tit's liithi4 &vitt WID2IIIBDA.Y, FISBIIAM 19,1884, `coxßELLsviixn RAILROAD. From the annual Report, Just pnbliah ed, of the Pre'ldea and IY/rectors to the stoclholders'of the Pittsburgh and Con nelliville Railroad Company, we learn that the gross earnings for the past year were, from passengers., sl74,o3o;freighbi, $312,931; 1:0/03, $3,650; rn". 'mons, o,ooo—total, $493,190. The expanses were--Cooducting - transpartailon, $71,- 349; Repairs of motive power, $99,240; maintenance of esrs, $28,975; mainten ance of road, $107,033; general expel:t ee'', $17, 549— i0i11. 6325,209. Leaving net earning - s, $172,972; cowling 34 73- .100 per cent which is 1 24 100 per cent better than the previous year. d year ago the floating debt was $53.39 5 ; now $30,095. Expenses have been increased to pro. vide and impose the Company's prop erty in Pittsburgh for parties mimed in the retell trade In coal and coke. Pay ment of forty thousand dollars in bonds, due to MO, on purthase of thisproperty, tr. has been extended until th Company shall be in condition to mos it. Sums have also been expended tel filling • the variOna trestles. At Sind atch-tunnel $B,OOO was used. IT ra WALL WROW2C that the Beaver Canal Company aro desirous of miler ging the capacity of their line of commu nication so as to admit the passage ships betwena Lake Brio and the Ohio River. To this end the aid of the State is Invoked in the form of a loan, eltler of cash or credit, to be secured by mort gage. )in... Lowne has this project much at heart, and may press it upon the corusiderntion of the Legislature. Gsammar. CaztanoN, with that far sightedness which is' one of his leading peculiarities, has, fora long period, ad vocated making a slack-water naviga tion on the Ohio, from the head at this city to the Falls at Louisville. If this idea shall ever be realized, or. LC it should be consummated so f,r as from this point to the mouth of the Beaver, this enlargement project would assume national importance. We do not know what prospect of go. ing through Din. LOWRY'S scheme has, but if be should succeed be would add vastly to the prosperity not enly of Pitts laugh end... Eric, but to the advancement of all UM 'cottntry intervening between the two cities. Too Pat SIZEST'I3 USJOINDEA to 0110. Grant is given in Our columns this morn log.. It contains nothing new; put only reiterates his former - statements. He Abought to make Gen. Grant a tool for the accomplishment of some of his pur pines against Congress and the laws; and failed. Tnat he is mortified at his lack of moms& is natural enough; but a sense of decent shame aliould have re strained:him froni accusing the General of deceiving . him and betraying his con fidence. The President is himself the most conspicuous and perfidious betray. er this age has produced. Re ceiving vast patronage. and authority from the ReOuldiesma, he. has used it all to defeat their plans and frustrate their principles.. 'Under ouch circumstances what right has. be to -complain that the General "changed his mind?" But It so happens that the officer thus assailed ...stands firm enough in his integrity and in the confidence of all citizens who bear true allegiance to the country, to put all his accusers to complete discomfiture. Thug STATE ELECTIONS °CC= the_ spring. In New Hampshire on the see! oud'rnesdity of March ; in Honnectlent on the Ant Monday of April; and in Ithode Island on the first Wedne3dsy of April. The Dinkocrats have had no chance of success in the latter Bate for a number of years Connecticut they _have . curled, and "In New liampsErre have waged contests indicative of hopes. la these last two States, the present sat in, the canvass is unusually animated, and, the look now Is that the Democrats will be handsomely routed in both. • . A =M U' beta introduced into ..the Senate to authorise the constriction of &boom and dam on the Allegheny river, in Corydon township; Warren co:nty. Ilihr grant h conditioned by the Mil on maintaining the descending navigation of the stream, and not raleing the cur rent above, low water mark without the consent of owners first had-and obtain ed. This booni and dim are.tri be loca ted at or near the month of Willow Creek. This isnot the enterpriseio which we referred some days ago, of booming the Allegheny at Freeport. Tire failure of three successive crops in Eastern Prussia has caused great suf. feting among the people. The typhus fever has broken out, and, owing to the miserable condition of the famine strick en people, has spread with rapidity. The Prussian Governmect and - local author iticafiad it impmsible to relieve all the sufferers and appeals for - aid have been made to this and other countries. In New York a committee to solicit sub iicriptions to a relief (and has teen form , cd, and doubtless our. German fellow cit izens will be called upon to contribute Tams is on foot a strong movement to displace Mr. Seward from his position as Secretary of State. Ms principal en emies are the Stairs whose influence with President: Johnson continues po— tent. Poor Seward! His dream of the presidency together with his brilliant ' name and fame have gone, and he stands tottering wreck of what once, he was, without the shelterin g wing of either party, or The remnant of any, to cover him in his hot* of political despair. BO much for mistaken and selfigt ambition. Oun regular Harrisburg correspondent gives a further account of the frauds by which the democrats defeated . Mr. H. W. Williams last fall. From the lees. 'alive proceedings it appears that one of , the 'witnesses subpmnaed before the In 'realigning Committee; frOm Clearfield county', was waylaid upon his return and so beaten that be died. The frauds upon the ballot box. and the brutality towards the witness, are of one piece, and illustrate the depravity and rect. lesenessof the democratic leaders. • Tan new Constitution of Alabama hu isemivejeeted, it !siting to receive =c hef as many votes as thero were voters registered. When the people down there bear of the decision of the Supreme Court as to the powers of Congress in the matter of Reconstruction they will Mimprehead the situation, and batten to adopt an organic law that an pats mos . ter as republican in form and substance as the federal Constitution now scads. CONSIDLRING how scrupulous and ten skive the Members of the Pennsylvania Benito were a few days ago, their con duct yesterday amens They zeta ally accused one another of being "sot up;" that is, of acting under pecuniary Or other mercenary Influences. If the pestilent newspapers had breathed that imputation, to, what a towering bight would the Mated indignation of the hon orable gentlemen have runt WII 219,TC Mewed from many kind friends copies of th.s runstng weekly ps_ pen for which we adeentsed• We no tary our earnest thanks to those who have so generonsly responded to our ad. entsememt. M Tun astonishment of the Democrats Is jammed by ,the annorumessent that the Supreme Coart Is unanimously of The opinion that it has no authority for sillustelng political questions. . - RAILROAD MASS The ljnie -7- n Pactic Railroad Company; (main line), offer substantial ea to wards conistructieg the_proPosed air-line between Otrults and St. 1.0111/.. By this line fit. Louis will be one hundred and twenty miles nearer Omaha than Chica go is by rail. An exploration has been commenced of the line of the proposed road , from Cleveland to Zanesville. Ileriollll Ob. stacks to the construction of a road with low grades and with little curls tnre are anticipated, with the exception of one spot of a mile or two, and It Is believed that there they am .be avoided or so modified as to be of little Moment. The indications ere highly favorable for the early commencement and suceesalul prosecution of this work. The Pituburnh, Columbus and Cin cinnati, end Baltimore and o..kt Rail road companies are to build &joint round house in Columbus, Ohio, next spring.. It is to bo-large enough to accommodate .twenty.llve locomotives, and Is Lobe sit uated on the lot owned by these_ (tom , panics in Lazelle's addition to the city. In connection with this Improvement, each of the above companies propose to erect extensive shops on the same land. • The Hon. E. Billingfelt, of Lancaster, presented to the Senate of Pennsylvania a 611 to incorporate the Lancaster and Delaware Railroad ()untruly, with a capital stock of $1,600,000, andthe right to construct a railroad from some point On the Dekli - PIO Myer near Point Plea sant, in Backs county, by way of Phm nlxville, 3lorgantown, and Chnrchtown, to Lancaster, with the right to bridge the Delaware. The amusements in clude a road from the Delaware to lex sel City, thus opening a new rim) west ward; and putting the garden oC Penn sylvania in direct commendation with New York. A raltroad lout been projected from Toledo, via Huth= and New Philadel phia, to Wheeling. It is contemplated to make a connection at Wheeling with the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. The route would certainly be the most direct one between Toledo and Baltimore. It is said that the road will be finished dur ing this year from the former city to Matailon, about sixty miles of the dis tance being already graded. —The Chinese rebels hays 1111 army of only thirty thousand men, but are successful in their battles with the Im perial troops. —The Duchess of Genoa, the affianced bride of Prince Humbert, is older than the Prince, very pretty, and much too good for him. —Goenod is much chagrined at the decidedly cold reception which his opera of Romeo and Juliet has met with in all parts of. Europe. last accounts Carucci had just oblauted tunste , Vion L of the presidential chair in Pere. Next week's President has not been named tot —Prince Napoleon polled the nose of the Marquis de Caul, Pantie intended, at the Tuilleries, in 1963, at the time of the Achille Murat scruidaL —The Baroness Etergenyi has at length confessed that at the instigation of Comet Charinsky, who promised to marry her, she murdered his wife., I —Mr. Crawahay, the great Welsh iron merchant, who recently died, left some seven millions of pounds of perr I soul property to his youngest son. —The British Society of Foreign Mis sions distributed twelve millions of taunts at the great eihibitiorTh Paris. Haw many of them were read is an entirely different question. —The ()humus,- a cuts in India, numbering some 539,000 members, hays deserted Brahmin's= and started a new religion, with a high priest and priest- Tap Harrisburg Tkegraph always I hood of their own. .professes to be -greatly shocked when The power of Juarez la strengthened bad motives are attributed to members 01 in Mexico, and it would not be worts. the Legislature, but it does not mind ing to see him lift to his own heed the taking a band at abusing the City Conn. crown which rolled from the corpse of ells. Hear it: the murdered ifsvhalliatt. "The balding of new Water Works —Captain .Tuakins, the great boa of a and giting Councils power to sell the , c ommo d ore olj the Canard n ee ; h as present Works, on which the city has expended from twenty thousand to fifty commanded thScotia for six years, and thousand dollars within the last few daring that time has conveyed 25 , 370 years, at prints sale, is intended, no passengers stares the Atlantic without a doubt, fa gine some farerits en &NM Ox i gio acc ident" • opportunity for speculation." I —Louie Blanc has been nominated to Nor doesit stop with this. It goes on the French rarllamsat by the Liberals to declare that of llanieilles. IWe think there will be "The Connell& are unable to account for some rwrz xnoussso nors.sns of the another Louis,H blank in looks, st least, present indebtedness of the city." at the Tuilleries, if this one should be Even this is not enough to satisfy it, I elected for it farther nays: 1 —Schneider the president of the corps "We have the positive assurance from legislatif, the greatest iron producer in persons in position to know, that,' the 1 France, and the most extravagant ex. aut horities or this city have fame d m o re Labiler at the recent exhibition, is bulk heads than they have authority by law , to do." , rapt, with liabilities of at least twenty millions of f ranca Thu is treading on somebody's corns, , to be sure. We awl expect mem b er . of I —The President of Venezuela has the Counc il s, at the next. meetings of 1 , made another new catdnst, as once more most of the members. of the olds have those bodies to tell the public what they j been killed. It is not an altogether pleas. think of the amenities of the Harrtsburg press. If their stock of vituperative ort. ant position, that o f C abinet Mini ster in tory is not equal to the occasion, they Smith A merican MePublic may be able to borrow a supply fromthe —Frelligrath , the great German poet whose wonderful oriental poems are State Capitol. We might mil ocreelves of the °eel- among thy_ gout specimens of • word extant, is at his old home in sion to tell our contemporary, in lone- 1 , P aintin g thent. language, (cupp in g i ts recent ex. i Rhenish, Prussia, fat, and in the com fortable enjoyment of a surecient ice ample,) how moan such imputations upon public men are; but a decent self- c erne. —Von Beet, who not excepting His. respect restrains us from Imitating it ! muck, is probably, the most versatile, any particular. _ lf not the greatest statesman of Europe, _ . Taw firm of August Belmont de C0.,1 has advised Franz Joseph to cut down in behalf of the Rothaelillds, sent a lot i the expenses of the Court of Vienna to of Pennsylvania State stocks to the ! one fourth of their present amount, and, State Treasurer for redemption, and i the kaiser has premised to de so. asked payment In gold. Mr. Kemble, ; _G enera l Cluseret, who Is now i n the Treasurer, replied, declinirur to pay I Paris, was most virulently assallel by to gold, and concluded his letter as fol- I the government perm t h ere because he lows: l stigmatized duelling as a cruel, stupid / have no doubt Messrs. /august Bel- I and cowardly custom.. Gen. Cluseret is , A moat ,b - Co., had many liabilities out i now g oi ng repapers to th eses dam • — "gra girl at a Methodist Church, when the Legal Tender Act was passed I p apers for . much- in Nashvi ll e, Tenn., tricime so excited which, became due after gold had risen . 1 ages, an action which does not add 1 and nervous, under the injudicious sp. to a utensil:Mot eighty. I have not yet to his dignity. pails which were being made, that she heard of their conscience compelling , _The„..eined trana in a h m prom . 1 .., aid • red in gold instead of the Legal i swooneo fell onto 'a hot stove, them to pay e are willing to give you the I his been revived In Vienna, by a RhYst - I burning herself so badly that she cannot Tender. W of drop of clan WhO uses it with great Kamen in - more ,. poun d n blocs'. fi es h, but n ot otte. . cholera rases. The blood of healthy —Before the war Jacob Thompson Christia Bol and a h frer a rTfe n nin lli g . toßetimbemoetruireesetliwonnds'of 1 7,7,_g person s i t a thf r eeed he ed ie . th . th _ e ., V,_ . e/11 .. 1 . wu worth more thins million- of the Rothschild" with the Pennsylvania e ` ' e Ps"r•-"`• and rem of ''''''' . tars, he being the riciest man in Mil: indebtedneu, he sa: . ! twenty ounces, An Belmont A Co. have never de- 'instantaneous relict / often- the effect in I sisappl. Be Is now an exile, living So ', Europe, where be recently reCeiveil dined to meet any demand for the pay. , —The ifrg i r h Irsdkal Jour ., is eon _ 1 $BO,OOO. being the entire proceeds at meat in coin of any liability contracted caned about English workmen; it says 1 the sale o r. a n hi t , pro p er ty. by them in coin, before or since the Le.. gal Tender Act. ' Unit they wear out too coon and die too 1 --Castor beans, broom - corn and sot ' And then he aids for the alneeild ben- I early, often of preventable diseases; arid 1 ghnm have been planted in place or cot '. End of the State Trammel: It Is now publishing a series of essay son ton in De Witt county, Teals. Seven I take this opportunity to express my regret that the Stem of p eami l uin i. this 'object, which will probably be read 1 thousand acres or castor beans alone should have for its Treasurer a person i with Interest, II • large class Is vitall y I have been planted, and' 'a letter from who could so far disgrace the State he I interested to the question: - there says that an oil press could' do a assumes to represent, and forget the ..... dignity of the office he holds. as to re- i . Count Vile Thum, the represemtative 81e hydride there In the coming fall. ply to a civil business communication In ;of a family which Is probably one of the ~zi a manner which must raise the bitch of I oldest in Europe, and from which the I •_, a Monday, February third, an ex i tans.ve and destructive fire occurred In shit" on the cheek of ever/ citizen °I. I old Saxon family, the Fitz _Thema of , that great and honored State. , - i England sprang, has bees engaged by t !Galveston, Texas, resulting in the leas of property valued at some fifty or sixty —The Young Men's Christian AIISOCI - 1 Pli."6 Metlernich to cult the memoirs of I thousand dollars worth of property. . Prince Clement Metternich I ation of Philadelphia seem to have taken his father There was some seventy thousand Apt on themselves put of the work them 1 Count 'ills Thum Is a member of the Aar . pi . imam= spore property, wind . , which several - benevolent citizens are Solon Cwhinei. . i pally in Northern companies. doing here. In Philadelphia the Ado- t —The Resat= government has found- ; —The news from Louisiana is more elation dialribtita tickets among the dif- .ed a new military school at Orenburg on , eseppraathg. The precautions taken, ferret &gond:muses and those homeless i the borders of Turkistan. One hundred I by the ersittrary and civic authorities tl and twenty of the pupils are - to bethe i have removed the apprehensions of at- 1 wanderers who take refuge for the nigh la those places receive these, and they i sons of Tartar or Margie chiefs and the .' tack „ from the bands of whlte and black represent meals, which will be given to I reu udeder ere to be moans, in w ” — marauders, and the peaceable portion.of the per,,,,, preiien ti n them. miry arrangement the desire of the govern- i the , p 'potation Is at work, so that the Persons Partook of the first melt Ou r 1 mea t that the ,various eatienebtlee lain of a lack of food are also dhow philanthropists also provide lodgings for I sho ul d frawm6l. is clearly shown. peaig. the destitute. It would be, perhaps, a I —Since the inpresse In th e pay of the I —During the last two wacke some good idea to imit the time which each I Proudest army, a lieutenant gets twenty- I eighty Germs" Waned through Lea. wanderer can stay, as It is done in the I live alders a month and a small allow- ' legion (By.) en' souse for Woodford various hospices of the Alps: In St.l ante for hoard. On a salary of this coun ty , w h ere t h e y have er , ga ged •t o Bernard every traveller is allowed to re, 1 amount It is a wonder the officers are work for the fanner'. If this valuable main three days, no matter what his eta- . I sought after for husbands, and it is not , e l emen t o f our population were en . tion or class may be. Then he must de- Latrange that the paternal government I grafted into all the counties of all the pert Duress be - is ill; when the hospital lof Prussia forbids ill officers below the Southern States, reconstruction would will receive him and tend him as longs" i grade of Major marrying without es- hue many of its difficulties. It is Pr:teary. The Grimed has adopt. I press permission. affray occurred on the 31 inst., ed the came rule, allowing four day ' I . —England has a new religious' meet in the dining room of the American however; and 'so it is with the others,. whose chief belief Is, " cursed is the rain n o t e d . .Atiente, , (Oa.) between C. C. The rule prohibits laziness frail qua rter- , that trusteth in man." They Call the `m - • Richardson, a member of the Conven ing on charity; and a similar one would I selves "peculiar people." and never all lion, and Captain Timony, formerly id be good for _Mr. Rabe's new and cone- In the aid of a physician, praying over the United States Army. The . Ciptain mendable enterprise. . ' their sick s milmvie ff f aith * Sev eral lira, was at supper When Itichardson came In rests of members of this sect have re. —The. funny man of the Iloston (btu- , with a friend and addressed him, 'a few cent] been • made in London, for de- wo rdsonl y d betw ee n.th e m , tocrend Batictin gives Borstal valuable hints to persons who are stout to give glect of children who died for want of the Captain shot Richardson, wounding presents: . For your .washerwoman or , me di c o a id . him fatally. - Captain Timony immeill bootbladOmv some olegillt trifle or Brio - . allean It Is their affair if they haven't —Partly owing to the injury to the ately delivered himself nal° the author., got a marble bracket or what-not to put harbor by the recent earthquake, partly id ea . them on, and no }roma. If you have - to the anticipated transfer of the island ' —the yeimg men of middle. Terme& any strong Calvinistic friends, a pack of playing cards or an opera glass will be to the United filmes ; D ritish ste amers see have many of them organized Into a a very lively enrprliie for them; and a from Liverpool no longer stop at - BL gift of a good heavy volume of dry ser- society for political purpo. sesoasort of moon to your sh ea th young friend, Thomas W Chau " Piruuugurs for - AF Rebel partite hand dallied the Kokfui wbo delignts in ea and hal- 1 pinwall tO another steamer. Port Bop Klan. The main object of this secret as • masque, will eery likely cause you to he al Jamaica, .1s to be the future general sedation is to se threaten and Intimidate \ remeintsaed with strong eipressions of t logbooks, [runt o[ gratitude. In buy.. depot for exchange of passengers . and 'the negroes as to prevent them from leg books fur children, patronize those freieht. • voting at the next election. The organ• gloomy caverns In Conahill, frotn which :.' the literary wet blankets of childhood A' young worn= was rece ntl y lzation Is extremely popular with' the see homed, and select a good dismall London, stabbed thirteen times by her lover, In disaffected portion of the Sate, and the t story of au unnatural child, who puts his I and then forfeited her bail u a Nashville F r ees f e ars that it w ill here a 'Tending Money in the misalonary bee, talks like a moral handkerchief, and la Ifflrroi , and refused t ° appear against bail effect the coming election. finally rewardedby being shipped off to him at. trial. Nevertheless, the brutal Boorleboolah fibs ea a mhodonnry. i lover was semtenced to twenty years found , —Thomas DaLs has recently been guilty of murder and sentenced to - I penal servitude. The girl wu after• b e h an ged In Raleigh, N. C. Be was wards arrested for the recovery of the e ngaged to, Kiss _Laura .Foster, but his bond, sane .200. Contributions were affections were weaned off by a young made for her by Truisms philanthropists, and pretty widow, named Anna Melton. among whom was John Ruskin, and the These two plotted together the death of requisite nun was raised, in that she Miss Foster, who, one day rode out oh could go free. horse back, and was fond afterwards murdered in the woods. Suspicion felt ' on the rally eoOple, With the above re sult. Mrs. Melton Is In jail awaiting her triaL The prominence, reapectsbll. It y and wealth of the pestles have caus ed the affair to be of the profoundest in- Wrest in Raleigh. - •' I - - -The London Star is witty, "The land In England. I. stadia be owned by some 'thirty thousand men. Wo have beard of a person who was awfally uneasy. in t of Ms mind lest these thirty thousand, ou patience with strikes, disgusted with re form, worried by railroads, shocked at the incremo of population, should one day combine and gam the whole British nation notice to gait." • • • —To" all who would be racing men. Judy offers a word of advice. Backing horses h a dangerous game I It was only the other day that a young man backed noDorse—intn almy.front, and U coat Um end of mangy. PITTS IUR . 4 H -W-EEt NEWS FROM ABROAD —Napoleon has deprived that aged sinner, the Marquis d'Orvault, of hie pension. —Owen Meredith ,has written a new volume of poems, Wis.! "Chronicles and Characters.'• • —Most of Queen Isabella's children are very illiterate. The Queen herself is not a marvel of erudition. —Switzerland still stleks to the old custom of beheading with a sword all criminals condemned to death. • —The llamas D'Azaglia, the Italian Minister at the Conn of St. James, has resigned and asked to be recalled. —Lessem the man of the Suez Canal, his paid - more than two hundred thou und dollars to the press of Buis for poffs. —The gossips at Bertha are somewhat exercised about the rumor that the fa mous "white lady," the aaritron which is guild to announce Im pp portant evehts In the Hohenzollern familn, has again made her appearanes at tho royal THE SOUTH cotton factory is to be erected at Delhi, in Fratlelti j'arish, —Hannibal, Misaonti, has but one steam fire engine, and that is broken down. --General Ceiba Coombe to trying hard to become United Btntei Marshal In Kentucky. —The Richmond Branch Railroad will won be in running eider to L‘ncastcr, Kentucky. • —The New Orleans Normal School is doing remarkably well. Theie are at present one hundred and twenty-fire pupils in attendance. —An Immense number of negro yo tars are letaing Mississippi for Alabama and Tennessee. Some four hundred have gone from . Monroe. —The North Carolina Convention has Toted down a resolution making negroca and persona unable to read or write ineli-, gible for the office of Governor. Texas correspondent lays that that State is full of idle men waiting. for something to turn u;,, and say's all this is the effect of training youth to live without labor. —California, a town in Monte= coun ty, Missouri, has a new weekly called the Ptirkwiekion, which Is a comic illus trated and rather, a . oreign looking ani matter the back wtiods of Missouri. —Two brothers-in.law named Smith and Cotton quarreled a few days since at Franklin, TennAsee, and shot each other. Cotton received a slight woond, but Smith was ahoti in the abdomen and cannot recover. Ru•-• some parts of Alabama snow fell dazing the last week of January to the depth of six Inches, an occurrence eo rare that some of the 'oldest inhabitants have found it remarkable. —Large land holders in Greene Conn. itT (Ala) are offering to give the use of their plantations fey the year to any per, sons who will payl the taxes on them; hoping thus to escape the necessity of selling. y~ —The Franklin (Ey.) Sentinel says that the farmers in thatregion complain that the senes of sadden free:legs and thaws this winterhave killed on all of the wheat and materially Injured the barley. d more whits —Thirti•ire Monsen, rotes than coloreld once - were cast to North Carolina at the recent election, and the majority! for a convention wai *knit equal to the whole number of colored voters. —The Fort Smith Herald aye that Arkensas is situated In the midet of one of the richest and meet extensive cos! delds in the country, requiring only la bor and capital, and not very much of either to =kilt pay. The editor ot the Batesville (Ark.) Mei informs Ms readers that he got a whole hog from ono of his subscribers for a single year's shbscriptlon to bee paper, and he wishes all the others would go the whole hog too:' —The returns from Alabama still leave the ratification of the new Consti tution of that Bta'e in - doubt. The Montgomery Mail Contains what it calls . a Realist, being the name of all whites who voted for the ratification. —The Receiver of the First National' Rink of New Orleans announces that he finds it difficult to collect debts dab the bank, but that if he succeeds he *fit be able to pay the Stockholders a dividend of fifty-six cents on the dollar. —Some nub, bold burglars broke into the State prison at Baton Rouge fold stole the clothes of the OIMVICLS.' The New York Commercial Advertiser says they are a disgrace to the prafCssian, and we think that it ought to Imo*. —Last Monday the emffolding on the new school building in Gethsemane (11 , r.) fell. Two men were on Hat the time, one of whom waSseverely.andthe other fatally injured: The latter liVed but a few moments after the accident. .—Oa the last day of January all the gutters were frozen over in N'ew Ot lean!, and there was some skating on I shallow ponds. The Picsynnesays that ter the first time in -years people found solid la In their pitcher!' in the mora -1 12g. PRESIDENT AND GRANT. Additional Correspondence. Letters from the Presiaent and Five Cabinet Members. Grant Accused of Insuberdinallv. Another Letter 'from Grant t t r.T.lter.as to tee Pittsburgh timette.3 Wasitt:ceros, February 11, ISO& Too President this afternoon sent the folio:ring letters to the llottne of Repro- Nell tativtw, in accordance with the resolu tion adopted yesterday: Ex cetriv s: 111aisstos,• Feb. 10, IltIM. (itrentut.: The extraordinary chime ter of yoUr letter of the 31 inst. would seem to preclude any reply on lay part, but tho manner in which publicity has been given to the correspondence, of' . which that letter forma a part, nod the grave question. which aro involved, in- I duce me to take this mode of giv ing ; as' a proper sequel to the communidWona which have passed between us, the st te• merits of the tire members of the bi net who were present on the occasion eel our touversation on the 14th ult. Cordes , of the letters which they have addressed to tne :mon the subject aro accordingly herewith enclosed. You speak of my letter of the Ist ult., ne a reiteration of the many and gross misrepresentations contained In eertalli newspaper articles. and reassert • the oor rectness of tho statements contained In your communiestion of tho 2 8 th nib, ad ding tend hem 1 glee your own words,) " Anything to yours in reply to it to the contrary notwitlistandiug." When a controversy upon matter. of fact reaches the poin: to which:this haslmen brought, further maertion or denial between the itumedintepartno should cease, especial ly when upon either side it ;looses the the character or the respectful discussien required by the parties standing to . each ether anil degenerates In tone and temper. In Pinch • (Ilse, if there Is noth ing to rely upon but the opposing. state ments, conclusions must be drawn from ethose Matements alone and frem whatev er intrinsic probabilities Limy &fiord in favor of or against either of the parties. I :should not shrank from the controver sy; but fortunately it Is not left to thle test alone. Thom were deo Cabinet oftl ceni present at the conversation, the. de tails of which in my letter of the 29th ult. you allow yourself to say contain many and gross rnisrepnwentations. These gentlemen heanl that conversation and hays read my statement. : They speak for themselves, and I leave the proof withenta word of comment. I deem it proper, before concluding this communication, to notice some of the statements contained in yeur letter. You my that • performance of the , promises alleged to have been made by I, you to the. Prenident would have in-i volved "a resistance to the law and an inconsistency with the whole history of my isonneetiost with the suspension of , Mr. Stanton." Soli thenstate that you . I had fears the President would on the re moval of Mr. Stanton sispoint 'tome one I In hie place who would . embarrass the I army In mrry , ing out the recomtruction acts, and add 'lt was to prevent such au appointment that I Las - yeti : el the antes of I Secretary of War ad interim, and not for I the purpteb of enabling yoit to get rid i of Mr. Stanton by my withholding it from him In oppention to the law, or not doing AO myself, surreadering it to one 'who, as theatatements and assumptions in your cum lionithtlon plainly indimte, was sought." First of all, yes horsed- mit that from the very beginning of what : von term the whale history of your cannecUon with Mr. 's sus ion, you intended toStar ci doe rcumvent pen- the Prmident. It waste carry' Pint that in tent that yen accepted the appointment. This was In Your mind at the time of your acts:puma. It was not, then, in obdience to the form, - of our aerial°, As e he r Ltefore hod boon supposed, that volt imsomed - the duties of the oflice. You knew it Seas the VreelderiCs pur pose to prevent • Mr. Stanton from resuming' the °Mee of Secretary of , War, end you intended to defeat that I - purpom You accepted the of f ice, not In To the President. the Interest of the President, but of Mr, Stanton. If this purptim so entertained I • : —...--- by you Lad been confined to yourself, if : , Poirnfrown Derawrxescr, 1 w lieu aecepting the office you had dove ", • WitlilitoTols. Feb. 0 , 1 808 . i 41 with a mental reservation to frustrate , tits-1 em ;In receipt of your letter 01 me President, it would bevel been a de- I the nth of February, calling my atten ,ption, to the ethics of smile lumens. , ti.stt to the roi•rostrondence publishesl I 11ach con rat. Ls allowable, out you cannot , the Chronirfe:between the President ant ! dead , even upon that questionable f Sieneral 4:rant, and especially to tha ground, The limurry of your connection : part of it which refer, to the converse, with Oda transaction, as wrdten lay your -, lien between:the President and General ..cif, piami you in a different preallese I firant at the Cab in tomtl gn e thatn th l e 1 4tha 4th , e ,et am], shown that you not only con- , of January,.;_with a rsstuest - reeled: your design from the President, , what wm sald In that convereatimi It 11l ilduced htur to sup: cse, that you! reply I have the honor to state that would carry out his purpose tat keep Ur. : have read careful::: the correetandenne Sienten out of MU,. be retainiegit Vollr- I in qaeation, and particularly the lettel ..elf, altar Co attempt:ea restoration hy the , of . the President'. to General Grant, Scottie, so as to require Mr. Stanton to j dated January 31, IffaS. Ti.. followthg :atabilsh his right by indicts! decision. I extract . from your letter of the Slet q I now glee that part of dna Lottery as , January te r General Grant is eccording written by yourself In your, letter of the , I i my roc:dim:Von of the conversation . i. , :alt ult that took place between the President "S,tite time alter I assumed the Julies , :sod General Grant at the Cabinet mew of Secretary of War of interim thePrefe leg on the 14th of January lost, In the Went attest my sierra as to the connse I presenee of the Cabinet: askedGea.G rent whet Mr. Stanton e ould has e to pursue, la , write President fat. the Senate nhould nut concur in his 1 er, in the conversation which took pi • ...pension, to obtain pant...SIMI of the : liner hisanpointrnentaa lietcretary of W oat,. kf v reply was in substance that I off Meartat; be did not ag e Sir. Slams would have to n ppcel to the I either te round° at the head of the Wm Courts to reinstate idea, ilinstrating my : Department mad abide any judicial:pie pesith.ti by citing the around I tied taken , iswdings that might follow the nonwsio in the cane o: the Italtimors Police Con, currency the Sonal• In Mr. Stanten'• 111 Ismonerig." , aufipeualort; or should Ins wish not tel life- Now at that time, an you rultnit iu your I come Involved In such ountroversy to i furm of the 3d inst., TOII 1161 the Office ,pu the • Proaident in the same poeld e tha very objets t - ff defeating an ap• , with rapeet to the office a• he accept 1 ... l ast to the t'ourts. In that letter you , prov :owl In Gen. Grant'. ape:Atrim t, say that in acceptieg the °Mee ene tie . by returning It to the President In ti • live was to prevent the President from I ti anticipate inch inftlon bv the See a. appointing some other person alio would This Geneini Great win:Mid. The Pr retain possession, and thus make Jodi-', ident then pinked General Grant if at e ef a t proceedings neeessary. You knew ceuferonctson the preceding Saturday a the President wan nnwilling to trust the , had not, to:avoid Grant t misudeelate rstandiwhat ng, - tidies with any one who could net, by : quested (filtered no o holding It, compel Mr. Stanton to resort • !Mended to do, and further, If In ready stoodCOlll. YOn perfectly under- Itn that ituMiry , be (General Omni) had stthat lii this intetwiew, some I not referred to their former cones . time after you tmeepted the of. f Sons, flaying that thorn them the P I. lice, that the Preddent, not eon- i dent underatood his position, end that tent with your •• sden,e, denired an :his (Gen. Greet's) &chest' would be cen- , ,weted„to,,, o t your visas and you .XI- i sLitent withthe understanding which lied e him that Mr. atantou would have 1 beetiresehed. To these questions fine. , to appeal to the Courts. If the President', Great refilled ,in the allirMtstive. The lied reposed emindenor before ho knew 1 eras dent ,fuiked Gee. Grant if, at he , Your views, null that contidence had' conelusiontof their thterview on Sa r-'' imen violatisl, it Might have Leen mid lie I day, it was not the umterstandiag e rd made a mist di' e, but n vs:dation of mat- 1 they were to have ano th er conferen on edence Xelle,ii eller that concertos, ' Monday, before final action by the ,hear- ' non, wan no mistake of his nor yours: It ate in the cam of Mr. Stanton. a. is the tact only that needs sat stated. Giant replied that inch was the under Jai at the 114!. id this conversation you standlng,but that he did notsuppossithe did not Intend to hold the ofece with the. Senate WOUld net •0 5006: !hot on Mon- ' purpose of If:mini; 31r. Stanton - into : day be bad been engaged in • centerlines . Court, but did hold it then and accepted I wi th - Gen, Sherman, and was occupied it to ,prevent that course from I with many little molten, and askedif Irving tarried out. In other worth., ; Gem Sherman had not called on That yen said in the President that is I day.” , tho proper course, and you said I I take , this male of replying t • the to yourself I Lace accepted request cordoned In the Preeittent's let this office end ”rn, hi ail it to defeat that to because my attention had been I, courao. The excuse you :nuke In a nub . - . al to the subject when the semen( ion *molt toregreph nt that letter of the .., between the President and Gen. Grant L'atn vat, that at terwarda you changed was under consideration. , • I a. ~„ n your vie,. ELA to wit:4.ool ben proper , .. . v., Rau pei:_n_ H. ii .y, j . course, has nothing to do with the point I hour obedient W. Than ser, naLtl now under consideration. • The pilot Is I-• f• • Aida. i, that before you changed your views you ITo the President. - Postunoner Gen: had secretly determined to do the very king which tit let you did, surrender the edicts to Mr. litatiton. You may have changed your views ens to the law but you certainly did ,tit change your views as to the mum , you bad marked out for yourself from the beginning. I will only rodeo one more statement in your letterer the ad inst., that the Pcr formanoe of the ',nimbi :it, which it la al leged were mode by you, would have in out yet you Iti the resistance oil' law. 1 know of no statute that would hive been violated, hafl you curried out your prom- W. In good faith, apd tenderts.l yo urres lunation when you concluded not to be wades party In any legal proceedings. You add: "1 am in a memure ion timed In this conclusion by your recent orders directing me to disobey the order , Irian the Secretary of War, my superior anti yuur imbortlinate, without having countermanded his nothority to issue or. dere I AM to disobey." On the '24th ult. you mid rooted a note to the President, requesting in writing, an order, given to you verbally - Iles dart before, to disregard orders from 31r. Stanton an Secretary of .War, until you knew from the President himself that they wore lila or dem. Ou the latth, In et:emit:met, with your request, I did give you instructions In writing not to obey any order •fr om the War Depart- . mord, assumed to be honed by dime, Sun of the President, unless such order was known by the General command in the armies of the the States to base been authorized by the Executive. There are POlllO o rders which it Secretary of W may . issue withot te authority Mate ar President. There a roethers svhlch ho issues aitnitly tot tho gent of the I'reshiet, nod which-puraport to be_ by direction of the President. For sch - ders the Provident In respounible, wi nd ho should therefore know and undersitand what they •nre before giving , such direc tion. Mr. Stanton, in he letter of the 4th itmbutt, which accompaulm the publieh col correspondence, nave ho has had no communication with the President since the litth of August teat, and ho further anys.that slum he resumed the duties of ' the office be has continued to discharge them without arty : personal' Or written communication with the President, and ' ie atids "no been sued from this on pa Derttnout In the mans of the l'resident with my knowl edge, and I have received on orders from him." It WU. llelitlla that alr. Stanton now discharges•-.:the duties of the War Denser:rent without any reference lathe President and without using his. name. 3,ty order to you had only reference to orders assumed to be issued by the Pres !dont. It would appear from Idr. Stan ton's letter that you have received nsi such order. from hint. In your note to, OE the President of the ro s ult., In wlii.-h you arknowirolgy tilereeeipt of the writ. ten Coder of tile 'llitit, you say' Gist you bare been informed ,b ,i 4 e. Stanton that be lon lAtlt.,' received any order limiting lAN authority to humour dere to the army according to the peen tire of the Deportment, and otate that "while this antherity to the War De. Er m hin ti eLt hit.nrtecveigiuteeermanto me , ti Lt t will orders Issued - from the War Department by direction of the ;President are autho rized by the Erecative." The President twum an order to you to obey no order from - the War Department, purporting te he Made Ly directtin of the President, until you nate referted it to hint fur his approval. You reply that you have received the President's order and will not obey it, but willober en order pur porting to be given; by lits direction if it comes front the War Department. You 'will obey no direct or der of the President, . bet will obey his indirect' order. If, .as you I say, therebtei been . % practice In the War Department to hone Orders ha the name of the President without his direction, tyce does not the preeLse . rder vou.havis re, , quested p and have', leea change the ractice to the Gen ral of the Army? I Could not lirePrey dent countermand any such order imp In the name of the President to do n s lel act,. and an or. dor directly from t o President himself not to do the act? , Is t ere a doubt which you are toobey? Ye answer the Ques tion when you say.to the President, in' your letter of the td inst., "the Secretary of War is my .auPerier and your subor dinate," 'mid yet you refuse obedience to the superior by mind of deference to the subordinate. .; Without further comment on the M au I ate attitulie whisk rat have sa au,, "et-sides to knew bow yea mu:Yellen yourself from the orders of tbsident; whit in mode by the Con-I alitutio• the Comenander.lmehlef of thMi army and navy, and is therefore the of- Solid superior as well of the General oili the Army as of the Secretary of War. . „ . . RespectfUlly t yours, ' I ANDBZW JOHNSON. IGeneral N. S. Greek, Commanding Az.- ; tales o t the United States,Washlngton, D. C. 'rho letter of the President la imam pealed by letters, from the Secretaries of the Navy, TreasUry, Interior, Suite,' and Postmaster Demirel; auppurting.hhe pool- Sena. Exscrrwt: ists.seston. 'WARM:Iamp, D. - C.; Feb. G, ltfS. Sua—The Chronicle of this morning , contains a correspondence between the President and General Grunt, reported from tie War Department, in answer to nresolution of the 'lionise of Represent attires. I beg to call your attention to thin correspondence, and especially to I that part of it which refers to the conver sation between the President and (ten. Grant at the Cabinet meeting on Tues day, the 14th of lunnary, and to request you to state wh i t was said in that con versation. Very respectfully your. J ANDREW OISPRON. • Wasiuncvrofs, February 1, 1868. SlR—Your note of this data eras hand ed tome;this evening. My recollection, of the oonversaUon nt tho Cabinet meeting on Tuesday, tiro 14th of January. °arras ponds whin your statement of it In the letter of the .also ult., In the published' correspondence. The three points spec , tiled in that letter, giving your recollec tion of the conversation; aro correctly lasted. , ! Very fiespectfully, • CiIDSON WELLL TREAEUEY DEPARTMENT. WASZDNOPON. Feb. I, het:. Srwi—l have received your. rote of the rfth haat, calling my attention to the ow it respondence between yourself and Gen- 9 eral Grant as published in the Chromic/re of poterday, evectally to that part of it I which related: to what occurred in the Cabinet meeting on Tuesday the Nth ult, and requesting me to state what was ald in the ooaversation referred to. I cannot - undertake to stae ttie pieclso I.gusge used, hot have r no healtatlon in flaying your account of that concerto. Lien aa -given In your letter to General Grant en ;billet ult, arthstantially lu all Important particulars aocorda with my recollection of it. With great respect, Your Obedient servq„ Iluou 11cCur.Locn, DKPARTIIIIiIiT OP Tul Feb. ' 1 Wwearriorolg, D. C., l Feb. 6, 110. ' 1 em in receipt of yors of yesterday, calling my attention to r n correspondsnos between yourself and lien. Grant, I pub lished in the cnroe, and especially to that. part of said correeptindonce Well refers to the twavOrsation bet u the President and Gen. Grant at the C lost meeting on'ruesday, the Pith ofJ nary, and requesting me to state wh t was mid In. that conversation, In r ply I submit the following a:element: At the Cabinet meeting, 'tondo: , Jan uary 14th, 18118, Geo. Grant appeared and took his accustomed sat ut the board. When ho had bean reached to the. order of business, the President linked him as usual, if he had anything to present. In reply, the General,. after starringg to a note which he lindthatmorningad reseed to the 'President, enclosing apy of :„. the resolution of to Senate refti lug to concur in the reaso h ns for the ausi4onsion of Mr. Stanton, proceeded to my Ihe re ganiell his duties a.s Secretary of War ed interns terminated by that. resdlution, ' nud that he could not lawfully e*orelse such duties fora moment after the adop tion of the resolution: that the 'relcolu- ' Mon rest:nod him last night. and that this morning he bud gone to the Wei 'depart meat, entered the Se :retsry's room bolt ed one door on the inside, loci,od the other On the Outside, delivered the key to the Adjutant General,' and procealeo • 0 the I leadquarters of the Army and ad dressed the note above mentionel to.the Prosid,ent, informing him that be was no longer Secretary of War mf interfm. The President expressed great aurprlse at the course which Osman! Grant hadthought proper.; to pursue, and suit:easing himself to the General, p oceeded to my, in aubatsnee, that he ha antici pated emelt action of theSenate,and being very desirous to have the constitution ality of the Tenure of Office bill tested, aid his right to suspend or remove a member of the Cabinet decidest by the JUillohil - tribunal of the country, he had some time ago, and shortly alter Gen. Grant's appoluttnent as. Secretary of War ad barns', tusked the General what his action would be In et eve— that.the Senate ahnuld refuse cot in the suspension of Mr. S ton, that, the General had then agt el el 4 , to remain at the head of the IY r Del. merit till a decision could bop obtain, from the Conrt, or resign the ollce ink -the hands of the. President before the case was acted upon by the Satiate, so to place the President in the ante situaa s lion ho occupied at the time tif Grata appointment. The President forth.- said that the conversation valreem• on the preceding Saturday, ' at sr/ time he. asked the General w l .•. , fr - -='' '-'±-. '' T -- "- r. ,„ F ; :..‘ ro A . '. ,1 rt. G teidel t. do if the k ,nate should entir-- La 4 e to res centre Mr. Scottie. In re; is to 3011141 al Gotv.ral referred to LI,. it tenter cwsll,oll,lLlLni 11110 U the +am. , suteste, and said 70u "umbret and iny immune and my cendurt wilt be con formable to that tederstandlne;" that Le (Alm Geuensl) the expressed a repug nance to being ma de a party to a judicial emiceeding, sayinglthat he would expose himself to fine Id imprisunmect by doing so, as his et unuleg to discharge' thdrinflet ofSeeretars - of War ad interim aftir , the Senate e i rld have refusal to co cur in the sus (mon of Mr. Stanton, set Id be a v 101 l tine 'of the Tenure ;of Ofilee bill; that in reply to„hie the President Informed General, Greet he had not impended Mr. Stanton under the Tenure of Office bill, but by vi toe of power conferred on him by the , Certi gi tution, and es to the tine and int ,pr Rement the !vigilant would pay 1 lei atsver tine wee imposed and submit to whatever imprftweiment might be ad , judged against him )the Generulft that ; they continued the conversation for 1 se its time, discus/hag the inn , at length, and finally separated without having reached a definite ronelasion, and wtth the understanding that the General 1 wld see the President again on Mon ddy. %In reply, Gen. Grant admitted the - conversations had oemreeil, and nail thht at the first convemation ho given It an hislopinion to the Preel dind t thst Inn the eventof noreconeurrenee by the Senate in the action of the Presi dent In respect to the Secretary or War the question wouldhave to be decided by the Court,lbat Mr. Stanton would have eipeal to the Court to relestate kirn in cep, that the Our would. remain In until t.ey could be displaced and the outs put I by legal proceeduagi,and that he then I thought so and bad agreed that If he Ishoald change liiemlud he would notify the President lu jime to enable him to make another eripeintment; but at the I time of the first conversation ha hid not looked very closely Into the law; Itt at it hail recently been discumed„by a nowspapere and that this had Indu ct : , i. h .b i m yt b Lo .I o . ,i.,,re examine rLt wn , l al t l. and that Stantonot h r more athew( carefully, zue lod. d that he had come to the coraciasion 1 if the Senate • should refaile to con- Grant) could not ntinue thereafter to tea Secretary of War ad interim with ° t subjecting hi Itself to fine and im p leimment; th at ace came over on Satur dy to Inform th e Pre:dame of this s a. change in his i i views, and did so I Ibrm him ; that the President replied that he ad not suspended Mr. Stanton under the Tenure of Office bill, tat under the °institution, and bad ap pointed him (General Grant) by virtue of L so authority derived from the Consthe-• t on, .4e; that they continued to dlacum the matter some time. Finally be left without any ceapclusion , having been ached, expecting to see the President ached, on Mond!. He then proceeded t explain why e had not called on the President on M inlay. saying he bad a tong- interview ith Genend Sherman, that various little matters had occupied is time until late, and he did not think he Senate would act KO green, and keel, "Did not; General Sherman call • n you on Monday!” Ido not know hat mused between the President and leneral Grant on Saturday, except m I earned It from the convereatloh between them at the Cabinet meeting on Tem flay, and the foregoing is substantially Whet then warred. The precise swords bud on the oocesion are not of coarse given exactly in the order In which they Iswei e spoken, but the Ideas expresed I d facts statedlstre faithluily preserved .end presented. I I have the honor to he, sir, With great respect, Your obedient %orient, I 0. 11. BROWNING. To the Presider , IDarILIUM . Or STATE, 1 1 p Wasiltrarrert. Feb. 6, 1868. j 1 Stn—The meeting to whim you refer In your letter was a regular Cabinet I I Whe the members were I assembling, and before the President hail entered the Ccluncil Chamber, General , (trent, on coming in, said to me that ho was not in attendance as a member of the Cabinet, tint upon invitation, and I replied by the Inquiry whether there was a champ, In the War Department- I After the President had taken tun seat, , Melee. sc, oft;on In the metal wnv of 1 hearing ma tera submitted le the. us.- I oral tiecretarle When the time came for the Se. re ; yof War, Geri. Grant mid that L was not there es Seeretery e War, hut upon the President n melt-then; that he Lad , retired from the War Ikpartinent, A , died differen e thou appeared about th e auppneed inn duce, General Grant say- I leg that tt e dither mbe had borne lie letter to the P i Lea ti ldeut th at morning, an nouncing his r etirement from the War I Department, d told him that the Pres ident desired us see him at the Cabinet meeting, to which the President. an 1 el that when General Grant's comment- I tenon was delivered to him. the Presi- ; dent ;simply Implied be suppose& ben. I Grant would be very soon at the Cabinet meeting. I rem.. riled the conversation ; thee begun re; Incidental. It went on , quite informally, andconxisted of a pante- . meet on :roux; part of your views In re- ; mud hi your hatlersuinding of the tenure I upon which l'en. Grant had assented to hold the W r Department chi ;etre., and of bin replies by way of answer and explanntiond It was respectful and eour- i tootle on both side*, being la the meter- , national fern, As details could only ' have beenr report by a verbatim retort, and is fuse I know no such port was made a the time. I can give only the general ;effect of the conversation. Certainly you stated - that although you had reported the resumes for Mr. Stan ton's h el d to the Senaty e b , ou nev erthelesst he would not e entitled to resume the sties of Secretary of War, even if the Inst. should disapprove of Ma suspend D. and that you had pro. rillto has e the question Meted by Jo emcees, to be applied to the per son who ;should be the incumbent of the Department; under your designation rat Secretary of ft ar ad interim In the place of If r. Stanton. You contended this was well undentocal between yourself I and General Grant. That when he en- I timed the department ad interim, he' expressed Me concurrence in a belief that I the questiott of Mr. Stanton's restoration I would he • usmaton for the Courts; that In a autneement conversation with the ; General 3.0µ had adverted to the under- standing thas had, and that Geueral Grant exprMaed ids concurrence In it; 1 that ; the conversation which at had beensa ute previously held (emend Giant said he still adhered to the same construction of the law, but , said if hebould change hie opinion he would giv Seasonable notice ed lt, no you could In any nee be placed In th e same poeit on in regent-to the War De partment at you were while Gene l t, pa ral Grant het it I did rot undendand General Giant ne denying nor as explic itly adnutpng these etatemente In the form and I the full extent to which you made them.. His admission of them was rather indirect and cirt•unetaettal, though I did not understand it to be an I evasive one. He said that reasonlag I front what occurred in the cam of the pollee in Maryland, which he regarded li n es a parallel one, he was of opinion, dso assured you, that it would be is right and duty under your hwtructiope to hold the War oftlee after the Senate should disapprove of Mr. Stanton's)deuspenelon and the queetion would be 'ceded by the courts; that he remained, until very recently of that opinion, find that on the Saturday be6ire the Cabirest meeting a convermtion wan ' held between yourself and him in which the subj ect was generally-discuss , ed. Getieral Grant's statement was that in that oonvereation Ite had sta ted to ybu the legal difficulties which Imight arise involviog tine and- imprle. I cement tinder the civil tenure bill, and that he did not care to subject himself to those penalties; that you replied to this ; remark t ti it you reganied the civil ten ''; tiro bill ; 4 unconstitutional and did not think It penalties were to be feared, or that you would voluntarily assume them, I and you ,insisted that lien. Grant elded .1 eitherri taln the oftlee until re limed by yourself according to I what you claimed was the original un derstanding between yourself and him, or by Reeionable notice of change of pur pose on his part nut you In the Berne sit uation which you would be In If Ile ad hered. I You chanted that Gen. Grant finally Mid In that Saturday's mayors:l -lion that, you understood his times and his preeetelinge thereafter would be con sistent With what bad been on under stood. Pen. Grant did not controvert, nor canll• say that he admitted his bet statement. Certainly Gen. (I met did not at auy; time In the Cabinet mirt leg insist that he had in the Saturday conversation either die tinctly ;or finally advised you of his decree nation to retire from the Menge of w n th d e W to a . r H De e per b.a tn c te o n n t v e e t r. b ed erw u lee po t n ha th n ,. I r under our Own istdmegnent direction. Ho eel dewed in your stetement thatt. the Saturday conversation ended with an ex- Nebel; that there would be a toilets quent nference on the subject, 'winch ho as ,well as yourself supposed could seasonably; teke place on Monday. You then aftudedle the fact that Gen. Grant did not call upon you on Monday, es you had dxpected from the conversation. Gen. ('rant admitted that It woo bin hz peetat OD or purpose to cull upon you= WWI J. Gen. Grant assigned remota for the omission. Ile said he was in eenfereace with Gen. Sherman: that there ere many little matters to be at rent matte taf the tnenmbency of the War sour the trent with Gen. Sherman. and ex-. I ; there ere 1 pact Gen. Sherman would call upon tillerl Monday. My owe mind suggested a t- further explenation. but I do not re- I Member whether It was mentioned or s I not, Ho mely: It was LIOL Anupp9ml by I Gen. 'rant on Monday that the Senate I wool decide the question u prompt !ly as to -anticipate any % further explanation between yourself and blut. ,r I if delayed beyond that day.' General .and h e taade another explanation. that ihieh , howes engaged enanday with General to in. I BbarEas, and I think also Monday, In _c ad ß T 3 . the W.r 1z • .4 hope, tin Jti‘ll Ise d ti if, tut • t tirwettro tip t o ,11.• a irs f .t42,11tn. !, .rtql ivotilsl 1 hav , the litator to be, With szrcai•retspect, • Your.tibethent %errant, n - Tti the Pre,ideui. Wm. 11. NoTitt Eft L,ETTEtt oIA.Nr. • Tito toylorupapying letter from General Grant; I.,..eived. 4113,3 the trtinsull , siot4 to the }louse of Rept4sootetive• of my coal inimleatioh of thtic tlnte, 1s aublnitted to the liou:so us part flf the corregrondenee referred to to the re-t,llutiou of thd lOth Inst. (Sigmedj Arnt KEW TOLLNe•OY. HEADQVARTER4 ARMY or Tun U. S. t WASIII.NOToN, Pebruary 11, 'it& Ili., lareellenry, teeitretc Johnson ut —I have thehonor to act:amyl. age the receipt of your communication of the 10th inst., accompanied by the-elate- , ments of tlye Cabinet ministers of their recollection of what occurred In the Cab- (net meeting on! the Ittit of January. Without admitting anything Conteintal in tho.so etaternents„itere they differ from anything )heretufore elated by me, I propose to notice only - the ! pardon of your coiommunicalion wherein I am charged with inisubertil natiem-,I think !it will be plain to the reader of my letter of the 30th January that I did not P l' ropene to disobey any legal order of the resident distinctly given, but only. 10 give an interpreta tion of whet would he'regarded SS satis factory evidence Of the President's sanc tion to orders ornorninunicailons by the' Secretary 'of War. I will nay that your letter_ of„the 11th Met dentaion the drat intimation I bore had that you did not accept Unit Interpretation, nor the -reasons for giving that inter pretation. It was clear to me before my letter of Jantanry 30th was written that 1, thb perean haying more public husinesd to transact wits the Secretary of War tharianyetheir of the l'resident's indmrdinates, was the only ono who had been instructed to disregard the authori ty of Mi. Stanton, where Ms authority was derived as an agent of the Presi dent -- Grs the 27th of January I .re ceiyeti I a letter from the Secretary of War, (copy herewith) direct ing me to Diruish an escort to public treasure from the itio Grande to. :dew Oriennit, dm. at the request of the Secretary of the jTreiteary to him. I al so eend two other inclosures showing the - recognition of Mr, Stanton as Secretary of War by both the Secretary of the Treasury and the Postmaster General. in all of. whichicasas the Secretary of War had to mil- upon me to make the orders requented or give the information deolred, and where his authority to do ao is derived in my Vie"( na :f e e a n r t iv o f . th th 1 1 . g rm$ i d eal t.tbl,/, of a t no oo nip r r e r; dent's; here referred to, It was my duty to Inform the President of my interpreta tion of It and tonbide by that interpreta tion _until I received further ordure. Disclaiming any intention now, or here tofore, of dmoboying a' legal order of the President distinctly' ny communicated, f remain very respectfully, Your!obedient servant,, 11.1. S. Grtaa-T.,..General. • lime. Di leatva'n ktansion, The Paris coircspondent of the Boston SaturdayF7eca P ing Gc.elte gives the fol lowing glowing account of a house Mme. de Petra bast built in Paris. He says: She has built ) in the avenue des Champs Elynces one of the most splendid man sions in Part. The steps are of the cost liest marble, the bannisters are of bronze, and the moldis - were broken after the brooch wag made._The doors and man tel-pieces of herdrvving rooms are made of malachite. Thin stone is so costly (although not reckoned among the pre- ChM% stories) as to be worn quite fre tqetorY of o a breast.plu. - Yon may have hed tee - neof our bankersami Prince Demidoff, Who owns the quarries whence malachite to drawn? The banker saw the Prince admiring his breast-pin, and, J . guorant;of the history of the stone, said, 'lt la beautiful, isn't it? Do you knowthe material? It is exceedingly tostly." Prince Detuidoff replied, " Yea, I aw quite faMillar with it; my mantel. piecer are made of ft," to the confusion of the bsmlter, The walls Of the drawing room con tain pleturest,lone by Mons. Boulanger representing Catherine ofßussia arrest ing Ity a smith Turkish soldiers, another by Mons. RIIL Delaunav exhibits Diana ' Poictiers Presenting Jean Goujon and other gr.: tirttste of her day to Henry II ; another 'still by Mons. Compt is s scene iu the life of Louis XIV and Mote. do Maintenon; the fourth is by Mons . Levy, end represents Cleopatra'a firs' interview with Anthony. Ono may re ! member Mtne de Pairs ordered fron I Mona. Geronie a picture with the fins • interview between Cleopatra and Cmsar ;for its anbieeL He painted the picture. but they failed to agree on the price, she thinking eight thousand dollars too ush or it, oifercsi to glee five thousand lot. ; tars, which Mona. Geromo declined and found at once a purchaser at Ills price. I The drawing room ceiling is painted by M oe , ticrome ; the theme is the hours of dawn, sue rise,ncton and sunset. • • • tt • as , er P.StAttj is now immenao. She owns the almost royal =Chateau de Fancier train, whereat:is keeps an immense ret inue of servants; her gardener , and hust lers are English: her lauhdres•ets 'and dairy-mecidaare Duteln•sho bits Italians for macaroni and Ices, and French, for !awry, Su, In her kitchen, and IVigN guard her estate. She hex tried in vain to get into good moclety; but as site is ! "very parttcular" whom she recePree, ,--her only female company Ls recruited from decayed families of the Faubourg SL,Germaln, who are only too glad to got a good dinner. Such 11114. as Mmsers. =abate Beuve, Nisard, F•ifillet de Conclun, Theephile Gauthier, Phllarete 'Chemise, Reran and Prosper Meneuee are her hubituaiguests. umtag aTogey. An ingenious mode of tiger killing Is that which 'is employed by the natives of Ondo. Thefgather a number of broad leaves of the prowls tree, which much re seinhlos the sycamore, snit having well bennseared'tbent with a kind of birdlime. they strews them id, the animal's way, tatting cars to lay them with the prepar. ed_olde uppermost. Let a tiger bet puthie paw on one of those innocent locking leavea and his fat* In settled. Finding the leaf atteking toldl paw, be chokes It In order to rid himself of the ntilonmoo, ' and finding the plan nnsuoreasful, he endeavore to attain his object by rubbing it against his face, thereby smearing the 1 ropy birdlime over his nose and oven, and gluing the' eyelidn to gether. ' By thin time he has probably trodden upon several more of the trench ennui kart", and is bewildered with the travel . incloirenienee; thou he rolls on the ground, and rubs his head and face en the earth in his effects to got free. By so doing I be only adds fresh birdlime to his bead, body, and limbs, agglutinates his sleek fur together in unsightly tuft* and 11111M:tea by 'hoodwinking himself so thorcaighly with leaves and birdlime, that he lien floundering on the ground, tearingtip the earth lett It his clime ut tering howls of rage and dismay, and exhausted by the impotent strugl. in Which be bad been w in long en g gaged. Thane erten are a signal to the authors of his mischief, who run to the ',pot, armed with guns, bows and spears, and find no difficulty in dispatching their blind anti wearledlbe. —The INorf York L'urning Pug am tains the fallowing °human' of a genii luau whOse Uame In as familiar au boas hold words in our oil merchants: • • • •- . - "The 'death of Abrithern• M. Corbena was as ituloOked for nil event nshis com mercial! failure a few days before Mot Leen, Mr. Conons had nmuy friends In the eonlinunity to whom ho was endear ed by his genial and friendly manners, his goileroint temper. en Irk piddle spirit. 'Po WM a friend and d liberal en courager of the tine arts, and at ono thus the Prilsident of the Art Union in this city. Ills disposition W. enterprising. and he!wits, we think, the first will, tn tnxluced the manufacture of kerosene In this country, procuring by the action of heat a crude petroleum or reek oil froin cannel coal before the oil wells were openedl . end then refining it Into keror done. This woe suceeekled Icy extensive entermases in, petroleum, to which he he awed his unfortunate (allure mid his death- The clreninstanetes of that fail ure, operuting upon it sensitive and In genuous nature, throw- him Into Buell n state Of mental agitation, that he died wlthinla very few days after his failure became known to the public." , . Tier, llEsnar. Etstn.AND.f oil carriages, perhaps, that were —O ever in vented, the beers° 14 the most hideous, m and the realty is no propriety about Ito build For decorations: whatever. 'lt is simply a very unseemly cupboard; and I why it should in surmounted with plutnes, of ail conceivable things, no one, iv we presume, hi ;trepan , ' to explain. These plumes again appear on the heals' of the bevies, without apparently any 11numol or suitability; and then, be It t 0.45[611, to be buried in anything like style !von must hove (out horses. There Is something grimly ansurd In the Idea eremite honest city man, who has gone to his-TaTly Lass tor yearfin a cab or an omnibus, beyondis last public dve, 'don he", enjoying It, in of ur in-hand. lie would have astonished his friend. with a yengeancooit he had ever sported a drag while he was living, end why !Mould he be made to begin such Ill treason:tee, and le a line so distant from his tastes, when he to dead apd helpless? London Leader. --Why would Venus descending from . Olympus be like illiberal husband? Os mium ahe would come down handsome. • F 13.0111 WASHINGTEIN. ice Iry Iljts,,G 43 I.llllrlll.st,:aXD 811.11EAte.1, 1 WASHINGTON,' February 13, I: • t RaCoNrTIMOTION , CoIIYITTIM. ON r. lII rF-u:ll3l.l:7ST—REsui.cTioN,: or Tn,,P. sTEVENS. ' I ii Ine Reeenstrmition t u nimiata--ioad a b ri e fsession thie morning, n ..`.the members being present. Thud. Shiva.. staled that ho to - soled to bring the eukile-t 1 of impeachment ton test in the Conelit tea He bellevedtthat the investLeShen had gone far enough, and that the tame at. had ;come when ! some tangible netion i • should betaken, ; Ho ; had preparti he Said, the following report to the H 4 se, and he would non take the seat: nts .if the members of the Coanrulttee dyer, on a 'The Committee ou Beconstruetion, to whom was referred the correspondence of Andrew Johnson, President °tithe United State., anal U. S. Grunt, DetAtrel commanding the mantes of the ;IJlntal fa States, having considered the aa er end the evidence, do! report that by rate of ! the powers with which your es niattee !has been invested, they Levitt f 111,1 ex amined tho evidence before Ali n,Aand ore orate opinion that Andre* Jehnthon, President of the United Status, ie stellltv of high crimes end inhale neanorsliana therefore see recommend the ndoptind of the followiug resolutions t %tt Resedred, IllatAudrew Johnson, Frits talent of the UnitualStates, be irragenehed of high crimes andtmledemeanors. tit Resalred;. That the Committee itti hi the Senate, end St the bar thereof, it the name of the Mouse of Reprostentalivis,. - and of the people of the United Steteti, do impeach Andrew Johnson, PresideAt of the United States, of high crimoiand misdemeanour: a n d acquaint the Senate the House! of Itepresentativeseivill , in due time, exhibit particular tartlet. of Impeachment against him. and Make good the mine! . a_ : .iji .Resothed, That said Connuitteel . de mand the t-the Senate take girder I', ; the itlipearence of said Andrew Joh nto Ammer,' to said impeachment. . ; As seen on the reading of the la:- rt. ) , times was finished, Judge Bingham eve oil to ley the report and while sub et of Ina yeaehment on the table. t Mr. Saeveus said. that he wante the yeas and nays recorded on that . ni don, so that the country might knows,. Was and - who was not an Inver of takln ;cog nizance of the crimes and miulemraors committed by the President. a The vote was then taken, and' toed: Teas, Messrs: Bingham. Beaman; Faine, "further% Brooks and . Beck. I-Neya, Meseas. Stesens,.Boutivll and Farns worth. t ! a , . t ; - Thaddeus t Stevens is greatl I cha grined at the result, though he ei s he did not expect much different. 'says the Republican party. In stir " de ferred, and through cowardice of it, own 1 members. He snatches much or the, blame teGeneral Grant end his Wends, who ho says homme frightened anll de moralized, for what reason he dotia not exactly know.,lt le Ma firm bellatt that had the friend.of General Grant ilk well as Grant hlinself kept their hinda elf. nothing have saved Johns Mi. When the !Committee adjournikt, life. Stevens invited, Messrs. DontweD and Farnsworth to meet With him In,biller to take other steps on the subject. '. a. t I AGRICULTURAL . ; 111:PoRT. . . , The monthly report of agriculture fur January contains a table of the aver,' age yield per acre of the princi fame crops of 1567, showing, with the eragn bome prices' at the present time.l about the Mule range as In Sanualy - ,. 1, . 'ln New England there la a slight red. ellen; In the west a decrease; la th e , 'aunt, except in! Miesissippl, .Lentlana, nod Texas, a marked red. etion. A reduction Is shown in Georpts, the Carolinas and Virginia In wheal. Tee - average of !potatoes .le higher Inaill the Atlantic States. and generally In the Wm t, excepting Kansas and, Ye mks, the greaten Western inerease,, being noted In Illinois, where the elyerage yield was 'sixty bushels _per acatlo, and the average orice one dollar sett:wee ty cents per bushel. The reper.l64, con cerning the average of winter wkeat in. di nds uo materialthange comnad with last year. In Pennsylvania, Ne eYore, ()hie; and Indiana there appears o be a slight decrease, and an increase appears - Mich i ic-an soil lin some Southern P tales, announting in North Carolina forty percent. Al the beginning of th whiter the appearance of the crops was :rot gen erally qtalte so favorable as Instal. A tarominent feature of the ropoft in in presenting, special statistics or farm resources and products for the ~lastern and Middle States, giving -a comparison with 1860 in. paces of barne and wild lands and Interesting facts as tiirjthe re iemrees In timber and - mineral, opecial it.est of pasturage, &La. § ~ eirwaravie. arrnerstavtoiy. a The consular and diplomatic agpropri ation -bill; reported "on the tolls differs from the one originally introddiad. It restores the appropriation for tig. salary of the Minlater to Portugal, .4d pro vides Commissioners and a Cort4ll Gen eral to Hayti and Siberia lent/ Min. Min isters. e The bill mntalns mo a ropria lions ter Minister. to Greece an ' Rome, end iodate** the contingent fund of the state Department from 5.03,000A11.30,08 0 ; oanitesaLsry of Second Assists:a:rm.:Teta ry of State, and falls to appropr4te mon ey for the following objects: ham:liner of Claims, rent of State Departmeilt build ing, Superintendent of StatUdles, dis patches by cable, and boundarylcommle ,lam Sur, Washington '4iirrritOT.r. The -.hilt contains a ta't•ortslou that ~'no Consul Genera. Con sider 4 %gent or Cymmemial b irnt b• paid except those specified the act, paid all laws end parts of laws 4. siding for the payment of any other igocaular officers than those In this act ;Specified are hereby repealed and alt moneys re ciyed for foe. et any Vitro Col i tlate or Consular Agency 'tor the UM .. States, beyond the sum one thousand - collars in any one year, shall be accounted for and paid into the Treasury in the oulne man nerl as other money. received officers of the United States." The number specified In the act le about on,. hundred and sixty, leaving upwards of Feta hund red Consuls and Commercla: gents to be no longer paid. The total sum tap- priated Is 1112,U5.9,:111.i . TrIT. ALABAMA :CONS ON. The following telegram was end le the Pane::: Senate to-day by Mr. ifonteernere .Ataberao, Fe . IS; Tot, "lon. D. F. Patterson., Senatoxirrom Ten-1 nesseet The ratitlattion of the Conetitu- 1 lion was defeated by over 15,(0; What is th 6 prospect for the passage of Sher- man's bill respecting Alaban4---- --- ' I Lslgnedl D. D. D'XI.I.S. • I Goventor's Jourll tC. RECKINBIDO6 alße R. A letiei received here frornlat l aa med. cart citizen at Pleyrout, Syria;. al Jana i ary Ild,lsaya John C. Breekt rid e"Saraa there. i making Inquiries 1 regard to traveling through Syria. dulled all elairreto the privileges of a ol teener the United Stalls and appeared uett affect ed while conversing upon aegis 1 in his country. When naked If hetnterded to return', he said he bad nOwiltit tottecome a martyr and should.not re tant geatil he could do so In personal tuff tyP but no other country; could. bo Inert:erne. He said in reference to alfalre,9l3 the war was over and appeal to the. !maid had been decided against' those *heal whom he had been asseelated, he *Ss w "ling to shoulder his gun like anv i gher Man In defenie of hie country. , h :Sever. spoke of matters at Syria tei t tlio tone of a foreigner. • The same letter slates Jre.ob Thomp son and other leading partiePof the South during the late war werl wandering about Turkey. . 1p , 1 TilliM PARTY MO4ENT. internlation in Coinser e circles. la to the effect that coneiderahle Procreate has limn quietly made tl4l:ingbout the country, by those prondn -.. In he Phil 'adelphia Convention, towatti G. efinaug uestlon of a combined :Ho lyment look ing :10 the formation of thied party upon the former plan of ' Conventlora. Llostility bet" to Grant r .ai d stch Dem i, i errant as Pendleton and ymeur, will I mark the action taken, an . the name of ! i General Dix, which is tangly used 'by dame men, Indicates t kind of par- Ity organization contemp,ated , Them have been nnutorona priva r p meetings of staleCouneittees, in, vedette pada of the country,, and It is expect/ liwafthe Na tional Committee, appol ed t 'Phila delphia, will aithembleberg. PARTIAL DisCoNTINCANLR 1: Tan rItERMICN:iS ne4a.v. The order, dismaitinul g 'lb Freed men's Bureau in Maryia ' ; hentllcaT and Tennesue on Satan y text, will probably be carried. intoi. dee . C...c... tary Stanton bas declined- to Yoko or I suspend it, probably becallsehe floes not i 1 taro to interfere while Valle at the War (Mee are in such eng i neer n con ultiop, and Gen. Grant ' 't now annul thnorder lie made as Secretary of war ad interim. The mattertait boon brought before Congress, tut titanbody has not !, yet ! ! indicated a divest! on le do any thing In tho premises. 1., cry o ffi cer of etmaillng In the three Stitt- rilmeal, and hundreds of other promltiect individu- Ma, have asked bar a aVenalora of the order, anal it is represen _ that the Bu reau should dot be lei dmwri before Rummer. 1 i norm, or li-17. - The United States, bone 2 s of 11417,which matured alst Decenalser,9}lll,lt , Is under stilted, be paid onp tenon at the rtin Treasury Department, at the office of the Amlztant Treasure. in New York, Interest beteg allowed it to the But of January last. ; asexeson Komi ,t The President to-day et' genus AsIMSSOr of 'ln of oho First District vacancy. - i POETICAL =MEI it tune-,. 't! io man • s ..g.Cl,,7,tanitr,,, • jOll,. 01.10. r(,..,-Pnk l.l, •!. WIIII nti htt{,ind ,I;11 11,1 QOM tail 1i: foal ,( 0404, 41 W 4 .1. EMS yoai INuft)t, You suseroM. rootlao; wars ' I'll lengttoS.l; go ditstiltur Past trlth my rim:lug iikotee end girl-;. Too ishtett,deurest, Bisset.% girl Tim outest. neatest girt; The Mon lull, 11,15,ttoSt. frankset. rgttrost. Timm d est, ripest. rognieb est. rurimt. li.prottr los% Wooing, situ Irmlost. n 11 , st or girl.. droOplng 1. Vars. Half cooreallog %morons Pamlico -7 "Just 5250 girl far unbar, Itlre 010 I To court, end lore, and marry. park sea— h roe. clomks cimuring tarts' The evretest and the best of glrisi. ; [Cincinnati Enquirer. • en auirt. Sweetly we live. my wife and I, Sweetly, all the time, , Asa May 20.112 her bonee of teal:el., Or a poet In his rhyme. • Oft In her male and qufat chenks,•l A dash, n/ Tea cloth allow • floe heart Is /lotto/Inc like In ttuo wave or love nelow.a whetd ealltnv good wile Cl/tally. And the blushes at th e name. i • Tbettelo the aft/0 the light of her hair and Orr. To our iunb9 'Mr. It r.mr II now Sweetly not we Il the way ve—be o trown,r gentle brow t And I, never two -that her heed Is gray, • And' her shoultlera•atooptog dew, —Arks . (11,o• Glen , of trarriOr• Of 0nt0r. 1 .16/ o r 7 of ong. Pahl wath m.volea. pass to be lost In nn eneleas sot— • Glory of Virtue, to tight, 4, struggle, to egg , the nrreng— :rnty, but aho .alre. , d not •t glory, no 10041 of glory shot . • and still to Glee her the glory , of going On, • • • Thes - asca of fin is death: if the wages of Virtue be dust. %Yoshi Ina have hoist to nodose fertile ilfe,cll3lte worm rod the est She' dealsex' so odes of the blest. no ettloS seats of the jtult. To rest in %gout= gross, or to Disk le IL S.MIZIer Bky: • • Give teethe wages of going on,soaet to Ataasn TZSCNT —Mery • • A. S. AN o 11. N. 0, There was WI Old fellow named Andrew. Drew. bow soca as n e'er beard man drew; Said he, af.le for me. Grant." Mid Ulymes, "I cant," • • Did thin second O. W. to Andrew. [Qaffp. FACETLZE. —Aptly namad—Cash-tuero —Red Sea—proapecta 'Ol a Cardinal's hat. .New name for a fog—the appa rent.—Tady. —An alarming feature—a cannon's montb.—Tudy. —A musical burgLivr-one whobreaks into a tune.L-Plinch. • —A precious nosegay—a probosels blooming with carbuncles. —An over-worked brain—writing ital' torials under a press-room. • • —A terrible climax—a spider running up a 'nacho; hanille.—.Fad.y. —No man will ever be able to Ladd a house by , carrying brlcke in his hat. • —Joke by Judy's watchmaker at Clew .kenwoll t An esmpe movement—the late ;explosion. ' • —Bolling watea,hurtum estimable than - .cold, -because it I...Mn't help rising 10.00- -To an old gentlemen with !alto teeth n gold tooth pick lea neat and approprl- • ate.present. (•?..., - —A taking title fur a farce for - our• Amorlmn cousins—Ala-Barra, or ; the lfbrty Thlovas.—Fan. —The Grand Trunk Raiiway..should have-; its terminus at Berate:3k at least during the summer. -- • —The Austrian mission Da properly Co called, -alum all the persons named for the place miss and shun It. - • • —The man who drinks to • drown care is like one who strives to quench a lire by throwing oil on It..—Tomuhalok , - —What is the sensation that en educa ted person :derives from witenitational novel? A - sensation of nausea—Punch. —The gentleman. who in pia "courted" . Republican principle., is now hu pity "ivedded'i to Cmoservative ones I udg —The manager of the Chatslot, being asked if ho was to give a full dress re hearsal of "Gulliver," replied "Simply impossible." —Judy asks, Why is an "Iteir-apparenr to a throne like au ;umbrella in -dry. weather? Because he's ready-for the next reign. • -Clustead of the often' quoted "whirl of time," Fun suggests "tlip-filapie of time nS InOre - upproprintz for the. pa tomimic SnaSOM ad.,4 asks, how - 14 It that the Turks . ex ress such an abhorrence of wine, aoe: at the same tints that they publicly approve of their Porte? , • —"Woman is n delusion," exclaim. ti o a crusty old bachelor to u wittyyoung ledy. "And man is alwaym bugging some delusion or 'otherp was the quick retort. , . —The Empress •Eugetile recently al. hinded a ball in Pails in a dress of white satin: crossed with yellow bands of the wile, and a bunch of gold grapes which she wore lu he: hair. , —The Tribuneauggeststhatthe roasting of four insane women, in the burning Of the lunatic asylum at Genesee, N.Y. yesterday, is another argument to favor of are-proof public building». —Antigly young lady i i always anx- Lott. to' arry, and young gentlemen are seldom anxious to marry her. This is a resultant of two mechanical powers—the. Inclined plain and leave her.—Fan. —For wetz small children. It is Well to . buy freshly painted - toys; the sucking of the paint will afford them other pleas- . urea besides those deslgmal by the man. recto:tr. • —Be sure and attend 'all the auction. • and special sale. which are advertised about holiday time; as long as you are to give the articles purchased away, it does not matter if they. are a little • damaged. —Vake, lady, sake! The moon a high, twinkling stars are bemire, while now . end then, acmes the sky, a meteor are streamln' I Yoke Sally, sake, and look on me—avake Squire daugh ter ! If I'll hove yon, end you'll have MO —(hy &eh! who threw that water I) —A lidy not long since visiting a cem etery, In Gardiner, Ste., with her little daughter, observed on one or the stones a neatly cut figure of a horse. Wonder ing why such an emblem ahould be used . they examined the inscription closely, but could And no clue to its appropriate ness, when her little girl remarked': "I immune she died of the nightmare." Notwithatanding the solemn surronnl - the lady could but laugh at - the • comicelicyof the idea. —lliTelying anything for a gentleman who smokes, always select one of the many Ingeniously impassible articles i which are to be found In the fancygoods r , fo stqres, for that, pur a pose. Cigar-cases that are too shed, o r any brand ofcigar, • or that would invariably smash a ciM• to pieces if placed In it. Cigar boxes • with springs which nn human being but the trademark is able to work, and which, when opened, would require a tremendous tax of time and ingenuity • to put in or extract a cigar from: Wea -1 derful cigar lights, that are very - difficult to ignite, smelt frightfully, 'and amid a . showerof sparks overtbo elotblug, when you attempt to extingulah them. —The Atlantic Cable does eelsuch nest.- to this eOuntry; • let us - not from it. tiarry—Wlut aro the comparatlie numbers of falselmals on an average daily issuedfrom this end of the Cable . •nd that? _ - Alltheelectricwires, however from abroad, bring so many essages, • that "telegram" will soon tX, synony-. awns with "crammer." Whenever anybody lays the thing which laaok his hearere will observe, "That'. efele- • army' and when you tell a girl-illy thing th at she doesn't believe, she will • exclaim, ..0, you Telegram!" Instead af "0, yon Storyl"—Patkelt. • correspondent of Peach propose. a banquet of horse gosh. The dinner la to be served on abuse sloe table, spread with a saddle-cloth; .ar.d the following , is the bill' of fare proposed: . • "First • course.--Saddle of horse with maws; vegetable—grass; • r •Second comae.—Curried horse. "Obligate accompaniment from Slrwee- ' heron .(as like • a • groom as he am make IL) 'This we expect to be very effective, arid cause so. much emotion that proba bly no one will eat tho curry.' Sall heel is DOW' to be handed 'rotted. _ "Third course.—Entriws of horse's trot ters, and others ktekehaws. "Air' 'Trot, Trah,' to - which 'they will be sent trotting. • .. Towards the close of the banquet there' will be a dish of bridle cake banded round. and the serrap cop will be scion the table; but* before this Knang and I hose agree(' he's to ask me to sing.Of course lahall may . Z•at a Wife hoarse, and couldn't getthroqgh an air. .llnagg• is to reply he not partieulas', tun horse *Mr. 'tgood, that, isn't itt).and to prowl um Kale, and theta to 1ay,..3-ay." We reckon on some of our guests bererising and saying something good about.. ope hersepitality. We can't very - well introi' d u pe (=saliva, but we shall take ware to getup a horse bunits. • Well, dam tbo stirrup cep if to be sent round, andl Knagg, rising will glee the Mist of the ' evening: flentlemen,earnueyour gime* —'The Horse, and Peeve to Ms dfcraw/V "Pk fFl•can • t. help thinking something goottmtaht be getout aide-ems/cr. Can teen plain enough, but whet the d to do with the de. , I'm a Juana man, and shouldn't wish to wean - Z=l mlnated .rnal 'Revenue, Ohlo, to MI a N II -,, MEE