IT T7 im ir ir rj -r- a -r- J 1 n r i LJLJJi . Ecuotcb to politics, Citeroturc, SVgricnltuw, Science, JHornlitH, nnb General Itatelligcure. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., MARCH 23. 1876. - NO. 43. "nsr. M! .IP I 17 f .'- ivh a roar in ad van-t and tt not T ':'T,V. .' 1 '( tii J year, two dollar HnJ fifly rv i;h.,i!r- UI1,n aJI arrearasos are PIr",P'l?,,'1-..-iii.mt.fth8r..litor. ftT w. rii tis ?1 5 ). Ivielt n.l.litional in- ;j ;;ntS. 'ri'!i-'s in proportion. JJK l-ISIXTIXG. or all Kif'S, .. -h -t sM I of t!i Art, and on the K.VT STKOUDSIIUHU PA. taV.-n :in.i all lysines pertaiuing U :il K-taH lnurancc Agents. i d i: .:..r IH' ?w t.uiUiu; tn lcpoi. " " ...... i. Jan. 27. lS.'t). D, V.L. iTL'Ei. Siursi" Oculist. . . r.i, -'-j newtnoMin. nearly oppOMt '' ,u. ,..'i;..uk. adinuiattfi-cd for exiucliu:; ,l.;f ! i.'mtz. r. Jan. f.'7.Vtf. 1) p-i;:i:nin D r.an, Cherry Valley, M jNKOK CU'JNTY V. pjyii:ii-,Sirj?3a and Accoucaeur, Svso Cut, V.'.vynk Co., Pa. :!ttnLJ. to I:v or msrlit. o uri.I.'r.i'.i. May i:J 'To if i L" I P pjjiran, Sarjeon and Accoucheur, Oa e t.il II.--': In.re. M .tin strei-t. Ktr:iiN ,,rr IVi . in tiit lii'ii" formerly occupied 'r? I'.. S i,'. l'i-'ii!i ;ii!f!iii.n veil to call. 7 t '.' a. 'ii. r.-. t..v.:- a 1 ' '' P. it - i fi " ? p. IJ1. A :rll 1'j i Mv. D GCO. V. J.lCKSO. Um SUEJji AD ALCOUCIIEIE. , , ii r f t i. In ihe f! 1 o'a.'i of ir. A. K.'cves .Jackson,; ffi;j-. r c,m r .if Sir.ilx an 1 Franklin trrrt. I PA. Aid-: VT'i-sf DIVXD S. lAZT.. 0 le d -ir u't-tve the "tiroa J.-barg IIoue, i i nr.'. i .. Oc:.bcr '11, U:. :i ill's c, 4I. - X,r& T'.ur.l S'tro.t, PHILADELPHIA. tsrlL'Ja-.-el rates. ?1 7." per d:iy.-Ba IIKN11V SPAIIN, IVop'r. L R. Snvi.fh. Ci-ik. A" V . 1-74.- -Jill. WILLIAM S. REES, Sirveyor, Convey ancer and Real Estate Agent. .Ui s. Timber Lands and Town Lots T?rr SALS. American Houc 13 'll March i) l)i-')W ti,tf Corner .Store. DR. SURGEON' & T L A N T Z, MECHANICAL DENTIST. i on M.;in st '"ft, in tfce fcorid ry tri "k i.uil lirii;. n..-arlr oTp,it tfio iur,' II , n;-. i, slat.-ri himst-if that by eitfb- ri J-i :tt.-!l I.,;, f,. ...I iiiJ tlii lfiu.st ekrin'ftt and 'rtba'Ual fu;i ' I r!".rTii all ofKTatiuiiii iV!iU'?tl''.riri',",.-iv''ri t- savis-tit- Natural Twth ; on. ; n.-Mi .;i ,f Artifi.-iat To-tli on nubU-r. 'n.. r I " -' J UMla, pLTiV'Vl ills J 11 r. ur ( ....; i ......... . . .....:.. !1 1b . . , ,!' "lr t'J 'lie iuvxiw.-rifiu.'i-d. or to tliosr li v lt April 13.W74.-tt ASOTIILK TRO I'll V WO. Bi' THE STEY COTTAGE ORGANS 1 ""pprior and beanlifullv finlIied in- 'oji'" w.'f;i' 'Med tlit-ir 'competitor in 'i l"i.iy, sweeintf Mtttfl AlA iciti.V .f f(lll ''-arrv ,,ff tle first .,,! , ,v .,;, Lriv.' Monroe l'v '.h,'!'1 sq-'t'mer 2o, 1S7-1. IV mil.. L . r l or price Jit ;?! rr J. Y. KIGAFUS, m i-ti. N T PAP PER IIArVfiER. Hazier and painter, AlOXKOE STREET. irlyoppOSlte Kutz'd Clacksmith Khop. SxROtOBBCRa. Ta. I for''j,'!erhi-,'f''' w.miI.J resped fully in th,t j,,, .c,tli' Siro..dsU .r..nd vicinity ofp,'" '"'w '"t'y re.,,rc m do all kin.le t ' al ''10, ot re. mid that he i . ""e1'?" ot'ult u-cripuoni and M Pfic, r 'ri. . . ... i8irp , J.,w "wryuae "f the puilic "W- WVJUV 1U. IS. MASQ A LEAF FROM HISTORY. Not to put too fine a point upon the mat ter, the Democratic papers in declaring that "during a period of mure than half a cen tury, while the Democratic party adminis tered the affairs of Government," there were no eorruptionists among its Cabinet dignitaries or subordinate appointees, as serts an unblushing falsehood. A corres pondent of the Washington Star, whose experience in public life extend.? back over a period of a quarter of u century gives the following interesting reminiscences of the "good old Democratic days:," bo rinmi-ir little out of the regular.'historic order, in 1L).l 1 .... l ..... ' 1S."0, when the notorious "Galphin swin dle" shocked the country : General Z tchary Taylor was President ; Governor Geo. W. Crawfor.l Secretary of War. Geo. Galphin, the oriirinal claimant, had been dead seventy years ; he died in 17S0. 1'rior to 177o "he had ben a -cencJ trader amon t-he George Cherokee and Creek Indians, who were indebted to hint fur pods, and his original claim was ajraiiist Great Uritain ; but under subse tpient treaties and acts the claim was pre sented by Galphin's heirs to the United States for adjustment. It had apiin and aprain but a law for its settlement was finally passed in 1811). Gov ernor Crawford, before becoming Secre tary of V;ir. liad been sixteen years acting ince ISo.'l as representative and ajrent fr the heirs ; and it was charged that he had .sought a place in Tuylor's Cabinet as a means of influencing the adjustment of the oI-.Tmi Tli,. t' er 'JOir (' "v 'i'"' 11,1 viV'lu 'i - 'i'l. under the law of 1841, bv Polk's ad- I lninistratioii ; and the interest for seventy- three months and twelre days, amounting i to the enormous sum f Sll)l.l"2 87 nearly five times the original claim was paid by the Secretary of ihe Treasury un- : der layior. Kiialia Whittles the lold watch dog j of the Treasury' as Controller, pro j nounced against the original claim as well as airainst the interest. Nevertheless the j interest was allowed by Secretary Merjdith, j under an opinion of Attorney General j Ueverdy Johnson, and with the knowledge ! and approval of President Taylor, after be i i 1 1 r apprised bv Secretary Crawfjrd cf ait interest ill the el. dm. Secretary Crawford received cf the prm- , cipal, as Ins lee. cI,4ti I'.j, and ot ttie J amount, of interest; $J 1,1 7t! 4 J in all j 31 1 ").17li . An invtatigatioii was had j by the House, but Secretary Crawf ad froze j to the money and resigned. There was no i tmno.-u limi iit. General Jvcwis Cass, after General Jack son, wjs the greot 'Thunderer'' of the part'. Under Jackson, Cass was Secretary of War. (";is collection, as extra allowance, illegally, r j of" SoS.OUO, and his organization of a com j pany of speculators in Western lands, are notorious. A3 Secretary or nar. Lasstiad advantages which no mere citizen could have. lie had opportunities of securing for his company a monopoly of the most choice tracts of land ; to learn when they would be put on the market ; to secure them, then to raise their price, and to sell them to purchasers forced to buy. It is well known that in Western laud specula tions Cass amassed his ample fortune. j Now. Mr. Delknap speculated in traders' j licenses, bv which the soldier was swindled; Cass in land by w hich the adventurous and hardy emigrant was plundered. General Jackson subsequently made Cass Minister to France. The Democrat-- made him first Senator of the United States, next nomina ted him as their candidate for the Presi dency, and then made him Secretary of State. Under the Democracy Delknap would bo in the direct line of promotion. Col. Kiehard M. Johnson (the slayer of Tecumseh, and a Democratic Senator of the United States, under General Jackson the "great Cabinet pacificator," and confidential friend), was, during Martin Van Huron's administration, Democratic Vice President; a leader of the Democracy. He as Vice President also had his little speculation in a claim of Capt. IJuckner's f..r removing the Chicka-saw Indians. Says the report of the House committee which, in 18G"2, investigated the matter : 'The whole amount thus paid to Capt. Cuckner was 814(5,2'. 50; of this amount, the sum of $:57,74! was, beyond doubt, im properly paid. If the committee have been correct in the view they have taken of this case, the Chickasaw fund has sustained a loss of S122,24:J r0, attributable to the want of prudent economy and faithfulness on the part of those connected with its dis bursement, and the accounting officers." Col. Johnson was "the only man" who prosecuted the claim before the department; that while Vice President. Heat first de manded thaf'liuckner purchase for him a farm in Arkana, and some negroes, pro vided lie got the money." Duckner de clined, liut while the two were riding to the department the day the $M,VJ was improperly paid," Duckncr agreed to lend Johnson 18,000. The requisition was ob tained and paid, arid the Jemocratic Vice President jrot the 18,000. Were the Democracy sdioeked at this ex posure No ; but in 1843 they voted Col. Johnson 810, 000 in payment of an old Indian claim. In 1834, W. P. Harris, a receiver of pub lic moneys at Columbus, Miss. indorsed by his Democratic Representative in Con gress ( John F. II. Claiborne) as "one of the main pillars of the Democratic cause," "ofdifl'used and deserved popularity," as "one of the earliest and most distinguished friends id the Jackson) administration in Mississippi," as one whose "family and con nections are extremely influential," and who are "all co-operating with ua ia tha ariaous struggle" against the enemies of Democracy was known to be a defaulter. Was he removed or punished ? In March, 18:54, the Secretary of the Treasury complained of his conduct : in Au gust, 13:J5, he threatened his removal, but the reasons assigned in the above indorse ment forbade it; and in August, 1S:JG, this W. P. Harris this "pillar of Democracy" wrote to President Jackson, resigning his office, and nominated as his "successor Col. Gordon D. Boyd, of Attala county," another "main pillar of Democracy," in dorsed by Harris as one who had "been for years a prominent member of our the Mis sissippi Legislature," as "an ardent sup porter of your General Jackson's admin istration," and as "an unyielding advocate of the principles of Democracy." "Col. Gordon D. Boyd, of Attala coun ty," was accordingly appointed, and Secre tary Woodbury quietly entered the follow ing on the books of the Treasury: "Bal ance due from Mr. Harris, 8101U78 08." Only five months later the Secretary was forced to open a similar correspondence with Colonel Gordon D. Boyd. He had early fell into the "footsteps of his illus trious predecessor." In June, 1S37, Secre tary Woodbury appointed Mr. Garesche to examine he affairs of the Columbus office, and the reported Colonel Boyd a defaulter to the amount of 850,000. Was Boyd re moved? Were the Democracy indignant ? Were the' shocked or outraged at the con duct of this "main pillar of Democracy ?" Mr. Garesche, in his report, says to the Secretary : "The man (Colonel Gordon D. Boyd) seems really pmitfnt and I am inclined to think with his friends that he is honest, and has been led away from duty by the ex ample of his predecessor, and a certain looseness in the code of morality which here does not move in so limited a circle as it does with us at home. Another re ceiver iconl'l probably follow in the foot steps of the two. You will not, therefore, ba surprised if I recommend his being re tained in preference to another appoint ment ; for he has his hands full now. and will not be disposed to speculate any more." And so it was decreed. In the October following, the "really penitent" and "hon est" Boyd was allowed to resign, and the Secretary, as in the case of Harris, entered on his books: "(A B. Boyd is indebted 8")0,!t37 31) as per last statement at the 7i ii rensitry. No foolish outcry on the party of the Democracy no silly waste of indignation no demand either by General .Jackson or Martin Van Buren that "no guilty man cs- i ' caped. And the "honesty" the "penitence" of Boyd may be realiz 1 from the following from the Louisville Journal of the time: "Anotiikk SuK-TiiEAsiitEU A Mr. Gordon D. Boyd, some time ago, was ap pointed a receiver at one of the Mississippi land offices. Shortly afterwards he proved to be a defaulter to the amount of 850,000. The promulgation of the fact did not at all abash him. He immediately betook him self to the stump for the vindication of his character. 'I did appropriate the money to my own use,' exclaimed he, 'and I ex pected to be able to repay it, but my specu lations turned out unfavoaably. ' 77s my miyfortiutf, and. not my fault. I hope, CiEN'TLEM EX, YOU AIIE SATISFIED !' 4 Oh, yes,1 replied his Locofoco heareas, lice arc perfectly satisfied.' " Employment Scarce ia Philadelphia. Mil. Kditot r Please say to any of your readers who may be thinking of coming to Philadelphia to find work, that they had better not come. The city is flxjded with men from all parts of the country, who have imagined that the Centennial would bring with it plenty of employment for everybody! They have forgotten the fact that thousands of good workmen, resident in the city, are nov out of employment be cause of the stoppage of the wheels of in dustry in foundries, mills, shops, and stores and while the Exhibition has giveu, and will give, work to thousands, yet the sup ply already far exceeds any possible demand. The new comers are not only bitterly dis appointed, but worse, for their little means is soon exhausted, and they arc driven of ten to the very verge of starvation, while hundreds have to seek the shelter of the strtion-houses, or walk the streets the whole night long. In response to an inquiry made of the President of the House of Correction, the following has just been received : Ofeice of "The House of Coiirection'." Philadelphia, March G, 187G. John Waxamaker, Esq., Dear Sir : In reply to your favor of the 28th ult., I have had prepared the enclosed statement, exhibiting the number of admis sions to this Institution during the months of December, January, and Feb. last, and also the proportion of that num ber who were committed at their own re quest. Oftwety-two hundred and forty twa (2242) admissions, no less than eleven hun dred and fifty-one were self com mitted. The supposition that, as a class, the oc cupants of the House of Correction, ore those who seek its food and shelter only to avoid labor is erroneous. On the contrary, asarulc, they work cheerfully enough, even at the hardest and most disagreeable of out-door employments stone' quarrying, ditching, etc., though in very niaiiy esses, the nieu have been' educated to clerical rather than to manual labor. The result is, therefore, startling, as an I indsr cf the overcrowded condition of many branches of industry, and I can fully en dorse as excellent, the idea su-gested in your note, n-initdy, to urge through the cole ni ns of the country papers, young men to stay ichere they are, and not crowd to the city in anticipation of obtaining em ployment, at least at the present timij. Yours, truly, WILLIAM GULAGER, President. STATEMENT. Admitted. Males. Ietnales. Total. December, 0J1) 80 1088 January, 003 118 721 February, 351 70 433 Total, 195G 2SG 2212 Self-Co Mil itt ed. December, G59 15 G74 January, 21)9 14 313 February, 15G 8 1GI Total, HU 37 1151 The writer is led to send this communi cation because of the large number of let ters and calls he is constantly receiving from persons in great distress, whose experience is suggested in the foregoing ; and he feels that ho cannot do a kinder service to the young men outside of Philadelphia, than to urge them, for their oicu sake, to remain at home, unless they have the positive pro mise of something to do when they come to the city, and come fijr the purpose of claim ing the promise. JOHN WANAMAER, President of the Philadelphia Young Men's Christian Association. The Republikaner, a German newspaper in New York, has been looking at the posi tion which parties occupy at the present time, and concludes a long article on the subject with these reflections : The Southern papers are filled with ad vertisements of speculating attorneys, soli citing the prosecution of claims resulting from damages done by the United States during the war, and the prospect which these lawyers hold out to such "claimants." in the event of the access of a Democratic Administration, are of such a nature that they cannot be underrated by the parties interested. Such signs denote the very es sence of the impending national corrtest. When Lincoln had been re-elected the collapse of the southern confederacy took place almost simultaneously with his rein auguration, because they were wanting in the resources necessary to continue the re bellion for four years longer, until 18tl, ere a possible reaction in their favor at the ballot box in the loyal North could offer them another opportunity fi r help from that quarter. Now, since 18o5 the people have been compelled, from considerations of safety and self preservation, to maintain a Republican Administration. This fact has notrsince been reversed, but, if possible, has become more imperative than at that time. The Democratic partisans are utterly indifferent as to the price the people would have to pay for the luxury of a 'Democra tic Restoration," as long as they alone can reach their purpose. A Michigan Giant. Charley Freeman, says the Ypsilanti Sentinel, along back in the thirties, appear ed for the first time among a gang of labor ers orf the Flat Rock & Gibraltar Canal, and he moved among ordinary men like a sonofAnak, He looked eight feet high, at least, and three feet across the shoudlerJ. His arm sprang from his chest as large as any middle sized man's body, and tapered dowii to a hand three inches thick, and when doubled into a fist, as big and hard as a rail-splitter's maul- lie gave his age at seventeen, and he was growing. He hired for the wages and work of an ordi nary hand ; but when he' seized a shovel it went through the clay like a break'mg-up plow, and the handle soon cam j off if the blade held. An ordinary ax was but a feather in his hand. It sank to the eye in the wood, and the helve splintered. He dealt out strength by the wholesale, and he could not weigh out his force in the measure of ordinary men. When he stood among a gang of laborers the contrast made them look like children. The strolling Indians would stare in amazement a few moments, and then with a deep "ugh !" get out of the sight of him as fast as their dignity would let them. He was put to do the work of three pairs of oxen. That was removing the trunks of trees cut in ten or twelve foot lengths out of the way of the diggers not hitched to them like oxen, to snake them away, but his right hand utider the end, raising it from the ground, then balancing in across his left forearm, he' shot the saw logs far to one side with a1! the case that a skilled workman piles hi.? split cord wood. And thus, day after day, the giant in'oved until the canal was not built any more. He appeared- again on the boats that plied along tlie Huron river, Michigan. He was the engine and tackle to handle heavy freight. What others could not shove or roll, he would pick up and carry or toss. When-the heavrly freighted boat stuck on the ripples he just stepped out of the stern and boosted her over. Nobody would have felt surprised if he had taken the whole boat' arid cargo right under his arms, as a woman carries a dough-tray, and marched across by land, when they came to long bends in the river. Nobody ever said he did this, because they never wanted to exaggerate his feats, any more than we do' now. But navigation did not pay, and that stopped too Soaae of tba "fiiDcy" heard of the uncelebrated giant, and took the no tion that there was money in him. H' was as simple as a child. An; one toull lead him. It never got through his skull that he was reinarkab' T- sharpers meant to keep him so, aid speculate on his prodigious power. They ci.ed him off eastward. At Buffalo they sent him into a dock saloon with a sixteen hundred pound anchor under his left arm, just as a chopper carries his ax, to pawn it for drinks. He got the drinks, and the keeper was glad to treat him for carrying it out again. Thus he and his friends traveled on his muscle to the sea coast, and aross to England. They intended to get a soli thing on sonic English champion. They had too much of a good thing. A friendly sparring as an experiment, with a profes sional boxer showed that a ma ch with any living pugi ist was impossible. The giant's face could not be effectually reached. Blows on his body might as well have been planted on a sand-bag. When his unskilled maul came down it came with the force of a pile-driver, and no matter what it met the obstacle went to the earth. By the ruse of representing him as large and strong, but green, they made a match of science and skill against power, with a footed pugilist. The parties came c'n the ground, but at the first sight of him his opponent turned away saying: "I came to fiht with a large man not with a moun tain." Second-, re'tree3 an! all hands de clared the match "oh. " Findrng nothing could be made out cf him, his sharp aUenujuis deserted him. From Michigan to Liverpool the route had been one of continued dissipation, and he had contracted the seeds of di.-ctse. De serted in a strange land, he was uncared for ; an object of awe and curiosity, use less to anybody else and helpless to care for himself, he soon died of consumption and was buried in a pauper's grave. When Heenen and S .yres wcr : raising s:feh an excitement a few years ago there was some talk of the sporting fraternity in tending to erect fbr him a mouuuient, but they never did. Thus perished perhaps the most magni ficent specimen of physical manhood that the United States ever produced. He never learned a letter ; he never felt a refining. in fluence ; he never had a real friend. Ilia raprd grovrth, great siz and iuimcns strength prevented all possible parental moulding or influence. It was fortunate for himseif that his birth w.js in a place, and at a time, where and when, necessity, we may say, forced him to run to waste. The New County Bills. There are two bills before the Legisla ture fixing the salaries of county officials. One applies to the counties of Philadelphia. Allegheny and Luzerne, and the other to all the other counties in the State. The latter provides that in counties containing less than 150,01)0 inhabitants all fees limi ted and appointed by law to be received by each county officer shall, when the aggre gate fees exceed $3,000, belong to the proper county. The duty of the officers whose fees exceed $3,000 shall be to exact, collect and receive all such fees to and for the use of their .respective counties, except such taxes and fees as arc levied for the state, which shall be to and for the use of the state, and none of said officers shall re ceive for their own use or for any use or purpose whatever except for the use of the proper cornty, or for the state, as the case may be, any fees for any official services. It shaft le the duty of the coun'y auditors in each county containing less than' one hnudred and fifty thousand inhabitants, whenever it shall appear from the amount of business transacted by any county offi cer, the population of the county or other caive, that the fees attaching to any coun ty office appears to exceed the sum of three thousand dollars, to nuke a re ful examin ation of all books, papers, accounts or other dates by which the amount of fees attaching to any office may be ascertained, or shall make report setting fbrth the amount of fees earned in such office within the year to the County Commissioners. If the fees have exceeded $3,000 the County Commis sioners shall notify such officer and the County Treasurer of the fact ; and all fees received by sirch officer after the beginning of the next succeeding month shall be paid by him into the county treasury, and such officer thereafter shall be entitled to the salary provided for in this act. . The annual salary of" each county officer within this Commonwealth, when not otherwise provided for, shall be three thou sand dollars, together with twenty-five per centum upon all sums paid into the county treasury by him in excess of three thousand dollars: Provided, That whenever the fees attaching to any County office shall not reach three thousand dollars, then the officer holding the same shall continue to receive his compensation in fees' as now provided by law. The salaries fixed and provided by the foregoing provisions shall be in lieu of all or any money, fees, perquisites or mileage which are now or may hereafter be re ceived by any officer nannd in this act, and all said moneys, fees, mileage or per quisite received by any of them as com pensation, fees or perquisites, from any source whatever, shall in all cases belong to the county and shall be paid into its' treasury, except where required to be paid to the state as provided in this act. This act shall imply only to county offi cers elected or appointed to office after the date of its approval. . The polica of Philadelphia will take a census of that city on April 3d. Cooking by Cold. It is a curious fjet, not generally known, tl h.at the action of intense cold on origanio substances is similar to that of a high de gree of heat, and that, when subjected to a very low temperature, meat can be brought to a onditlon similar to its state when cook ed by actual warmth. Quito recently a Hungarian chemist, Dr. yon Sawiezewsky, who, it appears, has investigated all the various way3 suggested for the preserving meat (by chemieab, cooking by heat and Ik rustically sealing, etc.), and has fouud points of objection to all, attempted the preparation of the material by subjecting it in a perfectly fresh slate to a temperature of 33 deg below 2ro, Fall., and s:a!ing it afterwards in tins. The results obtained have been highly satisfactory ; the meat on being removed from the cans appears, in point of smell and color, as fresh a2 ifjcfst taken from the butcher's stall. Although partially cooked, and thus requiring less fuel to complete its preparation, for tho table, it is entirely without the taste cf meat which has been partially subjected to any heating process, and may be roasted, boiled or otherwise treated, the same as if it were fresh. A commission appointed by the German Governments ha3 lateJv mil conducted a series of earefol and successful experiments' upon the process ; and as & final test two corvettes of a German navy, being about to circumnavigate the globe, have been supplied with a large stock. An extensive factory is being erected in Hungnry for its manufacture. Only those who are wide awake now ap pear to escape the clutches of the sharpers. A few days ago a person Was s"ef:'t to :t Philadelphia bank for the purpose of draw ing money to pay the wages of the hands in a manufactory. Two men stood near the place where he was engaged in count ing over the amount he had received, some $1,800; One of the men remarked to him, "You've dropped a dollar note, sir," point ing to a greenback of that denomination lying ofi the floor. "All right, sir," was the reply, "I'll just put my foot on it for the present," which he did. and c'outhiued counting his money. It was not until the sharpers learned that they were trvir'- their game upon an experienced customer, that they iufbrniel him the dollar note was dropped by one of them. Any other than a wide-awake person would have stooped for the note, and in all probability have lost the $1,800. The other day there was a vcrv ludicrous scene in the United State Sen ate. There are some new revolving and reclining chairs in the Senate, and it is nothing uncommon for a Senator to lean back and take his case. Senator McCrecrv, of Kentucky, happened to be sitting on the outsideTow, when an exciting debate occurred on the whisky frauds. Whether he was asleep or not is yet undecided, for he fleeps when he likes in his chair. But he fell, and great was his fall. Think of two hundred and forty pounds of Ken tucky manliness rolling around the floor of the Senate ! Just as Senator Cherman commenced talking of. Kcntu'cy whisky :n iep'y to Senator Gordon', oVer went tho a'laut Bern cratio Senator. Altera roll and a struggle to regain his feet, he sat dignifiedly in his chiir, looked serene, giz.'d blandly around the Senate Shainber and galleries, and then shook his big frame with a hearty,- noiseless laugh. . - William Hutchinson, of Springfield, Erio county, is afflicted with something which for want of a better ij-ame is called a devil." In 185S he was seized with con vulsions of aft extraordinary nature. His limbs and face were horribly contorted, and his writhings were fearful to be hold. His mind all through these strange perform ances was perfectly clear, and he came out of thrjni merely exhausted. Every year since that date, at the same time of the year, William Hutchinson is compelled to tie himself in a bow-not and go through with th se couvrlsions, aird all the doctors in the country haven't been able to stop it. But he is making a plucky fight, and it is hoped will beat the devil in the long run. The Clearfield Journal says : Farmers state that the fall grain has been considera bly damaged by freezing out during the several recent cold snaps. We presume, however, there will be pretty good crops in thi county notwithstanding the dam ago referred to, and that there will be a larger crop of grain cut than heretofore a larger acreage having been sown than usual. General Frank Reedjr has been elected Senatorial delegate, and J. K. Dawes, Uriah II. Wenuer and David Aikerman Representative delegates to the Republican State Convention, from Northampton county. They are instructed to vote for Howard J. Beeder for delegate to tho National Convention. There was received on Saturday at tho mint in Philadelphia ono of tho largest lumps of gold amalgam ever registered in that building. It was from Colorado, was eleven and a half inches high and eighteen inches in circuiufereuce, a.nd, was'wurth' about $18,500. ir Tri Tir i unnnij im