` fathu Abraham , ' • LANZ2ASI'Ett CITY, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1872 Editorial Not, —The epizootic continues to steer clear of St. Louis, and the future great city doesn't know whether to rtjoice or feel slighted. —*Fronde, the Englishman, an !mutters that his share of the procecds of his whole course 1 , 1 lectures in Bs ton will he givi.n to tho :intThrers by the fire. ---Bret Ilarte is distinguishing him self in New England by breaking en gago,ments. Hartford as well as Bos• ton suffered last week of this Ilarte complaint. --Lust week the English flag disap peared from the Island of San :Nan, which, in ctimp!lance with the decision of Emperor 'William, England aban dons to the ITrited States. --They do in,t allow any fooling on a railway in England. Sir Louis Fleet wood, of Sunbury, England, refused to pay his fare on the cars, and was sent to jail tbr twenty-one days. —Of the sixty counties in New York only seven gave majorities for Greeley. MI of these seven, except t.ivhollarie, are river counties, bordering on the Hudson, and under the direct influence of Tatninany. —Professor Tyndall's proposal to put the efficacy of prayer for merely material blessing's, like recovery from illness, to a practical test, is pro nounced impious and atheistical by a meeting of preachers in New York. ----Florida is still indoubt. The State is believed to have elected 131axharn, Conservative, Governor by a small ma jority, and will, in any . event, give its electoral vote for Grant, the contest having been mainly on State issues. —lt is seriously asserted by the Hearth and hone that the prolonged dispute over the San Juan boundary between this country and Great Britain originated in the killing of a hog be longing to the Hudson Bay Company by a countryman of ours. —The Shreveport, 149., , 4 ,'Hiithwestern says that several hundred Chinese ar rive° on the lc.!th, and took the train for Longview , Texas, from which point they will walk out into the interior of Texc4 and commence throwing dirt up to he Mr. Tom Scott's railroad on. —liuehanun county, Virginia, enjoys the proud distinction of being the only county in the United States from which no returns whatever of the re cent election have been received. By its position it is isolated from the rest of the world, and is quite a terra in eag»ita. —A horrible thought dirkturtA the minds and stomachs of water-drinking Cincinnatian: _ . , •• • I : • rom e o iver,lnto w eb fickle stream reckleSs Pittsburgers cast the epizootic horses, which float down toward the Qucen City, bearing along the dreadful poison. —The President s in response to Chi cago office seekers on Tuesday, stated that no officeholder would be removed except for ineffiviency or malfeasance in office, and that in all eases of vacan ciesarising from any :use tiw position would he filled by the next in rank, if qualified and up to the tequirements of the civil service regulations. —The New York AS'io: thinks that zi revival of the practice of duelling would be an immeasurable improve ment on the method of killing men. In a duel, it says, a man has a chance for his life, hut as the human butcher ing business is now conducted. the:vic tim ha 's no farther warning of his fate than the flash of his murderers pistol. —The record or crime in New York for the past few days is sickening in the extreme. The bullet, the knife and slung shot are daily doing their death work. Possibly the appalling prevalence of crime may rouse public opinion and feeling to such a point as to cause a vigorous enforcement of justice. —The North Carolina Legislature is at a dead-lock over the United States Senatorial question. There is a Demo cratic majority in both Houses, but owing to the bitter struggle between the friends of Vance and Merrimon, the Republicans are tint without hopes of re-electing Senator Pool, the present incumbent of the office. —The American Grocer urges farmers to organize butter factories, in which all the details of manufacture and putting up can receive the best at tention. It is obvious that a farm, or family, making only a small quantity, cannot go to the expense of an ice house, cool milk room and other con veniences which give so many advan tages to a first-class factory. —The Jewish population of New York are making preparations to wel come, assist and protect the Jewish exiles from Roumania, who will soon reach this country. There will only be a few hundreds of them at this time, but there is reason to believe that there will be a very considerable movement from 'Roumania in this di rection next spring. —We recently cited a number of in stances in which the example set by the . United States in diplomacy, science and enterprise, had of late been copied by other governments. To the illustrations already given there is now to be added the fact that our school system has been adopted in Sweden, Spain, South America and Japan. In this manner the ideas of the young re public of the West are gradually in terpenetrating and interfusing the world. --Tilt- prevailing uhichtsti cliw aQO to gcth ndly I , cliev(d t.. 1);o:e lice?) con trmtott twill tile !)entocrMic. rot+,ter :tine the ckyt;on. • - election precinct carried by Wonor is in Hamp,hire county, West Virginia. '['he vote stood (PConor rtA , ltsy 1:6, linutt 1. --During the month o f Novwilber we lost forty-three minutes of day light. We know a goi many in this city who lose that notch of daylight before break fa-4. - Somebody starts a report that the PreAdent is eApetb . 4l ;co on a visit to that country. We thiuk voni ing• events do not cast their sinidows quite so far in advance. —One etliwt of the horse disease in Wheeling, is the abandonment of the stables by the rats. As soon as a horse commences to cough, the rodents make for the open air. --The .Vut lona! ,Ylttnflm.(l will be united with the ,Votioir«l nuTeraiwe Atli -of -ate Oh the first of Jantlary, Its editor, Mr. A. 'AI. Powell, will hereafter he associated with the All rooette. --The New York li"(01/, seeing no further use for Messrs. Schurz, 'Prowl hull, Sumner, Banks and other Liberal Republicans, now calls them "floating political drift-wood," and desire to get rid of them. —lion. John A. Bingham, of Ohio, who has for many years represented the Sixteenth Ohio District, is gazetted for the appointment of Minister to St. Petersburg,, vice Andrew ( /. Curtin, of Pennsylvania, resigned. —The chairman of the Virginia Re publican State Committee wants the Richmond post-othee but is afrail to ask for it on account of the civil ser vice reform mountain which Avrmiced the hopes of the Pennsylvania poli ticians. --British speculators are sending for large quantities of American oysters to plant in English waters, and expect that the bivalves will thrive, for the reason that they have some moister seasons there than can be found in any other country. —The New York World states that justifiable homicide is now held to in clude "the rase of every man who kills any other• 1111111 on account of any woman and of every woman who kilis any man on any account whatever," That is about true. —The forty-third Congress will con tain one colored Senator and six col ored Representatives, all of whom are said to be intelligent and educated, and capable of filling their several posi tions with credit to themselves and honor to their contsituency. —Fifteen hundred children pass six hours in a public school building in New York, which is so unsafe that their lives sr Inm and lasting • . The fluthoritids - cantims .4-my say, repair the building because of the lack of funds in the plundered city treasury. —Elaborate experiments made dur ing the past year by the Chief of the Engineers of the Army have led him to recommend the adoption of torpedoes for roast defence. It will cost two millions to fully equip our seaports with these terrible engines of destruc tion, and half a million to place them in the chief harbors. —Thu Commissioner of Internal Revenue decides that persons selling cigars and tobacco on railroad trains must confine such sales to the smoking ear. They cannot travel from car to car offering for sale tobacco and cigars without becoming peddlers under the terms of the !statute, and peddlers are forbidden to retail from broken pack ages. —The great and progressive North west stilt leads the van in startling novelties and astounding innovations. At the last county agricultural fair, held at Stillwater, Minn., a valuable ring was actually placed on the most comely hotly who should visit fair gronnds. This premium was really awarded, and the winning lady's name is printed in large tpye in the Min nesota journals. --The Emperor of China has taken upon himself the responsibilities of matrimony. The telegram which pro claims the fact is brief in the extreme. We are merely told that "the emperor of China was married at Pekin, on the 16th of October. There was no public ceremony outside the palace, beyond the procession to bring the bride thither, and the whole aflair passed off very quietly." —The strange spectacle is now pre sented of dual governments in no less than three States, Arkansas, Alabama and Louisiana. In Arkansas they have elected two Governors, or least both candidates claim to be elected, and both intend to act as Governor. In Alabama there are two bodies in ses sion, each claiming to be the lawfully elected Legislature. In Louisiana there are two boards of canvassers in esslon, each intending to declare dif ferent persons to have been elected Governor, State officers and Legis lature. —The Superintendent of the Euro pean and North America Railway has sent to all the employees of the road a form of pledge for them to sign, whereby they agree to abstain. from intoxicating liquors as a beverage, and the use of profane or ungentlemanly language. Accompanying the blank pledge is a circular informing the em ployees that this step is taken in con sequence of frequent complaints at the ofilre, and requesting those declining to sign to give notice of their inten tions, that their places may be filled by others. 1101 Z 4;ItEELEI Tlia et, :Oh Of Iforaao Greeley east :',.shlnlow over the whole witl"n• :Lotto{ the Sin Ceres! niournOr.; Ur(' thinql who have beets lately arrayed against hho in the political field. in deed, the friends of progress every where must feel the loss of one of their most powerful allies. A man of the people, he rose by his own elLirts to a position of as ;great, if lint greater, in fluence than any other single man has wielded ; and that influence has ever been exerted in the interest of what he hene,:tly believed to h the right. If lad few great !nen can so inneh he said; indeed, most of our .‘incrican leaders have fallen far below that standard. Of our later statesmen, Linc:iln is perhaps the only exception whose rrcord will stand the test throughout. And the gloom which overspread the nation at his tragic end has found a counterpart, to some ex tent, in that of the few days i:necceding this more reCellt 111.11.0Venieni. If the last days of the great journal ist little is known except the general fact that mind and tasty alike were shattered by the constant carp of his invalid wife and her recent death, coming as it dill HI the same time with the destruction of his political hopes. /le died at the residence of Dr. Choate, at. Mount Pleasant, on Friday evening at 7 o'clock. ills daughter Ida was the only one of the family present. his funeral took place on Wednesday, and was attended by the President and eminent visitors from t all parts of the country. When the history of the great strug gle with slavery is written, in the calmer judgment of the future, the name of I brace Greeley, and the value of his services to humanity, will he fully appreciated. Meanwhile his errors will be buried in his grave, and a gr tteful people will set before their children the example of his useful life. Indian CI v ilizal The resolution recently passed by the Legislature of the Chickasaw In dians, in favor of dividing in severalty the hinds heretofore held in common by the tribe, may justly he regarded as the most advanced step toward civ ilization ever taken by any of the In dians; and it is thought by many that should the government not insist on any territorial organization other than that now existing, many of the other tribes would follow the example of the Chickasaws. The best informed per sons seem to think that the most prac ticable way to secure their rights un der existing treaties, and to enable them to continue in their rapid pro gress toward civilization, is to leave all legislation in regard to their terri torial government and landed proper tzfto the dr ,l 43n of thii tlns 13eIve8r Itt?'whiren - hianner it Is Also held, the United States government can best fulfill its treaty obligations. Constitutional Convention. The Convention adjourned on Wed nesday until the first Tuesday in Jan uary, when it will reassemble at Phil adelphia. The propesKi amendments are legion. Among the more import ant are striking out the word "white," woman suffrage, and eganges in the jury system. On Tuesday next a con vention meets in Pittsburg to urge upon the Constitutional body the im portance of submitting an amendment prohibiting the sale of intoxicating drinks to a separate vote of thc people. We trust this may be done, as it will give an opportunity for a full and fair canvassing and a decision by popular vote untrammeled by partisan consid erations, upon a question which ranks second to none in importance. —The Philadelphia Ledger thinks enough is knowe of the administration policy to render it certain that it will favor bank if not currency expansion, which is the most powerful stimulant to activity in trade speculation. After January opens, that paper believes, it is reasonable to expect great activity in business, both here and in Europe, under the stimulus of the flood of gold currency, especially in Europe, and bank expansion in this country. The Eledorg Mot at the several State capitols on Wednesday, and cast their votes for President and Vice President. At the hour of going to press, we have not heard what action has been taken by the Democratic States. There was probably no concert of action, as the death of Mr. Greeley occurred at so late a day. Congress Met on Monday last for the short ses sion, which expires by limitation on the fourth of next March. There is much work to do, but most of the knowing ones predict a dull session and few results. We will chronicle their doings whenever there is any thing of importance to note. NM Joaquin Miller. The San Francisco News Letter, in commenting on a recently issued photo graph of Mrs. Joaquin Miller, says : "Mrs. M. has our sympathy in the fact that the likeness is good. We con gratulate her on her new hair, which nearly, but not quite, conceals the tell tale car. The drapery fails gracefully over a copy of Harper's Weekly, and successfully conceals the outlines of an anatomy which goes far to explain the restless flight of Joaquin. Mrs. M. has also considerately tucked her hands out of sight, and but for one defect the picture would be altogether pleasing. We allude to the attitude of the head, which is erect, exposing the face. If Mrs. M., at her next sitting, will but tuck her head under her arm, we think that the gen eral effect would leave nothing to be de sired." NEE S AND 11E11 ITE)is. lost al);Alt lot) Senat.ir Sturm" the P. nton fire. 4731ish Ot v` reggrded Atm Si,: editors 14 Illinois legislaturt Woodcutters an per month at !lered ;:.; 4 6. -- , :cud board Mountain, ('al. Tammany Hat with the .Ipollo :York city. relties to (..wrisoWl;ity 41 I)enit., racy t•t' N. vs- Eli VI very ill, MEM Horace Matri f irl, of Tenucssue, a candidate for t.b :peakership of 111,; Congress. Oregon, this yoar, poured tour million bushels of wheat into thfi grain lii the World. Queen Vieto*, Zia sent ; - 2.,0,0:10 to Italy for the be 'ilt of lb, ,ufrerns by the 'flood. The olbee o ssistaut A ttonney oral of the Unit States will pro dyd . ), be abolished. The Alaska 4:1 company c: ( 1 a g avcruniuut tax:4 :..f.;2•)-:1 un!:.., eatuh. the pa:4 season. A thinoeero4 belonging 'co 's menagerie died of tis: cpi:rNotio iu:-•;. Louis on Thuriutty, One hundred avid thirty-two cargoes d; wheat have been sent to England since .1 my from Cailiforn Beavers a, lanimin„; the mill streams in Kans.!, ' ltepeoplearescrvlugthe *ail, • `, • The 1 tr, 3, private, secretary, General nom Port , r, has licea elected vice president of the I 'u' tnuu Palace Car Company. A terrible aceideld. 1, :ppi ned at Ma nilla on the 12th inst. The Spa brig Genovera was,sunk in a typho.o. „old all on board lost except one seaman. Some eight hundred track layers on the Winona and St. Peter railroad are now snowed up, and fears are entertained that they are perishing vith cold an4l hunger. Mr. "do. Rack uttd pardnero struck o $3,200 nugget on Yellow Creek, Rio de la Plumes, Cal divided it with ax, and started immediately for a trip to Illinois has an wrotiaut who expects to make a trip to Calitbrnia in the spring through the air. Should this; prove suc cessful, he wilijiMprtxke it voyage across the ocean. It is pro posed to get pure milk by hav ing - t iss a law that milk men shall put a 'saddle on the cow and ride up to the doors of their customers and there milk the cows. WaHack's Theatre, New York, had a narrow escape from tire on Friday eve ning. A tire broke out, iu the same build ing while the performance was in pro gress. It was fortunately extinguished in time. The Gettysburg Association met at Gettysburg on 'Friday, and it was resolved to erect a monument to Gt.norai itdeade's memory on the site of the batty-I:c'-1, One hundred thousand dollars are to bo raised. The Gert i n minktee authorizes au unqualified • :114-1 -of the report that his Government $ notified him to the (Arta that rates of : e would be increased in order to :vent iuigration to this countr . • • • o $ away the ruins 0 • : rltet progretsses, Mune , -le •ua ies of wool are due; out, and piled 1' ely in the streets to an enormous heitht. The recovered wool has a most uiltia,vory odor, but it can be cleaned and utilized. A conduetk on one of the eastern railroads, who has been employed for twenty years, has rode over t Sto,ooi) miles, has never received any injury himself, and has never known of the slightest injure received by passengers or employees of his train during that time. A pair of horses ran away in lowa the other day, dragging the lines on the road. After going a short distance th. y met a cow, and were stopped by the lines be coming entangled in the cow's horns. The cow sat down and waited until the driver came up and recovered his pro perty. A new danger threatens society. An eminent French chemist announces that many of4hb.elogromioning silks are cover ed with pieryte'of lead, and arc theretOre liable to a tremendous explosion at any moment. It would be a terrible thing., while waltzing with a lady, to have her suddenly blow up. At the recent generel election held in Presque Isle county, Michigan, the en• tire Republican National, State and county ticket were elected. Not a vote in the whole county was cast for the Cireeley and Brown electors. Probably 18 0 other county in the United States can boast Of 80 proud a record. The oldest printer in the country is said to be Andrew C. Huston, now living at Northumberland, Penna., in his Stith year. He learned his trade with Zacha riah Poulson, and conducted the Argus in Northumberland as back as the year 1805, which was the only paper printed in that part of Penneylvnnia. A minister once told Wendell Phillips that if his business in life was to save the negroes, be--flsgbt to go South where they were and do it. "That is worth thinking of," replied Phillips ; "and what is your business in life?" "To save men from hell," replied the, minister. "Then go there and attend to your busi ness," replied Mr. Phillips. The Chinese shoemakers at North Adams have so fully mastered the busi ness that they nbw produce a larger re sult every week than the same number of white hands were accustomed to do two years ago. They work steadily, ask for no holidays, and save their earnings to a miserly degree. --No objection has been brought against them as being licentious or intemperate.. The most satisfactory election bet we have heard of was that made by a Bridgeport lady and gentleman on the eve of election. If Grant should be elected the young man should win the lady, and if Greeley should be elected the lady should have the young man. The result glows t the young man won the bet, an - a it ri stated, on authority at the young lady herself, that she is per fectly willing he should have the prize. A bill has been introduced into the In diana Legislature which provides that in cases of homicide where the plea of in sanity is set up, and the defendant is ac quitted, the jury shall specify in their verdict whether the return of "not guilty" was upon that ground, If so, the maniac, wbo in an instant of uncon trollable irresponsibility slew a fellow creature, is forthwith to be committed to a lunatic as um, not until pronounctd sane by anoThor jury, but for life or a term of years, wording to the nature of the crime charged. ct.di,ir and lot of the steam front three Lverh( d !yrs which t brea toned every instant tot xplotio. It was so hot that his companions kept two streams of water play ing on him while he was per t', this fait. A !Ireton peasant on his way to Paris, stopped at a bath( is shop in Ramhottil let. \V hile the barber was strapping his rozor the pt.:IR:In!, notices: a doff, sitting viear his chair, awl Warin' at him lio,rce ly. "What is the matter with that do;.:,?" The !tarty,. answered with an un concerned air, "That dog is always there. sen when I cut tilt' an tar Ito 101 ti, lLi t.. tll.' r. Tkit'cit Of this goy eminent, for inro!anat ion rroin tOrciptt na tions rt spi•cting the rogulations of their !. , tcomboat, scrviet., nearly all Lh Ica lin k notions of Europe hose forwarthst to the of the Trcastiry, through the State )op Irt meta the desired documents. 'lliesc will be carefully examined and : - any points which can be practically in corporated in our steamboat I:ill will he recorunwniled in the proposed aniond meat. Mr. 11. E. Cole, observer of the Inited States signal service at Boston, has made an official report relative to the auemo metrical and other observations taken by himself during the great lire in that city, which clearly shows that the phenomena were distinctly cyclonic, and which will be Canal both interesting and instructive. lie says the wind during the progress of the tire varied from north northwest to north with a velocity of from live to nine wiles psr hour, the weather being clear, cool and pleasant. On approaching the fire on the north or windward side as close as the heat would allow, the indraught of air through the burning streets assumed the character of a brisk wind, pi obably 16 or 18 miles per hour, while the heat was so iutemse as to cause the smoke, steam, etc., to be carried up in spirals to a great elevation. On the south or lee side, the Wilma currents of air were very strong, probably 30 or 35 miles pir hour, carry ing the tire bodily to the windward. This state of affairs seems to he the reverse of the Chicago tire, where the strength of the wind was sufficient to overcome the induced currents, and the fire burned to the leeward. It seems as if the high wind permitted the draught to rise at a consid • erable angle after reaching the tire, leav ing a large spaee of highly ratified air on its front, inducing stronger currents to flow in, which meeting the indraught gave a spiral or whirlwind form to the ascending current. During the lire a flock of ducks passed at a great height overhead, and the light reflected from their plumage made them appear as fire balls passing rapidly through the air. Many who saw them called them mete ors, and likened them to balls of tire said to have been seen in the Northwest, dur ing the great tire in that region. As an example of the great heat diffitsed, he states that during the night lie exposed a thermometer in the observatory to the full glare of the fire, when it rose nearly five degrees, although placed upward of 2,000 feet from the burning district, and dead to the windward of it. No other phenomena occurreil,the barometer rising slightly, and the weather remaining un changed. iyp.my in:zuttwes nF (ilk 11,1! nu 11:LVS ill! "i ' in contr. linn NV;tlt i',Onton Life, 111 , .; f.4dowing is not brave fellow crowded into "Well ?" "Well, he vats it." There is much iipeculation conci•rnin::, the cour.iii of the eley;ors of the States that went for (it( tiley, will pursue, on NVednesday, when they meet to east their votes. They will of necessity vido for siime Other p;irson, but so little time is left fin consultation between the dini,r cut StAte electors, that it seems very doubtful whether the wishes expressed Ily the I).•niocrals thal all should vote for some prominent man the party, can lm c:lrrii a wit. The pneumatic tube, for which Con gress at its last session appropriated $15,000, will soon be put in practical operation between the national capitol and the government printing office. and be put to i practical test. Mr. Albert Brisbane, the inventor, claims that he can transmit packages from New York to San Francisco by this method. Th e inside diameter of the tube laid at Wash ington is thirty-one inches, and that of the sphere, which is to be propelled through it hi atmosphere pressure, is thirty inches. Harvard's Losws. One most toa•xpected result of the great Boston tire is the effect it has in cutting oft the resources of Harvard Uni versity. This time-honort d seat of learn ing has no less than eSG-2,000 of its en dowment fund in the 'burned district. thf the buildings, which it will take $300,000 to put up again, there was insurance to the amount, of of which only about iiloo,ooo u ill be realized, :ng net loss of $2.1 , 0,000, which will have to be raised in order to rebuild. But this is not the most of the cm: :trrassnient. These propertios yielded from their rental $35,000 of the annual income of the col lege. This is tow cut ()ll', at a time when, even with all that income, the Faculty had been 0b4e.1 to practice the closest. economy ; and besides this, the Univer sity will have to discharge $12,000 of ex traordinary expenses in insurance and taxes brought on by the tire. These cir cumstances appeal with great force to the graduates and friends of the Univer sity throughout the country, of whom there arc great numbers possessing the ability to respond in a generous manner. Ancient Ugh thouse. 'lt, is sllirfirat the ' cdive •of E pt intends to turn the pyramid of thi zeh into a lighthouse. lie is an enter prising :Ind somewhat unimaginative sov ereign, prone to works of utility, and it is quite poskilde that he may cause that an cient suaumit to be CrOWned with a FreS nel is - intent and occupied by a discon tented stipendiary with a coil of Man chester wi,•king and a Coptic pitcher of clarified i`tqlZitlP. Notwithstanding the ad vaut:n.re to the twilzhboring commerce of the N ik! of such a lofty and far-twain ing flan( s, all reverent travelers vi ho have seen it from across dim levels of desert, a* nillar of cloud by day, will re rl4, to spa it turned into a pillar of tire by Tim Arabs had a tradition that thew structures were built by the inhabitalits of the older world, and alone of human works bore the burden of the flood. Whether or not this be true, they arc at least old enough to be re lea s.+ from obligations of 'utility. The tmuumied :sovereign in the basement, whoever he was in life, must experience an emotion of posthumous resentment at the mere mention of finch an employment of his towering and venerable monument. If it, were Cleopatra who slumbered there she would break from her sere-cloths iu rage at such presumption and audacity, and disperse avenging asps throughout the twenty-five palaces of the present ruler of the lands of Egypt. Anentomelrleal. Inlitoils of Epizool). Ti iikt.....hlprr :Lniung ho!,, ita,cltti the attention of mankind tr i m the oarlit axes. wrote : "Bohol,' the hand of the L r l is upon the cattle which art, in the riL Id, and upon the horses," etc. Authors, long preceding the rl.ristian era, also allude to the great mortality autoug the beasts of the field, victims of epiz..dics of various kinds. The Roman territory was ravaged hy fearful mortality among animals about the year 19J, and descending still lower in the interval, between the years Slit and 1:1111. history characterizes . liot less than some Iv, my iliti.Tent. distempers among in olkind awl animal", of which six attaci:ed cattle, t v,•,, horses, and twenty ifs in ~e neral. In the six.- teenth century the sal j-et 11-gati to re el ivc 1 hi , ;Mention of physicians, and %hiring thy , year 1) (11, after a very hot :11111 dry remote", a kind of epizootic spread among horses and cattle, and upon openin.4 the hemi,worms vJere found in the substance of the brain and in the intestines, which were tl.llll V./M.:1111.1'1_11 the 8111 t. 4.111 ,,, Or 0.10 distemper. In the year. 170 -, to 171 a terrible epi 7 . o oty wa s dissf milrited Ihronehont Europe, ea hv the impoitaiion or a simile ox from and not li s than 1 :,110,0911atii mats )•i i-da , d f r om the plague. The neral iiiptows wI re shivering and d •11;t, respiration, frequent cough ; atel the animals attacked o ften h II down as it' struck with apoplexy. At first tie - attack was :V11101.111(!ell by a re jection of food and drink, and a general prostration of strength. Such epizootics, 11./wever, were contagions, and generally and vastly more destructive that the present distemper among horses re cently renewed in the United States. To abate its virulence, and, as tar as psi -1/I,', prevent the malady, three principal objects were to be kept in view, viz : to pr,•serve the fluids from corruption, to preserve the strength of the animal, and cli anse the intestines immediately on the appearance of the disease. Holland, Great Britain, France, the Went and Asia, from time to time, have suf fered ftarfnily trout. the various distem pers and plagues which swept those countries of horses, cattle, sheep, and even the leathered tribes. As a preven tive, inoculation was tried by the various gilvernments, but it did not prove au el feetti Fronde and Burke. Thonyli treating the political history of Ireland front entirely different stand points, Mr. Fronde and Father Bunke arrive at, the sum? conclusion on one very important particular. Mr. Fronde, in his lirst lecture said he would not discuss the propriety of separation between the two countries fur it was forbidden by geography. Father Burke, in the last lecture of his series in reply to Mr. Fronde, sa3s he does not believe in in surrecthma ry movements. Ireland, ac cording to Pallier Burke, can only hope to becorlte an Unit pendent and separate country when England has ceased to exist as a nation. In this Mr. Fronde would most cordially agree with his op ponent. Father Burke, however, con soles his hear( vs by the assurance that the day of Ireland's separation from England will not long be delayed, since the British empire is in his opinion on the verge of dissolution. NVhen its dis solution arrives, then, he thinks, Ireland will become a stale in the American Union and enjoy peace and prosperity. This is a view of the subject to which we are sure Mr. Fronde will not object, though it is probably the historian does not think his country is so near its end. But when the end comes, whether next year or several centuries hence, we have little doubt Mr. Fronde and the rest of his countrymen will make no objection Lo such a settlement of the Irish question as Father Burke anticipates. It is much that both gentlemen are in accord as to the futility of attempts at insurrection. 11141(11i 116111 jollnistlisin. In view of Mr. reeley'6 recent decla ration of Independent journalism, some body has been looking over the back tiles of tile Tribioic and hos discovered the followinr from the pen of H. a. in the issue of that paper tOr January :t, 1871. Mr. Whitelaw held , the professor of "independent journalism," was manager of the Tribune at that, time : "That what styles itself an 'independ ent, journal is inevitably a fraud, we have long felt and known. The essence of its protilssic,n is an assumption of in difference to the ascendency of this or the opposite party, which does not exist. In a free state, whereof the people are intelligent, no journalist is or can be in different ; and an atlixiion of impar tiality necessarily cloaks some selfish sinister design. Marital Devotion. The epozootic has developed in Cleve land, among other things, a vast deal of marital devotion. The with of one gen tleman desired to attend the Patti con cert but was in feeble health and unable to walk. The husband put her in a stout baby carriage, and proceeded straightway to the hall where Patti was to sing, and, at the close of the entertainment, trun dled his spouse home in the same style. Another wife desired to attend the wed ding of a friend, some distance away from her residence, but the horses were all sick, and a carriage could not be had for love or money. Carefully wrapping her up be deposited her iu a light buggy, the husband took his place between the thills, and for the nonce "played horse" most eueeesssully. The scientists are now speculating upon "the great November atmospheric wave," whose existence and annual re currence, long suspected, is said to have been established by the meteoric obser vations of the signal service. Some ac count of this November atmospheric wave was given so long ago as 170:3, when, according to Defoe, the air was seen "full of meteors and vaporous fires." The "vaporous fires," at least, seem to have given place, this year at least, to an at mosphere of icicles. Intelligence from the scene of the trouble between the United States troops and the ISledoe Indians, in Oregon, shows that it is more serious than at first re ported. The Indians attacked the Tule Lake settlement and killed three men, the women escaping to a neighboring settlement. State aid has been asked for, as the settlers are short of arms and am munition. The settlements are being warned of the dancer. The National Democratic Committee have issued a letter declining to advise the electors of the several states that voted for the Baltimore nominees as to the course which they shall l ursue in consequence of the death of Horace Greeley. They believe that futura con ventions will provide for such a contin gency, and do not deem it prudent to set a precedent. prifti v icniisch Nei/silt a ; -; --- ..::".-- v 4 , o • .„,.., Ttity:i..,., N, s , ' N'... Vi 4 .; • 1 \ I * / ) lit &i'*ili ~:.i..,-..._.,4 .. ' l ' i i ' l l .:+ ' '‘' ‘,. : ..\ \. •S ‘s. -. ', ''' S l. . — .- -_ , ....-''':' -,-- ' -- - . :.;t l r .• 'N). ; . '. ip;o• - • - _ - •:-...-7,- : _b/ A 4 k , -,!, ~,,,,, ' 11 ‘ fir,EF l'i:i . l . SCllli EFFELIIRENNEit. ■ !'( . 111.1r1'1:11 . . , k1 N. 1)1'1'11 1 r .11 I isTEr. : Ilevvy hut widtler anu,lll au nett in t brain kill) slit( tka, tin wrinti se innolil ultra niinrl tit * tnauht of e l / 1 1:1S (1(.1111 .r( 14 14' :11V 11( t .1)0 fadt is, se is elAniilils dais Sl` )11Shi acs kMIII, tit der r hate ich vte.2; thr I • rcetla in der fiinii:y is a lialtat is se ultra weg hawa Ehra notion is das ich midi gor Mtn my ob gevva soil fun weaga polities. Se behawpt de 1( it deltia yustit fun mocha ivvcr my breelit im I odder _Abraham, un dass de leading poifyti:-beners lurch yusbt usa for ehra eagny benefit, un doss Bei dog un des dung se tiler any how kea office g( vva. Der llorace Gree ley sauga se w:er doh tiir a paar dog [(mold draw gone a OUR shl.erwa, un doss er fort g'maelit I ut on seller I issmss bis er dolit war. I'll sell hut. de llevvy of de notion gi !maid, (lass ich des poliths welisa of get - va Fet odd( rner om end aw 110111 Awt r, mit 1111 1'1• is es gor net we's alit ern Greeley war. Es is wnhr, ich Lin aw an literery l t cr,uv, yuslit, we der Greeley, aver my of nn st ins is of ..E.ll4lisli wo iner in il shoola ;:,•: it. My (kits!' awcr met uat in tip:- , 11(4) - ::1, , AN , Ch will mils es of India fur sicli r, exactly we ielt 's gedu hob. I 'll sell proirft(larm icli (le• cidedly ahead bin fum Horace ( ieele.y. Awer, ich 11111S3 confess etas weil oily leit sttherwa ndssa, kaun 's aw bappena dash es aw on my turn kummt antebl elms fun derma dog, y talit tncr webs evva net «Allll. Awer, MI du with sheer fergessa. muss der now aw shreiva wnss es is dass llovvy hawa will day ich du set. I)u kennsht 's net esea of a Itoned. mold . Awer ich will der's sauga. Se hut ano Lion dos khan gonsy variety fun g'shefta awfonga set. Itn arslita platz mehut se. ich set an jewelry rhtore Manila weil so. ()Frick feel leit awfongs nei gehua for de brass watcha kett a en aw oniwr patent gold wo se kawfa beim punt odder lei der halb bushel, lie's ferkawfa tsu der feels norm de noeh.om lehwa se mehnt ich kenut aw goot du wann ich aw nei geh debt fa- de:aft iu bleeh•g'sharr so we pint blechcr, coffee konna, butter kessle, brod ponna un liebter shtick. Un se is aw of her opinion dass Hi mar aw an photograph machine hawfa set un nei sea for kit obnemma on a bolwer dahlt r 's shtick. Un 'loch an branch fun der bissucss wo de Bovvy ha Wit will das ieh shtarta soil is deale in retail milliner goods. Sell denkieh awe r wier ordlich risky, for s^ sauga de Constitutional Convention het int sine an provision macha for hp. de Constitution nei shteeka so dass es unconstitutional merit for de fashions for weibsleit bonnets efter das eh mold ally mohnat tsu ferennera. Alle weil is de milliner bissness first rate, for nine °us oily tsea shanleit missa all ehra ferdeensht betzahla on de minima s so dass ehra weiver aw in der fashion sin so Ivohl dass de niche leit. Un noch an bissuess branch dass de lfevvy hawa will dass ich shtarta set is an shneider shop, for custom nu oily onnery sort :erwet. Es is aw noch an gooty bissness dass de Bevvy awer gor net Onentioned hut, tin sell is kee melka um de helft, provided de kee gevva plenty millich. A wer, Mister - Printer, de Bevvy is a wenuich queer. Ich glawb anyhow ich Weil) noch a while doh in Schliffeltown un shreib der aw oily woch an fthher, neier tweet; so diner dass aw govt un nich ally leit. Excuse bad shpelliug. Yours trooly, PIT SCHWEFFLEISREN N R The small-pox lately took oil a very old and eccentric man of St. Louis known as Dr. Hotchkiss. He claimed to be 140, having been a Mason over 100 years. and expressed a determination to live until the second coming of Christ, It is said that for twenty years he bad not washed himself or permitted a broom on the place. He claimed, also, a supernatural agency in healing the sick. General Crook is visiting Indian dep redations with summary punishment. This accords fully with the adopted poli cy of the government, which has been much misrepresented in this respect. It is to try the methods of peace, failing which, to use decisive measures. focal Jews. NEW OFFICERS: The changes in the different county offices at the Court House took place on Mepday. The following is a list of the new officers, with their clerks : Sheriff—Amos Groff, with Samuel:Hess, B. F. Rowe and John M. Hess as subordinates. Register—Jeremiah Rohrer, with F. S. Al bright and B. Bauman as s ubordinates. Prothonotary—Wm. M. Slaymaker, with W. D. Stauffer and W. E. Kreider as subordinates. Clerk of Orphants' Court—Capt. Abram Set tley, with S. L. Kauffman as subordinate. Clerk of Quarter Sessions—John W. Urban, who retains Mr. Barton as clerk. RESIGNATION : On Friday last David Bair, jr.' tendered his resignation as Jury Commissioner, for the county of Lancaster, w hich was accepted by Judge Livingston, and Luther Riche' ds esq.. app o intedls stead.: ,