The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, January 18, 1868, Image 5

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    Rit4lturffk Axititt
SLTUNDAY, .4 1 .,..16116.1tY 'l6, 18613.
liffefonEL ll `.GillECon'srrirrlfliON.
coeseivra nn *Maisie in' holding on
to the f s ast with feelings akin to rev
ecent;a: 'Radicalism 'Consists In gains'
o :tit to meet the future,' inspired by
1141435 find: armed with. courage. 'Tsar
is. clearly men in this country - -1,,,,b,,,,
sentiments with.whicti thezetw a clause
regard Mt Counted*: .: The .c.fo rizer ,
:trees, Without regarding the ..k mp0 ,,..,
• conditions- o fpraltir al andfo mett l e. ;, - ,, c 1,,
ety.out of iffdelyti .'ithrw'i' s tkeePhimeral
PrefinneMths Ali . eli t hal. to be seconesto.
dated;the inamingneees to which It AU
required-tto minister; , the Madrivalried
and l'es4luPititirSit'it was sled
to adjust; regard it u the am:mends
hination of scene fished statesteansla
Even theme MlT.promieUe with. tiniala '
sentiments, w/ith luta Peenhanities, tli
ireiTacen'.., epi•ofe-ndrietaco44.3, ' 6
i
onnanentr . „ :fed in m a ture • and eiserice Ith
that, prorizions , designed to in
, berent and tundammitsl rights, eon - .
birdman leibstence :end impo ce
:Mere can, ATM. the Manna' of the' ,
; .'bri no Cent zuveisy, and whose recogra.
alon and security lathe aconeini of the
r . / 1 3t10/1 is ag . fediSifiti sable -as the.nanin
traiiinie ofiherital-flititi in the iniman
body. - .Theßadicals; perceiving how the
"Conriltuthent wits adapted icithecoadnl n
ucri
and wants of the ; generation in whl
originstedi , and boar thoseadipta ....
\ tune ft) be mace ruided, 't•.ia to' eacrednesa
and, pterrnanencu,,. in the ether, parte,
designed to rectugatze and enforce what
. wan 'abiding ''and -universal How the
compromises, as thei ire termed, only
aggravated dm vela they ware intended
t.- , cure, and -produced others Mil Mare
ralsclaziona; 101)1_11 expedient to elimi
nate,.to as-great a degreeas posaible, all
the elate eats pertaining - exciuslvely to
the age a sacl - to leave only those which
are stalle , beriense pelt and pareeird that
grand natant or ptilliiMi irrah, embed
, ded in bre - ettlightinad. Minchiumess of
all the Tn . ee, anti hence destined to abide -
'-forever. 'By this s primem, and by this
i 04.17, car.': the Constitution be adapted,. I
• from age. to age„.to that , ceaseless tio . w
of hum ,!.n life, and "'cal:Mkt:ix, - and :ri-
Maniere, which 'cannot be .reristec but
mid 7oe. aciepiedist en integral portion
of the comaion lot of humans Hoar_
Ha
ever the Conserretareamai in v eigh, and
shake their heads, and, sash for'.the
"good old asp - et lozgr, they can n ot,
by 1114 iontrirmins ni - poliarial !made
One of the moat .goeservatlve of this
religions: donotribiadons .. undertook to
do crystalize - in uhsting formula of te
lief, a corset ty pa of *each, and a par
ticular riu,liLEm Of. attire, so: that they
should ender e for.all time. So lug. as
the reeds& . adopted remained 'in vote,
Mita:penny .enough. but in ',spite of
cried/Maas, entreaties and rebukes,
V./sliced would 'change, end there was
ate lielPlorit: The coneernitisesof the
'quaker,:; Ulm' ell other descriptions
:thereof, 'cannot- ram" the. !animations
- whiniCcOntlitially 'Spring up; and each,
.‘age will eseertita right to amend or sub.
• rmi what it inlimitsfroro its fereionner.
Ilea Warld - Is' made so; and though
Consurstives may halal - this feet with
a Umbra paraienre,' or .cuse. It with a
malignant delight,..:.they cannot abol-
The fram:rtinf Mel Constitution were
" mot only cognizua„ of. the existence of
• thlr, principle, but were too wise to at=
rgotpt to ignore or Made it: •
The idea of change was recognized In
the constitution, by the provision made
for its amendment. ..,,True, the MLitt of
-
revision and alteration Would have a
leled. aritliss fat effect'-if it had - Ntbeen
admitted in the instrument, as by the
most explicit statement and'iriutranteiof
,it. In the ierynidere`ofilaiip, back
of all 'conventions and sci me over
ahem, man is mightier than - y er r_ all
y` ibls institutions , end not Only can, but
, -Wlll, change them at hi s pl c The
- ,aticient Medea and Persfane, its a spirit
,of the loftiest arrogance, cnrrie - 11 Ulmer-
..autism to inciagbesi pitch. WiitiAneif.
'-confldencernaver 'matched oer;rd Or•
'Since, they decreed thiu tbeirliswaishen
! once made, thoiad'er era:change. Whet
ustacy meld have-overflowed the souls
of those obi Coviervatlres when, as they
' fended, they had suotudea Instrine
fanning the t a' mistakes, and predjadleee,
sad lestrem, into enduring granite, deer
tined teo lest mail the fires of the last
ask tedould burit down, creation. Alas!
fat them; willookina'thosejnatitallotut
. Selle not: Those 'constitutions and laws
that Were "-never to change, have all
. Iteen swept swaY. What is left 4 only
' I.lle tradition of their" infatuation and
folly:by which wise men are instructed,
• but frog willed dances leant nothieg. -
- The Conseirativis of the Unitcdfitatea
. devote 'Marauders •to bewailing the
. Change a recently made in the Cimiltu
- tion. While .contradicting all inert was
Generous, elevating and noble in the
eplritund coaduct of the fr .aa.is of that
niocuttent, they cherishiattiadwas bit
.
'ter,, debasing and Ignoble in them.
Such ii coreuvadenasti „always. If
" liberty has made a successful award=
anywhere, they seek to get back's' that
nebleament to the elder delmotiam, add
--- fall down before it In ablectialgia.
.*- Certain - com Promises Into, which the
men of our revolutionary - era entered,
'aid Thiel' stiredily.rixed the nation on.
111 they.- culminated in a" - most gigantic
civil - war; have been swere away. :n
-. ist4d Of - Welcoming this fructifying tide.
. as the Egyptians de the dmiltowing of
- Outline, and with like ressorceuniCon
" servatives give themselves net,le 'Aitken-
Milo= The idi huid-marita ere sub.
merged, never to enpear usgait: end they
ere dismayed and distressed equally with,
the old idelates, whose imagei of wood
. ' and stone were 'purloined and carried
off. Henceforth these Conservatives
cannot worihip with the old pomp and
- ceremony the deposed and banished Idols
of hate and terror; end their hearts are
' sowed with grief.;Like other people,
` when in affliction, they indulge a dim
-. and , shadowy:ll°l.o that by some lux
:.. plicable dispensation the old condition of
strain may be restored; that -the blacks
. may be forced back into then former
. conditism of bondage; that the old mac
ter, and their ancccrsnrs may regain their
' former prestigeovith euperadded power; ,
s and through their owienbli of blacks
- may dominate the natiOnas of yore. If
this consummation could
„,only be
reached, they Would be le an .ir.flnit.e
. strait Whether to - depart in peace or stay
uid•enjoy the congeniardarkners and
130 me timid Radicals, not accustomed
to profound study opals the Tat. and
- sarprieng, and Oftimai suddeit changes
- that come oter the inatituttoris and des
tinies of nations, exhibit fiera no to ~th3
extent to whiel the latemorementsimee
gono, end the consequences talreedy
- evolved: leasittre and andis
' clplined nerves apprehend, a tort: Ur
An,irdit dliaster,. inAwhich .the whble
ilaienabalt berthiroersinalles inter, and
Mate, Plintwiairr State ; in horrid' diverL
eredds the
Area of unqienthable eontenilon. Theis
Wilke est tho .rrecogitition and de
rani* bt rigimr:Minsattrrtuwi swift and
odmpiebr, iit - rmyer Da dreaded as sub-
Wr order but alisayi-iiiiianned
as indicative .of genuie'elsretriu.'imd
erne Iforation: - But, it the ; act tt other
other-
wioe;lfthe recovery Aran vindication of
lost right& de entsilesgoeven
rnaghdtstdei• if dannbsl4 :Wrought in
political fibrice;" - 11:.' many
'Wiwi are crnshwi Aaae 4 l
. Snrs4ll; the
tempest/101st W ,
ilke society are the
whole des -
irsb!e, No min pp .
m', hid
4.0 . 1 011 0/4 4 .1.4i 0 -1 0igeri) *liter
tedtrwtode, be tornadoes soros•
trades: hreak..from restraint in& mow
broad swarths along the ground; - or that
ho ocean mails again be lashed
ti ' vEEKLY
mr
VOLUME LXXXIII.---NO. 3
lato fury because rich argosies are
wrecked and lost In tho violence of gales.
Thess agitations are part of• She indis
pensable economy of the world; promote
its purity and serenity; and
. render It
habitable. Censerratives may deplore
such exhifhtions of force;, may essay
to stop the elements when they muster
their wings for the onset; andy may
*nine they could devise a better plan
and conduct to more harmonious re
salts; they may deitte ample satisfaction
from contemplating their own superior
wisdom; but all their aelfmtuntlng• will
not set aside the ordination of tho Crea
tor that agitation is the- essential condi
tion of growth,. and growth mdispensa.
bilto the perfection br nature.
CiE;MOCRACY 131
The mantra that "Revolutions never
go backwards," Is frequently eortro-
Vetted, but never in the laria or totality,
bat in' the =into sad special. It I,
conceded by la observers that the ebb
nod flaw of the life of nations hold
analogy, in fonts rarticulars, to the atm
slap! rise and fall of oreanic tides; - or,
mther, to the current of a mighty river,
that now rushee down a precipitous- M-
I Mie now dlsappm.rs tmderneath the
said, now winds around the base of an
acelivity, - now- makes a torturous path
through the soft alluvial of a breed Tal
-1 je3 l , new late an eddy and seems to
turn back upon itself, now sweeps ma
jeriically onwards for tinny a le;agus in
direct and full lbw, and now divides,
seeking the sea by many oltlets. What
ever temporary or incKental appem.
anc . -es mb.y indicate to VA contrary, there
le, l on 'thewhole, a r.enstant though fro.= progresa,
ri
s idea rr.s3 readily be verified mid
its secarozy denionstrated by a careful
Ati ysi liritish'bistory. r 5 laperfleini.
cognition, it appears that what vLs .
gained during the protracted parliaMen
'which97lnn
tary struggle 'which resaltedl/1 tiTer
thr)ir of the monmcky and the ' ee
borate of CIIOKWILLL, was I t at the
Restoration.. Bob whoever searches be
neath tho surface finds indubitable eel
datice that, notwitUandiag the seeming
violence of the reaction, moat of the c.S:
sen i tial ameliorations t h at had lynni mt
eorepliahed actually remained. Not a
handl that hid been lopped from like
,
CM ,.
of 1111111 LIAM was +STU so ,replaCed
silo be vitalized by the parent sap and
start Into renewed effloreaence. Tlie ens
laity of Parlianisut was, indeed, con
temned, and the rein given to a wild
and delirious license, but tile touched. no
more Uteri the sough rind,. while the
pith sad ~ staluttince remained stemma
8 - ace then, particular
.periods may be
, mind In which Prerogative seemed to
gain open Liberty, 'bit these retrogres
sions were of 'Abort dente n, aid when
the l ; l stream of events, camping from hi.
cldental hindranclea, resumed Its normal
floW, its velocity was SO increased as to
afford abandeat compensation for Its
preVienthackwardamin • . .
..
poring the last hundred years aka pro
erns made towards the falleilmachise
merit cif the misses has been steady and
surPriaing.. This progress has hose feat
to er My department of activity—isi-pol
nice, education, in busi
ness, and - even in plea/urea At trot
the Inobility succeeded In wrenchingike -
government ant of the exclusive control
of the 'Crown; then am' gentry 'disputed
the kuthority,if the nobility, and at
length the_larger share to tiustaselna;
said new the laboring clanie are loudly
deciandinga recognition of their rights
In the premisei, and cannot ler a can.
adorable period he resisted. - •
• Bit far has this movement been
that the necessity for a thorough' revis
ion of the cdticationafiystem is general
ly felt , and will noon be carried. This
revision, when it shallcome, will recog
nlze
the right of each child. to a - good
primary education et the egpease of the.
whole. Thiele pot a 9all matter; ner
doeslt stand discoanected aid apart se
many fookahly imagine. The mama
of education adopted In each particnlar
country must and will comport, la the
:eng run, with the farm of governiient
prevailing therein.. The Papal govern
ment will concern itself chiefly in the
education of peat's; and this because it
Is a theocracy. - ruling in the came of
Clod, not for the
„benefit of the people,
but for Its elm: Ramie. is a military
deit-othun, and its &tem of inks-utiles
Is designed to tarnish forth soldiers; a
few:to command; and the many te obey..
So long as Greet Britain - was .an oil
garehical Stste : Its inatnietionel scheme
was devised and directed to deyelop and
eqiip an aristocracy. In these several
Instances the systems, of education ire
logiCartilest is, they are suited to pie
name of the cue. It •is apperent,
therefore, Pit whenever a government
take the education of the .masses in
hand; with the !Mennen of furnishing
esek for the duties of Me at the cost of
all, it has *sod under %beton - POI of the
deuiocratic element. Tie men who di
rect; it may not zee this distinctly; may
entertain the notion that by making
conCesalcMs they are gaining s umo and
power, to throttle the popular upira
tionscand may even delude themselves
till they are actually pushed from Pair
steelm.but the education of all implies
the all are to participate; and on equal
tertim, in the manage?rient of national
attain.- t
The Trade Unions Present another In•
dication of the same tendency: Not
that we justify or excuse all that these
argalliZaliOnll have done. That they
iMve. adopted arson and murder as rep
* Instrumentalities has been preyed be.
'lntl the poesibilityof cavil orquestioa.
It solntely makes the blood run cold
to read tha narration of the atrocities
syeterestlindli resorted to by teem to
intlinidate or. prudish wich as refute to
anbinit to their exactions. Let it be
coped that this is only the frenzy of
their newly acquired strength, anti that
experience will instruct them into wiser
awl humaner methods.'
Eiet, into whatever tertible • excesses
the Unions have run, they, are certainly
disciplining the Inhering classes into
many of the attributei of aelf-govern
dent. In these bodies theyare lesraing
to rosiest, &scum, decide, upon their dive
wants, priyileges and rights; to chat.
:enge, weigh and set aside preseriptive
4emands made on them.- lied:Mare ell
the; germs Of civil freedom. The amid
feenition may be etude, imperfeet,
wilill j . or cm]; but TUC and benencial
octrieequences proceeded from
cameo still more tunpromising at...their
How powerfelthese Unit= have be
comeis seen in the feet that though cost•
staistly resorting to molt brutal crimes
against innate` individuals, tie' ,eov
"en:anent does not`dire lay Its ialcidiut
Gouts make some
quioitiona Patthevridery Commisaleas
- search lets the wary depth of the efenees
an 4 weed tha horrible er . idencl . b494
the nation; bet the authorities do sot
dare put fortlitiodr kaida and breskrep
thelcombinatioas. -The Wait •• hare
bee formidable to the ;overnment..
Ints haPpened, trim Ike *Oakley
of ;the world, tn almost all . ' lands, that
the 'admibilttnatlon2 has; beth
allienot with the ecebremailcal- is hest
- they. wale, "the powers of. this world
hairnet's:sad intolreatrwiththe'powers
of the hoard to come, for 'Mutual profit.
trio knownhave wiabed the sanction of
din name wn ; and tie idrint4 ,*(l4=
-lighted-to- be when whl the atrial
mlibt of the physical.
.Essitiorrezeip-`
tiohal cases, as la the trailed States;
•
where this tandent7 is foranaly repudi-
- ated, It is not difficult ler practical ob
scrims to detect traces of it, Intent M
aud, but ready upon inducement to
spring into surprising, activity. Brute
asaisely averred that 1:110111. Or tke churches
in England had sitrunmed on this ques
aad all but the Church as by law
established had made a "dunned roor
:bargain, of it." But scarcely was he
laid in his grave when Lord clawr,
speaking in Parliament, u Prime Min
ister, gave the prelates of that Church
solemn warning to "set their house in
order." He was not hostile; but look
ing from the hight of intelligence that
he occupied lie discerned the future.- . •
That Great Britain is now agitated
most profoundly is too °brier's to be con
tridlmed. Signs of unusual and por
tr.r.tcus fertuttit are thrown %Pin all de.
partnients of Society. Various elements,
setlng Independently, are giving 'erten
alarm to the governing classes. If these
elements elan coalesce upon a COMIIIIII
heal 3 of action, they will become ins
aistible. • Whatever muy be the issue In
this respect, it is apparent that the spirit
of genuluo democracy in rapidly,gabilag
oa rmste and privilege and that the day
of complete political emancipation may
soddenly arrive.
CHRONIC AND CRIIIIIIAL INSANE.
Lest vriater a proposition wee before
the Legislature of V-13 Commonwealth
for the crectien of :a additional Hospi
tal for the_Cntitody and Treatment of the
Insane. It f-ailed, but will probably be
renewed this year. When It was ender
comideration the suggestion was offered
that the new house Shonld be deviated
mainly If not exclusively to the chroalc
Insane. The argument was that the re
moval of the clam of ptomaine' patients
from tbepretent houses would afford am.
plo room for the accommodation of fresh
cases, and would afford. bager facilities
for treatment and CUM. It was easy to
see how removing a large number of in
malea would make room for others, but
It was, not apparent, in view of the
pretty rigid classification of patients In
the different wards, uniformly pursued,
how recent caeca vreufd be benefited by
the separation,!
The National Association of Superin
tendents of Respitels 'for the Insane, at
the meeting held In Washington in 1866* ,
had this topic under consideration, and
while a few of the members expressed
themseivesla laver ot the separation,
bye very deejded vote; it was resolved—
',That insane persons considered
curable, and those supposed incurable,
should not:be, provided for . In separate
establishments."
Recent Oases of Insanity are always by .
far the most expensive to take care of.
The additional attention required, be
cause of greater inelleation to Injure or
.iestmy clothing, furniture, &0., and the
Deana necessuily employed to prevent
thle isrt eetioe. are the epees of much
of the increased outlay. , If no chronic
Patients are in a hospital, by whom the
mischlevions tendencies of recent pa
tents ere watched, double the number
of attendantaarould have to be employed
or the troublesome ones would have to
be locked in their rooms the greater
pert of tho time._
We made recently an incidental allu
sion to Dr.llowa'a preposition to adopt
in Maasachnsetts what Is known as the
Gbeel System, under which insane pa
tients are scattered in Tillages and treat
ed by peasants. All the witnesses do
IA coincide with the e . Dcanor either in
describing the treatment or in estimat
ing the efficacy of it. &Merit these re .
port that the "unrestricted freedom" al
lowed, b enjoyed with 'chains 'dangling
from the andel. Often they are conked
In uncomfortable quarters in the peal
ants' dwellings. Unless all experience
elieitritr.re in the treatment of the insane
has only resulted in misunderstanding
the nature of the disease; and conse
quently thi-meins for assuaging it, all
this would be expected. •
&aides, if we are correctly ; informed,
the authorities have given Up the die,
Unease principle of their treatment, by
the erection, within the last few Tears;
of what is called an Infirmary, to which
all patients are taken and retained for
period, and in which all who prove ex
cited or troublesome are permanently.
confined. If this is not an abandonment
of the whole principle of "unrestricted
freedom. we can hardly imagine what!
would -
' Maki such Circumstances It Is ,most
improbable thlt any departure will be
made in Pennsylvania from the system
now in operation; but that an additional
Hospital, vhenever it skall be erected 4
Will be conducted substantially as those
now in existence are. That another teal
'siltation is required. is well mown to
all parsons who halo taken pains to an. -
quaint them:elves with the facts of the
, I
At the lait sesaionof the Legislatures
very few of the members endorsed their
ignorance of heartlessness by deriding
ell public provision for the insane.
i'heir - notion seemed to be that it wan
better that insane persons should be pet
nailed to roes at Jlargo until it was
demonstrated the safety of the public
was imperilled by such freedom, and
that then the responsibility of confining
and attending upon them should devolve
upon family friende, or, perhaps, that
they should be driven out from among
as as those were in early days who were
reported to be possessed of devils's For
the credit of t4t, Commonwealth it lit*
be hoped that no members. of the ninr
Legislature will be found entertaining
so credo and inhuman views on this
portant subject.
=II=
Destitution arising from_ scarcity) of
labor prevails loan alarming extent in
this neighborhood. In conversation
with Gramme FORTIN", Esq., the effi
cient Secretary of the Board of Poor Di
rectors, be Warmed us that there had
been more applications for temporary re
lief during the past few: weeks than
were mado during any'corresponding
period within the last thirteen Years.
The amount distributed to the poor alarm
the beginning of tho month has thus fir
ezieedednix hundred dollars, while du
ring the entire month of January lent
year the total distribution dad not reach
that ram. The applicants are old and
decrepid men and women, :. young min
from the country is scorch of employ
ment, and In any cases hard dated,
earnest and willing laborer,, who can.
sot obtain work of any character where..
by to 'import themselves and. families.
The number et- applicants, aid the
destitution prevailing amongst them,
is absolutely . startling. • ite imag
hied an immunity from . rho distresses of
poverty proyalling in other large cities,
unlilthe long list of men and woman
renelving temporary. relief thorn the
Board of Poor Ditectors was shown us,
and ivofcel that there are thousands of
other's who do not realize that go mueli
want and actual suffering from destiti
-
.eidtt3 here in prosperous nth
bn're4
True Christians need no Incentive to
draw them into doing deeds of .charitr.
Thethave a duty to - verform. God re
quires them to take um of the poor,- and
now the acceptable lour to discharge
that obligation. We have worthy and
deserving poor en all aides, .and we ask'
our philanthrophic frields to seek them
out, and. 'Bard them the relief their
wretched poverty demands. .
a TO municipal election in Allegheny,
held Yeiterday; resulted la the election
reale Union Republican-nominees for
Mayor a n d Director of the Poor. Thith
branches of the - City Council will hie
largely Republican.
OUR DOTS
What becomes of the boys, the
naws-boys, the boot-blsaks, the gamins
of our streets? We "see them daily at
every corner, and perhaps 'become fa
miliar with their quaint facia and thrill
voices. Most of as get into the way of
thinking of them as we would of a post
or a cellar door, a thine that is necessar
ily there, but why it is so We never 're
flect. Try for once a little different
course. It may amuse you. The next
time one accosts you in the Postal:lice,
say something kind or polite to him, and
Bee how the hard old 'face softens into
that of a boy, how the sheer astonish
ment will serve to show .yett that this is
a human being, and no mere thing. And
whit becomes of him? The bays we
used to hear yelling out the Lew& of a
steamer's thirst tiring the Italian war
of 'l9 ate then new, and the boys who
howl over the dreadful "'sp'ocions" or
"all about the murder" now-a-days mast
sooner, or later outgrow their occupa
done. And what then? Biome of the
old boys have grown to be well-todo
citlians, have worked their way pp to
positiOne in the.town. Bat thews are the .
zxceptions, the Napoleons of the class;
others have no doubt learned trades, and
are rills earning their bread honestly
and uprightly. But these are all the
news boys of the pact, and we fear that
the curry and . vim of, the present
may be toned in another .
and bad direction. A few weeks ago
we saw a knot of them in a corner,
all ears listening while one read
the filthy details of a filthy crime, from
- a park:4llW; whose-aim Is to delineate.
the most disgusting seems, and to make
heroes of criminals and toad crime hero
ism; there were boys from eight years old
up,fall listening with relish to the story;
e ll seerabigly perfectly familiar with'
smiler ones; all impatient for the con
clusion. Again we see numbers of them
every Wesk on tip before the picto
rial displays of maws dealers, devouring
the wood cuts and sp out the legends
beneath. These are their . colleges and
their text books; wt can we hope will
be - their diplemas?' What can we expect
shall tecome of these boys? Can the
few bright examplesj of prosperity and
coccus, achieved by L former members of
,their class, be 'sufficient to . destroy the
effects of the trash which forms their
literature? We fear aot. And yet we
think somethlig might bedews Anthem;
an antidote for this literary,polson might
be furnished. As their inquisitive minds
o
thirst for -Imowledg 1 it might be fur
nished In 'another L
orm. Why could
there not be a strait 1 Ye library here,
as there ,is one for apprentices in Bhils
uelphlit, and anoth s erlin Boston? A. free
of-good, stout books, not tracts,
or tract-like books, , for boys will not
read them„ hut good; stout, entertaining
books, such as Oliver Optic, Mayne
Reid, or Kim Bowman know how to
write, gain the attention of the reader
and gradually instil morality or useful
knowledge; not those which pound down
a ton of morels with a straw of dory. If
these could be furnished we would have
hopes that the poisonous weeklies might
be counterac*d, not otherwise; and we
do not doubt that there are enough of
such volumes lying idle among the toys
of grown . up children to work a great
good if properly applied. Surely we
think something can be done for these
waifs, and sorely the thing Is worth a
triaL
TIM REISOILLSION 01 Ma. STLITO2I
`to his position in the War Department
threatens to entail serious consequences..
Dee President, stubborn and determined,
has resolved to hold no intercourse with
him,. and our Melees state that a procla
mation announcing this fact is forth
owing.` We do. riot partake of any
alarm from the afteation. Mr. STANTON
can, and will, retain the office from
which he was otigleally onlysitspended,
the threatening movements of the Presi•
dent to the contrary notwithstanding.
But while he holds his remitlon it will vir•
!orally annunt to little, as Mr. - Jour-
SOW can ignore the fact of =ora
tion, and rehiring to _ admit him
into the Cabinet, can' render WS
position anything but pigment. Then,
again, the President can transact all el
his buriness as Contmander.in-Chief of
the Army through General Gamy - and
other officers without to much as con
salting Mr. &LAMSON, who Will be left
with occupation gone. Powerless to set
aside the mandate of the Senate, ambit
tared beyond expresaion towards the re
instated Secretary, and defeated in his
efforts to keep the war portfoll4 out ol
the hands, of his mortal enemy,, it is
hardly conceivable to whit degree of
desperation the President may drift.'
Bat he is - checkmated, and his tree
friends will advise him to accept things
as hs now Suds them, and to pap the
few imitating mouths of his political
ilia in peace and quiet..
Gm W. W. lune, of Bearer cows
ty,vvu yesterday elected by the Legis
lature as State Treasurer. The western
delegates held together, and sea right
due this end of the State denuded his
election, and secured It. The new Tress.
arer will bring with him into the office
an unblemished private character, a fair
political and military record, and large
business experience and financial abili
ties. Be will prove a worthy successor
to Br. Kemble, the outgoing Torturer,
whose administration
q rsifikin has bean
highly - satisfactory to all parties, and
whose abilities and personal qualities
hive rendered him not only an efficient
and honest public officer, but likewise
an especial favorite with all those with
whom he has had business dealing.
busmen as the Senate refnsed to
concur in the action of the President,
suspending Mr. Stanton from office, that
gentleman jesterdey took - peaceable pos.
seesion, General Grant very generously
retiring and -surrendering the portfolio
to the rightful occupant. The noble,
disinterested c )11110 of the soldier hero
will commend itself to the thinking pub
lic. It ii not probable that Mr. Stanton,
after receiving endorsement from the
Senate, will resign, nor Is It likely that
the President will continue .the war
urged on him, is lie will be shrewd
enough to discover that that course only .
serves to render the Secretary more
populaeln the estimation of the people.
Tun Railroad Committee of the 1101113
at liarrisburg, has been announced, with
Mr. George Wiltow„ of 'this city, at
chaimutu. Aa cOnMituted it isstrongly
Free Railroad. Speaker Davis, 111 that
iesimck hat filly todeerned his Eledge on
the subject, in-making hitappoietmenta
There will beilittli or co opposition to
the passuo.for a liberal , Free . E3lroad
law In the Hone, ►at it will be fooght
iz the Senate by thosejn die,intareits
01 the renisylvertia
. °unable conmpondent at Haitisbarn
clearly explaini the motives which nal
=tad the Muse in reftming to Imar or
order the publication of the-Governor's
message: That document was exten
sively published previous to its presents
(ion to . the I:04 refusing to hear. It, and
was regarded as "dead statter,l'Amd,
hence, i without meiiiingt 147,.4brev0*
to Governer Gear ' , lumbers refusal
to hut' It reed. '
Hon. °nom 14nitzons, &pre ,
seststlie Contrer from tho Twenty'
fourth j Peansylesabs District, has been
sarlottily st *ashhislon &Inca -De
maw claK, snifstiing, (MI a bioriChisl,
sffeetiOn, Ws assay friends "-will be
pleased to learn that he is now npidly
reeorenlitehis health;
\ • -
•
PITTSBURGH, SATURDAY, - JANUARY 18, 1868
EPEMMMS.
—.Famine is devastating Ti.nni
—Small-pox ta on, the increase In Chi
—Basil 1/olte is not foi Pendleton for
President.
—There.were 4:17 deetba In New York
last week.
—A. beastly exhibltion—ts szionagerto.
Nachange. . '
—The walnuts in the London Zoolog
ical gardew is deed.
aged 106 years, died
Aidllia hat week.
e •
—Philadelphia supporta eight soup•
homes for the feedlog of the poor.
—Last icikr 43 brown ton L'i mt
butktingi wero put op in aroolilya.
—Tho old original Hutchison family
Is making a conccrtleing tour in lowa.
—A baby was born with. two front
tooth tWo weeks ago in Des Idolnes,
lowa.
—there are one hundred and thirty
aye thousand Tolcunes in the Astor II
—There are more than two million
•dollars' worth of factories in Minna•
—The heavy Ice sunk ;a achocrner
laden with lumber in Baltimore on
Filthy.
-830,000 men and boys un constantly
employed in the =al mines of, Greer
Britain.
—Charles Dickens has already Cleared
sixty thousand dollars by his readings in
this country.
—Lut week flee centeaarians died in
New Orleansi - the yornigest wu 101., and
the eldestlll years old.
—Mrs. Senator Sprague again recelyes
on Saturday afternoons; her receptions
last year were a anccesa
—Sinde the purchase of Russian Amer
ica Siberian Sables sell at hall' their for.
ruer pride l Sim Francisco.
—There pis one thing among many,
in life to try mea more than any other.
It ilia jury.—Eseheepa '
U. liennetewors $lOO,OOO
worth of . diamonds at Pike's Opera
ileum on the opening night.
—The celebration of midnight masa .
on Christmas eve was prohibited in Lon
don. Cause, fear of the Fawns. •
Nashville public @close, was closed
on Friday for want of fad. ,School di
rectors down there most be pennziona
—Among the members of the Maas
seta Legislature there is but one bache
lor, and he is only in the L.Wer lease.
—There were hat 127 deaths In
city of Raleigh, N. CL; dating the yi4t
1867. Berenty-thren of these were nerr.
—Twenti•elght negriies stole $3,980
in gold end of a sugar hogshead in Ala- ,
hams. The owner had put it there lot
safekeeping.
—Rich beds of iron ore and coal have
recently been developed in Tennessee
along the linnet the Nashville and Char;
tanooes Railroad.
—To economise, Is to draw in u much,
as possible. , The ladles apply this art to
thdr 'persons and the result p is a very
small waste.—Brehenps
—Bads have been seen in Newport
bay during the last week. Blies the
purchase of ALIA% we suppose they feel
at home in this country. 1 .
—L tobacco box which ones belonged
to Ben. Franklin wu presented; on Fn►
Year's day, to the editor of ths Char
lottsville (Va.) Chiresicbs;
—A:wild bear made its appearance iM
the streets of Lancaster the ether day,:
and several wild people immedlataly
made their . disappearsama
—Twenty-iwo Wawa dollars hay
already been subscribed . Or Ike erection
of s new building for the. yoang Men's
1./Malan Associition fn Chicago-
The nun Crean Maintain, owned In
Middleburg, Vt., and maned at $15,000,
Is dead. It was gene:ldly believed to
be tke.best eMck sheep in the world.
—On the 26th hist, a Convention et
all the Presbyterisn churches of War
ren, Erie, Crawford, Venango sid Mer
cer counties; will be held at- Meadville.
—A negro In SeWit, Alabama, shot
another through the hearten Christmas
day. It was another cue of pointing a
gun which3vu supposed to be unloaded.
—The druggist Sligel, in BL Lou*
who was struck on, the head withi a
hatchet on the night of tke 2d instant,U
he was going through a dark hall to his
own house, died butt week from the
effect& of the wound. We wife is cus
pated by some of being the marderen:
—The Pennsylvania State Temper
ance Association will Meet at Muds,
burg, on Tuesday, February .18th, 4
airhich time the reports of the aortae,'
officers will be submittal, During the
same week there will be held, .at . the
alreeeity, a general nevention of •/1
friends of Temperance. !
—There are in Philadelphia 80,830
brick houses, 6,885 stone Ibuildinge, and
18,819 frame ones; there' are also a few
iron &sliding', making the total number
of houses of all materials 101,504.
Mang these era 885 churches, 203 poli
tic schools, 43 religious ichools„ 1,288
factories, and 60 nubile institutions. -
-Some specimens of the new French
coin have been brought to this country
by Professor - Ruggles; on one side is
stamped, flee dollars, twenty-fire francs;
on the other side is the head ofd Rapala
' on. This ie the Dist step to a universal
coin standard. If the English would
make their sovereign equal oar Sae dot
lar pieces': all the other maritime nations
wordd soon follow.
—Somebody says editor's are. pcor,
whereupon an exchange remarks:
"Humbug. Here are we, editor of •
country paper, fairly rolling in wealth.
We have a good office, a doublerbureled
rifle, ! seven mita of clothes, throe leit
-tens, a Newfoundland pop, two.gold
watches,' thirteen day and two night
shirts, carpets on our floors, a pretty
wife, own ; one corner lot, have ninety
three cents In cash; are oat of debt, an
have no ricb relatives. If we are n tti
wealthy it la a pity." .
—At& recent meeting elf prostitutes
and Ottiers, held in hew York, Hu. Mr.
Ifuhlenburgo preached from the text
"Co iud Sin no more." The rut audi
ence listened with almost breathless at
tention as the 'pecker portrayed the
villainy of our respectsble fornicators
'and the anguish of their victims. Evan
the =Oft fallen at limes shed tears .01
penitence. Societt is wrong, Christian
churches are not - doing their duty.
..When Mn Muhlenburgh had ceu
ed. speaking, Mc Beecher said.. that
he never felt more deeply than now the
importance of this work of the Midnight
'Minn.` The most brazen and loath ,
inn were once as pure and Innocent u
a mother's - babe, and viers loved as dear
and ho - felt that the same blood that
was shed for us was shed for tho poor
street'-walker. . . .
M4i7,Sutduq.d l!etared In
. . , .
New York recently . the dry goods
bleats. Alluding to vinous beneicial
associationa, he urged thrkeinks to dorm
their own special .socleUes, and az•
pressed his trilef that 'total abstinence
should be one of the den/Mims of
.
benbip. Idesitisgs ware necessary. and
discussions and; - lichuns. Be • also ro.
osuusianded young men tO • ctilsidiste to
:csrryleg on business for theloseinti,
and urged that Aid be glom M Mom who
desired to tiny land.. Mayor wait a bet.
ter oPportanity than now to obtain good
lend in tke Southern and Weston Staten
Elecieties were needed to csny out tad
sad Von "plan, .sad be believed th at
lxiloineed ovevtheizotadty
II • a hmid' department In,.lgenr,,Toell
• In concbsslon ha appealed to the eletha
for immediate - Utica In the caopnation
aid emigration movement. .
VFW, liventor of Altro.tilyterine
Nam
Kr. A: Nobel, the loyenior of nitro:
gliaft,ite, writs/ frotti liahlborg to the
London nom "
"It is high time that the cubic ehould
kno* that nitro.nlyterfine Has Won 141
battle ever prejudice, and obtained the
tocillni a footing •In several countries
over trel, be banished from use unleu Übe
eomethhig better. The want of. th at
useful I knowledge het beta . tin real
nese of the tate Occident,' fut no Ohs '
surely Would attempt to store an aridom
*e enhance hi * * city unless unreasca.
able feer threw an obstacle la the way
of conveying.lt to and storing It In its
peropalphi Ity own ptinted preen
dens, lately. roduced at the trial.
ills b't'..74;s . lag StIOSNI# Obj;CtiO
trust neresseruable mode- of 'storing; but
the &idle retinal to receive it in 'pow
der insigatlne limy place an agent in a
very embarrad *nation. • Likud of
adepthig °Veil &casein to Paralfie the
cletalatiou of apowerfel and useful
exampwere f better to follow the
le of Mit ar. Wafilegton' Smythe in
enbgidening the puille is to its use,
thus mating it a beneficial mete meat
for the development - of- our mineral
wealth.. -
"It In not tolpo*onde tetlO tUst the
item* neldents of Aspinwall and
San Pruden!, led - to rigorous mutates
restricting the transportatkro of nitro.
glyearibut In Sweden and Norway
that an ce wu already es favorably
oon 'and bed' get into each constant
thit the excitement abroad lad no
When ite moths liberal regulations there,
nil until this day It is freely carried by
nifiln both countries, nor has it led to a
single .ruocident: •
• "In Berme*, beloie '
the proltb
titian tool place, thousands of permit
coetaining nitroglycerine. were sent by
riff, without causing the least damage.
"On the other hand, we Mid upon in
quiry that *Mate Data only occurred
when pitronlyeeitne wee transported
under a wrong 'decimation. finch was
the cue at Aspinwall Mad Ban Fran
cine, and it is only too natural that such
unwarrantable negleat should lead to
ealamitin - It is the same with gun
powder. Whenever people convey an
explosilre material the first thing they
ought to know is Its nature.
Loning over the list of atom minor
actin is of which the cause Mae been
clearly d, which unfortunately
with explosives as bet rarely the cue,
ire are forced to admit that duisnbstance
lisibeen strangely abused. •
"In five cases congealed .
the fan been melted purposely over era
"la three cases a red•hot poker has
been iraertrid into the oil In order to
Melt .
In one case a man 'kept a cartridge
inith n innovation cap and fuse *fazed
and lig ted in his hand until it blew it
011
^ "In ne instance a man stood watch
deg burning of a fuse inserted into
Minot pectic untilit went off and hurt
Aim. ' • ,
"In one case a captain Let flu to a
sailing vessel with a cargo of nitro
glycerine, and people went , ore board to
extlondidi the fire, but saved themselves,
seeing bat walk the Cargo, and the ship
wee eight hours on fire _before It blew
up, which could not posslbly,have been
the cue with gunrowder. • •
, "Inoue instance two workmen, while
filling cartridges with illtroVycerine at
the light of a tallow candle, set fire to
some gunpowder strewed on the floor,
but foondaime to save themselves and
tarn: away considerable, iroutitiss of
nitroglycerine be explosiou took
place. I
In one case two leaky canisters, fill
of nitro-glycerine, were soldered under
continua reports produced by the beat
Inn of drops leaking out, bat, caused no
accident.
"In ;one ease a captal,n of artillery Was
hammering on a shell filled with nitro.
glycerine until it exploded sind. killed
Wm. 1
In One CIAO a maa took to greeting
the wheels of his wagon with altos-gly-,
cerineAnowing what it was, and it went
all right until it struck bard against
something, and the whiel went to pieces.
"In one case. it-was burnt in a lamp u
an improvement on petroleum.
"We ought to look leniently on inch
accidents, and give thus .the greatest
piresible publicity in tinier to make them
serve ea a warning against similar at
tempt*. But it is taking a very narrow
view of the matter to try i to chect-Im
rcaremeat On , the plea of acidentt
Thertis, indeed, a'rery mit wive get
ting rid of them; we need 'only prohibit
the use of steam, tiro, poisonous sub. ,
dances, cutting toois, Mumma explo
elves, and return to those days when
Ignorance and safety went lovingly hand
In hand. Bitt unless civilization is lobe
stopped we cannot possible confine the
comutisnity to those article's only 'which
It is Impossible or even dl® to *bum.
Something must be left to the under.
standing, and it is an excellent regula
tor. iThuli, far instante,t. phosphorus,
one of the most danprotte poisons and
cotabestibles, is in every and's heed,
and yet does but little tome."
• The Great Nonestery In lowa. I'
Wel have already spoken of the new,
Cistercian monastery at New Ilellem - y;
lowa. The Dubuque, Tittits' contains a
fall description:l
"The site selected for the new ,
build:
tags 4 about 100 feet south of the preeJ
cut Monastery. Thu main buildings
will he four in number, and will be erect.
ed in the formic( a square, surrounding
a cold 108 feet long by the same in
width. They will be of stone, each in
perstiucture being 33 feet high, resting
ea bases 12 feet deep. The southern
wing; of, the cloister will he the most
Imposing edificeilut it is to be the Church.
It will be, with , the sacristy, 857 feet
long, a nd Within it will be five chapels,
each named' fter a saint of the Cuter.
clan order. At the end of it a tower
will hoe the height of 200 fest: The
church proper will be IPA feet long and
30 feet In width. Its chapel will be 50
by,Bo feet. The main structure of the
east eide.of the cloister will be 96 feet
long. The building at the north of the
square mill be 214 feet long. The west
building - will be a handsome edifice, 138
feet long, with two stories 16 and 18 feet
In height. '
"This monastery, or cloister, will
cover nearly three 'cresol ground. The
details of lu plan era copied from the
order of architecture used by the Oster-
Mani in the eleventh century, embracing
much of the Gothic style. If will be a
nobler pile.. •As a monastery, it will be
by far the largest of any order of monks
in Ainerica. Trsre are few In Catholic
Europa which are of larger &menden!.
Duplicates, of-the plans were gent to
France to • the General Chapter of the
Cistercian Order list 13eptein r for ap
proval. They were adopted w thout any
alteration, and the head . sif th e order
wrote .to the Abbott of few Yellers
that it would be the moat perfect' y
butt.
Milan Of. the Cistercian Order in the
world.
"Excavation- for the foundation was
cominencei,seireral weeks ago. 'Between
Web and four thousand „perch of stone
have been quarried and are 'already on
the !ground.
. I The stonei used will be
broken 'ashlar, with cut atone dressings
for ill the openings, the ,string and belt
courses, the water tubes, buttresses, cm ,
nevi, water tithes on chimneys, and the
capstones. The window frames are to
be of stone,! and • the sash of lead: .
'Stained ghoul, to be used. It is hoped
that every building will be ready for cc
cuptincy by the first of Jwie, 1870. The
cod of the cloister is estimated at over
9200,000."
ThO Year 1808—Intereithrg ammo.
logical Eras.
po year 1868, which oomprhes the
latter part of the all and the beginning
of the 93d year of the Independence of
thou ljaiteca States of Americo; corm-
SP ll4 4llto * the year 0561, of the Jullon
period ; 7370-7 of the Byzantine era ; 90-•
`- . 11 'or the Jewitde orot, 2821 since the
foundation of Rome, according to Varro;
=Voce the Iseginnlng of the Nra. of
Na maser, which has been assigned to
Weidneaday, the Milt of February of the
8,967 th year orthe J uhon period vans
eriudlog, =lording to the ehronologieta,
to the 747th, and according to the estrum
neth, to the 1451 h year beiges the birth of
st 2644 lof the Olympiads, or the
lid yew' of the 061st Olympiad, com
mencing JolY,'lBllo, If we fix the era of
the Olympiads at 775 k years been
Chrixt, or neer the beginning of July of
the year =hot the Julian period ; 2199
of the Grecian era or the era of the Belem-.
nithe ; 1584 . _
_l , of the era of Diocletian;
122; of the Idshomniedan era, or the era
of Hegira, which begin* oil the 26th of
Jnly, .1703 ;, Jauunry 1, is the 2,403,1384
del', alike the' commeneament nr , the.
Ju tan, period
traJtArrins ea LtramcAroa roll
eaZuu MAnu
nmnr. —A imitable Inbli•
r for bet-hr' engines - and others,
.7piwtione of the' ePParato•
Pito ••high temperature, has been •
dmideraturn, the ordinary oils no.
se the, vinntinstances bassining- atop,
tkas Ws Lathe motion of the s is t
either,. A French Unedneer new rei
eoluiteendaTarailthe wery-pdaltieslr'al
aarcutliogaullekas 041.0•111 1 + rryo.
The artier° need not be very pang t mix
ture with other Ihtty enbatanost ewer
ing a eery greltd pupa* •
V7AI3IIINGTObie
..
ad•
[From Oar lirclall Correspeent4 ,
He ashasen-84autes lobreille-Th•
Werth ••• mat Ititairry , litegr
, liaaseileos•ore satt44.-firant4l.
Jim rinW4ll•% • • litiossberi-,rwe
one% Am.
tf.e; 15, ts 4
. . •
'Villa' I ar r iv e d In this @Ey yesterday;
I found Senators, Itepmeentelletiklind
politicians generally, excited intenosly
ever the Wide of the lohasen4hustea
Mule in. the Senate: , The telegraph hie
already inlbrmed•youths! timpitiude,bY
a 'vete of .e 5 to e,..tuut.vindicated Mr.
Sientfin, end that hots 'now dlecharginil
Ltut d - rearperisining to the offloi of,Siss.
rater; of _ War . In rate mkiet of many
oongratulations le the War Attlee this .
morning, a gentleman remarked, fare
dowdy, "The Seerainry of Wet rem not
dead;,he only dept. ° - r
Mr. Stanton'' Privets Onine wit*
thronged during yesterday, and to.day
by crowds of Senators, Representatives,
eiliterebigh in
,rank. in the army, and
private chines, eke repaired thither le
pay their reel:recto told willows the . Sec
retary on his return to his forntor.posi-
Eto All of these gendeniee espreasio&
Eton
thilleblishleteatlifection with the aceton
e( the Santa,.; Ixdow, num P 4 t kmd
of or ,seenanj Repubilemi who lhas ex=
preened dlautthifactiori at tad
-We
.
- frequentlr find grad faultAtifff
newspaper correspondents, loaded .at
Washington,. for the coutrallictorzy, die.
patehes Which they Rend to their respec
tive jounuds—for telogrothing one thtng
to-der -awl a quite dint - int t/dng to•
morrow. :rho eaperienceOmerever,of a
short reaideliols Mite o'city 'of
cent! distances" Michael:et tri be
wh.it sparing ie . , our Britt reek About
nine or tea o'cleck at nigh die jai:alters
and clerk!! of-tbe different depart/cents
begin to circulate amOng.the.hotels end
public places of tha city. Eton one
gives a re hart el' what flu tnakipired in
the department with whitti.fitta mimeo:
tedduring the day. But eUtloreht , Ilnen
of policy; in relatlonio the 'same subject,
may, have been indicated In the sante de=
piatmezt at diffnest kolas et the same
day,' and if the same Individual to aot
cegnisant of then all, of meanie different
reports will emanate (rote the Ratite of
fice,' At the late hour of the night, at
which these reports are received . , and
oven if they were received: earner, it
would be imposeible ed to them as to
get the realatete of madam. , •
This was the moo veeterclei: SPeak
ing hyperbolically, could - have tele.
graphed atheneand rimers to yen Lai
night, as regards what the - President le
mg to do, and Mr. Stanton is , going to
o; but, so far as I con learn; neither of
them has determined yet ,whet he will
do. There , may have been sem founds-
Lion' fir the report whlch, In all probabil•
ity, was telegraphed to seine of the gass
ers and western paper', that dm Seers-
Lary of War vas .going to send; in his
resignation, to take effect_whea
causer shall hails been Appointed and
m w;i dinn , g gi I T 's hiL es Witfv v e au tllt 'ay ll,
. bee l
neon te-day It was notated to the rr
dint; and, for reason! which /will not
etata herr, It in not likely it will, for some
time; I thick" Mr.. Stanton will' be
guided altogether in the course he will
pursue by the advice of the Republicans
in.Congrees.
'MILT TItO PnELIDIni . ' Witt. ha.
Again, as to ties report. In circulation
In regird to what PoseldentJohnsonwill
do netiody,Ltkink, knows asything out.
aide the Immediate circle of his counsel
lors. Perhaps no degnlte policy has as
yet been fixed upon,' There Aare some
who say, "the crisis la at hand, and.tbe
President is about to perpetrate some
terriblepelltlealcrime." Itleto be - hoped,
however, that. this la niLimszinalMn.
Notwithitanding it is reported that he
irtilla vent to his denunclationi of Pen
g..rel. especially eines Idandayvin
Isn
gnage that would not be considered
worth y of a place in:lhe moral Taoists
lery, I have some flops that* he will al
low himself to be Influenced bz laser
counsel than that under which he may
have acted hitherto., ;It would be a great
blessing to the coutiqy if thsgiss were har
mony between the Legislative and Exec
utive departments- at the Government.
lint I need notconc al the fact that there
are many hero who do not think it pos
sible that harmony can ever be restored
The proclamation of the •Preildent,
which was reported yesterday as about
to he lamed, entenng ski the britinesa
pertaining to the Wu Department to be
transacted through the blusral of the
Array t has nu!, tip to this writing, bees
po?nanlgated. . •
!MAIM AND TIM DDIDIDENT. - - •
Tke report that General Grout is to be
mart martialed for surrendering the °l
nce to Mr. Stanton, le s imply ridiculous.
By wkomahall be triedand for what?
la the i3eerstaryaklo of the War:Gdies a
civil or military otlioe? , •
General Grant, by hla graceful surren
der of toe keys and papers Immediately
on the action of the Senate In the matter,
has dine mare to define ithi position tkan'
If he had made a fibs hones speech. All
tke odiumthat,ittacires to hla scoeptancer
of UfeSionretaryskip adinterim, kra now:
been remover; and. he, new elandx, en a
Member et Atm Musa expressed it Mils
mornleg, twenty-five nor nest. Maher to
the 'ethos/kin -of ,Repablicans lima be
did two:days ago. , think thorn can be
ne doubt tbat his desire le to carry out
th&will of the Law-making power.
I=l
I have met` General Mem/reed, Hen
'end Cameron, Hon. Themes Wi lliams,
and lionest4ehn," (who is alter some
person, I have fergetten whom, with a
sharp pitch in We form et a searabing
Investigatlon,) from WastmorelaruL All
these 'gentlemen seem to be attentive to
their duties and Courteous to their elm
atituints anu libitum. After so much
buttonholing, heed shaking, importun
ing and boring as I have seen them en
dure, I could nothelp coming to the con
clusion thut ft either Phtliips, • Negley,
HoWard, or" any other man, should be
sent here as the raccersor of our present
able representative, General Moorhead,
ne will net rind It either • pleasant or an
•lam curry tot use that Hon. Thomas
Williams is not In the enjoyment of ro
bust health.. He Is a Man of gigantic in
tellect, and, I - *lnk, has no superior in
the present Howes. Be is accompanied
by one of his daughters, as amiable, as
red genial a young lady as
we have met.'_ •
Cameral Moorhead Is enjoying a shill
from his oldest daughter and sneer his
daughtereln-law. When I saw 'Miss
Moorhead in this region last she. was
performing eminent sorviee to our sick
and wounded soldier' In eonnseilan with
the Sanitary Commission. Her deeds of
kindness then, shown aro no doubt re
mouthered by many brave 'soldiers yet.
TIEN LAND OFFICE.
I ',hated' the Lind °glee on busbies%
and caanot speak In Wimp - too strong of
the kindness and attention which I re
ceived from Hex. Joseph S. Wilson, the
'Commlntoner. It is really a pleuras to
That him. He does what is aaked at once
and in such a way as to show tkat it is
sot disagreeable to him to oblige. He is
now preparing a map is accompany his
aaatml report, [Moltke of wkichhas never
keen published .1n any c•untry. It is to
be hoped that a large Lumber of tkem
will be struck off.- The map will be a
bird's eye view of the United States and
the world. • .
NOMMATIONS NT MN TILZSIDINT.
Toe President to•day sent the follow
ing nominations to the donate : Mon
Ilradbury ' Collector of Customs at Port
land and Falmouth, Me. vies Israel
Washbrirrob Jr., whose catimaisalon, ex
pires on the 191 th inst.: John 0. Clarke,
lowa, receiver of publio moneys at Des
Moines, lowa, vice Thomas Seely, re
signed; Joseph M. Nibbling, Postmaster,
Findley, Ohio, to all vacancy:
Wasuixorox, January 10, 18.1.9.
OIIMMIE in TENNINSIE—BEVENIII3 COL-
121==0:12
Letters have been received at Moodie*
of Intend 'Revenue, dated Tullahoma,
Tennessee, January oth and 11th, from
T. O. Crefferd, Reroute Inspector, and
Jones Ramsey Collector for the. Third
District althea State, giving information
m regard to the claimer experienced by
them in attending to husinewi regarding
thelllicit d I stillatten, and witkinartitular
&Muslim tea case which has but recently
,scoured in that District, th where a party,
who was In arrears to e Government
ter taxes duo to the amount otorte thou
sand dellass,:bal•reeirsted the for
making a .4Lattairs open him for the in
debtedness'.- It appeantthat after the
(Detrain had _been secompliiihsd,ond' the
Collector and Inspector pad left the pour
mists, they were
.11.1Terrott And attacked
by - tb• • party who ' had. , bres
trained, accomposted by ethers, and that
the Inspector, was shot and' wounded:
Other outrages were perpetrate& It does
soteppeartrom theeserrespendatee that
the •ffendtar parties have yet been „ino
lested;elther by military or civil prawssi.
: letter hearths Inspeclershr the ilth
Wait reporterlduttsince hie beings wattad-'
ed severaltilloit distilleries were In oper.
&Son In theTblrd District of the State.
Inferwmtlen'has Mao reached the Depart
mentor the.resisteseapsairs, to. hereat. ,
nue racers lu Abe, discharge of their
duty In huperesslng
theneighborhood at Knoxville,: Tonnes.
Armee. VAMOLLIS MeI43IIIVIL bArebees
Institute/thy the Comolsaioner ef
nal Moraine ferthe'brreet'C and 'pstaLsts-
sossatef t4t paths tiopindOlOg the oat-
rages. 1 * •
tahressinGraweStririiiriliona.7,`
The t 01110:
tares ban sulhodsed ile - ahairmen -testes
1. re 11 0 4 1124
LEO p lit e r e#3 l :ZeVOrd 4 tri b- al
f prernik4wy.lloo l tithe
palatial publication of fluorglittiee
valuer of Importh on foreign and donee
tie accounts, and what proportion et
capital .invested is such Importing anal
kW
ESTABLISHED IN, 1786.
nee and profits therefrom pays tales
thle tiny triment--slistlegelshing be
tweeeraw materials and matmetetnred,
.and specify - ea the retattrevaloss of soca
Imparts warehoused onfersignandkome
Wrest.
alto I, MIL, izwrlcs,
The Connetttee on Itetrenciment has
In rreparathm an Important bill, which
will be nopoSted to a (endue.- It maCre
a number of refonis In the dell servico
of the Government bath at home and
abroad, andiwlll ammo plleh the purpose
sought to be attained by , the bill now be
fore the Senate, peoposing retbrme in tke
ConettlaOsairloe. - •
Tine Atnerafan anistozr,
-: It le luiesfirdniel beyond doubt that Sun
Set Cos wit ' lie reheated to the Committee
~.
'ell Foreign lotions as Waist ef to Atm.
tea. Only no Republican . member will
vote for hi , Pettenson, of New Hams.
altile. &pater: Sherman denies that he
Intends to vote for Col's confirmation. '
' - itancitlizeoni. ~
At 'a r =Wilde Of We 'etilestsice Coln
mitts be-daY, it was 'deckled to pipet
,IL. report of the labors of the Committee
tap to this tie, for presentatime to Con,
press: .Gen a bosun and Entleraelli
writ* the re which will prebahly be
rtlr,
ready . nest wee In the meantime, no
tbrtber teat ny Will be taken by tie
Ckemmittee. m
It o ts expected that a bill
%TIAN' luund rued with tho report making
acne Important reforms in the adminia
, nation at the Ordnance Bureau. •
' irraNTOieriTillnilen Woe r 0 innilaw.
I 1 -ittn-,..-.le- members of the Senate
, 1 .4 0i0 " . a,,
. - oro o ,L‘pn, are circuita
-1 tin p and el a; a paper imtll.
iSrlinton to rieWn In the War Wile:eau&
'not tender bin reeignattbn - at this time.
The Impreatdoia new it that Preaident
Johnson 'will not reoesulle Mr-Stanton
In any omeitii . capacity, but - tee med all.
business pert letups:, the War Depart
ment linnet& the headquarters of the
armlesand the officer In command, sad
:lino event trill any order lamed by ldr.
Stanton be rhoossofeed as ottlitial. ltdiiea
not appear that lien. Grant bad as oon
imitation with the President relative to
what lotion *timid be taken. in case the
Senate should refuse to sustain Ur; Stan
ton's auspecislon, \.
eras tux's
NUNICIPAL =ANNA 101
IbEATION,
' In the Coniston Connell today a reso
lution of thinks to the Senate for the
reinstatement of Secretary Stanton oo
ca.slocted a lg discussion andbitiertle•
cumulation pt the latter by the Demo
crats, whick was tenni 'sled by Melia=
of adJoarnaent.
M:
T N BECOSNINILUCTION
Mr. Bingham Intends to all the pre
vlotut tinestibis an the reconstruction bill
to-marrow,land If possible cut eft all
acnendmenti. - •
rEOTECSION ro Ainnucax
.srnziors
ADEOA.D.
The TIMM. Foreign Committee to-dej
diectmecd a bill providing for some pro
tection for ;American citizens' abroad,
without resettles a conclualen.
7AX1.10 11•TIONAL BAX*S.
The Meuse Committee en Currency
bad a long sesakm to-day= Mr. Blaine's
hill all'maing the Maiden (if shares of
ruitlonal llanim by States. • ,
lIZ-LWOW 09, '3101112 VAG=
A._ delegation of Western bankers le
hers strengths re-lean of United States
notes the. hive been withdrawn in the
eontraction or currency.
YE. STAATO/f WILL /IMMIX WAR
ELTAIIT.
Mr. Stanton inteiide to remain in °thee
at all hazard's, and the President, it la
said, on the anthority of those about
bim, will not resort to any extreme men- -
•
NOWL'IATIONIIAIIISI9,47PON.
&pits con f i rmed Edward B. Mc-
Pherson as Receiver of Publio Moneys
at Boonevill e , Mo., and rejected. Samuel
P. Daniels, do., at Indiatutpolli.
irrasT4ol' 63000 s 0000000.
The Treasury Department to-day duly
honsradtwo'pf SecretaryStantsn's
rr regtu
salons npou It fir public purposes.
,:a R. TIZOKAN.
By eable4ro Santiago de Cuba the
the Etecrel f State is informed the
people of S mum and St. Jeb,ne have
voted enth I tit:4ll,l'ler annexation to
the United Etta 00l twenty voting in
the negatives. • ' •
0114.211 , N 4 VV1S WOLTZ:. .
General Grant was on the floor of the
Nouse today for same time, and was the
centre of attraction among the members.
'swimming roams&
Baochus a.bd Minerva sit saPtioned to
gether In whatis denominstad the "Gress
Boom'. oil George I% Browns, in the
Fourth avenue. Upon the votaries of
the vinous' god, who quaff sad puff
within tie precincts of this temple, the
forms nod features of those whose story
makes upthecharro elite:lmPa legend,
look &mai from the gilded niches: in
monitory Wienee,and read' the eackast
meats which in days gone bytheir gerilus
yielded% Among them are the sharp,
bold fine of tho Elder Wallsek; the deep,
dark eyes aid towering brow ot the liv
ing Booth; the cheats and classic outline
of the departed Keen: the droll physiog
nomy of Di:ridge; the gifted aad verso
ttle Brougham ; the indomitable Laura
Lome; thet lamented Edmund Taylor;
the lost; brit not forgotten, Collin': the
Immortal Carrick: the aeoentrio Elder
Booth; Mein; Diacready, John Drew,
the pondardus•Forrast, llsokett, Brooke,
.Davenpertd Farm, Baelth, Mows%
Non, Cuskinaa, and nearlyelma hew
dred othoreare all here on exhibition hr
the lover% Of the drama, mid the .thous.
ands of others who share in their admi
ration of DO talents of those men, dead
or livin: t ,jho have held In so many
ways the ' mirror up to Nature," 'and
roprese before the footlights of two
matt:butts pm foibles and follies, the wit
esti wisdom, the dame and glory of our
common knimanity. NeveTork has hag
needed a complete dramatic pilotnre gal
lery and the public are certainly in
dead!. to Mr:Browse for the .onceessfull
Chit holm" made to supply thin, want,
' • gmemaste mimettry..,
Dome lift& ti years ago 'the *eduction
of the meleilrama of the ''Condiam Broth
ers" re-awakened the publio tutored In
the ghosts Of the theatre, and the spectre
that rosefrom the stage's from &cellar,
end croselag it gained Ids full statute
gradually as be went along, was forsome
times great popular favorite, though
burlesque dogged his course. and a cer
tain Odic* always attended his exer
tions. Thq fidgety musical aooompanl- •
meat known as "the Ghost Melody' , ac
quired groat popularity, and moreover
ca
the intrite Wage machine* , involved
lu the production of the shade of Louis
del Frenchl gave additional interest to
his appearance. •
Of later years - the modern drama has
scarcely any addition to oar • Mode ef
Elam ghosts. The it genions invention
known nettle Spectral Illusion or Messrs.
Direlre and Pepper obtained great - raver
at orie time, and awakened some interest
upon the subject or theatrical phantoms.
1301 it soon became clear that theyubhh
Cared for .Ihe Illusion and not for - the
spectre. 'they were concerned about the
mechanist:it of the contrivance, not aired
by the
fore
appearances it
ro
bught , fore them. When once ou
bsein to I quire by what proems • g host
I Is praluced, it is clear you are not moved
by Ire Mantcter as a spectre merely.
Puppets Mee their power to please the
wires by Which they are made to coo
—Chiscie • Magazine. •
—Don't" be afraid of a little final,
'home. Don't shut -up your houtos lest
the sun should fado your carpets; and
your hearts, lest a hearty laugh alioald
shako down come of_the musty cobwebs .
there! If lyou want to_ruin yoursons,
let them think that ill mirth and tiocial
enjoyment must be left on the threshold
when they come home at, night. 'Young
people must have. fun and relsiation
somerbeity. ' If they do not' !we; It at
their ormbearthetones, It will beCooglit
in otherstid lees profitable places. There
fore, let the fire burn brightly.. at mgbt,
and makel the home ever dellibtfirl with
all those little aria that parents IQ per
fectly understand. Don't reprisal the
tureyant spirits of yOur children; half an
hour of merriment round the lamp bat
rim light Of home blots' out the remem
brance brunet) o many a care .and annoyance
during th day and the' beet safeguard
hey can a with theta into the world
1 a the unsOu influence of a bright llttli
! dommtia Maettitn. - -• . '- -
.
Honieri Santana—The iyallk Walla
patmr heaths ibllowlngt , ..
The body otk nun Witt linand a "hurt
thnottio, stboutr Me, middle of Nevem
her, is near as we ran learn. betwein the
month Oft the' Meths. , 'river and • lAke
C.hehahut; on 'the Oolmntda - riior. The
man we are informed, was of dark *lm
plosion, and aad Ibonthia person, *him
found by , , the , Indiana,. about Toorteen
thonstuul ' dollamin aold, in pun. and
Ina bolt. The money , is now in panell
ed= of th Indians tenured to, and will
probahlybe hold by !him unti w a y s
not Mto.propor hinds: The man' not
Idontlflod by those who saw the body..
. •
•
—A ycnithllilng at Dirk, Irelan d, mu%
an old rOlned • sithegi - reeently planned
.one of thous -Inazdararwei read aboixt to
or
, Elle °Wont tho toting
in or a "errant gal whobse muted him in
certain benunntsylrretaltuitlas. ;. He dug
graeointheruln, what ha entlead the
girl at night time, and telling her to look,
in tbsCergeavatlon, While sheiras stoop.
ing • Irreti td hints her with a
CoVAilf.- , *did not stowed In all PIOI O.
drtisnathif undottnhing.
,hwerantiespoolgarakaa boatmenea.
tha„gAipoultr t z.,..t.i.b.: Mite
wf ~ e =r i. trZtel ? "
the work In all the docks olotr,tbe
river," wild he. "They get five shaUna
day, Mellows It all thetr ownway, Cod
/ doe t whi-ettete they want,"
GENERAL NEWS.
—Goodrich, the Pittsfield, ',tam, bask
rabbet', has defaulted snit lett his fatter
to pay his bidl.
Leighton, an old indwell known
pork packer of Cincinnati, died very,
suddenly yesterday of apoplexy.
—ln 13prIngdeb Itentschusetts,
landierd, it is repo rt e d , his voluntarily
reduced by al per cent, the rents if a
block of stores be owns. ,
--T1• Sheriff and his deputy, at Mar
shall, Texas, hove - been arrested and
tamed over to the civil authorities .(or
instigating . disturbances.
—Official whims from Crete state fhat
thi Cretins ed ail the - overnice* of
Turkey and i nsistouthemtputaionsif the
invaders from the Island. „ . I
—ln Cincinnati during 1807 there Were
.3,611,5 deaths; the lamest by fins *are $1;: .
600,000, poo,ooo more • than 'Mir loon—
rano', and the city expenses were
2:,803,1:171.
—Prams,-it is a.iied, has persuaded
the North Gelman - Confederation - ttx
abolish the annoyingpensi system
which has prevailed in the petty
panel-
palitien heretofore.
—Maine win once a great shin Gill&
lag State; but the Portland newspapers
say that the aggregate' lounge of new
renew bunt at that port the peat . :yew
Is only about lardf is larger 'its the' year
haveveports of tinumber of large
allure among the merchants and busts
nese men of the city , of Columbus.
Many at the wrthe who unreported as
having failed are. =tong - Alm heaviret
Ablest financhtl,men hi
Huniphropi, the "confide...Blf"
man," who operated at, Pitlnfield:Maui,
and ran away to Cincinnati laskinunmer
with Was Kenyon, has pleaded &Illy to
iwo indictments at' Springfield Maw,
for obtaininglndney ander . . Cabe.- repro,
, . . ,
.—Thrnew volcano, about
eaat of Leon, Nicaragua,. bad been in
violently grand erbption.' throarilrg,ftre
and cinders from two craters; suadlately
had sent out heavy glowers of tine black
sand, which had reached - Leofg - 05 4 ierient
the streets to the depth of half an inch,- ..
Experiments are beingreadetn Miter
Perin of the world besides America in
reference to the.oseof petroleintrai fuel
for steam( bolbrrn. One of thelateat
ported is that of Barg on the,ateem
yacht Olea, (ten horse pOwer) in
don. The riatilt was eonsldered quite
sttedessfai. The conatturptlonastmanted
to three gallons per hour.
,
—The Republican membereof the Ohio
delegation have signed a petition • ad
hessed to the ',mate, asking it to re,leet
e nomination of Sunset. Veg as Nine=
ter to dostris,stating as 1 principal rea
son that he always °mond the Ripnbli;
can party, and that during tholes( cam
paign he went to Ohio and used.his in.
:Mane to defeat Hoe. F. F. Wadefor
the Senate:
everal fainillie Were recentlrpol
soned In Platte City, by estlegr, cakes
made from, the flour of buckwheat,
m i ngled with the seeds Of the Jiinfizin or
Jamestown weeds. The Injuries were
not serious, though It Is said the parties
have henceforth foresworn bitckwiteat
mites. A whole family was dangerinutlY
poisoned come olz weeks ego, itt Balls
county in s similar manner. , ; _i
—The, New York' Wortfl contintave to
give statistics of the number df Work
ingman out otemploymeat It meetly
dated that 60,000 wanted work In New
York City, and 10,000 in Brooklyn, end
now says that the dspresekci In New
England throws out of Work. et least
180,000 people-10,000 In Hake, 03,0001 n
New Hampshire, 30,000 In Connecticut
and Rhode Island, and 100,0001 d Mts.
—Perlis modletes tall no that the .now
'est winter bonnets nre all exceedingly
ratall, but they do not look as though
hey were flattened - , to the Soper i
end, which effect the sturuner and nut
'limn bonnets gave. The newest forms
are oert*inly more raised hem the fore
head, by . means of high , bandasir n , ear
wide rushes, or wreathe of flowers, and
they ire more Lacewing, thanzwhen the
Irontof the bonnet rested an the fore-
—The IduWane Repairllcah komina
ting Conventrim have nominated IL C.
Warmouth • for Governor, Alderman,
J. Davis, (colored,) of New Orleans, for
Lieutenant Governor- George Beet, for
Secretary ofOtatel Thee.' IT. Conway. for
Superintehdeit of Public Educstionf G.
M. Bolden, for Attorney General; -G. M.
Wickliffe, for Auditor:Antoine Hnvellat,
(colored,) for Treaeurer. A rieolutien
endersing . Chase for President was voted
—GLIM hais always been supi=fied to
resist completely chemlele salon by all'
acids but Buoric. It if found, however,
that some bottlemakers in Europe are in
the habit' of increasing the amount of
alkali and thus saving hi the fuel vs
gnired to fuse the ingredients. Wine.
placed in bottles thus made seta upon
the glass and makes it opaque, and thus
adds to the. wine* Aran which ht neither
pleasant nor cholseome. .01 course
wine soeffecteddeteriorates. In value.
—On thi'Dltia ult., a Mr. and Mia
Frazer, and Infautchild,residingin.Ran
dolph county , - .1.10., after. having visited
a relative, were on their return home in
a buggy. apprtsching a steep bill,
Mrs. Y. got out to walk, carrying the
child in leer arms. Directly otter, Mr.
F. was startled by the cries of tiro child,
and looking' around saw his wife lying
in the road. He crated to. her, but re.
calving no anewer, I hurried . back and
found her demi! It Lesupposed a nen.
relgto pain, toothich she was'subJect at
times, bad attacked the brain with rabid
.
Fenn alarms , continue to , trouble
England. Great numbers of special con
stabled have' been sworn In for public'
• protection imLoittion, and a circuit= has
been sent from the Home Department - to
I the Mayors of about Arty towns in Eng
land and Ireland, requestinglhat special
constables may be sworn in for the ores-.
erection of property and the auppretesion.
of riotous proceedings. ' "Her MeJestrs.
Government," says' the cirotdar,."have
received Information which" renders it In
their Judgfeent desirable that the local
authorities libould be. preyareritomeet
any disturbances that may ariss.during
the winter." The., fear of Fenian' out
breaks is more widely extended at pros. ;
ant than darintrany previous parimiof
,Engliahbistory. • .
—There is s eingular bailing cauldron,
cir lake, near Humphrey's Station,lin
Monitor 'Valley, Reese River, Oregon,
which is said to be weliworthy of avian.
•In the center of a low, round bill, in
mood of sedimeatary matter, there Is a
natural bard aboui a sovenly-tive feet in
diameter, andappa tlyalatyor seventy
feet in depth. At the bottom there is e
large volume of sodding - hot water con
stantly in active eaullicitaa., The water
is so remarkably plus that astonethierne
into it la Caen dasoandhig with a etlow
spiral motion to - a: great depth, • being
gradually drawntowerdathepointwhere
the spring seems to burst from the rocks
beneath. The lake has no outlet and
the water stands about twenty feet below
—A Minster In Cabs at differsti t than
enticed three young girls of tender years,
whom hornet in the streets, to his apex",
meats, where he And ravished and then
murdered them, subsequently throwing
the bodies into a deep well. He was ar
reefed by • citizen, whosesnseelone bad
been aroused, and at the time of his cep
ture, was locked in his room In the
patsy of another young girl, wboi but for
timely Interference, would have shared
the fate of. the others. When the, mull:
lated bodies were drawn - from tho well
i r
the populace became ' ed ;de;
mangled
mangled that the mglorit event:iv rid
them for punishment. - ey turronnded
the Jail for the purpose 'a executing their
Intention but the sutkoritlesfinally man
-A history, of the London Tallor4
strike, is given ' or at least the financial
put, in a paper rend just before Christ
mss, before the London Operative. Tali
gee Association. - It appears that during
the strike from April to the end of Octo
ber, the money ',shed for the benefit of
the tailors amounted' to $43,100. tat the
amount received, 5713,405 had teen paid
to the men on strike, while the remain-
der, with the exception 'of Ste in hand
and s7gi advanced to the , defence fund,
was expended in delegations, . public
meetings, committees, printing.- saver,
tieing en d the other necessary incidenie
oonnected withsprotrsoted strike.. Two
[ thousand men were on strike for 'az
months, and they were padres' the - m t.
as lade over eixehillinge, per heed per
week. 05,000 were expended in defend
ing the .prealdent and others tried'a taw.
mo nths ago for . conseirieg sitainst 4.11,
employing tailors. -- --
It we reldrighU4,4loCia44
havenet nit I very ream ' coined - any
gold ortillver:- The 'Mall ridings of- the
countvi:-hatk x -been the . Power,. Leh, ' worth ; hof cent or eft
abortisi. one t .whllhlletheonly ether coin irs'
eulationwassithe lievTr.o *Mar, -which
in time bemMek to reisksiateet Weston&
Md. of Table:' fitipter,, , weirdness:all,'
made Into'what. le ee4oo4 o .BpaleePtlYer.
the metal ..belng. avusdree:or 'outmoded
into the ahaps or"a olunsay , akeeoathis
pleoteilding ope...thto anothe r - fikit. so
lastly lumpy :aid being dealt oist by
Weight. as one binikerstey andzedibnll.
ion. _ hold was Unlashed, and =toeles:l
s
at all. Of late, howeirer,the ;Chinese ere
coining geld, and nampleaari Orddhlted
here as curiosities. -, Thies' imbue stre-itt
Lime manlike& thetectr . wish with TOW*
' every Cattenden le RIR ? .fivklp& a
square hole in the znideter,-* 'pettifted.,
rim around the edger, without mitillhag,
and raised elnumentrerbetwert the relied'
.
______ _____
Cam end amiss.- The aelehwite ti,
I Pro l V - i'lr 'fii. - I-91 4 'r'
iter
■nd licking' who The ' " u
We la aunt - 01 welsh lie
to about WO of o
ea!uo of the the 9 Min . ,
It Is stot equal to our cobs In Babb, but,
rurrerthelass gluts•basibtoras cola.
CA,U
EIS
Sir -TL&M/MillX. •
a.Queen ,o 6 Ii'COMAIIIIIO
=
==m:
M=l#Zl
Llocbt. Mont 4 %
Orel Comore
exit+lnth .
Wrozstßeil w
==l
fE tker4r, MO Battle
. _
• Notions era Ili • Cleaned thati:idcasladuar
Iniprts=on icercbesSlbla aw;.l 0=4141 1 -
,sac, dreamers mist d, saw Ids 42 !timbals
•
droop) abrfsca, bluilang beauty aserbilie
Soon CP vld espied
'Ray siumbcr thus, switler—
etVcTiTaet, andsdabi'ai:arburniari
•
Impiiai:/'. nor
'Belie .gal .0, .0 ulr.liva -
aarttcht lowly comb, ausa?ic mania co
• • rest •
.4boribon curbs Ws cli.ed.!OS o:l3,Srar:LStait
wanting,'
and 'Vesper awaits thaw to-say, iss
Soft-loft. Ign ... .5 peach down, r 1 lack Cc,_
Sep;. WO, fuz.f.a ! ;, - ,th..toi,i IrnoreCif
Tillgorced to gepar, trnrals stal„
trown—bat zit
u rnad wit
amps, _
l'ihdii4 - 101 - ,ir PIM. a inicat'abot.lo ten.
Tba chests ,o 4 pus lamp. 11!0 softl9.4
:Adds shares to their w;alllaAkasu4: tccal4lre
totbeir stances. " •
7 - 1ei.,..-." •-- , r - 7 __
. TWO Ova" W-end =am ..: ; - ,..1,7..., ~,
:400,y0t1 7 0...7.uak Tirx ., quarOf Kul Eiculitig,
, -11711•01 3 11. 111 rinthiPSUM/Alkdollatb , .
"Troth urf.3 . #put ',War Slot.. .' -,...:
: '..i:3 % l i gliftre... " ViitiiTartg4l Witt .".
: . le4 ir k O.• '7 ! ' l blt ,-- -,• ' - - ~
Warild ;Imp i t im um
lil'it'plizi`4`4'.4tilf.'lll=liii lic;kii: •
w tato *lie': abort and dart 1114 likes :91a trinT' '
; .'. Bath umt;lculi..hoent ... 1 ~„, .
: Barer* ,Euutr.whon I.;enC •,. - .7:
114 oserllfular tr Zrotuk-. . 1 - 5.. - ...;t. ",:
i•' ' rg litrligi 7,u.itArc;l4 - ~ :, , v--,
1 -- 41.7 stiosp..willlkuutt,yuktu# u1ig41.„1, 7 ,,,
, ___ .
'wineTress ef roes at to the eel.
DT
Bede 11N1 slaw ot hair
Ahmed AT every ',nectarine
Wighlog ilas
' ',Why don%St.....OftbeioC 04.1.10‘d01 .
, Ttirangti, qv. ringlets - ran' mot Ileverti” o
irtioul'yos lets se , hund,-shadzein
And, theirs mesa liingeholoo2,
In the ring te attil,tor ea.
Only lcum th ononmeid see .!
Ithit - Itare eintailmed of ,
Al,. ins noel antrit. shah it •
• . Al it you honed ler; Ina, drum.
Nor it shell not seam. but be, . •
To 1111tH kill her, fir, said . , •
,Stiestand before yen there ;
' , and fiat ^ - . - -
•
Of only kitaingalsne Itildeflese tll4/)
Ind/4V lialerrr ildhet
v.144:176. its liege in • wawa it day
. ablest Due that excla in kut
Manta on can love;
_es the an unv ,
Wit) the Milenhan
lintatelon out Amain that - bin faith le=
• Ticrenth bebtarrflut . and ennithowlein,
Une , ./On inie,itiewhed.sh•dttetrf. l !
I. never Orli lt 10•111611"
CEITLIE
,
to for am.iob udilr4Folzo.
wranola'aconiniiirtii;2L. l s4ii ,
le our v to Ronagi hero? .;.• Marlene , .
. . _
. .. .
—When can a road he add to - Waren- ....
tkinalY When it has* positirevilettklet
. r. . ,
why:should confrieve manuthan- -
rera be coultdered adopts - 1n the acted'
aelf.defratoaleal?le the y a r t°4s° to
. —A. couple.Wele rotentlY .tterrltsiA, 1 1 .
Owlet Barrington whoed united ages a t.., _
one-hundred add thirty-two pees. They 1 I
Wets - old enough to know..hvtleeirper7 I„,
' halte Hers leen better: ~ ;,. ,
. —Theo" is a talkof4etwirtiellrg a rail
way through part of - King - Theodore's,'
domtnions for Lthe use Of our invading s r
army. - Ifs 'Whiny guide be . homed, it, : - 4
will, of sound!, be tut All Orden one. ...4 .. 1,. ,
—A loon; Youlninstknow, le t in Sagan, •
a fool. - Then, how is ,it data. the
tern fora oertaln London paper, the
--
being feels, are - only Wprth - a -pair' of -.
g t
breeches,amon ,them ? ~ Why, begone
they're .13antar- eons, itupidi , , ../ ,- -•
—"Well, no/ is bor what the &shit, ..
lan news this morn ing?" said a gentle % r,
man to his friend. "1 have jinn sent ai '
barrel of flour to spoor woman." . "Just f .
like you.; Whe is it that. youhava made
ha f pprby,yvar l eherity this thner's "Mg
wi ..
—Patrickwall in charge of a ferry boat.
A lady passenger being frightened by
the .wavist, naked bins if people were •• -- .
ever lost by O boats?" - He gaveghe
encouraging r epl y "Not often, ma'am:. - -
we - generallyfind them afterward by:
dragging theri l v'e7' -
-A dead p was found recently In
the woods nes ,Aberdeen, Miss., with a
load
by buckshot
c nr
hhoigs
tro O d n y, ,
t a h n e d n near
'theollowi b g y l oa iption wan - pi nned:
-
"The nigger kiNed the hog, and theAvng
killed the nigger: Selah!". i. , i _ -"_ - .
•
=Who'. Olga" said. itobluson, ono
oold winter ni ,t,diaturbed In reso
'by some - one knocking et thostrog, door.'
"A friend," woo the warmer. ~,, . .What
.do
you want?" IWant to . May all rdaht..-
"Qinor taste, ain't itt But stay there,
by all meanie, n i Wee - the 'sr/ herovolau
—On metal/in lady whom, you know
it
it is of the highest importance that 'good
breeding should be manifested" in the - IM. ;
terelew..whether It come Witte strati or
•elaewbere. Yalu are not, therefore, - to .
ejaculate-,'III ," or "Itollor 'at 'a db.
tame; but wed • mull she has acrided at,
your aide , and thou you ore
mold& how e a ,does., - Tlusatate of the "
weather maybOrdloired to form tho toplo .
of a .brlet coniieraatlen I hot 'lt. -/11,..lowc
redly unneeeeesre to observe that It will
ben romarkably - fbio daypif It don'train,
On meethigalady with whoiti ria..a.to
not acquaMted, it. la advised:de- Os •,,,,,,
gracefully askle, aid olio* herr_ U., pass. _
Should Malady be out ehbpping, mato.
title - tut° IL IttexL:drsper'irte make:Mune
purchases, It I, not considered - ,othputUo •
to follow-her and ask' her what she gave •
a - yard'lbr hoz-stout dtmlky,P - On being
naked - to take wine, the best thing-yisp
can do Is to takoll,and_he glad you hare
had the opp:4nuity - • -
r -- . . • •
• _
• alt•Astdote of Lode Mute.
The fid
_ .
' Thlekw* story was lately told ba
a London newper: - ; • • ' .
A touching maculate witi -related to
me of Louis Blanc the other . day, which
pra~ss him not odY.to Wendowsd with,
geurus, but tete, a good heart:' One
day--this was few days a ft er the Bart.
laden of'49—be =Me eelebrated Chia
deviants stadageseantly - at aeons oin , • -
natures in s 'shop irindow.T (What are":
youst.out? inquired'ofhimi the anther
°rpm .111stoire de dlx eannse,, drilling him
familiarly .on. the - shoulder: :Carder
soignee turned round and looked et him,
llla cheeke ware emaciated eyee
sunk with eaffeming aild.iticknese. • '
argleairdng how to , die ' f 'hearer
plied ebaudeealgnos. , Lards
deeply moved. took him home, o
his twcretary,l which °Ordained • ra of
three hundred - franca, and - putting
two hundred frolics intothe; hand of his
unfortunate bitud-osald is only an
advance on.the monryl mhall - owe you .
for Work lam anxious you should Ant. -
dertake for 011:1: Another anecdote worth , .
relating: fleeing heard that; Morena - of
General was 11l and unable tallies
hither:roux& without anyone to take.cane ' -
of him, M..louht ftimno • initantly west ~.
Male lodgings, and acted ad Manama
He anent duenight with his youngfriend. -
Daybed moro ly, dam:tett-when/I ring of :-.
the bell was Board. • Utile Blanc went tik :,-
opertthe door.' A man rushed,lafranti
eally with Sign, damming id. the moat.
violent language. for instant payment. .
Leda - Blanc returning to .bis Itiend'e
Weide told him that -be (1..0u1a :Mane) • , •
wattohlated tneulthinefor fee , hams
as ha h beim sentfor.. Re then left the
house with a ;creditor, teak him; end".
peid the t.W which amounted .to 4001
Theyotu3g !wand onl .bnew t years .
later that Louis Blanc y
bad: thus wo
arrod
ktrUltota betugltrreeted for debt?)/
I • . Gallant
The Lawreaai qleas.l .4etiric ma:
"Oa 'Friday last a numb& or have were
enlAted in sildingapotethelfaletta from
...
oW , straeL3344r Bring, 'down the
Utak and annast We ice ea th• Elpleket
dyer: The apart had -/rrikeeded a same - I
thus wheatbare tesaaaraah. , l4a Amon
of Mr. Patrick Plzga... a aged 'boot-nine
ae
rum elisaepmm eta er ,the Jai. A tit•
iar e p ci pp•ot Appirtirtaisraa
standing ott f Ole Aeme4recanallegk off . 4Je
iache l .-and tannnOmin the WS; pluepd
nye boy, pt Aug blow Oct
4,= . 4 1 1:0 notkact,tait, Ida tennis-dad
cuip4p: lop autdatioceadad •••
Behan asiaarable Ot*Sitlie oof
mind brokeVid toreluileo4l . 'witbr.bia
igkittiad
',Wahl 10 1. 9N.T44
Aster, ilkieimes vie 4 w ia~ b
gemswim..
.ertiev *Pew* the Una-Hato 'snow nen .
-*matt id- 44{1E= & R j
bukipelledi s p e:,
sa It Inn Int 141.°7"
both weal *ram* 1/31.1rImelps4.-"
thy refused 'do, and slang taAtts
skilfully haldieg Mtn 'be .a rnsnilar_
as to avoid bittagdtaggimidetann of which .
talr,
the-1»y
assothpliahed pa:M=llW ;humus
r r irall'eter aft& i tAr t ieug..
- • *tn NUL
Samara •
I.'9ias • •
I Zolttf4 . o4l. •
contain •
which. ore ing n
those of the;
masolo
• 44 ;
14" 6 :5 4 "'". •• • tubs:"
.. 1 ‘ 411 - 6 F
. 111 ••• =Eck. Minuet's
Alsometalipdbistos!
ME