El D Ell - gittsburA Galtits PUBLISHED BY PENNIKA.N, REED ez - A' GAZETTE BUILDING, No. OS W. - 12th Eitroot. r. i. PENAIII/ai T. P. IfillirTON I 0. BEK% ..1.130.111....ger 44 Three Coples„por re., b 7 sett,•enek......l BO Fire '•• •• • •• •• 95 Tea or 'more eoplort to one address, mad • inte tie. co 116 = atula .PP , " , 3 emt.• 'Delivered by <aerie f. Dee ereeK)....ls Den gbeesraers, (pci eeu.)••••.•••: eilLl3o. Liberifiedstelienis to Idervabine sad Aseau. %STU/IDLY, FEBRUARY 1, 1868. HE CONVENTIONN The Itepuhlican State Ccnivirt:tion will be held a 'Philadelphia; iarch 1Ith; the .Itepablimn National CoAtendon at Chicago, May 20th. .? By the terms of the call of the State Convention,lie duties aro restricted to - nominating candidates for,. uditor and \ A. flarreyor , Generals and Preiddentiil Eiectora and the selection of four dela. -, gates at iarge - to the National gasmen tion. The other' delegates will be a' - pointed by the respective distriets. 1. 'Teio methods for selecting distri t • delegates have . ' been used. Sometimes the delegates to the Stste Convsentlet, of the proper year, bale asanmed the tuna- Son - of Conferees for this purpinte, and . chosen the delegates for their respective districts. At other times the selections - have been made by district conic:diens • or conferences. ' This latter method has many advantages to reconimend it. We believe it-has steadily had the preference in this eciunty. It is highly desirable - de delegates to both National and - State Conventions shouldbe chosen front' among ;the Ter: best materials; for the duties that will de ; TOIVe upon them are of UntSual'grarty. . THE CABE AS or Is.'. Awides widespread and powerfulconspire - - cy exists to wrench Ireland away front England.. Moat min everywhere who are of Irish birth and the Catholic per 7 suasion, either lyznpattaza with - or are - . 1 inionnection, more or less active, with , . this conspiracy. -We do not blame them. On.the contrary, we its , manifold na sone Which would Induce us, if we were related as they 'are, to do as they do • touching this matter. Moat Irishmen, ', adhering to Protestant- faithe, stand . ~ aloof from this effort at Irish itulepend-. . , mice Or are opposed to it. ' I The pivot of this conspiracy Vin the United fitates._7Tlut conspirators hive received - much encouragement from the native-born population .for various Tea .. L . sopa. 1. Bemuse they ire understood to be Working against monarchy, &form of government not approved by the flb ,_,_- eialiam here, preyailing. 2. Because of traditional spite at the Englith, growing out of the old colonial embroilment. a • Because of the bad conduct of the aris tocratic classes of England towards Us. during the,rebellion. 4. Bemuse of a natural willingness in men ot lois 'organ . ization to see others Involved latrotible 1..--ikcance of demagoguism, seeking to Fain or hold on upon the Irish Catholic - - . Last year this conspiracy was devil , Oped in 'Each flagrant violation of the -- - - natiOnal :neutrality /awe, and! of the . - . treaty -obligations' of our government, 'that thePrmident, doubtless on-Willing - - Iy, felt constrained to interpose by mill .. . tar'' force to frustrate it. Plndbig their. ' scheme for- an Invuton of Canada . thwarted by governmental .11111=c:et - . fromlWachington, the Fenian i leaders turned their enterprise directly towards. Ireland, and soon developed a Most for midable insurrectionary power. : latter - lyihey have extende.l., their operation. - , into England with *Minhr energy and „„audacity; though no man of sober judg - . 'meat will justify all the matitunentall ties resorted to. • -:-. . . American citizens, by. natunsibuticie and by birth, who are involved in this . „ . .......conspiraCy have gone hence to Great . Britain. .It is fair to 'presume they went there to watch or to aid the progress of .. tie Insurrection. They seek and de - . Mend the protection of the Gcnrerrunent of the United States the same salt they were abroad in pursuit of them lawful . Millings .=Popalar passions are invoked • . " • throughout this country in their behalf. It is oven insisted that we shaft rush into . - war with Great Britain wales; these eon-' spLrators are allowed to proceed with __' ... their enterprise unhindered. - I Droning our rebellion the British Gov. ..e. errunent. -conceded: belligerent rights to the •rebels. Under this anthorizatien . certain British subjects, through l hatred - 'of. democratic Ir.atitutiens, or a desire to a ',,, get gain, furnished the rebels with money, warlike stares, and shins of war. We hold • the British Government an arable for all the provable damage tins to us from this cants Ileum thet i bamit claims. Nay, we went fur ' thai d held that this violation of am', " ty , justified a declaration of war by oar countrylskainat Great Biltain; and such _ . declaration 7tth, have been made and ~, executed bu t f or the fact that the' rebels - , gave -no all th employment wol could - attend - t 0... ire e prepared to cella. `iMash the groz - nd . which We set 'tin the ' . Alabama claims, - an still urge them? I \ .. '` : Or,.are we ready to red in damages . - 'tor losses inflicted on Bri subjects by - ' the Fail.= movement, far as it is tremble to our shores? i l s.. There are men who, in. privat e Pairs, -• r have one nths byr.whiel to m ' th eir . - , own rut and demands, and-is .her . . an.lverydifferentbne,byWhich toga e the claims and pretensions of their f ! .I ' Biwa. _More still insist on unlike rued - ardsofjudgment wtim dealing with - the 'concerns of their own government and ..'those of _ other 'powers. We see no, grounds of reason or justice on which els discrepancy can be exemed.l - t If: American citizens see proper to stir up trouble for Great Ifritain, and in the ..' 'prosecution of that enterprise take the , risk of putting themselves within reach ' • "otthe clutches , of the power they Miceli, ' they &rein law ,and" In fact their) own nisureis. If they 'suffer lou, they meat , 1 nderm ify, theMleiTtlll al . best they can, and not embroil. our government in a - 7 laurel of their own - seeking. I . ' This does not tench the ease of other --cluster of American. citizens, Alf„. cid . . zees of this country , whether natural iced : or native, going abroad in pirinit of lawfhl business or pleasure, IMus a right to expect: and claim, the amplest protection of -our . government. In this . - regard there can be rio - differen be. ....".... t wee . ~ e itte..oa _by bir th Or e. -Both stand on a Common level, and ,the. - -- Itanor and dignity of the government is -- .1-.... - ;;nefully, pledged to the one clue as tithe . '.. othir. Nor doos it matter in the least - 'l7thetlieri intlien is rated high or lows., - - .- to wealth, learning or metal status. 1 As ' fo-idiehts, ,all"citizens are necessarily :- - equid, aid the same measures of redress. , - .mast heacearded to one as to scones. Of course, whenever an Athericanicit- . -Lure is interfered.wlth in tiro - reign c ma : - . try,ly the authorities thereof, whe ex by AMA irrigterwiee,- our. gait= ent - - will assume that the interference is m - - proper and demand antisfactlon. It 11l • then devolve .on Gls_ pow,: interfe r i n g with bins to !deur good rations for its -. - conduct Or to mike compensation: rlp • .c 2 Bumatte borne in mind :that i -rd of tiiiiiedantry, journeying . throug h oi heitad ...:''iolocrinlng in another country, is - - . tozeipect , all - .the laws and 'envie he fliihtestablishad, and is operation : It .:,' :will net : 44:x for a Protestant :to g ,to - .' . ..-.ltonta and set up a church or;-conveithi . --- ale 'at his pleasnii. 'lf he - wante'tii en. joy freedom of worship, Pe tract stay ~-. wham the laws allow it. / But may com- i i plain that the restriction Laid upon him ii illiberal , In contraveition • of natural rights, or what not. Ent when he relen t Wily places himself where laws he dis likes are In fdrw.,. he must either con arm thereto or suffer the =sequences. It must, also, be remembered that the English :Igoverroment.is . peculiarly, situ ated at lam:rent, sad especially towards citizens of the United Sistea Dist gov ernment is seriously menaced. It knows that the blow aimed at Its head war de signed within our borders, ant that much of the force Imparted to it Is de rindfrom hence. • It has cogent reasons for standing on Its guard against Ameri- CUM coming within its jurisdiction: As an independent power it will exercise such precautions as it deems necessary to self.preeernlion; doing even as arbi trary Waimea our own government did when it was is danger. Brat time CCM- BiderationA will not justify or excuse its latermeddling with an American who her observed the nointrallty due from bis government tonations with which it is at pace. .ficti nifit be adjudged saga cleat to warrant Interference with, an American ahead that he has, either Its Congress or elsewhere, expressed sym pathy with the Fenian& Such expres sion may properly excite suspicion, and Induce a rgilut watch, over him, just as we suspected aid watched English- Men who clime here while the' rebellion raged, afterhavhCg denounced the Union and wished the success of its enemies. Our government is not in a humor to wards England•to suffer fresh wrongs at its hands; and it must be confessed that ear people are not so entirely recovered from recent smarts as to be without de sire for retallstion. That England is in, trouble does Bei awaken . our 'sympathies but rather gives us satisfaction. A grim delight is experienced in seeing the qvisenedeballice she presied to oni bps commended to her own. What we wish lathat our golrernment may so deport Itself in the present coojituctureis to Vindicate its late exposition of interna tional Lir and lead to its general recog nition. a triumph concerns all' muded, while the obtainment -of ie. lenge, though sweet foi the moment, will entail consequences to be perma neatly deplaied. .7%113 BLIND We icknc*ledge the receipt of the thirty-011k gunnel report of the liana gers of the "Pennsylvania Institute for the Instruction of the Blind." There are now in the school one hundred and eighty.three blind Persons. :.Thirty-two of these support themselves wholly or in part, 'as . militant Mashers, or 1n the work department, fee are kit paying pupils, eleven in part, and eight are day scholars. By a sorted of carefully ar ranged figures the Principal, Wnr..tan Claris, 'Esq., shows that there are now 15,259 white blind, and 15,555. total hilted venous in the . United Stele& 0! this number there are 1,590 in Pennsyl Tanis, - 273 :in New Jersey, and 561 n Delaware, the three States contributing to the support of the Institution. Grew difficulty is experienmiln providing em plOyment for the blind after they have been instructed and - graduated . from - the College. To obviate this, the -report recommends' the establishment by philanthropists c! a manufactory where the blind may be employed; at fair wages. Bud an establishment could not be made self supporting bat it would contribute large ly towards ameliorating the condition of those doomed in this world to perpet nal *know The system of educatioe adopted by tke School embraces not only mental culture but practical -instruction, , in mechanics and general handiwork The factory attached to the institution, where brushes, bream', whisks, mate,' aueetsomned chain, beadwork, knitting, sewing and general fancy work are made by the pupils and graduated workmen, is very successfully managed, anddurini. the past year stock to the amount o• ;16,865 41 was made op. There Cr, seven blind persons. among the pupil, from - Allegheny county. The report shows a very gratifying sMte of affair, and reflects great . credit on those imme diately connected with tin managemenl 'of this noble institution, of which Penn sylvania should feel justly proud. . Tna report of. the How. Committee =Foreign Relations admits thepolid we hive - heretofore urged, that OG2 courts enforce the'same role as those o! England and other European countrice, In rapped bii:the right' of citizens to ex patriate thernselyea—that is, . that chi zest hsye no right to throw off their al tiegiance.... The Committee donot recom mead any. Change in our own laws in this regard, but insist that the riatural lied citizen shall be entitled to and shall receive the sane protection as the native born, and that Upon the sanest or deten don of any naturalized citizen by any foreign goyenenuent, upon the allegation that naturalization in the United Stet,. does not operate to dissolve his forme, allegiance, or the arrest of any native citizen Without charge of crime commit ted within the jurisdiction of inch for eign power, the Preddent is impowertd to order the arrest of any subject °faint foreign power who may be found within the jurisdiction of the United States. This see= tom very much like an adultorated, chemists:4m. If a citizen hsa a right to repudiate his allegiance, ai n his option; the United States ought t recognize that right at once, and unmis takahly. If he had no such right; then die United States ought not to endeavor to compel Ennipan governments to ac cept a rale which it-reit:meat° adopt. Banaaanca on TIM ALLIGINNT Mr ws;_in Penneylrani*, especially on the higher section, are largo muses of hem lock timber. Latterly the ' attention of tanners has been turned to this 'district, and in particular tanners hitherto loca -1 • in the State of New York, and we , pp be ll . es senro of bark Am or t e i xhis em u t s . t/d . , , e r l have dy likeis up Large tracts of %I ts land. few of theta have already ercc ed tanneries, and others will soon d , ., so. Several enterprises of this descri rr don have been staved as high up as in Warren - comity, and with good prospect s, all things considered. Of coarse, tan ning is beset with the Nfune uncertainty as other departments of industry, aria leg out of the finsamal Iltutticut of the country; but this will be only tempura ry. The hemlock forests of the Alle— gheny valley will soon experience a "general invasion, and will yield shun dint rewards to the enterprise that shall utilize them. • , , THE DEXCCE•Ti 'lithe been Insisting with mach apparmit - earnestness, cin a redaction - of, , governmental expenses. Bray steno( Congress or the relpective Departments in that dirsetiosvinet their approval until a bill was intfOduced into the Boum of Representatives to vacate some ofthe higher emcee the army. This measure was accoidant with the previous Mducton of the' army itself. Bat the Democrats i howT over this re ductioi because avill lessen the grade so of their own rt./ expenses are toSe reduced, It *Mot all be accomplished with the rani. and file. • Some of the Gehernis =it go lower. Why not? Tait COaserrative RepabUcan mem. bers of the Homarof Ftepresentatlyea at Wootangton are - now going to rester =Mines than the &Ocala ever sug gested. A little of the energy evinced Vithla late day woildhairesuccumpllshed lunch lag. spring; iota:), of it does not Dmillitia to be beneficial as strains stand. IT xi anorak that specific lineation should be nude of the fact that Speaker Davis fulfilled Ma pledge so to coartitute the MOM Conunittee on Railroads as to secure the prenipt ftportbig of the 'tee Railroad bill and the bill to restore Igo charter the Connelsville Railroad 'Company. I • I . _ MANT OF TOE WHISi: YES at the South who lately ell.g.ig - t.d in on attempt to take themselves and their States cat of the Union, and failed therein, are now seriously thinisir.7, of asking Con gym to enatrilte the block people. In lamer year; these whitis maintained most stonily that i,p:e • w,:e Oa ' 'Mutely indispensable in the. Southern States; that white; people' were r.aberallY incapacitated for labor ia those legions; and, consequently, complete depopuLa, tion twist ensue bat for the presence of the blacks- As a matter of fact the black* did about all the work that was done, and the white; pocketed nearly all . the 'gains. We see, however, a hopefal sign in the desire to have the blocks Bent off. It implies that the whites have discovered the fallacy of suppdsing there are climatic hindrances to their working, and are inclined to try their hands at It. That is eiactly what is needed to restore the Southern States to prosperity, and the cannot too soon carry the hopeful intention into effect. That is within their own competency. The re moval of the blacks is another matter. As they are now freemen their coneent will have to be asked, unless the South ern people are preriarcel to recognize.in Congress a lawful. authority More arbh . trary than has ever been claimed by aso:t advanced: radicals. Wtren your, conservatives want a particular thing, done they can had a warrant .for it in the Constitution, militant the slightest difficulty. • • Texan to no concealing the tart that great Indiana , Inn 1t fait mono Repubncans In the northern tier of counties at the manner In watch Senator I.stetun was oversiunghed In the formation of the Senate standing com mittees. One of the olden, ablest, and most experienced Senators. as well as one of the =Oft powerful and elcquent Republican de. lenders, tts be lbus set aside, talthent an ap• parent cause, Is sufficient to make these restive who love and honor him, and In whose lead they bane Mitrebed to BO many Republican victories. wo a band of brotheral"—S am Smoot, To thfs the Scranton Republican re , anomie as . fellow.;: ••Toero are arrntal pronto hereationta who think :hut it...xi/taw Laudon'. count.. nun winter was unite aerticlent to account for Ms being left oft the itnlll . o4l Comte ittetai Tun Hence of Reprezentatives .. . at Washington saw proper to exprest gym. pithy with the Irish in the movement they are making against the power of Great Britain. The Landon Jaunt - n - 1S are indignant at this action, and profess to regard it as monstrous and unprece. dented. The British Government went much farther when it accorded belliger ent right' to the Confederates. It Is now reaping Only what it sowed, and ought not to comp lain of the quality of the crop. Tim Com.. Comma:sus operating in anthraciti counties of this State seitly increased their facilities for bus aess doting the last year, with the ex pectation of considerably enlarging next yeai, the amount of coal sent to market. It mayreasunably b.rdoubted, in view of the present outlook, whether with a ma terially increased supply the price Will not fall below the average of the last mason, which certainly yielded little or no profit. Tars Pottaviho Journal- gives the amount of anthracite coal Fent from Pennsylvania to We-water daring the year ISO:, at, 12,670,571 tons, being an inCeaSe of 2:1,061 Loos over the year 1860. 01 seinbanquatitte and bituminous reaclaing tide-water there were tut oar 2.2ZZ,73SLonr, bring a decrease of P:2,sBti toes Lona the preceding } - car. Thin given an 'aggregate of 14,h06,h00 tone, and an inereaLe of tons. Tux English Government is heartily &shame,: of having caused the anest of the riotorions Train, and is now endeav oring to fasten the blunder at the door:, of the authorities of Cork. George s Francii Will cot relish the fact that be was arrested' through a mistake, end that ho was not deemed large enough game to alarm the British lion to such sin en tent as to canoe his csrunrc. . AWHILE:AGO the ',Democrats COClfined their appeils to replan and p:ejndice mainly to those who hate black people becatute they arc black. Recently they broke out let another direction. Thr "band baron's" and "moneyed aristo crats" are field up to public odium. It will soon ba diflicidt to decide which Is most offensive to the Democrats, a black man or a 1 - 14 L white one. THE Iterinblicuts of .N.Jrthampton :county have declared for Grant and Cur tin, and designated Mr. Wm. H. Arm strong as one of the delegates. from the Eleventh District to MU Nations! CAM vention. Mr. IL D. 31.41ve1l is dele gate to the Butte Convention. Huntingden county has also declared for Grant and Curtin. Tas people win be glad to know that the House Committee on Appropriations at Washington are resolved to cut dowo erpnnsca.; The lurtker they vo In that direction, while keeping the wheels or government 'properly moving, the better they will snit all thouglit!,:i citizens Whatever ekpeases can bZ abridged, ought to he, -Mn. D. L. ,Extra, one of the members of the Legislature for this county, ha 4 been stint upin hN ;nom at Harrisburg, by sickness, for - two, weeks past. We are glad to lesin that his . health' Is now amending, and that he will rtsulue his public b:Mesita a few days. Tun Republicans of Susquehanna county have elected W. J. Sorrell and W. 11,,, Jessup delegates to the Sate Con vention,. arid liaised resolutions In favor of Gr„neral Grant for Presider:it, and Galnali; A. Geow' for Vice President. A EfARRIPBLIRG correspondent of the Philadelphia Sunday Diapatch says 'the leadinzapirita in the Rouse, Be. publican side, Ere Mr. - Thorn, of Pi 1 s delphla, Mr. fleri, of Dauphin, and Mr. Rickman, of Chester. • 31. Coors; of the Chambenburg Volley Spirit; 'formerly editor of the In telliyencer, of Lsneaster, is a candidate for Sarveyor d;:neral, before the Fourth of March Demrocratie State Convention. —TLe Bosion lost makes nu ussertion. It says that more than thirteen negro soldiers dezevied to one that was killed in battle. .It the l'oe is able to prove this, It slimild 4.t once offer its proof, for so grave a statement Is likely to make prrjetllced pertiona think that the paper making it Is actuated so far by mean potty partizan spite, as to' forgot oven troth id its endeavors to stake a telling Polnt. —The German Young Men's Christian Auctiation of New York gives fre.e din ners every dayltn the poor. One' hun dred and sixty rations are also sent daily to poor families In the city, This, wo humbly surgeti, It bolter than paying a hundred thoursrld dollars or more fora ball - Encli, as the. Ferweil in Chicago, which was after all nothing but a horri ble imp. Ban Franctscan complains that th California English Is horribly batch. cred and mangled, and up that Eau,. fait, Chinese and Kanaks words are free. ly used, and thai soon, in the course of another generation or two, the language will be a completely scpsiate.ddialect. Hyppomania which him raged for some time in Paris and Loudon has extended to New York, and some ardent admirers s.f things equine are going to have a dinner where nothing will be talked or eaten except horse. • —On the ?di inst., if.r. John Henry died at Charlotte, Va.,-in tho 724 tar of his ego; he was' a son of Pat ck Henry, the greatest sad least known or ator of,America. • Ono child of Patrick Henry's ii still Heinz. .1 —ln Atlanta, Us., real estate which sold for $40,000 In gold before the war resold recently - for $7,000 in greenbacks. Any- ono who can afford -to wait can make a fortune by Investing in Southern real estate now a daya.. PITTSB3EGII WEEKLY G. : ELLIttIOUS IIiTELLIGENCE. The A4eanes, of Chicago, a Con sire gatonal.lsrgan, assumes the ground that the doctrine of Christ is . that marriage ss indiszoluble .dering life, except on.the ground of adultery, which is in fact the sundering of its peculiar bond. Ali ether wrongs may Justify a temporary Or . permanent ligal separation, but not ad mit of re-marriage: It thinks the root of lax views as to marriage and divorce, is found , m the pernicious and plausible doctrine that the only true marriage is that or spirit, and that all other is if. ceased or legal adultery. Libertines use this idea to effect the seduction of their Tictima. The adulterer uses the same plea to insert the Mlle of his neighbor's wife., It argues Very forcibly that the purity of ' marriage and oft t sotiety— whose fundamental Institution it is, un derlying, both Church . ' and State—de mands that it be indissoluble rove for the one cause indicated by our Savior. It commends the course of the Catholic Church in adhering to this doctrine, though wrong in nutking,it a religious sacrament.' The First Congregational Church of. Chicago has decidedo dispense witha paid choir and Tobin ers from the con• gregatton have taken Its place.., Conliderable diNrence of opinion ex , Isis among the various religious denom !nations, in regard to incorporating in the Constitution of the I:rafted, States a clause "acknowledging God as the source of all authority In civil govern. meet, the Lord Jesus Christ as the ruler among all nations, and his will, reveal ed in the Holy Scriptures, so of supreme authority." The Boston Watchmen and lief.ettor, a prominent Biptist journal,. argues that the absence of such a clause is not a defect, hut an eicellence, and that in nothing does our noble. Constitu tion stand oat In sublimer peculiarity than in the aheence of just that religious festure;whlch is now proposed to put in. The Baptists claim that it opposes their Idea of seligieta liberty. • IL Con vention is to meet et New Clinic, Pa., Thursday, IlOth, to promote this so-called reform movement ( - It is well known, that the Methodists and other bodies, which epring from them, have always'- observed the ~4opy, or "fete of lore"—famillarly called by the Methodists, "lose feast," after the practice in the 'primitive churches. They however observe It wholly as a church rite or religious experience meet ing. The Independent glees an inter esting accannt of a "modern celebrated in festival farm Ly the Sec ond Baptist chcrei of Newport, R. L, which society was organized in thO year lanG. The chuich, was richly adorned for.tbe occasion sslth evergreen's, drop= ery, Midas bearing appropriate mottoes, and a variety of • symbole. Two trees, reaching to this vault of the Gothic roof, were hang with many gifts for the poor. of the church and. 'the childnen ortbe Sunday School, while tat:deaf arranged for , our hundred guests at one time, were laden With refreshments, • The ex ercises consisted of relfgions services, conducted by the; pastor assisted by several clergymen of other denombes lions. It Is estimated one thoniand per. Bone wets present. The pastor, in his address, urged the adoption of this form of the .4„esrpoi ass testae of promoting a healthier sottial lite in churches. Llnebrook Perish,'3fszsachusette, there is but one religious belch In the place; the people, bellevieg tint union is strength, _unite, with a few individual exceptions, in supporting this society. The independent thinks they are sensi ble people. So they may be, and yet a great many "sensible people," think that the - I:aloe of persona of different de. friendly union of members of serious churches to accomplish certain objects of nominations • into one society, and a a conceal interest, is a widely different D. L. Moody. the honored President of the Chicago Young Men's. Christian association, and lay evangelist, was presented on New Years' Day with LIT , free um of a new and commodious house by Mr. J. V. Farwell, a princely hearted Methodist of Chicago. -The house was famished by other friends. Bishop Simpson lectured lately is llt. Pleaaant, Iowa? by imitation of the Young lien's Christian Auecistion, for the benefit of the lowa Wesleyan Uai• varsity, Rev. Dr. C. A.Molmes, former. ly of this city, 'President During - Lie visit he addressed the atudenta of the University. Turning to the venerable Dr. Elliott, the distinguished author and widely known editor for over a score of years, who sat on the rostruin, the Bishop sald that nearly forty years ago be had walked eighty miles, carrying his little bundle ot, clothes, and became a student under the Doctor, when he was eresident of Madison College, then loos. ted at Uniontown, Pennsylvania. The Western do:lrritate says the venerable Dozier, the eloquent Bishop, and the touching Chalon of the past, made the seen 2:most impremlie and affecting. Rev. A.. S. Hunt, in unmarried min ister in Brooklyn, N., Y., rewired for . st , Christmas preeent front' Ida parishioners an India rabbet' model of a young lady, stuffed with fire hundred dollars in greenbacks—a 'hint, , says a friend, no doubt, of more greenbacks with a gene. We article of young lady. I According to a recent report of Dr. Rest, general Supenntendent of the Freedmen's Aid Society ohthe IL B. Church, the schools have rendered es. 'sential aid in the work of restoring sacral order, of bringing about friendly relit. lions between the euiployers and labor. era, in promottne habits of cleanliness, industry, economy, end morality, rea -1 Bering more emphatic the grand distine. tton between right and wrong, entorcing fidelity to contract;' teachiag there to respect the rigills of others, while they are prompt to claim them for themselves., It is believed theset schools, and the, Lama fact In many respects Is tree of the reboots or similar societies, have met a great want which no military or political organizathins could supply. The teach ers are quietly but surely "reconstnict ing" by teaching net 'only, the elements of education, but of eirilizetion and evangelization. The Letheresi Obser'rei repretents St. Peter's Lutheran. Church, in Cheater county, Penna.; as being In a Very gre. ciomi state. Its membership of one bun. dyed. and seventy are great 'workers in Church matters. All the beads of fami lies have erected therm/illy altar. Every member of these families, with perhape half a dozen exceptions, both main and female, are ready, when called 'upon, to take pert in public prsyer. Among the grand ',projects In New York, is one by James Lennox. a gen tleman noted for his pilneely gifts to the Presbyterian Church, to builds Presby terian Hospital, on a rpagniticent scale. He announces by circular that an ample and eligible site has been secured and one hundred thoueand dollars pmffered besides, for thi4rectionof imitable build ings. -Ho suggests that a Boszeof Men. nets, numbering thirty-ell,' be selected from tho diterent brinches of the Pres byterian- Church.....Aireadli full two hundred thontsind ' dollars are pledged for the project. Recent atatimimehow that tltn Pro testant Episcopal L'imrch of the rafted States numbers. thirty-four tilemsea, forty-four bishops, twenty-four hundred and.aliteen priests aUddeacons, twenty , throe hundred' and lice perishes, one litudrod, and aisty-orte iboumed twa hundred and thirty-omi members, one hundred and fifty-one thousand eight hundred and nineteen littudii School . sololare; contributions, over three rel!. ll,ni of dollars. I It is stated by en srchauge that over eight hundred Penang base "professed conversion in connection with the Ray. Belay itorgan's spotting' In Fiank Ball, Boston. . I= IT rf•IIII L 197341 r. ; Thonth be nethor olLits nor Krona. Dente Is bury with Dia bone.: _, sear h. 1132 o'er the jca.t.tog stones ' Gently, Lenity! to7oarrrm-, Syrathe bls limbs ¢ad tool his brave Peace: Us tout 1.1 vussltga,ow, Gea ll .l", geutiy • He has fallen In the strlfe ! • Tell lc to toe n 141 0 ,1011 wife, • : And to boo who gave him Ilia. Gently, gently ! I Lonilly potion the brave mho :rem, With their blood, oer dzadeln faultet—oh, eprak of thorn .Gently, qetaly PHEISTEBIS. —Frozen scallops poison peoplei —Wood is dearer than coal In Maine. —Prorela has seTen first.class for, tresses. - —Ohio gained but 11,000 in popula tion In 1007. --Tho fatly-six banks of Boston have $46,000,000 capital. - —Seven cents a pound is the price of Moose in Quebec. —There are ten thousand negreerin Lexington Kr. • —ltuston is to have a mammoth faLr far the Cretan a. —Seward Territory is the name now given to Mulet. —Dr. Livingston was a living merlon the lot of October. —There are six candidates for Mayor in Portland, Maine. , • —Sinta Fe has paid $24,000 for a tel egraph from there to Denver. —Tho paper having the largest Oren lotion is the parer of tobacco. , —The wheat crop is nearly ready - - far harvest in the Balt Lake district. —C. B. Brewster is the orator of the graduating class at kilo this ytir. —There never was a-better logging seeker in Malne USD this has been. —The St. Paula Iragarine laments the deterioradon of English race horses. -Poor men and etch ones can get tot limners for nine cents apiece In London. —Leads Napoleon skates badly, tad aften falls, and al wayepn the bony pail. —Twenty Indiana were naturalized in Topeka, Kansas, at the last term of court there. —Sixteen - divorcee Were granted at the last teratof court m Henry county, —lt ie ptopoEed to. make toreigneTs reside ten years In Virginia befote tltey can Tote. ' • —Antbrieite coal la 'shipped from Phil allaphia to Louis, Ille, by way of NeW .orlcans. . =Tao editor of Ibe Moscow ; Galt to speaks and writes ieventeen different langniges. •--The clporte of Great Britain hale fallen off 4,000,000 puuuda sterllag.du'r. lag last year. 'erne beggar In New Turk I. worts" $G5,000, w hicls-is securely barest ed in real estate. ' I —A slop cart a river' In St. Louis inew . Ills brains out, on Wednesday becs:nie La was swindled. • —FI fly tons of trout taro been csuglit in Moosehead Lskoand slapped to Neiv York and Boston. • , , —The New Turk .Vei: desks the U. Leyden that Rey...Licari Potter lass.bi t en culled to grace Church. —.Mikolnman, the circus maa, has bankrupted In Cincinnati, wills debts amounting.to if:1;300. Drunks, of Philadeb phin,,hes ,Ciallected over $1,780, ehicb be Las se4 to the Cretans. • —Another large bed ot. garnet bit been Mu& In Bohemia. Moat garnets online front Ihnt ellaalc country. —Nark'lcon can't get over hia chagrin at lila Mexican fiasco, and can't be indu ced% tend a mintater to Juana. • —T -e Elotia and Cheyenne Indiani :are again beerming very tronbirsome to the neighborhood of Port Phil. &nacre:l'', ' ninnks of Sew Itellery, lows,. sre said to La excited over their new . nannnitty, 'which is in course of erection: -31 r. Van Wyek achnowledges that Octiyal,rg: kilantosida are real, an,l the farm viesth sa mach as they value —Heir Chester, N. J.; a tine bed di iron Las been-found. Some of it Is to br taken out and sash II:ltd. - isl:els end pill lars. —George Prancis.Train vows Le wilt be President of the United States. Wr fear that* a only one of his superfluous vowdlla. . --The Douse imperial has a stall' Metre en4e, which ha kind father gave: biro on New Years day because he had, been s good boy. —A. lady in Paris recently found a bracelet Wkirth thirty thousand francs In her muff, at the opera, and the does not know how:lt got there. —George Peabody has presented Cyrus W. Field with a magnificent silverdin. ate serrice, conaistleg of twelve large pieces,. weighing in all seven hundred Ounces- —There . arc seven t'uouPand Jena In New Or!elms: Tho yellow fever Rave that city a pretty tight equeezi, I;nt all the juice don't seem totavo moon gotten out yet. - —Railway Iron ti slapped from. Penn sylvaula to the Pocky Mountslos, with out chan;e of cars, for the Pacific Rtli roid, Which is the mitrray to do that sort of thirug. --Lisleave denies the story of his bay- In 4 g meetly. murdered General Montae %fhb, chide]. lie says Mottles died of apoplexy. We have heard of suet de nials before. —The New York millionares want I Manillion Fish for Vice President. There might* siSme truth In the sneers ht cod Bab if We have a member of the family at the', White Mouse.. —iiiencraliAndersoll, the hero of Fort Sumter, will - preside at a grand temper ance banquet at the Cooper Listhute In New York on the next anniversary of Washington's birthday. —4'. revolting crime occurred on Tharsday, In Milwaukee. A. heinous ordiage was committed on the person of a homeless white ktrl by: an abandoned negro,'who is now under arrest. *President Johnson has sent his son RObert to an insane asylum, to be cured of periodical fits of drunkenness, which amount to Insanity. We know from whirl Side of.the house Le inherits that pee iia~rity. -41,tirpoot Is in' Asia, on the spot wldch,l according to sane authorities,, once was the Gardja of Eden. There the women do all the work excepting the knitting, which Is kindly performed by thei'r lords. —Yeting Breln, the student of 2i.m, beret, who defended himself against the sophonaorcs who tame to haze him, has been publicly commended by the (acuity, .t.nd presented a acholarslop of 204 a Year. Goorke Graves, the hazer who was most Injured, is in a hopeless —Chicago has bad a torsions affair; a oilier; wedding where between $5,093 and - Wm() womb of presenta were given. IThe cards were prlitted in silver and everybody went. , One gentleman pie:anted * a set of silver • valued at $2,500, another gave a dinner act of solid silver worth 11,500, and • the ern . ployees of th , e firm of which the happy groom Was , senior partner sent a present worth $l,OOO. • • - —l9t last Charles Kean has taken bin farewell benefit and left the stage. The performancesiill goes on, hat espe cial foot-tights have gene out, his drop has fallen; and he lois taken an orches tra stall es It were, a private box in the ult, where the throng a great, and there quietly waits the rising of the curtain an the new scene. It Is'a transformation ecene, • and we hope II will meet his every• expectation. Ile his made his -last appearance, and the curtain will not rise for him again: Let the audience shriek and whistle, bravo and de caps :is much as it pleases"; he can't appear again, for lie has taken otr his costume and left the stage. SATuiID - Jrl", veita, GeauiA AND tiUßeEHui u,. Grap•Vtaw.. My observation and experiesee have led ime to the concicsion that we do not SaiTiciently mulch oar grape Coil. Moi.a. tore (in the ground) is,the great. lack of the grape, as of mot berries and sm2ll fruit: Tne crape vine in too summer is a succulent thing, cud nada much 3VI - Mulching thoroughly and keeping the soil mellow is a acceseity to good success. The best mulch, perhsp., is a covering of garden refuse, grass and weeds that are removed. These not only 'keep the ground moist. but fortiliza it, and with that kind of manure which is the most appropriate and natural to the grape, improving its quality, its growth also, and its h.ealtLtulor:ss. Our best success has been with this kind of mulch and with leaves gathered in autumn and kept (rotted) till the following season. Ell= Tne hog is not a hog because ho loves the mire,he,seeks it to cool his heated aides; water Is preferable; and the cooler he can get it the better he likes it. Al. though be is of a hot nature, he is not therefore to be turned one Into the cold— intense cold, rain, sleet, .4 ...—leff to shift for himself often; stifferfng, yes, suffering; and he Is not slow in manifest ing it—whining, rquelaling, reproaching you. lie has not thei.patience of other stock. it a he Is an intelligent One. On your farm 'you hare 'no animal that will improve upon feed as much as he—that will respond to rreed treatment u readily as be. Be is not a "hog" to the ill Mae df that word. till owner, from time Immemorial, has made him such; he has done it by abuse, by neg• led. But the Log is sensitive, intent. gent,: good.natared, clean, if you give him ra chance for cleanliness; of mire cleanly - habits than any ererlures on the farm, sand some human creidurrs that we wet of included.: The wise than takes care of his pigdis of other stock. • lie to proud lof it. gives it good quarters—expecting the same In return.' Ile doves to see it thrice; and it does thrive ruscessfuly under his care. Piggy here is Ilp "hog," hut one of the family at I erge of the far mer, and a profit to him, because treated with regard.. lioneratlekx Grum I.skods. "An Mier - "-n ntleta igany correspi . of the Rural New Yerkerfurnishus nn interact• tug statement of his experiments in ren ovating meadows wlyere dairying le the principal Innanesii, and wiere it is desir able to beep the land moat of the lime in grass Meadows there become greatly diminished in their crops in a few years Re tried harrowing the surface, top dressizigyitli manure, re seeding, plas tering, applying Jashis, to,, with little effect. Ile narrovredrine•lislt of an eight year meadow after manuring It In the spring, and had an Inercaso of twenty. live pounds of Lay per acre. rihccp me sure, applied i:, tho fall on a new meadow, gave in Itereast of q hundred pounds per here. • Di-carding these anodes, ha J ilts.: tutus: the sod with good plough, nod re seeds{ to clover and timothy after tne first crop. What this coop wan he does not stale. He has t h an renovated seemly acre!, roliiing to the seed. Au o d twelve arra me:Ain-yield• ed but via loads; eller run:ow:leg as de scribed, LOU Brat. was twenty six loads; the next tweigy-four. In four years he ploughed nunin, seeded with lOU and a half loadsul manure per veto, and harvested clay bUihe!s Cl. psis per acre, and the next pour linty-one lowls of hay from the twelve acre let. f "It will be teem that this manuring was not berry. The up; liehti ramie `la spring in a fozdaez experiment, re , suited as we should' expect, espee.ally If i tlitnly'and nun only eppliql at haat sea• son of the year: Autumn manuring int:am:rely. and evenly made, Is leech more effluent. But it must be admitted that inverting the hod on day uzdands is the most perfect way of restoring heavy o'oo, a full &modal of gruff aced being need. Manure must be freely, it only a single year Is Mken for thin renewal; but a. two more ye ire can be added, en es to •turn. in a hoary crop o: i cloler in a shorX rotation, there is no ! question that to greetlmpifercutent would i.be mode. It must not La forgotten that one great great objection to ploughing find ro• besot leg greareftelde, is owing to a spar. teg use of grass ePcd, ant ai imperfect preparation of the out race for it. &sr thickly, say a peer:, rr more p o racres, a smooth, mellow, tiacii toplr, , e•lber• faro, and a Ices, hoary growth of gr..ss the rtnflt, tutielt te tter in. Sr than Lind affords,' Ir 'largo, coarse, thinly K-I . ,terel stem'. fef Imi:successful ,trailers inforr.l us that Nhey have sue recited In tettOritt.; meadows after cnt• Ling four orrice crops of gr a ss fro“, them, by posturing. theta with on tie for two or three years,: taking care never to eters them short, be,: allowing a growth of Oats at teat eight or ten inch., high, Led especially In autumn. and On the apt proads of winter.-f Zl3O rola. of aorers. lat Applyttsg MEM The great point' to be cOnthicreil in the application of raw manure le Ps speedy temtentstion. This is effected readily by surface aptilication, in widel, Case st undergoes . ueg.oniposidon in a shrift time. the NM has a direct etlect upon it, which .caures ilia. It to beim: that en.fthe application is so highly ben eficial,. for IV/1011k deg emp.osition there is Itttleirenetit is 'manure; it is a Liu. lessee rather. But, the heat ilecorapos ing,-cad the rains washing it in, the work is done. The next best thing, if not equally good, and arms beider perhapk, is to apple on the surface of ploughed ground and harrow in. This mixes it with the top soil exposed to the direct rays of the sun, the toil lucre ii anything, the (heat, and this, in corinectlon with the !decreased moisture, increasing and ne t eeleratieg the fermentation. This prim ! deo never fails. IC ix gildly. found to tie good—and good Whether the manure is rotted or not, providing it can he prop- I cily mixed with the soil. The secret an both these cases is, that the mu has it; effect. - Ploughed In deep, ithere In a- different result—not always succeseful, especially In cold soils, or In ! -we! seasons. Ilest,huti a proper hygro metric condition, are necessary. f, . This, then, is the seer I, that we must expose oar manures to heat; end- the nearer the surface, the morn . heat and II the more fermentation. We have had our best success with manure harrowed In. On meadows, top-dressing - is the. only way; and the time of application, it is agreed; is the fall or latter pert of the sumknerjxveen the hest has still its effect, and the rains help It. But deep.ploughleg Under will keep the manure as it goos into the ground, and will put it, if left there, out of the Macho( the grassee and light-renting grains It is simply hid. It sun be of benefit (deep in the grountl)only when the soil is'porous and of a sandy and dark or heat.attracting nature, and the, season a warm one. Iu . suck rummers we have known thebest of [net, where long manure was plentifully used, and made a bed fur the roots, of Indian corn, Or roots. 1 ' The sato and certain way, however, is top-application. There may be sonic loss, which may not - be the case where 1 the ground covers the osasura. 'Bet har t rowed in well, ilnot too long, or plough• ed shallow—a mere covering up where there is much straw—and there will be a aerteln, and. intmediste benefit; immedi ate if applied in the hest of summer, and never failing in its effect. ' . For corn, is s block sandy soil warm. ly located, we prefer' to plough under. For roots also. Odlerwlse not. . ; and lee ppie- =2O Tire American Journ - al of Horticul ture fur January has an article oa the anbject of these destructive ..inaccts from Benjamin D. Walsh.: Ho sail: 'There are two very destructive tar em, which barrow into thy flesh of the apple, so as to render not only en. sightly, but absolutely distalteful. The first of these, the apple.wtiroii was orig inally, like almost all our worst insect foes, imported from Europe; though it has gradually spread westward, till now it Infests nearly the whole northern half of the Valley of the Slisaishippt The second larva, the apple-maggot, bra na tive American species, - and breeds nat urally In our wild haws and crabs, but within the last fewyears has hems no ticed to attack the cultivated apple in Ilfauchusetts, In Lionneeticut, in New York, and probably In Vermont also. What la very remarkable; although the very Same • species exists, to my personal knew:edge, in Illinois (for I bred It Myself there many years ago - i from haws, or thorn apples as they are sometimes called) yet It hau not, as yet, been 'ascertained to attack cultivated fruit anywhere in the west.' It would Seem as If in this as in many other cases, it Is Only a local rare of the species that, has ecquireal the habit of attacking tame and rEported Instead of wild and Indigenous speales. of plants; and shut t h is race, tranemits - to its doseeerlants by the law of inheritanete, the peculiar habit% which • it,lnas itself Incidentally acquired. Thus the habit of pointing genie m the field, which Is clearly an acquired and not a natural habit, is often transmitted by inheritance' to young pointer milks, • without any artificial breaking or train— On no attar sutmoettion does litseem posalble to fitig whitey& than the abo fact that the 'eery came account for species of insects is both in the cast and in the . west, and yet it attacksthe cultivated OFTe only in a certain limited even in tie east; for, nectiriling to Dr. Trtinble, "this new and formidebl, tar my, of the peoplu is found io :he Ilmlion riser country, but has not ye: r..:.ched .tirer Jersey," 7 . 1 f these siesta be correct, Iv,: in .3 anlxicate that the s.pple•niagyA gracdually spread trestrrerS, tilt, In some tielinty or thirty years' time, becomes as great a pest en the Taney of the Miss • 3 it mate is in Now England out Ndw York." Mr. Waisb Lno.irs er no rcarc# for, the depredations of this American twat save catching and crushing them. Will net the sparrow of Europe, which hoe lat Cly been introduced here, and which is beginning to spread into the country•. prdve an effectual deetroper of these and oilier insects which seem to be every year becoming more numerous? The artirroir isaindoubtediy a great devourer of grain and other seeds and of certain otlV.r fruits—but it it should deetroy the curgulio and the apple moth it might moire than compensate for the mischief it la do in other respects. • Collision of Vetoed,. at sea.' eoree unaccustomed to seafaring life ar frequently ' surprised at hearing of collisions at sea, thinking it strange that, with apparently unlimited room, TCE eeli do not al we is turn out for mien other In One to avoid sack accidents. Such persons are not probalfY aware that the hlgnwaya and byways of the neon arc as well dettoed, and often as narrow, no tholte of the lidsd; that a nue] is bound under ordinary circumstanceetto keep in her; course, aid finally, that the 'winds and waves lethe a very decided ray in !the mailer. The various enures with lead dlitietily to rollieiono, as well as!their iretiuency, are given in a recent peg- Ilan' ofilmal report, from which it up pears that ro less than 2,788 Buehler:el. dents happened, Miring thu Lot bight'. yeal - S, on the coast of Great Britain alone, and that 793 of them occurred in broad daylight. Tins number: has ehnivn a regular increase from yolar to y eat during this psriud; ami it is impsr• taut, to notice the V1tri , ...C,014c5 ;t e lt l e d to the loss of these 2,70 G vessels. ! Thu average annual number of collibions In the hight years was 340. Of these, an tumUsi average of 74 occurred through a bed look-out; through neglecting to shot., a proper light, 19; through neglect of ignorance •of steering rules, i GS; through error of pilot, ft; want of! sea. tuanohip, 10; general want of caution, 23. It will be seen wattle> less than 203 I out lof the 340 happened from - causes width, with proper care, might have Genii avoided. The average number of collisions tram actual want of se t-rou wash only eight; .Irom thick and Orgy weather, 10; error In judgment, 24;'and froni parting cables, dragging and breaking Ater and touling,.4o. 1 Alyery singular fact is that of thg 143 collialona which happened in 1600,1 be. twegn It a. m. and 0 p. m. , G-4 occurred wheh the weather WAS 8110 and erne, and Only 30 when if was foggy. Oil 227 collisions between p. tu. am; C a. Int., 1011 Occurred in clear, anal . only 37 in • ibio/i ! or foggy weather. Of the total numher of collitauna in 1886, 11 occur red Eh:tweets two Itettal VtaaCti, bath on der Way; 160 between two coilin g Yes. eels, lona under way; 83 between tWo vessels, one under way and one at anchor; 09 helves - Dna Vt:66elattd a lolling vessel, botlaunder way; 11 'be. Osten a steam vessel putt u failing yes* sel; 7 I when a attball vested was under waymnd a sailing vessel at anchor, and 4 whin a sailing vend wta under way and a steam voter! al anchor; and 77 hap. fendd through veseela breaking...from anchnra or moorings. Au Ititereeting ltellc of the allallaWA /Milan Massacre. I; thc hut aqu,111.4..; The 'people of the 'North weest nliU hue recolltelitl cr otti t e Indian mas sacre! In 311unesat 'when . lulpadutah, with his Genus of Warriors, decked out in paint and feathers, went (rani settle inentto settlement, spreading terror and tlesolllian in their path, and murdering, withdut remorse. green old age and kelp tett! infancy. .S.Lacy of the victims of that tragedy are now sleeping in un-. knowSs,but honored graves, while ninny children deprived at their reoutrol pre. tectors ere null to he found in the cons try e sad 'WttavatlGS of thin catastrophe, which !at once licher:eel term of parents, lomie.; and all the inflections tear to childhood. The truth of thin was well illustrated on'thei 16th that. Oa the cota coming eastrard front Hanclicater be this point, out a gentieman, now tChittiLg at Lyoria, who Teas driven Out of 11i1101,0155 of the tithe 04 . the Indian maseacre, - Ilve or six years iago.. He lead with him a littie girl, v4hat he found to e,leserted rabid, she being at that time only two - weeks old.. She Is now a lovaltiolittle denture, and w Witt on the L 0,1111,1 1 ,1; 50015 Lq!all tiful Stinday School hymns with touch. ing pathos. When the history of the child was learned, 'much Interest was manifested, and' the little one was the iccipient of several small favors from the passengew Her preserver is of the opinion twat the child wan left in the cabin by the red skins to trap sous one, for haedly , had he entered the Louse be. tore the savagcs made their appearance, and lie had the hardest lo.itirace oa record; with-the little one in his arms, to make tile escape. Who the patents ill the child were he has never tarn able to 'ascertain, and there is no doubt but that they ales° murdered by the savages, :The Poo Fly of Mexico In a 'recent nutribertiof the Layer an cement wits given of a cerMin tly to Cr-gll Rica and South America which lay its eggs in the nostrils. of Lumen hind while asleep, the tans 1(0111 which were therein introduced into the nateal passage's, and gave rite to the mast in ' tolerable egony, and frequently death. By a late article in is medical journal, ea kern that the tame. or a clotely al lied s t scelea of lueilia was the coerce of serious trouble to the foreign troops in Mexico Aurin - the French occupatiou, infesting the row, warm valleys through. ant the entire country. The symptom' ore itching of the nose, followed by headache nod .welting of the nose, wiai bleeding at the nostrils, and Weeratioil, accompanied by , " discharge of lame Erysipelas of the fact and head i s Ire- Iquent, sometimes soccecileil by men . ingitis. • Injection of r loroform, al -1 though very painful, were used to most advantage. Cevatfilla kills the larinv. , cad expels them by sneezing, but Is alit [ to produce hemorrhage. •Illtxr.tr r,riar Pottsvili, of.l.he Aliewets tat-de:l,lC Captain It drer, whose father resides In lisirlsburg.mys.!erionsly disappeared from Pottsell4.s about two months since. At rho thrio ho had two Nettul-4, and there were mispivione 'of fool play, but nothing known dotinitete until Thorsalair, 2 diner.,, when the rather re ,rived the and Intelligence that the body of Ills murdered eon was thrown into the Marshfield Coal Slope, wldeh is o4out then hundred feet deep and tilled with water. Meson of ono of the partners of the dented 'divulged the terrible crime. All the parties Implicated have been a, rested. .The •Metivo for the murder Is supposed to bare boon to r.oeu re a curtain valuable earl lease: The nameo of the partners are ,4811th dr. Albrialiton. Capt. Rohrer r0r..4 n young man of tinblerutshod reputation. ?icuralgla We have out from th... Alta f n receipt for the curl or neuralgia, which the editor Of that. paper.eleints to have been ofroctli9 in several, emiei of his own knowledge; I.le toys: • Some time ace we published, ut the rermAt er a friend, a receipt to cure neuralgia.. Half n drachm or 01-umnto nia In an ounce of camphor water, to he. taken a teaspoonful at a dose, and the dose repeated several titans, at interval, of live Minutes, If 'the pain be not re lieved at once. Half a dozen different tier:ion. bate since tried the receipt, and inevety case nu lannedlam cure has been effected. In one, Oho sufferer, a lady, has beets effected for more titan a week, and her phyricam was usable to allevhne her suffertngs, when a solution sal.ammunla In camphor wateK R liovoil her in a few minutes. NEW Yuiin MEMILIANTS.—noInIezj nal revenue reports of tlia amount of sales for leti7, shoe; Cm following aggre gate amount of business during the your by the lending business hens. of :New York 11; B. Cialtln A Cn., $11.1,120,911; A. T. Smerurt. A Cdr., (wholesalo depart ment.) MOS 8,000; S. Jatiray A Co., 1, 1 5,8`34,500; • Lathorp, Ludington A Co., 57,510,500; Anthony A Hall, 5d,1ti0,50); George Mina Ss Co., $8,514,500; tieurge A. Wieks A Co...s4,Lrel,boa; n. H. Chittendeu , A Co., te1,:)..90.400; Vat. T. Peak° A Co., ati,tllB,soo; (7.. Brewer S. Co., 0,436,000; llor t, Sprague A Co., *7.872,000; Beaks a A Ilulton, 15,...T2,f410. These sales are said to be innelt sMaller than (nose of the previous . tiernte Diun.--Tho choir of thla grand old estlaedrst. has been restored. The French .journals protest agallist , the de. mend of ten Sous whleh Is made by "Le Suisse" no entrance fee. They any that tho cathedral belongs to tho people, and All the cost oLlts restoration wan a t their expense, amt: that the demand of ten cents to see Ili Is a swindle: • —Tbo Vlenha papers publialt itoine de •tallo respecting the trotusures Adel. King George of flaeover has taken Inthat elly. The plate coniprlses a valuable sortie° in gdld und another In silver. Tho cabinet of relies is eoinpohed of church ntenstla and of obJeeto brought in 117:3 by Duke Henry, the Lion, from t Holy Lunt, etc. collebtios of coins unuiberm nearly twenty-two tllocusand. Tho torte, libraryi to., 'remain, at leant for the Prosent, to uanovor. WASEINGTO = W J.tuary 24, 13 Nlt • OEM , SllprettlO Court to- dity, ;;It, N orizirtal, Staff , of '19,, 4.4, ICitk. CAE.' el al_ n'tis argued the inlttnotton bete;; f. 1 , .,] ilefonl- 311t.i,411, using of . certain by them fttar, MilLtary .itAra at ttas Our tsiflioll. The luntinn to dr-ss:V , inpiranion to Itat•ed Up . as ther grail.; that csautrea, having- tlet,riniti el that l'exay is nut a :tun-in the Union na7 pures•r+ isTresentatiOn, she is not alsrnnr ul the Union far the purpose of ,nit in thi4 Court. =9 A It gg,lly sea,ion of the Rays and Mom.: eemitlittee held ;lA A morn.- fit whfhlt the general re:lntro pro posed woo a new Internal lievenuo act: It was do,ae,l, but no definite action St at taken, FD/111 Ihp diameter of the di,on,ion it la gathered that the chief molinieation to be made in. the pyasent -law or, toeratt the bwalen of taxation oh and relieve, as far at Potisible, the industrial and mantlfat-turing inter tmti. °DANT AND TUE PDF:SOF:NT. T 6 .0 N.,: York Timr.i Fpeeka pro , DODIDN, • the statement, said to be sup , ported hy the Cahinet, that, Grant nit 13111frd !hot be hadar.ivl to hold on until removed, aa false, He agreed wills the President, that if he rant) was removed,. Stanton would have to re-ort to the COlida, hat he never IhO . PreSiaallt that he'would an remain and become a party to the con troy, ray. A sith-equent examination of the law 1 . 61, iurrd biro or the einirse he must pursue, null farty-elght hours be fare the Sets,no aoted, he waited upon aohnhoo of his own volition and an nonneedills Iktprinination. I.AN ID:VENtrIi SERVICD. 'file Secretary of the Treasury In eetionimbnnon to the House oi-tlay, sap e 1 ,3111.., employed on tau Lakes a , 1,1 of a eh:tractor lest stilled to the 11..31 ,f revenue service, but their aert a are Lv no lIIVAIIK - Ilniult.rima ,•r cart lies, and I{-1 they noire placed there by Ceine,real.'in vine perhaps of censiderationa, aside trout the ordinary purpoaes of the revenue, ha iloe; not feel at liberty to 'recommend the sale of then, unle , ot they limn • he • - 01 • WithOlit sacrifice, ifs sinn, to that if - Congress shall lei of the opinion, that these vessels are 1171., 1!(1 for recent., parpak-ea, and -Isall 11.:111 it tolviLable go dispose of [Lela, that in the bill rintheriiing their a Mt, the minimum amount _for watch they shalt ba said Lothisertaak ' r quietly? /1 . so, ft Wili . llo well for''everj ''''''"" 'tn.:Uß'. I eitizeu to have the prat,' f o' f an alihi at p,I. -lie, Worth, Suprintendent of , hand. Infian affair: Sr the S;outhern . " I.tin- 1 The total t i amount reailzatl by - the rob tentlen,-y, 1i.14 arrived frotn the Indian hers Is ye uncertain, bin front the best territory south .of Kates. Ile reports we LOU learn the total 1644 will not fall t' , h , " '''' v i t''''' t " tuen l , the th q" I shalt of 3:30, , .(ye, although Joe only, an, , Wilde the fiencino:e% andtte et...re to- „moo In the let e weereee. . [ribs` are making very rapid r a tter? informatio front a 3013.1 . 30 that toper in i .1111 i 4 1 ,16111, ctle1:1410113 trim several I hap . the, rn etretta „... as . ll ,.. entirety 1 nnti“. t r i'''-' , '"'l_,' 4 l'"l'd -here, shortly, too snitch trl minion publih. In the mean ) I r r 44,1;, are lrita the I , 1111111133101301% , f ..,,....„. A. „„..__ 6n Among the ; ril , e4 a Inch will he repro,. ..1 . , 2 74, , , 0 Z t `t e ,; . "! - 7, Latino to ferret out thep e rson ted are the Niow.,, I:a:own-In...Chu:. - ' O.- ,petrators, and the itnpressiou is . 1t don't 3311,0, 4 t-..orrs and Pottawmtamles. , , , pay to work for this tirrit.” NALioNar. DAN/: 1.0.133. r 1 Tho `- , ..,retary of V.ri Treasury, in • .• epty to 31 r. talon y, m.III. th ,, 11,..•e is rcport from tine Corr,n , y,.g.tying he Is I EIM=IMMZEMI ==EMEttti IMRE In the cUe MEM \.n.• i in tI habit-of loaning; thon. money up , ,, fancy et•,cicv MIMIIMMTI=CI lV4s u J Anuary IoLI'AILTMENT-I'I,IIEDMEN . II BC- An unnhially la ~ ro number of visitors he War Depirt tnent this morning all I had an IMPtatiVT with Mr. Vvry inahy Senators and Rep. re=ont,tiv, woro pro,nl. • • N. tvict IA attached o. ttc. ll.tro.tu In Kyntneky; talk with the Socro!ary of tear 11 to the ei rotor letter . of It . ccta,..•c :.e.,0 C. , 11Lr . .1e:.;t1,, (punt. in that and other :do , 1,1,1 moot,. A .ttonxelrort - .ado to have :flat eirimlAr ne t okd, ' lott t ..tam ba., yut Lou taken itr; the Soort.tary in the intier. The f..aroienul c3rtener iv ated for. the 01110 , 1 t r, , 1 to f , 431.,000. The amount hipped \V.I4 3 , 1,074. - Notional Ink : , qt, 5..2,:r0P. Amount in circa ::,,:Fruetroln I currency 4.1111,1 r..yLd tor the week, Taird Na•i. , nal It tek. at Nes teet ~ p.e, de..en tt-t1 a drp , sitory of pub. t.lev ad thtent of the Cuitul VI:1'1110N lIANCOCIe4 forzw , rly . a:rent of Ilttrean I,lll,iana. ar nveil her •eq , t ettl.ty, IXaror et a petilko frqui the It,elieal Cohy,ill,l ill the I en,vul co: (Lea. . . .• is aul C4 - .ayilitt.eutigr,., 10 burn II 1.11;1 ',PAW, to wpoint. t , I 1 alb ivil: , . , r4 of it, ,tnzo. .1110 petition pr,ente , l to Itongrembezt neck. - Jan. :A 1363. 11=1 A now treaty with lejoe Island has eaelieil the I iiipartinent of State. It to halo, variettatedin Misr v a..id ran rrty twisted g v cord tattle •itds. Its. 11 1110 O.:114 'Cuortgr4os ltia tO . l/1• United Stalest for three ..n rsnvS., l llrity fur Ihie payment or the etnsining indailniera of indemnity on c saint orTils subjects leaving eaten on o+ A caner to antlers many years ago. the Viciiiiteat is to prevent the rival tirtur,i tic war mrainst the jeirttinntte tat this Fejeis. 111060,1W:4 in truetions aro that if the l'resident epts tun tooth the treaty is to be consitb red otherwise It It. to be re. urn. ii. • CONIMEOI7ONAL TRIIPERANCZ SOCIETY. The first public 'minting of the -Con gre,stei,d Temperance this sell eon sees 1,-111;/?t. 111 the flail of the lense Represent:it ;res. There seas a cro hence, bed, on the floor and in the trellerien. Senator Wilson pre sided.. lie seal tin, Society Was Or, year ago. and he believed it tied exer,i , eed a p•cel italuenee till (Wet Ills, /hint. .r.y the- eruiddrig - of the rel,lll, , nand overthrowing. of reins in,deminns the eenntry had been made great and irte, but there !ran mirth, hardly le, gigantic, to bo ovoreome, and that tires intemperance. Ire Steen .neiesdvoly introduced Repro- Horace Greeley, En- Govern, Ford and others, who made ni.reelds on that and kindred subjects.. uour:4lT S. w.lr.lir4lt ON ::leQUlsrrloll, or 11:14Kir , l, BY Tilt tOtTOD Hoe. 11.411,0 rt J. Walker has written a. long loiter, whieh trill soon ho published giving u history of the annexation of territory to the United' Slate+, and in la- ' Yoe tf the. part:ha:lo of tho 'Russian- Atn..rieatt 1 .,, ,, , ,4414,11,1nd Danish West India I,la ntl.. WasitiNcrox, January 27, 1641.3. Ft , 1'741:1114 roger 1 , 1:c1,1IONs4. The Soprano Court t o o atfirtned th , 3 of the Dist riot Court of Texas, relative. t. I the Me,ina laud thins, which wan number ono on the Slipreillo Court Docket, iviving boon there at least twelve yearn. It . luny recollectedthat for ids aetion in thin f • Ils1) Judge WatrOus was eltargt,l in the I louse of Itcpre.;eniatives with — impenchahle offonscs, and that, inch ti,tittlonv was t:tbvo in regard to t sot subje,t.- 'rho Itmltor, however, was not onneliblet) by. Congre,.. The orig. ion tituuinc,d 1,-110v en. , 14141, , , 1,1141 In nd partiettlers, thus vindicating his ac tion. '1 be Court. also decided a case, on ap peal, .Innuncillg the pri ciplo of letelt• Ham hit. to be that a matter of a vessel t hew a right to sell Ida ship In a foreign port, when it ern be edablemed them is I a littMolity to di, SO to atteniv the inter ests of all parties Interested. General (toward sonde n copy pf hie circular let tor, dated Ileatniberiant,which provides that with :Select to reauct lon of otikters and au. tits of (ho Freedmen', Koreas, NV1)0143 services can he the. .pensed with, it Is mitered that, with the eXeernoll of Sei.efielee.ieete of Ed ucation, on unit liner the Li hot February nest all enlecrs and agents In Maryland. Kentucky, West Virmaia and'reimeasee be dispensed wdli, mid that Minters of , the regular artuy he designated by the Secretary of War to hike their pliteettrind act ua Aaafiaanl Cem mis tiunCnr In those Stets, (1011. 110 e says a large por tion of Crtaro...mai Trout Tennewee mid ilidgmtmits fro n t Kentucky .nun Maryland' have prasolial:y'and ha writ ing depreitated the proposed changes, whhit they ray rill. work !Murton:Ay it=lid educational and other interests of freedmen. rdtrom ON main, or NATURALIZED The report General Make to the Ilnuse, In rablltirm to what is already= stee=l, totes of natamilated citizens of this enuitry trlisi;_emtvicted and pun idled in Great Ilantdr,. that our Govern ment is In ditty bonito to listen to their appt-al and protect them in their rights. The Committee clalin that the doctrine 01 perpetual allegiance Ls a symbol of feudalism -turd Met.% and Is as abtolote over the t mind as the body. • It has 'ne authority In this coantry, except Its en clement of Linglidi common - law °slating at the. tine of the revolution. The reportge ellen this point at length citing the case • of Martin Kosta as la point, end appeals In fervent language to North Germany to) leld the _claim to perpottial nllegi. Athee, 61.villg, the point we make roust be ismceiled, thatinerights we claltdrati be permanently denied la impossible,' • , • 'AN muntaiLmi mavonS. • . " • • J. 11. harmony, who absconded from. Lake Providence, tar,, win> eight thous and dollars, deposited in Ma hands' as agent for Me Freedmen's litisean by freedmen, has been arras ed at Charles ton and nearly all the mousy recovered.' lie hes lava pent to NewOrleami for The Benttitightir tfen tient lltia itemised .Tleinht of t mates, tie. if itobt.r)/ iiri~~ lti•pa(c'.s A thus wriw, from Ti 'u Zen:, Were regard In the rei:orted 110?: ,1•1 / our l pOtratorS ir the live none for a 11.101111. Ili ell tQI ion 33 to their guilt, trot wac of too strolls a u.it. Ile: to yl stet'. day morniag au °hit*: eallett ion Major of the kinerican,land a.,1,0,1 if one ; Cady boarded there. Ile also Inquired for Mr. Harley. Ileing answered rhtit. both gentlemen boarded there, but liar. ! Icy was in flew York rind Carly in his ; r.kiut, he proceeded to nrre,t the lattkr, at the time searching. tire root,. Soon the nflicer and his ehargo, together whit a few friends of Cady, were on their way., to E.:quire I/onahne, at I Petroleum Cet,' i ire, to answer. . As soon as the .lilentifyluo `saw Mr. Cady, tins pro.timtor (Joe Ilen— umgholfr withdrew ttti, charge,. and I offcred to pay tint cost. I'. 31. Cody. however, insisted upon preying he wren at Pleasantville deriu. the moire even ing Of the robbery. 'The only circuity. stetter causing the arrest rs about as fol low. An anonymour letter won re craved by the I.lenninghoirs, stating that, if they would Offer in the Irertetil a At of the writer would ritveall to them the lost ire:tante.. Inforruatitla I Justrtbout as reliable, was also lurnis ! that four men were Aeon, to leave Titus , vine early On the eve of the rpbherv, and tho Caine party wore seen to return at a later hour, giving : proper 'time to , drive to the place and retnrn. and that one I of the party was Cady and another Liar ley, whereupon Jeri ileiminglitar swore mit a warrant against theist. The in terra a- I lion as to the party of fear was true, said party coupistm_ of ltlei.ars. Cady, liar ley, Maier :Alibi and Captain Pitcher,Woo 1 indulged In a sleigh ride le .Pleasant vine on the evening in Oueetiou. In re `rani to the feeling here aboutthe above arrest, oar citizens . arc a rulY indignant, the musiOolon e:11.4 sr, trillinx, char. otters ur Cite trnrneo 111111pr:31x. I are above reproach. They are 111,11 l engaged, per harc.., in the largest trate-actions in oil in the entire . regc.m. Messrs. Cady and Gen... Avery are the proprietors of the Pithole itud .Mbler Farm oil tOpo and our acquaintance With Mr. Cady' (lat.. back •to boyhood; and his honesty and Ijusiness qualitications are urappis &ion, Mri Harley escaped the odium of an arrest, its he was ab4eitt. ID) is the 14o prictor of the Iloilo; Oil l ips line, and col Jys tire coutidence of' ail htiiineTt men ; ind in reputation. stands umpu.s.,- tioned: In conclusion, we wonder If our best citizens will - etaeal iiitnit indignities oxric,l ‘i:l rra ri,overal ?One, e the p , r4 blued the omlll7 4 YC't the matt. , irre for tvli en- —The people of the pacific capital are congratulating thenmelvezi that the Pa-. dee steamship line hat rendered It un necessary for them to ship coin and treas ure to China and Japan Ny .way or New York. The N.:re tt ItCpubltc" carried ig.3. - p.977, of which . .17,11.51.1 were 111'01- Ter, .$315,519 in gold nurs and, ealn, and only 3293,913. in Mex.ftain dollars. Of this 5,34..430 went to Japan. Our tale-. graphic dispatches bring these faetsdown to the beginning of the current „year.- They era not full, Lit show that the printed report was not too nattering. The important fact contained in them Is, that the grain crop of 1007 Was more Val uable than the gold prodder. Theex port of the foimer espped4tl2,soo,ooo, In cluding wheit nod Ilan Mashies I.lol.l3Ml tif, consump ion Mid the stock on hand: Tho treasur shipment) WWI ilit,Zi.g,o,lo, and the meichend!ze .) wool. clip exceeded $6,51.1.1,0a0: There in enough in thou items tp assure us that the full returns most he Highly satisfac tory, mid that our Nellie comnieree; 'Mclntire stud mlning are destined t..kbo, even more. Important than they have heretofore keen. —Red tape has often peen burlesqued, but we doubt it to more extreme case Will everroeorded than the following, credited to the Eh:dials War Department: "There is a tradition raid to be historbasl, con ceruing a clerk, in the War Wilco who once wanted a mg whereon to. hang Isis hat. To rave tun expense of ticarpenti,, he applied for a hannne'catul a nail with which to drive it in himself. Six mouths passed before he ren.irdal any answer to his request., and he had long ago set up a peg of his own, whets a'ara)eial. Inescan. ger from the Tower arrived In Pali Mall with a hammer sent to him at last thrormh the tnedium of numberless requisitions and authorizations. At 'the same, time ha W. informed that it I was not ammo. vines of the Tower OniCiMIS to supply nails, but that these would came to tum trout Woolwich,. and niter a few months,' further waiting, they really did arrive -- a pound of nails; brought by a groat one. balance wagon, wit,la. its half dozen horses audits dozen attendants„.' I —A few days ago GerteralJumes Lon .. street - mlledat tie residence of Gener al Hancock, in Noy Orleans, and sent is,. his cord. General Hdocock was then engageil with sumo friends, ladies - and gentlemen.. Ile immediately left them to receive his old army filend, niece re cently his foe, but now again his friend; and, after a warm greeting, insisted upon conducting General LOngstreet into the` parlor and Introducin,, ,, Jilin to the eons, pasty there assembleiL ! The styfoof is troduction wad pecAliar. "Liulies and gentlemen," mild General llancock, ''al low me to Introduce to you a gollantgen lleman, to whom I am! .indebted .for an ungrecefut limp, and whom! had'the tnisfortune to wing.in the same combat." Although the toutpanY WMs composed exclusively of ladies 1 and gentlemen whose sympathies ware oh Aho - Union side In the late war, the! indident excited a profound and pleatumehle sensation. • —A Parts ealedriver,tired of his bizsi• nevi, has sued Isis thaViter anti son-lit law for support. • The untillaL pair sire the 3larquis and MatipPs° iil'Orrault, who ridi in luxury, while the fatherts so poor and loans that his wits has to wash his cab and glootit his horses. The 31nrquis also has a history. Ho lost. twoutpiwn relatives...lU. the Reign. of Terror, aervestirttlie Etrond Army , . tied the Legion or Honor MI ids horses Anil when entering Paris ivith the 'allied army, 'robbed' , Napoleon's sister-In-law, knocked Talleyraad.do.vn is church. suit distinguished himself in Vllllutie other ways. He doses'` care to tampon'. hispieboUn father-Lo-latn, and is trying to show that the latter Would be, own 'fort:ably well off if ho intd, ',tot gambled away his money. • --Late Arir.ons selvices say: General Palmer, Southern Pacific Railroad Sur- Vroevor, expresses tho Opinion that the :1.1 will he built to thertieth Ile reports that the part es surrey - hag tho Gets route may eunnp lbe route to the thirt.y.romol parallel, but he thought it doubtful. - General Paluier- placed ; corps of auvreeors on the' line teem 'recuneopee to nan.Franciseo, anti Feta back a party-of engineers front Colorado rive;Oo correct the survey from the thir ty- rlth parnllel to the Rio Grande. It is ' the Intention of ti2LICV3I Palmer to-pno. Lceeth itroustlionly .to Washington Via Sou Francisco, to make his report in tines to secure mone Congressional oats- • • --Dr." Stows writes the London 75mes that eookod pota strata as . dons against scurvy as w ones; a filet not itsuerully. known. but ascertained beyond doubt by Dr. William Holy, late physician tir the 31ilbadk Penitentiary, wham scurvy at MIA litho was not Us.' . .10111,110Ti. Tho diseasol wholly disap peared on the addition of a few pounds of potatoes to the, weekly dietary. —tee new JilraiicAe 'troupe recently arrived In Now York- Is said to perform mere romarkstile leatskthan any of its ptedesnstsork. Ono of the tricks consists In balancing a; tiny on the ilmb of a tree held In the air, hydrst rusting rIo base on a bird, cage, the cage on a stool, and the latter In a tub with long handles, and ail austained by the feet of ono or the mon. —The Istrort advice* rrorn Altmka to Decomber twonOrmightli, • mention no suffering among tho Iraci.)s. On tho eon- Lowy that repromut , s'e l l; The; 'Con: gressionst rooolutjori orllnquiry report ing the It.*?ps in want 01 - acmuturno4lo. .lions, intension:4 and suffering extragto eulff Weather, oreatos 'snrpriso In Call. fornla. [ • • . —A short time s7sce teeo precions ernes belonging to the MU50121.13 of Antiquities of Venice were lost, nut! two enipleveri who were sumpeved of Having• stolen them were arrested and • imprisoned.' After eeveralweeks the easel entrofountl In alio: Whore they, bait been packed; and the two Innocent prisoners wore re. —The Springfield illashl ffi7u74iinti states that most of-the v.:adieu:manufac tures that aro running la dud, vicinity aro -exporting .1x lair spring, traile„m retty much all the Imported zeds are used up, and they consider that imports-. Clone must•nearly oesse'hajeug- as our prmieut low prices hi woidlenshoutitme. —TheRAU'S' Vieeroy ckizul la has late ly^ held a grand colobratieur of Lneknoss. The princes or Victoria's I great Oriental. Famprru of 200,000,000 people:paroled in gorgoons precession befoSe Ore Viceroy.. Four hundred richly saparisoracd,rale, phsufs else formed . part. of-the . prima. easy. Tlienhow hr4nows.es tote! D nbaS.. —To provo that It Is pce,,slide tor .mar eted mph,' to Ilvo Übe ripe, old' age,. • Western paperannonnees the death of a lady at the age.of one tundra' and twelve, whose husband died two "lean before at the ripe age °foils hundred and ten. Theywere .Ftench, and emigrated tromeanada West thirty - r am- yea:sago STATE NEWS -The Ebensburg' Alkghottian says: Our old friend and subsea-niers Elmerlens ter ler, Esq.,- of Carroll towns*, has 'boot us ittufellowLng brief history of his . I life "1 came to this country with my pqrortl,, from Germany, in the year 171.$ We toe!, pasonge at Hamburg, end sr rived in Philadelphia in November: I IV Zl,l bound out he col. Caleb Davis, 4 So:lth Thind street, w,o sent Inc. to j veins • The following. year, 11111), just ' before Christrcum, the aohnolmnster said there would be uo reboot next day, for tlenertid.Georye Washington would hO buried that day. I was nt George Wuati.a button's flineral—and /suppose there is no other man in this county who sum say: no much.- I was bound on. when I was.-- fourteen; ytnirs old, to .xerre nix ream. Atter my term of servietad expired, I ,-erne try Uretto, Ctmbria county, 012 the ,Ll4th du of Aprll, 1:743. My father had- , gone there throe years before. In 1807, .116 v. Demetrius A. Gallitzin, got author dity from 41eury Drinker and . . - 3a r ob • 'Downing, who owned eight tracts of tifal near Carrallrowar for - three settlers msko choler of ohs hundred antes `each of that land, at ono dollar per acre./ Thome/1 Ayrne got the Oral eholpe I got :the second, and Ceurad Luther-g o t the • - third Mr • two neighbors hare been' • ... . lewd frpm . frotti forty to fifty years, :oil m the only living one who settled hero :iithetf• the country Wes a wilderness. j I dim eighty-three years old. I was ajury. 1 titan at the tirat Court held hi this county. 3 have been County Auditor, andln l&I•7 yes elected' County' Commissioner. Di that pear Paul Defeated', David Todd and myself, Commissioners, contra: :With Arnold Downing to. build the pros !id Conn House."' • - —Only a few years ago, says the Har i. 1,,, • L A. as-nri„ -tatefuard, by the way a very' iivn and rersd ble Journal, it was cup. posed ti.a p ...i Euid - pencils could be mantis xaetured lambert. putts England. Time and fulls linVe proven the groundless :hese of thisclaim. We now manufacture is good a pencil for all the uses of fine sketching and drawing as can ho made' anyarbero In the world, and whit Is still more gratifying, the plumbego out, of which the lead is produced for theAmer icon vend!, Is found to Peruniyleania;• ncurhsston. Plambagods found in other pat ts of this country, bet theEaston at ti tie is the most superior - and is regarded by the manutacturersof poodle tut equal, ('not - n better quality than that found shrew). The richness of our groat old Cotnmonwealth is thys'exhiblted in art article which we wereonce taught could not be manufactured in Elie new world. Millions of dollars have been expended in' the prodUction and purchase of pens His, of which the people of the United Slates have heretofore paid-a large share as tribute money to the foreign manufac t neer. 'Heatidfter we Will keep thlstsigne9 ut home, and in this peculiar time of Ludlam' we expect to see Pennsylvania take a prominent .position not only as the producer of the raw material, but in the manufacturer of. the load pima.' .!' --...A. nice (meg,aton bee arisen between , the skaters end the lee cutters on thj Sch chum river. The former that when the river Is frozen over, and the ire to of sufffeient strength tc: bear men and . ' beasts, ft is a public highway • which ni man or set of men t yngag- Imi In gathedeg • ice dare •-deistro f . y. Others again say, that the river ay -be. cleared of 100 to insure its nu gation, ' and the city is bound to furnis h an Ice boat, like that on the Delaware, ' clear the Schuylkill of ice,. The co Meting interests to the issue . are sufficiently strong to make a powerful litigation, so that we may expect to bee Arkiaterellgiria /MS suit on the subject. . . - —Niturcal II J.klear, an employe of ti e ~ . Catnbrln Iron Company, met with a so rions accident one day Dist•week. Ile Is emplo•yod in running- down the Iron , teem the blast furnaces to the rolling mill. On the day of the accident be wan taking a few cars down, when the brake mapped . air and the train Axes/no ram manageable. On attempting to jump to the ground; he fell, and his bead struck a rail, thereby fracturing his skull. Ilia injuries,' though severe, are hot neces sarily fatal. . : • • Perry county Is showing signs of • agitation on the subject of a- removal of the county sent from BloomSoldtoNew-' port. The subject trill, dor course-elicit much .ecgry discussion, but we still hope' removal will be effected without Inflicting serums injury Mt - any particu lar locality, it is not our lousiness to Interfere in such Matters; nevertheless it eannet 'be denied that Newport. le-- the present most eligible and popular local-- ty for the county seat of Perry county, —On Wednesday, the 2d, . , the little. daughter of Samuel S. Green (foto- • Man of the Harrieburgh Telegraph news room) sustained very severe Injuries by accidentally falling against a atone at the residence of • the family, in Chestnut street. Slit wag playing about the room And, when near the stove, fell, and in en deavoriug to men hersellahe caught hold of the bet. Iron, and burned her handl: very eoverely. —A largo and endnindastle meethig In favor of encoring the righis of natural. lzedokizens abroad was held at Pron liebieria Hall, Johnstown, on Saturday, 15th inst. The meeting. was ably id : dressed by Col. Jacob If. Campbell,. the President of the meeting, and by Capt. Woodruff, Daniel 'McLaughlin, John - B. Barnes, and Gen. James Potts. Resole, - lions were passedin favor of memorial izing Congress on the subject.. 31r. ISWIC Davis, of Beaver township, Columbia county, has in fiossesaion a Bible printed in 1603,-that came to Ame rica ht.the seine:ressel. that brought over the founder of Perinsylvanla—Wrir. Penn. Mr. Davie andi, wife are' about seventy-five years old resPeatiVed9e and have been married.tiffy-two years, and are enoying goodliealth.- The Biblehas been i ts their family since it - landed at • Philadelphia in 1652. . • —The Harrisburg TgegrapA says: We regret to announce the death of Ashbel Gratin Sinfonton, (brother-of John W Simonton, Esq of this city), who died at. San Paulo,- kern -sit, on the 9th of De cember last, after a sickness of eight days,., At the time of Ma death Rev. S. svm a missionary of the American Board of Foreign Missions. Il i a disease was. billions lever. —The freight accommoditlon - ttain last Sat unlayrnornlng on thO Lehigh Valley writ! %rut too ranch for the locomotive= thelrosty rails and ran. away down the grade from Newport. the passeogerear Was dotachid and sowed, but the rest ran rutfar as Warrior Run when It went of: the track, smashing one • car. Na one hurt. -A man named William Lafray;so companied by twn3comexi, , ,wns' walking on the rnilroad trick near, Tyrone on Saturday huh. A train came upon the party suddenly, and before .he could get off the track the laoometive struck Mr. Lafray, killing him instantly. 'rho 'ro man romped unhurt, ' —Taking die daily newspaper fever Pow prevalent In Heading, ourrottaville neighbors are clamoring for something of the cart, :anti -we are informed : that parties have hi contemplation the enter prise Of a nen:4 , 4loly piper In that, floar tshing at an early day. - - "The,opierdng of the Lehigh' and Sus .qnkbanne railroad U4°ol/II to Betide hem and Easton, is now expect/id 40 citron the Ist of FolirrunTitlofddiethres and passenger cars of the wound most approved pattern* being, ready for the • • —A prior will is about VI beAsstab. belied at Connonsburg. and 'we tinder- - stand the she bee already been selected , below the town, between the Pittsburgh . pike end the creek; . " —Tho I/ antingdon county Court was , , brought to nn abrupt termination last week e by. the gnashing of the Jary by - Judea Taylor, owing to an Informality In its drawing by;the Jury Contoilasion- —no other day a yOung man in Johnstown slipped Rod fell against a hook, and impaled lilmsetr so •firmly thereon that La was wifle difficulty re leased frounitla unpleasant situation. —John Crofton,- an employee. of the Cambria .IrOn Work', Johnstown,; had Ole of his toot badly crushed. by a large piece of soapstono &Mpg on It the other —Tho Meadville Republican urges the atithoritios of that city to prohibit the rale of the Police Gazette nad Lke pa pors Within:their city ]]mite... ——A 'Child of Mr.- Rohert D.Thomas, ot . ..Ebensburg, diedr on Bran:deg. of measles. The disease haaprefallenthero of late to o considerable extant.. • . . . —Among. theist& arrlvabstnPariswere :L. W. Midi, late. Speaker of the Penn strania Senate,and. wife,' litai are on mluers are still standlaa ant at game et the cone:lea In'Never .Meadow region, with ao latteekle paelpeet or oing to work - . ' . • . .Thco tollos of Xingston, delimit:lg the . 1 virivilege of leap yam-, took their some- . • .. ioq hearts a sleighrido Mat Thureday oven- - •'•1 1 1kozo is n alling t :ft. of sereotrave per eelt. in Lb 0 clumber. of prlanaers . is Venango countrja.U. "getting Bitlefibender tuts Aought th e holet - properiAt.t Aosencrlyia, at Hobbit,. tor --Col: gam. Young luus 'resumed tho priblleation - of the Clarioti Banner: refival'ln'tbe Baptist. ellarch at Ntelulvillo is atll.l I , n proscrees.... Sedalia; Me. - Totten...ley, eta. built. • Inge wore, destropal by fire, occupied by Thort&elitt, dry goods ; Mesa Wryer ,t Co., liquors•,* Tinter & Serbs, stoves and r tinware; Bard at C 0,,, and Woltit.aro., i +lts:goal ; bong Bro., drYgoo,k. d 1 Th e : three fist named bonsai lose_ -pretty • j. mach overythingr - Tbetireelatter eared ' a - portion of their stock. The Ices ie eet.ttnated;at from slily to seventy , end :,:lusurance , At•Wortester„Ussa., yiSteidaymorn. 1 litg, lisywOod &Mgt.'s - igusnntaatory wax la moony warned, isiTolving a loss of . .Ir.o,b(lo,oamlitelz there la au Insurance pret3,COl "kennimeld Hounigton's- adfolubsir„ , satransi a sonsldatablo '
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers