TIlTcpRinfiftMlll. EBENSBURC, PA., Friday Morning, - - June 15, 1877. ,, ' M. 1 Dtmocnttic Comity Convention. u j The P-inorratie voters of the several j Wards, ltoroiighsand TownshipsorCaml.ria j County ar reonesleil to meet At the places for. holding the g. n. ral elections, On Sittitrtln.v, Ju! 7, IS77.- j and eWt tw-o delegates to represent them In i County Convention, to be held iu the Court j J louse, in i.hnstmrg, on Mon.l).Jnlr . ivn, J at one o'eloek, v. M., to nominate a County ; Ticket, select one Senatorial ami two Io-p- i resentative delegates to the Siate Conven- j tiop. to make a chamre. if thought advisable, , in the present system of electing de.l-gates . and nominating candidates, and to transact. other business. I The polls will be open in the r.oroughs , between the hours of 3 a id 7 o'clock, v. M. : 'l Tuwn"1,il, ltu " il,!d j O clock, 1. M. lly order of the County Committee. L. 1. Wooi.kikk, Chairman. Johnstown, I'a., June l, lSn. I A very large niee P .. .... , . ting of the political , ; )( ex-Governor Hen- and personal friends of ex dricks was held in Masonic Hall, Indian apolis, on last Saturday night, to bid good bye to that distinguished gentleman piior to his depaiture for Eurojie, where he pro- iwwlu tn rfin:iiii fur three months. I . S. ,i -i j ,t ,,. ! Senator M Donald presided over the meet- . , ii tv... . e Ami c imolifia mtiilt. IkV 11:111 ClllU u uii v 'i . " ....... w j - - Yooiliees, Governor Hendiicks, Governor Williams, lion. Win, S. Iloltnan and Judge Gooding. In the couise of his brief re- marks Governor Hendricks, in referring to the fraud by which Mr. Tildeu and him self were cheated out of the offices to which they had been honestly elected, said : JU-rc:irtei- the man who is elected President i . . . - i . i... .i... i ..1 1. ! or the I iiiti u suites ty i ho voice ami juu- meiit of the American people must lie iiiautru.- rated. Governor Hendricks and wife sailed from New York on Wednesday. The Democ racy of the count rj' unite in w ishing them a prosperous voyage and a safe return. Wiikx the Emperor of Ilussia, in tho early part of last week, passed over the I railroad through a portion of Houmanhi, a Turkish province, on his way to Bucharest, the headquarters of his army, the most un usual precaution was taken for his personal safety. That part of Koumauia has re cently been suspected of being a gathering place for Poles ami other turbulent char acters, intent, in Russian opinion, on the assassination of the Emperor, if a fit op M)i tunity presented itself. To prevent the success of any attempt of the kind a loco- j stigation of Prince Bismarck to gag the motive, with a car attached containing a French. It is possible, and even probable, squad of secret police, was run a short dis- j too, that the ctowned heads of Em ope have tauce in advance of the train containing ; urged on tho would-be usurpeis of the the Emperor and his attendants, as well as j French government. a similar triin behind it. That theie are j France under the Republic has, since 'ho hundreds of exi'cd Poles, broken in fortune j fali ,,f Napoleon III., enjoyed greater pros jet treasuring up the memory of their perity than she ever before knew. Xot many wrongs, scattered all over Europe, only hasshe paid an enormous w ar iiidemni any of whom would regard it as the most ty to Germany, but by judicious legislation, glorious act of patriotism to lovcugc 'nrs i which made her paper money a legal tender country's sad fate by taking the life of and her refusal to entertain the u;ea of a Russia's Czar, is not at all doubted. Not resumption of coin payments, shehasaccu many years ago lie made a narrow escape ; mulated in her treasuiy over if-lUO, 000,000 liom assassination near l aris at me nanus of a Pole, when he was on a visit to the Emperor of Fiance. How true it is that ' uneasy lies the head that wcaisacrowu." Thk Chaiiman, together with a small fragment of the Republican County Com mittee, met somewhere in this place on Statin day last and tlected Wm. M. Jones, of Ebensbiirg, and W. II. Storey, of East Conemaugh, Representative delegates to the State convention. John T. Harper, of White township, was recommended as Senatorial delegate, and a resolution adopt- cd instructing the delegates in favor of i John A. Lemon for Auditor General. Sat urday, September 1st, was fixed for holding the delegate election, and Monday, the 3d, for tho meeting of tho county convent ion. Tho leading Republicans in this, end of the county appeared not to feel the least inter est in the business of the committee. Even tlie-'old Republican war horso" of north -etn Cambi ia turned his hack upon the town and betook himself to the country to attend to his own business, evidently impicssed with the bulief that the manufacture of shook, dull as the trade is at present, is I more profitable than the mnnuufacturc .f .... .... .. . . , I delegates to a State convention, to take ( part in the empty honor of setting up a j ticket only to see it knocked down. Tho , Republican party iu Cambria is suffering I trout tlie sauio uiy rot ol JJtteism wincii so seriously afflicts its ranks throughout the State. Wk will publish next week the prospect, us of the New York Sun "for the campaign against fraud," These words mean of course that tho Sun, will in the future, as n has in the past, wage war to the bitter end against the present national adminis- tration, which was brought into existence by a fraud upon the American people, through the forms of law, as outrageous as it was unparallekd in the history of the country. In order to make this wai fare of the Sun effective, it invokes recruits from every quarter toco-operaio in me movement didatc. It was Darsie's misfortune, how ami lend it a generous support. As the ever, to have been born in Scotland, and Sun circulates and is eagerlyread in every ! tjlilt fact 8C.llctI ,,is p,,iilicai fato with the nook and corner of the Hnd, we know of kow Nothing fanatics', who, in their l-jdge no other journal that can be so jK.wetful meetings, pledged themselves to sunport and effective in the crusade in which it has ( Mott. Of this secret action of the dark embarked. If it talks plainly, and if its lantern order Darsie was blissfully ig bur sting often huits, it is because of the. wide ant untiI 1,0 discovered that. Mott had dc- and increasing spread of ofhcial turpitude Vl ' o l ft ,JM):W ,Ie . . . , knew then what a crime it was in Know- and the absolute necessity of thorough ro- : Nothing estimation to be a countryman form in all the branches of the general as' of li diert Hums and Sir Walter Scott. well as the Slate governments. That tho : ,r- Molt a8 afterward elected to the ,., t. , , ., Sta'c Senate by tho democrats of his dis- pages of the are as Interesting as ihey ; triclf a1(1 ,S(to tLe CollstiUltiullHi c,ou. arc pungent, is shown from the fact that vcutiou of 1S73. the private Secretary of Mr. Hayes recent J m t n. i i . ly requested Mr. Dana, Us editor, to send j Thk Ohio greenback convention met at u copy of it to Ihe White House, to be Columbus on last Wednesday week, adopt jdaced on file, but as the ju ice of subscrip- ( td a plat form and nominated a full Stale tarn was not enclWd, the request was very ticket, with Stephen Johnson, for Govern piompllyand very properly declined, and or, at its head. There were only thirty ji a result the lay of the .9m n do not ilht delegates picsent, which would seem to mine the t xeenlivo mansion. So able," indicate that tho movement is not likely to ; feat Jess and independent a newspaper as prove as formidable as ita friends boasted Ihe New York Sun richly deserves nil the increase that Can be given lo ils present immense circulation, which we I rust for thr s ike of the country and its cht ribbed institutions will booh Imj illimitable. The French Crisis. Tlie excitement in France occasioned by j i tlie resignation of the Republican ministry, : j in consequence of the dictatorial letter of ' ; Piesident MacMahon to 31. Jules Simon, j of tlie lOtlr ult., the subsequent appointment . liy the President of a ministry with the) ' ... ,. . ., , , , .. Due He Broglte at its head, and the pro- rotation of the assembly in order prevent RM im.j,y Hlto u,e motives of tho Presi- j ,.,. i dent for his hasty and uulooked for action, ! which was about to bo set on fot by M. r;:imuetta, of the Left, and which for a! f d of , "lar government wi h grave apprehension for the safety of the Republic, has some- j what subsided, leaving: the conspirators in ! j a quandary and the people defiant and con- fident of ult imate" triumph. The caise )f lbe c (P ((((t was ,,ie . . intrigues of the monarchists by whom France is continually cursed, embracing the several prollinate breads of Chambord- ists, Orlcanists (Botubons), and Bonapait- isls The Bourbons, who are represented . 4, ,, . ... . , , , by the Count de Chambord, who styles iiimscit Henri v., ana tlie uneanists, oi , ' which faction the Count de Paris is the .... head, had long been rivals, but some two o l ll I CO iu.113 ago iney cuuiim imo t. j compact by which it was agreed that in .i. .. .i. .7 :.... the event of the success of their united ef forts to subvert the government of th'e peo- pie and re-establish the monarchy, the " Count de Chanibord, who is considerably j advanced in years, would be King, with i the right of succession reserved to the i Count de Paris. Under this agreement both of these factions have been plotting in concert, nd the letter of McMahon to Simon is supposed to have been dictated by the Due De IJroglie, the arch-conspirator of the llighf, or monarchial party, with uie v;cw uf paving the way lor the nion .. . archv 1V precinitatinsr the present crisis before the corning elections would have permanently established the Republic, which they would most assuredly do if they were conducted by the municipal of ficers of the nation, Hence the necessity in the minds of the conspirators of a change of ministry and the consequent removal of the obnoxious officials, to be followed by tho appointment in their stead of men known to be in sympathy with their dernier retort of defeating an honest expression of the popular will at the ballot-box. The desperate strait of their cause, is seen in the llimsy pretext setfoith in MacMahon's letter that Simon had failed to appose the passage of the repeal of the press law of 1875, which was originally made at the in in specie, or four times the amount at pres ent in the treasury of the United States, which is of course a very tempting bait to the avaricious minds of the royal brood of vipers who are plotting against her peace ami liberties. Once let the Republic have a successful experiment in Frarce and the forco of its example will be so powerful with the down-trodden slaves of monarchy in Europe that the logical result will be a revolution iu politics, -which will forever w ipe out those hereditary dynasties which have lo;ig been the bane of the old nations of Christendom. It is for this reason that the monarchicsof Europe aid and encouiagethe ; trench pielemlers, with the hope that on j tho ruins of the Republic a monarchy may bo erected as a prop to their own toMering j thrones. Rut this hope is without found. i ; tion in fact, for in no country is the Re i publican sentiment stronger or more potent i than in France. The votaries of monarchy ; may diduge the land in tho IiI-hmI of itscil i i.ens and achieve a tcmpoiaiy success, as ; they have dono on several occasions within J the past century, but the will of the people ! will at. length triumph di'spite the machin ' at ions of kingly usurpers, and the advo . cate-R of the imvink might of kings will bo made to feel that the "authority of the temporal ruler depends upon the consent of the governed," and not on any right in ,ieiet m ,ie individlIf, b .. f , lineage, military prestige, or past services to the nation. 1. S. Since writing the above, the news from Pai is indicates that the Hourbonists now suspect that MacMahon has all along been acting in the interest, of the young Napoloon as the future ruler of France, and that his mother, the ox-Empress Eu genie, is intriguing with the same end iu i view. Hon. n kn it y S. MoTTdicd at Milford, ; Pike county, on yesterday week, in the ' GCthyearof his age. In 1S54, when the Kuow-Xolhing patty was first organized. Mr. Mott was the regularly nominated candidate of the Democratic party for Canal Commissioner, and George Darsie, of Pittsburgh, a man of ability and admit ted iKM'sonal integrity, was the Whiff can- it would. We are decidedlvof tlm oniniou that to the square mile Ohio contains more deep oliiicians and more profound states men, to say nothing about office-seekers, thau any other six Slates iu the Uuiou. It is a satisfaction to know that the In dian problem is fast approaching a settle ment and that the expense, hardship and danger of au annual military campaign against the belligerent savages west of tho Missouri river will be avoided in the futme. Since the beginning of March nearly all the leading hostile chiefs, with their war riors, their aims, and their ponies, have come to Red Clond, Spotted Tail, and oth er Indian Agencies, and quietly surrender ed to General Crook, or some other officer in command. The surrender of the ablest and most troublesome of all the Indian leaders, the renowned Crazy Hoise, and his band, took place on the Cih of May. He will bo remembered as the chief who met tho ill-fated Custer in battle last summer, in Montana Territory, and inflicted such terrible slaughter on his command. He and his warriors said that the peace he had made would last and not be broken. The only large fighting force of Indians which has not yet surrendered is Sitting Bull's band, lie is supposed, as is his custom when matters become too hot for liim south of the Yellowstone river, to have crossed the boundary line into the British posses sions. The important question of distrib uting and maintaining the large number of these Indians now at the agencies will be disposed of during the summer. If this can be done satisfactorily our Indian wars will be over, except perhaps with the Apaches in Arizona, the most blood-thirsty and treacherous savages on tho continent. They have repeatedly been compelled to make peace, only to be followed by their again taking the war path, dealing death and destruction wherever they roamed. D EST R VCT I V E FlUE AXI GREAT LOSS OF Like. The most disastrous fire ever expe rienced in Bridgeport, Conn., occurred on Thursday night last. At 11:30 a light was discovered in the fourth stoiy of G rover, San ford & Sons' factory. The flames were first seen in the dyeing or mixing room, in the northwest corner of the third story of the main building, and running along that floor were communicated by the dummy to the stories below. While volunteers were removing the goods from the office, a one story sti net ure, suddenly and without warning the back and front walls of the factory fell, leaving the two highest walls unsupported. The one adjoining the office leaned outward, and as a shriek went up fiom the specta tors, fell upon the roof of the ollice, crush ing through to the basement, and burying those within. One man, who escaped w ith a gash, stated that there were a dozen ! men in the ruins and already eleven bodies have been removed. Nearly all are fear- j fully crushed and more or less burned. San ford's loss on the building, machine- 1 ry and stock will reach about two hundred and fifty thousand dollars; insurance, one hundred thousand dollars. There were about fifteen thousand hats ready for ship ment, tho most of which were destioyed. The hat shop gave employment to two hun dred and fifty hands, and was to have started on Monday with a full force. San fords say they will sell or lease rather than put up a new factory without a better wa ter supply. They had a hose on every floor, but no wafer could be had. Two bodies not fully identified next day prove to be I hose of James Coyne, bill pos ter, and John Killingbcrg. The latter was only recognizable by a hand, from which he had previously lost fingers, and a tiuss worn on the body. This completes tho hstol tlie dead, eleven in all. The Wonders of Telegraphy. A patent has just Wen granted to Loring Pickering, tine of th editors and proprie tors of. the Ereninj Bulletin and Morning Call, of San Franciso, for a method of rapid telegraphing of fac similes of stereo typed plates. It is- claimed that by this process au entire p.ige of a newspaper can be transmitted by telegraph in from fifteen to thirty minutes, delivering tho copy di rectly from the instrument in such form that it can be handed immediately to the printers. Iu other words, (he copy will be a substantial reproduction of the original, except that it may be given iu a larger sized letter if so desired. The Btereotyoe plate requites no prepaiation for the pur pose of telegraphic transmission other than the filling of all its depressions or spaces between the faces of the letter w ith a non conducting substance which may be quick ly applied, the faces of the type being left clear by means of au equally simple pro cess. The plate thus prepared is placed upon a cylinder arranged to revolve tapid ly, so as to present each successive letter to lingers attached to a travelling frame. As the cylinder bearing the plate revolves, the frame gradually advances by the oper ation of a screw ; and thus each and every line is successively presented to the fingers or magnetic points already mentioned. Necessarily the circuit is open when the points aro passing over the nonconducting surface : but as often as the metal type pre sents itself to said fiugeis the circuit is closed, and the corresponding magnetic points or pens at t he qpceiving stat.ion'niake the record theie in the same, letter as the original, delineated in a series of fine linps. j either upon chemically-prepared or ordina ry paper lixed iip-m a corresponding cylin der 'A, said receiving station. Matisiiat, M'Maiio.n's Policy. The London Time" Paris special of June 1 lib gives the following report of President MacMahon's reply to the Legitimist depu tation : ".My duty forbids that I should risk a change of the elements composing the present Cabinet, seeing that it has of fended none of the pjwers with which France is friendly. As to the Legitimist candidates, any Legitimist candidate really having a chance of success wil! be openly and loyally supported by the Administra tion at the elections. The question of pro longing mf office will not be considered during the prorogation of the Chambers, and I shall lend myself.to no coup tie. main of any kind whatever nor to any venture of Imperial or monarchic restoration. It will pet haps be necessary to demand a dissolu tion of Chambers. If you accord it to me I shall use it as well as possible ; if vou re fuse it I should withdraw." Pa tits, June 11. The France asserts that Ihe Government have resolved to pro hibit the brojected plcuary meeting of the groups of tho lie ft before the reassembling of the Chambers. Mounts Wan no, of Granville, N. Y., aged 19 years, and weighing KM) pounds, deserves Ihe title of champion .Man with Ihe iron jaw." A few davs auo a man weighing 2(10 pounds sat on a heavy table in a sal-Mm there. Wando stood on a chair and seizing the table on one side with his ; teeth, lifted it and the man two feet clear of the lloor, and held them there tificen seconds. He lifted a cask of whisky weighing 400 ounds, astride of which were two nion whose weight was 300 pounds mbre, by seizing it by the chiuo with his tee'.h, holding it out straight. Three men pulling on rope which he held in his teeth could not budge Wando from his tracks. He has gone East to Beck au eil gageuieut with a circus. Gov. Hendricks on the Presidential i Flection. J ' Following is a stenographic report of tho most interest itig part of a farewell speech delivered at Indianapolis, on Friday even ing last, by Governor Hendi icks on the oc casion of his departure for Euroiie : I have had my conti S'S. I have teen thrown somewhat into ihe political strifes In Indiana--nnd they were no ordinary strifes that have j deeli made in the State; the party lines imvo ! heen closely and t in h l ly di n w n. mid the con tests have tieen very curliest, very positive, very determined on lioih sides; ihe tendency has lieen to make the men of the respective . parties very loiter towards tlioe of the ottier side. I have experienced I hat somewhat not very much, I think anil why is it? Hecause I have never carried it myself; I have never, i in the political contests into which I have been thrown, carried -tioiiK with men person. il pre- j judice, a bitterness toward the men ol ttie other side. (Applause.) I conceded it to any irentlemaii who occupied u dilliereul position from myself politically the absolute riirht to oocjpy that position, 1 haxe never quest lotied j it. 1 conceded that riurlit as I claimed it tor myself, and only one sentiment has jroverned me, and that was, believing that the side I oc cupied was ritrht, I advocateri it with nil my , initfht according to the principles of honor and j liirht. (Vehement applause.) The presiding j officer of this occasion has relerred to the tact ; that if the vote of the people had been rejrard- ed I would occupy the position to which I was nominated last yenr. (Applause.) Of that I have no more doubt than that tiovernor Wil- I Mains was elected tiovernor of Indiana. (Ap- ' plause.) lint at the same time justice requires ! me to soy that if the decision had been left to . the (rreat body of the people of both parties, ! the decision of the ballot-box truly marie wi u d : not have been reversed and defeated. (Ap- 1 plause.) I believe that to-nirht it is a subject ; of reirret to thousands of (rent leinen who did not ami would not vote for m who did not : and would not vote for Governor TiWlen a ; subject of profound regret that the damajriiiK I capiS a joud call w Cutler Cor another Mac blow has been (men to .-tmerieaii institutions. -,,.. ((treat applause.) And I would not refer to It in any partisan spirit except to say this: That l hereafter the man who is elected President of j the ITnited States by the voice and judgment j of the American people must be inau(t uraied. : (Wild applause.) lexpictto see other lands within the rext ' three inont hs. I ex pec: to see countries that are (TOverni-d bj laws and institutions to which we arcslranirers. and iu respect to which 1 hope ; we shall always lie S! ranifei s. (Applause.) And : It was with pleasure that I anticipated the op- poi t mill is of making a comparison between i he Inst it u t ions of my own country and of the condition of tlie people under those institutions with the institutions of other lands nn l of the people under those institutions. From KnR land we derive to it lartrc extent our system of laws. In France we had a triend in the time of Ihe Revolution. (Applause.) It was Lafayette who stood side by side with ficorxe Vahin ton. (Applause.) From Germany and Ireland we have a powerful element in our ow n society. Them countries I hope to see. Hot in advance I could never hone to see a country whose in stitutions are to be compared with our own. lint the value of our institutions depends upon the care with which the people guard them. If we a I low our ir.st i tin ions I o iro into chance and out of the ruarliau care of the juilir meiit mid will of the people they will non become no better and perhaps worse tlinii the institutions of other countries. (Applause.) Ami if you would allow mo one sinjrle expression of the duty that devolves upon the people of the State of Indiana it would be this: That you and I, without respect to political faith, should stand by th Constitution and laws and the in stitutions of the country, and allow no politi cal scheme whatever to deTcut the purpose of any one of t lie provisions of the Constitution of the land. (Applause.) - I expect to be a'isent about three months. That will not (rive :ne an opportunity to see very much of the world, bui it will tie the first time f liar I have eycr looked upon Htiy sky ex cept that ir America. It will be the first time that I h..ve ever looked in foreiirii lands upon the people iroverneil by their institutions, and in that respect it is an opportunity that I prize verv hiirhly. I thank you, my feliow-cilizens, and I thitiik you ifut ninir to the men on the staifei lor the expressions of ri-ifarri and esteem that I l-a e received from you ti-ni(rht. I shall never lorjret this nitfhr so lonjr as memory piesidcs in my brain. (Applause and cheers.) The plucky little principality of Mon tenegro can show a record as the licht- weight champion of the. tt-oi Id. It was in Ihe fifteenth century that a hand of 30.000 Christians, retiring before the wave of Ot toman invasion that had ovei (lowed all the rest, of Turkey, pained the mountain stronghold of Montenegro, which they have held eer since against the constant onsets of Turkey. A few facts w ill give an idea of their struggle. In July. 1712, 12,000 Montenegrin defeated 100.000 Turks, killing 20,000 and losing bin, CIS. In 1822, 20,000 Turks were defeated by I, 000 Montenegrins and their General enp t nved. In 1TGS, with a great army ot 150, 000, the Turks invaded Montenegro, de termined to crush so pestilent a thorn in the side of Turkey. They were met by II, 000 Montenegrins, defeated with the loss of 25.000, and thoircamp and baggage captured. To come down to modern times, in 18TC, July 28, tlie Turks were defeated with a loss of 4. 0(K), to 70 Monte negrins. August 14, 20,000 Turks were defeated by 5,000 Montenegrins, with a loss of 4.700. September 0, thev killed 3.000 mo:o Turks. October 7, C,000 Mon tenegrins deflated 18,000 Tmks. The summing up for the last war was 20,000 Turks to 1,000 Montenegrins. A spfciat, dispatch from Easton, Fa., to the N. Y. World, bearing date June 11th, says that the seventeen year locusts have appeared in vast numbers in that part of the Delaware Valley. They were thee in 18(50, aul a strange circumstance is no ted w ith their reappearance,. In that year fish in the Delaware river and its tributa ries and in the ponds throughout the val ley died in large numbers, as if attacked with some fatal epidemic. This year there is a similar mortality among the fish in the DHawarM, but no information as to wheth er it prevails in the mountain waters has as yet been leceived. The ouestion in many circles now is, las the seventeen-year locust anything to do w ith the death of the fish? Some parties affect to believe that. the fish die after eating locusts that drop in tho water, but only one dead fish out of a large number that have been examined had any of these in its stomach. The re con ence of the epidemic i.? probably noth ing more than a singular coincidence. - TnE South Am Kmc an Tidat, Wave. A Panama dispatch or June 1Kb says: lly the arrival of the steamer "Orova" from Calloa on the 2Sth ult., we have fuller de tails of the disasters Hift'ered on the coast from earthquakes and tidal waves. The towns of Arica, Inquique, Pont a De Lobos, Phellon, De Pica, Chanavaya, llnanillas, Tocopilla, Corij., Mejiltones, De Bolivar, Antafagasta and Chana.l were nearly all destroyed, and about six bundled lives lost. The destruction of projierty is esti mated at $20,000,000, confined mostly to the coast, although tho town of Tarapaca, twenty-three leagues inland, and tho vil lages of Pica, Mat ilia and C'inchones, far in the interior, were more or less ruined. The shipping of guano from the southern rh- j posits w ill be indefinitely suspended, as all incomes in tne way ot launches, chutes, wharves, water condenser and buildiugs of all kinds have been swept away. This is vouched for by the Boston Traveller as being as true as most of the dog sto-ies: A mastiff in that city, un muzzled by his master, resolved to comply with tho law on his own account. He knew that to preserve his life he must have a muzzle. Early one morning he stole ieuiy newspaiiers Irom doorsteps, stood on a corner and sold them, went w th Hm mo iey to a store where muzzles were sold, made a clerk understand that he wished to ouy one, anri before noon went home muz zled accouling to law. .Pl,.linR 8Fve" years Charles Eichorm, ot Cincinnati, was supported by bis wife who worked hard to do it. Keceutly she told him that, she was tired of that kind of thing, and that he must earn his own liv ing. He was in excellent health, and had a trade ; but he had been so long used to idleness that Mrs. EicliDim's resolution was a great shock to him. The poor fel low's feelings were hurt, too, and he weut into tho yard and hanged himself. 'etvf ami Otfier Votings. James Lewis (colored) has been com missioned Naval Officer at New Orleans. The York DtKjmlch is very certain it has found the Ross boy. but we aie not let into the secret of the thing. By the capsizing of a schooner in the harbor at Halifax, N. S., oil Tuesday, four men and a boy were drowned. Eleven hundred employes in seven collieries of the Lehigh and Wilkrsbarre Companies have struck against a reduction of wages. A Womelsdoi f, Lebanon county, lien lias hatched three broods of young chick ens this Spring and is now setting on goose eggs. The wife of George E. Woodbury, of Methuen, Massachusetts, gave birth to four children on Wednesday night. Three of them died at the age of three hours. . Miss Elizabeth Thompson, the well known painter, was married in London on Monday lust to Major William Buth-r. Card inal Manning performed the ceremony. The execution of George W. Fletcher, for the murder of James ITanley, in Novem ber, 1875, took place at Moyamensing pris on, Philadelphia, at 10 o'clock on Monday. Tne Workman family of Greene coun ty are heavy weights. The father and nine children (including two girls) weigh 2,010 pounds, or au average of over 201 pounds. Jack Wharton has been . appointed marshal at Louisiana in place of Citkin. This is what the Lancaster Intelligencer Yeagh letter. Mr. Benjamin Whitman, of the Erie Observer, announces in.his paper that he is not a candidate for the Democratic nomina tion for Auditor General, nor for any other political position. A pine tree has started from San Fran cisco, on its way round the world. It has ' reached New York in front of a locomotive ! t-moke-stack, and will soon be on its way ; to Liverpool on the bow of a steamer. Three blocks of houses in Galveston, 1 Texas, were destroyed by fire on Fiiday. i The Southern Hotel. Col ton Exchange, and j twenty-four other buildings were burned, j The loss is estimated at three million dol- j la rs. j Five car loads of cattle were last week ! shipped from Lancaster county to Liver- j pool. The price paid was seven cents per ! jaiund. John I5u!l not only likes our beef, I but he imports large quantities of Ainci i- I can butter. ( The small schooner, only twenty ftct j long, iu which Captain Crapo and wifeaie t ' making their way to Europe, staiting fiom ; Aew l.edlord .May 2H, was spoken June 6, ; latitude 42:20, longitude 04:22, getting along finely. The Human Catholic Archbishop of Philadelphia took to Koine as a special of fering to the Pope $100,000 subscribed iu his own diocese. This is $20,000 more than the Roman Catholics iu all Eng'and sent to Pins IX. on his jubilee. The little town"of Salem, N. C. with two thousand inhabitants, has gathered and sent to market during the past three years more than three million Miunds of blackberries, for which the galheiers re ceived neaily half a million dollars, The Huston V reports t he existence of a Know Nothing order in Rhode Island, so well organized as to have made its in fluence felt at the last election. There is no State in the Union where an order of i this kind could iluiish more thriftily The Iirotheihoid of Locomotive En gineers is twenty-five years old, and has a fund of nearly $4,000, :00. The monthly dues of membeis are 10. In case of sick ness an engineer receives $25 a week, and at his death his family receives $3,000. The grand jury at it. .Tolmsbuiy, Vt., have refused lo liud a Hue bill against Mrs. Young, of Newaik, who recently kill ed 1 ler chilaren with an axe, the medical experts apix.intcd to examine her mental condition having ascertained that she is insane. Hetween Soradoville and Painter, Mifflin county, a hail storm prevailed a few evenings ago which is said to have never had a parallel. Hail the size of eggs Tell and in great quantity. Four bonis af terward chunks as large as waluuts weie picked up. A Lancaster county farmer, who claimed that he was too poor to take a newspaper, sold his wheat recently for $1.30 per bushel, when the matkt-L pi ice was over $2. The loss sustained by him in this transaction would have naid for a paper for forty yeais. Last week the di voiced wife of J. K. Kitby visited Sunburv and secured her boy, who lived with her former husband's sec ond wife. They left Sunbuiy on Friday, and the next day the mother was fatally injured on the Lehigh Valley railroad and the child seriously hurt. At Petrolia, On Fiiday, Minnie Smal ley, aged ten years, attempted to kindle a fire in a stove w ith kerosene oil, but hold ing the can too near the flame it exploded, burning her fatally, the tkiTt being torn from her body and limbs. She died in a short time in great agony. An old lady in Ilinghamton, N. Y., who died some time ago, look off and cave to ner daughter, nisi bofoin oeatn, a pair or earrings that she had worn eighty-one j ears w ithout, removing them ner lather bad given them to her wlu n she was only six years old. Charles Evans, of Norristown, who disappeared about three weeks ago, was found in a barn in Montgomery county one day last week almost starved todeath. hat his object was in remaining in the barn until nearly dead is not known. Evans' recovery is doubtful. Alderman McMasters, of Pittsburgh, recently convicted of procuring an abortion which caused tho death of Miss Kavan augh, was on Monday last sentenced to six years in the penitentiary. The case will be taken before the Supreme Court, mean time the sentence remains in abeyance. . An insane man on the Pacific Express west from Pittsburgh the other afternoon attacked a passenger w ith a razor and .cut his throat from ear to ear. Fortunately the wound he inflicted was not fatal. The assailant, who wason his way to Plymouth, Ind., was arrested and imprisoned at Lima Ohio. ' The reason for the transfer. of the Kicc-Coolidge scandal case in Boston from the courts to referees is that the revelations of the triai would disgrace scores of fami- ,es or ingi, standing, who littto dream that their tnemlters hv 1 with questionable, if not criminal, opera tions. A little heroine was the ten-year-old daughter of W. B. Waters, of West field, IS. B., who seeing the railroad sleepers in front of the house on lire, brave.lv went . - . ...I II ufc Willi n UUCKPC lOOIlAliP.il llm Him,, Her clothes caught fire, and the poor child w fat'illir l.........l ...r , rvT-b ill iiiiHIII'.ll 1 rt'iimid ' . ..T...7 "i "l"la uel aoseut Pa" Chas. Stre render was arrest nd f Ti.:i.. j delphia on Sunday by the agent of the oouieiy ior tne I'revention of Cruelty to Children, for placing his grandson upn a hot stove and burning him badly, for as saulting his wife and another grandchild w ith a hatchet and kuife, aud for setting fire to the house. " The fact that one of the buildings at the late international exhibition at Phila delphia, erected aud used by the United States goveiuu.ent on ilm .vi,.i.;i;.... grounds, was to,., How.. kn vZ 7.1" V w VAIIIUILIIIH without nntl.o. it J r. Z i 3 P ., Unauce boai.J of tl. .vi. ;!.;,;.... L-r AMD WANAMAKER & BROW, IN THE OLD PLACE AT THE OLD TRADE. All the best talent, experience and advantage w, can command, continued at OAK HALL, to produce th BEST and CHEAPEST CLOTHING for man and boy. For sixteen year we have lived at the old corner or SIXTH and MARKET, and the business done there has been so satisfactory to the public and ourselves, that tiavo decided not to change or move the Clo-.hinj business away. The people like the placa and weliketo please the people, and we believe that we can do it better than ever at the old place. The 6ales of the past year far surpassed anything we ever dreamed of, and this puts it in our power to start the Spring of 18TT with a STILL LOWER SCALE OF PRICES, and a class of goods soexcellent tiiatweore not afraid to follow each sale with our warrantee, or receive back, the goods unworn and hand over to ih customer the money paid. The store has been larpely refitted, end there. never was such a splendid stock of Men's. Boys' and Children clothing under the roof, nor were we ever nb!e to ee'.I so Cheaply. Our word for it, and we are your friena of sixteen years. THE OLD PLACE, The streets of London, if placed in one line, would form an avenue of 7,000 miles in length. In the daily cleansing of the stieets about 14,000 men find employment, and 0,000 hoists and 2,4'0 carts. The en-gtr.eei-iri-cli ief has a salary of $10,0 0. The woik goes on day and night, but the actual sweeping docs not commence until S r. m. Di. Benjamin Thompson, near Laud enberg, Chester county. Pa., has a Dur- i ham cow which gives such rich milk I hat jit can be churned to butter in the short i space of foity-five seconds by the watch. ' This is done by stiri 'iig it rapidly in a tea j cup or tumbler ; but the time lequired in ( ordinary churning is about a minute and a half. It is said Judge Jen e Mack is engaged in the preparation of a severe review of the Electoral Commission ami of the Su preme Court Judges who decided in favor of Mr. IIav?s the cases for the Commission. The article, which is designed for one of i are In ruit.s. ( the magazines, is said to have been revised less and help!.' by Inst ice r leld one day last week at Judge Black's residmice at Yoik, Pa. The body of Julia lloppneb. a beauti ful young lady, of Buffalo, aged twenty years, who has been missing for two weeks past, was found iu the canal in that city on Sunday. The cause of the suicide is snj posed to have been parental cruelty, she having been whipoed by her father on the night previous t oeing last j-een for alleged I intimacy with a joutig man who was ob I ject lonable to her parents, j Poje Pins on Saturday received fifteen j Italian and foreign de'cg.it ions, frm whom he leceived the most goigeous piesents, representing the wealth and science of the east and west, consisting of lovely statues, paintings of rare value, and other works of art, to add to the enormous catalogue of art now iu the Vatican. The delegation i from Guadaloupe presented a number of; bricks made of solid silver. j Another case of child-killing by a child ' has been discovered in Chailestoan dis-1 trier, .Mass., the vict mi -being a lad named Charles Fagerstrom, aged llnre years.and the slayer a boy named Welch, aged two years and six months. The Coroner was callei iiwfi, but itfoii learning the paitic ularsof the case decided that an inquest would e unnecessary, owing to the irre sjonsible age of the Welch by. James W. Knapp and Wm. J. Baugh er, ex-train agents of the Pennsylvania railroad, were an ester in Baltimoie, Sat- ... .... ... I r ti- . . ... iiiu.ij, oo oiiin oi tiii. r.. liUNimcr. a ticket scalper of that city, charging them six hundred lives win won me larceny ol one hundred passenger tion ol pioii-m e cm - railroad tickets, issued by the Pennsylva- ' confined mostly l"il!,'r ' ; tl nia railroad from Jeisev Citv t,.V ! town of .Tarn one i. cw and sold to Wallace C. White and l ton villages of Paean i ati!! :: i : ' W. Dorsey, "scalpers" who are in dancer, in ti c interior ate hwpk: -f. - . i ipers wuo ate in flancei. 1 lie v hestcr, which sailed fioni New York for Liverpool on Saturday last, took out 4.4O0 boxes of fresh butter. These are packed in the refrigerating loom, in place of fresh meat ; and us the exerimeiit of exporting in this way is likely to lie a suc cess, the practice will no doubt be general ly adopted dining the hot weather. Oth er vessels, sailing tlie same day, took out 3,0H) boxes butter packed in the same way. A confession just made by twociimi rials now confined in the Ohio penitentiary, if tuie, proves that flie wrong man has been hanged for the murder of a young girl named Mary Mur. ay, w ho was wa 1 id, outraged and murdered near Poiitiac. 1!1., in the year 1800. A young man named " iley L. Morris was arrested, tried and convicted of the crime, but solemnly swore to his innocence to his last moments upon the scaffold. Ihe owl tiain OU the Pennsvli-nnia H,.ilroad, duo in Jersey C v Sunday 101 n -. . ... -7 V . "ouay mom ing, was boardedby a band of thieves, who robbed and nearly beat to death Downing, or New York. The conductor and brakemen, who attempted to rescue Downing, were driven away with revolvers but locked tlie ruffians in the car aud tele graphed to the jxdice at Jersey City to be ready at the depot. While the train was running thirty miles au hour three of the desperadoes escaped by pimping out of windows. The fomth man, John Williams a sailor of New York, was arrested. The N. Y. Sun notes the fact that Dr. K. . Pierce, the greatest living inedie.il advertiser, is flatteringly mentioned as a candidate for the office of Mavorof Buffalo, the Queen City orthe Iikes. " Let other ad vertiseis and other medical men imitate his example, and we shall hope in time to record tlie lact or stmil.ir distinct ion eon lerrcU upon them all. l hev run not nil tua Mayor of Buffaht, but eacii tnav become " "7 " what is bet- . . : .. i. : , ... . - i t t i iu mo voncciousness ol ier, great in tlie consciousness of ai a great ten- V..' J"l--"i ier our resncctful rnmnlimaii to Dr. i ieioe. j-cl liim be Major I AT OAK HALL. STILL TO BE HEADQUARTERS FOR rCILiOTESXmcj. WANAMAKER & BROWN, OAK HALL, 6th & Market. PHILADELPHIA. 1 The Sheriff f S'iin;k:,: in Philadelphia laf Wt-t-k of getting t he fatal !.( f.. ti.f f hanging six !.!! M-;.ii :r , of this month. He va: ta-r ! inaiiufactoiy of F.tUiii II. 1.: : whaif, and tin-re I.e. o.i!. , thilty ftct of the . r ii;a; f4!...: I made from a special Ita!::!, j t-ed to stand a stiaiii ef2.ii-:.' i Fitlei's pbee has tie m p ; ghastly patronage f.":n ;i p : State, and tnntsv of the vi:;. ;i ! but it should be aMcJ il ;tt i ! ever made for the i"-. then I declining to accejl this 'trv.: ' money."' j An Associated IVe 1 Caimei, 11!.. or .Iii:,e rh i cent tei i iWe oal m; :' wlix!. ' ! has not been oveiM.i'vii l-y T-:rt 'the metropolitan p:c-. ',. of beautiful home mid t, .-.. It., t A M' i'c over seventy t.n! y Ii.i.t. J. of 2.5'la loss of n .it le''i;ii. heavy a load foi ti e I t to carry alone, ats.i In '; n: the coutiliy at iatp". -' or towns 1 1 at ni.ty In sen: t . Mayor, or ,lu;li;e S!i i:ri.-i. 1 bouse of Shannon fc ! aL t i lo lief t iMiini.tuo. wi.! - inllvbt :i I -1 1 1 mi iateil t.ai.i.J: 1- i i i i are woithv an. I in-niv. I he New Oiieaw. I' " : '' (ten. Old, now in co'iutr i f ; t States tlooj-S on the l::.;!:f:.:f.s son of lleoie IV. ami tiir a" Fitzheibt it. to w !M-tn lie m- n Catholic pilot while I'lince consent of I'ai liatne'it h (,1 ;: '' ;,r and the maiiinje h'-r.',-law. A son was hotn hy consigned to the can? 'f !;;': Old, w ho emigrated ttli l.ni -tiy. The youth !--l ti.t !..' and mat tied a Viig:t:a or '.' by win in I had t" s! A ' Pacilicus. The hVt " "'',' '' Point, and is the '' netah-i . ;! .. i'hf. second Ik came A Oilc.it.s. and emulated ' . ( :i ' ty-tive veats a'". iv hi- The St.tr .i-.-f ILr:' '.;' reived in New Voik 1 " lel:nls of disa-'eis fltal ti'' on the South l'.uitic qnako and tidal ae -f W ; i pii tow ns aie m at ' ' shipping of tJuatm fi''1" " '". ' will lie indefinitely u-"-. facilities in the way i w baives. water C"tidi of all kinds hive bveti destruction and damas; li lieen verv trie'. v cry serious loss of lite- s. A mei-e eggsla'il ef 'u ""V the X. Y. ''.'. calls tw-." .1 I' ! P 1i 1 night involved the l -'l lPrSH I PMIiit . lives. It wastwolnimi.t"- i:; long, nny ic-.-i. 1.11, hove til1'... Mt'l 115 I 'k"' walls were only t 'vf ' windows weie four feet" , i. c . , ,- Inrtii'S ! piacea viuy i.'i i n i- i,,i?e it an t'ii"'v iri' firemen to quench th broken out, and '1,e.c,,''.1". building made it ,.,. should all nun le in the way. lite ci ti' .. . rtT" n ed were endeavi t it " and other etTVctsef ''( ' adjoini.:.".!''' ite woniiii , the office sjH Ctahlv connccttHl. ' , f,r band an 1 sexeial V , t ;: them some time itl s' i oence wi.n , -., .. .....M.I 1'" v. ' 'Birchrunville. tm'' ' night last, the 1'"''" ,.fr his white fiict'ds iis't tii' ll.o rr.iiltf I all .I'" ii i ' .tf t tie wojuaii ltr.i-t.Oi,lir. anu " , ;r As s."" " ;i:ar I.:- r. made tl.n' ground, an aim" A deerate Hyio n vietol V for tl'C numbeiing lais''.v ,t compiled to ! l i-,ltJ!J white woman ith if;, surrounded by a" '''"' leave them and uke f negro in a iniseiau undersuudiiig- ... .. n i t