csv rata ss nc blcl xst es& THE inu. EBENSBURC, PA., Fi'tfay Moinin, IT j The Harrisburg Patriot about two w?eks ago contained a lengthy ami intercstm; article on "the desti nction r of our forests," from which we publish : the snliioir.el o-rlrrtct. Th snhipct. i - Jill. 21, 1876. one that is beginning to attract Terr jlt,-t- ! cetieral attention throughout tire coun- Tur. PunloiiTs Digest swindle was tr3' i'ice the demand for timber for defeated in the House .it linn islun n- rail road Mirnoses lias become 9 ou Tuesday vens 72 ; navs 83. j enormous. That this riem.iiul must i.o.a I render our forests treeless of what is . John XV. Fop.net, it is announced, called hard wood, is quite apparent, will return from Kuroje about the , In anticipation of this event scientific middle of February, v hen it is to be men hare been experimenting with rail hoped he will find leisuie to explain road ties for the purpose of ascertain H about that 2.r,0u0 transaction in ing whether thev cannot be rendered comiccticn with the Credit Mobilier impervious to water and therefore to swindle. rot and decay. 1 hat the problem will yet be satisfactorily solved is fair to presume. If "it is not. what will le Philadelphia. Times for a copy of the , substituted for wooden rail road t?es ? "J((- Almanac for 18iG." It has ' This is a most important question and been prepared with great care and la- well worthy the attention which is now bur and. is a model of its kind. It ; being bestowed upon it. From the contains almost one hundred pages 1 article in the Patriot taking the num- and is replete with election statistics, j Ir of ties required for one mile of rail particularly those of PennsvLvania, as road in this State, which must be re v.ell as a vast amount of other useful : placed about every five yea is, a correct information. Xo man, and especially est imate can be formed of the vast no man who feels an interest in the 1 annual destruc tion of timber tliroiisrh- political affairs of this State, as well out the country for that ore purpose. Wr. are indebted to the editor of fie ? IjwI i una " ilk - I)eMcrtttl4! - - State Ctmimtttee. - Pursuant to call the Democratic State Committee met in Committee Room No 12, House of Representatives, Harrisburg, on Thursday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Chair men Wright called the Committee to order and after a few appropriate remarks, the j Committee ptuceeded to discharge the du ties which they bad met to transact.'1 The Scretary,George IT. Kuhn, called the list of members, when the following answered to their names ; ' . A. A. Laws, John W. Campbell, John E. Faunce. A. D. Boileau. Thomas A. M'- A kkw weeks ago, when the Republicans in the House were wasting so large a mea sure of buncombe in an Attempt to put the majority into a false attitude towards their soldier employees, it will be remembered that the Ohio Legislature hastened to their assistance with a set of spread-eagle reso lutions, severely reprimanding the Demo crats in Congress for Iheir "traitorous" conduct. Their 'wonderfully disinterested j patriotism has now met, we regret to say, i with a melancholy tumble. On Wednesday j hist, when the Republican majority in the Senate, having placed in nomination for a clerkship the name of an able-bodied Af- j tican. who had proved serviceable in local Devitt, James Atwcll, A. II. Ladner, Lico. I politics, were contentedly awaitinir the Pallat, S. L. Fairlamb, Allen IT.- Heist, discomfiture of the minority, they were Benjamin E. Dry, M. Longaker, W. Hays . startled by the nomination of a one decreed Grier, A. J. Stiucman, IL C. Raymond, J. I lieutenant, who had fought all through the H. Fngel, Wm. Gossert, John Stotzer, R. j war, from Foit Donelson to the battle of! JJentonviIIe, Is. C, March, 1865, a good Re Jones Monnghan, P. A.' Beamish, A. J. Darling, Delos Rock well, "J. Am merman, C. Hollenbeck, Robert Swincford, Jere. Carl, O. P. Bechtel, A.-J. Randall, W. J. Jaekman, E. W. Stehle, B. MTNead, T. J. Hover, R. L. Johnston. John II. Uhl, S. C. Thompson, Martin Williams, James I publican and voter for Governor Haves. as the Democratic candidate. The Repub licans saw they had fallen into a trap ; bat it was too late to retreat, and beinar j ashamed to crawl out, they elected the coioreu man. i nat done, their first tlwi't past as present, should be without a copy of this invaluable compilation. "In Pennsylvania, according to the report of the ami itor general for the year 1 s j 4, there. were 4,302 miles of TtiK Philadelphia Centennial folks , main line of rail war in operation with have succeeded in getting a bill re- j 94:i miles of double Hack and l.oOO ported by a Committee of the House ; miles of hidings. Adding the double at Harjistinrg impropriating fifty j track to the length of main Hire and thousand dollar. to constrnct a new ; leaving out of consideration the sid building for the use of the State on the ! ings for the purpose of this article we Centennial ground. Is not this ecu-j have 5,335 miles of railroad track to be tennial sub-ndy business becoming a furnished with cross ties and timber lruk too fcteep ? It ought to have an j needing renewal as often as once in end some time, but a? the A r.ierican J five years. Allowing 2,500 ties to a eagle is a!) ut to take its loftiest and mile of road it takes 13,337,500 ties to longest flight, we presume the money furnish the railways now in operation wilt be forthcoming, and even a further j in Miis state for five years, or 2,667,500 instalment if it is asked tor. Patri-! per year. This form of consumption oti-mi in these days is very cheap when j attacks the hard woods ami theyonng backed by the public treasury. timber, and allowing two ti-js to the tree, calls lor the annual destruction of 1,333,750 trees of the varieties in demand for this purpose. There is an average of one wooden bridge to every three miles of railroad, besides the wooden cars, passenger, freight, and water stations and engine houses and shops, which arc to be considered in the consumption of railroads for per manent way and whieh are in constant process of repair and replacement. Of late years, and partly in conse quence of scarcity and dearness of wood fuel near the lines of railroad. coal has largely displaced it for the --.i Thk I 1 1 1 appropriating a million and a half of dollars in aid of the centen nial celebration passed the lower branch of Congress last Tuesday by a luajoiity of IS votes. No man seri ously chiims that Congress has any power undei the constitution thus to dispose of the public money. It is .nothing but a nub., idy, and in the face of the almost unanimous vote in favor of Judge llolman's resolution at the commencement of the session against Mibsidics in till sh.ijies and forms. shows that some Ihinirs can be done as well as others. The ueoule. however. ' purpose of fiiL'l for locomotives are used to Conirressional iobs of this I leaving out of consideration this item character and will endure this one a3 ol" wood consumption, how long can they have the rest, with Christian for- t,ie forests of Pennsylvania supply the titude and resignation. increasing yearly demand for railroad Tub Mississippi Legislature, which is Democratic by more than a two tiiirds vote, last week elected I. (. C. Lamar to the United States Senate as the successor of ex-fiovernor Alcorn, whose term will expire on the 4th of March, 1877. No man in Congress enjoys in a greater degree the respect and confidence of its members than Mr. Lamar. His abilities are unques tioned, while his personal integrity, like the virtue of Cnesar's wife, is not only pure but above suspicion. Ue may be regarded as the most promi nent public man in the South. Jn all the attributes that constitute a man, what an impassible abyss there is be tween Lamar and that slimy and cor rupt carpet-bagger, Geo. E. Spencer, from Alabama. Toner, M. R. Wise. John Gilpin, George was "revenge," and they named for the H. Kuhn, Thomas Fagau, John Covle, T. next clerkship a one armed soldier of their O'Leary, jr., B.F.Morris, William Henry, .own choosing, expecting, of course, that M. Park Davis. , t)ie opposition would vote against him. I he following resolution was ottered by ; Rnt the Democrats had no intention of '. : n- l . I 1 t 1 ' V - . . We stated in our Isst issue that with that niimb'T commenced the tenth vol muecf the Freem.y. During the nine years that we have ha I control of it we have endeavored to make its col Thk proceedings of the Democratic State Committee, which met at Har risbiirg yesterday week, will be found elsewhere in our paper. The Com mittee decider! that the State.Conven tiou should be held at Lancaster, on Wednesday, the 22d of March next. There arc no State officers to be nom inated this year, and the only business for the convention to transact will be the appointment of Presidential elect ors and the selection of delegates to the National Convention. The ques tion now arises, how will the two rep resentative delegates from this county to the convention be chosen, the Sen atorial delegate beinsr conceded to Blair county ? Shall the Chairman of the County Committee issue a call for the election of delegates to a County Convention to elect them, or 6hall it be done by the County Committee? If a County Convention is called for this purpose, wo will have tweonven- i lions in the same year, in as much as Chairman Wright and adopted unanimous llesolred, That the Democratic State Com mittee of PcniiKvl vania most respectfully suggests to the Democratic National Com mittee the propriety, in this centennial year of our national existtmre, that the old State House, in the city of Philadel pTiia.be desig nated as a historic locality for holding the convention, and that the day be the 4ih of July, 1876. Several places were named as proper places for holding the next State Convene tion, nnme-, Harrisburg, Lancaster, Al toona, Washington and Reading. A vote was then taken which resulted as follows : - ' Lancaster had received 20 votes. Han is. burg had received 22 votes, Reading had received 1 vote, Altoona had received 3 votes, Washington had received 1 vole. A second ballot was taken which resulted ' as follows : Lancaster 21 votes, Harris on rrj 23, Altoona 3. Third ballot resulted as follows : Lan caster 24 votes, Harrisburg 23 voles . It appearing that Lancaster had received a majority of all votes cast, it wa resolved that the next State convention be held in that city. The following named members of the committee voted for Lancaster : Messrs. Laws, BonVau, Atwell, Ladner, M'DevItt, Pallat t. Fail lamb. Heist. Dry, Longaker, frier, Steinnian, Fcel, Beamish, Durling, Randall, Gilpin, Kuhn, Fagan, Coyle, O'Leary, Henry, Davis and Wright, chair man 24. The following voted for Haiiishurg : Messrs. Campbell, Faunce. Raymond, Gossert, Stotzer. Monahan, Rockwell, Am mcrnian, Hollenbeck, Swineford, Carl, Bechtel, J.ickman, Stehle, Xead, Boyer, Johnston, Uhl. Thompson, Williams, Ton er, Wise ah d Mori is 23. After considerable discussion, on motion of Mr. Coyle, of Allecheny county, Wed nesday, the 22d day of March, at 12 o'clock m., was agreed upon unanimously as the time for holding said convention. M. Park Davis, esq., ofleicd the follow ing resolution : Iirsolrd, That the Democratic prSH throughout the state is requested to publish these proceedings. Adopted unanimously. The Hon. Dclos Rockwell .offered the following resolution : . - Renlvpr1, That we hereby tenner onr wor thy chairman, the Hon. Hemlrick B. Wright, the thanks of the democracy of the state of Pennsylvania for the able and effi cient manner in which he discharged bis dutieR as chairman of this committee during the last campaign. The question was put by the secretary and adopted without a dissenting voice. On motion of Captain Pagan the com mittee adjourned to meet at the call of the chair. being caught uaijoinar. and thev at once made the nomination unanimous. Then I the Republicans, wild with chagiiu, threw j away an reserve, and nominated for the remaining office a one-armed hero, who, as the local report facetiously puts it, "had lost his hand while fighting a Republican saw-mill np in the Western Reserve." The minority offset this gallant fellow with their original candidate, the one-legged lieutenant, and once more compelled the majority to go on record as refusing office to the very men whoso claims on Congress they had so eloquently indorsed so short a time ago. Now let us hear from the organs. Is it that the Republican party loves the wounded soldier less or the able-bodied colored man more? Come, gentlemen don't all speak at once lI'hi!a. Times. A Bktravkd Hl-srand's Revenge. The little village of BetUville, Heneca county, near Tiffin, is shaken from centre to circumference. Il appears from infor mation gleaned from an exchange in refer ence to the aff.iir, that Mr. S. Norton, of the above village, has for some time sus pected his wife, during his absence from home, of being improperly intimate with a j Mr. Chapman. For months the husband kept bis own counsel and awaited events ; but at last he became, so troubled concern ing the matter that he s;oke to Chapman about it, but the latter nevertheless per sisted in continuing his visits to the house during Norton's absence. The other evening Norton hapi-encd to go into a store where Chapman ws loafing and almost immediately Chapman Sneaked out and proceeded directly to Norton's res idence. The husband's suspicions were aroused, and he went hurriedly home and 1 actually caught Chapman and Mrs. Norton in tlx ltter's spattmetit both talking earn estly and excitedly ou what they considered a private subject. Z The infuriated husband at once drew a revolver and snapped it at Chapman, but the weapon hung fire ; and as Chapman was making an effort to escape from the room, Norton caught hold of a coal oil lamp that was burning on the bureau near by, and hurled it at Chapman, striking him in the face. The lamp exploded ; the pieces of glass cut Chapman's face terribly, and the burning oil ran in streams of fire over his person, burning one of his ears almost off, destroying the sight, it is thought, of both eyes, literally cooking his breast and shoulders, and burning tho hair all off his head. The fife was at last ex tinguished, but it was feared that Chapman was burned so badly that he would die. We learn, however, that, he is now im proving. The physician who attends him says that he will doubtless lose both his eyes. iSandvsky Register. .1 t i , . .. .1 iim.ii tinsvill i l? iMIILT zilLCr Like urnns both useful and interesting to .,..,.; ,e c, . A i- i ! i . .i . F meeting of the State Convention to our Kiilisc riders nnd tn that. nil -n . " . c"uu"' w have devoted ourself to constant and unremitting labor. That is what the publ sher of a newspaper muni do if he hojes to retain his patronage, but es-leci-illy so if he is ambitious of in creasing it, as every newspaper pul lisher ought to How satisfactorily we have performed our duty leave our patrons to judge When we take into serious con-ideiation the constant de- iioiu unite a county HCKet. Jt seems to us that the County Committee is abundantly competent to select the delegates, and can do it quite as intel ligently as a County Convention. This is our view of the matter. We commend the subject to the careful consideration of Isaac Wike, Esq Ch airman of the County Committee. Mr. IlfssET, a Democratic member of the State Senate from York county, iu.uid on our time, oftentimes running ' ..m :,.f. i. i . I L 1.-1.1 i i;..i . for t,:e relief of the surviving soldiers v. fcn .nisi .net utiiLt ii.il l vq 0 1 rill in the oll'ee, we f. el and know that our jKst is ho one of leisure, but one or constant, unremitting tod. As we have already said, that is the penaltv of an editor and is not to e complained of, provided nlwavs that he is ade quately rewaroed font the publisher of a cou of the Mexican war, which provides for the payment of a bounty of 200 to every Pennsylvanian who served in that war. This is right and wc trust that the bill will pass in this centennial year, even though James Q. Blaine at nt-new Ppneral mnestJ bil1 f h ill tlionr.AMBf rtQi.l iiiin f.M liiaUl.n - . J m tlic . ,, - t : j rr.(.c of the iiol,Se of -Representatives in the whole community, and any one I of i,o tht J A.. r..- .: I "the company that went from this meat wm be forced to the same 1 , chu.on. Subscribers ,n .y be bad in cl,uli c t M. himself, and one in aoundancc most of whom, fll.v Jnhm?onnlm There may le Xrs predating their duty . do not fad to l,,,. if lhtre are wc cannot reeaUt em' l J l f - - i a n ru it tin ivi a r number who are criininallv remiss and ! .ssein t. th-nk that an editor is not made ot the s line material as other men and that his worldly wants and necessities are matters of secondary, if n it trifling, consider ilion How a say how many of the memliers of Capt. John W. Gearv's company from the Summit are 6till living, but their number is doubtless small. The money that the Legisla ture proposes to jikh from the State , treasury to purchase a copy of Pur- . . 1 . I i . f t v min oi or. unary uonesiy, as me woria , Ann iy,,rt fr r ;t " u goes, cm have the cheek to biibscrilw i wolli,i " h mf, llian nnv t. - .. ' j iis ri i f r a piper, read it every week for one pose(1 bount of ?2oo to lpv two an I even three years, and never ing Mcr ot the Mesici tuinK oi pacing ior it is one of uie Cambria countv. unsolved problems of American civil-1 T . fo our RubscniKMS who have ' ery surviv- exican war in ization. jo our RiiDscniKMS wnonavc ' Allegheny Covxty has a Stat. promptly met their obligations and . Senator named Wood, whose natural thereby en aided us to keep our head ! place is not in a deliberathe IkkI-, bfve water, we are profoundly J hut in the arena of a circus dressed in thankful, while to those who have the fantastic: . suit or a clown. His turned a deaf ear to onr reiterated ap ' preamble and resolution last week in peal in that respe.H. wc again repeat, , favor of making ground hog day ft le nd our determination i as irrevoca- gal holiday were not original with him, M a tho m of the Medes and Per-' but stolen from a memlier of the In dians, that their nam will be stricken diana Legislature at its last session, from our Iit and an apjal mde t The legislature should make an ap the law to enforce tha payment of ruopriation to purchase a cap and Vhafc w har labrou-ly an J b r-uV.Iy Wll for Wo-1. and then Jet him seek earned. fan interview with Birnura. Senatoti P.rTAN, in his I3eaver county pper, candidly admits that the cry against tho Catholics in the last; election was with out reason, and merely for political ad van tage. lie says: Now that the heat of political excitement has passed, we have little doubt, that the judgment of dispas sionate, candid men is that -there was nothing in the passage of tho Geghan bill in Ohio that warranted the inference that an attack was premeditated upon the schools of that or any other State by the Catholic church. The bill in itself was essentially right, and its substance was adopted by the legislature of Pennsylvania at the last session without a dissenting voice. Wo refer now to an act making an appropriation to the Western house ' of refuge which contains the following provi so: "And provided further, that minis ters of any religious belief may visit in mates at any time whether sick or well, and give them private religious instruction without the presence or interference of any officer of the institution." This Trovisr was inserted at the request of the board of managers or the institution, all of whom are 1 rotestants, we believe, and most, if ijoi an, nepuoucans. l no intention of the proviso was to secure to Catholic inmates tho l ight to receive visits from priests or miuisters of their own faith. This is jnst what the Geghan bill was, in substance, and there is not an intelligent man in the country who understands and believes in the principles of the Federal constitution a-ti Ivrkt.l A. 1 . . ...... nut iuib io jjive mo mem hern or aonereius oi every religious sect, or denom ination confined in our public institutions tho tight to receive spiiitual consolation from ministers of their own church. A sad story of betrayed innocence, sor row, shame, crime and death has just been developed in Lancaster. A young lady, the daughter of a hotel-keeper in that coun ty, got into trouble of a peculiar character and fled to the city, went to a house kept fov improper purposes, became a mother and subsequently died. Her remains were conveyed to the home of her paronts, who summoned two physicians. They investi gated the caso, declared the girl died from the effects of nn abort ion, and in conse quence of this action a doctor of Lancaster was arrested and held for the offense. The story of the doctor is that, some time ago, he observed a young lady sitting upon a doorstep opposite the railroad depot in Lancaster ; that he accosted her, assisted her to rise and gave her his professional address, in case sbe needed a physician. He was summoned, found the same girL who confessed she had ill used herself, by the advice of a married friend, and shortly after became the mother of a dead child. , 8he subsequently died, when the doctor ( hired a wagon, drove to her home in the country, brought her sister to Lancaster, i procured a coffin, in which she was placed ( and conveyed to her father's house. The doctor confessed he had told a thousand lies fto screen the family from shame and nAXOED by a Mob. A special to the Cincinnati Gazette says that Edward Wil liams, who, with .Mrs. Meeting, was arrest ed for the murder of the latter's husband, was taken from the jail last Saturday night, at Barboursville, W. Va., and hanged by a mob. The prisoners were assured by a minister that sufficient evidence of their guilt had been obtained and that the jail was surrounded by a mob of excited people, but both denied all complicity in the act, although the minister continued praying wilh them and asking for a confession. The mob finally forced the keys from the jailor, took Williams out, and placed him under a tree in the court-house yard, wheie, with a rope around his neck and he stand ing on a barrel, he made a confession, lie expressed a hope that the mob might ob tain God's forgiveness for their crime as he had for his, and declared ho was happily started on his journey homo to heaven. IIo died after fifteen minutes of terrible agony. Mrs. Meeting was then bionght out, and, placing her in front of the dead murderer, the crowd called for her confession. She said Williams had been her paramour for three years ; that she had been trying for the past three mouths to ooison her lni. band without success ; that Willian.s struck Meeling on the bead with an axe while he was asleep on Wednesday night, afterwardscuttinghisthroat. She assisted in destroying the evidences of the murder and in burying Meeling. She accused herself of beinc the cause of the murder, but liegged pitifully for life. Though the feeling was very strong against her and the crowd voted unanimously for her execution, no man could be found who would put the rope around a woman's neck, and she was returned to jail. Williams' body was left hanging unt il it was cut down by the au thorities next morning. Dr. King, of this city, says the Pitts burgh Dispatch, wrote a letter the other day explaining that Mr. Blaine was not a Catholic, and disapproving, anyhow, of the discussion of religion in politics. The New York Tribvnt says of it : We fear the Doctor has laid himself open to criticism by this expression of disapproval of the meth ods resorted to by the able and intelligent persons who are engaged in circumventing the Pope. And we are not quite sure that the admission that Mr. Hlaine's grandpa rents on his mother's side were Catholics will not be fatal. It has not been definite ly decided yet bow far the taint reaches, whether to the second or only the first gen eration. We cannot be too CI TO fill lr grarding against the "machinations of the Pope." They are said to be "insidious." Arthur Devlin, who anot unknown in these parts, is again on his travels. After one "f his craxy No Pooery lectures in Do ver, N. IL, recently, Devlin was assailed by a mob who had not even his excuse for making fools of themselves. But his was only a mild martyrdom to free speech, as '""i"" uninjureo. ueviin oneht to settle down to the editorial charge of some Know Nothing nnimr lilr !.. IT...-:.. sorrow, lmt declared he was Innocent of , burg TeUyraj in which he could roar any crime in this connection. StilL thent . airainst th Pmw Hn liia . ' . . .... . . - - ' " ' " MI U. I " my"ery enongn in the whole matter to j lie possesses admirable qualifications for warrant a full judicial investigation, and . such a position. Harriabura Patriot. that will take place at an early day. There ia great excitement iu Lancaster in refer- It is estimated that, on an average ence to the ease, and a most searching jn- ten washed or fraudulent stamps are mailed dicial inquiry will be mad into all the daily at each of the 83,000 postofflces in I raeta and eircumstaucea eounectcd with the the country, thereby involving a loss to a affair. the treasury of about $8,811,500 naully. yews and Otlier Xotitiff?. By a fire at Soochow, China, 1,000 houses were burnt. There are five counties in Georgia in which there is not a hired man. A family of four persons in Montgom ery county have died within the past nine months. . - A widow baa just died in Rome and left a quarter of a million dollars iu cash to the Pope. The business of the New York Post office amounted to thirty-live million dollars last year. There are 570 prisoners iu the western penitentiary, a larger number than ever be fore confined there. Suicides are common in Erie city. It stands at the head of all other towns in the state in this lespect. Mr. Charles O' Conor says he is improv ing rapidly, and considers all danger from his recent illness past. A hero of the late war, named Philip Clancy, has been left a fortune of $60,000 by a relative in Dublin. An old man named John Fergnsson has died in Emyvale, County Monaghan, Ireland, at the ripe age of 109 years. Mrs. Corvart, of Dawson county, Ga., with thirteen children growing up, recent ly preseuted her husband with triplets. A man named Masters, of Jefferson county, is said to have fallen heir'to a for tune ii. Saxony reaching into the'millions. Thirteen persons were killed in a rail road accident near Huntingdon, England, Saturday, among whom was a son of Dion Boucicault. There is agatn a painful rumor at Washington that Grant has written a letter declining something or other. If true, it will be the first time. A girl, one of a bridal party of tourists, was recently blown off the highest cliff of the Giant's Causeway iu Ireland, and of course instantly killed. Mr. Cooper has an orchard within about twelve miles from Santa Barbara, Cal., of 12,000 almond trees, 1,000 English walnut trees, 5,000 olive trees, 0,000 grape vines, G,fKK) eucalyptuses. " - Thif-being leap year Miss Belle Harper, of West Virginia, went for a fellow with a piitol. Fhe was incited to this defense of her rights by his refusal to accept her offer of marriage. A lake a mile and a half long by a mile wide is said to have been discovered in Idaho, which is so densrly inhabited by tiont that they appear along the shores in immense numbers. The Philadelphia revival is fo be con tinued. Conceit hall has been rented for tho pmpose, the freight, depot being no longer needed now that Moody and Sankey have gone elsewhere. A Brooklyn tramp, hungry and savage, threatened, a few days since, to cut off the head of a bishop the Right Rev. Bishop Loughlin and the ears of his servant girl, if he did not get bread. David L. Fleming, managing editor and part proprietor of the Pittsbuieh Ga ftte, died Friday morning, of brain fever, lie was a native of Chester county, and about forty years of age. David Ilassinger, of Beaver township, Snyder county, is eighty-six years of age and resides on the same farm where his grandfather settled. The farm is now oc cupied by the fourth generation. The Schuylkill coal exchange held a meet inc. Jan. 25, and agreed to srop work from Feb. 5th to March 11th. They also adopted a resolution providing for con tinuation of last year's basis daring 1S76. An Owensboro (Ky.) dispatch reports a peculiar accident there. A three vear old son of Dr. C. E. Cottrill, while playing with a tin whistle, fell to the pavement, driving it through his mouth into the brain, causing instant death. Compulsory voting is advocated as a cure for political evils by Mr. P.etl.nne, a memler of the Ontario Legislature. He has introduced a bill which would punish by a fine of five dollars every man who might vote but did lo t. Prof. Mosler of Germany is now treat ing phthisic, or pulmonary consumption, by making a hole through the wall of the chest and drawing off the pus with a sy ringe, jand afterward washing out tho ulcers with weak carbolic acid. About forty houses were burned down on Wednesday uight, at Apollo, Armstrong COUIitv. rniisintr a !, .f "".n ooo Tt gmated in a shoe store, by the explosion of i.tt :.(-. it? ini, huh was not got unaer Control till about midnicrbt. A man iu Iowa is credited with having built tho smallest steam engine on record The little beam weighs one pennyweight and seventeen grains, is complete and sym metrical and when steam is applied it runs Biiiuoiuiv ami SMips swecuy. .-v cnienniai pig nas oeen born in Kentucky. Its distincnishing character istics are a perfectly hairless body, eyes as mi an Mieep.s, ears UKeiuoseoi Hie hare, and a horn, several inches long, project ing from the top of its head downward. A citizen of Stonington, Conn., has an old button which was ploughed on iu t , , . . . I one oi nis neina. nnannrr t im rii-n rr '.i. . - n . ,,n.-u I mgton s first inauguration, and with an inscription showing that it was made with others in commemoration of the event. jura. AiCKenzie, the runaway Canadian wife and mot her. has cmrm lu rr,m Ti.;i adelphia to Montreal with her father. The upshot of the scandal will doubtless be a divorce suit on the part of the injured hus band, and the possible reunion of the guil ty lovers. After living together 32 years and ac cumulating $ 10,000.000 or property, Mr. and Mrs. Alviriza Howard, of San Francisl co, have a suit for divorce, on the ground of desertion, although they live but a few hundred feet apart. They are both over CO years old. A large vessel was recently found sev eral feet below the surface by some work men at Chatham," England, who were mak ine excavations. Seven guns, a quantity of shot, some tobacco pipes and a coin dated 1633-were among the articles found on board. Ex-Governor Francis Thomas, of Mary land, lato minister to Peru, while walking on the track of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, near his home at Frank ville, Garrett county, on Saturday afternoon, was struck by the helper of au engine and instantly killed. A Chicago insane woman resolved, as a religions sacrifice, to starve her five chil dren to death. She locked them in a room, and for three days gave them nothing to eat or drink. Cold added to the suffering of hunger, and they weie in a pitiable con dition when found. .. Taylor, a young negro at Keda- lia, Mo., has gone mad and believes him self to be the Saviour. In bis paroxysms he recites whole chapters and even books of the Bible without missing a word, a feat all the more remarkable because he cannot acad and was always a vicious boy. When Dudley P. Ely, a wealthy citizen or Norwalk, Conn., was three years old his nurse put f in a Hartford savings bank. He has never added to it or collect ed any part of it, but recently he had the bank book written up. The f5 had been there 56 years, and Mr. Ely found that the interest had increased it to $175. Marshall Crain, one of the noted Illi nois outlaws who made a national reputa tion Tor Williamson connty in that state as the scene of a most horrible vendett, was banged January 21. He confessed the murder of William Q.. -.1 l nr ?'?,ni7i t,,e Uttor person he was hired to killed for 1300. THIS mil NOTIFY THIS of onr intention to put skw and lower prices on muei, of L The tear's closing oct balb will commence at week-day mokxixg, and CONTINUE UNTIL OUR FALL a IS SOLD THE IMVTIV FACrJ iSt We have made up too mast OVERCOATS and SUITS for thi8 v our Stock into Cash needed for 1876, we will make eertain ,-' anniwpnf v ivn irrrn WPIlPSn4V TIP-OVM ti Pn r-..,, " ' 1 ir - - j--'i u K.H r f w litu t ' .... iloi viriuo ouu VUI VIA & L, SHU eVeQ a trart many of our. present prices. To be tcry exact in ttating this matter, a trc do not intend t7t jt a or euftom of our house tJiall mislead the public in. the least particular ' " per to say, that this 2fark Dovtn. it7iill it applies to ' A THOUSAND AND MORE OVERCOATS A THOUSAND AND MORE UUSIXESS COAT HUNDREDS OF DRESS COATS, SEVERAL THOUSAND VESTS, SEVERAL THOUSAND PAIRS OK PANTS and extends Utroughout oar house, yet there are some lots in vhkh i t been marked at close prices,) tee shall make no change. We desire to axsockce that this is Our FINAL and ONLY Mark Down this & . So that NONE NEED WAIT rou Lower pliItEi " The BTr.r we take will wonderfullt aid those wno fuel iike f The Terms of the Sale are the usual Terms of our U 1. No Second or Altered Price One Fix ed Price. 2. Cash from All, to warrant Low Prices- . The Contract on our pait, tor return the money, i a paiur the i- . case (provided goods are returned unworn). 4. A Pull Guarantee given for each garment. The Stock we offer is all new, aud is uol "bkit.hi" or Sviionvul- OUR OWN CAREFULLY MADE CLOTHIN; It will be remembered that our stock always embraces the imk rT stantial coons, and that evert size and mi ate is prodded f,.r both It will also be borue iu mind that Here is but ONE OAK HALL, au -. the corner of- f 1. SIXT1I-SIXTIT-SIXT1I-SIXTII r Uull vnti rviticir stioots. t Hoping tot a visit from each reader, and that our friends will pass thisKiK to a!l their fiiouds iu the country, We are Very Truly, ABEU'Hl . At Viiginia City a few days since, Lama Chrystie, an inmate of Rose Herja inin's dance-bouse, died, and the cal mistress exhibited the corpse at.a qnar . - i , .i . . ler ucdo, me proceeos, together with Hie tirofits derived from tho c-i 1 ,,f 1: quors and cigars, being applied towards ll.A f . , . . 1 J. M. fllltfliilic-s rtf Vnwtn!l discovered in the head waters of Kern riv er: 10.500 feet above the kt a nur ot.1 beautiful fish, which he named the "golden trout." Its color is like that of the tfold fish, but richer, and dotted with black spots a quarter of inch in diameter, and wilh a black band along its sides. Tl. T- r . . . . . iiii5 i reasurv l 'etiartincnt fKciOes ' that the sale of plug tobacco for retail pur- j poses in any lmt the original stamped pack- ago is unlawful. To comply with this manufacturers will le compelled to put up I largo quantities of the weed in three, fie ! and ten pound boxes, or lose the custom of the multitude of small dealers who cannot invest in a caddy. It is remarked that the ptesent winter closely resembles that of 177tV-one hundird years ago. The military operatiims of! Washington and others, depended on the j condition of the weather, and hence the; character of the winter referred to is clear, ly mentioned in the history of those times. The January of 1776 was mild aud plea- i ant, as it is tins year. Ex Gov. Charles Jackson who died in Providence last week, used seven tv-nine, was, it is believed, the oldest manufacturer of textile fabrics in the United States, lie was noted for severe treatment of mill ojcrativcs. His factory at Jacksonville was kept running fourteen hours a day, and his employees, many of them girls, were poorly compensated. A Mr. Pemlwton, of Jackson, Mich., proposes to exhibit at the Centennial two curious specimens of forestry. One is a section of a hickory tree which springs from two separate roots and unites in one trunk above. The other is a section of a water leech, from which a branch springs and after growing some three or four feet again unites with the trunk. A horrible murder occurred near Tor onto, Canada, on Saturday afternoon. Samuel Hopkins, contractor for a bridge, was noticed bv the wrtrkmon tn I... I,ll ing from a cut in the neck. They repaired w me uou.se, wnere tney found his wife lying on the floor stabbed with a butcher knife and her skull crushed in with a hoe. Hopkins was immediately arrested. Mis. Hannah Stover, of Howdoiham, Me., has a right to be regaided as a hero ine of the Centennial year. She was born on the Fourth of July, 17T6, at nearly the same hour when the great bell was ringing out the news of the Declaration from the old hall in Philadelphia. She is in good health and hopes to celebrate the hundredth anniversary of the uatiou'g birthday iu July next. The Tribune remarks that "there are many indicationsjtbat Mr. Blaine is rally ing from the bad efforts of his amnesty speeches." He doesn't "rally" so much as he "falls tiar.t" nn hio c.- . . : .. . - un.ljMlUrVnr. But the Tribune's candidate will never ral ly from the political misfortune of having had a pious Catholic mother and one or two feminine relatives in a convent. The K. N'a will have uo such candidate for Presi dent. Alvin and Charity Haywood, husband and wife, lived together in extreme poverty in Sau Francisco for many years. Mining speculation has enriched theiu to the ex tent of ten millions; and now, when both are over sixty year old, they have decided that they will Iks happier apart. The enor mous estate is to be divided evenly between them by mutual agreement, and he is to allow her to get a divorce on the ground of desertion. At the bottom of a mound cut through by railroad ditcheis near Alton, 111., Ust week, inclosed in a bard ceniect, perfectly water-tight, were round large quantities of beads, shells, necklaces, stone implements and weapons, including a spear about two feet long, made of clear white flint, with a handle wrapped with copper wire. It is thought the spear was a present to the mound-builders from Father Marquette or La Salle two hundred years ago. A curious old bell is to be hung in the belfry of the main building of the Connec ticut Screw Company at TarifTville. It beats au inscription, only part of which can be deciphered, showing it to have been cast at Rouen, France, in 1787. From that place it was brought to Newgate, the old Simsbury copper mine prison, where it did utrv!i till tk nun -- -J : m , 1 be bell baa a considerable amount of fcil- nr in If 4. ln a . www una iuhi m uuo VOUO. The discovery f human K f the old San Audita -il'p;i explained by the fact ttat t! the Inca race were removed f.i order of a Spanish irt r v, rxJ. the hospital walls. Tlw taw! moval was that the bulla it borhood of Cuzco weielis.i!T..o presence amng them of thf 1 honored dead was a oMiiiiu', insurrection. The Iiti'ti-:::;j.-yifice many victims i:i Uxt. t ished there only a few yri-. Supeiiiitendent VValihif V has information w l.ich T V' important in regard totl.env as, the dynamite fiend. v,;U any particulars until li 1 if ted the reports that helis'"" believed that the iiif itmst c : was obtained from lVrik that it relates to a tiansw-.U : in that vicinity. The .-!. if the facts aie as tirv -t -he they will astoniOi tl-e w-'i limbed. It is possible Tb r thimr to do with tlin c;i:rr"( A frightful aori.l.'iit nary 2!, "at the IalU lle .! sre; Allegheny. A lj:rt i heated to a white kea. njMa-' the rils when a catcher tj t John (JrafT attempted t f pinclicrs. Unluckily lie miw! iron striking him hetvTn : passed th rough and into the l:r and the heat toeether rursi": downward until it fell totbfr unfortunate man wasimmfdK to his home near by. and Dr. J summoned. Two otlier rli's' subsquontly called, and wrj!" to relieve f be sufferer. Ths hoje of recovery, lie has been married b nt we ti Jonathan Case, of wralthy. and eighty vpct is young widow charmed tim. ' ried her slilv. His wedd;rcr ? 1,000 in cash. ".Viw. f " the new wife, "get all ymrV zages. and money, ai d brFf " I will take "good care ef t He went, but his fan-.i'y the marriasre. imprisoned lurcr declaring that he slmnM wife. He had made a vi'lr property,'Hnd they did not "' ot of it. Mrs. Case Fent c stout driver to get the :'& irl fort failed. Then she V aidel by a hired man, tx1'; the door of which were l'' band shoutetl encouragement window, and pistol rere 1- both parties, but she had tr" out him. The courts Montreal was esritrdc' f, clojMmentof Mrs. Marv Mackenzie, M. P.. -f M ,tr?i tenant P.rydees. of 1('' vice. The wpmsti dren. A teleffram f ' New York, where a jf!:""--them at the Fifth Aw' were taken before a j;K'. on a HiiVih erptj$. Tl Mrs. Mackenzie pnmii'' . treal with her brother in t Come to the city in rx'J' l", left the court together. t few hoars the 'iT. smiths" wa verifle.1- T, ant, the lady ar-d l!t,(!. est, and it w fninJ i repeclive LwtyinK l'- ti other. Thri"i'iil'"7,, ties rHli:ere.l Mr. ana . PhinixvilK roomS'l -Ul h tek riiilaoelt t'- A Mecklenbure pr ' lowing historical i-c d' attempt of Thoni Mosel: In the sprinew ' fleet lav in the harN J Master-"ei.eral of tb tay Wransel a te , Sweden on board tbT Plume on board the 1 j H wished to send off ' & of the two vessels. "J, , shipped the one to 1 r ral's ship sto.l already magaiine a noie . chests as from c11!; opened, and a mec'; ' clockwork as f""'J,L fire-steel and a '0,'l'..tf them powder, ldtcli, . shipper of the chet. a or -of Barth, rretenoed to; chests from three cit', t, was re polled to have JVj;i Danisli factor at Lutec on the 5th of July.