THE HOME OF JEFFERNON. Clutriettuvilletiontuluaisorna. ,4,ol / 0* inhabitants; and itis Adly. ;iAnto atir • them is any neeesSitylfoi,as no man uftwtures arq tarried 'en. ann.l•Tinehl are little other. slitui tho Avididt,and' product of wheatimi eon, , is, °remit's°, an ~exeeptiOth. but thiS interest leis vastly dctcliai Once the • war, a n d Eon' so that qt, ! o yinch , I um the manufacture; in witietahouT sands of colored persons Were' employ ' ,tit, has alindit coved. Tho Univer sity of Virginia, of which'Jefferson was the prineiiral founder, has tdiotit' students, the grounds are 'hand somely laid out, the --bitildlnzu am numerous; spacious and Well . dG 9l gn" f . 41, rind all that is required Pie a &st ela:ss institution is. provided. The young men had a line, 1 114)(Sr:taw,. theif6holitvior; as far as' I taw; exemplary pe an uncomtnim &anal anti o'ol night to make men ofluark) The number of young men attoiat ing• the various institutions -of tenni ing in —and the wive may In. Said of the ‘vhole tiontiv—ls fully as large as' before the war, for situ%) t lie t ennntile business bag been over done t Ise only in eat is and vanecn ten t, 11" ilier think, lie In the profemiung, II must be (lull great sacrillecs are made by many parents amid the sits pension and disurgunizattoifur try, almost of society HMI; tai pro vide the. onus fur their support. For the most part these 'young men !lave good intellects, and it. really ap petired to Me that the average in this respect ~ is higher • than among the Ante clm in the North, which might ho suspected, since they belong to tho best families, which have given good training and habits, including .a fa vorable moral and religious bias. Con sidered In this respect, they ought to be the most promising young men in America •Cluirlotteville to, perhaps, the most interesting spot, with reference to 'nodal culture and the influence that • ideas have upon lien, either hi, our own country or in the - whole World;. for within a few =Ref of it. Thninas Jefll•roon was horn; and In an adlolM log ctiunty, only , twenty heed 'dia.? taut, James Madison was tike 'barn; and at one thuuldenrtieteshkd hew Monticello. fhe house .of Thum 'Jefferson, is on It Ihlghptopioqtory of the Blue Ridge, looking like a round.- ed hill, and 24 milm from Charlet* vine. tietting a horse and 'Tossing the railroad on the right I passed a. ileid of at least 811 aorta in elovor and - red top, then through , a long lane Minded on each side with tocusi trees; then I mune to a field of at host JO ;tens in heavy wheat,' nearly ripe, enes-qM a creek, then turned to the ' left and went up a - hill, with old ; trees hero roil there in the fence lw hanging full, whileaftum halse amid treeiginlin upland valley, wso in the loft. .Everywhore . thp' 04e. appeared cropping out hi Wilkins's; standing at various ldevatlon*:ftnd sometimes perpendicular. A .hearty. min had fallen and the water' rilm' ning down the hill side was tingeit with iron, andwas es red as red lead paint. Then I astoudi.d It'fitety and long hill with a deep gulloy on the • left, a high wooded hill rising beyond which was Monticello; and on. the • idler side was a steep field, in black nisplierries were ripe; then Otis. 1-irl'a mountain spring,„ from which led a drinking spout; then eomingto the head of the galley 1 turned round, stillascending. Durilig this ride the - traveler' will he intereotal In eousid iring that through many hours& the day, and oven hours of the night, the • ',•,plprtal author of the Declaration all tht4leeniWtfnleo rode, and on A dense growth or eli'dhar rested. gum trees on each side of the - reek? rough and little traveled read, and soon, the family cemetery was reach ed. It, is about trio feet square, has • two iron gates on two sides, stud the forest i.i all around. Next I came to awold field when' some fenehig re. : nwined,ind in the row , WOO ',some blackhrart cherry tnxs, in one of them gams u negro girl smite 16 years ' old, who, taken by surprise, cacao down liks flag from the mast laud, • on the run, and started vffint therun. Then 1 Callie to itu old chimney and it !wig picket fencepatched with piens elf sheet iron, standing on end ; then to nu old stone home on the right, •4111 d 011 the Ic , ll. Wait n 54011111.1, small, brick ,dwelling; from which extend ed a low, narrow structure S(X) feet 101114, on a side hill, formerly the Ale gre quarters, but now used as a sta ble; awl beyond. on the high ground .7 was the mansion of Monticello. The fisice mentioned ineloßts one side of the 1 ' ~eurden which is On tin brow and side of the lull, and in the middle it 44 terraced, giving two strips of baud itee feet long and, together, Lo feet Nvide. 'on the tower sidels a row of cherry trees which -.Mr. Jefferson planted, and the fence itself was made • in his day. I (itching my horse, 1 was met by. •• n tall Virginian evidently Whinging tea thir), nut fi rst, family, who af . terwanhi !turned spent- his time in elbblitig l and in showing the place to he few visitors. First he wanted his We', which was 2I cents. Tice house is about Ira feet long and 50 wide, though.belng irregular it Is loss in seine pieties, in front is iiplitras with nlastered.brick pWars, about-11'feet high, awl with a mountain slate floor lituch decayed. 'What have been used ter doors scorn nut to have been in tended for such, hut -for windows r there being three, with dose pageled lanais inside rewhing to the r. Tlie Virginian wentluandeontriVed tee open one winduw, when '1 welt, had been hung and used.fbc elope,, mid that the fastening waltillt'pluilock ' and chain. The Willis abieintp pet ' seivare, with a gallet* ithti Inch. -• Senn° 1.11 feet hilettiZll 4 ,lllceli,' gallery its a meeting tlw door Is au old; chigik` Mittlre not its weights* a the males theyhey cros sed regiskils on the i ii ;ipakk k g the days of the week. 0111, corner of the hall is tildhttie of Jelferwm, well executed, - ,unif hr good preservation. • The'lltekaW'fif! not Huth as is generally reirwesetitetti , ,111 tiw head Is smaller.. 1 wish hcite to add that the heed of the Ilotift , 44 - 4laltae of Washington dens .111:CL • as large as in portraits N sudcuowlotiVi to N. eorrect, and it seemed at that in (lief 'liar ikon mits-of these two men the heads um extemerldt4: Itut the, statues of I loth sl fore • headed remark... Oily line, and both have ; a devilled feminine and poetic clumw. • ter. 'Phis Statue of Jeiforsun is out of ' place maid the general ruin and de my. • The floor iS of ylillowpine, laid at gnat expense/ht herring-bone put • terns. Front the :ceilings overhead hung what is called a hum', but it WAS made for holding four candles. Next we entered the (lining room, IS feet square, with at h Rill tearoom adjoin " ing, and wioarated by a glassandsash • partition. The ;whir is of good Ow, and iS still furnished with two large Ineking glits4es with frames of many little concave and convex mirrors, and there is a small dilapiihded • ma : '' hogany table. The floor is said to ' have emit .;everal thousand dollars; it is of Mahogany and live oak, and is composed of iminense number es' litotes in square,' and Miters. There are double outside Inkling doors, the inner pair loving black walnut sin4tot with large ;tams, and the windoWs are t he.atne. Keting that the sashes of these wiiidiiws are raised by weights -awl cord, that they appeared to • ' have , been so constructed at the first, I thought it singular, but :Alais told Mr, Jefferson had them Put in: -If SO they.trust.-lunre Astitn • uniong the first N . VialliSinit tict nrnuird ht this country. . e•••`,• •-•• • There an; two stairwriAlieth alike with black Walnut rails, but the mi rage Li less flew two feet wide, The bedrooms have each as mums some four by six feet; and cleats were fa+ tented ty the wall, in whlehslats were '•• fixed for the support of the bed. A vontriviuwe so rude and poor Inman- . • parkoll with a French holdout with • • springs,l could not have supposed ever WILS adopted in a good house had lied Sell it. The ceiling of the - I)4.'4ll'o(lms wasswiretilyekht feet high. MEE IfEWE . „ . them was two small square Windows, and the airliner chore. , The• plaster ing was uneven suid Poor; arid where l it had Indian I aaw.that the lath had been rived and not sawed. in what was,Mrs4eiferatin's room Was a fire :pima+, the side lines of .which were not plumb, and the work) second to have boon done by a botch. - -The chief wonder of this house was the ball mom, which Is about 16 foot square; the ceiling is arched, and tho cornice is imposing and costly. Ad joining he the ladles' dressing room. 'lt seemed like a garret under a roof, and not the least attempt had ever been made to finish it, for the stud dings were in the sante condition in 'which* thorwere sawed and put in place, nor did I weeny place where nails had been driven for hanging of clothing, or even a looking Ow. As 'Monticello is some distance from; Charlotteville, 1 doubt whether any bluing overAVas done in this hail, unlace a couple now and then swung round while mmehodv whistled.. • As the house‘*as several Yturs in build ing, and s one part was added other, it is probable Wadi's Wawa:4 built longafter Mrs. Jefferson's death and at the suggestion of his daughter or some of the younger fry, and at a late period of his life when his preju dice gave way. It is well enough to know now for somethings with re ferenee to eminent Men are found out late, that Mr. Jefferson was not giv en to common ainusements; he did not know one card from another, and he never allowed a game to be played in his house, which is more than a great many'religions people e r n . any of themselves, or at best of their sons surddaughters. Theworso thingthat I have heard reported of him was that when he was culled upon tocon tribute to.the,rerair of a church he, said it was good enough us it was, sinee their master wasborn ins man ger. ' Costly as the house of Month:elle must have been, for no expense was spared, it shows how low was the standard ofonm fort in those dnys, and how poor were the, ideas of master arid mistress of whiralhrilfire' be. ' IlUtarith's willies or watt, Venience and the saving of labor was thought of. Even to-day some of the best families get their water from a spring in 'some remote hollow, re quiring, as g one would think, the eon stag labor one person. At IOW; thello I saw only one well, Whicliwas in front of thenegro,quarters, and the windlass and crank, of which the original iron remain, musthave been so heavy and awkw ard that, no 'wo man would think of drawing 'water. On the northern side is a snow col lar,bulit illten cistern, some 'ta i feet in diattieter. and 40 k fLet-'deep;• and near this commenced a sulbternmeati passage leading under the house and seining out on the: alter aide.. of .the trimming a. distance of more ' thane 506 feet. A young_ man who worked on the Ids* sald that Mr. tieffersonescaped from thellritish by this passage, and then. Mounted his horse, which wad shod with shoes hinrestikes,Vaefilf wft3r* 111401.11.1m1 that an old Mau • in Charlotteville knew all about Mr. Jefferson, and more than rmybody else, for behral„, he believed rend d book of his life. !' lt l t ' L ltur gilly l air w h et i l frhrou . D rg an (men iron gate. A granite block perhaps eight feet high marks his insaxigrave, buta is of owl* with ,the* IS kept In the hontie. I could taie no stone for his wife's grave union it was the one which was broken into many pieces. There are several tenths of the Randolph faml4 ly. Mr. Jefferson died deeply in debt., .1 saw an old mitten - um in Clairlotte -411e who-said he was a merchant num., ~ i with far .1.._.. that Mr. Jefferson trad - .";— • • t tedsome of the WO neglects moue (wet with order, for clothing, and e like; .._.when Mr. Jefferson died they had a Irmau, full ofilkee orders; that tlitr'. Indebt edness amounted to $25,00, and that a part of the farm was taken to close the account. During the last 3o.yerrs iif the hit; ter part of his life; therewere visitors ' every day from almost every part of ' the world ; an open Wiese was kept, arid the negroes' work was not macro, aged so as to payerXllollS64. Ifir must have known, it he knew imythirig, how his larks were going and ha' would drive done better if he tvuld,, for ado man ever lived with a sharper eye on surrounding things. ' The present farm at Monticello consists of 2151 acres, with the buildings dc.seri tx.d ; it is owned by someone in New Norki a city which has an Mame:lse grasp on real estate in every part of • the country, and it is 'valued at $ll,- eon. , It is worth Itheut-tl,ooe, and it would make agcxxi sheep farm. Still it might be worth more If a smart man with a handsome wife and sonic nice girls should get, possersiorw put the house hi 'order, andlmve it` plaice lit to be visited)* .. At no great distance, from Monti cello, and in full sight and on the line of the railroad, is an old nri It-proper ty which belonged taTham& Jeffer son's father; and about half a mile over the hill the son was born. The venerable librarian of the collegetold me that he had often heard Mr. Jef ferson say that tile suectai in life, of the &theca of Nair Republic •flving iw that sealdn was In a tr•d4 bidastrie . due to the thorough Instruction they received ; from Scotch. Presbyterian .mlnisters. , lint*Jetlertain owed fully l'As 111U4 to hialdlier,:lyh4ol thesiigh -far from - being r ulearrarl Man had a 'literary taste' atrial, he continually ;cultivated, though he had little time !to spare.thruth Meet aillye' Itte,lirtd. lie wrote a neat aria exert hand, and ;he taught it to his son with the la mest thoroughneru. Upon this ae i complishment Mr. - Jefferson's suctas was frainiled, for thereby hiri &reels. Mous were ,culthitted early, and he ivnerpatriasaed'of the inetdisof extri&: slug his thoughts without hesitation or embarrassment, and hence his re flections had a natural growth. We have imnucely: began to understand , the hest meithirdi. far , 'educating dril -1 dren. It is true thattMr:' Jefferson' had bY natUreacoaaßair ensive mind, and this eirfl,t. training. being:added he was aid r )to see and to eltpress inure than a her, although he spent butilvir #eft .'eollege,r. Aid ' l'w when he en l'ed active life •he was preparedle impieties his ideas 'upon the larding men of his day . , and even 'to lix them in the' powerful. Mind of Washington. Thomas Jefferson wasNborn April 2 2 1742, died July lrr.m. In due Mire he became ala tr„V whirl; he obtained a prick( • Worth 0,1110 a year, and with what his father - gave hit!' ' and what he blnurelf bought, lie had I ,9011 rwrce of chiake hind, includ ing Monticello. Ile married a young' widow, Mrs- Martha, Skeitol brim (Veber Its, 1718, who died Seil lianher 11, 17r2, mainly through• the shocks , she receiVed fromthe InVash it of the British, and their inhuman to it ofirirr slaves. She hrought jeflbmar not wily a large minMer.of slaves but also 10,00 rt acres of land. She was an excellent housekeeper and manager, and she had llve daughters andeime . . . 3lrs.delferßat litigerede id time. gar wt.*, her Plixitxtut; i wari by, her sitictrin'a . room - that ' ho. head oilier bell; ;and he and a role tivb alone . watched.' When at last 84:41°111 f g ff 41114 W 415.11* MO111011( tin away, am along time he NiAS*lolXoled dint4lotA4 Du ring the throe • weeks' following :he did not leave. his room. .he was ludtked io mount• his horse, and accompanied by his thuighterhe rode among the mountains, often bursting into want: •• At tin s ;had litotthttioldy about 4o yr:Ors-old; but he never .iner., rill again, end whoa he died 44 ycar . l afterward u kick of lwr lialrond $ O ll lO other tokens Were found in -.U. secret drawer of his cabinet, inclosed - ht en cevelope, which lbro . tier make of having lawn frequently handlecl.—t The remainder. of his Ilk Wait in public service lend , in improving twoUtid which Paul rum mies lingered; fur "here • Ids children - . wore born. • The cultivation of his garden was by his oWn betels, for he evidently believed that"asido front. the reward which labor brings, - that in tho bread and raiment for the sup- - port of the human race; Wawa Bow- er and Ituit growing out of moil's ' communication and contact with na ture, which can come 44 no other' roesics, and to the true roan of letters It Is a luxury which only be who has enjoyed It can even imagine Its ex istence. While he was Vnoldent of the United States his inthrest in (Tr ,doning woos undiminished, s a manuscriptbook is extant In which he noted the appearance and disaii pearance of every vegetable brought 'the' Philadelphia nutrket during the eight years. At home, and dur ing cold and stormy weather, of- ten withdrew to a workphop where' 'be lust tools of all kinds for working in wood; he made wash Stands, ta hlet, cupboards and shelves, turning out neat jobs. Ile could stock aplow, repair a wagon, and in the house, building going on fur several years he was not bile. "fNillege professors who deliver ehdiorate 't4) the voting mad ?f Virginia condemn ing labor ; and intsk4 Northern Inca will be disgusted with these. state melts, or will read them with the in- differento that a sinner listens to tile gavel, or if they deign In reply they will toll us that labor iseunied, while for want of acuteness they fai l to see that it is the"ground that was cuised, and for men's sake; and not labor at all.' 'The printed pialci hi molt dura ble than writing on the rock, and these things will be rentembercsl so long as human nature remains un changed, nor can they he disixonnect ed from the history of this man, Thomas Jefferson, in whose actual handwriting we have the immortal Declarttionef Independence, which informs the declaration of_ inspiration, that God made of one blood all the nations of the. earth, and upon which is founded our government, destined to Withstand the attitekti of every en emy, whether from without or with- 7 , In, and to Impree itself 'upon all na tions androceii: Perhain . saMeyoung man, Some bettrildeted student,' may 'now' understand thenteaaing °thread 'culture, and; if hti is tn! be. a public Man; understand the meaning of the term "Jeffersonlim Demoeracy.'?— Nem York Tribune. ' - • Won an AI'WWI Letter.' ' illsdralNlULeßelow'Griiintd. James White, Henry Strole, and thpt. Baker, of the late Confederate army, left Colorado City May 37th,' 1867, on foot, with two pack mules to carry pmvisiens, tool4titid blank ets, for the purpose of Prospecting in the Ann Juan valley fbr gold. After several weeks travel they :welled the San Juan river; but not finding sunk- cleat promise in thesands, wept fur. Cher west to Grand RiVer, the hunks Of which welt perpendicular ruck, two thotiamd lbet high. Both 'men . . . cilli-01411 11 4 . atlittd. for. water, . and It was, a day toe.ore thersould reach the sh"&dil'Whicti dished and foittiaed In the canon. The 'next morning, [Aug. 24;J : they ascended, and were suMenly itlealled b ygun shots.from a' bend of Indians. Baker,kil at the first fire, saying, " Boys, save your. selves." But, his comrades fought until ho was dead, retreated down into the canon. I The consultation which ensued re- Salted in a decision tog down the Thiel . since to go leek was almost sure 'death from this! Indians. So. they abandpned the Mules and trav eled down the stream; for about lime miles. On '.each sitle• rose . the sold sandstone walls, two thou.ssind: feet high, and they waittsi for dark when onlifor a single hour itt - the day did the sun Shine into the chasm. They found driftwood and made a raft of sticks and cotton-wood. lashing them together with mule ropes, And then lashing on their proviSions, floated on n rew ire........' tr.rturftui Ilarkness of that wonderful stitch. "crash. the long night they clunk to the raft, as it (Wiled against rocks or whirled in edilii.. : At .last: daylight mine, and with it a smoother current. They . then made a landing, f eat some of the water knoked' prtivistoits, sand:duel° their raft stronger with ceder sticks. Then they embarked And toward af ternoon casino to.the Junction where Green amltirtnitt:Tivers willti to fop!, . thil Colorado. At the juitetiou the river is abut icy. either feet in width, and. the walls Isk either Side wens nearly a mile hit, AboVe was only to he seen a narroWe strip of .SkY cwltile" the cedars' that. stood upon the edge of the canon ap peared.no larger than wetxts;; and 'del icittal pinnaelts Ina* yet higher as lontunens.s to memorize the Mutiny of mighty watete.; Down they floated in the great tenon in .1 he daylight, made brief by the shutting out of the ,nun, they endeavored to avoid the rocks:which 'opposed • them, and at night they. drew' to the fobt of the huge wall and stayed till .morning. They could not go back, and so they floated, on, hoping bineeh.Calville. Four days . had- pawed. when, • on the afternoon of the :Nth of August, an ,risr aliesti-wes heard, the, .c.t.;beetune `More- pial. a sharp. limed was •turned, and a •fotuning.wa ter-fall Nfas seen. Nothing could prevent the raft going over:. Then itrole stood up with his pole in his hands, while, White dung to the logs, The raft leacsi down into the waters,. and White laird thefiast shriek of his companion, who had been castoff into the seething torrent ; with turn ed head he beheld, through the mist and spray, his cominde's form tems for a moment in the boiling water and then sink. Remembering this, and not know ing what yet to expect in that terri ble fissure of the earth, the walls of which were now as much as seven thousand feet in height, and seamd to meet ahnix4t, and • keepingout all of the uppex eartlexcept the nar rowest ribbon of blue sky White tied himself to the raft and strength ened the lashings. An the provisions and annals/id beer:L4st in going over the waterl4ll, and after that came a succession of rapidi'," blocked up by Uie masses of rocks over which the aft was &tying and tmishiltnr, and anmetinussoompletely submerged.— In one of these the logs in thp raft be uune aeßseited at the upper end and spraul out fanwisq but White, after being thee= (Ma the water, regain edplace and fastened thou. Soon afterwards he reached the mouth of the Colorado Chiquito, • which Joins the cidortido proper at right angles, and murky a small eddy or whirlpool. In this whirling of: waterer Whih., clinging desperately' to the ra ft , was teased to and fm for hours, and only wheu.almost unconscious, found that 'lu- had been released from the„gritsp of the liquid arms, and wits; once more linaThig down; between the lof ty perpeudicular Four days had passed since she had tasted food. ~Nothing had been seen but the foaming waters, the blank,, hue Walks, and the Rimed of the sky above. For more !than auweek he had hen 'at the bottom of a trot* a mile in depth..,Yx.hunstod mathun gred, he even sought to suck his ywn blood, but the aspect of his shriveled, blistered arm, .frightenen him. - At was then'that he came . by ai flat strip of shore with 'bus* groWliur oh it. Here he.litopptsk‘devoumd , some green leavhs and pods cud Amin re sumed hiss journey., on the 11th day he was taken on shore by sonfoYitm. lads Indians, wile - would probably have killed him had not one of theru• interfered and protected him: This' humane Savage gave 'the,:Veyager meat midlftezquite beans to nit, and after a snarl rest White" tottered to his raft and floute47dewhward. Three slays afitirwardS• 'he was aroused fibm stupor fiy•voirxtr. titroug arms wertithrowsearound ,biut s . and bathksi fares looktkls pityingly upon him. Ito_WILS tended and •orrni.for by the .Itlonnons of this plate, and ' vith his strong • e&istitutiou, soon regained health, and has notlesire to leave the snat where good Saniarl taus ministered unto is in . good health and doing nellouid does not wish to renew•his experihnee. (From the Tout, Plead ild Vans.r A aide Itelilad roeskostlas. • . --, - - Mr. Robert B h onner a smany fit- Inuni trotters in his stable, but done in our opinion, more haruLsom, more Intelligent, and more speedy than the little bay mare, Pocaladas; the daughter of Ethan Allen and the old 'taring mare - Pocahontas. . Her pro- i portions are as near perfection as we ever see them in a trotter. She has the Bittern amt of a thoroughbred,' a bright glossy bay; the contour other head's as decate, as sugtive of aristeautic be li ading as the haul of a Fifth avenue belle when compared with that of theseullionofeklichen, and her neck has thegraceful -taper which is the unmistakable sign of blood; . legs stnall,but witiltheteugh, compact bone of deer ; feet also small, and hard no the hoofs that track the sandy plains of Arabia; powerful hqs,linnly jointed, as ifby laminated steel, to shoulders of immense depti_ ,e pasterns springy; and 'a black, full Bowl ig tail ; eyes-large and lwArous,- lighted up with the firetof intelli getter-eyes as full of -expassion us the brown eyes of a whinen. /u her form seems to be concentrated the speel of sire and dam; and when we watch ii swift:ideal, We remember the plaudits that Ethan Allen res*v ed 'when he made his mile, with run ning mate iu rue minutes and fifteen 'month!, an'd then a vision of the old peeing mare's grand nun to wagon— a record of 21.7?—risos - before us. , The union of the great trotter aud the great pacer brought fourth good I fruit - the blood mingled in hamar ny, and the beet qualities of the pa- L I rents were transmitted to their daughter. Before the star of Dexter had reached its zenith—before the marvel last. presumed to dispute the championsip with - -Ethan Allen, Young Poetthoptas had won so much fume that Mr. Robert , Bonner was glad to Isswre her for his Stable at the princely price $25,000. 1 Under his tore she has grown , Stouter and Speedier, and now it, is claimed that not even King Dexter himself ',can beat her _down the road. - Certainly, She brushes arnaringly:fist: • --'' •'. • I Lest Friday afternoon We had • the pleasure of riding :behind the bay mare. We went out to the Fashion Course with Mr David ‘ Bonner, and on the return, Pocahontas . was fee ling so well that Mr. B gave her head. Mark you, there were two of. us—but fortunately nithbr ti" betty weight—inn light road wagon, built to carry one. To look at the wagon it seems a mere toy, and people of weak' nerves would not care to ride, faster than alhree minute gait in. it. But It is stronger than it looks to, be, being built of, the very• bed material, and by one skilled in the craft, .and then it runs :with the least possible -frictiou. . . The Mad wwi good, and the Mare' Was anxious to go ; she chanzpetithe l bit with feverish 'excitement, bte her driver held her back,speakingnooth- in* to her all the while. Teams pass us in quick succesion. but we disregard'ettereballettge: Now n = ear harnessed to a light wagon to the front; the black has a good turn of speed, and he ntpidly cuts down all in advance. Mr. Bonner has gently been easing his pull on the lints, and we are bowling along at a tat) gait. Wo are at the wheel of the wagon 51newn by the pacer; the black , increases his stride fo 413 a pace. Ace linger• behind. TO 'ownyr of thal black is exultant; he shows it plain-,' ly in look and gesture. "Steady now," says 1). B.; "I shall let the mare go, and we will take the wind out of the fellow's .salls very soon." We have little space to sit in so brace ourselves for the effort. "111-a-ck ! 111-a-ck !" .Poeahontas knows full well what the sharp cry means. She squats, flattening herself down to the ground, :IS the flying squirrel fl atens Idniself whenjaking the leap in air, timid then throwing her sholders into the breast, stamp with the power 'of a Iff.x-inrateil high pea e ure engine, the wheels hum, fairly rivalin„.* the momentum of a filoily balanced top. the stride of those limbs is Slinply awful. A moment, and we have col lared the black ; another skond; and we had passed him like a dart shot from the bow of Apollo. We glanced to the left as we swept past,l and .in ,thejf i rief frnet 1.. ...e.....,ccanat'reaa as -611124 intent in the late eAultant ram. Ltd the .skiessuddenly opened and 1 . I •f, fall the fleet steed of Arlon, stn..; Hi*. could not have been grtater." ,',..l'he * landscape no • longer spoke of ' theality and order. '!' • It 1:4 strangely 3 confuses'—gree n r fields running over feneas, mitt state- .1v •trees indulging In the fantastic freaks of madcap flight and dante. The pacer is left far behind. We read the van. But, as we ascend the hill, the mare is pulled to asiforter stride, in order that She mhy clear her Wings fear a grander effort' 'Thesharli exer else has warmed the blood, and Poen booties 'stager to get down to rapid work again. A beautiful stretch of Mad is in front.. The ground Is slightly dt..scending, so weight • tells 'cut little., • "Ili-aleckr _ h i -neck;!' Great God; how she ,llies ! She has dwindled/roue Lifted; • hands doWn to ten. No substanee Is lost, but It is spread and elongated in'ltie Ever? cord stands out; every mu*• de swells under the 'crushing strain. The wind whistles around our erasA wind born of our terrific flight; and the teeth fairly . chatter.. We are going at better , than a gait. Two-twenty! 1)o von know what that meths'. Rideit once and you will never forget it. It is the very climax of sensutlen. • The blood - re eolls-ritshec frOin veins 'to hrterieS and front arteries to the Heart; : the nails grow whiteoind the toe and finger extremities arcs left in-tingling doubt. Going at this fearful rate of speed and one narrow seat for two! The ride of Oemnius through theca on a hippogriff was nothing conk-, parison with it.' We bracxl.oursielves well and . hotel" fed AS Ixt - Ive can: Suppose one of those frail, trembling' swift revolVingWheels should break s ; what .would he the -consennenee ? A broken-neck, .perhaps. • And yet we would not stay the flying feet. We never rode as fast as' thbi , be fore, and question if we ever shall again. Dexter curried us' with light ning speed .on Ilarlem lane, last spring, but we are lower down in the seconds now. We hang as it were suspended between time and the great unknown. But a few willowy, tretn- Wing spokes separate us froth the land of mystery. Let them break and time will be nothing tons; starlit they lirm amtthe 'gm shall not read the future. It is one of these periods of existence when tile weight of a hair turns the wavering scalcu in fa vor of life or death. Weare conscious of this, and yet we ritleou, on—weak passive creaturec in the hand of fate. 'We are so near I [(liven that •we do not eane whether the scales go up or down. This is *here the true spirit of adventuilit US 1.4), and enthusi asm having been excited we look In tie to then...sults. But We have gone half a mile at this terrible rate of 4as:4—have probed the myAtery of secomts—and D. 11., pulls me strong and steady, brings Pocahontas down to work again, from the transition state down to solid earth. . Tiles° who' km , Pocahontas' when . sheittweil cook's Hotel on Pridire afternoon livititilttitatauch: fremenV duoitiNard Was never seed road wagon - befontittit old Poetinintas never paced • fitster when she made her imperishable recent of 2: 173.' Mr. David Bonner atys thatlhe little bay pare neverstrtiek such a' gatO'With him hi till WdriVing•of her and we are not only tilling but glad, tO aloe j lieveit true. • Alter- Neptunns had won the loveof Amplittrde Iv coin ing toter On Darbaek of the dolphin, berphiced , the dolphin among -the , Rats . ; we felt agnind thrill 'behind hauhontas, and as we are pot iretsi= god; and therefore • unable to,trunsi port her to the skios„-we do .the next best. thing—glorify Wein print. A Man In Tiny, Oldo, haccdeSerted his wife and eloped With 1113 mother- In-law. '.!Thero are foW men who Will . follow that example. ~ -_ . ~ .. wt ~.:t C-~...~ ^'~f'- -`._~..~.C':AiJ~d.'ael`~Y:a.]c.:s,s,.v:l-E":A The TennestraWites Many It the early eatiorket Penn sYlvanla and' Mawyland ' Were Ger. inans;. Hollandem and Swiss, - who were driven by religious intolentnee In their own lands Coseeknew homes In free America -William' Penn, the (tanker founder of l'ems'Avtinia, l and George Calvert, • the tholio founder.of Maryland, having secur ed guarantees of civil and • liberty in the charters of Zi r • lc : spective provinces, the shines of the Delaware and Chesapeake naturally /Awed an asylam to all who mew red tolerance to intolerance in mat tem of religion. During the c lasin year of the seventeenth century, an 4 up to the commencement ,of the American Revolution inthesuceeed i ing century , many thousands of the people wo have • mentioned the ocean and settled. In 'Pennsylvania'and 'Maryland. Sane of them pushed.into the Shenandoah Valle in Virginia: The Rhenish provi y nces of German* seem to have fufnisiscil a huge proportion. of -lb° G e rm a n Settlers. Rhenish Bavaria Wurtenburg,Baden sent large numbers of emigrants. Switieriand sent many, thousands. Them never was a„ very large ant gration of Tiollariders to Petinsylve nia, the prows of their vessels - toeing generally directed to New York. 'ln a brief time the-representatives of the three nationalities Weenie so thoroughly Intermingled, by. reason, of religions ties, IntennarriaVai Malty of custom and language, and general harmony of interests, that , they formed one homogeneous , emus, by ,sotne pilled h e rs ust °cr imes and by ote ~ rmnaylvania Retell. The Swiss settlers ceased en tirely to be called' Schweizers or Swiasl - With the perfect union thus estato 'Med, and familiar intetcourso with the English speaking settlers, came a new ixtaoritki and witted lan guage, also I,od Pennsylvania tier- . or Petimitivafila Dutch, Which i s still imply spoke ,_n but , dot much' written, in some sections of- Penn sylvan*" Mar/land, Virgin* and in some .portions of Abe , Western State; te.whkh the descendants. of the Pennsylviniskiermani ed. •As a lan it taus =, yield at all panti to the , pure Eng lish awl Germantongaos. Few now speak it who do noti - aZzak %h. It Is mainly acorn dof the Bavarian and, Swiss eels the German language; with - many Eng lish and 'a - few Dutch , (Holland) words added. ,It is doubtfhl if a Pennsylvania Gentian could make himself understood In any., part_ a liolland, G ermany or Switzerland to rho religiose belief. of the - early Pemisylyania gerinans was that of I theliennnonites arid German Map- 1 Oda or . Tankers. 'The .Mennonites I ( were the first' to come: - Their :Ars& I Hettletitent in this Country wasmade, l at Germantown in 1608,:the year afs. ter Penn commenced his settlement at Philadelphia. Those who settled at tiermantown were Hollanders. The Mennonites who followed them came from Hol land, Germany, and Stritserhurd. The first colony of the Brethern or Tunkors also settled at•Gentrantowul and Its •vicinity in 1719:-• 44ghty-aix years after the first Mennonite settle ment. They were Germans * : who had taken refuge from religious per secutloßlu Holland. Other Tenkers followed in 1729, and during succeed-' Mg' years. America soon became the stronghold of the new religion. AP , though its adherents spread Into the various parts of Germany,, •Holland, and Switzerland, our. researches lead us to eonchnle that the most of them finally. Sound their way to this min try. The Mennonites, on the other. hand, are still more numerous in Eu rope than in Ameriat, Holland bask their stronghold. ileretheir fotin&l er, Menne Simon, was born in itios. Jacob' Amen, the leadin . spirit of the Amish branch of the alto sect,rwas a native of Switzerland. , Strictl Blanking, the Tunker and Mennonite faiths were almost I at tin s.•er whleh weep L l tic izi ars tig ! ad t a h n .L go4 i ryxzn if l , d r p a zi still recogniti,t4e Dortrecht •Confea slun of 16:t2 aY their standard theo togicat belief. The points of differ ence relate chiefly to .church goyern-, must :Ind other outivard ofxscrralireit but even in these there IS great itral- . 1 laity of practice: The •Mennonifewl were in existence long anterior, to the Tankers. Menne Simon, their. founder wri.s a tetemperaryof Luth- . or in,. the .sixteenth , eeutatry, While Ow Weekend did not, have a denomi national national existence_ until the. btsrin Mug; of the eighteenth' tentttrY; their first churth having' been - orgarfirXxl in 1708, at Swartzenan; in the of Witgenstein. Is proper Ito add that both sects &dined tobave I received their religious faith In great part from the Waldenses stdAlbi genses, and them from the Primitive Christians. . rl It may lie of interne to e eat ler Ito tetra that Witgcnstelu was form lerly a small:State of about' tWetity- I German square Miles governedby count, and thathalf efit,sabsequent ly belonged to the Duchy of Nassau;, mid hall to Ithenishit.. -Now, .sinee•Nassan was absorbed .by Plus; •sia in-1866,•itallbelongs to thettings dom of Pruutia.,.:.• Ninety-nine out of .everYundred of the Mennoniteriatid Tankers are farmers. Their mode Of Ilk is Am ple in the extreme. 'They dress plain ly; live frugally, find -practice livery strletcodeof mends. Their honesty, truthfulness; and indastry Jam pro; verbial. • They do not mingle .much with the world, but .14114.aniyers at , home, ninding their own business, and minding it well. Poverty is al most unlaniwn among them 'They are 'sloe/ to' abandon the - casinos; of their father, end do not readily adopt Modem • innovations of I any kind.. They wore originally .opposed to the eiumnonschod twatern;hutriewL,al - unanimously ! fever; .ity,..They are opposed to war,, and gfierelly. settle an disputes am ong themselves. withoutgOing to lane. • We have said that theMenitiniteit and Tankers' users.first , of 'the German settlers of Our State, and to this we now add that they constitute to-day a very huge - portion of ' our old Pennsylvania , German popula tlen, especially In the ' ural. dkstriets, Lutherans, Idontviates, and represen tativea of other religious dencaiiina-., tions renewed them from Germany, ! but did nut precede them. 'Whole orour 'State are inhabited by ' them. They early spread into the.fer- , , tile Cumberland N'alley, and theme pushed Into Bedford, Somerset, and Cambria counties. A few of them ecsaed the Chestnut Ridge and Lau rel Bill into Westmoreland, Indiana, and oiler western counties of the. State. Their settlement in Carribria ' county was made during the clueing year of the last century, ins and around Johnstown,' itiVlutt was then' tailed "Conemaugh reentry." The portion of Cambria county thus set tled by them was embratui in Som erset. county up to .1807. . A very. kale insjontv of all the farmers In the neigltborhood.of.Johnatowu to this day, are Mennonites mid Tunic erty.the latter, _ largely predominat ing, A *Jeri& ef the whole are be; lierVid to lee ;of Birlts origin:L4ehns: tOtrti Mg/nine: ' • ”In.the autnitnition or . .iudge ker. for (leveller we , would, have. preferred a 'nom Idauomi — i one that did not rake up old 'lsnic.4 —bet aetepted the situation anti intuirmy. Wo•recard the stir: rage questfen Ai'settleditollght it. ont'novr -LA 'like hutting- year :Watt against a stone wall i ! or- utteatilleg. to dim .up Niagara. ThaDeniocrao. eyinatat cultivate. more liberal and enlarged politital ideas, if they: over e4Peetto_pgair4ctitirely the prestige Ag r Ai , tve lost, 7-.7.lldoanAgr.(petn.) .Ono of the moot fashionable young lauilass utSahaut ,wears n hat which cost only teu cents, and the trim-. tulngs she had In 'the how. Shok Unmarried and conks from Boston. ,--- ! j '' • ":,-"- ,". -, - • it • t T N t '4,. ,, . -. ••'.. _ I ,ii'..d,;- ~ - '+ ! e A' ~ - 6.4 ' ice ' .... , poops. A' 81 3 LEVDIIi ASSO RTMENT . or CHECK p si AND. FAIN6Y. I MATTING& roit sin9uniczatrw OPEN. • 1021q1-ARRTITAIt . NEB BRIT T • $$ Tot to= TfIItkIB.PLYCAIIEICTS to till onr stackainco tho cklec of Oes beery If. • OPrina Trade- Oliver McCluitea JO. , I : • k ? ; EITTSBUROI7; PA* 4 9 PP- • SL 59 lifar)cet.l3: W. MIXER & COBUYLPIM !tame for this week% mak, tb;lartoistoot. !' ';• **pest Atoet or; • .i'-til•ilN :li.. i• DRE 3 C}OUDS, . .911;A TvX ; q AND !oglrs EVER CIPI*R.F.RI J aiiiiitEL & C. - ' A - 6.49.*W*1 411 4mt` " MEM • 1•10. 1 9t1 SIXTH STURM =I Forug:dy Si. Clair, Piiabiligh, Pa juii3oam: , . , E.= =eidostrtz owl "zonate" au tie aside et 11 10 Vlsber,dee'd, We ef New ttowlekly town. At" Bean? et M* Pil.4 Megabm all kog i egaes are hereby notified= "Ana throe Wier atlas na sold eon!' preezot then daily euttwolicated tor ..tt lctaen t e — jurrs 1111nISON, Xxrcaar. aagt:Go• • LIMIT OF CAlitiES ' Wee TOW . 1 at atiplitaber 1559. Carlini= GOO.' ‘, vi W.fis C. H. R. co tote Spear ' re W.Taylor ILL Worth' Andsent Mann ' vs WIIW= Kennedy; • Washington Water 'vi WWI= Hoowle • -Chtletien Loki JaeObaletta. et al. Inintris sookllloote, is Comity of Beater. Potty BrownCtuuteo Glinz Dent. RAW. Meer. vs •Wllliani Jenkins. n Yardman& Ennio 1 =:11 Mary on 3. Woolley Webb. 'PrOavali Coposato vs MID Wats. Andtew 'es haul C. W.Jonee " • •raise. S. pas Juanita ilean,„ toe C. anes Ts mune, John tholtlt Wlltlant Glenn. Hsiric B.Aadonos .• on Willlnia Mateeost. Jobs Itanlant. rr. en Join Moon. • Stephen al* e . vett. H.-Itatt - .111 01; • Its. W. W C. 11.14 Co. Chinks Cosier en W.Tritbte7nitt s ollstnit. este° Mullett - Marko Inenett. 01. • I Ch=IOTIOW et ox. .ye TWA. Jenkins. et al: Grsey - ILletennall* •to James Ltuto. Wlll.lolsnoton raleirls Beta. Bobcat "Frye cglAweence &Co. eigittej. . '343111t •CALIIIIEY. Pox_ 'TO VElCllllllllerell Tesebe" es wanted to vapppt ix:book al Ohle lowouildp. Ap. DV= ,Ildw.=:4ollll=noet.l= Fmse at Itoldadr.t. 41.1kost Slat. - Ansel - Jr]. J. B. GOODWIN Deeyr LINDSAY, STERMT & EUWER, 'NEW irIIOLESALE ' • , ",* • , HARDWARE i HOUSE. El 911 tiismirr3:7 peal.( sUYMMs PITTBB,URQH. .P.A4NIV'A. Inuattf J6l,4;N;,,stimEtr i : 111141. •.t z. 1.11 ~s~-~ 1' ~rowisions, i.COItN, OATS, YII.1.• PNED!„ AND. PLAN;INED DRAIN A Glr-j ) IP fl, pr RH 511443; and IMPHOVEP :CHIMNEY • TOPS, For Its& litannfoCturci.A CALL AND EXAMINE CASlfPubt for COVNTRY PI(ODU(•E Goodn Tklivered Free of Cluxrge. Itl3CflENT . Ell,:l"a..lday 5,1859. mayl2llin OOKIIERE. iiierN4 vaderdatioi. treat Nave to mat cream lAto Meiw the rkid e irga 0, the Wirt ' stjiel far apnea and deadtee In* ;which bo offal at vd7 Modena Wm • • • - (1467441,07, URNISIVING • • • t.'tiIV f itTXATLY 011 HAND. ' tiothtag made to Oder Oa the ahertret *Wm. Thenhfal to the ostela fee 'peat favont, .1 hope aadr of rite crams:. le dose adesaleat theror to NOM tat 1, I • • Diifiras MILLED ?4. . "BRIDGE 47'.. IMMO X TrA?WD. • )'' ' - UT A. =NM — N. D. Wain Mo s = doe& •oall to Do Ohms •131 tor. gad soranadtogvaaaary. Cam to S. • glostueo's drag o•Wo, an Water itrad, Partwater, Dower rosoly Pa. • Coomodagloot bans Warm fa m. addd p. • • • aM.:tatted mot peatripapao' mods* II: Dlgt ne shf. ave Drag Ntore. • -, ' . . . soirogias. - 11,11111014045114. . rsirx.firr.waysii KCtuokaoiLULWAY. laie. rims will Imo _it Ilk P. X., beirai , W. Mr;il".l7.ks vi x, •=5 =I MOO& Nobwor IhAew Arnow. Cam • Itiorno. • Goes. I=l. .. Mg eg eornolli, lhod ELIO Wawa"— Arum* Wallinllso Chicago— RM 111=11! =so arr ik. ur Colambic &et Wires Nu P ran iksbalq Wooster-4 es-, Al= I Young"lowa, 71. w " .true ifs River gam Youipluen MRS p. in; Can* t gag suttee p. in. Retuning, lams litidniegli Riga. es; est. lortTausgstow!. tok•LX. ciens,esia. gr. ,• • , -• • • =CEOs sea Ptliguegiune.. Tomplown, CIO a. a, Row ceobwhie L. waretree.stAßlOrgy SSW IL .r opierit ret4 *M. nressokamitAnaoAn. .111,0===k". , --- 7 —‘------ mair5111; • "1 St . ' 43 . AMU 11041111 41 ; ' - 11 - 11 - 371 - IW I4 ---7- - ‘lO7l - W . A. 10 ~- • 114 *-- .... 4.4.4. . , Proboar-...'...r.•, Mr , . -". MI VS MOM Ilr, „,,.. ." ..... s.. . I ~- rammorso ti:l w an:. 111301.1 ... _ I A.. 1 1011 : . • ... . ' • • Illadsoa.. .....,.. -, 4311 111 .. Eseldltriel: 115 ' 111 111 ' Lierreliod 310 tll 1105 1 • aweemo. 1•1133 0 5 -0-7- 11.4. n.. Amos '-.........---.7.---- ----•- -....-.. EMI& ~. r . m ilkll s r?. LOPIr PI:M.4:— 'MO '''. ifli MO; . 3.15 1 1111 es 015 1.... ' 11=1 ". /M17...! 113 alk 453 .: - " Memel ' . 244314414/...... IN • , 115 ' .... 111114104011 IMO SO ' 15 MS 10 ..... . • minim mom .-- . -- r4 - 4 'mums.t Amu lis 41071Wir. : - .7.. - .. pa wr o..l4 I /1114 x Mrs 415m4 .. • . 110 . 155. 540 .... 14mitles Mllm 111 114 .21 .... 11411mille ISO 413. - 111 .. . 1444410404111.5„.... 151 ' 515 . , .... Muir i lieWarL , Mao an 1.... , mo • lilollo GM t .... SW • This is a sued train to Wefntlle and an ex press train bum WeIIITIIM to Pittsburgh- • TUBCARAWAS katANCI.I. Pa Lesvos Arrives PhUadelphisAllo st:ts. I liayard. fleoun. Ityard. 110p.m. N. VbiladspWa,iltavm J. 1/.16.11111ALL• Clansial Ticket Assiut Dry Ckm,ds. CASH BUYERS _ AT 1,4 S WILL FIND A \'ERT LARGE AN p . • - • ATTRACTIVE.-EiTO OF - =I POREON AND DOMES* DRY GOODS, =II Al 'Very LOW PtU€ES, Eithrt• the yard, piere or Itaekage AT A'. OF.'ERWIN ('O'S. 178 Federal teeet,' 4.lllegheny Juntly. lidtettlitaatt WellemA ll2 11 1, to! ". pal t. the Covet of Common Mao fearer 1114; *I Meth Ter*. IMIL • Mama To Coi; Deltedeut ebjoLg_ 2 , - • :no *ATM at st toothybotte to ove'eei- the shore ego loyft retorsod "N. & I." gotten here. br roas es le mod sweet at • Comet Mho. wee Pli to tot We /lenge, to mai Ore* mo.W.ef Boom oft Ole Sae Newby of Ilepteut ' bit to uenter the OM, oustiokat god Whets #_Na 704 ' why tea loottle•ef thomakl Cox lora S. LITT - Oile NW. tut J. be tMolllee, Aug. S. lOW Isagette S. lerosS do Co., IaCHOLIEWILIEEL, Pa AItiCONSTANTLY RECEITINd NEW and FIUME GOODS. UM 1=221 TitEnt MMt conslsta k o Fall 'ltaaortinent of Dity GOODS, BATS Ze CAPS , Boots and Shoes NOTIOSR IN GREAT VA RIETY. II 430 as ties 1007 1007 IWO 110401 117 IWO 4W FARMERS AND MECHANICS TOOLS all kinds Builder; HARDWARE. 1144 lUS tit6fit rio • lox I 1M NAILS PURCUASED BY 1410 KGS AND , FOIL SALE AS I.OW As CAN BE BOUWIT IN privsnrgoir. All Sizes of Window - Glass, PAINTS,. Xii..3aggesesfi. 011, WHITE LEAD, ' ; : COLORED PAINTS* -DRY AIfD . IN ' Cleveland Slate - Lime, CEMEN'T."&e. A full amortiewni of GROCERIES, BACON & LARD; FLOUR 1 of ilitTernot Oiadm delivered and WARRANTED \ - Wu buy no goo*Khut;l:eCT tho beast quality. inuiyl9,ly. • NEW vimiitt entocenar PROVISION STORE! 11 - I.elkositeir. Pre., By COE VA. RAG 11 WIIRItR MAT BE FOUND randly Gr. - warier , and Previsionn. , Flah., Maur, C.irnar, Bolter, Lard. Bunn, 011. Pon• eider cinegar, Orono. Mulaaacry Ten.. CiAvs, 13n,tarn, Cracker., Thhirro. - queensware.Wl.llmor-vrarr. Vaaaden•trare, and evetythlng In their llnc,andtha•T hope 'by Fula intent lots an In merit a UIiEUAL shARE (U' TIM PATIMNAGE 124.0.—A11 Inarke4 mire. " • i ill !Intimater. Ocf. lit. 1867:Loct7'tr.:1.y .SAN & SIEDLE, Sureessoro to REINEMAN. MEYRAN dt.,SIEDLE Gold and Silvc►rsmitha. 'FINE J•EWE'LRY. wercuis; DIAMONDS, } a Y ‘4INDAPLATED WARE. Agtricylor MI die tiiLKt in'iikeA of Amsiriimn '4Vatchrlk SETH ' Anoxia,. cLogics; l' • Allidtab% of %catches carefully repaired ancl-gthintateeil. ~ • ' ralyl3;ly lIMEI GRAND CLOSING OUT SALE, SUMMER DRY - GOODS, JAMES A. FORTUNE'S IN THE DIMIIAND, ROVIIESTEII. b..1113 , 1A11:11t Gull tend tee for yourxeltvs DRY GOODS, • OF EVERY DEsCRIPTIoN At ,Plltaburgli }:Arly, and Eil SECURE BAI:(1.1741'8, AA we van not be Undersold. BTAIITIING TO ( )RI E PINKING DONE R. Xo %7'NUMC to Show ;ood 'IIE3IE3II I ER TIIIL PLACZ! mazoomi, ROCHESTER Pi. P,13.-1 have pecuretd the ft!rvidra o, Watt 13italy, formerly .of liiiitgetrater. sonr:ll:ly—ch.jy 21. • STOVES O. R. ANSHUTZ, DEALER IN Tin, Copper &. Sheet- IMII 110,fiE_Ac DARRAGH N 0.142, Fitfr ATISMIC; I'ATTSBUIIOII, Pn aid dealers in EMI AT AT LEW THAN COST. -7;77, I , Iron Ware. AXASESCO Anortunt or Wire ~ . /orctits, Grates,Cooking-Stoves (Ica. (Ica: hoofing, (iodating •nd Iliqoutiaa 1)ont to Order prouiptly and on 1:e3,.11 • rible‘TerOi.. Particular Attention Paid to Job Work, .lapilanul atia PRESSED WARE Kept Constantly on flond Shop on the lowet . en4l4,7lkird 13ozwei-: . Cal 1 and Examine . ear eitack -before purchasing elsewhere... , Nrusarlntr _._ .. . _ .....__. ALLSION , FOV • ' Aint Bllßdleitit o l . • , . railsen. IT side sad the bast style. ' meat Indlort. ams. with poroptiV soommedi °wait alma e:yerzesyr ortlarg i ai k ru • *west rules. Mingle' aid. Imoirtivax6p, at d,lOwle—ut. pattem.incithe (brat wide* 'peaks 1130111elt 11. Wm 'bed ."'ilereVlo4: Conking, Yranit7le iintiffeitthtg: of lira mon ton, eta rantailt; GI Ali Dawn 1111Mrts ties Warr Itareauc tha best so It takes link fuel, Ma. room todo ttm moat trot, beat baker, amt rant 411 abbr. token IMMO* dr best stays In sae, I. connection aria the /toss I Mee dot op a Pident rartaaie EXtension Top, which takes wry little MOM. no additional loci. can not get not of order. and, not Hahn dbwatwahig wl W all Finn. can I. pat ou taken elf at any thsta_and made to volt lifton, • of imystitror petunia.. - In Wilms" of what la bete mid. + trot names of perinea having rtri the him, for Muni `llll.4hit'Oftple wmia.: i '' 1 Dr. lona* 113..—. _ IWe T. Kennedy, . 1411.11hiser Morton. 3 Rause! Rannady, %Join U Whom 4 Robert 111rOairan. IS Jonathan McKenzie. - 5 John Watsaa. 36 Hassell. 6 Dr. Ju. R. Jackson, 67 John W. D. Moab 7 1/r. J. M. - WK. S. M'Yeresa. Dr ••••• rooter. 1131Joha J11C114.11, 9 Dr. J. D. Rvervarl. - 110 Deal. Pugh. gi MUo W. Miller. 1:1 Samuel lientway, 11 William Leen al 4.:....pt..M.J.di05t0n. 12 Adrew Morro ;I raln Ron . li neo enj l a .' Loes D. VAUD. !7 I Jnlnerter • 11 ('O7ll. .12 we Roney '72 Juana V. I; Cala. . Yr.:Orrick Meters% Mre Nal..r Wade Mre Robert Andr. w. 1: Mr.. Re... Fallon : .71John M. 1101.3111. s IT. Retro.. . Mr*. Thaw. 1111.1.110..1. 19 A. 1.. M'l 'every .tilJ . Janlew IlMothot Cookie ,s 1 Da ld I.lold 31 Thomas R. Dams ',33 Thaatu Beacom 21 Hugh wheals Is 3 John Dunlop 13 Cas W. Warw. • , ;WI /Wears 'W. Isekson. 11 Macau Dradshaw,lar i bs Samuel Tarim, -33 Milo Bradshaw,. fel Blum Stowe. 26 Robert Bradshaw ! s7 Petkreemal. IT %Las J Bradshaw, Ir:RIWIIILun 11 Mum Reed. ItS Bea Shively. Sap 11111.3 a Regal ASO Sunnel Dnalu. 39 Milo lk-tal 191 Rev. D. P. laorsr3 - , 31 William Iteml. .91 Robert Imbrie. II Joel Reed, 11 Leo. W. Ilarolitoo. 31 Mn Thu Bonier Igl Vast WILoo. 31 Johnston Llogbitu Illlam Doan, Milames Thompson, 111 Geneve, Wilson 1,41 Martin Knight gz Juan Websnloa. 2/Richard. Staley 1 lat Mal Z. Subj. ISLWlllbon Rogers • !V9 Alfred nem rJoseph Mcgetran 1100 Austin 40 David Carr :101 Jolta lberto 41 Dr. Moon let Mrs Juhu Thome tt Solomon Front llf2 John Lowery 43 James Rnowle. J. W. renkl.ne.er 44 Judge Cairn* . 111113 James Morose. WIIILsm Morrow. '1136 Robert Walleee 46 Win. Bleterstaff , 107 Dank) Mexvo-11 47 Smoot Croup= WSThomas Y 017,111, • .45 Jirepla McDermltt 109 Dr. C. R. Wile, rs V 3 M. Jam WDerralti. 110 Ulu Orltasuria; • W William Wagner • r . Remy Teths II 61 Rev Sewitlll • DI Thumb Unollet tR Washlngtaa•Baglo 113 111 Emu, 61 John Y. Marks 1.111 IL „St Copt, A. 3111301mk1 , 1113 Deuricl & Lena ter, apt M M'Donald, 1116 IlleharlWeyn.l 56 Wm M - Dauvid . 1117 15'1r:ern retched : Mrs Nano' 32*Dna.11.1112 Rev Wm lieehlt 59 Alex. WHvn 'll9 :Icor! Iffedlnnt 211ln. Ltiod.ll .1,9) Wall= 21rock, no William Grow.; 111 Jewegb L L'l - norm Boston (Rove In introducing cwr toilve se.rvccll• lal pail I' great 011111bC, Or Stases recently mannWurio acrid gold by - other partlev. Throe. as azenenl thin; aro nearly WO' and cnibrion'tlw OCIFIO4 Orbri moat Improve.' idyl..+ new made. exceritior. thou, Marin factuted by soy pelf. tau will oefl Woe it very low Wm. Tin tag theca Mut cbieu enelnee .ims'ltisid. 4 about Meta honiepowerespeelly, aro cArenit to the public at reuronatile Urptq TTIORNILET (eh • .. NEW GOODS! Sprfn: an Sa rice . 4l4,olK mtvic morrovernum A noes 1010 tillOrk4 rqi: LATEST STY-LES: Spring and BFmm'er Wear Cetitleasesi'm Iftrukhallse; Geed CONSTANTLY ON NAND. cTiuruiru 111 All TU uunt:u In lair44l itctrolo faehlona bie and st ' WILLIAM Ult11:11, Jr., irtarlLlS Itat maw /Tint. MoOnalmlialliasroßE. • • F, - I': lc • I • t• . foawl the Ir.l ayurWm a 1 Ciii:EPS4EC S; 14. is R. 11 olt S., AV 1N ES And 113rtiitdies.. I'ni•n t 4 • EIMI 1)1 E ); lUlelo S: To I LET A I:Tit:l,l.kt, st 72I:.1TSI'1E 4. E N ME I) ICIN Es kat Meal •511.51y.5110f 1/55.1.5 , 55 - . 1 5 , . 44 I !W.1.,' tilnilt.3111Y01•111:'111 1,1) r VIII. NI •• 0.0.11 V. Fmnte, 1111 r, nat. tinswia7n'or. - 11;•19ait'e. fI The Lorwa., t %tack of LAMI'n• 11NTKIISN. KTAVONERY, WINDOW CI -ASS .t Pl rrY Inv ogered 110talde the city, rll 11.ure .0 b 11)“, aud rout ciwapyr than ran No "' Whelp" Clot.. 14.4 thoao who druid Oda iw. MO no I will doubt au ZOOM Milt,l;t: N ON EXPLOSIVSI.• The New Ulla Petroleum Fluid ,Vigr Ito liar, light of earbos 011, and under art eirtam.tanho. • . • Can Not be 14 - 3kpl(xle( l . tunkraLetrd are vow ILINIeSaLI Slai bare for $.llO the New revrateaut Yleld.wade il dlatillattan.wlthoet the eld of compreveda. take la vaginally taking the place aVeartwe Ufl. W v" place* rata re introduced. • Agape. wanted to every fowl,. Send cir- Ca J. J. PALMER .1k.(70., N. 6 o IL v m Srviurr. irtsututtiti