II 1 ....._ SOLDIER* (MPH:INV ' CALLT LAST WEIL We panted these . GEORGE F. IdcFanthan, Esq , Super-.' eitl lo of at , S..ttremt , Court of the lint intendent of the Soldier.. Octhaa', , 1.0 l er:a:cs„ I,: rnotrzcoa' by Chief duo- Schools of Is,,picsylp l e.',, furnist.i.4 u-3 ieO T.,NEY, is :Le Rhode Island cast,' with his annual report h.r1667, made to ;:dirntt l t. Il•itrltistr-0 it as iiich the law the Governorin pursuance of taw. Ike 7ett• laid dawn to be titai is political law provides for the dare, maintenance : matters the :tenth had no jorisdiction, and et:kcal:co, fit the expense of the the Coutitution devoiving on Congress State, of the destitute orphan child:Lai:l' , exolusively the right and duty of ad all 'Leh deceased soldiers sad suitor=, jud i Fier, oolm'lrer the Siete organizations citizens of Pennsylvania, and soldiers - wen- republican in form and cribttance. who fi ave , r ,.., 4 i n p ese 4l,-, th i n reg i. . Thlt was demonstrating that the power meets as have tiled in the service-of the 1 new claimed by. Congress for itself, - of. United States in the late war to sztp;•reti . re.a.kinting the governments of the the rebellion. Owing to thelneideque.ey i Satllittrn States, and denied to the Su of the first appropriation much eitticalty I Oreille Court, Wel,.not revolutionary or was experienced - in dlspoaing of •all the ; ereo novel, but strictly In eccordance applications made for admission into the I with the organic law as expounded by schools, and, indeed, in provirling for thel highest judicial tribunal. It was, thcem already received into the schools. wise, ahawing inferentially that the After mature d e tti rwra q ted th e n e p er i e _ Damocrate, under calor of zeal for the tendent resolved to retain el-the seliol•:„ 001 h 0 ti 1 3 - and dignity of the liapreem 1 1 are, to admit only the o'dest and need- ; lie° ilt were bixthiS to debauch It iota au instrument of partizan contentions. 'eat applicants, to discharge promptly I _-_7 all the scholars arriving at the age of •; The Post read this decision with pro• Tau re - roocista sou, . sixteen, and in traevent to allow the ''found amozement; cogitated tips° it for ; nsmussuse• len . ll . l3ll6 .exPendinares to exceed 4450,000 per . 1 th e I teu.ainder of the week; took It for 500. Gazer:tr.-The edttorLal to to-ders - ohilv -meditation; and, destry, on Oszrrre.„ relative to Yr. Connell. and allot- year, th a ISOM voted by the iloese - Houle. its "' wilierlook to prove that the ,• 'g a l°, t t ' ase " h f l tl,T h it' w e as i e lt f r i t o of Prey/d ar ted , : Daring the loot seven months of the - 11 "' j 'i ' ail bili, doe. Mat Sename • Cruel wren, year-one hundred and eighty-one pit Ica : Amiges were egrei3oualy ignorant of the !that such • report 'ragout in ctrcuLation concenito g bleu, our sinturid' snot/W. u m ', were added to the acattota, a•- ; -1 , -, ' ' '' l 4 ' as cirearamanees. slime Ativre are always thou g h t h e n ew l etent i ent e ff„.„,,, „ -al,at of filch: powers--opd, all this, an• person. to te round in eery commUutty " der miler of replying to our reflections ready to implite toe beget] or motives to I change in the grade of scholarship Vidal raw set they disavrimve oft. brit the pre's, i.v/11 the drci•Lion.d its a licabilir to tenet or such reports dly. amounts to a i fail,- compensated ki this adattonnl 1: t „ • • PP Y l t r&at t l i gt r t n 1,1 , ...k,2n t Tho u ri: 1 111. 1 m existiog situation. so, then, our oestee one 0 eta e.Lea 'mu, pur e :MI:PI 111 the State there ore twelve schools ' c ' s. ti li iP-s'Y is equally at l'Arianee other Senator would es a done for any rub • . ' . with' Cop - and the Supreme court. eg ,,,,, jm , ~,,,,,,,,, 1 ,,, 1 ,, ~, in bi . 00r ,..,,,,,.. far the more advanced echolars, contain- Peciliala'y it agres Just es little with the •vicy. It was welt ender ,tvad ham ws,l Mk; leg 1 , 041 made and 726 female pupils; fact wee known to the Ittsburwe oil amen ateeldiv,e as with Legialative and Judi. 1 whams. here tolook a r throat , that Mil there arc three Primary- l Eolo°hr contain- Adam. muted brit was I tended tor a Phil l, ~,. • • `cal I) ."L triturate If it coul d only run 100 rules and 158 females. 'lure , , - t - • a adentaituon no way e acted With Mr. I ... all three of co or:llrue brooches to suit Connell That gentleman had not tee I are 26 Baines and other institoitions slightest interest In the Matter, one way or .leedl it YE ght be satirtled, but it would theorem, ; whichedmit 636 males and 413 femilcs• xr es . 0,. 50cr0,..u 0 m ette l. bi t ti po.n was e g .. ? L . rte:L rn tire . e . d 1 at rho Home foe d ' estitnte n ,, t i oredeehiid : . prod l ce a government nia good citizen ; wouy be vrilling tie five under. lentil teams near tram the oil metier &Ile- I ren there are 15 make and 7 11 femsle‘. sherry empty, and ha plomptly compiled - - .- TO the grief of the Port, With my reque s t, refusing peremptorily to Those figures giro us 1,874 male and . 1 doubtless, - yield to any imagestton from PtilleAlelphia * • i lilt Supreme Cour, on yesieulay morn -1,-06 female scholars, affording a grand • . 1 in cut it up; end. when the Committee of 8.180 orphans supported , main. ; ter, ie,ffirmcd lip ind sketches% dismias. . Pittsburgh oil teen arrived here. he eon- total of aenum at once to such • Mptilllcatinti or it ea I' State out of l lag d i m Georgia 'anti Miasiazippi Rooth. would completely remove al/ their obJer- tamped and educated by the • I of har tilt Immiled to Make thi s ...... 1 gratitude tar the services performed by ',- 7truc• ton eases- Toe Dernecrats will now ;eel elike con teropt for tice Court no for .men in anon Jusuee 7 ....... a I their fathers on tho field of bc.ttle. La 1 :eel sere the Oscar's will t refuse me the I • privilege of patting b right berme its '•1867 the whole number of accepted ap- i C'ugless- readers. As no eta everytntes that wee niinato„. received ~..„1 09- Lein 60e I 1 --------- '7 -- ••• --- - -- • posande to give oar men amu oesaine so t --- -—r a. en - . Conentes has been accused, alike by the matter, ano to ricalreZe bill newly se- less than in 1066, and 753 lees than in 1 D I • ' ep:able to thein It was due from m• to emocrats and Conservative Ilepubli - aim that 2 Should It testimony to re- 1865; the number ororders issued 739, - h 4. gait 4sf mti ping authority in its Seeps!, ileve nun from tee mermen.. so unntortir being 1,040 less than en 1666, ant, . cut opon him. gespeCtruilv, gruction Polley not conferred. on it by stossunlEmearr. less - than in 1665; the number of•adruis- , , he t , o ; • ; .._ ~..." as:Retina. The Supreme Court ; • lin l liuthiet-+alix thin chi', and where-v- :ions 636, being 945 less' than in 1506 er eliellt Ennirri to itilbwhi his state' and 412 less than in 1665; thenum • bcz. o ' r , i , i, taut .cogrcis Lice exclusive. mlinohad this quest ton btforn it, and has ; meat Will be received as I reliable twthe discharges, %be., 125, being 7 more than `recededu ihneat degree, atut will exonerate - Me- in 1666, and 104 more than in 1E05; while 1 titcritt' in 'he premiers, rely political year was pr l Constant. from the charge of soelthlg to the number in school at the close of the I topics being involved. Kant is more; earklihimself by means Of the l'etrole- only 495 greater this 4 cision confor m s to the doctrine um Inspec orship bill. ater than tel the close of theevious year, before "chid, tell by the Court on this class of not t -- ' ; tern ft m the foundation. of the govern- While Mr. Eanyarr maguudinoasly the schools were not fairly irt'opeiation. I , • strictly within the limits of its beeomes thenhamplon of !Mr. CONNELL, Theselgures show conclusively that runt. Congre as has been, and is still - even he is constrained to admit that the the maximum number in 'school at any octingl g imputation . " - wes natural lender the cir- one time has now been, or is being preyed atives; and it. assulants wish to curnstancea." : Mr. Cos, ax.r. says he I reached, end that hereafter it will de- , niakenew rules, in conflict with ell past , wanted "to protect the hies of his bon- ere.. The decrease from discharged ltrccetls„ dectsiorria Lais to Bait their the moos consequen ti rat y e?ill • ntltnnuttl from accidents&Thing from the 1 o - a age alone will bo 374 in 1568, 329 in Tiii be ettise ithas been understood for use - of 'adulterated oils That is his I ism, gigl, a in -„i.O, 403 In 18,4 479 in teal representation of ; his motives. /fr. - 1872, 460 in 1873, 416 in 1874,./ontbg that a nattjerby of the Judges,4, 341 in -Ewan.= resist:els defence On the ground .1575, and 807 in 1876, when the number i° their private " I ' l ' i ' i ' , do not con ' that he "merely wanted 14 ehlige on• of will haVe been. reduced to the capacity 'eat to what Congress has done and his nonstltuenta”" Thili is another view. of a single institution of ordinary sizes is doing. It they had toe power they i In either ciere,lo imPese a yearly tax or The entire cost ot clothing 1,098 0r ,.. ; would not do ac Congress'is dating, but .4100,000 on the oil., dealers was going phase in the advanced aohooia for the , racy are constraiee dto adjudge that the I , quite beyond the , requireMents of per- eleven months ending December Ist discretion is not with them, _but with tonal friendship or public sty.. ' t the Sena t e and Rouse' After this, It lth 1867, was $45,538 57, or 2,90 for each ; ~ ,ecome • the Dernecrate is abate - ' Bat. while Mr .' Corm n. will t affirms Le orphan ; b was attested - only by a anthroplc . i $2 The schools will enter the new year I '''''''''' toes t, of their wild talk • desire to preve l ft his constituents from with a fair supply of good clothing, all' I'/Ott qic uaurpati.us of Cdpgress. . being killed off by kerosene explosions, Provided .at the average raostof twenty. -. hirt - Exxxxx tells us that the °thee eon' , live dollarsfor each arid per annum. , tetapisted was :Vended 1 - 4. a- Philadel- 1 The milarles paid during cloven piston. A. annglofflea, worth $lOO,OOO al months amounted to 44,1/74.98; other I ..X O - 0 ; manufactured to order, might or general expenses of the Department, I might not operates* a suretrotection to 1 such as postage, Stationery, blank books, people who burn oil,that „ mold surely printing, advertising, funeral expense, I be an excellent thing for any man who az, amounted to 41,606.62. I ; should fall into it. Nose, it is possible While the number . of el - Ili - rep atlas'. I that' so many eggs mayble, put into a ly in eelcool on the tint of Dem . enter, assn', baaket, even in IthrnstetreMi-upon 1667, was 8 , 180, the number of out- I ; principles of disinterested etttleheer 1 standing orders, which entitle the hot ;;, and with so einderstandin thit those dem to admission whenever preseated, I I 0,40, end the number of applications on Gairttt Ii zunima22,"Br FIiEFTNI.KAN, REED & CO., I t, AT GAZETTE BUILDING, 1 - HOrith IBtroot. r. R. 'pricer - m.4.x, ,? innwrcni, fnor. J..&11.11 XING, 1' IleutnesailAnsim. IMMO FUR VTERILLT • Ilre• CePler, per yEer. by mall tarb.....sE so . 1.•....123 . re ar Sore copier, to irtie Me TEEXB INS DAILY: • t !ewe oerptto .• a maw Palmed by center, (per 18 - F.. entrettbers. roes 0.00. Ltbeeel reelweloe• to Newsboys end Ageots. 1TZD1515DA7,17.193,111.11,7, 12;11101. chiefly instrumental in the beneficence . shall have the private sucking of any of ( I , them_ It is posaible—nay, probable— , . for a member of a legitirdiv body to in troduce trodu or stranger, having a large sized snake In it, without stopping t scrutinize deadly what was contained therein, or e.,,,, how_it would operate in - p ctice; and when such a snake moo to disclosed the.leg,islator would be AN tad unjust ly to injurious imputations, as now in the case of Mr. Cossets,. 1 But we beg to call Mr. ONNELL'a -. • attention to .the second sec on of ale tli bill, commencing at the ten line and dose, going to the wherein it s provided that. if the Inspector shall d any oil . with a fraudulent brand or na rk of in spection, or adulterated after I spection, he shall wino It, - and procee to sell it, pocketing a part of the pro ds, and turning the remain'der over to the trews- my of the Association for the relief of I disabled firemen. Doyoa call it protee. , ting to the lives of your con • vaunt? to 1 pat edit - I:grated or fraudulent on the market, under solar of Law, ii2g them I to the highest bidder? Mat say yon, Mi Conners? If such is year motive, _._wealtlyon not hare provided that each 1 fraudulent and impure oils should be re __ distilled I Bach a provision w4nld com- I pert with yourprofemion. The existing s provimiXdoes not. • N ow,; we will tell Yr. Zlonnut.x. whittle he has done us tninstee. The eecimation against him did not 6riginate in oar columnit nor did we endorse it as ' ' well4onatied, It • had been ' running Dough the newspapers three or four days before we referred to it at ill. Two of, AejmurnalSof this city had; given it faith Circuladon and endorsement We then vote of it as a report; for Which we amid not vouch, and oragAatMl that he should saake . denial, if he had denial to make. - Hereupon, he pounced down upon as as kis accuser, charging us with impertinence and lying ; bat he said not , a word of or to those journals that pub lished the atatemcnt - originally end voneluid tor Its accuracy. Will Mr. Gortaxis, while his hand is in, explain he:ay . :this happened ? - . .A. few words with ML LoWax. He wets that .the newspapers otthls city are "common scolds." It mini bo ad-1 tatted that they have at times exhibited mach impatience and heat at the course of laglalation at Harrisburg. . They Would hive demonstrated the possession oryirtua more than human it they had net Agood deal of legislation, touch ing most important interests Within city 'hid Vegloo has been of a character to slake even a saint- swear. But; It enes not become M. Lows! to put hits:mit forward as a - ce.nior of the poses in general or of any settled thereof : If any ten journals in the Demmon•\, Wealth /Lave done as much - violent end eearaa sco'dlng in their coluMns as he has done from his seat In thel Be.nate, daring the seven years he has occupied IT , ` they deserve to . be abated a's public anizances-- .:::7-)."Itlille men, - .... when Irritated tiy strict *viol the press, are wont to express a degree of contempt for journalists and ionnislions. they do not feel. CCintempt does not fled expression in thei furious manner adopted by some of, the members Of the Senate; Why - , gentlemen I lash yelieelves into fury, and dm:4d Into the iielths - of Wacknoardiszot if .4°4 only moan to - signify that you are unntoyocl and regaiuless of the censures t 4 Witch you nor subjected 1 A sane man ayes like a pugilist to brash a tly hls fate. Xels do not weigh, /n the 'pot, to - show_ that boiling Water is pleuaat to them. = - s'4l4rnfeel warranted In aIIIIOIIIICi gthat Arkistri;thlrty.daytthe week requisite to komplett:reit OonneThrrille ltatlroe4 will 14 4 -.Alaigrt* for letting, and that the whole will tes inlakai probably in the eo f ee l of a rAri or, as -farthest, rata txtorli few days weishall inskirsaltion to givethe getausor the --konbsinplstedtirrangemente t Pinnsylva' ziti_Cal legei held an important Conreniion st.i Harziatnirg, which we shell 130tke in de !lllf4hertl7' : =MEM die awaiting orders, :AO, makingn total •BY A ItecE 1 I,,CISION of the Supreme of 4,060 children to be provided for, en I • M-Ats,inn at. Philadelphia, Mrt, Caddie of the additional applications re. I S ANL - B ; iwi , sztEtu, of Lids city, 'recur solved after December 1, 1E67; yet the rt , •i Ett.tE to ( kir ' , mitt. of some di sc h arges w ill °cone rsp id!, so d t h, E;0,000 , vrhichtiSdbeen a:legally trans , - may be grod„ by her huolizel Dune wbom she ually, that the number aMnally in school,' divorced. Mrs. S I.as battled this may be kept. from exceeding 3,500, •,e fur 1, - . 1:14 time her many the let of June, lEGS, and 3,61./0 'rier.. - !eviill be ph-Are:Li to nuts the *eat the following year, or by the let of.Tane, in hm 1669, before which the maximum hive been reached, and the decreare have commenced Thus_resixinted, the average 11111:11XT is school will not differ materially from 3,400 for the six menthe ending June 1, 1868, and 3,500 for the year ending June I, 1869. Assuming that no provision will be made for no more than the numbers here I'edit:sled, the Superintendent estimet eo '-e average cod per pupil for the year et k 142.9& Tids contemplates ,only the. adrausion of , the friendless and deal t lute, and the Superintendent strongly Icages the Legislature to make a more lliSerarappropriation, so as to provide the recce:ton of fully five hundred o ore pupils, and as the maximuns'num. I b_r will be reached thin year, the gran: now asked will be the heaviest that wit ever be required. • The Sacerintendentls not Particularly I pleased with the character,-style and ac c•lnmodatiork of the advanced and re -vary; schools, and sets there down :a ; .a;iproachingl failures when corsoarq with Model institutions of the character. dowever, he congratulates himself that most of the schools show steady and en. C.-waging advance towards the required standard. The report concludeakey paying a just tribute to the patriotism of Gov. Cute. - rue, to - whose sympathy, wire and far. I , ting statesaudislalp is due the easel,- .•kanent of the Boldiera' Orphans' school! in Peartsylireuria. , - - • OrmT one thing ilo we core to friy is r< ply to the Harris:burg Telegraph, and that In short metre. Member,' of the I,giaLsture, or oda; may think it legit imate to introduce bills, with or without .li-elimination, striking seriously at large indnatria' 1 or commercial istereste; tend leg to put thou) Interests under =tel -1 billion to slayers, on pretenso of pro• tenting the public welfare; throwing, Clore Interests into temporary tweet t:inty; and taking men aincerned therein away from their-homia and atfitisa, on e yens., to explatilt or counteract, bet Losinass men take a different rice . of the c.se. They hold that legislators aro Wand to know what they are shout, and ! not, with eyes open or ahnt, , strlke at 'whole 'classes or whol onimanities. i They will resent finch b as promptly as legtslatons dog caper s neon ,their integrity. At the opening or the ses sion, 'some lessons were Inculcated, on this bead, that ought not aeon to be for- , gotten. Other lessons, of like charac. ; ter, will follow in due-season, from this i section 'of the Commonwealth. . 1 Tug Beaver Conaty . Republican Cen tral Committee met in /Seaver on !Satar• day and elected Ilesars...J. 8. Ratan end J. C. Boyle as delegates to the State Convention. Hamra. Banimain Wi!de, U. C. Barker, Ron. X. S. Quay, D. L. juibrie and D. Weyann were appointed eonferrees to meet with contemns trona other counties of the Dlstrictlo select delegate; to the National Convention. Resolutions Were adapted instructing for Gen. Grant for President, cx=oOc: Andrew 0. Curtin for Vico President, Oen.. Hsrtntift for Auditor General end Compbell for Surveyor General. Tart ReppbScans of Wayne and Pike counties have appointed Kr. lohn Shona; delegate to the State Cuuvention. In structed for °mutant' Cattle. Col: Samuel Knorr has been 'selected as the Senatorial. delegate from the CO. bitable Dietlid to • the Republidan State . 'Conveittlon. • The Representative dele gate has been conceded to Montotir , . in Clarion the Bashlimns have made G. W. Lathy and B. T. Bald delegates to the fitati Convention, and instructed for Grant and Curtin. Tug rkskors..ve are taking alarmat ~ i i: rcorganintien of the 'Fenian broth :rhoe:id b thii country. and, in View of zoisibl owaingericies, a force of regu lar, wil b.: stationel along the Niagara AM/ t 1 3 15,3011 19 navigation is resumed. This phre rt,f prudence may be very vell, bu l l ; as we take it there need be no ,lerni E t by oar cattalo+ across the bor. as the leaders of the Feniins have !'tit Xll fiith in ecLernes for the inuaton ,f Cant, ind in the th , trrevrill confine heir operutionr to the toil oT Ireland. GEN. Iti.UON Lis (-trued the ap- I l , !.ice. oral} considerate rata in protesting Nrtinat :le employment of scoot agents 'ay the State Oro/natant. Such agents .ialong to a by tern of diplomacy the [ 'world it. fast air:growing. Otte honest, frank 3EI expiica Ire:tot:a:or it worth a is hole army of aacsk3 and . epics., Sr 1 lunarlso of the Republican Committee of Crawford coaxal', bold •.a Saturday bit, delegates were se locted to the State and. Senatorßl Con :ention., toad instrce.ed to support Gen. Urarit for President and Oalush' A. ?:row for Vice President. Allew [Teenage Temple. ' Philadelphia teieicus now in the, pee ... of, one of lb° f t.- ]laconictel rotten in Amerlea. but the members f that orler bare in contemplatmn the 'ront;on . f a new eilinee which will ..,tnpletely overshadow the preleht one In point ri f l eleganee _and grandeur. On reext. SG John's Day the earner steno ~ will be hull on the site treloetol, Broad And I , lll;ert•s . ree;s, nod the temple will be elmißlett,l tire yearw from that ale, .... a Emir or 57:A.,,,t0. jar The newiltall w:11 bo of granite and fa tbe Norman style; the 171051/iVei character -,t t.l.ta order of tireriltoeture, however m•ing well'lreileveti by Lim arrangement ~ f Om buttl'es...es, bab,nies, balustrade 4 oml grareftil lennaelo4 0 - itieb form 'part ~ ,r the de-dlgn. The four hitll.o '.cif . the building wilt be of granite, the only lit ;'.e. 11,0 10 the design being in the front in lll, l lolrlirei I. 3illolll will present ono ; the mestitriagnincent fo stems of: ibis erougnfare. The 'building will be three singlet height. Tim front on I;road str•et will Present two towers, .a.: at caelie,rner, tw o s tun-reviling space rn I wing eop,sed of liatelaomo portico, r 0n.1t4: ~, :tie- ~ , ,..:1, Fu,ry, ant itimve t-hide will 170 two ine/tes Mr statues toms of.Sllcare.) the nliblel sti riuounted kni the apex of tb.) roof whit a small tower, a: she stironerof which will bee, staluo of t'aerity. Up rite 1.14.43 of this Main front, to athilLiall to dm ornarneutal-wincLowa, will bo tin dello() elriblell. oil the Order -.tire ',quern and compass,eke- e The tower at 4. be 09111.11 wad, corner.of i tile building will let tho great feature, lt.will be three himilr“i test front the ground to Lb,• top of the spire, or 040 borelrevi and four fist higher than C riot Church steeple. Tito nm r celrners This to wer will bk. Kurtmetnted by pine...lst,' 1 o bile lb, bei it ete,fli extending up a rota sitlerstile dieters..., t h e b e im- miss ar e the tvintloa.s. niii3 the iisiteocuilea and hew- tirod om:lll.sta:tien t iii* ILI. portion of the structure eriß add greatly to the twouty Ht• too whole dee•igot. Tim remaining I ilitre elde of the banding will be ea . tiered by Inottre , sett between the' win dows, rind tlll.l li hole effort of the exterior will is, at niter' massive and grwedhl. The portico lit lb, front, being twenty fort in iII , IVIIII, of the line of tho build ing, null ~ .till further odd to . the beauty of the dedgu. 1 - lia - building throughout will be firr (root, iron gliders to-lag mood et the sto ner[, and other prevention" 'are' being adoliied to guard aga Met the destruction of the °dill,. Ventlletion of tho moat complete Ithiti has been proVitittt the strain apparatus to be ivieh for beating 1 Lilo bulb hitt; behig also cifelignitti to !rive a fen to keepnha c irculation of 1r hair in idiot the rooms, ProviAnn ha. glen been 1111010 foe a bontiiirtil P.uPP y of wales at overt story.' The entire build ing will he .rievoted to Siaannie purpt, see, ate% thert , foro there' writbe 004 rent donee within 'the hilt, as heretofore , , Cumors 31.citrixr. TII I / 1 .1..—A rufous murder trial lu o j tst bt.rll concluded et ivma, Mli i., It ..iipia•ars . that John Bros - nand William MorsiL had friluent ly qua r. fed flthl the former had.sworn he wooldkill Mors» bit the first opportn. nuty. (me uMrnittg r Morse went to his barn, :and tv.ino time afterward• was found there banginr, by the net* with u .tray taken front nix 1.. t. harness. The jury visited the promisee; and from the position In whirl: the body RA* found, some tot tbeeonelslon that he must have LYGIMI strangled, and then placed in Butt position, to Make it appear that ho done ills deed himself; and strong circum stances pointed to Brown as the murder er. Ile was etinviette.l. : . —Tho ,Antoricsn Ibtard of' Foreign Minion oorreets n jibe laiprts.lon of the expense goltint; fonds to the heathen station, Inttead 'coding et venly-dire ernts to get a dollar to the heathen, sus hit+ been said, only is little mon , lima , s; per new. of •We income -La speut.ln raising funds; anal:act:Whig all expenert of adzultdetnnioni the coat ' Is only . eigtd end threareigine'per cent. -.And -In the .Alty-ttert yews of Its exist ent-own one dollar bee over been List by unfsithfultites, Incapacity, er - negli, pnee in the Board. ;'• RELIGION IRTELLItiEh tr. From the glowing accountant' the . pa ma, the Forty.ninth Arteirersary of the missionary Society of the Methodist Epis: copsi Church, just held at Albsny, I N. T., must have been a grand cffair. Sunday, the day before the arrive:Amy , proper took place, was devoted to hold: rag epeeist services in the various churches of the Capital. Varied semi. cea took place also is one or two churches Monday morning and afternoon. In the evening the crowning service was held, in Tweddle Hall, His Excellency, Gov. Fenton, presiding. After the opening religious • eervices, the Governor dells erecl a brief address, In which he stated that he wad glad to bo relieved a moment from public cares to rpect the represen. tatiVel of Methodism. A missionary spirit, he remarked, had prevailed from the planting of Christianity, and ho was thercforeglad to hall ttor aosembir there convened to help on this great move• meat He then referred In strong terms to the patriotfam of the H. E. Church in thetiour of our country's need, and of its existence . on this continent. Among the diatirignithed speakers who participated were Bishop Janes, Dr. liar. via, one of the Miasioncry Secretaries, Dr. Sewall,' the .eloquent Brooklyn preacher, Rey. R - W. Clark, of,the Re-'•j formal, Church, and Judge Wright, of, Pennsylrenia. By special invitation, I Rev. G. Douglass, of Canada, was prey. eat and delivered an address of great power. He is represented as perhaps the moat eloquent speaker la the Meals , ion of Canada. Dr. Sewall's closing ' words had a thrilling effect. He affirmed that he believed Jesus Christ will get the world, and when ho does, ha said ho should like lobe permitted to take part in the hallelujah chorus of the great English composer. The doctor then re d the following Incident: It is said that-the privacy of his solitude was In terrupted by a visitor, who found him at his desk writing .hla music . to the seer. Tattoos words, "He shalt reign forever and ever, Mallelejahl Ile shall reign forever and ever!" and the streaming tears were rolling down the rood mane cheeks as he repeated the language and wrote his manic. "Ile shall reign for ever and ever, ever &adorer, I Ile shall reign forever and ever, Haile. !rajah! The Lord God Omnipotent reign. nth I The United Pre.ilterijn of this week contains an editorial entitled "Reform in Church Music," in which It argues that a want of proper knowledge of mule, by the cultivation of the voice, calla for a reform in this respect, anti that God is entitled to the best offerings we can give, and thsrefere every means should be employed to• cultivate oar powers to render acceptable praise. Re• form is urged in the practice of haring such artistic and elaborate made as to silence the praises of the tongregation; and-designedly so, that the sweet bar-- monies of professional 'singers may not be disturbed by less cultivated voices. Severixstrictures, and very justly too, are made against the course or some churches for employipg ungodly men and women to sing, taken from the the atre aed opera. It is gratifying to note Hest this evil practice does not obtain in this part of the country that we are aware of, at least 'not in the offensive form It exists In some eastern cities. Rey. John 11111, D D., of New York, latelj from Europe, daring the Este Sue day School Institute in New Tort, brittle spoke of the means that should he employed for the conversion of schnl. ors. Re uld to this end teut ere should, 1. Try to deal personally with the . children. Teich simply, intelligent ly, and without effort to display; there should be la high Sown clouds of rhetoric or rhapsody In the enumeration ofGesd's troths. t. The scholars should ho truly loved: 4 Teachers should be holy persons before their children. as elsewhere—not severely saectimonlons, but cheerfully religions. 3. Set Jeans forth, distinctly, kindly, and fully, be fore the children, with the ell' of the Holy Spirit. Attention to these sug r;estioni would, be thought, secure the conversion of Sabbath schools. Recent Intelligence from Johnstown, Penis, represents the churches all aglow with revival power. Considers. ble Interest prevails in the- Presbyterian said United inathren Churches. •.4 iiturnter of baptisms by immersion, ad ministered by the minister of the Disci ple's Church,. took place last Sunday. Marked lumen crowns the efforts - at the special services la the Methodist Epieco pal and Methodist (Protestant) Church. es. Toe Evangelical Lutheran Church, under the pastoral CATO of our friend, Ray. R. A. Fink, his enjoyed great spir itusi prosperity. On a recent Sunday seventy-two persons connected them. selves witir that Church. Of theaetigh• teen adults were baptized. Meetings still contbune. . According to the report of the treas urer of the . American Bariat Missionary Union, at a special meeting of the Huard of Managers, held In :few York city, last week, the expenditures of the Union for the Year, Including the balance against the Society last year, will likely be $230,000. Daring the ,quarter end ing March tlat, the, receipts ought to reach, from all mucks, cot •less than $162,000, to ',meet te viants of the . Union. - Roy. 8. C. Faris his been employed bythii . First Presbyterian Church, Rev. S. P. Bernet, pastor, of this city, tolahor as city miasionary. We believe one or two other of oar city Churches have al resdy initiated this new movement, in connection with the work of the respec tive congregations. • The project of planting Coegrrgu. tionst churches In the South, under the auspices of the American Home Mis sionary Society, Is so greatly hindered bribe obstacles interposed by the unto. constructed condition of society in the late rebel States, that only one now church, the Independent Church at Belem, illls been occupied during the year. The general. poverty which prevails, produced by the rebel lion and the failure of the crops, has compelled most of the churches to fall back upon the Society for support. • Rev. Thomas L Beecher, of Elmira, New York, has commenced holding 9.111- day evening meetings at the Opera flocte, for the reason that a regular chinch edilics, with rented pews, I. too exclusive, and repels the marees,Thsteed of attracting theut, While under this plan all may feel free to bear tee Gospel presented, "without money and wltliotit = The Independent says that two Heath. diet, the Congregational; and the Second Baptist churches, at Newport, R, L, units,' on a resent Sunday everderrln partaklue or the Lord's Supper. Tim Baptist pastor, Rim. Charles H. Mai• = man: It thinks thewourss 01 this ;Astor of the Biptlst,Charch Is mach preferable to that of Mr. Earle, who Is holding mectluge at ISnitou The Christian Dlociplea' Church of New . Castle, Pa., last ready for ma- pancy, Is a very beautiful eqtßee, of' Ibe English Gothic style. It Is staled It 'was built by the liberality of •Phillips Brotbersjottr gentlemen or fortune, rc• siding In that piano. Its oost, when (Idly furnished, will be about ninety thousand dollars. It is most likely tho handsoMest church Galileo belonging to the Catnpbelllte body hi theVelted EMI The Prasbyteriatt states' that the Church babel:as In tha Eplacopal Diocese of Pennsylvania are prospeting, and show sia Wangler in numbers and strength. Am:IOMM College °Dent with twelve or fifteen more scholars thee hitherto, the Allentown Academy :hez over nu hundred, St. Mark's /madam'', at Manch Clinek, ban Itty, while new iinditutions lure been organised In the BM .;_L wishes of 3lsho lid elsewhere. ney City, White listen The Pcaocay tlona!) CArch Masai- LiII2EMMIII thULIELL.:I dui:.:., beic¢ furciohej w dedicated to quite recont!y. the NJ:m.o:: Efyll In lie Tillage, an peraens. CO:i(2 ~cuouz: by • Mr. Peabody, O the worship of Gad It Is built of brick, in to want, aC ornioniust in will seat six hundred A nen Epieca , be ettattliihed oa of Fifth Aveuue, r‘ol Church is about to or near the upper part Nero York. Tito CAFisaan byte:lßn) tssors vexation in this nit,' day of Much nei forincil Penal - I:et consider question Union of those: of Union goes foi. niirable spirit MI torians, the day ii when a easer ash!) only by Ilio tr.,' bill other members of Witness, (United Pres na the third 'rues: lions, with a view to a d e : nra ' n l , l : : e :„. l b e hnw. b .: h ie Y ol ] a 3 ls . t ' r n T lU bn l d ba lh : jo l g it p i a : et s ff e hwai l i do dter t : i pf h t n bi le dt l a n n dri n o d ll ab t a o t b h r onyd n' y t e tt: : I the Presbyterian'fain- L-Itivival Interest the Prdshyteriart e At Bargaehanba Han church CDjdy. vrork. Thus for quested prayer, fifty have expree The church nt Al with a reviral of -day night of last w tiered fifty. Too lecture rr villa church, Rev. will lid frrinally ship on next Babb !Horning hour, Dr.! proval la in runny of 'Lurches in this State. Dapot, the Preabyta, quite au interesting over aixty have re• and, of this'nu'mber, ed a holie in Jeans. cone, Pa., is favored eat power. Thurs ,ok the inSialrers nuin. 1m of - the Luivrence• J. d.Mi!ler, pisior, mica for public wor th, the PM. At the H. Minerva!! preach. Wolff will rier - vines will be held Bimpion will fining, at 7 o'clock, in the services. No ;Eimply , a basket col luritution is extend alio It convenient to Iu the afternoon It °coopy the pulpit. it three O'clock. I be inn,ont in the e l end will Ileirtleipat sub!criptiona takeal. lection. A cat ed to all who coo attend. =1 'DIERIS —The robtrins ol the , forth have liven "riven South Ity the, evenly of the weather, and the profile of l'ensacola are shouting and eating thorn. —Ainouttetent th l s ineinnri of the Into venerable filght Reverend Iliahop Dorkins, of Vermont, to be raised in Trinity church, Ntw T x. rtt. —The B 'snt Atinert • dr Bays: "Some people thins that P i tttsburgh, done up in January, is an answer to 'Does it pay to arnokir propounded in February." —A petroleum w i ell has been disco's., ered Ito Finglaini, and, the FOultneper• matting, we may !oil for a repetition of the petroleum exittement in that island of frogs and spleen —Count Tank, a Austrian Cabinet, Ir Nothing can agent tiom in turning up it often Just when wet member of the new itt Irkeh Viscount. the men of that. ea n queer plate., 'Sxid —Nova Scotia noI having receded ac et, is going to do so In driblets, sad also to .-11sniz. See Zealand. A ship load of bite acres is going Ina co-opera tire way from rixilfix shortly. . is stated that Ih.tring the put two Years about iwo thessand persona have bren murdered In iex**, with bowie k ai:e or revolver,arid that none of the murderer. hare been Judicially punished. —l.euirvire pad s grand rat kiiiisg excitement Ike biller! day. A "celebra ted deg Sack" killed one hundred rats in.tive and a half minutes Coon draw ing was also ohs of the amusements lof the evening. '---7-vidently the con airy is going down Lill alter Isttaln as fast as It can. Louis ville iv to-have the honor, however, of triartgarattn; Abe late:st eymgt inn of the fall. There in w butt fight In that I Iltudy town. • ' • ~ —ltnght, Carlyle and, Bismarck all 1 1-moke, and their intellect dent, to ewe ' moo ot.,rvers to be u trilllant as Is I that of Mr. Parton, w r t 'io holds Mansell up so a shining example lii greet men who do not indulgc 19 diii "pleasant weed." —Ertgiisar. Toung.lthe rope effoty. gardists, hoe ramenstrated. _with hit salute an the subject 6r phyricisna He ' abjeets at pre...at to their employment; and helieau that people will get well, if they are going to at ail, without any irs. I tefference by. the faculty. , —.l party of Eaglisti ferules profess to hare found the identical pillar of gait where Lot's wife so ildughtlesaly turned in, leasing her husbaild and fatally to , hunt up otherlodglegt These English 1 discoverers -were pla lurians and .ate I part of the Lol. with ih.ir Lard. boiled !eggs —We are sorry to hear that Mr., Grant Grant Is affeced. Nothing Is more die ! agreeable to the gen, tit public than if. I 'gelation in pcuoas ra,rupying high an -1 Hal positions. The futon Pot: is Opr authority for thin statement`, It says "Mrs. Gen. Grant alrects....4.lnk silk." —When 0. F. Train Wes asked - for his, autograph In Cork, daring his arreal, be wrote fur one man, I ^Whnthrr on the la alLora GI ,b. . Or In tan nati,:e's van. • The ‘ lll Os! place fir man to rile, ram!! For another he wrote, "ray Alabama claims or fight.• Re!mu l e American citi4 WU! In Engliati jails, or war Is certain."' —A. fair hall Won opened, In London to guise money for the relief of the earring dogs of thatl city. A. more worthy charity coLildl..not be !multi if there Tete no starringlinen in London, or the world; but it wer perhips ber:er In let all the doge, thourh they are noble and true, enure married! , If by so doing onn men's life could be kept in him. - —A van of on Irish menagerie, Con• turning a pair of lionesses and a lien, wag overturned recently on the road. The:lion and the lionesses were con. fined In separate compartments, but the fall broke down the partition between them,.whlch altogether enraged the for est'smonarch eo much' that be ert upon and clew the twit females, - - The Bolton Poet Is encouraged at the terrible lashlue . General • Grant bas, given to Mr. Johnston dot it says In Its' wrath that Washburtit and Stanton wrote hlalettertifor him. For our part we can't ace how that: betters the thing. Stanton - has been; If posSible, treated in a note disgustingly, rude manner than L3EI Grant, and, therefofo, luis,s, better right to thresh the l'resldent, whole Plague la °Peri too thick Ito thresh with. • -• —The proclamation 'Men wu posted on tile facade of the Maimlon House In London, a couple of wa•ka ago, and which catmed much Indignant exelte- . 'hectic the Aldermanla 'circles of bon don read as follows: {•The Irishmen of America are naltedl Triehmen of Eneland, follow their example! :•Unlte; foreraril, ye fearlese, sods of Ireland. !Rand for the old coantey At the head of this was a harp; the with; "God gyro Ireland," and the leleis T. E. young men in,New /Jana "do serve a great dear of mint". for_ their Inventive faculties. They hare impror• od on the fesblons of England twenty years ago amazingly. Then the flub. seeable swell would go males to be - ahle to find, wrencleoff and Ikea' a unique knocker (Toni the deed of a private house. I.w the gay young men °Mew Three, whware moat fashionably tuella. ed;ateal and carry of the gatca Weal• solves, thus emulating Barnson la their sportive mood& ' —The ancients - were not intimately acquainted with zoology. 1" We remem ber that in ono of their fables a fox Jeers the lionois fur bringing forth but one cub, wlufrais she, tho for; had it whole Imo. or pupa, and *a royal bout re marked that that one horeTer .was • Hon. • The moral. ofwiq,w aiyery pain ted, but the were not facts. The tlonou to the zoological 'gardens at Dublin has loot given birth to Ms cubs, and four or fire is by no moans na common number. . 2 • 1 rkitil, 6,1101,N c:.e: iior•Eipi,v, 11,F. The general treatment of .. gram loads in this respect is moron; and ex new 1.• Wier, . ::.!..r, I !pentode, and should bie abandoned ICI a Winter has long Leen upon nein geed ' smatter. 4 of profit and eiononty.— Wilco, .. • earnest, ta.l all otinele of stook, and par - an Farmer. ' 1 „__, ticularly !snail., ~ITIS nod ~1:, .r.o..ii , . Tar , Heeell as • !flea' , Pialal.. gaol! shelter, good cor , o tored l':eoly 'lf I nttioed your anklet in the Poem . , X1.n . '131 l r irla tln the um, of tan , ~,,, o. .... ~ Ae • , g OO O f o ' l3 . TILy '''''''''. v-"l ''''' ,l . .1 . bcceh la- I hedge plan I thick le may guerelog sinter weather !Ike: Oder ante.. be ac, ,'„ aith . 4 , aaccaaa, mak.iag male. TM.). ,l t en l Jlke fi,.., dry '6.1, , besel Ledge, Hoare is used' in short. and tome's they lllITIII:Sr,12,.;.11 1,41 , 2. will -.ening .0. `l' - taw many hedges of this ' ' hihol n ST, i:i.erimad, `Eastern France fall awa37, and Pa ' aal).l not 0."." tal.)- ' and Pkesis find moat struck with lee spring. i • '. .. adapts:ion ot ; the berels fora thin but But it was upon the cite of low!:; tiolt 'of ectiVe hedge. .It brknches little, is we began thin Ortocho. ',icy thoidel Lb ' riff:end here. its placed ' I now but little .withot . n tla u a r, T, s. w_ L a , s kTed_or . in nif jerg I hy rt dr r y re, separated from the older sheep fail. • Sheep nover do well in l : . . - ,:il fior d s I ' I . _ „ __LI at btst, and ths weake..,,t cud .pur,:cAt , t. Vileriexv ion Ibizte.A. correspondent suffer the most. Lambe, it lett :with lion', ~ „ . _i ,_, c,,,a,ti,e, whose older sheep, will to pushed abut IJ- ; :'__'`"_-''' onve was over.rnn with rats, says a aer their; sure rior stren e,th—ni rl v. n cud ke.i. • ' 1 'MIS zirl, who had sec the effect. of away from the feel, nti win l' a A a - 4 ---‘-' -7, : whisky on bipeds, rho ght she would die. ; Tory need hetter toed cad belw . L . try an experiment ' upon rate. Accord. care than old sheep. Sheaf oats Ore !.... ,tingly she took a entail quantity, made it celleat for !ambs; Out loci:n by teedit I- . , , , ,e ; very s eel with sugar, crumbled in bread lied: and Increase the amount '''' .7a ''''''''' noug for the crowd,. and sat the dish ly to what they ought to hare. Coril ;in the rtßar. A few hours after she should be fed, if 0 ,re are not IC be isle / went dwn and found several r ate gloxi. Corn meal is better than ungronnd ours 1 oa . ty , faddlad,„ engaged In throwing anti ahead corn be.tt r than ,:ersbnlbli I ( potato vringlyand heeling one another ear—but Hyatt have not toe alt, 3 n the ' 1- ----t up to drink. These were easily disposed other. ' Good, bright, sweet hay el:could e4o . b: °l , i"mrt;_na4,d‘jailb..9a.?, nut killed tefirlo ton from e a Fre a r.l ay M provided in sufficient. quantity toed ino 't. „ ca n' t. a i ie. ''''J ' ety. Clover htly,ll4Vlll With Iliol,l'fartl I. , . -....-.- is greatly r,.;b , ,,b by 'holt", Obi, la.; Muck Son POTATUES.—Thu editor of deed,-by nil holds of :es k. I. to .triegej i the Mains Farmer finds from an cape that bunters don't nii,1'1.1.101.., Cov , rh , yriesen pr many years that muck does and less timothy. Clover is more fatten • well lei, potatoes on dry land. He ad. Ida and butte: reliaLcel I.y all :Ands 01.1 vista 4ll)ll:lg.outnack in the winter on stock. Intlce'l, stock will keep bit au!' sandy or gravelly pasture, and there al e-haver alt foul poor on tito,thy 01000.1 i towel ti, lreeze; them in the spran H" g - fed nu limo ihy, they nol.t have ocOlii, ply a pip,opplp rindel, ma a hilt w ith &p a also. nut n variety 1,1 bay o.ottbllell table,plourul of plaster, Thin course, produced—timothy for won king animals I he nays; w ill ki n seee d , ew „.4, pe t it . —clover, or:,,:avt! ;antes; Lerw , grab.,!i the!, otithl at least a fair crop. Potatoes etc , and thetc niern for a dom.?u sstelt, le Mame the past season were st"small particularly to lambs and other young crop sad poor In quality. stock.. • No met ahnuld pretend to 1.1.,p !Lr ep without Laving r;o:L. from (hay are to . le,d. i. m0re 1 . 1 , ,..111ki in tn. climate than tiltiher anti im, bocnuou have so tu'uth \ rain aud thud here. It thrown upon the ground, the feed gets trampled into the ihu.l wartell— wretched economy, when a low dallars would' LuVe Im:ranted acy anco waste., It the luck of !mulls is large,' they should be sub-divided and the puny ones separated and gl rca stili better er•.ra, Anexperirnee of twenty•lire year. , with lambs has taught us the corralatnesa of these directiona. . . . -At Ay r aterfortl, Erie county, on !tfol, • i day inight, tee thi.rmonutter Indicated . . 11 thirty din.treer helot,- zero, the 'coldest Lid 1131.1,,, ' , ' %vex tic in that locality this reigon. A very simple, I 2'6,6 ive and gniek ~. , y .. -kll the igroatnr in the northern port of fastening feur.foot wood hi ,. h s k i . , ,: of the Stile are now go strongly het/Art.4 ' • : I w 6 h 11,,.. 1, - 1,1110.. 1111! frkl4,lgo of the not in general etc, is 1 tidier or wintilkia „..„..,, t e . ..., ....,, „.,, , ,, t he „ i i ) .. 10 ., 0 , 1. at . the: back end et the pied. An Int' it i wagon, ' and a -halt or twolnch hole Fa bored bor. -1 -Six hundred eopies of moth Mostra- Loatally into the rack or ladders behind Foil trtir.. no thtl• loiter I iaI.CUN are the bank,alake hoick,' Olen Oil, • mood p..-6.1 in Meadville i every week. A ploy hard Wired stick, (our tor tied ii.6fier in .i.lifol .',lj o and r crime :mmmorality • will . - fitamettr, tank. a gudge e nn etch end'i ,", 'hi' r, al:- ofit to fit the holes istNal in. tlie rack or 01, -hr. 1 U 01 , of Connwtotville, recently I' ladder - a; or inslctid of istritig 4.,1rs iron .ilimie'icd unto named _Klumit for elan staples can la nerd on the :inner hil.4i 01 . ,I'. h.r ` .Idl '''' . " l°4l : i . " 1 "....thg 5 7 9 4 We rack or s i til body, whirli wiii liold . '''''',". 4, ,e o fir iiiiin"i'r"A xiiik-' . ... the time when Dr. Lunn Has the roFer. It. re two or throe loch and. i''''''''''' t. ~ ~ , in the art ty : • half lever 1101 E, loth, r 011... Iltlll 'PM!! . Tl,F,' w .li, , th e • thi t tra r r hero a Wind/sea similar to those. need sty . . 1 . 7 ..'i. i . e ' n ,'..„ .. - . ; ..,,,,:, h .r . i n rod . ..„T ii i blacktulltlis in alining earl:. When r...111,ird Carrels per t isk , 'f or ag e w,' the wood is pincnd upon the s'ied, fasten II nee past VOIIItIII.I3CCIJ 10 IIUIT MI 'No,- the -binding chninly nre t ly te the troot I play lag. and the production la three end Of the tied, sod pIP., d user the ntid.. iihundrett ',arta* per day. die of the into, tastenis t : the other end it _...k ,„„„ who hail b een nt work .2; We 1, to the windless, arni6ii b e ing turned, ;minter or he NI:Vr .t'ro'y Coograny, lu draws the chain wnli crest tot, span :111,.n., , ,, war found frozen to death on the w'rsol, so that co; a 'tick rap 'move.;Smarter morning, with lik bottle by hat it t h e ei e d,i t ,;'set, or Sr. wi n do w ,;ili,sitle. Ile and WlllO4,Vd front the I.:peened. I- the bar tang ensile lootomes i6t-ti k Pit /tie , way 1., Id` Itto:trAiug Itoof.e.- , 1 .... h) .. 1 thing el th , i i ona tin Fin. road, r .. , iilitli.talt i trre R , cord 1,1 M. lonier. you here only. to ;urn th e te inji h r• a lit- ji .-I in I IP/al-night. the 17th Met.. Relit. tie, me , the chat. i, tigibt a.b. f„,.. ,IY011I1C . :11 xl wife, now tiring in Ilarcuos, Tale is the roichest and nine thorongh ,'..iiv.2 .." I ''"T t n ...l' i ' ir lT - y:!.. rn 1 .',. ° . ,,, " , 4 ° . 1 7..7:,7 st way of laentag loser efany kind upt.na i t i ,,,., .4., in tit ... enrt rei . nt to wagon cir alnd, sod °lion 6.l"ref - tit,. kind i !, T n ., ~,,,i . ,.hi in ~,,,,,i t win, 10001...., „ ire ., ikoM turnirg o•Pr, liS I,o iiint: i' lk iil'ii , ' 'them out I hr.skim. Mr.,Young's collar - Whell'01;l slarding pacts,-V'. E. 'llava • !i,,,,,...-I:',, (~,,,, ,:red, • ,, --The contract for bulitting the Marino • •1 il liiillilii ill he erected on the northweb ,,,,ll,ll,,•irts of this city. lulu been let 4- Yttlrsiel I: ing, liiiki., .111 other parties. _NI'. hint' to now Inapoetlng various tot hit, 1,6 ;4:04 lOs so 10 be the Better en. o marled to •fotet mine 1.11.1 /110 plan.-Erie - p-L T rir , -1,1 . --11 l lill. Rlllphin enmity °twirl, tiro s'' ttli tit :if thit Common weal against the ; 6 erylv ittia Railroad and Canal Corn 1a.,. it.i [not etening 1)111 for fish to i i,...4n1 ttei tinto a n:,4 decided against the i - ,,,,,,,,,hy,i Tii,,sss 01111 go to the Su { ....tle Coen. to led tiro eimatitutlonality : 6' the itet.l i't '--The County Committal/mere of kis, i to have pnrelnitatill [helot unit realtlenreof ' ilia late tienerst l'orker, Iticated on- the tatu nito.l, tenth of the Court nottarn'and 5..,u , en: pl ate orret I eh. therism a new Jail the 4.'.1112g •lnonee. Mir 14 a ni•eded lrii- ' j,,,T)01l ~ ono ,m, ~,,, tottded time lend' }irate by filo ti rand Jur y, o I -A Peel - lecke nut in George P. rtleFt-i iml's now Three story brisk building, iu l'iyinetithi on Mt.n.tay 1.4', entirely d e . 1,63 g:0 It was 3et notintsbell, ands ' ise ere net-limited hya pile et shaving,. , I, 6.64 pear tee store It:toting when no I i , ,, ...4 16-ar. 1....., .I.:htaX). No Insu- .11111 n.- n ee '. r ef ~/ if, Vone-s. 1 , I .-,A •sis.ri ,, r arti,loof granite, admit- .gily toluptied for latildiug purport.. lass I Feeentl y Ikon diro.vered -- ratur Fitony , I l'idni, te I Itocklanil Inuittahlp, Iterkal 6..ittge. Tee supply la apparently Inez- I ~ ,,td.ls, it:o the Stifle is pnnioun,sd I 4 u I,riur,t,4;kx for beauty and tolerability. 1 iii., •k• mar he otititined from twenty to , •,,itrty fat n, length. -A fuert, 6 ityttsgindurlng than progress •if au auctidtt h:/1011/ /LW sere ~, IL Ili rim, elf Fres.linrg, Snyder tramty, tile Ili tor save way, and a large 'nu ober , 1' men :Ail women WRY . precipitated I i o the cellar. A large afevo Altai a all horning 66.41 aloe went down 'with ~ q 11,0 .1 F 11.! Fifty or sixty persons were 1,..,y . t..11y hurtled, ltrunied and nthc r i se n , Fitjutol, and it le fared that eone tit them will tog survive. '. - , . The Oil Cit 3 enrersylentlenn of the Pit : , 6tt 1:..' I I .34 014 propeety of the, %' ••1111 Oil ItT2AI lArld Cituapitny has parsed lan the hatitir of Hon. C. V. Cnlver,who Nave, to 6perato It In - ttr• ;Interest of 1 'II, er, liege A. Co, itisreral applimgions r 10,1.0, rjr toning purpiete• hare al -1 Pi -air 'l , ell hula, and tllf.ritYlKli 1/1 tOll.. I! , 1111.1 1 / 1 1,'bmiritnry ill 4111741 W. possible, 'fift,re I. ho denim of this beingaraltodole t.11',4[1•1, from lla proximity to the flow ig well 'of I liasattni..t on Shaffer 13on. ----1 • 1 Co., . , o rim Mr'yleollrwrjr—Pyros a ro.l ifoit• • The mountaima and YJC:Cyi 4 , 1 Griiislt C.linabla over which fire has. strips, clutoming all the and leaving • Lothian standing after Its departure, are covered with • growl!, of yooog popinea nerd the ocrvien berry not attai n any I:rea a: although although I have seen them ten and mere feet In helglst, tint rarely PlCrrtlirkg TOFU,. and four ftwt.' Tie t:errtra are ripe ,• Aug.- oat and hang On Until Ir roe I.lars revel ardor g 'Lem to Os tans cf the year. of bughela ripen end fall to decay. { L•xdon any, Cle grat'tink of this or IMISINCC i`;;• up Pr im:en the comm.. limn;, re,:de:r. it one of the truly or,,nerts.l *rubs. s rue Jests vice. 1 rtrulr.,l non: It P. solar plants git ♦ dwarf . variety of the bertice berry , which pier ♦ p:raglat !it.te fruit; !our Its want of chatiefer,c• It, own ird Inc to . neg.ent it, and I have :net It, As oily sod an artscaen,al sirti , 1 notlea , this stow that our growers may.tail hold of and intro-lure E It E =Z=MM =I Thera is ear:omit rind in lb, 11,2.. , 11, when the Imtk may Le • whal:y trona the n trunks of spri:e truer, witheet .!coloying them. li rung he at a time , wuen soma new hark Las teen just formed beneath the old, thus lorietne a satli. i , Ckt e.aup; for It LeTT .r,vrth. It is I.leCrl oar, that the old burn he 141,L0n Cff., oat rubbing or clone; the new curiae, We Irately examined on Old orchard-in ; I the town of Arighton, near Itece, , er, part of the trees of 'eiblch had hi en di.. vr cod ot, their bark about • ycar ate, •Tstey were found to s tariity, I,,ea:thy ceaditlen,.the trunks . hrleg tea , 's smooth new beck of a unitorrn thick nets of about one sixteenth of nn leek. We are unable to say how ion; the seuon CeralltUtO, WhCli ta., operation nosy be performed with .area, Lor what degree of benefit or injury ie likaiv to result. In the present case,. rho trues were certainly unfelt Improved in smoothness of appearance. flora say of our retderi.had any decided er'-oatit factory experience in this respect Country Genatroan =I Almost every locality has air own aYatem, hut I may divert to of-w facts on thia sub,lect: poultry, when tiled to death, is much whiter in the tech. I should advise the following plan, as the very hat, Catitlng instant death wltuent pain or dirliguiiimenti Open the:heSk of the fowl, then with a pointed and . riarrow kiwi., nigh° au Incisslon atidbe back of the .roof, whisk will divide the verteline and eaffic im mediate -diatb; after which 'hang the: fowl up by :the legs. tilt the lilrediria ceases; then rinse the beak out with vie. egar and niftier, Fowl/ k!ilitl la this manner kecp longer and do nut present the unsightly external marks a. theie killed by the ordinary 'poem of wring log the neck. When the entraiis are drawn Immediately after death; and the 'low! stored, as they do In France' with paper shavings or short ruccionlit ti hers to preserve their shape, they will keep mach longer treats. ynr,.e breeder. Crblll ihalr poultry hticlre, killing to Tusk, them appear heavy; thiaiii a most 'tops- I dictum plan, as the undigested leod own enters !into fermentation; and pit trefsction takes place us to tivincell by the quality lit greenish, putrid looking foils that no secu In the mork.els Giyfin'a Poultry llTenling. Publa7lect by :I 4.. Co., 1.10,?an, Mesa, • I= .D. 'D. Waleh, of ' Rock well kilown' an an entomologier, love that all hie iranfluelanna 'have resulted tri the opnvicilort that tho hack toot ou the Ono trerfle the (Pr. of a tongue.awl ti not a Lib:case nor a gall. Ho thinks the spores or reds are formed about the end or July ‘ lu latitude 40 deg,.. 00 vela., and Therefore l(the excrescence' be all cut off and .destroyed by this early pirt ofJuly, as effectual stop will be put to their farther epread. =I C. R. Wilson, Tiogi county, Penney!. eagle t writes the Prarie Farmer. Phila delphia, on the comparative productive ness of three srarierien of potatoes he tested the pant ammo.' There were sent to him, from Ohio, two Harrison, three Euly I Seine, and tight Early Hoellrich potatori f Three were cut to single - eye* and ;denied In drills eighteen .11sehes smut lit Tiny were dog In September. Thu Schee yielded s bushel; the UGOliriell gm five lrthels; and the Harrison about we and a lira bushels.' About half the Sit e e died out after haying made a considerable growth. Two Matteis or iheilicason were plant. od se an experiment, cut Ilk° the others, and produced about forty-nine bushels, or-nearly twenty-Arc to ono. Mow to Weep ap Your hey Crop,. A farmer who had been in the habit of selling hie hay for many yearn in arc cessfon, being tithed Low ho kept to his hey crop without manuring or cultiva ting hie hued, replied, "I Never altowed the after swath to be cut:" If this rule wan generally followed thoro would be led laid abaut:running otitorgran fields or &lion Crops of hay. Some farmer, feed of every green thing and compel their cattle to pull up and gnaw eff the roots Of the graze. Cutting rowan. la while death to hay crops. • farmer bad better bey hay at forty dollars per tea thu rasa hie hay fold by close gra- - STATE NEWS Thn Ropololivalot of Mifflin eouory Jr.nr all, opl.tho Char:fora roouty titmatiuns. —lt k Oren' not that John M. Coopvr, , ar Chanthersburrr, Into beam Cop pvrheatl v.indit,litto for Surveyor Gen eral. county ha, elected a del, pan to t State Couvontioli lit Phila. :tt t doLliba, and imtrurded for tirant and t. • , • , ',-1 1 11 Ttle , f,l,LY, the Ili inst.. at about 3 p; la., the doelling of 11. 3a. 11.10, in Vo %lingo county, was rensinnesl by fire, TlO tire limit, out in the ripperstory and sr. lir, al ink through the roof n bon ills ,. semi. ?dr. floe was tick and entire. 13 lielplees. Her hosband suesasslr.d in iitositig he and 1111. I.d she lay on. /sae eras takrn to the residonvo of his nulicr. P. it, Pale, nisi.. without Injury. Niewly everything in too hotise was id. ~.tryrd. i , The Wa nosburg - „Ife,cagee. revs: IN r/Trer in earn that mr. Ephraiml4v-er y, of Iliin4iird towvoihip, leis county. 1, n h bitted; We believe, or... Monday, the +, Itui LW ryt lie was engaged In repair- Ii li toils roof i" hi, house, and 'sidle go. ireup'is ladder It 'broke and threw hint li, ,the .j[rmts.4, ahem, alighting ini Ida [wail, he sr. Iv, seriously Injured that br illy t.urclved a few hems:. The do. eeased w. a I very worthy citizen:, sod le.lves inanyi relative. mid friends In iw,iiril ink sudden donut. Mr. Evenly wax agent elm it iio years. „ • ...- . .1-'1'66011 C 6' . .. Ronne/Icon pave; Malty of ',the forme 'residents of cur dty no., tod In oilier _places ditring the last rune rears, trili 'ecinilsig , back again.- a iNvrii, the...esva snarly who are largel.r • in srest.sl In 41°4,11 regl,l,ll,in vscae ill it wealth s.been derived. All speak' ,1 rho 1 ,1 1+11113 . 11,1111,AX031 presented by' Oi City and the cartoon other points of / tint 1.-ality i+i , possessing lialurementn foil the prod[ tile Investment - of capital that are norm eel by no ether section.ol tins country.. They intend to locate lie,rel permaneutly, 'lid are pureltaider; homes I Irl that par - t - We welcome them I bask again,. 't f —A Idirlaly ,sitreeasritletfort max Leen intido at /I a ntknadon, Ft, to robe rondo by isiih,cripttriti fbr this - oslabliribinent of a lairinnisithoil for the Seventh. district, iNlllll,olNett Of he twenties of Cumber. 1 land, Admits, 1 mobile, Fulton, Iledfont 1 -II eitttioctlon and .11bilr, tinder the bet ot 1 'rot b btay, 1e31.1 Tiar,eum of nearly thir-- ty thousand dellan. /no been subscribed. II the State thaws the srunifltberailty to tied - institution -that it haste - others of tliSkllli, killd,i the selaid will not only no a anoint Nlll, l / 4 `ll W 1 !At 11/1 ornament to 111.1411bitnlon nail the tither .enuntlea of lids normal dif4rlet. ,:.. . . . -.lCulver, 'Tian Jr Co:have issued 'ii. circular inalorrdato of February let to their creditore:' advising thent that the .Rona ttotnpattyl on t bat day caterett into Ow:is/Jaw...dun,Ruid management of the lands fornnirly Owned by ~r holtilin Pit" 'and, Lend IC?)nlprins" , 'they. ,atato that "the DI rectore of tbeltanoCoutpany luta ingl.p,e.e.nalon4.ure Inkling neflve rue.. urea for its iloyrliip. , inint , - They p. tet p coS -n-tonce te let twenty .leaSes , upon the acrritory iniuteillatolyeatiotning the I,lll•KhlWania triO Ileason- wellOt, ' which have berm so Inigtay• - pniduettve during tie pant year, Arid !sib, as the, rums in their hands WI I permit, 'overhaul the well , . of the Cninpany . now lu operatlon mulleonipleti se thaw. 'heretofore earn -klilittimniin tie urging die, hit:glen at .bat place of I tin proposed nets limn ne nsyliim Yee Northern Pennsylvania. - At a rneetiog of thel,yeoming County Med. I.l . (iuclety, held id Williamsport retstrit ty,i -ley reitnl imended that one additional aayl Du lovueti In a twrceeniont mut cen tral kissility witldis a tlietrict formed. of thel . ooinitles or Wayne, Susquehanna,' Wyifiling, Lot:erne. Orflumbis, 'Mon tour, Sullivan,. Bradford„. Lvsonling, Clinton Coutre,lChaurtleld, F.llr, Caine ron,l id:ill - eau 'otter 'and Forest.'. The. p hysic/snit prleletit . Wel* tumultuous' In its. [Onion Unit, Williamsport prtnouterl I solve iihiges possessed livr. no other-toad, 1 its r,tin snob ain inetltution. In - thole oplahm they wet* austalned .by, a aunt.' bet of-the most prominonteltisetia of [lib otniblif, who wore rrome; for consulta.: Lion; on the at:axiom ' • ' ' 1 The Nupreme Court and Reconstruction. The Georgia Bill Dismissed The Question a Politic xi tile. Court ; gasi no Jurisdiction =I WAinINOTON, Feb. In, il..e.i. In the Supreme Court of. the United States to-dsy Associate Jtistbst Nelson announced the opinion in the case of the State of Gergin against lion. E. M. Stanton, Secretary of Wile,. General Grant and Major General Pope. The last named 'at..the time the hill ] was cired w:s commanding the Thirst Military District,. eomposed. of Georgia, Florida end Alalitann, designated by the act of Congress,approved March 2d, lie:i7,., entitled "An act to provide for the more. ellielent government riffle Rebel States," ] aria tho act supplemental thereto, passed 'the tad of the same mouth.] Tito, bill tiled by the State of Georgia prayed for an injunction for the purpose of restraining the defendants front carrying into client the several provisions,id these eons and sot forth the existence of Geor gia nit olio of the Stalest of the Cnimi, and farther that on the surrender of the Confederate army in beifl,,. at the close of the civil war, that State was In the pox. session and enjoynient of till the rights beton]. ing to a State In the Union under 'the Constitution and laws of the United States, anti ao such was entitled to rep resentation in botir Rouses of Congress. The bill further sets forth that the inten tion and designs of those acts of Congress were apparent on their fore and by their terms, slat the overthrow of the existing Slate Government and Weems-ion I who plats, of another not atiltoriaeil by this Constitution, and that in .1 - uriberauee or this into. the S...eratary of War,:l ten. Grant and lfajor-General Pope, acting under orders trom the President, were ahent setting In motion a portion of these statutes to take military possession and subvert •the Government of Georgia, thereby subjecting the people thereof to military rule.; that the State was wholly inadequate to resist the power of the sev eral departments, and therefore insisted protection ought .to he afforded by a de cree of the Supremo Churl In the pro ' nibs,. The bill next prayed: Pima-That de fendants might] be restrained fromis suing any •order or dding•any. not or thing within the State of Georgia 'inju rious to nail State which might be re quired of them my we of Congrs.s. .Yeeencl—To ionise the defundantatode lay . registration In Georgia ns preserilasl in the last named act. Third—To entrain them from aomjnis• tering or causing to be administered. the oath provided for in that net. Fourth— To prevent an election or returns of w:tett election from being received as• carding; to the ions in guns. ./A/ 1 / I —From holding or causing to held any convention as prescribed the in. Associate Justice Nehion, having set forth the premises but at greater length than above given, said in sulegarice, teat .a minion tied been made lay counsel for defendants to.disinbet the - case for want of jurisdiction, and an one wi bout 'pre cedent. It wan claimed the Court had no Jurisdiction In the Esse, either of the subject in the bill or over the parties !preteded. The first ground wax amp toe - tell by the argument that It was a po- . htieal and not a judielal question, there fore if wits not a subject of cognizance by this Court. The distinction betweenjedi- Mal and political questions resulted from the orgaeiration or thegovernment, exec- utter, legislative and-judicial, and tram the limitation of the powens of each un der the Constitution. The judiciel pow er was vested lu the judicial depart. moot, and the pntttival power in the two other departments The distinction be twee., judicial and political power was generally admitted that the Court deemed it neceesary to do nothing more thus toreler bh some of the authorities• mi the subject. They were alone their direction. Among them tiro case 61 Rhode !eland agairest.theState of Massachunece. It had teen supposed this ease afforded authority fir bearlag and deciding as on a quest iin nionechal with atilt! inequity, but on close exmaination 'this would be found a mistake. There wail a question of boundary between these two States, and not one era political 'Character. In thee... of Florida against: Georgia the United State, were allowed to intervene, tieing the proprietors ore large portion of land. situated within the disputed hnotelary ceded to the Culled, States by Spain, the State of Florida also being ira terested es a proprietor. The coon be Most directly on this one be thet of the Cherokog Nation against the State of Georgie_ A bill wan tiled in thiserase and air Injunction prayed for to 'Prevent Me execution of eertalit not-. of Geo9kla against the Cherokee Notlmit.. The la,.er maimed the right to appear In Court as a foreign online. The nets of the leetinlai ture, if carried into °amnion, would !owe tleetroyeal the tribal condition of the Cherokees and atthieeted them to the nu thority of the Stale. It was, therefore, doe...foil that the Cherokee* were not a foreign nation In the sense referred to In the Constitution of tee United States, J nuke laterals:all mid the hill Was omen/able on another ground, namely; it luvoleo4l a political questlen • lostrereNelson referred to several high euthoritios in impport of the above views,. and showed that the political newer did net helium to the Judiciary, and that the i'oert eoillit have no right tq pronounce ,nterely an abstract opinion of the Con "esti tin leo or of State laws It might, haw ...ever, decide on all !detente properly fall ing under judicial authority. By the seismal seetiou of the third articie of the t'onszitinion of the Tithed Satan, it is provided the judiehal power abet! extend to all rates atl law and equity arising ender this Constitution, the law of the Coifed States and treaties made or which shall be Matt . ender their authority, to all eases affecting atubassadors Other blicau inistere and consult, to all rams ef adiniralty and maritime Jeri:stile lion, to rontroversim to whirl' the Coked Sus; shall to a party. .1 eo Introve ,between two or More Stitteshntween a State and citizens of another State, betweeneitizeua of dif fer.. Staten, between citizens of the same state claiming lands tinder grants ef dill rent States, and between a Stand or the chimeras thereof and foreign Staten,', - sell/elle or Selleets. • • • The bin. me, by the State of Georgia mem for an Injunction to restrain de- Jettilanta from executing certain Darla of the acts of Cougrese, being apprehensive Pull Minty to the State would thereby result, but ansording to law and pre crdent, in order to entitle the parties to relief, a ca. must be properly presented for the exercise of judicial power; and the ease must refer to tire rights of per sona and property, and pot to ethical .questions merely which do not belong to the judielary either in law or equity. In view of the principles under tate C:on- Atha,. bon rand ritauntes,which the Court had endeavored to explain, the queetion was whether tile Court amid take coguirance of Um qtwerionpoix Ireton:lt. The Court was called on to restrain defend ants, who represented the Executive Department (rum • potting , - into, execs thin certain nets of Congress, which it was claimed would overthrew the ex lining State government Of Georgia, and establish a different one in Its stead, In other . words, desteoy the corporate exis tence of 11mStatezSuch is the ettbstance or the bill. It malted for the judgment. of the Conned a political question, and not one involving person, and property.' NO question of 'lemon el property, or threatened danger to 'thorn. was pneent ed in too eiti in a room peear,ra a jo.n. plat ;ellen by the Court, It was true the bill set forth" palitical rights as in dun ger, and among other things .that Georgia owned etjtatn jiroperty, tho State Capitol, Executive Manelon, and other real and personal property, and that by putting dime acts of Cungresa Into 'execution. the State would be de,. mile of the pe...wou et each property; but It wins apparent this reference Wes, only.inettlental and not speelau matter or rermely. The rolier, naked would call for u WI differeht (rem Abe one now be fore the Court. • ' Having for the seasons 'dated arrived tit n corielteilmi; It was Important to ex endue the question of jurisdiction in coeneetion. with the defendants The Court dismiesed the bill for want of jurisdletion. Thin derdalon, the Judge romerked, alito disposed of the Case of the State of llpasiY Ippi against Secretary Stanton, General Grant and Major Gen eral Ord, I liVolVing a similar question. Chief Jingles Chase said he .did not concur in all the reaanns, lint assented to the conclusion, believing the Court had no jurnalletion lu the case • • • SUPAJOISIt COllng orteroeft. In the Supremo Court today the ful- I looting °Malone were N 0... 17. Loa - rye s'appolant, versus Sypher, tulatinistratrlx. of Ensue; appeal. from Circuit Court of the United States, dietriet of lowa. Justine Davie deny , prod theophilon of the Court atferiniog the , decree of the Circuit Courtlwith • . - No. mt. Haight, plaintiff ins error. YE.. Pittsburgh,Tort WAyno R Chleago-Rall road Ca; hi error to Circuit Court of the United States for the Weeiern District of Penns - Steatite Jointer, Grier delivered the opinion of the CoUrt, affiriningthti Imighient of the Clreidt Court. with costa and intertet. • - - No. 61. West et. al,plaintillit In error, VS. City of Aurora; Ind; error ltsCireuit j Court of toe United Staten tar the Dia triut of Indiana. ChletJuetice Chase de- livered the opinion of the Court affirm ing the jodgment of 'the Circuit Court, with cods The Chief. Justice announced the Court will iuljourn jets the term on the find Monday in April. TINT SKR LAND Pelt NAVAL PURPOSYS. - The President sent a tnettge to the /fOlifie tordav, enclosing a couirnunica- OM from thi Secretary i tat tbeNavy Ma gee 10 the deprnitatiene Upon and future rtteef reeervations of lands for the par. Pose of eupplylng timber for the navy. The land:tame reserved Were plated an- der the control of the NevyiDepartmenti ... _ .—.— . I and are scattered through Florida, Geer- i . . . . .' THENHAPJVALONW. ' , gia. \[ pi and Lou , l9l.lna,ientilta- ,' . . : sir : Ass Anit..l.ll. eing :gird f. .. , acres. Seeretary W‘Ressayyr.-,, ,,. .. -..--.;. • if the land, are ....., bo rebtined.. for the :‘ •The shape alone let Others rinse, .. . • ..,„ ~.. T hafeat area or-the tale; , • - purpose for which Lath Lave 1,.n. pro- I . I Illairtor spirit le her eyes, teens( if half. a .century an itts , ropria- „ And me „,„t,,, , t r .:bor.!. tion of i l, ld.t/ell for ....alaries and fah, 1 • ~,,,.„,,,,,,,,,„.,•,,,,,, w ilt 1 : ,,, r , 1 ,: 5 ,.,, d., 1, A . 4IA re n ks pe k , : t O m tek ;.. r .b l e ior . 4 , 417, . -- • k Non/NATIONS IIIAI4I .1 vn Art' i'j UPON. [ 6 ,,...ft. ri. 5.... r....., : . The Pres.itiont to-day soot 1111 ,. .; follow- , . "'" e p . `" r, to !Uhl.: lug noinivations to the emote :11 , ,Caarles . A Nee le nere ',MI boner shlisee. F. Tuekerman, -Now Nork, tare.Minl..l4l . l et. .1...W s lt..M.i...'tta MM.'. - 1 n... sheet Innoc ence refines ident. to Grc,.ee; Captain GreeVie,. Coop Th., t„„,,,,,,„„, 0 , 1 ,, -„, rutYlorc in the Navy on ta:tive Ast, vie° I Commodore Cicero Priee, rctirni: Coin- 71 , 1 ,.,° „ =„ 1 ° °::. 1 1 1 1b „ Vr i rt.V'S tramp ' ... Dello:shed ell nor features teem; ribsioro John Cooper, Captain 0 netivo list; vice Captain . Green, nominated fur And MI her roe...deed.. p . l: romotio_ e , , tii ' gut • ail: where both Moir charms unite, The Semite confirmed [no ~ , ggiwing : Hoe perfect Is the view t T. Scott Stewart,' Pa., Consul 4e,r IJeala - With every Image of delight, • and kliage; Janie+ W. Ilengersoß, Reg , With graces ever new 1 inter of Land 0:11ce at Ilum huh% Cali- 0: noleer to char m the deepest ;nos, fornia: L. a. Webb, SuperintbtOelit of . Toe wildest re ' s. eoetrel— Indian Affairs, No :s Mexico: William J. I Dttfustne mildness °Wale brow• itritan, Assensor Internal Iteyenqt First An o renter. thron?. 010,901. , Distrist, 'Mississippi; , Felix G.r:*7lark, Their nOIVIIr but fatally to express Register Land 011 in, id Des Itifqinen, I All I.rue/to tenet, despair: fosse; George IL Ibillett.. noc4Tver of Dot go. h0h01d.L.M.11..• Wil t Piddle Money in Colorado; le:Win G. I An'd real It P" /°. " 11 oro. Stanton, Register of Land (Mice ktCon-„„, teal City: Col. Ambrose Canipbeli,. inter of Lund 011 Ice at Marquett.e l . l ,llielb "gnu; :W.ll. Tremor, Postimieter, Sher lwville, Illinois; William G. igowers, Postmaster. Mount : Vernon, Iowa:. PROTErryMN no crrignxs .tnit.ts o. The Sevretary of Suite. in ropily to a resolution, sail to the Irons, to-clay an Immense mans of documenta-rehiiive V. the protection of Aincriwin , ' l .:dir. tin abroad. Some orthe papers itroi7dated two yegrabaeli. Te....:il'eretary pMlllise. :Milt her portion on Cie subjset, .:4, rt., to fully give all information on i hrt piles in itie department cap tl,r till. MM.; The document/. Are com Posed for the greater part of reports awl proceedings oldneet.. Inv In this country,. and ruldreS3es to the government on that mnbicet, Asking relief for naturaligsd citireitS ahmeltl. . ONION PA CIFIe ItA I LIIIMP;;; The Board of Directors of the talon Pacific Railroad Comtwny,atn trijetlng on Friday, voted to-place tho . inachitio iihops, depots, fur ithe tient tint of tho niountains and for tholnuuntiein di yision at (7boyenne. and to nial:lx that' a : grand turning I point t eaNt ba , ,o of the mountains. 'A he iloeiNitt. svi it 01,1100 an expenditure ofl a large anion tit of money, as tho shop . are to Leimilas_ largo a scale as any In the United and will boa credit to the road.' • • TOE STANTON-0 RAiIT ArrAnqi The suli•Committee on Reconstrcretien 'this morning restuned the e.xtuninlition of Mr. „Stills., mrrespondent' tit, the How York WorM, with refer,nce his - einiversetions with the President of tho subject of the Stanton end Grant nigtter, end in 'connection with the President and Grant correspondence, whichliwas referred hr the House to the Coundittee. CONSUL, FROM 1.11`.11. The Pr?sident recogniieli Chru-lesAVal e-dt Brooks Cownil of; Japan, et4Sen Francisco, , '- PATENTS TO . 10:1 ' ISSCEO. The Patent Office will lwitie too Ann red and seventy six • ti.atents far .lz the "eel: ending the 18t11 instant. ."—A Paris ladv with an Italian litle„ who moves In the first society, owe% all hor good fortune, to an accidental tin:bible i•tto a plt. The story is romantic, It not creditable. Some years ago a Priitch nobleman, hunting In the foresta; of Brittany, fell -into one of the pits tised for str ing • winter . vegetables. Unable to get out, he temained there unfit a band of peasants approached, to viltom he appealed fornasistanoo. They rectuir ed that he shouldnrat hand oat hie v..14a- Miles, and while ho was implying wdh this outrageous demand, a young Or!, leaning forward to - lake something from his hand, fell into his arms, - Ho ]tell liar ns a hostage, but the peasants ged, finding themselves outwitted. The .Marquis and his companion spent three days in the pit before assistance reached thorn, in winch time ho discovered that the girl ,was pretty. intelligaht And agreeable, and when released Ito thole her to Paris, educated her anti at this death loft hers millionaire. • - -An English mechanic, maned 'Nat.- boy, is said to linen calved a prol4om which has no long foiled ,the edbrt.a% of engineers and scientiti ; men, in cilsur, ering a certain menus of detecting The alteration In the texture of • lron,inr• erscls,*or minute defects Invisible tothe eve, wliiehliitv'e been a fruitful canna - Int the breaking of railway axles ands other machinery. itr. Berkey, it Is Said, Was found that when an iron - bar is bonio geneous, the magnetic needle riot bo suddenly displaced from • its , poeinlon n being slowly moved to. endfro, 'its, a direction perpendicular to the Magna - fie tneridan, of the locality, hot if there beidn the bar any unsound Mace, a fault , r (law, the oscillations of the needle t i ll. bosoms very Intense as It passes • r these 'defective points. In slew nr the joss of life and property resulting fika flaws in the iron work of machinery, cue discovery of such a test . of Iron mint prove of great value.' . • A Besrog Joan.—Some silly and i pedant persons In . Boston attempted le make Mrs. Harrison Gray . Otis the butt of - a practlealjohe lestweek. They forg ed rands iFr havitatinu fora reception ;at her honer, sent fictitious orders to traueal men and dealers of all sorts for goods 46 bo delivered at thot.ine bows, and final ly advertised in the Boston fferehi rod i nii•ober of cats, also for. Mrs. Otis. Mts. Otis wag not at all disturbed by the nigh. ter, but quietly recoil-rod the unexpected, guests, and, with the aid or two lion'ip. Men, detailed for the purpose, turni,,ki. spay the V.ioll.llvictimized tradespeople att, fast as they arrived, thoreby_tturnik the tables on the loners. Moreover, lire efildr has been put in thelandelf , detteiti. tired, an that hers is a great , pro abilit& of thefoke turning out no Jake t all t the idiots whose shallow • brains coneoi —Mr Kelsey, of Near York; has - .tin vived.'t he air lion. railroad- project be-: tween New York and' Washington. dte intnidueed the same , blil passed tt the Houso of Itepre , entallves during thn first session of tho thirtpnintts I;t4 grass, with new eorporators. viz Sim , * Cameron, Thomas . N. 'Scott, John 111 - 6 -Manna, David R. Jae %MUM, W. 31nEvor. James Duffy, James Andrews,. Winos 13. Willey; 7amea D. C•Don,") Cameron', end John Edgar' Thomps in, of this Stati- William T. \Valiant. of MttrYittali Niehols, - E. fit. Wailann,../tichard _Frans idiot, arid Erasion Corning, ofNew York; Nt. Itslgn, of lowa, and.T. , C. Renbeity and Charles A. Sherman, ofWeshingtors: D. C. The hill was referred:to. the Cosp mitteoon Railroads and Conant, which:is understood to be fatorable to it. - • —.A. Faris journal catalogues tto3 tit of the l'riuccnis do Mellun3lciu—"epii which have the 1.w...eth05.% of a" Gerntati reverie; teeth of brlgh twit . euarne!;- is fotiC,;: head smooth and clear aeon infant'!; big and widows that of a thinker; atiabunitc, not silky -brown hair; the form of hour. a 3 Greek ea that of the . vents .of her ear like a pink. shell; the bewail - nil fall of her uhoulders; the expilsite fond:: of her arm; the tong aristocraticiha and. the. narrow;, dajatr foot. Be she drosud iu blue. red or yellow; he, lOW coifed With her tootle Over ber eyes., oi" evltlta sergent-diville'Neeptasheappearii ed one day et the - Tuileries,aho. 13. and; remalrut a el:meas." , —A 'rich• and fascinating 'Kentucky; widow- was wooed Eby. two colonelni one formerly belonging to thit national; and tho ether the rebel army. Rile ¢nall, coneltuled to take the rebut, and arraingetk that the/mm.1.30 shoo] 0 take place at thr in. Thfn was tory eit* agreeable- to . ' the • Union • colonel, • wh6 picked alight with his stiecessfut and challenged hint to a duel, The - Coot federate eotonel had two'darrghters . hr 4 'former rife, 1 , 410 dhi not want • theit father ~ to. marry,. again, andpert," Funded the widow to ern' him op unit take the loyal matt. Sho'dtel no, uud tit* nuvl ullAsuat ramp, nit —The llopublivaus at Columbus had el - Florioun meeting 'Wednesday night to interchange congratubitiors over that' cheering success itt the Eighth Distrito Judge Thrall presided,. and speetiab* were made by ideal. Goy: Lee, - Generith' Potts, General gimlet., lion. G. W. Inson, General Schneider; lion. Senna* Galloway and lion. }. E. White.' A rvie,; ohation of 'sympathy with •shith Samuel. Shellabariker, and I - vine:444 him tint to return to public duties unith fully restored to health, WWI passed, andi another renewing the nomination by tint Columbus. Union Club of Gen. Grant for,' tbo Presidency, , • • -- - it• —B. B. Iran Valkftburg„ Minister Japan, informs the citizens of tho United States, that be mid his eolloigues hav4 mado arrangements. With thopapaneen Government by which theeity,of Yedd4 the WWII dr IS ' estato. on, tho West-cos*, and the Harbor at Eldsurnenato, on the island of Sado, will be open to them h - p trade and residence, pursuant, to treat} stipulation, on the firm' , day of Apv4 next.. —A. riot occurrixl at Vayettorillo, Lip _Coln county, 'tennonace, laat tonday 1,1- f . ..room', hitting from four o'chack. oral dark; and causing great excitoment. wrong man named PAnaphliu was y• n piatul shot, mot a number orothe wounded, some with' knives aad otho.* with atones. The riot was .cateed hyrfa druukonfellow Inkq n crowd !saying he could whip any person ln . —Lain .fitizonia advice+ state th'it General Palmer's Pacific Rai!Toad at& Toying party woo ITardyaville riga January Tho lineof . atirvii4 oroscon tho Colorado river, 'twcitty-fivit mato below Fort Wino.. MT; rout. ht unexpectedly . favornblci. The ongino:Pa on the thirty-second parallel wore recall', ed and Prom stopped In that direetlon.:!:. —.The }Manly.° -and .Latikatcan4 Railroad Conniany have bean loaloi nay tone efeaal pot month, and trialil to know what bocamo of It, mot which resulted In the arrest of 1 .ona h the guilty partice„ at CCU nig!: }lamina° Junction N. J. , Diakeino dew riptlou orate wreck, lo bla rearllnghornilayid copprak gold; lu_Ziair Tork, ,waa, ao naturally impresalyns Wit' his auditors 'put tluAr ovar4hoea cut le! prevent wetting ttuitr, het. _ THE 211?0Y BE/Illlollll= !LILL. I= I mitoticd last night no tieing moon Upon a foreign Strand. 'Till monocles crime, illtellowers &Jane, ' Ol home end let her I . • I a runlet I wain aailll ones Moto, I beside the rippling 0111. . :Whore ilisrtsaw,in deye of yore, Tho moo,ihubled the bill,' It brorightle book the .1010.,., grand' • That rounded boy hood'. drums ; 4 s youthful loves, its happy land, •,, lirbibt s 1 mornins'e bums, . I . It brought me beck my own sweet Yore; - ' Th. Castle uti the Mill, - . • . . Untili my ayes could Sao 00 mare Thu moon behind the hilt. . . It brought mu back a mother. love, Until la accents wild, prayed her, from her home above, : To guard her lonely child i' . • ' ' t brought me ons aarOaa UlaltaVo To live in memory stin— t hrrmylittoe hack my Yettilecnes grayt, Ito moon•betand the hill. • A SKATER'S RONQ 0 In the tiohlan Summer I To elle.° the hills Is rare, When the cuckoo blithe new-comer, ' I Calls through the sultry And pleasant %lain AULIIIIIO, All dro.oo In any apparel In search of the grouse to use your nous lint there ar o f whod do mt l ae Winter tids the .... moat cf the year. when the suowd.r/tm Ile and Ike skaters tir • • in their marvellous career. l - . • _ .• • .. ,The racer's joy on the toot ls - I No greater than we feel- Las we cot the MY - surface ! With the sharp keel of *eel: And after breathless skating ' • Who heeds the alut•lors spllntera. ' When your spirit high may welidely - I The Ice of a thousand Winton 1 Anti If the holy of your love fis out upoe'L , that hour. 0 follow her swift over feeand drift, and' ' ' speak the words of politest [Echoes /ram the atter. ;OHIO NEVIS —The Young Mn'es ClanstianAssocl tlon of Mansfield has just dedicated. a . flew mom, —Nolley's Islanders. non. cross on the Era to tho main land *Rh" double teems'-• and heavy loads. • ' —A meeting of parties Interested In a. , illroad from Sandusky to Akron arid ltla.etil Inn or Ctudon, Is io be held at El y rid en Lha.l3lL. -. —The grount Vernon Republican stays:, Soox county has 2,440 dogs and last year they kllled'4lB sheeo, worth $0 65 : . and injured 570 more, _ ' . . - IA s ur v ey —. of two routea from Toledo to Mossiion 1., I going forward. On Mon lay a rommitao meets at Norwalk. And' dr.:ides upon 'which route the rood to to bo built. . • . ' - -Ti e Warren (Trumbull county,. Ohio,) Chrenicie save a new vein of coal, • sic and one-hair feet thick, has tunny • struck ; that neighborhood. It hsthe thickest ever discovered Inlhat section: —The flantilton ( 0 111o)mithorities bays.,,.`.' been lining railroad men for running:, • through their village faster than (our miles an hour, and the officers 'ot the • road talk of moving the trick ontaldp the corporation limits. • •-• • • Unkin epnbli_ean inemisarrtOV, the. Ohio Legisla ß ture /aye Issued an id-:: ; dress ta the ftspublinitni of the State, in, c iliac them. to-be pmetirici large hers at the State Convention,. to be hold on the 4th or March, next. —A total disease sarong the awing . reported in screral parts of Ohio. Hocking county mine fanners are los. , log from fifteen 'to twenty, 'hogs h day., Tho disuisseis said to be an . affection of the throat. 'Chas also prevailed to some'' extent among the tarkeys. The Fayette . county Herald reports the diseaseatnong . thr hogs in that county.. . —The few Olio.etatisths given below are culled froth an able and lengthy at nate on Ohio, in 1817, in the Omen/014U IGarette: Of oral there were prodtmed 42,130,021 ltushels, and ef pig iron 31,700 tutts—a, slight increase over 1.911: There are, In .the State, 100 private - , banks, with an aggregate rotate of 1",523,051. National Banks, 137; with, capital of $22,347,803. State Banke, with $1,309,0711 capital. Aggregate, :114 banks, with k. 10 ,479,0c0pita1. The number of marriages in ,1637,. wteir 2U:2M. a decrease from the number in .1056, which era, 30,479. 'Number of di.. - comes in 1.015,T17; in 1656, 1,150; in 1867; ' =EI There are some !lilacs almost barber.' one in the treatment of people in some:- m . ole shaving and hair-firming shape. There is ne need that a • barber should plater you all over thellps or on the halt, or nearly dislocate your neck, take hold of you by the none, .or pull yourthutont of shape when he is eltavingyon. There' Is no need that; he' should - make your face burn amf .tingle with' some zin,• pleasant,,ftnid, or spat your theek with -- hie wetand dirty hands. Meryl, nil need". that ho ftkould tlelugs your : tisk- with... some tonic so that a stream of It runs down your 'neck' ' or besmear [rivals' . g - mase, so that it feels -soggy; heavy odrusive, and so that you dare not touch it with poor• hands - without - washihe them 'afterwards. There is nee neetitilut he should. twitch little tufts. of, your hair nearly out in frizelog It; ooropend so long a time in placing a few hales on your temples when he must know they will cerbualy be„disariagged by year n hat. There 'ls 'no need thkt he should lariate you mentally by erolmitattorus ter" buy eilstuad invigoration% 'and by war- 1 Rums that you have waideugleilte dan druff end baldness which imp• iltnlyl-be • checked-by them:. . . Undoubtedly in this country the toil- Sort:d'art hue been brought to the highest perfretion, and there are many who real -1y enjoy a barber's manipulations, what: - his towel is clean, his lather perfumed , and creamy, ilia touch like the touch of ' a summer- braere;t leaving your cheek. - soft and fragrant, the nibbing and brush: lug of yo ur heir either by his hand or by inaeltinerY 'real - pleasure, and then you The Rug of the Cannibal leasallis. A number of year; ego the Fettle 1,. 0 !finders American' ate up three Amecan' sailors. The United Snares government,' It seems; made a demand for indemnity,. end - one. Of the two kings of reciee now aindtrto tho "greet father" at - Washington ati enortheow tooth. Liana to be • taken la that his Xfatesty of . Feejee . would. likolo "cut and come again?"' or to it a' testimony that -American sailor egrets with the i.eejoe digestion? - --The.tooth: must bo regarded ttenictephorleal tooth, dental figure of 'Speech, . for leis not a Fesjeo's tooth, bat a sperm whale's , tooth. Our governmeaVe demand .for tooth., indeally might here 'been' met by a ttift of teeth, but they- should , bare been' the teeth or. the 'taxi:alone fellows who dined elf our seamee..• That would have txamtiot tioly indemnity forth° part,lint eeisurily for tbe future. - Japaome government Once bor e:tied ou American CoMmOdere with the' preterit or e% maq's hood, hy way of In-- demnity. When Contmodoralliddlolay. in Jeddo Ifay, In the Columbus, jet ho ettempted to' Belt one der n FOraft-' eso war Junk, lint es: he clambered over her Etilwarke a sentry prediod him back into he 'sig. Tho Commodore returned'. in n rage to his ithip, and seats pereinp tory doirtand for in tipolot#,and tedtint ntty for the insult.' Withi n,guarter of an boor Came back an answer that 'the metre rotted elthoot °niers, and That his hesdliad boon promptly cut off, ?and... was novitt the aenqco of the_ CoMmoe • —/e , n , 106 .h.eeh thus makla merry over Oil lid re r tisentent ' . . - . ' EarI.OIIIIENT PORSONXIIIODT.—.IIaThit.-. 19, and u very prod idea, too: .1 “The 13-stop garmoidant, with Swell, Thirty Guloww. Full Lists spat on Why ahouidn't a Swell do something • for h,tmaelf in this . i.ray 2 Of course„ in applying for the 134 a t opper you'd ask the' follownhaquaations:. , • - I. Doi. treo Swell ploy.the harsuoalitm?, ... 2. It Po he require much pressing? 3.• If ho won't play awing sulky, or not • well, for tustanco).what may you do to him to make him go? Of coarse; ^lf had a do" donkey what wouldn't, every one known Mt about that,. bat in. the =se eta, Sn UM mode of treatment la acareply I • 4. If a fondly 'laris a harlioniuna, will` the •Swell take- his meals wittithern, or. by himself in hisown harmonium?, .. Can the Swell be let out? .;Let out with safety—aid', If so, .May he be de pended upon to come tatckl , . . Many more' Interrogatories - might be pat to the' enterprising advertlears, hut In any case we' have dame our duty.M. making thcalapvpsugrotiona,andOcimat —An ambits:unconsciously perpetra.. ied n crest loke nt: the, ~expense of ble leacher the other Any. -The „wns ~ announcing Veber pupils the not on the 22.1 day -of February , and asking;', theta sense antmtlona concerning Its' ab-: serynnetrosong othein *try-the birth% Ass. otiVaelltngton:aboulti be celebrated. intro than. that of any one else. .'Why," she addect,.`'lnorolhan mind - "Town:wk . tell MC , ,,.' alio added In a little Maw °agar 'ICI - axplatn.....l3eannay.,. hO. ex.„ olaln;ed, with greet ytvaci ty,..bnianse lag stevaclold a lie: , ...,,,,... ........,.. ;li. :.•-, 1 . Z.:;. ; .-. 4: .t,l, KEN