TBI mmi mm i't t utt'U in 7V IS7S. , Fearful Sacrifice of Unman Life. , Ebensbuig. Pa.. Flit HAW - - AOI.-.VO. Is pubHshinir I lie prospectus of he I'.tisbutgh Ttlujrn ph, laly weekly, n take occasion to say that by its riilai Kl ines t, on Monday last, to a nine Ci-l.umi yair, it now furt.Mies its readeis with a a quantity and as gicat a vaiiety of news fiow all quai te is as they couid possi bly desire. The Ttlejrap? is edited i:h very decided ability, and to those who de a (Wch.ss city paper, one that U thoroughly independent, and not controlled by any rin or faction we know no oilier inui.al more likely to give ihtm iUi "iKitiiifikCtion- " The SciutJie American, aa will be sen from it prnsprelus i-i our present issue, is yiblishcd erkly in iew Yoik by Munn & Co., at the low rate of $.20 a year, in. eluding postage. Kaeli number of the fVa contains sixteen pages of useful information, scientific and miscellaneous, i-iub:viitg a number of elegant illustia lions. U in a iimst valuable and instinc tive publicat ion, to those mho take a spe cial iulrrest in the study of mechanics, manufactures, A' chitcctnre, aciioul'ure lut'iral histoiy, &c. and wo ndvise all thus inteitsitd to M'bciibe for it. (Is Fiiday last the House of Kcptrsent a'ivc at Washington, by n vote of 133 ens to l-0 nays. -passed Hi bill repealing Pie provisions of the act of Congress of VMH providing for 'he resumption (f specie ) .lyments on the fiisl of January, 1871). It , i.. believed that the bill will not pass the ( Filiate, and, even if it should, that it wauld be vetoed by the Ptesidvnt. The chances uie that the rcfumn'.ion net will remain un .hanged, notwithstanding all the clamor nainat it, and that it will he left to he 'emntist rated whether or not under its pro- 1 vikioiih the grrenhack notes can be redceui ed in com at the date specified, j Tun threatened attack on I'lovna, by the Jiio.si.tiis had not oecured up to yesteiilay. nor had tlie links under Mehemct Ali at : tempted to provision the troops witninit, , about whose ability to sustain themselves , iiucli longer without fresh supplies of food t'.re are various conflicting tumors. A hvy snow Motm pi evaded tn t he I. ilk an j loiintains dining '-Yc.lncsday last, an 1 the probabilities are that miiitaiy operation f r the season w ill have to be suspended. Af'er Me dfrat of the Tut Us at Ki, two neeka n, they retreated to Eizcioum, about ninety miles dis ant. It is the capi- il of Aimeni.i and is strongly foitilud. The Ki.siar. commander summoned M itkhtar l'asha, who is defending the ( ) la-e, to surrender it. and received a teply I fiat he would defend it to the last cxtum i - jr. Thiee feet of snon had fallen in the i oiintain in that patt of Aimcni?. on the I ly above irimed. llumoisof peace nego. t 't.,nn me aain revived, but the lano j ran j res dm snot place much reliance in ft ii. 'I he Sultan of Tutkey is irpoited .-ay.ug that he will t.eat for peace only wltu the r.ii.pcior of Kiisshi, and ibo pa IriofSt. I'elersburgli and Moscon, while j-ii f -SMntf a stiong desiie fur j,eace, de eiaie that if niul be brought nb-uit wiih ci.it ilie intei ferenca or ageucy ot the lii i.isli l,oVel liTMlll. (Seohok H'ai.trii, who whs elected Sher iff of Uutler comity in November, If 73, Mud went int.) office in Januaiy, 1S7G, learned last week front a decision of the Knprome Court at Pittsbmgh how peiiloits i' it under (he new constitution in a candi date for office to spend his money corruptly und illegally in procuiing his election. That was the charge againsl Walter, and John MeClute and otheis were named as having teceived the mouoy. In the IbitU-r t 'ounty Court, in which legal procet dings were instituted against him, he got a de rision in his favor, but the Supteme Court leveised it and tinned him out of hisoftice. I U tiffence also f.iiever deprives him of the 1 m lit to hold an office of trust or profit, and t ikes away from him the right of sufirage for four years. Walter alleges that this rtipleasant result is altogether owing to a blinder on the part of his counsel in tho lower Court, and this may be tine, but it v ill not avail him now. This is the first. C ise under the constitution and the act of y.nsembly of 1874 authotizing election ex penditures by a candidate, and the decision li is caused great excitement iu liu.ler c '1111 ty, P. 9. After the decision above referred to had been leudeted. Chief Justice Autiew, on application of Walter's counsel, stayed ' A little mote than biteeii yeais ago, tho : J Union aim; commanded by Gen. John j Pope, who boasted that his headnaiters 1S77. would always he "in the saddle," snffeted aeiushinir ai.d disastrous defeat on wbat was known as the hist Hull Hun battle ground in 1861. The wildest consternation and dismay prevailed iu Washington, and its capture by ihe victorious rebels was re garded as a question of only a few days. President Lincoln, pressed down by the weighty cates and responsibilities or tlie ' war, and dcspnndetit of the future, entered his carriage late at night, and drove to the hotel of General McClellan, who, sometime before, had been removed from his com-m.-.nd of the army of the Potomac through ; the intrigues of Stanton, the Secretary of I War, and his personal ring, to make room ' for the blatant hero or the west, General Pope. Mr. Lincoln had nevei lost his faith in the military skill and genius of JlcC'el lan, and After briefly re fen ing to Pope's defeat and the imminent danger in which it placed the national capitol, he a.ked him ' whether he would forthwith proceed to the ' army, again assume the chief command and 1 at test the threatened rebel advance. Gen eral McJ'tellait, who properly appteciated Lincoln's generous confidence in himself, promptly replied that his services were ! ; ways at the command o! his country. His I commission was accordingly delivered to him the next moining, and. accompanied by his staiT, he crossed the long btidgo into Virginia. The news of his coming hail preceded him, and when ho rode along in front of the at my which had been drawn up to receive him with proper ini'.itaiy honor, long, wild, enthusiastic shout of welcome went up fiom the broken and shatteted ranks of his old soldieis, 6ticb as was never before her.rd on the soil of Vir ginia. That scene may be imagined, but cannot be described. Its only counterpart in modern history was the memorable re ception of Napoleon by his battle-scarred 1 veterans when his familiar form once mote appeared before them i:i his well known military dress, after his escape from ban ishment on the island of Elba, in the spring of IS;1). The icLf 1 at my under Gen. Lee ' was then on the tn.irch to western Maryland, : with Washington for its destination. In Jlftren d'y McClellan, at the head of his old and disciplined troops, into whom his ' presence had infused new life, encountered Lee near Sharpsborg, where he fought and trained the battle of Antiotam, September 17ih, 1S12, and compelled Lee and his army to seek safety in Virginia. Washington ' was saved, and Congress and the President ; the one by a resolution and the other by a ' Iettei, cxpiessed the grateful thanks of tho count ty to Gen. McClellan for his decisive ' and most opportune victory. His name ; became a household woid throughout the ' north, and the highest meed of ptaisy was : bestowed upon him by a grateful people, j He again cioi-sed the Potomac into Vir : ginia, determined to make another efFoit to take Richmond, if his arch enemy, the Sec retary of War, would pctniit it by giving , him the ner.essiiy suppoit. Uut the envi , ous and unrelenting Stanton had been busi , ly, and, as the event pinved, successfully at woik to at rest his maicli at its outset, and when Ihe aimy leached Itec ortown a ! letter w as handed to Gen. MeC It linn from the Secietaiy of War, iiifoiming him that I he had been Mipeteedcd in command by the appointment of General Hu.usidn, and ordering him McClellan) to rrpirt at Tren j ton, Xeic Jcrty. He issued hi farewell ad i dress to tho at my and lepaired to Wasli : ington on his way to Trenton. His ap i p lintment to the chief command fellTipon ; Iiurnside like a clap of thunder from a ' cloudless sky, and he has'ened to Wash i ington to consult with Mr. Lincoln. The ! brief, but reniatkable, interview between ', them is well remembered. (Jen. Burnside ! piotested his unfitness for tho place, and expressed his firm belief that there was but ! one man in the country equal to the task, j "Who is he?" asked Mr. Lincoln. "George , 1$. McClellan," promptly replied Gen.Iiurn ; side. But, it was too'late the enemies of j the victor of Antietam were in the ascend ' ant and Hurcside letutned to take coru , mand. This was in the eatly part of No- i vetnher, 1S62. The defeat of liurnside at A UNITED STATES MAN OK-WAR WRECKED AM ONLY -THIRTY OF A ( KKW OF (INK HUNDRED AND THIRTY-HOUR ES CAPE niOM A WATKKY OKA V K. iminiK. Va.. Nov. 24 was received to-day that the United States steamer Huron, with a crew of one hun dred ami thtity four souls, went ashore this morning about oue o'clock, off Life saving Station No. 7. near Oregon inlet, on ; the North Carolina coast, and was fast go ing to pieces. The wrecked steamer Hes oiute was dispatched by the U.iker bioth eis to her assistance, j As soon as the news of the disaster reached the headquarters of the Noith At lantic squadron in Hampton Road, Rear Admiral Treuehnrd sent the United S utes ; steamer Swataia and the tug Fortune to render all assistance possible. Later information leaves no hope of sav ' iug the vessel. She has gone to pieces un der the fierce assaults of an unusually heavy sea and many bodies have been ! washed ashore. Thirty pf ions were sav ' ed. None of the names of the victims or of the survivors arc known. I The Huron left Fottress Monroe yestcr ' day on a cruise to Havana and the West ' Indies. ! The storm signals have been flying for thiee days, and it. is thought strange that the wartiingshotild have been disregatried. : There was a fierce storm raging all hist ' nicht along the coast, the w ind blowing at the rate of seventy miles an hour. j i The theory of those well acquainted with the coast is that the Huron got caught in the height of the gale, and while trying to 1 hold on, head to the wind, her machinery : gave way, her sales were useless, and she , drifted ashore. It appears that there was no assistance rendered from the shore, the life-savine station not having been manned. ! The United States steamer Powhattan ! ; has left Fot tress Monroe for the scene of ; tho wreck. I Washington, Nov. 25. The observer ; at the scene of the wreck reports as follows: j Drowned whose bodies have been recover : ed : White men Thomas M'Farland, Al ' exander Cameron, Rariet Ratche, William j Green anil James Couch. Colored Geo. i W. Miller and Mathias Hayes. Saved : Officers, Cor. way, master ; Denig, assist ant engineer ; Young, ensign ; Wai hut ton, , cadet engineer. Men Pe er Duffy, Joseph Robinson, Frederick Hoffman, Dan Denig, . Dominic O Donald, Harry Nelson, Thomas . Pi ice (colored), John Calling. J. K. Hoi- land, Thomas Cat ley, Joseph Hynes, Vil i liam M'Hugh, Joseph Mntphy, Ftrtiik i Walls, Dennis K. Deary, Michael Tranor, I I'll ward Tranor, Au'oino Williams, Saui t uel Clark, Michael Kennedy, William I Brooks, Harry Lvey, Daniel Dergan, Mich j ael Darken, Frank May, Robert Sampson, '. Patrick Cane, William Houseman, August j L. Aienberg. j Cause Thick weather, fiesh gale di ; recily on shote ; fore and aft sails, set reef j foresail and mainsail catried away; jib stay bent ; and the fores to i in stay sail was st nick between one and half past one in i the morning. The boats we id washed ; from the boat's davits, leeward. The 1 first cutter was swamped about ten min ' tttes later. Lieutenant Palmer was drown ! ed about the same lime the captain was. ; The livintr saved themselves by swimming : ashore. No aid was obtained from shore ' except when near the beach. The incn-of-' war Powhattan and Swaiara and the brig : Fortune are anchorod abreast of the wreck, i Flag communication opened with them j through the steamer 1). and J. R.iker. No ' assistance can be lendeied from the steam er, as the surf is still heavy. Thesuivivors ! go to Not folk this evening, j The signal service observer at the scene , of the wrecked Huron reports at 5:2.1 p. m. j to the chief signal officer as follows : ''The ! kiii f boat of the wrecking steamer, D. J. R.iker, iu attempting to laud was swatr.ped with iii tie men on board. James S. ' Yksone, Stephen Hell, Dennis M'Coy, I Willis Walker and Captain J. J. Guthrie, 1 paymaster, of the life-saving fetation, were : lost." ; Secietaiy Thompson has telegraphed fo 'the naval authorities at Norfolk to semi tlie surviving officers of the lost Huron to Washington. They will probably reach this city Tuesday morning. Nothing di rectly tioni a naval officer has yet reached the department with j-egard to the wreck. The United States steamer H'.uon was i one of tlie eight sloops of war authorized ! by act of Congress, approved February 10, j lr73. all of which have already been i launched. Her frame was laid September ! 3, 1873, under the supervision of contractor j John W. F.asby. Her dimensions were hs i follows: Length over all, 213 feet ; length ! of deck, 191 feet ; depth of hold, 15 feet, i and she was of about G50 tons register. ! Her battery consisted of one eleven inch j pivot gun, four nine inch broadside guns and one sixty pounder l ine. ciie was j built at the Not folk navy yard and launch- Master W. J. Fieneh had the deck. She had sighted and passed Currituck light and orders were given to keep a bright lookout for Body's Islstid light. At 1:40 Ihe vessel struck, and all hands impulsively rushed on deck. Captain Ryan and the officers acted oroniotlv, and the crew responded l Information ' all orders with alacrity. The surf was ter- I'Uic. bhordy arter I lie vessel sh uck a boat waslowered, but immediately swamp ed. The vessel slewed broadside to the sea, which made a char break over her, sweeping everything from the decks and carrying the boats from the davits. Many seamen and officers were washed over boatd, anil sevcial weie killed by pieces of the wreck. Captain Ryan and Lieutenant Simmons were last seen together as the sea struck tl e vessel, and they were swept away. The vessel broke up fast. The surf be came more and more furious, making it beyond all human efforts to hold on. It w as dark. Signals of distress had been re ceived. No one knew where they were, and all that did get ashore were washed there by the sinf. The cause of the wreck is attiibuted to local att taction of the com pass, and a stiong current settling iu yew ana tHiter jYotinas. Forty million bnshels of wheat were raised this year in Minnesota. The Hood of Saturday night did 30, 000 damage at Chanibersburg. A gale drove fifty vessels upon the En glish coast Saturday night. Many lives were los. Miss Ella Howard, of Johnson county, Mo., committed suicide on Saturday be cause she and her lover had disagreed. In Monroe county, this State, the dem ocrats carried every district, and two El dred and Tunkhantiock unanimously. The Lutheian church in Reaver City, Pa., has an oil well on the piemises, ami the flow is sufficient tojiay all the cuuieh's expenses. A firm in Mansfield, Masa., is manu facturing jewelry out of sour milk. It is not related iu what whey such au invention occiii red. An Omaha husband sues for a divoro because, while the color of his own aud his wife's hair is jet Llack, her babe's hair is bright red. Henry ITausmann, who shot his time children and then himself at No. 19 Chrys- j ed on Match 8, 1875, being the tiist vassel launched from that yard since the close o tin war. She was baik tigged, had back action compound screw engine of 8(10 horse power, and was one of the handsomest corvettes in the service. On March 18, 1877, she sailed from i rt shote, which made t lie vessel go further to j tie street, New York, on tho 12ih ius.t. the southward than her compass course in : died on Sunday. dicated. j Mrs. MCiure, wife of Alexander K. - - M'Clure, editor of the Philadelphia J'iiue., died on Saturday last from au attack of neuialgia of the heait. There aie ten blast furnaces within the city limits cf Pittsburg, Pa. Of these seven are in blast, and their combined ca pacity is about 104,000 tons a year. A man in Ohio is having a house hewn out of a solid rock, the material being cut away so as to leave the walls, roof, and floor all of one piece. It will be very damp. Arthur Retler, son of a prominent meiehant of Independence, Iowa, shot himself in the giaveyaid at that place on .Saturday, dying instantly. No cause is assigned. There are six families in West Midde town. Allegheny county, that can match out t8 children on dres parade. The smallest family contains 10, aud the largest 15 children. At Baltimore, on Sunday evening, Miss Laura Rannon, wi h a pistol, acci dentally discharged, fatally shot her cousin, James Murphy. They had just ret tuned from chinch. The shr rifl'of Montgomery county has a turnpike advertised for sale ; the sbeiiff of York county oft'eis a circus at auction, and the slo-i iff of Schuylkill county proposes to sell a church at public octcry. Tho steamer C. II. Northam, plying between New Yolk and New Haven, was burned Tuesday morning at her dock. Three colored men perished. The loss is $175,H)0; insured for $ 120,00. There is a continuous line of demo cratic judges from the southern shoie of Lake Erie to the northern boundaiyof West Virginia, a distance of 100 miles. Eight of the districts are republican. A BataviaiO.) dispatch says Chailes E. Dimmitt, Deputy Auditor, was at tested, chatged w ith robbing the county treasury of $24,000 a mouth ago. Dimmitt was com mitted to jail iu default of teu thousand dollai s bail. Although the Democrats had every thing their own way in Mississippi at the late election, thiee negroes were elected to the Legislature on the Democratic ticket, and colored men weie chosen to several County offices. A large owl. with a mink-trap and three feet of chain attached to its foot, was killed near Paducah. A family of ne groes were very much relieved to lind it was tot "de debil dat hab been pulliu' chains ober dey house." In Geauga couny, Ohio, on Tuesday night, a constable and three deputies ar rested a man suspected of lobbing a cloth i"g store on the 15th inst. While taking their ptisoner to jail they were ovet power ed by a masked mob, who hanged him from a tree. A tramp who sought to get f warm by sitting on the top of a lime kiln, near Ma i gee town, Montgomery county, was suffo I cated and tunned to death. On Fiiday j morning two men found his body bv the sioc or me k i hi ounied so badly as to be unrecognizable. Hiram and William Rupert, cousins, aged respectively 15 and 1 years, sons (.f Adam and Philip Rupett, of South Rend township, Armstrong county, weie killed almost instantly while digging coal, by the falling of a piece of slate, ineasiu iug about fifteen feet square. The Pottsville StumJ.ird says that Mr. A. W. Seltzer has at his drove yard a cnii osity in the hog line in the shape of a por ker weighing 425 pound'!, red and black in color and having not a bristle on his body. It was bought in Iowa, and a drove Lad to be bought to get it. An old man named Johnson, with his head whitened by the frosts of 86 winters. The authoiities of Providence, Rkode ': It-l.uid, recently sent back to Iiacadie, New Hi unswick, a girl named Caroline Brideau, ; aillicted with leprosy, and iu an advanced 1 stage of the malady, who had for two or j three years lived iu Providence in scveial ; families there. j The Eastern Hep-rosy was introduced in Tracadte from tho Levant in the year 1758, i ; according t; one account, by a Freuch ; vessel, which had on boa id a large quanti- j ! ty of infected clothing. The vessel having i bi 'en wrecked, this clothing was takfii on i ' shore and worn by the inhabitants. A ter- ! j riblc pestilence bioke out, and 800 victims i weie buiied in one place. The surviving j fled, and formed three hamlets on the coast j : 'if fit. Lawrence, one of which is Tracadie. : The plague went with them. No active ; j measures weie taken to suppress it uutil ; : 1844. when a medical board was organised, j ' and a lazaietto established. In 1808 the ; I pest house was placed in charge of nuns I j from the Hotel Dieu, of Mim ical, and the j ; lepers have since been treated like human j beings, instead of caged w ild beasts. j The Abbe Gauvreati, who has been for ! eighteen years chaplain of the lazasetto, j I descitbes leprosy as a "subtle poison intro- ' ! duced into the human b nly by transmission i j or by dnect contact." He also says that j j some of the unfoi lunates, feeling the in- ! j sidiotts approaches of the disease, and , ' shrinking fiotr, the idea of the h-zaietto, j ! secretly escape from Tracadie, and, while j as yet there are no externa symptoms tfi j I excite suspicion, obtain employment in : : families, and scatter the contagion. He j I mentions one instance of a youth who died I I in a hospital at Boston. As large mini- j ; hers of French Canadians are employed in 'the facto' ies ot Rhode Island atid the! ' neighboring States, it is possible that Miss ! ! JSnaeau s case is uot a singular one. A S3 Savl! $l Saved! $Z Saved! $5 Saved! $." Saved! $5 Saved! $5 Saved! $J Sated! $5 Saved! $5 Saved! $! Saved! $Z Saved ! $!i Saved! $5 Saved! $5 Saved I $5 Saved! $5 Saved I $5 Saved ! $5 Saved! $5 Saved! $.1 Saved! $5 Saved! $5 Saved! $r, Saved! $5 Saved! $5 Saved! TO SAVE AGOOOoWiSEAHfiEST v TiTrTut aurthiag ia the paper t!t i rJ:ncj fully suUrtJinriaie. CEUTAIN FACTS riractoour knowle-lpe that tome ezcl'.n t pori t -f jj-tmfr with their reoiify witbcut&uy nnmn. It it alt njtit where peopi ckoe u, U:r mnrifT away; bal if tney rare to save. theT will tnj in ntr'r Jnntioiee. for exactly ir ea&ir.e matriaJ.w s;i a w.r s.i.t ii cheapor. sr.J our pnotls ara m-.ra vuttt.t.a.'( male in the tarpain. The t re r ail r-jfn to erybody. and th. fu t can oe seen by l;k:Pe TVwe who are m-t judge hart an abauiot aavii.-: in f.ur i"irintf. tuil tLe fact that Uiay oe.ii Kt u.i -saoiiey Lftui 1 f thv chorse to. The eloti.;n we ofer it rift p-t f-.r "whiow,; bv.t oh arUrle it f.nifha 1 fc-r U ur cf rt ; ,,,B we expect toanrve from yr to yetr. OlB Cloi2l l FA7H10NATU.Y fTT, UHtFlIXY MAIE. THUKOrsHI-Y Sfl.vr.ip MAI'E OF RFL1A1H F. MaTXKIaI. MOPKRATETY 1 KM F.l. l.O(D FOR THF l.f'S'i F:1V. CAN BE Tt'RNFP I'UK IM'i MONEY IF THE fcVYLR M;r.K:. FOR THE FALL OF 1877 We have Uielargit stork rr known in Phfia irJ we j.nt down pr'.cat at onc, to a to tell tuor iit.ii ttI IMMKNaE LOTS Hoy' Suit. Men's Suit. Uoyn9 Overcoat. Meii Overcoatf. A FEW PRICES ARK SUBMITTED: Ccmplft Main's Suit, - Ettr Ori, - - V. - - All-Wool Suit, - - - - Diagonal Suits, Doubla Bpeatid Frock Style, Whole Suit, - t!7 BO SoM elwhere at $25. Fine Suit of the Beat Materia!, $1S, $20 to S3-! Tc y ' Suit aa low aa ' - - J i o Men's Overcoals, - . - . S8 tc SitO $ J Aflftf; fd; Si, Sttd: $ 5 Sated; 5 Sired; $Z Sated; ft Sated! $3 Scred; 5ltf ; fo Saved; ts su: fS Said! ?o Sand: fo Snved! $5 Saved! $5 Sarrd', I Stokm-Panorama in Nevada. A re j matkable iiAtnral plienomena icculiar to j that legion is thus desctibed by the Vir : ginia City (Nev.j Enterprise : I I.Bst Pnnflrty afo-rnoon no les than fv li; I tint t snow-jual!s were at toe s.imc moin nt to I l- sci n tn in oirrcsM iiiiihi:k tl.e moii'itHins hi.i1 , (Ifscrjs to the eiistWHril, white in thjse'tv not h i thtke'ivHS tnllm-. '1 he squalls reprexen teil nil j fteirrees of tlfici'm . anil trotn the most nortli . erly to the mniit snniherlv stretched over nil ; extent of at ie.ift tm hinirtreil iTiile-ot etnmtry. Tin; tnfist nnrth'Tly wis also that furrlier j east. Hii'i H.(.-ri1l 10 t,e .iireeilv over tlie 1'or i ty miie ll. pert. Ii wns tilsi. k niirht, rtn.i ttp I peared to tie Bom ten tuili- in (liaaieter. A ! iriHii in the e-nter if it wotil.l h.ive been inciiii ; I'll to suppose tint a was sriowinu t urimisl v over the whoie continent, y et a few toiler taiti'e nurlhwiir.l twoor three tail (eak.J n-.-n- -.o- in i tn tli full 1.1 17. of the sti-i. Ttie hil's an.i ! iioiiiiititiiis beyond t tiiu binck Hjuail were liid.lt. 11 ; ss ti a tiim-k eui ta.n. j Nearer ami furl her south a fnrm wna in urn. ! jrress tl.nt was less black 111 ph hi arice. thoutrh I It was still ttnek eiioiitfii to hideull thecountrv : behind it ns it crept uionir to the eastward. 1 rrncluiiif from the level or tiie Valiev ot I'm-aiiti ; i to the cloud whence it came, hiifh in th hcav ; ens. .Mill nrnror and between the city and the i ! mountain of Cnmo h llurht s'tnall. two or three I 1 miles in width, was In proaress, Thrruush this ' j the niountaiu pettks hi-yoinl were 10 be s-eii us tnioii(rh a liifht foir, whik a mite further oiith I 11 storm whs iHiTiiitf in a belt not two miles in ' I wld'h that whs so black hs to liifle nil behind it. j ; Miles away to the southward still another heavy storm was creeping al.mir. covering and , hi'liefr a ninieiif twenty or thirty mius ot lulls. ; I ti'-tween these several snow sijualis nr storms ! I the hills and mountain peaks were pinluty to be ; seen as far as the eyecould reach, and here and 1 j there a peak irlowed like K'-ld miles and miles i j tiryon 1 the dark curtains r fallm snow. la lew IochIh ies can a wider ratifr or country ! I 'e lkcn In Mtone view than from ntir elevated 1 ! lookout on .Mount Davidson : th. p'neeft In thr tt better opportunity of SMn) inf uiNii iiu-f (i I'uiifT snow Wanamaker & Brown, OAK Sixth & Market Sts., Philadelphia. r Maior Kennatd.ex-Tieasiirerof Cham - A dispa'c't fp.tn Dii-i'V V4 j.lain county, III., coiif.-sswl that he had ' lav uigl. savs : 1 he :.v-i V-.- .. T-,,.,.... ,i, twni.y ui uel., . u, tieanv tl.e iiu:,i Alio was indicted for foigeiy. He laised the plea that, as there was no anthoiiiy tif law for the original isue of the genuine bonds, the chaige of forgery con hi not be sustained. The joi y w as insti ucted to bring in a verdict of not guilty. Mis. Sitzler washed the shelves in her husband's Philadelphia drug store, ai d did not replace the bottles exact ly a they w ere before. A girl came in to buy a mix ture of -cas or oil and peppermint. Mr. Siller took a bottle from the place where peppermint had been, and mixed the cis ter od ith muriatic acid by mistake. The consequence was the death cf a httle child. The friends of ('rt el A. I". Xoyes met in large numbeis at the Fallon House, Lock Haven, on Thursday night, and can' him a serenade as au cxpiesMoti of their personal legaid and their pleasure at his election to the oiliee (if State Tieasutet. He responded in his happiest manner. St eechis were marie by seveial prominent citizen, and, iiotwiil srandnig the bad weather, it was a spirited nnd pleasant oc casion . The body of the wife of Mr. Jarnes Campbell, lesidini; lieat Hlootnini; top, It?d , who was buiied m her father's faim in the common soil -f '.lie locality, in an otdi naiy wooden casket, twenty "ea:s ago,W;is being exhumed for the put pone of removal to the chinch yard, when the weight of the cofhn induced them t open it, atid the body was found appaienlly as sound as on the day of intei ment, the fcatntes beit g nat u t al and pet feet. .lames Kosrluitg Ilawkina. ohted. aged twenty years, washat ued at Tows,. n- hei". 1 he ihitn.i- is ninietl.a". ";i!',o'i. .,- in,j iti the l).tu i net a' 1 ;!f 1 1 S.'iiniv i ivets l"t:. The Viigara M.tiiai.J li-ij tained n.tii h dai...;e at th'- ; iron bi idge over the SU'n.'.u, that road i fore. Three bridges im tl.e san-e in d havt -away, ai d tl.e r-'Tidbed tr .: inaiiv p'acts. !.i'i Mt : i r. t dai kiisc. at t he A number of hoist" away, ar.d the lienii.i.; fitshet is ii.calcidiil'ie." hv. York's bt'ij k'jow day. Neaily 2''" inf.i :'.-. ets and pin-es. eie most f thctn weie wth majni'y weie c-"it: :-t-:i'( 1 the pooie:- c:.i. ''.it i ! Miiuay II ill aie said tu i; sent. it ies th ie also. N five years of age is stir;-: picniit'tiit utttac" ii't.s h:i twins, !a:t;ieg fn-tn f t months old. 'itie '''' '9ck. lowing tn ih" v.: i". the weather. An 'tie; c y b!e j -iuted b.iiy, and . w ltli a d.'U'i e c; ovu ne'ii" : !-hn the tbau is afTurded hero iu Vir(;itiia or ram storms AS AsHTABCI.A HoittlOR IX THE SofTII. a Loiumoia, j. U., dispatch of Nov. 24 . j says : The startling news was received last ,''it over the hill to the ponr-house," the 1 evening that a terrible accident had occur- ther day, in Houtbon county, Kan., and f i red on the Charlotte, Columbia and Autnis- I ,'e,, after being there two days. The au- ta Jtaiiroail, about twenty miles from Charlotte, caused by the falling of a trestle i bridge that spanned the Fishing Creek, j while the noon train from Columbia for ; Charlotte was running over it, and that, all ! the passengers had perished. The en use j of the accident is conceded to be the under- j mining of the piers by the action of the un I usual current brought to bear upon them, i They weie undercut to such an ntlont Miai I t carrying of cliionoinetnc diflerences of i tne j ir of the moving train being suddenly longitude from that point alotitr the north- ! transferred to these supports, caused them ! Fiedcricksburg followed in December, to ! "y". South Carolina, on a scienlitic . , . , - ,, ,, , cruise in the V est Indies and on the Span- be supplemented I ho following May by ,sll hflvilIt? ,,een 0.(,ei e,, tu UI t II.H.kei's signal disaster at Chancellorville. Spain, island of Trinidad, where her spe- Ptanton is in his giave, but McClellan i cial woik was commenced. This was the still lives, honoted and respected through out the Republic. On the 6th of the prosetit month he received another order, not from a jealous and hostile Secretary of Var, but an oider issued through the ballot-boxes of New Jeisey by a majority of neaily thirteen thouiand of her voters, who, repos ing confidence in his ability, patriotism and integi ity, directed htm to report at the same city of Trenton, to which he was banished in November, 18f!2, on the 14th of next Jan u.iry, then and there to take his official oath as Governor of the State. It is thus that time has its revenges aud makes all things tha order of the Com t oust in t he Sliciitl mid granted a reargunient of the case on tin uiriira before the judges iii January next at Philadelphia. as a- - To attksii'T to refute the old and un foiuried slander anainst L'lesident Buchan an, so of en tevivrd by Republican pa pers, that ho recognized the light of a State to secede from the L'nion as a remedy tforaupposedoijacttr.il erieviatiecH is little m than an insult to a man of oidiiiaiy.iir tell'tcenee. The calumny has been com- even pletely exploded time aftefiitne. but the ! following extiact from his messagoto Con- 1 ress, in Pecemher, liT0, befoie the re-! hellion commenced, is so directly to the i point that we cannot refrain from lepub- j lishiug it. Mr. Cuchaaau in his message j aid : j In r?r to Justify secession A n ennstltn- I t'nonl remedy. It must te on t Iif principle that , tum federal mircriimfnl is n mere voluntary . t . . ..r -i ii . K tiMwoleeri lit I)PARlirf J" P v any of iieeonirnc'ti.ijr pai ties. If this n s, , yt.t, of which on last years basis the Re wtiipj rop- ... - ... ... i iuoiicaus stiouiu nave rccetvii xio.o.J XWXXn ! Vhey got, taking the returns where their rmtdinaip raf i ti i-t Tinr - o 1 1 a o rf nnd mii-a - - ..... . . . v . . v ... ( tfi OHIO ; CU ' lacged furthest behind, ; a falling "It wnsn't much of n tidal wave In Pennsvl vaniii. cither. The omcinl tiirures show the lioiiioenitic pluralities to rHiiie Irom e.SO to P.Wil. ThiscMimot liedeserihert.tn t he liing-iintfe of truth as a crusher." Trilmue. It wasn't eh? It can't, can't it? The total vole of 1876 for Ii esident wan 7o8,S6i. of which Hayes received 384,122, or 5016 ter cent., and Tilden 3(50.158, or not quite 43.3 kt cent. This year'a vote was 54'.),- t ue emit t rated a ..f hlii. oniiiion In un v untnior our tliu ' -lliree sratps may i""'" tliemsrlvi Into its many petty Jorrlinr and hos tile republics, eachoim retirintr rom Ihe iiiiiun without responsibility, whenever any sudden excitement mlg-ht impel them lo such n course. Uy ili. con raw m union niirht l. entirely hrnketi no Int.i friflfnenta In a lew weeks, which cist our fathers m.iny years of toll, prlvat on and Llood lo establiiili. It ii not .ret ?nd!l Hint anvoUuse tn tTe constitution rivea cuiinte i "oe lo such a theory. It in e.ltoirether round ed on in urencr. not from any bourn . ton- - an ehKrueter of Ih several Intel ty hich It r.,i r .tinea. r '.'Ti'" V:,. . . ..I . 5o0.000.- A' istf. line an inni niiafi. j - fr t'l off from the vote that under an iiiichane-ed condition of things they would have had, of 3H,7!1(1, or something over 12 per cent. The Democrats weie entitled to look for 2fi.-,,rt:y, and got 251,000; falling off, 14, fi:V, or leas than 6 r cent. This is quite tidal wave enough t be satisfied with when the scattering vote from 8.500 iu a poll of 750,000 jumps up fo 53,500, in a poll of J. World, l.onof Itssnver. in rinht. t.. secure he remnln rter? In the l.mru .t-eof Madisor,. w ho has l e, n VnU the father of the const m Urn .' . .a t,r .he sr.it. s-ihst is. by tbe people m e -b of the state, actimr in their ' u'l iVn CHimcltv. ni form it. oon-equeotly. by thi.MtTffCr.lj which formed the .'Me Cons , ,.- lion.. Nr i. "VlnV. Jf.tea ereafft i.y the constitution Ies. a ii'M.nHn tb strict aence ot the term wlihin &Eit?1 " ! P-"cra. rban t he overnmel SlfiXSf ,VJ ! eora trutionor tu .ttenai WltlfHf iA asil'tK entitle.. The clerk of the Dauphin county treasurer, a young man named John H. Ni.iley, ia missing, aud foul play is sua pecied. He is a brother of the tieasurer, aud au examination of his account, shows that everything i tninincr to the office ia corrrct. This seems to be th pidernio eaoQ for "iuyeteiious disappeaianteb." ei n coast of South America as far as Aspin wall, and the preparation ol sarntig ilireo tions for entering the various ports she vis ited. During the trip she visited all the important ports on the northern and east ern coasts of South America. For this wot k she carried a complete and valuable an ay of apparatus. She returned from this cruise in August, arriving at Philadelphia on the 17th of that mouth. After remain, iug at this port a short time she sailed south again, aud was in Hampton Roads, off Foi tress Monroe, on the 20th instant. She saiied thence for Ilavaua yesterday morning. The North Carolina coast, upon which the Huron was wrecked, is one of the most dangerous of any along the Atlantic sea board. The coast line begins at Little River inlet, on the borders of Sou h Caro lina, aud runs neailveast to Cape Fear, thence northeast to Car Iiokout, thence j in the same general direction to Cape Hat- ! teras, and thence north to the Virginia line, j a distance of nearly 4W miles. Alot.gthis i whole stretch of coast there are sandy, j barren desert islands from half a mile to j two miles in width, separated by numerous j inlets, few of which are navigable. From these islands shoal extend far into the rendering the navigation of the coast exceedingly dangerous. Nariow, shallow I lagoons, lilled with constantly changing saiiu o.us, exieiio an aioug ine coast soiiiu of Cape Lookout, between the mainland and the "Sand Islands," LATER FROM THK WRECK. No more bodies have been tecovered from the wreck of tho Huron. The tide ia running strong northward, and it is proba ble that a nnmlicr will come ashore furth er north. The sea is too hih to get a boat to the wreck. The dead body of a colored man from Raker's boat was washed up during Sunday night. Seveial seamen of the Huron have been interviewed, and make the following state ment : The vessel was heading her course south southeast, under after sail to steady her aud steam iim along. There was no eveul to excite 7pieL...Moii of any danger. to suite, and the weight completed the ruin j or the whole bridge. The engine and ten- dor passed over in safety, and the structure ; fell when the expiess and baggage coaches were well on it. The expiess" car went : iuto comparatively shallow water, and Ex ; press Messenger Fateman escaped with a little hurt. Up to this hour the onlv names of victims definitely ascertained here are I those of Messrs. W. J. Oi r and J. F. Mc I Laughlin, of Chailotte, N. C, reported iiiownea, ana Jloiehead, also of Charlotte, inj u red. A Welsh Phenomenon-. From time to time the west coast of Wales seems to have been the scene of mysterious lights. i no niieenin century, and again on a In larger scale in the sixteenth, considerable alarm was created by fires that "rose out of the sea." Writing in January, lfi94, the Rector of D.ngelly stated that sixteen ricks of hay and two bams had been burned by "a kindled exhalation which was often seen to come from the sea." Passing over other alleged appearance, in Match, 1875. a letter by the late Mr. Pictoti Jones ap peared in "Rygone8,"page 19 giving an account of curious light, which he had witnessed at Pwllheli, and now we have a I"""". 'V0 '-yn l"t within the last are kent bnrninc till ...o.,,; " ",.:, " V .ew weeKs "lights of various colors have Bradford bv niJht " " . . ?1'H Ila1k thorinec- wore not badly paid, however, as ifoo were ioutiO in ins pockets. It is stated that Frank Rande, the no torious desperado, recently arrested in St. Louis for a double minder after a desper ate conflict iu which he killed one police man and nearly murdered another, is a native of Claysville, Washington county, this Slate, and that bis real name is Frank Duratit. Jacob Hnntzingcr, late president of the Miner's Tiust company bank at Potts ville, and his son Albert, cashier of the bank, charged with conspiracy to defraud Thomas Kerns, j.rotlionoiai j of Schuylkill county, a depositor, out of $24,000, were Friday evening found guilty after a trial of fifteen weeks. Nicholas Pleimling. "a notorious rough, his been attested at Sparta. Wis., on sus picion of having murdered Mrs. Van Voor hees. whose body, with the belies of her three chihlien, was found in her binning dwelli ii at Wilton about a month ago. He had threatened violence to the deceased, and was seen near the house a "short litre befoie the discovery of the lire. A Montreal man went to California twenty years ago and never wrote back to his wife. She deemed him dead, and mar ried again. The second husband died.and last spring she tin.k a third. Now, the lust returns and claims her. She has sep arated from the third, but intends to re turn to him if she can get a divorce fiom the first. The streets of Bradford, in the oil re gions, are as light by night as by day. A large natural gas well in the vicinity fur nishes the gas, which is carried through pipes along the different streets, at a slight cost. Gas jets as larire an hor,.fi, r.. iieu,uciiiiy oceu seen moving over the estua ry of the Dysynni River and out at sea. They are generally in a northern direction, but sometimes they hug the shore, and move at a high velocity for miles towards Aberdyfi and suddenly disappear." Can any authoiities upon natural phenomena furnish information on the subject? Ot- wentry AdrertUer. George Dell, aged 17, and Jacob Mas- sorth, aged Co, quarrelled i:i New York , Sunday afternoon. Massorth wounded Dell with a hatchet, and Dell cut Mas-! soi th's throat with a razor, causing almost instant death. The young homicide was arrested. It is alleged that the quarrel was caused by Dell's mother having ini- 1 proper relations with Massorth. pea ranee. Moses II. Orinnell. th r-ii merchant and politician, died at his resi ! dence in New York city, on Saturday night J last, in the 75th year of his age. Mr. I ,WS e,ect"'1 to 'ngress as a whig i lo? 3J',V,U "'wdeftrnteil for re-election iu i ,Me WR collector of tlie port of New -.oik during the first term of Grant's ad- I ministration u A first class foreign mission in not often refused but Col. Rob Ingersoll actually to'd Hayes he would rather remain in Washing ton and practice law than drive in a each and for '-under the Linden" and drink with Bismarck ; and as a consequence all the folks are staring at "Rob" as he passes along the avenue, and wonder bow long he has been crazy. town, Ualiimoie county, Friday moining at half past nine o'clock, for an atrocious assault uH.u Ida Schaefer. a school git I, aged thitteen yeais, in April last. Pre vious to the execution religions sei vices were conducted in the pi isoii?r' cell by Revs, Daniels and Rice. In a letter to his father and mother, written by a friend at the request of Hawkins, he made full con fession of his guilt, In the esse of "Ruck" Dotmellv. tiled in the Pottsvilie emir for complicity in the murder of Thomas Sanger at Raven Run in 1875. the jury on Sattitdav returned a verdict of murder in the first'degree. He has just seived out an eighteen months" term of imprisonment for an assault, w ith attempt to kill, upon a German near Raven Run. Mis part in the imiuler of Sanger and L'ren was that of a helper in planning the affair. Thomas Munley has already been hanged for this ciime. Thursday evening, at Pottstown, on Hie Ohio river, opposite East Liverpool, I homas Potts, an old man. was killed bv bis son, John Pot s, in a lit of anger ai being reproved for dissipation. He seized bis fa her, dragged him to the river, threw him into tlie water and c-ndeavoied to drown him, but the old man struggled desperately for his life nnd succeeding in releasing him self, ran to his house for prntec ion. The son followed closely, and seizing a hatchet dealt his father several blows with it, in flicting injuries w hich soon resulted fatally. A colored man, who voted the Repub lican ticket at Lancaster once too mnnv at the late election, was sent to jail for ten months. He will be out in time for the election next fall, rematksthe Philadelphia Time, but it is probable that he will never again undertake to vote tw ice on the same daj-, aRd under the Cons-hut inn it m ill be four years befoie be will have a right io vote at all. It is not an unusual pastime, but it is unpleasant to get caught at it, and race, color or previous condition of setvi thde makes no difference, even in Lancas ter. Agnes Eagan, an operative in a Fall River factoiy, recently dreamed that she would be stricken dumb, and on Wednes day of last week, whilo talking with her associates, she was suddenly stricken with dumbness, the shock lieing preceded by a sharp tingling sensation from the throat, extending through the entire system. She had always been a robust, jollv girl. is not ill now, and keeps at her woik a. usual, though she refuses to seek relief from an electric batter), as advised by a physician, believing that that w ill also make her blind and deaf. The directors of the Irish Catholic colonization s.K-ie y of Philadelphia have just closed negotiations for securing a tract of land at Bai nesville, Charlotte county. a., containing about seven thousand acres, at fll an acre and on ten yeais' time. There are on the tract a stw mill, grist mill, tannery, aluit forty small dwell ings ami a large mansion, valued at sever al thousand dollars. The society is nego tiating for the sale of the latter to a le ligions organization, w hich proposes to ue it. for school purposes. The land is to be sold to colonists on ten ycatV time, at a slight advance, in tracts of twenty five, fifty and one hundred acres. Colotosts id tending to settle thereon next spring a;e btivv eiJiolliiig. : -' ,-t - : i in. a ss i .nki a!I it ih mi c.i : REAL ESTATE 0? E EE at mi l's yi ill, ni in o : 1 On TUESDAY, PEt'EMFIIK f 10 ' I Ot li. 1. nr. Fiii". r-'- s ".?" Itvulrd in let :: f.--.-ra 1 ' " : - ' 2. UNI: FA KM f . r" k V " llrtsrrtv nr,.;.. rtv ; I : ' barn. :i l .icr r.f :i. NK KAliM. r T: ir.t ' tie HM'T j ; part nia.!-.)w. K" 4. F A KM. lt5 the llm-T't V-l -r:y a- tin 1 eter: tm t-rr - r'' c ,i r enlt ivatteii. V ilNKTHlfTt;AiT,F'.s-: ! "" ty. Hakrr ami -iiers. R. (INK TH ACT f 1 V r ' aVi i f 4.1 acri- T. USE T It ACT ( f :v I ' ' ri .' . , Mnrtin Fet-re 1 t- l ' "''' ' lanrfl linn t hr !. ii. S. ONK TK ACT ef A. r-. aH.ve 141 aerea. 1 '! I.nuf' i !" ... it. and .lireotiy abvvc !Nt m -j.!. P. ONE TKACr (!.!'.' A ul-' ' " of Krlfcy'si linn. VI. THK VAHTIN li'. ,: 1 433 sere. K'3 ui r.'lio-. . s 11. THK MAKT1N Kf.V TitAiT''- l. THK M All TIN ULl. 1K.V lore'. , . , . . - tc i! T i:i. THE r A THICK I'A ThA arros, l.V. i'roti'f . , - 14. 1 11 K V A 11 1 IN T!: l i 1-v' iitpii. ll.i nt-ri'iio-1. ' . - 1 : IV THF. THHFF. FH TKKIT in ll.e Mart u 16J puri'hf. jxoc. to. ii. v:. n.!4r ! fliip. een:ni n" t M ' .; K. K.. in alt " -liere-!. r. 1 1 Varm M -W ill he sol.l uci'iw "r in. HAi.KiNrK!:rv'T , ', urvoyJ in rr:it:t i . IT. H ALF !M Kl!!:t ;i es. urvcyevt n Jirr.rt 1 1. HAI FlN1F!:ITi furvey-!! i.n narr-oil if J- tXo. 1. IT ' 1 rr ' shin, t'anit ria r. ur'v. ar derlai:! it li c. xl. i h liy the ht irs "f '. I- '.i:n. TH CT of 'K' White townhip. l .-m the n:inie of in'iiia.'' H' a .Iwellinc tioe. ! e well timt'ereJ auJ umttr and fire clay. :t It4 si" . o . -r- ..r. li - 1 4.f : H '" i 1- - '' 1.. ' ; i'i. ; " ... t; r a '" .; !ri: K'i.i '' ' , 20. H A IK IXTfcKK-sT !n f" ( 4ol arrt-s. i.n I'lcarii'-w ,.T rf hip. I'uraWa pouu'.j : '" "' UeriaiJ with !. SI. THKFATUH K B'"5",4, t Vl4 4M Aiuts. I'ciii iit. -'""44 tlup. CleartielJ couuiy. tli THE NT. IV Yi'KK '',V ' acres, si'.uate in W h"4 44 ,h ir rr.Hnn or i r and the Imla-H-e in V" iT vu-f ' '"i tnents. with int. r M. " '' ,' A I satisfaction of the -V""',: ot '. necessary wiik-i at t rr. fhaers. Five r, r ,nU ', ' , n" J l.e tvati!e on ttic it ' on the "-iiiflrniM!i.''i .! "'' 4 j t.'"t: . Al! purehss. r- will f,"l 1 J,,, , ,.-! r l rtv as i.ureh.i-w.1. iitn. . ,, tf..,firiii the sule. and " l'.- HI'! . . i r- M on th- iH c chaser w ii h the teriii 1 l!''! Oa Arreant af o- Mil I ' , ill t ImrlbrMlror rr.l ' ,r,-Ji er.ml rr-rerty .'t v -.Pt.t r 1M h. consistinff 1 i.rir rows. Ladders, rt--da-" ' . t..r. . - v fr:enis. lour tons irro-i" J ' p v t -'T r vPrl.i l TnnH o In the a-ronnd. iarr )t "t K' ' A i' inn