IE LANCASTER INTELLIGENCER, PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY EY H. G. SMITH ct CO. G. SMITE, A. J. STEINMAN. -,sofß—Two Dollars per annum payable all eases In advance. HE LAN EIASTNat DAILY INTELLIGENCES bllshed every evening, Sunday excepted, at ur annum in advance. TWICE-SOUTIIEUMT CORNER OF CENTRE ARE. Vottrp. IT Q rern PATS. It never pays to fret and growl When Fortune seems our foe; The bettor bred will push aimed And al dice the braver blow, For Wok Is work, And throe who shirk Should not lament their doom, lint yield t he play, And deer way That !putter leell have room. lt pitypi lo 1110131.11 h lu Ilrudglng tri r gain, Anil 130 lo hold who rlllnkl Cerinla Animals 1.1 we In 171,0er Our readers know that there are two kinds of respiratory apparatus—lungs which inhale air, abstract oxygen front it and give, in return, chiefly carbonic acid • and gills which absorb the )xy ger, dissolved in water, arid also give off chiefly carbonic acid, which is more reality dissolved in water than the oxy gen. The apparatus is possessed by mammals, birds, ete. ; the latter, by fishes; and as lungs are incapable of taking oxygen out of water, and gills cannot take it from the air, or, in other words, as lungs cannot breathe water, and gills cannot breathe air, animals withilung. , are &Owned in water, while tish are drowned in the air. A small number of amphibious animals, how ever, possess both lungs, and can there fore breathe either air or water, and thus live in both. It has been, however, ob served that musk-rats and other swim ming mammals with lungs could travel considerable distance under ice without reaching,any breathing hole on the sur face, and it was for a long time a prob lem how they succeeded in living so long and traveling so far without access to the atmosphere. The problem has been answered by S. Newhouse, in a work called the Trapper's Guide, from which we extract the following: " Musk-rats have a curious method of traveling long distances under the ice. In their winter excursions to their feed ing grounds, which are frequently at great distances front their abodes, they take in breath at starting and remain under water as long as they can. They rise to the ice and breathe out the air in their lungs, which remain in bubbles against the lower surface of the ice.— They wait till this air recovers oxygen from the water and ice and then take it in again and go on till the operation has to be repeated. In this way they can travel almost any distance and live any length of time under the ice. "The hunter sometimes takes advan tage of this habit of the musk-rat in the following manner: " When the marshes and ponds where muskrats abound are first frozen over, and the ice is thin and clear, on striking into their houses with his:hat chet, for the purpose of setting his traps, he frequently sees a whole faintly plunge into the water and: swim away under the ice. Following one for some distance, he sees him come up to renew his breath in the manner above describ ed. " After the animal has breathed against the ice, and before he has time to take it in again, the hunter strikes with his hatchet directly over him, and drives him away from his breath, In this case he drowns in swimming a few rods; and the hunter, cutting a hole in the ice, takes him out. Mink, otter and beaver travel under the ice in the same way: and hunters have frequently told Changarnler and Bazalne The Nuw York ITT, eld colitBiii:+ a long despnteli giving nn nevount of the iu tervl between lienernl Chang:older and one of its corrc-v mac n ts. We quote I as fellows: I Now, General, what ahout Metz? Did thefortrewewarrenderthrough necessity? NVIc. , there treachery Inside? I General Changarnier--No, Kir there was not treachery. Bazaine did not I mull himself to the enemy. Ile had no need of Looney. IDA work was far from being an act of treason to Prance. Mon Dieu There W:1,4 no treachery t wac 1 a bw,lute necessity. Correspoodent-About the military' ealateity of Marshal liazaine General Changarnier—There is the point. It h; said by many that the Mar slml is really Incompetent to command a large army, that the number of his own force bewildered hint, that lie could not operate such an army with any chance of final success; In tine, that he has already no Judgment or foresight in a great military emergency. It is also ally ed that he is a selfish man—all for himself and his own personal glorifica tion, and very enthusiastic for the hon or of his country. Bazaine, as it is said, sir, thought all the time that if Ifeace were proclaimed soon het Wein Prussia and France, Paris would never attempt to hold out; that the war struggle would fall flat, and that, Iris military reputation being unimpaired, he would march from Metz at the head of 1.10,000 of the very cream of the French army, and thus force the public to believe him a hero. liazaine wile kid yen into Metz on the Pith of August. lie could have escaped soon after had he marched boldly o ut with his entire army during; the thir tf-en remaining days of the month of thirty days to September 1, and for fif teen days of ((rioter. This is fin abso lute certainty. Any iron possessing a sound knowledge of military affairs will tell you the sande thing. Look at the facts. There were 'City-eight days elapsed with inizaine shut up in the strongest fortress of France, where her rio,oon of the bravest find most expert eared ,Ifliers could merely exist. fiazaine was selfish. lie wanted to be a hero, imagining that peace would Le concluded, he thought that the world ai large would say, "liazaine held Metz after France had droppe.l stronghold after stronghold into thehands of the enemy.' lint remember that, during the last ten days of the investment of Metz, French sorties lush been rendered impo,ible. No attack on the PrllSsianS, no:lnempt at escape could be made. Because 11azalne had really no artil lery, no cavalry mounted, and only, in 'ifact,ui,oisiiuhutlry. could do 110(11- [IA these three bralleheA Of the Prussian service in force, and wellequip- P• fors--pendent—Of entlr-o, ieneral, Paris is now the great centre. l'lmrigariiii2r-I'(.-, it is. The repub you sav is it governs without nr, nut the orleanists strong? i Correvondent---Yes. Should Judge that nut of 400,000 voters at least 11:15,0110 would go fur an Orleans monarch, as the Orleans feeling is strong in France. Changarnier—Yes, very strong,. The provinces are all for a calm anti for a wise, just and liberal Orleans govern ment. I know Parisian politics; know France, and this sad and unhap py situation can have no better relief than in the restorati o n of that line.— l You told nu. of Red Republicanism in Paris and of the Republic that must conserve all these incongruouselements. 'l'll hour the people of Paris do not know whether they want a licpuhlle or a Monarchy. They don't know what hey want. Some are for the Orleans dyna,ty ; Faye, is on.• party; the for another. All over France there are violent, irreconei hlt. factions. I) you not believe that front these tiniA come the restoration ? ; Correspondent—Yes, ;cnoral ; in Paris it looks ft" if this republic must fall. OWiflll to this disunion among the lenders. Cleingarnier—Vou are right. The repuldie cannot stand it. It is a fact that it cannot. stand. It is already divid ed—already broken into fragments all over France. There is no government to-day. It needs organization and har mony. ()He:mists can give these to Franco. An t/rlcans monarch is petwo, quiet, rep >o /1.1111 cucral happl- A Curious Accident NVe can say, aist,r reading this little story, that truth is unt nearly as strangu a, Iwtiott : A young man, :111inch:tide by trade, passed the evening in Brooklyn, about six weeks ago, and was returning to ,NCNV YOH:. on the terry boat tit twelve ninety-nine out or every one hundred persons always rush directly through a lout to the end nearest their destina tion, but this young man remained on the after-part till it touched the dock, when he passed through the ladies' sit ting room, and observed on a seat a lady's satehel still umbrella. Every one was hastening till the bout; there were but three or four ladies iu the whole Marty, so the young man seized the sateitel and umbrella and hurried after the receding ittettsengers. I folding both tlrt ides aloft, he hurriedly questioned several Istople. To none of those he hifigett the pruperty he hail taken pos se,sion After waiting about the ferry house sorry time, he took . the captured articles h borne. Of course e expected that they would be speedily advertised, for the satchel, which was locked, and the um brella, wore well worth some reward. Rut :lay after day passed—no advertise ment appeared—and he procured a key and opened the little bag, which cun tuinei iuuo in government bonds, :un registered:, rn portemonnaie holding fled it: en rrency, a splendid gold watch and chain, a broken ring, :t gold thimble, a locket containing an elderly man's par trait, a slip of paper, and thereon in a te rmite hand written these words : "I have waited and waited; you do not rune, and I have ceased to hope. E. P." rpon a margitud piece of some foreign newspaper, was the name of a hotel it, New York that does not exist. The young man consulted police headquar ters, and he went daily to the Morgue for some female to come ashore, but now nearly two months have gone by and no trace of the owner has been found. It is only by onc of three suppositions this mysterious satchel can he account ed for. Either murder, suicide or sud den insanity has overtaken the unfor tunate owner. In the meantime the cUslndiall of the unexpected fortune is hilt out of his wits with the embarrass ment that besets his position. Honor Your Business. It Is a good sign when a man is proud of his work or calling. Yet nothing is more common than to hear men finding fault continually with their particular business, and deeming themselves un fortunate because fastened to it by the necessity of gaining a livelihood. In this spirit men fret, and laboriously de stroy all their comfort in the work ; or they change their business, noel go on miserably, shifting from one thing to another, till the grave or poor-house gives them a fast grip. But while oc casionally a man fails in life because he is riot in the place fitted for his peculiar talent, it happens ten times oftener that failure results from neglect and even contempt of an honest business. A man should put his heart into everything that he does. There is not a profession that has not its peculiar cares and vexa tions. No man will escape annoyance by changing business. No mechanical ,business is altogether agreeable. Com merce, in its endless varieties, is affected, like all other human pursuits, with trials, unwelcome duties and spirit tiring necessities. It is the very wan tonness of folly for a man to search out the frets and burdens of his calling, and give his mind every day to a considera tion of them. They belong to human life. They are inevitable. Brooding over them only gives them strength.— On the other hand, a man has power given him to shed beauty and pleasure upon the homeliest toil, if he is wise. Let a man adopt his business and iden tify it with his life, and cover it with pleasant associations; for God has given us imagination, not alone to make some poets, but to enable all men to beautify homely things. Heart varnish will cover up innumerable evils and defects. Look at the good thing. Accept your lot as a Man does a piece of ragged ground, and begin to get out the rocks and roots, to deepenand mellow the soil, to enrich and plant it. There is some, thing in the most forbidding avocation, NUMBER 47 around which a wan may trine plea ant fancies, out of which he flay dI velop an honest pride. President Grant mid the netatternhitn 'rho Fretting Tbst clearly sums up, In the followingi succinct paragraphs, the points established against General Grout by the recently published documents relating to the 111ctiarrahan clairu, showing how the med at Secretary Cu a recoil upon the President's ow:: head Elsewhere will Le found a number ot of ficial docuinyntA giving a curious hi s tory of the Met tarrahan claim, and of Grant's connection with it. We are sorry to have to say that the it esident does not appear to ativantago in thls story. It seems to he established : Ftrne—That mouarr“)l3[l . , claim had been within live years tilsuded unfounded by the Supremo Citurt of the 1 !tiled States and that mart, In feet, In Its 1101.i5i.114, MilOWed il/3LYolllo bt the persetts Colloorlied ill it have been guilty of gross Semref- -The clnfut hnd boon ottiolally exposed by two different Attorney-t lone, als of the htited States as fraudulent. Third—lt had been beforo Congrss, RA we showed ontiaturtlay,and a Congres-Uon al vont mince had derided against it. l'oterth—Attortwy•tionvral Ilan utlici.d lv instructed Secretary Cox that tinder these circumstances he had no richt to de ny the defiant! of the opponents of ralmn to hare their claim ,15!!A -Litter opmien iir ; erwral !tear, Sriiretary Cox t.rdered. met ChM thin Note !drill Company should have hitd their patent, but only that in the regtt Jar course ,)r their slams sliiitilil he examined at the land Oilier. pon it Ili, one !Awes lie nt, a brut her-. n-la 11 . Pre.,,icnt, rat on tu Lung Prrt itch, whern Net Pr, u.l, at and, in (hr Intro's( ..% his fel nutn ts,persua, I ett h .'” fo I'l u the acru sit of .'f't el'etarg I to. .Xiireitt/r—At the :sante tittle Mis - iarrithitit indueed a minority of the judges of the Court of the District. of (•ohimhia, in V 11 1 411.- 6011, and in the al,eitte of the majority, anil 2trter they had iiiiis• been reletked by Lite Supreme , ('tort fir similar ntor fermi° with the constitutional tinivinee of the Exetattive, to make an order against tho Secretary to show can' , a by a manda mus should not ho issur.l he - bidding . him to have the Yew Itiria elitists exam mod. li:i!ifith.— ' lloreupou Secretary (fox wrote Gll 1110 PreSitil'llt ass iteedislit lieyilsi 11i111 U 1 110 uninformed of the 1 . :11 . 1,11 pointed out to him that, rho court proposed It gross, iitterferenee with the Exissitis au thority; asked ins in isimo In Wit:h int:ton, call lt C:1111110I 11101 , 1i11.g% 111111 deal with 11151 1111S1111 1 ,1 in a bll-1111,:i 11111111101% note, of this request. :mil art upon the in formation given hint by Seeretary Cox. 'thus it appears that the President, is 110 WILS prolialih• ignorant of the demerit , of :Nle(huiraltans u fun 1/ to 1,, prr.vra I, fed l,q rt bruthor-o In,' to Illte•Ift•IT ill. it It, the d u Inn fru, of t ashes . , lirucr.rt ("nut! .lors n short . 11'c:7;r th , n u int h rf, ',nu,l.of that not only .s brut rno"-, In fill! sum, poblicutils unt t, be 111.1 ettlqi ftt re 'rimier( r, r%nirvrnr , lrr,rlr ;arra tan tiii4 chr But it ought not to Lu lorgotteti that this 'hula matter iv a fah, by lho President again , t General Cox, Tie , real issue is the prostitution 4,11110 I•i it Snl•rs il•O ; and it is for that that the Prt-oilent. is held esponsilde by the people. The President, in his Hind strikino at Governor iipellea a Sit'lVO \Vlloll Will pear out a !loud he did not ex poet. Ity fool ishly publishing the eorrespondu nee, he has bound himself over fiat arraignment in Congress on charges of great gravity. lie lets precluded an adjudication of the in the Interior bepartment, where by law it belongs, and forces it into Congress, where he will receive the freest luutlllug front the friends of t 1 r. Cox and other opponents of the notorious train. 'rho is certain to he debated with great warmth and acrimony, and now that the personal character of the President is publicly involved In it, it will attract uni versal attention. As between the two sets of claimants, It would exeite only a languid interest; but as between fhe President a n d ox- Secretary, in a ,01:trrel tvdeli is ill grow daily more bitter, it v.i:l bissonti one , d lhr 'nest stirring topics debated at the next .I.s- Sil/11. NO matter how the quo:item may be decided, the decision will make against tirant. Ifltilittrniliati /',.s'it Will re garded as a triumpli over the President ; if ho totter, his success will atlrilwtrd CO Pres idential influence in abcttutg a fraud whieh has attain tel again been stamped with infamy by the law oflieers the government and the Supremo Court. The President is tut L,rtuuntu in his brothers-in-law. Very likely Lein is Pent utislod him when he hurried from %Vasil- I tigton to Lifillg Ilrnu ch, lust August, to re port, what Secretary Cox was preparing to do. That his cars were stulted with false tieernints by his brother-ill-111W nuay 11:1V0 boon inure tho inisfurttine than his fault. itut it was both hie unlit and Lin inisfurttitie that he spurned Mr. Cttxt..l r ,1111,t to 141E1114 to Washiturtun anti investi gate the subject with Itlf.illil of his Attor ney Geiterai ail Cabinet. Ills preleretiet of Summer recreations to his utlietal lulle anti his ti) 1110 ilitern4ol views 01 his hrother-in-laW, Lent, rather than be at the trouble tin eett,tilt his pruper udvisr rs, is likely to cost him dear in thy• etel.-- y. 11 -nrhl. Capture of lrrarin lite Murderer has bl,ll II th , • c.llitil M=MIEM=iI .13,t1) gives this account: "A negro desperado named Louis Trav is, Wlitl murdered in cold blood, in Spauld ing, County, (fa., a month :Igo. a lir. 'littler, wife and child, a isilore.l:Woltlatl, :111,1 two. other persons, arrived in this city on the nugro excursion train from Atlanta last May, and until yesterday, had been enjoy ing a fancied security from that retributive justice from win,/ he had not. " S. henna, Sheriff ol the Veinit v in which the murders Wcri , tornmitu•dl, Lave ing heard that the liloodtlitrsty scoundrel was lounging abo u t tins city, arrived here yesterday morning in quest of him. Sher iff Brown heing.known to'frits Captain Skills, nt the Chattanooga depot, to make the arrest. At 3::to o'eloek in tin afternoon Captain Skills discovered Tral - 1, Church street, l""l'I ing intently at a 'flying jenny,' in an open space on the ' , inth sit lent that thoroughfare. flaying already 111•011 illf,/1 - 1111•11 of Tr:, is' desperate deeds, Captain Sit ilrn took every precaution Inn. bd allow the rascal to get the advantage of hint, :toil not to arouse any suspicion I11:11 , 1 get near enough to lay hold "r him. Cap tain Skills aecordingly e. -..lkedl up in the direction cif the spot where Travis wt. standing. Travis became 11111•,y;i: his :11,- 1,1:11.11 : but Marin In/ rt hunt to ,Inp:lrt.- - When Captain tiltilos dell reached him he caught him by thecol lar and Loh him he wan his prison,. At that moment Travis jerl,sl tint a Colts revolver iind shot at Captain Skites, grazing his right hand. Captain Skiles broke his mace over Travis' head, which caused Travis to drop his pistol. They then had a des orate struggle for the mastery, ending in both being thrown to the ground, Travis falling on his pistol. In the scuffle Travis again pistol. At thin juncture Captain >kilcs snapped a Derringer at 111111. Till, :WU'', then -dint at Skilrs, the ball taking out a piece of the latter's oar. Captain tilt i les now drew forth a small Smith A: Wesson pistol 1111,1 shot Travis in the neck, after which the latter gave himself up, and was eunveyisi to the Chattanooga depot, from whence hr WILS taken to Atlanta by the Sheriff, manacled and handcuffed, on the P. NI. train. " It is believed that 'Fray's' wound may prove fatal. Nov. Bullock, subsequent to the committal of the dreadful murders mentioned, offered 1,000 for Travis' appre hension, the citizens adding more.- IVhatr,ver may be the reward, Capt. Skil, Certainly lifkeltVo,4 not only to be emn mended for his bravery, but to share in the division of the nion,y." 2111,4olrzte Freedom of the Pope'.• nov men t. 'rho Italian govurnzncnt has addre,se the foll,,wing circular t, its agnnt ab,ad: Stu: His eminence Cardinal int.inelli has applied to several courts fur informa tion as VI whether the pope would b e tree to leave Rome and go back to it at his own pleasure. This application of the Cardinal Secretary of State having been brought to iny knowledge by some member of the di plomatic body, I have immediately an swered that Italy naturally wishes his Holiness to remain at Rome, for nowhere else would the Pontiff find himself sur rounded by greater respect and regard, and nowhere else could he enjoy greater free dom in the discharge of Lis spiritual func tions. If, however, other ideas wore to prevail in the Council of the Holy Father, the King's government would certainly regret, but it would also respect the Pope's determination. Most assuredly the idea of exercising any induence on the deliberations of his Holi ness has never crossed our minds. Such an idea would be contrary to all our prece dents, and to our well-known political pro gramme. The Pope can, therefore, abide in Rome or repair to Castel Gondolfo, to Civita Vecchia, or elves, hero, He may quit Italy or return. The only observation I took the liberty to add to my answer was that if his Holiness made up his mind to leave Home, it would be desirable that he should do su in a public manner; for, con sidering the full liberty enjoyed by his Holiness, there would be no reason why he should expose himself to the inconvenience and fatigue of a secret journey. Whatever may be the determination of the Holy Father, neither the government nor the people would ever fail to surround him with all the honors and all the proofs of respect whirl) are clue to him, RATE OF ADVERTISING BURI NKR,' ADVEIITIFIRMENTS, $l2 a year per ealuro of ten Iluos ; $S per ruar for each addl. tion4l square. '• • ' REAL ESTATE .11._nvEreTtrirrto. 10 cents lie tor the first, and 5 conts for each othsequent n In- Insertion. GEN FM A DVERTISIN 0, 7 cel4s a lino for 11$0 fl o+l, and I ants for each subsequent In•e tlon. ESPErrAr.NOTicrs Insvezt.ed In I.o.,lAtitans 15 cants IK•r Hue. SPECIAL NoTirrx precelllna tnarrlngeoi and de/fall., 10 eellts per Iluo fur arst miert and t 5 °ots fur every xubseqUent LnlsertlOU. 0.6 L AND OTHER NOTICEH— Executors' notices 3 50 AI I miniNtratorm . notice 2 foi Assignees' notices 210 Auditors' nutlctst 2 OU Other " Notices," ten Ilnes, ur less, throe times— I 50 Erl=2 A Iteeldeof of 'fn. ttttt ionitin.7lrwiernry Shot mad Thrown tinder n Railway Troln---F.ctendlYi but 1 . 111.411.4 . e..... nenreh for the Murderer. 'rho supposed suicide ii Julio Cossaboom at .11anuttlusklit Station on the West .Irer sey !roil road. particulars or tvliielt were published in these columns a fete thlys ago, turns nut to lie a case of mysterious 11111 alisrirlilni; Interest. Since Lilo hodw was in terred itiforination has been given intinelitt; the belief that n void-M.lo(lyd murder in stead of deliberate suicide elided the lire of the unfertimate man, and subsequent de velopments isintirm these suspicions. Ito Tuesday eight last, the engineer of it frelizlit and passenger train oil the Wi•st Jersey Italiritil, tliseevered on the trite!,, shore tlktlllll.o nhonil of ills train, which wits then near Maninutiskin station, a man Nine inotintiliins at frill length across the The tvhist 1,01 111001 11 tiervely, the hell wits rung unit net 010103V0r u 1111!1 In Stoll 010 train. 'rho num illii not mot and laifore the train be stop- Iped the I.i.s.iiiiitivii uual three of the ears tvd passes! ever Ills body. Tho mutilated amp., was oXtril'lllekl frnrn 11111101'11011W the ear 11101 10.15 Varrlotl tic Mlllil/11111'. 1 sin The fentnrrs WOW ilololltllll , ll as 000, .IJohn 1,5141011 t the 11- /hge. A luisty exmilltiation was made of the seot.ft,l 1.111130114, but 11,, it 11115 I.:01101a! 1y that 010 iinfortimate man had cnnnnitlr,l suicide ruts seareh ing to vi'SliVatl4 , ll lye` , 110010, evil hoot au 00111,1 the lied:: was inferred. The ex:mini:Men of the peeliets or the pun and .siat tvorti b, 111, &CV:10011, 41100.01 i, 11101 ever, that 110 111141 00 1110110 y, 3101 this lael. 11.1 lc, the I.NIIIIII - of the Mrs. l'4lo-,10 , 0111 1111010 the iilNce/NAtry, (0.0 days after the imm inent 01 the body, thui. bee 61156:1111! hml Oar 1 - 1011 111, ay trill, 111111 I'll the day token he was hist soon over 3C' in money, 111111 it 10,11.110•1 1100 u, the Ititol - 110011 of . 010 day 110 hall !well ,14.11 hear the ,Vallip In 1•0111111111 y in 1111 a Jr.perate 011,11 . - aotor named birrb+on, body was then bit; on tip and a surtneal Won wits 110010. I'VVvaii.tl the filet I hat murder had prissiiiisl the simposiel SOVOII —,01•0 0/1111 ill near the le art. Air exploration et the sty:imp near the spot ou the Nt heir° the heily „as 1111 OVOI . , 111 010 ih,,,iery or a trail thrififtili the fallen leaves, and heave root•prints S , OlllO jterScoll tt 11. was 111111101leti th the lifelt•ss hotly. tiarn.on lid di, - 1,,,,red, an,l although the h,ob print. uld not he identified in the soft ground d bedded loaves its li.mtitr, boon made by in, I here u,r•re wally itcnin.lances 1.. the 1,01.•1 that he is the murdrrrrr. which has always huoil al nd in his all.' lilt• IL G~un,l it) Elio in sizt , With 11 , 01 i by hill]. All d:ty tnt SaninlitY band, larint•rs gen, armor!, •re ~ itycititi;:. ',vamps ill which tho mord, a`i ',pa"( finding stone tratio of the niiiiithitior, that tviitilit load to the ilistiositiry i l his Thoy hitil also n strong hop, tho dm:penult, nt a tarot-limo.° oval' the oast Sidi, of tilt ..aVillllll tali, 1.1 . 111, faun-haunts rrpnrlyd that ho Inul ',Oa a Mall anstveriog tar walkiu,iii :thing fluo ill' the wot,ls tit Friday 11 1 - 14 ,, 0. "Ito sdnrrh 05,10 rtinewoil, anal it Aviv, said - that tho totirilortir's shat gun hail boon found. Thu oxiiittinittint iv onisitirs.tl bluntitintry for wally tillii+,..llrl,lll.llllg, anti if the murderer ,011 Lila Chore is little doubt that he st ill I *iistaliiiiitti's I ittritiiii MEMZ=I rst interinont. 'The l'oroner's inquest kill pr,,hahly bu held until the cll . t h y• •arch 1,rl" lII° IliNlt.ll.lill. 1:=1 ,111111111, 511114.1110111. TIIO (1 nee Rigor, (It.t..her '2'4, Coil (aim+ a letter from NI. 'l'helln, the private trea,tirer Napoll•011 111., doted rrw., na,,her the of the Pith lent., NI. ,tax l'ol, whom I hat,, not. the honor lo) kiww, calls nio to prove that the 1.111- peror, doriett his reign ~f 14 vearn, invest ed vonneterablo nuns, abroad. NI. 11fax Poi Pi wrong,. It v. Ilia 111,1,1111, 1,111 111 10,1 no 111:1I 11,, Emperor made orn new hive-4111,1N , , huh I will it Ivo pet a 14.11101,11•111 a, 1 , X ael. u, po,•11110. Ills civil list. w , huh, 11111111 1 10111 M dnriv. , l Iron tht , crw.vn PM:41.011,1e I.lal .10,1100, sir (ilk sum th, , ,,iiimry °WM., 11140,1•11,01 un the Midget of the civil list 111, sorhed tt:.,,,e0,0u0." NI. 'lll,lin pr 1,01.1.114 lt detail what those ox ',NISI, WOl,, 1111111111 g, lunonw, ether Rolm., the repair and tel entlnteetteco of 1110 Ifllpflrillllllllll , loS,llllll , - 1111,11,111110111 , 1 or Ll,, , Enipm., and f'rinvci ',Tint, and the Vxra , ll,4l, Of the 14111111,1 10111 1101101111,1111111101 . 1111111111111f111.11111,1, Tllll ElJl perm, NI. Thelie Co 11111110•11, h,oi rolllllllllllg 11111011111111 Slllll if liii. :51,(i0n,0(m) par ,1111111111 for 14 yeari, the SIIIII of $1 111 all i, 1141,11111011 fur In varlotly ways. Tliere were a tinge 1111111110 r 0114111,scrip11.1, for orl,s of 'public , utility, the reelam.ithot and cultivation 1,1 1.11111, 1,1 , 1141.11 , 1, 141,0111-,, allll 0111,1111100 11011a1M114, i1111,11111111{;Z , 1,:11/11,- 1,00 to 1110 Et. rur pllrpose, alid i‘72.0,e00 for pr.,•ets to Iliploteati,t, 1111,1 player, Tllll iii l' ruvards the letter :14 ill 1111 Ivan refettmz r urreot 411114.1110111, ro .1101:1111g 11111 11,11111 of Napoleon, o-inrn it 11,,e, not aeveutit for the .llnronal of the Reed', of Ihn NN'ar Department which Ivam ,•harge.l during 1110 111 year,, still, 0,•11111,- 111011,1101, all.l 11,1 Irl,l,llry manly lll y when the war began, Ma= of the most glestrertive railroad ac cidents that everoceurretl ill our State hap penedoit the; ;reetivilleand Columbia Itail rnad, 011 Tlllll,llfly altert,,ti, at I o'clocls. The iloWn I,ll,l4ellger train, 11 little 'Whin , ' 4r111 , 11110 titer, was 11,1,51 lig over the trestle work across (It'd:lr Creek, about 12 neks from i'olumbia, w hen the trestles gave wan ',reel paling the baggage-car and those cars occupied by passengers Into the swamp below, a distance of ,twenty-live few. The I v,meal cu anti tender eased over Fromm the • trestles gave way, sell tho last car of the train, a /11111 11110.C111 , 11 ., 1 t• , .1:11, stopped ut the verge of the gap. The cars thrown into the StValtip were the intr.,- gage car, gins second class passenget• trill tie° first class passteiger rare. The ears IV,, instantly demolished, and of the unfortunate passengers lieu were iustautll killed, three mortally svourided, four se verely injured, and others more or less bruise, , citify it tine escaping. unhurt. The only Car that rem:Lewd 111,011 the track WILS a splesplendid eras 4 . 0;101 Whi , •ll, , St and se rich was 111101•4,11pled. ' no en gine passed safely over the trestle. but 1:19 1111 - O,VII ferret the track by the displacement of a rail, and teas considerably damaged.— The loss to the road will probably amount. to s'.lii,outt. One of the coaches which tc as ,I....iroyed was It companion to that which escapel injury', am! ~,t a similar sten. This :11 , i11 , 11t 14 only paralleled in 111. State by that which happened sotne Lurid . % years ago 011 the 01,11101A° Itaill'Oad, 111,011 t twelve olive trout Columbia, which caused by a train running (41 . a trestle into Elkin's mill peed. For the last three weeks the stream et water winch !lows from the "Big Spring" into Spring Creek, has been literally full of trout. The water being of an even temper ature anti shallow, the "speckled beauties' in the larger streams, in the latter part s: . ( - wisher awl the first or November, leavi• their summer pastures and locate in tins stream Mr the purpose of spawning, and most every day during the line men tioned, thousands oC them can be seen fulfilling the command of the Grand Master of all life.: In these annual trlps;the tunics always aceompany the females itiel both mutually assist in removing the rub bish off a small part of the bed of the stream, alter Which, when accomplished, they make a bed of very line sand into which the female deposits her egi.Ts sore in every six hours. Every time she spawns, the Male, who is always near by, proceeds to cot er them over wiM sand and slime by rubbing, his body over them. The lonian, trout generally deposits about ono thousand eggs annually, and the time site is engaged in it is ;Mont four weeks.- , The eggs hatch in about sixty days front the Lune they are spawned. The youn g trout collies into its li q uid world with a membrane sack about its neck tilled with a lluld substance, which is its wh - dc sus , tensile° for the first three months of its ex • intone°. If the suckers and ducks, who are great destroyers of the spawn, could be kept out of the stream spoken of, trout the first of October to the first of January, each year, in a few years all our streams in this valley would he literally full of trout. - Reff.:funtc Watchman. Wanted—A Lady Physic 1111 l PrOM uh , • Sort hl,•vtrrn Chrixf tan Atirot'it A lady physician in wanted for India. For centuries tits (001/11,11 of India have sub. !bruit unutterably for the lack of medical care. The physicians of the country aro all men ; and a high easto 'NUMMt would die before situ would allow one, not hor father, brother, or husband to enter her room. Worse than that. These miserablo women have been compelled to see their children nutter and ale, before their eyes, when a physician might have saved them. Of late, there has been a call for medical women to go and Coach these helpless, trampelled sufferers, that they may vane for each other and their children. The Woman's Foreign .Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church has the honor of having sent the first medical lady, as a missionary, to the foreign fields. It is itep.ssible to estimate the good sho in doing, as tut educator and I% ChriMilltll, hrnh•r of hod iost and non is.