®Jw Cmtrt jgrnmrat. WiAaAyWVvtVovvvww BBLLEFONTE, PA. The Largest, Cheapest and Best Paper l'Ulll.lSUKl) IN CENTRE COUNTY. TBI CENTRE DEMOCRAT Is pub tllhiil rrtiry Thurwlaj morning, st IMlvllint*, Crnlr* county IV THKMS—<\*h in advance $1 HO If not paid In advance 2 OO Payment* made within Ihre* montha will I* 00®- Mdertxl lu advance. A LIVi PAPKH—< devoted to th* lntar**U of the whole people. No pa|x>r will Ihi discontinued until arrearage* are paid. except it option of publish*!*. Papers foiug out of th* county muat he paid for In advance. Any |>ei*on procuring a tenraah •übecrihert will be tent a cop* free of charge. Our exfeaoalvt clrrulatlon make* thin paper an tin* ntually reliable and pruAtahl* milium for *iiv*rti*iiig. We hare the m<*t ample faril|iie for JOB WORK and are prepare*! to print alt kind* of Hooka, Tract*. Programme#, Poster*, ('ntiimeirial printing, Ac., In the Aueet atyle and at the loweat poeellde ratee. HAT KM OK ADVKKTI.SINO Tim*. 1 1 in. j 2ln. | 31a. | 41a. | 6 In. luin.j juin. I Wnik. 11l WI2 no |n 00 4 |) |A (si |s o'SA IS); (*> OO ; 1 Yistr. ||2 oil IS 00,24 IS) 23 Ou 42 00 (It ll'|t> ig) | Ailsprll." linoit. m calculated lor lll'' fbcli in length of column, niul any 1 ■*. ,|>ace I, rated as a full Inch. Foreign aiWertlawiii-nU must b* paid fur l'fur* In- ■ ■*rti<>. **c*pt on yearly contract*. when half yearly | parment* in advance will le required. PitmcAt Noticm. |* onU p*r line each insertion. | Nothing m*Tted f r liw than &Ocait. Brigt*ji N Ti r.v. in the editorial column*, 13 centi j per line, each ln*ertl.n, L cal NoflcM, in l> iml column*, in nt* per lln* j Awrorwciaigtl of name* of candbtate* fur ofllce, j 93 each. AWNOOWCEMINT* or M kRRUOf* A*n DtATRB Inaertesl free; tint all obituary notice* will be charged & cent* per line. Spki i %l X-TICM 23 |*r cent, aborw regular ratee. Tiik efTort of the Hon. L. I). Sher wood, of tlie House of Representative!, to reduce the pay of members of the | Legislature is praiseworthy, hut entire ly useless. It cannot be done. Let them have the pay, but lock up the Hall and keep them from stealing, and the people will he satisfied. Cot,. JOHN C. BI RCH, of Tennessee, has been elected Secretary of the Sen ate ; H. J. Bright, of Indiana, Ser geant-at-arms; ex-Congressman Sby bor, of North Carolina, Chief clerk ; 11. Bailey Peyton, of Virginia, Ex ecutive clerk, and Rev. Joseph U. Bullock, of Virginia, Chaplain. J. SIMPSON AFRICA, the Democratic candidate for Secretary of Internal Affairs last fall, and J. BLAKE WAL TERS,the present cashier of the Treasury department, are favorably mentioned as candidates for State Treasurer. The material is good, and the Democracy would commit no blunder in the choice of either. A Nt'MßEit of citizen* of Cincin nati have made serious charges of an unfair election, returning Butterworth and Young to Congress, and demand investigation. A committee has been raised and investigation ordered. Their CIU-H; will doubtless bring to light some of the working of the Fed eral election laws, and if the state ments of the petitioners arc establish ed, may send Messrs. Butterworth and Young back to try their hands again. THE New York Tribune * PEAKING of the Democratic organization of, Congress, says: " The noble work of i seating Democrats in the chairs to which Republicans were elected, will i now go on with beautiful celerity and ; regularity," and then adds. "There are abundant precedents for it." Well, yea, the precedent*! for this . kind of procedure have been very I numerous in the last fifteen years, and their character of a very aggravated j kind. But we trust the demoraliza tion of the past docs not and will not reach to any alarmiog extent the party that now controls in Congression al representation. We hope we shall have honest elections, and that the honestly elected will be seated, what ever their political affiliations. But no more troop polls or 8 to 7 commis sions to seat fraud*, if you please. A new instance of the sincerity professed by the present administration for civil service reform comes to light in the recently announced appoint ment of William A. Herron, to the position of pension agent at Pittsburg. There is no reason for a change of officials in this case except that Mr. Hayes desires to provide for a person al friend, whom he finds in the gentle man named. Against the present in cumbent, Major McGregor, who has filled the place for many years, no charges of any kind are made. In deed it is conceded that he is a compe tent and faithful officer and has al ways performed his duties with entire satisfaction to every one. He was also a soldier of the late war, and bears upon his person the marks of three wounds received in battle. But all this weighs * nothing when placed in the balance with personal favoritism; and such is civil service reform. A Democratic Majority. Since the change of political power from the republican to the democratic wide of the Seuate of the United States, the first test of party strength on n political question between the mem ber* of the two parties in that body occurred on lost Friday. A resolu tion, introduced by Senator Wallace, that required the Secretary of the Treasury to furnish the Senate a state ment in detail of the accounts of the marshals of the Uuited States in cer tain states for the employment and payment of deputy marshals in con ; nectiou with the elections of lost Oc | tobcr ami November, furnished the ' opportunity for a skirmish between the op|M>sitc sides that the republicans could not permit to pass unheeded. The statement required bv the reso lution, it was well understood, would l>6 used by the committee to iuquirc into election frauds. This committee wa appointed ut the last session and was known as the Teller committee. ! Its investigations, under the direction ' of the republican majority of which it was composed, were confined to the southern states. It was continued in existence, and now with a democratic majority, under Mr. Wallace as chair man, instead of Mr. Teller, it pro poses to find out something about elec tion frauds iu some of the northern states. The resolution was no sooner called up than t'onkling ami Kdmunds came boldly to the front with n writ* of amendmeoU designed to impede the investigation and baffle the demo* crats in their intentions to expose the deputy marshal abuse to the country. The republican senators named, reiu forced by Blaine, took the floor in support of their amendments evident ly intending to provoke an angry and prolonged discussion. The strug gle, however, was of short duration. Throughout it Mr. Wallace bore him self like the able and accomplished parliamentarian that he is. and uuder his leadership a determined and unit ed majority soon convinced the opjK>- sition that they were uo longer the dictators of the senate. The result was a sad lesson to them, for they learned to their sorrow that a strict party vote in the senate does not now score as it did during eighteen years of uncontrolled republican ascenden cy, and that republican omnipotence in legislation has come to lie a thing of the past. The chagrin of the lead ers at their first defeat was but illy concealed. Possibly in time they will learn to bear it with a l>ettcr grace. No DOUBT many of our well-mean ing Republican friends will regard Democratic senators as exceedingly inquisitive, even unkind, in making demands upon John Sherman for infor mation which they believe the people of the United States have a right to know. The inquiries will neverthe less continue to he made, and* the crnAy Secretary will be obliged to turn the light upon mauy hidden things that yet remain iu the dark before a Democratic congress lets up on him. Besides responding to senator Wal lace's resolution in relation to the army of deputy marshals paid out of the National treasury to corrupt and control the elections last fall, he will also find an agreeable task in answer' ing Senator Saulsbury upon the con nection of the treasury with syndicate* and )>anks in the negotiation of gov ernment bonds. This inquiry invol ve* a question of several millions of dollars in the way of interest and double interest unlawfully paid to cer tain pet banks and bankers, and upon it the public may as well be enlight- I ened. THK thieve* about our Legislative Hall at Harrisburg have been plying their vocation this year a* usual. We have authority of Mr. Hewit, the Re presentative from Blair, for the asscr* tion that "of f23,580 charged in the Auditor General'* account* a* paid in the present House for stationery, only $6,000 worth wan honestly used, the remainder being fraudulent It ap pear* that nothing in the shape of moveable property ia aafe in that neighborhood, and Mr. Hewit directs attention to the fact that SIB,OOO of curtains have been stolen from the chamber since last winter." What has become of the resident clerk placed in charge of the cioamber to guard the property in the recess? Could he not tell how the property got out of his custody ? THE ASOELS* TRACK. PKDWATRt* TO H4LLIK. By my ■tin. at ths window, shr Urril long— Tills laMin of flvi ysam old, With thr wlusoms nll and h"*rt of song, Aud hair of sunny gold. As hs i>rattlxl unjust hfurn us stood A mountain, towsrlng high, With Call, dark plus* and wnallh of wood. That st'in*d to touch tli sky. " Look, look," —h*r wltful syss turnsd to ms— " l.'nt that lli* 1 angola* track 1 Ths i ki!i Is worn twos ly thHr f*?t I s*s— Ths rsst of tlis hill U hlark. Yss—that I licit t ish slrsak In and out of ths trsss Mint sursly 1m ths wny That thsy trass) from hoavsu, with g*ol thing., I*l as Toll ms, U'ut it to, I j-ray* thsy taks up our tint to ths tiod ahovs, By ths vrry muis |*th, too? It cannot l> f*r to that hm of loss— Ju.t —bow i-lusn ths bins. Why It almost H'U on ths In* to|. grssn. It I. only a it<

f ths hIU, Aiwiigat moss*-# and ferns frmn lae to crown, Winding in and out at will. With ths shadow, upon It, Hut merrily play Athwart from Mi to right, Il**ri not angel*' f>t |>rinu. No ihsluwnl way I. theirs— It la glorious light; ' k And th.lr tread li too gentle, w*U this I know, To brat down ths growing grass. Softer far than the t<, of the wind thsy go, Nor rnorv a b-uf as they |m ar only mark, which ths log. hare mads That ars hewn on ths mountain . |*wk, And *enl rti.hlng down to the .|*u glada, Fast as ths lightning's streak. '* Oh' l>*.utiful Uflry! I wondering Untight How the |aast and lh. |rwent •••sii; Alike—as a glimpse of the Udder 1 caught That Jacob aaw in Ids drtatn. While | uiiMel uii the l"a.n We lauo, I stuiled To think in what vartd ways, fc'eil out of tle ni<- army and the |>eron of tho riuson •ecuro against arrest at the poll, by the millions of Federal p. w>-r! Thrau. are smong tlu mo.t sacred privilege* of free men, and wo may b<- sure that the I>arty wbicb su.lains and protect* thi-m will It self la> protected snd sustained by tlic jh*- ple.'—.Yew York Sun. Fiine after time the CW/ic bos shown that it was the province of the ikriuo cratic party to check the encroachments of tho Federal |iower ti|ion individual liberty snd to slay it from irrasping power beyond th constitutional limit. It i* nec*ue Hetnocrata in the South have so much to complain of the i w;ual ity to which thoy have heretofor., subjected at the polls, for notwithstand ing the federal bayonets and the mali cious legislation ol the late Republican Congress, they have swept the field, and have no fear* that Mr. Hayes would attempt to rob them of their dearly won victories. But they are determined once and forever to blot out Irom the statute l>ooks such iniquitous legisla tion. They will have no such prece dents to stand as menaces in the future. Frauds at the elections ought surely to lie punished, but for the insignificant offences of this sort which have been perpetrated in the North as well as in the South—and by Republicans as well as Pemocral* in both regions, they will not tolerate the employment of troops. I.el the local authorities deal with such things in local elections, but in Con gress only, not the Executive, is vested the priviiegeof adjudging between con testants in a federal election. If the election# proceed so riotously as to j>a* beyond control of the State authorities, then tho Constitution provides for the National interference; but it needs no special enactments. All that is now wanted is a repeal of these lgws which are at once a disgrace to the country and contrary to the spirit of the age. I.itlle by little tho iHsinocracy have been adjusting sfl'sirs and restoring this country to the basis u|M>n which it was originally established. They represent to day a majority of hundreds of thou sand* of the voter* of the oountry—and yet when they are about to expreas the will of that majority, we are met with the cry of the Republican*, "you can't do that, we have the veto." True, true, we must accept the fates for the present, but still it occssionslly grate* very hard upon the majority, when they consider how that veto power was obtained by the Republican*. The love of peace and the love of country only have re strained the people of this country from violently deposing Mr. Hayes ftom the Presidential chair. He may keep it now, but the people will see to it that that trick U not perpetrated upon them again, and it ill behoove* the office hold ing clique to oppose the just measures for reform sought to be inaugurated by the representatives of the people in Congress assembled. But don't lot the strain U|ion their |>atience become too ! great, for something might break. Tut New York Aw* print* a table of the reward* paid by Mr. Hayes to the men who counted him- in, in liOuiniana and Florida. This pention roll includes ihe name* of one hundred and thirteen individual* who did Hajrea service in variou* ways in the two Htates. Their rewards range from the sl7,fioo a year paid Noye* and Stoughton each for re presenting the purity and grandeur of American institutions at the French and Russian court*, to the petty S9OO a year swarded to the smaller fry villains as Custom House gangers. The sum total per annum which these men receive, who made theoounting in conspiracy successful, is 1207,715, which will amount in the four years that Hayes wilf remain a* the rMM Democrat. Raw sens are never offead for the re mains of men politically .■ad- Hlgiis of the II in PH. From lb* llsrrteliurs Palriul, The incroaaing activity in commercial ami industrial allium allbrds a cheering sign that the oountry i* slowly but surely recovering from the stagnation ol recent years. The Now York Timet has been collating reports of the pros pects of spring business in nearly all }>ortions ol the country. With few ex ceptions theso reports show that the farmers and merchants are looking hopefully to the future and in almost all departments of industry there is renewed activity. The iron industry of Pennsylvania, which has been so much prostrated since the crash of 1873, is daily improving. Within the lost thirty days the price of pig iron under the still' demand has advanced $1.50 a ton. In New York the great iron and steel establishments, the "Onondago" nnd "Sanderson," which have an annual business of a million dollars, report that they have orders which will give them full employment for a long time. In some of the great manufacturing estab lishment* of New Jersey the men are working overtime so as to meet Ihe rapidly accumulating order*. The man ulai'turing towns of Connecticut, Hart ford, Merrden, New Britain, Collinsville with its axes, and Wdlamatilic with its woolen and linen manulaclorie* aie all busy. In the west and northwest the number of acres under cultivation has considerably increased. The south, too, shows cheering signs of the improve ment in trade and industry. While business activity is steadily progressing the emigration of super numerary workingmeii to the west is making progress. It is estimated that a million and a half of men have emi grated Irom the east to the west and south within the last two or three years, and the movement seems to be on the increase. In Boston and New York asMx-iation* have been formed to assist emigration with money and other aid. The workingtiien have themselves taken the matter in hand and have formed co operative unions for founding colonies in the west, without waiting for Hen drick B. Wright's promised loan from the government. By thu relieving the east of its sujM-tfluous working popula tion the condition of its industrial peo ple is improved. There is greater de mand for their labor at belter wages. Report* from Kuropc show that asso coitions have been formed there to en courage immigration to the south and west of this country, and especially to Texas. The Mcnnonitc* in Kansas have in-t with great success in founding their colonies. Not only is emigration from Europe to this country increasing, but the capi talist* of the old world are recognising the superior advantages that are offcrol here lor in vestment in industrial under taking*. The Ixindon Iron re|K>il* that an association of English capitalists are building great iron work* in .South I'ittsburg, Tenne*ee, and will soon be gin manufacturing operation*. Anoth er English company i building similar institutions in Toronto. These are not solitary operations but are signs of the difficulty of cotn|>eting in England with the iron manufacture of this country. Another sign of the limes is the exten sion of the list of exportation* of Amer ican products. Th recent attempt of the Reading railroad company to intro duce anthracite coal into Italy and Switzerland ha* met with much success. Anthracite coal of the best quality is delivered in (ieneva at $lO a ton, anil is acknowledged to be chea|>er ami Wller than the French snd Herman cos). In the revival of business, the absence of the spirit of wild speculation which marker! the period that closed with the crash ol IXT3. is one of the most favor able signs of the times. Trade is re establishing itself on sounder and se curer foundations, and the supply is regulated by a healthy demand. Re sumption in putting an end to fluctua tions in the currency and seeming a steady measure of value has coniribtiied no small share to the improvement in business. Currency Is in sufficient sup ply for the demand* of regular and legitimate trade and among business men there is a general indisposition to disturb the existing monetary system unless it be to stop the excessive coin ago of depreciated silver. If distrust ing influences do not intervene confi dence will soon le fully restored and the business of the country will improve until it ia placid on a secure and more pro|>erous looting than ever. ' ♦ M I Rank Robbery. Till TIIIXVEA onTAIW RXoraH Movxr TO rsr rox mi raoi;Bi.B. Ik# PttM>rf OHMfi. A bank robbery w'a* successfully car ried out in this city on Thursday, the particulars of which have finally leaked out, notwithstanding the strenuous ef forta of tho officers of the bank ana of the detective* to keep the matter quiet. The modoperandi was this: In the same building in which the bank ia located ia the office of an insurance company. The president of the bank ia alao one of the principal officer* of the insurance company. It is the habit of the clerk* to go to dinner about noon, leaving only one or two persons in the bank for some time. The thieves evi dently understood these facta well. On Thuraday, a littla before one o'clock in tha afternoon, two men drove up to the bank in a buggy. One remained in the buggy white the other went into the bank and told the prsaident that there was a man outside who wished to see him about some insurance. The presi dent went out to the pavement to see the man in the buggy, leaving no one in the bank but the caahier and the atranger. The latter engaged the at tention of the cashier, and a third man, a partner of the first two, slipped in quietly and gathered up all the money he could conveniently reach. Alt three then left before the robbery was discov ered. The bank offiera refuse to state the amount stolen, even to detective*, but insist that the amount was not targe. The officers have not even the alighteet clue aa to who the thieves are. The relations between the bank and "front office" do not appear to ba of tha moat pleasant character but the presi dent informed a reporter that there oould not have been leas than four con cerned in the job. Two men were in fron. of the bank at different time*. The one who did most of tho work ia a little fellow with stubby fiery rod whisk - or*. Ho wore brown overcoat and a suit of grayish blue. The individual in the luggy was of dark complexion and black whiskers, The bunk and insur ance company ref.-rred to iu the Arti zans, corner of Third avenue and Wood street. A Family's Narrow Escape. From ths Brsdfor.l Era. Alonzo tJilson, a contractor in the employ of 8. L. Wilson, resides on the Worth man farm, to ward the head wa ters of Oil Valley, A pathway leads from the house up the hillside to a tank directly aliove. About ten days ago the oil was overflowing from the tank. One night last week, after the family had re tired, Mr. fiilson was awakened Irom his slumbers by a strange feeling of suffo cation. As soon a* he became thor oughly aroused his practiced sense* told him that gas from crude petroleum was rising. A bright gas fire was burn | ing in the stove. Mr. Gilson stepped ! out of the bed on the floor. His feet j touched a greasy liquid. He had step- I ped into crude oil. He shut off the gas I from the stove, and called to the men who were sleeping up stairs to extingu ish the light which was burning. When I the lights and fire had been extinguish >ed an investigation was made. Mil hud run down the hillside, crept under the rear door, and covered tin* floor for an inch in depth. In passing over the snow it had beccmed sligotly chilled and the ga was not generated rapidly after it backed uii in the house. Had iit been thoroughly warmed the gas would have been fired by the red hot stove. Had the oil on the floor of the house been fired the sleeping family | must have perished. It certainly was a narrow escape. Work Hoon to Begin on the New Peni tentiary. frvtn III* llUftf.f.£<|<oint*i to aid eel a file for the Middle Penitentiary, spent a couple of day* in our borough this week. They were accorupanied hy Mr. Morrtaon, of Jy>ck Haven, who haa the contract for building the reservoir and laying the pipe. The contract (or do* ing that work wu first awarded to Meftr. ( ollon A Co., of Philadelphia, for $5,165, that being the |owist hid. The refused, however, to comply with the terms of the contract, on the ground that they had put in their bid believing that the pipe wa.* to be furnished by the .State. When they learned that the contractor is to furnish all the pipe, they 'backed down." The cotmimiori* em then decided to *crortstion according to the sjeed of trains and the space occupied is rejected, and the present system retained. All newspa per-sand |>eriodica)s may lie sent through , the mail* at two cents ja*r pound, and ' sample copies may be sent free. The Postmaster'tenera! is authorized to compel railroads to furnih bun a re port of th business in order that he | may determine what amount of com penaation is fair for carrying the mails. ! Newsdealers may mail to regular pa : Irons, aners to submit to the department false evidence as to the character of their publications wsa re tained. This really give* the depart ment power to compel a registration of newspapers if it may see fit aa a matter of administration. The authoiity to the Post master tienerai to put into public use double postal cards and double letter envelopes was alao stricken out. - ♦ A barmen! of (Hiss. tnm lbs Asa Frsactsr.. Chronic I*. In the basement of the residence of H, Isaacs, Mission street, is now being woven the most wonderful fabric of which the voluminous history of unique feminine apparel furnishea any account. It is the material, a* flexible as the finest of silk, for a lady'a dress, and I* being woven by Prof. Oreiner out of innumer able colored strands of glaas, first spun by himself. The strand consists of in numerable aoftly glistening threads, finer than the finest of floss silk. These stands are spun of all colors, and are then washed in a solution or water and ! beetroot sugar, which toughens them. The weaving is done on an old-fashioned hand-loom, the warp being nineteen feet long, and the woof tour feet, eo that the material will cut to splendid advantage. Only about ten inches a day can be wov-1 en, and the whole piece will not be com pleted until tome time in April. Tus Seicnftfc America* ha* discovered that striped stockings are not the only articles of wearing apparel that are poisoned. It claims to nave seen wool en, silk and cotton goods which contain arsenic in dangerous tpiantiUe*, and gives several instance* in which death has occurred from their use, Professor Nichols, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, al*6 reports the eiamin ation of a lady's dree* which contained eight grain* of areenio to the square foot. * August Hunt, paying teller of the Xeokenics and Traders' Bank, haa com mitted suicide at New Orleans. A Few Furl*. grow. M Washington P*. When the Republican party had full away in the Capitol neatly all the offi ce# of any considerable iinj>orlance were •riven to men who Mood at the rear. Moat of the "colonel*" and "captain*" on the pay roll* of both Henate and l!ou*o got their title* in the home guard aervice or a* honorary member* of the Mat!'* of atate executive*. A lew crippled soldier* were employed as mes senger*, and the fact of their employ ment was noisily proclaimed to the country a* indicative of Republican gratitude to the nation'* brave defend er*. Hut the valuable and honorable position* were, a!mo*t without excep tion*, bestowed upon men who had een no service and who had made the four year* of war the harvest time of their live*. A* it win at the Capitol no it wan in the department* and *o wa* it in the custom*, internal revenue, postal and Indian branches of the public service. Here and there a soldier waa given *orne trivial position, and hi* appointment wa* advertised a* an example of Repub lican gratitude, while the office* of hon or and profit were lavished on men who not only had been excused from sacri ficing anything for their couutry, but had accumulated a competency through the facilities for money making that the war afforded to the thrifty and the sje-culative. I'erhap* the bcxt illustration of this may be found iu the case- of Morton, who wis* honored with the title of "sol diers' friend," and who really waa a* considerate of the soldier*' interest a* any leader ol his party. In the list of Morton's ap|*inteet, in his state and in this city, there were numerous military titles. A lew of the owaers of these title* had earned them at the front. Hut the great miM of the recipient* of the immense patronage that Morton dispensed were bogus military designa tions. A "general," two or three "colo nels," a brace of "major*" and a squad of "captains," who danced attendance on Gov, Morton at lndiana|Kilit during the unpleasantness, were quartered in the best pla< <-s at Lis disposal, and some of them hold those places to this day. A collector-ship worth JlO 000 a year was given to. and i* still retained by. a man who rrfuaed to take an honorable fighting command, but applies! for and received an inferior stall ap(iointment at the rear. And this man is by no means an exception to the rule. Now that the ]>emoeratic party ha* control of Congress and the official po sition* pertaining to both hou*ea, the Republican papers are raising a howl about the "wrongs of tb|>oor soldiers.'* and are falsely accusing the Democrat* of discriminating against the men who fought under the stirs and tri|>e*. We undertake to say that, in it* solic itude for the soldiers, the Ih-mocratic party can safely defy comparison of iu record with that of any other party that ever held power in tin* country. There i* no interest of the soldier that the Democratic party has not uniformly de fended. no just claim of the soldier to which it ha* ever turned a deaf ear. At the Capitol, and wherever else the Democracy ha* had patronage to le --stow. jiowcr to vote pensions, bouotie* or adjustment of any fair demands, it has uniformly been the firm and faith ful friend of the soldier*. Such ha# !>cen it# record in the paiL Such are it* act* to day. Such will be it* course in time to come. The Democratic party is the party of the people, and a such it is bound by every tie of interest and svmpathy to be true to the ciliteu-aol dieri of the Republic. Conviction of Riotos* Alli-ghenv Mine r*. PITTSBvaoH, March 22.—Sotne three weok* ago al>out three hundred miner* who were out on a strike at California, a town on the Monongahela, about sixty mile* from here, drove forty min er* from work in the mine* of J. K. | N'eel, i>aying that "if all the men were 1 not given work not a ton of ooal abould l>e mined." Sheriff Work, of Wahing ton county, with a posse of 150 men, raided the mining town* and captured seventy-fiTe of the rioter*. They were charged with conapiracy and riot. Fifty of the men were found guilty to-day in the Washington county court. They were Philip Aldndge. Alexander Hate*. John Bate*, laaac Rrewer, Robert llrewer, William Brewer. John Crawford, Wil liam Courtney. William Davia, Arthur Ihxon, .tame* I>agger, .1. C. Alexander, Conrad Gillon, Morgan Uaaper. William llenahall, Van Hartman, David Hart man, John Henahall, Mike Hartman, George lluieman, .lame* Hoover, Wil liam Hager, Martin Jeffrey*, John Jef freys, -lame* Johnaon. Richard Moore, John Nicelow, Mechli Pastoriua, John Pyle, Allen Robert*, Charles Roberta, William Robert*, John Roaael, Cbarlea Rex, Alfred Shutterlv, Peter Hhovelin, a William Simpson, William Smothers, * Robert A. Tray, I>avid Thorns*, S. Rent ley Walker, Jame* Walker, Thomas J. Walker, John Wood*, Charles Oaten*, David Truxall, John C. Wilson and Same* Wataon. It is asid that moat of these men are of the worst type of Mol lie Maguirea, and have organised a num ber of stubborn strikes in the Monon gahels regions. The result of the trial will be greatly beneficial to the mine owners. legislating Against Tramps. TBI BILL WHICH HAS TAUtD TBB lOCK. The lltoiw at Harrisburg, on Tuesday of last week, by a voto of 123 to 50, p*** ed on third reading an act for the pun isbment of tramp*. It provide* that any |>er*ou arrested and convicted of being a trump abali be imprisoned at solitary confinement and hard labor for a period of not ieaa than aix month* and not more than eighteen month*, and any tramp convicted of trespass, carry ing firearm*, threatening violence, or kindling fire on the highway or upon any one a land without the permission of the owner, shall be imprisoned in the manner above stated for three yean. The act exempts minora under sixteen years of age, also blind, deaf and * dumb, and maimed or crippled persona from its provisions. The bill now goes to the Senate for concurrenee. Incendiaries burned the entire wwt aide of the busineee portion of Tyler, L., on Thursday.