with such plaudits ami approval as are only due to honest public service- Can there Iks any explanation rdefence against this fearfnl indictment? Ilarrisburg Pa Terrible Storm at Gatvestok, Tex as. The New Orleans Junes, intra in formation obtained from papers and pas sencers. gives the following account or a recent wind storm at Galvestow : To briefly summarize the disaster, a gale twin the north by Wednesday at midday reach ed such proportions that captains of steam ers accustomed fin- generations to traversing this portion of the gulf declined to put to sea. Almost simultaneously with this de termination came the repoit that a ship yard at the extreme eastern end of the is land bad leen inundated and men were fleeing for their lives. A rapidly falling barometer indicated an increase of the storm, and the waters of the gulf, which is on the south side of the island and in the rear of the city, gradually commenced to encroach. The gardens of scattered resi dences, skirting the beach, were soon over flowed. The waterduringtheday reached a depth of two feet. All day long, and during Thursday it blew a hurricane, push ing the gnlf water over the entire island and covering even tho highest elevations to the depth of two feet and a half. This ridge embraces an area of perhaps twelve blocks of buildings, extending from Me chanics street to Market street, a distance of two squares from latitndinally, and Cen tre street to Rath avenue, about six squares, longitudinally. In the entire rear of the east and west ends of the city, the water rose to a sufficient depth to float large wooden edifices, many oi wnicn aie very valuable. The resident portion of the city was mo-t affected. From Trcmont street, where this section begins, for the distance of at least one mile and a half west, every garden and every foundation is destroyed. DOMICILES SCATTERED rROMISCrOVSI.T. Domiciles are scattered promiscuously in the centre of thoroughfares, many of them being jammed together. Farther to the Park, where there are many small farms nr? a number of stylish residences, the water is reported to have reached a depth of from six to nine feet. A similar story is told of the eastern end of the island, which extends from Centre street at least one mile and a half into the business section of the city. Large stocks of goods are kept on the ground floors, and one cannot esti mate the injury which thirty inches of sea water would involve. It is fair to presume that the earnings of an entire year will be exhausted in repairing damages. Proba bly vegetation lias been utterly destroyed, but that the island is involved in wholesale ruin we do not apprehend. Gai.vesto-jt, Sept. 21. The steamship Harlan h"s just arrived. The purser states tfvat the town of Indianola is almost roivupfetely demolished. Light houses, wharves, business bouses and dwellings are broken in pieces or swept away. There are only three houses remaining which are not damaged. The telegraph office is gone, the signal office damaged, telegraph lines down for miles, railroads washed away, and houses, fences and tiecs piled op in broken masses on the streets. The rejwts of loss of life are conflicting. All agree that there were one hundred to one hundred and fifty lives lost. The pur ser states that on account of theexcitement it was impossible to obtain the correct number. The ttoamhip retnrncd with her cargo of goods, as there was no place where she could land. A Stuakce Stort. The Titusville Courier has a curious story, as follows : "About a week ago a gentleman stopped off the ti o in at Tyronville and calling at a house a short distance beyond Clappville in which two families lived asked to remain over nifdit, as he whs sick. The hus bands of the women were away, but they consented to allow him to remain over night. The next day he was no better and on tho third day be died. During his illness Dr. Ashley, of Iilooming Valley, was called in, and through him he request ed tho presence of Rev. Mr. Eckels, but be fore fiat gentleman arrived he expired. One of the persons at whose house he died came to Titusville and purchased a coffin of Puss fe Davidson, paying for it in Canada money. These persons stated it wasthe re quest of the dying man that he should be buried in Canada, and after being placed in the coffin the body was taken by them to the depot in time for the afternoon ex press. Instead of taking this train the par ties took the sixo clock train south, brought the body to this city, where it was kept over night, and the next morning taken to I'leasn-mville, where it was inferred. On their return the persons who had the biwly in charge called on Huss fc Davidson and redeemed the Canada money with Ameri can bills. The deceased had a tiunkand a box with him, and in the former was a suit of fine clothes. It is snppsed by tho neighbors that he had money which has been taken care of by his wonld-be bene factors. Our informant, who is a reliable gentleman, states thrft considerable excite ment exists in the neighborhood, and that an investigation is going on to ascertain what can be learned of the history of the man, and whether there are grounds for the belief which so generally prevails that he was possessed of a large amount of mon ey which is likely to goto persons who have no right to it. There is an air of mystery about the death of the man with out communicating his name to any one, together with the manner in which he was buried, that needs clearing up." The Discovert that was Made rt a Travemxo Sewi.no Machixe Agent. In one of the raids of the Cornplanter In d inns many years ago,they took a young man named B!esde prisoner, and he, through choice, never left them, lie accompanied them in their hunting excursions, etc., and helped mine silver, which they used for ornaments. They captured a loy named Sampson, and Ulesdoe helped him to es cape, and gave Sampson a rough map of a silver mine on Pine creek, Lycoming coun ty. Sampson kept the map, but gave no thought to hunting up the mine ; and after his death this paper fell into the hands of one of his descendants. A traveling sew ing machine agent got hold of this map, and at last found the place and took out some of the outcrop. A young man, exam ining the wagon, discovered the ore, and then followed their track to the mine. He also took some of the ore and had it tested. It contained about twenty per cent, of silver. The mine is on the west side of the creek, near the mouth of Solomon's Itun, on land belonging to John Dure 11, and is about twenty miles from Jersey Shore. New York Democratic Convention. The Democracy of New York met at Syracuse, last waek, and after adopting a hard money platform nominated the follow ing ticket : Secretary of State John Bigelow, by acclamation. Comptroller Lucius Ttobinson. Attorney General Charles S. Fail child. rotate Treasurer Chas. N. Ross. State Engineer John D. Van Buren. Canal Commissioner C. II. Wairath. State Prison Inspector Rodney It. Crow ley. ' How a Briber Came to Grief, and Jlotr Old Vic. Mioiette r.Tvm n Gang of Scoundrels. Certain Radical jowmals have already begun to iiitrodnce a story Ifcat Mr. PioWsU was once offered and accepted a bribe of five hundred ddlars, when in the Legis lature, and say they will show up his "record." The story of the bribe, as they tell it, is simply miserable falsebtd, and all we ask is that they will correctly print the record of our candidate. If they do that, they will be aiding the Democracy effectually. The facts in this "bribe case' are as follows : Certain charges of fraud having been preferred against the Lebtgh county bank, a "wild cat" affair instituted by Mes G. fJeaeh, of New York, in 1844, and a de mand made for the reeal of its charter by the leading citizens of Lehigh county, the snbieet w;r referred to the committee on banks, of which Mr. Piolette was a member, w ho reported a bill favoring the repeal of its charter. During this investigation, and about a month before the tinat report of the com mittee, Beach, who was then publisher of the New York &un ami other newspa lers, aggregating a weekly issue of 300,0JO, proprietor of several rotten banking insti tutions and a man of great political in fluence throughout the country, sent his agent and one of his business partners, Daniel McCook, father of the since famous "fighting McCook''family,to Harrisburg to iniluence the committee on banks to make a report against the rejeal of the charter of the Lehigh county bank, lie found thiee of the seven members of the committee will ing to do so, and, in order to receive thejeo operation of the necessary majoiity, con cluded to prevail upon Mr. Piolette to agree to a report favorable to the bank. Know ing Mr. Piolette to be opposed to any such repoit, McCook tirst sought to procure his vote through the inrlnencc of his personal and jiolitical friend, lion. John La port e, of fering to bribe the latter by making his son a present of $5i0, on condition that the father should iniluence Piolette to allow the committee to reiii, favorably t the bank. Being repelled by Judge Laporte, an attempt was inado to induce Clerk of the Senate Goodrich, a citizen of the same county as Piolette, for the consideration of $100, to influence the latter's vote. Both these plans proving unsuccessful, McCook determined to approach Piolette in person. At lirst he undertook to per suade the latter by the aigumeut that those favorable to tlie bank were men of his own party, of vast political iniluence, and whose favor it was valuable for him to secure. A few days later McCook informed Piolette that he had written to the latter's father to come to Harrisburg to use his in fluence in behalf of the bunk, and had promised him $300 to do so. Knowing his father to le an old man of 72, and no lobbyist by profession, Mr. Pio lette was surprised and indignant at the infoimalion and gave McCook to under stand that his schemes were useless. But tlie briber was so iniortunte and reckless that he finally offered Piolette directly $VH1 as a bribe ami left him to consider it. Mr. Piolette at once consulted his friends. Judge Laiie, at that time surveyor general, Hon. Jesse Miller, secretary of the commonwealth, and Jeremiah M. Bnrrell, esq., a highly respected member of the legislature, and advised with them as to the best course to pursue in order to fully expose the nefarious attempt to corrupt a legislator. Though his. natural impulses led him to repel the scoundrel at lirst.blush, his tetter judgment suggested a more ef fective way of exposing him, and upon the advice of his friends, who urged ujkii him the beneficial eR'eet that would result from such an exposnre by permitting it to be consummated by the payment of the money, he resolved to accept it and then thoroughly exjHise the crime. Accordingly next morn ing he received from McCook $400 (the other $100 fo be paid aflerwavdV, which he request t-d him to place in his bureau drawer and to leave the room. As soon aa Mc Conk was gone, Pioletie sent for his eon U dauts. who he found had gone to the capi tl. He then summoned his landlord, Mr. Bnehler, bad him count the money and seal it in an envelope, informing m that he proposed to carry it into the House and make a statement in regard to it. Mr. Buehler d'd so and the money therefore never touched Piolette's hands, lie at once proceeded to the House, made a statement of the foregoing facts and laid the money oh tho speaker's table. A committee of investigation was appointed, who took the sworn testimony of Pioletie, Laorte, Burrell, Goodrich, and others, vi Inch is before us now and which embodies the foregoing facts. Mr. McCook, though defended by Hon. Thaddcus Stevens, made no attt mpt ?o impeach these witnesses, and accordingly the committee reported the facts as herein given, and a resolution, which was adopted, dirccting;the Attorney General, or his depu ty in Dauphin county, to arrest McCook and bring him to trial for attempting to bribe a member f the legislature. And we believe that Mct-ook was tried, found guilty and sent to jail. By resolution of the house the money was directed to be deposited in the Haiiisburg bank subject to the order of the court of quarter sessions of Dauphin county. In both the minority and majoi ity reports of the committee, it is agreed that a bold attempt at corruption had been made. Mr. Piolette's coursu i highly commended as including nothing "calculated to throw the least suspicion upon him as a man" or representative, "and the committee concur in this opinion that the exposure and primpt punishment of this high-handed outrage will tend to preserve, unimpaired, the confidence of the people in the purity of legislative action." It is safe to say that there were no further attempts at bribery that session, and no one has been found since foolhardy enough to undertake to corrupt Victor E. Piolette. Belief onte U'atchnutn. The Stort ok a Bi-oooy Shirt. On the 18th of May last MUs Whitby, living in Montgomery county, about three miles from Phoenixville, was found brutally mur dered. Nobody was at home at the time except a boy of eighteen, named Thomas F. Cnrley, who was arrested on suspicion of having committed the murder. Curley's trial conies off at Nonistown in December. He pleads not guilty, and says he was out in the field planting corn with one of the neighbors all day. When he went to din nerat noon there was a tram per at the house wanting a meal, which lie got. On going back in the evening the boy found the dead tx-dy or Mis Whitby, and ran back to the field to give the alarm. He described the tramp, and it is said a man corresjondmg to the description was traced from the house nearly to West Chester. On the Monday before the mnrder, Mrs. Nelson Stephens, of West Chester, gave a shirt to a tramper who called at her house, snd on Wednes day this shut was found in Joseph O. Sharpless' orchard, Kast Goshen. The shirt sleeves were all over blond stains, and the Bhirt was torn. After leaving this shirt, the tramp came to the house ami asked Mrs. Sharpless for a shirt. The description of t his man is said to je ident i cal with that given by the boy in regard to the murderer, and Mrs. Sharpies has been snbKeued as a witness in this case. The boy's counsel is sanguine that the prison er's innocence will be proven. Indepen dent Phoenix. Pershing preponderates in popularity. Sewr end roUtical Item. Neat elections Ohio and Iowa, Octo ber 12. A new definition of an old maid w woman who Las been maid for a long time. Theodore Tiltou is drawn as a juror to seive in the Brooklyn City Court next week. A baby without n spine has ventured into the world by way of Kt Haven, Connecticut. The greatest depth of the Pacific Ocean, as found by tho British ship Chal lenge, was sbont five miles. The Catholic church at Tremont, ii Schuylkill county, was destroyed on Friday evening by an incendiary fire. The Postmaster General has officially thanked President Scott for placing fast mail trains on the FertrfsylvAiiia, Railroad. A mine of Inmey has been discovered at Cajon Pass, Call. It is a quarter of a mile long, and contains 1,000 tons of the sweet. There are said to be more than 2,000, 000 Williams in the United Slates, to say ' nothing of several hundred thousand f pm i ous Bills. , A St. Louis woman enumerates among her friends twenty-two women who have! become bald from wearing heavy masses of : false hair. A political change in Pennsylvania J proportionate to that in Maine, will give i Pershing and Piolett a majority of fifty thonsatMl. All the signs are propitious. At Jefferson, Florida, a Judge of Afri can extraction has condemned his wife to three months' imprisonment for stealing one of his .shirts. Roman jusl ice outdone. Mr. Samuel Murdock, who has made a thorough study of the mound builders, will try to construct fac-similes of the most remarkable work on the Ceutenuhd grounds. A man seventy years old is to be hanged at Cleburne, Tex., on the first Friday in October. He has asked for three hours in which to deliver a speech ou the gallows. In 1872 the Republican majority for Gi ant in the State of California was 13,302. In 187-1 the Democratic majority over the Republican candidate for governor in that state is 30,003. Wetherslield, Conn., sometimes called Onionstown, derived its nickname from the fact that a church bell hung in 1775 was paid for by contributions of onion from the parishioners. Last year the Democrats carried one county out of sixteen, in Maine. This year they carry six and the Republicans ten, with the news getting better and bet ter. AU hail, Maine ! Theie is a ond near Watch Hill, Rhode Island, the bottom of which the longest sounding lines have never succeed ed in finding, and which is popularly Mip posed to be fathomh ss. The most fearful ieiort from Texas is that of the submerging of the town of In dianola, under the influence of I lie equi noctial gales a"l the loss, as a. result, of one hundred and fifty lives. It will be great cau-e for regret if the rascal Westervelt, who is clearly shown to have been i.-iij.lirated in the abduction of Charley Rons, escapes prison through any arrangement to restore the lost child. A human skull of jiecnliar shape w as washed ashore at Newcastle, Me., the other day, and preserved by a resident of Portsmouth, N. II., who thinks it has been in the water more than one hundred years. There was cast at the Tredegar Iron Works, Richmond, recently a bed-plate for a cotton compress weighing 42,000 jm.iiikIs. The calculat ionsof weight were so accurate that the molten metal exactly filled the mould. A council of Catholic Bishops and Archbishops concluded its delibei a Lions at Maynooth, Ireland, on Monday last. It Is remarkable for the factthat it is t he second that has been held in that county for seven centuries. Niantic, Conn, has an embryo ChaiTcy Ross sensation. A note was h-ft at the house of the Episcopal clergyman of that town, threatening to abduct his child if f 1,000 was not left beneath a certain tree on a certain date. The Pope has appointed Cardinal Mc Closkey a member of Congregations on In dex, Saered Rites and Bishops and Regu lars. Another consistory was- to have In-en held yesterday, when twelve additional Bishops were to be appointed. There is to be but one more total eclipse of the sun during the nine teenth century, visible in tho United States, and that will occur in 1878. The total eclispe of Radicalism will oocur two years before that date, in 1S7G. Barnum's rhaiiot girl, who was to have married the unfortunate Donaldson, has entered a convent somewhere in Can ada. She is said to be very pretty and very intellectual. An intellectual giil in a chariot is something of a novelty. A small yellow-spotted lizard, about four inches long, w as found inside a water melon at Dallas, Texas. Apparently life less when taken out, it was soon resusci tated, but lived only a few moments. It is to go in spirits to the Smithsoioan Insti tut ion. For a week or two the indejendent movement in Maryland had an appearance of incipient strength ; but the moment it assumed the malignant form of Know Nolhingism it suffered a collapse. That devil's invention must be tried on i,ew ground. In tho territory of New Mexico the Democrats, according to partial returns received, have made a gain of 2.300, fifteen per cent., as compared with the election for delegate to congress in 1873. This is high ground, but the tidal wave has reached it. A number of the friends of Miss Eliza Ann Lewis, whom a man named Duross violated, near Scran ton a few days since, have been making attempts to intimidate Warden Lifts, of the Luzerne prison, in order to get Duross out of jail for the pur pose of lynching him. A man in Michigan cut a large piece out of his leg the ot her day, under the im pression that he had been bitten by a rat tlesnake, and then discovered that he had merely been stung by a bee. A meaner feeling man, on making the discovery, was probably never raised in that State. Friday the 17th was the anniversary or four important events in American his tory, the signing of the Declaration of In dependence in 1776, the adoption of the Federal Constitution in 1787, the promul gation of Washington's Farewell Address in 1780, and the battle of Antietam in 1872. The Boston HeraUl says a pigeon match for ten thousand dollars has been arranged between James Gorden Bennett and ('apt. Bogardus on one side and Car roll Livingston and Ira A. Paine on the other side ; hTty birds each. The match takes place at Newport in about one week from this date. A Norwich, Conn., antiquarian will exhibit at a fair in his county a book pub lished in 1523, a cane 225 years old, a leaf from a Bible brought over in the May flower, and a piece of the white oak which fell in 1808 under which the first settlers of ancient Woodbury eucamped on the nigh of their arrival. A dispatch from Pine nifl, Ky re ports the death of Jesse James, wounded there several days ago when with the gantr who robbed the Huntingdon (W. Va ) Bank. James was well known throughout the country as a notorious Missouri outlaw, whose depredations produced much excite nieut some time ago We have seldom heard of a more ter rible affliction in one family, than was been the case in that of Michael Gallagher, of New Garden township, Chester county. He has lost eight of his nine children by scarlet fever, four having died within one week some time ago, and four more having died week before last. Sunbury had a kitten w ith two-heads, f ! fiend new on the same neck and were joined together where the ears should j be, cacn iteaa naving a jwj;o;ou n'uunr, an upper jaw, one eye and one ear. Only one lower jaw was attached to the double bead. This complicated animal lived but a short time after fcs birth. The Oxford University Press has pub lished the smallest Bible ever prdneeo. It is printed on rough, unbleached India paper, of extreme thinness and opacity; is four and a half inches high by two and three quarters inches ?road and half an inch in thickness, and weighs bound in limp morocco leather, les than three and a half ounces. Miss NeuT.icsin, of Canada, is trying to live economically, and has thus far, ac cording to her veracious friends, snboed without food for five rrfoutlrs. Should she succeed in dispensing with sustenance for a year or two, she will have made plain tin; niatiimonial problem which our young jieople are slill wrestling with, hovr to live comfortably on nothing. A proposition to bury the bodies of Presidents Jackson, Polk and Johnson in the Capitol giounds at Nashville, Tenn., and to have the State erect over tbein a costly monument, has been frustrated at its outsel by the discovery of a clause in the will of President Polk ordering that his body, with that of his wife, shall re main in their graves on the Polk home stead. Says a correspondent of the Uniontown Genius of Liberty : We presume that it is not very generally kn-nvn that nails were first cut west of the mountains at Mount's Creek, near Conellsville, Fayelte county. Pa., at, the Mount's Creek Rolling Mill, by oxen on a tread wheel. This mill was in operation at a very early day, and supplied j the then Iinuttd demand of the West with cut nails. Conceding that the Erie platform is not entirely satisfactory on tho currency question, it is letter even for the hard money rren than the Republican, for, while the former demands that "the vol ume of money be made and kept, equal to the wants f trade,' the Radical plat form 1 d eel .nes for 'a uniform tintiotml currency j adjusted to the groin ng leant of the busi ness interests of tho country.' The terrible storm, that so fearfii". devasiated the Texas coavt, developed a J phase of equinoctial terrors that cnld not j lie prophesied by the Weather hure in. The effects of the storm were not confined to i Galveston, but included the entire Texas ; coast. The winds drove in the t-ea upon ' the land, till '.he island of Ga" vest-on -.n-d j other points were entirely submerged, j The loss of projierty is very gie;it, and that :f life is very considerable. When a Cleveland husband tires of his wife, lie kills her. This saves the trouble and excuse of coiner to Indiana i for a divorce. A Mr. McGillan. of that i city, took the former method of divorcing ; himself a few days ago. but concealed the body so bunglingly that it was discovered ; on Monday, and he was cruel! v incarcerated 1 j in the common jai'. And now the Cleve- j i landers aro talking alioni breaking up the j custom by hanging Mr. McGillau. j i Kearney, Neb., has again been the ; j scene of a brutal mm der at t he hands of a ! i band of Texas herders. A party of thee j desperados came in with a drove of cattle, Thursday night, and camjied on tl.e Platte River, at the edge of town, ami left their horses go into a corn field. Collins, the owner, drove out tlie horses. The herders Friday morning went to town, got drunk, and returned to their camp and attacked Colt ins, shooting him five times and killing hint instantly. The citizens oiganized and s'arted in pursuit of the Texans. I loll Gate, a rocky obstruction in the channel of East River, New Yoik, is to be exploded next summer. Tho work of ex cavation has been done, ami now it re mains only to drill the holes for the nitro glycerine, and then puck them in the cold weather, and fire them when the warm weather comes. The engineer are very confident that this oceanic Hell ('a e will be heard of no more. But the Brooklv'n Aron says. tlnse who nnder-mine the j theological structure of the same name in I that city have not been so successful. j The damage done by the storm at J Galve.-ton was rather insignificant after 1 nil. In some of the stieets houses were floated from their foundations, ce llars were J filled and the goods, Arc., in them destroyed; a bridge was washed away, railroad tracks ' were tmn up and telegraph poles pros-' staled, but at no time was the city in dan- j ger of destruction. The disaster was bad j enough of course, but in view of the sensa- j tion.il telegraphic reports with which the 1 press has been filled for several days, the actual damage sustained is insignificant. i Win. H. Westervelt, on trial in Phi'a- , delphia for complicity in the abduction of litile Charley Ross, was on Monday found guilty on the last three counts of the in- ! dictment. Amotion for a new tiial was! made. Both the district attorney and the j Ross family deny the sensational story in 1 ,1... d . . . . . l .. Ti . . i ... . ... . ' . me '.-un.i,i,Y i rt-KH to lucenecitnat i;iia:iev 1 T ...... i i ... J ,! iwnneij Known ro oe still alive, and that there is a strong probability of' his being shortly recovered, that the prose- j cut ion in the Westervelt case have with- ! held some important evidence in further ance of n plan which promises to restore the lost boy to his parents, and that Wes tervelt is U have a King sentence and to be pardoned on the restoration of the lioy. The Pqe on Friday conferred upon the first American Cardinal the titular ju risdiction over a particular Roman Chinch which always accompanies that exalted rank. The Archbishop of New Yoik is now v nrnmai oi the Church of Santa Maria ! Sopra Minerva, one of the most interesting, and since its recent restoration bv Pius IN, ' one of the most beautiful of the countless ' churches of the Eternal City. It occupies the site of an ancient temple .r Mineiva, ' and has been closely connected in nioie ! modern days with the history of litertum : through the noble Casatenseusia:i Library which is housed in the adjoining convent. A curious water gauge also on the facade of n the chinch is well known to travellers, j which records the height reached by the i Titter in the greatest inundations of the last four centuries. j When the "limited" mail train arrived 1 at Elkhart, Ind., at 3:00 Thursday morn ing, it was twenty five minutes late a de lay caused by the heating of a journal box on the sleeping car. The distu.ee to Chi cago from Elkhart is 1G1 miles onlj-, and the engineer who took charge of the train looked doubtfully at the time table. His name is Francis Osgood, and his woik in carrying the train into Chicago fast enough to recover the lost time so strained his watchfulness and nerves that w hen he shut the i hroltle of his engine in Chicago eight minutes ahead of schedule time, he" fainted away, and for a few minutes it was re ported that he was dead. The announce ment caused great excitement. A large Iortton of the Chicago delegation break fasted with the postal officers, w hen com plimentary resolutions were passed and pleasant replies were made. Ten thous and tetters for Chicago were brought by the fast mad train for distribution. The New York newspapers, only a day old were sold in tho hotels at tho same price as the Chicago d.iilies. Tradesmen's Industrial 1 OF PITTSBtj OPEN TO THE 0 1 PIlKMllV VALUED AT $V t NOTHING EX:u- r.reri Fprrrtw,,,f ,., it ill, 1ht mos i-ov,-,.;, funis ami Artf ,,. " I htf first- h,s r.a.!s trn.lattrr from Jo f 1? M. lttriuj thr ( Htirr ( UnparaHe.ee. AtfacW Every Departmer.! A I I. l 1 lis r farmers' mmus m Reduced Fares on,-: roads. ,! TO QUIT BUSIX V Til i.f i Fine CLOTH! H th I. AT V r s : VI.: c- ,l 1I1 H frill !m- w.i t w :l v - w f BiBliEniOI!! 0o7e f,f V.,Mi-; JOIINSTC AV Ai. ii rs ! c rs. t ...-, nsiT-t mi-iii -( M!!i! s. 't i:-','. .1 .-.-! I . 1?it. Ii. . Vl4:. f. ll.trln:! 'Ii-t i Tfilii.-! ?.. --ii- t . 'lot UU-s. :i-H all .. 1,-r u' . VII Til 1IIH V. Wt I'.H W.n-F i:jkKS f.4T. i...ii-t !,.-.-; ...j.,. i-trt et from lit.- !... . s. 1 fl(p.C dttt VKtl Kill s-'l BARGAIN'S i Iiir-iirE- Jfrfrtfnrn. Ana 5M loHN IlKFIiT 'i.hnIi' John Libert &( (orrer M.in a.vJ Ft. T 0 1 1 IVKrr" AV. Accounts ttf Jlcrchanlni, business jt'rrjJr itJh;t ticjiti(ihle in till tnr'.'i ti-tf for sale. M,nit;j I L'ollcrtion .Mfttlr. .,- ru tc of Six- I 'erf rift, ftc tv lowed on Time .-oos.N. S'lvinys Iejtftsits W ftnd Interest C'o u,hi:U annually when dt-sirtd. A General B.inKinzHiniy l. PITTkRI'KI.11. PI Fr ttvw.u-.I f wt v -v.- r n-ss f,.!-. .f M I"i;,-! !:..- ' qiEi'Vvl :i liiu',-.-. l,-r tin- -h ' P ncatiorreryonnit roi irri-1 s.lrmitnlat anvtirm-. K " ' J-The "I It o x n V oi l r.f institution f tfi kin 1. in !r v.v.iv tnernl to tlie .w!Iic pn:i"sc."-- Bstnnrrf Pitt'lmrjeh !'.. The IrtrM nmJ l. t mipire'. IT" ohtsii.iej !nihi V. ImiiTi' n. For cireiilar ulr.? P. MTFi 3.-:?nieom.l r:!;" layer's Fru-1 T-.-.-r.r'pU'' (iV tor ure I nt.p1tiindeceheil-fnni-rfr';..ir:- Kp I,onltxr-tiincfv i " '' f. Vmn. wlTh K.rth rtr.t;tndr''''a-T.j ft . i cm vnnr GlAiCX. 47 Mint .f ..U. A.I f-r. - t K. - e- .VMETr-B mm. m. h mc a . . . . . i. I i r r,v ii ii ii i an-l Sit a of each won !' ; , I rltittiee in . '.i.".'' !' I'r 1 4o:).0U.l. As-r.t i:in:i''. u J. M . PATI V.K. Ijira:nic J one 2a, l;..-din. rnlllW JOIIXMl'S ' JibonsbttiU- j "WILL receive money " ",U mnl eoll--t not, . m"i E! " H. I' LAN k m. i ..... .'II' . ! Ill - - eitlrciin of KlM'ii"t'Urc n'i ,1 v,-. K. 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