Lancaster 3intelligencer. hOwißpomvarasteastzvosamovircil The European The armies of France and Prussia are being concentrated. The other powers maintain a neutral position. The news for the past week has been of little im portance. A great battle may be ex pected very soon, as both rulers have gone to the front. We will furnish the readers of the WEEKLY INTELLWENCER with all news of importance, but do not care to cumber our columns with rumors that come by cable one day only to be contradicted the next. The Estate of Thaddeus Stevens. Thaddeus Stevens left behind hint a will which. is singularly ambigeous lu some of its provisions. It is not such a document as was to be expected from one who enjoyed the extended legal rep utation which attached to its author. It gives his executors great power, and, by making the final disposition of his prop erty dependant upon the happening or not happening of several contingencies, leaves the bulk of the estate in their hands for an indefinite period of time. Of course the trust confided to them is one of a sacred character, and one which the law will strictly guard, if invoked by ally party having a right to call the executors to account. The executors men who occupy high positions in our community. lion. Anthony E. Roberts represented this district in Congress, and lion. (I. J. _Dickey was chosen as the successor of 'Mr. Stevens in that body, and is now seeking a renomination. It would be strange if such men should be found derelict in their duty as txecutors of the WWI WhOSO iuliuuatcfriends they were, and ttliose devoted :idmircrs they pro fess to be. Yet they have so fur failed to discharge one of the most imperative duties imposed upon them, and have violated one of the plainest provisions attic law relating to the estates of de cedents. The law of this State requires every executor mill administrator to make a true and perfect inventory of all the goods, chattels and credits of the tle ce:lsed, as far as they may.know or can ascertain them, and to exhibit flu .want into (hi . I;ryist, e's upper reit hi n thirtgthly4 frmil thr lilnr ti.lirn the Will is proren or lrNtry if ad i rat ion grantcd. The law is imperative, and tit) executor tir atlntinistr:ttor can attempt to evade it without exciting suspicion. As a getteiml thing there are interested par ties \vim wilkummarily cite a delinquent executor or administrator to appear be fore the Orphans' Court, and :newer t i or negleet of so plain :t duty; but it so hap pens that theambiguous chttracter of Mr. Stevens' will does not vest such author ity in any o n e. It gives the executor . much power, :toil leaves them very wide latitude, hilt we do not imagine that Mr. Itieltey will prt•tend to say that it frees him and his co-executor from the obli gation to obey a law which rests with equal binding force upon all who tiveupy the position of eXerillors or admiuislra ttits. Th, will of Tlintlticus Steven.: was til ed in the Itegi-th.C,(tilke or this oouuty early in the month of August, Since that time almost two years have passed away, :Led, .1, yet, no inventory has been exhibited. The estate is said to be very large, of flue executors admitting that it exceeds two hundred thousand dollars. siiyor Laiwa,ter has a vontingent . interest in nearly the whole of this estate, but there is no out. herewith authority to eall the executors Itt acettunl. The bull: or the property may go lit lilt' horougtl Iti colunibia, under certain contingencies, lint there is no one there to cite the executors liefore Still the duty or Roberts :lint llickey is plain.- liy neglecting to they the imperative requirement , or the law they have al ready set malivious tongues to Nvaggi and halo giveli ground `41,411i1•11/11 in the Minds of well meaning people. have heretofore called attention to this neglect of duly on the part of Mr. Stevens' executors, mill we tell them now, in plain lerms, that they eau not longer renew to ....nutty with the intiter ,live I, ' , l ,, ir v it o ' l,l, of the l awWith"" doing injustice to the dead and damag ing iii public t,dintation. 'fliers are members of >I r. Stevens' party who freely ileelare that he Moil with a large alumna of the lionikatillc or t h e I'nl'l I' Railroad; ill ilk pos. scion. Is that Init.: If it ho not, let the sworn inventory of his executors brand the rumor as a falsehood. Let them obey the 111 w. Thus will they do justice to the dead and remove suspicion from Raising a Corruption Fund IZadivala arc alarmed at the pros poet before them in the coming tqatt.. :nal Congressional elections. Itttly of those \vim have been log-rolling laml grabs at \Vashington Item' they will be I dell•ated this fall. They will spend 0 reasonable tillittillit ti the money they I made, tall they begin to believe that the close districts \till be carried by the De. inoeracy in spite of the negro vote. 'ro save t heloseives from merited defeat these fellows have procured the assent of kraut to a regular black-mailing scheme, and they have addressed a eir ettlat to all the clerks at Washington and other tttlice-holders throughout the country informing them that they are required to forward by draft or money order pc cr it/ , t 1 llu it mi1,(171 to Zacluttialt Chandler, John 1.1. lietchttnt and John 11. Platt, Jr., the ltadieal Coligressitaial Celan:Mee. Z -'4:111e 01 . the clerks at \Vashington refuse to "pony up" and swear they will not submit to be thus blackmailed. We imagine, ever, that the Seta:NV:4 will he applied le all the refractory, and that they trill eventually come down with the stamps. \Ve do not believe, however, that mon ey enough van he raised by the It:Idle:0 l'ongtessional l'ommittee to turn the strong title that,is now settling against the party. Tut, seal of Wally or have disappointed tlirrxpreutiiw e: of the country will be tilled by wino crab,. Execrating the Carpet-Baggers The oxalttion or Whittemore by the negroes tlf South Carolina, his acknowl edged leadership of the Republican uarty of that. Stab., his complete control or the state convention, in which lie acted as Chairman or the committee on Creden tials and Chairman tit* the Committee alt Plat l'orni, is beginning In open the eyes of northern Republicans. They see in this unmistakable evidence of the rottenness and the degradation of the party in the South. Sonic Republican newspapers :ire furious at the course things 11.1'1., taking, and the Philadelphia Equity' l'ficyraph declares that the party " be obliged to repudiate the whole race of carpet-baggers, and to give them plainly to understand that the loyal people of the North decline to be their backers any longer." The 'Plc graph seems to forget that Its party has been built uplin the South by the mill- ary support given to these very carpet baggers. If they are abandoned and military interference done away with there will be no Republican in the South. It Is only kept alive now in the Caro linas the moat, rascally agencies.— Every where else in the South it is dead or ha arlicido mortis. The sooner IL is completely buried out of sight in both the North and the South the better it will be for the people. Radicalism In South Carolina As will be seen by a report which we publish elsewhere the Republican con vention of South Carolina was run by the Reverend thief and convicted cadet peddler, \Vhittemore. The body was composed of ignorant negroes and a few very mean white men. How much longer do decent Republicans in Penn sylvania intend to stand by such Li par ty? War Sympathies. Meetings to express sympathy with he European belligerents continue to be the order of the day in our cities. The quick blood of our Teutonic; Gallic and Hibernian citizens is kept at fever heat by an eager discussion of the war news, which is daily delivered with commend-' able punctuality by the Atlantic Cable. The Germans are largely on the side of Prussia, and many who fled from the land of their birth, on account of disa greements with the government of King William, are now loudly pro claiming in support of him. The idea of German unity is a captivating one, and the fact that they have permanent ly cast their lot in America, does not prevent very many of our German citi zens from giving expression to their sympathy with Prussia in the pending contest. Still there are many of the more thoughtful among the Germans with whom this wild enthusiasm for the Hohenzollern family finds no sympa thy. They say, with what truth the reader may judge for himself, that the quarrel between Prussia and France is not an affair of peoples, but a contest between rulers with whom republicans can 11:1Ve very little sympathy. They regard the war as a struggle between two ambitious men who care little for the people, and only wish to aggran dize themselves and establish their thrones inure permanently, so that they may resist all the encroachments of re publican ideas. 'Phe French in this country side with Napolean front a feeling of nationality, and the Irish because they hope to see England involved in the struggle and dream that Ireland's lung delayed oppor tunity will then coon•. 'l•lre discussion between the adherents of the contending parties are as warm as the weather, and the drinks which are taken have no tendency to cool the constant debates. The I terinan grins more voluble over his lager, the French man increases his vivacity by repeated draughts of iced Claret, and the Hi bernian atltfs force to his eloquent de nunciations of perfidious England by copious libations of potheen. Of course there is no disposition on the part of any one to check the enthusiasm of the diflerent factions. They are at liberty to talk in private, to discuss the war in saloons and at public meetings, and to furnish as much money as they can spare to aid the sick and wounded.— There is nothing in our neutrality laws to prevent all that. But it behooves all classes, Iterman, French and Irish, to remember that when they becotne citi zens of the 1: nited states they deliberate ly forswear all allegiance to any foreign potentate, and especially to the ruler of the country from which they come. Having become American citizens this country has a right to demand their eomplete allegiance in all things. With it they should sympathize more strong ly than with any other, and to preserve its honor and perpetuate its power and glory should be their chief car . Is Onr Congress a Good School for Ora (111 . )'? 1111111 . 1111:1111till With tilt , fiWt. suppo,r that l'ongre.s. Nvotihl la• a good , :choot for the trainiti! or an orator, and the correction 1/' fault, ul' III:WM . 1' :I - . :kn.' likely to attach U. tu:un• ul the rural la \eyers m h o 11 11 (1 their Nvay into that body. time Ica, \viten the 111,e.t di,play, of modet•n clognenee e , ndd bcwituesstd within the walls of our National Capihil, and peo ple traveled thousands or miles to listen to the elihrlsor Clay, Calhoun, \Vt•hster or Douglas. day has departed, and in its stead has oonica day of swan tutu and poor Congressional \NW overt foreibly reminded ol this fact when listening to Col. InelLey's at the lierutan :\ lass Meeting. It is tortnin that hi' has not improved his style of speaking by serving two Sion , in l'mtgru , s. Its did not pretend to disetiss European polities, did not exhibit any hat he had studied the secret springs of the eonlest between Fralire awl Prussia, and did tc. III:11:e a learned orstatesinanlike speech. Ile ,L. 0111141 to inut,gine that he had the Emperor Napoleon arraigned hefore a Lancaster county Quarter ce ''Lions Jury, to :Los \ver for eommitting m• , rracal , l assault and hal Ivry ninnt ; and he prureeded to deal Nvit It the royal eulln•it would wills ill thr I.x. Ile valled 111111 :11l Manlier of foul names, ho inalle ugly Is:Lees:a him, he pointed his lillet•r 111(11 tlllll di:if:1111 Slllll . l . 111111 S 11001: it Willi threatening tremulousness'. at the far on' I rongdovr, he wagged his head, humped up his hack, serect•hell like a eat in a dark alley, and went • through all that great variety of antics aunt contortions kir which he is distin guished. lle workeil hitt:sell up into a terrible passion, anil it was not until foain gathered about the corners of his mouth anti a lather NV:IS per- above his shirt collar that he subsided in an exhausted condition. It is tiviiltint to ifs that I)ickey's ora tory ha , not hoeu iIIIIn • in • edliy his ser vice ill In fact sonic or hid most ,v,laring faults scciii to have been exaggerated. It may be, however, that the eiretini stances muler which the ('olonel spoke were t•aleulated to excite him unduly. II the 01'74 ,lot. 01•11 Ile hall 1111ldt . siuoe his return frc.in Washitigt.ti, and icl;- ershani had the impudence to take a stand right in front of hint :1111014; 11 gang of those who had ,inee been Ml'. Dickey's devoted adherents, but who are now training with his opponent.— 'Plum, 6111, till' 011011e1 01111,1 linthelp remembering how active lie had been in the Know -Nothing cause only 11 few years ago. and kith What bitterness he had denounced the people whom he was limy called upon to praise. Polities makes people acquainted with strange bed fellows, but the Colonel had nut got to feel quite at lo me aiming his ne \cly-found :Issociates. Ile deemed it necessary hi be all the noire 111111til ye of Napoleon on aecount or his former de ' nimeintion of those whom he used to , style "toed -d, dumb 1)utell." Under , be 511)•.1 v.IVIIIIISI:1110) , it ( , 1111 , 1 113I'llly , upt lied that our ('ottgro,t,ttittit would ! aitit.tr to the very itOt4 Declines the Honor Tiw Washington correspondent of the N. Y. Sun says : Mr. Frelinghuysen de clines the mission to England. Warned by the brief tenure of his two itunedt alt• predecessors, he thinks it better 10 stay at home than to run the risk of tie ing summarily superseded tool disgraced without Johnson and Motley Were allowed about a year of diplomacy each ; one for speaking too inuelt, the other for writing too little. It seems that Motley supposed, in the innocence of his heart, that Sumner turned the crank of the Universe, and therefore addressed despatches to him instead of to the illustrious Fish. This went very well until the days of San Domingo, when (Irma shouted in his wrath, as the expected gains of that job disap peared, " with his head! So much for Motley!" Mr. Frelinghuysen is Wise, if it be true, that he hesitates to serve under such a toaster. A Lo NO BRA Neu letter-writer classi fies the President's neighbors curtly and specifically. lie speaks contemptuously of them as "your horseman, your sen ior merchant partner of semi sporting pro pensities, yon• actor-manager, and your city mushroom, whether of the flower of polities,• money-shaving, or• quasi law—au uninteresting set, fond of im portance and yearning for the news paper notice they aired to despise. The best of them—the best being determined by a sort of snobbish blackballing per formed with the eyebrows—try horses on the beach drive, encourage their daughters to know one another, give a supper twice a season, and open half a basketofchampagneerery second night. And that is the sum total of their daily experience." We should think they wouldjust exactly suit the President. Grant Backing Up Holden's Outrages, The Raleigh Standard, a paper pub lished at the capital of North Carolina by the son of Governor Holden, an nounces oflicially.that "President Grant fully endorses what the Governor has done, and will practically aid in the sup pression of the new and dangerous trea son." Since that was published the tele graph informs us that Grant has sent several companies of United States Soldiers to North Carolina, with orders to act in concert with Holden. This is a matter which cull not fail to excite the indignation of every intelligent and patriotic American citizen, if properly understood. Holden is acting, not in the capacity of au elected ruler of a free people, but as an appointed satrap of a muster :at Washington•— Acting in that capacity he has deliber ately undertaken to control the coming Congressional elections by force of arms. He has gathered together a band of des peradoes, armed them at the expense of the State, put them under the control of a desperate villain named Kirk, pro ceeded to break up Conservative meet ings, to arrest llie speakers, to drag unoffending and peaceable citizens from their homes at dead of night, and to hold them under guard of his militia. His minions have torn up writs of habeas corpus and arrested and imprisoned the officers who attempted to serve them. Holden now deliberately declares his intention to subject his victims to a trial by a drum head court martial, on charges tramped up against them. - - The President of the United States was made fully acquainted with the outrages being committed by Holden and his gang of desperadoes, and was besought to interfere in behalf of the citizens of North Carolina who were be ing thus maltreated. He declined to do so, but took occasion immediately there after to put Coiled States troops under the command of Holden ; and the son of that satrap announces in Ids paper that the President is in full accord with his father. Such proceedings a u •e violative of every principle of our gov ernment, and are illithitely worse than any act ever committed by Napoleon. NO monarch in Europe would dare to be guilty of such gross outrages upon the most clearly recognized rights of the people. It is the very substance and essence of tyranny. 6eneral Grant has shown his true character in his treatment of the citi zens of North Carolina. He is deter mined to hold on to the °lnce which he has managed to convert into a source of immense pecuniary profit, and fear ing that he may not be renominated if the Radicals are left free to chose a can didate, lie has determined to coerce them into again selecting him as their nominee fur President. NVith the aid of such men as Holden, he expects to be able to control the delegations from the Southern States, and will stop at nothing which may he likely to give hint success. If he can plunge the South into social disorder hecan control the Radical party of t ha t section by brute force, and will trust to the corrupting influence of ex ecutive patronage to give him enough votes in the North to make up a ❑cajuri ty in the nePubli"" Natio n al I'""v"" - tion. He has ignored the leading poli ticians ()flip. Republican party, and has surrounded himself by weak civilians, while he depends Mainly upon suet OrtiVON Or the army :is are ready to de his bidding. Ile is completely ignorant or :ill that constitutes the statesman, and has shown himself to be as Wieldy regardless of law . as the brutal lirk who commands the militia of Holden in North Carolina. Let the people of this country turn their eyes away from the war in Europe. Let them look at home. A taut e st is being waged here which more nearly concerns all American citizens, native or naturalized, than the war between France and Prussia. 11l ;rant, llulden and Kirk can ,ffitrageeverY nriplc ul liberty, strike down all law, overturn the Courts of Justice, throw hund b •eds of unollimiling citizen• into the guard house, and try them by military com missions in lilac ofprofound pence, then is the United States I overnment no ladder than the most unmitigated des potism with Mitch the world was over cursed. Let Aun•ricun citizens of till classes luck at the totitcat.tes which an•c being committed at home. Bungling Legislation . . The Radical majority in l'ongrt,slias exhibited the most wonderful Nvaiit of legislative capat;.ity. Tht•y failed 1.1 male ally tippl,priati , /IIS 1 . 01 . (111. pay 01' janitors to the public building , t, anti t hey must lie left without care or guardian ship, unless those in charge shall talte the 'jolt or :Lod trusting to future legislation for pay. A corr,.poild owe between the l'ostinaster of Phila tielphitt and the Acting Secretary of the 'Treasury 0110 up the matter in a light which maker the action of l'ongress appear very ridiculous. No money was appropri..ted to itay. the ~Ilicers e•1Lo are to retire under the new army NIL and the \Var Department is likely to be gristle tunharrassed iu this way. Other irregularities , and im perfections iu acts passed have teen dis covered, and so great is the difilettlty likely to he encountered by the admin istration that it is thought an extra ses sion of Coul;ress will have to be called to ruffled.) . the I,lttiolors of the last out , . What aounnientztry is hereby tarnished upon the ineilleiency of 111, , majority. A VI ye( 111.1:H1'cl 11:15 I, FA, k out among, the Radicals in the Sixth Judi cial district in this State. The district is composed of Warren, Elk and Erie counties. Each county presents a can didate for Judge. According to party usage each county was entitled to five Delegates. Erie county, having more Radical votes than Warren and Elk combined, claimed the right to double representation. This was refused the Erie delegation, and (hey declined to participate in the Convention until the t!.:2.1 instant, when a compromise was wa d e, g i v i ng Erie t en delegates, Warn, eight, and Elk six. Up to the _all ultimo, 24(1 pallets hail been taken, and double that number of glasses of whis key drank, and, oaths launched at each other. The proceedings were of the most, disgraceful eharacter, and one delegate, 'after kicking over a table, and blacking a brother delegate's eye, ex- " When compared with the Philadelphia Conventions?" On the evening of the 2. - ,th ult., a reso lution, asking the candidates to give their conferees liberty to vote for any person within the district, was passed, but the Erie delegation refused to call upon their candidates, and expressed a determination to stick by Woodruff, first and last. T'lle Convention then broke up, with an understanding that it would convene in Erie in August. But the tires are lighted, and they cannot lie quenched. Th 4, Sixth District will most likely be presided over by a Demo cratic Judge. Synipallu for Prussia The meeting held in Centre Square, un Wednesday,by thr.se who sympathize with Prussia, was large and enthusias tic. It did great credit to those who en gaged in getting it up. Our German fellow-citizens never do things by halves, and the very successful meeting of last night is another evidence of their enterprising character. Is only right for us to mention the fact that the tier mans of our city are not a unit upon the subject of the war in Europe, and the meeting of last night only represented a part of them. Had they been perfect ly united the demonstration would have still more imposing. A NUMBER of prominent Californians have Invited President Grant to make a visit to that State. Whether he will go or not depends altogether upon the In ducements they offer. He can ho in duced to do almost any thing by those who know how to approach him. Itoneyfugling with Negroes. The Radicals have had all the male negroes in this county carefully regis tered, preparatory to their primary elec tion. A careful count shows that be tween live and six hundred black voters have been added to the list by the fraud ulent adoption of the Fifteenth Amend ment. The consequence is an extraor dinary excitemept among the various aspirants for office. Prof. Wickersham held a long conference the other day with the Reverend Cuff, of this city, and it is said that the religious part of our colored population will support the pedagoguical candidate for Congress; but then, on the other hand, it is claimed that all the negroes who are outside the pale of the church, and in favor of free love and free whiskey, will sup port the gentleman who is the Execu- tor of Thaddeus Stevens. There is a rumor to the effect that old Thad's col ored housekeeper, with whom Mr. Dickey lives at Washington, is to be brought on to instruct the darkeys of Lancaster county as to the opinions of the Old Commoner, and his desires in regard to who should be his successor. In the boroughs . bf Columbia and Mari etta, their is an intense excitement among the negroes. Certain magnates of Tow Hill can be seen in daily and • - lightly consultation with Radical office . eekers. It is rumored that some o those who pretend to be leaders of the black voters demand money for their intluenc?, and take all they can get, promising to support every man who pays them. The negroes in the lower end of the county have concluded to make a lump job of the business, and they will hold a mass meeting at the Spring ( ;rove Hotel, on the sth day of August, at which every Radical politi cal aspirant who may desire to negotiate for their support at the Republican pri mary election is expected to report him self. We undersland that Dickey and Wickersham will make speeches from the same platform. We would advise tile pedagogue to keep a sharp eye on his competitor. If he does not he will be apt to find that agencies more potent with the negroes than arguments will be used against him. We have not been able to learn what is the opinion of the negroes in regard to the state Treasurer ship, but we presume most of them are still as open to conviction as were any of the Radical members who bolted the caucus nomination last winter. It is not to be supposed that negroes will prove more virtuous or less avaricious than white Republicans. We wish our Radical friends a happy time with their African associates, and for their sake, we hope, there may be a speedy abate ment of the excessive heat which has prevailed so long without interruption. Honeyingling with negroes cannot be very pleasant work when the thermom eter ranges steadily away up in the nine ties. Let every Radical aspirant pray for cooler weather. That Secret Treaty. lit Europe and in this country the ecret treaty which Napoleon and Ilk- marek wore busily considering ill 15t;13 is still tho topic ~f newspaper comment. Il is nut bviieVed that thS111:11Tk half as virtuous as he would fain appear. The truth seems to lie about half way between the statements of the two par ties. Bismarck unquestionably gave publicity to the document lie had in his possession with a view to intluencingthe action of England. It is no doubt true that Napoleon expressed a desire to ab sorb Belgium, but it k also true that Bis marck was ready to annihilate the King dom of Holland, the possession of which would give Prussia a sufficiently extend ed sea coast, and enable her to assume the position of a great maratime power. The two conspirators could not agree as to the division of the proposed spoil, and from that day to this there has been bitter enmity between the rulers of France and Prussia. The spectacle pro-anted by the parties NOM were deliberately vonsidering the terms of this secret treaty is One which no Republican can calmly contemplate. Two boll schemers sit down with the well understood purpose of annihilating two or more small and weak States.— Holland and Belgium were to be the principal victims. 'Whilst they were quietly pursuing their usual course, de voted to industry, commerce and the civilizing tendencies of our day, abstain- Mg from any meddlesome interferenee with their neighbors, content to be peaceful and useful, with no improper ambitions, Napoleon and Bismarck were deliberately plotting their mini ; hilation as nations, and their reduction to mere make-weights in "the balance of power." That is the true meaning and intent of this secret treaty, the ex posure of which has caused so much commotion. It is no longer to he doubted that Biimarck was as deep in this infamous scheme as Napoleon.— t mier the light of these disclosures, what wretched stuff was all the fuss and indignation, the virtue and dignity af fected on both sides. How hollow seems the nice distinction drawn by - King William between his readiness to disavow the Hohenzollern affair as the head of the family, and his refusal to do it as King of Prussia; and how ridicu lous the assumed anger of Napoleon at the slight offered to Count Benedetti in the garden of Ems. llow miserable are the pretexts upon which a gigantic war has been brought about, which will cost many thousands of lives and entail misery upon millions of people. The curb is the existing war is a contest be ween ambitious rulers for personal and 'amily aggrandizement, ;11111 the people ire only blind tools, to be used until .)roken and then thrown aside. The Prize Clip The Prize Cup sailed for by yachts (df all nations mid won by the America at the regatta of the Royal English Yacht Sqpindron, :it l'owe,, England, August 22d, IsJt, teas presented Icy the OWIlerS or the 111Crit•A to the NVW York Yacht flub WI the following conditions: Any organized yacht ,dul, of any foreign I country shall always been titled through any one or more of it , members to claim the right of sailing a match for this cup with any yacht or usher vessel, of not hiss than thirty 1101' 111Ort. (11:111 300 tons, measured by the Custom House rule of the country to \vhiell the vessel belongs. The cup is to he considered as the property of the club and not of the meinheN thereof, our of the inner, of the vessel winning it in a match, and the condition of keeping it open to be sailed fur by yacht clubs of all foreign nations on the terms stated, shall always be considered :is attached to it, making it, perpetually a challenge cup for friend ly competition between foreign coun tries. Other conditions are attached as to the mode of giving notice of the chal lenge and the loarticulars of the race. Mr. Ashbury, the owner of the Ctllll - and member of the English Yacht Club, having complied with all the for malities, will enter on the contest for the future possession of the challenge cup, and the race is to come °lron Mon day, August sth, over Ole 11S1.1111 course of the annual regatta of the NOW VOrk Yacht (1111). Tint news from North Carolina not wily confirms the report of the repeated hanging, of Mr. Patton, but informs us that Other persons were suspended by their thumbs by Kirk's gang of ruffians, to make them confess that they belong ed to the Ku-Klux. Vet we look in vain for any such report in the news columns of Philadelphia Republican newspapers. They deliberately sup press the news because they fear the effect it will have upon the minds of the people. TILE knowing ones assert that this heated term will give way of a sudden, and that it will be followed by a season of whether uncommonly cool for the season. We shall get up some morning when the thermometer will mark 90 0 or so, say meterological prophets, and in the evening of the same day ask for blankets and overcoats. So mote it be. • • The Outrages in North Carolina, Republican newspapers are trying to break down the force of the news which comes from North Carolina by publish ing the explanatory letter of Governor Holden. They lay before their readers the one-sided statement of the chief malefactor, taking care not to publish a line of the mass of evidence against him. The following extract from the corres pondence of the New York Herald shows the condition of affairs, on July in the community over which the reprobate Birk has been domineering: "Last evening, a lady standing in the doorway of ono of the residences here, ap pealing to a gentleman named Withers, said: 'Do pray, Colonel, come and sleep here to-night, for I am terrified and don't know what may happen. There is nobody here but myself and the children, and we aro nearly scared to death."lndeed, Mrs. Johnson, said the gentleman, 'I would do so with pleasure, but I have already prom ised Mrs. that I would stay there to night. You know she has a largo family of daughters, and they require, more than von do, some male protector.' 'God, help us!' said the lady, 'what will become of us ?' Tins brief con versation took place between the wife of one of Kirk's prisoners and a citi zen, not yet arrested, who now employs himself affording protection to the families of the gentlemen who are contined in the Court House. When the citizens still at largo are distributed, there is scarcely a sufficient number to allow one to each house, and in consequence of the roving and depredating propensities of the jay hawkers the greatest alarm and insecurity are experienced by the helpless women and children. A town occupied by an in vading foe scarcely ever underwent a more trying ordeal than does the village of Van ceyville at present, for here there is a horde of ruffians who seem to be impressed with .he idea that their express mission is one persecution and outrage." But we are told that the men who have been arrested all belong to the Ku-Klux Klan, and confessions pur porting to be wade by certain persons are produced to prove the allegation. — How Holden and his desperadoes under Kirk have managed to obtain confes sion is shown by the following tele- grant: ItALmoit, July 30.—Elirk's men arrested 30 citizens of Alamanee to-day. They hung Wm. Patton, a respectable citizen, three times, cutting him dawn each time, to make him contess who murdered the outlaws. The last time Patton was cut down it was over an hour before he mem"- ered. lle 111:11.10 no confession. The rack is a mild method of dealing with memin comparison with repeated hangings by a set of brutes such as the inorderer Kirk commands. It is not ' strange that some should have been found ready to sign any document pre sented rather than submit to such treat ment. The wonder is that Kr. Patton did not accuse some one falsely to free himself front the hands of the fiends who were torturing him. Ile must be a man of the most undaunted bravery, anti possessed of a conscientious integ rity which prefers death to dishonor. There arc few such heroes in the world now. Very few men would have acted as he did. 'Plc President of the United States backing up Kirk and Holden in their outrages, and he can not be ignorant of the fact that all these things are being done for the purpose of controlling the coating elections. The Washington correspondent of the New York Times telegraphs to that well known Republi can journal as follows: Additional troops have beet sent to North Carolina, and ttov. Holden has ten com panies of regulars at his disposal, eight elthem being artillery and two infantry, and all of 110.iin armed with Springfield breech loading rifles. The elections take place on Po, rsilay, etna as these regular troops hare becd as widely dial ribs(,'' ! (Is their at re ngth will alit,', it is hall' hoped that the acre:fill , Will pa:s "ht serious di tneullies. The italicised paragraph furnishes the key to the situation. All the Outrages reported in Radical journals, and set out in detail by Holden's letter, have either been manufactured to order or grossly exaggerated, in order that they might serve as a pretext for quartering troops upon the people in time of peace. There is abundant testimony to show that the citizens everywhere in North Carolina are and have been peaceable and law abiding ever since the rebellion ended. Some crimes have been commit ted, but these have not been hall as nu merous or shocking as can be shown by the polite records of any one of our north ern cities. There has been no general disturbance, and nothing h justify the calling out of the State militia or the in troduction of Federal troops; and even now, with all the gross provocations given by irk's cut throats there is no outbreak or attempt to meet violence with violence. The _Radicalconspira tors who have tontbined to carry the coming elections by ['tree are responsi ble for the state of affairs which now ex ists. The Congressional elections take place on Thursday, and the voice of the people is to be stilled and Radical can didates returned. To effect that purpose Holden has put a gang of outlaws under command of kirk,and Grant has order ed United States troops to be distributed throughout North Carolina. Such is the truth about the matter, and the Radical press can not conceal the facts in the case. That the state of nnlthirs in North Car olina is the result of a deliberate plot on the part of Radical politicians there can be no doubt. On the :2.2d of May last the NeW Verk Tribiuo published in its Washington correspondence a complete exposure of the scheme which was then hieing perfected. The paragraph to which we refer reads as follows : " The manner in which partisan tele grams from the South have been manur.• cured and published in the North, to fur ther the personal designs of unscrupulous and ambitious men, was well shown up on the developments brought out in reference to the Washington Chnmiele during the pro cress of the recent Georgia investigation. 'rile same game is now going on in connee tion with the internal affairs of the other Southern States. It is believed that the ensu ingeleetionsin the South will restilt,in some instances. not perhaps in the defeat of the Republican party, but in the defeat of cer tain individuals wino are and hare been us ing: that party ncn a Ilnlati , mily tic their n, n sottish advainyment. For, , e l ing this, the illicit is 1.• Oct lip an nxeinse la declare mar tial la', and Meal newspapers ill the inter est of the Men alluded he are Wein : llo4 With accounts nr “olltragus. •l This is particu larly lino ease in Nnrtli landing. and nn surprise need ho 1 . ,•1t at a daily dish linr rnrs fin. that State, servcd nip in the nto•le " "no 411 tint N “rth Canmina Seuaturs , " wc• intend to Icon the Military, and, tan institioatimi, wr must get these , tateitielitn thrmiLth One North." Itepuhlican netyspapers linty ld'irse to aildish the repors oroutr:;ges in North 'arolina whieli are rurni,lL.,l the 'gents of the Associated Press, but they .1m not keep their readers in h_unirtuive \Vilat is transpiring. Neither ~:111 hey prevent the people 111 . the North 'min seeing that Holden and Kirk aro playing a most desperate gale to prevent any free election ; and that ( ;rant is, backing the scoundrels up with the power of Federal liayoneti.i. Tin: attempt of the editor of I' Itr r .lbrahaffi to foist his puny little paper upon the Republican party as a negro or . ..tan has proved to be a complete I is circulation is rapidly declining, and its early demise is expected. If a negro organ is to he kept tip by gratui tous contributions let it be the Pruyo es qt . Lily.rty, a Radical sheet which is edited by a negro. l'it. Schwelliebren ner's attempt to break down his black brother is utterly contemptible. flit: editor of Fallirt ..11wrtlueni pro nounces Governor Geary a humbug, and declares he don't owe him any thing. Geary may congratulate him self. Bob. Mackey holds a claim for $5OO against this virtuouseditor, and can only get abuse in payment. Democratic Nominations in Fulton County. The Democracy of Fulton county have nominated the following ticket: Treasurer—J. M. Fields. Commissioner—Lieut. A b. Hess. Auditors—Natinan Barnett, G. W. 11 Sipes. District Attorney—Jno. A. Robinson. Jury Connuissiuner--Jouop T. hicllott. George A. Smith, .s4:/-vas unani mously declared to be tiii,Kboice of Ful ton county for Congro4;ttitti was au thorized to appoint hisirVit:delegates to the District Conference:"'' Recruits for the Prussian and French Just now, when our citizens of for eign birth are excited over the war in Europe, it might be well for them to Make themselves acquainted with the obligations they are under to the gov ernment of the United States, and what will be required of them by our laws so long as this country maintains its posi tion of neutrality. No German or Frenchman can enlist or volunteer in this country for service in the Prussian or French armies. No organized armed body of men can leave the - United States to make war a.cainst France, or any other power. But any German, or ally other man, who desires to fight for Germany, France, or any other country, can leave any American port and make his way to the territo ry of the Government he desires to serve. Five hundred or a thousand men possessed of this disposition may take ship from America for any other country whatever, provided they be not organized or equipped, and give no sign of hostile intent against any power With which we are at peace. If, however, they should desire to go to Germany, for example, we could not guarantee them protection against French cruisers on their passage into a German port. We could insure them safety to England, or Italy, or Austria —always provided they had not, indi vidually or collectively, entered into the service of eitherof the billigerents. Our laws, which are strict in regard to these matters, are necessary to prevent our country from getting embroiled in Eu ropean troubles, and we have no doubt they would be rigidly enforced by the administration. Under such restrictions it is not likely that either of the contend ing parties will receive any great addi tion to their armies from this country. qualms of Conscience The editor of the Columbia Spy scenic to be troubled with sonic qualms of con science. lie talks in the following style: " After the disgraceful conduct of the late Treasurer, Mackey, and our present Trea surer, Irwin, it was fairly presumable that no honest Republican having a proper re gard for his own character, would serious ly think of re-electing either. There was but one sentiment throughout the State during and after the session of the Legis lature on this subject. Strange to say, how ever, a In iraculou, change has corn,. over the dreams of our political managers of easy virtue NC lin have lately determined that the contest for the °Mee of Treasurer is to be narrowed down to these two um - ti dos, anti for that purpose candidates for our State Senate and I louse are to be selected with reference to a choice of either. We are, therefore, again to be insulted by the obi system of bargain and sale bribery and corruption that has disgraced our Legisla ture for several years past, to realize the - - mortifvint , truth that no holiest man can be ele cted State Treasurer, and that our Treasury is nothing more than a place for the in-gathering and temporary keeping of the public funds, until the annuli thieves shall assemble to plunder it. It is lamen: table that in good, old, staid Pennsylvania such a scheme should oven lie thought of, but, unless pains are taken to prevent it, this movement will be carried out anti our party again have cause to blush at the dis graceful exhibition of 011,11pti011 in their representatives who falsely represent them selves as worthy of public confidence. The suggestion, therefore, made by a cotempo rary for an amendment to our constitution providing for the election of a State Trea surer by the people is a wise tile, and should be adopted, and should also lie ex tended to the election of an Litited States Senator... NO one \ORO reads thealeyVe pantgral will need to be told that the editor of the .Vpy is young in years and a novice in his profession. If lie were not he would have learned by this time either to go In for Mackey or Irwin, or to keep his mouth shut up as tight as that of an oyster. Every Republican editor in Penrrsylvania knows that his party is rotten to the core, and is fully aware of the fact that it has long ago ceased to to enable a certain number of lucky fellows to grow fat on the spoils of of fice. We believe the editor of the Spy has had a crumb thrown to him in the shape of an appointment to the position of Notary Public. It may he (taverner (teary has a candidate of his own for the office of State Treasurer, and that our youthful and verdant friend of the Spy has been ordered to assail bath Mackey and Irwin. All that he says is very title ; the only wonder is that he has dared to say anything. " Keep quiet till the crib is cracked, and then divide the spoils," is the motto of burglars and the loaders of the Republican party. An Unfortunate Allusion. Napoleon, on taking personal cow inand of his aridly, issued an address \\lnch has the Napoleonic ring in it but which ha.; also, for the honor o France, an unfortunate allusion. II conveys the idea of invincibility to the enemy in these words: But nothing is nl the persevering efforts of the soidiers of Africa, Italy and :\ lexico." The last word—Mexico—is particular ly unfortunate. The I‘lexican expedi tion is the disgrace of France. It wa. conceived in wickedness, executed ii weakness, collapsed in disgrace. Its termination was an additional evidence that Napoleon could break his word when it suited his purpose. I [cleft Maximilian to his fate hecause he S:1 \V he could not carry out the original programme.— The French expedition to Mexico is amongst the laughing stocks of mili tary campaigns. 'fo remind French sok titers of that is about lige weakest allu sion in military annal. \Ve can only account for it on tlio ,tippo , ition that the mention of three countries wa necessary to give the sentence a Napo leonie turn. Mexico to France was turn-out. If the Emperor's cheek eve blushed with shame it must be when It reealls the ind,iellts if that campaign 'l' he widow Louis Na poleon would not ace. In her loci moments she charged hint with the I.( trayal tot' lwr dead husLand. \Ve fanvy we tan hear the laugh of .kle•tri:ra prira,,,it tins allu,ion t o Mexico, and in thi, Itt•puldiv, where tho or the Freirati Era per, art , pdit,tly u ndcrstond in re.,:.ard to the Mexh•an expedition, an that on, of Oory for Vrclit•ll I.roop, itil laCI: of aract• ti n tl ,avors 'N‘ More Thlel lug Radical Congressmen 'l' \vo uu,rt• of the It:olio:II Coligre,,it,n .al thieves have lwvit detected in their crimes. ltoderiel: Itaudoto of 'Fennessee, and a fellow elected frwu (;eorgia, who rejoiees in the title of Judge Winiley, have been caught steal ing motley belonging to the widows of deceased soldier,. The pet,i , oi are said to have the proof dead on the rascals, :ma they ale to he arrested :tnd tried fur theft. (if such k "the party of great moral idea." eumito,ed. IT is suggested that now is the time the mercury ranging somewhere from t) , .) to lon degreesl for Capt. I lall to man his ti;.50,00u expedition to the North Pole If ever the people can be convinced of the propriety of North Pole expeditions it is now. Blair County N Inatiott% The Democracy met in convention at Hollidaysburg on NVedlicsilay and nomin ated tho following: State Senate—Col—John C. Everhart, sub ject to the decision of the I'oll l) C the district. Assenibly—\Ciii. Smith. Prothonotary—Joseph 11. Blackburn. Sheriff-I°ll - n B Associnto.Judges—.Juba and w. A. Brooks. 'Treasurer—.Jacob Nfitttern. County COllllllismic , ner—Joliti IL llile mon. Poor Director—John E. IloW Man. .Jury Commissioner—Matthew Stewart. Auditor—John E. Burchinell. Messrs. \V. Jackson, Samuel Lloyd and James H. Patterson were selected Con gressional Conferees. S. J. Woodcock Was made Chairman of the County Committee. What Doom It :Kean General U. S. Grant, President of the United States, and Gen. R. E. Lee, Presi dent of a college in Virginia, aro both at t‘ Long Branch enjoying as ay may the cool Atlantic breezes. We ho a this meeting has none of the signiticane that usually at taches to the meetings of gr at men beyond the Atlantic. It is certain Vint their last meeting had a wonderful significance for the country ; but then there aro no apple trees at Long Branch.—N. Y. Heroic. TROTTING IN WEST VIRGINIA Night's Rest in the Virginia Canaan-- A ir We Lay's Sport—Exploring the Blaektrater. Editorial Notes No. IV The meek-eyed morn appears, mother of dews ; At first faint glimmering in tno dappled East ; Till far o'er ether spreads the widening glow, And from before the lustre of her face White break the fogs away. With quieketwal Step brown night retires; young duy dawns lu apace, And opens all the glorious prospect wide. Toe dripping rocks, the mountain tops Swell on the sight and brighten with the dawn. If England's sweetest of rural poets had been alive and with us he could not have described more accurately and graphically the manner in which morn broke over our camp upon the bank of the Biackwater river. Two or three times during the night we woke chilly, and stirring up the lire and heaping on more fuel retired again to re freshing slumber. We roso at dawn fresh and vigorous, performed our ablutions in the river, and were ready to do justice to the appetizing breakfast which Charley soon set before us on now plates of freshly peeled birch bark. Sol., who had returned M the house the evening before, arrived with the maple sugar in time for the las- tidious members of the party to sweeten their third pint of coffee, and their serenity of temper was thereby completely restored. It is a singular fact that the trout in the Blackwater will not bite early in the morn ing or late in the evening, and they seem to feed most voraciously for the space of about three hours in the middle of the day. Two of us went with Sol. by a path to a point some two miles above the camp and fished down the stream, the others fishing up until they net u‘ . .. For a couple of hours after we began fishing our luck was compara tively poor, though it would have been con sidered extraordinarily good in most places., In a broad and comparatively still pool, where we caught hundreds of trout four years before, one of the party taking fifty without moving from his stand nil a rock, we now caught very few. It was not because the trout were not there, but because they had not began to feed. When they began to bite they proved to be as numer ous and as voracious as could lie de sired, and the party returned to camp by Wclock in the afternoon with ere,' one housale/ fro s t. lieorge A. Smith had saved ill the little IJzies he took, and ho counted tut of his ten pound creel, Which was near y full, over two hundred fish. 'There were .en of us fishing, and most of us had rows hack many of the smaller fry George A. Smith cleaned fifty of the sinall est he caught and avowed his determina tion to eat them all for dinner. The cook piled them up before him on a separate birch bark dish, and he attacked them vig orously; but when only half his heavy task wits done, he began to show signs of visibly increasing in size, and, after slowly 'masticating his thirty-fourthiish, "gave in" :std sunk back on his blanket in a state of exhaustion. A little of the medicine we mil taken along to cure snake bites, cats ttl to rally at length; and then we dis mssol the feasibility of exploring the ISlackwater to its mouth, while the smoke 'rent our pipes curled gracefully upward .h rough the embowering arch which was lortned by the closely interlacing branches if the trees above us. ]iv the rules of our association every proposition infecting the party was to lie :tended be a vote, and the question being put, Captain Skinner, George A.Smith and the Wr i ter hereof voted in favor of making the proposed exploration of the Blaek wa ter. Duncan and Blakemore (lid not vote; they stating their desire to return to Oak land and lisp certain streams in that imme diate vicinity is here very largo trout are sometimes caught. Illaketnore's feet were in no condition for the proposed tramp, and Dunnm feared to trust a weak ankle. This agitating question being amicably settled, we broke camp about 5 o'clock on the af ternoon of the of June, and retracted our steps through the dense forest. As the sun declined the light seas tuned down to a dim cathedral hue; and the profound quiet, was very inn pressive. We reached Dob bin's Hotel in good time and found it com pletely untenanted. It is not occupied ex cept by occasional parties, such as ours, and Sol. Calhoun, our guide, has charge of it. It was built some years before the Re bellion by Judge Dobbin, of Baltimore, a wealthy gentlemen who owns some thirty thousand acres of land hero in one body. Ile furnished the house quite eomfortably, but during the war marauding parties car ried off must of the portable articles. There are plenty of bedsteads, chairs, tables, cook ing utensils and plain table, ware there now, and any party, wishing to "rough it" can be amply accommodated. Sol. charges a very moderate stun for his services and ine use el' all :he property under his con- Soon after we arrived some one espied a line of horsemen entering the clearing, and BlM:more was sure it was Sam. Smith, of Uniontown, I'a., and the rest of his long delayed friends. So it turned out to be.— Mr. Smith was accompanied by Judge Ewing, Mr. Miller, editor of the Fayette county Stmt./a/Maud a couple of other gen tlemen. They brought an excellent negro cook with them front Uniontown, and a guide from Oakland. We were soon in troduced, and there is no place where all fteremony melts away more quickly than it does in the woods. Mr. Samuel Smith is a true sportsman, and, though suffering with a bronchial affection, he ramps in the woods for sonic weeks every summer. His friends are pleasant gentlemen, and we were glad to meet them. Our larder sup plied an abundance of trout for all hands, told Charley and the darkey soon put on the table a slipper that any true sportsman would have pronounced perfect. We had warm cakes of wheat flour, and the fasti dious gentlemen of our party had their very hearts made glad by the production of an abundant supply of white sugar for sweetening their coffee. For the first tune during our trip the little black gnats threatened to be very an noying, but half a dozen bright tires kin dled in dry slumps, about the house, soon dispatched these dintunitive pests. A "smudge," or smoking tire is not the thing to destroy them. They Ily intoa bright tire by 'myriads, and the surrounding space is soon effectually cleared of them. We re tired Pt bed at an early hour on our mat tresses of loose hay, and were up a little alter daylight in the morning. After a..- other hearty breakfast on trout, the party divided, not to meet again. Sant Smith and Judge I.:wing went with their guide to OP? Black water, to fish for trout and see the falls. Mr. Miller and tt couple compan ions took to the woods, in hope of killing ,t deer. Dllll , Bll ;11111 ithlkl.lll , Pre mounted the pack horses :tad turned their laces toward I ktklantl. Captain Skinner, Item .1. Smith, 11. cl. Smith, Charley Atkinson and yonng Mosley, followed Std. Calhoun, as he led the way toward the Illack water It %Viill4lll due ,It•libt•rati,i ;Intl smim misgivings that we ventured upon this trip. inn - route lay down the bed of ono of the wildest mountain torrents for a ! dist:time of not It'ss than twelve miles, I through alt utterly uninhabited and almost unexplored re4ion. had been over the I route once in the 111010.11 Of August, lint this was .Inne, ,ind the river much higher.— Stones which would be bare in August I were now more than a Butt underwater, , unit eve would be sure to find the current sin swift as to make fording ditlicult at all times and generally impossible. The banks were precipitous, awl the laurel which cov ered them so thick as almost to preclude a passage through it. 'rite reader will see that the difficulties before tin were decided- Iv formidable. Still we had an eager de sire to follow this wild stream through the deep mountain gorgo which confin ed it, to where it emerged into a cultivated section of country. When we began to pack fur the trip, we found we could carry very little extra baggage.— Sol's long rifle was locked up and a Colt's navy revolver substituted. Our blankets were strapped on the pack horses to lie taken to Oakland, and wo made up our ! minds to sleep in the woods without cov ering. An extra pair of woolen socks all the extra clothing we took. We wore woolen pants and woolen shirts, and car ried heavy woolen coats. Our commissary stores consisted of a piece of fat bacon, some crackers, a can of coffee, a small can of butter, some pepper and a small allow ance of whiskey In a wooden keg with a handle. Our cooking apparatus and table ware embraced a small frying part, a small coffee pot and two tin cups. Thus accou tred we bade farewell to Duncan, Blake more and the rest, and struck out for a tramp of some fifty miles from Dobbin's Hotel to Rowlesburg, the station where the Baltimore and Ohio railroad crosses Cheat River. In the very first mile of our route wo en countered obstacles sufficient to have ter rified any one inexperienced in wood craft. To reach the Blackwater at the point de sired, we had to descend a mountain side so precipitous that we wore compelled to cling to the shrubs and trees to prevent ourselves from being precipitated downward. Moro than one of the party got a rough fall, and even Sol. did not escape. At last we struck the river at the point whore the North and South Forks unite. Wowore glad enough to notice that the South Fork was very low. This led us to hope that the river would not be found to be much swollen by minor tributaries as we descended it, and we were not disappointed. We wore now sonic three miles below the great falls, and we began the descent of the stream with stout hearts and eager anticipations of. ad venture. Sol. soon informed us that the trip would be more difficult than when he made it in the month of August, on account of the greater depth of the water. The descent was toilsome indeed, and only at raro inter vals were we able to Lind a rod of smooth surface. We stepped and leaped from stone to stone and front rock to rock, now clinging to the side of a precipice, picking our way along the projecting ledge of stones at the base, and now climbing to a height of a hundred feet through a dense under- growth of laurel, the water at the foot o 110 cliffs flowing in a current from ten to twenty feet in depth. Many times did we ford the rushing torrent, slowly takingone step after another, and picking our way from one boulder. over which the dark rater swept in circling eddies, to another NOW and thou we Iqllllo to iIILCEVILLS Whero the rock which makes up the primitivo strataof these numntains Nye, laid hare in its original horizontal po , ith,n; and onco tw us walked nearly a iniie over a sinoot mveinent on which two or threo carriage. might have been driven abreast, while th rest toiled Oil amidst many difficulties - _ being too deep and rapid fir them to lord it. We fished as we went along, and caught, as litany line trout as we eared l'or. Cap Cain Skinner took two out of one pool Oar of which mind have been over finirtee inches in length, and ten inch trout we plenty. We could have caught any quanti ty, but when we had dined on them and secured enough or supper tuid breakfast Lit fishing and traveled down stream ,idly as wo conveniently could. in its source to its mouth the Black river flows through a deep gorge, and the banks rise precipitously, there being little level ground along the edges of the stream until you are within two or three miles of the mouth. The scenery along its entire . course is of the grandest ch.iracter, the mountains towering above you on eith er side to the height of twelve or fifteen hundred feet. Its course in iillllo4l as straight as that of a canal cut through a level country, and yull gait look up and down it ill many places until the vista is closed by distance. Its descent is very rapid, it being a brawling mountain tor rent even at comparatively low stages iirw.• toe. There are multittnMs of miniature falls, fr o m tell to thirty feet in height, and many of these are wonderfully he:m[lCM. At the base of them aro deep pools in which the dark water whirls a b out in wide, c.itn flecked eddies, and here the trout spring to your llv With eager voracity. The eye never tires of the unendi n g variety of pie turesque scenery. NV° saw hundreds a views that would have charmed the heart of au artist, and :lily tine of Which would have paid richly for painting it. Nothing but a skill MI pencil could do justice to the glorious Visions that constantly Durst upon one sight. ennillOt attellilit a iiiiScrip trim of tbem. 111 imperfect sketch of a sin : gle view all We can give. lhu•r in the early altorltrmll to ',tnrnl nu the shade side the ricer, beneath it dark canopy ut hcwlurk troos. Imoking up the stream, at a distance of three huudrud yards above we saw the river tumbling over a sloping precipice, !caking a descent of fifty feet in that many yards. 'nu , wader which looked black as ink when it flowed by our feet was turned to ii. delicate pink tinge as it rippled down the rocks in the bright sunshine and formed wide ribbons which were fringed with silvery 1 . 01011. Below this pieture , tmely broken fall the ricer swept wildly downward, dashing over op piising rocks, damming up against huge boulders, circling in deep pools, narrowing into a dark torrent, tind then spreading out in a wide, rippling expanse which lay be tween its and the precipitous hank opposite, along which some of our party were toil somely climbing. Above their heads, face to face with us, some baud reds of feet up the steep mountain side, we caught sight of an other object of wonderful beauty. A stream of water, as clear as crystal, leaped nut of a narrow gorge and plunged down a perpendicular precipice. It did not de scend in an unbroken VolUine. In the middle a thin sheet, seemingly some twen ty feel in width, pitched headlong, preserv ingits solidity for thirty or forty feet, then breaking into white foam which gleamed like carved marble in the sunshine. On either side ~f this, rivulets trickled from the level plane of the precipice, breaking into myriads of crystal drops, which glit tered with a brilliancy surpassing that of diamonds. A thin curtain of foliage inter posed at intervals between our eye and the beautiful vision, veiling its features just sufficiently to lend an additional charm to a picture that would make a painter's fortune. Amid such scenes, toilsomely wading, climbing, and leaping from rock to nick, WO made our rev down the bed of the Illackwater, and down the western slope of the Allegheny mountains. !Nowhere on our route did tee see the i s l,t thing to Mills eate that .such a creature as man had an ex istence. There was not a foot print on the shore, not an axe mark on a tree or on the driftwood along the stream. We were ,•mn pletely beyond the bounds of civilization, alone with the wild beast orate forest, in the heart of one of nature's grandest solitudes. Twice we caught a glimpse of deer, as they stood and gazed with mild-eyed wonder lit our intrusion, and then dashed up the steep mountain slope. We saw where the otter had constructed his slicling'places on the edges of cool deep pools, and the occasional mark of a bear, but nut the faintest trace of Mall. To be thus com pletely shut out 1 . 1 , 111 human kind, even for a single day-, is a new experience which begets peculiar sensation. A trip down the Illack water alum would be a very lone some jaunt indeed. About an hour before sunset the guide proposed that we should camp on a huge boulder, which stood in the stream awl rose to it distance of fifteen feet above the surface of the water. A. large pile of drift nl had lodged against it, it WaS sumo thirty feet siptare and we rerched it by walking a hug , leg. A consultation being held, it was finally determined td make a mile or so more, and we finally camped tin a level bed of rock just abaci a nat. I lire ivohntinl plenty of wood, which all hands set about gathering, and soon we had a huge tire going and our pantaloon., hung up hi dry. While Charley cooked supper, We gathered large armfuls of long dry moss from the rocks On the bank, and shortly after supper we retired to rest 011 pleasant as Fitz Janie,' bed of Scottish heather. Th.. niurtlturiin.; str.•ain, 1140'. 1114 ',IPA! 1011101 11. 011 11, Y 111•11 With mingled lulhth e et night and Two or three times in the night we woke a little chilly, but, after piling more trued upen the tire, we slept :es soundly :mil sweetly,with no root above us but the wav ing branches or the (rues and 11,1 cover except our elothes, as ever any one did in draped chamber on decorated I . ollcll of down. NVllat followed must be told in anothe number, which will end the lenouritof on trouting trip to West Virginia. Pad• LP or Quit The 1i: lowing letter has been sent to :LI the Federal (Mice-holders in the country It will be seen by it that the Radical Cult gressi.trial Committee are .scared: CON(IItES.SI ,, NA I. 10.:11:111.1cAN Ex leUTIV F: COM 'I I l EE, WaAhington, D. C., July 26, 1,70. S Sit: —Tho political campaign or N7u, which has already been commenced in some of the States, promises to be contest ed with more than usual activity by the Democratic party. It is therefore 110008lia ry that it should be met with spirit and de termination. Every Republican whose at tention has been directed to the subject will readily see the necessity of prompt and decisive attention. The only defence need ed by the administration is that the people limy be furnished with the facts as they ex ist 4 iTo accomplish this money will be ne cessary to defray the expense of printing and circulating documents, and in sending speakers Into the acid. Your position in the Republican party warrants the Com mittee in believing that you would willing ly contribute to this purpose. They have therefore thought proper to call upon you for a contribution of dollars, the re ceipt of which will be promptly acknowl edged, and the money expended In main taining Republican principles. Whore it can be done, money should be sent by draft, money-order, or In registered letters, made payable and directed to lion. J. 11. Platt, M. C., Secretary Union Congression al Republican Committee, Washington, D. C. An answer is expected. Respectfully, (Signed) ZACUA RIAU C RAN D LER, JOHN H. KETCITAM, J. li. PLAIT, Jr., Finance Committee. OUR BUNDLE OF NOTRINUS 1!EI=!! A. surfeit of the sweetest things The deepest loathing to the stomach brings I was brought into conscious being some live and twenty years ago—have had an "awful" experience—and, from present in dications, cannot survive more than live years at the farthest, when I ought to have reached the scriptural " three score and ten." The fact is, I am not my own mas ter—l am a poor, feeble, persecuted and overworked slave. Perhaps there is no species of shivery on this earth, that is more unrelenting, more cruel, more bur dening and more destitute of common ra tionality than mine. lum very simple in ny structure, having neither head nor tail, utnds nor feet, nevertheless I perform—or NV IIS intended to perform—a very important function in the economy of the human sys tem. To make the matter short, as to my individuality, I am nothing more nor less than a human stomach—sometimes fateti- ously called a " stmmjack"—perhaps be cause I :tut very often compelled to boar burdens and perform labors, that would be onough —or too much—for that patient long- eared animal familiarly called a Jack. Shortly after I was ushered into exist vitro, my ,merous labors commem,d, with in the body Ma rich man's suckling. And 0, what quantities of milk, :Ind tea, and sugar-water, and pap, and paregoric, and pills, :Mil sweetmeats and tinctures were indiscriminately thrown into me, oxpeet- ing too to digest and appropriate thein,:wki to ,laliorate the nutriment necessary t o build up a healthy human, body. I larilly hail I began to make a sensible impression upon one instalment than another NVit, dashed dutch , ilestri tying and disarranging all I had compelling me to suspend for a time my manipulations; whereby the superabundant iintterial on 11111111 in until sour and ferment, causing niti to reject it tilt` avenue by tchich it came, ca acmliug it and by :1 process p:tinttil d• Illy proprietor, through an inflamed and eructating no/ wt/fll, to the outer worlul. AA I gi es% uhlcr and bevann. more Ci ill Nvas vonsequently rx pecto,l 1,, perlitrlll 11..1 Inrroaxi•sl If lab, a., II how I droatlo,l Christmas, anti Now Y oars, mill Easter, :11111 l'ourth or .1 lily. ,itniatinn sva, a hard and nnonV h ddi• 0110 nt any limo, :tinl undor any cirolllll bult 0n 01,0 0‘•1.i011,4 it N%:/, 31- pa,t. ft, I never could gel 11.'1110111s I'l,l. 11 , 111 early till 111. It ul night. Such arid valtdi. , , hard-builed egg', 11.11.1 “angps, appie,tild rai,iits, inincopic., "ysters nml lid,ter sanco, roast-souse, and , ttillings, besidt, ti,any (alter too Lc,linus U, tnrnti,~n, wlnt•lt svcro thrown into me—as ir I won. a e,1111111.1 - 1,1,1111 . 1 . hacr put t” sh,uuc any l'atigtmian I'vegty Islander, awl turn whoa cx - trent,' pmverless t.xpattshiti, and dilittimis with showers water, and mill,, alit! h., and witty, I het•attn, iniablo to perf, , rtn tny duties, iitimodiatcly I was saluted stAtlntents ..1 rhtit...l,, and rash, oil. n,el opsont salts,,, that and jalap, until I cmild Itardly 101 l ‘vh,•thei . I was a human Sti , llllll . ll, or a more rocepta- ele ul iilcoinzruffits drum. Such N, as we fate during' LI., whole ILaoleseent period nly ownPr, ana When lie reached manhood it ,a, dean wur.e, liar then, WaS uddud ritest 1,‘,•1 * . ;Mkt I,llled limn, allti fish. ;Ina otit . .•l:. and '•linekwhoat cakes and san:ages," and tripe, :intl and eidd-,law, and lart erle, anti Liudnrger cheese, hi ininn i rSl i li ina p e ns 0f1.1 . 1,111 Lager, and ltramly, and Sherry, and "IM Whi,key, - interspersed Ivith peppers, Imti horse radisli,:md mustard, aml sundry Miler condiments avid spices, prolonged u m til thu small hours of the morning,. If I dill not extract immediately from this superahiim dance of material the eltyie• that teas 11(.11,- stirs in support the tottering system ill illy tyranival proprietor, lie would scud 11•1,1 buses ef lirandretli's Pills, :Uhl )i ishler's Bitters, and Alartrloy's kippers, to sae what was wrung, and to dictate to me ho a illy work ought to be tiolltt, plot It, Il a 1111111 all stomas is WaS a vointlion apple mill, laud could grind tip and (ixtraet the nutrition from such a ill.tert.gt . lte , aN aims, till. saint' as it could front a gii ell iptitiltity, at ti given time, of simple and iv holesouto ILod. Theiiii art lily grieve:woes, and I appeal to the common sense of mankind to say w limber the fault is mine, or that it my indisereet, sir tyranieal master. lie Illay think sill this vast labor is ',thing, but / ititi con vinced, liy ilear bought experience, that it is something. A Bork, county fanner has a goo., 21 ears old. 'nowt county, in Pennsylvania, has a cese factory which used tip nods of milk in June. The Mattel) Chunk jail is tenantless:it present time, which speaks eximeil gly well fur the morals of Carbon. The Elk Arleoeute notes Okla .1. W. Oyster, of Elk county, is stocking a trout pond. This is the that time we have heard of an oyster propogating trout. Commander IV. IV. Queen, formerly of Reading, tuna liven ordered to o out mound the naval rendezvous it Huila delphia. 'file York County Steel works, Nt er, tit in suocessful operation last week, lie machinery, we are told, all worki,l a satisfactory manner. Philadelphia, according to a recent numeration by the police of that city, las P.),1i95 horses, 2,44-1 mules, 2,3-17 cow, :11 sheep, 5,99-1 swine, and 73'2.thrr le, (gouts, etc.) A gentleman in Carbon county W:l4 attacked by IL lot of black snakes the other day. Ile showed tight, and killed ISE=I The Titusville lb raid is :itith..rit v the statement that the Vnion Tine-- railroad in tinder tanitraet and will he in good running order within the next three months. A lad by the name of Clark Betz, aged It year+, left his 1111111 e 1111 thr rAlt Any information concerning his whereabouts will be gladly received by his father, Jacob Bretz, Newport, Perry county. 1)r. Cyrus 1). lloninger, of Lebanon, s talked of as the probable 1/eitiocrali . lorninee for Congress front the I.elm ,lon and Schuylkill district. \V. will probably Le ilic Ih•-• publican candidate. A son of Mr. I):uiirl I,indernian, rr sidingnenr I /ouglassvil le, Iterki.vounty, was seriously injured, on :‘11)111iZty by the accidental discharge I,t a guti iii the !minis of another boy. passed through both hands,oneof which has already been amputated, and ii is feared the other stay have to be also. :‘lr. J:11111,1 AlIght1110:1111411, ul Clinton county, :\lissouri, formerly of Dover, York county, was bitten in the palm of his hand by :1 rattlesnal:o while voting strawberries upon the prairie, MI till. :it'll ult., and died on the sth. lie teas in his 70th year, sad leaves a wife and seven children to mourn their loss. Captain Edward Schall, of the First . National Artillery, Norristown, on Wed nesday last brought. uit against Robert C. Fries, Esq., editor of the Indtpcnth of that borough, for libel alleged to be contained in a notice of the parade on the Fourth of July last. The latter was bound overin the suns of $l,OOO to answer at Court. - - - I\lr. Ilikleubrand, while crad ling oats, on Friday last, in York town ship, killed a Snake Which measured three feet and four inches in length, and ten inches in thickness. After he had despatched the monster, it burst open, and sixty-seven young ones crawled out of it. 'they measured live and a half inches in length, and were all of one size. Mr. William Schroeder, of Albany township, lierks county, our the line of Lehigh, is the owner of a calf having only three legs, and no tail. It Is three weeks old, and weighs 70 pounds. It runs about 11.4 lively as if it had its full ntunber of " locomotors." It Is esteem ed quite a curiosity in the neighborhood, and a large 1111111ber of citizens have called to see it. - - - - A short, thick-set negro, very black and repulsive,committed an aggravated assault on n white girl, named Ellen Rupp, la years of age,residing in Cu in ro township, Berks county, and would evidently have outraged her, had not her screams brought her father to her assistance. The negro escaped, and Mrs. Rupp was so shocked that she has had repeated convulsions from which it is feared she will never recover. On Thursday morning about seven o'clock a man named Henry Shaver, aged about seventy years, a resident of Mount Union, Huntingdon county, was run over and killed at that place by the Pittsburg express train going west. Tho deceased was standing on the track, and, although the engineer gave the signal, did not move. He was a miller by trade. No blame attaches to the company or its employees. INEERIBM