gannoter inttlitfienta. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1887 arculate the Intelligencer. The long winter evenings are coming on, when in their quiet and comfortable homes the farmers and laboring men of Ladcaster county will have plenty of leisure for reading. What they espe cially need is a newspaper which will give them news from all parts of the world, a review of the political events of the day, choice literary matter, a complete summary of local affairs, and full reports of tLe markets. Such a paper is the WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER. It is admitted to be second to no weekly paper published in Pennsylvania. After the Ist of January we propose to en large it greatly. It is very cheap at $2 a year as it is, and yet we are now offering it, with the proposed enlarge ment, from the present time to January 1et,1869, for the old price. Many are being added to aux, list, but there are hundreds of Democrats in the county who do not get it. Wherever an active man in any locality has made a little exertion he has invariably found his neighbors ready to subscribe. We hope all our readers will make an effort to add to our list between this and the beginning of the New Year. Let none treat this request as most people do sermons, regard it as being meant for sonic one else. We mean you reader, you who are just now reading these lines. You have a neighbor who ought to subscribe. He needs the paper him self—lf he has a family they need it.— See him. Speak to him about the mat ter the very first time you meet him.— Ask him to subscribe, urge hiin to sub sci•ibe, do not let him rest until he does subscribe for the INT 1.3.1.1(1 CER. He will be thankful to you for what you have done, his family will all thank you, and you will have the conscious ness of knowing that you have done your neighbor a kindness, done us a kindness, and done something toward aiding materially In the great political contest now going on. The coming Presidential campaign will be the most Important and exciting the country ever witnessed, and the chief agency 00 which we must rely for success is the press. Then let every reader or the I NTELl,olomuut resolve to do his best between this and the begin ning of the New Year to increase our circulation. Lk) to work at once, mu/ go to work triNi rt will. Remember money can be mailed in large or small sums at our risk. TIIE molest.ltadleal ticket Is (Intuit I'm. President 11.11(1 Forney for Vice frost• dent. So a Itadleal newspaper says. Tut: State Superintendent of Cow -11100 Schools Is 1)001 a had politician and a bad grammarian. IL Is hard to tell whleh IM worst, Ids polities or his gram mar. Both are horrible. TII la SIN: Radical members of the new Legislature held a caucus at Pitts burg, on the I4th, and arranged matters generally about the prospeotive spoils. They must, be a hungry set. 'l'm: Republicans of Grant's ONVII and in \Vashingtou City refuse to in dorse him for the Presidency. They are afraid to trust him. Do not believe Lint to be sound. Tic: New York I.lclold says " Old Thad" is to be invited by the Conserva tive Republicans to take a back seat in Congress. If he is able to get into the Louse, he will show them who will take a back seat. 'rm. State Superintendent of Coin mon Schools It Pennsylvania cilium , write two consecutive paragraphs o grammatical English. See extraets Ilou the Erprem.4 or yesterday for proof 0 our assertion. WA IT until the Presidential election and then—so say the Radicals, will meaning twists of the neck. 'Phis i. like the beaten school boy threatenini his adversary with a big brother, wilt is coming home from a whaling voyage 'nth: Stalc Uttar(' is a new daily paper to be published at Harrisburg, begin niug on December 2d, the• prospectus fur which has been issued by J. It. Dunglison, \Vein Forney and L. Knoll'. man. It is to be Republican in polities. he State Superintendent of Com mon Schools were to submit to an ex amination, as the teachers are compelled to do, lie would not be considered lit to teach a class in English (trainmar. See extracts front his communication iii yesterday's Express, if you doubt it. 13 tiT ',ER'S butler bay ng secreted some tea-spoons from his master's cupboard, at Lowell, (with various luitials,) the General reproved hlin sternly, saying, " When I took you for my butler, I did not think you would take me for your New Orleans!" The darkey fainted. (h N. i\tc(2l.m.LAN was expected to start for home last week, and extensive preparations were being made to give him a magnificent reception In New York. The latest all vices announce a change of programme, however, and he will spend the winter in France, return ing in the Spring. NANY Of our entemporaries are ask • iug, "what will Cougress do." The best thing the Radical members could do would be to go hang themselves. Judas did so when be had betrayed his master. They have betrayed their masters, the people. Let them imitate Judas Iscariot. THE cost of the Military establish ment in Virginia during the last ten mouths has been over $5,000,000. This is exclusive of the cost of registration and other minor affairs. HOW long do the taxpayers desire to pay the expense of voting negroes iu Len States at that rate? TUE recent elections in Arkansas, Florida and Mississippi have resulted in negro victories. The whites almost uni versally declined to vote, and the black Republicans had it all their own way. They now propose to pass a law dis franiddsing all the whites who did not vote. An elegant state of affairs, truly. THE FAMOUS Missouri Test Oath case has at length been decided. It will be remembered that Francis P. Blair, Jr., was denied the right to vote because he refused to take the test oath. He ap• pealed to the Supreme Court, and that tribunal declared the State Test Oath uncouNtitutional, thus sustaining Blair. GOVERNOR GEARY pardoned William Carson, of Philadelphia, who has just been sentenced to six months imprison- Ment, and $250 flue for robbing a man in a gambling game at cards. The great est criminal need only approach the Government in the right way to be sure of escaping the penalty of the law.: TILEBE has been considerable gossip in Washington for a few days past of an unpleasant character in relation to John W. Forney. It was rumored that he was some fifty thousand dollars be hind hand in his accounts as Clerk of the Senate, and that lie had transferred ttu his real estate to his wife. Investi gation, It is said, ,does not fully sub- Atantiate the .suspiclons. His accounts Atte behind hand, but it is said he will be able to pay up. A Republican exchange says it does not expect much from Congress this winter; that the time will be taken up in skirmishing for the next Presidential contest. We have no doubt it is quite right. No good thing can be expected from such a gathering of fanatics and .corrupt political adventurers. LAWRENCE COUNTY, Ohio, gets the magnificent banner offered•by the Dem ocratic State Central Committee for the largest gain. The gain was 1,321 votes. There were three townships in Ohio in which not a single Radical vote was cast, the three casting an aggregate vote of over 900. Healthy spots to dwell those. THE New York State Constitutional Convention Las re-assembled, but, as the late election in that State renders it certain that negro suffrage and other proposed Radical innovations cannot be carried, the probability is the body will dissolve and be laid away as so much more dead and useless political rubbish. THE Times thinks " that unless the Republicans abandon some of their hobbies, that they will be overwhelm ed in the Presidential election.— Shouldn't wonder. As Hudibrus bath it: t• So guilty sinners In a State, Call by their crimes prognosticate, And In I hull' eonsclence feel pain, Some days befure a slower ut rain THE New York Wm*/ says it is con stantly receiving letters from men lu all parts of the North who were subjected to unjust and illegal imprisonment un der the Lincoln dynasty. The letters endorse with earnestness the proposi tion to held a Convention of such per sons In New York city, on the 22d of February next. TIIE Hattiellk lidnilL that the cost of voting the negroes In the South will not he less than :477,,00n,000 for the present year. Lel the workingmen of the North think of that. Every dollar of it Is wrung from their toll. $7.5,000,0n0 a year to keep ten States impoverished and subject to negro rule. ILOW do you like it fellow working men. Sc:\ tE of the Northwestern Eepubli. cans are advocating the election of an other Secretary of the Senate to take the place of Forney. They may easily lind a acre honest and decent nun] for the position, but they will not readily find a fellow with two newspapers, both daily, ready at all times to do the dir tiest kind of work for thew. We l o udly think they can i:pare Forney. TIIE Indepr ndrnl says : " Out of every three. Republicans whom one meets, two are chiefly anx lous for the success of negro suffrage, mild the third lor the success of (kn. Grail t„" the edi tor proceeds to state t h at " this third Republican will most likely be found to have either retrained liana voting at all ut the late elections or to have voted with the Dirmocrati,." Ni: Yon!: will elect a :\layor on De cember The Democrats have two candidates, the preerfe Mayor liollman, of the Tammany wing, and Fernando Wood, of the Mozart. 'The Republican candidate is William A. Darling. As each branch of the Democracy polled over -111,000 votes at the late ele,tion, and the whole lteliti bikini vote was but there is not the slightest chance for Mr. Darling. Simi.: the recent election in Maryland the Radical Congressional Committee are said to be progressing very slowly in their inquiry as to whether that State has a Republican form of ( tovernment. They spent, one whole day recently in vestigating the case of a negro woman who only recovered one cent damage iu a suit for assault and battery. The re porters have not been able to asey,rlain what they intend to about it. IT appears that the Southern Conven tions are to he rllll upon credit_ Loyal papers advise the darkey representa tives to look to Congress for the pay ment of their expeuses. By all means. Why not? What right has the coun try to expect that Soutnern lcyalty should not reimburse itself for weal and tear front the coffers of the nation ? That is the way in which ;Northern loyalty gets paid. A Radical exchange says: "General tirant has not raised his little finger to keep the Republican party from a dis• graceful defeat." We opine that the raising of the (ieneral's whole hand would not have affected the result, in any particular•. The people are not par ticularly interested at this time In what he thinks or does, and he has too much horse sense to trouble himself about It. The public mind is bent on the over throw of the Radical rule-or-ruin fac tion, and a thousand (Inuits would not divert them from their purpose. lIIM=2 THE New Hampshire Democratic State Convention assembled at Concord on the 14th. John (1. Sinclair, of Beth lehem, was nominated for Governor; and resolutions favoring equal taxation and the repeal of all the stringent pro- Ilibitory laws were adopted. The gal• lant Denmc•acy of the I iranite State are well disciplined, highly elated by the victories of the party in other portions of the Union, and will make a bold and spiritei contest. We believe they will rescue the State froin Radicalism. TiE threat of Mrs. Lincoln to tell all she knows about the frauds, cheatings, swiudlings, &c., carried on by the lead ers of the Mongrel party, has produced a terrible fluttering among that gentry. They, in retaliation, threaten to tell all they know about Mrs. Lincoln. They boldly hint at something worse than " indiscretions" on the part of the "rosy Empress." They will make out the morals of the White House as tad as its politics during the reign of the " late lamented." Pr is said that scone of the Raiflea meinhers M . Congress propose to nomi nate General Grant at a Congressional caucus, and to dispense with a national convention, which they think would be a scene of hitter quarreling and the source of discontent and disaffection. They cannot, heal the wounds In their party in any such way. The Democracy care little who the Radicals nominate, or how it is done. They are confident of success in the great contest of next year. The great political reaction has only fairly begun. IT Is said the ungrammatical State Su perin tendeut of Common Schools aspires to fill Old Thad Stevens' seat in Con gress; and it is generally believed that the old man has sworn not to die until the silly fellow promises not to bring his memory into disrepute by squabbling for the succession. Let the Professor agree to be satisfied with a seat in the legislature, stealings included, that the grim old chief may depart this life in peace. Neither grammar nor honesty are of much account in a Radical Legis lature, nor in Congress either, for that matter. BIRTHDAY PRESENTATION.—Last Satur day, being the return of Rev. W. V. Got weld's birthday, the Reverend gentleman was the recipient of u number of valuable presents froth the lady mena hers of S t.John's Lutheran (Thumb. They comprise, among other thinge,A sll t hat, line beaver cloth overceal,.. hair album, large fruit cake, pocketknife, cte...--.4,1cpre.44. " Float &banal" ;That is suggestive o love. We believe tice Revetonal Gen tieman is not worried. Prof. Wlekersham—Uls Truthfulness, Ms Sword, Ills Urammar. We wondered why the Express, when it championed our friend, the political preacher, so zealously, bad not a single word to say in regard to Prof. Wicker sham, to whom, in the generosity of our heart, we gave some excellent advice, which he would have done well quietly to have heeded. He is a sillier dunce than we took him to be. He informed the editor of the Express that he would attend to us in person, and he has at tempted to do so. 'Far better would he have fared if ue had left the blackguard of the Express to manage his case.— " Would that mine enemy would write a book " said Job. Had such things then been invented Job would have been sufficiently avenged on most of his ene mies if he could have induced them to publish a few paragraphs iu a news paper. Not one literary pretender in ten can pass through that ordeal, par ticularly if he be in bad humor, with out making a foolish spectacle of him self. That the weak, vain, shallow smatterer, Wickersham, has done most effectually. We assert that after a rambling harangue of an hour or so. in which appeared nothing but the most common place political clap trap, Prof. Wicker sham did cap the climax of his folly by pronouncing in favor of negro suffrage, in terms sufficiently plain to be under stood by any man or woman of sense who was present, and we know that he was so understood by the audience.— Yet he denies it. We are sorry he llhs so little regard for the truth. He does not attempt to deny that he makes political speeehes, and he Insists that he will continue to do so. In so declaring he admits the, truth of what we charged, and shows that lie is unfit to fill the responsible office to which he has, unfortunately for the interests of the Common School system, been elevated. l li sets a limit for himself, however, and says: "I shall stop at this point—until My sword's my own." That sword flourish Is dramatic, but slightly incomprehensible. A Itetubll• can friend suggests that the Professor meant the sword he wore when lie went to war, "training so bravely in the militia." Ills campaign was very short, all his wondrous deeds of valor, of which lie habitually biaists, being performed lu a thirty days' campaign against some imaginary copperheads up in the coal regions of this State. Ile was a Colonel, a real live " Militia Kurnel," having been appointed by political favor over a body of men raised by a real soldier. He wore his trappings with ostentatious vanity long after his brief term of ser vice expired, and we believe did not lay aside the blue vest with brass buttons and the military hat with long gold cord until some months after Lee's stir. render. I - 1k sword was always kept hanging on his lied-post, except when brought forth to exhibit to admiring friends, especially " school-marms." That is no doubt the identical sword re ferred to in print. The" Kurnel" winds up his silly communication with the following very original and exceedingly dignified paragraph : One meets, in other towns than I,ancas ter, little curs that snappishly hark in front, or sneakingly Hie behind. My custom has always been either to pass by tinnotieed all such insignificant creatures. ~r, if they be came too troublesome, to kick them out of the way. My intention is to continue the practice. It must be gratifying to the Professor to know that there are no such crea tures in Lancaster. That is what he says. lie meets them "In other towns Mon Lancaster "—none here. We have a suspicion lie meant to include us, but he seems not to have had sufficient skill in framing a sentence to do so. That is not the only specimen of bad English there is in his communication. Here is a HVlltence which we want all the school teachers in the State to try to parse. H one of them succeeds in doing so, according to any known rules of English (;runnuu•, we will send him or her a copy of the INTELLitiENCER, or any other weekly newspaper in the United States, free of charge for one year. The sentence is this: I never have, :Ina I never will prostitute my official position as Superintendent of Schools to ii partisan or sectarian purpose, Go to now, you ignorant blackguard ! Mend your manners and your grammar! Both are sadly in need of it. You are a more egregious ass, even, than we took you to be. What a sad commentary on the Common Schools of Pennsylvania is furnished by this vulgar and ungram matical communication of the vain glorious ignoramus who stands at the head of ti o it is enough to make any intelligent citizen hang his head in shame. Sued for libel We were waited upon by Constable Baker on Monday, and politely in formed that the Trustees of Itev. Mr. tiotwald's Church had commenced a prosecution against us for libel, founded upon the article which appeared lu our paper on Friday. We presume the Christian gentlemen referred to are anxious to have the matter fully investigated. We assure them we shall throw no obstacles in the way of such a laudable undertaking. On the contrary they will find us ready at the proper time to render them every assistance in our power. Their Names A friend from the country asked us for the names of the gentlemen who figure as prosecutors of the libel suit against us for words spoken in reference to Rev. \V. V. Coiwald. They are, Daniel S. Bare, John J. Cochran, 'Mar cus C. Selmer, B. B. Martin and Henry Baumgardner. They style themselves "Committee of the Council of St. John's Lutheran Church." THE Express of Saturday evening has a characteristiceditorial. The felon who does the scribbling for it isas abusiveas lfe knows how to be. Being but an ig norant, uneducated ass, without wit, his attempts at severity always degenerate into the most stupid and common-place personalities. Iu his repeated attacks upon us he has never been able to utter a word calculated to provoke more than a smile of contempt. We have greatly the advantage of him. If we chose to sink ourselves to his dirty level, we could rake up his past career and hold him up to public scorn in attitudes which would .make him writhe in an agony of shame, if he be sensible to such an emotion. We have purposely refrained from engaging in any such warfare, because we have always been able to put our columns to much better use. We may eventually feel con strained in undertaking what we feel fully justified in doing. Should we conclude to lay aside dignity just for once, we will, we think, give him a scoring which he will rememberduriug the term of his natural life. We really pity the scurvy fellow, and his abuse is so stupid and pointless that we can afford to laugh at it yet awhile. THE N. Y. World announces that Alexander H. Stephens, of Georgia, Iras been invited by several leading men of both political parties to deliver an ad dress on the actual condition of affairs in the South. That is a move in the right direction. Let leading Southern men of moderation and judgement be heard in this crisis. The people of the North vain eagerly listen to their views. They are prepared to reason On the great, issues of the day, and will read and carefully weigh the words of such men as Mr. Stephens: Improprieties at the Teachers' Institute. Pennsylvania is justly proud of her. Common School System. The means of securing a fair English education are thereby placed within thereachof every child in the State. Year by year these nurseries of the intellect of the common wealth have continued to improve, as teachers have become better fitted for the important work committed to their hands. The terms during which the schools are kept open have been length ened, the school houses have been im proved, apparatus has been provided, a general interest in the course of edu cation has been awakened in the minds of parents, and teachers have learned to respect and honor their vocation. Among other agencies which ought to be made efficient in promoting the course of common school education are those periodical assemblages of teachers known as District and County Insti tutes. To encourage teachers to attend them, provision is generally made for allowing the time thus spent to be de ducted from the term for which they are engaged to teach. When these Insti tutes are properly conducted there is no doubt that the pupils gain instead of losing by this arrangement. It Is pos sible for a teacher to more than make up for the loss of a few days by increased efficiency. The Lancaster County Teachers' In stitute has become an affair of consider able magnitude. Most of the districts allow the teachers a holiday for the occasion, and for a week the . large hall of the Court House is crowded daily and nightly with an interested and appre ciative audience. We hope and believe that some good is annually done by these gatherings. We are sure that by proper management they could be made a most efficient agency for promoting the cause of education. The teachers who are employed hi the rural districts are generally very young, the salaries given not being sufficient to induce thew to make teaching a Ilfe-time loud -0 ess. They need to be taught, and a week properly spent at a Teachers' in- stilute ought to give them valuable Ideas lu relation to a proper perform !MOO of the important duties devolving upon thein. We fear the proper course is not pur ' sued at the Teachers' Institute in this county. It is not made a week of prac tical training for the keachers iu attend• ance. Too touch of the time is taken up in things more showy and pleasant than useful. There are lectures, some of them pleasant and entertaining, some of them able and profound, but few of them of the kind best suited to such an occasion. It is a much easier matter to string together a set of glittering gener alities, such as are calculated to elicit the plaudits of a crowd of young people, than it is to instruct a class of teachers In regard to the duties which appertuifi to their dully calling. Yet udozen words of sound practical advice, advice which will be acted upon in the school-room, are worth volumes of plausible plati tudes and pleasant poetical readings. We have been led into making these remarks by listening to two lectures de livered before the Teachers' Institute now iu session in this city. On Wed uesday evening Prof. Wickersham, State Superintendent of Common Schools, delivered a lecture. From him we would naturally have expected au address containing at least some prac tical suggestions to those under his care. To him the teachers of our common schools look up, as to the head of the system. He ought to be familiar with it, cognizant of ifs workings, conscious of its detects, and ready to suggest means of improvement. He ought to, talk to the teachers of their duties, to show them what is expected of them, to encourage them in a faithful, consci entious and painstaking discharge of the arduous work in which they are engaged. If he be lit for his position he should be able to do that. We are sorry to say there was nothing of the kind in his lecture. It was a sort of hybrid political harangue, with just enough relation to education to remind one occasionally that the speaker felt that his stump speech was not quite the thing under the circumstances. Mr. Wickersham is too much of a politician for the place he occupies. We had oc casion to notice an exceedingly dis tempered harangue which he deliver ed at a political meeting in this city just before the State election. That we deemed out of place. If he attends properly to his ditties as Superintend ent of Common Schools he will not find time to run round the country deliver ing bitter partisan speeches. Ile has no business to do so at any time. No State Superintendent ever did so before him. Still more out of olace is it for him to make stump speeches at a Teachers' Institute. He may believe in universal negro suffrage, but he is not pald by the taxpayers of Pennsylvania for going about us au itineraut lecturer on that subject. The people of this Slate have a right to demand that Professor Wick ersham shall either give his attention to the duties of his office or re sign it Into the hands of some one who will do so. They do not want a political mountebank at the head of the Common School system of the State. We are sure that all thinking men, without respect to party, will agree with us in this view of the matter. If a ma jority of the people of Pennsylvania agreed with Prof. Wickersham in re gard to universal negro suffrage, they would not desire him to convert the Com mon School system into an engine for the propogation of his peculiar political theories; but when it is well known that a vast majority of them are bitterly and unalterably opposed to any emit degradation of the elective franchise, the stump speeches which he gets off at Teachers' Institutes and elsewhere are a direct insult to them, and an outrage on all propriety and decency. Let him either earn has salary by attending to the proper duties of his office, or resign it into the hands of some honestAquali fied person wlto Will 110 so. From all we have seen of Mr. Wickersham it is our conviction that he is a mere shal low smatterer at the best, and by his course he has shown himself to be en tirely unfit to occupy the position which he seems determined to disgrace. But there was another lecturer to whom we feel compelled to pay our respects. He Was a sleek, smooth, oily tongued fellow, well-dressed, well-kept and blessed with quite a diarrhcea of words. He was au Adonis of a little man, but, unlike his prototype, evi dently not insensible to the charms of female beauty. He was a preacher, much,we fear,after the"God-and-rnoral• ity" style of that class. He had honey ed phrases for the "school-warms," as he styled them, very pleasant words of flattery, softly mingled with pious ejaculations and curses of popery and other abominations. As he proceeded with his harangue we somehow thought of Gettysburg, not of its battle-field, but of certain other transactions which once roused quite a storm among the godly and ungodly people of that little town. We remembered something about a prosecutionfor fornication and bastardy, in which the defendant was a political preacher, and how a loyal legislature granted a change of venue—and we wondered whether the dear, little duck of a man could really have been guilty. Strange fancies will keep running in people's heads sometimes, and we are often at a loss to trace the springs of good or naughty thoughts back to their source. How did it happen that we should have been thinking of Gettys burg, and not of Its battle field, during the course of the whole lecture of a handsome and wordy preacher? We cannot explain, and must leave our readers to conjecture. The lecture of Rev. Mr. Gotwald, a synopsis of which will be found else where among the proceedings of the Teachers' Insti tute,was a sort of modern moral climax, in which he ascended by regular steps from the question, what is God ? to the query, what is man ? In an swering this last interrogatory he went to the extremest advanced Radical view of the negro. He gloried in the fact that in Massachusetts, the model repub lic, negroes sat side by side with white men in the legislative halls. This was received with mingled applause and hisses. He exultingly proclaimed the hope that the next Mayor of Washing ton City might be a negro, and thought any such sable official would be dis graced by being compelled to occupy the same carriage, on some State occa• sion, with " the accidental President." [Another storrnof applause and hisses.] He advised the teachers to cultivate such political views in the minds of the rising generation. Now . we submit it to all candid people of all parties, whether such harangues are just the right kind of thing at a Teachers' Institute. Are they in any way connected with the cause of our Common School system? Are they calculated to aid teachers in a conscien tious discharge of their work? Does not every one know that politics cannot be Introduced into our public schools with out immediately impairing their effici ency, and ultimately destroying the system. If teachers' institutes are to be converted into a sort of a bear garden for the display of the talents of political preachers and other political spouters, the sooner there is an end of them the better. We hope the County Superin tendent will not allow any such thing to occur again. It is his duty to see to it that these gatherings are made sea• sons of Improvement to the teachers of the county ; and not occasions for silly fanatics to air their peculiar political notions. Wha; we have written Is forced from us by au honest concern for the general good. As a public Journalist we could not witness such a prostitution of an importune occasion without enter ing our protest against it. To I: EtpreBB says, speaking of us : "so long as the respectable members of he old ilrin remained, solos restraint was kept upon his vulgar instincts, hut with their withdrawal all pretense of editorial decency disappeared." We will Inform the Express that from the 11rst day of the establishment of the Duily in/ea/veneer until the present, we have had entire control of its edi torial columns. Except in one Instance, unless we were absent, nothing has appeared in its editorial columns with out our personal supervision and sanc tion; and comparatively very little which did not come directly from our pen. We shrink from no responsibility, and wecould not possibly command the commendations of the L'xpress without being recreant to the cause of political truth and honesty. The fact that it assails us so bitterly shows that our at tacks upon the corrupt and revolution ary party which it sustains tell with trenchant force. One honest Repobllean We find the following notice going the rounds of our Radical exchanges and gladly give it a place in our columns. It is refreshing to know that there was one honest man among the Radical politicians. It is a pity he is dead : John A. Andrew, whose recent desth Is so widely mourned, unlike an army of public and private men, realized no personal pro fits [ruin thu misfortunes of his country during the civil W.I. lie left Mitre poorer than he entered it, and wits obliged to de. cline a re-election its ,vta•uor of Massa chusetts in order to support his family by Iris practice as a lawyer. lie has it lite policy of slo,ooo, and beyond this leaves but little to his family except a reputation that is beyond all price—to them and to his countrymen. Last ye.tr his friends pro• posed to send hint of Congress, and con• tri huted a purse of money that would place hint 'Move the nevessity of legal praetice; lint he ref used to sacrifice his independence, stud declined the oiler. FAcTs have come to light showing that the exorbitant whisky tax WasOsed through the connivance of a "ring" who bad bought up almost all the whisky in the country at a low figure, and who had paid the nominal tax then levied thereon, awl who, when the preset - 1C tax was itn u,sed, Sold their stock at immense profits. We were told only lately that when the tax on whisky i‘ as at the old rate, the Ilovernment could and did collect more revenue from the manufacturers of the article than is now gathered.— fi l arrisburg Telegraph,. The !acts alluded to by the Tdcgraph, are not new. It was more than sus pected at the time that the Radicals in Congress were paid large sums of money for their votes on that question: The jobbery In Washington In these last days is like that practiced so openly by Radical legislators at Harrisburg. No Chance for firma as a Radical Can The New York herald, which has been the most devoted advocate of the claims of General Grunt as a Presiden tial candidate, has a very strong edi torial on the " negro Conventions in the Southern States,, and their effect on the North,'' in which it emphati cally declares: If General Grant accepts the Radical nomination upon such a platform as the Radicals now tread he will be beaten, despite his national popularity and his masterly re ticence. General Scott was defeated where there were similar but minor principles in volved, and Presidi tit Pierce, with till his imbecility, then stepped into power. The Hcru/r/ sees what is in the future. Any eanoidate whom the Radicals way put up be defeated. The people of this country are not prepared to turn the greatest uation in the world over to the wild rule of a set of barbarian ne., groes, just freed from slavery. • The St, Louis Democrat or Tuesday says that the exchanves from Western NI issouri aril Kansas have lately briuight many 11, C. , [lllls of disasters from prairie fires, Lsini sequetit on the re , ent drought. It finds the i,ll”wing flirt iu the Law l•enre (Kansas) Tr, - bane of the .sth instant: The tlauu•s would Hip roads, str,•:uns, and even plowed fields, the swuir as if no obstruction existed. One tanner had care fully burned all the grass in the vicinity of his farm some weeks since, and lie states the tire ran over it as rapid:} and with as much fury as though it had not been burn ed. The majority of farmers had plowed and burned around previtedy, to protect than from tire, but the dames would leap far over and catch in stacks orgrain hun dreds of feet beyond. It Is estinhiled that the loss in that vicinity is mtt. less (lam twelve or Bitten thousand dollars. It is stated that the tire kept on its course, and on Wednesday and Thursday, burned out the entire crops of the country between Vashington and Hoek creeks, doing an lin. rnense amount of damage. In one vicinity six farmers lost everything. Views of ,enntor Dixon Senator Dixon, of Connect icutt, is a mod erate and sensible Republican. Ile has just arrived in 'Washington, and is reported to express himself as Pillows: The Senator is in excellent health and jubilant over the result of the recent elec tions. Ile considers the (Ilan;, in the public mind to be deep-seated and perma nent, and not merely a transient one, likttly to be altered a year hence, when the people come to elect a new President. The Senator expresses the opinion that not even General Grant could carry the country with him on a radical platform now, and that, in fact, radicalism had been prostrated, never to raise its head again. One effect of the elec tions, he chinks, will be the practical aban donment of impeachment, either formally, by an adverse report sustained by the House, or sob silentio, by letting the thing die out of its own accord from want of no tice or agitation. Should Congress attempt to suspend the Prygi - denl pending trial the Senator considers , it a question of very grave doubt whethbr it would not be the President's plain duty to resist what could not be regarded otherwise than as a usur pation of power by Congress. The Alnbninn Convention Faroe The proceedings of the mongrel Conven tion, now sitting in the capital of Alabama, furnish abundant food for serious reflection. A statement of its composite elements and a summary of the proceedings cannot fail to be interesting and instructive. It was formally opened on thepth instant by a longwinded prayer from a high color ed chaplain, who invited blessings on what he called " Unioners," and curses on "re bels." Of 100 delegates elected 84 were present, sixteen of the number being negroes. There was but a single Conservative in the lot.— Most of the whites are Northern adven turers without reputation, character or in terest in the State. Tne native whites are unknown, ignorant, inexperienced in legis lating and utterly unfit for the work in which they are engaged. A brief notice of some of the more noticeable will serve as a sample for the lot. Ben. Alexander, of Hale, a negro of the ordinary type of field hand. J. L. Alexander, of Elmore, a native Ala bamian, who served for a time as a private in Company "K," First Alabama infantry, C. S. A., a commonplace character and not over highly spoken of by his comrades. A. J. Applegate, of Madison, a North Alabamian, chiefly known for a squabble with Figures, a tenth-fate demagogue of Huntsville, who In some way put him (Ap• pleoatei to the rout with two negroes. Arthur Bingham; of Talladega, is a small man with a chin beard, who seems pos sessed of some sprightliness, which ho nor mally diffuses on the Freedmen's Bureau, whereof he is an official. D. 11. Bingham, of Lauderdale, would answer to Spencer's "old, old man, with beard as white as snow," but for the fact that this beard is dyed of a preternatural black, with the white only appearing in a thin line next to the face that it adorns. Like five and twenty of his colleagues, the captain has a constitution in his pocket, and the chief points in this document are the disfranchisement of "all rebels" and the enforced settlement, In the present currency, of all trust estates lost In Alabama during the war by fiduciary investment, under State nets, in confederate securities. W. 11. Black is a Northern wan of small size anti little note. W. T. Blackford is likewise a Northern man, a Bureau official, and the wearer of ono of the two really clean shirts visible in the con vim lion. Mark I). Brainard, of Now York, is R very, very young m u tt with a florid cheek and a coming moustache. 110 Is a post-office clerk, has something to do with the Bureau, and Is said, when elected, in accordance with the programme for Monroe, not to have known ex wily where "his county" lay. Alfred E. Buck, of Maine, is not other wise noticeable than for the singularity of his sobriquet In Mobile, which he " repre sents," Charles W. Buckley, of Massachusetts, is clergyman who ministers to the spi needs of the Bureau, nod is an ciii wad superintendent also of that organization. Ills brother. W. M. Buckley, likewise of MIIBSILCIIII - of course, "represents" the wealthy county of Lowndes, and is thought to bear a facial resemblance to the late lamented John Brown of Peripatetic soul. J. li. Burdick, Of lowa, speaks the senti ments of NVilcox, which sentiments in this rendition are fiercely radical. Pierce Burton, of Nlammachusettm ro moved from tho Bureau for wilting a leiter to the Horiengtleld Republican, advocating a repeal of the cotton tax, but 104 the nogroem favor that view the broach has been:healed, and Mr. It. is the dele••ate front Marengo. M. Cabot is a Northern man, who was in the reconstruction ercinventi.in of which he is now, In '67, seeking to recon struct In turn. John Carrowity I , la light mulatto e. it II u "back hair" of magnificent prorortems. At its supremo altitude this ornatiteii. ester is fully live inch( - straight out from the oapo of the 110ek, I ming a rigl.; angle ve.y comely to the .•e. Mr. (larroway is as sistant editor o; he 'Mobilo .Vation ,/is/, and it is a Waller 01 professional coup e.l to thus record his distinguishing I). E. Coon,of lowil,and urigudier in the United Suites army, 1 , a small 111101 of a rather Jewish loots, Thomas Diggs is a negro whose head is grizzled and whose bin, is brown. Ile „ represents" Barbour, and makes it beau tiful cross mark when signing his 1111111 e. Charles 11. Di.:tan, of Illinois, is an ex general officer States Army. No particular antecedents. tieorge Ely, nl Massachusetts, is a snug little man, wits neat whiskers and "nice," smooth hair. Ile lives here and represents Russell county. Mr. E. is brother of that Congressman Ely who came to grief at the first Manassas, Peyton Finley Is a city negro who once held the door open for mein hers In that very chamber where he now sits us a dele• Samuel S. Gardner, of igassaeLisetts, is .13ureau W. Graves is a Virginian who was first a carpenter and then taught himself medicine, which he now practices. Early Greathouse is a Baptist preacher, but a preacher after such fashion as would make the well-kidded and neat necktied ecclesiastics of Gotham gasp anti stare. Ilk appearance and political" views,'' and, doubtless, theological tenets, also, ure coin prised in tine word, and tine word is rough, .James K. Green is a negro who takes the mune of the master whose carriage he once drove. The name of this statesman does not appear On the signed list, from a modesty which withheld his sole signature, an Y, mark, Bride Oregon is a light mulatto from Mobile, whose thin lips, keen cut jaws, and furtive eyes seem to body forth a Malay type of man. It was this Ovide who, as the phrase goes, " busted Biisteed," withdraw ing the favor of Erhiopla, on one occasion, from that sagacious and ad inirablo Judge. Albert (;ritiln, of Ohio, is the editor of the Mobile negro organ, and, as stated, had the honor of primarily presiding over the " Convention." But for a trifle more youth and a trifle less unctuousness, A. O. might well be taken fur :qr. Chadband, and, like that good man, hides by a certain outward greasiness much inward venom. He is a bitter Radical, and has. perhaps, a majority in convention to back him. Jordan Hatcher, of Dallas, is a grizzled negro of lightish hue, who, after a not un usual fashion, takes his former master's name, James I I, Howard, of Crenshaw, the only Conservative in the Convention, in a line soldierly looking young man, and native Alabatn i 11. It. 11. Johnson, of Illinois, misrepresents Coffee county. Wash. Johnson has the very blackest skin and the very worst signature of any patriot of the whole eighty-three. 11ls hue Is, with out jest, a Jet block, and his autograph, the sum total of hie writing abilities ; might stand equally well for Smith, or Vail ',limit, or Scheinerhern. A. \V. Jones is a ghost. That is to say he is the gentleman who was barbarously murdered by a "rebel outrage" which originated here in Montgomery, and kill ed him 011 successively in every truly loyal sheet in the country. Mr. J. writes a very unspectre like hand and misrepresents Con ecuh. C. Jones is a yellow icegro, who, on being called up to the Secretary's desk to register his name, expectorated with a refreshing abandon that provoked a general smile and then made his mark. John ( Keifer, of Pennsylvania, is ehair man of the Radieal Executive State Com mittee, and is known to the nialignants ns the " nead devil " of the Loyal League, Ile is al, fite9e lit Forney'.,, liii, been conneet ed ttiilt the Philadelphia Press, and by virtue of strict patriotism, has put money in hiapurse. Ile %Vasa candidate for Presi dent of the Convention, but withdrew. Thomas Lee, of Perry, is a negro who finds that it assists hint very inueh in sign ing his name to lean his head quite on one side, and not be in a hurry about it. He is vey black. J. J. .Martin is a military appointee pro bate judge. Charles A. Miller, of Maine, wears the secwid of the two clean shirts in the Con ventien. Ito WaN 11' six years clerk of the 11011,e (0 . Representatives, and is an cx Federal army 'dicer, a major. A. c. Nbirgaii is from the North, very ex treme in his politics, but personally presen table. It. W. Norris, of Maine, is a truly loyal man. lie was a United States Commissary, has bought a large plantadon, and is a large !nail, with a bvge heard 1111(1 H high f ,, re head, and a wide nostt it—two of theni—that scent treason in every gale. Major Norris cannot abide rebel preachers, but the savor or R Union cleric is sweet unto his soul. Therefore he vigorously insisted to-day that none but a "saf e ' (.11., plain should be elec ted, and on this rock the convention split into adjournment. R. M. Reynolds, of lowa, has been six mouths in Alabama, and very naturally "knows all about, it." He is an ardent H. C. Russell, of Barbour, is said to have been at the close of the war under sentence 01 death for mutiny. He is now a truly loyal man, and purposes to have the name of Bullock county changed to Lincoln. T. J. Russell, of Chambers, is a nimble preacher who took advantage of a military order forbidding the running of n Conserva tive ticket in his county to secure an elec tion. The Rev. gentleman was in the secession convention of 'lll, but now favors a strict adherence to that precious and searching testimmtv. the test oath. B. F. Sat ffold is a Virgi a ian. Was a major Confederate States army, and is now mili tary mayor of Selma and a truly loyal man. J. Silshy, of Massachusetts, is a Bureau reverend. William Skinner is the best speaker so far heard in Convention. He is rapid and furious, which Mei hearty applause, one shrill cry of extfluttion bursting forth at a peculiarly severe assault on the white pop ulation of the State. Joseph H. Speed, of Virginia; is a cousin of Attorney General Speed, was a Captain, C. S. A., and afterwards C. S. Salt agent of Alabama. M. D. Stanwood defies effort to locate him, It is thought, however, that he is from Mas sachusetts, where he has a brother He has been a, cattle drover in California and is credited with several negro disturbances more or less serious In this State. J. P. Stow is a Northern man, resident here for some years. Alfred Strother is a negro ofintense black ness and would have gone to sleep at one time in convention, but for a timely wit ticism which woke a laugh in the hall. Of the eighty-four delegates present six teen were blacks of all colors, from the jet black of the genuine Congo breed down to the yellow variety. Fifty-four were North ern men, bummers who had robbed and ravished in Sherman's arms'; camp fol lowers, who bad hung like jackals upon the outskirts of the camps; Negro Bureau officials, whose mission is to plunder the negro and the Government alike. Nine were born on Southern soil and the rest had scarcely "a local habitation or a name." But two of the negroes could write, and they with great difficulty, while the rest could neither read nor write. What good can be expected from such a Convention? is It a fitting body to frame a Constitution for a sovereign State? The native whites who were present in this mougrel:concern, are, with one or two ex ceptions, perfectly unknown men with no ability. Are the people of the North pre pared to commit the destinies of one-half this great country to the guidance of such men Do they forget that all the social, political and material interests of our sec tion, as well as of the South, Nvill be affected by this action? The proceedings of this body of many varying hues show how utterly untlt the members are tar the work sot before them. The Convention was temporarily organ ized by the appointment of Griffin, of Illi nois, editor of one of the pauper newspapers of Alabama, as temporary chairman. When this was done, a motion was made and curried that the members register their names. Of the African delegates, one-half could not write their names, but made their marks. This being over, the selection o secretary took place, Barbour, lute agent of the Freedmen's Bureau, was one candi date, and Patrick another. The vote was taken by count, and when the first African was called, Me Insisted upon answering here. The clerk repeated his mane only to get a louder response, n}:ttE. Here was a hitch, for here wits not a candidate. At length the President explained to the Afri cans that they were not at a plantation muster, answering at roll-call, but were voting either for Barbour or Patrick, and the convention started again. An African was then made assistant secretary. Smite while members then attempted to get a while doorkeeper. This led to a vote by count, and the African was successful.— came a proposition that the members take the iron-chid oath provided by Con gress, which all Federal officers in the Sorth and lawyers in the Federal courts are required to subscribe. This made trouble, for many Radical delegates were, during the war, Radical rebels. Thu diffi culty, however, Was overcome byithe furtu nate suggestion that, as Cleneral Pope had approved the selection of and culled the delegates, the oath was dispensed. quite a cute dodge. When the Committees were framed the !legroom were given prominent places. 'rho correspondentoithe New York Herald stlys ; The negro element has been awarded Its fair share of representation on each COM tnittee, and care seems to have been taken to place the niost Ignorant and uneducated dark les in the Convention on the most Im portant committees, Thus, on the I:mu tilate, on Taxation and Finance is u pure blooded negro named Strot her, who has been transferred direct from a plantation to his desk in the Convention, and who has thus tar only distinguished himself by the assiduity with which he has sat in his seat, his elbows on the desk, and his dusky visage buried in his bands, showing his white teeth us he grinned at every concession to his race, and stamping noisily with his big feet at every fulmination of " torch and tur pentine" Bingham. Peyton Finley, of lontgoinery, formerly a slave of Judge Finley, whose m u te he has taken, the offi ciating marshal at all the negro processions in this city, and who can barely read and write, is a member of the Committee on Education and the School Fund. Diggs, who makes his mark, is on the Committee on Amendments to the Constitution, and B. Alexander. who on the lirst day of the Con vention had to be told how to give his vote, Is on the committee on County and Muni cipal Organizations. '[lto most highly educated negro In the body is Caraway, the Mobile editor. As specimen of his accomplishment the Y . Herald publishes the following verbatim et literatim copy of a resolution offered by hint: Resolved, That thu morguant•ttt•itrnis bo nistrtivted to itppr4.priitle it portion of thu lialur.} . mid 1,0 by hu La ys. As Cm e. ay is generally regarded as the nest tear, d, smart, well dressed and liter, ary Mirky in the Convention, end us, more over, he has gained some reputation as a poet and an editor, and is alluded to by Radical orators ns a colored man of genius and culture, his orthography may prove of genet al interest. Of course the acts of this mongrel con vention are radical in the extreme. To expect moderation front such a body would be as idle as to look for wise or statesman like action. The first movement was more completely to disfranchise the whites. The Congressional plan is regarded as entirely too lenient. The poll-tax is to be repealed, and all tax to he levied on property. This will entirely exempt the negroes from tax ation of any kind. The convention is not disposed to watt until after the adoption of the Constitution they frame for a division of the spoils; but the Stale Cmyernment Is to be overturned at once, and a temporary concern set up under the Joint direction of the members and General Pope. We ask the people of Pennsylvania to look at the scene which is here presented, They are dire6tly and deeply Interested In every movement being made In the South ern States. Every Injudicious step taken In any one of them must have an effect upon the material Interests and the pros perity of the entire North. The End of Another Political Preacher The country has been literally cursed fur several years past by a set of intensely loy al scamps who have got up as preachers, and donned the livery of Heaven to servo the Devil in. here is an account from the N. Y. Tribune of the end of another of these fellows: The sel(-styled "Rev. Wm. H. 4 6 reer)," who has just been convicted in Litchfield, Conn„ of the murder of his wife, by poison, has run a race of crime during the last two years which few men, in a long lite, equal. Ile first became conspicuous in the western lot or New Y.. k, in the fall of as the Rev. Geo. W. Long. Ile presented tinged credentials, purporting to ne from Method ist Conferences in the South and West, and obtained the ministry Mille church at Cen terville, Allegheny county. Ile proved so acceptable to all the brethren that, after a two weeks' acquaiotance, he married in one of the neighboring towns, and took his wife home With hits. lle then commenced borrowing money "to meet his increased expenses," and before long had run up a debt Of $7OO. Thinking that he had reach ed the end of his rope, he borrowed means to pay his traveling expenses to Dunkirk, Ohio, where he pretended that he had real estate to sell. His return was anxiously expected by his bereaved flock, but time passed, and instead of the long-expected Long, arrived a letter saying that he had gone to New York to conclude the sale of his Texan property. He told his wife to be contented and gout], and to pray for him. Exit Lev. Mr. Long—enter at Utica the Rev. Win. li, Green, a preacher, political speaker, and temperance orator. Temper• mice lectures around the country were the most expedient Mr raising the wind, but this wasn't as profitable as the clerical fraud, for the man he employed to personate the habitual sot had a moment of sobriety, and refused to continue the partnership unless he was patd. On the 20th of last D,cember "GrearVbruarrie.d a Mrs. Searles in Guil ford, Chebango county, New York, and in March moveil to West Cornwall, Connecti cut, where he made his debut as a refugee from 'Texas, and delivered loyal speeches, being engaged us a stump orator by the Republican Convention for Litchfield county. On May tith Mrs. Gre-n died, having been taken with convulsions. The physician thought her death unusual, but did riot then attribute it to its true cause. Ou the ftiurth day after her death Mrs. Green was buried, and in a month the " Reverend" left for Utica, where only five weeks after the death of his wife ho married an Irish chambermaid employed at a hotel. But he was hurrying matters too fast. His conduct excited suspicion. 'The body MIAs wife was disinterred, the stomach and liver examined, and the "Reverend's" race was run. Strychnine was found, and "Green" was arrested and imprisoned amid popular execrations. In the Litchfield jail he made two attempts to destroy himself. He dash ed his head against a wall and choked him self with a handkerchief. Meanwhile he averred his Innocence. Last week he was tried at Litchfield before Judges Loomis and Granger, distinguished counsel appearing upon each side. The evidence was over whelming. He was convicted, and, we may presume, will shortly be sentenced to Bullet' the extreme penalty of the law. formal Tranerer and Delivery efltessalan America to the United Ntatee. NEW ARCHANGEL, OCt. 8, Via VlcromA, V. 1., Nov. 10, And Swirrommaz, W. T., Nov. 11,1867. The formal transfer and delivery of Rus sian America to the United States Govern ment took place to-day, by Capt. Pest rechoff, Acting Commissioner on behalf of the Russian Government, and Major General Rousseau on behali of tho United States. At three o'clock P. M. a battallion of United States troops, under command of Major Charles 0. Wood, of the Ninth In fantry, was drawn up in line in front of the Governor's residence, where the transfer took place. By half-past three a large con course of people had assembled, comprising Americans, Russians of all classes, Creoles and Indians, all eager witnesses of the cer emonies. Precisely at the last named hour the Rus slim forts and fleet tired salutes In honor of the lowering of the Russian flag ; but the flag would not come down. In lowering it tore its entire width close by the halliards, and floated from the cross trees, some forty feet from the ground. Three Russian sailors then attempted to ascend the inch and a half guy ropes supporting the big staff, but each failed to reach his national em blem. A fourth ascended in a boatswain's chair, seized the flag, and threw it in a di rection directly beneath him ; but the mo tion of the wind carried it on; and caused a sensation in every heart. Five minutes after the lowering of the Russian ling the Stars and Stripes went gracefully up, floating handsomely 1111li free, Gen. George Lovell Rousseau having the honor of flinging the flag to the brevzo, the United States steamers Ossipee and Resaca at the same time honoring the event by tiring salutes. AM the Russian flail; teas lowered Captain Pestreeholl stepped forward and addressed fitment' Rousseau as follows : I.; ItAL—As Commissioner of his Im perial Majesty the Emperor or Russia I now transfer and deliver the territory of Russian America, coded by his Majesty to the United let tern." Gutieral Itotimmettu, 1:: rumponso, am Ow tiloricat: flag ameemliml, said: " ('u I'Al N—As Commissioner on or the United States government, I receive and accept the same accordingly." 'rho Commissioners spoke in a tone or common conversation, and were only heard by tiovernor tieneral Jor. c. Davis, Captain Kuskol anti a fnw others who formed the group. Several ladies wit nessed l he ceremonies, n inong them Princess Makesatoir, Mrs. tioneral Davis anti Mrs. Major Wood. ('(co Princess wept audibly an the Russian (lag went down. The transrer wan conducted In a purely tllplontatto and busittess•llko wanner, neither 'manillas nor speech waking tul lowing. 'Chu entlro transaction was eon chided In it few hours, diet tsstpee, with tho Commissioner on hoard, steaming Into the harbor at eleven o'clock this threttoott, anti in four o'clock In tint afternoon it dozott Automat) Ilags float ovor thu !lowly born American oily of Sit kit. -.........-- Additional Particular, or the Terrible Himont. rig nt Porto Miro 111 l I Tortola. IlAv,v.N.t, Nov. 15.-I,,itor inlvicen from Porto Mei, urn received. The line tempest wen more nnvaru thus 1110 two terrible wiles which visited the 111 fated island previous to 11450. All the towns have been terribly desolated. One thousand houses have been laid In ruins, and throe thousand have liven severely damaged. In some Instunces the houses along the entire streets have been demolished, and the roadway entirely hidden by the runts. Vu 110 WM whatever hits been received 10 . wading the effects of the storm In the veil teal Portion of tlin rotund, where, on Ow S,ivunnnv, 111111101%/IIS hurls lire pastured; but elsewhere the cattle have been and Ulu hells swept entirely bare. The loss Is incalculable. 'rho merchants ur the Island have do nut:tiled that Muir corn, provisions, Ac., 14111111 be entered duty free. Litter lidvicem Isrom l'orto Itleo slate that, during the late terrible gale, the 1111 E ishind of Tortola, of the Virgin Orem., entirely disappeared, being completely submerged, it is said, l'or right hours. Every living thing, 111011 or animal, upon it perished. Mount Vcoircium in Volcanic AOlOll and IL Grand Eruption Inuniiteni. imns, Nov. 11, Isffi. I\ fount Vesuvius, on the east. 01,1 e thy• Bay of Naples, in 111 VI/11'11111C !WHIM and sending lbrth it pillar of lire, whieli has IL magnificent eih,t,to seen 11'11111 till, city. New craters liave been formed, inel the usual point or httittidu 40..19 north and longitude 1-I.21; east—is alio engaged. During the pact night red but stones were ejected in large quantities Trent the burning mountain. Tilt, surrounding earth Is in tremulous metion hlr a considerable Llishineu; Lilo lava is pouring forth and running down the sides of the mountain In volume and with rapid flow, and the general uplienving from the volrimii gives warning of a grand, unusual ly grand eruption, from which we may look for very serious consequences, as in Milner years Ilf the more remarlialau phenomena from Vesuvius. 'l'liti first eruption tif the were soden., kind front Ntount Vesuvius occurred in the year 79, %%lien the elder Pliny perished, mitt the then vent rltiev et Iferouhenouni, Pompeii and :Stabil; %viii ~ Ver w 111.1 itql by tile burning torrent, and buried in lava and 11,1}1011 thruwn from the ender. Forty-nine eruptions nl Vienivitis oc curred diviisirous period to Il e • year 1850, of Mlich the most celebrated iii history Look piece in the yours .172, 177 U, 179-1, find Is:in. YAtrrinta• 111 VVli()lesztle A most extraordinary matrimonial ar rangement hits lately ' e cu consummated in this city, one which is worthy of an ex tended notice, not only as lacing in distinc • that trout Illy ordinary, slow nut It making process, but 1.1.4 carrying with it Bowe very valuable suggestions. The bareannotince ment of " Married, cm the instant, ny tho Rev. Mr. —, ut the residence of the father of the three brides, Mr. Fl'alik Ulbrich to Miss liarbara Schur; /tier), Mr. Augustus Ulbrich to Miss Mary ; also, Mr. Henry NV. Ulbrich to Miss Elizabeth :Schur," would lull nearly tree whole story, the oily really necessary ;chid tonal information being that the three tin legrooms are brothers, that the happy brides are sisters, and that, Itt both Instances, it finished up tile family. It was literally the marriage of thoentire Chicago 'I wir.v. Failure of Wcr , Ots lo \Volk lOU 511Itot lo 21 floury* Ci.EvimA Nu, Nov, M.—Weston, uu his hundred mile feat, reached Erie, Pm, at twelve o'clock, noon, and leaves et hull plot fur Ashtabula, the r u e hundred mile terminus. 110 Iran made II fly eight ❑tiles In thirteen hours and tier min utes, and not the Mast fatigued. Thu PX- CitVlllollt Is groat arid i minium] ng. Clo:siNkAuT, Ohlo, Nov. M.—Weston, the pedestrian, arrived here at 5.12 this 1.11,11- 111 g. HIM feet were so badly swollen that he Is unable to proceed further irr might, and ho ham thus failed to make the hundred miles in 24 hours. Desperate 14. m) On Monday a United States detective, with a manacled deserter in charge, passed west over the Pennsylvania railroad.— When the train Khan passing Packsaddle station, three miles beyond the Blairsville intersection, the detective went into t h e water closet a few 11101111 , 111 S, leaving his prisoner on the seat. While the detec tive was absent, the prisoner suc ceeded in raising the window, and jumped out, the train going at a speed id thirty in item an hour. A pas senger in the car !CM hint in the act of jumping out, but could not prevent hint. the train wits immediately checked and bucked to the place, where the man was discovered in an insensible condition, hav ing fallen on his head, causing a severe fracture of the aku.l. Ile wits tit hen to Pitts burg and placed in the Soldiers' Howe. There is no hope of his recovery. 'Filename of the injured titan wits not ascertained. A Negro CM" His niltier'n Throat On Saturday night last a young negro attempted to murder has father near Jenk intown, Montgomery county. While the old man was sleepitig on a chair, the son deliberately drew a razor across his throat, inflicting a wonial which it is supposed will prove fatal. 'flat wounded man made a struggle to secure the razor, but fainted from loss of blood. The mother and wife gave the alarm, and the assassin fled, but was captured after runniog a quarter (au mile. The father is fifty two years o!d, and his injuries are of such a nature that he cannot recover.—Patriot and Union. Utimuccessful Attempt to Rob the Schuyl kill County 'ircitmory. On last Saturday night the Schuylkill County Court house was burglariously en tered by some evil disposed person or per sons, who, it is supposed, were sadly in need of "justice" or " stanips"-01051 pro bable the latter. They entered the Treasu rer's office arid set to work at the vault which gave way to their work ; this done they commenced operations on the urge iron safe within the vault and were sue cr,sful in working through the outer door, Litt coming in contact with the inner safe, which is made of solid iron, and very hard, they found thentseivi s toiled and abandon ed the job, without securing the rich prize which was "so near, and yet so far."— Nothing else was disturbed, so far as wo were able to ascertain. The Case of Jefferson Davis It would appear that the idea of post poning the trial of Mr. Davis until the May term of the Supreme Court has been aban doned, and he is to be arraigned on the '2.sth of this month. His presence in Rich mond is, therefore, looked for on the 23d. That Davis will be arraigned and will pliad to the indictment for treason is quite proba ble, but that he will be iried on the charge either at the approaching term or in Muy nobody believes. However, the law officers of the government will have thesatisfuction of bringing him all the way from Canada in his somewhat feeble health, and by so doing will, of course, have conscientiously performed their duty. Is it not almost time that this farce should end?—N. Y. Herald.