The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, January 22, 1868, Image 6

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    II
11
Smut fialittt
H
H
inutaza HT
OU4i; }MM & CO
- ,
. .., IT GAZNITI BUILDING,
1 -- - sr., es aruva moot.
,-. t• : a . . nig"---
. 1.........
1 . . ' Mile ' it.., 31..
1 ".
per rue by iaan; a5ei.....411 1 , 5
f, -is se swiss, to am adtri!,.. 1;u1 ias
1 . - "elms to e15b.................. ....
.. Tisis Tux DAILY 1 •
4 • somierea,trye;alter. C00....k.)..;-1111.
1 • NW Isbeialms. (t.,.. mr.)...........158.00,
Liberal Ur 11rnnbon W Alial.w
intinj - ;:, 23.
I . TIC RALLYING - CRIES,
'Upon rreofall ear Preiedeetthl cam;
pulps onielswerde of party 'Piing
mmoils.
. ' . y, aid are adapted ,b
y
• , Ike bees's' they expresk in few - words, current sentiment of the
party them..
. The recent debate at Harr/Um_ ', on
i Di reablutleas endoniag Secretary
.`
• &cirri:4's resteration,, has given birth
to two our/ phrases - which, exposes most
f =he prevailing sentiment of the
.., tie Purr- - '
I -_, Theis , are "'The gallant Leer'
i and " said Ma hondear For the l
. '
w eed
,• , ]girt of- h appy phrases we are in- 1
1,: , tiebted of Mr. Playfori, of our neighbor-
I- lei amity if Fayette; and fortis other
1.. r to se:s al eit ‘ bisr gentleman en Matilde of
the ti equa ll y happy in' 'adapting ,
kis to his ideu. • '1
IL I T l ‘ o s tneatly and filly these two
[ ' ph eves, the Demecratle Wee of
• the tle cows that struggled together
lon the daring the rebellion / I
•,, "The t Loaf' and kis equallygal. 1
- nusfltesti! On the side of the Rebelvi
....' noble, •ttrave manly, gallant -deader,'
,--
.• binding 1#1; pair -laic hosts to repel the
invader and sad defend the sell of /Is loved
Virginiamthedesecration and polli-1
tion of e Alden foe; bet ea the other
aide he ' different the
.sdctore•,,in 1
Damara - nerd- Instead Of "the g et - 1
s
, gent La g '
.' the hued; noble defender
--- of his nativeSlaW. behold the plebeian
. •
“innaiiir and bli,hordur' How tit a I
wort, in inch it place, is "hordes:" 1
, - "Hordes". of barbarians/ "Hordes" of
Northern loafers and mudaills; "Horde,"
of snivelling and drivelling Yankees;,
'queries" , of IRa:cram and brutal
, - "kozdes" - of • "mossy nschaniM" and
- bawhicks-411 swarming over she boy
der to &Mate the bozos of &Minns
Renllemen, like an irraptien of Goths
1 and Vandal , into this domains of civi-
Ened sad cultaited Roulet ,
- -
Thu Anathe spirit ihrornly - the Ds
• mac ucy all through the, rebellion, and
it developes all the mere actively,' note,.
_ as the 'hopes of victory appear to grew
. • brighter to those who entertain it The
quips/hies of the Democracy, while the
war holed, were niMietakably . on the
side of "the gallant Lee," although pro,
deice prompted the leaders to. saiothitr,
the ouialfestatkM of to as much as plia
aibie; end now, as they' begth to feel safer
la the erpression of their long pentsip
fee/lngs, their admiration of the heroic
conduct of the Rebell centres around
"the gallant Lee.".and their hatred and
contempt of those wise Move to riudn-
Jain the,integilti and authority of the
nitioa Is coeuntrated in the - phrase,
"Gaurr and his derdecr' Te-day, uin
the dark days from lett to lass, the Ohm
- mule mrty is in tke videof the *bele
and against thiiisisse,and tke interests
of;the coutry. 1
Bit, as in the Rebellion, so In the
.octettag Presidential struggle. "tiliiaur
and his horde*" luif northern barbarism .
twill be tee math ibr "the pollard tee"
1. and the aristocratic. Exeytactia. Let tie
boys in blue take' notice/that they are ai
such hated by Ike Democracy as ever;
and that.the victories Soldered at tort
Donde"; yiekaberg sett Richmond wilt
have to be repeated in. nits, until tithe'
• gallant Lee again capitulates and his
dartomatfc Confederates are (acidotic:o tn..
Imre into "`"""*---
. -
TILE 1711 D Tikßii i
-; • ; °
The "Workingman . ," 'known politi
ally as tuck, peed at the recent elac
thins in Pittaburgh'. and .lillegheny with
the Damocrats, and have, in ureic,
ether waya'show i n" a strong disixelti6o
tethrerw in their lot With that party. I
Asttlyet, en the very first opportunity;
the Democrats repay this co-eperatlen•
by Tieing 'gains' tun iirorkLagmen, on
their ,test masenre'-4he Eight Heir
Wean the bill 'came itp in tiis
House of.Repreeratatives, at.li'ashing
taa„ to maks eight hours a day's work la
all national workshops, navvyards,
.snarly every kepablicalf voted for
whilst neatly every Democrat mtsj
-
Comment oa suck a fides this is sia.
perduons. If the "werbingmea" can
0. I . tot Properly nudariand and intarore
• it,' without argument, no amount of
words can . eanyince them. They must
be wilthfly Mad if they do not lee that
the party whichslands by the aristocracy
south mails the inveterate foe of
Jreerleber in that resit% cuorot be the
tats friend of this, workingman any
,
'lobate.
' ; patty that hat , been as long out of
• power little democratic party has been
is naturally ready to . make any promise
'mind of it to obtain votes.' It has dn.
calved the workingmen with: those
gocamises. just as it has *tired all'ilth-.
11141 who have hailed in it, except its
matatal allies, the Southern rebels; bet
it viii brittle* vote, biita represent
Wives, when brought to the test, in hir
' meny with the wishes of the Ihruthera
- atiatieracy, which &replies .labor 'at
whatever grade, and "'hint regard to
place, race or athrm
11
4 conzzaroanrrr of the New Yerk
W /d has sioceeded In'worralas Mtn
; tato the 'good mess-of President
I J .so far uto draw out en °pla
t iao on the attnatkat of aloha The
_ I t 'Meads to - intaghte that he Is
/
-a abused IndividnaL -He:speaks
... gly, - tad ' seests• to =Weals
tili***4l AO 14 4 'Si:44MM. and In
01141404 eras tdnuielf on thrum"
and the ism*, ' - aPly the long I
,sea- 'Unitybe that Yr. Johnson fa In
_ riareasti for ft sertalake-applara that he
haalabored Elute his amend= to the
- Oldie of Chief r.zecitre to bring about
a revohitkin. His atubborn, tutreasori
- &Otto , tau cootritrated target' to the
trnehulti,erd lidleellag which .now ex
- Istrhatinetat Maud:and Conicrfee, sad
I i
it stead of the latter bodr he alarm
Amid Awe the responsibilities of con
thilincies. ' , i _ , - •
u irr Ci.ires ore naf so azunisnotis is
this wady as they should be. Ws do
'sot know way- the old butter district
, hue bias a slow is follow is the aria
sal costepos"tizkr the bloater orthe
datioguistal hero aadeoldier. We Iss.
Ilan=the &mid Irani ininiaaticatis
fie 07 osi Yet Animal in this Esigt
--barbood. Beyond anTdoubt the iodhint
Gi s id - von lead thillapaikliati hosts io
victory baba fbrtheoming and
In urge oar friend entry distztet to
sf eses orpthi deg to'doPaii4ll
skit in his behalf.. - ' -
• - •
TEAT °Maa inidtagg Is dot.
Used to make a natal? in ttotworld there
=la so. : douht, he ba.iipecpar
and kluietof ring WWI Sit#lloe
ckaolocau4o4.: .14-jfkrest s
by she MU& Gorsilusibt vu -part' of
fii4r .1011 ~.1 134r out VT husaaltt
aid U?br ticiParEool9iti b y
shall be 'saluted, 10 1 4 !stbili
arleist, be amply Made up by theme.
?WM irin for a kw intiaieso7._
ALLEGIANgi AND ITS Comm.
Allegiance is defined by cows to be
the highest and 'greatest obligation of
duty and oteedience that can .be. In
memarchietthi e is due to the person of
the servereige; in Irepublies to the cation
or the IS**. Allegurgif is natural or
acquired; permanent or temporary; ex.'
press or implied: Natural allegiance
arises from birth in aparticular realm
or nation, under Mrcunstanceslarolv
ing subjection or Citizenship. Acquired
allegiance proceeds from naturalization,
accerdieg to prescribed forme- Express
allegiance exists When the obligation is
recogrfted by any formality, as the tak
ing oleo oath; Implied allepsace grew,
oat of the tact of births:residence with.
in a particular jerimitetion. Permanent
&Butanes Is due from subjects or chi
run, whether natiee or • naturalised.
Temporary allegiance Is due from 'Sens
domiciled In a cernatiy; that is, the* are -
under obliguiou to obey the laws. An
England, and many other countries, au
alien Muddied thMem is laid to be wa
der so limed °hilt:ideas of obedience u
to be liable to prosecition -for treason,
the same as a subjeim L.
We have raid that the relation of a
subject to his liege and of a cikiseen to
his country, is penainient. This is stat
ing the Mae very Mealy; but we &not
recall a elute government in which a
subject or citlz n - jie allowed tOdivest
hie:mei:of allegiance at pleasure, or by
any process whatever.. Many citizus of
the United States reces' tIY, and In the
most solemn reamer, forswore alle
giance thereto, sad with equal solemnity
transferred their allegiance to another
and a hostile power. The government
of the United States did not recognize
this repudiation of citizenship for. so
rand as an matint. Nor would the
case have been changed bad the men en
gaged in the revolt put themselires un
der the protection of the. British crown
and sworn allegiance thereto. .-
Prom 1788 to 1818. the people of the
United States were seriously vexed at
the comae taken by the British govern
ment in claiming the menden of its
natural-boos subjects, who had migrated
- Mika, and expecting to remain so long
as they Bred, had taken the oath of alle
glance—. Wherever puns-gangs could
reach them they were seized, and car
ried on board of British men-of-war,
and compelled to serve. Nor were these
Puss-gangs 'at all particalarla seising
only naltreloniitzitoas. Hundreds M
inim hernia this country, were (object
ed tothe awns violence, Drumm]; who
Is =mitt/rig, tad whom we have known
for many year; was taken out of an
American ship near Gibraltar, and com
pelled to ternagainst his own country,
as a cannoneer, from INS to 1815.
These proceedings brought, tender dis
cussion both the right of impressieent
And the right of search. Our germm-
Lunt felt its obligation to defend equal
ly the persons and immunities of all eta
citizens- , Englandd sorely needed sea
men; was powerful and arrogant; refereed
r
toneake ananiceeskins, and held stead
ily en in the way she had chosen. Prom
these and other causes of embroilment
'rime the seer tkat opened in iSla and
closed in 18t& The Inviolability of the
Sag and the security of every American
citizen, native or naturalized, were
among Mr most potent rallying cries,
throughout this- country, during that
contest.
It was natuially expected that when
the war closed care would be taken. so to
adjust the two pointa of difference above
ipeeited as to avoid reasonable probe
' bility of trouble about either of than in
Intim. Nothing of the sort happened
Whoever reads the treaty by which the
war was terminated, 1711111nd note weird
therein teaching either of these grave
mitten If suiprtae leads tho ruderto
seek further, he will And that the Cur
aelsidoners of the United States at Ghent
were pointedly instructed by our goy
-Tumid not to my one word concern
lug impairment er search; and that, at
aordingly, net one word Was add by
them on either of those terns
Our government, at that time, - was In
' the hands neither of fools nor canards,
bat of statestnee, :who comprehended
that both of these VbitctlEMzt'.ti
.7--,upanDetia
_es. ,
They were not willing to concede that a ,
citizen of the United States, at pleasure, 1
could divest himself of all or any of ids
obligations to the laws lyr • ioreewearing
allegiance; and they comprehended that
neither Dint Britain nor any other pow. 1
er would go further in that direction a l
than they ware ready to go themselves.
During the pro-slavery domination In.
this country cur government found It
nonventsa to practice what it had
Preached - touching the Right of Search.
By treaty with Paglandne were under
obligations to maintain, jointly. with
Great Britain, ambers on the African
cunt, to aid in breaking up the Blau
Trade. As the Democratic ' leaders
thought it inipolitic to repudiate the
treaty, they !nattered It of more effect by
allowing
_all vessels engaged in the
Slave Trade •to escape by hoisting the
Gant& or any other neutral flag. It
was a cionvindent dodge, and such anvil
officers u did not resort to it found
themselves Instantly In aurae at the
Navy Department. But we more thara
aspect that aniconintander who should
have allowed a Oonfederate privateer to
get id, daring the rebellion, by showing
-English or other neutral colors, would
bane round theiwarth of both oar goy
: =um ,t and people . hot against hint
This illustrates, that 'while\ search is
[belligerent, it is none the leas a right, all
nations will exercise beans otrucemi
tY, subject to whatever . responeibiliCies
may Ulla& .
The Constitaticin makes but ono ells::
Linden behrzen native and naturalized
citizens. Only a• native citizen can Ali
, he eft" ol • Preiddent In all other par.
, *alas the two daises of citizens are
on a perfect equality. Whatever duty
,
the one clauswies the sacrament, the
I other class owes likewise; and whatever
I art or musics of Protection the goy
' ertuncat is bound to extend to the one
class, It is boned tO extend to the other
likewise: - -
should be captured by the French got.
-annul, behind a Purls berzleads, cha
lets rebellion, what claims would. he'
hare on the government of . t* United
to
1. Evidently, Evidemtly, all the goys
or -could legitimady 41°,1,nd
,
to see that I fah trial was *carded
This country beteg at peace with
niece, he would be held ender oblige-
Was to revert those relations of maw.
idle lIIW proper not to do so, he would
he judged a running thank chencee.
N iabetantial reasons can be &aligned
wh American citizens," levying - war
~ , :any - Minna= Power, should
aisa under a different tile.- -.: -r:
Ppm stain maniacal Um. reign'
sympathies so powerful with the laudoi
hieativity, that be freely goes forth
andientines in an attenipt torevontion:
Ise tin Government existing them, he
ought to understand that be engages in
ALbenterprlse of peculiar peril; that 11
a primmer of war, be may be held
u a .
;citizen, and be deal withaccord
, tee ; err, if not held id a citizen, he
will I ,' held was denizen„ who lender
' oNligations be respect the Iwo of the
' camay ma loam es ho stays in It
Ner judgment that may be formedef
dm plenums adz intervention was
,desigied to remedy, Is of validity here.
A. Orimigint, luiehalwaye the right of
, adfleotectkot end will eurdso it se
' attffing tattle degree of rower itianay
posseen. It will got exercise this eight
Emmtkelent 'certainly ere: 4 sava4i l 7, be.
- murtelits undlietsseek to dielta them
ileltronfrqut respiaudtality bjrnataralize.„
Widow/tem.
1, •"-Twin, is -another : plat oit NIA* I
twelipoecitoNtelatinti oNatd iskii itto
elle.ittbitreopteshilsralittowdefii,
meal! and to maalfoet advaateige. A'
lop put'af tkottitimos of tin Untied'
States were born in Europe; have friends
there whom they desire to visit; rind
have bueiaeu relaiiona there which cten
them thither. has happened that
naturalized &lima, upon goieg back to
their native liads,. for these or other
lawful purposes, have been held to per.
farm military or other service o,r.whit
not. European governments would en
counter no practical disadvantages by
loosening their practice on this head;
and it is 'well for our government to
press the maper on their attention.
Considering that the rule of law asheld
is our own Courts does not lifer on the
subject of erpatriation from that which
obtains throughout Europe, it will cul
t/duly be well for oar people first to
make the change l it home they are
mandieg abroadi—citherwim they will
fall under condetrination for insuferablO
impertinence. Such change oar govi,-
.entunent will be as slow to make arthe
government of any other nation on the',
globe.
TUE DARE: ALGER.
pity yeara ago It was still the faille*
to speak'. of what are popularly Called
the "Dark', Ages," as ages of peculiar;
moral and mental darkness. In vale.
was it to call attention . to the archltect4
oral wonders which grew lip all °Teri .
Europe during that pretreated period,'
and which even yet astonish all who'
look • upon them; to those marvels In
painting and sculpture whlchyet remain 1
=rivalled as models of taste and beauty;
to those hospitals in which the infirm,
sick and maimed were cared . for and
'solaced; to those seminaries of learning
which then took root and flourished; and I
to those grand poems which' are ileitis
unmatched by any similar performances
during the last two centuries. Ages I
that produced AscilllKii Bsvflaxx. Can
mirk Matunarnsa„ Canonise . Can-
Taw, Boccacio, and a bolt of
,1
kindred spirits, ceuld not have been bar-
I barons. They may hare beta bigoted
and superstitious, in the estimation o n
modern critics, just as the present age
I will be so regarded by historians and re.
viewers who shall come live hundred
years later. Bigotries and superstitions
I are not phantoms or trifles to these who
cherish them, bit solemn 'verities ; so
that each individual and each generation I
passes on in Ignorance of their delete,-
cies in these particulam They look
back upon bigotries that have died out;
upon superstitions that have faded away;
and are Ailed with surprise that men of
serum should have fallen victims to such
pi:Little infatuations. Every age is so
judged by ages following; and there is
no more certain indication than is hire
in afforded of the general and steady
progress of Mankind.
Mr. , HALlay opened his History oft
the Middle Ages with the profound re
mirk that these ages were called dark
not because they really were so,'hut be
cause we were in .the dark concerning 1 1
Those Aerie controrertles corn.
=aced bt EnAlingd, LIITMLB, CALVIN, I
Knox, and their musuirdes, continued, I
ender rutty different phases, by VOL.
BoLimunOris,
SnarrinizEnv, and brought to a terrific '
cataatrophe by DANTon, 11111141. and
fiOnnirnialill, were not favorable to the
formation of dispassionate judgMents
upon the man or topics involved.
Mr. Ifaearnarr, in hie introduction to
his History of England, advanced a step.,
farther than Mr. HALLInt, declaring
that it was difficult to decide to which
the English people owe most, to the
CathilleChurch or to the Reformation.
His argument to sustain this pOsilien of
uncertainty Is, that the first bind of
monks that passed over from the 'conti
nent to the island, and settled in Canter
bury, found the people sunk in barbsr
inn, and by slow degrees nixed them
and their posterity to that high degree
of civilization sold enlightenment to
. which they had attained when the Refor
mation broke upon them; and that the
Improvement before the Reformation
was so nearly equal to that which fol
lowed after, as to leave the balance in
the nicest tinairteinty. •
This candor of magnanimity was
matched by M. hircirrurr, in his
nice to the Life of Li:rregiA, which.
-......--ttnannie - muitorian Of Prange does
not huitafe to declare the German' Re
former "The Liberator of Madam
.Thought." I
It Isnot par purpose here to maintain
vilest:the authority of Mr. Gins,,
that after the deelthe of the classiic ems
in Greece and. Roma, and following the
introduCtion of Christianity, there was a
decay of leanting, either partial, as lim
ited to special classed or countries, or
general, Mextending with considerable •
uniformity throughout the Boman Em-
I etre. The impression is doubtless gain.
leg strength among men of lettere ; that
alterall the animadvertions to which he
lise been subjected, he Is incomparably
the most superb delineator who has yet
appeared of the decay of the religion of
classic =thirdly and the rise of Chris
tianity =on the ruins thereof, Amid the
turnings and , overturning& of those
time; when the memorials of learning—
the garnered wisdom of the ages—were
only preseryed in manuscripts—lt Was
Inevitable' that great fluctuations
should occur In the stream of
knowledge. At one epoch it passed al.
most entirely away from Christians, and
wad fed and , enjoyed with almost rigid
exclusiveness by the Jews. The pro
fessors oflealning in moat of the public
Institutions and in the houses of the no
bility, were of this peculiar . rue. At
another epoch the neetaresn cup paused
absolutely into the hands of the Arabs.
Comm relates how, all through Spain,
the Moor were equally devoted to :earn
ings& to chivalry; and there are multi
plied authorities showing the existence
of the same condition of facts elsewhere.
Indeed, if the Mahometene came near
sweeping Christianity out of Europe,
and would have
~.suded but for the
gallint rulatairceof lioinnd, to them he:.
Inlip the credit of
.keeping, at one pee
clod, the Impel' Knowledge . from giv.
ing out on that continent, and of pre
serving the. learning of theancient world
for the benefit of the modern. We may
further remark that Dr. Dowantaxn, an
eminent Catholic scholar: of Berlin, hat
recently pithlished some volumes of pro
found studies on the original relations of
Htathendona and leirdom to Christian
ity, which go far towards - confirming
the conclusions of Mi. Grenoit, and
which are how, extorting unqualified
commendation from the ablest of the
Protestant Reviews.
Tie December number of the Festiotr .
ei littec,rterly , Beefily, published in Bos
ton, has an excellent article on "Medie
val German Literature," 'which opens
with - these words:
.The darkness, with* far in noun ann.
ries reeled upon the achinnement. 02 the
middle atm on the dans otdatentare ash
general
dissipate
d t
a m ed awyor n ev e e r sl U g t i i e n de see
.emit which regarded that period ..one of
saddest Ignorance and barhstim from
whtch our weeder. era has sprorsir a• by
a. soirenie. cagy sionslon now is,
whether our literatore and culture are so
feria sul.s i jof th at era of 'darken. and
sunmitlttonP IL la not tl• gothic, architec
t. ghee y longer, ebbah rooms opeet
of those =ladle sin with In, prone heaven
amatadlair spurs. out Ilksonse • .ante pits
sesaphy 0.4 • 014•10 poetry of IN C 1.41•12-
dear and
f-rdnaslftm.a 00
thZen I p tnane a recent
oe'Wow y yy siWrod o to h them
..ente the essn devoted to the lAILIOSOphy
of the bright. elasalc •Ires and Muller *di•
thnui of the Berman seen, of the sandhi
an. are beginning to dad as mina nig 111
tiennany aa those of nog poen of breech
It Is doubtless true; whitens' boasts
nmy be made in behalf of the:moderns,
and whatever exultation may be indulged
emertileuee - mpliehmentaoll3rnsozaand
Elvin, Kris. and HAMILTOX, 0011111
aai MtUy in discussing the freedom of
the will, the relation between mind and
matter, the dependence -of ante and ef
fect, the lesmortallty of the soul, the ea•
suns of BeNn the inductive or deducUre
methods ; of Intessagation, and many
othaiddisteisphiati anbti ties, that all
glesivntate were debited contniies !a
lai *4410 41 ei/ 1 44.. .tzlens !Wan
ity. Nay, %batman& crYears ago, the
ilindoee had adnased M tar Inese
LPITTSBITGE WEEKLY GAZETTE:
1 mental intricacies as the moat advanc l ecl
thinker of the present era; and !Ida not
in the cease of Comm:Ban when he sneer
ingly said that "metaphysics is theisit
enoe the evil spits in hell delight
discus:" nor la the sense. signi fi ed 1 ,
BTROX, when he cut the tacit, alter
Coutamon had lamed "The Friend,"
in which he diluted German philosophy
down to Zoglish tastes, "Co'eridge his
taken to explaining metaphysics to 'die
nation- : ' I wish he would explain ids
explanition;" bat in the sense of askant
and seuuldag investigationi u Moto
subjects, from their very nature, ere sue
ceptiblenr:
Mr. WIINDILL PHILLIPS, in 1 la lecr
ture on ''The Lost date," made otiveral
significant suggestion. to the erect thit
"modern Invention" have compare
lively little in , them that is new; that
they consist in fresh applications ofprie.
cfples known and used when the world
was omparattiely young.
The same fact is Apparent in the thj.
pertinent of morals. Doubtless, the
world, bad as It Is to-day, is better than
at any former period—ehanks to the
vitalising and vivifying power of Chria
tianity:. But whoeirez goes back two
thousand years to the' Tahmed will fiat
most of 'the moral principles of the goi:
pets embodied there. Even the 'Aztecs,
when Mexico was first explored, poi.
mused ethical maxims fitted to adorn a
Christianpultdk Confucius proclaimed
the Golden Rule. Xersians and Arab's
have a proverbial litiiratuse of high ex l -
I
The exhtunation of medieval German
literature will teed powerfully to abat'e
modern : arrogance, sod to induce I custM
conceptions of the men of the past.
STAGES OF LABOR. 1. 1
A maw officially connected with a
prominent benevolent inmitution, ut ono
of the chief eastern cities, started recelM
y on his annual round to solicit contribu
tions from merchants who, year after
year; had gladly been patron' thereod
Fhe first eonating.room he entered, th
rclant said to him, "You must no;
ask Me for one dollar this year. My
Mocleot goods, as it stands, cost three
million of dollars. At. market rates it
Will not toll for two carom" The mil
4 alter saw there was no more to be sald
en that merchant, and he went elsewhere
but wherever.he went he was coconut-1
e'yed by like Statements, attesting the
hea decline In priced* of most tom-1
reed! es, and the consequent roues suf.!
feted by holders. Them complaints
were not simulated; but real: Prices
have gone off, and there is no prompett
Mat they will go back, for many year*,
if i rrer, to the high point attained der
tag the rebellion.
)Yet there are plenty 'of demagogues
and scoundrels who built that mann
,
factureri could well keep up the wages
ollemployerbut for their disposition to.
grasp and oppreu. They talk volubly
abbot the unprecedented and. enormous
prelim made by proprietors; tell bow
rich. they have become; and how easily
that' can pay any scale of wages demand.
ed,i, if they had i mind to, We sup
pose a good many manufacturers are
rid, and, that they mean to keep what
the have, made as well as they can.
Thy will show - themselves to be fools if
the- do not. • We suppose, moreover,
that artisans, mechanics and laborers
had up handeome sums during the prey
aieace of high wage'. If they did not,
the blame rests with their improvidence
antiwant of forethought.
BY I
a law stronger than any resolution
of a Manufacturers' Aso:dation—time
any'rule of a Trade Union—wages must
and will, in the long min, bear a dednite
proportion to the rate at whiCh the par
ticolar products thereof sell la open mar
ket..., Combinations, by proprietors or
worionert, may temponuily bonnel the
cJ4nt of lowiness, but these internee!.
tione act only as mu' impediments
throWn across a river. The waters will
snakb their way to the level of timorous,
and ['in spite of all hindrances .prices
will [ J gravitate ' to . the level of the
normal market Hence, 'it may be
dottiest whether combination to keep
up Prime eitker of wages or of goods
IiATI! - on — cae large scale, advanced
the interests of producing classes. For
briee l periods prices may be artificially I
form;up, but movements is that dint-1
non ways result ultimately in re-ac- i
tins, by which purchasers obtain corn-
pensation for the extortions practiced
upon them. -
Tliis principle has received an admir- J
able ['illustration in the anthracite coal I
Undo. Daring the war the miners en- j
tered into a most efficient combination J
for thee: own advantage ;, which, as a 1
ranter of • coarse, rigorously excluded 1
Mei helpers by ahem employed. The
miners made, through a considerable re- j
riod,[u high as debt or ten dollars •
day,worthig not to exceed Mx hours.
icd 1, went up in market to fabulous
prices,- to the sore dismay of himdredSof
thounmds of fireflies living on salaries
or ether timid incolnes,, of widows
struggling with the needle or the wash
board to keep the wolf of audio from
the dbor. The proprietors of collier
era made great galas as well. All con
carnet' in the baffle grew rich,no matter
how
j imany shivered" with cold. This
could pot Wt . The law of which we have
spoken could not be deed. . Coal went
down Iwith a run, and all the past year
it waseold at lower rates than ever be
fore. liitill, the wages .of miners kept I
up talisrably strong. The principal lose
fell upon the proprietors. Whatever
corporated companies paid them, notbut
,of current earnings, but out 'of surplus,
the h e dings of flush Teen. But
sur
pluses do not last forover,ansi when eri 'I
mind , stockholders become restive and I
wages }re cot down. This is happening '
sharply,. A few days ago, we chronicled
ed the fact that a number of the leading
anthracite companies had reduced wages I
largely!, We venture to predict that,
this Is riot the utmost state which the
, reductkin will reach before the new year I
shall go, out The opportunity of the 1
ccomumers of and has come, and they I
will enj oy it.
The same law is operating in all other 1
deportnamts of Industry, and will con
tinue
rooperste ' whoever may oppose.
I .
With hundreds of t housands of work, ' 1
men, released from sonic° in the army
and nevy, and witk gold down from
2.80 to 1f.93, it is simply absurd to imag
ine the compensation of labor can be
kept up Ito the flume; standard, As
well might an; attempt be made to sus
pend the iaw of gravitation.
k I
Men who are dependent on (tip sale of
thelr lobe: for the maintenance of dual-
lies :will do wiseir to - consider this :
twitter cabily. Time, to them, is em-!
pluticallY money. Many of them hail I
no' savings laid by, and are solely'
pressed. Circumstances have fallen un- '
der our lffaltai.obaervation of so touch, 1
bag a facture as to make the strongest
posalble appeal to human sensfbilitim.
There iilialtering-In MEW !prances,
deep • suffering—in families nut :of em.
ploynient4 . Blanding' mit and' refusing
to work for such waists as can be ob
tain ed--:ai are ratable to what the pro
duct of lib labor will sell for7-eoly ag
llratates dm misery. The winter In not
half gone.' Drearyweeks lateryme be
tween now sad the reium of spring.
Dosiness has fallen upon a transitionary
j epoch, and whoever may essay to hinder
must go through the foreordainedordera.
We called the attention of proprietors
'to this fan,' months age, and urged
them, as the blast of .buts, to:: decide
upon an uriuediste march to spede pay '
meets; but We seemed to meat of thine as'
those who r t d ocked: They thought they
arcade!, cVtern with eel,-
webs, as to ran the whole Main of com
mercial Mitre across.. Barely, by this
time .ther 1 mast baYs illicavered lb&
I.
Bamko.. !' now soy harming Mee,
by all reste, work—for the beat wages
—bat onta!nly work:' * It would damn..
lass be 'cnstaztala for you to buy cot
,
tons, woolens... and other. articles you
need, at'ss low prices as you paid before
the War, on the specie beet, and to sell
labor at the same rates you did when
gold wasat 2:80; but that is an 'arrange
ment you, cannot make. Discretion at.
ways °bows, before the invincible.
TIM nlitor of the Cheieri an InteWien- -thee it is pie) a g Dale again, in ' peels-crat e waiosei,, ream storms.
ear was theently urged to write an article eta ea.
the people tine year.
on Damnation. Farmers generally de not appreciate
woo made the ineation Li elute, ' ate filend 1 -75,000 Logs were
request said
ahealth of denie-ee e :mte, by their ex
m being made drank a setslicentious -Admire] Farr:mut and Lai fleet ere peeure to cold reins and seisms Most
stones, strewn broad -cast over the land Ist Neplee. - n o tin eviler,. rover colas se long
lamas ova utirAT Fnalicil Remote- Be urged the plea that here (New York) - . Eugenie is said to he the Imam greet.- •ne they can eaeep dry, bet their holies\
TioN all classes of society were con-1 the dead walls are covered with 1 'ecsnie, fel hn oLer in Pine-.
yelled, the throes of a world were felt anacontaininglndecent pictures, Ir:suiting -Mae Anne Dickineen 'wally froz e . , Lemming wet and I:. p , wet, coupons:lon
comeeeteces t h ca rtes elf heat rapid
mall pc - inform of the earth, petty uprie- 'to every simples mat' and women into ito death in alinne.ot a' i ly, and they ere see; chilled prone'
lags took place In various countries oft whine e y es am'. send their horrid Bug. ! -Senta Anna Milt! a sitint partner i am! through The , ahreet tits
ale-
Earope, and the people groaned under fi e-e line's Teo reque it seemed a reason- l in the revolution bueineos mesa health, and 'mist 'Especially with
the timene p„, , ,,, of the arteto cr ., 3 , 1 able one, and at mat thought the editor ' -Counterfeit five cent pieces are ex. ' math t essi, which are bee vigorous and
felt hoe duty phi u. Eta be felt I tensively circulated In Clmago. I lea. al •'. least euaelerichanges from
and their rulers. America wrened ,
and twisted at the bonds under watch 1 convinced to en a sic le-handed " .-1 greed daughter ea George the 1 1 eat to cold than s'oek
eve
to
she chafed untalithe succeeded in break- ,in a eanteet of this kane called for con 1 Third is iaeleg at Long Branch. I tin. dairy. Host of our domestic animals
lag them and melting down the pieces. adoration, on the round that the very 1 -1 western paper eaYa the prettlect will endure suitlee changes from told to
. Prussia, through the energies sa, one ' , attempt to expose etain Linos of wick- 1 girl lit that eountry lives in Peoria. heat rah impunity, I chances
the opeosite 49
great man, enlemed
ag, her posseasio a and cams only insure them a wider cur I --ji, steamer Ituaea hail the boner , ellen attended well very injurious, con
humbled Austria. France was oppressed rency and more raid spread. The fact i
of giving Leith to Cherie-. Dickens. ' Eequence.a. -Wain, even if the beaten of
-It is booed that Leichardt, the long I !i n ie anT,aaitrt) n o o f t io ` e ,,r w i r n i r ia ! n r i e P g e' e lega to n
by her sovereign, her press was in cha 1
11:act:mad= b e 7 , k o ' n ' ly r• Te l :27:to us l n tl e :rire P i t t: I lost Auetralian explorer, is still alivt '
and her people cried out fir bread, and :
Isupply the heat thus lost, or there must
sale, by 'mating a rimmed curt city to I -Dartford has a new NatMnal ecrtm be neci.seanly Ile•li thi the
against' the_ favorite ministero of La!'
King until thew , reieutera were'di, search for the vii none which liontht !Company w illa a camel of $1,00(1,000. emit. of ecanomy le food, to say nothing
1 criticism has triedlts were, so that . its I -II is 2411 that the clothes of A. T. (:fou''sceac'=';.-.1., . will be cheerier to
maimed. Mane Antoinette wan gay and
add steel S . , and irom
thoughtlese, erensyagant and devoted to real nature, when seen, might be bated Stewart, the merchant prince, cost him
and derided. While conceding, the abase allOO n year. . } wet %lather it be from telling rain or
i .
astonLehing fashions; the Doan but es
MOW.
pecially the Princeese de Lanabelle were ' tie editor thinks, bowever, that acme-) -A lare feray eagle was captured last A certme -.mount or Pod is required t
disliked and lampooned, by many this thing ought to be done, to check tile i week white piomenading on the lee near keep sip the temperature of the bodea
Iced an extremely mild weather the alt
wall eeppethd th be the a Wad Win 1 earculeflon id eu much "0 arnnutwa la. j llri 'dal vele, 11l
eratime," but urges elPrlecommensuthle 1 --te ate a number of Mammas have ILe“telte;! much eon e t t r ar , ra f f ,n, t l /14 , 11 ,r th aa ra n i l l
muttering of the wind before the greatsd
point of the storm, white it w as tbe mere
with the magnltuee ot the es al. Ile sealed ;mar Tuskeegee, Aleheme, and used Ira cold weather le not empla d yeel for
Believes the Pulpit and it e religions { gone to renam e,. Laying up fli Sa, but is consumed to ruble
shortly afterwards.
ternado which swept over the' world
Kea", of cone.; simulO 'teat in the -aee,ooo dollars worth off buildings Mat. It a this principle which 11.1.dora a duty to
more Milleult la] more. expeue.se to
• ',. uty to be performed Valise-10e effort Lave been put up in the little to wn •of
History repeats itself I At present we • Vl ' i I fatten animals in winter than in warm
Osage, lowa, in tele' weather.
have the same premonitions of storm
to improve the light literature of the ,
day, of lb., "sensational" order, are -Two men were overwhelmed and There is considerable difference of
and demister, of revolution and change,
done by coneeet of motion, very little ran killed by an avalanche on the St Ber- etEn.Mite.nrlMegi,n,eak,inuent. fa regard areareordatf
which preceeded the great tragic finale
he accomplished by treating this subject I non! reed hist month.
of the last century. The working pee-
rhe old elaa of st that Mock
I . ,an a fragmentary or empirical way. I -A Pennsylvanian has bought for is healthier alien Unwedto mu in the
pie of the world are turbulent and,
Christian relents', easter', of calumet', i ea•/,000 the 1200 ncre fa-in of Rufus pa. }Ord Moat of Ike day. While other ,
some places, 'Saone. The mecum:lice of i
urge tel the test results ere Obtained by
analstmernitendent s of Fehbeell act eels , am, laq , near la mantle,Va.
England cry aloud for reform, and the I
li m oig cows in the Etotae most ot the
mime co operate to Lel!, 1/ n /111 , •1. , this --I'Veheae the difference lactase n
people of Ireland seek liberty.-America lei-- 1 e " during wine r, allowing teem to go
perdition literature. , horse and a barber' One Lana live ma oat each day only for e mar and return
has just emerged from a war which has'
The (inverse (Cetliolu) of Pnadel- I thavlnge, and the othsican. lag them Immediately to the stable.
burst the bonds of more people then
for Tithre is no doubt lea the latter system
t ni , ' -A wine man has Mena a remedy
composed, the whole population of the r ina den ' inne e't in stn tuglang u age , I wine man
- will require leas food then the other, but
Ike practice of Catholic parents I unbappy marriages. It' is to abolish the
continent at the time of the rurst revolt,
ills not yet fully established that such
sending their . children to the Public I institution of marriage entirely. close confinement is prianotive of the
tion. Prussia has once more, under the
Schools. It regards such parents nabs-'-"La Sacra Wangs." is the name of largest dea elopmeni ot health and vigor
leaderehip of a great man, extended her
botuidaries and degraded Atietria, and 114 MOM unnatural than the mother who the great Italian secret league of which vi;v e h r gt at e e tilble i e t, arc
( Int e. c t l n e t a r n , „ ,, , e l•
Fiance is In a mime th e y ntte , o f the expoms her intent on the path of the Mazeini Is supposed to be a member. lost]
enoy lima truth= good
the yard and
If It further soya that Catholics -Twenty-two villa ea In U
eighteenth century over again. Fier wn •1e pper See- Ikw hours from their stalls in the middle
who send their children to Protestant sou, Prussia, bates eutidenlybeeu efilieted 01 the wormer part of the day seents to
press Is shackled; her / sovereign upheld
achoom have, anevatably before them, with the worst type of cattle plague be more in accordance with manic even
merely by favor; her people are fierce
though more lei d nay be requiaed to
eternal companionship with fiends m -On Thureday a sleeping car on the
for fond and woodland Napoieo ea in-
carry tha animal through. Brit in Mornay.
hell. The &niters,' usually writes in a Chicago arid Northwestern Rellroad was weather or ...ben it is extremely cold,
vorite, Baron Hatissrnann, bas been
much bitterer strain than the Catholic i burned. alone of the sleepers were lame doubtless the best place for cattle is en
forced to re/ID:L e ,Eugenie leads the
press generally are accustomed to do In I -The people of Cenral New kook
~.,,,d er r e f l, h , ne ln l e. r t . t enN i o . l i il dt r i4t z d b n e r t i t n e ;
w tha n n
frivolous pleasureeinad fashions of the
treating each questions. The question 1 Lave taken to fox hunting. An exciting
world, and spends the millions of the
ter, aud if a owing is lobe meade both
of educating the children of Catboa t ) I chase was had near Geneseo last week. in Pod and health, all etovnia and end.
nation. Prince Napoleon's position is
unaer tie direct teachings of tee Church -Wild turkeys are very numerous in den cleaners of temperathre must be
not nueimilar to that foraierly stemmed
has been frequently urged by tied Virginia this yeet Mote then two Len- guara!,d spinet as tot' as peemble.
by the Duke of Orleans. Tba dauphin
Church, but It I should, be kept wholly I tired Lave Leen killed near Manassas Is repeated in the Prince Imperial. The
leadlanclironnd 1e..c01.
distinct Mein other queationa. I lunation.
The (comae). of giving ground feed
Duchess 'fle Istoclay and the Princess de
Crowing aatemeliod Be a that A
The /thependent is' certainly gr a y y t . 'l'. Stevien to stocl. depends somewhat on the man.
Metternich are all Otlkranto the people as
a Netting and the uses to which the
more erangelicaL In the last iesue an i would not decline the nomination for
were the Lamballo'and the whole Boar- it n la c als 20 led ere put The digestive
ben Court. a announcement appears that next month I Vi c e Prenbleut with Grant as the leade'r at fLapse bff foes b t
_ pearl. 0 the ea t a
and a department 'ot Sunday School media- I ot the ticket.
et , the ex, the latter being more cape
• Them comparisons areasigrilficant
gsnce will be introduced, and will here. 1 -Jas Gordon Bennett, Jr., OW Lay- mons and digesame more perfect. In
a therumors of riot, die
momentone, an
iteding ground lust wet to the horse it
after appear . In one first issue of each i ing succeeded Den yachted or as •
„a pure
affection and sedition in the old world e
will be asrallowad Po nineties and with
month r e ip f ,t iwe l y. , II wilt be prepared ial.t, lies concluded to run a plantation
have been lead enough to reach the new,
much leas saliva than it suited if the
with a apecial view to chrunichethe most in Seuth Carolina. - food had Leen led ungronnd. A certam
we have heard them; we almost fear we
interesting and iinportant events and in -' -The cholera is still very bad in Ha amount ot sal' a appears to be required
know their import, and we await with
•
cidents an our Sunday Schools. I
v"o' there burin bee "' ee nLth yas is n en t c h c e w s in u' l l o C o h d Is b tti alrl t i l o " u 2 t . bfi d •
bated breath Om coming of the evade
Beeeber'a sittings were rented week 1 three hundred cams a day, and on the
which have east sack portenton shad
magic:aloe the eellyary glands are
before lest ter a sum taint of forty nine 10th !cat there were tlfty-two I not stanulated to secrete their fluid in
fall
The formerrevolution in Europe,
thousand five hundred dollar; about one 1 -Ti ere were eevenly two cleethe an the quantity demanded by nature. la a
'all revolutions in the world, have worked
slant time the horse will show evident
1
dollars more 'bee last year's ' Cintennua het week Twelve of ?hem
hundred • i •
mumeasary and often migbty changes, and
, same of intligerann, acidity of the
i
amount. I were from tylihold fever and tarots e
the coming one, promises results of no i
commie belching of wind, dances and
I
Da Hatfield a Ilethodlet minater to 1 Mom auflammation of the lunge. - inahilif ,toBM 1 lard work.
C use or importance, and nothing , '„..,,,.. , _
L I 3 . 11 •
Ch eagn, is out in the ladepenifent with f - .a .., ,J UZI .Tones Ent Off tht, ate, of .In
]natterf •ed , ing ,e , rorid food to
. horses,
`can stop Its eventual program '
an article condemnirg the Oliera es be I. John l'abinson fa SL Louis recently. , a ,," d e ' ' , hr ., ; , ,„--1,1,,c; g ay ' i ia dr y;
ing an improper. lac M r C onafton , i M r . Jame was not htmgry, bill be (Ma I loi l y t tir e st W raie 1• witii°chl-lonegerAnm.eclti
Four reasons are Frei; which are chill. i augry. There men were coat diggera. ' neeesnitafed In eating and anflielent snas
orated tally. Farm, That by peteema i -The Swedish peasants Lave been ex. lication secured. lloth homes and
swine,
tag the opera they encourage and airport I istuag for 'some time on akar - made of
e wb n e t n ae t ki n i l a g ll food tehaartthil'eAta ,, La d
to
a princelier' that works the moral pain torch hark arid moes-tekes that ere ari co t° .ue to the ' l t mel, instinct ° tea L chig
at most persona who engig - e - la It. Se- 1 hard as rocks and alutheloe indigestible; tbeat that this will neutralize the enemas
con& taarastemth should nisi culvert the -Oar new hthtnerKiii' lite Alaskan ot acid Snapid ashes or salt and clay,
opera for the reason that Its moral tone ; persuesien are leathiPa English; they r o i r i , uld ni c , Owa i s Le
wit
re of the
is objectionable. Third, Tee happen of , call :wear now just as well as tee Le e t
Peeifile 'itnco'r y
c M er n Ptri C lil ln° te reL2
the opera by Christmas is regarded sat of the Anthricane, or e nettle worst either -4 ployed In feeding, tea these are liable to
theencestene and unbecoming by the 1 -Newspapers differ ae to who is the. I produce C•Lebbiy‘• acidity, Which the
areliames world. Fourth, Such 51.1 p. 1 senior F.pisimpal Bishop of the United 1 ! l i . e b b u i t atl i el . . o sal s t. , 1 , 1 1 1 ., reeve to correct
t
part of MC Oparn 2.111M.(1 large numbers healer. 801110 ea 1352110j1 Ma l "muc g l'ound doubt,
inusufeaderi;etre'Mmge
of sincere sad InielligenTehresuana. 'others BiEhop Smith. It Is the hetet 1 grain, las a genernl thing, for domestic
The queallon of inaugurating A aye- i -John W. Ayres !named his fourth I animal{; bat to awn the best results
ICIn of pastoral aid societiese composed 1 wife in Delman, 111., last week,"ana it I ell e l r l l 'l'l 'l are
net to be treated alike,
of lather, Was before the Thilatlelphia 1 Las just beeu "discoiereel that they are I z ep i t
in eti „ exet deemed aunt be closely
Preachers' ataeuecor the jw. B, Church. 1 all eine and an well as could be expected 1 t P'-
--o--
The work suggested 1.1 that of eub .1'6 ; 1 -lire. J. G. Bennett wore $lOO,OOO f ' hai ` b `”" " Yde " .
The amount of out of door wink will
raving the terntery embraced in their , worth of diamonds at the opening et
- ' b e governed by th e etatOd and the ducat.
retigregetieria, in order to vlsit the sick l'ike's Oaera Ilouee. Is Grange NM It y: w 1... rcsr ' anylblng Can he d one to
fed needy, ! pon c e th e caddies tato the i her sea runt too,ooo better the fralTle i faeilitale next spring's Operatioas it
Sander School', encourage attendance '! night. - i I ehould be untested to %tele work Is not
upon religious eervices, and glee rell.l -Somebody has decided that by t c I ., a i r t e , es j i.7 i, At li tat the one important
glees counsel wherever ucedech The i she plot rules of the first step In Ana ' Dia L n ' ere-the Ley '0 Euceesa- be
question was brought before that body 1 rnetic-audition-loin Rogers had te 1 that wilt TIICTC , ore but few crops
nt the instance of Biehop brapeon, by i children, for 9 and 1. make ten ever that will not pay for liberal rnanurnig i
Mrs. Wtteemore, an intelligent and 1 place 1 and where early hotbeds are hike start
' led the manure may be placed where it
pious lady from the. West. ; -In New Orleans there are mor '
' be neced.
will a
should be
Tee trial el the younger Tenet. corn" ' Meths int churches than any other kin o i lme thec they will not Leanne dull.
menced in blew York, on Friday, the thee! come Roman Catholic, Eplecap e ed thraugh, end if fermentation roes on
101 k inst. After the court was organa I lian,Lßaptist Preebyt r
, e tau, Lutheran
• 1 t too eats ely Cary must be turned over,
lint-bed ' 1 and F '
i _ b.4.!7 MS all Frames Are 10 Le
zed the charges and specifications were ned namian
, in reedineaa. a The usl of eagles
read, namely, that he had officiated . In I -banada papers are impertinent . One is . Uaa feel In small operations aframe
the bounds of the , pastoral care of of them recently, do noticing the fact lof cenvemeai. lice, is placed on a thick
led in fora crating manure, bat /11l quilt
Messrs. &nabs aral Bugg!, without their that a week of prayer had commenced I
I I i eicavete 2 feet deep, tied
remission or the permaeion of the In the Celled Steles, stated that a year 1 ger w d 'l lt up watt rough boards and place
Clutch anthentme. it the request of 1 would be better. i the lammg material in this,,
the accused the court ' dm-Med that the , -The widow and niece of the Illus. I Straw Mats will be needed, aal a
i Straw,
bock of them ma be made in a
tried should be open to the public. The I triune Faraday have received a penmen
i short time
President asked' the tweeted what has lof one hundred and fifty pounds frorta'ar Cohl Frames generally need more at
plea was. Mr. Tye: stated that he was the Trustees of the literary fund of the I aention to keep them colt! than to pre
astrneted by Lie weasel. Judge Fullee• Meath Goyermnent. I. vent rinury from fret xing. Cabbages,,
ton, Mr. Parke{ and Rev. Dr. Tyng, The negroes of St. Landry,law. al
1,4,, _ I tape - madly, should e air, except id•
that no plea was neemeary. The Presa frightening the whites so much by their I th e amb ee may arc ' very eevere ISI ether acid in mad time
en'tirely be a
removed
dent urged Mr. Tyag to make Rome plea, forwardness that. the latter hare asked daring the day.
but without effect lie then• said Le for a return of the United States troops Taal, are to be oyerh anted a rid repaired,
and tao-a needed mule or numb seed A
isapreasateat would be enflieient to ander to Ofeleuese
t it
eagle I.lllalC roiier, tParLer, reel for a
stand that the respondent denied the -The Dablin Exhibition clan is ein hue and th . e like, are great helps,
cluargea. Mr. Parker rephed-not alto- (0 be bought by Hargovernment, and all- eve
n t eve in a muellgarden.
gether. Ile clerk inquired if he Mould of the public galleries and collections of At the South, Lot belle maybe Maned,
miter en the minutes that the accused is the a and lettuce., radishes and cabbages sown Irish capital are to be united in tu fu them, aud the heir Lardy vegetables,
understood as denying thecharee. Judge one grand Haab Muse um .such us b etE, ',emote, turnips, ere,
Fallenon replied -not 'at all; no denial -A New England mechanic leas been eown In the ap n ground, and the early
has been made. - fie reljearament rep •ycsrs at worn getting up a cotubina- carte of potatoes planted.
Dr. Howland urged tbelacetaed to admit Lien organ amt piano, which 171 to bo e tower sisetteui - nrid Lawo.
the feat, so as to make the trial brief operated by one eet of keye. It wall laterereene are nave appreumed, and
and prevent bitter feeling. Court ad- conslet of nearly ten thousand portione. the present Is the meson to
,Ilse
pureed until the 10th of Februery. -A veterinary surgeon in London haa ,
. where they way per introduced into the
hroi lade to tho test aevarange.
I The Pittsburga Ohaiseen eidemate thveated e new temedy for the tealue Itheeedentirone Malic nett other of
I has received over thirly-itle hundred race; icons who have learned to pro. the broad-leaved evergreens, may be
new subserthera for 1,40 e, waking the flounce glibly the name of the natton of made to cow riliute largely to the cheer.
circulation In the neighborhood of lour- hence in Swift's novel will end it easy lab v", latee n !aspect
nest at
the b grounds,. „, and
teen thousand, being the largest emeula- to remember. It Is called. Neurasehe- n L a ' 11.1 t n -m on ' : u ;erv% t th e e E do l u ll b i l li e7t t i l r d
don, we believe,'of any range:al/weekly eippeneeeleeteelea, , pose of •
mu thing them gay w ith theu
in this part of the country. For years -A member of - th w e Leavers in spring and aanmer.
e .new apuaese ,
I
earub , e and Trees of all kinds must
the paper has been steadily lacreaslng in troupe can ha cools twice a week. Ile
circulation, azd it is believed ere long belon gs to a n e t 0 1 &make, and
tn , s ii i i i,, t , bst .
1 17:i l e a : II 7 .
o b . ent a eut of ahape by
full twenty thousand subscubern will be ordeal is ouc of their rites. We areper-. I 2. --a e
RSV. T. M. Wlieon haa Just been la- I -,to
-
on Ito hooka mateycUywitting oureetree to leave all 2AI
rites to the women If they want then .
&tithed pastor of the Old School I"reeby- • -A We s t ern eeeeeeee, in desenblne '
knee church at Shareburg, ono of- oar a ball, says'Lhst the most elegant dies.
suburban townie Rev. James Allison,'was composeel of red silk elaberat' 13
of the ' Presbyterian.Banner, preached trimmed with white braid anti long g li
the sermon, and Rev. Messrs. Potter and fringe, with u blue end yellow silk o er
Swill took part In the exercises. deceit. It attracted universal attention
It Is known to many of our realms whi c h we can hardly wonder at
that E.D.Jones,Elq.,forinerlyeashier of
the 'Thu Memphis Peat Faye that them
Wiens' Bunk of !hie ea, and now
c a of the Commercial Bank of the
occupying the name position in a Na
city created coneiderable excitement
thane! Bulk at St. Louie, Is on ladefati-
which wen only par , I ally alloyed by th
gable Sunday- School worker. While publicauon ot a card by the Preaden
attending k Sunday School Convention swine that the *wets of rho
store even
et Palmyra; 31"eeeel ' he gave great of. 111111Crina to pay all of the creditors.
fence to some of Um "whitewashed;' re•
constructed'of that place, in this wise : -An exchange announces that "Mln
neapolls butchers caw their meat.” W
Daring the course or a spook ,upeta the
beget' to pity the butchers of other pin
necessity ot tenderness, on the part of
the Sunday School Tee era who coahlint sea theft's, i when Teacher In leading w.
read further "becanee la Dozen to•
the children to Christ, he commenced to
hard to chop," then we topped pieyini
nerrele an incident •reepecting the late
butchers and turned ur tboeghts In
President Lincoln, and had just began a the
sentence with the word "Mr. Lincoln," ward. •
when twenty
-else, eta wean, to hear a -Some medical students, In Galles
word more, started for the doer, making ton, amused themseivep by throwin
pieces of some piddles they were dissect
a terrible clatter. There was no attempt
lag, at pereoria in the street below; on
by Mr. Tones at drawing, a parrallel
men objected to being bit by a piece of
between Lincoln and Christ. A paper
rectelly deceased friend, and the poo
In Bt. .Loule, hes had it greata deal
to ray about are
it a gtee with°, politics students were obliged to atop their lace
cent little pleasure.
Once of those honorable and high
ioned exhibitions of mqval depravity and
mortal endurance, ycleptTrize Fighting,
rook place on Sunday in Bt. Louis. On'e
gthe contestants was left deada the
S 04. We would urge as a pens ty on
miniver that he be pumme ed to
I n
he
t?lßath by one of the fraternity, an it
would prove no serious loss to the co, mu ;
nity were all' theee gentleman of the ring
swept - off life's`stage by each others'
Sands. The mania for prize lighting
MO been suddenly revived in this coun
try Jest at the time that good cilia's')
*ere nattering themselves into the belief
thatil was rapidly passing away with
other relics of barbarism. The prese, in
giving prominence sail , attaching a large)
degree Of importance to the disghsting
aildhitions of brutal force and training,
ii responalble for the Increase of loch '
affairs. The authorities too aid i i mimeo
sihle. There are stringent law enough
to prevent collisions of the character,
and as the arrangementa are never secret
ly' made, the exercise of proper dili
gence might prove beneficial to public
merabi.' '
A - . LEADING Democratic paper has
taken to conundrumislng politics. Its
latest effusion is: "In what respect is the
Rep' üblica4artyr etmUar to an iceberg?" .
The answer we give entire: "We are
preparing for the great
,contest of 1868,
and we shall win! We must win!
will win! If not • by ballots then - by
bided! The iceberg tioafr out from the
poikr sea; It sinks not at once, bat wears
away by warmth and abrasion till at last
it mingles with the waves and is washed
to oblivion. So with Republicanism.
It is wearing, away." The poor old
Democratic party has tried tinit "blood"
dodge once, and must once too often. If
the thing were attempted again the war
would not bear long as the late one, but
them would be a good deal more Cop. ,
pethead blood let out, and the axe and ,
the rope would make shorter work than ,
thO Isabre and eolumbiad. One little
word, It l the name of one of Longfel
low'a poems, Is all the' advice necessary
to these "blood" howlers, it is "De.
ware.—
True Revenue Laws are about to be
carefitily revised by the Congressional
ComMittee of`Ways and Means. This
L a fiery Important task, and one In
which unusual knowledge, judgment
and tact must be exercised by the gen
tlemen composing the_ Committee. An
othnt will be made to .strike out . the
spode' tax of tiro per cent, on maunder, ,
tures, 'and likewise the income tax.
—A itreaciful crime has Just been com
mitted. et Ghent, 'Belgium. An inhabi
tant of that place, named Van Ityasel
berzhe, well known aa a violent man,
lost his mother a abort time ago, and not
finding any tummy after her death, mhe
ban expected, believed that some reln
tivm, whp bed attended her in her teat
Illness,! had taken the property and
robbed him. Full of this conviction, he
armed himself with three pistola and an
enormous hatchet, and went to the bons°
of one Of them and demanded his share
of the inheritance. , liyon being anaured
that there was nons,he tired at the hus
band, mortally 7voundiug him, in Abe
ebeet; ho then discharged another pistol
MALI) wife, wounding her in the heed;
anclatteiward failing on her with the
axe left her bathed In blood. Then, cov
ered with blood,' he went to the house of
another religion and xectimmenotid bin
butchery on title man and Ms wife also.
The neighbors, alarmed by, their cries,
collected and seized 012 themurcirer, and
but for the_ Intervention of the police,
would have killed him: Tho,lburth vic
tim is expected to recover.
—At Bristol, England, a Idled man
named Elites elide, aged tifty-three, who
had been separatrd for wino limo from
his wife, had himself guided to a beer.
bouseovlimeithe lodged in the top story
of the house. Ile made hid Tray up to
the room; where he found .her and her
nephew, a young, man named Farrant.
Immediately screams were heard, and
on pennons going Up entire, Clans was
found beating his wife with the legof a
bedstead, and tho furniture all smaShod.
- Ferrara, although a strong and athletic
man, had been forced through a window
only two feat Name, and thrown Into
the street. I railing upon his bend, the
vertebra; of tlio neck wore disloelattsl,
and the unfortunate man tiled al mmt In
etantly. The blind man Is In custody on
the charge of murder. .
young women to Kentnekv 101 l
Into .a trance , Induced bye religious ex
citement, In November last, and, on TIN.
covering, told etrange stories about
heaven and the other plane, beside* pun_
dieting the death of three young men of
her tunnalntanno before the year was onL
The Instmte died New Yemen day. An
unpleasant female, that.
—Hod: W. T. Ilatolltou tram yesterday
chosen UnMIW Simes Senator from Mary
land far stx years, to emceed Maverdy
Johnaon. Thu auto an Um last ballot
stood: It. Alton Ilfty-sfx; Swann. for
ty-alx• Merrick Lire; Pratt. one.l
zrdy Johnson reeds oil no votes. Mr.
Hamilton 'start formerly a member of
congreen (ruin 314:y/and.
St. Androwa, Canada, at midnight
o t i the .itic Y sovoro shock of an north
quake was felt: . A slight 'bock, imeom
panted by loud nolitt, was also experien
ced at-Montteal.
W
DNESDA Y. JANUARY 22, 18tiS.
RELy9lii E
Daring the "Week of . Prayer" in
Cincinnati, a twelve-hour union prayer
roeettaelWßll held at the Second Presby
terian church, at which, wo believe, the
Eratoheal denominations united.
During the progress of the exercises in
the ortaingthe great church wu pack
ell Fifteen at that" Vale *knitted their
desire for salvation. The meeting ap
pealed to move the whole city, and no
wonder, aithc people waited upon God
thrills blueing from 01. IL till nearly .
Judge Irwin, of Georgia, JAM* charge
to tee. Grand Juries„ recommended the
oPPomimein of • Sonday School, Board
composed of leading citizens wild shall
establish • Gondar &hoot, il l o var y
neighborhood.
EPLIEDIERLS
--Stern the let. of. January, 186 t .
. _
1,745,846 gallons of petroleum have bee . . . ..
exported from New York, and 785,11 t
gallons from other American ports, mel
log a total export of 2,551,961 gallon _ , ;
which is nearly a million gallon!! mor :
than woe exported during tiro came ilm ' 1
lest year, and nearly half a million mor . •
than hoe beeit exported during the sem •
,
....
time any year mom petroleum bream ' • . . .
an article ol export: Fifteen veimelic - i.,-. nn . • ' •
with a capacity , for carrying 41,000 her. I I . o
1 aga i n st .r0r.... ~,,,r-`,,,,..n...,z.,.!7,„ i
' rels; arc ROW loadiug..witli this product i defence against hard freezing. Never
at hew York, and 6fleen vessels with a delay failli . making after the anon, to fair.
ely.ruier,;...ilii cstiTtof.alryc.facilkitsrwn.
capacity for 49,00 barrels are leading at
eilladellthla. nee° 'cumin ore bouud itnivictilatell, kt, rain f l ailing, the
for nearly every . Port in Zunore, but weight be greatlytnereased, and serious
mostly for Antwerp. . . damage occur. . '
.. ,
6.IiIDEN :INn IiOnEHOLD
--A barn belonging to Philip Taman.
near Auburn Four turners, was de
-strayed by tire on Tuesday morning,
January 7th, with itscontents, about
sixteen tons, of Imr, oats, harness, -,wag
on, dm. When -Mi. Tinnau got up in
'the morning, about flvo o'clock, he dia.
covered thOtlre, end the roof was then
just ready to fail In. One of his horses,
tout was tied in the stable at night, was
now fund running loose in the road:
having either slipped his halter or , been
let out. The building and its contents
woes insured—perhaps enengli to; cover ,
the loon.—Mostr,st. Republiecrn.
—On Friday alternohpt arasnecd
.
dent cs,curred in the ale quarry ot o ili.
Isaac Parker, on Slate I It:Iv, this Vellui-
I 3 , about three Mlles. f m Pe.sch Bet
tom, which resulted .1 t the Moan of
Henry Williams, a 'Wel Luton employ
ed In toe quarry, 'Nfr, Wallace, was
ene,Aged working in this bottom of the.
pit, winch is uveruou hundred net deep,
When a pu non of thodebris collect.'
around the top of the gnarl": WV, loos
ened by rho recent thaw and feil into the
pit, striking .Mr. Williams on the head,.
ihj tiring him to such an extent that Ito
died the following Saturday night. Ile
Was an unmarried matt , -Wriyhtirvil!c
York anialy ASTeir. •
AULIIi'ULTURAL SUCiCTS.—Parsnant
to notice the Pennsylvatila State Agri
cultural Society met at their" attire in
this place, yestonlay morapg. Owing
to the non-vennPleth.n of the 'Wildness of
the Society, referred to the ISitufille
etn uinittee of last year, it tiled
inexpedient to proceed to at; election for
officors, and the election woo thereupon'
ne , tponed until Wednesday next, the
of January, between too hours of
ono and three cc clock, when it will take'
place. Messrs. Ellis, of Lycoming. and
Gilbert.' of linupliin, were appointed ii
eniumittoe to audit the accounts of the
Treasurer and report to the adjourned
_meeting, and the Society 'adjourned.—
/lam:bury AYlnte Jutu*6ll,
- • —On Friday-art, the daughter of Joint
Hendricks, residing with a Mr. Gaul, a
tailor, in Upper HanoVer towns h ip, this
ouunty, Was•buined to death. The fol
lowing aro the particulars. Ilr. Gael
Ind in his employ two girls, and en the
night of the necident, the family. had 're
tired to bed rho (We girls 'w4ifina to stay
up to finish sonic work (bey were at.
'fib,. younger. • Eltiabetli • Hendricks
trots tired and laid down In front of Mai
stove to sleep, in course of limo tim:her
got up to put sernd coal upon the' fire,
and as she did so, it is supposed the
water In the cool caused. the mui and
fintne.4 to must ,tit and ignite the clothes
of Miss Hendricks, .which. resulted'
burning 41..00 severely,) that she cut
en the Satunlay morning ,following, TI
deceased win. "
Leger
•
—A dreadful accident • occurred in the
nines - tone nouray Of Mt. Darnel Leber,
situate In Lower Winder township, about
five utileS below this place, along. the
lino of the Susquehanna and Titio..Ca-
I nolo.. The uitarry is now leked and
workNl by Mr. John . Detwiler, and 'en.
Monday last, Just before noon, twit or
Mr. Detwiler's outplays., nano,' 'iVot.
Stu:Amer and Joheph Wider, were stand
ing gat a kAge or roc/. abOut fifteen
feel trout the bottom lit the quarry, en
gaged in eleariuk it oil', when from some
cause, it large rock above them, weigh
ing frotn two to four' inns, became de-
Welted, and in Its descent caught Mr.
Snieltrer between the falling reek and
„ I ledge on whirl, he wan standing, crush. .
7, Inn his breast and killing him almost in
. :tinnily. Mr. S. saw the rock corning
- • and gave the alarm in titan to save the
. ' lire or Mr: Iteider, bet was !Annuli' una
ble to get out of danger. •Nfr. S. was an'
industrious titan about thirty-five years
of ago leaves in Wire and live or six
ebildien who 'were dependent on him for
. support.— Wrigh tardle (Yolk Co.) War..
1
Igcsi Virginia News.
WE learn that.the Baltimore rind Ohio
Railroad l'onnutny hove issued orders
for the Intildiu,;•ol ft boat in our city.
The bills for tho huoher it' in said were
iniule ontou the ISth Intl;
Could this mit lead some of our enter
prising mon into the notin o giinv
motile of their serious thon o l;Lts f
to v the
Importance ' of it- dock-yard, where
we
could have outployed constanfly shout
tiny laborers! 'What an amount of lumi
nma ntieh 'an establishment would se4
cute! ' Thing of, it gentlemen. and try to
Net tin: kat hi oll ion. It eau he acorn
pththed, and thig o'lll2o attftined, II blurille
reiltray will follow as 11- natural C0L1131.1-
quenee.—lierkeraburg Z:utes.
. ••
.
ASUrib ythimmmeofUnston.aresi.
t
dent of Grafton ividte in st.steof intoxi
cation, was ho4nity ki led near 'l'exa4,
on tho .I.laltitooke and Ohio Railroad;
lant Tu esd ay OVOIIiW y fidftlig ( root
the Iminper of a fight ear . whiit te
traits 505. ill !Mg 'OILre .lilltitoll Lad l
galah.
ed by his •fantssue toe, quite a reputa
him among his fellows as a t'Jig Pouter, '
.'
and waxen route at thotitito of his sud
den L and awful death, for Fairmont., to
coutest the floor with another expert of
the Same profesdon that evening. Ile
had seeretly got aboard , of the UMW at
Grafton, mid his presenee was not known
to the entidoutor mall a few moments
before the ocenrreure of the accident*
Whetting had lgcnrer. ' ,,-
—An attempt at murder was made re.
eently at it. Melee-tin-huts (Franee.
A. workman timed Venloya, a nett
montcse, called, on a widow - named Gue
rin, and after a row minutes' -conventa
, lion, rushed on her and Inflicted several
wounds with a polguent;then, thinking
her dead,'he cenunettred. senrettiag the
house for money. Several (knee he re-
turned to the woman; slut Intwover,held
her breath and allowed heraelf to be
turned over awl!' she were dead. Yer-
Anytt, before, leaving,. dragged her, to a
well about ten feet deep, and threW her
deem; abe, however, succeeded Ink-eels.
jug henrelf on the snrfned of the water, f
cud whenshe Shought ho was ; got, to a t,
dlntance, ebunbered to - the top IT the w
elude, andnearly el a 'nulghbank newt.
house who alio fall:kb:W. liergroanawere ship"
h e"Ver• Laud , and anatatance arrlved: cadent
The Inan was afterward eirested bin 1 0 1 .t.°
0111 C hOtt-Ok • .?
STATE NEWS
—The ,tore ~; John Wit rime...,
t o oo,t, oa, horsed on Sunday. nigh.
,niposed to have 1,, rot - a, ! an.l the
...et on the. Mi. !hone, inNtrit
3,„„,52,0iy nn lii. property, In' h . ,
gl eater thin tii:.t rat
cover.
—We were ;mine.' to learn .that on.
morning I,t wept:, Critehflgti'a nit wit
and woollen Factory flout nvn mll
south of tni4 rwrougn sere totally rntl
Nlll , lOl bv 'rho lire i,
ori , zinal,l front the oil-mil. Is bleb ha
nut been going
cat:, Cr it iv not known.—S , nter.q ,
Whig. • ,
—A few nights since some dogs get
among the hock of sheep belonging to
Nelson Ely, of East Finley township,
Wii'dneeMii vomits.; and thirty",
two of 'thorn. On tho same" night thp
Hoek of Joshua (lethal, its the came
neighborhood, was visited by anethq
i.et of canines, and twenfr-nine Were
kilted. The dogs that attacked Mr. Ely'S
,were e.itiglit and eXioritillialeel.
Aland six weeks a g o, an :seconnt we;
published of fl mrehildren of Ellay and \tars .
Fraker. redil ing near Burnt.
ins, having died of Ilea terrible diStals ,
diptheria within aperiodot t hirty.so or
days—botween the 2ittls of September
and the lst of Nnyomber. We bave.flow
another tsar, in the mato hiality, stilt
, more terrible in. its finality,' sweeping
nasty five rhildren, in One faintly withlw
six ilaysl—JamotilL&atiert.
—On Friday evening of week before 1..4 •
the store orlineston rrelt e ar die tins ,
innati Ctial }Yorke, near Coal Bluffs;
Union township, this cosilley, was tat ,
gaiter with the entire :lock. org•vels, stet;,•
strayed by fire. The building, iv sup.:
hoard to have. caught, from a horning.
shirk pile in die iniciledkile
We knee, nor learned thonnunlid of 10;s: •
Then) was an insentece in - the Nortlk
American, of Philadelphia.— Washiogloo,
Ilaminr~. -
-We have been informed by n retie- ,
blo source, that an oxtem•ive '
lion exists in 'Mason euilury of what Was' - t
known before and daring, the war lr
"Knights of the Golden Circle," and_
which !noels regularly eve-y week' in a. 3.
certain part of the roomy. IA prdirni
pent Democrat in the otter end of the' r
county Is Use "dig Chief:" and "talks; s
Di itch—talks big" . to thefaittirral4 At each,
meeting plenty or whiskey is Said to tax' k
Weekly Register,
—The depression in the Mimic ell ro.
Ihrfly R
ion is distressing. The l'itholo
,
Ilocora earn thatat no time its the past s
t i
tiktory of Ile. oil re o •ions- hare the bard
tunes been felt • ranee than at present,
Tne.elfeet can be seen and felt du ail' 1,
branches of trade, not being contined to
the oil biedness alone. • Tied much will be the Cite for several' months - to come. ~"1
probably owing tithe present depressed
and uncertain condition of the suunpy .
market there is little doubt. • . •
—Alas, seventy persons will be ridded
to the membership of the English Bap
tist Church as a port or Mitt result of the
revival meetings just closed. All .of
these, with the exception of three or four
wtin were from towels e to fourteen Years
or age, were adult • peronna, inchisllng
several husbands and wises, who went an
into the baptismal • Witten., together.
A bont ono hundred poisons - in all want- t tar
o
pealeda special relfelons interest in them-,
seisms during the sueetttiga—Ptittateo ii
it,
quzette. ' •
—On Saturday last, says a correspond
ent writing from .Tacksonyille, the-barn
of Mr. Samuel C. Donebey, of Young
township, was totally consumed by fire.
Two hundred laudiels .of wheat, lied
hundred bushels of gala and a quantity
of liar, in the barn at the time-WAS de.
strayed. The tiro was caused by the
t riction of the apron of a threshing ma
mane, then in operation, and was so
sudden that the men engaged - id opera
ting the machine lad scarcely. time to
escape. The machine wee destroyed:
Leas about S2,IXSI.—/iutitstm Democrat. •
—We hove Senile particulars ef an oat.
rank In Ward township, about len days
ago, involving the beatiri o t• of a woman
by her brother. Miss ltOwents ,Rice
married 51. r. Isaacs (loude' about Christ ,
mas time, much against the *lll of hes'
brother (Merge. A fair 'days after, Mrs.
Comfort went • home for her clothes,
which her brother refused to
.give up.
She attempted to take them, when lie
knocked herslown, and heat tier so liad
lv that she still ressminsia a critical con •
-
dition. Such am. the Bats as vouched
tar by 'go-;d authority.-7Mga thanty
Agitator.
FA TV.t:r JAI:At:SCHEE is Mho in Cleve.
land - I i
, ,
Pain". YOIIMA!INs is to lecture shortly
in Zapee ille.. • . •
./V TWELVE year old' child nameda Ella
Soulels Mvellogand lecturingonTern
peninee n Ohio. She asserts with much
gravity t tat she has been totally abate.
miens al her life. She was in Salem on
ho .
A. AN , EOM, front Lief= to the Tuxes.'
rawmt vasy which twill moaned Medi
,
na Mid 1 ea der with Cleniland, is pm
posed,: a d is in a falr way of going ,
thetul: fit should be completed It
woold li lof immense advantage - to'hi
tartar oll'o.
Tan :Ravenna Democta 4 lmS , , that a •
men named Pod Myers, a not e d horse
,
thief, whiff was sentenced bv Judge Tut
tle, at thsiate term of the \Venal,- court,
to nine years in the Penitentiary. for .
home :stalling, is also under indictment -
in that Minty fur the
same crime, and
remarks !pat .. ag Myers has now spent
wime gist - years ln crime, and about
twenty, in priliou ' he will hardly be able
to resume Ids prorestlen with Much vigor
at the ea - Oration of his term of sereke t:
for the State." • ~, i
Tnraii Was a :nitwit/ up on the Nei I
,Lishon:Railroad last week, roller/log(1i „
faahiou tithe day. As it , is not a big
railroad It 'mild not have a big awash
np, colt lied a little one. Tholtuckey3
Viatc-says ;it occurred at Li... Mottle and
prevented rke train from coming down
foe a day or nee. In switching, prsome
means the loctonotive and a paasengei
-car "came sgether" with such - force as
1.0 thus 11%1 the latter anti' Jaime -the
former to aortae extent. .Evervthingli:
right now,' and the train IS mining ,
TUE Botaware Herald sari: 3fr,,8. C.
Waiets,l.-Zlfitil Agent on the C. V. &C.
Railroad; Ni'ito was seriously liiitilati lasi
sprilig try b3ing - tleacrri from the car while
in the actlV taking a mail bagfrom a
crane at a a anon near McMinn!, - while
the train -wits passing at, the visual speed,
sued Um: cob:many for datuagtv,tbasing•
his Malta upon the facts, as alleged, that
the "crane ,des in the - reverse positron
1
front what. t should have been,whieh . •
outsell the Meat., and that an employee
Of the rod, who had charge of the Ma-
Men, ginne d the bag upon the crane and
was nape Me . for thee recent* We
iL
i.....,... t matt* has beertnampro
mitted—Mr: R aters withdrawing hie
suit and the inpany paying him e 1,500.
Inn •No k. Advocate .3sysi„ East
t t
week Brl, 1 . 11. 11. Oatley, of Gratiot, •
_
was btough - before 'Sneire • Grasser, of
thin cit), on charge of having -attempt
ed' to r t rocur cm abortion pe the person
of Martha Ellen. Beeson, daughterof Mr.
'rotary - Bees n, a farmer of llopewell
tow.nslllp, :Me young woman was pm- ' . 6 4
alined ns n'svitnets In the cue, and Is said *,•-• 'I
(. - .I
to Lace testiti with little indications of
shame. She ppcared to beabouttvienty. t ,
two' years , o Inge, and tbat eke became, •
pregnant hy ne Townsend CochreiVion
the tat day.* July. bet, and that the at
tempt to. p ore an abortion was made
On the gib' v of October, in thawood a .
io the neigh wheal where aheraildes.
On the ti -,
iho Dc.
or 6500.
—An
romp In
_amoral ex
perinim -eo or. saving Are
st ass.oly In the preaoneo
of thou , apecMtma, at Holyhead,
in {Pal „ AI Mr. Rees, who ,Lea a
patented ..ayattn, went through !ham
evolution& '1 tho litst; he threw blip.
self on the vial rand was buoyed up by
a very ahnplo tdrstlgltt dna.% and, amid',
-teas plaudlta,ksaddled. himself atom; at 1
rutoar three miles 'an hour. -Thi n •Id "
in oplm , on of eznerlenned •
m, kat of ilumensoserrleo in ease of
'sk i its roadeed whouever Ilfet to •
ltiaklag
• r 7
n Original Ponta by Ills
• I.lalleik.
s I,I3I.2RMLL!TO C.ONXICTICrt.
Mme.'s buttock to my del...liven:man.
tale.
.as (La dim ltlnsb aY aurciet grow pale in
the ske;
fti tens-O.IE. earn iha music that leapt from
the fountain, •
eind the mono o f the Wco.la2o thosteenner
wlmPs sigh.
or .0030 t. the gray mitt of the twilight
wastirallag,
-I.al the tints Of the landsc,Fe had thclixi
in blue,
lira my pale IM 00311 mariner tbo seeenta
Of
It bale the Mud muses of my chililhoOd
hl-mock not that lr4 g, for irtY heart tnts
I . .l.; r t e r '7 l:o ' nf of happiness, sparkling an - tk
atilt with u mOt4ortt.
I • tlnthritclap,
YS cheek was etlll oL with a fund...ice-1-E
Like lr.tant's !Pet .Sleep on the lap of He
Mother.
Were the Asia of ray childhood—those
liaya aro no morel
.Itud toy s rrew's clsepterob 1 had streigled
tina to tllTtinit r ulls %ltdcry- when Ita Prat
.aleep Ives o'cr.
I,ears have gouo by t nri . l
remembrance now
or oi the meKeelcam, the
ji
[Jnute or that bear,
•C still in hls eayeltehut the wanderer
1 1:laTI111m
, :tag° he left. an , llte green
1•11,12:1 tOlTler•
..1 0 1o t ,n1115 . 0near . her wildOst
rtnd points to a Itit , 4o" day, distant and
hen the finger of annset, Its eglantine
worrint.„
h 11 t - i,thten the hem° of hlocWhlLoal
tot hla.
P1an...17W .16,,,,nzineloi• Eibruary..
NOTES ON SCIENCE.
Er.}:rnieLft - .I.r•F A rAcpus:
A now apparatus has been brought out
id Ptris by M. NI: Alvermlint- for do
:n mstrating the fact that electricity will -
not pass thro u gh a perfect viteuunt. Tito',
lola, .I , ,lliCit tier,' fir-the experiment ,
eramnins two platinfini wires, the free.
stkla of which aro separated by the space
r'ifulsolit ono-eighth of nu inch. A nearly
tolsaltitti viemitut is -first created by
ems of it memorial mienumhe Inn-
Ante; then, niter /lair MI holler action, .
drn tube is Mated to dull redness,. and
.11r exhauoting'process continued until a
n
rot is reached whoa, In' spite of the
:light distance between the plutiva points,
14 electric spereceases to pass; This
.speriment. which Is Ilan enntirmatlfin
'rpm ofisarvation first made by Gaston,
1
se la in au important manner err the
ill hoingim of the Aurorn Dmealls, prow
ii: that electrical lrigiArly eAll only take
pl. a Within the Inuits of our aims
it re, and conversely ,% dart the nines
li,, re, although In an extremely lamb
tit state, extends tone immense bight: S
l'itt , ,SE : OF DEATH FROI SNAKE SITE.
Profmer Jtalford orAlelbourne LIM , .
• t,' • - ' b •
AlAll ity, m vest igatang t Is subject, hound
1 bul blood of the victim In nil rasesdark,
l t,
;vet' • fluid, without any tendency to •
:a 'elation on expoanre, and contain- .
MI a large number 01 foreign cells, .
Itch under the microscope. were seen
lilntaln nuclei. He- concluded that
n the person is bitten, molecules of
. 1
vi tg germinal matter" are thrown Orr::
rh
rig
speedily grow Juin cells duil =l
ip).- with astonishing; rapidity.. This
oilen. Increase takes 'Waco at the ox
en e of the oxygen etbserbed blood at
licti reap ration; hence: the gradual do;
cret6a and ultimate extinction of com
bine ion and
andeltetuical change In' the
hod . , followed by coldness, drowsiness,
face odhility, slow breathing, nnd finally .
deniro
1: Pfessor Raiford claims to no
tice
' i ntrong comparison between the ef- g
feet. resulting front . snake bites and
t , hol •ra, and Considers the above expla
t
nail u a probable clue to the study of.
sytp tie disease..
! _ CARISOLATE OF lODINE, '
Th external ll4e of lodine and itS prep
iirqns, remedies whose theratspetic
Mil • ey in eort.tin Ones cannot be ques
tioned, has hitherto been exceedingly.
litnited,' indeed, almost abandoned, on
temoont of its leaving main marks on
tits linen and on theskin.. Avery-simple
mac s' of Fettigv.t rid 'of this drawback
hhvately been discoymed by Dr. Percy
Dote Mt, which will ho welcomed by all
the thedical profession.,. The remedy
consi4s in adding :tithe' iodine solution •
u..fe drop, of phonic or•carbolic acid.
iiieet of this addition is n g. only to
cruder the solution perfectly colorless.
thkt it nosy Le employed with impu
nity, put the. compound .is rendered in
trinsrly, a more efficacious agent than
iodin alone. In sore throat, absee..as In
the ear, freparaDon Is said to be
a •;or'erkign remedy, causing all local
sorisitfilny to disappear, and curing the
path et dutch sooner than ei th er of the
a l , t 4 were employed aepa . rately.
. rozsmsons CARA%
•
.
The sale . or manufacture In M unich:
I or. the much. admired crystal lized or
"Mother pearl" visiting cards has PPM
forbidden by 'low.' For , a _short .limo
si
sub. 'nerd to their introduction into
theft. ty,thesse cards had great popular-
Be, th I demand far exceedusgthe supply,.
hilt fal M
lug under the notice of the fed-•
Mat Ilrector of the Sanitary. Department
of Mu lich he caused au In v estigation to
be sna e concerning the composition of
thecr2htnlllzed surface, and consequent
nisei,t, le report of Prolbsysir Wit totem,
to who 1 ilso examination mos . corntittt-.
lest, th tabooing order was AiSl3Oll. The
crystallizing material, the - Profetisor
found k,n applying the necessary testi, is
a wsluabio salt of lead, a poison the most
slatigerims especially to children,
.from -
itspleasatit 'qweet taste. - ,'.
: • • .. .
-, 11 A NEW IMAGE:Ir.
:A: lw 'and higbly sensitive test 'for.
chive d alkalies has heed : prepared by
Proiliir Bottger from the leaves pt en
ornate btal plant, t'olens Verselialfelli—
so called imhonor of Ilse Dutch horticul
trmint Feresiltarrelt. The fatty developed
boa Ps#, digested iu alcohol, and slips
ol .Sws. ish biter paper snaked. lit the
41ccdptio i take a beautiful reddish tint;
Ichieh liehmes green under theinfluence
Crab alhill or astalkaline earth. d+ this
reagent 1..4 ROL, lltreCtiAt by free carbonio
sick); it May ire used in I lotectingtmrbott
ao Of dime in water. ' If astrip of this
paper moistened with Water is heist over
a burnel• from which. glll ts' Laming, the
gre4.111",11 . tinge appears,' in .constsineneo -
of t Imp alfunoula from which„ perhaps, no •
mus Is eMirely free. ' ..,
Millll,
10 /312111
ras tw0...11,4,4nd the thlrd,
uPF,lei& An theses. . • '''