VOL. 48. The Huntingdon Journal J. R. DURBORROW, PUBLISHERS AND PROPRIETORS. Office on the Corner of Fifth and Washington street:. Tin HUNTINGDON JOURNAL is published every Wednesday, by J. R. Ducconwow and J. A. NASH, under the firm name of J. R. DURBOHROW AI CO, at $2.00 per annum, IN ADVANCE, or $2.50 if not paid for in six months from date of subscription, and $3 if not paid within the year. No paper discontinued, rnless at the option of the publishers, until all arrearages are paid. No paper, however, will bo sent out of the State unless absolutely paid for in advance. Transient advertisements will be inserted at TWELVE AND A-HALF CENTS per line for the first insertion, SEVEN AND A-HALF CENTS for the secend, and Film CENTS per line for all subsequent inser tions. Regular quarterly and yearly business advertise ments will be inserted at the following tutee : 3ml 6 m 9m 1 y 12 Inc' Oil . 1 2 t u b ) 0 5 0 1 5 2t0 1 r,,,i 1 2 9 4 OO ran sro ' 3 62 3 " 700 10 00,14 00118 oO t "340050 00 60 80 04 " 800 14 ' 0 21 00 11 col 36 00 60 00 80 100 00i" 3m16m19mi17 Local notices will be inserted at FIFTEEN CENTS per line for each and every insertion. All Resolutions of Associations, Communications of limited or individual interest, all party an nouncements, at, d notices of Marriages and Deaths, exceeding five fine% will be charged TEN CENTS per line. Legal and other notices will be charged to, the party having them inserted. Advertising Agents must find their commission outside of these figures. All advertising accounts a,e due and collectable when the advertisement is once inserted. . . JOB PRINTING of every kind, in Plain and Fancy Colors, done with neatness and dispatch.— Hand-bills. Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, &c., of every variety and style, printed at the shortest notice, and every thing in the Printing line will be execu ted in the most artistic manner and at the lowest rates. Professional Cards. A P. W. JOHNSTON, Surveyor and -kja-• Civil Engineer Huntingdon, Ps. OFFICE: No. 113 Third Street. ang21,1372. R F. GEEIRETT, M. D., ECLEC L• TIC PH YCICIAN AND SURGEON, hav ing returned from Clearfield county and perms, neatly located in Shirleysburg, offers his profes sional services to the people of that place and sur rounding country. apr.3-1872. DR. H. W. BUCHANAN, DENTIST, No. 228 Hill Street, HUNTINGDON, PA, July 3,'72. DR. F. 0. ALLEMAN can be• con- Baited at his office, at all hoars, Mapleton, Pa. [march6,72. CALDWELL, Attorney -at -Law, D•No. 111, 3d street. Office formerly occupied by Messrs. Woods & Williamson. [apl2,'7l. DR. A. B. BRUMBAUGH, offers his professional services to the community. Office, No. 523 Washington street, one door east of the Catholic Parsonage. [jan.4,7l. V . J. GREENE, Dentist. Office re -A-LA • moved to Leiger'E new building, Hill street P.-otingdon. Cjan.4,'7l. L. ROBB, Dentist, office in S. T. "LA • Brown's new building, No. 520, Hill St., lfuntingdon, Pa. (ap12,11. GLAZIER, Notary Public, corner TT • of Washington and Smith streets, Hun tingdon, Py TTC. MADDEN, Attorney-at-Law • Office, No. —, Hill nroet, Huntingdon, Pa. laP*l9 ' '7l- A FIRST CLASS NEWSPAPER JFRANKLIN SCHOCK, Attorney • at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Promptsttention given to all legal business. Office 229 Hil street, corner of Court House Square. [1e0.4,'72 JSYLVANUS BLAIR, Attormy-at, rfi • Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Offloe, Hill treet, hree doors west of Smith. D. 1•471. JCHALMERS JACKSON, Ator• • ney at Law. Office with Wm. Dorris, No. 403, Hill area, Huntingdon, Pa. All legal business promptly attended to. [jags J• R. DURBORROW. Attornopl to Law, Huntingdon, Pa., will practice in h several Courts of Huntingdon county. Particul attention given t• the settlement of estates of dee, dents. _ .--• Office in he JonaNAL Bailding. ifeb.l,lL W. MATTERN, Attorney-at-Law J • and General Claim Agent, Huntingdon, Pa., Soldiers' claim. against the Government for back pay, bounty, widows' and invalid peneions attend ed to with great oars and promptness. Office on Hill street. [jan.4,ll. S. GEISSINGER, Attorney -at -A—d• Law, Huntingdon, Pa. (Moe with Brown A Bailey. [Feb.b-1y j. HALL 3117/1111R.. K. ALLEN Lovci, L OVELL & MUSSER, . Attorneys-at-Law, HUNTINGDON, PA? Special attention given to COLLECTIONS of all kinds to the settlement of ESTATES, &c. ; and all other legal business prosecuted with fidelity and dispatch. j:n0v6,12 M. & M. S. LYTLE , Attorneys •• st-Law, Huntingdon ' Pa., will attend to all kinds of legal business entrusted to their care. Office on Fourth Street, second floor of Union Bank Building. Dan. 4,71. RA. ORBISON, Attorney-at-Law, • Office. 321 1011 streot, Huntingdon. Po. [may3l,'7l. JOHN SCOTT. B. T. BROWN. J. N. BAILEY BROWN & BAILEY, At torneys-at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Pensions, and - all elaime of eoldiere and soldiers' heirs against the Government will be promptly prosecuted. Office on Hill street. Dan. 4,11. WILLIAM A. FLEMING, Attorney at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Special attention given to oolleotions. and all other I3gal business attended to with care and promptness. Office, No. 229, Hill street. [apl9,'7l. Hotels. MORRISON HOUSE, OPPOSITE PENNSYLVANIA R. R. DEPOT HUNTINGDON, PA J. H. CLOVER, Prop, April 5,1871-17. WASHINGTON HOTEL, S. 8. BOWDON, Prop'r. Corner of Pitt 4t Juliana Sts.,Bedford, Ps. msyl. Miscellaneous, OYES! 0 YES! 0 YES! The subseriber holds himself in readiness to cry Sales and Auctions at the shortest notioe. Haring considerable imperious* in the business he feels assured that he can giro satisfaction. Terns reasonable. Address GI J. HENRY, Marchs-6mos. Saxton, Bedford county, Pa. HROBLEY, Merchant Tailor, near •Brosti Top Corner, (second floor,) Hunting don, Ps.. respectfully solicits a share of public patronage from town and country. [0ct16,72. A. BECK, Fashionable Barber R• and Hairdresser, Hilt street ? opposite tho Franklin House: All kinds of Tonics and Pomades kept on bandana for sale. [apl9,./1-dm f„,IIIIR,LEYSBIJRG ELECTRO-MED ICAL, Hydropathie and Orthopedic Insti tute, for the treatment of all Chronic, Diseases and Deformities. • Send for Circulars. Address D. BAIRD A GEHRETT, n0r•24,72tf) Skirleysbin, Ps. The Huntin g don Journal. Printing. TO ADVERTISERS! J. A. NASH, THE HUNTINGDON J OURNAL. PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY MORNING J. R. DURBORROV Si: J. A. NASH. Offiee corner of Wasting-ton and Bath Sta., HIINTLGDON, PA. THE BEST : DVERTISING MEDIUM CENT:AL - PENNSYLVANIA. CIRCULATION 1700. ONE AND FOREIGN ADVERTISE MENTS INSERTED ON REA- SONABLE TERMS, TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION $2.00 per annum in advance. $2 50 within six months. $3.00 if not JOB PRINTING AL KINDS OF JOB WORK DONE WITH (EATNESS AND DISPATCH, AND IN THE LAIST AND MOST IMPROVED STYLE, BIJOU AS POSTS OF ANY SIZE, CIRCULARS, WEDDIk AND VISITING CARDS, BALL TIKETS, PRtRAMMES, CONCERT TICKETS, ODER BOOKS, SEGAR LAk, RIIPTS, PHOTOGRMER'S CARDS, BILL HEADS, LETTER tADS, PAPEROOKS, ETC., ETC., TO., ETC., ETC, :0:-_. Our facilities for doing kinds of Job Printing superior to an y h er establish• meut in the county. (lers by mail promptly filled. All letterkould be ad dressed, J. R: DURBOIRV & co But through the murk some ray of hope may steal Some blessed touch from Heaven that we might feel If we but chose to mark. Who shut the portals fast, And turn the key and let no sunshine in, Yet to the worst despair that comes through sin God's light shall reach at last. We slight our daily joy, Make much of our vexations, thickly set Our paths with thorns of discontent, and fret At our fine gold's alloy, Till bounteous Heaven might frown At such ingratitude, and turning, lay On our impatience burdens that would weigh Our aching shoulders down. We shed toe many tears, And sigh too sere, and yield up to wo, As if God had planned the way we go And counted out our year.. Can we not be content, And lift our foreheads from the ignoble dust Of these complaining lives, and wait with trust, Fulfilling Heaven's intent ? Must we have wealth and power, Fame. beauty, al! things ordered to our mind ? Nay, all these things lay happiness behind! Accept the sun and shower. The humble joys that bless Appealing to indifferent hearts and cold With delicate touch. striving to reach and hold Our hidden consciousness. And see how everywhere Love comforts, strengthens, helps, and saves us all; What opportunities of good befall THE TELL-TALE DIAMOND. ON the night of January 10, 18—, the Clifton Bank was entered by burglars who made good their escape with thirty thous and dollars in their possession. As soon as the robbery became known I repaired Ito the bank and sought the president, to whom I presented my credentials and made known my intention of beginning work at at once. The old gentleman read ily acquiesced, and together we passed into the main office whre several spruce looking young men were scratching away as unconcernedly as if they had not been engaged in an animated discussion of the robbery only a minute before. I glanced at them sharply, but saw nothing suspi cions in their looks, and concluded it would be a waste of time to question them. I examined the lock of the door opening upon the street, and found it had not been tampered with, although the first arrival had found the door ajar. I next turned my attention to a door opening upon the rear, and found it securely locked, in which condition it had been, so the presi dent assured me, since the night before. "Who has charge of the key of this door ?" I inquired. "Mr. N—, the cashier, has one, and our janitor the other. "Can either of these gentlemen be sum moned ?" "Yes, both if needs be. Here, Warren, run round to Mr. N—'s and tell him that I wish to see him immediately." The clerk addressed was about to obey, when a sudden thought struck me, and I called him back. "You need not trouble Mr. N—; but if the janitor can be found ask him to step down. fcr a minute or two." In less than two minutes the clerk re turned accompanied by the janitor—a broad shouldered Irishman, whose answers to my questions were given in such a straight forward manner, that I at once exonerated him from all blame. "You lock up after the clerks have gone home, do you not ?" I inquired, looking the man in the eyes. "Yis, sometimes I does, an' sometimes I dosent," was the laconic answer. "When do you not ?" . . _ "Whin Mr:N- works late o'nights, as has been the case pretty much of late." "Did you lock up last n i g h t, ?" . _ 'Yis,sir, an' what's more, tried every door afterwards." "At what time did you lock that door ?" and I pointed towards the front entrance. "Well, as near as I can recollect, half past seven." "Are you sure you shot the bolt into its socket ?" "Aye! I could swear that I locked that dare an' left it locked." "How about the windows ? Did you fasten them as well ?" ivery wan ov thim." "Very good, air. You may go new, if you like," and I turned to the president. "Now, then, with your per mission I Will investigate matters below stairs." "Certainly, sir • but first let me get my coat and hat. fam troubled with rheu matism, you observe, and have to exercise more than usual care when descending to the vaults. I will be with you in a min ute or two," and the old gentleman disap peared within his private office. BUSINESS CARDS, "The old hook a s !" I heard some one exclaim, "devilish careful of himself, ain't he?" And then it snicker ran around the room. "I judged from this that the "old hunks" in question was something of a bugbear to the gentleman who had just delivered him self; but I had no time for reflection, for the old gentleman made his appearance at this instant and conducted me to the vault below. The heavy iron door of the large vault in which the bank's funds were sto red stood wide open, affording a view of the interior, which presented a scene of confusion not unfamiliar to my eyes.— Books and papers lay upon the floor in ev ery direction, where they had been thrown after having gratified the curiosity of the burglars. I stooped to pick up a crumpled docu ment that lay at my feet, and as I did so, the sparkle of a gem, heretofore concealed by the paper caught my eye. With a quick motion of the hand I picked the stone from the floor and held it concealed in the palm of my hand while I perused the document, more for the purpose of concealing the ex ultation I felt at having gained so import ant a clue, than for any other reason. Having glanced at several other papers similar to the one I had first picked up, I began a thorough search of the vault, which preyed fruitless ; but the diamond in my possession was sufficient foundation on which to weave a network of circum stantial evidenee. LEGAL BLANKS, PAMPHLETS "Well, sir," queried the president, as I signified my intention of returning above, "have yon discovered anything that would be likely to aid you in bringing the villains to grief ?" I nodded. • "At ! Then you will have no difficulty ghe 1 ; 1 uoto' gowtr. Discontent. BY CELIA TBAXTEB. There is no day so dark To make life sweet and fair. ?kr ffitorg-Zeiltr. BY B. D. MASON. HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 1873. in bringing the authors of this deed to justice ?" "None whatever." "Good! I am glad to hear you say that. Only catch the perpetrators and they shall be prosecuted to the full extent of the law !" And he brought his cane down as if to give force to his utterance. "You may possibly have occasion to re tract that assertion," I mentally added, as I made a few notes in my diary. Having no further business at the bank I took my departure and went diroet to a celebrated jeweler's establishment in Som ers street. The proprietor of the store knew me. and intuitively guessing my bu siness, conducted me to his private office. "Well, Tracy, what's up ?" he inquired, when we had become seated. "Nothing unusual," I replied. "You have heard of the Clifton Bank robbery, I presume ?" "The Clifton Bank ? Ah ! yes, I did hear some one remarking about it. There was no account of it in the morning pa pers." "No, I believe not. The affair was not discovered in time for the reporter to get hold of it. Well, sir, the bank has been The Railroad Question in the Constitution robbed to the tune of fifteen thousand del- a l Convention—The Rights, Privileges lars, and I am engaged on the case." and Restrictions of' Railroad Corpora " Hum ! indeed! Hope you will catch the rascals, old boy. Dreadful state of On Friday last the Constitutional Con things toexist in a small city like this," vention concluded the considerxtion in and the little man twisted uneasily in his Committee of the Whole, of the article chair. propssed to be incorporated in the amend " Not so bad as you may imagine. Be ed Constitution, defining the rights, calm, my friend ; the parties that robbed rivilegesand responsibilities of the R the Clifton Bank will not be likely to pay p road corporations of the State. The arti you a visit." "Ah ! I hope your surmises are correct; cle vas reported by the Committee on but pray tell me your reasons for thinking Railroads prior to the recess of the Con as you do." vention in the latter part of March. It wm taken up in Convention, in Committee "Certainly. In the first place, the hank robbery is the work of one man, and he is of the Whole, on the 17th of April, and not a vas earnestly and sometimes excitedly dis professional burglar ; in the second cussed, until all of' the nineteen sections place, that man cares wore for greenbacks had been passed upon, and the article than he does for gold ornaments, and would ordered to a second reading. Seven days, not plunder your place for all there is it with two sessions each day, were devoted it; in fact, this very same party owned .1 diamond, but threw it away rather dun to this important subject. The article, as carry it around with him. It is way adopted, differs in many important res peas from that reported by the Commit pretty, is it not ?" And I held the stone up to him. tee; some of the sections reported were The jeweler took it examined it cbsel stricken out, others materially modified, , y, and a new section added. It seems prob and returned it to me with the rema:k : able that the article will be adopted by the Convention on the final vote, and go "It is as you remark, a very pretty stone, and, I might add, very valuable for to the people of the State for their decis a gem of its size. That is your flue, I presume ?" ion, substantially as it came from the "Yes; the only clue I happen to pos- Committee of the Whole. sess. Now, then, lam anxious tc find This railroad question is just now the absorbing subject of discussion in a num the ring to which this stone belongs, and her of States, and the people of our own will you please allow me to see the sings commonwealth must feel a strong curiosity that have been left here for resetting gnce to know how their constitution-makers the robbery." have met it. The disconnected rep talent." orts of With pleasure. Excuse me one no- Convention proceedings do not afford the needed information, and we have therefore And my friend disappeared, returnitg carefully collated from the past two weeks' a minute later, with a number of rings on proceedings of the Conventioc a statement a tray, which be placed on a table, and began to examine the labels attached. showing the action taken. It will abun "Some of these rings have been in our dautly repay a careful perusal A FREE RAILROAD LAW-NO HSCRIMINA. . . . possession a number o days. Ah ! here is one received this morning. 'Jan 11— diamond setting—E. Baker.'" And he read the inscription. I took the diamond from hia hand, and examined it. It was a finely chased ring of virgin geld, with the stone missing. I fitted the diamond in the setting, and passed it to my friend. "By Jove, Tracy, that is the very ling you are in search of! Now, let me see." And he went nearer the ight. "Yes, there can be no doubt shoot it. The stone fits in the setting nicely, and now that I think of it. is of the same size and quality ordered. "What name did you s , y the party gave ?" "Baker—Emily Baker." Emily Baker! Then it was a lady ?" "I presume so; at all events she looked and acted like one." "When is she to call for the ring ?" t "To-morrow afternoon." "I must see her when she calls, and in order that I may play my cards to better advantage, I shall enter your service as clerk. What do you say." "I am perfectly willing, but take care what you do, old bay; there may possibly be some mistake." "That is very true, and if such should be the case, you may rest assured that I shall discover it in time. Did I un derstand you to say that you had prom ised to have the ring ready to-morrow af ternoon ?" "No, sir; I said nothing of the kind. She said she should call for it to-morrow afternoon, and I simply nodded assent." "Then lay the ring aside, and leave the rest to me. I shall call to see you again to-morrow ; until then, adieu!" And I passed into the street. I had thus far met with better success than I had anticipated, but I was nowise elated nor thrown off guard, for I knew I had a genuine sharper to deal with, whom it would be a difficult matter to outwit. Daring the day I visited several places where "ye little game of faro" was in full blast, and picked up several items of in terest, all of which tended to convince me that I was on the right scent. Early the next morning I repaired to my friend's establishment, and was assigned a position behind the counter, where, it is needless to say, I felt ill at ease; but years of training and patient study had enabled me to act almost any role to perfection, and it was not long before the feeling of unea siness wore off. The day dragged slowly along, for trade was not very brisk, and the salesmen had but little to do besides reading the papers and yawning at each other over the glass cases. Four o'clock ! Would the owner of the ring . ever come ? I asked myself the ques tion a hundred times, and was on:the point of doing so again, when the door opened, and a heavily veiled figure glided in, ap proached the counter, and inquired, in a somewhat hesitating voice : "Is Mr.-in ?" "No, madam, he is not," I replied. "Can I do anything for yon ?" "I left a ring ?ft charge of Mr.-,for a diamond setting, which was to be ready this afternoon. You will please let me have it, together with the bill." "What name ?" I inquired, bringing out the tray containing the articles left for re pairs. "Emily Baker." • "Emily Baker." I mused, picking up several rings and examining them. "It does not appear to be among these. Ah 1 I recollect what has become of it," and I replaced the tray and took from the glass ease a small box, removed the lid, and ex- posed the ring to view. "Is that your ring, madam ?" "It is. Why has it not been attended to ?" "Simply because the original stone has been recovered, and presuminr , that you would prefer that to any other, we have waited until we could hear from you." "The original bas been recovered ? I do not understand yon," and her voice sound ed strangely masculine. "Pray tell me where it was found." "Certainly. It was found just where you lost it, in the vault of the Clifton Bank !" and I reached across the counter, and with the quickness of thought tore the veil from the thee of no less a personage than the cashier of the Clifton Bank ! He saw that it was all up with him, and quietly submitted to the handcuffing pro cess, but when I took hini before Chief he broke down and begged piteously to be let off for the sake of his wife and child. When on trial, he confessed that he had stolen the bank's funds to liquidate gam bing debts, and having missed the stone of his ring a short time after the robbery, and fearing that it might lead to his detection, had attempted to have it replaced, as we have shown. for tht The People and the Railroads , TION. The first section of the article reported to the Convention by the ommittee on Railroads and Canals was adopted with only a verbal amendment. it secures a free railroad law, and aims t, prevent dis criminations by a company akinst •freight transferred to its road from a other line; it would not• compel the carriag of freight by one road according to the tar iff o f another, but provides that the -ate for such transferred freight shall be tk 3 same as for other freight on the road. T, see tion is as follows : SECTION I.—Any indiVidual, comp. iy, or corporation organized for the purpk,, shall have the right to construct a railrom or canal between any two points in this State. Any railroad may intersect and connect with any other railroad, and no discrimination shall be made in passenger and freight tariffs or tolls on persons or property passing from one railroad to ;nailer, and no unnecessary delay inter posed in the forwarding of such passengers and property to their destination. The Legislature shall, by general law prescrib ing reasonable regulations, give full effect to these powers and rights. INSPECTION OF THE BOOKS OF RAILROAD COMPANIES. The second section was materially mod ified. The public inspection of the books of the company provided for, it was claim ed, would prevent the "watering" of stock and consequent loss to stockholders. It was adopted in the following form : SECTION 2.—Every railroad or canal corporation organized or doing business in this State shall mainatin an office therein for the transaction of its business, where transfers of its stock shall be made and books kept for inspection by any stock or bondholder, or any other person having a pecuniary interest in such corporation; in which shall be recorded the amount of capital stock subscribed or paid in, and by whom ; the names of the owners of its stork, and the amounts owned by them respectively, the transfers of said stock, and the name and place of residence of its officers. TAXATION OF RAILROADS, This subject elicited earnest debate. One party in the Convention desired the roads to be subject to a local valuation by the commissioners of the counties through which they passed, while others held that the bulk of the taxation should be collected by the State and app'kied to the general purposes of government. Very properly. the Convention did not go into these de tails, and the section as adopted reads as follows : SECTION 3.—A1l the prsperty of rail road and canal corporations 1r other cor porations of a similar cha-acter doing business in thip State, and other joint stock companies now existing sr hereafter created, shall be subject to taxttion, and the power to tax the same shah not be surrendered or suspended by any xmtract or grant to which the State shal be a party. The last clause was designed to pneent any commutation of the tax, such as the Legislature conceded to the Erie road i n one or two of the Northern counties. NO CONSOLIDATION OF COMPETING LINES. The annexed section was adopted with out debate, indicating pretty emphatically the view of the convention as to the con-1 solidation of competing lines. SECTION 4.—No railroad, canal, or other corporation, nor the lessees, pur chasers or managers of any railroad or canal corporation, shall consolidate the stock, property or franchises of such cor paration with, nor lease, purchase or in any way control any other railroad or canal corporation owning or having under its control a parallel or competing line; nor shall any of the officers of snch rail road or canal corporation act as an officer of any other railroad or canal cerporation owning or having the control of a parallel or competing line, and whether railroads or canals are parallel and competing lines shall always be decided by a jury in a trial according to the course of the common law. CONSOLIDATION OF NON-COMPETING LINES The fifth section reported by the Com mittee prohibited any railroad or canal company from consolidating its stock property or franchises with any other similar corporation, and from purchasing the property or franchises of such corpo ration, and from leasing or contracting for 'a lease thereof exceeding twenty-five years without the consent of a majority of two-thirds of its stockholders, ratified by Act of the Legislature. There was a very warm debate on this section, its friends claiming the people demanded a restriction on the power of great corporations to monopolize business by buying up small lines. The opponents of the section claimed rates of transports tion was reduced by consolidation, and that requiring the consent of the Legisla ture would introduce one of the most cor rupt forms of special legislation. After voting on various amendments the whole section was rejected. This , leaves the ar ticle with no provision regulating the leasing, buying, &c., of railroads other than of competing or parallel lines. Un der present laws, however, the consent of a majority of the stockholders of both cor porations is required. RAILROAD COMPANIES CONFINED TO BUS INESS OF COMMON CARRIERS. The sixth and seventh sections, limiting .railroad companies to their legitimate bus iness of common carriers, were adopted as follows : SECTION 6 —No railroad, canal, or other corporation doing business as a common carrier, shall, either directly or indirectly, hold, guarantee, or endorse shares in the capital stock, bonds, or other indebtedness of any other corporation, individual or partnership, except those doing the busi ness of common carriers. SECTION 7.—No incorporated company doing the business of a common carrier, or the officers or managers thereof, shall di rectly or indirectly, prosecute or engage in mining or manufacturing articles for other persons or corporations for transportation on the works of said company; nor shall such company, directly or indirectly, en gage in any other business than that of common carriers, or hold or acquire lands, freehold or leasehold, directly or indirect ly, except such as shall be necessary for carrying on its business; but any mining or manufacturing company may carry the products of its mines and manufactories on its railroad or canal, not exceeding fifty miles in length. NO DISCRIMINATION AGAINST THE PEO- PLE OF THE STATE, On this object many of the delegates, particularly from the western part of the State were very earnest in their demands, that unjust discrimination against our own citizens should be prohibited. After pro tracted debate the section was adopted in this form : SECTION 8. No corporation engaged in the transportation of freight in or through this State shall make any discrimination in charges in the carrying of any freight or passengers against the people thereof; and such corporations shall carry the persons and goods of the people of this State on as favorable terms as those of other States brought into or through this State on the works owned or controlled by such corporation ; and the charges for freight and fares for passen gers shall for equal distances in the same direction be the same ; and a higher shall never he made for a shorter distance than is made for a longer distance; and no special rates on drawback shall either Zirectly or indirectly be allowed, but corn notation tickets to passengers may be is end for passengers as heretofore, and rea so able extra charges within the charter mai be made in charges for any distance umexceeding fifty miles. AM RAILROADS DECLARED PUBLIC HIGH• WAYS. T e ninth section brought up the ques tion ,f how far the convention would seek to cotrol railroad companies in the man agemnt of their business in order to se cure Ovate shippers from unjust discrim inatio,. The section as adopted is as fol lows : SEexoN 9. All railroads and canals are declarer public highways, and all individ uals, patnerships and corporations shall have ecrel right to have persons and prop erty trauported thereon, eseept officers and partnerships or corporations composed in whole r in part of officers of each res pective ralroad or canal, who arc hereby prohibitedfrom engaging in the business of forwardag or transporting on the lines thereof; and all regulations adopted by the companies owning, controlling, or managing sath railroads or canals having the effect of hindering or discriminating against indilicluals, partnerships or cor porations, exiapt at above accepted, in the transportationof property on such rail roads and eands shall he void ; and no railroad corpoation, nor any lessee or manager of' thc works thereof, shall make any preferencein their own favor or be tween individual, partnerships, and com panies shippingand transporting thereon in furnishing ems or motive power. This is regarced as a veto on the fast freight lines whch have become so obnox ious to merchant and shippers. COMBINATIONS IETIVERN RAILROAD COM- PANIES. The tenth section, designed to prevent combination between railroad companies tending to enhance the price of commodi ties, after considerable debate and the adoption of several amendments, was re jected on the ground that it would pro hibit unity and consultation in railroad management. INCREASE OF CAPITAL STOCK AND BONDED INDEBTEDNESS. The eleventh section was adopted after a strong opposition by its enemies, who de clared it to be revolutionary and likely to lead to very serious consequences. It pro vides that no railroad company shall issue r!ock except for money, labor, or property etually received, declares all stock divi- Ands void, prescribes a method of increas- Intthe stock of corporations by general law..and contains a retroactive clause de clan?, void all laws by which railroad and canal qmpanies have been authorized to increas their capital stock, "except so far as may L necessary to maintain the obli -1 gat'm of ontracts." C°l\ EQUENTIAL DAMAGES. Passing b.the twelfth and thirteenth sections, prehbiting the free transports tionof passeog-s sal providing a legal remedy for violuons of the article (both of which were Sted down), there was a warm debate on L. subject of consequen tial damages malt., from the construe- tion or enlargement of public works. The section was adopted in this, shape SECTION —. All municipal, railroad, canal, and other corporations and individ uals shall be liable for the payment of damages to property resulting from the construction and enlargement of their works. as well to owners of property not actually occupied as to those whose prop erty is taken; and said damages shall be paid or secured to be paid before the inju ry is 'lone. FENCING-IN OF RAILROADS. A section requiring all railroads to be substantially fenced by the owners or con trollers thereof, was rejected on the ground that it might be properly incorporated in a general railroad law, but was out of place in the Constitution. A section was also rejected giving boroughs and cities the power to regulate the grade and rate of speed of railroads within their limits. STREET RAILROADS. The seventeenth section, requiring the consent of the local authorities to the pass age of every law granting the right to construct or operate a street railroad with in any city, borough, or township, was amended, and agreed to, in the following form : SECTION.—No street passenger railway shall be constructed within the limits of any city, borough, or township without the consent of its local authorities. HOW THE DOCTRINE OF VESTED RIGHTS IS TO BE MET. Of course there are provisions in the above sections that seriously impair the rights and franchises of railroad companies hold under charters heretofore granted. Precisely how the Convention proposes to bring these companies within the juris diction of the proposed amendmends is in dicatedin the following section : SECTION -. No railroad, canal, or oth er transportation company in existence at the time of the adoption of this article shall have any beneficial legislation by general or special laws, except on condi tion of complete acceptance of all the provisions of this article. This section provoked the indignant op position of the leading railroad men in the Convention, who compared it to the threat of the highwaymen of "your money or your life." It was adopted, however, by a large majority. REMEDIES AGAINST RAILROAD COMPANIES The nineteenth section of the article reported by the committee transfers the supervision of railroad companies from the officei of Auditor General to that of the Secretary of Internal Affairs. It also pro vides that it shall he the duty of the lat ter officer. " On complaint made against said cor porations by any citizen, person or com pany interested, of a violation by law or any infraction of the rules of said corpor ation injurious to the rights or interests of said complainant to investigate said complaint; and, if it shall appear that any violation has taken place, he shall proceed either against said corporations or the of -o,treof or both • pug ifm" made, or of Lis own " - st w eage, It appear that a...;• railroad, or part thereof, is so insufficiently or carek,wly constructed, supported, guarded, protected, or so out of repair as to imperil life or property, he shall at once notify such delinquent cor poration of the same, and specify and di rect the remedy to be applied, and it shall be the duty of such corporation to repair, support, make safe from or remove said cause of peril, under such regulation, not inconsistent herewith, as shall be proscri bed by the Legislature, to carry this sec tion into full effect. This section was adopted. RIGHT OP COMPANIES TO USE EACH OTHER'S TRACKS. Tho annexed is the last section of the article. It was not reported by the com mittee, and was added to the article by the convention on the suggestion of a Western delegate : SECTION.- Railroad companies shall have the right to connect their railroads by proper connections with the railroads of each other, and shall have the right to pass their cars, either empty or loaded, over each other's railroad free from dis criminations in freights or charges, and without delay or hindrance in their move ments. This completes the Railroad article as it has passed through the first stage of the Convention. It will not be taken up for final action until the remaining reports from the committee of the Whole.—Pitts- Intrgh Evening Telegraph. A Story of a Rose A rose with so pretty a little story as this, and so full of romance as this, ought to be beautiful, and so is the Cherokee Rose, Here is the story of it : "An In dian chief of the Seminole tribe was taken prisoner by his enemies, the Cherokees, and doomed to torture, but fell so seriously ill that it became necessary to wait for his restoration to health before committing him to the fire. And as he lay prostrated by disease in the cabin of the Cherokee warrior, the daughter of the latter, a young dark-faced maid, was his nurse. She fell in love with the young chieftain, and, wishing to save his life, urged him to escape. But he would not do so unless she would flee with him. She consented. Yet, before they bad gone far, impelled by soft regret at leaving home, she asked permission of her lover to return for the purpose of bearing away some memento of it. So, retracing her footsteps, she broke a sprig of white rose which climbed and twined up the poles of her father's tent, and preserving it during her flight through the wilderness, planted it by the door of her new home in the land of the Semi noles. And from that day this beautiful flower has been known between the keys of Florida, and throughout the Southern States, by the name of the Cherokee Rose." A Mother's Love. Lamartine gives this illustration : "In some spring freshet, a river widely washed its shores and rent away a bough whereon a bird had built a cottage for her summer home. Down the white and whirling stream drifted the green branch, with its wicker cup of unfledged song, and fluttering be side it went the mother bird. Unheeding the roaring river, on she went, her cries of agony and fear piercing the pauses in the storm. How like the love of an old fashioned mother, who followed the ohild she had plucked from her heart, all over the world. Swept away by passion that child might be, it mattered not; though he was bearing away with him the fragrance of the shattered roof-tree, yet that mother was with him, a Ruth through all his life, and a Rachael at his death." NO. 20 Tit-Bits Taken on the Fly. A republican club has been formed in London. The loss by the fire at Fort Scott will reach $75,000. Gov. Dix has signed the new charter for New York city. A 16-inch oyster has been pried out of the Savannah river. By neat Christmas Des Moines will own a $50.000 opera house. The cotton.crop of Louisiana is ten days in advance of last year. An Indian squaw has just died at Lan caster, Mich., aged 115. Paris had thirteen "justifiable suicides" in a single day, recently. A Benton county, Ind., farmer owns a flourishing "sugar orchard." The town of Mariana, Ark., was nearly destroyed by fire last week. Raleigh, N. C., sells full-blooded point ers at twenty-five cents apiece. It is proposed in Kentucky to let juries fix the penalty in murder eases. Portland, Oregon, expects to put up 3,000,000 sans of salmon this season. Pennsylvania erected seventy-nine new iron works last year; New York seven. A Georgia judge fined four lawyers; $5 each for laughing in court, the other day. A Minnesota hen has got into the news papers by laying thirty-six eggs in sixteen days. Excellent sugar is being made from the sap of box•elder, in the big woods, Minne sota. A new theatre in London is to try the experiment of giving only afternoon per formances. The India widows don't burn themselves any more. They find it more agreeable to marry again. The Sioux and Minneconjon Indiana are killing and wounding white men on the mail route. Kansas reports its fruit trees in full bloom, notwithstanding a three-days' snow storm last week-. The value of exports from Boston to England alone the past month exceeded two million dollars. The Maryland oyster beds have been scraped so clean that a tight market is looked for next year. Insanity bas been successfully pleaded by Mr. William Hibben, of Des Moines, lowa, in a forgery case. The shoe manufactory of Mr. Lawrence Boardman, at Exeter, N. H., was burned last week. Loss $lO,OOO. A young husband handed his wife a dozen buttons the other day, and asked her to put a shirt to them. And a more useful one, too. Another flying ship is being built in San Francisco, and, like the rest, "on en tirely new and original plans." An illicit distillery on Barren Island. near New York, has been destroyed by United States revenue officers. A wide-awake young darkey in Troy is running a news room and barber shop, and fitting himself for the ministry. The old United States Arsenal, erected in 1812 on Jersey City Heights, is to be torn down after the first of May. A ship canal for New Jersey, running under the Palisades at the rear of Wee hawken and Hoboken is proposed. An ironmaster of Liverpool has been sentenced to the jail for six months for stealing twenty-five tons of pig iron. Leprosy has lately made frightful havoc among the natives of the Sandwich Islands and other groups in the South Pacific. A few pots of canned meats and one shirt pattern make up the list of Maine's contributions to the Vienna exposition. In Boston 23,500 persons cannot write, and 17,400 cannot read. About 22,000 of those who cannot do both are foreign born. Three experts from Washington are now engaged in examining the accounts of H. W. Whiing, in the New York post office. The colored men driven from the Court House at Colfax, Louisiana, have written to the President a full statement of the affair. Rev. William H. Grass was consecrated as Roman Catholic Bishop of Savannah, in the Cathedral at Baltimore on the 27th ultimo. The general topic of conversation at Lit tle Rock, Ark., at present, is the discove ry of a valuable silver mine just outside of that city. A precipitate Detroiter is miserable at discovering that his wife inherited half a million just after he had procured a di vorce from her. The doctors have come to the conclu sion that chloroform killed Napoleon, and that if they had left him alone he would have lived on. A Newark man paid a claim of $3OO all in old-fashioned coppers. They weighed four hundreds pounds, and took three men to remove them. A portion of the baggage of the passen gers and some of the cargo of the ill-fated steamship Atlantic arrived in New York one day last week. Smoking tobacco and pistol cartridges should be kept in separate bags. A Chicago man neglected this little precaution, and he is a blind man now. Doctors' prescriptions for whisky are printed for one dollar per thousand at the office of the Coatsville "Union." They have local option there. Fon du Lac, Wis., reports the discovery of another miraculous well, the water from which instantly converts a piece of soft iron into a permanent magnet. The sugar crop in Louisiana has failed so disastrously during the last two seasons that this year the area devoted to the case will be much diminished. Two young Mississippians who roomed together three years have recently WM mitted suicide within four weeks of each, other, in precisely the same way. Work on the slackwater navigation of the Monongahela river passing through West Virginia will be commenced as soon as the title to the land can be obtained. - ~k.-