Savannah morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1868-1887, November 23, 1875, Image 1
®ir Igcsaing |lws No. Ill BAY STREET. TKRMH. 910 oo 6 OO 2 OO l),tly.— r; Tr |.U cekly \s tfUy*- —■" oorswT scbsukiftxons eatable ra advaboe. ^ palters by maii are stopped at the expira tion of the time paid for without further notice. Subscribers will please observe the dates on their ^rappers. The postage on all papers is paid at Strannah. persons wishing the paper furnished for any time iess than one year will have their orders promptly attended to by remitting the amount for ttu time desired. Ho city subscription discontinued unless by positive orders left at the office. To Advertioora. A SQUAB® is ten measured lines of Nonpareil 0 f the Morning Nxws. Amusement advertisements and special notices |1 oo per square for each insertion. Other advertising, first insertion, fl 00 per square; each suoseiuent insertion (if inserted every day). W cents per square. local, or reading matter notices, 20 cents per Hue for each insertion. Advertisements ‘nserted every other day, twice msek, or once a week, charged $1 00 per square for ssch insertion. No contract rates allowed except by zpccicu tyrcement. Liberal discounts made to large ad vertisers. Advertisements will have a favorable place *hen first inserted, but no promise of continuous publication In a particular place can be given, as ill advertisers must have equal opportunities. Affairs in Georgia. Sows in Elbert county have the happy faculty of chasing and murdering foxes that destroy their pigs. Between the needle-tail Italian bounds of Jones county and the Elbert county sows, the foxes will soon be exterminated. If tee were going to chase Reynard, tuongh, we would prefer the sows to the needle-tail Italians. It is stated that Judge Hopkins, of the Atlanta Circnit, will soon resign on account of failing hoalth. This is to be regretted. Judge Hopkins is to Atlanta what Judge Tompkins is to Savannah, a terror to evil doers. In addition to this, ho is the only mau in all that countryside whose cheek never blanched at the mention of Wiley Redding’s name. Mr. E. H. Pnghe, the well-known printer, has taken charge of the business manage ment of the Augusta Constitutionalist. Subscriptions to tne Morning News are coming in with a rush. Let ’em come, They can’t hurt us. We are proof against all such attacks. A hand of gypsies passed through Rome the other day. Bass, of the Commercial, utterly refused to have the palm of his band investigated. An ungodly owl is engaged in the nefari ous practice of stealing the chickens of the editor of the Hamilton Visitor, who is not pleased thereat. In other words he has set up, through his paper, an ’ell of an ’owl. There seems to be no adequate remedy. Calhoun has ship ped three hundred and eighty hales of cot ton this season. Corn-shuckiugs are on the programme in Gordon county. The burglars are evidently hard up. They have commenced operations in Rome. It is understood that Major Mark A. Coop er, of Cartersville, will be a candidate for Senator from the 42d District. Incendiarism has begun in Macon. The paper warehouse and junk-shop of the Messrs. Wolf was burned the other night. Where is Moodj? A man named R. T. Wallace, known as the “Reformed Gam bier,” has reformed again. This time it is said te made off with some money. The Hinesville Gazette says that it is a general complaint that the rice crop, although nearly np to the average yield in quantity, is rather of poorer quality than usual. In weight, it does not come up to the standard by several pounds. This is attributed to the dry weather just as the grain was tilling out. Down on the imme diate coast, and on the rice lands of the Altamahain McIntosh, the rice crop is ex cellent, equal both in quantity and quality to the crop of any preceding year. On the 17th proximo John B. Petty will be hung for murder committed in the year 1864. His trial took place a fortnight since at St, Mary's, and though defended by able coun sel, the evidence was so clear, and the com mission of the deed so well established by the confessions of the culprit, that his late is de cided beyond peradventure. The facts in the in the case carry one hack to the dark days of tho late war, and is only one of hundreds light be brought to light. Petty was a private in the Fourth Georgia Cavalry, and was with that command at Charleston, and deserted from it with a fellow-soldier named Floyd Williams. Up to this time they had proven themselves to be brave and gallant men. Elbert Allen, also a private in the same command, and being in the same county (Camden) in which they had enlisted, was detailed to ar rest them, and proceeding to their homes, captured them and carried them back. Floyd Williams soon after died, and his re latives attributed his death to his returning to camp. Petty soon after deserted the second time. In December, 1864, Alien was granted a furlough to come home to attend to some private affairs, hut hearing that threats had been made against him by Pet ty, he Bent word to him that he was not coming after him. It seems, how- evr, that his enemy had determined to re venge himself even unto death: and while Allen was driving along the road from Jef- fersonton to his farm with provisions tor his family, he was ambushed by Petty and James E. Williams, (a brother of Floyd) and killed by a shot from the former’s gun, Wil liam’s gun missing fire. Poor Allen’s little aon was the only witness to the bloody deo«L In the then unsettled state of the country, the killing went unpunished; but as order was restored, Petty, who in the meantime had married the widow of his deceased comrade, Floyd Wil liams, left the country. Year* passed by and Allen’s son had come to man’s estate, and determined, if possible, to bring his father’s murderer (who had often boasted of his bloody work) to trial, and tracing him to Florida had him arrested on a re* quisition from the Governor of this State, and brought to trial. He was defended by good counsel; his wife selling the last of her estate to save him, but without avail. James E. Williams, who was also tried, was acquitted, as there was a doubt in his ca.se, though we understand that Petty lias made a statement, in which he said Williams was present, hat did not fire at Allen, as his gun would not, go off. Thus a bloodv deed, committed in December, 1864, will be ex piated eleven years after. Elbert n Gazette: A prominent gentle man of this countv, in whose judgment we have great .confidence, informed us this week that in passing through our county he noticed anything but a cheerful prospect ah< ad of us. Each year the plantations are going down more and more, and the yield growing less and less. The negro, sc far from improving as a laborer, is degenerat ing every dav. Add to this debts piled upon the devoted heads of our planters mouutain high and cotton selling at less than the cost of production, and the future outlook is gloomy indeed. He says that unless some thing is done for the relief of cur planters, and that soon, bankruptcy and ruin is -cer tainly the portion of the masses. What we noed'is a settled and reliable class of labor, smaller farms, more money and a “no fence ” law. And this is not a picture of Oglethorpe alone, but of every county in the State. Atlanta correspondence Augusta Chroni cle: There are nojiew developments of im portance touching the treasury difficulty. The Governor, of course, can take no action And express no opinion until the ten days’ notice has expired. In the meantime the receipts of money from the various tax col lectors throughout the State are deposited for safety in one of the city banks. A num ber of Mr. Jones’s friends are in almost daily consultation, and even should tho Treasurer fail cr decline to renew or strengthen hi* bond, (hey claim that he will have abundant proof to 'establish to the satisfaction of aU that be has been guilty of no wrong; indeed, that he has been far more unfortu nate than culpable, and that if be has been guilty of negligence and lack of proper vigilance, it was such negligence as he could not well avoid. They even intimate that they can account for the payment of the $150,000 of bonds twice in| a manner that will relieve Mr. Jones in a great degree of the blame and responsibility in the matter. The ten days’ truce, however, will soon ex pire, when the result will he known. _ There is no son of probability that the Legislature will be called together earlier than usual, for there will hardly occur any snch emergency. If Col. Jonex cannot make his bond, it is not apprehended that he will make any re sistance to the procedure of the Governor to ■fotoree the law and declare the office vacant, J. H. ESTILL, PROPRIETOR. SAVANNAH, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1875. ESTABLISHED 1850. Sonth Carolina Affairs. Last Friday night the stable of J. M. Moore, Esq., in Gillisonville, Beaufort coun ty, was broken into and a horse stolen. The dwelling of Mr. M. E. Telford, living near Belton, was destroyed Ly tire on last Thursday. The town council of Winnsboro has re cently paid Mr. Caldwell $1,100 for damages sustained to his person by reason of falling into a cistern on one of the streets of that town. The total value of all taxable property of Laurens county is $3,882,262. The trial of J. H. Johnson for the forgery of a county check In Edgefield, was brought to a close by the illness of the foreman of the jury. A mistrial was ordered. Paris Sitnkius was not indicted as reported by the Advertiser last week. It is reported that A. J. Gill fatally s’abbed a man named C. D. May, at Varnes- ville, Beaufort county, last Friday. W. K. Hamilton, living at Pinckney ferry, in Yo rk county, had the misfortune to lose b y fire his kitchen, stables and corn crib on the 1st inst., involving a loss of $800. The crib contained about five hundred bnshels of corn. On Tuesday morning the residence of J. B. Archer, of Spartanburg, was destroyed by fire. * Two infant children, colored, were horned to death on the plantation of Mr. Warren Dike, of Abbeville county, Tuesday night. The mother bad left them in the house alone, and on her return found the house in flames. The fire was extinguished. Henry Calder, the murderer of Mrs Cyn thia Quick, in Marlboro county, is sen tenced to b) hung on the 3d day of De cember. We learn, says the New Era, that a negro went to the plantation of Mr. J. B. lioaz- man, near Chappell’s depot, on Saturday last, and rode up to where Mr. Raiford Boazmau and a negro were cutting wood. He shot the negro, killing him instantly, and wounded Mr. Boazman severely. Mr. Robert Bolton, another stockholder in the English Manufacturing Company, from Fall River, Mass , arrived at Hurricane Shoals, Spartanburg county, the proposed site of the new cotton factory, on last Wednesday. Mr. J. A. Lanier, of Edgefield county planted Irish potatoes on the 26th of Angust. On the 7ih of October he dug them. The Advertiser says they were not as big as pumpkins, hut nearly. Another citizen of Edgefield has seven plows going now in order to get in a crop of spring oats. He says he can plant nntil the middle of De cember and still get a splendid crop. Who wants to leave a climate and a soil like that? California and Texas bo hanged. A WONDERFUL GUX. Ill TUM I I’ll —TO— THE MORNING NEWS. Noon Telegrams. SPAIN AND THE POPE, A SECRET AND UNPUBLISHED NOTE FROM THE VATICAN. Brick Pomeroy’s Troubles. A NEGRO RAPEE HANGED IN GEOR GIA. SUDDEN DEATH OF VICE PRESIDENT WILSON. A Defiant Ranger's Destructive .Missile, [From the Bowling Green Pantograph.] Mr. William B. Wiuan3 has in his pos session a remarkable gun, and one that has an unwritten and partly unknown history more remarkable than the weapon itself. As to where it was made, or by what train of circumstances its death dealing crack became a sound of terror along the Tennessee and Cumberland rivers during the earlier years of the late war, we shall not pretend to say. Cortain it is that many a Federal soldier bit the dust during the Fort Donelson and Shiloh campaigns, being laid low by the buzzing ball which sped from her dread muzzle, the trigger drawn with steady finger, in fallible sight and deadly aim. The very sound of the gun became known and familiar, and an ominous one along infantry lines, and among the sharp-shooters. Near the time of the battle of Shiloh some infantry had been employed in skirmish or reconnoitering duty in the deep tangled woods. Crack, bang, boom roared at intervals the old gun in the distance, at every discharge laying a soldier stiff and stark in death, with unerring accuracy. Shift their positions as they might, the gun would bang away, and with a hiss and a thud, ther-j would be one soldier less. The direction of the firing was ascertained, and the entire regiment or party was ordered to charge towards it without knowing where or what it was. On they went, losing a man at every few paces. Nothing was accomplished, and the party returned, leaving the murderous gun cracking away as they retreated. Shortly afterward the old fire-lock was heard again with her murderous music. It was resolved at all hazards to find and capture the infernal machine. After per sistent efforts a tall, raw-boned, grizzle bearded, large-sized Texas ranger was discovered in the foliage of a tall tree, from among the branches of which he was picking off his foes as well as he had picked off hundreds before. With his iron visage, piercing eye and unquailing nerve, there he sat, fierce as the untamed jaguar. Brought to bay, he continued to load and shoot with deadly aim till brought down, and the famous gun was captured. It after ward fell into the hands of the late Bone Lucas, and finally friend Winans became and is now its custodian. It is a gun of immense calibre, being near eight feet long, with a smooth bore, single-barrel, large enough to admit of a small-sized walnut. It is quite a curiosity, and an interesting relic of the past, and could its muzzle talk, it could tell of many death shots that had passed its steel rimmed and blazing lips. Solomon Eclipsed. [New York Herald.] ‘Hwang Lee and Ah Wing,” said His Honor, as he bent a rather low brow upon a pair of Celestials who stood be fore him, “what do you say to the charge of disorderly conduct brought against you ?” ‘Ah Wing he luu away my dog,” pleaded Hwang Lee. “Hwang Lee whatee Mellican man callee damlire. Hwang Lee comee my landlady, stealee my dog all like Mellican man dam thief,” pleaded Ah Wing. “It is not remarkable,” said the Judge, that these strange people, so far behind the civilized world in many respects, yet possess in common with us an affection for the lower animals ? I must discover to which of the prisoners .the quadruped rightfully belongs, and that, too, by means of a strategy once employed by a somewhat famous biblical predecessor. Officer Brown, bring the dog and a meat- ax into court.” It was done. “ Now, then, Ah Wing and Hwang Lee,” resumed the court, assuming a style of pronunciation meant to be clearly comprehensible, “ Officer, comee chopee doggie in twoee. Ah Wing takee halfee, and Hwang Lee takee halfee. Under standee ?” A painful silence was at last broken by Ah Wing, who remarked calmly, “ Allee light, Judge, so officer give halfee got em dog's libs in him.” “Affection has spoken in silence.” 6aid the Judge, triumphantly; “let Hwang Lee have the dog.’ “Tankee, Judge,” said that prisoner, as he lifted up the obese animal. “ Ah Wing he not havee dambite; Hwang Lee eatee dog all up self.” Five dollars or five days each,” said the disgusted Judge, as his estimate of the celestial in human nature fell down to zero. What can I do to make you love me more?” asked a youth of his girl the other evening. “Buy me a ring, stop eating onions, and throw your shoulders back when you walk,” was the immediate re- ply- Many a good-minded mother has inno cently warped her son’s character satan- ward by arguing that gray patches could be inserted into his black pantaloons without the other boys being able to de tect the difference. DEATH OF THE VICE-PRESIDENT. Washington, November 22.—The Vice- President died very suddenly at half past seven o'clock this morning. He rested well last night, and awoke at seven o’clock this morning and expressed himself as feeling bright and better. He sat up in bed to take his medicine, and laid down on his left side and expired in a few moments without a struggle. Senator Ferry is President of the Senate pro tempore. The Cabinet is in extra ses sion. k will represent the Cabinet at the m^^^^Hkthe Seuators and the Judges of th4|^n^nw Court at noon, to arrange for the^ineral, after which the President will issue appropriate orders. FOREIGN NOTES. London, November 22.—The main sluice of the ship Iron Duke was accidentally left open and large quantities of water rushed in. The artificer of the ship closed the sJuice with the water up to bis neck. At one time & signal that the vessel was sinking was displayed. A letter from Rome to the Times states that besides the loDg note from the Vatican to Spain on the 12th, Spain had previously re ceived a a secret note from the Vatican, which is not yet printed. RUMORS OF WAB. Cincinnati, November 22.—A NowOrl -ans special says that the monitor Canonicns has been ordered to prepare for sea at a mo ment’s notice. Provisions and ammunition aro aboard, and the officers and meu are forbid to come ashore. It is reported that Commodore Cooper reports favorably of Now Orleans as a base of operations in case of a difficulty with Spain. JUDGE LYNCH. Fort Valley, Ga., November 22.—John Brown, colored, who was arrested for at tempting to commit a rape on a highly re spectable young lady, and had knocked ont some of her teeth and filled both of her eyes with dirt, was taken from the custody of the sheriff and hanged. arrested. Baltimore, November 22.—The schooner Shiloa, of Baltimore, reports that while at Demarara her Captain and first mate were arrested for larceny, and imprisoned for nine months. The second mate is in jail there, charged with assault, with intent to kill. ADJOURNED. Washington, November 22.—The Supreme Court has adjourned until to-morrow and there are no opinions to-dav. The flags here and northward are at half-mast. MARINE DISASTERS. London, November 22.—Fourteen lives and many vessels have been lOBt on tho east coast. The brig Elizabeth aad the b&ik Fairy Queen, lost with all. DEAD. Baltimore, November 22.—Colonel John McLean Taylor, senior Major of thq Subsist ence Department, is dead. brick. Elmyba, N. Y., November 22. — Brick Pomeroy denies that he or his paper is sus pended, and threatens libel sails. INCENDIARY FIRE. Harrisburg, November 22.—The Harris burg Trotting Park, with nine horses, is burned. Incendiary. ill. New York, November 22.—Dr. Wm. H. Hure, Missionary Bishqp, was suddenly taken ill while preaching. FURNACE EXPLOSION. Pittsburg, Pa., November 22.—The More- head Company’s blast fnrnace exploded, killing and wounding three probably fatally- Evening Telegrams. DEATH OF HENRY WILSON. Last Honrs of Horace Greeley’s Co adjntor. GUIBORDS GHOST AGAIN. “ CNCON'SECRATING” HIS PLACE OF Bl'RIIL. THE VIRGINIA BELLIGERENTS. Facts for the Democracy. [New York Sun.] We have not seen any reference made to one feature of the recent elections which we think is worthy of close study and grave reflection, especially by Demo crats. The Democratic State Conventions of this year in Massachusetts, New York and Marylaud adopted Hard-money plat forms of the soundest quality. On the other hand, the platforms laid down by the Democratic State Conventions of Ohio and Pennsylvania were in favor of Soft money. Now, so far as the currency question influenced results, what was the effect of these diametrically opposite doctrines upon the Democratic vote in these five States at the recent elections? The Democratic loss this year in Massachu setts, New York and Maryland, as com pared with last year, is about 53,000 votes. The number of members of Con gress in these States is fifty, and conse quently the loss just mentioned is an average of 1,000 votes for each Congressman. The Democratic loss in Ohio and Pennsylvania at the recent elec tions, as compared with the results of last year, is about 41,000 votes. They elect forty-seven members of Congress. The Democratic loss, therefore, is an average of only 870 votes for each Con gressman. Even in New York, where the platform was intensely hard, the Demo crats lose rather more heavily than did their soft brethren in Ohio. There may.ije many reasons for these curious results. But, at all events, they are worthy of philosophical study and consideration. Executive Mansion, Washington, November 22, 1875. , It is with profound sorrow that the Presi dent has to announce to the people of the United States the death of the Vice Presi dent, Henry Wilson, who died in the Capital of the nation this morning. The eminent station of the deceased, his high character, his long career in the service of his State, and of the Union,his devotion to the cause of freedom and the ability which he brought to the discharge of every dnty, stand conspicu ous aud are indelibly impressed on the hearts and affections of the American people. In testimony of respect for this distinguished citizen and faithful public servant, the vari ous departments of government will be closed on the day of tho funeral, aud the Executive Mansion, aud all the execu tive departments in Washington, will be draped with badges of monrn ing for thirty days. The Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Navy will will issue orders that appropriate military and naval honors be rendered to the memo ry of one whoso virtues and services will long be borne in recollection by a grateful nation. U. S. Grant. By the President: Hamilton Fish, Secretary of State. Nearly all the courts in the country have adjourned in respect to Wilson. Tho Su preme Court of the United States will trans act no business this week. Delegations have been appointed from various places to come to Washington to attend the funeral ceremonies. The first brigade of Maryland National Guards have tendered Ibeir services to the President as a guard and escort. The Vice-President passed a quiet day yesterday. He heard of Senator Ferry’s death about eight o’cloc c, which depressed him very much, and beforo he retired to bed he alluded to it several times. He retired at half-past nine, and his sleep was sound and peaceful. At three o’clock this morn ing his rest was disturbed by a pain in tho chest, which was relieved by rubbing the chest with an anodyne which had been prescribed, and he again slept. He awoke precisely at 7 o’clock. He said he had slept soundly, and was much re freshed. lie sat up in bed, took a glass of bitter water, which bad been prescribed, and shortly after arose aud walked about the room. His attendant n iticed a change in Mr. Wilson about a quarter past seven o’clock. He was then lying in bed, drawing short aud hurried breaths, mov ing about uneasily, aud his limbs twitch ing convulsively. Tho physicians were called. It was notice 1 that the breathing grew shorter and weaker with each breath, and as the attendant moved rouud the bed to support his head, he gave one long gasp aud expired. Four times last night beforo twelve o’clock he called for water, aud drsnk a glassful each time. Night before last he complained of his old trouble with pain at the base of the brain, and remarked that he must have more determined treatment, but said nothing about it to the doctor. Last night between 6 and 8 o’clock he said: “If the doctor were here I would have a.blister applied to the back of my neck.” From 8 to* 0:30 bis at tendants manipulated him. pinchmg him thoroughly. He never liked to bo rubbed. There is no evidence in the fact that Mr. Wilson suffered severely. The face wears the usual pleasant expression. A post mortem examination was made by the doc tors, who came to the conclusion that ho died of apoplexy. The special session of the Senate called in April last, after an exciting caucus, se lected by a majority vote of one, Thomas W. Ferry, of Michigan, as against HeDry B. Anthony, of Rhode Island, the competitor, for the place. There has been no change in the Senate since. All the new members articipated in the caucus deliberation which nought about tho nomination. There is no donbe that if the Senate, at its next meeting does not reverse its selection of last April that Ferry will bo the presiding officer. The revised statutes contain the following: In case of the removal by death, resignation or inability of both the Presi dent and Vice-President of the United States the President of the Senate, or, if there be none, then tho Speaker of the House of Representatives for tho time being shall act as President until the disability is removed or a new President elected. Two Massachusetts Dogs. — Those who love dogs will be interested by these incidents : An English eetter dog, owned by Thomas W. Lane, at West Roxbury, Mass., while out hunting the other day, brought to his master a pocket book con taining $425, which he had found in the woods. The owner’s name was found in it, and the dog now wears a thirty-dollar silver collar, presented by the owner of the wallet &3 a reward of intelligence. The body of Mr. C. C. Moulton’s little son, who was drowned at Springfield, Mass., lately, was recovered through the sagacity of a dog that was near the mill pond when the little fellow was drowned. No person had seen the boy'at the pond, and search was made for him in every other direction. The dog coaxed so hard for them to go in that direction that at last suspicion was aroused that the child might have been drowned, and the water in the pond was drawn off, and the bodv found. Counterfeiters Arrested.—Cincin nati, November 19.—Abram Culber, Cal vin Stevens and William Shephard were arrested and held in $500 bail at Ironton, Ohio, yesterday, charged with counter feiting. These three are but a portion of a band of counterfeiters who have been operating in Southern Ohio for some time. Their business consisted of manu facturing nickles. About half a bushel of the coin was molded on Wednesday. Soft hats have once more come into favor with gentlemen. They are a more sensible head-gear than the hard stove pipes, which for some not discoverable reason are generally supposed to impart dignity to their wearers. The Journals little joke about Grant’s having to be nominated for a third term by the Democrats, if he is to be nomi nated at all, grows less funny every day, now that the administration is beginning to show its hand. Professor John Wise completed his 454th balloon ascension October 30. He started from Louisiana, Mo., traveling fifty miles in fifty minutes, alighting in the tree tops and losing his balloon. WASHINGTON WEATHER PROPHET. Washington, November 22—Probabili ties : For the Soutn Atlautic and Eastern Gulf States, high barometer, northeast to southeast winds, continued cold, partly cloudy woather, and in the latter possibly occasional rains are probable. For the Western Gulf States, Tennessee and Ohio valley, falling barometer, south east to southwest winds, warmer, partly cloudy or cloudy weather, and possibly occa sional rains. For tho Middle and New England States high, followed by falling barometer, south erly to easterly winds, with cold, partly cloudy weather in tho last district, and rising temperature with increasing cloudi ness and possibly rain or snow in the two. NEW YORK NOTES. New York, November 22.—Edward Lovey, cashier ol the Devoe Oil Works, shot him self through the heart. Two hundred laborers at work in Bergen’s tnnnel engaged in a drunken row. All kinds of weapons were used. There were twenty-eight arrests. The boiler of Dye’s poudrette factory ex ploded. On-3 person was killed and one fatally hurt. The Pacific Mail Steamship Company is sueing ex-Congressman John G. Schumaker, of Brooklyn, for $30,000, which, it is alleged, was unlawfully paid him by the company’s agent, Richard B. Irwin, for services in pro curing a subsidy for the company in 1872. STILL AFTER THE GHOST. Montreal, November 22.—Yesterday the cures of the Roldan Catholic churches in this city announced the reception of a pasto- tter relative to the interment of the remains of Jto. Guibord in consecrated ground?\The pastoral says, “for we have truly declah^d, in virtue of the Divine Pow er, that wsfe^rcise in tho name of the Pas tor of FAstorsMhat the place where this rebellious son of Ike Church has been de posited' is separatecNfrom the rest of the consecrated cemetery, and is no longer more than a profane place—auNj^dinary piece of ground.” , ' \ the hot bloods. Richmond, November 22—Gen, Bradley T. Johnson had a hearing before the Polioe Court to-day for assaulting Gen. J. D. Im- boden with a cowhide on Saturday night. He was fined twenty dollars and placed under bonds in one thousand dollars to keep the peace twelve months. Gen. lmboden left Saturday night to attend tho railroad convention at St. Louis. When arrested, he was bailed till December 2d, and not till this morning, as first telegraphed. THE FIREMEN. Chicago, November 22.—The United Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen in session here adopted a plan of mntu il life insurance, and elected officers, and ad journed to Baltimore next year. OH, GOODNESS 1 Montreal, November 22.—The cure of the Parish Notre Dame has given public no tice that Goibord’s grave is illegally shallow. BISMARCK. Berlin, November 22.—Bismarck was in Parliament looking better ihan was ex pected. He makes a speech to-day. NOR-WESTER. Detroit, November 22.—There is a ter rible nor-wester on the lake shores. OUR WASHINGTON LETTER. The King of the Lobby—Notes on the Ilouite — Richmonds In the Field—Old Fiah and the Porei* a era—Jewell and New—The Poor Indian—The Contented Election Cases—Olla Podrida—A Cor rection—An Acceaaldn to Florida Soci ety. [Specia. Correspondence of the Morning News ] Washington, November 18, 1875. THE KING OF THE LOBBY. Sam Ward has already opened the season by giving an entertainment, at Welcker’s, to a distinguished set. He did not feed them on “ pigs’ ears,’’ perhaps because he thonght each one had enough of that arti cle. He had at the dining Lord Houghton, Gen. Garfield,'Chief Justice Waite, Justice Field, Sir Edward Thornton, Justice Brad ley, Attorney General Pierrepont, Dr. Lind- erman, Director of the Mint; Justice Swayne, Secretary Robeson, Prof. Rogers, Don Louis De Potestad, Secretary of Span ish Legation, aud Assistant Secretary of State Cadwala.ler, as well as a sprinkling of minor lights. Sam dirtiognished himself in Pacific Mail lobbying, and it is edifying to observe how the powers, in recognizing Sam, also recognize the lobby crowd of which he ha-> the lead. Chandler, Bristow and Jewell were neglected in the invita tions, being below the Ward standard, and Belknap couldn’t attend, being too busy in arranging the expenditures of the War De partment. THE SPEAKERSHIP. The candidates for the Speakership are thickening up, but Kerr, of Indiana, seems to be ahead of all competitors, although Randall claims to have the South with him. Piatt has been pitching into Randall heavily for something, but that doos not hurt him. Sunset Cox will furnish the fun of tho race, and is certain of his own vote. Gilbert C. Walker, of Virginia, is put forward as being a handsome man,who would, in the Speaker’s chair, accord nicely with the upholstery and please the ladies in the gallery. Fernando Wood has plenty of dignity, but too much ‘New York” to bo seriouslv thought of. But when the battlo opens a split may ensue, and some other whom the knowing ones nave not yet brought forth may be the man chosen. Blaine will have lo guerilla around the floor hereafter, and Strabismus Ben will haunt the lobby. OFFICES. The best positions in the gift of the House are Sergeant-at-Arms, in which office Ordway has raked in a fortune; Clerk, where McPherson, of Pennsylvania, has gathered in a handsome estate ; Door keeper, in which Buxton has managed to lay bv enough to keep want from the door, an i Postmaster—Bill King’s happy place fice Department, that she received her place through CoL Mosbv, that she was discharged by Jewell and restored by the President, who had her put down to his credit. Miss Jack- son never was in the Post Office Department, and the rest of the story is imaginary. Miss Jackson is a clerk in. McCartee’s Bureau of the Treasury, appointed upon the recom mendation of numerous Virginians. About a year ago McCartee discharged her on learning tiiat she was Jackson’s daughter, but upon the nrgent request of several of her friends, and the fact that she was a good clerk, she was reinstated. She has another sister here married to an employe of the Board of Public Works. The corres pondent also says that Miss Surratt married a Treasurv clerk. In this he is wrong. She married Dr. Torrence, then a clerk in the Surgeon General’s office. He was discharg ed shortly afterwards, bat is now one of the most prominent analytical chemists in the oountry, and resides at Baltimore. Other parts of his article are incorrect, and havo caused some broad grins here over his care lessness in obtaining information. THE COTTON CROP THEN ? AND WHAT Some Prognoatirations and Possibilities. Bed-skins.— Washington, November 19. A party of Warm Spring Indians arrived here a few days ago and went to the White House, and then called upon the Commissioner of Indian Affairs for aid. The Commissioner told them if they wonld go to the Tremont House their board while there would be paid by the government. The Indians chose to re main where they were, and the result is an unpaid bill for which the proprietor threatens to retain the baggage of the Indians. Yesterday, Dr. McKay, man ager of the band, called upon the Com missioner to make another effort to secure the payment of this bill and the release of their bagg&ge? trinkets, qtc., but the latter peremptorily refused and repri manded the Doctor for the intoxicated exhibition by the I> idia&s on the street, declaring it a di« jraoe to the Indian service. Dr. McKay finally consented to leave t-fria morning, and the Commis sioner agreed to furnish tickets and blan kets to each Indian at the depot ready for departure. where Sherwood has also managed to find a stock farm. The Clerk has forty-seven per sons on his rolls, the Sergeant-at-Arms three, the Door-keeper twenty-six, and the Postmaster ten. There are also twenty- eight committee clerks, making the total patronage of the House one hundred and fourteen. There are in this District, ac cording to tho ninth censns, 33,329 voter?. Of these 10,143 are “ring, streaked ani speckled,” leaving 23,178 white voters. Of these latter 3,000 are empliyed directly or indirectly by the government, 178 are living on their meins, orj outside ot government patronage, and the remaining 20,000 are looking for the one hundred and fourteen places in CoDgress. But Maryland and Vir ginia are in arms for the places which they say the District has held long enough. Ste venson Archer, late member ofCongress from Maryland, wants to be Clerk, aud is opposed by G. C. Wedderburn, of Virginia, while the same prize is also sought after by G. M. Adams, of Kentucky, A. D. Banks, of Missis sippi, Gcd. DuBoae, of Georgia, T. T. Crit tenden, of Missouri, F. M. Sbober, of North Carolina, and Gen. Mitchell, of Kaunas. Wedderburn received the nomination la«t CoDgress, when he stood no chance, and thinks it fair that he should have it now that prospects have improved. Wedder burn was associate editor of the Rich mond Enquirer, and agent for the Virginia Life Insurance Company the same time. When an indignant youth came to the office looking for the fighting editor, George always made him get his life insured before he boarded the lion in his deD, up three flights of stairs. After the sudden taking off of Pollard by the explo sion of a double-barrelled gun, G. C. W. moved to Washington, where ho has been insuring heaitby government clerks, hoping to make a raise by the lapsing of their pol icies on a change of administration. CONTESTS. While on the subject of Congress, I might refer to the seats which will be in contest in the next House, ot which there are several. The one nearest at home is Gen. Fiulev against Walls, which may be considered as settled in Finley’s favor, thus semi ing J. T. W. back to Gainesville to be used as a stool pigeon for the Tallahassee ring. The career of Walls in Congress was Tort but brilliant. He never said auytking, and therefore never committed himself; a good barber was spoiled by making him a Congressman. He bad an easy time on his $5,000 a year. His constituents didn’t bother him much with correspondence, aud he never sent them any documents, as they coaid not read them, and he could sell them waste paper, etc., here. Gen. Finley will be an able second to Senator Jones from the I And of Flowers. In Alabama there are iwo seats in contest. Jero Haralson. Demo crat, of Selma, is opposed by Fred G. Bromberg, of Euiaula. The latter was an appointment of John Pope, General, in Mobile, as City Treasurer. He worked like an or ter with tho Rads until appointed Post master at Mobile, where he hung out two years, until Spencer had him removed. He was elected to Congress, and after the ex piration of his term moved up to Eufaula in another distriGt, and ran again,' and now comes forward and claims the seat. The seat of J. N. Williams, of Mobile, is con test* d by the highly colored J. T. Rapier, of Montgomery, who puts himself down as born in Florence, Ala., educated in Canada, and a planter (!) by profession. He was given the credit of planting Oates by the last Con- jress, but this one will harrow up his soul. [a Illinois, C. H. Harrison has cleaned out D. Ward, Republican, of Chioago, but Jasper contests, and J. V. Le Mozue claims the seat of that rasping Radical Farwell. In Indiana the seat of Baker, Republican, of Goshen, is contested by Freeman Kelly, with a good chance of suc cess. Id South' Carolina, the piebald apostle Rainey , who says in his Congres sional autobiography that he “improved his mind by observation and travel,” has a claimant for the seat in Samuel Lee. It is to bo hoped that South Carolina will have one decent representative in the House, where Sol Hoge, Buttermilk Wallace, Odor iferous Smalls and Purty Mackey will be, ready fof their pay and perks. In Wiscon sin tho seat of G. W. Cate, Democrat, is contested by Dr. A. 8, McDill, of the last Congress, and formerly of the insane asylum. Me. had better take a “Dover” and go home. Gov. T. W. Bennett, of Idaho, finds that a jolly Democrat stands a chance of getting the place of delegate, and has taken rooms for the winter to make his expenses. Bat the most pleasing prospect of all the con tested cases will be in witnessing the defeat of the carpet-bag parroquet from Vermont’s green hills, Platt, of Virginia. John Goode lias been elected, but Platt can not bear to part wi'h the Committee on Public Build ings and Grounds, which was such a “bonan za” to him, and the patronage of the Navy Yard which was suen au assistance to his Vermont relatives. Besides these ten seats, we may expect to hear from several more in contest when Congress meets. The Radi cals instituted the system of giving every contested seat to the claimant of their par ty, or keeping their man in until near the close of Congress, and then giving the seat to the properly elected man, as they did in several well-known cases. OLLA PODRIDA. The chief of the Metropolitan Police wants the force of legalized loafers increased to one thousand for this district. The title of Mayor would then be chauged to Colonel aud the ex-schoolmaster become a semi-mili tary dignity. It is rumored that Zach Chandler has pur chased the Washington Sunday Chronicle. It has come out flat-footed lor the third term, as has also a new candidate for gov ernment advertising, the National Intelli gencer, a Radical organ, run by some clerks, What desecration of a name ? The News’ article of incendiary firing of cotton gins has caused some speculation as to their cause at the Agricultural Depart ment. They do not understand African kleptomania yet. H. V. Bojnton, of the Cincinnati Gazette— they call him “General” since he wrote his book against “Sherman’s Memoirs,” but don’t buy his book—has gone to St. Louis to testify ia the trial of Avery, late Chief Clerk of the Treasury, indicted for connection with the whisky ring. Ex-Commissioner Don* lass and others have also gone. Zack says “Bristow ’ll get into trouble foolin’ with the Goddam crooked whisky yet. Why’nell dou’t he take it straight like me.” Ex-SoDator and Schoolmaster Peasr, of Mississippi, is here trying to get re-instated in the Vicksburg Post Office, from which he has just been removed. He is backed up by G. Wiley Wells, member elect to the Forty- fourth Congress. Grant pave, “Lotus have Pease,” but Jewell responds in the nega tive. Bristow ha? ordered the force in the Cus tom Houses to be re luced, as the appropri ation iB deficient $800,000. Murphy and Ca sey will be on their auricles over this. NEW AND JEWELL. Thn Indianapolis youth who fills old Spinner’s place has been threatening to re sign lately, to look after his banking inter ests. But he has bc-en calmed down through the interposition of tho thirty Iloosiers whom he brought with him and who would be kicked out upon his departure. And now Jewell wants to leave. He says Zach has not got tone enough for the Cabinet. Since Jewell was Minister to Russia he has manufactured a genealogical string of Jew- ellry back to Capt. Noah, and therefore associates only with the Fishes. He has had rows ail aronud, and is despised by all who have anything to do with him, on account of iiis egotism. He had words with Grant about Burt, of Boston, Pease, of Vicksburg, and others. Spencer, of Alabama, Ciavton, of Arkansas, aud others, arc* after him for his fight with the bogus mail contractors; so the probabilities are that he may return to his home on the Onion river, and re-es tablish his nutmeg factories, and New is therefore brought to the front as his prob able successor. New is backed by Morton and others. He was a member of'the Indi ana Legislature for years, and became rich negotiating loans for the State during the late war. Ramsey, of Minnesota, is also talked of. Old Ram. is mentioned for every vacant place, bnt as yet has not struck oil. ODDS AND ENDS. Rev. Smith recommeuds in his annual re port that Congress authorize tho Quarter master’s Department of the army to pur chase clothing, and the Commissary De partment to purchase provisions for the Indians. The Warm Springs Indians, under their ohief, Donald McKay, have been here, trying to raise means to get homo ou. They havo been showing around the country,-and at their agent “jumped” with the funds. Oli- gairo and some Mission Iudians from Cali fornia are also here. They want a new reservation. Boss Shepherd sent a paper to the Ameri can Pablic Health Association on what he knows about sewerage and paving. He didn’t tell all. The Commissioner of Pensions some months ago suspended action upon a largo number of bounty laud claims from Florida and Louisiana for militia service, on the suspicion that many of them were fraudu lent. A special investigation has been or dered. Hon. Bob Stockton, son of the ex-Senator from New Jersey, goes to Pensacola Navy Yard as “writer” at a stipend of $3 per diem. He will assist Major Farr in giviug tone to society. He can be distinguished by his red cravat. He’s a blood, and fights at the drop of a hat. Look ont! Cyclops. A GREAT RUSSIAN CONTRACTOR. The Collapse of n. .>Ian Who Employed Over One Hundred Thousand YVork- THE STATE DEPARTMENT has taken possession of the new building near the White House erected for it. where the old expounder of international law. the venerable disciple of Vattel, Ham. Fish, goorhes his corns on the Brussels carpet and jaws his stenographer for confounding his ideas. Ham. is heavy on ideas. His cranium is so full of them that they can hardly force their way out, hot when one escapes he secures it immediately, failing in which he throttles the scribe ana “blarsts” the young man in the blue necktie and blonde side whiskers who sports the name of Levilion A. Brown ; and sacrifices his leisure to serve the government "for $3,(-00 per annum. The Virginias affair upset old Fish. Don Jose Polo de Bernabe beat him in diplomacy, and a f( w hundred dollars settled for the insnlt to the flag and the lives of butchered citi- se::j. The “Book of Blood” published by tho Cubans, containing the names of over firs thousand prisoners of war and defense- less citizens murdered by the Spaniards In Cui a, failed lo ronse him, and the late ne * spaper talk of intervention to stop the bn: ffiery, only caused him to send for Ned Thi niton tp drown the agitators oyer some chc.ce cognac. poa^ECTEp. The oorresp indent of the Augusta Chroni% els and Sentind is in error in sta ting that the daughter of Jackson, who shot Colonel Ellsworth, ia a clerk in the Poet Of. [From the Vienna Freie Presse.] Dr. Strousberg, who was arrested at St. Petersburg after failing for nearly £100,000, is of Jewish origin, his full name being Baruch Hirsch Strousberg. Born in 1823 in humble circumstances at Neidenberg, in East Prussia, he went to London in 1835, after the death of his father. Here he was received by his uncles, who were commission agents, and was shortly afterward baptized a member of the Church of England. Gifted with great intelligence and energy, he more cr less educated himself, and entered jour nalism. In 1848 he went to America, where he gave lessons in German, but finally real ized some money by buying a cargo of damaged goods and selling them at a heavy profit. With this capital he re turned to London in 1858, and founded several newspapers, but six years after wards he went to Berlin, where he was for seven years the agent of an English insurance company. In 1864, however, Strousberg began to think of improving his fortuues, anti having made acquaint ances at the British Embassy, by this means came to know some English capi talists, with whom he contracted for the construction of the Tilsit-Insterburg Railway. Within six years Strousberg was making a dozen lines, among others those of Roumania. He had over one hundred thousand workmen in his pay, and had launched out into other vast en terprises. At Hanover he established a gigantic machine factory ; at Dortmund and Neustadt he had smelting works and iron factories ; at Antwerp and Berlin he built entire new quarters ; in Prussia he bought ten estates ; in Poland an entire county ; in Bohemia he paid £800,000 for the splendid domain of Zbirow, where he established railway carriage works which employed five thousand workmen. Meantime he built a palace for himself in the Wilhelmstrasse, at Berlin, which in decoration, luxury and accommodation surpassed that of the Emperor himself. In it were to be found works by the first S 3rman and French artists—Delacroix, eissonnier, Gerome, and others. Nor was his charity on a less splendid scale. In winter he caused 10,000 portions of soap to be given daily to the poor, in addition to 2,000 pounds worth of wood. When the famine broke out in East Prussia he sent whole trains laden with corn and potatoes to his suffering fellow countrymen. Of course, such a man had his own organs in the press, and was chosen to represent the nation. Yet he took from the Moscow Bank, which he founded, 4,308,000 roubles, and it is hinted that his future is not altogether unprovided for. No greater collapse than that of Strousberg has probably oc curred in the §nanc,ial bi&tory of the country, save, perhaps, that of Law. [From the Macon Telegraph.] There was a prognostication yesterday from the southwest that if the cotton in the field could be saved, the incoming crop would outrank in magnitude any hitherto produced in the southern coun try. We have been inclined to look for a crop in the neighborhood of 4,200,000 bales, and to hope that it will not greatly exceed that amount. Three or four hun dred thousand bales in excess would take prices entirely beyond the influence of producers, and the whole cotton growing business would rush down hill to ruin without backstrap or breeching. This, we take it. is the pending ques tion just now. and the great rock of peril ahead. We may not strike it this year; but where is the probability of missing it next year, or any year in the future which shall prove to be very fruitful. The past heavily productive year, as af fairs are progressing, is bound to over stock the raw cotton market and send the whole crop begging. It is quite true that such a catastrophe did happen twice before the war with no very ruinous consequences to the plant ers; but it will be unwise in cotton pro ducers to measure the future results of such a catastrophe by the past. Before the war their lands and all their planta tion investments, including laborers, were solid, available assets, yielding, altogether, a moderate income in the shape of increasing value, independent of crops. But now, there is nothing to make farming lands in the Sonth of any money value whatever, except profitable returns from culture; and when these ’ cease and cannot be reasonably expected to revive, Southern lands become i s worthless in the market as railway stock which can never bring a dividend. Aud let no man delude himself with the idea that a recovery in prices will be an easy matter when quotations have fallen absolutely below the cost of pro duction upon any reasonable scale of re numeration. There will still be a wide margin for loss in price by the degrada tion of the producers! Negro labor can still be squeezed down a good deal in the interests of consumers, and then there is also an immensity of white labor which can find little or no other employment except in agriculture, and will be forced to work at any price on the “root hog or die” principle. Cotton has sunk rapidly^ every suc cessive year since the war, until we see it now from fifty-two cents a pound in 1866 to twelve cents in 1875. A very few months more of that headlong speed ia decline will bring it to a point when its culture will cease to comfortably support the latior which produces it, and the lat ter must sink to a condition of disorder and disorganization, or to mere squalor and serfdom. It would be folly and cruelty to hold up this impending doom before the great Southern cotton interest, if thero were no remedy for this overproduction. But there is a remedy—an easy remedy which an intelligent people, seeing aud appreciating the deadly peril ahead, could be induced to apply. It is ia the power of the State Granges to abate the cotton product a third, and so enforce reasonable compensation for their labor. This remedy is a direct and legitimate one resorted to by all handicrafts when the markets become overstocked with their goods and prices fall below the cost of production. It is also in the power of the intelligent husbandry of the South to make such a diversion of their labor as still to employ it all profitably and increase their own productive wealth, instead of sinking down into a destructive and degrading poverty which shall deprive them of the comforts and elegancies of life. We can apply a larger portion of our agricultural labor to the cereals and grasses and to the production of animal food and laboring stock. We can produce fruit crops, rice, sugar, tobacco, Sisal hemp and all other fibres for the production of the immense quantity of bagging we annally consume, and we can, if we would, add at least twenty-five per cent, to our annual reve nues on the fleece of sheep and of the variety of valuable goats. The vast range of our productive ca pacities admits of not the first reasonable excuse for the over product of any single crop. The course we are pursuing'is gratuitious self-murder. It is not alone that it is ruining usgpecuniarily; but that with pecuniary ruin, in this case, comes the loss of social dignity—the sinking down gradually into the condition of mere peasantry. whose scanty earning do not permit of generous food, or the means of mental, social and religious culture. If ev6r a case called for a corps of Pe ter the Hermits, to rouse up. the people to a sense of their danger and the great yawning gulf of rain before them, we think this is one. Why do the Grangers fail to appreciate the crisis ? THE AMEKICAXS IS EGYPT. Gen. Stone Demoralizing rbe American Officers in the Khedive’s Service. Caleb Cashing says that this is a big country. Has he been hunting over the back yard for his ax at ten o’clock of a dark night ? On such occasions a man sinks all his personal feelings to feel amazed at the extent of Uncle Sam’s dominions. ^t is some time since the thing hap pened, bnt D.uluth still wants to entertain 4- Proctor Knott for his speech on the “Eenjth City of the Uns&ited Seas.” Duluth has a memory where facts get fixed as firmly as a Presidential relative in office. A Good Soul. Little Eddie Gerrold, nine years old, of Newtonville, N. Y., has been playing the role of Romulus and Remus. Eddie went out into the woods to gather nuts one morning by permission of his parents and did not return in the evening. The parents and their friends searched the woods all night and failed to find or dis cover any traces of the little nut-gatherer. A large Newfoundland dog, named Jack, who had been in the family ever since the boy was born, and had grown up with him, was missing also. Two or three days of search, passed and the Gerrolds had given np their boy as lost. They had their house full of sympathizers one evening, when Jack came whining at the door, asking to come in as plainly as he could. They let him in and he behaved so badly that they thought he was mad, and drove him out of the house and thought of shooting him. Jack went to a neighbor’s who knew him and piteously asked to come in. The lady of the Louse opened the door, and in bounded Jack in great excitement. The lady had jast put a loaf of bread for supper in a con spicuous placj. Jack seized it in hi great glad jaws, and ran quickly out of the door. This family saw method in the dog’s madness, and followed him. Under Jack’s lead Eddie was found in the forest miles away, and almost starved to death. He was too weak to walk or make a noise. The dog laid the stolen loaf before his young master, and squatted by his side with a look of intense satisfac tion. Of course little Eddie was brought home and restored to the overjoyed family, who never before believed that dogs have souls. Paris, November 1.—Several American offioers of the Egyptian army have pissed through this city for home, all expressing their dissatisfaction with the Khedive's service. The pay promised them by the agent of the Egyptian Government was that of the United States army of 1870, whereas they receive only the old pay. This makes a difference to officers of the grade of colonel of one hundred dollars a month. Besides, these officers say that the rank of bey (colonel) is beneath their dignity in a country in which beys are thicker than blackberries, and that they are entitled to the rank of pacha (brigadier general). The chief source of complaint, however, is the treatment they receive at the hands of their own countryman, Gen. Charles P. Stone, Chief of Staff, Dr. Ed ward Warren, Surgeon in Chief of the Egyptian army, who is in this city, and CoL H. B. Reed, who is in New York, speak of his treatment of Americans as simply unendurable. Of the Khedive and his son. Prince Hussein, Minister of War, these gentlemen apeak in the high est terms. Stone has given out that no American need expect any favor from him. He refused to interfere to get a pension for Major Hunt’s widow, al though that officer, dying in the Khe dive’s service, was entitled to one, and it needed only his endorsement to pro cure it. He treated Mre. Hunt with con tumely, and it was only through the con tributions of generous English and American officers that she was enabled to return to the United States. ^ Among the officers driven from the Khedive's service on Stone's aocount are Col. Walter H. Jenifer, who, as General in the Confederate service, commanded the forces against Stone at Bali’s Bluff; Lieut.-Col. Basse], Col. R. M. Rogers, Gen. H. H. Sibley, Col. T. G. Rbett, a classmate of Stone, who is here very sick; Col. H. B. Reeid, who commanded the military forces in the expedition for the conquest of Darfour; and several others, all distinguished as engineers, cavalry, artillery or infantry officers. Stone, these officers say, is endeavor ing to make complications between the Khedive and the Sultan, and is constantly talking of what he would do if Egypt should cut loose from the dead body of Turkey. His behavior toward Americans has been such that if it had not been for the Hon. George H. Baker, United SUtes Minister to Constantinople, the Sublime Porte would have ordered the dismissal of all Americans from the service. One of these officers is the authority for the assertion that the Consul-General at Cairo refused to see Stone at his house, and it is said that a resolution is to be introduced in your Congress when it con venes asking for intervention in favor of those American officers who are slill em ployed by the Khedive. A GIRL BEFRIENDED. An Episode that Weakened Air. Clai borne's Confidence in Human Nature. A Yankee Farmer and His Fat Cat- fle. —Franklin county has long been fa mous for its fat cattle, but the forty- seven head now standing in the stables of George W. Jones at Deerfield go a little ahead of anything yet seen in the county. They are all Durhams, great fellows, so large they can hardly move themselves, the heaviest yoke weighing 4,600 ponnds, the next 4,400, and the whole averaging over 4,000 per yoke. They are fed eight quarts a day each of meal and bran, and all the hay they want; water is supplied to their mangers in pipes. Those now in stall will be taken to Boston about Christ mas, when Mr. Jones will stock up for the winter, his usual supply being eighty or pinety cattle, 600 or 700 sheep, and about a dozen horses. Last year he cut about 350 tons of hay, all of which he fed ont, and some seventy-five tons more. The cattle are kept in a sub-basement of the barn, which has to be well ventilated daring the winter, else it would become oppressively warm from the number of cattle confined there. The shdep are kept cn the floor above. Mr. Jones pats upon his own land, which lies along the west bank of the Connecticut river for half a mile, all the manure from his stock, raising twelve or fourteen acres of heavy tobacco every year, for which he gets prices considerably above that paid for tobacco grown by patent fertilizers. In fact, he is one farmer who has found out how to “make fanning pay.”—Strring- field Republican, Mr. J. H. Claiborne, of Trenton, N. J., on taking a seat in the New York train cn Tuesday night, saw a young girl in front of him who was crying, bat evidently trying to suppress her grief. She was prepossessing, and her attire indicated taste and refinement. As she was alone, Mr. Claiborne in a fatherly way ir quired the cause of her trouble, and proffered assistance. She replied that her name was Ella Douglas, and that she lived in Lockport, N. Y. About three months ago, she said, she formed the acquain tance of a young man, who said that he was a commercial traveler fer a New York boot and shoe house. He paid his addreeses to her, 8nd, her parents objecting to a marriage, he induced her to accompany him to New York, promising to marry her and take her to the house of his mother in Wil mington, I»eL Arriving m this city, they were married, and after spending the night at a hotel went to Wilmington. There he deserted her, after informing her that she was the victim of a &audu lent marriage, and that the story of his mother living in Wilmington was a hoax. The gill was heart-broken and out of money, but she said she had friends in Thirty-fifth street who wonld render her assistance. She said that she was too weary to walk frqm the ferry to Thirty- fifth street, was ashamed to go up in a car, and that Mr. Claiborne would* con fer a lasting favor by taking her in a car riage. To this he willingly consented, and on reaching Thirty-fifth street and Sixth avenue she requested him to leave her, saying that she preferred to go to the house of her friends alone, as the distance was only half a block. Mr. Claiborne turned away, but before reach ing his hotel he missed his watch and some money that he carried in his vest pocket—N. T. Sun. An Electrical Speotbe.—We learn that within the last two weeks & singular discovery has been made at the house of Jesse Garth, for many years deceased. It is said that a distinct and accurate liko- ntss of Mrs. Garth, who has been dead for twenty years, can be seen on a pane of glass in the upper sash of one of the windows, presenting very much the ap pearance of a photograph negative. The discovery is said to have been made by a woman who was washing clothes in the yard, who imagined some one was watch ing her through the window, and went inside to see who it was. We gather these facts from Dr. Charles Brown, who has himself seen the singular picture. Dr. Brown remembers that about twenty years ago, Mr. Garth told him that his wife, while standing at the window, was stunned by a sudden flash of lightning, and the doctor’s theory is that lbs out lines of her features were photographed on the window pane at that time. The youngest daughter of Mr. Garth, and others who were well acquainted with Mrs. Garth, have seen the picture Lnd pronounce it a striking liU&neoS. It is said to be more distinct about nine o'clock in the morning and three in the evening, than at any other time of the day.—Charlotte ( Va.) Chronicle. Duncan Campbell, having undertaken to walk from the Atlantic to the Pacific, reports progress from Itoch Sprit ga, Washington Territory, having been al ready four months on his journey, say ing, ‘*Had fine weather through Illinois, very wet weather through Iowa, for ten days never had a dry shirt on my back; fine weather through Nebraska; good weather through Wyoming till I got to Laramie, and from there to Rawlins four days and four nights in a heavy wind and snow storm. From the time I left Lara- qiie till I got to Rawlins 1 never sat down for ten minutes, it being so cold, and be ing afraid of getting frozen. I tritd sec tion and station houses, but I could not get any shelter. I finished my journey here for a while, preparatory to my re turn journey. I will leave Ban Francisco on the first of February, or as soon as the weather permits. I will get a wheelbar row that will carry my blankets and cook ing apparatus. I will make the distance from the to the Atlantic in one hundred and ninety days.” A HORRIBLE CALAMITY. Twa CUUm Burned le Deeib—* Braee Girl Save* Her Lift* Pensacola, Fla., November Saturday last a frightful calamity occurrea some miles from here, on the Bay Sh » near Town Point, by which two LITTLE CHILD REN WEEK BURNED TO DEATH. Mr. Kimmins, the father, had come to the city for the purpose of doing some trading, leaving at home his wife »n three children, little dreaming of the horrible fate that was even then laying in wait for his little ones. It appears that Mrs. Kimmins, the mother, during the absence of her husband, went down to the beach, to a point where some fish* ermen had just drawn a seine, leaving at the house an infant, one child a little older, (about two years old), and one about five years of age. While convers ing with the fishermen she was STARTLED BY THE REPORT OF A OUN from the direction in which her house lay, and on looking around was horror- stricken to see dense volumes of smoke and lurid flames arising as high in the air. Rushing home like the wind, she reached the spot only to find the eldest child safe outside and hear the frantic shrieks of the two babes within the walls of fire, crying for succor, which no hu man hand could give. What must have been the frenzy and agony of that mother when the full real ization of her darlings’ horrible death AND HEB OWN UTTER HELPLESSNESS BURST UPON her! When the fire subsided a search was made amid the smouldering ruins, but naught save a few charred bones remained of what but a few moments before were jewels in a coronet cf domestic happi ness ! Two loaded guns were in the house, and the fire reaching one of them caused it to explode, thus giving to the mother the alarm. A- BRAVE YOUNG GIRL. A few nights ago witnessed a rare in stance of presence of mind, by the exer cise of which a young girl, aged eighteen, saved herself from a fearful death. She had gone to the mantel and “turned down" the wick of a kerosene lamp, which immediately e^loded, scattering the fragments of lamp and particles of fcumirg oil in every direction, and setting fire to her clothing. She seised the re maining portion of the blazing lamp and made a rush for the front door, intending to throw it into the street. In her hurried flight, however, she ran against a center table upon which was another lamp burning, overturning both, and caus ing this lamp also to explode. When she reached the door she never stopped, but pitched headlong into the sand and rolled over and over in it, trying to smother the blaze, KEEPING HEB MOUTH TIGHTLY SHUT all the time to keep from inhaling the flames. Although this all happened in a moment’s time a good many neighbors rushed to her assistance, and by tearing off her outer clothing succeeded in “put ting her out.” Had it not been for the presence of mind she would, without doubt have been burned to death. As it is, she is badly burned.—Correspondence Atlanta Herald. Greenbacks. Indianapolis, November 19.—The fol lowing declaration and call, signed by over three thousand voters of this city, will appear in the Sun to-morrow : In view of the continued and increased depression of business, resulting in the failure and bankruptcy of all productive enterprise, the enforced idleness of thou sands of industrious working people, the continued shrinkage of values and the relative increase of taxation, the vast burden of puhlio and private debt, rela tively increased by the depression of all other values—all produced, as we be lieve, by a mistaken policy of financial legislation; therefore we, the undersigned voters of Indianapolis and vicinity, do unite in the following demands upon the Congresi of the United States : 1. The immediate and unconditional repeal of the resumption act of January 14, 1875, commonly known as the “Sher man bill.” !. The permanent retirement of national bank notes and substitution therefor of national legal tender money, to be issued directly rrem the Treasury of the United States. 3. The refunding of at least a portion of the present national bonded debt into bonds bearing a lower rate of interest, say 3.65 per cent, per annum, intercon- trovertible with national legal tender pa per money at the pleasure of the holders ; and we further unite in a call for a mass meeting to be held at Indianapolis, De cember 1, 1875, in furtherance of these demands. Quantrell’* Old Headqaarters. [From tbe Lawrence (&»-; Tribaae.l About 1 o’clock last night the alarm of fire was sounded. Soon an immense blaze sprang up near the South river bank, and it was found to be the National Hotel on fire. The fire took in the rear end of the building, near the kitchen and washing rooms. It had got pretty good headway before the engine got to playing on it, although the firemen were promptly on hand and worked with terrific energy. This was an old building, though in good condition, having been erected in 1S57, or rather commenced in that year for some additions have been made to it since. The hotel will be recognized by nearly all our readers, when we state that it was originally the Whitney House built by Mr. Whitney; afterwards tho City Hotel, kept by Mr. Stone r then the Dufree House, kept by Mr. Skinner, and now the National, kept and owned by Mr. Charles Strong. The whole back part of the hotel was destroyed, and the front part 6o burned and drenched with water aa to be almost ruined. The whole establishment coot Mr. Strong •‘$14,000 four years ago, fur niture and lot included, and the building is probably worth $8,000 or $9,000 now. The building was insured for $4,000 and the furniture for $1,000. The furniture is a terrible wreck, and the portion of the house whioh still stands is as black as a pit of charceak This hotel was the headquarters of Quantrell at the Lawrenoe massacre, and he set a guard around it for its protec tion. on account of the kind treatment he had on<je received at the hands of ita then proprietor, Mr. Stone, though some of his men afterwards killed the good old man before they left town. The Gallows.—Rochester, N- T., No vember 19.—John Clark t who shot officer John Trevo;, whs nanged in the jail yard this morning. He slept but little last night. He ate a hearty breakfast and conversed with apparent unconsciousness and walked ta the scaffold smoking a cigar. Be seated himself on the drop, and throwing away the cigar, listened to the reading of the death jrarrant and the prayer of the clergyman. When directed to stand, he did so, erect and firm, and spoke smilingly to the Sheriff, reporters, etc., and m answer to the question if he had nothing to say, replied: “Nothing, except that he hadn’t had a fair trial.” After John Clark’s body -vas cut down, to-day, an attempt was made by his friends to resuscitate him, but without success. Japan is advancing with commendable rapidity. Qno of she most remarkable incident:; of the recent Social Science Congress in England waa the reading in the section for international law of a very able pager, by a young Japanese gentleman, Mr. Rokaro Hara, on the consular courts in his native country The Japanese eagerly seek education for their children. The daimios, or local anetocracy, have vied with each other in establishing schools in their provinces, ia which chemistry and other sciences are taught. The Imperial Government has ad ded a college for the higher education of the more promising pupils of the primary schools,and great numbers of private estab lishments have been added. In the Government preparatory schools lan guages are taught, together with the de ments of engineering, and naval and mil itary studies are pursued, the more ad vanced pupils being promoted at b.iv yearly examinations to higher schools, or to the Imperial College, in which it has been decided that in future the English language only shall be used as the medium of instruction. The report of the Japa nese Toot master General for 1674 shows that during that year nearly eighteen millions o| letters, ol which nearly three hundred thousand were registered, cessed through the Post Office, besides acs?! G48 newspapers and nearly 34.000 bookn aud patterns. _. A , Wir TO b e Kntm.-Mr. Pickett Boggan, a respectable citizen of more than forty years' residence in this county, met a most singular death at hia home, near Fine Apple, a short time surne. He was sitting in the piazza of Us honae, m a rocking chair, and near the railing or banister, his feet resting at the edge of thefWing. In this position ^ the 3oor to *“d the ground, hts body being allowed to follow on account of the moving forward of the chair on the rockers; his chin caught <£ the upper railing, and the back If thL chanroame up against the back of his head, and so remained, so thu\ suspended m this singular manner Be ing quite old and infirm, he was f" and the weighto? his body rearing on his chin profited hi8 opemng hts mouth to call for Sb and he thus died from strangulatio^- Greenville Advocate. ^