1UL ran 3 aao epb n: bitvcj post- - TK C1HBHII BlffllB. EBENSQURC, PA., ruby Murnin?, - - Aug. 17, 1877. democratic County Ticket. IM'.OTIIOJCOTAUT : CHAS. F. OlH)NN'ELT,, of Lorctto Bor. MSTniCT ATTORNEY I W. HORACE ROSE, of Johnstown, rooii mirsF. pirkctor: JACOB KIUKIWTKICIC, of Chest Twp. COIiONKIt : JAMES MORELAN It, of Wilmore Bor. . i i ' 'Vk I:ave barely time before going to pics at 3 p. in. Thursday to announce that the Eenmcratic State Convention, winch met at Harrisburg on Wednesday and pro longed its session until next morning, nom inated .In. lye John Turnkey, of Venango c :o:ty, f'i Judge of the Supreme Court; Wiliiain I". Scheil, of Bed foul county, for Auditor Ceiier.il. and Amos C Noyes, of Clinton comity, for State Treasurer. --- Wmrc without any important news this week from the. seat of war along the Dan ube. In Armenia (Turkey in Amu), on Saturday hist, the Russians, numbering 9: (v.ilt oi-.l l.VI fTinic e-uiiiniimloii Mie ,.--,'-o iiiv.ii too. v fr, 1 ..v.--. - , Tuiks along their whole- line, beginning at 7 o'clock in the morning and ending at C j in the evening, when the Russians ictreat ed, w ith i loss in killed and wounded of 1, 2'K, the Turkish h..s Wing 200. R.w.kioh T. Daniel, Attorney General of Viiginia, died suddenly at Richmond on yesterday week. Ou the previous Friday he h;id been unanimously ic-nomiiiated by I ho Democratic Jr'tate convention for At-toiiioy'C-euoial. He was rcgaided as Uie foremost public man in Virginia, remark able alike as a a profound lawyer, an elo quent speaker and an accomplished writer. His death has caused a deep feeling of re gret throughout the State. The Permanent International Exhibi tion, at Philadelphia, olloi-s to merchants in every pail of the country facilities such as were never before presented for the exam ination and comparison of all the vai ions stjles and qualities of maun fact uicri goods that are placed in the market. A day or two spent there befoie making purchases will enable any intelligent buyer to enter the maiket at a great advantage. It has surprised .ill who have visited the Exhi bition to find so giand and complete a dis p'ay of Americin indn tiies, while the grouping of exhibits in classes is admirably adapted to facilitate comparison. m. S J Ti We confidently expected to be able this w eek to announce I he success of Gen. Howard in his pursuit of Chief Joseph and his Nez Perces waniors. The telegraph has, however, failed to furnish any such information. It was ten days on Wednes day last since Howard started on his hunt from General Gibbon's disastrous battle ground. It appears that, Joseph went noith from that point and then west, and that on Tuesday last he hail got back into Idaho and quietly encamped at Hole-in-the-Rock stage station, ninety miles north of Fort Hall. The country must patiently wait until Howard is hcatd from. Some of the army officers have expressed the envious opinion that in this famous hunt after Toseph, Ilowaid might carry the thine too far and accidentally (ind him. The strike for an increase of wages, which was inaugurated several weeks ago by the anthiacite miners in Luzerne coun ty, still continues with no apparent pros pi-ct of a compromise. Several thousand moii are without employment ami are rest less and discontented. At many poinfs the cais and other propcily of the railroad have lKicn interfered w ith threats made to destroy the mines. In order to preset ve the pan co and protect the mine properties from wanton distinction, large numbcisof the State militia are still on duty at Scran ton, Plymouth and other places, and the Governor says he will not remove t.hem until perfect peace and safety are secured. The miners declare that at the. present rate of wages it is utterly impossible for them tosuppoit themselves and their families, while,on the oiherhand, the owners protest that at the present price of coal they can not increase tho pay without an absolute loss to thomselves. Who will cut this Gordeati knot between th? workingmen and their employers? It is impossible to say, for no outside power can interfere. Winter is fast approaching and unless these two conflicting elements are speedily li unionized, the misery and destitution that must surely follow aie tenible to contemplate. A communication from'.Johnstown pul Jished in the last issue of tho Herald "( this placp, and in which, from a Republican Mandpoint, the political grievances of Mr. Home, the independent candidate for I'ro thonoary, are minutely set forth, must have afforded pleasant reading to that gen tleman, and served no doubt to convince him that M)litios, like misery, often make i man acquainted with strange bed fallows. If Mr. Horne. and not Chailey fi'Dnnncll, had been nominated for Prothonotary, the communication referred to would have as sumed quite another fdinpe, and its author would have playrrl a tune on the Republi can harp w ith a very dillerent set of strings. Mr. Home would then have discovered to his utter amazement that he was a rebel sympathizer dining the war that hn was n chronic offioe-seeker a bigoted and tin. i:om promising Democrat w ho was unfit for the offioo and without any solid claims to popular support. AH this, and much more, would havo teen imputed tn Mr. Home if lie had received I lie nomination, but as he did not he is now the object of profound Republiaan sympathy and rpspeot in vul' gar slang, a horse of a very different color, Kepublioau duplicity ban often before play, t'lisqcli yu.ii) and funtanfio tricks on lie po- Hon. Mr. Mills, an official of the Cana dian government, has lately been on a visit to Washington for the purpose of securing the peaceable return to bis reservation in I Montana of Sitting Bull, who took his tribe across the border last spring and isnowen- camped some distance from Fort Walsh, in British Columbia. The Canadian authori ties, feaiiug that Sitting Bull, the "Sioux j N.ipolcon" as he has been called, may be- ! come turbulent and incite trouble nmong other Indian tribes, are very anxious to get j him out of their country, and it is said that ; Mr. Bull has expressed his willingness to ; return on fair and honoraldo terms. Gen. j Terry, f the army, and Gen. John McNeil, of St. Louis, have been appointed a com- I mission to go to British Columbia, invito the retmwned Sioux chief to a conference, and if possible relieve Canada of the big and unruly elephant now on its hands. The opinion is entertained by Borne of the offi cers of the Indian Bureau at Washington that the mission will be unsuccessful, but that question of course remains yet to be settled. While in Washington Mr. Mills explained to Mr. Hayes the Canadian sys tem of dealing with the Indians, and the President is said to have expressed his in tention of adopting a similar line of policy. What the Canadian method of dealing with the Indians is in the main we do not pre cisely know, but its leading and most im portant feature is that the government takes care that all its agreements with and promises made to the Indians are faithful ly observed both in letter and in spirit. The result has been that although there are ninety thousand Indians in the Western ortion of the Dominion of Canada, an In- diau war or outbreak, such as aln ost an nually takes place iu some one ..four west- I ern territories, is unheard of in that coun- tiy. It lias been more than once attempted to pass a bill through Congress transferring the management cf Indian affairs from the office which now and heretofore has had it in charge, and entrust it to the War De- ! ' partment. All efforts thus far to pass such f bill have been successfully resisted by the "Indian Ring," as it Is called, which j is perhaps the most powerful and unscrupn- j Ions combination of thieves and plunderers i which controls legislation at Washington, j The theory upon which the proposed trans fer is based, is that officers of the regular j army, holding their positions for life, would ! keep good faith wi h the Indians in alU their dealings with them, and not cheat and rob them, as neatly all the Indian agents, as ( well as Indian contractors, notoriously now do. The present war with the Nez Perces Indians had its origin in shameless fraud and robbery pei pet rated by the agents of the government. The rich lands of Joseph ' and White Bird in Idaho and Oregon were coveted by a ring of land sharks with the Indian agent at its head, and th'y must be had, if, not by fair means then by foul. James AV. Nesmiih, an ex-United States Senator from Oreeon, a gentleman of high character, and who has known the Nez Perces tribe intimately for thirty four yew, has recently written a letter on the subject of the piesent outbreak, an extract from which we published in our news depart ment last week. Gen. Crook, our g-.oatcsl Indian fichter, and the highesi authority on the Indian question, has often declaied that the cause of neatly all our Indian wars can Ire direct ly traced to the fraudulent and dishonest conduct of the agents of the government. An Indian, though rude and uncultivated, possesses all the stionger attributes of hu man nature, and will rebel if imposed or 1 1 ami led upon. That a different method of dealing with him maybe adopted by the government is a consummation devoutly to bo wished Y hat is known in the anthracite coal region as flooding the mines is one of the stupid as well as criminal means resorted to by the inert who strike for higher waces iu order to compel the owners of the mines to accede to their demands. That men not m absolutely insane would be guilty of such supreme and suicidal folly passes all human comprehension, it being a wanton destruc tion by the miners of the very sources upon which they must depend for support. Sup-l-osejihe striking coal miners fluod the mines with water, so that they can proba bly never be pumped ou' or worked again ? They w ill then have succeeded not only in destroying the capital invested in the mines, but also in completely depriving themselves of that kind of employment to which for years they had been accustomed. The , mines having been destroyed by the work men, there will be no work to be done, and ; of course no wages to be earned. There is no doubt that in nearly all of the anthra cite coal fields the condition of the miners is very deplorable ami ought to bo relieved if it can be done, but relief will never come '. from the wilful destruction of the minns. ' It is well known that for months the sup- ' ply of an hracite coal has far exceeded the demand, and hence the mining force had j f . lA L 1 I1AA.I f a.n . . . ...i i,-Miiurw, 17. no iowor chii compel i ne public to buy more coal than it needs. Until the dark cloud that hangs over all the industries of the country passes away, strikes, instead of lessening the now heavy burdens of tho workingmen, will only add to them increased weight. Ir Is 9 severe strain on human credulity to believe the accounts sent from the seat, of war of the atrocities perpetrated by both the Turkish and Russian soldiers. Ibn-ror on horroi accumulates, and if even the one hundredth part of what is told is true, jt is enough to make each particular hair to stand ujMin its end. Thousands of Rul galian fugitives have been massacred iu cold Mood; hospitals with their sick and wounded have been burned ; towns have been sacked and plundered, and men, wo men and children have been indiscrimi nately pMt to death. Whatever may he the extent of these butcheries It would be unfair to hold either the Russian or Turkish i"f rrn 1 i.f.1.1: .... -TC1. reiqmnsm.e for them, the ' -Right Rev. S. IT. Rosecrans, of Colum-v-ossacus in one army and the Hashi It, bus. Ohio, is damreronslv Kiek at. Put-in- zonks In the other being fully competent to P.o.m sueii unnsl and revolting acts. One month more of such a war In rtulo-ai i, will transform that fair principality into ... ! Our Washington setter. "Washington, 1). C, Aug 20, 1877. MR. HAYES is determined to divorce politics from civil service, be the consequences what they How it is to be done is beyond our may, comprehension, but so lar re lias evinemiy j . . . - . . ., UiaWII -ov-Ll vilifcirno -' v -. ' t mound him, and they are still coming within the fold. The Administia'.iou will explain all official matters to the country nt large, which will enlighten them upon the sul ject of practical civil government, without daMdiug in the politics of either party. This, we are informed, is to be the rule and guidance of nil officials whoso po sition of prominence, as well as information of details, give them the right only to sj-eak, and it is to be confined as strictly as r.ossiMo to Cabinet oiticcrs, aim noi. m any - - . . m m case to be tile rated by the nuderliugs who j mix in ward pontics. THE SECRETARY OF WAR is considerably exercised over the recent disaster to Col. Gibbon's command, but thicks the defeat is not so bad as was rei resentcd. The fault seems to be with Frceilman's Bureau Howard, who subdi vided the troops, thereby allowing the red j skins to fight them in detail. This condi- . tion of anaiison tho frontier will prevent the Secretary of War, as well as most of the other Secretaries, by a press of business in their departments, from enjoying their usual vacation. OUR FLAG. The firing upon the American ensign by the Mexicans at Acapulco has been official ly received here through our Minister, w-ho ! informs us that the altair is under prompt ' investigation by the Mexican authorities, j by whom the perpetratots of the insult will I belsuminarily punished. Our Mexican trou i bles, together wiili the Indian war and stiikeis' riots, furnishes the Administrat ion I and his Cabinet with plenty of work and ' close application to their duties here, and 1 they are he first set of Cabinet officers ' since the close of the late war that have earned their pay, which is in striking con- r,- , ; 1 1 (int. n HU ui -1 1 1 1 ) tnio vnvuivw iniri'tr-1l- Ot.l -k ' "t " droming ot the Grant rule, verily the cus- toius of the people have changed. OCR GR.VIN TRADE, through official dispatches received ria the State department, is so gieat in Europe t,,at we "ow ai,d for a le to ......... i .i.n ...... : . . n .. ..... . . f T. ....... ; t;i'inc tt'Miiiii iu; iciii nidi net t'l Jill i v j , ltussia being our only compet itor worthy of notice, and throuch our elevators, rail roads, machinery, and numerous ot Iter fa- cilities, wo can put our grain on shipboard 13 ier cent, cheaper than any other people, and the gigantic war now being waged will afford us the opportunity to outrival our formidable competitors in the grain busi ness for the present if not for all time to come. The English are making prepara tions for tho transportation of our bread stuffs to British shores, and our farmers should use every exertion to meet the in creased demand, as it bids fair to continue. We hope this information, which may be relied upon, vill stimulate our farmers to that activity which will enable them to produce an inci eased supply and thereby reap a good .rice for their grain, which will replenish their depleted pockets, of which they have so often complained. BEN. HL'TiiKll ON THE SITUATION. From an intimate friend of Ben. Butler's we learn that his course in the next Con gress will be to lake every advantage offer ed to make xlilical capital out of the Southern question, at the same time mak ing a big fuss over the labor question with a view of becooiing the workincmen's can didal for the hi e House in ISfeO. If the work'nimcn put forth a leader with no more character than Ben. their cause will receive the worst set back il has ever had, and they will be ignored ei.titely as the re sult of such an insult to common decency. They would act wisely if they would slow over such a nomination, for at present they really have the masses with them; but such nn adventure would sink them into perpetual discredit. BLAINE'S THREAT. From private sources we learn that sun stroke Blaine threatens thai while he will advocate Ihe agitation of the labor ques tion, he will not abandon his cowardly as sault made over the shoulder of carpet bagger Chamberlain upon Mr. Hayes. Lis assertion that the convention iu Maine was more than two to one in its opposition to Mr. Haves, and that it was a matter of extreme difficulty that he could keep the convention from so expressing themselves, turns out to be one of those "squat ed-toed'' lies that Greely invented. Since Proctor Knott forced him t lie himself under the etticoats of "a female memler" of his own family for the stealing of those rail road bonds, his veracity is not rcgaided as Biblical teachings of ti n h, and Die friends of Mr. Hayes declare they would not le lieve an thing he says, particularly in re gard to that convention. Mr. Hayes and his Cabinet have it from the best of Re publican authority that a large majority of the convention were really supjnters of his policy. Blaine should now join the bland "Smiler" Colfax, as both of these fellows have been caught in raihoad bond stealing. O I.D P ARALYTIC MORTON'S sickness, from advices received at this writ ing is not so bad (unfortunately for the country) as was at firsr reported. His physical condition has mo been gol for a long t ime, and he has only been hobbling around the Senate for years giving to the world the l est evidence that bis mental condition never was even good, but, on the contrary, very, very bad. All of his at tempted efforts at elocution and diffusion of knowledge have resulted in nothing but. bellicose hot headed ness, vituperation and vindictiveness. His retirement from the Senate would be hailed with pleasure by the respectable and more liberal and fair dealing members of his own party. He has long been a sore upon the bmly politic. THE SITTING St LL COMMISSION m m are evidently at. a los for membership. Gen. Crook, who is now in our city, lias declined an invitation to act. as a member thereof, and John elch, of Philadelphia, has not as yet passed in his acceptance to act as one of the Commissioners to treat with his Royal Highness, Mr. Sitting Bull, j ex-Americain plain dealer in Government supplies and soldiers' scalps, now tempor arily sojourning in Canada. J DAME RUMOR informs us of pending changes in the In terior Department among its prominent of ficers, but as this repori. has been so often promulgated, we merely give it a passing notice, keeping our "weather eye" opeu to the advent. SPEAKER RANDALL, ' notwithstanding the reports that he favor- : ed government aid to the Mississippi levees, Tf xas Pacific Rail Road, and other subsi dies, when here last week preserved his , usual caution in refraining from an opinion I on Ihe above subjects, and the reports to, that effect were SPt afloat by his opponents for the Sjicaketship with a view to his in jury. Anderson, j ay' M'c,,iK'n. where he bad gone for much-needed rest and iecrtat-'ii. His favorite niece, the eldest daughter of Gen era Roseerans, is also repti ted as dying at the Urbuliue Couveut in Brown county, , onw. ' JL Haiti on Forgers. THREE SWINDLERS ARRESTED HOW THEY KA18ED CHECKS THEIR OPERATIONS BELIEVED TO INVOLVE MIL LIONS OF DOLLARS. CmcAOO. August 19. A report was pub lished here yesterday by one of the morn- ' ing papers, relative to the arrest of certain , parties supposed to belong to a gang of j forgcis, who had been operating extensive ly in this city. New York and other piaccs. . Inquiry of the officials here failed to elicit any definite facts, and the story was gen erally discredited. It is now known that yesterday morning constable Hartman ar- j rested iu this city two men named Weston ! and Gesner on a charge of forgery. It ap- j pears that these men, working in connec- j tion with a man named Stevens and other j accomplices tbrnugbmit the country, bate fr Bf,me Ume g,, carryj,l? u a system of forcrcricH from which they have realized large sums of money. In January last the Third National Bank of New York was de frauded out of twenty seven thousand dol lars by means of checks puru ting to have been drawn by Winslow, Lanier fc Co. About the same time a check for forty thousand dollars, purporting to have been drawn by the New York Life Insurance Company on the Union Trust Company of .New l ork, waspresntcd and paio. 1 hero had been other similar operations known, but never made public. Representatives of New York houses employed to investi gate these forgeries have been following np suspected parties for several months, and have found tho leader of the gang. He is a man of wealth and respectability, named Stevens, alias Henderson, who has been known hero as a speculator in grain and stocks. Next, to him comes Nelson A. Ges ner, a wealthy man of Minnesota, and for merly a member of the Legislature of that State. Associated wi:h th;m was one E. B. Weston, of this city, formerly a real ; estate agent. L pon examining tjesner s trunk, after his arrest, it was found t con tain a larce assortment of implements ne cessary to his profession, including inks, microscopes, acids, brushes, pens, tracing implement, fcc. In Weston's possession was found a number of washed diafts, on which everything had been obliterated by acid except the cashier's signature. When doalimj ;n drafts it was the custom to buy them for small amounts, and then obliter ate with acid all ink marks except, the cashict's name. Before this was done, however, a careful tracing was taken. Then when larger amounts were written in on the face of the draft they had on the tracinc a fac simile of a number of the let ters and of the figures which were used in the greater amounts. Iu dealing iu checks they would learn from some one in a bank or office of a firm depositing in a particular bank just how the deposit stood, in order not to overdraw the account. It is said that some forged checks have been drawn for sums as high as seventy five thousand dollars. The developments so far indicate that these men are part of an organized gang of the most dangerous forcers that has existed for years. It is estimated that they have swindled numerous banks out of millions of dollars. Stevens was arrested near Grand Haven yosteiday, and is now on his way to New York. The officers hav ing in charge Weston and Gesner left for New York with, their prisoners yesterday evening. Presidential Counts. THOMAS JEFFERSON S PLAN TOR THE SET TLEMENT OF ELECTORAL DISPUTES. The New York World is indebted to Miss Sarah M. Randolph, a great grand daugh ter of Thomas Jefferson, foi a niemoran-. dum, prepared by her illustrious ancestor, of practical suggestions towards a bill to regulate the decision of disputes over the results of a Presidential elect i'n. Miss Randolph is a grand-daughter also of Wil son Cary Nicholas, who wasa Senator from Virginia in 1SC0, and this document, w hich is appended, was found among the latter's papers about two months ago, to late for use in the heated Congiessional debates on the late I'residentialeleclion. The follow ing is the memorandum, which is published by the World in fac simile : JEFFEItSoJi'S MEMO RANDOM. Whereas on an election of President or Vice President tr the I'. S. questions may urise whether an .'lector has hoi-n appointed in such manner as t.ie I. pri.-hiture of hU State may have directed ? Whether the time at ul.ieh tic was chosen and thr day on which he pave his vote, were those determined tj- Conpres? Whether he were not at the time a Senator or Representative -it" the U. S., or held an oliiee or trul ir protii under tlie IT. S.? Whether one at h-iist ,if tin; per?oni he has voted for is an inhabitant of u State other than lii- own ? Whether the electors voted by tallot and have sinned, ci rtitied lied transmitted to rht Presi dent or the Senate a list or all ihe persons voted for and or votes rr encti ? Whe ther the porsor.-i voted for are natural lorn citizens or were citizens or the I'nitcd St.ues at Ihe tinr r Ihe :e1.pti n "t theCon slitution. wcreSTi year old and had heen lonr-te.-n years resident within th United States? And the Constitution ot the t'nited Slates having- directed that the Presid.-nt i.l thcS -imte shall in the presence of the Senate and M.nis" or Itepresentatives. open all the ecrtilimtcs, and that the vol. s shall then lie eoiinu i. from whieh i inosi reasonably interred Ilial they are to he counted ny the members C"ii:pusii-i( the paid house and !roinrlu there for mat oltiee, ii' other la -ii.p as.-ifjiscd thdn.and inferred the more reasonably, us thrret y tlie constitutional wc-ipht or each Slate in the election . f these hiirh o Ulcers is exactly preserved in the tril li ra 1 which is to jiM'pe of ils validity, the nutnt ,.r of Senators and itepresentatives I r- in each State cninpnsinir tlie said tribunal l,ein exact ly l hat of I lie electors of the same Slate. He it therefore enacted, &e. ihcrc insert the former clanso.l Provide that the certificates of the Kxecu tive "f any State shall be conclusive evidence that the rec-uisite number of votes ha b pi.en for each elector named by him a sueh. Mere add all limitation on Ihe prcodinK questions which may be thoiurhr proper, sta limr w hat Hie two houses shall vt decide.) And bp It further enacted. That whensoever the vote of .iie or mire or the electors of any State, shall for any cause whatever, be adjudg ed invalid, it shall be lnvf,il for the Senators and Jtepn sentatives of the sai 1 State, cither tn tlie pr senec-of the two houses, or separately and withdrawn from them, t'i ilecide by their own vote to which i-r the pcrs'.n voted for by any of the electors of iheir State (-.r to what person) the invalid vote or votes shall hepiven, for which purpose they shall be allowed the term of one hour and loniror. durinp whieh no other certificate shall ho offered or proceed, ed on. The fJovEnsoRs Week at I'nir.ADEt, ruiA. An invitation has been extended by the exhibitors at the Permanent Inter national Exhibition to the Governors of all the States and Territories of the Union, to visit tne week iu Au: r.xni.uuoi, auring the last t nst, for purp wes of general , s, ... , .. . i w i itiri.o. ivinintre na sucn an oppor tunity over before been offered tn compare industrial results, as accomplished under the varying conditions existing w ithin our broad, national domain. It promises to bo a notable event, and arrangements are be'ng perfected to make the visit highly enjoyable to the partici pants. The programme includes a prelim inary meeting at Indeiiendcuco Hall, on Tuesday, August 21 li ; a formal recep tion at the Exhibi ion by the Exhibitors and Management, on Wednesday ; a grand industrial parade from the manufactories of tho city, reviewed by the Governors, on Thursday ; visit ing leading manufactories, on Friday ; a visit to Cape May over Sun day. The trip will le further extended to New York, with a stop at the Trenton potteries, where three or four days will bo devoted to an examination of jifew York r . xt , . industries, and then on to I.oaton and ihe manufacturing cities of Lowell, Lawrence and Wattham. closing with a trip to the nice Mountains. jvc?f ami niTter JS'otlnas. Since the 1st of January 117 persons in Reading have died from small jn-x. Mrs. Kate English, of Pittsburgh, by upsetting a coal oil lamp, was fatally burn ed on Sunday. Chicago grain men finale on receiving seventeen milliou bushels more grain this year than last. V illiam Drie.bach, of Wiiliarospoi t, aged seventeen years, is six feet three inches in height. Stephen Hall. Wendell ?ma!l and Frank Houston were drowned in Shebago Lake, near Portland, Me., on Sunday. John DeCarma, w in. was shot by John Orim near M'Keesport three weeks ago, has died. Glim has Leeu arrested fcr murder. Miss Sophia C. Kemper, cf Easton, living with her nephew, Colonel T. li. SitgreaVes, was one hundred years old on Wednesday. Kichaid Bell, of Sharon, Mercer coun- I ty, was convicted of ni nslauyhter on Sat i urday, he having killed W illiam M'Cilvray j several weeks ago. I Mrs. Maxwell's exhibit cf Colorado ' birds and beas-s are to be removed from , the iermanent exhibition to Pittsburgh's exposition, m iepicmner. The I .rstile Nez Perces hold the fort j j at Hole in the Rock, Idaho. 1 hey arc strongly intrenched, and refuse to allow auylx riy to pass either way. ine of the most beautiful women in New York is now iu the Bloomingdale In j sane Asylum, a victim of insanity caused by the tisc f enamel on her faco. j During a quarrel in New York, Satnr ; day morning, Ann Kinney threw Delia j Fox out of a third-story window, breaki ig her leg and injuring her internally, j The favoiito cat of a Newport family i died last week, and was swathed in linen, placed iu a coffin and duly buned at a cost of 1 10, or, say, 105 loaves of bread Twenty-two thousand quarts of black- ( berries have been picked from a piece of i land in York county, during this season, j ami mere are still great quantities remaiu- ing. Capt. ICioff of Santa Gertrudes, Texas, is making ar. addition of sixty-three miles to his pasture fence, which will enclose al together, when completed, 1 G'J, 000 acres of splendid land. A Chicago man has married three sis ters, and all arc living. lie took them in the order of their ages, lived with each about a year, and then obtained a divorce. Theie ate three more sisters left. F. F. Lcvallry was lighting a fire with coal oil at Flushing, L. I., on Tuesday, when tho can exploded, and his two sons, ajjed res actively seven and ten years, were burned to death. A half-w itted fellow bathed in Sacca rappa, Me., and on coming out of the water c nild not recollect where he had hidden his clothes. He wandeicd two days naked in the wiwds. At Paterson, X. J., early Friday morn ing, J. Eokert threw his wife out of the window after a quarrel, killing her instant ly. She would have become a mother w i t ! 1 ii two or three weeks. Mrs. John A. Eight, nee Miss Early, of Lebanon county, wife of the well-known aeronaut, lrof. Light, who died in Illinois about a year ayo, made a succescfiil as cension fi'.in iJecatur, recently. In the Palmer House. Chicaro, a "beat" who had been living lavishly there i f.r a week, was compelled to stsnd at the ' entrance to the dinino; -ihim while a clerk . explained his case to the guests. j The woi kinsmen's political movement ! is still spreading rapidly. The late stri- j kers alouir the Erie road arc org-.nizii-g ' for M-lit ical power, and organizations are j also being e fleeted in New Jersey. j It seems almost incredible that there j should lie r,y."i,(K)!) jK'rsons receiving le'.icf i in consequence of the want j.ivvailiig in) Madras alone. Such A famine exceeds iu its destructive results the wmst of modern i wars. The two regiments of "three months j men,"' called by Governor Hart rao.ft, are! being rapidly enlisted, and it is thought they will be full bef ue the end of the wet k. i ney w in ne provided with the L reg ulation uuifoi m. Sawyer City, McTvenn c-:vdy, consist ed of an old saw r.iill and two bouses four weeks ago. rsoy it has six stores, a hotel. )wstrfnco, thirty new houses and a popu lation of five hundred. A big oil strike wrought the change. -The losses by the late riots to the rail road companies, including freights de st roved, have been figured down, by rail way officials in I'hiladelphia, to -2.rti0,tM0 i one half less than the lowest estimates ! made after the fire. i An unknown woman died at Durham, N. t;., the other day, from excessive drink. having drank seven glasses of whiskey, or twenty-eight ounces. She bad on her per- i son about fifty cents iu money and a letter j addressed to Emma llorne. New York. j ,.ri:"r;:. ZS. . c lc ... ............. .-.-.ri .o..,.vuHciesoi lam:, ne- ing the aggregate of Ihe grar.l to the State under the act of ISfd. admitting Kansas into tho Union, has been decided by iho Interior Pepartment iu favor of the State Henry tunnel, of Cecil tow nship, Washington com. ty, is said to be the only person iu that section now occupying laud taken up by tomahaak claim, which has n t passed out f the family. Mr. I) . i id's father took up the claim iu 17G8 and trot a deed in 1T72. 'n the road lending from the Whitman mine to me oi.i town ot t 'onio, Jsev., there 1 i r-cK me prouie oi which lias sosiioju- j jar a resemoiance to the profile of Wash ington that from a certain jioinl of view the most careless observer cannot fail to uoto the likeness, Ihtvid Martin, of Raltinio-P, aged eighty -one years, is now on a visit to Jacob Camj , of Shippenville, Clarion county, who is eighty-live years old. Mr. Mart in enlis'cd u"der Mr. Camp in the war of 1812, and the old comrades have not seen each other f r sixty years. Silks valued at $2u,000 were stolen from tho wholesale dry goods bouse of T. J . Claxton & Co., Montreal, by two employ ees named Sinclair M'Coy and John Har vey, who had as an accomplice the notori ous thief Voshmgh. M'Coy and Harvey were arrested Saturday aftcrn.N.ii. The latest sensation in Carlisle is the j rntiniug away with a married tramp of a i miss of eighteen summers, the pride ai.d ll'.Tie of ft. l-iidi irranniAlltAw .... , " - . ............ vo nun KIluniK B lived. The young lady t v.k $100 i.t of the bank ml.ieh the old la.l uZ.i J to bor credit ; likewise her gold spectacles "Lon" HnbVll, "the strong man of the woild," once well known in the circus arena, is iu the pw.r house of Putnam county, N. Y. In his time, he could hold back two yoke of oxen, and supput a weight of l,S0o pmnds resting on his arch ed hands and feet with bis stomach up ward. 4 The Montgomery (Ala.) AdvcrtUcr sys that there is "ne plantation near that city which is suffering very much from drought while adjoining places east and west of it have enjoyed g.nd rains. Last year the caso was reversed, the place alht ded to having plenty of rail, and the others getting nono. The RopC has recommenced work upon Ins memoir, begun eight years ago, his collaborator ,eig Father Drescian. one of the most learned of the Jesuits The work will contain all the Pontiirs confidential coi residence with Najvoleon III, Victor Emmanuel and Charles Albeit, but will not be published till ten years after his death. On opening a bard-bollcd egg at a res- taurant in Pottstown. the utl-er day, a small egg alnrnt the size of a gooscberiy, ' covered with a thin shell, was found ini bedJed in the centre of the yolk. The ) small egg, when held to the light, showed that the albumen it. contained was at one end tr the shell, w hile its little yolk lay at the other. j One day last week, in Brooklyn, two! colored men one tall and lean, the other short and already fat ate on a wager. Bread, sausages, eggs, beef, buns and l am were furnished without, stint. There was ago-.! deal of qni.t woik done for awhile, but the tail. h'Ho man was the first to ask for a rest, and the other won the wager, ' having eaten ten pounds. I'ne "Bi st. n B-1'' has licn tato.ing abi.ut a hundred of the ingenuous yuth -f Philadelphia at a chnrge of twerty-1ive ' cents a head jy rather, fill arm. As the artist chewed t bacc- and had an ulceia- ; ted nivuth,aud mixed hisc dors with saliva, ! the? consequence was thtt almost all his customers were ini-culatci! rrore ,r h-ss severely with a painful and loathsome Cis , ; ease. I Mrs. Wart er, w idow of BenjarrsN ' Warner, who was killed . ti the lailroad about a year ago, drowned her. ii-fa'-t in a , ! rain bairela few nights ai;o, at Ashley, I Luzerne county, and af.erwai-ds cut her own mroat. Mnce l'ie :eatli ot her lns- band Mrs. Warner had fixquel attacks of melancholy, and while ui.dci the influence : of ne of them she committed the double ' crime. The County Commissioners of Laramie J county, Dak., in w hic'i Deadwo.1 is situa i ted, havo published a proclamation in ! which, after reciting the long c-ntii'uancfc : of Indian outrages and the neglect of the j genera! government to cime to the lescne i of citizens, a re war.-! f ' is offered for the bdy f every IoiT.'ar. dead or alive. i who may be taken within the limits of the ; i county. I In Mercer county a few davsao Hen - ; ry Fisher was murdered while lying in hi. bed, a shot fired from the outside taking enectgin ins nea'J. bile return?!!? Iron the funeral the wife of the murdoie.l man , and a son, the latter e.ged about sixteen years, were arrested for the crime. Mr. Fisher was extensively known as a farmer and stock dealer and had a family of eight children. Mrs. John L. Mitchell has given the gossips of Milwaukee a fine dil i f scan dal. N-he is the wife of a h'tate Ireuator, who is the son .,f Alexander Mitchell, ex member of CiMitrress and theiichest man in Milwaukee, ai.d they recently agreed to a mutual separation. Ou Tuesday, how ever, she attempted to abduct her child, which was at its grandfather's, but failed in the a tempt. Tfie R'vlischilds arc supposed to be worth ?C"Hi.ri-.(h,(. with an annual in come of 5?lVW,iM.-; but Mackey. Floyd. O'Biien vt Fair, the reHt silver miners of Nevada, have an income f tn.t less than $20.OO0,'', or d- tible that of the R .H s childs. Twenty or thirty ot hei Mh.w s out there have foi l tjues varyio from tiO.tiHi to tf -iO,Oiti,((Hi. Tb-e woi tlj only a million are not thought of. The Youghioehony express train col lided with a pay car on Thmsday afternoon between Greensbiirg and Uiii-ntown, and two men were killed and c'ghl injured. The trains weie rut'oini; alx-nt thirty miles an hour at the time of the accident. The kil'ed were Edward Ri.lh-y, engineer, and George Major, fireman, of the express. The engineer and fireman .f the pay tiain were seriously injured. Harvest expectations in Minnesota have been more than realized in the yield as ascertained since tl'.resl.int; besran. The wheat crop of this wnei fuli pi ain pro ducing Sate is now ret d-wn at the enor mous total of "VS.! Mil I, (,M bushels, leaving a surplus for exp-nt . f fi-mi So.lvMoiXi t.. 'JS,(MHi,ooO bushels. The aveiage yield t'lioiijriiout the State is now estimated at twenty bushels to die acre. On Wednesday there was a sad scene at the Schuylkill county prison. Robert j .cons, oi rcnuy iKiii liaven, wi is ti nier Cwidi'icnHMit for n biH iy, was shown the corpse of his child. It was imp.ssible fr him to go to the funeral, and U was brought to him. The sighs of the father affecting in the extiene, and highly moved weejung over me .tea. I io.i- in priso'i was those who were c mipelVd to witness it. The town of vJayville, twi miles from Deadw.KNl, 1. T., was almost entirt ly de stroyed by fire Satuiday moi,ing. ;dy ne or two houses weie saved. The fire originated in Value's icstaiirant. There being no w ater for fire pin poses, the flames spread tapidly. and in three hours destroy ed about two hundred houses, lan.j-ing in value f;om $5o to 2.. "",;!... The total "loss is estimated at $Go,Uv0. TLeie is n j insur ance. Herbert Rla- chard, the ivov (Mass. murd"ier, is a veiy ad egg. He began by threatening his sclu. .Imaster, married at seventeen and hammered his girl wife Hit divorce, was hunted out of California as a thief. e.,I.s.te,l i,. tb. c;ln a, ci, ild crimh M.xi- i . army, and deserted, leaving a wife and went to Prance to comidee his criminal education and returned t Savoy to do murder and qualify himself for the gallows. A young German, who has been bold as a witness against Whalen, accused of the murder of H-chiie, at Elm station in Cctober, was, on Monday night, committed as a principal at Norristown. He had some of H"chue's cl-tbiog..n w hen arrest ed, and the authorities claim to have cvi- tleoce to prove that the murder was cm- niiMed at about 9 1. m.. on October IT. and that t'io parties now in custody ate th& murderers. Thomas Harding, aged 4.1 years, shot bis housekcei.or, Mrs. Wood, aired '2d. at ' bis residence, One Hundred and Ninth ' street, New York, Saturday morning, and ' then put a pistol to .is "head an ! Pied ' twice. He. lied instantly, but Mrs. Wo-i"s wound, which is iu the shoulder, is iu t thought to bo fatal. Harding was a mar I lied man but bad not lived with his w ife i for some time. The cause -f the shooting i is in.t known. I Mrs. Urijrglemyer, residing near St. j Mary's Elk county, a few m .rniogs since got up about, four o'clock, pn-curvd a hand axe and while her husband was asleep struck him across the bead with the i'.i , stiument, indicting an ugly injury. She ; followed up the blow with another, which ( cut open the cheek of ber Lushnnd, when ! be sprang from bis led and seized the axe. i I lie two had quarrelled during the pre- i unless s- "t r ; viol, i even in ir ! ti'i ate! t ir I Alunit eight o'clock Frii'ay morning j Maitir. M oiahan, of etn it, Mich., aged i eigtity years, asked bis son John, a man i thirty-eight, years -H, and ir.sa.ie f.ir the j past twenty years, t cut some wo.d, when the Svn suddenly turned on him with the j axe. The first blow w as fatal. The crime . was not discweicd for a quarter of an ; hour. The parricide was arrested back of ! tho house when the alarm was given. As be is kn.iwn to have been crazy for years ; the law will not punish him. j The centennial celebration .f the bat tle if lieuningt in c- mmenced at IVnnig ton, Vt., on Wednesday, w ith the tiring of cannon, ringing of bells, display of banners. ! music, and oratory. Hon. Daniel Ribetts was orator of the day, and addresses were deli vered by Hon. E. J. Phelps. ex-Gover-noieHawley, of Connecticut, ex-Governor Harriman, of New Hampshire, Gen. Ranks, of Massachusetts, Governor Steph enson, of Rh nie Island. President Hayes and patty ariived at Bennington in the af ternoon aud were enthusiastically received. Tb.- V.- the foil. . n ii- rnaii st i !:, yaid for a this city, a ditneni !i a-Ti-.t. jl- il 1 Il-MIIHS T,,m 1...1 . . 1 " w I ii;, "ii: 1 :t t M Mi tfs ,,f : 1 lli.tr.... J ,f " bllr . .1 f l--g. Ilv.. and one-ha-r ' . -the Kolec :. ... a.' "Ci.m tl.irk Vi. ..... ,,u III )s s( ... to Urooklvn, X. v c,, Lat factoiy there. 1 . Amoii the ohitt,,Tl,.,. in ..nr pa-.cr this m..,,,.. ; Is-lsr of Satin,' ., ' r v-u (. lair, who .li..,i ., " it . oiirbty-Cfth 'T tn C-.U-eiy C'-;:i,v -...I : ' i' rv,ini.:g. HeV.st 1,pp.''.7 i . iiniur I..- ri. and the last i f rame ! St. Cl.i m.s. .,, jiyh :jir. grateful 1.1 ; p.. . ; it. nr. -... . . . 1 -..Ind West. tUl,.,'.1; 1... l:. ' .. .mi, like an .tj .,v, ( uff.1., Miaifibl in front t.f . ' "" nema t.ot width. To swee,. the'., ejes i,e mut tun, At eie- ne to nicer hbrcast I e wouil : t! lee ;1, ceeiie. I l;i?t r-ctilia, afr..c.; IS Rlowii.ir ni -oil h;r,. ness is 1 1 !v a liosti-.i- r the....re' .Uu water, .avu c .in.ty. ,-,. a I- o.ren ou I I.iumV.v n ceas. il ap lie their" f.r 1 previous, and ns l e f,, l-aiai ce within a i,.a.' morniiij:, the bur V., V'H III to I) (-Si1tc, V.' f' tin 1 in the c-mdi: i J; I I tnoi j.lniir h i;.jr v in his diaiy tUr. Lt na live. Stephen. .1. Mm,.v v ,., ontttie sttnnj rccley cami-aio,,..,, o. ... mi.! i nL. j.,..,, j,, t lett vacant I v t!.p t lJgnlen. l,e terest, and on an ;t-vi-,vi - i v - , meetinjj i at r, Nandileur j.: , , f eld, though it is c: !-r f-. ti.riinii Mai ,.. tT run. He second. .1 i re for the Ooor, y j., .-- Mahot, f. u.;!!t twentv-: the election . f ; on band at i:ce, i;o j . , , . I ft CIS liaCKO.: '. . !. At l"i dl M olrf T,.-:, . . the Rochester .-, to-., daughter I Mis. Ti-. t ;, r left aloi.e r!,,i!.t- i f a t to light a Lin,;, t,, ) ,. : V . .' the eh ild sc ,ci , ' -; . . . started to i;m ,i f,,,. : or baby ,,;, ,e , , . that l icres i.f !.., 1.,, .-. ; . di- pi d on t!,e tl -t. c gnish-d them. t I'. v; . and threw heiM-If s i; r n !,".-, . -; ! tiitff out the fue. S! e i t'. :- the bouse and. as t.ar,:'v a- t w ould ;ei nnr. f V v.- When Mrs. M.ukhn.i ' one said : M ... 1 . r. 1 - -I shall die."" she iivt.l in ! : half a!t"i ihe ,tci-:1. : t. R. W. M -.1 , t!e - ; of 1. ci ef a: t !:!i'z. n-t ; !; '.; the c nits f -i ,'iv..:o" ;". - . ) the c round ef ai'i't.-:v. V . reply, which a a j :!.", .!-,o ' hit.n, si. i . li', " ;" '.. ii'!T. i a ren.a: kui'n- i. t leges Coiis'int eiiit !'y v ; : : part of M ret V. : i. ;:.' - n.itte.l t; i : brought to the l.on the roan with wli e : n: li gui'tv of a.!; i. "ci fie.pietit iy tn l w ith Coiigrt s earn ni-iticy. a Edgertot, ai'd whom he had t-. rt"i m1 g:vts I 1.1 l-tl livid . r niat i iage to l.cr. TLf ? one. ickei.in5 ' 1 ndia C nt i'lno t" he '-" ai-e stiew ti tv it); il : bulk of the living a e i i ibs stieki- iT out in 'i with almost rrit ii'i " The fidl stoiv .T w iu a land sw aiii.i!: " when it shall be b-M. if told, w ill stnla Uio " 1 V '.J . would si em n- -w dead and ti-c c :.' i.n vci t the h-i':ai .It and 'hat lie .V;i with the -.tei;. :i thousands of 1 i sun. We com; our happy 1 n.d India and than! ica ! f T.i: Three Months M " an or.p:.ii i;y oi In oidi-r to rrl: fin '.her tr. nMr ai or Haiti anft fa der, carviS f"" teeis f l three :n Itf tr... Heai or.ll-Tl ' General t''r-1.T N The Natiofv.l (". eonipos.-.t el in-'f I .-as. s inn s- ; i ! t..r any t'ro'r serious 1 ss n neon th-ir 1:1 s i: lite a 'l-1 IT"!' that a str. t s t reiri. mis ot l In it lias i " '' l......! in ii.-t-i r r: v it i i.i act ai'nrov.Ml Mav I- 1 the efif:i:n.-iT Itie Milma ot tli- V lllliil." I" oil.':' panic . Mi ll, t : ,.r the Niiti- 'i:i ipi-ii a c ui a' - . , r :.l i - it ;.:" I II.'- !' r h ! -it i i;es will. 'ii' si"' siTO' act i c'y '' iliirieir l '' i"'--u s' ltv isi "i l-i 'II'1 rtin-etc. to I t" .-t nt ' ' fii-i r who ar- at -l H'' I c .letaii.-i t'TTl r- er rel:.-v.-.l. ft- ;' I e set. etc It-"" ' !:'v: to lie t-l lil' 'i- S.r 'ii''. I'"1 " ' antsc! unat to" om-e. thr-nikr'i .Itieer of !''-,r ilti-iir to v l i'" s .if '' ,. I c ' ft V . r t r. in 1 .. .. I s cic.-h replmeiiT. "' i. - i : item' -i. io . i ..... presfit I ite r.' will riTun ' .i;rr I ret" tin" s-'i-iii , r nn i the unattaiti.-t o-. , tmtr. 'ed t-V s.o I ,r vice fer t'ir.e n-1 t "1 ' cn.enren.v. ,..;"' ri,i,'.i..-r.fl . t, npfointi'iu i ' .,. ,. latinjr reel inn"; . 4 ;.i upon Ihe reci i l Ihe lists herein ! r - ., F:urth. TL-,,;JT he r. Poi t. il t:m-' ;e -three inolMhs. r " ,.e.Hle.i. Hi- .',.....1 I'-'. i. . f narticulariy t',u o,.lv to volll'tflT i Ihe-lea-t I'leenveiij.-i ' quiet rest i ' ' . Hsatlstt-I "t t f.- . th.-so ilet nil- " . .. . it... tin ,. S S.Mll ' r ifi I' fits f tne . -ui- and ert initial "t" " V' a, mile !; ,0 0,-' an.t H ntu ltv cutninati'l oi . 0- f J.iH e.,-crn.tr tuC