CO Ell Z;tif#'d‘6ro (Sa. ttt . PMEIIISSZD BY , REED ei Co., dT 6/tarn BIIMDING, se street. NM'''. iditars. OP, L it K ig, e ' I it.buse Maxims. 1.1332 , 7 0 11 ALT1L7 t Th.e•C°9 ".• Pee 7*... brow]. 60 .V!ve L 2 * • S 3 .r " Ot r 0 .6 Wan,: to Oia atm.. gad: I Is Stzig ros DALLY ritele vapor. 4..... ' ' a OillltS. riatrengt by =ran. (PIM W•ek,)”.. Ili I°. 'all Itbsarlbqs. (pq rau.).......... AIKIDO., Ltbrai retioam 4X•w.boys sat iglata. tiLT171113.6.1r,' IT,J3RULIV7. 15, :1868. PIITSOLEIIM .1011. , 1 lIMMICIME., rib. e, • nos. Glerint—The editorial in today , * Gazirrrit relative to 'Yr. Colleen. and aunt burlap to Mee th Paraose Of presidia, a Sour Ware for ti e st by the - pauses of the nu bill, Mee that Senator cruet woes.. That semi a 'repon was put In creulatioa concerning him, nor sutural insouga ureter the circumstances. slam there are always 'perilou to so to In leery ealailatintty ready t o !repute the basest of motives 4o any aos they disapprove of: but the preen tense of ouch omens hardly amounts to a hmtldcation of mattes teem ' Mr. Connell Introduced thlabill merely So obUse line of its emastanssma .Jaat a. any other naturtor would hate dons (many r► rpectable person Included to bls eimatltu ram' It'wse wall understood here, and the bat Was known to the Pittsburghoil men whoa...of here to look after the but that. the place enestad by It was listendird for alPhil adelphimt In to -way enunemen with Sr. Connell. That gentleman had not the slightest interest to Me matter, one way ur the Mbar. As coon fa the bill was reported I urged Sr. Connell to postpone its etitimiderattori Minn t Maid hear from the oil =snot Alle- ItheoT annsty, sad be promptly compiled with my manes; rename • peremptorily to yield to any augseation from Philadelphia to rsll It up; and when the Committee of Pittsburgh on men arrived here, he ern eirtiteil Mimeo to rub amOdifleation of it as would eompletely remove' all their ObJea- Mona. I have felt fastened to make this Mate mint m ahem • notice to Mr. Connell, and I feel sure the Cian;Pris will not refuse me the privilege of putting him right before its madam. A. he CM everything that no potable to eve om• men a full hearing In the matter, sea Waage the MI teeny as cisrptablo to them. It Ti. dee trete ono to him that - I should bearthm teatimmy tore. nova him from the Imputatlonsi Ito azd tartly cutup= him. , Zsapectfultr, • - I I - ntrasimr. Zaast-r. *,lbueenza.—ln this city, and whirer, ei else Mr. Enuarr is known, his state ment will be received as reliable .o the fullest degree, and will exonerate' Mr. COMCILL from the awls or seeking to atria himself by means of , the l'etrole— In Inspectorship bilL While Mr. - Seas.= magnanimonely batman the champion of Mr. Illosrizu., even los 11 eonstrained to admit that the liilpatatson "was natural under the cir cumstattoea" Mr. ConzeLL says ha wanted "10 protect the lives , of his col . stitrumta from accidents arising fosse the use of adulterated oils." That is his repnesziation of his motives. Mr. Enatzrr rests his defence on the ground that he "merely wanted to oblige ens of his cough:teats." This is another riew. In either ease, to impose a yearly tax of $lOO,OOO on the oil dealers was geiag quite beyond the requirements of per - ioiiii friendship - Or nnl3llo daty. Bd. while Xs. Comm. affirms he was tended only by a philanthropic desire to prevent his eonstithents frost beim killed off by kerosene explosions Mr. Burry tells as that the elides 'eon tentpiated was latesded fora Phibidel- L mug apteororth $lOO,OOO a year, maimtactnied to order, Wed or - ;_snight not openness a sate protection to ' people who bard ell, but would surely he in 'exeellent thbeg for any man Who should, fall Into It. saw, It Is possible , that in many eggs may In pnt4eto a man's basket, ends iu Harriabirg, upon principles of disinterested bemerolince, and with no understanding that those °May instrumental in the benefleace • shall hare the private sucking of any of pOuibla . -say, probshlt— for a number of a legislative body to in trodoco a bill, to oblige either a friend or "Manger, haling e lame sized snake in it, without stopping to sundials. 'closely what was contained therein', or howit would operate In practice; and when suoh-a snake came to be disclosed the legislator would be 'objected najut ly to Juju:L.lou imputations, en note in the cue of Mr. Oottazu. • Bat we beg to call Yr. QiiwariLL's attention to the second section of nit bill; commencing at the tenth line and going to the close, wherein it is provided 'that if the Inspector shall find any oil with a fraudulent brand or mirk of. in speedo*, or adultanded after inspection, - he shall mine it, and proceed to sell it, pocketing a part of, the preidedr, and tuning the remainder over to the'trems tuy of the Assottlatiori for the relief of disabled tremme. Doyen call it protec. deg is thi Urn of your constituents to put adlitarated or /muddiest oils on the market, under solar of law, selling them to the highest bidder! What say yon, Mr. Connistal If sack is your motive, *mad you not have provided that tech /rendition* and Impure as zkonld'be re disci led f Inch a pro on would com port with vow profs w on. The eristing prolitlea does net. Now, wo will tell Xr. Comm. wherein he his done us injustice. The accasation splint him did not originate him magmas, nor did we endorse it as welltensuied. It had been running through the newspapers three or four dere before we Weald toll at all. Two 'fibs journals of tids city bad given it both circulation and endorsement. We than spoke of it CI a report for which we weld not vomit., and agitated that he lama make dental, if he had denial to make. Hereupon, he pounced down upon us as his accuser, chars ing us with icaperthrentm and lying ; bat he said dot a wind of or to thou, joarneis that pub lished the statement originally end vouched for Its aseuracy. Will Mr. Codnota., while Its hand is to, explain bow this happened? A few words with Mr. LOWRY. He aunts that the newspapers of this city are '..110111211011 icolda." It mast be ad mitted that they have at times exhibited much Impatience and hut at the team of legislation at Harrisburg. They would have demonstrated the permission of virtues mere than human it they bad net. AS good deal of legislation, touch tag meet important interests of this city end region has been' of a character to make even a alit swear . But,-it does not become Mr. LOWIT (opt Idnuelf forward es s censor of the press in generator of any section thereof If any ten journals in the Common wealth have dons as mach violent and coarse - scolding fns their ooltiraas as he has done from his rest In the Senate, 'during the seven years he has occupied it, they deserve to be abated es public nuisance'. • I mart, when Irritated by attic*, ores of the press, are went to express '• degree of contempt for jonniallsts aqd jonnzallare, they do net reaL Contempt does net find expressten to the fortons manner adopted by some of the membeis Of the &Mate.. Why, gentlemen I lash yearielees into fifty, and descend Into tbodopths of biarimaaidluo, if yon on mean to i/Val} that-YOU a Yeinmoy and regaralsai of the. immures to aid you are subjected ? A sane man d. not'sitika Ilk., a pugilist to brush all from Ids fine. iris do not wriggle the pot, to show that boiling water pleasant to thant. LIGIITI We feel serraateddn timbal:icing tha withitilhiity days the work requisite complete the tionnellryille Railroad wit , I be advertised for. letting, and that the whole will be finished probably in th. spice of a year, nr,at fartbeet, with sixteen months. Ina few daps we. dal be in a ridden to give the details of th contempliteti arrangements. • Tem Pnwidents of Pennsylvania Co. /Kee held an important Convention a riarrisbncgi whieh we shall notice In d 110LIMEIII4 ORPHAN. GEORGIC F. MCFARLLED, Erg., Super. l Intendant of, the Soldiers' Orphan'e Schools of Pennsylvania, tarnishes nal' f with ide anneal report for 1e67, ramie to the Governor in pursuance or law. fink law provides for the rare, maintenance 1 1 1 stid - idticiiinn, at' the - expenea or ;Loll State, of the destitute orphan children of ail ail inch deceased soldiers and tailors, citizens of Pennsylvania, and soldiers who live sorted In Peruasylnniis regl wants as - have died he the service of the United States in the late war to suppress the rebellion. Owing to the inadequacy of the first appropriation mach difficulty was experienced in disposing of all the epplicatiorui made for admission into the schools, and, indeed, in providing for those already received into the schools. After mature deliberation the Superia-, tendent resolved to retain all the schol.l ars, to admit only the odest and need.j iest applimmte, to discharge promptly all the scholars arriving et the age of sixteen, and in no event to allow the 1 1 expenditures to exceed $430,000 per, year, the sum voted by the moue. During the last Coven =sputa of the ,3rear one hundred and eighty.oze pupils were added to the Soldiers Schools, al though the Superintendent effected a change in the grade of scholarship which fully compensated for this additional number, entailing no additional Chlt. Lis the State there are twelve schools for the more advanced scholars, contain- i ing 1,041 .male and 128 female pupils; I there are three Primary schools contain. lag 180 males and XIS females. There i are 26 Homes and other Institutions which admit 638 melee and 413 females; at the Dome for destitute colored child ran there are 15 melee and 7 female,. These fienres give as 1,874 male and 1.206 female Scholars, affording a grand total of 8,180 orphans supported, main tained and educated by the State out of gratitude rot , the services performed by their fathers on the field of listtle. Ice 1807 the whsle nemter of accepted or ' plicatiens recet•sed was I,o9s,•beLeg 602 less Than in 1866, and 753 lees than in 1865; the number of orders issued 729, being 1,040 less than in 4860, and 848 less than in 1E65; the number of admie rions 630, being 945 leas than in 1860, and 612 lus than in 1865; the number of oischarges, 125, being 7 more than in 1866, and 104 more titan.in 1865; while the number in school at the close of the year was only 409 greater than at the close of the previous year, before which the schools were not fairly in operation. These figures show conclusively that the maximum number in school at any one time has now been, or is being. reached,-and that hereafter it will de. crease. The decrease from discharges on age alone will be 374 in 18.88, 829 in 1889, 848 in 1870, 403 In 1871, 470 in 1872, 460 la 1372, 416 in 1874, 344 in 1673, and 307 in 1876, when the number Neill have been reduced to the Capacity of a single institution of ordinary size The entire coat of clothing 1,988 er n/eine in the advanced schools for the eleven months ending December Ist, IEB7, was 145,638 37, or ;23,90 for each 'orphan. The schools will enter the new year with a fair supply of good clothing, all provided at the average cost of twenty. d►e dollanfor each child per annum. The salaries paid during eleven mouths amounted to f. 4,274.99; other general expeases et - the Department, each as pestage, stationery, blank hooka, minting, advertising, funeral expenses, t.e., amounted to $1,606.62. While the number of children actual ly In school on the first of December, 1167, wan 1,180, the number of out standing emus; which entitle the hoi dors to adMiulon whenever presented, 640, and the number of applications on file awaiting orders, 540, making a total of 4,860 children be be provided for, ex elusive of the additional applications re. Weed after December 1, 1067; yet the discharges will occur so rapidly, and the actual admissions may be made so grad ually, that the number actually in school may be kept from exceeding 3,500, on the Ist of inns, 1889, and 3,000 during the following year, or by the let °fit:me, 1869, before which the maximum will Lave been reached, and the decrease have commenced. Thus restricted, the average number is Ildloo.l will not differ materially from 8,400 for the siz months ending June 1, 1888, and 8,500 for the year ending Jane 1, 1,868. that no provision will be made for no more than the numairshere indicated, the Superintendent estimates the average cost per pupil for the year et $112.43. This contemplates only tie :amnion of the friendless and desti tute, and the Superintendent strongly urges the Legislature to snake a more liberal appropriation, so as to provide for the reception of frilly dye hundred more pupils, and as the maximum cam her will be reached this year, the grunt now asked will be the heaviest that will ever be required. The Snaerintendentie not particularly pleased with the eharactvr, - style and ac commodations of tke advanced and pri .nary:sehools, and eels them down as approaching failures when com2ared with model institutions of the character . . however, he congratulate' himself that most of the schools show steady and en couraging advance towards the required standard. The report concludes by paying eject tribute to the patriotism of Gee. Cue. TIN, to whose sympathy, vim and !sr meting statesmansidp Is due the estab lishmentof the lieldiers!Otphans' school= in Pennsylnahis. Oars one thing do we etre to ley in reply to thuMarriabstrg Tsiegray and that in short metre. -Members of the Legislature, or others, may think it legit ! imste to introduce bills, wait 01'10U:hat examination, striking serionaly at large industrial or commercial interests; tend ing to put Come interests ander contri bution tor - sharpers, on pretense of pro moting the public wollere; throwing those Interests Into temporary uncer tahoty; and taking men concerned therein away from their bottles and affairs, on expense, to explain or counteract, but onsineu men take a different view of the case. They bold that legislators ere bound to know what they are about, and not, with eyes open or shut, strike at whole classes or whole communities.. They will resent such blows as promptly es legislators do asperelens n;ort their integrity. At tie opening of the seri- MOD. some lessons were inculcated, on this bead, that ought not soon to be for gotten. Oiber lessons, of like charac ter, will follow in due season, from this section of the Commonwealth. Tai Beaver County Republican Cen tral Committee met in Beaver on Satur day and elected Mean,. J. 8. Ratan and J. C. Boyle as delegates to the 13tata Convention. gcssre. - Benjamin Wide, G. C. Barker, Hon. M. S. Quay, D. L. Imbrio and D. Weyana wercappoluted conferrees to meet with conterrees from other minutes of the District to select delegates to the National Convention. Resolutions were adopted instructing for Gen. Grant for President, ex-Oo•, Andrew G. Curtin for Vice President, Gen. Hartranft for Auditor General and Col. Campbell for Surveyor General. Tax Republicans of Wayne and Pike counties hare appointed Kr. John Shot= delegate to the State Convention. In structed for Grant and Carlin. • CaL Samuel Knorr has beta selected as the Senatorial delegate from the Co lumbia District to the Republican State Contention. • The Representative (tele. gate has been conceded to Montour county. - • • In Clarion the Republicans have made G. W. Lethy and B. J. Reid delegatei to the State Convention, and instructed for Grant and Curtin. EAlll.l' i i t,uux Re quoted the de cision of the Supreme Court of the Uni ted States, pronor.nced by Chief Jae. tic° Teats., l'rt the Rhode Island case, Delth's Rebellion,) In 'which the law was laid down fo be that in political matters the bench had. no jurisdiction, the Count:Mien deraillhp on Congress exclusively the right and duty of ad judging Whether the State organizations were republic:in in form and sibflance. This was deMonstrating that the power now claimed by Congress for Itself, of regulating the governments of the Southern States, and denied to the Su preme Court, ,was not revolutionary or even novel, but strictly In. accordance with the organic law or expounded by the higheet Judicial tribunal. It was, also, :bowing Inferentially that the Domocrati, under color of zeal for the authority and idlgaity of the Supreme bench, were aiming to debauch it into an instrument of partisan contentions. The Pest Aid this decision with pro. ' found amszeMerit; cogitated upon it for ' the reo,einde r r of the walk; took It for ' its &today Meditation; and, finally, on Monday undertook to prove that this Judges wore egregiously Ignorant of the manning of the Constimtinn and of this extent of their poweraLand, all this, tin der color of replying to our reflections upon the decision and Its applicebility to the existing I situation. So, thee, our contempo.ery Is equally at variance with Congress end rho Supreme Court. Prohsb!y lt agrees just as little with the Executive as j with Legislative and Judi, iial Departments. If It could only run all three SI ce.ordinete branches to suit itself, It m.ght be satisfied, bat it would produce a government no good citizen would bu wiliiog to live under. To the grief of this Poet, doubtless, the Supreme Court, on yesterday morn ing, reaffirmed its old doctrine, dismiss ing Cris Georgia and Mississippi Rican e traction cases. The Democrats Fill now feel a like contempt for the Court as for Congress. . Co:tellies has been accused, alike by Democrats and Conservative Repaid!. cans, of =tuning autherity hilts Recon struction Policy not conferred on it by the Conetitution. The Supreme Court has had this question before it, and has decided that Congress has exclusive au thority in the premises, only political topics being involved. West is more: thls decision conforms to the doctrine 'aeld by the Court on this alma of mat- ters from the foundstima of the govern— ment.. Congress has been, and is still acting strictly within the limits of Its prerogatives;' and its assailants wish to make now rules, in conflict with all past precedents to snit their party ends. This domino is the mere consequen tial because it bee been understood for months that a msjorlty• of the Judges, in their private opinions, do not con i,ent to what Congress has dens and is doing. It they hid tee power they world not do as Congress is doing, but they are constrained to adpsdie that the ilecrction is 'not with them, but with the Senate - and Rouse. After tide, it will become the Democrats to abate -ornewlmt, at least, of their wild talk boat the usurpations of Congress. 1 Tee Carrabrans are taking alarm at he reorganisation of the Fealaiebroth erhood in this country, and, is view of possible contingencies, a force of regu lar' will ba stationed along the Niagara rout OM noon as us vi gati on L mimed. This piece of prudence may be very well, bat as we take it there need be no alarm felt by our mimics scram the bor lcr, as the lenders of the Fenian, hive loot all faith linechemes for the innaton of Canada, arid in the future will confine . .heir operations to the soil of Irelsad. Bra EECKST DECISION Or the Supreme Court, in aeeoion at Pnitedelphla, Mn. .I . A.SIE G. dwisenurat, of this city, mov en real estate to the value of same 160.000, which had been illegally trans- . ferret! by her 'husband from whom she was divorced. Mrs. B. has battled this use for some time past, and her many friends will bd pleased to note the final decision in her favor. Gus. Cj&ieoc has earned the ap. 1111111 n of 11103,0 ii erga men in proteating against the employment of secret 'agents by the State Department. Such agents belong to s system of diplomacy the world is fast outgrowing. One honest, Crank and explicit negotiator la worth a wholo airily of sneaks and spies. .AT ♦ VIISTIN6 of the Rapti:akin Committee of Crawford county, held on Saturday Sast, delegates were se• lected to the State and Senatorial Con ventions, and instructed to support Gen. Grant far President and Galosh"' A. Grow for Vice' President. = Philadelphia rrleices now so the pox , ,eselon of one of the [meat Masonic Temple. in America, hut the members "(that order have in.contemplatten the erection of a new sdifloe which will completely overshadow the present one in point of elegance slid grandeur. On i seat St. John's Day the corner atone will tee laid on the alto selected, Broad and Filbert a.nseta, and the, temple will he completed five yenta front that date, al a oaut of $7.50,0M. Th. new halt will be of granite, and in the Norman etyle; the massive Character a thin-order of architecture, however ring well relieved by the ;arrangement of the buttress...l, balcenlea baluntrade. and graceful planaclin which form part' of the design. Th. four Aida; of the building will be of granite, the only dif ference In the design being In the front on Broad street, which will present one of the Meet magnificent features of Hsi. thorenglifart. •The building will be three eloriew in height. The front on Broad street mill present two torrent., one at each corner, the inte - rvening apace being composed of a handsome portico, running to the secend slier , earl ep os . which will la, two incites far Mamma (Ono of Saone.) the whole surmounted at the apex of the root with a email tower, et the commit of which will lace Staten of onaritv. On the late of this mein front, In addition to the ornamental window., will be (In relief) emblems or the Order —the equate and compass, °The tower at the totithwest corner of the building will be the great feeture. It will W three hundred feet froni the ground loth., top of the spire, or ono hundred and four feet higher than (Sorint Church steeple. The four miller]; of thts tower will be surmounted by pinnacle., while the buttrerareextending up a eon- Kiderubte dintartoo, bite imleolwes at the window., and the benletrarice end gen eral of lid. portion of the structure wia add greatly to the beauty of the whole design. Thu regnalsdng three othlew of the ,iatildieg will he re lieved by butlre.ece between the win dow., and the whole erftst of the exterior will be at Once massive and graceful. The porticoni,„„lhe front, bring twenty feet in sal rams:, of the title of the build ing, will /dill further add to tbe beauty of the design. • • The building , throughout will be fire proof, iron girders being used at the ate rim, and other precautions are being pt d to guard agelnet the dtruction llo'fA'hieeerilli,e. mi Ventilation of the most complete kind bas been provided,' the steam apparatus to be mad for beating the building being alto designed to drive ran to ke4,ptin a circulation of tree, air in all of the rooms. Provision has also been madlt for a bountiful supply of water at every story. The entire build ing wilt be devoted to Ittanonic purpo ea., and, tlierend , there will be no mai dence within the hall, as heretofore. ' Omura MIJItIMIL 'NITA L.—A canons, murder trial hasjost linen concluded at Mich. It appears that Jahn Brown and William Morse had frequent ly quarreled, and the former hail sworn Le ',mobil:Ill Morse°. the first opportn , nay. One morning Moran :went to his barn, end Remo time afterward was !bond there, hanging by the neck with stntp taken from his ion Larne.. The Jury visited the premises, and from thu position 'in which the body was found, came to the concision that be must have been strangled, and then placed In that position, to make It appear that he done the deed, himself, and strong elrcuns swims pointed to lirow,tiats the muz,ler or. Ho was convlctod.::.- —The American - Board of Foreign Minton. corrects 1111 e Improwilon of the expect. of: pitting funds to the heathen station. Instead f cootlig ettventy-five cents to Kat a dollar to the heathen, as haw boom said. only a little !wire than six ;sir cent. of Its Ineume is orient In raising foods; and including all expenses al administration, the cost Is only eight and threceelghts per cent, And In the flfty-two year. of its exist , orem not one dollar boa over been lost by unfaithfulness, Incapacity, or negli gence In the Board. rITTSBr:r.s_ 1 q.k.Z I RELicurs INTELLEGE4CI'. From the glowing accounts , of the pa pers, the Forty-ninth Liinitereary Cl the Missionary Society of theMethodiet Epic. 'Copal Church, jest held et Albany, must have been a grand affair. Senday, the daj before the anniversary proper took piece, was devoted to hold. ing special services to the various . churches of the Capital. Varied eery'. cos look place also In one or two churches Monday morning and afternoon. In the evening the crowning service was held, In Tweddle Hall, His BreeliencA:Vor. Fenton, presiding.. After the opening religious services, the Governor deliv ered a brief address, in which he stated that he was glad to be relieved moment from public awes to meet the] represen tatives of Methodism. A missionary spirit, he remarked, had prevailed from the planting of Christianity, and he was thcreforegled to hail the assembly there convened to help on this great move ment, He then referred In strong terms to the patriotism of the .M. E. Church fn tho hour of our country's need, and of Its. existenee on this continent. Among the distinguiehed speakers who participsied were Bishop Janes, Dr. Har ris, one of the Missionary Secretaries, Dr. Sewall, the eloquent Brooklyn preacher, Rev. R. W. Clark, of the Re forme 1 Church, and Judge Wright, of -Pennsylvania. By special invitation, Rev. G. Douglass, of Canada, was pres ent and delivered an address of great power. He Is represented as perhaps the most eloquent speaker In the Damln ion of Canada. Dr. Sewall's closing words had a thrilling effeci. He affirmed that he believed Jesus Christ will get the world, end when he does, he mid he should like to be permitted to take part. in the hallelujah chorea of the greet English composer. The doctor then re lated the fallowing incident: It Is sold that the privacy of his selltude wee In terrupted by a !teeter, who found him et his desk writing hie music to the mar vellous words, "He shalt • reign forever aid ever, Hallelujah! Ho shall reign forever and evert" and the streaming lean were rolling down the coed man's cheeks uhe repeated the lenge/pia:4 wrote hie mule, "He shell reign for ever and ever, ever and ever, Elellehijakt lie ihall reign forever and ever, Halle lujah! The Lord God Omnipotent reign eth I" The Malted Presbyterian of this week contains en editorial entitled "Reform I in Chnrchliluile," In 'Which it argue! that a want of proper knowledge of music, by the cultivation of the voice, calla for a reform in this respeet, and that Gad is entitled to the best offerings we Can gin, sad therefore every =arm' should be employed to cultivate ear powers to reader acceptable praise. Red form la urged ie the practise of having sack artistic and elaborate mule as to silence the praises of the coagregation; and designedly so, that the sweet har monies of profeulonal singers may not be disturbed by less cultivated voices. Severe strietures, and very justly too, are made againet the coarse of some churches for employing ungodly men and women to sing, taken from the the atre and opera. It is gratifying to note that this evil practice does not obtain is this part of the country that we are aware of, at least not in theleirrentles farm it exists In Corns eastern cities. Elev. John Hall, D.D., of Hew York, lately from Lampe, during the lee Sun day -School Institute In New Yore, briefly spoke of the ratans that obeeld be employed for the convertion of idiots ars. He said to this end teachers should, 1. Try to deal personally with the children. S. Teach simply, latelligent. ly, and without effort to display; there should be no high flown cloud■ of rhetoric or rhapsody in the enumeration! of God's truths. 3. The scholars should I er be truly loved. 4. Teachs should be holy persons before their children, u elsewhere—not severely suctamoalons, bat cheerfully religiona. 3. Set Jet.' forth, distinctly, kindly, and folly, be fore the Children, with the old of the Holy Spirit. Attention to these sag gestioes would, be thought, setae the conversion of Sabbath *dipole. Recant intelligence from Johnstown, Yonne., represents the churches all aglow with revival power. Considera ble Interest prevails in the Presbyterian and United Brethren Churches. A I number of baptisms by immersion, ad. ministered by the minister of the 1?Iml- Chersh, took place last Sunday. Marked sneccu crowns the efforts at the special services in the Methodist Epiacci- Poiend Methodist (Protestant) Church. es. Toe Evangelical Lutheran Church, under the pastoral care of our friend, Rev. R. A. Pink, has enjoyed great eplr. Real prosperity.. On a recent Sunday seventy-two persons connected them. j selves with that Church. Of these eigh. 1 teen adults were baptized. Meetings still coattnuet. - According to the report orthe trees- nrer of the American Sarin Missionary Union, at a special oteetiegof the Hoard of 'Manson, held in New York city, last week, the expenditures of the Union for the year. including the balance against the Soeletilast year, will likely be 030,000. During the quarter end ing Much list, the receipts ought to reach, from all sources, not ins thee $161,000, to meet the weals of the riEfl Rev. S. C. Faris has been employed by the First Presbyterian Church, Rae. S.l. Stove!, pastor, of this city. to labor as city missionary. We believe onoor two ether of oar city Churches have al ready initiated this new movement, is connection with the work of the respeo: tive congregatioae The project of planting Congreffl , iNiast churches In the South, under the amodcos of the American Home Mis sionary Society, is so greatly MO:feted by the obstacles interpooed by the unre constructed condition of society in the late rebel States, that only . one new church, the ladependent Church at Salem. Atiesiuiripl, has been occupied during the year. The general poverty which preemie, produced by the rebel- Boa and the failure of the has compelled most of the churches to fall back upon the Society for support. Rev. Thomas Z. Beecher, of Elmira, New York, has commenced holding Hon. day evening meetings at the Opera Rouse, for the reason that a regular church edifice, with rented pewe, is too exclualve, and repels the masses, instead of attracting them, while under this plan all may feel floe to hear the Gospel presented, "without money and without price." . The Independent says that two Math°. dirt, the Congregational, and the Second Baptist churches,. at Newport, It. 1., united on a recent Sunday eveninen partaklng of the Lord's dapper. The Baptist pastor, for. Charles H. Mai colas, presided, aided by the other clergy men. It thinks the coarse of this palter oft the Baptist Church la mush preferale to that of Mr. pale, who is hold ing meeting, at Bellied : The Citriztlan . pleciples' Church of New Castle, Pa, lust ready for occu• penny, is a very beautiful edifice, of the Boglish Gothic;:atyte. It is stated it was built bribe liberality of Phillips Brothers, foul gentlemen' of fortune, re• sidbig in that place. Its cost, when fully tarnished, will be about ninety theism:id dollars. It Is most likely the handsomest church (Mine belonging to the Campbellito body in the „United Mate'. The Prtsbyterkm states that the Church schools ln . the Episcopal Diocese of. Pennsylvania aro prospering, and show an increase In numbers and strength. Andalusia College. CMOs with twelve or fifteen more scholars than hitherto, the Allentown Academy hap over one hundred, St. Mark's Academy, at Mauch Chunk, has fifty, while new institutions have been organised in the Pirtatiei of ISLitiCiat4 City, Mate Haven tud eliewpere. pre Natively Memorial (Congrega tiosxl Chttech In Georgetown, Maui chn.ette, cord-; r,-arly one Imodred tlicuradd • the entire amount brine furnished by Mr. Peabody, was dedicated. to "the 'worship of Qod quite recently. It is built of brick, in the If armko style!, la quite an ornameat to the village, and gull seat six hundred persons. A now Episcopal Church is about to be established on or near the upper part of Fifth Avenue, New York. The Christian (United Pres byterian) Lyons the holding of a Con. ventionin this city, on the third Tues day of March next, by United and Re. formed Presbyterians, with a view to consider questions bcsnng upon the Union of thoso bodice. Thus. the work of Malan goes forward, and with the ad mirable spirit maniforted by the Presby terial, the day does not appear distant when a closer union will be affected, not only; bY:tho two branches heeled but by other members of the Presbyterian fam ily. Revival lotcrest prevails in many of the Presbyterian churches in this State. At Surquehanna Dzpot, the Presbyto. rian church coleys quite an interesting work. Thus far , over slaty taro re: quested prayers, and, of this number, fifty bare expressed a hope In Jesus. The church at Altoona, Pa., is favored with a revival of great power. Thurs day night of last wack the inquirers num. bored fifty. The lecture room of the Lawrends villa cbuich, Rev. J. A. Miller, putor, will ho formally opened for public wor ship on next Sabbath, the 9th. At the morning boar, Dr. IL Miller will preash. In the afternoon Ref. 8. P. Wolff will oomipy the pulplit Services will be held. at three o'clock. Bishop Simpaon will be present 10 the eiening,.at 7/ o'clock, cod will pUtleipato in the aervicek No subscriptions tikes; simply a basket col., leetlori. A. cordial invitation is extend ed to all who can make it convenient to attend. • EPHEMERIS. _ —The robbing of the Malt have been driven ilionitt by the severity of the weather, and . the people of Penear.ola arc shooting and eating them. —A monument to the membry of the late venerable Bight Reverend Bishop Ropklni, of Vermont, Is to be raised In Tritely church, New York. —The Buten Adtgrtiser nays: "Rome people think that Pittsburgh, done up in January, le an answer to 'Does It pay to, smoke?' propounded in February." —A petroleum well hes bean discov ered in England, and,. the Feulans per mitting, we may bask for a repetition of the petroleum excitement in that island I of frogs and spleen. —Comet Teets,, a member of the new Anglian Cabinet, is an kith Viscount. Nothing can equal the men of that na tion in turning op in queer place., end often jest when wanted. —Nova Seeds not having seceded as Set, is going to do in in driblets, and also to eolonise New Zealand. A ship• loud of Wee nose, is going in a co-opera tive way from sunlit shortly. —lt is stated that darlag the pest two li years about two thousand persona have been murdered in I Texas, with bowie• knife or revolver, and that none of the murderers have been jediciallypardahed. —Louisville had a grand rat Mina' excitement the other day. A "celebra ted deg Jack" killed one hundred rate in fire lad a half minutes. Coon draw ing was also one of the Casements of the evening. —Evidently the country is going down hill after Spain as fast ae it can. Louis-, rifie is to have the honor, howeeer, of inaugurating the latest symptom of the fail. There Is to he a hull fight In that lively town. —Bright, Carlyle nest Biamerck all smoke, and their intellect seem, to torn. mon obtarvers to b Its brilliant nuts that of Mr. Parton, who holds himself up se s 'hieing example of gent men who do not indulge in the "pleasant weed." —Brigham Young, the Popo of Poly- Rimiste, has remonstrated with his saints 1.11 the subject of physicians. He bj,rte at present to their employment, sod believe. that people will get well, if they see going to at all, without &Di , In• terfrrence bY the faultily. party of English tourists profess to have found the Identical pillar of salt whore Lot's wife so thoughtlessly turned in,lcsving her husband and family; to hunt up other lodgings. These English discovirers were Miliarians and ate part of the Lot with that hard Lolled eggs. • '—We aro sorry 14 hear Art Her. Grant Is affected. Nothing Is more die agreeable to the gent nil public tarn af fectation in persons occupying high so. nisi positions. The Boston Post is our authority for this statement; • It_ asys "Mrs. Gin. (Smut alTecti—pink silk." —When O. F. Train wm asked for his autograph In Cm+, tinrinir his Mind. he wrote for one main, Whether 0,1 the ry ltoea tree, Or In the Tattle, •re, Th. e u e•t pta•.lnt man te. le where he do. tot noi.a." For another he wrote, "Pay Alabama claims or flea. Release. American cltl rens In English Jails, or war is certain." —A. fair ha* been opened in London to raise money for the relleftof the starving dogs of that city. A more worthy charity could not be toned If t bore %ere no starving men In Len ten, or the world; but it were perhaps better to let all the doge, though they are noble and troe,•starre outright, If by eo doing ono men's lice could he kept In Itinid • .. . —A van of en Irish menagerie, !con -1 tnining a pair of lioneues. and a lion, MLA oierturned recently on the road. The lion nod the lioness*. were Coa -1 !hed in teparkte.compertments, bat: the tall broke down the partition between them, which altogether enraged the for m'. monarch so much that he a.t upon and slew the two femalks. —The Boston Post is so encouraged at the terrible lashing General Grant has given to Mr. Johnston that it gays la Its wrath that Washharne and Stanton wro e his lettere for him. For our part we can't new how that bettere the thing. Stanton boo been, if possible, treated In a more disgumingly, rude manner than Las Grant, and, therefore; has abettsr right to thresh the .gresident, whom tongue is often too thick to thresh with.. -The proclamation which was posted on the facade of the Mansion Hoene in Leaden, a couple of weeks ago, and which caused much Indignant excite ment In the Aldermarae circles of Lon don, read as follows: "The Irishmen of America • are milted! Irishmen of England, follow their example! Unite; forward, ye fearless sons of Ireland. Stand for the old country!" At the head of this was a harp, the motto, “God me Ireland," and the lelers I. IL . —The young men in New Haven "de serve n great deal of credit" for their inventive faculties. They have hapr9v. ed on the fashions of England twenty years ago miasingly. Then the lash. enable swell would go miles to bo able to find, wrench off and steal a unique knocker from the door of a pnvate boar,. li.w the gay young mon of New Haven, who are most fashionably Melia; cd, Meal and carry of the gates them. selves, thus emulating Samson in their. sportive moods. —Tke ancients were not Intimately acquainted with zoology. Wo remem ber that in one of their fables a fox Jeers the lioness for. bringing forth but one cob, whereas she, the fox, had a whole litter of pups, and the royal beast- r e _ marked that that .eni however Was a lion. The morarof this was very pain. led, but the statements IMO not facts. The lionen in the zoological garden at Dublin has jot given birth to six, cubs, and four or dye Is by no mesas ix an- ICOMMOR mamba. EP;:tirk •EUIMDf Ydil~, 4AILBtsI -:.. 1:113=1=133 ~.Winfor bits lons been upon vain good lett-neat, and all kinds of [stork, and par. lamlso, calves aced good shelter, good carp, 'and plenty of good food. They rani.o': c - itistfard tLo plercin.7. - rintor weather dike r:,:erf ani mals. They do not like ti o dry lily, and nnlees they have esneei I care will fell away, and pc.rhatie not survive the spring. . I But it was upon the core of land. Coat we began this article. The,yehoulrl be sipargtod froin the older sheep without full. Sheep never do won in I trg.o ihoirs at best, end the word:sal and, penitud Auger the most. Lambs, if loft with the older sheep, will oe• pushed chant by their superior strength—driven nod boa away from the fore, and ilvrimile.aid die. They need better reed sail bettor care than old sheep. Sheaf oats are es:- rellent for 'ambs; but begin by reedit light, and increase the arnonnt loodua:- Iy to whet they ought to hove. Corn 'Mould he foil, If outs are net, to ha had. Corn meal is better than ungronati corn, and shelled corn bolter than corn in the ear—bet If yea have not the One, use the other. 'Good, bright, sweet hay shonld alsol4 provided in softielent qeautity and vari ety. Clover Lay,'Noved with proper core, is greatly relined by, lambs, and, in dyed, by all kinds of stock: It is nuance that fanners don't ratio more clover hay and less timothy. Clover le loon !suet, ,1,, Mg and better rollsbed by nil kinds of .stock. Indeed, stock soil hasp fat on clover and grow poor on ti othy alone. If fad on timothy, they must hay° corn 4 ISO. Bin CC variety of boy .b..r.d ho godneed—timothy for working anittalo —clover, orcliard. grass, • bera'nj nitwit, ..to., and • thcio given. for in change and particularly, to lambs ••and other young stook. lio man should pretend to keep sheep without Laving racks fr m which the y . are to feed. It is Inure et - entlel to tide climate than further 'nem , Lannon WU have so much rain Itnd ' did here. If throWn upon the around, the feed gets trampled late the mud and wasted— wretched economy, when a teti dollars would have prevented any such went°. If the fleck of lambs, is large, they shield be sah-siivided und the puny. ones 'operated and given still better. eare. Au experience or twenty , llte years with lambs has taught us the correctness rat these directions. =! A. very simple, cfnutive'and 010: way. of Whiling four:foot- wood upon u sled, not In general use, 1s a roller or windlafii at the back end of the med. An inch and • halt or two-inch hole is bored her-- laentally Into the rack or ladders behind the back stake holes, then take a round, hard wood stick, four or flee inches In diameter, mike n gudgeen on tech cud of it to tit ths.tioles bored in the rock or ladders; or instead of boring nolee iron staples can be used on the under side of the rack or sled body, Whit h will hold the roller. Bore two or three inch-and. a-hilt lever bolts in this roller, and you ; bays a windlass similar to thom used by blacksmiths In shoeing cattle When,' the wood is placed urien the tiled, fasten the biadtog cholely firmly to the 'root end of the sled, bald passed over the mid. ' tile of the load, fastening' the other end to the windlar t e, whb h being turned, draws the chain with griat.torce upon I the wood, so that not s atilt can muv until the sled is upset. or tbo windlass I lessened. It the hictitaisdlittie hecomes seen by Jolting of the hood ou the road, you have en!y to turn the windlars a lit tie, and the chain is tight so before—l Tide Is the gait:lest and most thorough , way of fusfenlog loads of any kind upon wagoner sled, and orten eaves the load from toning over, by katiiing it en place.! when on Elatating - ipleen.—.N, C. .1.1. n e• stead. = The otouratainalud ntlCys of British Colombia over which tire . has swept. ' consuming all the tiniber,'•and leaving nothing mending atter its depsrtiare, are covered with a growth at voting poplar. I and the sortie. berry shrub, which does! not attain say great him although have seen them ten and iwelre ;pet in ; height, but rarely se,rtiling three and I b?er feet., Thu berries are' ripe In Aug cat and hang on until frost; Tea revel among them at this tint,. or th• year. 2dilliona of bushels ripen and fail to decoy, Laudon says the graftinie ui . tha trouia t or sereire berry, ltnetly r, ha, on.tha coalmen 1/.. , ru, ra . r,ltre tt ono if the. trulY rirnsruentsi shrubs .Sasso year. aince I rece:St,l :rum It I'. Fulkers.n, , Itna,r Va.ts tit art astr , variety of the service ilarry, which ,flare a pleasant liiqc fruitf bat vs want of character sin • its own rofiis led me to ; negiect it, and I have !sat It. Asa airy and imornsrnerehl shrub, this now, that our, growers tiiity take told of and iatroluett tt. : It E. Hart ir tat,. j Jqr. rs,. 4 Ilarklear Appto There i►e certain peried 'fir the reason, when the hark may hi stripped whory from the treats of app!e trees, without destroying them. It nine....,he at . a time • when torn. new bark hiebcon just formed beneath the oh!, thee tormipe arefficient coating for a new growth. l It is, ears- i mare that the old hark Do tkker with out tabbing Or. .Ithatieg the: new surface. . We lately examined an 0.,1 orchard in the town of Brighton, nenr.:ltoctester, a pan of the trees of w tach'had beets dh s rested of their bath about a year ago: ; They were Nand. In a thrifty, Lea.thy condition, the trarfks !Ring costred with ' a smooth new Dark of • uniform thick net. of about one sixteenthOf an inch.' We are unable . to say how tong the season contincee, ,w hen this operation may be performed with safely, nor what degree of Deuellt or injury Is ,likey to molt. in the present can, the trees j ware certainly meek iinprwred to smooths:sena of appear - neer: Nate any of oar readers had santecideti or silts. factory experience in thia respect ? Country Gentians a. and II L~Pnnll r 7 Almost every Locality , hes its own system, but I rosy advert to a few hits on this subjeet. ?sultry, when Lied to death, Is much whiter in the f1e.41. I should advise the fallowing plan, na the very bast, reusing instant death pain or disfigurement.' Open the beak of the fowl, then with a pointed and narrow krite, make en incission at the Lack of the roof, which will divide the verloolore add cause im mediate death; after. which losug the fowl up by the legs till lite bleeding ceases; then rinse the bealvent with vie eger sod water. Parole hiled In this ;mouser keep longer awl its present the unsightly sixtercal notrk+ is those killed by the ordinary system of wring -11?‘; the neck. When the yentraila are strawn.leamediately after dente, nod the fowl stuffed, is they do; !trillia ms. with paper shaving. •r shore esiesse•nnt them to preserve their lassie, - they will keep much longer fresh. Some Frees's:re cram their poultry before killing to make them appear heavy; this to 11 most Injus dicions plan as the undigested food 1 34011 enters Into fermentation, nod pu• trefaction takes place, nu is ermiceo by the guilty of greenish, putrid ladtleg fowls that Ire "ern to the markets,— Veylin's Porltry Dreading, ,Pubttahad kg 4. Miliisme linvoa,..Alau. ' • 1:1= ' D. D. Walsh, of Huck foland,:lit., well known as no entomelogiat, lays . that all hie eraminattons have eisnitod in the conviction Drat the Witch trivet on the plum Deo is the effect of M fengui,' and to not a dime. nor Ali:alb-A.lO thinks the Frame or seetbsure formed Oast the end of ]sly, la latitude 40 deg, $0 win., and thonforeir tbdt et: ... . aces be all cat otTalld deateeyed,by the early part of July, an *fealyi atop will hr put to their farther sidearl. I . Comparative 710 d et Patel ore. C. It Wilson, Tioita,couttly, Pennsyl- Tanis, write. the Prey% Farmer, Phila. delphis, on Ike einupafktiv• protlnctlea nets of three varieties of pOtatoes whiett be tested the past season.. ,There were sent .to him, front Ohl., two Harrison, three. Early Sabre, toad tight Early Goodrich Waives, Theee wet. rut to single eyes and pleated in drills eighteen inches apart in garden call. They were dug in September. The Schee yielded a bushel; the Geedficu gave live 'armhole; and the Harrison shout two and a half bushels. About half 'the Settee died out after having made a considerable growth. Two itusbels of the Gleason were plant ed as 1111 experiment, cut like the other, and produced about forty-nine bushel; or nearly twenty-Svc to one. - = A farmer who had been In the habit of selling his hay for many years in sac. canton, being asked how be kept an his hay,arep without mattering or celtiya. - ling his land, replied, "I never chewed the after swath to he eat." If thle rale was generally followed there would ha less said abut running out of grass geld■ or short crops of hay. Some farmers feed off every green thing ; and compel their cattle to pull up and gnaw off the roots of the grass. Cutting rowed Id certain death to hay- crops. A fernier had bettor buy hay at forty dollars par Um Wiz ruin his hay field by class gra. it 1 15 ;:;s , sine. T. general treed_ lends in this respect is wi pensive and shosit b* , at matter of profit and etertemy,-- Yawn. ain darner. cat of grass! oon4 and ex bastioned ae a , lbe #•eatk as a li•• I noticed year article iryl cit NO , l'enber bth, upon tI I;ieeell'sisi hedge plant. be used with much seecei beautiful hedge, if eareis ening in.'. I maw Many Mad in'. Zwitzenlaad, and Prussic and was st adaptation of the betels f effective' hedgc. It bran ' stir and keeps its Diane. that Was killed or injured' sons.L.T. L. S. in. Math, 3E= the Farmer ?0,. use of the think it may making a Msed in short edges 01 thm astern France tack with the r a thin bat as little, is saw hht little by dry ten- Farmer. Wursir ron ItArs.—A. orresponderd of the !Mansur Conserratire, Whose house wee over-run with rats, says sa vant Orr,' who had seen i the effect of whisky on bipeds, tilt she would try an experiment upon ate. Accord ingly she took a small Quantity, mule it very evert with sugar, crumbled in bread enough ter the crowd, and set the dish in the cellar. A few Mitre after WA went dawn soil found several rate glori ously ~ ,.fudilled," engaged in throwing potato parings, and hauling one another up to drink. Them were e asily disposed of, and those not killed !ell the premises immediately, suffering (tom a severe heedectid. ' rOrt POTATOR' , .- 2 1110 C.llor of ihu_ts its F•crinet finds from ati expe rience of 'many years thit meek:does Heil for potatoes on dry land. To ed. .vif.na hauling out. mock 1n the winter : lnt zemly er!gravally paeture,land there 'al lowed to:lreeze; then in the opting ap ply a shovelled of meek inn hill with a tablespoonful nr . plesrer.."Ehis course, he ssye, . will bring soundl mealy pota toes. ancl l tenet alair crap. Potatoes In Maine Min past - beam:o were nemail crop and , poor in quality. • ' STATE NEWS. --Thu Itepublicans of . Dille county linco atlitilted the Crawfor, county eye. tent of notilitintinns. --It is given out that Jon M. Cooper, Eng., of Ch.stnhareburg, is;to be the Cop perhead 'Candidate for Surveyor Gee .lll. —Monroe county has eirotod a dela gato to the Sloth Coucentlun et Phila delphia, and instructed for Groot and atrow.. —At Watorford, Erie ool'ely, rotation day night, the-thertnormter Indicated thirty degrees below zero, the coldest weather dt that locality the season. —All the streatas in thin northern part Of 610 Stale aro now so etruturly hedged with ices. to allow the passage of tiro la: gust teams and town I cavil} loaded wagons l --Six hinoirod copies of such Illustra ted papam an thu Poltos Gazette are sold In Meativillo every weak. A plan t:Ail l•rnplo f cri me and immorality will lea the result. , , I --Dr. Dunn, of COnneaulcill., recently holleted a man named Klump for elan doe, andl sueceeded in tibtaiolng $70.) damage., The idnurloruus espresso • .related io the time when 'Dr, bum. wee In thoeritty. —The Eee well no the Atkinson Farm, Upper cilerry Hutt, whieli liia produced two hundred barrel* per; der for sums time past; commenced to flow on Tate day lain, and the production le three hundred barrels per day. i —A Ulan who had boon at work at the minus oldie Now Jorsti2il Company, in 111... car; wan found frozen to death on Saturday, anornlntr, with 'ids bottle by I Ids side. Ile . had wandot-ed from the' path .on lie Nay to his hoarding house.— W it k esbarre Record of the. n„,„. --On FriINT night. the 1702 Vining and wife, now living in liartnn my. returnLhoniu from • in NinElvainea, mieaed _ ... ... the reed and in their •tifort to return to the rani.% the sleigh yrsa upset and threw them out, lireakinis Mrs. Young's collar lieue.—/tetfrr Cdiren. j —The orint met for . Spiiding the Marino lbrspital to be orerarsisin the nertitives i tern outskirts of !hitt - 41.11.y; See been let - to Wilson' King, Esq., and other parties. Mr. Kin; ie now Inert -nog various i puldt.• loo.pitale an Al to be the better en , ablnt 1., ttetOtlltillo upon the plan.—..Eralt 1 josprorti. , - j —ln the Trattphlo county euirt, toe ' suit ~ the i•emmnnwoattli against the ?sone VIVRSI. 1.411(0.14 stud Canal Com poly, for Jos. opening whys for ash to ~...eu.i.tiii. dents wes deeldoil against the t'otzipanyi T110,...,00 Si;! go to Or. Fins to - emo Omer to toot tho constitutionality .f tho ti.l —The Cl. irdy Commlssinuera of Mer- yr have pilechatalthe It sod residetneeof io I.ne trauerei Forger, - located on the W h sition.l,4,oth of the Court 1.1011 , 10. and 'oll..tripiste erwiting thereon it nowJairthe roditrig wii comer. dills is a needed ITO rrt..ll..t.t. Ono reommnended time and mi.int by.'4letirstol J El ry. i —A tire it!. -ire roll in tie , rco I% Rich-' strd•s tiew 'pies.. story briotr. Isulltilog, in yto ,, tilliii 1,1 Monday lac entirely do• t toner:cc it. Ii we. et. on inishei. and 111, lire originated by a pi!. of •harings in:. nestritile stove igrlit ng when n• obe wss lieer. Lora, SZUO , ..). NO bran rnnee.— R.in , i'd ,cif Ole nmer. —A impiirler artlele of vault..., sdnidt ohly wielded for building Purpesra, hse se,ently Leon disenverwM near Stony itei., , , it t i rto.:dand teweship, Berke Iftly. The supply in erparently loos liamitible.,end tho steno rt pronounced suportor birth for heatity arid durability. Iti,•ks mean he obtained frthrt twenty to thlrty feet in length. —A few - dayeegn,duringlthe progress au an. tiiu sale at the 'et re of 11. 11. ilrlinin. In. Fraiiiiiirr. Sl:der roubiy, thalliair Faro way% and a 1 era nu nber .1 hien aid yeomen sae preripitatail in, apt cellar. A largo•!ably* 1111.1 a ith liirnin coal also so, rrlotrn retch , [ln, crowd; Fair or aistyromans arena trey ba.ily burniari,lirniab anti othar wiaeliilureal, and it I. tostrott that somaof them will not Annie.. - • , .. —Tliiiittl rity enrreatioraiient aria rib Lola itei.oad mays tho property of tki !Lino VII anti Lanit Cuiriptiny hat paaiia i l i'zitn the ham - kilt lion. l'. i Culver, who ripe," to operate it Itt the I at/trout of itiver, Penn it Co. Several atiplicatie. 1,11104 coy hum; purple** .Stave al )1 VV." • .111 and thodoisign la to do• veiiip the territory ity *nun, . pomlble. There is nie . doubt of tide tieing valuable oil laud, trent tie yiro:tatity to the flow irqr tool! of Mattson K Co. un Shaffer Ilan. -tin Ttiiisilay i Lho Itb twit., at aboutiS p. tot., the do el lieu of 11. M. Bole. in Ve- sa t t.. .s,uhte. unit ronsuthed by flee, "Cue :Ire hruce oult In tho utter story and :T. rentant: through the r of wheudis. Itolo inns sir 'and entire. Jy helpless: tier husband totneclod in tont it Ing her mot the toolshe ley on. Nnu inns (shun to the testdouco •t his her, It. hi. 11.16. Esq., without Injury. N•hrly everything. to the hot.° inns des' —The Tt i nsnwiteirg .1/esirrtger • Writ IV, regret to learn that Mr. t fthralrn tv. erly, of Ituultar.l township. this meanly,' n a• 14 tiled, we believe, 4n .Wn.lay, tile Itoth JMIII LI ry, Ito was engegeil In repair. log the roof of him haute, sod whilst go ut. up a ladder It broke and threw loin In the ground, where, alighting oil his head, It• was at. serlouel y • Injured that ho t4ily 'tarsi% ett a few howl. The de.' eased Was ,a , very worthy eittaea, and lea,. ninnyrelative* an friend• to minim his ambit. death. Mr. Evegly wss egad about to year,. , --Tian (lil'City Reptatlietin says: litany o f the forte, reek:eats of our city who located In tuner planet during the fiat time Jean, are entotag hack again. Among th.so are litany rebut are largely Inturikteil in the 01l reglnn, train wilenno the, weslth has been davit nil. All apeek 14 11:11 intnintm tolvaittogent premoatoti by u,l lily snot tie vat-lona othir points of thin Int`olit.y na pottacoalna Incittesinonto Gtr the profitablo incontinent of capital that are %orpiment by no °War kocilon of this country: They intend ba locate hero orruano n tly, and an , purebosing homes lit lief' pontoon.. We wele`onae them hack altaiu. —A Malty Num..rot orori lone loon .to `llllO O "'dor Ite. r ~n . ... made at Huntingdon, Pe., to ralen fond. IT ni,lotoripti M on tor the ("b lahment of a .J rutol ..eh.l for th e Sorel tit illatrlet, •,yrowoo,,l of the counties , + C Corning , fond, Ad 41114. Fr.krallo, t w it, n; Bedford, I ionlimrden.and I Blair, tutde'r the eat of _nth May, 1 , 1.7. The coin of nearly thir ty tholontild dolles hian been auha , •rthed. ll' the Stan, shown the come llbera:lty to thin Inentollou• that IL line to others of thn Kama hind, the aelg,l will out only ho n grand liaree.e. but an ornament to II untlegilon and the other reunite, of thti normal lllatriet, --iliilver, Pl.llll it Co. hare Issued a circular under. date' 1.1 Fehrbery let to their rreditore, advising Mein that the Ilene Company on that day entered Into the pomeasion and management or tho land. formerly OWIIO.I. by •ITIle Rena Ott and Land Company" Thelf elate that ....die I iirectors Mil., Reno Conmany hur -1 log pe , ,ession, era taking slitiVs MOM are, for Its ilereloponenL" !They II: o ram° at unen'' to lot twenty teaser upon the territory immediately adlolning the u Lacawona and Hanson we Is, which hare livened largely product re during the past Sear, and will, es th means at their hoods will permit, or ‘rhaul the well. of the Company now"' operation and complete Orme hereto:ore com menced. ;--Willeusaport Is urging di location ut plat phiee of be proposed new insane asylum for Northern Pennsyl . rania. At it mWI a g of the LyeetninnCuunty Med ical Society, held at Williamsport recent ly,t hey reeommeuded that eneadditional miyhint located In a convenient and cen tral locality within a illetrlct Limed of the countic, of Wayne . , biniquehanna, W ynntiag, Lucerne. Columbia, Mon t Our• dal avail, Bradford, .t.yemning, CIIIIIOII, Centre, Clearfield, Elk, Came ron, McKean; Potter null Feirest. The phyaiclans present were unanimous In the °pluton that Williamsport: presented adventagmt pretnerised ley 110 other local ity (or nutria lan. Inatitutlon4 Is their opinion they were eustained tkt a num ber of the moot promineuteltisena of tho county, who Were present, foe' consulta tion, on the occasion, 1 • The Supreme Murt and liecomitUetiou, The Georgia Bill Dliassid The Question a Polities' one, Court I•eab no Jurisdiction. By 'ftlrgrarti to Me gnu:awe:l 0.1..4 1 W.Lartrawrotr, Feb. 10, RIGS. In the Supreme Court of the United States to.dly Associate Justice I:el.n i afinuuntrd the opinion in the case of,,the State of Ought against Ilon. E. M. Stanton, Secretory of War, General, Grant and Major General l'opo. 'rho last named at the time the bill was filed was commanding the Third Military District, .inponed of Goorgia, 4 Florida and Alabama, designated by.the act of Congress, approved March Id, 1da7, 1 entitled "An net to provide for the More' eftlelent geverimmot of theßobel States,". and the act sugdomental thereto, paisied the 2341 of the mania month. The 'bill filed by the State of Georgia ora ;s. yed • fur nu IniunCtiall fur UM pnrp '.;of restraining the defendant, (mines ' 4 j . ig intoselleet the several provisions o Lego auto and set forth the exi4Mn. of . r gin no ono or the States of the 11 . en, and further that on the surrender Orthe Confederate army in 1865, at the close of the civil war, tied State was In the pea- I se,inu awl enjoyment of all the rights 1 I oden