,i 1 ' '-- ..1 , .0. . ..,. , . • . . I. 0. MOD 111011,• worm Towanda, .Pa». Jl4-8, 379. neputelleau Slats OesavestlW The llepublican of Yeeta sad illtottare finr of an hottest curette 7_ and the falthhil disehargdof Nati:nal obligattot s. sod opposed to comma:3lMA and the restoration to paste a the hl Heal striereeteet of the lelhemees which pro. sl .ced thitrebeillou of Sat, are reettested to teed INtate , kaPFortiebed according 'to then rens ' ntation to the Legislates*, to a Oadnutne to set at Harrisburg. at 12 o'clock. moos, ou the the day of, .111)7 Deft, to toOttaltatO a candidate formats Treasure m and to tn.:tact such Mher Widow& as ato be brbught be foie them. X. 8. 9r .sr. Manilas Repeblicue Stets Chmaittes. - , nErnite or rim urvaimis VOEXTY COMMITTEE OP NM • . The members of the „!Republican County Com, kola& of Bradford County, are requested brunet on TIME/MAT. jIILT 10, ISBN at 1 reclock.r.M., at the Grand Jury Room, In the Cot& Hoar at Towanda, for the - purpose of perfecting the organi sation of the CoMmittees, the appointment of the - Vigilance Committees, deciding as to bolding the Republican Countyy - Convention for the year 117$ ; •• xi tr. the selection of DelegaUis 3t the Republican State Convention, and for the teatime Roo of any ether bustaiss JAM may come before the Commit tee. IMEMBERS OF THE COMHIML. 1. Alba-Georgell. Webb. 2. Albany-JMnes Trrry. S. Armenia-ie. N. Smith. . S. Ayers. . 5. Athens BotWirti --A. C. ZION& a. Athena TownshitristDistrict-14. V, Weller. 4 •i, 24 District (Orentt Creek) •s: " • 34 " (SaYre) J. P. Ovenstdee. 9. Barclay-B. L. Ln•ber. to. Burlington Township..Clarenee_pearne. • 11. Borough-L. S. Wright. - _ 12 " West-J. B. McKean, la. Canton Township-Henry Mason. • • ' 14. Borough-J. W. Stone. 15. Columbia- ' 16. Franklin--Stern McKee. 17. Granville- , -Solon J. Saxton. I.4. l llerriek-I. P. Leo. 39 Leßoy-MIL Holcomiti or A. T. Utley. 2.0. Leltarsvllle-Btephen GorhaM, •21. Litchfield-I'm. Campbell. 22. Monroe Tow ship-Dwight 23. " Borough-John F. Satterlee. 21. Orwell-11.1;. Case. 25. Overton-Fred Iloirerley. 28. Pike--• • I • • • i 77. Itiligbory-113, .P. Brown. • 28. Rome Toetenip-L,ert W. Towner. 23. Borntigh-Renry Smith. - 30. tiheslacquli -G. L. Fuller.- 11. Smithfield-1401 0 Y Vineent• . 32. South CreeleL-George Denham, Jr. • 2. Routh Waverly-D. L. P. clerk. . ss. Springfield--O. P. Harkness. 3i. Standing Stune--Peter Landutesser. au. Sylvania-George P. Munro. 37 Towanda Township-James T. Hale, - 3a. " Buroagh, Ist Ward-Ira B. Humphrey 3:1. " . 2t" -J. Vi.,Sanderson. 40. " " 3d • • -.W. H:Tipdge. 41. .. North-George B. Mills. 47. Terry-Jonathan Terry. Sr Troy Township-M. O. Loomis. .14. " Itorough-Albert Morgan. 45. Tuscarora-Levi Welles. 46. Ulster-C. W. 11-ilemnb. 417- Warren--John D. Kinney. . 4s. Wails-H. G. Grinnell. 49. Windham-Stephen Bostalck. 51. Wilmot-O. T. Ingham. - 51 .. Wyalusing-N . 3. Gaylord. 32. Wyso.r.L-Col. IL E. Whitney. v HEN RV STREETER, CbsJrman. • A-WORD TO TOTITE MEN. ' ' The voting strength of the nation is every year increased by the attain- meat of young men to their majority. Of these, some, no doubt, decide, up on their affiliation after a more or less thorough study of party policy . and party methoils. Probably a •large number find their affiliation in it manner determined for them by the politioiriiias of those with whom they are associate. • But every in telligent young mairwill noi,benitale to admit that . one-who can give no --- better reason for his affiliation than -hereditary bias, has not much to be proud of in 'his; political manhood. 1t ,is not enough that a young ma* • explains his vote by referring to the fa ithi of his father and his grandfather. . VIC world would :resume harvesting with the sickle and travel over dug roads in . the lumbering old stage coach were such reasons for faith JONES' grandsire may have been right s but it does not fol- low that he was Tight.because he was Josts' ,grandftither. The way , in Which a .young man goes about the duties of citizenship . depends, or _ought toi depend, upon something ' moree - than that. The political affilia tion of a young man should result to prlifound convictions. Convictions do , not descend from father to son. They ate not heieditary. Men should b 3 Republicans or Democrats from 'c9nvfictions. Whatever a man may be, if he be anything from conviction be is entitled to the respect of his fellow-men. But whoever is one thing or another because his father or grandfather was that thing, cuts a _ very sorry figure among thoughtful men. - For this reason yOung men should reflect- deeply upon the.histo ry and:policy of parties.- We can think of no better mode of making Republicans of yonug -men. For ' when a Man begins to read - the histo ry of parties and to weigh it, therels very little chance of his allying him self to the Democraticparty. Wheth: er he contemplates Democratic meth *ods or policy; he will soon discover that that party -has been from the first visionary, impracticable, and frequently gOilty of great primes. lie wdl search in vain for` anypolicy, original with that party, which has le been• worth preserving. The mo emtic party has never been. ori inal in anything, ezeept its alliance with 1 slaver,y. That was an'originsi idea. Nevor before had the world see the boasted champions of a pure,thimoc racy leagued with the very eiPOosite of democracy. For democracy means absolute and inalienable eommixity of right and privilege; a governuient in which the consent of every man is rpresented, and therefore a gorernv went in which individual slieneels voluntary-and not constrained. The advent of •the Democratic party was signalized by financial collapse; its rule by turbtileirde and cowardilsub• mission to the dictates of- an ariste cratic rew, and its departure from the places of , pow it by a deep.laid con spiracy against the'life of the repub lic.. No young man can give any valid reason tor allying himself with such .a party. • But. when the student of history turns to the record of the Republican party .he learns that that party arose to champion universal freedom. It had its origin in a quickeningOf pub• lie ci)iiim4enei. It demanded free soil, free homes, free speech, free press, and free men everywhere. It had laid - upon its young shoulders the great task of saving the Union frot# the plots of faithless and ambitious men. It found a nation. despoiled, its :sword arm crippled, its credit gone. It restored national credit, and secured it by a wise policy of finance. It created armies and navies, and for four years wagek through varying fortunes, the greatest conflict of arms that tred shaken the world since Rome conquered the wo It suppressed rebellion, disbanded its armies without a single" shook, and tookup; the work of recoustriM. Von by amnestying the rebels- who had laid down their arms. Since that hour it has paid more than a thou ! indlicia rediced the interest on VIC Valance 'of - Its indebtedness one-third, raised treas ury notes from 66 cents to par, and to-day holds the treasury - amply pro *Tided for the redemption of the na tion's promises with gold. The young man about to enter npon the serious business of citizenship cannot do bet- ter than to read the records of the two parties in parallel columns. And whoever reads history in that'way, cannot - greatly err. , 1 If be err at all, the error will wise from prejudice and not from want bt contrast. GOVESNoR Horr has vetoed the Philadelphia street-eleaallg bill on the ground that the present system is satisfactory in its operation, more economical and effective than any earlier system . and ought not to be cast aside—certainly not until a new system is prattled that would re quire the same care which it exerts to be taken .by the Councils to have the work of cleaning the streets per formed most thoroughly and with theleast expense to the citiaens. The Governor has also vetoed-the act.to secure to - operatives and laborers en gaged in and about coal-mines and manufactories. of iron and steel the payment of their wages at regular intervals and in- lawful artaney of the United States, otherwise known as the act abolishing the, store-order system, because it " interferes with the free employment of capital, arbi trarily controls _ trade, substitutes legislation for the laws of supply and demand, and is the beginning of a system of paternal government at variance with our * political institu tions, which always pioved 'when tried injurious alike to the employed as well as the employer." The Gov ernor has disposed of all bills before him except that increasing the juris diction of justices of the peace to $3OO and that tnmsferring-ihe levy ing and collection of school taxes from the Pittsburgh Central Board of 'Education to the Councils. The bill making aneppropriation of $144,- 000 to the .Philtelelphis Deaf and Dumb Institution has failed to reach the Governor end is the third which has fared the same way. In each case they were retained in the Senate transcrihing room. Tnn murderer of Mrs. Hutt, has been arrested in Boston. He is a mulatto named Gruen:vs Cox. He confesses to the robbery having entered the , house through a ' base ment window, but alleges that belled no intention to commit murder. Ma arrest is a relief to the hist:rand of the murdered woman, as the chain of circumstantial evidence against him was almost sufficient to;har ensured his conviction. In these days when wife-murderers are so common,; it was but natural that suspicionshould attach to Dr. Hum., husband of the deceased; therefore, \the capture , of the murderer is a • doiMe. Cause for congratulation. It not only relieves Dr. Hcm. from suspicion, but un ravels all the dark mystery that sur rounded the case, and will result in bringing the criminal to well-merited punishment. It is amusing now to recall the; many diverse theories advanced some of the leading detectives, as WI the murderer and the method by which the grime was perpetrated The story of the prisoner, it it can be relied upon, and f there does not appear to be any ground fOr doubt ing its correctness, completely over turns all the theories of these ex perts in unravelling the crime, and had it not been for the bungling man ner in which the murderer sought to realize upon his plunder, and; the shrewdness of a wide-awake reporter, the probabilities are that the murder of Mrs. Mum.; like that of Mr. Roo zits, Dr. .11uanm.i., the Pretty Cigar Girl, at 4 gr. NATHAN% Would have remained a mystery forever. Tun , Supreme Court again con firmed the judgment of.the Columbia county courts in the - Si - atter of the Williamsport bonds.. The city over issued bonds and refused to pay the interest. The case was decided against them in Columbia county and then taken to the Supreme Court, which latter affirmed the decision', of the lower court. The Williainsport authorities again refused to pay, and again were put through the same le garprocess. The appeal from Judge Ermstr.'s decisions was only for the purpose of delay, and the payment of the amounts due cannot be 'much longer postponed, as the Supreme Court administers a deserved rebuke of this attempt at , semi•repudiation, and warns the authorities to take steps to pay the legal obligations of the Hmunc-riddert city. ARPREBENTATIVX men of the BUT LER wing of the Democratic party of Massachusetts, state it as a fact that General BUTLIR will receive and ac cept a nomination both from Labor Reform and a Democratic convention this fall. They say reports have been received froth the largest towns in the State drying last week, and that, with brit a single exception, , these reports favored - Btrrm's nom:ns. Lion. :They say their State conven tion will be held at Worcester in September, but that a gubernatorial nomination of &MAR will be made previously by either a Labor Reform or Greenback OrglilintiioD7 Tan Department of Agriculture reports that the losscs to sheep own ers by the ramiges of dogs reach one million 4 9 111 4' as* bbd lit!ct wo4 ietWirAesti*de Tbqse figures give tie di :posies helireetioes, hithe 41* couragement of sheep raising,einnt4 of - course ever be estimated with any approach to definiteness, but it seems reasonable" to — suppose - that - they Would not be less than the figerea just given, and quite likely they would be much greater. There is no ; good reason, excepting the loss by dogs, which' prevents the farmers of Bradford county from engaging largely and profitably in sheep. raising. -If some guarantee could be had that the flock would be cure from the ravages of worthless mars, OW hills would be covered with flocks of sheep. To remove the difficulty has engaged the attention of faruiers and others, but no adequate remedy I for the evil has yet been found. ON Monday, after the Senate had refused to pass thebill appropriating $600,000 to defray the expenses of executing the laws of the United States, Senator EATON boastirigly exclaimed : "The Senators now un derstand, the President now under star: is, the country now understands, where the Democratic party etude.'" Never were truer words spoken. The Senators, the President and the coun try do understand precisely the post tion of the Democratic party as rep resented by the majority in Congress. It was highly fitting that atter . Atoll should hive been so conspicuously called to the attitude of the Democ racy, just at that time, when a parti san majority had only a moment be fore retuned to vote an appropriation needed to execute the laws of the na tion.. Mr. EATON need not have had any fears that there weild be a mis take made as to the true " position" of his party. Varo Numnas Five—Every one expected.that the Marshals' bill would be vetoed, and it has so turned out. The President could not have sigtied it without stultifying himself, and be has given abundant preof , that. he is not that kind of 'a man, so.he has sent it back unapproved, reiterating those objections which have already been rendered familiar. His message is brief but cogent. Aiithe political enactments embodied in the bill are identical with those which led to the rejection of the , Judicial Expenses bid in its c•riginal form, there are no new arguments to be advanced. In deed, seeing that those already put forward have not been answered, and cannot fairly be met, to present others would be supertlitons. The President sticks to his text. He pro , tests for the fifth time against the ar rogant attempts of the Democratic majority to coerce the Executive authorities, and obtain upon compul sion what cannot be secured by force of law. Tan report of the American Iron and Steel Association — ahows that there has been a gradual increase in the manufacture , of pig iron is the United States since 1876. Last year it was' 2,577,361 tons of 9,000 pounds against 2,314,585 in 1877, 2,093,236 in 1876, and 2,666,581 in-11475. The price per ton has fallen•from ss3:e7f .in 1872 to $16.50 in November, 1878, but since then there has been a slight advance. Of the 2,577,361 time made in 1878, 1,092,870 were made with anthracite coal,, 1,191,092 - with bitu• minous and 293,399 with charcoal. Less than fifty years ago all the pig iron produced iv this country was made with charcoal. Ms fight in. Maine this year will be a fight to carry the Legislature. That is not only the key .to the posi tion in, cue, of a failure to elect a plurality Governor; but there. is a United States Senator to be chosen in that State before many years. Hon. DAVID F. DAVIB, the Republi can candidate for Governor, is a new man in Maine politics, but is said to be an able and popular man, and will make a vigorous and effective cam paign. PM& MOMANUiaIId JNO. O'Nxt LL, the' only convicted Mollie Maguires who have not been executed; were on Mon lay justly condemned to death by the decision of,the_Supr :me Court affirming the judgment of the lower court. They were convicted in Sun bury some months ago for the mur der of Corener Ifssss, in ,1874, and, now that the court of last resort has pronounced their condemnation just, the 9oveinor - will doubtlms fix an early day for their. execution. 'Pat Republican - Convention of Maine met Thursday, is Bangor and nominated D. F. DAVIN of CO. ninth, for Governor. The resolutions adopted declare' the United States a nation, not a confederacy of States; condemn the Democratic policy? - in Congress as "-treasonable and revol ntionaty;" applaud the Presidential vetoes; I oppose_ an irredeemable paper currency; and uphold prohibi tion. Tan act of•the last Legislature making 6 per cent. the legal rate of interest in New York State has been signed by the Governor, but it - does not, go into effect until January 1, 1880, neither does it disturb contracts or obligations - made before its pas: sage* Tux Senate Committee on Finance Thursday amended the Trade Dollar Exchange_ bill, so that trade (*liars may be exchanged for standard silver dollars at their bullion value only, and then, by one majority, postponed the bill until December next. - 11.118M1111116 . . canvas has while* aecwe the MO ll 4 ll * of thel.ollkieth• United fetes; aid, ii*eyilliekeet his Cab. biek 3 f*toolliP° ol dios RAM hos eanclializt Wolisi (keret another ex -tra sealer. at thii-time.. The Demo eratic majority hairier In caucus de• clared their purpose to raise to pass a simple aPpropriatioi bill PrOilding for the - expenses and fees of marshals aid their deputies, and also declared theirdetermliation to ageism, the already - twice vetoed bill itd spite adjounl; the President realized that nothing would be ,gained by keeping Congress in . session Jaeger. The country will judge between the Presi dent and the Democratic majority, and the former wilt have nothing to fear from . the verdict.. This adjourn meat, without providing the means to meet the expenses incurred in Inc; tinting the laws of the United States, is the last wriggle of the revolution ary reptile. It attempted to strike its fangs into the army and failed; it sought to paralyze some of the im portant functions of the Rzeentiie and failed ; and at last, in its rage, it has wounded the Judiciary of the nation, not fatally, bat sufficient to densmitrate the . venom of the ser pent. lona Baowx, Jr. has been taking great interest in the emigrating col ored men from the South to Kansas, and the Na,shville Annie - an calls his attention to the fact that his father "lost his footing in the world by pro moting a negro exodus." If this uteseneanythlog it is a threat that if he continues to assist the emigrating colored men Joan Baowx4r., will be lynched. The "exodus" promoted by Jona Baowx, Ben., however, proved a great success, notwithstanding that the old man lost his life. He back= rated and promoted the exodus' Of four millions of human beings from slavery into freedom. Tux receitea from internal revenue for the fiscal year which expired on Monday, were over $113,036,000, be ing an - increase of over three million dollars, despite the reduction of the tax on tobacco. ° The gain is due to a more thorough enforcement of - the revenue laws of the South; The , breaking up of the tobacco ling in New Orleans adds $t0;000 per month to the internal reienne of the country. Tua Democratic State Central . Committee of Ohio, at their meet ing on Thursday, elected Hon. Fusin' MoKinsurr, as Chairman, in place of Jour( G. Tnoupsos. The latter wai a, partizan of Tunantztes and was suspected of devoting too much time and attention to furthering the Presi dential aspirations of the Ohio Sen ator. A victory for Truax. - Tux Cincinnati-Enquirer says that for'Senator BATAILI) to pocket a bill of such importance as the Silver billf and keep it in defiance of the demand", of his own associates, is" nothing elSe than brigandage in polities." It may snit the narrow bonds of his own little State, it adds, but it will lois him the respect of every other. MR. FLUDINAND DZ LISIIIPS, in a lecture at Amiens,' stated that the first sod of the Panama Canal would be turned on January 1, 1880, and that with 40,000 navvies, including some Chinese and 15,000 Brazilian tiegroes, the work would be complet. ed in eight years. BRIGADIER °GAMER; of Missis• sippi, says there is a big Greenback party in his State "that threatens to give the Democracy trouble.," Well, can't the Democracy of Mississippi. get out their shot guns and stamp " out the Greenbackers as they have the Republicans ? WORD comes from the coal region tbit, trade is growing better daily. This is agreeable news, for when ,the dnuind for :coal Is bilsk, and don sinners are able and willing to pair gOOd prices, prosperous times cannot bofar away. 00NORESI -- 1 2hursday J.—ln the Senate a min &rem* report on the Letter Carriers' bill was adopted. The substitute for the House bill extending the provis. ions of the -act for the relief of cit. tain settlers on the public lands, re. . rted on_ Wednesday, was pruned. Mr. Beck's resolution providing fora joint committee to sit during the re cess, to inquire into_the best means of collecting and guarding the rove. nue, was adopted. Mr. Vest desired to call up his joint resolution declar ing for the remonetization and free coinage of silver, but objection was made. The joint resolution in rept!' to additional pay of - Congressional employes was discussed. An men- Live session was , held. The Judicial Expenses bill was received from the House, read twice- and referred to the Committee on' Appropriations. Adjourned. In the Rouse the Judicial Eapen. sea bill, and a bill making appropria. Lions for the pay of Marshals and their general deputies were reportit and referred to the Committee on the Whole. . The conference report on the Letter Carriers' bill was speed to. The Judicial Expenses bill was passed. The United States Marshals' Appropriation bill was taken up, pending which the House adjourned. _ Friday the Senate, Mr. - treiti Free-Coinage.and—Full—Remonetiza tion•of•Silver resolution was disarm". ed until the expiration of the morn ing hour, when it went over. The joint resolution for additional pay of Congressional employes was passed, with amendments. The Judicial Hs peines bill was reported and passed, without amendment. It now goes to the President. The-House bill mak ing appropriations for the joy of C.. S. Marshals was read , twice and re ferred. The House resolution fixing Monday next for the adjournment of the' sesston, was also referred. A message was received from-Abe Presi dent vetoing a bill for the relief of Joseph B. Collins. Adjourned. In the mouse, the bill appropris. lIM!!!!IF;MMEEMSMMT2=I . _ tins $600,000 to , pay TY. Marshais 04weir general ftuties _was peek tOta ed,liftar anin animat4debiteAsers: Geik.Rofd, belitirthoilietabi Pod 1021611111\:-1; jotakvelOdigii journiiiibmiliN*4* itmie Mist 4___l? 1 - ,)14 * IPOrty., *ojlt , - .4411 .. : ilit[Senate •fir. Morris, o %Mesas; isabialtfed a solution authorkdng the , el:Intro:- tion of a refrigerator ship under the supervision- sod wording- to-the 1 plum of John Gamy*, sad allowing him & compensation fetid , ennioes ; after setae debate the resolution 'went offer ;". Mi. Vest's silver remota tioa-was discussed until Abe expira tion of the morning hour; the United I States Marshals' - Appropriation bill was pasaed, without amendment, by a party vote; a ft er an executive ow lion .t ie Senate adjourned. lathe Rousei..the Senate bill exempting from license and enrollment fees vas. eels not propelled wholly by steam Or internal motive power was passed; a: joint resolution was passed author izing the President to appoint a com• mission to . negotiate farther treaty with Mexico; after some further pro. 'ceedinp of little importance, the . Reim adjourned. Monday:—la the Senate, the =- elution to adjourn at 4 p. in. was de feated by the objection of Mr. Win dom; a political debate took place, in which Mr. Chandler arraigned the Democratic party _ for its adieu it this session; Mr. Windom introduc ed a bill `to pay the United States Marshals, and it was indefinitely postponed, on motion of Mr. Raton ; the Mississippi River Commission and a large number of other nomi nees were confirmed by the Senate. In the House, a veto of the Marshals bill was received ; the Rouse failed to pass the bill over the veto; a new Marshal bill, introduced by a Repub. lican was defeated. /ATTU 110 Y PICILAMILPITU. On. Tueeday at last week the New York, New Jexaity sod Pennsylvania editors met fora tour days' re-union at the pcfpular melds resort, Cape May. They were accompanied by their "eiders, their cou sins and their aunts," and in some cases, we presume by _their sweethearts. The, attendance was very large, for an editor, you know enjoys nothing so well as "dead-beading," and the railroad offi cials and the hotel clerks put forth their best efforts to make the occasion enjoya ble. The lbanquet at the Stockton House on Wedheaday, was attended by over six hundred ladies and gentlemen ; among the indied guests was Hon. Galosh& A. Grow, and other distinguished gentlemen. The newipapers of Bradford County were weU represented. A boiler in the planing mill of Wilt Son, on Ninth Front Street, exploded on Friday, demolishing the mill and several adjacent houses. The engineer, and a woman and three chikfren were buried in the ruins, and when found were dead. The muse of the expledonis uncertain. Several detachments of pirlicrs made raids - on a large number of disreputable places situated in that part of the city bounded. y Sixth and Eighth streets, and Lombard sad South' streets. - Some 150 persons of both sexes, white and colored, were cantered, representing the lowest classes of thieves, street-walkers, panel. house keepers, and disreputable dona tors, generally, all of whom were taken to the Third District station house, where they bad hearings and their cases dispos ed of. Tense." raids „ of the police f are only temporarily ef f ectual in the =ppm don of the places and practices might to be reformed. The places of those sent to the Mull of Correction are quickly filled by others equally degraded. • The Legislative Committee to. whom I has been entrusted the duty of clearing up the mystery surrounding the ever is sue of the State Loan of 1858, has been in minion in this city, examining the bank ers and brokers-who were supposed to be I able to give some information in regard ' to what became of the missing $72,000. , Not much light los yet been thrown up on the lidded, though it is claimed by those who are "posted,"that it will yet be shown who profited by the transaction. The turn-outiof equipages in the park on a fine afternoon, is something wonder ful, being every kind of. ehicle and horse traria can horse and democrat wagon, to the swoU carriage and four. Wl* so much driving in the park, it is not strange that many accidents should occur, as some of the drivers an inexperienced, and not always sober. Hardly a day pas& es withoqt accidents, some of them of a very serious nature. The list of brooklet in these pleasure trips in the park, in . a single year, would be a frightful recent. On Tuesday, a lady riding with her broth er-in-law was killed, and the gentleman seriously , injured, and on Saturday sever. al casuidties occurred. The °Sinn of the Penmen% Eihibi tion and Of the State Agricultural Society conferred cid Thursday relative to the *p reaching fair. It was decided to open the fair on the Bth, and close it on the 20th of ik;pteekber, to increase the premi um Ust to $20,000, said not to receive any but Amen:Wan working machinery. In a short time an office for the transaction of business' pertaining to the dir- will be evened in the Mutual - Life Insurance Company's building, at Tenth and Chest niit streets. The Antwerp steamer, Switzerland, which arrived here on Ttieedayi last, brought over 600 Russian ItennCultes, who were on their way to Karnes. These people are industrious, frugal, and temperate, and will make valuable citizens. - Tbei are well provided with money, and are met here by agents who case for their 'Whin and see them started to their Western homes. Many more are to arrive. The Weather has been *shot as a blast from a farnan4 for the past few days. And while we are treading_ the red.bot pavements and feeling the hot air, as a breath of the simoon, it is not at all satin factory to pick up a newspaper 'and road that snow-balling is one of the diversions indulged in at the White Mountains. What's ibe use of exasperating a suffer ing person by that bind of talk, It is stated in some religious paper that it is estimated that Rev. E.P. Ihunmanci's winter campaign In Onside I.lllll.ted in 4000 conversions. There reams to be no Wing off in the seal with which the eel. tivated evangeliet pansies ids work, nor no diminution in the' Mithdaiten results of his labors. Philadelphia has not only the largest area of any city in the United States, but It, Is Ism? than Paris' sod nearly equal to that of London. The toilewhza Agutis wilt limn interesting : New York twen ty-two square mike ; Philadelphia, cme hundred and twenty and a half square miles; Bake, ten square miles ; Balti more, fifteen • square miles; , Pittsburgh and suburbs, twenty-one *lure miles; Buffalo, seventeens:pare miles ; Chicago, twenty-two and a half square miles ; Cita aimed, end, VIM square miles. • PUILADILIIIIA. June St, 11179. Bight baulked in revetttraight boys are reeetring the benefits of a boilivand lai Obeatiolik it the aii* crokel l/2 in :ranwheiddi. ;.. .r -- -,-- - -__,- • Tbi mi lie topot; _ ai of e' caw I *l Raillhilf COMAIIN Width iiiiTidrisilde7 . 04 W litaluchr; estta; Onoistt a hi the shape Of i bugs irons flth. ' ft le four' het and -six lathes toe& three feet.*nd lie lethal wide, and less then ball:a fnOt fa thick. DNS In iti,t Ifxpet part. It will, doubtless be tient to the Aesdemy of list:Wel Wen _ - An htteraikgiate boat race took plue on the Schuyildil on • Toady , last, be tween mews kora Columbia College, New York, Prineetoo College, New Jena, and the Thdrendty Permaybrania. Tbe lat ter were the winners, the Princeton emir being the latA. A handsome same of sit. cm, presented by George W. Childs, wan the /ebb. - • The Sunday trains to Cape Nay. and Atlantic City, are now orowded,`and the bolds and cottages find it difficult to Ao. oommodate the people that null to these remits air one days enjoyment of the air and water. OONGltral ADZOUBXED. Pinot IProweedbegi Ireesda*. ADDRESSES BY THE PRESIDENT OP THE SENATE AND SPEAKER OP THE HOUSE • -i-CONGSATULATIONN LEAVE•TAXI INGS AND GENERAL GOOD FEELING-- THE PRESIDENT HAS NO . pORYBER CONIIIIJNICATION TO MAKE. Wasritnirrox, D.C., July I.—When the. Rouse re-assembled there was a marked absence of spectators, and upon the floor: were few indications that the close of the session was ap proaching. Mr. Blackburn submitted a conference report on the joint res olution relative to the pay of com mittee clerks, etc., and it was tweed to. The House at 4:46 took a recess for ten rninntes. The time was con. awned in• handshaking and leave taking among the members. • 1 Mr. Atkins, one of the committee appointed to wait upon the !Presi dent, announced that the President had stated that he had no further communication to make. The hour of five o'clock- haring arrived, the Speaker rapped the House 'to •order and said : essrutster or ?Ss Roues or Itersitissre- TIVICei Setote we separate. I desire to return my thanes, as the presiding officer. to the members of. this House of every minks) dl.lsloa , and to say to tb am th.t I appreciate their uniform landmass sad' conduct. and now. in obedience to the tenni et the concurrent ntsolation of the two Houses, dying the time for final adjournment of the dist session of the Vorty.tithth Congress, I declare this Home ad le journed without day.es:3 / animal* ell over th e name sod the collieri TRIG SZNATE. At 2:45 P. it., a message from the House announced the concurrence or that body in Senate amendments the final adjournment resolution. 'The President pro tem. annexed, his signature to the free quinine which then- went to the l'resident. of the United States. Atter an palmated debate, pro. and con, the Senate, Passed House joint resolution pro viding thirty days extra pay for House employes—yeasi 30, nays 13. Mr. Thurman being in his seat on the door, Mr; Anthony- said : " I take advantage of the absence of the Proddent pro tem. froin the chair to offer the following resoTution: , Reserved, That the thanks et the Senate are hereby tendered to lion. Allen 6. Thurman, for the sbillY._ ll 4Dit7 and Impartiality with which he has disenargea the duties of the chair. Adopted unanimously. At 3:30 P. st. the Senate went into executive session. The doom were reopened at 4:50 P. M. Mr. Kernan submitted the following resolution, which was unanimously agreed to Resoteed, That the thanks or the Sowde are doe and are hereby tendered to Bon. William A. Wheeler. Ince4oresident of the United States, for the Witty. courtesy anti impartiality displayed by him whilst be presided over their deliberations during the present session of Congress, The committee appointed to wait On the President reported that the President bad no farther communi cation to,send to the Senate. At 5 P. M. the President pro tem. said: 1' SaltretOsil Thaisking ytni alnaerely for the re. adopted t om . expressed In your resolution adopted today. and for the kind aid you bare Ind. tonally given use sibUetetsporarily performing the duties of the chair, and wishing you all a sate mad pleasant return to your hom I now, In obedience to the coneurrent resolution o es, f the two Homies t de clare the Senate to be adjourned without day. (Applause on the boor.] - Assiber Feel Heard remit. READING Pa., June 30.—Anthony Sharp of Boyertoyrn called. on Miss Amanda 8. Edinger at Emans ' near this city, last evening. He had been pitying attention to her for some time. She Was the daughter of one of -the lon ore operators killed at the recent boiler explosion. Young Sharp' attended the funeral `with a fine carriage and desired Miss Edinger to accompany him. She refused. Last night she told him they had better part company. He said "All right; good-night and good-kve." ire walked several yards from the house, when he drew a gold mounted revolver And discharged four shots into his body. His dying statement was that he had intended to kill her also, but at tbe last moment changed his Mind. He had a prayer book in his pocket marked at the ninety-, ninth Psalm. He was twenty-four years of age and is now unconscious and dying. , iIiMIMS to Parts of Ifew York. Poconttraysiz, N. Y., June 99. Despatches received last night and to-daytell of severe storms in Dutch ess and Columbia counties yesterday . and Friday. For many miles, in lower Duchess county, trees were up rooted, fences and telegraph lines de 'stroyed. At Fishkill Landing, the barge "Minhesink" had her hurricane deck blown away. The Catholic churches at Philmouth and Chatham, Columbia county, were struck by lightning and badly injured. In some places hail - cut the cherries badly. The track of the storm was about two miles in width; and e% tended in a northeasterly direction. Stilled by the Cars. STRATIMID, Conn., June 30.—An unknown huly, about seventy ! five year of age, while walking on the track, was killed by_ the Nanghtauck train thli morning. Five hundred and forty4lve dollars were on her person,and two baggage cheeks from New iaven to great Barrington. Nowell Insbees Inseam Portsvius, • June 80. Howell Fisher a prominent citizen and re cent Republican candidate for Con gress, who has been confined to' his house for two weeks, suffering with an abscess in the face, was today struck with paralysis. Xis recovery is doubtfUl. , The Fastest Sowlag ea *weird. Booms, July L—The single . serail race for five hundred dams $ side, between Warren Smith, or Halifax, and 'Evan Morris, of Pittsburg, three miles, took place on Silver Lake to. day, and , was won by Smith, by half a length, in twenty-one minutes and five seeonds,the fastest time on record. Maki itme shey died st Mount Jai tickla r y- Ikea the effects of itOnries-titidsed at the hands of Lewis Sowers. The pet** lars of the Affidellie about utrollorts; An old grudge existed.:hetween the two about' the .taifilug suit of Atty cents, which o n e Owed the othear. Or. Thursday the two men were engaged in putting in a boiler at the flour mill ofd. M. Brandt. ,Heeshey was stand fin On a doorway four feet above the railroad track, when Bowers came up and spoke s, few `words, ,atter which. be knocked Hershey down. The latter in falling struck his head on the track, rendering him insensi ble. Blood gushed' from his mouth, nose and ears. He eras carried to his home, where he died, as stated.. Sow ers was _taken.to jail, after refusing to enter bail. When notified of the death of Hershey he showed no sok row, but instead said he vas - glad of Both men are old residents of Mount Joy, each being nearly fifty years of age and having large fami lies. They were both under the in ' fluenee of liquor at the time of tile quarrel Iteduebts tbe Gauge. ST. Louis, June-28.—The prepara tions for changing the guage of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain and South ern Railroad, which have been in pro gress for two months past,,Culminated last night. At daylight Una morning over 3,000 men commenced_• work shifting the rails, and long before night the entire line, nearly 700 miles, from. St. Louis to Texarkana, was changed from five feet - to the standard guage of four feet eight and a halt inches. The locomotives and ears have also been changed, and traf fic under the new order of things will proceed without break of hindrance. Another Clone Wrenn, BosTim, June 28.---James P. Ed munds, aged sixty, a well known and highly respected citizen and e;-alder man of Newton, Mass., and - flour and commission merchant of this city, was arrested to-night for forging the names of Amza Crafts and Sands and Fur her, to a large amount of paper in possession of the Naverlek Bank,thiss city. The amount of his forgeries in the hands of the batik aggregates eighty thousand dollars. He is ar rested at the instance of the bank. on a single charge of forging Amza Craft's name to a four months' note 'for three thousand 'dollars. Since Tuesday, when the forgeries were discovered, Edmunds has suffered severe mental prostration and his physicians say he cannot be moved. He is now under the charge of three police others at his house in Newton. Nothing is known as to ,the disposal of the money. . Paper amounting to oyez:one bun 'dred thousand dollars is held. Cap tain Edmunds who is still very sick, was brought to Boston this afternoon and is now locked up in the police station. The names forged are Sands & Forrald,Captain Edmunds succes sors in business in this 'city, and Amaza Crafts of Newton Highlands, his brothei-in-law. Until . these de velopments were made it had been supposed that Captain Edmunds was wealthy, that. is,wortb anywhere from fifty to one hundred thousand dollars, as it was naderatood when about a year alp he retired from the firm of James F. Edmunds & Co., flour deal ers, on State street he received fifty thousand dollars in cash for hiis share of the busidess. It is not yet known how long he has been uttering forged paper, or it the amounts, above 'en numerated compritte the whole of his transactions. Lobbed and Almost. Burned to Death, OIL CITY, June 29.—The residence of Mrs. Rachel Hollis, a widow, re• siding in South Oil City, was entered by a burglar at three o'clock this morning and robbed ot $lO5O, which was - taken from the cupboard in the room in which she was sleeping. The thief effected his entrance through the cellar by cutting a, wire screen from one of the windows. After ob. tamping the money he started a fire in five different rooms of the house and distributed oil about to • make sure the work of deStruction. The old woman was awakened by the smoke when nearly suffocated, but managed to give the alarm in time to save the building. Her escape from death is simply miraculous, Is the clothing and everything in her room were destroyed. There is no clue to the perpetrator, though -it was evi dently some one familiar with the premises. The loss on house and fur niture will not exceed $500; insured for $5,000.in the Franklin. of Fhila delphis,and Oontinental,of New York. A Terrible Death. CARLINVILLE, 111., July I.—. As John O'Neil, a prominent farmer and ex-railroad man, was „ driving into Shipman yesterday morning, his horses became frightened, throwing him from the wagon ;' his foot was caught in a wheel, and his leg 'was completely torn from bis body. Ile soon died from the effects of his in juries.. lodinate on the War Patel' Orrawa, June 25.—An outbreak among the Indiamvitt Battle Ford is rumored, causing great anxiety -to the friends of those living there. The government are. without adv:ceS as to any fresh complications, , but as telegraphic cominuications has been interrupted, it may be accounted, for in that way. It is .stated that a Sup ply of money for the purchase of provisions had been forwarded to Windepeg, which would indicate that unless the Indians were immediately willed, the situation may become critical. A Blaughty Toile; Mini. - FAtIA CITY, Pa., ....Charles Daily, son oft he the iiiiijoe . enoefao Wheel ing W. Va ., jail, has n arrested for complicity in the r bbery of the Workingmen 'a Savings 'Beek of Al legheny, which attracted so much attention at the time, March 301.13, from the boldness of the scheme and the bravery of - Cashier Walters. The robbery was committed by three men. The men' got their hands on $15,000, but were obliged to drop the most of it under the rapid thing of Walters._ The -thieves got sway with $l,OOO. The detectives know the names of the other two thieves, but their whereabouts are unknown. Daily got intimate with his partners In icrime, while they were confined in the Wheeling jail. It is believed he'aided one of them to escape from Fatal Aeeldeate at llarselteads. N. Y., June 30.- - Thomas .111einnerny, a laborer in Westlake's brick yard, at Horseheads, Chemung county, was buried under a ela y _ bank, which caved in on him while shovelirg, this; afternoon, and. was instantly killed. • MOW 2210111161111 L S?. FanL, Minn., _June 28.--The pleasure steamer "May Queen," on Lake Minnetonka,. . a peninsula MUM titer resort in Minneapolis, exploded while landing at a wharf of the up per-lake this afternoon. The boat is * complete wreck and sunk in fly, feet of water. The casualties are as follows: Capt. R. W. Rockwell, In ternally hurt and scalded, will die; Engineer Haluel terribly crushed and mangled about the head and body, probably dead by this time; Isaac Dean and wife, Makstoo, both badly bruised; D. D. Walker, St. Louts, badly hurt; Mrs; Walker, slightly bruised; Mrs. Blakeley, mother of Mrs. Walker, seriously in jured internally and;suffering greatly. A few others received light bruises. Fifteen people were i boat. The cause was clumsy ' ery and , carelessness. 16NOTII CHICAGO, June 28,—A Nebraska City, Nebraska, special says: A. hor-, rible accident occurred on the Mis souri river, five miles below this place, late yesterday afternoon. The boiler of the government tugboat "Clitie!" exploded, killing J. Lane, of East Nebraska City, and Herman . Bohl,fireusan, and fatally injuring I. and W. Kinney, engineers, of St. Lon's. — It. Pinney, Captain of the tug, and mate Pyle, were horribly scsided.4 Brutal illuriSer at-Newark Valley. On Wednesday night at about 10 o'clock a negro named Daniel Searle, a laborer in the saw mill of Sidney Belcher, one mile and ,a halt below the village of Newark Valley, went to the 'residence of Mr, Eldridge Rewey, about one mile north of the village, - and.asked the loan of - some money. Mr. Rewey was sitting by a table, reading a newspaper by the light of a tallow candle. He was ' a bachelor, nearly 70 years old, and has lived by himself since the death - of his sister, some twenty years ago. He was also a very eccentric sort of a man, mingling but little with his' neighbors. No man could say aught against him and none knew much about his business, but supposed him to have money as he was industrious and exceedingly economical. 4 . - When Dan asked for money, ac cording to his'confession after arrest, Mr. Rewey said he had none to lend, when Dan told him. he would have some anyhow. , At this the old man arose from the table with his paper in one hand and the candle in the other, when Dan rushed at him, strik-. lug him a stunning blow on the head, with a boot-jack which staggered the old man. Then the negro drew a razor from his pocket and struck his victim across the throat the first time cutting a fearful gash and break ing the razor. lie then began to' search for money, but, hearing the man he supposed he had killed mov ing; he returned, and taking Rewey's knife from his pocket, began again his - horrid work of butchery. He cut his victim's throat 'again and again, and lett the 'knife - laying on his breast. de was now dead. The negro got about $3OO in money. On Thursday, a colored man nam ed Coleman told that Dan Searles had come to his house at midnight, called him up and told him what he had done, giving him $lOO and his wife slo_ to clean the blood from his clothes, and say nothing aborit the affair. -- Searles was at once arrested and confessed.-, He says the old man beg ged for his life while he was coMmit, ting the murder. ' lie is perfectly in different, says be don't care if he is hung; would just as soon be hung one time as another, and seems to consider himself a hero. He is a re pulsive looking negro, about 25 years .3 old and blind in one eye. - The Coroners inquest, he d in El well Hall,and conducted by r. Rog ers has implicated several negroes, who were seen in company with Searle on- Wednesdarinight, trying to procure whiskey. • they probably got it. Coleman and Boulden are the alleged"accomplices. Searle was brought to Owego list night and placed in jail, to await the sitting of Court in September;—Owego Res olute, June 27. •. , • .;---------,. The Hedy pf A. T. Stewart ' Nzw YouK, June . 28. Superin tendent Walling to-day, in speaking of the various reports published from time to time concerning the finding of the body of A. T. Stewart, said : "I tell'you I knoi the body leas riot been found. - But I don't say that. I don't'know of its having been found. I know it has not been, and I knol hoW' the reporters got their story. Some of them have heard a private; conversation between two men whom they though were in Hilton's confi dence, and ey filled in the points from their o n imagination." • A Freak of Listitular. Nzw Yoax, June 29.—During a thunder storm this afternoon, Emily, aged six, and Anna ' four and a half years, daughters of Mr. Well, master mechanic employed by the ;Harlem River Railroad Company, were struck by lightning. The children were sit ting in an arbor .when " the storm came on. :` Their father called i on them to enter the house, a llastycif lightning struck a tree and shot downward. -When the father recovered from the blinding light,.he found his children dead. The father and mother are prostrated with grief. Theeitoitomeot to Gas Geary IlAnsisuuttu, June 28.—Thz coin mission selected to choose a monu meat for the grave of Governor . Geary in the Harrisburg Cemetery to-day decided to award the contract to (Rome Starkey, of Scranton, who tgr - eed to furnish a granite base six feetin width and bronze statute of the late Governor for $5,001). His destincasbefore the commission con templated a monument composed en tirely of granite. The 11p4inment will be twelve and a half feet high. 7 Giant Powder Exidostor., NORTH' ADAMS, Mass., June 30:— A. giant powder magazine hit Mow bray's Nitro-Glyeerine Works ex ptoded this afternoon, killidi i Jack Pierce and William L ong,_ who were in the building mixing blasting pow der. -Their bodies 'were blown to atoms. The , force of the explosion was plainly felt in North Adams, a . distance of two miles. Neighboring bilildings of the works were badly shattered and the ground for up wards of 30 rods strewn with timber and debris. . l i nwimex Kzu.s.--" 'Eleven years our daughter suffered on a bed of misery.un der the eareof veral of the beat (and some of the wwo e) physicians, vibo gave her disease vast% s names but no relief, and now sbe is '' tored to us in good health. by as Ara le a remedy As Hop Bit ters, that we had poohed at for two years before using it. Ne earnestly-hope and pray that noon° else will let their sick suffer as we did, on aount of prejudice against so good al medicine_ as Ilop Bitters."— The Parents, , 1:=11=71 Tan product of iron but pax wail about 40 per coat. greater- n - this State than in 1818. Tix a ki n or stilecksoeie, eight feet keg, was'seeently discovered in a wall in • Chaste& crusty. Ton eidtlestionot tobexo fs large!) , on the Wonsan In the southwestern action of Chester county. - 1r takes nearly 20,000 towels of oil to All the 104 miles of six-inch which make . op the tidewater MILTON BERNARD, of Newlin township, Chester county, sold 20,000 quarts a strawberries_ of . his own-raising this • GaNSBAL BfitOrCAAßaw, contribute& diners 625 monument, w to- ththumberland.county hich will be dedicated on July 4th. • 'Lmvasuricvnit, a hunter of Strasburg township Lancaster ' county, was found dead in his room on Wednesday. AFT°, plexy caused the death. Am exchange says that Thomas Grabb, farmer who lives down below Oxford in Lancaster county , has a cow which recen t. ly gave birth to a calf that weighed 154 pounds when it was three days old. . Tug wire mill of. the Hazard Manufac turing Company, Mauch, Chunk, is run ning on overtime, and "Orders are bOoked for 200,000 pounds of wire, which will keep the present force employed tuitil September. GovEnuon How hal been elected Pre sident and D. McConaughy Vice presi dent of the Gettysburg Battlefield-Me motial Association. The directors are; Generals Alexander S. Webb, Charles K. *Grattan' ' J. Watts Depilyster, Horatio 0. Bickel, Hons. Henry .C. Geary, A. 0 Heisler and Heaters. McConaumby, Hor ner, Krauth, Schick, Danner, McCrary and Buehler. WILLIAM A. BLARIr,•s Princeton ate dent, residing in or near. Allentown, who had determined to commit suicide, and fur that purpose abstained from all food fdr nineteen days, reconsidcked his deter mination on Wednesday of last week and began to take nourishment. Biz desire for death resulted from a belief that he Could not recover from a paralysis whic afflicted him ; his present desire to e arises from a contrary belief. ONLY a short time ago rays the ford inquirer,the grasshoppers made a raid on some of our Western States, and as the reports came in that fanns were stripped of everything green, and that fat mers in some districts were 'dePendent upon the charity of more fortunate people, - we con gratulated ourselves in this section of the country that ourflot was in a land where grasshoppers didn't come ; reports, how ever, are now coining. in from Cotentin and Cumberland valley township, to the effect that the grasshoppers 'are appear ing in large swarms; ciearing the clover and cornfields as they go. It may be that by another sear they will be as numerous in this county as they were reported to bo in the West: • ' RuinAj, rzws, NEWTON COOKE and a eolored man were killed in an ore mine in Pittsylvania county, Va., on. Wednesday afternoon. CitAirixs McCumt wag shot dead by 'Elam Trotter, bothl colored ; at a ColOred picnic near Batavia, Ohio, Thursday. Two men were killed and three severe ly injured by a collision on the Southwest ern ItailWay, at Watea lon, Quebec, Thurs day morning. Two tiamps attempted to rob two harvesters near Alton, 111., Friday. The harvesters resisted, and one of them was shot dead. FIFTEEN female clerks were discharged from the L. S. Treasurer's office Fridar, owing to lack of appropriation in the Leg" islative b;11. Ilttantr. LATILIEMAiLE, on trial at Al bany, N. Y., for killing Catharine Bumf back on the sth of April last, was convict ed Friday of murder in -the - fist degree. T. T. litcics was shot dead by his brother-in-law, James Burton, in Merl weather county,- Ga., a few days ago, in a quarrel growing out of the settlement of some property.' SEVER:\ L buildings in Keene, N. IL, were struck by lightning during a severe thunder storm Friday afternoon, among them J. S. Taft's pottery which was The loss is nearly $20,000. R. S. and Robert Taylor, brothers, met 13. C. Wren with whom they bad an old feud, at Anlville, Lafayette county, Mo., on Wednesday and the meta began firing at each other, 11.• S. Taylor- was killed, and the other two mortally wounded. - throe reports- front thirty points in Southern Minnesota show a favorable cot. dition of corn and .. wheat. The latter crop has not teen damaged by the recent heavy rains, - -buk there is fear of rust should the wet weather continue. THE body of 3lm. Rolland, who went over Niagara Falls last SatnrdaY June 28 was found Friday morning on the Canada Shore, a--few hundred feet below the Horseshoe -Fall. It was entirely nude, but only slightly • disfigured. Her hue.. band lett for home on Tuesday. faxc'TEN?,NT VON Scuutzurat, while scouting in the Tonto district of Arizona,' on the 25th inst., : encoontered a party of renegade Indianiconsisting of seven men and woman. The men were all killed pad, the woman caphired. It is said these In. dians have been depredating. - GENERAL Howe. n' has returned to Portland, Oregon, from- the Indian coun try, and says that only bne chief—Garry, of: the Spokanes--refuses to goon the nese reservationa All the others are will ing to go, and many of the Indians will occupy land under the Homestead law. - Tan Dominion Government has en gaged thirteen farmers, at kt salary of $lBO per annum with all the stock and farming implements for one year, to in struck the Indians of the Northwest in agriculture. They will leave Ottawa for the North Saskatebewalt country about the '2 nd of July. • AT California City, opposite San Fran— cisco, Friday It 11. _Moore; keeper of the Dumont, Powder Company's magazine, shot And killed A. Fulton, manager of the works,. Dud then committed suicide. The provoestionto the tragedy was a no , tice from Fulton- that Moore's services would be dispensed with. As incendiary fire in Taylor & Crate's lumber yard, at Briffilo, on Wednesday', night, of last week destroyed 42 4 2,000 , worth of sheds and lumber. C. A. S.ch ncider's tobacco "factory and Cochrane &,• 1 Mim's machine shop„ in New Orleans, were burned on Wednesday night of hiss.. Week. The loss is estimated at ,$75,000. THE Republican Convention of Maine met Thursday last, in Bangor, and nomi nated D. F. Davis.kf Corinth, for Gover nor. The resolutions adopted declare lye United States a nation, not a confederacy of States ; condemn the Democratic policy in Congress as "treasonable and revolu tionary.; applaud the - Presidential vetoes ; oppose •an irredeemable paper currency ; and uphold prohibition. - Mits. AGNES InEcsustcwifeef William Dieckman, a farmer at Bluff Ridge, Mo., twenty miles from St. Louis,- was tumid murdered in bed on Saturday morning, with two bullet holes in her head and a third in her neck. Her husband, who re amed from market in St. Louie late in the afternbon, expressed the belief that a neighbor named Stockli, who bad helped— him to prepare for market, did the deed. Both Stockli and Dieckman were 'algid in fail. JosErn A. Bina, paying teller of the Mechanics' _National Bank of New York, residing at Montclair, N. J., was arrested Friday shooting his. coachman, John Arinstrong i on Thursday.evening. Arm strong died of. his wounds . Frtday. He says. Blair got into a passion because he had stopped in a beer saloon, and iol lewed him to his room in the stable where he shot him. Blair alleps that "he sup posed Armstrong was about to shoot him and Bred in self-defence." Tim State Convention of the New Celt sfitutkin Party of California met in Sacra- ,Menlo on Wednesday afternoon of last week. Thursday morning the Convention oiganized by electing Marion Biggs chair man and John H. Burke Secretary. Res- - olutions were adopted repudiating Com mnniam demanding the enforcement of the anti-Chinese clauses of the new Constitution, and favoring a reduction of railroad fares and freights. Dr: Hugh .1. Glenn, of ' Colinas, was nom-. Mated for Governor on the-first ballot .he receiving 128 voters to 115 tor-J. V. Web ster, or -Alameda. It is said Dr. Glenn will not accept - the nomination. Mil