• . . . . I, c la (• ) 42, - T, D e , " „,„„7.Y x: 21. r . • j:V • . .-0"' • •c;:r: ittpti * • „‘• : 41 1 IA: , , PUBLISHED WEEKLY IN THE CITY OF READING, BHRKS COUNTY, PA.---TEAMS: 81,50 A YEAR IN ADVANCE. .1. LAWRENCE GETZ, EDITOR.] PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY MORIVIIg G . . ..rth•Wetit_ corner of Penn and Fifth :dyed, ad joining the Farmers' Bank of Beading. TZEMS OF bUbSCRIPTION. 81,50 a year, payable in adwasee. 1,00 for six inouths„ in eavianee: - To CLOPS: Four coptes for 193, in advance. • Ten corie4 for lite,' ier AU papers disoontinued at , the arptrintion cif the timrvitt fur. • RATES OF ADVERTISING It TUE GAZETTE. 3t. 111110. Smo. emo. l Square, 511nes, or less, 60 60 75 2,00 500 5,00 10 " 60 1,00 1.25 3,01 5,00 8,00 - 20 " 1,00 2,00 2,60 5,00 6,00 1 5,00 " SO " 1,60 3,00 3,75 7,50 12,00 20,00 [Larger Advertisement* is proportion.] fieeentors' and Adinitilstratorte Notices, 6 insertions $2,00 .editors' Noticas and Legal Notice*. 3 Special Notice*, its reading matter, 10 cta. a line for one lusertiom IV Marriage notices 25 cents each. Deaths will be published gratuitously. eat 511 Obituary Notices, Reaelaileaa of Benetlelal and other Private Aosocialions, will be charged for, as ...leer ilseniepts, at tire . above rates: • - - air Advertisement , ' for Religion.. Charitable and Edit. estional objects, one half the above rates. sir All ease: tiling will be considered payable in cash, ou the first insertion. Yearly advertisers shall have the Privilege (if desired) of rouovring their adrertioemotifs every three weeks—but tMlf Winter Any additional renewals, or advertising ex ceeding the amount contracted fur. will be charged ,airs at one-half the rates abate specified for transient adver tisements. Yearly advertieers will be charged the same rates as trausient advertisers fur all matters nut rclatiug strictly to theirbusiners. PRINTING OF EVERY DESCRIPTION Executed In e. euperfur manner, at the very .I , rumt pricer. our at...3:tsuent of Sue 'NPR le large and laabiouable, and our Work speaks fur itholf. • BLANKS OF ALL KINDS, Laebiding PARCHMENT and PAPEtt. DEEDS, MORTOAOES, DoNDS, ARTICLES OF EUREEMIGsrr, LtiAtlaa, and x variety of .1.1,A3g3, kept coiwegtaly for sale, or printed lo order. EDWARD H. SHEARER, ATTORNEY AT LAW.—OFFICE 1N COURT Street, North side Reading, Pa. Laprii 26—Rre• REMOVAL. VLLIAM H. LIVINGOOD, ATTORNEY AT LAW. has removed his office to the north side of Court - street first door below Sixth. [dee 22-tf ABNER Z. STAUFFER, ATTORRRY AT LAW.—OFFICE, COURT street, below Sixth, Reading, Pa. [spat/ 20 • JESSE G. HAWLEY, •A`rTORNE,'Y AT LAW, OFFICE - WITH S. L YOUNG; ESQ., PENN Street, above Sixth, Reading, Pa. Jray- Will be at Friedeasburg, every Thursday. September 29, 1880.1y* Charles Davia, _ . ATTORNEY AT LAW-HAS REMOVED HIS Office to the Otlice lately (=urea by the lion. Devi.' P. tiordea, de...med. in Sixth area, opposite the Cuert Theme. (April 14 Daniel Ermentrout, ATTORNEY AT LAW—OFFICE IN NORTH Sixth .treat, corner of Conti alley. Lang 13-ly • David Neff, - WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Foreign and Domestic DRY GOODS, So. 2 set eon street, Reading, Pa. [March 10, 156 u. LIVINCOOD'S United States Bounty, Back Pay and Pension Office, COURT STREET, NEAR SIXTH. T_T AVESIIV BEEN 'ENGAGED IN COLLECT /I I Mg claims against the Government, I feel confident tbat all wbe have heretofore employed me will clieerfit fly mariatpul my Yruniptuess and fidelity. My charge; are moderate and no charge made until obtained. - WILLIAM If. LIVINOOOD, oct IS-tf] Attorney at Law, Court St., Reading, Pa ASA M. HART, (Late Hat.; & Mayer') DEALER IN FOREIGN AND AMERICAN DRY 000DS, CARPRTINGS, &c., Wholesale and Re id!, at Philadelphia prices. Sign of the 60idea Bee Hive, No. 14 East Penn Sonars. [april 17—tf P. Bushong & Sons, - MANUFACTURERS OF BURNING FLUID, Absolute, Deodorized and pruggists' Alcohol; also, Wilton, which they will at the lowest Whole's:ale prices, at Beading. Fa. sir= Orders respectfully solicited. . DR:- T. 'YARDLEY BROWN, SURGEON DENTIST. - GRADUATE OF PENNSYLVANIA . Dental College. Teeth extracted bt Fran- Electro Magnetic process, with ularke's improvement. With this method teeth are xtracted with lunch less pain than the usual way. No extra charge. Office in Fifth street, opposite the Presbyte rian Church. [april Dr. Cr. M. MILLER, BURGEON DENTIST, FROM TIIE - College of Dental Surgery, Philadelphia. t di• Office: At his . residence in Main street, Hamburg, Pa. 4? Teeth extracted under the influence of Ether, or by the Electro-Magnetic Machine, without extra charge. E.carvy cured. *Jar- Ile has aloe Patent and other MEDICINES for sale at his aim [may 31 FALL AND WINTER -, CLOTHING, FOR MEN AND BOYS IN GREAT VARIETY, SOLD 'PERM LOW Ifir JAMESON .Lsz, CO., Corner 6th and Penn. sept 6 B. DISSLER - A AS CONSTANTLY ON HAND A LARGE supply of Muelins, Prints, Checks, Tickings, Sheet ngs, FlauneLn, Crash, Toweling, Ste., which will be sold cheep. Give us a call before buying elsewhere. Augcust 16 LAUER'S BREWERY READING-, PA. - THE SUBSCRIBER respectfully announces to the public that be bae recently enlarged hie Bit,EWE- It. to. considerable extent, and introduced iiteam•power, sad is now ready to supply all demands for SUPERIOR Iiff.S.LIZ LIQUORS, For home and distant consumption. His stock of Malt Liquors, warranted to keep in all climates, is as follows: BROWN STOUT, PORTER, BOTTLING ALB, DRAUGHT ALN AND LAGER BEER. june itl—if FREDERICK LAUER_ N.R.—Altheral per oentage will be allowed to Agents abroad_ THE GREAT POINT ATTAINED !! ! 14. NEW STYLE Or SHUTTLE SEWING MACHINE, Q 0 SIMPLE IN ITS CONSTRUCTION, LIG ST to run, and eav to learn, that any one can operate It without instructions. Sews MIISLINS and the heaviest ARMY CLOTHS eguraly A splendid Machine for Tailors, Veet and Pant matters, lint and Shoe Modern, &c., at the low price of $5O, A liachitte than 021 y *Wt., in the jnarket, at 575.. Call Witt ace it. G. W. GOGDRIdEt, Jan 24-tf] - Non. 3 and 5 Patin Square, }leading, Pa F. P. HELLER, WATCHMAKER, YE FIER, AND DEALER IN WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, Q POONS, SP E(.3T ACLES, GOLD PENS, &c., Sign of the 4, Rau WA.Telit," No. nah' Ea Penn Street, above Sixth, north vide. Heading. Pa. 4Eir Every article warranted to he what it ie sold for Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, atc., repaired with particular attention, and guaranteed. [feb l—tf S. M. PETTENGILL & CO., No. 37 PARK ROW, NEW-YORK, & 6 STATE ST., BOSTON, Are Agents for the Reading Gazette, In those cities, and ar• authorized to take AdverUsetueuta anti Subscriptions SOT as .ist ear witab/Isbad rate•. •- BALTIMORE LOCK HOSPITAL Lir - ESTAIa:I - SHED AS A REFUGE FROM QUACKERY The Only Place Whete a Cure Can be Obtained. rlit. JOHNSTON . HAS DISCOVERED THE „urtnost Certain. Speedy and only Effectual Remedy in the World for all Private Diseases, Weakness of 'the sack or Limbs, Strictures ' Affections of the Kidneys and imstl der, Involuntary Discbarges, Impotency. Deneral Debili ty. Nervousness, Dyspepsia. Languor, Low Spirits, Confu sion of Ideas, Palpitation of the Heart, 'timidity, Trembling. Dimness of Sight or Giddiness, Disease of the. Head, Throat. prose or Skin, Affeettocis of the Liver, Lungs. SP:wadi or Buwels—ibose Terrible Disorders arising from the Solitary liabits of Youth—those wean[ and solitary practices more tidal totlieir victims than the song of Syreos to the Mariners of Clyeses, blighting their moot brilliant hopes or antleiptitions, reudering marriage, &c., impossible. YOUNG MEIN . Especially. who have become the victims of Solitary Vice, that d road iitl and destructive habit Vbicb annually sweeps to an notlinely wave thou•sands of Young Me.. of the moot exalted talents and brilliant intellect, who might other- Wi,o have rntraue-•d listening Senates, with the thunders of eloquence or waked to ecstasy the living lyre, may call with full con tidc!iee. Married l'ersuus, or Young Men contemplating marriage, being aw are of physical weakness, organic debility, def..- Mities. &C., speedily cured. He who places himself under the care of Dr. J. may re ligiously confide in his honor as a gentleman, and confi dently rely upon his skill as a Physician. ORGANIC NATILELICATESS Immediately Cured, sod Full Viuor Restored. 'Phis Distressing Affeetion—which renders Life miserable and marriage impossible—is toe penalty paid by the vic tims of improper indulgencee. Ykrung perilous are too apt to commit excesses from not being aware of the dreadful conseqraences that may ensue. Now, who that understands the subject will pretend to deny that the power of procrea tion is lost sooner by those falling into improper habit. thou by the prudent? Besides being deprived the pleas. ure of healthy offspring, the most serious and destructive symptoms to both body and mhod arise. the system be comes Deranged, the Physical and Mental Funclione Weakened, Lose of Procreative Power, Nervous Irritabili- ILV, Dyspepsia., Palpitation or the Heart. Indigestion, Con stuntional Debility, a Wasting of the Frame, Cough, Cun aumptiou, Decay end Death. Office, NO. 7 South Frederick Street, Left band side going from Baltimore street, a few doors from the corner. Fail not to observe name and bomber. Letters must be paid and contain a stamp. The Doctor's Diplomas hang in his office. .a. cuitm VarAILTLANTED IN TWO No Nsrcury or Nauseous Drugs. XOUNSTON. Member Of the Woyal College of Surgeons, London; Gradu ate from one of the most eminent Colleges in the United States, and the greater part of whose life has been spent in the hospitals of London, Paris, Philadelphia aiid else where, has effected some of the most astonishing cures that were ever known., many troubled with ringing in the head and ears when asleep,. great nervousness, being alarmed at sudden sounds, bashfulness, with frequent blushing, at tended sometimes with derangement of mind, were cured immediately. TAME PARTYcULSR Nomixam. - Dr. J. addresses all those mho - have injured themselves by improper indulgence and solitary habits which ruin both body and mind, unfitting them for either business, study, society or marriage. THESE are some of the cad and melancholy effects prodnc• ed by early habits of youth, viz: Weakness Mille Back and Limbs, Pains in the Head, Dimness of Sight, Loos of blue: miler Power, Palpitation of the Heart, Dyspepsy, Nervous Irritability, Derangement of the Digestive Functions, Cm eral Debility, Symptoms of Conennytion, dw. MENTALLT.—Tbelearful effects on the mind are much to be dreaded—Loss of Memory, Confusion of Ideas, Depree• sion of Spirits, Evil Forebodings, Aversion to Society, Sol Distrust, Love of Solitude, Timidity, &c., are some of the evils 'outfaced. Tuouemwne of persons of all ogee can now Judge what is the canse of their declining health, lowing their vigor, he coming weak, pale, nervous and emaciated, having a sit gular appearance about the eyes, cough and symptoms of consumption. YOUNG DIEN Who have injured themindves by a certain practice indul ged in when alone. a habit frequently learned from evil companions, or at school, the effects of which are nightly felt, even when asleep, and if not cured render,. Inarriai4e, impossible. and destroys both mind and body, should ap ply immediately. What a pity that a young man, the hope of his country, the darling of his parents, should be snatched from all prospects and enjoyments of life, by the consequence of deviating from the path of nature and indulging in a cer tain secret habit. bush persons atm - , before contemplat ing NEALRRIACLII, reflect that a sound mind and body are the mold. necessary requisites to promote connubial happiness. Indeed, with out these the journey through lite becomes a weary pil grimage; the: prospect hourly darkens to the view; the mind becomes shadowed with despair and tilled with the melancholy r reflection that the happiness of another be comes blighted with our own. 4) 0 * sAit k)311 , ': tot When the misguided end imprudent votary of pleasure t ° finds that he has imbibed the seeds of thie painful disease, it too often happens that an ill-timed sense of shame, or dread of discovery, deters him from applying to those who, from education and respectability, can alone befriend him, delaying till theconstitutional symptoms of this horrid dis ease make their appearance, such as ulcerated Sore throat, diseased nose, nocturnal pains in the bend and limbs, dim ness of sight , deafness, nodes on tee shin-bones and arms, blotches on the bead, face and extremities, progressing with frightful rapidity, till at last the palate of the month or the bones of the nose fall in, and the victim of this aw ful dioemie become,, a horrid object of commiseration, till death puts a period to ble dreadful sufferings, by sending him to that Undiscovered Country from whence no tram eller returns." [march 12 It is a •thelaucholy fact that thousands fall victims to this terrible disease, owing to the unskillfulness of ignor ant pretenders, who, by the use of that Deadly Poison, Mercury, ruin the constitution and make the residue of life miserable. • STRANGERS Trust not your lives, or health, to the care of many Un learned and worthless Pretenders, destitute of knowledge ; name or character, who copy Dr. Johuston's a.dvertises teems, or style themselves, in the newspapers, regularly - Educated Physicians, incapable of Curing; they keep you tettling month after month taking heir filthy and poison one CUMPOilltdit, or as loag as the smallest fee can he ob tained, and in despair, leave yon with ruined health to sigh over your own galling disappointment. Dr. Johnston is the only Physician advertising. His credentials or diplomats always hang in his office. His remedies or treatment are unknown to all others, prepared from a life spent in the great hospitals of Europe, the first in the country and a more extensive Private Prac tice than any other Physician in the world. larnonsnutzST or Tun PRESS. The many thousands cured at this institution year after year, and the numerous important Surgical Operations performed by Dr. Johnston ' witnessed by the reporters of the "005," "Clipper,' and runny . other papers, notices of &deli have appeared again and again before the public, besides his standing as a gentleman of character and re aponaibility, lea sufficient guarantee to the afflicted. Skin Diseases Speedily Cared. rap No letters received Unless post-paid and containing a sump to be used on the reply.„. Persons writing should state age, and send portion of advertisement describing appptouis: zoniu . .70EINSTON, W. D.; Of the lialtimore Lock Ho.pital,l3nltimere, bit,r;ll.3 may 10-Iy] STRICKLAND & BROTHER, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL BOOKSELLERS & STATIONERS, 23 EAST PENN STREET, Itk_IADING, PA. ALARGE AND WELL SELECTED STOCK of School, Miscellaneous and Blank 3111 C 411 - J, PRAYER BOOKS, ENGLISH AND GERMAN BIBLES AND _HYMN BOOKS, • • PERIODICALS, MUSIC and 31USIC BOOKS, - (OLD PENS. FANCY ARTICLES,. NOTE, LETTER, OAP aw 2 PiBIVTING PAPER cool PAPER BAGS SMARR BOORS MERCHANTS' ACCOUNT BOOKS • Marin to order; Churehen and Sabi-mak Schools sopplied with Tract Society and Sunday School Union patiitcationit, at eats:lolom prleas. Os Orders from Country Merchants solicited and filled promptly at the lowest wholesale prices. Aro- Teachers supplied with ?dusk, at the usual discount. B. B —Hooke and Music sent by mail postage paid, on receipt of Publishers' Prices. Jan 18—tf DR. D. LLEWELLYN BEAVER, United Solutes Penalma Surgeon. in XAMINATIONS OF INVALID PENSION `,/ ERS and applicants for Penhiona, from any Stale, and of both the Army and NaTy, made at the corner of Fifth and Walnut street, Heading. /kir Office boors—from 12 to 2 P. M. Poe. 20-Nmo.l WATCHES, GOLD AND SILVER, CLOCKS AND JEWELRY. A RELIABLE IN QUALITY AND AT LOW Prieto, WATCH It/EP/LIMN,' —WiLlCliee put in per ferct order and every one warranted for one year. JACOB LB DEN. - Aiov 15-Clool 21 North Fifth Street, Reading, Pi. IVEARRIAGZ. ~a~~u~ National Ini,-ocation. I= Tent' GOD OF ALL xtorrr, from the Throne deign to bend, And grant that'unr Land may be blest with re•nnion, Laths Spirit of Pease o'er onr'borders descend, - And let State stand to State, in a loyous communion. Let our Star-biuner rise, In the light of the Arles, And shine, as all discord, and anarchy dice; Undimmed may its galaxy evermore be, The hope of the world, as the Flag of the Free! May the virtues that burn'd to the breasts of our sires, In the hearts or their Bona, Buda permanent dwelling And Union refocus all bar grand altar-tires, Alt thtrkneus, and fear from our border. dlapelling; Let heart to heart staudr , And hand join to hand, Till a cordon aubfoken encircles thelLand, Of route full determined forever to be, The guards of the homes, and the Flag of the Free I May the year just begun, find our Flag still on high, With a star for each State, when Its inotnentaare ended, Like the stars in their spheres, that bespangle the sky, By - wisdom united—by blefo4ing atte,nled. On the rh.,oa, in the Field, All their Rights let IL shield, - And all who assail it. attack but to yield While the xi:lnflow! of brothers exultant shall be, 'Neath th.) star-studded Flag that waves over the Free. Let it float, while the years in their cycles sublime, - Sweep the ages away, which shall find de returning, Till the angel's last tramp tells the ending of Time, Be its Stars in their brightness and glary still burning. 'Neeth its folds let them rest, Whom our Fathers have blest, By &adding in wisdom this World of tho Wont," And the last sound that echoes o'er Land and o'er Sea, Be, HUZZA FOB. Tile OLOELIOIN OLD FLAG OF THE FREE. HOST AND GUEST. ===EIMIA Sir host, Sir boat ! I'm full of care, My head doth swim, my blood dotb boll ; For ah, a maiden, tall and fair My semen doth embroil ! On me she proudly turns her back, And yet her eye doth me attract; And her sweet ruby lip I " Then fill your ease, and never pine, There's health and courage in the wine— In every drop you sip!" Bir host I what also troubles me, I'm drafted for the war; I fear the vile Confederacy. And fighting I abhor! I stand aside, a helpless wicht, While my dear maiden, in toy eight. W4l, epaulettes dots, play! "Then All your glans, and never pine, " There - is more virtue in the wine " Than epaulettes display !" Theo must Ito my bust confido— I have not studied deep; ' My books for inaltlODs tut nride," And learning held quite cheap! The ductal's hat how charms me unree— l-Int ah, I lack the ueedfol love, And cannot win the prize! "Then till your glass, and never ping., " There's erudition iu the wine— " Good wine makes e'en fools who." Sir host, Sir host! ah, what to thin? dentitnte of CAA. ! .1)7 act:Meta, my pun.. How nhall I make a dash ? nun far you've taught me how to steer, Now, cleared landlord, help me here— of money I've no store! Then get you gene your wife, at home, "With three-legged stool your head will comb— " There'd help for you nu mote Carts sub Sietdcs. THE VEILED BRIDE A STORY OF ART In one of the art galleries of Vienna hangs a picture of Venetian life, by the painter Frances co Mayez, which excites peculiar interest in the visitor. It is an interior, an apartment in the ducal palace, where three aged senators, evident . 'the famous Council of Three, are holding one of their secret sessions. One of them, a tall, proud figure, with the finely chiseled, intellectual, dark face familiar to us in old Venetian portraits, has risen in excitement, and with a stern gesture is addressing a young and beautiful woman, who sinks fainting on the stone.floor. She is sup ported by an official who seems to deprecate the harsh manner of the senator. A notary, behind the table in the rear of the group, is making a record of the proceedings. The story on which this picture is founded is contained in a French romance of the seventeenth century, and though no authentication of it has been discovered in the Venetian archives, it pro bably rests on a tradition then current. If not, it is no less a true reflection of the character of the time in Venice, when, amidst the gay pageant of its flourishing and gorgeous life, rose that dark, mysterious tribunal—irresponsible, remorseless, irresistible as Fate, which held in its unseen hand the whole power of she republic. The story rune thus: Valenzia was the daughter of the Senator Gradenigo ; by birth, therefore, one of the first ladies of Venice. She had all the rich beauty of her countrywomen, with this remarkable distinc- tion, admired in proportion to its rareness, that her hair was of the loveliest, blonde color, chang ing in the sun to gold, and was so abundant that it. fell in heavy shining waves below her knees. A beautiful Italian woman of nineteen could not be without a lover, and Valenzia had already yielded the first bfoorn of her heart, to the young patrician Leonardo. Whether from necessity or the Mere caprice of youthful fancy, the attach ment was kept a secret from their respective families, and "the young pair met only in the palace of Leonardo's bosom friend, Antonio loos carini, Even he was not intrusted with the name of the lady who stole, closely veiled, into his house, nor had he ever been favored with a glimpse of •her face. But the glowing eulogies of her charms to which ho was obliged to listen —especially - the description of her wonderful hair—uxeited his imagination all the more, and the idea fastened itself iu his mind that in those golden threads lay some magic power which had enthrilled his friend, for heretofore Leonardo had been insensible to female attractions. For a time the course of true love ran smooth. Then, suddenly, as if the earth had opened to him, Leonardo disappeared, and a few days after his dead body was found in one of the canals which vein the oily of the sea. A deep wound in his breast showed that he had been the victim of assassination. Valenzia's grief had all the stormy, violence of a first great sorrow. But far more profound was the affliction of the friend, who fully believed that the fatal stab had been . ......... given by a Jealous rival. SATURDAY JORNING, JANUARY 17, "Leonardo! Leonardo!" he exclaimed, as ho gazed on the bloody corpse, "the accursed blonde locks are answerable for this deed!" From that hour an unconquerable aversion to blotide hair took possession of him, which grew into a monomania. It was the fashion of the day in Venice for the ladies to bleach their dark hair by the use of chemical preparations, and so strong and undisguised was his contempt for the practice as to obtain for him the name of the 1, Blonde hair Hater," His relatiVelEi, anxious to divert his mind from these morbid recollections and fancies, urged him to marry. He was one of the handsomest of the young patricians of Venice—his figure noble, his face full of intelligence and feeling; and ho had a further passport to the favor of the ladies in his singular devoti.4:'in friendship, and his corresponding indifference to themselves. Ad miration, sympathy, pique, conspired to render him an object of transcendent interest to the fair sex. His friends led him from one gay circle to another, in - the hope that he might, unawares, find himself in the meshes of the blind little god. It was all in vain. At length his father Settled the question by an arrangement with the Senator Gradenigo for a marriage between the two fami lies!, and Antonio found himself pledged to the con nection entirely without his own knowledge or consent. But such marriages of domestic or State policy were the. rule in Venice, and his heart, having no tie elsewhere, he submitted without remonstrance. Preparations were has tened, and the wedding-day was appointed. Valenzia had yielded with less reluctance; nay, even with a degree of mournful pleasure. She well knew Antonio, though herself wholly un known to him. Their mutual attachment to the lost Leonardo was a tender bond. His inconsol able grief for one dearest-se her had given him a sacred place in her heart. Her own lot, more over, was full of discomfort - and chagrin, her father being one of those stern and cruel men whose iron rule turns the palace into a detested prison. After the death of- her lover she had wished to bury her sorrows in a consent, but the old senator, who regarded his daughter as simply an instrument of family aggrandizement, had peremptorily and harshly refused his con sent. Life with the honorable, gentle and true hearted Antonio seemed to her crushed spirit a blessed escape from thii bondage ; and thus it happened that alto not only assented without oh• jection to her father's plan, but became most anxious to win the affections of her bridegroom. Knowing too well his morbid prejudice against blonde hair, she dared not reveal to him at once the secret of her history, and accordingly stipu lated that he should not see her face until the day of their marriage. Antonio, utterly indif ferent to the whole affair, had nothing to say in opposition. But etiattatla required that he should pay assiduous court to his veiled bride, and these interviews soon began to have an un expected interest for him. tier character, soft ened and exalted by sorrow, harmonized with the tone of hia own heart ; her sweet anxiety for hie regard, the grace of her shrouded figure, wove around him insensibly a tender spell which he wished not to break. As hope reawoke in her bosom she grew more charming and more conscious of her power; the morning of a new life of happiness brightened before her, anti she looked forward with increased confidence to the approaching revelation. Thus the wedding-day arrived under the hap piest auspices. A magnificent assembly was gathered in the Gradenigo palace, and the .hand some and joyous bridegroom awaited with impa tience the movement which should disclose to him the features of his bride. But that move ment changed all. The instant that Valenvia, throwing off het veil, revealed that glory of golden hair floating glittering about her person, the frenzy returned upon him with double vio lence. II She htte deceived me!" he cried, in a wild burst of anger, and breaking his way through the astonished company, rushed forth without a word of explanation to Gradenigo, or casting even a look on the deserted bride. That from this hour a deadly feud, like that of the Montagues and Capulets, divided the houses of Fosearini and Oradonigo was a matter of course. She blamed her own fraud, so innocent ly meant, as the sole cause of the calamity, and mourned her second lover with a sorrow far more deep and lasting than she had given to the first. Her father gave himself no rest in his efforts to avenge the dishonor of his house. But for the present he was able only to obtain the expittria tion of young Antonio, and this under the honora ble form of an embassy to France. He bided his time. After four years' absence Antonio returned to Venice. His welcome home was a summons, the fruit of Gradenigo's labors, to appear before the Council of Three to answer the charge of disobe dience in certain points to the orders of the Council. His bold defense, and the conclusive proofs he adduced of the skillful manner in which he performed his mission, procured his honorable acquittal. But plots thickened around his path, enemies lurked for him on every, hand, and time. after time he barely escaped through the warnings of an unknown friend.• That friend was no other thian the true-hearted Valen zia, who watched over him like a protecting angel, nor even relinquished her chosen office when he entered into a marriage engagement with a noble Spanish lady. But •it was the opportunity long watched for by her father, who now accused him before the Council of a secret alliance with a foreign power, and procured his imprisonment. Valenzia had warned him in time, and had arranged his Night.; hut, too proud to succumb to injustice, he hesitated until iL was too late. He was brought, in chains to the ducal palace, where, according to the ancient usages of Venice, a speedy trial, to be followed by a speedier death, awaited him. Valenzia did not despair even yet. By gold and tears she gained an entrance to the Doge's palace, and having won the overseer to her interests, she descended with him, at midnight, into those damp and gloomy depths beneath, whose dread secrets only the' last day will fully reveal. At any other time the scene would have frozen her blood with horror. The black pas sages into which the cheerful light of upper day had never shined, and slimy with the moisture of centuries; the heavy doors, bolted and barred, which the lamp of the guide dimly disclosed on either hand; the sepulchraL silence, broken only by the dull play of the water against the outside walls and the loud knockings of her own heart, 80. Were full 'of dark suggestions of pitiless cruelty and unutterable woe. But that which would. have deterred a weaker soul but made her bold, for was she not bringing to the best beloved de liverance from these horrors ? And was there not exquisite joy in the thought that now at length he could not fail to understand and for give her ? The jailer unbars the door ; she steps in, trembling with fear and hope. The next instant the door is shut behind her, is looked and barred with malignant haste, and the un pretended helper was a true servant of the re public. He had. betrayed her to her father. All was lost. With the first gray of morning she was brought, wearing the man's habit in which she had dis guised herself, before the Commit of Three, of which her father was a member. The first glance told her that there was no hope of, pity from him. As she entered he started passionately from his seat, and poured upon his wretched daughter, as she stood trembling before him, a torrent qi the bitterest reproach, ending with a fearful curse. Exhausted by the terrors of the preceding night, and foreseeing her own and Antonio's doom, she yielded to this last stroke and sunk in a deep swoon into the arms of thb jailer. Even he t her betrayer, hardened as he was in crime, was shocked by the unnatural scene. "Signor," he cried, "you are here as the ser vant of the State, and not as the avenger of your personal wrongs. You are the representative of justice, but you have no commission to curse your own child." This is the moment chosen by the artist for his picture. Through what fortunes the hapless pair, with fates so strangely severed and yet more strange ly united, passed to the repose of death, we are not informed. Only so much is known, that from this time the noble and brave Antonio, the flower of the patrician youth of Venice, and Valenzia, the fairest of her daughters, were seen and heard of no more among the living. DEATH OF AN ECCENTRIC FARMER—BUSHELS OF GOLD AND SILVER STORED AWAY AND DROUGHT TO LIGHT AFTER HIS DEATII.—Mr. Abraham Ilershey, an aged farmer, died at his residence in West Ilempfield township, last week, and was buried on Friday. After his death a large amount of specie, gold and silver, was discovered in the house, and was breughtt on Saturday to this city and specially deposited in the Lancaster County Bank. The gold was in match boxes, bags, Stc., and when counted amounted to $28,884 41. The silver was also in bags of various sizes, and from the weight is estimated at over $21,000. It is not yet counted, but will not fall below this figure. A great deal of the coin, gold and silver, is of old issue and valuable. There was a half bushel of old Spanish dollars, and any quantity of. old United States coin. The premium at the present time on this " Family Bank . of. Deposit" will not be less than $15,000. Mr. Hershey was an unmarried man, but lived in his farm house, occupying a room up stairs as a sleeping chamber and depository for his wealth. In this chamber he kept. his " iron " chest, con taining part, but not all of his wealth, for besides the specie he holds bonds and mortgages and owned the farm of 156 acres on which he lived, toiled and died. The accumulation of so much money in coin by a farmer must have taken many long years of toil to accumulate, and many anecdotes are rela— ted how the old man was accustomed to bargain for the hard metal. He was parsimonious and close, but withal honest in his dealing% paying every cent he owed, but exacting the same from every one he dealt with. He has, however, gone, and his hoarded treasure has already been re moved from its secret place, and will in a few months find its way to the pockets of the heirs at law. Since the above was in type we learn that, on Monday another "deposit"; was found in the house. This time the " bank " was an old blanket, and on the contents being invest , tgated it was found to contain $1,400. Nine hundred and fifty dollars of this wag in gold, and the balance in bonds, &c.--Lancaster Examiner. AUSTRIAN CRITICISM UPON MCCLELLAN'S VENIN BIJLAR CA.7 , 7PA113N.-Dr. Motley, the historian, and our Minister at Vienna, in one of his despatches to Mr. Seward, gives some extracts from a series of papers in the principal military journal .of Austria, in which the course of our oampaigns is criticised, sometimes severely, but never un generously ; always with talent, and with thorough knowledge of the subject, topographi cally and strategetically, and with a firm dispo sition to do justice. Ile says: ‘, You will be in terested to read the comments of so able a writer upon the withdrawal of our army from the Tames river." "It is not to be wondered at, then, if the Gen- eral-in-Chief of the Army of the Potomac was-in haste to save the army entrusted to him from the dangers surrounding it, even from certain de struction ; from a noose in fact, which required only to be drawn a little more closely together in order to suffocate the soul of the. Union. The manner in which he acquitted himself of the most difficult of all military tasks, redounds to his infinite honor, and places him at once in the ranks of those memorable commanders whose names history treasures for posterity ; men, who, if they have, perhaps, not had the art to chain victory to their banners, possessed, at any, rate, the fortitude, audacity and the circumspection CO rescue their armies front intpending * * * * The American General has made a thorough study of war in the swamps of the C'hickahornitty, and has made himself, a com plete master in that most difficult of professions. * * * He has manifested the unques tioned talent to save his army, in a manner not sufficiently to be :tdruirod, out of the most des perate sit nations. Moreau made himself immortal by his famous retreat from the Iller to the Rhine, in the year 17811. What is due to the American General-in Chief, who conducied with a morally and physically exhausted army, through a swampy, pathless country, covered with ancient forests, and in face of an enemy outnumbering him two to one, the most. classical of all retreats recorded in military history, without a single disaster ?" offpillutr.s putt novunsrmnavr was administered by the Democratic party, by Democratic states men, and in accordance with Democratic princi ples, the nation was peaceful, prosperous and happy—but the fell spirit of fanaticism stepped in, a sectional party was organized—the people listened to the syren song of the tempter, and— where are we ? Afar Br preparing for the worst, you may often compass the but. [VOL. XXIII.-NO. 39.-WHOLE NO. 1981. ,Dotificaf. NEW YORK. Abstract of Governor Seymour's Message, ALBANY, Jan. 7.—Governor Seymour sent in his message to the Legislature to-day. On the subject of national affairs, he says : " Not only is the national life at stake, but every personal, every family, every sacred in terest involved. The truths of our financial and military situation must not be kept back. There must be no attempt to put down the free expres sion of pus.dic opinion. " Affrighted at the ruin they have wrought, the authors of our calamities at the North and South insist that this war has been caused by the unavoidable contest about slavery. This has been the subject, and not the cause of the controversy. We are to look for the causes of the war, in the pervading disregard of the ob ligations of the laws and Constitutions. disre• spect for the constituted authorities, and, above all, in the.local prejudices. which have grown up in two parties of the Atlantic States—the two extremes of our country. " There is no honest statement of our difficulties which does not teach that our people must re form themselves as well as the conduct of the Government and the policy of our rulers. It is not too late to save our country, if we will enter upon the sacred duty in the right way. Where it is the right of our Government to decide upon measures and policy, it is our duty to obey and give a ready support to their decisions. This is the vital maxim of liberty. " This war should have been averted, but its floodgates were opened. The administration could not grasp its dimensions, nor control its sweep. The Government was borne along with the current, and struggled, as best it could, with the resistless tide. Few seemed able to compre- hend its military or financial problems. Hence, we are not to sit in harsh judgment upon errors in conduct or policy. " But while we concede all these.exeuses for mistakes, we are not to adopt errors nor sanction violations of principle. The same causes which extenuate their faults in judgment must make us more vigilant to guard against their influences." The Governor urges that economy, and in tegrity in the administration of affairs are vital in periods of war. 1 - fe says meddling and in trigues have thwarted and paralyzed the valor of our soldiers and skill of our generals, within the influence of the capital ; while our armies have gained victories in fields remote therefrom. EITATEI RIG RTS The Governor says: "The National Constitu tion must be held inviolate ; and he contends that the rights of the States n•ust be respected as not less sacred. There are differences of opinion as to the dividing line between State and National jurisdiction, but there can be none as to the existence of such separate jurisdiction, each covering subjects of legislation and juris prudence essential to the public security and welfare. (A consolidated Government in this vast country would destroy the essential home rights and liberties of the people.) The sover eignties of the States, except as they are limited by the Constitution, can never be given up. Without them our Government cannot stand. It was made and it can be changed by State agency. This is shown by the following provisions of the instrument. itself : " The ratification of the conventions of nine States shall be sufficient ,to the establishment of this Constitution between the States so ratifying the same_' " ‘• Again, three-fourths of the States can add to or take away from the powers of the General Gov ernment, by demanding a Convention in which amendments can be proposed, which, if ratified by three-fourths of the States, become parts of the Constitution. " While they can thus take away or add to its power, the General Government can in no way touch one right of the States or invade their jurisdiction. The obligations which rest upon the States to respect the Convtitution, laws, and authorities of the General Government, also demand that the General Government shall show equal respect for the rights and constituted authorities of the States. " To State legislation and authorities we look for the good order of society, the security of life and property, the protection of our homes and all that is nearest and dearest to us in the relations, duties, and actions of life. It is dan gerous and demoralizing to show contempt for State authorities and laws. It undermines alike the foundations of State and National Govern ment, by breaking up the social system. If home laws are not respected, the more general author ity will not be regarded." =I On the subject of arbitrary arrests, he says : " Our people have, ' therefore, viewed with alarm practices and pretensions, on the part of officials, which violate every principle of good order, of civil liberty, and of constitutional law. It is claimed that, in time of war, the President has powers, as commander-in-chief of our ar mies, which authorize him to deolare martial law, not only within the sphere of hostile move =Lents, where other law cannot be enforced, but also over our whole land. That, at his pleasure, he can disregard not only the statutes of Con gress, but the decisions of the national judiciary ; that, in loyal etates, the least intelligent class of officials may be clothed with power not, only to act as spies and informers, but, also, without due process ot' law, to seize and imprison our citizens, and carry them beyond the limits of the State, to hold them in prison without a hearing or a knowledge of the offences with which they are charged. Not only the passions and pre judices of these inferior agents lead them to acts of tyranny, but their interests are advanced and their positions secured by promoting discontent and discord. Even to ask the aid of counsel has been held as an offence. It has beet well said that " to be arrested for one knows not what; to be confined, no one entitled to ask where ; to be tried, no one can say when., by a law nowhere known or established ; or to linger out life in a Cell Without trial, presents a body of tyranny which cannot be enlarged. "The suppression of journals and imprison tnent of persons has been glaringly partisan. Conscious of these gross abuses, an attempt has been made to shield the violators of law and suppress inquiry into their motives and conduct. This attempt will fail. - Unconstitutional acts cannot be shielded by unconstitutional laws. Such attempts will not save the guilty, while they will bring a just condemnation upon those who try to pervert the powers of legislation to the purposes of oppression. To justify such ac tion by-precedents drawn from the practice of. Governments where there is no restraint upon legislative power will be of no avail under our system, which restrains the Government and protects the citizen, by wriitten constitutions." " I shall not inquire what rights the States in rebellion have forfeited ; but 1 deny that this rebellion can BUSpend a single right of the citizens of the loyal States. I denounce the doctrine that civil war in the South takes away from the loyal North the benefit of one, principle of-civil liberty. It is a high crime to abduct a citizen of this State. It is made my duty by the Constitution to see that the laws are enforced. I shall investigate every alleged violation of our statutes, and see that the offenders are brought to justice. Sheriffs and District Attorneys are admonished that it is eheir duty to take care that no persons within their respective counties are imprisoned nor carried by force beyond their limits without due process of legal authority." " The removal to England of persons charged with offence, away from their friends, their wit nesses, and means of defence, was one of the acts of tyranny for which we asserted our inde pendence. The abduction of citizens from this State for offences charged* to have been done here, and carrying thorn ninny hundreds of runes to distant. prisons in other States or Territories, i 8 an Wage of the same character upon every principle of right and justice. The General Government has ample powers to establish courts, to appoint officers to arrest, and commis sioners to hear complainte, and to imprison upon reasonable grounds of suspicion. It has a juslicial system in full and undisturbed operation. Its own courts, held at convenient points in this and other oyal States, are open for the hearing of all complaints. If its laws are not ample for the punishment of offences, it is duo to the ne glect of thine in power. " Government is not. strengthened by the ex ercise of doubtful powers, but by a wise and energetic exertion of those which are incon testible. The former course never fails to pro dupe discord, Suspicion, and distrust, while the latter inspires respect and confidence. u This loyal State, whose laws, whose courts, and whose officers have thus been treated with marked and public contempt., and whose social order and sacred rights have been violated, was at that very time sending forth great armies to protect the National capital, and to Save the Na tional officials from flight, or capture. It was while the arms of New York thus sheltered them against rebellion, that, without consultation with its chief magistrate, a subordinate depart— ment at Washington insulted our people and invaded our rights. Against. these wrongs and outrages the people of the State of New York, at its late election, solemnly protested. •. The submission of our people to these abuses., for a time only, was mistaken at home and abroad for an indifference to their liberties, But it was only in a spirit of respect for our institu— tions, that they waited until they could express their will in the manner pointed out by our laws. At the late election they vindicated at once their regard for law and their love of liberty. Amidst all the confusion of civil war, they calmly sat in judgment upon the Administration, voting against its candidates. Nor was this the only striking ptoof of respect for the Constitution. The minority, of nearly equal numbers, yielded to this decision without resistance, although the canvass was animated by strong partisan esaito meats. This calm assertion of rights, and this honorable submission to the verdict of the bal lot-box, vindicated at once the character ot our people and the stability of our institutions. Had the Secessionists of the south thus yielded to constitutional decisions, they would have saved themselves and our country from the horrors of this war, and they would have found the same remedy for every wrong and danger." I= " The claim of power under martial law is not. only destructive of the rights of States, but it overthrows the legislative and judicial depart ments of the General Government. It asserts for the President more power as the head of the army, than as a representative ruler of the peo ple. This claim has brought, discredit, upon us in the eyes of the world. It has strengthened the hopes of rebellion. It has weakened the confidence of loyal States. It tends to destroy the value of our Government in the minds of our people. It leads to discord and discontent at the North, while it has united and the South. • If there is a necessity which justifies that policy, let us openly and honestly say there is a necessity which justifies a revolution. But this pretension is not put forth as a necessity, which overleaps for aI. •e all restraints, and which is justified by a gi :at exigency; it is a theory which exalts the military power of the President above his civil and constitutional rights. It. asserts that he may, in his discretion, declare war, and then extinguish the State and National Constitutions by drawing the pall of martial law over our vast country. * * " There is little to fear in periods of petZce and prospeejty. If we are not protected when there are popular excitements and convul sions, our Government is a failure. If Presiden tial proclamations are above the decisions of the courts and the restraints of the Constitution, then that Constitution is a mockery. If it has not the authority to keep the Executive within its restraints, then it cannot retain States with in the Union. Those who hold that there is no sanctity in the Constitution, must equally hold that there is no guilt in the rebellion. " We cannot be silent and allow these practi ces to become precedents. They are as much in violation of our Constitution as the rebellion it self, and more dangerous to our liberties. They hold out to the Executive every :emptation of ambition to make and prolong war. They offer despotic power as a price for preventing peace. They are inducements to each administration to produce discord and incite armed resistance to law, by declaring that the condition of war re wives all constitutional restraints. They, call about the national capital hordes of unprincipled men, who find in the wreck of their country the opportunity to gratify avarice or ambition, or personal or political resentments. This theory makes the passion and ambition of an adminis tration antagonistic to the interests and happi neas of the people. It makes the restoration of peace the abdication of more than regal author ity in the hands of those to whom is confided the government of our country." • The Governor declares that the President's Emancipation proclamation is impolitic, unjust, and unconstitutional, calculated. to create may barriers to the restoration of the Union, and to be miscou,strued by the world as an abandonment of the hope of restoring it—a result to which New York is unalterably opposed, and which will be effectively resisted. The Union, he says, will be restored by the Central and IVestern States, both free and slave, who are exempt from the violent passions which control at the extremes. " Those of the central slave Statee, which re jected the ordinance of secession, which sought .to remain in the Union, and which were driven. off by a contemptuous, uncompromising policy, must be brought back. The restoration of the whole Union will be only the work of time, with such an exertion of power as can be, put forth without needlessly sacrificing the life and treas ure of the North in a bloody and calamitous con test. We must not wear out the lives of our sol diers, nor exhaust. the earnings of labor by war for uncertain ends or carry out vague theories of extermination—means not only destructive of lives and property in the South, bat also waste of the blood and treasure of the North. The exertion of the armed power must be accom panied by a firm and conciliatory policy, to re store our Union with the least possible injury to both sections." The Governor concludes: • At this moment the fortunes of our country are influenced by the results of battles. Our army in the field must be supported. All con stitutional demands of our General Government must be promptly responded to. Uuder no cir cumstances can a division of the Union be 'con ceded. We will put forth every exertion of pow er. We will use every policy of conciliation. We will hold out every inducement to the people of the South to return to their allegiance, consist ent with holier. We will guaranty them every right, every - consideration demanded by the Constitution, and by that fraternal regard which must prevail in a common conntry. But we can never voluntarily consent to the breaking up of the Union of these States or the destruction of the Constitution." Slur A MELANCHOLY STOICY is told by a Wash— ington paper of a very beautiful young lady residing near that city, who fell a victim to the wiles of a seducer, was abandoned, fled to a house of ill-repute to hide her shame, sought ob livion in the intoxicating cup, and, recently, While in a state of intoxication fell from a third story window to the street, was picked up a mangled mass and died in the brothel surrounded by, her miserable companions, far from a luxuri ous home, away from idolizing parents and at an, untimely age. The reporter does not envy the guilty cause of hor death, and no more could any one. 0