~2:~ `:~' ..~_~ .., ;vl 4t9itttillg. i d atilt .. ).• . -,.- t -riregazetarr:. L • ! e IIEEED ,i: CO., ..,. . . , f - ," ' ,111 ,1 - 'Li VAITIII lIIIILDIN taeb. sit 7. Am, =lima et. . _- : , is 5::: ", . — *. fl z*lin Sit z • 1 .Aduca. 1 ' ' 'N i t x ''' ° •-• - -. '';•,;--....'-';•- •.. -., ' '-- iiiiii TOE scars i , COOll4 P., TW• bt a". 8.. h .• 'AI a g ' ;:tal'itsitit erplms. le w aggran. -. t05e1git1.16. 7 .4...........,........."1.. 1111 ,-,.. ,e., .. , IZZIVI 701 111 . 1t1s• , '-• ...• ~:- , Detireial by eanfts .: . (90....1 4 • • •• II " , y. ...,' laoLibrnalboll.o,/ 7•1117.1.......... al n eel. , •_, , • - . Literal rwhntsSam, I rSll.lbolll axe Altral& U ! • •,,.'W'JeD2SASDI.7, : TAZIIJART * kIea& • lan PIXrIT calms that Mane will it the - Chicego Couptration; for randtation to the Vice Preadeacy. the name of Mr. Hamlin; New: Vol that a Mr. Faiton. Panneplranta than of Ur.. Orowt Oldotharot Mr, Wade;. and `thine that- of lin Colfax. a. ion Oahe* pm ftoin which to E:au/is fa"' ide/1;1'4 klut liat „National Ocuipentien • badtiken either of these men, tha party - Irina hive teen ipared she knaillation a exnat .betnipai, and ttu: aseed.foir jean of fraltlataagitit.thne; 1 If rr xa TAP; it stated yeabirday kl Wail telegram, %Ileitis men who stormed , : ihn e pg, tpwei, near, Cork, ansacked . -., a - gunshoP in Chit thy; wen t ther from thatlited LOCI, Mit_ (sxfor signs a iignificant commentary the 'nicitimblia meanie here,dentsading ' f- ......- dem Waabington govunitient - toll pro. •„„, - % . - ; .30eibtohttlnaimallzed Anntriean eitisens when "abroad. ' However touch tie rect ..; : :ipi mipilito to such plientarii' may ''• -.--- eheittdmization, and so:mini: hew dimply the miseries of. Imbue and the -.. : - wroagi of liar people, may oomPti own . Mbseratioa; It is the blindest urea= ,-. . at til.i simpldost. folk for any man , or 'Mt of man to suppose - that a perwmfal -..', isvolam'''"'" -- Melt ran be Pasuaded or Soused ., . - -.= into glinting Immunity to idahUnticam. _._ . a ' 1 attl4 North . •• • , Wm:pi the Onueryst xes ... „ 1 - ,... - ,piototo great - dirsitlafaetlon - that the . ...- watt ot.ltesonstinction doe" asit:Pco , grad , with great ; rapidity, by r i fir the larger portion of their ilk at the South are doing all they can to refard the con , itimanatiori.,.. What den ; people' want, theiefore„ is not sO much liieconitroci . . .. bort, .0 i paitleular:type tftereOf—Fte• - ` ,, eotittrietkor with a/1 the rebel whites let ,„!-Ice, all .tho'loyulabbacks lib out. ;:- xlfach utturaugaiment ciniot behind, no "•:;:'- 'mirteir 'how lont If may be walk 4 for. L., , , . . . ..-.T.11* ttme`wlllcoma,ratol we - ,tntsi ;short 1 , isheir a grand eel of: oblivion shall' i d -7 doleet all beat political offeriose; IL t that .. .. . . , ought mat - to. hi until tharigh of all citizens shall . be .achnowledged , - ea ': fbrizetl, :vrltliout gaped to itotidOnta Cr ..., rtieli, color, place of . hlrth, .or any other _ . Immatr.rial ,Involiartty. - . 1 ~.- .. - ' 4 4 ,I 7 TEX liiileATl is mamas to what is . • c: - . nu better Ithin'a dodge, In order i te Sp:. '... .pear , to maintain ilisaliptirfand Other ' . . ' sty, when doing neither, it is , taming a . • mista ha, ~ Either - Air. 824,Ri0N aught te go' hick to the. War Opee or. stay out. , It the President removed him Wit:tient • - . sublier muse, in :deAanee of the' laws,. . " • ',.., then be Tight to be reinstated and hpld plaUe. If the President . removed . •• him for genii reasons, th en the Senate.' ...•-• ''=ought to say so, and let 'him droni - To 1 ~.., • 'destslest' his ,restoration: and theel lassye ! him remiii, may serve ei a tesehapical • -,-, viirdniution of the rights of the-841de, ; . tut will exAsts that body to .ridirele,' and Ists eqniyalent to a sentence ofl ' ; eort ', demnatiori upon the Secretary.. - rams '' , • .. , .:are: - almost, alwaja transparent, .I and ~ 'never fled favor with straight.( eery. ard '..;•-•;.',;::,,..:• - who conititutethe majority l ?;, • fee/ingin I : •••i--:-''.?7,:.',-11,1..bt.'•' : - - ' ' : I.,ma :I,• ':' . •--,' ;;` taly i, ,, ,,•!......11300ti,be dispmed,bas eanateu t ined 4 :i•sAiktiii i po • ding the. - 1i.y,, ; • - T - f.:liisotepteses, tii by 'heis en :' d, IZilii,d,ll.4l,lsddiMy thit Ticune ab 7,:;,- - .4 sosie,.. ileituititalfit_ltaiy; but her.w4o/' 'T• 2•- .. - ,;: - . ; W:O0, 1 1, • ill& the ' eonsummation would re -4.ls.lOuneU'mt.tlitt part, of his people. • „.•!•_.-•?„-,-.','.!0;-•-.111searissiii mid bid i few matinttus E100,..141... • • - iheii Indium _ ,•, :.,ttitlisde'g goal'at is .."- :' ,', ' 7 . - . ThiL l,, :llll: 4° ll P ,l 'Ouoi -- Mier - 6 11 10- E,... - e4s...rs.kiial otiisi!,Ssailis heft* the ... •• : Prukh eonld:oinspy•A,:.,Bou ei li a , ~..,, ,•.:- thipmt otthateemessr4 s4l o4 ! : • -•. - !,' with *rfocif_ rad:#9thetadt,_ *nib pert,..: Rxi b u d e, Traft 4m, salsa 1341giumailialeesniaidt4.- -170 **,": 1 4bar_ 4 9!irvs:Clroutpaie •,-, ,' --, , :Awed Prance tem earipa t iii i ii.fi nzad, . .. . . ._ _ • - - bun terminated ~ . .. • .- -tho m matau o m-4 'vedag — fili " as — of .nnizatton :-..:,-- .. 4._ „... Accotirra . from tOtho.t Oetiomos, cod * , in lfactltMt NittiaStehance_porti. peettfor Um Bolted &mai ego s d ar a 4 „' : Ulm - ao, implied ' th at kis hides feel ~,. -, soma* decree. of confidence quitiukt4 ;''.choice. Bowamer it is only Dirt* a , .._4,,i .lic Thermo!' imp,: !pin! lug, . thatthemaxibmewlio lavabo= *tram • -43,426eea ehiction, tO Tote fbr Mr. Vat ..,.,,taanDoirn, wIII riot ilo 180;T : but:ell act according to their inriehmialy 83 1)moted '..'..y.refcrances. . - ' 'll . ._,.. -Ita: Vellialighartilathec Most;attable r - Inca dm Democracy of Ohio canreelect. '-- ni II Thar rr P r e! rara r. n r , O vin • ~,-, anatioltaiateit ampresaion to their, moo !' Coin. , convictions lid impala Be • Us illalthfr Doraetero7: 4 : o errltktottl. . Yetnat, - , honatn. and +while we not :: - . , :ritah Ida idena, - me have 'More ot for .iiiu•we lasiq for_akch. 1 * -iale; hitinnatlng'men, who would numb : .:: Wont Qui ha would, provided way* .' • that they weld actin the dark. or trader t ut inch "ollor arcomatinaitsernald_ , le - . shwa tetUde iisposigatr. • '..•'•: "' !aceetilnili . ftial tl/irlilt •,` -.-." ` --- " liedistesadedsif 34 43 tbe ,exelnacns4irlir.Landostftamtite , on , ' - - - - ••, '•tosibiltip pf•:tbe_-Beetts' Oe ,Ittee Balk° . ids. '' NW Ali " I , l ! ° P.' ale z° demand, bdt lie here mid nothing :- „..• • -•,-:, inch , „___:,,.., It. I ' ' " Ida It-OmM be rimetuelly / '. -• ' :"12-11 l *and._ Wi'anopretteed :::•:,,doli e ' ' ' '? it iiiertinisge*cfiker an r tm '...• '• '- - tartieTate-itte'eceutieles of 1 1 12 1„1, i4 ,4 4 wild e position ; bow ra m ,_,_ ll 1 -;,- . ''.•,=-.' • Ai ; tiximett pateboaft . .r , •'' '- l': :' w d i n a sieleettbe istaefte , iris •'',::.'..• l' , . - Ater Intended to promote tinnairei.iiimer 1 1: itwiiirtbsOltere 61 ' 0 ' 1 ' 1* P l ,:i'•'the- . • .„ Committee a clear i ns. , .---.' .= - At ittemberi'kziOlin iii,b6301 7 7 -.l:!•,,,,tiii•Rsitrqad.itelldleibelan ill ma 4,6• -- • .•:, : : eeßtikT e, . .1 1 4 1 7 Wd ., P c- e - if Kr , 0 , 4.1 `•'• '„lbt4...thtt PAW., 1 , 11411 4 t '-'. " b m ,:- . ..,- . •, - ;,;;; , i bailee_ titopeettlett 11! th e ipranam !N. ii incidental " I h, e , l re k slo 4 .!l"ri , - .7 ,...i. - ,4iiiiett,toedl432l3ld.r4de e. ll iewat7 ~ .••::- A eelsotdetescrillee:lthilseit t 7 1 i brrack , -etAseefFit willmiAilkil*,°- filodi az 4 :- ..) ,- . - 4 , `, - iteirieis.ltinroa , Nal.; . : . .- - •=:,- That ' Ye. -7 OriPete r li_ do 7. ", ;‘l'r''.'sllliiii4o367:.ii*lleClU..W° it ::. 7* bgeitaaillii(ll 4D: Wel as * I I9 6I9IBt. CF I .A Dd P rNi f u ! it L4 51 11 1 1a Inaks l o4 l2 ". PIPP4ItY .t .we ' toed 1,3 ! 1 44 111 P r belint !g''' wo r n i; ,- be'irill'Oasitt. eie;to,gfatiri, mor i djtbt ; .044treef t trottlge lwith - 44111147 I " .:‘ • ::: ' - iiitia/C14 1 .*:0 4 .PA. 11, 44 - Zr .. 4. -- - .yelne.feitt e :bee •.;eitaittei . •iii ?of, a : - .feet.'• that the/ . ' kg/ Tit ?: :r• ; .•-•'; 7.i.- - 44 iiiwili,:•,* iade!: L:iiithei.!..ear,'.o.- phi:soda -oflia - ~ , Iti t qt , orpaldisintatrotiv his °elm: 7 :•. :: -, T t 7 :''.%freekthit be*itis o 4Ti*. erg : be .b.., '' q • -• ",-. ~ : • i iede,, e iiiriltlik:d4l l6 4 ' 1" 7" ‘ 1 3 1itritipitketa444, 4,, -*l4o4altrt ?of"' ':'_•,:'.• - ., " /tbeitilTiree,b,inegon: - 6,44 i.4rli!‘ 1- .4.7:100A5r e f - spiltesekd ~.,:! ;, ~ ,,r , a , . ...._ .4. : - .2 - . - - -, :t. , ...**p4.41...i.*.pa-,.: Yl,.. ;: : ', 7iissa z in- - , ;(4ll*.illilati ~,. , • '' '' ' . ,,'.,a,, ,1 tovnae--- ,etatlettattssefee:m4,l .. . ''..,. - ,,,.-I.v,- --...--, ~ a-- ,. .i i ii.ai inia p - •.„4 a-14 , 07-titct,....„..* a- , :0rg.avidz....,,...i ~4_..r. ..,., ~:.,--. ~i3~vT~-~~~~ IZIM =I JOlllOlOl-Dre Fierrol During the rebeillez•Xr. STANTOX disclosed high abilities Zed raideted net . anti= to the amain.. In neither 'of these pertlealus was be unpused , by any -other citizen, , who, acted a part either fa the civil or military seiviee. So halding;ure shall not fill tmder a ea/olden of improper bisa• when we declare that cut most of the pointaln the imutrovusi =mislaid and trying Ere ' &re the Sonata and the Peep/et-respect ing ids relidicsas -to the President, oar jedgursurdoes let run in hthlliTur- TAI; u state whattho epata,aare : : • L That fund: the Asseention of lII'. /union to the:Preddeney, down to a gaits retint date, Er., Bustrow, u eet , retail , of War, steadily gage -him to un dovetail% by word, and deed, .that he fully eoacurrid in his plan of Reetni. 2. 'Tkatirben the Office' Tenure Bill was under coniideratioeln 'Congress, Mr. 152euiticti in the 'COI , net, denounced ft as en Wringer:ma ufsiethe constitutional prerogatives of thelesidemt, attar it Lid: passed both Roluies,' 'deified 'the President to I !etc it, ofkring to furnish the arguments I in Ituelficifitin of that measure.' - & Thu la replying to a note frointte Presided /tang him to • resign, he em- pkyed terms unbecoming a subordinee, and which nude their longer connection impreqicside - • • - -That by : Withholding fromtha Pies.; Idea importUat dispatches, he deprived I Abet ftuudionSiy. Of an opportunity be [would gladly hive imprared to prevent the kemcasiolb massacre of members of the Constitutional' donsartion.at Rem -As yet r Mr, - Burn% liars not seen proper to make any rejoinder, though hL friendsliiist he can completely tikate hiniself.ffrom cacti of Week eacolastions. - If he tas any defence / to; offer he owes it tolhis character and Lime not *delay, bat to make it as con- **lye as the materials at his command wW allow. .Msanwhile, we feel that the President isconic:torahs lint three points above' specified; end that on. the last the Emu are Sigh*, allegation. Touching Ws last polet,loux Washington atriss, pondent, an his letter published some days ago; niadathe ablest and most ex-. hatudise preseataticsi of the - evidence ambits thus hi come befOre that:addle. It dematealauled by, antsopesl r to Aides whielecathiot be suceesaftilly di/Med that all thefikelquitencea of the ease were known to the Preskient in seethe for any action he deemed appropriate. He might have gone farther, andestab• 'Baal the lhdthet the evinced ty the - Preside*, both before a:Wailer the siurnicre, were in*fisoft with that ter. I title transietion: - , Bow we plus to . show on what grounds •-••kdepcedently of the unqualided aver ment of QuiPresident, Lei which as yet *ends enetmlienged—we .bellare. &intik, and &lithe other member *the Cabinet, suitaked the. Preeide* in hie original scheme. of Reconstruction:, • .They tare to the public, fora long pe ek& no sign that they disapproved. - In their remedies Repotte, presented to Congrem at Uri tint requingifter the as unbutton of Mr.Lmo;ter, theca; foluid no trace oftillisqdfrom their chief - Ot course, this is. nevelt.* proof; sever theists, it has weaght. • let unProffood, to that, which is pesithre. • When President lorinson'i annual message appeared in December,lB6s, it excited many apprehensions. in lite Re publican rants, and partlenlerly.on the part oftits moretker-sighted of the Re publique newspapers. Shot* *kr auts the intentions of the administra tion:Were mere elearly:revealed, and the better sort or Bps Republican jennies expressed tempendeind chansons, but decided proteet.- The proprietor of manj inch Impala either held alike* or recelyed_Advartising . frtnn the govern mint Airiest; but net quite efinnitane, curdy, the Reads of the various De, meats rernoved th ese proprietor- iron their pile* or took Maadvertising Pt , . _ trouge - Shey alloyed 'from them. le this work of proscription Mr. STARTOII, as was to liave been impacted from hL . superior. bolds= and Promptitude, Ind the Way: pe advertising of Ma Der partmint wu taken awayfrom any jut: nal that refused to-austais the President. It was transferred Ifni to the abillythal ly zuesklbniu journals, that keep wadi en-elseks to go by, and thence to. Iher nuphrodlte and democratic newspapets fn 'boos equal proportkru.No , poll elan could doubt what wan Intended by '761511 tLn napste of tbi traiLiactions of the:lifir Depsaftetent Kr. STAIVII.WII.I k atqat.dbeCtYliTfeontact with the ilc- IPllillran newspapers of the larger towns. What he mold do _either to seduceor overtire them tutu auppurting the Presi dent giblet, Congress lie did with so Whiterlng has& - .- While the bead of the Slav Office was as sii4, ~.,.. .th tklistaY With the proprieiors ''''' ss s wisa, l issaJourinds is the more, popekma .tilaces, the head of the Post -IEOI wilt Isirring:the mu policy to. w Wss Wis liseruichne of ,Republrca'n Under enripirces at the mitres ~ . county MIL We Immo= . a large repartiOn Or the tweets:tem' in enanty mints be lona to.thio due' Alt Ara a her were Yetti - Sisk_ h • Wia hope of staking terror into the ehers. When.this did not mail to make, them a4ad on :e t , speu the were oil await ceg e t oilat Y Be islanis Yaw ail. SILL! the Preddant minuted that iks lisist lids of or opinion had estranged et bed tb m or the members of the ctebt ib i f rom kb Polk/. .. Thew it was ks Yeslicted that arrangement neer whbria aich Of the Cliensellore of State wag coniteditd to declare hiesentimenta. To the eery*. di many ' . memhers of 9ongretra wed of thouisnds .of. pommitunto who had taken theiratefrom them, Mr. Brae. To, under ids own algoeti* identified tassel with the President.: }ii. Jaini sm believed these assarancee tabs gm:- nine...: , Members.of Congress did not imiti besittUtto declare t the time that they were simulated, to leer a who end . and Mdmeztt. sof s.--thongh what naublefs were prer thereby we failed to dimmer, we watched intently. While we waited d watOhed, we could not help asking. onmelvei, Who's the dupet Geo..Gzater,in that letter of his to the President, marked"pririts," aid which bas recently become famous, plumply abated that the.,ol7lce Tenure Bill was specially designed by chugress to de-_ Ivies him of authority , to remote- lir. STAXTOL - Sled an announcement from such a source could' stoi fall to lead the Friident tO recall whatever had piued Unwise him had theAerretari of War, sad Mumma It.ith *tut Aloe hwenetal7 must halm mid to members the two Simi to /mire thesa Ira' inch hater What Gen. Oxen? ealdwaa trze MN Tennis Bill mu weed mainly to kap Brifrox in- the War Depart. man, It-was originated and wonted becalm*, had given nearly' all the Be- AM= menders to anderetand he Will whit than, Otherwias solloitade Lot Ms catcall:la wontil be a nupaidng IR& 040111,was time leg- Listing - ft bit orbtedion, he via saitri, itt, ll PPlddalt *PPositlon to: th m ats eam: 410 di l et bamillt tiled; int 4 IL innicrieas sad alallw a: moll sixt4, ia:jrjrzalint is.would sila th. " I P I/ *0 4444 in Pohl of law 4rid loerc;‘. hat* the' reply pr "bleb Abe, President csonplaine, booed wu dammed bilk rwilopi *US ' tit PrNituat eot let% Will Ithirp lid *nap; Oa . 11 C 1 WIIV 11 141 ta i 0; toath au& sat lavach Umiak Ae two irrvareast. vs think 2s94,mddigude Ininiaidsaaaak a now, Me=ll= however much be might have admired the Thick and sarestm, he would hive rebuked the impertinasce.. • ease as • lithe '..view we take of the ease it - is now presented. Mr. Bunion has uncommon capabilities. Ha is ani mated by an unbounded nabiti - W. Not satisfied -with' what he le-d already tained--with keying 'written his mime high -fa Cite : annals of his country, tad llhiminatedit Whiten imperishable glory, his longings .ran out towards the most emilted sat in theilktion. his skill ss a leklitical navigator—Per haps pleased with the tempest 'when tile vans tad high, and for a calm unlit— he conceived be Wks so 'dexterous si to Wife all factions and all 'interests, and make him become,the indispensable man of the hour. If ao, the ambition vim noble, but that 'leans for gratifying it altogether censurable. How faxther.deselopinentsnisy change this upect of the am. csnnot be fore. toll ' Bet it will afford ns the sfacetest pleasoie 'lf Nr.. - B•rszpros shall dints his conduct in all the particultun in which it is btreimpeached. annizapiL covEtaptExr. .Me factin politickl mini. is plainer than „that popular Hasid* Govern. Meat; throughout all the twee; hn leen the fonntain and beet defence of Civil Libay. 'Before it exists, nothing is pos. iible but nrodloied dear:whin Wherever it iq established, sooner or later the right of the people to share in the highest:de• part:ants of government will force lts way slid compel recognition. - The pnieeer of Maeda recently or dained. that.all citizens of the respective Municipalities, including the ennuicipa ted air s , should, vote, on equal condi tions, for all, their. local officers: .T/us iris a startling innovation upon the usages indlraditions of. the empire. It contaia ~. all the germal of full-blown Freedom, which may long in tuning forth its leaves and distilling its fra grance, bin will be sure at last to aur ae. in, perfection:. , • , • The lint ainp towards Orli Liberty Is to teach min to consider, to discuss, to weigh and to deeide political citation —not IS an gonad mental exercise, but aa prnticil aid important right And duty. 1t in fitting that this discipline should begin on the clue of things Which' stand_ in nearest relations to novices. 7 the care of roads, the support of paupers, the maintenance of schools, and the en forcemeat or local iron. Bat when the habit of debating and determining mat ten has teen for Med, It naturally branch ea out into higher and more cense- I quenthil afar'. By this process, Per- fitments, ConstinualkAssemblies, Cori gneisea-the great representative bodies of s nation-=grow up enlarge their pow. en, consolidate• their prerogatives, dbl. , pate se authority of theXtrown, sad in. serrate and. confirm the existence of Liberty and Equality. This is not a fanciful speculation neon a pouible comae Of es:eits, but an actual delineation of whit hunniformly plied. If we remount the Braun al date until history becomes lOst in fable and alligomilds uniform succession is constantly witnessed. Mariner the right of ne'peoPle - to control their own municipal affairs has been conceded and - ealoyellt, - there has been deieloped first a tendency and then a deterninstion to participate In the highet.fanuitiona of governmont. Of mune, there have been fluctuations in this process—tametimei of the meet marked discriptions--U in Framer, when the shadow on the dial nr Yrogreas hu sometime, advanced with stspassing rapidity and then gone back. warns with IS astonining &luny. Bet howevet Inexplicable , these osculating movements may appear to superficial cognition, careful and trained observers bava no difficulty In detecting under the surface the real and train =went, stead ily tending, hOwever slowly, to the grand consummation of ctonplete poliUcel en li:the United States we have for so long ► period beenaccustomed to all the larger forms of Ereedoe3that we are prone to disparage the lesserform—often to pew spleen or contempt thereon—to ' seek, to abridge and belittle it, rather Coin to allow it to giow and Impend end ', gather strength. Not many mietakeilis politics are more flagrant than this. Let' . any One take pilaf to inform himself accurately of the imeibmities and powers of certain- of. the tree dike of Europa in put ages—what port they played,. not eimpli . in developing commerce, nour ishing arts, and ennobling social life, but In furnishing umpteen( the nlue of liberty and of cotusge in the defence 4reof, Smile! will' attain to a Duster es te of the tree pace Sloverzoneut In the economy of political comma Nor will this estimate be lessened, If he thin '.directl his ,omen-' phitlMl to the conduct of cities and Imr oughei‘itthegred. parts of nations,in de tending \acquired prerogatives from en- Moulusra monarchs, in 'amulet log. the nausea of the population to a I•jut appteMation of political rights, In insPhing there with a disposition to in- Mr tieheiviCst risks and to make tbe Inuit amilicem In order to maintain them. Ruch ot tide .wu seen through out the ficatharMStates of thil_llnion dming.the late rebellion. The—lftnuei plant were everywhere foremost In SIG quotas, in supplying regintenteOn marches, and in all otiscr !shore essential to the furthenutssof tke national muse. • Theste.are among the considerations *Melt lead us to-day to felicitate the city of Pittsburgh_ on the\ulargement of tteterritory, the Increase of its popu haw; Ind the quiceesion toiite wealth and Mamma consequent upOn consoli dation. The new Councils have an as duesauttllztanultugiuta:ror::::,:;c,:atheorbipeitet7Tetotheoitourdcateedlvise;ece.bmat:tdrlHawth..ededie conftdenee that they . ehmhine .measure um for the new condition Of iOl7--,mtrateall wh,all:the:adulcdiuctsa.lbhthills....u4tyrtutofusi:re!‘• cent emette. munici pal As DS taw. who vas Coididentl Agent of Confederate Staten In 2: the dtainkihn Tube of Confed haa published the !' Emmy erate DiplOmeY eVsond"'' mows liar the French Emperar Wax more be t tiVt the 'United States than any of dleli ot it o i pritilh gatemen; and wu rud y . to take active nieswirea in behalf of the rebels In eaaa the !drill& government *could jinn him therein. While tide was hie real poution, he did not Intermit eons to make our ;•gstivernutant believe his ientinienti were honorable and friendly. Tide duplicity li in keeping with his *winder and the peculiarity of his race. . Tax Clearfield Republican thinks the people of the Twentieth Congressional 'Thatrlct.of this Sista have been badly represented. They tried lir. Culver, lad 'Ms got into • jail. , . Then theyotried Finney, and bliphydClarur sent him I to The Erie .IHspalcb,.on the other band, indite time the people of the Twentieth; 'District • have been , better sieved thanthe people of most dimmits whom ..tepreseettativei hare Wien at Washington all the, while; If that sagas spiteful, theinis some truth In it. . IV= 114 inanufactinatk . With harry steals of scrods oh hand, which harts already fallen • to the speck standard, are not ao eager 'to atop tha contractden• of the pains Currency and stave eff the reaatastipe of Void* *J. inento, they were before tto dentin. /doh. Nothing is pore nattuat apapption Would enable awn to sell on the bast* of spode, and ii pa irnblitudty for their loam. skw 'nods of vatelsatag h ° gond iiPS , Pa fir lvume as b " 3l Itsir Tisci .Al141+" • - • r . ISM - • ITTSBURGH W Ing:LY tiAZErn: WgDNE '161• .• JANUARY 8. 1668. cABE rit ww., VaISSION. Some monthsOgolir. Vsneinv,. a coi ned man of excellent chancier an d at- Armenia, applied for 'dignity; s a a tigapractitioner In the Court of C um : Pleas of this wanly. Ho gent tad .tdhis application'upon the fact the the been admitted to practice in the duireme Court of New York, and IpOn_ comity existing between the C putts o that State and of rerriarylvanis Pa that Bard- After a • preliminary haring, aim was referred' to a Cornaittee, misting of highly nepectabb; unro of the bar. ma. Conine.tteer de yod making , th elt.; report tlll'Elatetrday wki. they- seiniutted s' document w ch - we publish 'tilllll mot reins, and is peddler. In the'. It simply to then feels in cone ection with the application,HerithUnt making any' [ rolcommendaticeX,whate roe. . :' Upon foredo g the rep Ort Judge Std.% tact remarked that by a: vile of the Su- • p me Court, of 2few • Yi ak only lawyers from Fennsylvaniswere admitted tome tit here who lad regale sly punned the p feation bra Within's; n 'ceding period oftbree vane. White he dld Mt saytbal 1 h should be; geiverned by :the same rule i• in disposing of this application, there is n doubt he will be. Under Ads: rate , ••• Pathos's application cannot be ; for . a much large numbn of.. 4 'ale" elapsed tore he served as a lawyer in "Han York web:swims. I .Ro doubt an reasonably be entertain. ed uto the, propriell 'of Illa . rule: A 1 man may at a Oven period Posiess a kn'owledge t of the lawmaillying him to sent comptikattlj the int:mats of c 4att.: - But if be goes out of the pm.' mei remaimient for w'succeasion of : 79 1 91 + h° bemiones alto/SUM disqualified.: 0 COI the RlCCeillt2l 'puma *Utile , calling.': -While tin inlelll a good One, we think 1 itmes in opPortunely .to relieve' the Cos train putting •ther refusal it was certain to make on other' and lensset ts-' fachory grounds. I ~, ~_ • I LIELIGIOFS 1/STELLIGENCE. . , '4x• "Dia - AMAMI." hi • *tali: lead- bi t clergymen and lama of the Rohr copal Church,. termed by way of distinc tion the "Low 'Chinch" party, bout In , the Protestant Churclursan and Eptseopa. la u editorial mart., Without die g the differences hotelmen the two • - es, which, to , asy the " least, is en to - ter, or annining the vie* of eith er, 'a prelim' some of the salient Points of `idocument Agned by Drs. New. Cotton. Smith, Stone, .Tyng, 'and per ck4l o r pens ej" w ria ltit the e reasons nti 'll f :T o mClL r the tion, the open: and secret tendon ciailwidch exist to cenfermity with the, Church of Bore, than (Whim an enu meration of these tendencies, suck as the subversion of the Evangelical 'character of thandorined Chincieby transforming the. IMO a priesthood; 'biPti•M -• . EPHEDIERiB 4 _ lnto magical rite; the ./; 0 0 . A _supper LW the_ 1aai1 ,,,,_, 9°. of the 'met and 9°° ' --Many of the Mute. arc Free Mr to , x Yo a more ' =radon] system. 500 ... • , A limb, then called to'a subtler and _p a d l a to t a to .' ty the gp ot . go t a d o less serif:, pronounced seeradotailim, No .. w finds eiftr? . serel in thin c°9lnrT —Alex. H. Stephens!" visiting in Bs l in exclosive , views of 'the Episcepal umors. . ( tal l is lommiPtund _conceptions of • -Panthers Infest the neighborhood of' the ant; in superstitious ideas of Aurora, oa. the power of Me uinisti7i Ind is a I t - rather than an !evangelic —Seven feet is the length of a hog in gal 'evangelical view of c o t iooottoot, . , , • th e Ciutiltu l ilfe • _ Refet e9ce le then —Commis of 10,000 Philadelphians to the floinalidsl Influence of died last year.t . - ' -•• these M e derielest •nd to the fact that in . • —The income of. Girard Cuticle was msh of the pulpits of the Chu rc h an- stagogo a u y ear. • other Gospel la preached which lir rot the lof Christ , and- urge', the . —Judge Roland la Vermont's choice for Vice President Chin tkawakencto ite Perii- .The —There Were eighty-two inricides in # Par agraphs are mainly devoted to , l i ow y,k j u , year. " 11 4 th at sympathy , and so- Pliessilms ,• —.lt is more. than two weeks since . be **Wed to otter.evaigelicaldenomi- Fern had a revolution. ' • nations, and the validity and recogni t , _,4 , • . • goat race took place in Sayan avow 9 'l lmit 1°411437 ' a°9l2° Words ' bah . on Chris:mai day. ' STOW ova and detotion to the Church. • There, are given hundred - and *Agit •. Th elegent new st/Wentre of the Prot teen bar mines in Detroit.. byte Pnbiishing interest" in Cincin• —Goy. Haight, of California, &scour ,l,l. na4 Jost been completed, and Is oc• .ages eninen immigration; cardby "The Presbyter," "Tee' Her- ~ ....The Eogliah are the most thievish aid," ' Christian Wirrld," and "Presto , - race in the world.—Lendon Spse.atar. t ar t an wham , ' The :Western Traci t —Bear fighting Is the laTorlta imolg., el and Betok Society occupy the ground ment in the country districts of Mes- ,1 floor, and the editor& and 'employees or Kmil. the printing department are in the, sec- —A Mr. Beatty wens 'aceit t entallY shot: end 1 third stories: - - - at a torchlight prOCCEBIOn in Maysville, The A gents - of th e Methodist Book Kk. y., Iva wee Con net New York, D. Carlton and ' —Upwards of ten thomand turn are Lased Porter halm ed dnrielfttli Tearing' 'employed hi- . • the. Baltimore and Ohio closed i,„ 6 110110IIIIIIirshusidted and see - Railroad company. nay thousand and did) , three rapture( -: - .d. 'tine and ' tobacco. factory in the venom Chtirch puiadleala ' Wentzville:Mo., were destroyed by are Antitig the mooted etiestioni is, the one night last week. • , best ItlitOOß to lead - italdroo to Christ. -4aries Halley, a young menet Bahl Variant plus have been prOpoied/and More had his font cot otT by a assi new theories Stennis : and P tromPlus • train on Monday, is that city. : ng D tiseltilms Odd SO-thrt mean s employed ' —John -Q. Breckenridge, .ex-Vice The .fo Wing plait is adopted by the President aid examen I' other Adopt teacher of a bible 'elan' otilortent7 Cr Is said to play a nue game of nimblest • elaktY,, the ruttl Pres - .. church, —A:triple portrait of Dexter boa been 'On ati, which neej 4.hro light ' oat taken by Mr. Troye the animal :painter. this reflect. . When thelese or (Robert IkiSIA kie aiat to Pais to - be'ehromoed. eimita j Brown)] observe/I,mi ape al signs in -The o.ld Fellows or New Albany -his ohm he Mirka the, pawnor most 1111'; hive gathered tip a Mutual Aid Anode erclaed, aitsi ePtiellY'obtains their places lion, which is:ping ranch geed this au nt rearm., He then ilalletliMnand favorable season. - taibtan prays with them at Mimi.. By '. —The late lbw in the Mena - ids river thdemetions he has -been inetrimenied in let ant some fifty %hound barrels of oil, leading many to Christ and into the Wilth narked to supply the Parkenbur monk,' - • 1 ' ' refineries for awhile, , • A Baptist minister coma atm to —Mr. Thos.*R. Robinson, aged men ihe Mrtser the mains he °PUS/ to ieer y-en yearn, blew lia hrains out with : awaked lnferest in his gregotion a revolver on Christmas eve. Ito lived Iti Indpror A mink. namely , by she in green county, IAo. visitatio of laymenellro by Iwo, going -The daughter: of • fire ex-King or from ha to honse, to tali and pow , Hanover tato marry the Crown niece with ti tmconvetted, and invite them ejlionesl. 'She .is to have a dotal gilt to mee tin g. . L Other denominations felt of two million Antlers, if theroyal father the po of this mode, aa i d u i tor three can persuade Flossie to pay up. months , city was moved , the OW' —A *cadent exchange , In speaking er and 'p • Of God, as natter before of two tales of infanticide, one of the in its history, - ' - •1 ' ' beurdereases being white lid the other Iri an= The Iterfspvident • sqs the Secretary of *black, calls the .White ones "an tinter the American IfisihnterY AWOCistion in tonne tail," and the other "a negro Chicago ceived, on • Christmas Morn- tread."" • • • -- . i , • MIL a for twent.rnse 2 0 101 ared — The number .of persons mortally dollars m two gentlest*: living In a wounded by Premature discharge of Ste *tadlnterior town It , Magi; W 1 2 ,0 arms or by accident, on Christens day, centrils4 in addition a Pk* satquit .lll .!i was' large, the jail of whom we hive itindlY So wow illowirs7. -This Act : hoard was C. ' Kebentiek, of Hew Oc tet:a:ion' 'work ban:lo2k the Oeedment leans, who fins sine died. While it Plop constantly , upwind of - -A grey eigle attacked . a flock 'of 1 ‘ l ,..tre lain miesionssient teachers add geese in Wisconsin recently ,- and would' ' , , e/l efillen, -- •.:• • • • • _ .' •• .1 - Mee made a successful raid bad it not _ A tilition wastivp =Mg the MAIM- been for a woman. who attacked him , nanil me being held in various parts . 0 with a stick and heat hint severely, driv r_,_\9°oll±, to ppronatejnion •on the fug him screaming from' the field. • ,j,7"\ of 1 late Philadelphia 'Consert ' —lnfo !Itemised iounde of meat, nine —9 ' k Outline:for preen and'ounfer-, hundred large. loaves of bread, four .ease „,,n,„4 t° 4, l l " " t° ,_, this OtOte.;k ll, , bee” ebests ill tee, and a large qteinthy of e l , '...., " .d at Ma ,31iidlioa4rlars allied' thod,. wori distributed by the St. r. A t e ' , _Presbyterian ,, uiriai: Philo ), " Oaor 's &May of Toronto emoog the lew lei • ••9 n. /: nada; • iMilltig - 1 '. 14 • 11; peor ga of that cify Pa Ciditumoldn• ' 4 47 kb— -I.""'""edus of a similar .:—Tits society .for_ the Presintion of hani4v L44'44144 be heid in ,ittneitylo animals n Itjew York b doing ary eteubmni tua i , 868 14 ` .0 . I'l°' commencing Janu l ' aioi,l4 ' iood, ' veil, ear e tir tin a it.....J r .... P.. thiii. knOwn'of Om 5.... -'l.6gneti" to 1 1!c411 " • '' tier 'I. of i lk mtar t ,_ 4 tot the t raj oroo b etween in Mei Mr. Bergh s only !he rom '"" an them ' ' 1 v- bidlculane, , the- honorable character of Pretbrininsi and • ' • t , • • - mounter" Wing of the ett atip, ,,,, DUI* Inv it:tantrum' -.-- • ' . ,sun; the fatten arageT mainly: ' ift " —On lAIIBO4I . night thno neuron doctrinal Pointe. - Tha mo to iT teao ..,,! bruise jaw i *TO .11;81BIPSOOTtiter 9• 1 0ber 1 .4 4 PrethypnAu k "" au stole the stock, consisting of several body Wished b n i,„. l , ..,,,,,A.; were b ested either IM'adoptlon o c th e - Confers - lots Of ---- it , 4o ' ".." .. Th a I s all Faith . sa4Catecklan t ef that Choral, or or -rft" i'-•-'•-. Wbi4. inch etoOdiflitetion ol l trhe preat ot i a „ ' 9l ' l° o 4 the last lead id a '"/I°l'. Confession Si would mike It =le agree. tr" IT " Ili ° stolen. ‘."..„. • :: _,•' ibis to Atutm—modllicattets manumi t , _ —Ta x. nirhope and AroaDissuiPa 01 . affecting „ tie cilobritro t en's'or that rowan's hove' eietrentralniated ell e ,iie r 4ymboLl The a leticiraieu w . 1' 4 .2 0 4 °W.P 3 Pir. , alleging thi4! they" los of ,_ ..._.__,ln ~,.0 et r 0......... ire *ducted by Jews atone -fhia.has• the matter Z= s; Qiiii ttoe, ,,,,-;;;; lead tho easet of 'largely increasing the was adopt by the' AniaMblY, and it la r b " 9441° 9 /h im , 7blott la a. gcbd thing . 00 7 the eilot*antis ended,. at least I° ' th e mi nors, ..., ... • ng liarciith.ortf7;:ch:thalka."'::7o. ~ t ..f thialathin' e w.e =i " a e, . usuidivisul eitir . 4 S t lL ' iiit ' iloc : 14 . - :v . ! ' iMitbiane ,;ide4l.:::::haiL:::tatf:l'...Cog.tt3:l?„:ll::ol°.,tortwe7:4.l,::rumßerlallW:aolale6l:64:;:itit.:o3l"4:l:: 14 7 :: : f o alil l e. 7 : soi. a e : ' ''' 1 Thif..o tea Brethren JAUltist are 41 ate In thew parts Is in criterion of t heir 4" lutvdtr ... .` " 'Y be einlT imagied. low\h and po of the Middle * O4 Ibici ial49.l. 4 :irPPer Saodusky, Ohio, who ro. isres 111 siroLit tot*. *cant 'writiatliti ,P ml4 -1 //I j l C el r 'uddealy , were p iiaOn. rul ._ Gout show re Thor teklici lime bee fines the Yrs. m Mist' the . -,..... ..‘. _.,_ 4 examined, , Samba or iarsahldar plata hi one has- , i llO 401 Dt. l / .0•4 " 4 Ozisill 1111 to the dad and " tOrty,' as 4 the jßa tu t e do t:-..! Who e the poisoner was la a, Isom. 1,00. . .1- -, ~...,, , . tt.. : .. :: ble4ijitteri-. - 1 4 0 . , ~. . o f . the Youzia ladle, The tt ' . 'OIN ' *mil were ; -per t' *lnd Vii, and woos i awl ithiiita Wiiit,hialsi,r ' U. shortly to boliairlid„ r .l .,, ', sidaut ' air .-_-./...,.. _ ' \ • Mil black- Alldren oat of Sabbath 14.h00L Whrzettpon the Er mean. 'propoSes the &Joining amendment of Beriptttre for a risotto, "duffer little: while children' to Bishop Marvin, of the Southern:Meth. Church, repreients the destitution in,the bounds of the Arkansas and Little Rook Cottferences Iv being - very great ©gals Priathirs and people. Soria' of the latter havefo f une It dlfficalt to obtain bread.. Meat Is rarely .on the table. Amid their poverty .spirithal prosti;y, believer, attends the use of theme s.. The beautlfal property purchased, by the Ladles' Vision Aid BoCiety of/the IC E. Church 'in Philadelphia, for a Home for poor.and aged females, about a year ago, after months' of litigation' owing to some defect in .the title, lies been 'decided in favor of the Fociaty,aid they have'been put in complete posies sloe, and the ` .peachaie money of eetati. teen thousand five hundred' dollars aid over. "Eel:Cilsontwil, Haskell, formerly pes ter Of GricistAarcb; (Gentian Reformed) on ViSthster sad Grant streets, in this eitY4sa been chosen "Book Ediuir" by the Bynod of Baltimore. Russell, in former yearn, was an indefatigable Worker in the Yotieg „hick`, Christian Association of thii city. • The elegant structure, Calvary B sp. Vst Church, in Washington oily, D. C, recently etatooyed by fire, bad not been • regularly transferred by Hon. Amos 'Kendall, who give sloo,ooe of the *1,20,000, required to rebuild it, until a tew vela ago, having returned from karope - ice October: Fortunately the Church records bad been, contrary to the castoros and:fixed rulti of the Bock.. ty, incidentally kimoved the day before the Arc, and were saved: Bishop 9 - srk.,* the M. E. Church, having. recently purchased a house .li, Cincinnati, quite a number of lay friends 'and the Methodist Ministry of the City. met to extend blot oia his .fatally a wel come to the city. The Bishop was pre sented wika .catillcate of deposit for two thousand dollars, and also a check for three hundred dollars 'on behalf of the nib:deters of . that city.. Speeches were followed with a sumptuous enter tab:soma provided by the ladise The Oatholk, or this city, &dm:nudes the 'holding of a Catholic Congress in, tile country-- It deilee the Impotation• of some journals that politics Weald en ter into ltitleliberations,.only in so far as it might tract religion.' It says thi4e are Catholics of all :parties, , hut the Church keeps eatirely aloof from poll tics. It thinks much benefit 'to religion . *mild accrue 'front - inch a meeting, which is quite reasonable to suppose. llirpers are Sheet bringlog out Brum. macher's David Slop of Israel. The preface to the American edition is filled with love to . his American brethren, and is in the Coprt preacher's okra hand. .GIittS!:AND WIVES. • Two publications of meat, one a quar terly review, the other a monthly snag. ;urine of the elar , and gra ver' sort,...at ;tempt this weehys reopen a died - lesion Which three yeira ago a'most occupied the ite - ',...a5. "lii the "North Bridals Re . . view,',', an eloquent w ter, whose idea ' tity requires no!signit re to establish it; points to th e diarise. of marriage In the upper and middle 'el. as one of the i great "sores" inlßritis society. There ought, he says, rScfor . on to the Census returns, to be only 00,000 - women be tween twenty arid fo ty still unmarried.. 'and titers are l*SO„ thedifference representing the number wilfully shut • . out from their natural and must • useful position In society.' W e may' add that 1 this frightful dials portion is mainly within the Janke of e so-called mid-. i dle clasa.- Peasant omen all - marry, l and the workmert,:a idst thcir tho,sand complaints, certethl do' not complain that: their datightera cannot find bus. betide. • Het Is evldeu yr. inclined to at- I tribute the Mil Maio) to an increase in luxury and vlee,l..,ohs rattle, with 'epl• gramalle Jurtice,lthat I celibacy includ ed chastity almost all en would marry; tatt even hi is reitere a th e love of lux toy and show foil whi h come women saajlice so much ,,' Th writer In "Fra• ear`iXagazine;" l don th other hand,whe profeises tattledlressona why he, • with .CSCA a year, Is. still a bache;or, boldly throws the whole: blame on the women, and . launches • otft - in a . tirade against them, which readi as If it had been tak-• en (roman expurgated Juvenal. I • Their dress, their cosmetic', their de: mends for sett:entente, their entrains; gance after marriige, alt come In for his unqualified censure, and heaven logs in the wedding- breakfast as one of the nuiaances which disioclint meta to mat rimony. The anneal premium• on the insurance which fathers usuallydemand often, he says, 'cripples a man almost through life, the £lOO a year so bestow. id reeking all tiiii .thfferenee between plenty and disconiforii c. remark which breathes the very eatellee of the Ladle. ler sellishnese, donbtleia assumed rather' than felt by the wilter. but which comes out still more stroriely in the following paragraph;-"sly' L'EOO a gear keeps me In iuxury as a bachelor,—the club, the' rubber, the" little 'dinner at Rl:homed, the bottle of 'B4 claret, the opera-stall, the monthat Baden Baden, are quite ' within my modest:means; but the - mo. -meat I marry, I exile myself from this easy paradise." Most peopte,we lancy, could feel it a luziny to know. that the' selves 'and babies ivies '-sale from the , niter misery wffich'comea on aneduca. ted household whole bead has left noth ing at all; but, however, selfishnees is sot our topic to-spy. Apparently the bachelor would not.mind all these an noyances so mnch,lthe lose of luxury, of independence, of Income,' the wedding breakfast, and the Paymfut to the In a-um:ice office,: bps weary ceremonials, mid the more Weary waste, if only the wire, when won, ware worth havlag. - But he argues she Is not: "Simpson, for Instance, Inforroed nee confidentially; and not without a bench of pathos in Ms manly voice, that Araminta (who %dor ed'ssmoking in the days of their woo ing) requested Win to retire to the guard'a van when tie mildly suggested, a week 'after they new metaled, that a cigar would not be an altogether un pleasant comp Miord en the road." . The matron newer days quite eclipses the maiden. , Site flirts more in-insert. only; she waltzes thorn violently; she dresses more' outrageously. 'Hang it P - said D—, the other day, -speaking of a well known beauty, who had not yet ceased f.? reigns 'she knows as much slang tes a cabman, she drinks ..as much as i fish, only it's caracos, she gambles like Fox and Sheridan together, she wears' a dress which the French rp• lice would eacludd front the. Jar din ifalliile; and iii.'s for a. jade .Like this that you ask. mu to gins up my, cruet cited and liberty,— my shit litg whist a y pipe. Not ifl know it. D— is' cynical phllose. pher; but it inspect that In some respects this sketch la not, Much Verdrawn." This. violent paragraPh is the most im portant Is the anicle,::fdr it. expresses, in a rough way, a feeling which seems to pervade the whole literature of the sub ject,' a sort of disgust'ithd antipathy for the women of the dap, which breathes through All 'ethical, nerature, 'which enderlleethe most tenons comments on society, and which MO may see Cropping out every now and then even in Punch, perhaps the only asit•Fcal paper ever es. tablished In which women were treated with hearty national, respect; laughed. with, insteld.oclitughed at. There Is, of couite(kome foundation fora chirgis so generally brought and so long continued,, and f( is smite as wetf that the women to whom such descrip tioos apply shotild knew what men re. ally think of them, „their. graces, and their wayi; but the ge i tieral drift of. dia tribes like these is 1 ' pnjudice men against marriage, to I rease the evil of which the sagacioui w ilier in the North British complains witUo mach acerbity, and, si we thiLk, som ch Melee. They increase. Immensely , ' e of our smaller axial difilcultlei to w Ich very little at 1, warn has been. paid, Ibuiwhich le we strongly suspect; one. ,i' the many mute es•tr Inch keep up that!llion of unlucky spinster;, the Increasi g obstacles men dud In the way of awe tainhig what the girls they might prefer are like. The it o.d " ease at !Meter/Arse Is Wisp pealing, till teen,, particularly ~:the cultivated men of citle feel u if mar , riage were of nicessityl is lottery, aa it. they must chose. if they choose stall, oss the strength of an ahquaintante they admit to be inadequate, •a "ball-room knowledge," - u 'people who never at• tended mi ll In their byes are morello ,deently tonight to pin* It. They see soresta only at aasemblies or la Pahlio gatherings, till they doubt whether they aro precisely like that In private; whether ;they may not i re acting, oist all Mends concealing t e rr. tone charac. tem, a doubt which sates like that In Fraser tend strongly te c i'lannitili. This difference between the r al *Oman, and the woman of the ball -r am, is the petit of the Saturday,Review'a attacks, with their. details of Gime bisome, bustlea, and the rest of It. •For Mr' opporturil ties of easy intercourse,..ieal conversa tion,' trite flirtation In Its beat :sense, which have diaappeared iwithin the last twenty yore, scarcely one new one hag been' added,''perhaps oady one really available opportunity, m4met, tine very beat amusement ever IntWuced. Into a SPG'icommunity based on the privilege of c 9 .: .• ' --_ L - , It tries the temper as Ito other game deco, shown figure and face under. sun. light Instead of Base ligh t , prohibits ruled, enamel, Glee hair, nd bare shout. den, mad allows unlimited opportunity of conieriation.. Bat crd,quet is , catce- I i iv played In great cities, where society, ) In the Old sense, la most rapidly dying away,,and where men soonest learn to be distrustful., Let the older profesitott. als who live in great cities look round, and count up the familles.not related to thein in which thin malaria received as intimate friends, and habil:sally use their Intimacy. . . . • What binds a profession 1 man to look after Frazer'.' Jade, " whine the pimp,. Veil throughout . England are open to bite when county town and and country neighborhoods are swaredsg with nu, tarried woman as nice, and modest, and moderateu . ever they were, with more information, no' doubt, and sometimes with moreexternat Pretctliteti r .but with their real character* as vatted as ever t As to extravagance; the chrge, even as th against e,"hard" class la overstretch. ed. -They are brought up to knd w noth• leg of money; their lathery never giver them the &lightest hint of 4heli &few their husbands never talk•ittsinesa, and of course their demands fOr Z 0011.4 bp. come mere experimental eftrts to =kr: stand through indontion, by thy . big . gling of the market, how mtrava eh theythay L i nd. Wd are not,ex ing spe tinet, but men rather mean, la Tin gaot by g ndero. wank gym Let I man tel 'stay woman slime in close relation In; cu, that het t i au so ranch, and wante i to leave oct of that, and then be Is just as ha can about dress; and it will not ho her fault if be dee, not are Mathis. A.stillboosontry • eels, do farfrom baling liable tto the charge of extravagant wets, the spry satirists .. . manneah who Leg, brin zu g ia ,i i i cett a t‘ li m eg thixi e eer t y lie adta t e t u b .be e tib t ,i f i tt ri n lyb a m f4e , r nt al ios 'kept by gentlemen in poem& That la • 4he egser, comments the may*, of an . CSiestition. Is ittj . Ar is its:rather the elitictof a feellog Bost the cat 7 ta ten. ' illy the mod ntluod man of A net, the . beat -educated, the one *lli mod In-' tailwind Inleteata - It Is not the slily oda who. 'duct* mostly, tibilnwsitu hotchn.;ollimitedl ready oa r " .il contendjlwnesk Ibe . nb b have 11P 111we v i ht is: qualifie d Ilya ' ceis' at e da n'lcl'i!rll.4 h h 1 lb: 81:1 ill I. i a : . :. lib " 21 n stl 4 o l 3 Miiiktl a a r li w7 hl : 7:2l4 I SSC 1:43 , : g h 111; 71 :41 h °ll i bf Ial: Meats f , g;ir t e s l i • " 4 .4'l.,.. u bqt 1.": 17 n UI ;:113.(1:;4:1:1 j°7l:'l ei ab''the c ult ure6:° u.ll"lwn:F i e q . h . s4l l _ dang‘ th e lib°:::dtt . • thoroughly sound, itestatetii Merthifie belay, eight times out of tens ' 01011111 ;) but how dote all diet m Um. ' tip clu.s - Women he scow l , ~., .., S ti oo t o 4:40n° P 91 7 et Stilumer - or ealle,fikla#o. . ' il '''' . • , iake the world, and areas a rulethe most . ignorant of crested b,ings. In every connt 4. the ...fine ladiels" are ignorant, (or they study only people:not things, society, no:life; but these peen. do , dne ladies never evert know .truthe about people, arc notpmerely in:apt In conversation, but inehpanle of it when ever it strays beyond chitchat- TLelr single special faculty is a kind‘ofsedned insolence, useful no doubt both as a wee. pon, and a defence; but still not the stroigest•which C5:l be used, nonh ,If no strong, for exaraele, ae either ti.zaoty or humor. We admit the wretched mutt. tion even of the DUB an educ.dion ap parently apecially devised as a barrier to knowledge; but still it is improving, and they are infinitely better educated than' they were a century ago, when men of good position believed music to be the only, pope; accompliebtrent for their daughters. cookery a female science, nal reading a taste betraying a slightly de peaved mind. Thousands, scores of thousands of Englishwomen are sod will remain unmarried, who are as well in fokmed, though in a different way, as • men.br their own class; who read as miich.,,atudy es much; and can bear their part, to any conversation, on the whole, rather better. "' : ' The truth is, we believe, that while marriage is as frequent as ever it was, the growth of a taste for luxury concur. ring with a Sudden development of up port not les for gratifying it without set ting up hots:, boo pushed bock the usual ago. pirtieularly in the sipper and middle' climes. Census tablets do not show this wily, because the habit bets not reached thelower classes, who marry no they alwaiii have done, before gley are twenty.one, and who outnumber the income tax.payers by 80020 twenty to one; buttit inn fact, nevertheless. Pro fessional- men'marry_ as .beforo, hut in- Stead of marrying at twenty-fire put it tiff to thirty-al or forty, and then choose woman at least ten years youngex than t'%emaelves: Thla le a serious, evil, no doubt, though not so aerlotts as a diruae' of marriage; bet we do cot' KC bow it to . 1 .to be removed by taking a partictllar and limited class as the pattern br the whole 'MX, and showing that the women who lieloug to it will he nuisance, na 'wives. Very likely they will, though something might be aald for them, too. but Enpuns bag they will, what has that to do with the matter, when they are not one- per cent. of the eligible and the ready? FASHIONABLE CHAT 11=1=121TE What shall we nay of bonnets? Many pooplo • ray bonnets will / be_ altogether out of fashion' sonnet than the much abused crinoline. Many and bitter are the complaints we hear en the subject of those ever-decreaalng bonnets; but aro not. those persons who lime complain aware that bonnets aro quite a modern invention, at that ladies did very well • without them until the time of the French revolution,. a revolution which acted , quite as forcibly upon fashionaw upon anything else? The thorough change. made at the time have never been quite effaced.. It was then that gentlemen lett off their gay silk end velvet garments to doff the uncompromlelog butts of broad cloth, and put away powdered wigs and tricorn., to assume the noble looking, -chimney-pot; and it was then also that ladiek ball to give up hoops andst mach ' • era warts and aaperott.c. To these sue geeded plain skirts and a sort of huge basket-soaped coiffure, the first models of which are said to have been introduced, in Paris luf English lathe; and which were known by we name of chapeaux... In a different style the very Haien fanchnn, with th 4 mantilla lace veil, is also very becoming. Thamodern fithebon le scarcely tiro inches wide; it la made of tulle,- satin, or velvet, arranged in plaits or bouillon; and a few pieces of wire run through it are sufficient sup. port wlthent need of the strong Wet and wire foundation generally used fur bon nets. When the hair Ls beautifully dress ed, this little fenchom with the lace veil, looks extremely pretty. The style of faneron Is a more dressy bonnet thstuths chaperon. . I Ilutbealdesthesolhereareother models • 'which we cannot madly admirtl=the Em pire bonnet, the high crown of which is cocked up over the; chignon, and the pug bonnet, which cov ers only Just the top of too head, and is -Aniseed oil at the-, back with a • very; large• bow of satin or grosgrain ribbon. • - • • • The Eniplie bonnet le generally made of plain velvet, the, iaulf bonoet of pruned slue. Of the latter ova noticed three maiele at Madame.. Alexandrine'a one of Biamerek satin,;With a tuft of droop- mg cock's feathers tstened with a gold lino/xi; and a widelrow of ribbon et the v back; one of klet ado, with violet pan. • ales with golden ceptnas upon the front border and a hOw grits gratin ribbon lat the hark; And no 'of black velvet, with a white teethe , a hunch of scarlet 1 geraninmajuet under It, ands bee of black satin ribbonitt th e bank. • Theme puff bonnet. are, as weltave said. placed just on the top of the bend, end the bow of ribbon, with wide, long ends; falls over the cbiglloll. • - Cbanolease velvet entesca;.with neck. leers titan!, snide, tied in loops, With long euds at the back, aro very much the fash ion pat wehr With low dresses. Some vel vet eeeklaikaare trimmed with scallops or vandykes, of large beadr. ;. • In jewels the most fashionable neck lathe am heavy gold chains, from which depend oval medallione, enriched with diamonds and precious atones Brace. lets are made in the some style. Cameos for brooches emollient:ally. mounted itt 1 the Grecian style. . . .Tewelehre also - much need for head dresses,The moat beautiful epiivte3 are butterfies, humming-talrds and even.' email peacocks; made of Small diamonds, Lrubies and emeralds, delteately mounted in gold, Diamond flowers are alw beau; • tlful the hair; we noticed In ,particular large alletnnuaes, .theatantens of which • were each formed by a entail . diamond l'lrernbling.npon a tiny silver stem; the' Pedals' werealve formed of a number of d ' diamond; • - • • • In charts...tures ive noteoice dbligte, ' kid and velvet b o ot e, !lead, hot bet- toned' at the cravat row bluck. velvet aboem,"wlth a cravat bow hi front, and lined with quilted silk: Bronze kid shoes, ornamented with black L•eo • rosettes, nod colored kid or estht .hoar to match the dress, with ribbon or lath , bows, a small gold butterfly or ilbwer hit centre. And slippers of red Morocco, with high heels, a ruche of rod ribbon allaround,_ and large 'rosette in front, others of black velvet with a fur 'border all rotind, or edged with a strip of rash- more with a gay pattern in broderie Bro. tonne. • It Is very stylish to LATO the bent, oboe or slipper, to match with the draw, and the fashion of- short or loop skirts has rendered the qu e stion ofd cheuesures importani. . I. Antaton Ltnot.—Tho leg le 'Of black • zephyr satin, buttoned' on the side . • the top' is trimmed th varnisketi ' eat, band varnished golf. A smalltee' 5 spur is waived in the heel. Fine gold tassels-' 2. • Elastic Hoot —Tito leg Is of tine With elutic and the tip of. thick ti,r cul Slik•tassele with a.bow of passementer ie. Spanish .retblialt . brown silk, amt./01,1,w and •atitched with blank silk twist. Louis XV, heel: ed with silk. - rover- . 1. Dan Bbee.—Of while saga trimmed ' , filch n relecto and ornaments or gold 111 1rageo. Imeds X. 1 7• heel covered with • . 6. Fancy Shoo.—Of Mho clutpilie roceo !leather, with n tip or varnl , l,ml calf, elitehect with blue silk iwiet.% lieel a ha •vozolicre, covered, with loather. Blue silk, bow, • O. Do Barry ' flipper .— Of pinithgfalo. wethleji awl lined with 'whip. *llk. nacho. ofnerrow pink satin. Satin ro okie. ;High heel, covered teltWpink eatin.-eZigligh WorneWaliomeatic 41lityct-' screen of Philadelpithi Sotlcti. Dila Emilie Schaumburg isa Pitgadol . tillia celebrity, In society, who hasittliloa. the fascinations of rare skill In vacating atc, annatig rarer powers, of dmmattoox.. prmaloa r as an nm ilegr . romedienne. to the attraction of pont beanty.. Ifer grandfather, Col. Bartholomew 4Jchnum burg„wita a waif of the Landg e 'f Hems Camel, and closely connected wit o h him. He lineal the Americans to ilia RevohltiOnOry Wor t 10111 served under Waahlngton. Ho .tharrled a huly, who wan a lineal descendant of Ihe principal Indian-chief Semite, erthe Lemma Iri be whgaigned the treaty of Ifleg frith Wil= ' gam Peon, selling-him the large tract of lend In which-Philadelphia la atuted. Min Schaumburg la the eighth remove 1 In. a direct line, from UP • aboriginal , 1 princass, and was born in New Orlenna. Prom childhood, her great mtialcal t lent WAS evldont; united to a voice of uncommon poster, purity and swt 'meas. - Its natural atlvantagm Lama be ee en fully dovelopod by the late ifigtior Per ell', who'cousidered her bid moat hrfili ant scholar. - Thosoirces OltteifOkS nt her residence gather togother all that Phila delphia agents of most elegan t land moat. _____.„„,.....-...-;.-iiimoter accoMplished, Tito earlier portion. of ....A - powerful &WO' IMI""'"--.. tallith /5 her education was theft directed bytho In gt:erail o g ig iii'ew &fort r, nut Into Hon. 11. D. allpin, one of ma moat „id to h e echleving mondeft.&-dbad brilliant scholars. of- Amerlm; and by 'meant', cold bulecitted,l,lTlvgigegv she Itut bad all the advantages in of hitMlllolltireOUMV. 4 . , 7ios (to t t cultivatiowhich' Ilia magnificent cavilling it canal Aft= Cri-liaroil feet library . Hite haa ad- deep and sevetity.flee 01..11 .I,..,npate, dell - the accomplishment or ot.eaktiert. wltie, taking' litt a t0...n &nudl„,,fggaittli.,l. several modern language& She has ulso nt d deprwiting It in faw arn- bT, &trill WI ' a graceful gilt of vomitleation frequent- laid health,. the canal. ~,- i gnnena ' iy, Ana& unpretendlnply, oxcart:WM utiles aunt; to the doers or .!,,,,ste,.. for the entertains/mot of bar I mmediate in that port el. NeW Jerafli - - ' - d e g ma• ciftle. - ' milde, deg:gibing' Di ".,. maid, • Whin thePriccoorWalea risked Phil- chine" like these rag elm.ii...-- fitedathal' tielphis, beat:mit the only ereutog of end Illustrates by abowing.... tt= Ma stay et the Amdenty of }lnv& lle ;night Ito Put in °paragon on naii g, saw Alias schautnbilrg la anoit9r. b o x, e d ~,,,a 1 i rom ei m a. la Ef go o (h a and his munition was at Mum attracted sf&tl that la recetwarY -I"rstirar by. I. or hefting. ,S!.iie waathdremod witty • itigh e m gg g it g„.i the T omo at • lh e •IntTPtiallnquiltd.. t'ict with Bold .Zti'ite asaflleklntiuellitiVll3fratt.tUdWitenalb' - royal r partY we gale r direction tit don p i o ' l nt, net tbem to ixor-,- ,iii,ggir loug egfib to ahew'th house the • npcgito diectintua-one ;et to .. ... te ,_ ottiect of t tele admiratin. The Pyme e ii er b er the other . t „..ras , declared ber "the laptheiggiful woman building' tithe '4 in the r9gt_e,UTltearit he bad scan in A uferict.'! ear xr ,,,, Amitlier sot ;multi aleo wc... ......s a the dramatic , talent was first decei ved - due- e n d „f. the i nn ,. ...flaw to-:-..--,,„„ by ~.. th e sanitary Fair. itt nuuteer of la. mocha , m e a ,„,,h, O .....y to_,-,reky, 71,7„d. gentleinon tined up a little net, „„, mctbit of gooth r.,t tank entre to hold about hree hand: ttia led—ii.of &meal at the P 5.....- geed Ta l e- th ' • r rid l'''''A th ° C raft "' ' b• 41- ea could' be permaned With . 1 n.. ... jwygonet. 9014+ n'l449g tl ,- 4,1 and ationotn,Vl . . . .....- . ..„ . • . • . . . . .. . . . . . WI Vee r/ el or sneaky, the 'he& elna:vely to OK 'eradtto.:, bur . Many pinyi 1,2,011"31INI "Th. ]dies' a Atb,.,i'rinclE.l Schen:aim, „..., 1ite.,,, - ri e ty DI role of the : " Cotincrar. • ti,..0k....„,ixqu,... sown,. , h,„ewhow:y f ~.1.-,;0„,.,, vita rendition, elrabin ',-• the wa" thefeet grace d i e t s i g , telro — „,l o , Le' most ishades - rival" member' it ala piece of a../. 1 4 'l.e.- Arl on ill.i. Anl,riCllo ttafr6,' ter —i 7 drama, c.dled. n'tte Witis \ ,'- egted Oho' l which Mis,r, Schaumburg. g to ,.,.,,rara ' 1 Tole or Latly Eeelye_rs et,raDett,r,.; prodtmed Cobb gmit eeug at _,,•,,,,,,, . , In I It= 'loom," far r haritabler P , W74, ever , I this-probably the mutt. trylag „",_3fise mternined by any lady aniebrure/S• Sulhounbrirg acnieved fte s _,l . ' one of Mad.iine Risteri, who' w'ude.'"'",,..ti Stir the perrortnencen, expentled...er 'the ' 1 rind and delighted it the ge? l , l g . . brilliant amateur, , . - 1 In .A. A'r the gubernatorial reteldr_.ee'etontra\ h‘ny; nre. Fenton wi ll wear......avllT gray silk dre.ss, 4th breadth 1,, ,,- .'....; emhroiderei In 'a . pattern 0rm,,,,..° ,13 Vine, nod leaves In gun y• and "—Oat 1 slie•ls still, in hag' um -f a Thl . • with • ~ ~O r mtgo., is`cut fully g .rki With ti g u ,,ggiud : The sill: tar Otte drew; tgadone `' es franc, In, geld, In t t arte, nod the dr D int, leak tn., 1411 tem •-stenetntat -.,bttentr 1 hundred dollars. Tham. la ncP.7 , ; .eitnplieit . it fur you. . ' • MADAME DE M OT : anti, On the ti mu NiOtt at . Ilk , Foieign ()Cue 7,00:0.,. ' 2 , niaisted ioweitannin; her o ats '''',ll.lll, two daughters. Both art.verY:_,,,,b't7with and wore plain-white tares r0.r.,,,t azure furipes„ put the eftrauceL•, in -00,1 the style of their toileta Istu.L.,`''rorsi de,,Hboable,.for all that is ihO 'ilea° device of 'llaristan dm...Atm plain robes were armor., a 1 . 017, - - '.ine• and square on'the shoulders. "..'-,Ath• de I.lotistler •wae is er,„,,,, sal. -, Pompadour stripes,..'...R.ariecur.l; ' These low A FAStfIottADLE Lan. vial °: M adlucui Avenue issued cent' L''''''.- party, which was Intr. 1,,e,,,t0 ItitierL,ell the twelfth n'hist mown, .nbler,,ll,,.';'et be reeenoeted, twos thentabror tuee'`,„ snow storm. Of the eighty' iOl%-ce--' urcapted; only fourteen persona ! w ar d present, theremalninz 'etxtrsaLt I L ' . 1 ,7.. Ittrsent "on ac-amnt of theitsibef*-* Y. Home Journal.' • A PAnis correspondent. nys that geld 111111 mr el, Cotta tfit 11 0111.1:0 yetrlt leaves, are the awe, tortes on eve; ahirg, 'Cloth unutues withjnothing but Olt W4ticwg are consideret;tho Meet diatiaM'' ' ~... NEWS . BY ITIEGRAis. • I —An Augusta db,p.td." Bar. Dr. Beckwith Law 'accepted the ,Birtairic pt Georgia. —Consul General At i erill his returned to Montreal after etx months absence I n . the finites, —Beethoven Block, Bodac. 0, Maid°. Iran burned yesterday menhir, 1433 M 1,0 0 ,4. insured. , . &Co, on, of the Olast and most exrenalre &am to Itonnosi. c'unadn, boo anapended. • —A negro named Jciztes Las been son !once(' to be bung. at Frederick, XI; fur rapo open! a Cato trutuaa • • —Tbo largo sugar winery P f _ St libelled, et Philadelphia; mre moth j Injured by are on Saturday nosing. •.—The Toledo Bought Tradevedords9 9 P P°l '``‘ ln ' •.(l4 4 3 sto,the Basiri of 'trade ttongreat which areal:treks In Bolt turi February btb, • I —Lease IVIB sited 1.11 the:ltouse.atd Senate of .llalne, yesterday, to present a bill.ropealing the State CoastabeJarYlid, but It wee nut granted In either flnasea • ,Tho °Sick,/ Cantle Ll:Uteri, Cattu da, curdalue a notice that !horses and other anima;, poultry and fancy birds. Importtil for the purpose of Improeing stock, will be admitted duty fru. The duty ou Amerkau lenient; twenty.ftre per cant. • . —General Reward Us not turned: se ders dinmiasing Barfum . Ulcers for4u 'gragitur hrpol ft les In the SonthemSUdes Lie has established a rulethat theaceept 'ems) of an Milos must be mouldered as incompatible with the duties of the ? ears, of the Bureau. • I. ; I. —The steamer Highland Light, bound to the Eastern Shore, exploded her slam Cheat when tifieen tuileafrataßaltimorth, on Ssturday. nue or ten persons were culded, iirluding four adored platen. 4 ers,—ttie remainder beionging•tis the iirewr.somo darterously., . . -1 —The &aroma Court of Ratite:leaps:a decided that thelawtexempting annblt Malmo,. mortgazes 'on the.property of widow's, charitable Institution arid' churches from taxation la unoonatittu , 'tonal. The decla' adds about htmdred millions t im o the haahle pper no ty of tho sate, and sill increue the arcane two millionti a year:, L -An elderly man natual Pater lee= . 1 h 4, of Reuling, wan arrested at Harris berg on the 3t, charged with publiah log and nailing a iiholoos laok. It was ' a black list of citizens of Harrishufg, who wore indlacrimitiatelr put down an "poorpor for 6oneat deft. con He was hound ewer to appear Cow:a as wan also a citizen 'rho gave Idarnotno Of the nanica ' . r, Gala stain. sea inastuesa, Frata ito Alio count 0t..3 Looking at It ea a speculation, it La tie' ' Olney it the pram generally to have a Oleg al*old nalutnia In every circle*e hear man tellin ofsuccesafularlvenjures in what they misname mining. If yOu inquire closcly;you will And all (metes by speculation, In Nl'ashoe stl*k are set down as loan:sin caning. Money paid 01ai . 111,1 supposed to cover good mining around, and money spent to fi nding t it that there wakes such ore at repratimt. ea, is 'oiled mining. Money put tato mieolng out • ores that assay well, but wide!) alter patting upexpensimeworks are found so full of hose metal that Our' preoofnt Milling will network them:. to clamed so Imam by mining. Tempted by . underestimates, men. gm Into mock companies and _ find themcsatiot pay the tottestments; so they lose"whot they pave paid, by ibrfeltum. - Bebn afar, this nu; unrolls crowd cook spina: what they . aindcrotand as "soloing." Of an it, ' clow of regular newspoperlcritero there Is scarcely one that does not take:Milt. at mining, and magi one redly know. anything about acted Mining Wearing much 1, Ile from the loungers about, th e y get an idestitat mining leonine. and no heart.eldom, If arm, theserwriters Mier sything kora men *idly etigave In mining. Legitimate Mine* are at their work, ,lid *0 not encountered. In. Um Kammn, nor. in. the. chide= at our; street cornets. When we consider than sixty millions "of dollars as prodtmedi &trid orly nom Oin' WM*** Cannot r e . moist limo coveted* . than Is a ; ,toady soil proinablchtulmaut end that' ' a gt oat maul persorui ere engaged In io sueom•tullp; so many Wiest thit It they would • tip the some pains to chronicle their success sad **month. IS profits, as • others do.. to ogre.: late their .vsgas sod -.laMoboton denonciallous—sgaind .Whet they undermittitt as mining; .perlatt ; would Note lied concept/OmM thews* °rout. Pacific Stake. TliqWhebiinlkutito the vslue of goad minite.Ordillu areal kir tly reellalng. • Thity do lt .'nor write. Monis tlog olds *h bone, i hey don't even like rah I nleu nlng lnquirincly,,ancilnu nngthilintalnare. 'on?. Uniortunaney,,oturralinho ha. la Emit to tell a,llko one irtxrand gets crack in u crowd, makes ml' outcry than ono hundred men iftl* . b 6 d. haves • • • • • • • • not been hurt. lies Fraticiseasiros era• ryt bins. uLtho gold mhos iitadifornia. l'ilo1 ,1 1)norno here tor siol&')Illothor In. dmitrlcs me no nuatrainatnitino,our gold wines. Take thenranill",..nlia the 'whom", Stmo as well oaths oicr los retsO gado: 'rho prodocnotertnilPelotta moist, Is the talisman WWI gaol Ibis lis couSt into Ills, stsl growth 4. ypts• after jeer • . vary disreputable titelnlii took pinre country-chunk, litkimll° 6 "toltio thin city, on•Tanakolog last. • A revival hatUntlitlikLry`t,..a titan " '4 dto elt rehosnil twelViontrims.- taken Into the fold - 'wbotl'4o ti e me 6 stated a company ,pt :young men dingulitd t shnpo w hon t scandittablibells and hbrnese almond, bp*. 't he house 'or worship Joist* too t o ter . " WOO open ininho tiervicti to the throne of gmoo pros tooled was dreltledly Lm Tme% with pasteboard. hastls„ qa nisi bushy lona otilizOied necks covered nab .bOOl tho Mite and rushed :up hi - most threatening madam' Tbansonter. brok6 off the thread rtr WOW" to the throne and besought to thelrinlr'leavotholionne. TboYlt i 47. mer vles We' nuioneratas thi ng returned, an d set upatildeacenwg and pawitnr, mingled with Saßkit,..A9°.• um of gi ing boils IkS IyalVig .t°rO heard In Duch" pldotc• thitilload. Intrusion the ;Teacher beeliglA tc-rI Y dleimated, diemitised 4 0 4 0 r n ' nod left tho arena or hik ibelimand (Ad.) Men who would nottkce needing onsbt to be lynched: 11111 E o.Tho only liter a ry society in Ironton, , Al ui , is nude up of colored.pcople, who 1 pl od "unintelligent tovote." • 1•.•;:alic suburban .thelim of 1:n11(.4111e, i ;If Part', teas horned recently, and it l ought Pro persons recently, 'ln tife , frits cs:totoguo ei the V/rmatii UM ' ty at 13firliugtonShorre 143 students • the regitlar course, Ilscientitic and IS z oilcul students. I ;Alter intent 'Mot General }Toward F t o efolorted the pn?position of a Icon of tiry roildOnis : fo Southern planters i ,eh a licni on. thelrettales or crolw, is in: e ffect. - Abe New ' York Cake% iflirlkathat "a.' „ Rind bus, with a lemon to his:mouth, ;Whig tall llffd to Ids dame tin,' might. , t , toil try to SWIM up °Teethe falls of . vaue' as the Radicals to succeed on ro suffrage . • •f-In Zanesville, Ohio, thensis house i f three brothers and mentor bare \i f * for fifteen years wilbont ouLsldo In (-tours°, with witolowsand doors claw-' ItiOut and. barred; . 3 .lra:Grumlyf deb •043,att luvestigation. ,: . • 'he Saint John Globe thinks that at uopd of three more - ouch pensions of dopominion Parliament es the Ilisthas 4.11; tb a Parliament buildbagt might be ,Tohnied fors linltod ,t3tates arsenal at i l i itere bitch lower than cost; . •-• ~ men In Chilicothe, Ohio. heard a ,b,gootion in hit hou•konso the other nu k t , sod • calling out "who's there:l" ivirred no answer, and 'fired Into'the &oast Tboutext morning a dead no grooms 'bond with a thick:en ender his ~..gn applicant for a foreign 5115111551 from New• Jentey mentioned tho' 17,000 oroservatlve majority In that State as a recommendation. " Yes,"'eald the Pres lona obut I think we ought not to re. awe," . d n a that, majerley by sending .you ' ( ..-1 -121 tustltuttoit has bred 'aatablithe in pails for the higher education.of we men,` and a journalist' draws a glhomy shore of the time when ladies will per ithar their husbands with imotitions such as, What Is your opinion mitt. admen th ow Mao!. beat?" -s„. , ._,A Nevada Judge has recently added Wthe stock of law at present governing utTerritory, a decision, that stealing quads flpm 151 1 / 3 0$1 of gold add. sliver is note mime, because a mining ledge is rent 'eel, and real estate cannot be stolen.' 1 --lluring the pad. - fEW sapt !mint maids arrived at Victoria, In Now South Wales. The government of that Colony darlag the year expended g0a,370 Id as audits Wee immigrants, and during the 1 last Ave,yeara has expended $2, 036,104 in eecoarsisasomustyation. : • - • :-./t Is reported that some otthe girls employed to tend store In Boston receive but four dollar* per week, and them am inereappileations Tor -such places than call be granted: Itt tho shipyards" of, Newburyport,.'llaas., the most. skilful carpenters urnonly ono dollar and a hid: o day. -General "Howard, It Ls stattid,,Pro poses to distribute the eurplus.funds In the Freedmen's' Bureau athoog tlui des titute people of the South' during the coming winter. It la reported that there is an unexpended balance of over eight Million dollars remaining In thehanda of the Bureau *facers. •• i • -The-French navy at present consists of 128 sidling ips and 344 steamers. Of the latur, 9 m are iron-clads, 187 screws and - 113 paddles. These 967 ' Mips are of 02,571 horse power;and carry 6,784an5. Besides these, /6 iron -clads, .14 screw became'. and I sailing weasel are now building for the Government.' i - .LAD. Tames Jaeohs, or Alayliville, has a patent for an improved reign" plow. The improvement mishits in a cutabl natlon of the lifting., twisting and throwing qualities in the. share and mcmid-board. Tim beam and handles are infinite, and ttie depth of the furrow can be regulated by an adjustable wheel which to attached to the beam. . • --The rapidity of the. growth of the Sato of Wieconalti Ls, illustrated by tho fact that Bates county which,' two years ago,had , not a, population of SA now has 31,000 persons between tho ages of five and twenty-one years, and has forty-live echoed houses • Wisconath India. sister States of the Northwest are rapidly fill ing up with settlers. . ... . -A gent'emiyA residing at Ea st Bella, Pa.; recently attended" a sale in the neighborbood;where Imparehased an old chest, which, on taking homeand smart- Ming, be.. surprised to Sad, toad a falsehottont; in which were atoned away a great many gold and silveroolna of va rious denominations. 'They. had probe , bly lain them upward s zor one hundred years. ~. , . . -In 1887, as• shown. by thii "Racing . Calcadar," 752 two•year 01d5,'661 three ' Year olds, 403 four-year olds. and 837 dye year olds and upward, making %total of [ X. 468. horses of different ages, run on the various racecourses in England. In 1866 the total. number of 'horses of magus ages that made their appearance on the English turf were o 109 making a gain of 3491 for 1807. By this It will too seen that racingils 'eaten the fleclino, ' In 1797 ! ths total number of bolts onthe Britlab turrwere 593. :- -Mr. H. J. Fellows gives inthoPhil adelahlaPlotographer a simple and of. rective'renTedy forthe• (Wanting. or tili-' taluing sufficient [true upon children', picture,. He heats the, developer. To do thiatie turns op the edge ors quarter metal Plate ao that it wilt holdfast ' aut. defeat for, oim_developmant, and 'then heat; It over a gas gams. By this mean, ho has deimentlyebtalned a picture in te1165211: It may perhaps lack Colt, torus and derth, but what can one ex- Peetfe tim &child who will not sit still/ , . The ancestry of the Milled Col. Par ker. Is a IMMO of newspaper discussion. , Ilia &tally owes Its origin to a French otlicer, (stationed at Fort-Du gamine, (Pittabergh) and a Seneca aquaw, They :hada daughter which was brought urine 'Seneca Wigwam, and beande the mother lof the present Col. Parker. He is not related by blood'. the celebrated Bed acikoh though be belongs to the fame n and was once elected a chief of it. . be wortes orbit, social ninth). are pro. ' ounced calumnious; he has never - beets andetyto a ,aquase, nor hat his tribe ` rv. sought to marryltidtto one. . t , -The horrldio murder committed by 8 negro last month; On goard an Ameli wantwhating bark at Honolulu, is.-es,, 'Scribed to'inwinity.. Tee negro cut the throat of the swab:tune. Partzmese boy. as lie lay salsa main hutch, and the rifthr,, :illie, bone, became dulled, so that :, W Wabiaiattempted to amused ittlidebei was obliged to backs 'Bradt own In i Meat horrible, man. der. .The boy died In twenty minutep, L u i t i tele axgica r ti e tt L e termtn u attori l ut e kill the lady, and had alai, meditated sal -Thquias Wlley, a rovoluiloriary paz Mot, War buried in New York Thum day.oritUttialireFtB" honors: 17'1,1 ortAlondijilsat, at the advanced ag e - 71 f ninety.odoyear ft and eleven month,,, cull . was ono of tho" oldest citizens In New York. Mr. Wiley 'was horn In. 1776 in that cily,andilimm the front of the house In whirl US born.was first read the Declared n of Independence in Now York,. ,r, Wiley lies ,voted at every Preakientlal eletitiott since attaining his Iludorltv„ paid retained a pinto remit.. Ilion of theiappearance of General Wash-- -Two uwa won suspected a peraon under arreit In . Mahan, /calla., of Stealing from them, went in the night to. the placewhare pa was confined, thund the sentinel asleep,, bound. tbo prisoner, carried hirato • picoe of woods, and ir.555 him the alternative of confessing or hanging; thr chnso the latter. Twiee Fey ti e d hum up by the neck, and twice) e rope broke. they then dug a pit wider tho tree and built a lire In It, and • hung blot areosl,y, over it. sib clothing Caught tiro ead ho then eonfeaaed, He was carrie d back to the place of confine ment, and ;being safely dePoidied, the guard wioi weakened Mid abused for neg lecting ids dily. - I -Sir JOhntouring,fornterly gover nor of Efongiong, In stetter to a friend on this su r b4r. says that the statistics of thia place painfnlly histructire. On in of Arbil% ho Instituted ii . „y or der of the httlists Government at. home, be found thatthere were a greater nom ber of &midi Wont Miriam tremens, and other disintint,tiviag.thele Drain in the Iwo of . ' oxicating thinks *mods 600 Euro . than among .60,000 chth e u o, IT habitat • beverage wan t 0,4 th oug h , many opium anthkeni fortited palliative population. That li k fs ta stirj thB 08 8-thau Who profess od cb r Ism the - mortality- from tho use of the -ft splints `supplied by the li quor vender Lea hundred fold more • tin 4, ihnnno professors or Buddisea.t! / -As.Fradely. Gavels ate, aged" vino icon ' , • waaranding Oil Ames 11111, tilpringfield,i likes., .on Wednesday, Lis feot worn a front under ulna, s h od lie was kn. high Into the air, by ni.. ou o u di which another boy was ~,,,,ffg,i' =4 11 on the km upon Ma hr.& ] ifs u * on the right sight above oi tho" --- o u r : was"' nted .by the fail,iand he swan taken des .dead. For dine boilri the bay , re . perfectly motionless, except whew, Zed With conydisiona. Alter. than howerer, he Tallied somewhat, ' ' lektougts he I. now ett semeims, akit am power .of moving Ms muscles, 8 lii probably recover, An English 8 wile Ihrtitill to the g roun d i n , b d p r 0 magnesium Tuesdy, and her collar 1 broken lied her face and hadd added. ' . , ~ I_ l , faro!, id,ltalonging to an old hunter, ala toutertine morn . tag when'in chopping', wood Intl 3iNarl•fy . in Intel= •ligible sit led lila owner to fol low him I t some little distance olf lathe holiunter, on follow ing blae tem i small and &a ble fawn, in some 'inc. an d bramble* ruldipossible led it di extricm tie usgeetoeutto Idea Wah unit MEMO and fed upon Milks bat and, who' was ever ready to h mil• doWn• the wild time in Ila tined to understand that he ha' v little animal's life. Re made I i bed at niglati. and throuithu i aver thea tool: did ttl defead i Mt wilt of the , Pack of he led to' knew lt, and tissitiderst nay sem,notAo Mir leo iksk, '' ,l ,Foit*. . .- ' 6 1 2 74 a lt In tto 0 "elWlwr d •rat wont' un", o f ^ Ida hei• the *au' !gobe . .e t ea .t.f Ttu Aga 1%, '" i on - es to trout lod tO t 3 hoot "L the f• e , hul u ' 0 lona ,* the • t or „; 'mutt. k" iiiiiiEn ■ A Visit to the Crut Gluier". Or. Weir - • tea Eriglinh paper lila ail a*ittitt of n • I visit paid reficltly by the eblefotng,not the Gecloglcid Department tte the 'greet ' gluier on theereSlaido of ' s.l.crint The ford of ilk. glacier, which a but thlr teeo miles trim the sea, lel i tee feet wide. 'N . `.;either the ?glacier nor the • trutacuse , t• - • fold of snow: which feats It is- eteiLle • from the river until within a quarter of.' a Mile from It, when the stopentluoun - ammo( snot and ice at once bora': ripen - •I" tbiPriew. Iklarr the glacier a ascent. moraine extends Tor several bundmil yanie, 'constilting of dcbrie nf. the Fa:X. ( twenty Met deep,underlaid by 'bre twat snow, throligh V which considerable weans. of whter run, which are , retattir..- ; od visible In toned holes, ceased- bythe tl giving way . Of the lee and by cricks in the surfice. jOn the southern aide there has recently been a great fracture 'of the '• ice and tavettli et the roeki - . which •tiled fallen In Immense maitre; • The'larty•• : ascendedon Elie northern side, wherehhe • ,sriow or too formed roundel' hills; mulls. t lathed by any crack or Ilssnte% .The; • glacial matter fa ?orate; and presents-tot `araall ble dirt Maine; It ofagray ceder , hill of sm With °cautions' eh:mac - width • • tad evidently fallen In)ra the surround- •• Inglilits • ' • / • • •• . • not peculiarity of this glacier is not only ha immense etre. but the csm Sequent friclN:s,tlilts demenelngto se IoW a level -600 feet hove the se a deiel—lm • ' '44 stead of ending,)t us e Is u*ually thetas e, an altitude of - soe„,li,000 or 4;00) 'close- to the limit 'l4' „perpetual snow, • " nitining Alpine vegitation:. Here the • e•-', green bush extenda• some•lllotaande of last above the glacier, On thrieecee 611106 : of the range in Which the glacier Ma cut this deep' gores. Not - a -single lelpine; plant rewarded tilt research of this patty, and the temperature on the glacier Watt;Watt; .•••.•,•• acnrcely below that on thki With some ceremony' the party named It Victoria Glacier. The height ...of. the,. \ •‘. peak pf Mount Cook - 111round to be 1.2.=.,p.„, . . norm:ol'cent -Their Number and ; 1 • - . pcaranee at Certain; Ages.-.lriet . • Dealers. I -: -1..,- " At tire years of ems a horse I -4 . . •.s teeth. These are twertly.four molar .". l.,.„„: Jar tooth, twelve incisor or frontiee "..:' between the molars and Inaslra - be ' -. -y winally wanting in the mare. .At birth, , - L only the two nippers or middle incisors ./..",.. appear. • Ate year old, the incisors are ......- all vialblo on the first i r milk set. - de: , i7W' fore ihreeygars the permanent nippers have come .through..: At four years old,_.`, - 1..• the permanent dividers next. to the nip. pers are out. At tire, the month la per, ' feet, the secondset.of teeth. Miring teen completed. At six, tae hollow under the i nippers, called tba mark; has disappeared • ~-s. from the nippers, and diminished In the ; .1,- ! dividers.. 'At seven,theimark has dissp , . r; • peered from dividers and the next teeth, • , or corners; are level, .hougb showing no- ./ : 2' • mark. At. eight, the mark has- gone" ! L .. from the confers , and the horse is seshr ' ._.s. to 130 aged. Alter this time -lrideed,i good authorities say after five years- ', l 1. the age of a horse can only be. cemJectrir.... ,'• .. ed.. Bottle tooh gradisiallychatemth eir '''. ~,b vi r form; the incisor. becoming round, oval, and then irregular. - Dealers sometimes .- • , bishophorses-that the teeth. of old ' 1- -.- scoop them out to imitate the mark; bu thin ran be known by the absence or the white edge of enamel .which Alavacur: ro \ the th,unds. the real mark, by the shape of i - : the tee an d other marks Of ago ,bank . , .• : • Death of a Wealthy Negro. -• . We see it stated 64 James Roper, the -• largest •liindbolder dna the' wealthiest . . . mu, in ' Jefferson county.- Virginia, Is . • , dead. Roper ware mulatto, the natural - son of an eccentne Engliehman.wholal. quarthed the most of hispropertyto the -; recently deceased, who added' greatly to ir his patrimonial estate. Roper had a 7 great faculty for acqulringpmperty. and a mania for adding to his large landed estate.. Every year or two he wronid purchase a thrm for , .which: we beret Known him pay =ranch asSUO per 4Crit - when dollar, were dokbara Roper:was , • an intemperate than, rarely ever hawing town in a state of sobriety i yet ;such • wan his natural shrewdness that nobody yield take advhniage of him in a trade, even when he was drunk. R oar e. was a quint, innoffensive men; and as general.. ly esteemed as amen of his habita could i . expect to be. Ile never voted, served on juries, or attempted to ezercl.e rights l denied bytho laws to men of his race; ; yet ho sax as fully protected In hie right of person-and property as . any man in 11 Virginht,"altd tie; doubtless, lefts huger and more- valuable landid estate than 3 any man how living in , thila State ern 6 " boast. Roper," so he was always willed, was a living example of the feet that Virginialawa, 'even iihen. slavery • ,stated, protected men of ogler in the enjoyment of their rights.:447le/Rarg The following is o reeagitulatieucif the losses by tire, which comma through. out the country,durlng L 0330 in Antl: January..i.l4,o43,ooCeJuly ts,z2s,es• February.: 4,4lls,ooti4Auguet..i. $540,000- .March..... 3, 9 :34,oooilleotember 2.230.000 April3,oso,boo,oetober..... 4260,000, May -; 2,o72,oooNovernbor 1,7E9,000 ! Juno .4,o7s,o l :o l December. 1M4,000 Totalloesel 1&57.:.. .. . tas,ons,ooo Do. :'1806:.......:. 66,4111,900 • Do. • ' 1865 .. ... 43,139.000 , -1893........ .. 14.0eck000 Do, .• 17,1110.000 • Do. 18614... .18,0A0(0 . . 15A7,00)." Do. • 1859.... _1(1,Ct58,0011 Do. - 41,481,000 ' - Do. 16,792.000 • Do 18511..::..:::21;150,000 Total loares In 'twelve vears.4ll/1,8441•00 - • Luxuries asenaataitre , '- • _ . . For a quiet - -- man, 'a monastery must -be . it sort , of paradmet-rbe. - ; : s' sides there being a,• large..quantity ~ 1, ofit: •Bayard •• Taylor ' ' describing - the monastery .• celled the "Grand 'Char- -t, muse," to the South of France, speaks of notelet+ corridors!' lt imam' nod sixty feet long. Looking down Mho perspect. ' Ivo dwindles almost to a want.. Opening from It; and from the otlicrinfersecting ; corridors, ,ere the cella of the Anoilks, ..,•,. each with a Whiled sentence 'ili . Latin *4 - 1 Printed on the deers. Tho furniture of.-- these cella Is vary ample, but &human skull la always a port of it. 'The only .- diversion to breith the Solemn and agent ~,0 monotomy of li fe la - the cultivation of i a few flowers in a- garden attanhed to -'• l eech cell. Silence la. Imposed upon all I and the priests, guides and. visitors cen 'pea" only in hushed whispers, The vrriter says he longed Minorite the dead • repose of the corridor by a thoui of tree- ..-; dem and "siolclng. - In thia celebrated t, monastery theirs - are but forty fathers f, and twenty brothers. This monastery datestrom the year ILIS. • -p :it : -BUFFALO COILIISIICIA-110 ETIVON , and departures of weasels at - Buffsdo 1842, Includ:ngiuslt and steam, were Buffalo,' • 4,554 and the tonnage-of Vessels on • tlic lahes was not one , quartet- what it I new. In/8/0 HliffelP MPOrts 13.51524. rivals aud`departurie at that portl,alonc • and eech vessel rep:mons four -ti ti '• the capacity of the best at anearlier dey..„ The grain trade of iho port was bui. 5487,447 boshele is. 1842. and was 50,166,-"z' 4 074 bushels in /867 , antreyerl then below the the figures of some Ibrmer Team, -' The total endles fur - they/oar were 61,,57a, - - •:, %nth . 3,214,024 tots, add .11H;076 hands. • ? The clearances were'6.237 in the sant -.-, time, representing. • 4,211,061 tons,' and --.•: 66,P15 hands. tone, r the were ' 733, with i 11,240 and the clearances. were 760, with 82160 dons. ' There' is Ile . _ • -lenticular change to te :found In-these' - facts from the Immediate yes-cedin ' • 3a. era, but there Is a satisftlon In find ing that the lake oommere ec s and- business of - Buffalo sustain' Itself se well through a trying period. - It lain Indication that rapid growth will be experienced se soots 'P Dl' tlamp a .17."'7-7----. a a r In Pane eonthsna. In trio u llarblare" a lbw eventnas since alto snag is now wank emu “pfted by the Saroune. Rothschild, called .Je Wove pas, o. expressly fon the 1211140 /Me= ' scene, and of courrett was Conned: In ~ : 1' napalm rho gave the."Calesern." What 'I - , ,tho Tarantellelsto Sauthern Spaniards. I lir, f l creams this song to the *grantah le Paris: They not only listened and velar" ed, --,.' i but at last:bripti to sing lu chorus, Don- (Pete poured clown inserts showers that at last the effect wash - idler oui ' "You all know," %says a Pada letter, ,"that old mule box which Is biroughtin . for *at; ;ea to sing to for her lesson. Well, Don . . ' MIIIIITIVII Gantoni. trua letting Wand ‘ ''at 1 ihat,,at the. table, whilothe flowers were., ;Ft (clang around /ter, and ware being pick- . .1-/i, 'Yd up and piled ;Abe Instromenk.:' ..,,fi When they began so g the oIU cAtuter. '.-'.,.'.` do to Bon yloino a to; t was found that . poor gardont was hidden' behind &pile '... .4 . of bouquets. and couldno room bo seen.,.. - than that Unsettles apieulausy about whom so many tatioltiwt•--1ir,•;7.-ITA7CIT-4-. ' - treads!. Mare Vuukiclnd, r`"- ,, z,,, ,- ..; .., —Tba gallows enthu 7 advantages In Prance. , • :-: !oriole upon which re -. . Will take plate. and in - ' , I are.opent, In waking.` hutchor,Ll.hb used to --... 'lnto some secret p ' 'Leer bodies # - fand Ihru. Seine:was recently gultlou presence of a collard of thmtaand' . the sadistic* had watched the Place. de • , , la Roquette six Wet* In nee a ri d fad . ',',-; i and 'Oat, for the anticipated spectacled i . , ' A horrible acatfokl scene matey took - , ::• - i, - i plans In rivals. = Awontanend hereon , _ , ..f.- ! were to be executed -- for the murder of, ~, ~.., :. t ... the htuiband and father. -Tee woolen re! ~. ~ fused te, walk, enema. entriee-oe'ttelk , " . ecad'old, her son waited below, Owing:. ....,, to thishortneas of her noes, the extena donor mule not keen - her sectwely to .„..!, rho block. andonly ti second blow arry-,! , ,.?. ercd bar head Thant the:trunk, The non; if.al:tbmuanstdt—to ~, od, ~,b. revised hereto her' , with ills /Caber!. warm Waal. ' .., e bthe -- -, block-4h' reel:hog BirSersitnentlurspiehe , of Old pipet thoroughrsres at Loadonwv±i:TA .1, 4 ,13, pat MI ed bj ib e ar y alma or no ether .psseera I bol e , , To these he sd4exised . nunseK Wy e have. tiMr ° s L g a u= "CP ' V u A t e aEagararis e?•. " lia l %a 415 • : " ;;\: , N: . ; , ,-.!1• - • , ,• • • •