Y a R 1 H i fi 9P i i 1 1 A. JJJJL OcuotciMo politics, fiitcraturc, gricnltuvc, Science, illovaiitii, curt (general Sntclliacurc. VOL. 32. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, Pi., MAY 20, 1875. NO. 51. PuMished by Theodore Schoch. Tkrms Two ilollars a year in alvane ami if not paid (L-forf th-; om of the year, two dollars anl fiftv cirits will I"-? clianro!. tt" ." jriir lNrrntinn'tl until all arre:iraj are paid, oxi'tt :t tli o)ii(.!i of the Editor. So' Advcrtisnionts of oiih siiar of (cirlt linos) or .. on.- it tliive iiK'-rtitiiis SI '). En Hi additional in-m-tioti, O'-nts. Lonjr oni's in proportion. JOK I'EtlXTIXG OK AM, KINDS, Uxooiitod in tin; highest style of the Art, and on the must re:tsii:iM tonus. D 11. 11. BRUCE JOHNSTONE, Homoeopathic Physician, Ke.-idcnte: I'.cnjamin Duncan, Cherry Valley, MONROE COUNTY PA. May 13, lS7o. ly. D II. A. LEWIS KIRKIIl'Fr Physician, Surgeon and Accoucheur, Sand Cut, Wayne Co., Pa. All eases promptly attended, to day or night. Charges moderate. May 1, '7o-tf. D r. x. i l'CCBi. Surgeon Dentist. Annonnciis tli nt having jut returned from Pental "olIi-grt, lie is fully prepared to make artificial teeth in t In.- int ht-.nitiii.l ami life-like inmiiiT, and to till de-o.-sy.-d t eth accord in- to the most improved method. Teeth extracted without pain, when desired, hv the u-e of Nitrons Oxide lias, which, is entirely harmless. l("pairiii'Tof all kinds neatly done. All work warantotl. 'Uinjps reasonable. .!).: .1. i. Keller's new brick building. Main street, Si riucNbur, l'a. iAinj. 31 '71-tf. Operating and Mechanical Dentist, Anuoiin"is thpt havim; returned from I Vntal College lr- is i'u i ly prepared to perform all operations in the dviital line, in the must careful and skillful manner. Teeth extracted 'y the use of gas when desired. All work warranted, liarues reasonable. OiTiee in Hutchison's bik-k building, over Shot well's More, K.it Mioiiiisbiirff, l'a. April T2, ''. ly. D PHYSICIAN. 0ncc near opposite Williams' Drug Store. n-siden-e, formerly occupied by K. L. 'Wolf, corner ?rah and Walnut streets, ;i rondsbur, l'a. Viari.ii 2", 1. tf. D HOW.tlll) IMTTCKSOX, Pjysicim, Surgeon and Accoucheur, Oflicc and lle.idence, Main treet, Strouds hur, Pa., in the building formerly occupied by Jr. S jip. Prompt attention given to call. ( 7 to 0 a. m. O.Tice hours 1 II o .. ... ( G "8 p. m. April IC, lS74-ly. -l X I. III. D R. GCO. Yi JACiiSO. rilYSirilX, SURGEON AND Al'CUTCIIEUR. In the old oliiee of Dr. A. Reeves Jackson, residence, corner of Sarah and Franklin street. STROUDSBURG, PA. Aunt S,'72-tf AUCTIONEER, Real Estate Agent and Collector. The un lcri'.'iieil lieg leave to notify the public that h i tireji.ired to ell at short iK-tice personal proi.-Tty f a!! kiis, as wiii as Ileal Iltst.-, at pulilie or private o:!i-e at Thomas fte:nrIe's old tore stand, at liist Hr'uds!)iirg, l'a. l'ec. 1", 1S71. ly. Attorney nt Law, One door above the ".Stroudburg Ilouf-e,' Sirotidrbtirg, l'a. Collection promptly made. October 22, 1874. JSIL: SIOCSS2, HONESDALE, PA. Mot central location ot any Hotel in town. R. W. KIPLE & SON, lr0 Main street. January 0, 1S73.- Proprietors Iv. ArERC'IIAVrS' HOUSE, JL 113 & 415 Xorth Third Street, PHI LAD EL PULL SOT. Reduced rates, $1 75 per day.-tia HENRY SPAHN, Prop'r. L R. Snvdkr, Clerk. Nov. liG, JS74. Cui. WILLIAM S. REES, Surveyor, Conveyancer and Real Estate Agent. Farias Timber Lands and Town Lots FOR SALE. Office menrly opposite American IIouch nd 2d door below the Corner Store. March 20, lS73-tf. DR. J. LANTZ, SURGEON & MECHANICAL DENTIST. 1ia.s hi office on la?n street, in the se:ond story 'f rr. S. Walton's l.riek building, nearlv opjx.r.ite the 'rondshnrg House, and he Haters himself that by eigh teen years constant praetiee and the mwt rarnwt and 'Veful attention to all nuitt-r. pertaiiiinK to hi pro-'"-wion, tht he is fuUv able to perform all operations 'n tlie li,tHl line in the most careful aud skillful mun Br. epecial attention given to saving the Natural Teeth; ai-o. to the in"rtion tf Artificial Teeth ou UublH-r. '"Id, Silver, or Continuous Gums, and perfect fits iu all fs,,s insured. Most persons know the great folly and danger of ;n 'fusting their work to theinexperieneed, or to those liv '"g at a distance. April 13, 1H74. tf. D OX'T you Kno' mat J. jIefni tv Sons are the only Under- Icers in Stroudsburg who understands their Wsiuess ? If not, attend a Funeral managed VaDy other Undertaker iu town, and you sec the proof of the fact. Juue l?,71-tf R. MAINONE, Maker, Tuner, Regulator and Repairer OF Pianos, Organs and Melodeons. Tarties rosidin: iii Stroudsbunr and vicinity, witdi n thoir Instruments thoroughly tuned, rcjiulated and r ):iirel at a most reasonable price, will please leave their order at the .I;tt".rs..iii:iti itK.- Those u ishimr to purchase Pianos or other instru ment will find ittotheiradvantaiietocallonnic. Hav- "'K "" practiele experience of over twenty-six years in th muienl line, I am preporod to furnish the latest and most improved instruments at the lowest possil.le prices. I have located nivself permanently here and solid vour favors. HENRY D. BUSH (Successor to 11. F. & II. D. Ctish) DEALER IN DRY GOODS & NOTIONS, Shawls, Cloths and Cassimeres, SILKS, DELANES, CALICOES, AND Dress Goods Generally, White Goods, Flannels, Trimmings, and HOSIERY, AN I) IX SHOUT The vaual $toc7: of a iccll appointed DRY GOOD AND NOTION STORE- The stock was not purchased at Auction or Bankrupt Sales but will be sold at prices satisfactory to purchaser?, and warrautcd as to quality. CALL AND SEE. II. D. RUSH. Stroudsbur:, April 30, 1874. tf. PRICES REDUCED AT THE orner THE CHEAPEST GOODS IN TOWN. Great bargains are now oAl-red in FANCY DRESS GOODS, ALPACAS, VELVETEENS, CLOTI-IS, CASSIMERES, FLANNELS, Ac, all of which have been marked down to PANIC PRICES. Goods all new and right in ntyle, but marked down to meet the times. We invite all to call and peo for themselves. Terms Cash. C. n. ANDRE & Co. dec-4tf Main St., Stroudaburg, Pa. 0. H. Dreher. E. B. Dreher pi-iceints: (2 doors west of the "Jefiersonian Office,") ELIZABETH STREET, Stroudsbur, Pa., DREHER & BRO., DEALERS IX Drugs, Medicines, Perfumery and Toilet Articles. IPaints, OILS, VARNISHES, GLASS & PUTTY. Abdominal Supporters and Shoulder Braces. Seeley's Hard iti itne;n ttivshiis aim Bitter's TRUSSES OF VARIOUS PATTERNS. Lamps and Lanterns Burning and Lubricating Oils. Physicians' Prescriptions carefully Com pounded. N. U. Tho hia-hest Cash price raid for OIL of WINTE1UJREEN. may-ltf. Store! Priestly Politics. The New Y'ork Times is doing a plain duty in a clear and forcible way in constant ly calling attention to the political designs of the Roman Church in this country, a task which we, have also endeavored to fulfill. There is, however, so general and just a fear of even seeming to interfere with religious liberty and the right of every man to hold and profess whatever faith he prefers that there is some reluctance upon the part of many good people to favor the discussion. Rut in the interest of tho very religious liberty to which they are devoted, such persons should watch careful ly the conduct of priestly politics. Do they think the Roman Church friendly to re ligious freedom or to the careful separation of church and state ? If not, they should understand that the aim and hope of the Roman Church as a political power is the control of the government, and when that should be achieved, the union of church and state would follow. There may be a very great difference of opinion whether under any probable circumstances that control could be obtained ; but there is no doubt that it is sought, and sought with great ingenuity, subtlety, and influence. The objective point, as we have often shown, is the public schools, but that is not the only one. In Ohio, as has been for merly stated iu these columns, an attempt was made to repeal the prohibition of sectarian grants to schools, and both in Ohio and in New York an effort is making to introduce the Roman worship into the jails and hospitals. This is done, as usual, under plea of that religious liberty which the Pope curses, and which the Roman part- would at once destro' could it get the chance. The bill presented in the New York Legislature by Mr. M'Cowan provides that every prisoner or inmate of a public institution of confinement shall have the ministrations of clergymen of such churches as they may elect, and that in institions for children they shall be deemed to belong to the church to which their parents are at tached, and all religious exercises except by such clergymen are forbidden. The last provision, of course, abolishes all the chaplaincies in public institutions. As the vast mass of the inmates of penal institutions, except in the rural districts, belong to the Roman Church, the chief religious instruction would thus be under the care and according to the rule of that Church. The difficulty is, however, : l .1 i . tp it i i- uuauiuauic. ii mere ue any reiigious service or assistance of any kind whatever in public institutions, it should be determin ed by the choice of the convict or inmate, as there is no state church. Rat it is not a matter of majorities. The fact that the greater number of convicts in a State-prison are Roman Catholics would be a very inadequate reason for compiling a Methodist or Raptist or Hebrew to attend the Roman mass. And the rule is, of course, as im pcrativc and reasonable the other way. It is true that the class of people who fill the prisons is not usually very careful of its religious instruction ; and very few of them, unless they have been brought up in the Roman Church, have any knowledge of the difference of sects or any choice among them. Except for the peculiar tactics of the Roman Church there would have been no question and no difficulty, for the inmates would have been content with the ministrations of a clergyman of any denomination. Rut when the question is raised, the point is to insist upon the. equal right of choice for all, and to take care that the whole religious control does not fall into the hands of the Roman clergy. The fact of the resolute political purpose of the Roman Church is one of the most evident and significant facts of the time, and can not be too carefully considered by every American. The one thing never to be forgotten is that the purpose does not depend upon popular whims and fancies that it is not the purpose of a party which may to-morrow differ and disband, or which is at the mercy of private ambitions and cabals. It is the design of one of the most ancient and permanent and politically unscrupulous of organizations, and is unac companied with any personal or temporary or occasional aims whatever. The attack upon the American public-school system is a wholly foreign movement. It begins in Rome, and is the result of principles and a policy which are utterly hostile to American ideas and development. Its object is the absolute control of the schools as a, means of removing one of the chief obstacles to the supremacy of Rome in America. Rome never submits to a divided authority in church or state, and the contest in (jlermany is the necessary result of the presence and perception of a great statesman. He com prehends the character and design and methods of Rome, and understands that it is of necessity a power to be resisted to the end. Iu this country, with other traditions and a free popular government, the characte r of the contest must be different, but it will be as absolute and determined. The Roman policy is distinct and consistent and thorough, and will be pressed with unflagging vigor. It must be encountered in the same wa', and with firm reliance upon those American painciples which Rome would subvert. Rut above all, ecclesiastical Rome must not be permitted to cloak political Rome, nor must it be forgotten that Rome urges in American the plea of religious equalit' and freedom only to gain a position from which it can overthrow them both. JIaivcrs Now is the time to hunt a convenient dark corner to carefully stow away stoves pipes till falL when they will be again ne3dcd and so easily found missing. THE NEW ATTORNEY GENERAL. IIECOHD OF TIIK LIFE OF , EX-JuDOE PlEllREI'ONT HIS SERVICES TO. THE COUNTRY HIS POLITICAL COURSE. Edward Pierrepont was born in North Haven, Conn., on March 4th, 1817. lie entered Y'ale as a freshman in 1837, and graduated with high honors, being fine of the oration men of his class. During the succeeding year he studid for the bar at the New Haven law school, under the tutor ship of Judges Gaggett and Hitchcock. On being admitted to the bar he removed to Columbia, Ohio, where ho began the practice of his profession. Five years later, in 181G, he removed to New York. Here he continued in active practice, rapidly ac quiring a reputation as an advocate which promised to become one of the foremost in the city. In 1S37 he was elected a judge of the superior court to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Chief Justice Oak ley. Three years afterward he resigned his judgeship. Up to the breaking out of the war, he had always acted and voted with the Democratic party, but without takiug any part in political life. When the news of the bombardment of Fort Sum ter reached New York, he was one of the first to rally to the support of the govern ment. He was one of the most active in the organization of the Union Defense com mittee, of which John A. Dix, Hamilton, Fish, A. T. Stewart, and other prominent citizens were members. Judge Pierrepont took a prominent part, and was one of the principal organizers of the great Union de monstration in Union square on April 2, 1SG1, on which oeeasiou he was also one of the leading orators. Throughout the administration of President Lincoln he was one of that statesman's most zealous suit porters, and in the prosecution of the war for the Union he never wavered or doubted that victory would in the end reward the exertions of the north. In 1SG7 he was engaged by the government to conduct the prosecution, of John II. Surratt, indicted for complicity in the murder of President Lincoln. Throughout the celebrated trial which followed, and which lasted from June 10 to August 10, Judge Pierrepont gave his best efforts to the conduct of the case. In the campaign of 1SG8 he was conspicu ous as a warm friend aud supporter of Gen. Grant, and contributed largely toward his election. When the president assumed his office in March, 1SG9, Judge Pierrepont was appointed tmted States district-attorney for the southern district of New Y'ork, which office he resigned in May, 1870. In the fall of the following year he was active ly engaged in the war against the Tam many ring, and at the mass meeting of Sep tember 4th, at Cooper Institute, was ap pointed one of the famous ';Committce of Seventy." During the summer and autumn of 1S72 when so many Republicans joined hands with the Democracy, Judge Pierre pont remained an earnest and unflinching advocate of the ticket which was triumph ant in the next November. Iu May, 1873, he was tendered by the president the post of minister to Russia, which he declined. In March of last year, he addressed a. let ter to Senator Sherman on the "Finances," a production which excited general atten tion both at the time and since. As a writer and a speaker upon this topic, he has always advocated the resumption of specie payment at the earliest practicable moment. In June, 1S71, Judge Pierrepont re ceived the degree of .LL. I. from Colum bia college, Washington. Two years later the same distinction was conferred upon him by Yale. HUMAN ENDURANCE. A Baby Injured Han Lives Two Months on Raw Bear Meat. Nevada papers bring us details of two remarkable instances of human endurance. The first is told of by tho Virginia Chroni cle of April 22, as follows : About fifty miles from Virginia City is a little mountain value know as Gravelly Valley. In February last, two hunters, named M. II. Robinson and David Knox, were in the neighborhood looking fur game. They succeeded in killing a large cinnamon bear which they dragged to the hut. On the morning of February 15, when twelve miles from camp, Robinson, in getting on his horse, accidentally discharged his gun, and the ball, an ounce iu weight, passed through his right heel, shattering it to frag ments. His ' companion enveloped the wound in snow, and tied it up in a piece of saddle-blanket, and they started immedia tely for tho cabin. Upon their arrival, Knox saw at once that it was necessary to go for a physician. Kobinson was weak from loss of blood, was utterely unable to ride to the nearest settlement, a distance of forty miles, and the nature of his injury was such that he must surely die unless medical assistance was procured. They were sworn friends ; and Knox, after plac ing the wounded man in a bunk, covering him with a blanket and leaving him two days provisions, bade him be of good cheer until his return. He rode all that r.icrht through a blinding storm, which set in soon after his departure, and arrived in Lake Valley soon after daylight. Having pro cured the assistance of a physician, who was well known to Robinson, they started to return. As they ascended the steep side of the mountain, the determined men soon found that it was impossible to proceed further. The snow was already four or five feet deep, and was accumulating iu great drifts. The regrets they felt at Robinson's fate were of uo avail, but all through the win ter his untimely end was discussed by his friends around their fire-sides. About ten days ago, when the snow was pretty well off the ground a part' of men tluwght it their duty to go over into the deserted valley, and bury his body. They arrived at the door, of the cabin and were alighting from their horses when a voice within was beard joyfully to exclaim Well have you fellows got here at last ?" and Robinson came limping out upon a pair of crutches. Noticing their surprise, be said : 'You all thought 1 was dead, did you ? I am not, but am as well as ever 1 was in my life, except this leg." And so it proved. He kept his wound dressed with snow, aud when his ready provisions were ex hausted dragged himself to the carcass of the bear at the door of the cabin and cut off a slice with his butcher, knife. Raw bear-meat and water from a mountain stream which ran near by was all the sustenance he had for over seven weeks. This mea gre diet, no doubt, kept his foot from mor tifying. The fever subsided, the inflama tion went down, and it soon began to heal. AYith a wire which he tore off an old broom he probed the wound and drew out several pieces of the bone. lie then made a pair of crutches and was able to get about with out difficulty. lie considers the snow storm a luck- thing, as his leg would pro bably have been amputated had the physi cian arrived. THE BOARD OF PARDONS. Rules Adopted for the Government cf the Body. IIarrishurg, May 7. The recent meet ing of the Board of Pardons, the following rules were adopted to regulate all applica tions made to it : First. The first Tuesday of each month is appointed as the day whereon the board shall convene to give a full hearinged in open session to all applications for pardon. Second. The board must be furnish with proof that notice cf application for pardon has been published once a week, for two. consecutive weeks, in a newspaper printed in the county or city in which conviction was had, said proof to be made by the affidavit of the publisher of the newspaper that the publication had been made as re quired by this rule Third. Notice of the application must have been given to the judge who tried the cause and to the district attorney or at torney who prosecuted, and proof of said notice be furnished. Fourth. Every application for pardon must be accompanied with the following papers, written in a clear and distinct hand : 1. A certified copy of the whole record, including docket entries, minutes of the court, copy of indictment, pleas, and all other papers on file relating to the case. 2. A brief statement of the reasons upon which the application is based, setting forth all the facts, will be required in every ap plication ; the notes of evidence taken on the trial ; letters from responsible persons iu the community where the crime was committed. Fifth. No applications will be considered if presented to any individual member of the board. Sixth. All applications and correspond ence must be addressed to or filed with the Recorder of the Board at Harrisburg, so that the same may be prepared for presen tation to the board at its next sessson ; and no application will be heard or considered unless the same and papers upon which based have been filed at least ten days be fore said sessions, and iu no instance will this rule be relaxed. Seventh. No application that has once been rejected will again be placed upon the record or heard by the board without the consent of the board first obtained therefor, and when submitted the second time, addi tional reasons, petitions, and proof of notices to judge, district attorney, and the public must be furnished anew. Eighth. No party will be permitted to occupy more than fifteen minutes in the oral discussion of any application unless by the special request of the board. John Latta, Lieutenant-Governor. M. S. Quay, Secretary of the Common wealth. Samuel E. Dimmick Attorney-General. William McCaxdless, Secretary of Internal Affairs. A. Wilson Nokris, Recorder. The constable of Cabot, Vt., went down a trapdoor into a man's cellar for the pur pose of putting an attachment upon some potatoes. The man's wile shut down the door, sat upon it, and would not lot the offi cial out till he had made to her ';the most solemn vow he ever promised to a woman" not to put an attachment upon the vegeta bles. As he was coming up she interviewed him with the fire shovel, and he left the house thinking that 'a slice of the day of judgment" was after him. The Buffalo (N. Y.) Courur says: "While you are talking about this backward spring, just remember that in the spring of 1817 or '43, there was sleighing in most places between Mohawk and St. Lawrence on and after May 1." "Lake Erie continue covered with ice as far as the eye can reach," says the Buffalo Courier of the 7th instant. John Smith has been arrested in Buffalo for wearing a clean shirt. Unfortunately it belonged to another man. The female3 Franklin. are crusauing figain in A Pennsylvania Woman. A correspondent of a Cincinnati paper" tells rather an extravagant story of the ex ploits of a widow of his acquaintance. It runs thus. We dwell in a branch of the beautiful Clinton Valley in Fayette county Penn. Just to the cast of us are the Chcs nut Ridge mountains, :.s rough and rocky as mountains generally are. Well, upon the top of the mountains dwells a widow, yet in the prime of life, who is now wealthy, and owns the best mountain farm in Fayette county. Ycar3 ago, when quite young, she married a young man who owned thi farm and a team, and nothing more. Tho land was uncleared, exceedingly rocky, and full of ravines. In a few months after be ing married the husband died, leaving his wife nothing but this land, cabin and team. Thrown upon her own resources, the widow went to work felling timber, making cross ties and hauling them to the railroad at Conncllsville, distant ten miles, and all with out the assistance of any one. This being before tlic panicky times, she made money sufficient to give her a good start in life. Disliking to drive a team or attend t horses, as soon as she considered herself able she bird a driver, but continued mak ing the cross-ties with her own hands, and between .times amused herself with blasting rocks and rolling them into the ravines thus killing two birds with one stone, clear ing the land and filling up the ravines. Thus, by industry, economy and persever ance, she, in a very few years, amassed a considerable fortune, cleared seventy-five acres of rough land, filling up and leveling over ravines, and fitting them flr agricul tural purposes. It was indeed an interest ing sight to see her sitting on top of a rock, with a drill in one hand and a sledge in the. other, piercing the very heart cf the rock aud blowing it to atoms, and afterward rol ling it piece by piece into the ravine. This lady has now a grand house, luxuriously furnished ; a first-class piano, from which she brings forth the sweetest music, and fifty thousand in the bank. She has had scores of offers, but she refuses them all, preferring to pass the remainder of her life in single blessedness rather than undergo the pangs of burying another husband. Objections to Education. The San Antonio (Texas) Herald ten this story : Some years ago some emi grants from Ohio and Illinois settled in a little town in this State, and soon began to agitate for the erection of a schooihou.se: and the employment of a teacher. A town meeting was called to consider the proposi tion, and one of the Northerners made a neat little speech, telling of the blessing which education had brought with it to Ohio and Illinois. When he had sat down an old man in the corner arose, gave the customary hitch to his corduroys" pushed back his hat a trifle, and answered thus : "Stranger, up in yer Ohio State you've, got a big penitentiary full of people, h'anint yer t Well, yer ve got lamm' up th: 'ip in yer Illinois State ycr've got a big penitentiary full of people ; ycr've got larnii? there. But I've lived here thiity-scvcu years in peace and happiness. I've raised nine doys and tew gals, and I sleep perfectly sound o' night, 'cos I ain't 'fraid any of my boys '11 go to the penitentiary for lbr- ntiary gin ir-trL .... A 1 . .. . ' . ius nicy can i nunc ot cm nune of write ! Sensation in the audience and sympathy manifested. Another of the new-comers then spoke, arguing in favor of education ; and then a tall, Tank native, stood up and made this speech : "Sec here, mister, nin't you that 'ere machine man?" "Yes," said he, "I did sell some machines here last year." "Wa'al, when; wheat got ripe, all the people went to Neighbor Johnson's to see how yer mowiu' machine would operate. We got the tar nel thing into the field, and Neighbor John son he hitched his young filly into the shafts. She allers was a fractious critter, and the first thing we knowed she give :t flounce and caught Neighbor Johnson's L J i ill "s leg an' cut it clean orf ! Manifest sensation. Then, mister, in just about two weeks yer pardner came round peddiin' wooden legs, and Neighbor Johnson had to buy one of them "ere thing?. Nice eddieated people you are ! You understand it, you do ! Fust you sell the machines, and then yer pardner he furnishes wooden legs! lias ended the matter, and nn school-master will be welcomed village for some time to come. ui tln.t A rural assessor lately asked a woman she had and. doubt in- how ln.-mv -Ii!i L-..iw wl. her word, proceeded to count them. She took him to the bee hive, kicked it over, and invited him to count the bees. Thcv counted the marks on hi person :-.nd caf culatcd the number of insects therefrom. The tailors of St. Louis trash those of their patrons who do not pay their bills. And this niut be stopped. What, other wise, is to become of tlve very structure of society Jlochet,'r lh,n. and Chtouidc, Tho Witkesbarre policeman, Reibseumor, who was shot by the lawless Councils oil Thursday, died Friday morning. Many potato bugs are found twelve to fifteen inches below the ground, in Ches ter county. Ex-Mayor Loft us, ofScranton, tried at Wilkesbarre for perjury, was acquitted. . The p.olice of Philadelphia made 2,G0O arrests during the month of April. There are G.2S2 pupils in the pubhe j s:-hool3 of Reading.